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Lamplighters Preschool to Exhibit Engaging Art Experience | Community | thejewishnews.com – The Jewish News

Posted By on May 30, 2024

Three years ago, Lamplighters Preschool opened its doors in Royal Oak, offering a fresh and innovative approach to early childhood education for Jewish families throughout Detroit.

As the only Reggio Emilia-inspired Jewish preschool in the city, Lamplighters a department of the Royal Oak Chabad headed by Rabbi Moishie and Mushky Glitsenstein has quickly become a beacon of progressive Jewish education, emphasizing creativity, community and cultural pride.

At Lamplighters, children are encouraged to express themselves through art, play and hands-on activities, fostering academic skills and a deep connection to their Jewish heritage.

We believe every child is capable and full of potential, says Mushky Glitsenstein, the schools director and founder. Our approach respects and harnesses the natural curiosity of children, guiding them to explore their Jewish identity in meaningful and personal ways.

Lamplighters is not just about teaching Jewish customs and traditions; its about making them meaningful and relevant to the childrens lives. Our goal is to give the kids a positive association with Judaism, Glitsenstein says.

The Glitsensteins credit the schools success to its great staff. The dedicated teachers grant the students a well-rounded education, as well as skills to deal with conflict and emotional regulation.

One of the highlights of the school year is the annual art auction, a vibrant event where families and friends gather to admire and purchase artwork created by the children themselves. The art auction is a wonderful culmination of our year, she says. Its not only a chance to showcase the childrens hard work and creativity but also an opportunity to bring our community together and support the school.

Proceeds from the auction benefit Lamplighters educational programs and maintain their commitment to providing an exceptional learning experience.

Lamplighters Art Auction will be held on Sunday, June 2, 10:30 a.m. at The Norwood, 6531 Woodward Ave. Detroit. For more information, visit http://www.lamplighterspreschool.com/artauction.

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Lamplighters Preschool to Exhibit Engaging Art Experience | Community | thejewishnews.com - The Jewish News

Israel is a reason to live, not just survive – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 30, 2024

After October 7, many a Jew is asking the question: Where should I live? It is a simple question that has within it the deepest of existential questions: Why do I live?

Our basic instinct pressures us to find the best way to survive. If someone is trying to kill us, we assess our fight/flight options to maximize our chances of survival.

When Muslim peoples are threatening our existence, a number of alternatives present themselves.

We could move to a democratic state that allows freedom of religion. However, today those countries have been inundated with Muslim fanatics fueling good old-fashioned antisemitism. No one really knows where this will end, but history has shown that comfortable places for Jews in the Diaspora do not remain so forever. Indeed, that was the very reason modern Zionism began (see Theodor Herzls Der Judenstaat).

We could renounce our Judaism and become Christians or atheists. But this would only delay the Muslim wrath that has its eyes set on world domination in the form of forced conversion to Islam.

We could convert to Islam. But besides capitulating to a murderous death cult, we would be joining a benighted culture that seeks to destroy everything we hold dear about life freedom, equality, opportunity, education only to aid in their endeavor to return the world to a medieval fiefdom ruled by ayatollahs.

We could find some remote place in the world where Jews are not recognized and simply assimilate. But besides such places being few and far between, such a move could entail residing in a third-world economy, culture, and lifestyle.

What kind of life would we be living? And that really is the question. What kind of life do we wish to live? What, really, is life all about?

If it is just to survive physically, well, maybe converting to Islam or living in some third-world country is an option. But, as famed Holocaust survivor and psychotherapist Viktor Frankl (Mans Search for Meaning) taught, we cannot survive without meaning.

It is precisely here that Judaism, and Zionism in particular, comes to answer our question. Judaism teaches that there is a purpose to creation to make the world a better place (tikkun olam) and to make oneself a better person (tikkun hanefesh). Judaism comes with a program to do this, without imposing its religion on others.

For the peoples of the world, Judaism demands only fundamental morality dont kill, dont steal, dont commit adultery, establish just laws, and so on, as set down in the Seven Noahide Laws.

For the Jews of the world, Judaism comes with a program of self-actualization that teaches self-discipline, morality, and altruism. Ultimately, Jewish thought holds that the best way to bring about these lofty goals is by being a nation in its own land (Zionism). It is in our own land, and only in our own land, that we can fully live by our beliefs and serve as an example of the goodness of those beliefs, as Eliezer Berkovits writes in Essential Essays on Judaism.

But these lofty goals demand self-sacrifice.

They demand of each individual Jew to take part in the People of Israel. For 2,000 years we have come together in our Diaspora communities and tried our best to carry the torch of these lofty goals. For 2,000 years the Jewish people talked, prayed, and dreamed about living in their land and living their beliefs. The dream has become a reality in our day.

It was a dream backed by the prophecy of a future reality (Isaiah 11; 43; 60; Jeremiah 30; Ezekiel 37; Amos 9). Today we are living the prophecy in our land and with it, the opportunity to fulfill it.

This is Zionism. It is the reason we live as Jews today. It is our reason for living.

Living simply to survive is not a reason to live, it is an animal instinct. Living to eat, drink, and be merry are not reasons, they are distractions. Of course, everyone wants to have a nice life, a fun life. But more than that, everyone needs to have a meaningful life. A meaningful life is one worth sacrificing for.

To paraphrase Martin Luther King: Without a reason to die, one has not a reason to live.

For over 3,000 years, Judaism has been the reason for which we lived and for which we died. In our day, Zionism is that reason. Living as a Jew is meaningful, but living as a Jew in the Land of Israel is even greater. And that is why early Zionist leader Joseph Trumpledor, who died defending Tel Hai, famously said: It is good to die for our country.

Not because it is good to die, but because it is good to live with meaning for our country.

The writer is an Orthodox rabbi and moral philosopher who holds a Ph.D. in Jewish Philosophy and lectures on the Ethics of AI at Ben-Gurion University. His work can be found at divreinavon.com.

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Israel is a reason to live, not just survive - The Jerusalem Post

The US chose not to stop the Holocaust, but it can choose to stop the IC – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 30, 2024

Neutralizing the death camps Round II: Will the US impose sanctions against the ICC?

On May 2, six Holocaust survivors who were selected to light memorial torches during Israels Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife, Sara.

