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Corsicana receives $25k grant to maintain Temple Beth-El – Corsicana Daily Sun

Posted By on June 27, 2017

The Texas Jewish Historical Society is donating $25,000 to Corsicanas century-old, onion- domed synagogue, an architectural gem that needs $403,000 to replace rotting wood, upgrade HVAC equipment and install a fire-sprinkler system.

The city, which has owned and maintained the Moorish revival Temple Beth-El since 1987, is optimistic that the TJHS grant will attract funds from Jewish foundations and individuals, which in the past have contributed little for the landmarks preservation.

Babbette Samuels, 89, the oldest surviving member of Corsicanas once-thriving Jewish community, said it was a miracle that the TJHS approved the $25,000 grant. The temple is a monument to Judaism and to this small town, the octogenarian said, following an emotional discussion and vote at a TJHS board meeting June 11 in Austin. The city of Corsicana has been taking care of the synagogue all these years and will continue to do so. It just wants financial help.

The 117-year-old Temple Beth-El is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and has a Texas Historical Marker. Although repurposed as a city community center, the worship area with its stained-glass windows, vintage menorahs and wooden pews hosts Shabbat services once a month, drawing up to 20 people from miles around.

Dallas attorney Bud Silverberg, who grew up in Corsicana, told the TJHS board, Temple Beth-El is not just a structure. It represents a part of our Jewish heritage and the lives of Jews living in small towns in Texas and across our great country.

Since 1980, when Temple Beth-Els congregation disbanded and its exotic building faced demolition, the local Christian community has rallied to preserve the religious landmark. Initially, a Save-the-Temple Committee staged potluck suppers, applied for grants, and hired a preservation architect to restore the building and reopen it as a community center available for weddings, parties and meetings.

The synagogue, located on 15th Street, is within sight of the Collin Street Bakery, known internationally for its fruitcake. Both landmarks draw tourists from around the world, most recently two Israelis representing the Israel Movement for Reform and Progressive Judaism. The website http://www.Synagogues360.org describes the building as a fine example of Eastern European wood and Gothic masonry motifs modified for American frontier construction.

Corsicana (population 25,000), a rural county seat 55 miles southwest of Dallas, budgets $30,000 annually for the temples upkeep. Seven years ago it restored the buildings twin onion-domed towers and three stained-glass windows which some authorities say were crafted by Tiffany.

British-born Judith Steely, a non-Jew and president of the recently formed Corsicana Preservation Foundation, said local residents often wonder why Jews havent contributed toward maintaining this landmark. Last year she convened a meeting of Dallas residents with ancestral ties to Corsicanas Jewish community. The idea to approach the TJHS for funds came from that meeting. The ad hoc committee plans to draft a formal fundraising plan to tap Jewish institutions and individuals.

The city restored three stained-glass windows seven years ago.

The city preservation society has also received a $25,000 restoration grant from the Navarro Community Foundation and $1,500 from the Church in the Park, a local Southern Baptist congregation. The Parks and Recreation Department has published a handsome brochure promoting the temple as a unique venue for weddings and receptions.

The distinctive synagogue, with its octagonal towers and keyhole windows, has seating for 150. The main sanctuary has a rose window with a Star of David and two other stained-glass windows depicting matching tablets of the Ten Commandments.

During the first half of the 20th century, Corsicana was a thriving oil, industrial, mercantile and agricultural center. It became home to more than 500 Jews and both a Reform and Orthodox synagogue. During the late-1960s, the younger generation began gravitating to urban areas. Faced with dwindling membership, the Reform Temple Beth-El, unable to afford the upkeep of its landmark building, disbanded in 1980. The Orthodox congregation, Agudas Achim, dissolved in 1999. Its building became a senior citizens center.

Temple Beth-El is the only onion-domed house of worship in the Southwest, and one of a handful across the country. The others include Temple Aaron in Trinidad, Colorado; Congregation Bnai Israel in Butte, Montana; and the Plum Street Temple in Cincinnati. The onion dome harks back to the Golden Age of Spain in Jewish history. Its use in Moorish revival architecture reflected optimism that the American Jewish experience would lead to another Golden Age.

