Jewish Standard, October 21, 2016
Jewish Standard, October 21, 2016
Jewish Standard, October 21, 2016
NORTH JERSEY
THEJEWISHSTANDARD.COM
Community
organizer
Laura Fein brings
new directions to the
Jewish Community
Relations Council
page 30
85
2016
Melissa S., Closter, NJ, mother of two, entrepreneur, and breast cancer survivor
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Page 3
Olympic Yom Kippur confusion
Forgotten
Yiddish book
becomes a comic
In 1938, the year Trina Robbins was born,
her father, Max Perlson, published a book
collecting stories he had written for Yiddish
newspapers about life in a Belorussian shtetl
and in Jewish New York, where he moved
when he was 16.
As a kid I knew my father had written a
book but I didnt care because it wasnt in
English, Robbins recently said. If anything
I was ashamed that my father wrote in Yiddish because it meant he wasnt American. I
wanted to be American. I was unappreciative.
Robbins grew up to be a cartoonist and a historian of comics. But she had
forgotten about the book until her daughter stumbled across it at the Yiddish Book Center. So what do you do with your fathers recently unearthed
book when youre a cartoonist and a historian of comics? Robbins translated
the book, adapted it into a graphic novel, and commissioned artists to illustrate its 14 chapters. Its publisher is now raising money for A Minyan Yidn un
Andere Zacken A Bunch of Jews and Other Stuff on Kickstarter at http://
LARRY YUDELSON
kck.st/2elUyEZ
CONTENTS
NOSHES ...............................................................4
BRIEFLY LOCAL ..............................................14
OPINION ........................................................... 24
COVER STORY ................................................30
FINANCE & PLANNED GIVING ................ 35
HEALTHY LIVING &
ADULT LIFESTYLES ..... ............................... 45
DVAR TORAH........................................... 57
CROSSWORD PUZZLE ................................ 58
ARTS & CULTURE .......................................... 59
CALENDAR ......................................................60
GALLERY .......................................................... 63
OBITUARIES .................................................... 65
CLASSIFIEDS ..................................................66
REAL ESTATE.................................................. 68
Noshes
KEEPING UP
Gal Gadot
Isla Fisher
Arianne Zucker
Bob Dylan
Daveed Diggs
benzelbusch.com
4 31977
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10/14/16 2:54 PM
Local
RAC director to discuss issues of
social justice at Teaneck synagogue
Rabbi Jonah Dov Pesner will highlight contributions of the Reform movement
LOIS GOLDRICH
Some 50 years ago, during the height of the civil rights
movement, leaders of the Reform movement came
together to create what is now one of the countrys leading social justice organizations.
We thought we could be a hub of justice, said Rabbi
Jonah Dov Pesner, who will talk about his movements
Religious Action Center at Teanecks Temple Emeth on
October 28.
As guest speaker at the congregations Rabbi Joshua
Trachtenberg Memorial Lecture, Rabbi Pesner, the centers director, will talk about Prophetic Power and Politics: How Reform Jews Can Bring Healing and Justice to
Our World.
Rabbi Pesner, whose office is in Washington D.C., said,
You just have to look at the plaque across the hall to
recall the movements leadership in the field of civil rights.
Why? The Civil Rights Act and Voting Rights Act were
written in our conference room.
Rabbi Pesner explained that a trustee of the movement,
the late social activist and philanthropist Kivie Kaplan,
donated a building on Dupont Circle to the Reform movement. As it happened, that building, which now houses
the RAC, was also the headquarters of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights. Hence, The lawyers did it in our
conference room.
According to Rabbi Pesner, Mr. Kaplan was deeply
affected by a sign he saw in a country club during his honeymoon. The sign read, No Jews or dogs. He turned to
his black cab driver, who said, They dont even bother
with us.
Mr. Kaplan joined the NAACP in 1932 and was elected
to the national board in 1954. He was elected its president
in 1966 and held that position for the rest of his life he
died in 1975. He was their last Jewish president, Rabbi
Pesner said.
Rabbi Pesner, who has headed the RAC for the last two
years, paid tribute to his predecessor, Rabbi David Saperstein, who held the position for some 40 years. His organization always seeks partners in its work, crossing lines
of race and faith, he added. These partners have included
the NAACP, PICO National Network (a national network
of progressive faith-based community organizations in
the United States), and the Lawyers Committee for Civil
Rights Under Law, as well as partners in the movements
many local communities.
Today, working with the NAACP, the Religious Action
Center still is tackling the ongoing issue of racial inequality. Citing Shelby v. Holder, a 2013 United States Supreme
Court case that eviscerated the Voting Rights Act, Rabbi
Pesner pointed out that this is the first presidential election to follow that decision. Nine million votes may not
count because of voter ID and suppression laws in North
Carolina and other states, he said. Were working hard
on an election protection campaign, engaging in voter
registration and preparing for poll monitoring efforts.
In addition to speaking about these efforts, on October
28 Rabbi Pesner will address the issues raised in Michelle
Alexanders book, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. While one in 17 white
6 JEWISH STANDARD OCTOBER 21, 2016
Local
FIRST PERSON
SHABBAT
PROGRAMS
OTHER SCHOOLS HAVE
Torah
learning
MANY EVEN PROVIDE
Kosher meal plans
JEWISH STANDARD OCTOBER 21, 2016 7
Local
Lois Goldrich
201-837-9090
Local
an intern for Senator Frank Lautenberg, and by the time he was 23 he was
at Harvard, he alternated between working at the Federal Communications Commission and for Microsoft.
And now hes running for Congress, as a
firm believer in the kind of across-the-aisle
collaboration he learned from Mr. Clinton.
You have to work together, with civility,
to solve problems, he said.
Civility, of course, is in stunningly short
supply right now. There is an undercurrent of extremism that is an offshoot of
Donald Trumps candidacy, Mr. Gottheimer said. People obviously are
angry; Mr. Trump is both amplifying and
directing the anger.
Some of that anger is aimed at him, Mr.
Gottheimer said. He is actively Jewish he
and his family belong to Barnert Temple in
Franklin Lakes, and he studies with a local
Chabad rabbi when he can. He is getting
tweets that accuse him of heinous crimes
chief among them but not restricted to
the crime of being Jewish and that tell
him that there are people who will glory in
SEE GOTTHEIMER PAGE 11
Local
Baking together
Womens Zionist group aims to gather 2,000 women and girls to make bread
ABIGAIL KLEIN LEICHMAN
The smell of any amount of baking bread is
heavenly. The smell of thousands of loaves
of challah baking in Passaic on November
9 is likely to be nothing short of divine.
Organizers of the New Jersey Great Big
Challah Bake at Factory 220, sponsored
by the worldwide Shabbos Project and the
New Jersey chapter of Womens International Zionist Organization more familiarly known as WIZO aim to get 2,000
women and girls pre-registered to knead,
braid, and bake Sabbath bread under one
roof in the spirit of unity and inclusivity.
This event is a rare opportunity to
gather with Jewish women from all over
the area, from different backgrounds,
different levels of observance, different
cultures, different opinions, different
ages, its co-chairwoman, Janet Hod of
Teaneck, said.
All of these women gather together for
one special night of Jewish unity revolving
around a beautiful mitzvah, making challah. Our barriers are dropped. Our hearts
are open, and the energy of the room is
palpable. This unified energy lifts our
spirits, ad reminds each of us who we are,
and rekindles our connection with all Jewish people.
We are each a braid in the bread of
Judaism, and only when we come together
are we whole, Ms. Hod concluded.
The name of the bread served with all
Sabbath meals whether its braided or in
any other shape derives from the biblical
mitzvah (commandment) to separate and
sanctify a small piece of bread dough, saving it for the ministering priests of the Holy
Temple of Jerusalem to help support these
civil servants. The separated dough, also
called challah, has come to refer to the
loaf itself, and the act of separating challah
has continued as a symbolic remembrance
even some 2,086 years after the destruction of the Second Temple. (The little piece
is burned or discarded these days.)
And while baking challah isnt a genderspecific activity, the process has taken on
deep meaning for many modern women.
Esther Friedman of Teaneck, a city
leader for the Jewish Womens Renaissance Project, explained that the New Jersey Great Big Challah Bake began three
years ago under the auspices of the Shabbos Project, which was launched worldwide by the chief rabbi of South Africa.