One of the survivors commented that the State of Israel is the one and only shelter for the Jewish nation. Another applied the lessons of the Holocaust by saying that we cannot count on the worlds nations that make promises.

Netanyahu responded, In the Holocaust, great leaders such as [US president Franklin D.] Roosevelt were told what was happening in Auschwitz, Birkenau, and the death camps. He was told! He knew!

Roosevelt was faced with a proposal to neutralize the death camps, such as by bombing the railway tracks leading to them. Netanyahu recounted Roosevelts response: Over my dead body! I wont lose a single pilot [UK leader Winston] Churchill, whom I very much appreciate, tried to act against the death camps. His army revolted against him.

Indeed, just as Holocaust survivor Michael suggested, the worlds inaction enabled the Holocaust. The Allies had the capabilities and plans for action but, for whatever reason, they decided not to act and to allow the attempted eradication of Judaism to move forward.

As discussed in this column in recent years, Judaism is under assault. As in all previous large-scale attempts to eradicate Judaism, the assault is being carried out through the most relevant Jewish channel of the time, and in our era it is Zionism and the State of Israel.

In this column, I have described the path to Judaisms destruction through Israel-bashing and anti-Zionism. That path includes actions by the International Criminal Court, paralyzing sanctions on Israel and Israelis, arrests of Israeli soldiers, settlers, and politicians, and even confiscating financial assets of Israeli hi-tech companies and individuals (for example, see the May 5, 2022, Jerusalem Post article Israel-bashing is this generations existential threat to Judaism).

Some readers have said that I am exaggerating and that such a path to destruction is merely theoretical. Some said I was focusing on a hypothetical, far-fetched path of destruction that is not likely to happen and that I am diverting attention from the battle against real, present-day antisemitism, such as mobs chanting in Charlottesville, Jews will not replace us.

Indeed, I have acknowledged that the path to the destruction of Judaism is not immediate; it is one day.

On May 19, The Jerusalem Post headline read: The day has come: ICC seeks arrests of Netanyahu, Gallant, and Hamas chief.

Just like after the Oct. 7 attack, Israelis came together to unite against the ICC attack. Nearly all Knesset members signed a letter, saying, The IDF is the most moral army in the world. Our heroic soldiers fight with unparalleled courage and morality, in accordance with international law, as no other army has ever done The scandalous comparison of the prosecutor in The Hague between the leaders of Israel and the heads of the terrorist organization Hamas is an indelible historical crime and a clear manifestation of antisemitism.

Israelis are united, but does the world support us? Or was Holocaust survivor Michael right when he warned that the world cannot be trusted?

On May 20, US President Biden reassured us of his support and his trustworthiness. Just like he stood by Israel in the aftermath of the Oct. 7 attack, he called the ICCs May 19 action outrageous, stating, There is no equivalence none between Israel and Hamas. We stand with Israel against threats to its security.

Such a threat is coming from the ICC and others who are seeking to sanction Israel, its soldiers, its military units, and its civic organizations, and to demoralize Israeli Jewish society.

This is not a time for words just like in the 1940s, when it was not a time to merely condemn the Holocaust that was unfolding day by day.

Biden must, at the very minimum, impose sanctions against those individuals in the ICC responsible for the ideological attack on Judaism.

From biblical times to the present day, when people want to attack a nation, they go for its head. Like it or not, the world sees the Jewish states leader as the leader of the Jewish nation.

The ICC needs to be unmasked for what it has become: a vehicle to assault the Jewish nation, with a side business of prosecuting war criminals around the world.

The ICC is not alone in this mission. Plenty of other organizations are in the same line of business, such as the UN Human Rights Council, which, in addition to its core business of assaulting the Jewish nation, has a side business of defending human rights around the world.

Similarly, Hamas, Hezbollah, al-Qaeda, and ISIS have all helped the poor, provided for the sick, and given charity to thousands of people in need. But let us not be blinded as to what their core business is: terrorism.

Biden must choose from a variety of options against the ICC, ranging from sanctions as a minimal response to shutting down the ICC. The US has the capability to do so. For example, it can give The Netherlands a choice: Expel the ICC from your country or lose US support (Choose: ICC or DC).

It is important to note that the US, through its own actions, has severely compromised its ability to act against the ICC not only by its bizarre decision to institute, in the middle of a war, unrelated open-end sanctions against Israeli Jews who engage in anti-Arab violence and organizations that provide for their defense, but also by the ludicrous idea to sanction and defund Israeli military units fighting in Gaza.

In that same meeting with Holocaust survivors, Netanyahu stated that he prefers to have the world on our side. However, he added, If we need to stand alone, we stand alone... If we do not defend ourselves, nobody will defend us.

The choice that President Biden faces could not be clearer.

Will he act like Roosevelt and allow the attempt to eradicate Judaism to move forward?

Or will he impose crippling sanctions against the ICC and those assaulting the Jewish state, its leaders, its brave soldiers, and its citizens?

The writer is the author of Judaism 3.0: Judaisms Transformation to Zionism (Judaism-Zionism.com). To read his geopolitical articles, go to EuropeAndJerusalem.com.

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The US chose not to stop the Holocaust, but it can choose to stop the IC - The Jerusalem Post

Out of the Shadows – mishpacha.com

Posted By on May 30, 2024

AT some point, weve all studied the Inquisition how the Roman Catholic Church forced Jews, first in Spain and then in Portugal, to either convert to Christianity or leave the country. Those who remained and converted, but kept Judaism in secret, faced tribunals, torture, and death. Tens of thousands are known to have died horrific deaths over that dark period that spanned more than three centuries. It remains unclear how many lived double lives, pretending outwardly to be Christians while secretly practicing Judaism, and managed to survive.

With the Spanish Inquisition starting in 1478, one might think that the event has been relegated to the history books. But globetrotter Moshe Klein had always wondered what had become of those Jews, who have been variously labeled over the years as Anusim, Marranos, Conversos, and Crypto-Jews. At Amsterdams Portuguese Synagogue, during a recent trip to Holland, Klein asked a local if he knew what had happened to Portugals hidden Jews.

The answer left him speechless.

He told me that there was a revived community of Anusim living in Belmonte, says Klein, referring to a bucolic village located in northeast Portugal not far from the Spanish border.

Researching Belmonte became a priority for Klein, who soon discovered that it was one of six communities in Portugals remote countryside whose residents are believed to have descended from Crypto-Jews. Even though he was scheduled to head back home to Williamsburg in two days, the opportunity was just too appealing to pass up. Klein changed his ticket to schedule in a quick side visit to Portugal.