Writing in 1990 about Corsicanas distinctive synagogue, Texas historian Jane Manaster described it as a two-story wooden structure fronted by a gabled roof and squat twin towers, each exotically topped by an onion-shaped cupola or dome. Her article in the East Texas Historical Journal deemed the house of worship a remarkable ecclesiastical heirloom.

Renovations on Temple Beth-El have already begun, utilizing funds donated to date. According to Charla Allen, director of Parks and Recreation, restoration work is divided into four phases:

Remove existing siding and substrate, install new plywood, weather barrier, and wood siding with trim to match original;

Seal dissimilar material junctions with urethane sealant; paint new siding and trim with two coats of acrylic latex paint;

Refurbish 24 windows and two doors;

Install fire-sprinkler system and up-to-date heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning systems.

For further information or to make individual donations, contact the City of Corsicana Parks and Recreation Department, 903-654-4874 or http://www.cityofcorsicana.com.

Reprinted with the permission of the Texas Jewish Post.

On the Net: http://tjpnews.com/preserving-small-town-history/

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Corsicana receives $25k grant to maintain Temple Beth-El - Corsicana Daily Sun

News Transcript Datebook, June 28 – centraljersey.com

Posted By on June 27, 2017

The Marlboro Library, Wyncrest Road, Marlboro, will present the band Rave On! in concert on July 5 featuring the music of Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, Chuck Berry, Roy Orbison and other early rock and roll musicians. Free admission; ticket required; limit of four tickets per family. Details: 732-536-9406.

The Italian American Cultural Society of New Jersey invites members of the public to its July 13 dinner meeting at Basiles Italian Restaurant, 536 Park Ave., Freehold. Special guest Candice Guardino will speak about her new play, Italian Bred, coming to Asbury Park this summer. The July 13 dinner is $35 per person for society members and $45 for non-members. Cash is preferred, no credit cards. To reserve seating, call Anthony Grassi at 917-743-3311 or Richard Favara at 732-861-9465.

Barbara Bogner, who taught human anatomy and physiology at Middlesex County College for 24 years, will present Our Beautiful Baffling Brain as part of the 2017 Discussion Series at St. Robert Bellarmine Co-Cathedral, 61 Georgia Road, Freehold Township, from 7-9 p.m. July 12. The series is sponsored by Kathy Lo Bue, managing director, Glen Eagle Advisors LLC. Adults of all ages are invited. Refreshments provided.The series is free, non-sectarian and open to the community. RSVP to 732-866-6660.

The fourth annual PJ Library Summer Carnival will take place at Solomon Schechter Day School of Greater Monmouth County, Marlboro, from 10-11:30 a.m. Aug. 6. The carnival will feature inflatable rides, games, face-painting, prizes, snacks and special guest appearances. Admission is free, but advance registration is required to attend. Details: Linda Glickstein, 732-431-5525.

The Manalapan-Englishtown Regional School District Board of Education will meet on the following dates: July 11, 7:30 p.m., committee of the whole, 54 Main St., Englishtown; and July 25, 7:30 p.m., regular action meeting, 54 Main St., Englishtown. The meetings are open to the public.

An Independence Day concert and fireworks celebration will be held on July 2 at Freehold Raceway. Gates open at 6:30 p.m. Live music by NRG from 7-9 p.m. Kason Jackson will perform The Star-Spangled Banner. Food and beverages will be available for purchase. Rain date July 9. Fireworks made possible by Freehold Borough, Freehold Raceway Mall, Downtown Freehold and the support of sponsors. Check http://www.freeholdboroughnj.gov for weather updates.