We began with 300 ladies in the auditorium of a day school in Paramus and
it grew last year to over 1,300 Jewish
women, she said. The walls shook with
emotion and joy as the music played and
the women danced and baked challah.
Last years bake, held at the Rockleigh
Country Club, was cosponsored by WIZO
10 JEWISH STANDARD OCTOBER 21, 2016
Last year more than 1,300 women participated in the New Jersey Great Big Challah Bake.
Local
Gottheimer
FROM PAGE 9
added, is to be sure that government continues to give shuls grants to improve their
safety.
As for him, my Jewish background
has had a deep impact on me, he said.
Everything I learned, growing up, both
culturally and in Hebrew school, affected
my values. Its how you treat each other,
how you talk about each other. Its always
been about social justice, and also hard
work and decency and respect. Theres
the idea of making your family proud, and
of doing right by people. Thats had a big
impact on everything Ive done.
Religion has taught me not to leave out
hope, and to be very careful about what
happens when you get into the business
of judging others. Self-righteousness is a
snare, he warned.
Bucking his party, even as he worked to
raise funds for his election, which at first
was an uphill climb, Mr. Gottheimer came
out strongly against last summers Iran
deal. He is also strongly against the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement, which, in a surfeit of self-righteousness, is trying to strangle Israels economy.
Israel is a beacon of democracy, he said.
Mr. Gottheimer minces no words about
the Republicans presidential nominee,
Donald J. Trump. He represents exactly
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With unparalleled faculty and Jewish resources, YU offers it allincluding $42 million
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Local
FIRST PERSON
Bob Dylan
12 JEWISH STANDARD OCTOBER 21, 2016
Philip Roth
earned anger and disapproval,
perhaps most famously when
he appeared on a 1962 panel at
Yeshiva College alongside Ralph
Ellison. The tone of the evening
was summed up in the words of
a Yeshiva educator who wrote,
in a letter to the Anti-Defamation League, What is being
done to silence this man?
Local
Israeli.) But it was Dylan who was photographed at the
Western Wall for his sons bar mitzvah, who became
a born-again Christian follower of the evangelist Hal
Lindsey, who performed on a Chabad telethon, who
showed up on Yom Kippur at Chabad houses across
the country, and who occasionally was seen at student performances at his grandchildrens Jewish
day school.
The question of in or out, whether for an individual
or a generation, has no easy answer, because people
are never static. The enfant terrible matures, kicking
and screaming, into the elder statesman. It was 50
years ago that Dylan went electric and embraced
rock n roll; who can count the stages between then
and his present status as a gravelly voiced interpreter
of Frank Sinatra songs? Roth began as a naughty young
Jewish writer, became a champion of Eastern European authors, and let his early ambition to be a great
American novelist play out as the grand chronicler of
lives lived amid historical moments, capturing the eras
of his lifetime, including the McCarthy era, the 60s
counterculture, the presidency of Bill Clinton, and in
his 2004 novel of alternate history, The Plot Against
America, World War II. That book is a prescient depiction of the temptations and consequences of America
First nativism and anti-Semitism and features not only
a conspiracy-mongering President Charles Lindbergh
but also a bullying developer who is described as a
cheapskate, screamer, shouter, and a man without a friend in the world.
For that reason, a Nobel nod to Roth right now might
have been seen as more Swedish meddling in American politics, akin to President Obamas peace prize.
Yet Dylan, too, is a rebuke to the Trump moment not
only for his youthful support for the civil rights movement as a songwriter and performer (he professed
to abandoning politics back in 1964, singing that he
was younger than that now, and has, with a handful of exceptions, remained apolitical since), but for
showing that singing American and being American
is as rooted in the language and songs of the African
slaves as it is in the folk immigrants from England and
Scotland, and that a grandson of Russian Jewish immigrants can nurture himself and his country by grafting
on to these deep roots.
In awarding a literature prize to a songwriter for
the first time, the Nobel Committee honored Dylan
for the boundaries he broke in the genre of popular
song. Surrealism, anger, confusion again and again
Dylan found words with old echoes for ideas new to
the radio and record player.
And it is for this, for using old words in new ways,
that I come down on the side of Dylan over Roth. Roth
beautifully, masterfully chronicles the life of American Jews. But in recombining old texts for new times,
Dylan hearkens back to the most ancient Jewish way
of reading and writing, from the first compilers of
the Bible, through the rabbis of the Talmud and the
Zohar, to the Yiddish and Hebrew writers of the past
two centuries.
In that, Dylan puts me in mind of the Jewish writer
who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1966, Shmuel
Yosef Agnon. Like Roth, Agnon chronicled the lives of
Jews in their times. Like Dylan, Agnon creates something new from old language, using the words and
phrases and images from the prayer book and midrash
to tell his tales with more than a touch of the mythical and surreal thrown in for good measure.
Roth, for all his brilliant sentences and psychological awareness, is a writer of Jews.
In making newspaper headlines sound like ancient
wisdom, Dylan is a Jewish writer.
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JEWISH STANDARD OCTOBER 21, 2016 23
Editorial
Dangerous phrases
he question is when do we
say something?
How long do we let it go?
Pretend to be amused, or
bemused, or too busy or too befuddled
or too caught up in other things to say
anything? How long do we let ourselves
be intimidated out of saying anything?
Donald Trumps campaign has been
playing with the tropes of classic antiSemitism. Yes, we understand that his
son-in-law is Jewish, now his daughter
is too, and so are their three children,
his grandchildren. We know that Mr.
Trump has not said anything specifically about Jews, as he has about Mexicans, and Syrians, and other immigrants, and women. But we are not
blind and we are not deaf. What he has
said the images he has used should
signal danger to us.
Hillary Clinton meets in secret
with international banks to plot the
destruction of U.S. sovereignty in
order to enrich her donors, Mr.
Trump tweeted. Later, he said that the
election would determine whether
we are free or in fact controlled by a
small handful of global special interests rigging the system. Those special
interests, he continued, are powerful because their financial resources
are virtually unlimited, their political
resources are unlimited, their media
resources are unmatched.
On first reading, it doesnt sound all
bad, does it? Who wouldnt mind having unlimited financial resources? But
its no joke.
In a Jewish Telegraphic Agency story,
the writer, Ron Kampeas, compared Mr.
Trumps speech to the notorious, bilious, and deadly anti-Semitic tractate,
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion,
which its author pretended was written by Jews. The similarities are terrifying. The author rages against radical
globalization, as Mr. Trump calls it, or
international control at political, military and economic levels, as the Protocols author says. The corporate media
in our country is no longer involved
in journalism, Mr. Trump said. They
Jewish
Standard
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Joanne Palmer
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Larry Yudelson
Community Editor
Beth Janoff Chananie
About Our Children Editor
Heidi Mae Bratt
thejewishstandard.com
24 Jewish Standard OCTOBER 21, 2016
Correspondents
Warren Boroson
Lois Goldrich
Abigail K. Leichman
Miriam Rinn
Dr. Miryam Z. Wahrman
Advertising Director
Natalie D. Jay
Classified Director
Janice Rosen
f Jewish law were the standard in used to say...: let the fear of Heaven be upon
determining who should be the next
you. Further on, in 2:2, we are told, Rableader of the free world, as U.S presi- ban Gamliel, son of Rabbi Yehudah Ha Nasi,
dents often are called, Donald Trump
taught: All who serve on behalf of the community should do so for Heavens sake.
certainly would not qualify. Come to think of
One trait required of a Jewish leader is
it, most of our political leaders, Hillary Clinton included, probably fall short, but Trump
humility, something Trump, who often
stands out.
boasts I alone can fix the system, clearly
Neither his character nor his comments
lacks. Thus, we are told in the Babylonian
even come close to what Jewish law consid- Talmud tractate Chagigah 5b: Over three
ers acceptable in a leader. As the great cha- things the Holy One, Blessed Be He, weeps
sidic master of 200 years ago, Rabbi Nach- every day...[including] over a leader who
man of Bratislav, put it, The true leader
lords it over the community.
of a generation must be holy.