Kleins itinerary was short and targeted, with a good friend joining him for the 28-hour trip. The two planned to go with a local Jewish tour guide to visit Belmontes Orthodox Jewish community, with an additional stop in nearby Trancoso, confident that they had just enough time to get a feel for two very different Jewish villages. Klein admits that he never imagined that he would end up squeezing in a last-minute visit to a third Jewish village in another part of the country, and discovering an authentic shtetl.

Kleins quick visit to Portugal was much different than his trips to some other Jewish communities, where he documents formerly thriving kehillos that are slowly fading into the annals of history. In Belmonte, though, Klein saw a nearly invisible community that is being reborn.

Set high on a mountainside, Belmontes Beit Eliahu Synagogue was built in 1996 to serve the needs of the villages budding Jewish community. Artifacts and documents dating back hundreds of years show that Beit Eliahu stands on the very location where Belmontes shul once existed before the onset of the Inquisition.

Beit Eliahu overlooks a sweeping valley whose green expanse is dotted with clusters of red-roofed homes, the panoramic view bounded by distant mountains. Inside the shul, high windows are topped with drapes, their vivid red color matching the paroches on the aron kodesh, set on an angle in the corner of the shul. A large menorah atop the aron kodesh is flanked by a pair of Luchos, but as majestic as they are, it is the humble ner tamid that is the shuls most unique feature. Shaped like a teapot with a raised, hinged lid, the ner tamid pays homage to the vessels the Anusim used to keep the lights of their Shabbos candles hidden from prying anti-Semitic eyes that hungeredfor Jewish blood.

The town now has a rabbi and a functioning mikveh, and is also home to the Museu Judaico de Belmonte, built in 2005 to document the areas rich Jewish history. The museum highlights Belmontes centuries of hidden Jews and includes hundreds of religious items, drawing tens of thousands of visitors each year. Klein was fascinated to learn about the traditions that evolved over the centuries in Belmonte, as its Jewish community survived underground, with no access to rabbanim, seforim, or any other guidance.

While they appeared to be practicing Christians, Belmontes Jews married among themselves during the many years of the Inquisition. Their children had Christian weddings, but those celebrations were preceded several days earlier by a secret family dinner that included chuppah and kiddushin.

Belmontes Jews commemorated Shabbos with covered candles, but little else. They would refer to Yom Kippur by several names, including the day of the master, the big day, and the spiritual day. Because they were under strict scrutiny on Yom Kippur, they marked the holiest day of the year a day late, on the 11th of Tishrei, to avoid detection. The only other Yom Tov that Belmontes Jews observed was Pesach, known as the holy holiday but, like Yom Kippur, it, too, was subject to significant modification. Inquisitors would station themselves with binoculars on a hillside overlooking Belmonte, surveying households on the first two nights of Pesach for signs of secret Sedorim taking place.

Knowing what was happening, local Jews would avoid eating chometz on the first day of Pesach and would conduct their Seder on the first night of Chol Hamoed, baking what they called the holy bread on that same day, a practice that continues even today, says Klein.

Another Pesach tradition in Belmonte is the prayer of the water, with residents going to the edge of a lake with a branch taken from an olive tree.

They would hit the water like Moshe Rabbeinu did, and then put the branch away, explains Klein, who surmised that the custom is an allusion to Krias Yam Suf.

Klein saw Jewish symbols hearkening back hundreds of years in certain locations in Belmonte, which he found to have somewhat of a touristy feel. But even as the resurgence of Yiddishkeit continues, hundreds of years of furtive behavior has left its mark.

Even the people who have come out as Jewish and openly go to shul still daven in their cellars, notes Klein. Thats where families practiced their religion.

The renovated shul around the red-roofed homes of Belmonte is a testament to tenacity against all odds during 300 years of oppression

It is impossible to fully appreciate the significance of Belmonte having a functional shul and a rabbi without understanding the villages full history.

A stone marker dated 1297 that is believed to have come from Belmontes first shul establishes the presence of Jews in the town as early as the 13th century, and it is likely that there were Jews there even earlier. When the Spanish Inquisition led to the expulsion of all Jews in 1492, Belmontes Jewish population swelled.

But it wasnt long before the winds of hate blew through Portugal as well. Faced with a choice of forced conversion or death, many of Belmontes Jews pretended to renounce their faith even as they continued practicing it in the utmost secrecy. Coming under the suspicion of the local populace, who referred to them as New Christians, the Crypto-Jews lived in fear of being outed, knowing that discovery meant death.

Portugals Inquisition, considered by some to be even more devastating than Spains, finally came to an end in 1821. With centuries having elapsed and no information indicating that Portugals Conversos still existed, it was generally assumed that they had assimilated and faded away. But all that changed in 1917, when Polish engineer Samuel Schwartz walked into a shop in Belmonte called Casa Veraya de Susa. Schwartz was working in the nearby mines, and as he left the store, he was approached by a man who uttered a strange warning.

Dont do business with him, said the man, referring to the stores proprietor, Baltasar Pereira de Susa. He is a Jew.

Having worked previously in Spain with a family who knew that their ancestors had been Marranos, Schwartz was intrigued. He had seen Hebrew letters on stones in a few places in Belmonte, and suspected that there had been a Jewish presence in the hilltop village at one point in time. Was it possible that Belmonte was home to descendants of the original Anusim, still clinging to their traditions and leading double lives centuries after the Inquisition?

There was only one way to find out. Schwartz went back into the shop and asked de Susa if he was Jewish.

The answer was a very firm and resolute no, with de Susa insisting that he was a devout Christian. Still, Schwartz wasnt convinced, and he wondered if perhaps de Susa actually was Jewish, but was afraid to say anything about his heritage. He tried reassuring de Susa, identifying himself as Jewish. But the store owner grew increasingly angry, yelling at Schwartz that he couldnt possibly be a Jew, because there were no more Jews.

The encounter stayed with Schwartz even after he left Casa Veraya de Susa, and he wondered if de Susa understood that admitting his Jewishness wouldnt place him in danger. On his next visit to the shop, Schwartz explained that contemporary Europe was filled with Jews who were openly religious, but de Susa said nothing.