The Midrash (Exodus Rabbah 27:9) quotes God as sayEspecially following the recent
ing to the would-be leader: [S]
revelations about his locker
ince you have undertaken this
room talk and his conduct
responsibility in becoming a
with women, it cannot be
leader, go, humble yourself at
argued that Trump is holy.
the dust of the feet of princes
Many leaders on the evangelical Christian right are comand those greater than you....
ing to the same conclusion, but
Yet another required trait
not all. Jerry Falwell Jr., presi- Rabbi
is respect: The leader must
dent of Liberty University in
respect those he leads, just
Shammai
Lynchburg, Virginia, excuses
as the Temple priests had
Engelmayer
Trumps comments and actions
their faces towards the people
by saying, We arent electing a
and their backs to God when
pastor. Dallas Baptist Pastor Robert Jeffries
blessing them. (See BT Sotah 40a.) There is
said, I might not choose this man as a Sun- little Trump says that is respectful of anyone
day school teacher in my church, but adds, but himself.
thats not what this election is about.
Finally, the ideal leader must be able to
This is not a job interview for a Sunday
withstand the slings and arrows of outrageous charges that will be flung at him or
school teacher, said the Faith & Freedom
Coalitions Ralph Reed. Even Trumps for- her from all sides something Trump demmer campaign manager, Corey Lewan- onstrates almost hourly with his tweets he is
dowski, who called some of Trumps com- incapable of doing. In Exodus 6:13, we read:
ments indefensible, nevertheless uses the And He gave them a charge concerning the
Sunday school teacher argument.
Children of Israel. Because the charge itself
From the standpoint of Jewish law and tra- remained unspoken, a midrash seeks to
dition, though, we do need to elect a Sun- fill in the blanks: God said to [Moses and
day school teacher, in the sense that the
Aaron]: My children are obstinate, bad-tempered, and troublesome. In assuming leadleader must be someone who sets a positive
moral and ethical example for everyone else, ership over them, you must expect that they
will curse you and even stone you. (See Exoespecially children.
Rabbinic texts leave no doubt about this. dus Rabbah 7:3.)
It is very likely that Rabbi Akivas family had
For example, in Pirkei Avot 1:3, we are told
that in mind when he was asked to become
that an early sage named Antigonus of Socho
leader of the community. Know they will
Shammai Engelmayer is the rabbi of
curse you and they will despise you, they
Congregation Beth Israel of the Palisades in
advised him. [See Jerusalem Talmud Peah
Cliffside Park.
8.6.] He accepted the advice, not the offer.
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,
-
t
t
t
r
-
y
-
Opinion
One of Trumps
favorite expressions,
usually referring to
himself, is, Its a
beautiful thing. His
words and his deeds
are definitely the
opposite and
that must concern
us deeply.
All of this led the rabbis to codify these traits in setting the requirements for leadership in the Jewish
world. They added the requirement (Shulchan Aruch
Yoreh Deah 256:3) that a person could not be qualified
as a communal leader if his conduct in any way would
have barred him from being a dayyan a judge.
That rule harks back to a discussion in BT Bava
Batra 8b about who could collect and distribute charity funds for the community. The prooftext cited there
is taken from Daniel 12:3, And the knowledgeable will
be radiant like the bright expanse of sky, and those
who lead the many to righteousness will be like the
stars forever and ever.
Said the Talmud, They that are knowledgeable will
be radiant like the bright expanse of sky, this refers to
a judge who gives a true verdict on true evidence, and
to the charity collectors; and they who lead the many
to righteousness will be like the stars forever and ever
refers to those who teach young children.
From a halachic standpoint and from tradition,
then, communal leaders should be above reproach;
should put communal concerns ahead of their own;
should exemplify and spread the traits required of a
kingdom of priests and a holy nation; should not let
their posts go to their heads; and should expect to be
vilified for their efforts.
Trump fails on all counts.
This presents a problem for those who would support Trump on Election Day. The Takkanot of the
Council of Cracow, which ruled Jewish life there in the
Middle Ages (and which have been cited here several
times over the years), offered guidelines for voting.
They leave no doubt about who is at fault when our
leaders fail to measure up to the standards of ethical
and moral behavior.
Each voter, the guidelines state, must promise to
act for the sake of heaven and the common good, as
he is instructed from on high, and not out of favoritism or self-interest or personal grudge....These voters
should not act in haste, but should consider carefully
whom to choose, because once the votes are cast,
nothing can be changed.
One of Trumps favorite expressions, usually referring to himself, is, Its a beautiful thing. His words
and his deeds are definitely the opposite and that
must concern us deeply.
the place you excel, help organize play dates or meals (mealtrain.com or takethemameal.com are great resources) or
create a clearly written medication and treatment schedule
based on doctors orders. If you are a social person, offer to
be the point person to keep others informed of her progress.
It can be very exhausting to speak to all those who care and
want to know how she is doing.
4. Be a sounding board. Dont offer platitudes. Dont try
to solve her problems. You cant. But you can listen. Distraction also is important. Maybe this is the perfect time for
a little innocent gossip. But she also needs a chance to vent
her frustrations and discuss her fears.
5. Refer to Sharsheret. Remember that in addition to the
community, a woman facing breast cancer should have a
team that includes medical professionals who manage diagnosis and treatment, and professionals who provide guidance and support. This is particularly important for those
without strong supports systems or who
have chosen to keep their diagnosis private.
In any case, the support Sharsheret offers
complements the support she may be receiving from family and community.
Sharsheret offers 12 national programs
that support women and their families facing
breast cancer (as well as those at high risk
or facing ovarian cancer). These programs
include, among others, our Peer Support
K.
Network, to connect women facing similar
diagnoses, at a similar stage of life and with a
similar connection to Judaism; Busy Box, for
women with young children; Best Face Forward, to combat
the cosmetic effects of treatment; Embrace, for those facing metastatic disease, and Thriving Again, which provides
tools for survivors to move forward in the healthiest possible way.
In addition to the formal programs, Sharsherets clinical staff of social workers, a psychotherapist, and a genetic
counselor answer questions and offer support and guidance to women and their friends and family every day.
These services are all confidential, individualized, and
completely free.
These five suggestions are simply that: suggestions. You
may have other ideas that will be of great help. As you offer
your assistance, please remember not to be hurt if she
turns down a visit, doesnt need a ride, or prefers to keep
her children close on a particular day. Remember that she
may feel better or worse on any given day, and that her
needs will change often. When you check in, or as you offer
your help, remind her that your offer is a standing one and
not limited to that moment. And let her know she does not
need to respond. That, in and of itself, is a gift.
The bottom line is that it does not matter how you help,
but simply that you do. Help can come in the form of a simple note to show you care or in the form of one the above
suggestions. As a survivor, I know firsthand the impact that
these gestures have emotionally and the practical difference they made in my life as I addressed my cancers.
This breast cancer awareness month, and beyond, be a
part of someones team, posse, squad or village. Your kindness is something that will not be forgotten.
To learn more about Sharsheret, go to www.sharsheret.
org. To speak with a member of the clinical team or to connect to Sharsherets programs, email Sharsheret at info@
sharsheret.org or call (201) 833.2341.
Melissa K. Rosen is a two-time cancer survivor and
Sharsherets director of national outreach.
Jewish Standard OCTOBER 21, 2016 25
Opinion
Claude Monets Grainstacks at the End of the Day puts us in mind of the Sukkot holiday, a time of harvest.
Samson Raphael Hirsch, a 19th century German rabbi, sees the word atzeret in the holiday Shemini Atzeret
as a gathering or storing up not of crops, but of the gratitude and devotion weve developed over the
course of the holiday season. We should time-release these qualities into the activities we undertake over
the course of the year.
Opinion
it mean to be an American? and What
makes a good argument? The PBL classroom isnt frontal; that is, you wont
find a teacher at the front of the room,
lecturing; rather, youll find her moving
from group to group or student to student, as the class works on individual
activities or group ones that lead to a
larger product or event students create.
One of the activities common in a
PBL humanities classroom is a Socratic
seminar. These are discussions where
one group of students sits in a circle
with texts theyve studied closely, and
another group of students sits in an
outer circle. The inner circle conducts a
discussion on the prepared texts, while
the outer one observes the discussion,
noting which students participate, ask
questions, wait for their turn to speak,
respond to another student by looking
directly in their eyes, and dont engage
in side conversation.
In short, the Socratic seminar not
only shows students how to read and
think critically but also how to be
good citizens: to have well-informed
opinions they can share respectfully
with others with whom they may disagree. An important part of the PBL
classroom and of the Socratic seminar
is reflection, and when we reflected
on the discussion, students noted
how good it felt to engage in polite
discourse. We spoke about creating a
society in our classroom where good
listening and civil discourse are the
norm and about bringing that experience into the outer world.
Dost thou love life? Then do not squander time, for that is the stuff life is made
of. Benjamin Franklin
The PBL classroom also is different from a traditional one in that it
insists students manage their time
well. Students must have completed
the research for the discussion by
the time it happens, and though part
of my facilitation was ascertaining
that each student had used academic
research, the students were responsible for ensuring they met with the
school librarian to find the sources
they needed.
I had asked students to post how
their research process was going on
an online class discussion board. One
young woman and I had spoken about
a class period she hadnt maximized:
she had spent it waiting for the librarian, who had ended up helping others
with their research. When I asked the
student why she hadnt asked a few
of her peers who were researching
the same topic for help, she quickly
realized she hadnt spent her time
well and had to spend time at home
catching up with what we had accomplished in school. (I will allow this kind
of homework!)
When the student posted about her
research, she posted not only about
Letters
Im for Josh
us at nechamacomfort@gmail.com. You
can also find us at www.nechamacomfort.
com, Facebook and Instagram (username
NechamaComfort).
Help us support families like Ms. Croogs.
Reva Judas, CPE
Founder and Executive Director
NechamaComfort
Teaneck
No to Trump
Opinion
Israeli tennis player Shahar Peer at a 2008 press conference with other members
of the Israeli team before their Fed Cup match against Russia in Tel Aviv.
RONI SCHUTZER/FLASH90
Unsporting behavior
A call to end Israeli athletic discrimination
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Opinion
soccer authorities fought a Palestinian challenge to
have them expelled.
Now, the Palestinians have adapted their campaign
to a targeted boycott of six teams based in Jewish
communities in the West Bank. All of these teams
are lower league sides, and are a million miles from
making it to the glamour of European competitions,
where even Israels top teams struggle to get past the
group qualifying stage. But that doesnt matter to the
Palestinians who not satisfied with their own membership in FIFA, which Israel never opposed are
insisting that a body that governs soccer (very badly)
is in a position to adjudicate Israels borders.
Theyve also turned to the U.N., which, unsurprisingly, has indicated that it supports the move to force
Israeli clubs to move behind the Green Line. Meanwhile, FIFAs president, Gianni Infantino, has said that
the issue must be resolved before his organizations
congress next year, which conveniently falls during
the major anniversaries commemorating Israeli military victories in the 1947-48 and 1967 wars.
If FIFA does take action against Israel over these
clubs, then it will have to get ready for a volley of
accusations concerning double standards. After all,
competitions. Moreover, boycotts and acts of discrimination can backfire. When the UAE excluded Shahar Peer,
Venus Williams issued a condemnation and Andy Roddick withdrew in solidarity before the Wall Street Journal
pulled its sponsorship.
These are important precedents that must be drawn
upon in any situation in which Israeli athletes face discrimination. Come 2018, Israel will have been an independent state for 70 years (and a member of the U.N. for
69 years). Whatever trouble Israel experiences on the
global stage, its past time for these vindictive attempts to
JNS.ORG
exclude it from world sports to end for good.
Ben Cohen, senior editor of TheTower.org and the Tower
magazine, writes a weekly column for JNS.org on Jewish
affairs and Middle Eastern politics. His work has been
published in Commentary, the New York Post, Haaretz, the
Wall Street Journal, and many other publications.
perfect gifts
for the holidays
RAIN
OR
SHINE
Sunday, October 30
1pm 4pm @ Camp Veritans
Cover Story
The JCRC moves forward
Its new director, Laura Fein, talks about her vision for the public policy body
Joanne Palmer
ts easy for an outsider to
despair of ever understanding the apparently labyrinthine
structure of the Jewish federation system.
Dont worry. This story wont
attempt that task. Instead, it
will focus on one of the federations organizations, the one that works on public
policy, advocacy, and outreach to other
communities: The Jewish Community
Relations Council.
Just as all the federations agencies are
tied together through the federation, and
the federation is tied to other federations
through the Jewish Federations of North
America, the JCRC is part of the Jewish
Council for Public Affairs, the charmingly
called umbrella organization to which
it belongs.
Here ends the Jewish civics lesson. Now,
lets take a look at the local JCRC and its
new director, Laura Fein of Teaneck.
The JCRC has always been the part
of the federation that deals with public
affairs, public policy, and community
issues, and it is also the part of the federation that created and maintains relationships with other communities, including
the government, elected officials, New
Jerseys Jewish community, and organizations that represent other religious and
ethnic groups, Ms. Fein said. As a result of
a large-scale marketing survey that the federation recently concluded, we looked to
reset the community priorities so that the
federation would match the Jewish communitys needs.
The findings showed that anti-Semitism, anti-Israel actions, BDS thats the
Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement that is aimed against Israel Israel
advocacy, and education were a high priority, and we wanted to focus the JCRCs
work more on those issues, she said.
Those are priorities at many other JCRCs
around the country as well, she added;
the organization works to influence legislation and policy that impacts services for
senior citizens or people with disabilities.
These are all issues for the JCRC.
Now, we have re-organized, and we
have three primary committees, and
then a project spun off from it, she continued. The first one is government relations; AIPAC the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee is a good example for
the JCRC, she said. They have such a huge
cross-section of people, with everyone,
every ethnicity, every race, so excited to
be supporting Israel. I went to several of
Cover Story
Laura Fein
every week, and they are paired with children, and they serve as friends, buddies,
and teachers aides, helping get the kids up
to grade level. They often form tight relationships, and the schools have expressed
tremendous appreciation for the program.
The program comes from our commitment. The population we serve is by
and large non-Jewish; it is predominantly
African American and Latin American. We
look to build relationships so that hopefully we can work together on other issues
that are close to our hearts.
She is not nave about the problems that
some of these relationships must overcome. We are well aware of the issues
presented by intersectionality thats
the idea that all victims of discrimination
based on gender, race, class, ethnicity, or
disability, among other things, somehow
are linked. Its the idea that all victims
are victims together, and that somehow,
despite thousands of years of anti-Semitism, Jews are excluded from these groups,
and from the conversation.
We have seen this summer the statements from Black Lives Matter, which were
so transparently anti-Israel and really antiSemitic, that accused Jews and Israelis
of genocide and apartheid and the worst
violations they can come up with. We
dont believe that it is representative of
the broader community, but it certainly is
something that raises a concern. We feel
that the best way to change it is to broaden
the relationships with the communities that
we have been partnering with for so long.
And then there is the third committee.
The biggest committee. Israel.
Many departments of the federation
deal with things about Israel, Ms. Fein
said. The federation as a whole donates
money to Israel; we have our sister city,
Nahariya, the Israel film festival, and many
cultural events. The JCRCs Israel brief has
to do with advocacy, education, and the
impact of the BDS movement.
This year, we received a grant and we
are piloting a really exciting program to
educate high school students on the current climate, and about the conversations
Cover Story
The JCRC was part of the Coalition Against Human Trafficking in 2014, when the Super Bowl was held in New Jersey.
Cover Story
Martha Cohen and her son, Harry, above, and Donna Weintraub and her son Cory
went to learn how to counter BDS at a UN conference last year.
Last year, on Israels independence day, its flag was raised in the county complex
in Hackensack.
Women from
the JCRC join
others from
across the
county and
the country
to fight human
trafficking.
Cover Story
Its gratifying.
The program was duplicated on other campuses. The
method was to bring students in before you had the plans,
and provide them with resources for things that were
important to them. It takes a large tolerance for risk.
Thats a model and a tolerance that shes bringing to her
new job as well.
After college, Ms. Fein spent a year in Israel as a Wallenberg Fellow, studying at Hebrew University and
Every year, the JCRC and its counterpart agencies in other communities draw people across Bergen County to the Interfaith Brotherhood and Sisterhood breakfast.