Schwartz kept showing up at the store each week on Erev Shabbos, asking de Susa where he could find challah and where the shul was. Each time he was met with stony silence and anger that grew more palpable with every passing week.

But the hostility that Schwartz had encountered previously was nothing compared to what he experienced on his next visit to Casa Veraya de Susa. The proprietors grandmother was ready for Schwartz when he appeared in the shop, and it was clear that his presence would no longer be tolerated. All the questions that Schwartz tried to ask de Susas grandmother were promptly rebuffed, and she steered the conversation in another direction, challenging him to prove that he was Jewish.

Drawing on a foundational tenet of Yiddishkeit, Schwartz began reciting the words Shema Yisrael. He realized immediately that the two words he had said held absolutely no meaning to de Susa or his grandmother, but he continued on, and in a split second, everything changed. As Schwartz said Hashem, it was clear from the look on the de Susas faces that he had just uttered a code word that identified him as a Yid, one that was only pronounced just once a year in the Converso community on Yom Kippur.

De Susa and his grandmother were in a state of shock, unable to comprehend that they and their fellow Anusim werent the only Jews left in the world. They told Schwartz that for as far back as anyone could remember, praying was done only in the cellar, and Shabbos candles were covered with jars so no one would see their light, which would identify them as Jews. Schwartz learned that de Susas grandmother was the de facto communal leader, taking on the role of chazzan and rabbi a tradition common among the Crypto-Jews because men, not women, were typically scrutinized to see if they were exhibiting any Jewish behaviors.

Schwartz spent several years learning everything he could about Belmontes Jewish community, sharing his discoveries in 1925 in a book he called The New Christians in Portugal in the Twentieth Century. Glimmers of Yiddishkeit that had been concealed in the deepest, darkest recesses of the homes of Anusim began to glow once again, their very existence taking historians by surprise and bearing worldwide testament to Klal Yisraels eternal nature.

A brachah from Belmotes Rabbi Eliyahu Shaeffer, at the crossroads between resurgence and secrecy

Just 45 minutes separate Belmonte and Trancoso, another place that Klein visited in search of Anusim, but the two towns might as well have been located on different planets. While Belmonte had an almost touristy feel, with Jews freely embracing their religious roots, the shadows of the Inquisition linger in Trancoso, half of whose population of 3,000 was Jewish when the centuries-long wave of terror began.

I walked down the street and people would lock themselves in their houses, recalls Klein. I asked someone on the street if he was Jewish or a descendant of Jews, and he threatened to call the police on me.

A prominently placed pole that had once been used to reeducate Conversos made it easy for Klein to appreciate Trancosos fearful vibe.

It was used for someone who they didnt feel was chayav misa, but still had to be punished, explains Klein. They would tie a guilty person to the pole and hit him and curse him to teach him a lesson.

Klein saw another spot in the center of Trancoso that had an even darker legacy.

Whoever was caught practicing Yiddishkeit would be burned there, says Klein.

Trancosos locals were clearly unnerved by Klein and his peyos. Some ignored him, while others gave him a polite smile before quickly making their way as far away from him as possible. A visit to the house that had once belonged to Trancosos rabbi evoked a similar response, with Klein asking neighbors if it was true that the current occupants were his descendants.

The second I asked, there was no one to talk to, recalls Klein. The whole idea of a Yid in Portugal, especially in that region, brings anxiety. People just dont want to associate with anything that looks Jewish.

But even as Trancoso has followed a different path than Belmonte, with its residents outwardly clinging to the veneer of Christianity adopted by their ancestors hundreds of years ago, the towns Jewish presence is hard to miss.

On every corner of every street, there was a Jewish sign or a piece of Jewish history, says Klein. There are buildings with known Jewish significance, but no one will talk about it. Everyone was nice, but it was like being in the shtetl where the distinct feeling is,Dont come here, dont mix with us. They just want to live life and be left alone.

Because their Yiddishkeit was practiced in secrecy, the minhagim in Trancoso evolved differently than in Belmonte. Trancosos Jews would fast on Yom Kippur but would grill a non-kosher animal near a window so that passersby would smell the meat and assume it was being eaten that day. And it is commonly believed that many of the crosses engraved in the stones next to the doorways of many homes were placed there by Anusim, who hoped to convince outsiders that they had renounced their Jewish faith.

A Jewish cultural center with an on-site synagogue was built in Trancoso in 2012, but it is clear that even though the towns religious roots are being recognized, Jewish residents are not rushing to reveal their ancestry. Similarly, the sizable number of centuries-old locked homes whose ownership remains unknown had Klein wondering if they still guard long-held secrets.

If theres one thing that I learned visiting Belmonte and Trancoso, it is never to bet against the resilience of the Jewish People, says Klein. They practiced what they understood as Judaism for five centuries with no guidance. It is amazing to see how they hung onto their traditions.

(Originally featured in Mishpacha, Issue 1013)

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Out of the Shadows - mishpacha.com

Orthodox synagogue in Nashville with ice cream, music ‘ministries’ hits the high notes at 120 – JNS.org – JNS.org

Posted By on May 30, 2024

(May 29, 2024 / JNS)

During the COVID-19 pandemic, when people were keeping their distance in Nashville, Tenn., as they were throughout the country and globally, Rabbi Saul Strosberg came up with a way to keep his community engaged.

Strosberg, who leads Congregation Sherith Israel, put a freezer in the parking lot behind the Orthodox synagogue.

It was always stocked with ice cream, he tells JNS. Anyone could always come to the shul anytimeday or night, any day of the weekand get ice cream out of the freezer to make and keep shul a central place for people. Kids, adults, Jews, non-Jews. It just became the place, and weve continued that.

Members of the community sponsor the frozen treats, and some neighbors of the synagogue even stop by on their walks to get a snack. Strosberg estimated that the shul has handed out some 40,000 to 50,000 ice-cream novelties, whether bars or popsicles, over the past four years.

My Christian colleagues call that our ice-cream ministry, he tells JNS.

The frozen-food ministry is one of several ways that Strosberg, who grew up in Upstate New York, is serving up Judaism la mode in the Athens of the South.

Great bones

When Strosberg first came to Nashville nearly 20 years ago to interview for his current job, the then 100-year-old Orthodox synagogue drew 60 to 70 congregants on a typical Shabbat morning.