34 Jewish Standard OCTOBER 21, 2016
Finance
&
planned
giving
Be money-smart
DaviD Heyman
My parents ingrained in me the value of
earning my own money and being financially stable from an early age. By the age
of 10, I knew how to budget, save, and balance a checkbook thanks to my mom,
who is an accountant. However, as Ive
grown into an adult, I have gained my
own money-smart tips and try my best
to ingrain these valuable lessons into my
younger brothers. So, here are a few simple tips to share with the young adults in
your life, encouraging them to make smart
decisions about their hard-earned cash for
years to come.
plannedgiving.hadassah.org/impact
2015 Hadassah, The Womens Zionist Organization of America, Inc.
Hadassah is a registered trademark of Hadassah, The Womens Zionist Organization of America, Inc.
The information contained herein is intended for educational purposes only and is not intended to provide legal, tax or other
professional advice or to be relied upon. We encourage you to consult a tax advisor or accountant.
Charitable deductions are allowed to the extent provided by law. Hadassah intends to respect your wishes regarding this gift,
however in accordance with U.S. tax law requirements regarding deductibility of contributions, Hadassah shall have full dominion,
control and discretion over this gift (and shall be under no legal obligation to transfer any portion of a gift to or for the use or
benefit of any other entity or organization). All decisions regarding the transfer of funds to or for the benefit of any other entity
or organization shall be subject to the approval of the Board or other governing body of Hadassah.
Like us on
Facebook
facebook.com/jewishstandard
36 Jewish standard OCtOBer 21, 2016
Appeals process
IRS Publication 556, Examination of Returns, Appeal
Rights, and Claims for Refund, is available online,
at https://www.irs.gov/publications/p556. This document will help guide you through appeals and claims
for refunds (in case youve overpaid in previous years).
If you do not have satisfaction from an IRS appeals
conference, you can take your case to the United
States Tax Court, the United States Court of Federal
Claims, or a United States district court. Its strongly
recommended that you follow the chain of appeals
and begin with IRS appeal first. So long as you have
provided the appeals process with paperwork to prove
that you paid the correct taxes, the burden of proof is
on the IRS at this point.
If youve filed at a federal court (U.S. Tax Court,
U.S. Court of Federal Claims or a United States district
court) there will be filing fees and other reasonable
administrative costs, which can add up quickly. If you
filed with the tax court as a delaying tactic and never went to
IRS appeals you risk fines for frivolous filing. If you wind up
being the prevailing party, you can request that reasonable
administrative and reasonable litigation fees be recovered;
the court will decide who the prevailing party is.
If you and/or your professional tax preparer find that
you overpaid in taxes for previous years, you can file for a
refund. You must file the claim within three years of the date
Fact:
65
70
75
80
85
90
Rate
6%
6.5%
7.1%
8%
9.5%
11.3%
75.3%
77.8%
79.7%
81.5%
84.8%
86.4%
Tax Free*
* In the month you use cash to establish a gift annuity, a final calculation is made determining the portion that
will be paid to you tax-free.
NJ_CGAWater_NJJS_6.5x9.75.indd 1
10/14/16
3:20 PM
Jewish Standard OCTOBER
21, 2016
37
e
Heart
Heart
sh
Heart
c
an
agency
agency
Finance & Planned Giving
with
a
ha
an agency
with a
are up to date with a history of on-time payments; anytime you fall behind in your payments, you are risking
losing the label of good debt.
When a lender examines your credit history and sees
an educational loan that is on schedule or ahead of
schedule, for example, it will be viewed more positively
than a balance on a clothing department store charge or
high-interest credit cards. Business loans for a steadily
growing business will also be viewed in a nicer way than
a car loan or a loan for a wedding reception. Real estate
loans for investment properties have built-in collateral
for repayment of the loan (or equivalent value) as well as
the potential to make money; these qualify as good debt.
Financial organizations need to assess more than the
borrowers repayment history, they will also measure
the amount of already outstanding debt versus free
income, the number of inquiries into credit by other
lenders, and they will assess the guarantee that they will
not suffer losses if the borrower does default. Having
too many credit lines, even if nothing is owed, will be
viewed as adverse credit.
An inquiry into your credit history will show attempts
to get loans or credit. If credit was denied, then it
becomes a negative. Some existing lenders periodically examine a customers credit rating when reviewing accounts; some employers check the rating before
hiring; and some mortgage companies may prequalify a
candidate before actively looking for a house; these are
called soft inquiries and rarely have any effect on the
credit rating.
Consumers can and should check their own credit
with a
Heart
Create
a
Create a
Jewish
Jewish
Create a
Legacy
Create
a
Legacy
Jewish
Jewish
rating every so often. Federal guidelines permit consumers a free credit report each year; call Annual Credit
Report at 877-322-8228, or go to AnnualCreditReport.
com. It is also recommended to check your rating if
you have applied for and been denied a loan. Ask the
lender to tell you which company they used to make
their determination.
The most common credit reporting agencies in the
U.S. are Experian, Equifax and TransUnion. Consumers
can contact these companies to get copies of their credit
report to verify that there are no mistakes, check personal information (name and address) and find potential
negative information (making sure disputes and paid-infull accounts are recorded accurately).
There are also companies, some of them free, that
will contact all the credit reporting companies for one
comprehensive report. Report any inaccuracies in writing with proof and ask for immediate correction. Your
resulting credit score represents the assumed risk a
lender takes in extending you credit.
Most people need to borrow money to purchase a
home, pay for college, or make otherwise large purchases. Its important to have a favorable credit history for bank loans, mortgage companies and potential
employment. Young adults or people who are new to this
country (credit histories do not transfer between countries) need to establish credit. Secured loans or credit
cards showing low credit lines and on-time payments are
among the easiest ways to build a credit history.
And remember that if you fail to pay, good debt
Creators.com
quickly goes bad.
RIO DE JANEIRO Ilan Goldfajn, an Israeli-born economist with an acknowledged career in both the public
and private sectors, was confirmed recently as president
of Brazils Central Bank.
Goldfajn, 50, a Haifa native who was raised in Rio de
Janeiro, has served as chief economist at Itau, Brazils
largest private bank, and deputy to the bank governor
of Brazil, as well as adviser to the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund.
He is an active member of the Brazilian Jewish community and was educated in Rios Liessin Jewish day
school. In a May meeting held by the Brazil-Israel Chamber of Commerce, Goldfajn said Brazil has a lot to learn
from Israel.
Last year, Goldfajn argued during an Israel-Brazil
chamber event in Tel Aviv that the deep economic crisis affecting Brazil stems from a lack of fiscal responsibility. In response, he said, Brazil must boost exports
and raise taxes, cut government spending and raise the
retirement age.
Jewish
Federation
OF NORTHERN NEW JERSEY
An outspoken critic of the corruption and socioJewish Federation
ish
Federation
economic gaps in Brazil, Goldfajn will face a series of
OF NORTHERN NEW JERSEY
monetary and economic challenges. Latin Americas
Jewish
Federation
jwiner@j-add.org
| 201.457.0058 x14
largest nation
jwiner@j-add.org | 201.457.0058
x14 is struggling with its worst recession in
The Strength of a PeoPle.
nearly a century, including the prolonged erosion of
ner@j-add.org
| 201.457.0058
x14
The
Power of CommuniTy.
jwiner@j-add.org
| 201.457.0058
x14
the Brazilian currency, the real, steadily rising inflation and the pessimistic projections of a negative 3
The Strength of a PeoPle.
percent growth in 2016.
The Power of CommuniTy.
Fluent in Hebrew, English, Portuguese and Spanish,
Legacy
Legacy
Marcus Moraes
Goldfajn has a doctorate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as well as bachelors and masters
degrees from the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de
Janeiro. In the mid-1990s he was a professor at Brandeis
University, followed by a stint as an economist at the
International Monetary Fund.
He said he dedicated his career to his fathers advice
on the importance of studying.
I only stopped my formal studies at almost 30, Goldfajn told Educate to Grow magazine in 2012. This was
key to my life in economics, which is also based on studies. Right after I graduated, I thought of working and my
father showed me I could invest in me more.