The shul was really on the decline. It was mostly white hair. No kids. Poor finances, he tells JNS in a recent video chat from his Nashville home. But we felt like the bones were great, and the people who were there were very open to growing and breathing new life in it. Very tolerant. Very open-minded.

He was offered the position, and he and his wife, Rabba Daniella Pressner, opted to accept. Their four children now attend Akiva School, the K-6 Jewish day school where Pressner is the principal. Strosberg founded a very unusual Jewish middle-school program for Jewish and non-Jewish students for which he serves as its head of school, and the Kehilla High School, where he teaches Talmud, debuted in 2022.

Some 30 students attend the middle schoolwhere there are electives and students can take things like instead of Jewish lawand Strosberg hopes enrollment will be at 40 by the fall. The high school will have 18 students this fall.

In the middle school, when the Jewish students have tefillah (prayer), the non-Jewish kids have a program called Spiritual Start, he explains. When the Jewish kids have limudei kodesh (religious studies), the non-Jewish kids have a program that we had created for us called A Soulful World, about world religions and morals.

In 20 years, attendance at the shul has nearly doubled. Including adults and children, between 125 and 150 people now attend Shabbat services, and most opt to stay for the weekly lunch after services that Strosberg introduced. (The shul membership is about 200 units.)

Under Pressners leadership, Akiva, which is celebrating its 70th birthday this year, has grown from fewer than 60 students 20 years ago to 112 students this coming fall, according to Strosberg.

We both have worked very, very hard to build a community that is unapologetically who we are, but also very broad, he says.

Multitude of milestones

Congregation Sherith Israel traces its origins to 1870. In 1887, a group of Hungarian Jewish immigrants sought a charter from the city as the Hungarian Benevolent Society of Nashville; in 1904, some members of the society broke away to form Sherith Israel, according to the synagogue website. When its charter was issued on July 26, 1905, Sherith Israel was the citys only Orthodox congregation, it states.

This year, the shul celebrates its 120th anniversaryad meah vesrim, the longevity of human life, per Genesis 6:3. Strosberg, who became the congregations rabbi in August 2005, is slated to celebrate two decades at Sherith Israel next year, which according to Pirkei Avot is the age that an individual is ready to earn a living.

What I realize is that 20 years for me also means 20 years for Daniella, Strosberg tells JNS. As hard as I work for this community, she works even harder with the schools, and its a true partnership.

It can be difficult in a Jewish community that is so remote to hire faculty and staff, according to Strosberg. We also have these amazing people who walk through the door every day. You never know whats coming. You never know the opportunity.

In 20 years, you build really deep relationships, he says. Thats the reward.

The biggest differences at the shul since he arrived are that today, there are tons of babies and kids, and the atmosphere is very heimishe, he says, using the Yiddish word for homey or comfortable. Strosberg also notes that the food is much better. Gone are the pretzel and gefilte-fish kiddushes, and now there are substantial lunches after services.

Sherith Israel was a congregation of immigrants in its early days. Now its a shul of Americans, although we do have immigrants from Iran and from the former Soviet Union. But they are still immigrants because theyre immigrating from different states to Tennessee, he tells JNS.

The immigration story hasnt ended, he says.

Strosberg is a transplant from Schenectady in Upstate New York, just 15 minutes from the state capital of Albany, where he grew up going to a traditional synagogue that was the center of our lives in many ways.

I just always felt home in synagogue, he says. Love Jewish tradition and love people.

After graduating from Yeshiva University in Manhattan with a business degree, he went to the rabbinical school Yeshivat Chovevei Torah in Riverdale, the Bronxoften referred to as part of open Orthodoxyfor ordination. He was part of the second rabbinical class at the seminary, which opened in 1999, and became a rabbi in 2005. (Strosberg tells JNS that he had no qualms about attending a school in its infancy since Rabbi Avi Weiss, a well-known rabbi and activist, was one of the schools spiritual leaders.)

He tells JNS that working with the community is somewhat of a family business. Strosbergs father is a doctor, his mother is a social worker, and his siblings work in Jewish education.

At Chovevei, the mission was to serve Jewish people where they are, including inspiring newly-minted rabbis to leave New York and other large metropolitan Jewish areas and to try to make a difference in smaller communities.

That really spoke to me, Strosberg says. He told JNS that he turned down job offers in bigger Jewish communities. I saw that this is really where theres good work to be done, he adds.

When he and Pressner moved to Nashville in July 2005, she had graduated from Barnard College with majors in religion and dance, as well as participated in the Drisha Institute scholars program the year the two married.

She agreed to go on this journey to see if we can make a difference in Nashville, he says.

The two came at just the right time, Strosberg figures. Nashville is a growing city, and he credits the shuls growth to that expansion and liveliness.

Nashville was totally not on our radar. We were thinking maybe New England or some of the more obvious places, he says. The furthest Id been around this part of the countryI used to play music and be an adviser for Midwest NCSY.

Omaha, Neb. Places like that, he says. He played keyboard and trumpet for wedding bands when he lived in New York. He still plays but not as much as I used to.

Southern hospitality

The Southern warmth and hospitality is so profound, Strosberg tells JNS. You feel it, and thats part of the synagogue missionto be warm.

What exactly does that mean beyond being a clich?

You walk to shul with a kippah and the mailman, the neighbor and everyone says Shabbat shalom, even if theyre not Jewish, he says.

Some congregations have formal greeters, who introduce themselves to visitors. At Sherith Israel, its every single person in shul who walks up to them and says, Whats your name? Were glad youre here, Strosberg says. Its inherent. The idea of welcoming people.

Its not welcoming them because they look wealthy or because we hope they join the shul, he adds.

When one runs into other Jews in grocery stores in larger communities on Friday afternoons and the people say, Come for Shabbos, that means that they dont have time to talk to you now, according to Strosberg. Maybe there will be a future Shabbat where we can get together.

In Nashville, you stop somebody in the grocery store, you could be stuck there for half an hour because you want to talk to them and youre having a good time, he says.

Tourists and businesspeople come to the shul since it is the only Orthodox one in the city. Strosberg gives out the code for the shul and his cell phone number. If a visitor during the week has an obligation to lead services because he is saying Kaddish, he is free to do so in his own nusach, or custom, Strosberg says. (Typically, shuls are strictly Ashkenazi or Sephardi in this regard.)