JTA Wire Service
Marcus Moraes
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Streamline your finances and your life
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too, making being money-savvy even
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Mint
The Mint app collects all of a users financial information in one place, providing a
clear overview of assets, bills and spending habits. The app updates in real time
so users always know their financial status including credit card spending, 401(k)
investments and loans.
Chad Reid, who works in communications for a tech company, is a self-proclaimed huge Mint.com user, saying he
uses the free app daily and recommends
Stash
Stash, an iOS app, helps users investing in
the stock market. Investments start with
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Users can start small to gain confidence
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Ever wonder which credit card you should
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Hate doing the math when dividing a check
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Digit, an SMS-based communication tool
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Qapital, the free, first-ever gamified personal finance app that lets users save for
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Payoneers $180m
leads huge funding
in Israeli startups
Investors look to SecBI, Aqua Security, Folloze,
Codefresh and Reporty Homeland Security for new
cybersecurity and marketing technologies.
Viva Sarah Press
Israels fintech arena is celebrating Payoneers latest funding round a whopping $180 million investment. The digital
payments company, which is transforming the way businesses send and receive
cross-border payments, announced it
has completed the first closing of a significant growth equity financing led by
TCV and existing investor Susquehanna
Growth Equity.
Payoneer is one of Israels biggest fintech players. President Yuval Tal and former CTO Ben Yaniv Chechik founded the
Petah Tikva-based company in 2005. It
has raised $235 million to date including
the latest financing round.
Payoneer said proceeds from the latest financing will be used to accelerate
global growth and to enhance an already
strong and debt-free balance sheet.
Payoneers scale and global reach,
along with its proprietary compliance
infrastructure, allow it to differentiate
itself in the field of international payments. We think Payoneers superior
growth trajectory, increasing profitability and huge addressable market make
it an ideal investment, said Nari Ansari,
Principal at TCV.
Meanwhile, Aqua Security, the platform provider for securing virtual container applications, just announced
a $9 million in Series A funding, led
by Microsoft Ventures. Cybersecurity
luminary and investor Shlomo Kramer
will be joining Aquas Board of Directors, it was announced. Aquas seed
investors TLV Partners and Kramer
also participated in this round of funding, bringing Aquas total investment to
date to $13.5 million.
We are thrilled to receive such strong
endorsement of our technology and
customer success, said Dror Davidoff,
CEO and co-founder of Aqua. Security
has become a key enabler in container
adoption, and I look forward to working
with Microsoft as we expand our footprint, helping our customers to unlock
the benefits of this new technology.
Aqua was founded in late 2015, and
launched its platform for general availability in May 2016. Aqua is based in
Israel and San Francisco.
And container lifecycle management
platform, Codefresh, has announced $7
million in funding. The investment was
led by Carmel Ventures and included
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Jewish Federation
Getting to
know Hadassah
Did you know that Hadassah, the Womens Zionist
Organization of America, is a volunteer organization
that has inspired a passion for and commitment to the
land and people of Israel for over 100 years? Hadassah
has enhanced the health of people worldwide through
its support of medical care and research at the Hadassah Medical Organization in Jerusalem. Research at
the Hadassah Hebrew University Medical School has
opened the door to finding cures through stem cell
therapy for ALS, MS, Parkinsons, and macular degeneration. These are only the tip of the iceberg of Hadassahs amazing work.
The history of Hadassah began with the extraordinary Henrietta Szold, in the year 1912. A trip to desolate, pre-State Israel profoundly affected her. She
devoted the rest of her long life to the health and wellbeing of her people and what was to become their
Jewish homeland. Starting with the goal of providing
pasteurized milk for new babies, and working to eradicate trachoma, a disease causing blindness, Hadassah
focused on Aruchat Bat Ami Healing the Daughter
of my People. The rest is history and you can see the
results of her practical Zionism today in Hadassahs
two world-class medical centers in Jerusalem.
When you think about these accomplishments,
it seems natural that Hadassah should be on your
list for charitable organizations. Tikkun Olam has
been the motivating factor for the women and men
connected to Hadassah since 1912. What an inspirational organization to include in your planned giving. Why not make a donation today? Every dollar
counts toward medical research. Every dollar counts
toward helping Israeli children at risk. Every dollar
counts toward planting forests in the Negev and
making the desert bloom!
To join us and get involved, contact the Hadassah
Northern NJ region office at (973) 530-3996 or email
us at nnjregion@hadassah.org. Well be happy to connect you with a chapter and provide you with information about our extraordinary work. To donate to
Hadassah, visit our website at Hadassah.org/donate
and you can explore the many miracles Hadassah creates every day.
Read
from page 40
and armpit area. Check both breasts each month feeling for any lump, thickening, or hardened knot. Notice
any changes and get lumps evaluated by your healthcare provider.
2. In front of a mirror: Visually inspect your breasts
with your arms at your sides. Next, raise your arms high
overhead. Look for any changes in the contour, any swelling, or dimpling of the skin, or changes in the nipples.
Next, rest your palms on your hips and press firmly to
flex your chest muscles. Left and right breasts will not
exactly match few womens breasts do, so look for any
dimpling, puckering, or changes, particularly on one side.
3. Lying down: When lying down, the breast tissue
spreads out evenly along the chest wall. Place a pillow
under your right shoulder and your right arm behind
your head. Using your left hand, move the pads of your
fingers around your right breast gently in small circular
motions covering the entire breast area and armpit. Use
light, medium, and firm pressure. Squeeze the nipple;
check for discharge and lumps. Repeat these steps for
your left breast.
The Foundation also lists a series of potential signs of
breast cancer:
1. A change in how the breast or nipple feels
2. A change in the breast or nipple appearance
3. Any nipple discharge particularly clear discharge
or bloody discharge
If you have any concerns about your breast health,
you should contact your physician as soon as possible. The Valley Breast Center provides comprehensive
breast health services by a multidisciplinary team of
experienced physicians, physician assistants, nurses,
technologists, and other support professionals who
work together to coordinate all aspects of a womans
breast care.
The center recently expanded and enhanced services
with the addition of a second breast imaging location at
the Robert and Audrey Luckow Pavilion in Paramus. This
new location, along with the original one at The Valley
Hospital in Ridgewood, increases the number of patients
who can be served by the center and improves patient
access to same-day diagnostic mammograms, fine needle
aspirations, or core biopsies.
If you wish to make a mammogram or bone density
appointment, call (201) 447-8600.
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he Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have found that most adults consume
between 12.5 and 13.5 percent of their total
calories per day from added sugar. Children
are consuming up to 16 percent of their calories per day
from sugar.
This large amount of sugar in daily diets contributes
to a number of unhealthy conditions, including obesity,
type-2 diabetes, and a lack of important micronutrients
that help to prime the immune system and help fight disease. The single most critical dietary change you can make
to improve your health is to limit the amount of sugar you
consume on a daily basis. Although this action may sound
overwhelming to accomplish, a concerted effort will result
in better overall health for you and your family.
Removing sugar from your diet can have dramatic
health benefits, both in the short term and the long term.
Some benefits of reducing your sugar intake include
lowering cholesterol and triglyceride levels for better
overall cardiovascular health, improved blood glucose
levels, and a reduction in risk for type-2 diabetes. In
addition to better mental clarity, more stable moods,
and improved sleep patterns, you may also lower your
risk for certain types of cancers. Additionally, digestive
health may improve and weight management will be
easier. While most people only think that sugar is bad for
your teeth, both overall health and dental health benefit
enormously with limited sugar ingestion.
If you spend time walking through your local supermarket, reading the labels on your favorite foods, you
will notice that every aisle is filled with products that
contain sugar. Its not only foods that you would expect
contain sugar. You will find significant amounts of sugar
and fructose in gravy, healthy cereals, spaghetti
sauces, and virtually every processed, easy to fix food.
The prevalence of sugar as a flavoring in these products
means that the human body is bombarded with sugar
throughout the day. Sugar can cause inflammation in
Valley Health Systems cancer care team now works with Mount Sinai
Health System. In addition to having Mount Sinai doctors practice at
Valley, we collaborate so we can be even better at preventing and
beating cancer. Heres Alexs story.
Alex was a healthy runner and mother of two.