The openness is lechatchilah, not bdieved, he adds, using the rabbinic terms for what is preferable and sufficient in a pinch, respectively.

Its not begrudging, he says. We passed the threshold of being desperate for more people. Were just desperate to be welcoming. Were desperate to fulfill our mission.

For Strosberg, the mission is also somewhat of a renaissance rabbinic man. He oversees the communitys eruva rabbinic mechanism that allows for carrying items on Shabbat in certain instancesand he provides kosher certification for Nashville eateries. In fact, the food for the American Jewish Press Association annual meeting in Nashville in early June was under his certification.

Music therapy

Since Oct. 7, there has been more security at the synagogue, according to Strosberg, who has seen people coming have come out of the woodwork wanting to become more a part of the community.

He had been trying to think what the music city could do for Israel in the aftermath of the Hamas terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7 when he visited a synagogue in Boca Raton, Fla., where a program hosted Israeli soldiers and provided them with therapy.

Strosberg liked the idea and tailored it to Nashville. The new program Promise Sessions brings up-and-coming Israeli musicians who served in the Israel Defense Forces to Nashville to record albums.

Patricia (Patty) Heaton, who played Debra Barone in Everybody Loves Raymond, was one of many actors who moved to Nashville from Los Angeles. The actress, who is not Jewish, contacted Strosberg after Oct. 7 to ask what she could do to help.

She partnered on the program and connected Strosberg with a producer at the top recording venue Blackbird Studio, which according to its website is the first choice of many accomplished artists, including Taylor Swift, John Mayer, Dolly Parton, Beck, Rush, Sheryl Crow, Miley Cyrus, Pearl Jam, Neil Young and others.

The first group of three soldiers has already recorded their music. The rabbi says, one of the songs, we feel like its going to become one of the anthems of Oct. 7.

The Israeli musicians give performances in Nashville and receive trauma counseling, according to Strosberg. Promise Sessions also bring light and life to the lyrics and poetry of soldiers who didnt survive, he says.

The program brings together people from the shul, the Jewish Federation and the art community: It was just magic, he says.

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Orthodox synagogue in Nashville with ice cream, music 'ministries' hits the high notes at 120 - JNS.org - JNS.org

Inside the Texas synagogue where a radical Islamist held Jews at gunpoint for 11 hours – Haaretz

Posted By on May 30, 2024

News Life and Culture Columnists and Opinion Haaretz Hebrew and TheMarker Partnerships

Haaretz.com, the online English edition of Haaretz Newspaper in Israel, gives you breaking news, analyses and opinions about Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish World. Haaretz Daily Newspaper Ltd. All Rights Reserved

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Inside the Texas synagogue where a radical Islamist held Jews at gunpoint for 11 hours - Haaretz

Man arrested for Pittsburgh synagogue vandalism and possessing explosive – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 30, 2024

A Pittsburgh man was arrested on Thursday for being in possession of explosive materials and for being responsible for graffiti spray-painted on a Squirrel Hill neighborhood synagogue, the Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh said on Friday.

William Murray, 33, is facing 34 charges for possession of explosive or incendiary materials, causing or risking catastrophe, and multiple counts of making or possessing prohibited weapons, according to the Federation.

The suspect had been set to appear in court on May 14 after he had been charged with ethnic intimidation, institutional vandalism, and criminal mischief for inscribing a hate symbol on the Shaare Torah Synagogue on April 8, but according to the Jewish organization, he had failed to attend the hearing.

The synagogue reported to the Pittsburgh police that Murray inscribed what was initially thought to be a Star of David. But police later said that upon further examination and additional photographs, it closely resembled a hate symbol used by the KKK [Ku Klux Klan] instead.

The Federation said that they did not believe Murray poses a threat to [the] community, at this time.

We remain in a heightened threat environment and are working closely with law enforcement to monitor potential threat activity, said the Federation.

The greater Pittsburgh area is suffering an uptick in antisemitic graffiti, according to the Federation. It logged 128 incidents in 2024, while during the same period in 2023, there were only 44 incidents reported.

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Man arrested for Pittsburgh synagogue vandalism and possessing explosive - The Jerusalem Post

Synagogues focus on building compassion for all those suffering from the Israel-Hamas conflict – NPR

Posted By on May 30, 2024

Synagogue leaders and members are working to cultivate compassion for the many sides in the Israel-Hamas conflict. Nam Y. Huh/AP hide caption

At Congregation Beth Shir Shalom in Santa Monica, Calif., Rabbi Alex Kress welcomes people to a casual Sabbath service on a recent Friday night.

Shabbat shalom, he says. We are going to start our service with candles.

Kress lights the candles and a warm glow illuminates his face and the room. The cantor and congregation sing in the Sabbath. Children squirm in pews and wander the aisles. Outside, construction on a new security fence is mostly done. The fence is a recent sign of the times. These past seven months have been hard on Kress and his congregation.

As I think about how to keep the tent up for everyone to find shelter under, he says, I've leaned much more towards pastoring than towards preaching any positions, any politics.

Because politics arent, Kress says, what his people need. Rather, they long for a sense of security, and they need to be comforted in a time of rising antisemitism.

Many Jews in my community don't feel safe, Kress says, and that is a new experience for many of them, that often arrests their ability to be compassionate or show empathy for the other side in this moment.

This moment is one in which family and friends in Israel have been have been killed, taken hostage or displaced. The American Jewish community makes up less than two and a half percent of the U.S. population, and that minority status has been thrown into stark relief since the Hamas October 7th attack on Israel and the subsequent protests across this county. Many Jews take personally pro-Palestinian campus protests and criticism of the way Israel is waging its military campaign in Gaza.

I feel as a rabbi a huge pastoral job to hold their hand through that moment and also guide them towards that compassionate light that we know we can achieve again, says Kress, even though we've had this horrible thing happen that has hurt us and stopped us from being our truest, best selves.

Best selves that Kress says his congregants long to be as much as they long to feel safe. The word compassion comes up often both as a wish that more non-Jews felt compassion for Jews after the killing of more than 1,200 people in Israeli and the taking of hundreds of hostages on Oct. 7th and also as a wish for more Jews to articulate their compassion for the plight of Gazans.

Upstairs from Kresss office, Beth Shir Shalom board president Deb Novak is setting up for the congregations annual fundraising gala. Shes a nutrition instructor at Santa Monica College and has raised her family in this congregation. Her kids are now in high school. Novak says shes seen a broadening of concern beyond the Jewish community in the months since the Hamas attack.

Everyone in our congregation feels very strongly about the safety of the people in Israel and getting the hostages out, she says, but also the safety of the innocent people in Gaza.

Novak says at her synagogue these days theres a lively conversation about the war that often starts like this: There has to be a better way than the severity of the destruction and the harm that is happening to the people in Gaza.

But Novak says that sentiment isnt often talked about publicly because of a desire among American Jews to express solidarity with Israel and with Israeli Jews in the U.S.

As difficult as the conversations are, theyre taking place, says Beth Shir Shamon member Al Courey, who also serves on the synagogue board.

You can't really talk about October 7th without talking about the suffering of the Palestinians, he says, not just the current suffering, but the sufferings since the founding of the state of Israel.

Courey is a professor emeritus of biochemistry at UCLA. Hes acutely felt the conflict in recent weeks, with pro-Palestinian protests on his campus devolving into violence after a group of pro-Israel counter-protestors attacked the student encampment.

I'm actually an Arab-American, Courey says, and so that certainly heightens the compassion I feel for the suffering of the Arabs in Gaza right now.

Its a compassion that grew even more poignant for him earlier this spring as his family observed Passover.

When you talk about the ten plagues, you dip your finger into the wine and put a drop of wine on your plate for each plague to remind you of the suffering of the Egyptians, he says. Somebody suggested we should put an 11th drop of wine on our plate to remember the suffering of the Palestinians in Gaza.

Coureys family did, in fact, dip their fingers an 11th time.

Across the country, at Temple Ner Tamid, in Bloomfield, N.J., with Sabbath services underway, Rabbi Marc Katz stands to introduce a prayer.

As we do each week, he says, we add a special prayer for the state of Israel a prayer that speaks to all of the many complexities of this conflict.

Its a lengthy petition thanking God for the Jewish state and asking for its protection. Among the lines that stand out in these times is this one:

Master of compassion, Katz prays, help us to hold the humanity and the heartache of the Jewish people, of all the residents of the state of Israel, while also holding the humanity and dignity of the Palestinian people.

Addressing the humanity and dignity of Gazans in the liturgy itself, says Katz, helps cultivate a heightened moral sensitivity within the congregation. He points to a recent example of that concern playing out.

We had a fundraiser for a medevac unit in the [Israeli] Air Force, Katz says, And by this time, Israel had already started dropping bombs on Gaza. And although we purposely picked a medevac unit, the fact that we were giving money to the Air Force caused some congregants to push back.

A pushback Katz says he welcomes as it shows his congregation is engaging deeply with the Israel-Hamas War at an ethical level.

It is possible and I do believe the majority of rabbis feel this way to criticize Israel's actions through love and to be proud Zionists says Katz, and to care about Israel and to love Israel and at the same time to be able to see Israel truly for what it is, in the same way that we see family members truly for what they are.

One can love family members while at the same time being deeply troubled by their actions.

In west Los Angeles, congregants at IKAR sing in the Sabbath with a musical round that swells and resonates until it fills the room. IKAR is a community of more than twelve hundred families, led by Rabbi Sharon Brous. In recent weeks, shes been preaching about campus protests.

Last week, she says standing before her congregation, I argued here that antisemitism has been normalized in parts of the solidarity movement and that it threatens not only our Jewish students, but also the righteous call for justice for Palestinians.

Her sermons have also been critical of the violence pro-Israel protestors perpetrated at UCLA. She stresses the importance of holding these two ideas together.

Longtime IKAR member Shawn Landres says the news over the last several months has sparked lots of discussion within the congregation.

I've talked to so many people who really are leaning into Jewish safety or peaceful protest, he says, but the most thoughtful voices are the ones that are holding two thoughts.

Two thoughts about the very same thing, says Landres, who works as a civic strategist.

For me, one of the Rorschach tests is Free Palestine. I'm for a free Palestine. I'm also for a free Israel, he says. The two are not mutually exclusive. In fact, you're not going to have the one without the other.

What makes this current moment so difficult is that the two realities that seem diametrically opposed are also two realities that are irreducibly true.

The task of confronting those truths has focused the work of Rabbi Brous as a religious leader.

How do you hold both your commitment to stand with those people whose loved ones have been in Gaza now for an unthinkable amount of time, suffering in all kinds of ways she asks. And also know that any child that is killed in our effort to retrieve those hostages or any innocent who is killed, that itself is a moral catastrophe? And that is the challenge of our time.

Its a challenge Brous navigates with the help of a story found in the collection of early rabbinic teachings knows as the Mishnah. Its a story shes talked and written about extensively, including in her recent book The Amen Effect: Ancient Wisdom to Mend Our Broken Hearts and World.

Jews used to come from all across the land, and they would ascend to Jerusalem and ascend the Temple Mount, she says, and they would circle around the perimeter of the courtyard counterclockwise, except for someone with a broken heart.

The broken hearted would enter the same way, but circle the courtyard in the opposite direction.

And this sacred encounter, says Brous, would occur between the broken hearted and the people who had a little bit of strength in them, in which they would look into each other's eyes. And ask, Tell me what happened to your heart?

Brous believes those early rabbis tell this story to teach that the obligation is not to run away or retreat from relationships even difficult ones but rather to look with compassion and curiosity upon those suffering especially when we feel alienated by them, she says. And lean toward one another with love and with grace.

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Synagogues focus on building compassion for all those suffering from the Israel-Hamas conflict - NPR

Another Montreal synagogue and school fired upon | City News | thesuburban.com – The Suburban Newspaper

Posted By on May 30, 2024

The Young Israel Synagogue and school on Hillsdale in Cte des Neiges-NDG was fired upon about 3 a.m. Tuesday May 28, but police were only called to the scene the afternoon of Wednesday May 29. The shooting comes six months after Yeshiva Gedolah on Deacon, two blocks away from the Young Israel, was fired upon twice. The latest incident also occurred a few days after a Jewish girls school was shot at in Toronto.

Outremont MP Rachel Bendayan stated Wednesday evening, "four shots at a Jewish school in Hillsdale early Tuesday. I spoke with school administration, community leaders and the federal Minister of Public Safety. The police are investigating. This is the third shooting at a Jewish school in [the] Outremont [riding]. This has to stop."