Cancer was never on her radar because she
didnt have a family history. Then, at a yearly
wellness visit, Alexs doctor discovered
a cancerous lump in her breast. After careful
consideration, she chose Valley a decision
that resulted in finding undiagnosed cancer
in her other breast.
See how Alexs decision changed her life
at MyStory.ValleyHealth.com.
10/18/16 1:37 PM
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JEWISH STANDARD OCTOBER 21, 2016 47
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thejewishstandard.com
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The Gym of Montvale began fundraising on October 14. They kicked off the
events by participating in a Ladies Night
Out Fashion Show fundraiser at Athletas
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chaperones, that promote efficient folding and prevent toxicity, says Dr. Adrian Israelson, who heads the Cellular and
Molecular Neurodegeneration Lab in the BGU Department
of Physiology and Cell Biology
For the first time, this study reported that the endogenous multifunctional protein macrophage migration
inhibitory factor (MIF), a gene that regulates cell inflammation and immunity, acts as a chaperone for misfolded
SOD1 in a mouse model. The researchers demonstrated
that completely eliminating MIF in a mutant SOD1 mouse
model of familial ALS increased misfolded SOD1 accumulation. This also accelerated disease onset and late disease
progression and shortened the lifespan of mice expressing
mutant SOD1.
This study provides insight into the potential therapeutic role of MIF in suppressing the selective accumulation of
misfolded SOD1 in ALS by modulating MIF levels, Dr. Israelson says.
Dr. Israelsons lab focuses on cellular and molecular
mechanisms that lead to the onset and progression of neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimers, Parkinsons,
and Huntingtons diseases, with special emphasis on ALS.
This work was supported by Israeli Science Foundation
Grant 124/14, Binational Science Foundation Grant 2013325,
Seventh Framework Programme Marie Curie Actions Career
Integration Grant 333794, German-Israeli Foundation Grant
I-2320-1089.13, and National Institute for Psychology in
Israel Grant b133-14/15.
Freedoms commitment to geriatric care management is unique. Our geriatric care managers serve as
trusted liaisons that ensure the relationship between
the caregiver and client is at the highest degree of satisfaction and compassion.
We never accept less than 100 percent satisfaction.
So when a crisis arises or when there is a change in
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family members.
When the issues go far beyond the expertise in
home care or require daily, weekly, or monthly attention or observation, Freedom strongly recommends
a referral to a certified geriatric care manager with
whom it has longstanding collaborative relationships
. As mentioned above, Freedom does not charge for
its care management or social work services. We
believe it to be a conflict of interest to provide both
the care management and the home care services
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Also, be a responsible consumer. Make certain that
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For further information or a care management recommendation, contact Freedom Home Healthcare at
(201) 883-1200.
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JEWISH STANDARD OCTOBER 21, 2016 55
Daughters of
Miriam Center/
The Gallen Institute
is a Glatt Kosher
Facility
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1. Shoe that might be worn on Yom
Kippur
5. Item shipped when making aliyah
10. Common Jewish last name
14. Yoni Netanyahu, e.g.
15. Common Jewish last name
16. Exs & Ohs singer King
17. Hebrew for made
18. All ___ the Watchtower
19. Bilhah and Zilpah to Joseph, en
espanol
20. Common Jewish last name
22. Common Jewish last name
23. A box of babka might be wrapped
in it
24. Pinkish Monster who has appeared
on Shalom Sesame
26. Have some kreplach
29. French equivalent of an agora, once
30. Indiana Jones finds it
33. Common Jewish last name
38. Aviation film with Hilary Swank and
Aaron Abrams
40. How long G-ds universe might have
been in existence, according to
Rabbi Sacks
41. Make like Moses, regarding the
Golden Calf
43. One can do this down the Jordan
44. Common Jewish last name
46. Common Jewish last name
48. Weizman and Bialik in Tel Aviv: Abbr.
49. Some rural rtes. in the Negev
51. Now You __ Me (Fisher film)
52. Ein Gedi, e.g.
54. Klutzes
59. Common Jewish last name
62. Common Jewish last name
65. Idina (Menzel) voiced her
66. Mixture on 47th St.
67. Tref Bell
68. ___ of You (1958 Elvis hit)
69. Fire with Gaza, at times
70. Sound that can be heard at the
Makhtesh crater
71. Berkus or Silver
72. What Saul did by letting Agag live
73. Farm no-no on a sabbatical year
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1. ___ toppers
2. Plant pomegranates, again
3. ...___ I like to call it.... (common
Borscht Belt punchline)
4. Common Jewish last name
5. Tref king
6. Make like David
7. Call off an IDF mission
8. Dark yellow or green, for a citron
9. Lang. spoke by many new Israelis
10. Accomodate a Hatzalah vehicle
11. East of Eden director Kazan
12. ___ Dracula (animated Mel Brooks
role)
13. ___ Can!: Sammy Davis Jr. book
21. Matzah for a Seder, e.g.
22. Touro grad, e.g.
25. Cant stand (like Haman to
Mordechai)
27. What Jews try to make around Yom
Kippur?
28. Kind of pit not far from PicoRobertson
30. Banned spray that rhymes with a
month
31. There was one between Jacob and
Esau
32. Common Jewish last name
33. Admit to a sin, with up
34. Israels win over Great Britain at the
World Baseball Classic, e.g.
35. Jay Fiedler didnt like throwing
them: Abbr.
36. Woodmere, N.Y., time zone
37. Anti-Israel college grp.
39. Steroid ___
42. Dell alternatives to Macs
45. Israeli diplomat Namir and others
47. Becomes chatan and kallah
50. Actress Jamie-Lynn
52. August: ___ County (film produced
by Grant Heslov)
53. Panels on many Israeli roofs
55. Animal character in Landis Animal
House
56. Shalom
57. 9 Av reading
58. Be a nosy yenta
59. Common Jewish last name, or at
least a start to many
60. Site of Napoleons exile
61. ___ the table, words parents might
like to hear from their kids Friday
afternoon
63. ___ weight, post Passover goal for
some
64. Made a blue fringe, e.g
66. Israeli Air Force hero
Daddy Issues
highlights change
in social norms
MIRIAM RINN
The most interesting thing about Daddy
Issues, the new 90-minute comedy at the
Theatre at St. Clements on 46th Street, is
how much our attitudes toward gay men
and lesbians have changed since 1982.
Thats the year in which this farce by
Marshall Goldberg is set. Donald Moskowitz (Matt Koplik) is an aspiring actor in his
early thirties, living alone in an over-decorated apartment in a sketchy New York
neighborhood. His overbearing father, Sid
(Tony Rossi), barges in to convince him
yet again to marry and give him and
Donalds mother a grandchild. Sid knows
his son is gay, but he thinks Donald can
pretend to be straight long enough to convince an unsuspecting woman to marry
Calendar
Place. (201) 833-0515 or
go to JCOT.ORG.
OCTOBER 21
Book sale: Friends of
the Englewood Library
holds its bargain book
sale, including Judaica
and Holocaust titles,
10 a.m.-6 p.m. and over
the weekend. On Bag
Day Sunday, fill a grocery
bag for $5, excluding
specials. At Renaissance
Office Center (side
entrance), 15 Engle
St., next to the library.
(201) 568-2215 or www.
englewoodlibrary.org.
Shabbat in Jersey
City: Congregation
Bnai Jacob offers
dinner outdoors in its
sukkah, with a program
by Rabbi Aaron Katz,
6 p.m. 176 West Side Ave.
(201) 435-5725 or www.
bnaijacobjc.com.
Shabbat in Hoboken:
The United Synagogue of
Hoboken holds services,
7 p.m., with guest
speaker Mark Hetfield,
president and CEO of
the Hebrew Immigrant
Aid Society. Oneg in
the sukkah. 115 Park
Ave. (201) 659-4000 or
hobokensynagogue.org.
Shabbat in Teaneck:
Temple Emeth offers
musical services with
the Temple Emeth Band,
Cantor Ellen Tilem, and
Rabbi Steven Sirbu,
8 p.m. 1666 Windsor
Road. (201) 833-1322 or
www.Emeth.org.