Montreal Mayor Valrie Plante posted, "It is completely unacceptable that a Jewish school is once again targeted. Antisemitism has no place in Montreal. The SPVM is on the scene to investigate and I am confident that they will once again find the guilty person."

Monique Lamarre, a Hillsdale resident, toldThe Suburbanand Rebel News she heard the shots at around 3 a.m. Tuesday.

For full story and community reaction please see The Suburban on Wednesday.

Excerpt from:

Another Montreal synagogue and school fired upon | City News | thesuburban.com - The Suburban Newspaper

At Vilna Shul synagogue, the souls of the dead are stirring – The Boston Globe

Posted By on May 30, 2024

The pews of the sanctuary have been pushed back and turned so that audience members will face each other, with the scaffolding in the middle.

Its the first time in the Vilna Shuls history that the pews have been moved, says Dalit Horn, executive director of the Vilna Shul, but we were open to creating a stage experience that is convenient and unconventional.

After October 7 [when Hamas attacked Israel], I wondered where human souls go when they are stuck in between two worlds, Golyak says. The Dybbuk speaks to the experience of refugees, as well as the history of the immigrant Jews who established this shul, and then moved on again.

The plot centers on a young woman who becomes possessed by a dybbuk a malicious spirit on her wedding day. The dybbuk is the spirit of the young Hasidic scholar she loved but her father forbade her to marry because he was poor. The scholar died when he learned she was marrying another man. The play blends Jewish folklore and mysticism into a story of star-crossed love. The two leading roles are played by actor Andrey Burkovskiy and actor and film director Yana Gladkikh, both celebrated in Russia before emigrating to the United States.

As the actors rehearse, moving up and around the scaffolding, on a raised platform or close to the Torah ark, the production feels less like its being staged in the sanctuary and more a haunting of the space by ghosts disturbed by the renovations. Of course, mounting a site-specific production is nothing new for Golyak and the Arlekin team. While last falls transformation of an empty basement restaurant space into a bomb shelter and dreamscape for The Gaaga earned Elliot Norton awards for design and direction, Golyaks vision for his sets are never simply backdrops but environments integral to the theatrical experience.

History is layered into this synagogue, says Golyak. When I saw those paintings on the walls I doubled down on the idea of renovation, and uncovering things hidden just below the surface. The scaffolding, which goes almost into the skylight, allows us to see the otherworldliness of the space thats uncovered by the story.

Anskys play, written in Russian, was first performed in Vilnius, Lithuania (also known as Vilna), which was, at the beginning of the 20th century, the global center of Jewish culture. The show eventually became a staple of the popular Yiddish theater. The Vilna Troupe toured Europe with the production, but during Nazi occupation of Lithuania, 95 percent of its estimated Jewish population of 265,000 was murdered.

Naming this synagogue the Vilna Shul in 1919 honored the place where these immigrants came from, says Horn, and while the paintings depicting biblical stories represent the culture, religious traditions, and motifs they wanted to carry with them, there are distinctly American architectural design touches including a sculpture of an eagle with outstretched wings protecting the Torah, and wooden doors decorated with scallop shells that nod to acculturation in their new homeland.

As the Vilna Shul enters its own new phase as Bostons Center for Jewish Culture, Horn says the organization is committed to serving as a host and convenor, supporting artists and helping them tell their stories. We hope this site-specific show will spark interest in Arlekin and the Vilna Shul and provide new opportunities to connect with the Boston community.

Busy summer stages

While local theater companies will soon take a well-deserved summer break, theres no shortage of shows within reach.

While Broadway in Boston, the North Shore Music Theatre, and Ogunquit Playhouse all offer a full slate of summer musicals, the Berkshires are buzzing with Shakespeare at Shakespeare & Company in Lenox, new works at the Great Barrington Public Theater, a mix of concerts, new and old titles on the Berkshire Theatre Groups stages in both Stockbridge and Pittsfield, and a heady mix of musicals, cabaret, and plays celebrating Barrington Stage Companys 30th anniversary. Just over the border in Chester, Vt., the Chester Theatre Company always provides a surprising mix of performers and plays.

If its easier to just hop on the T, Moonbox Productions is offering its third annual New Works Festival June 20-24, presenting eight new plays across six stages at the Boston Center for the Arts and Calderwood Pavilion. Tickets are pick your price. And be sure to mark your calendar for Commonwealth Shakespeare Companys annual gift to the city, Free Shakespeare on the Common. This year the company is staging The Winters Tale, July 16-Aug. 4.

And if you need a breath of salt air, head north to Gloucester Stage Company for its busy summer season, or south to the Cape where you can find musicals at the Cape Playhouse, intimate dramas and comedies at Harbor Stage Company, and a mix of new work at Wellfleet Harbor Actors Theater, celebrating its 40th anniversary, before ferrying over to Marthas Vineyard for new works at Marthas Vineyard Playhouse or plays and musicals at the Theatre Workshop of Nantucket.

Chinese folklore and the Bard

CHUANG Stage creates a potent blend of William Shakespeare and Chinese folklore for the world premiere of Nwa in Fairyland, playing at the Boston Center for the Arts Black Box through Saturday. Brandon Zang, currently a student in the MFA Playwriting Program at Boston University, has written a coming-of-age story focusing on Benji, a a Chinese transracial adoptee, whose life takes a magical turn when he is cast as Puck in his high schools production of Shakespeares A Midsummer Nights Dream. As Benji prepares to play the magical messenger, he meets Nwa, the Chinese goddess of creation, and goes on an adventure that blends languages, identities, and cultures. For ticket information, go to chuangstage.org/nuwa-in-fairyland.

Paulus directs in New York

American Repertory Theater artistic director Diane Paulus moonlights at Lincoln Center to direct the world premiere of N/A The Play, starting June 11 at the Newhouse Theater. Former congressional aide Mario Correas new play stars Emmy winner Holland Taylor as N, the first woman speaker of the House, and Ana Villafae as A, the youngest woman ever elected to Congress, as it chronicles a battle of wits between two strong-willed women.

Terry Byrne can be reached at trbyrne818@gmail.com.

THE DYBBUK

Presented by Arlekin Players Theatre. At Vilna Shul, 18 Phillips St. Through June 23. arlekinplayers.com

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At Vilna Shul synagogue, the souls of the dead are stirring - The Boston Globe


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