Sunday
OCTOBER 23
Sukkot open house in
Paramus: The JCC of
Paramus/ Congregation
Beth Tikvah offers an
open house with the
Sunday Special for
children, from 4 to 8
years old, focusing on
Sukkot, with crafts,
singing, and dancing,
10 a.m. Open house and
dairy lunch at 11:30 a.m.,
in the shuls sukkah.
Indoors if it is raining.
East 304 Midland Ave.
Marcia, (201) 262-7733 or
edudirector@jccparamus.
org.
Saturday
OCTOBER 22
Shabbat in Teaneck:
Rabbi Gil Student
discusses The Evolution
of Sheva Brachot, at
the Jewish Center of
Teaneck, on Shabbat chol
hamoed Sukkot, Oct.
22, 6:10 p.m. 70 Sterling
communal barbecue in
the sukkah, 1 p.m. 115 Park
Ave. (201) 659-4000 or
hobokensynagogue.org.
Sukkot in Hoboken:
The United Synagogue
of Hoboken holds a
OCTOBER 25
Simchat Torah for
women: Teaneck
Womens Tefillah begins
its annual celebration with
Shacharit at 8:45 a.m.,
followed by hakafot,
Torah reading, Musaf, and
kiddush. For location,
email teaneck.womens.
tefillah@gmail.com.
Wednesday
OCTOBER 26
Dinner and music in Fair
Lawn: The Sisterhood
of Temple Beth Sholom
holds its annual paid
up membership dinner
catered by Kosher Nosh,
6:30 p.m. Music by DJ
Dan Winston. 40-25 Fair
Lawn Ave. Reservations,
(201) 797-9321.
Monday
OCTOBER 24
Simchat Torah in
Franklin Lakes: The
Chabad Jewish Center
celebrates with dancing,
including an outdoor
torch march, buffet
dinner kiddush, open
bar, and a childrens
program with prizes
and giveaways,
5:30 p.m. Kiddush
sponsors welcome.
375 Pulis Ave. www.
chabadplace.org/
simchattorah.
Simchat Torah in
Closter: Temple EmanuEl celebrates with
dancing with the Torahs,
6:30 p.m. Refreshments.
180 Piermont Road.
(201) 750-9997 or www.
templeemanuel.com.
Simchat Torah in
Pompton Lakes:
Congregation Beth
Shalom celebrates
with hakafot and
refreshments,
OCT.
25
Norman Lear
Tuesday
Friday
Author in Paramus:
Best-selling author
Alyson Richman is the
guest speaker at the
Jewish Federation of
Northern New Jerseys
womens philanthropy
event, at JFNNJ, 7:30
p.m. Richman, the author
of The Lost Wife, will
discuss her new book,
The Velvet Hours. 50
Eisenhower Drive. $20/
person includes a copy
of her book and desserts.
(201) 820-3906 or www.
jfnnj.org/velvethours.
Thursday
Friday
OCTOBER 28
OCTOBER 27
Saturday
OCTOBER 29
Shabbat in Closter:
Temple Emanu-El
welcomes daughterand-daughter scholarsin-residence, author
Ann Arnold, and
Holocaust survivor Mark
Schonwetter. During
Shabbat morning
services at 9 a.m.,
the pair will discuss
Together: A Journey
for Survival; a dessert
reception and informal
discussion follow.
180 Piermont Road.
(201) 750-9997 or www.
templeemanuel.com.
Sunday
OCTOBER 30
Walkathon: The
Jewish Association
for Developmental
Disabilities holds its
annual walk, rain or
shine, at Van Saun
Park, Pavilion C, 10 a.m.
It includes a carnival,
games, refreshments,
and prizes. Proceeds
benefit adults with
developmental
disabilities; J-ADD
provides kosher homes in
Bergen County to adults
with developmental and
intellectual disabilities.
(201) 457-0058,
sshapiro@j-add.org, or
www.J-ADD.org .
In New York
Sunday
Sunday
OCTOBER 31
OCTOBER 30
SAR School open
house: SAR High
School in Riverdale
holds an open house,
9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
503 W. 259th St. Nancy
Lerea or Gila Kolb,
(718) 548-2727, ext.
1576, admissions@
sarhighschool.org.
Register at www.
sarhighschool.org/
hsopenhouse.
Singles
Thursday
OCTOBER 20
COURTESY YU
Seniors meet in
Tallman: Singles 65+
Celebrating Agnon:
The Yeshiva University
Center for Israel Studies
hosts a conference on
the works and influence
of Nobel Prize-winning
Israeli author S.Y. Agnon
in commemoration of
the 50th anniversary
of his award. The
conference, Agnons
Stories of the Land of
Israel: Celebrating the
HARVEY HENDLER
The walk is on unpaved, well-maintained trails that include several modest hills. Sturdy shoes are encouraged.
If you bring a dog, you also must bring
pick-up bags. The next scheduled walk
is November 6.
Laurelwood Arboretum is at 725 Pines
Lake Drive West in Wayne. The group
will meet at the Sensory Garden, which
is between the two parking lots.
Email Mitchell Borger at Mitchell.
borger@gmail.com with any questions.
Like us on
Facebook
facebook.com/jewishstandard
www.bcplayers.org
or Call:
201-261-4200
Next on Stage:
The Emperors
New Clothes
2:40 PM
JEWISH STANDARD OCTOBER9/25/16
21, 2016
61
$2.95
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2008
A YEAR-ROUND RESOURCE
The Guide to
Jewish Life
is coming.
To advertise, call 201-837-8818
2013-2014
2015-2016
Gallery
3
n 1 Eric Lee, Joseph Bae, Eric Kwon,
and Ezra Borgen, members of the
Waverunners 10 & Under mens relay
team based at the Kaplen JCC on the
Palisades in Tenafly, recently broke a
New Jersey state swim record. They
swam the 200 yard freestyle relay in
1:53.58; thats a 0.65 second improvement on the standing New Jersey
short course record, made in 2011. The
record-breaking swim was at Seton Hall
University in South Orange. The team is
coached by Juya Cho. PHOTO PROVIDED
n 2 Susan and David Spiegel of Paramus
were honored for their service and commitment at the annual Selichot service
at the JCC of Paramus/Congregation
Beth Tikvah. The honor was bestowed
on Davids parents exactly 30 years
ago. Standing with the couple, from
left, are Rabbi Arthur Weiner; their son,
Max Spiegel; presenter Dr. Richard Winters; the honorees, and their daughters,
Rebecca and Sara. COURTESY JCCP/CBT
n 3 Valley Chabad Hebrew School students recited the Tashlich prayer at
Pascack Brook in Park Ridge with Rabbi
Yosef Orenstein. COURTESY CHABAD
n 4 Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno, left, receives
a menorah and roses from Shterney and
Rabbi Mordechai Kanelsky, Bris Avrohoms associate and executive directors.
Guadagno was the keynote speaker at
the organizations 37th annual dinner/31st
gala wedding at the Sheraton in Parsippany. The Community Service award was
given to representatives of New Jersey
Transit for erecting menorahs in many
public spaces. COURTESY BRIS AVROHOM
Jewish World
FIRST PERSON
The Ben Yehuda Street pedestrian mall in downtown Jerusalem is packed with tourists and local shoppers.
YONINAH/WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
Obituaries
George Blumenthal
Samuel Deutsch
Seymour Margolin
Melvin Opper
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66 Jewish Standard OCTOBER 21, 2016
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vera-nechama.com 201.692.3700
68 Jewish Standard OCTOBER 21, 2016
and ticket; all books must be bought from Books & Greetings.
The store is at 271G Livingston Street in Northvale. For information, call (201)
784-2665, go to www.booksandgreetings.com, or email
booksandgreetings@gmail.com.
Heres a nice recipe that could be made for Sukkot or any
other time.
TM
Call Phyllis
85
2016
ARD.COM
about
Matty Selman talks
the Battle of the Bulge, d,
opening day at Disneylan
Woodstock, Uncle Philips
page 44
Coat, and more.
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6
COUNTY ROOTS page
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SCOTT GARRETTS BERGEN
HEAR DEFENSE OF REFUGEES
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HOBOKEN SHUL TO
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CELEBRATING MILDRED COMEDY FOR KOBY page 12
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NORTH JERSEY
(201) 837-8800
Jewish standard OCtOBer 21, 2016 69
Cell: 201-615-5353
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