The Old Bridge Toastmasters Club meets on the second and fourth Wednesdays of each month from 7:15-9 p.m. at the Sayre Woods Bible Church, 2290 Route 9 South, Old Bridge. The club seeks to help individuals become better speakers and better leaders. There is no cost to attend a meeting and residents of all towns are welcome to attend. Details: 908-906-4926 or http://oldbridge.toastmastersclubs.org/

The Monmouth County Audubon Society will host a bird walk on Sandy Hook in northern Monmouth County at 6 p.m. July 20. Open to society members and non-members. Meet at 6 p.m. in parking lot M. Follow Hartshorne Drive (the main park road) north to a right turn onto Atlantic Avenue, then right on Ford Road to parking lot M. No cost to participate. Bring binoculars and dress appropriately for the weather. Insect repellent is recommended. Details: http://www.monmouthaudubon.org or email info@monmouthaudubon.org

Joe Grabas, genealogist, entrepreneur and author, will present So You Want to Write a Book: Sharing Your Story and Passion at the 1:30 p.m. July 9 meeting of the Monmouth County Genealogy Society at the Community Center, 72 Broad St., Eatontown. The program is free and the public is welcome. Details: 732-747-0090.

Marlboro senior citizen artists are presenting an exhibit of their work at the Monmouth County Library Headquarters, Symmes Drive, Manalapan, during June. The group, Dabbling in the Arts, is sponsored by the Marlboro Senior Recreation Division of Marlboro Recreation. Artist Susanna Anastasia is the class instructor. The class meets from September through June.

Embroiderers Guild of America-Monmouth Chapter is dedicated to teaching and sharing the joys of needlework. Stitchers of all levels are welcome. There are sit and stitch tables at each meeting as well as special projects. Evening stitchers will meet July 17 from 7-9 p.m. at the Colts Neck Library, 1 Winthrop Drive, Colts Neck; Day stitchers will meet July 20 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Colts Neck Community Church, 25 Merchants Way, Colts Neck. Details: Toni, 732-462-5540, or http://www.mcega.org

The Freehold Borough K-8 School District Board of Education has made changes to its meeting schedule. The July 17 meeting will be moved to 7 p.m. July 18 at the Freehold Learning Center. The Aug. 7 meeting will be moved to 7 p.m. Aug. 8 at the Park Avenue complex. The Aug. 21 meeting will be moved to 7 p.m. Aug. 22 at the Park Avenue complex. The Oct. 9 and Oct. 23 board meetings are cancelled. The board will meet on Oct. 16 at the Freehold Learning Center.

The Monmouth County Fair will run from July 26-30 at the East Freehold Showgrounds, Kozloski Road, Freehold Township. Admission is $8 per person. Children 12 and under are free. The fair gate will be open from 5-11 p.m. July 26-28; from 3-11 p.m. July 29; and from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. July 30. Entries will be accepted for the Home and Garden competition. To download a brochure, visit http://www.MonmouthCountyFair.com

A concert to benefit Special Strides will be held at 8:30 p.m. July 7 at Congress Hill Farm, 118 Federal Road, Monroe Township. Special Strides is a nonprofit organization devoted to improving the lives of individuals with special needs through horses, therapy and affordances of a natural environment. The community is invited to the free concert. Bring blankets and chairs. Details: http://www.specialstrides.com or 732-446-0945.

The Deep Cut Orchid Society meets at 7:30 p.m. on the second Tuesday of every month (July 11) at the Monmouth Reform Temple, 332 Hance Ave., Tinton Falls. There is a speaker, refreshments and a discussion of plants on the show table. There is no cost to attend and everyone is welcome.

The Italian American Association of Monmouth County is accepting registration for an Italian Summer Enrichment Camp to run from July 23 through Aug. 4 (Monday-Friday), 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. (included, lunch made by camper on premises) at St. Rose of Lima, Freehold Borough. Cost: $300 for child/grandchild of an IAA member; $350 for non-member. Ages: 5 years old to teenage. Activities include Italian language lessons, Italian crafts, Italian games, cooking lessons and more. To register, download a form at http://www.iaaofmc.com. Details: Cheryl Scuorzo, 732-536-5832.

The Jewish Heritage Museum of Monmouth Country, Freehold Township, announces its next journaling series, Our Stories, Ourselves Jewish Journaling and More, facilitated by Michele Bernstein Klausner. This series is based on the museums new exhibit, Three Centuries of Growth and Change: A History of Jews in Monmouth County. The workshop is held Tuesdays from 10:30 a.m. to noon. The fee is $5 per session. Details: 732-252-6990.

Look for turtles, egrets, herons, ospreys and other wildlife during a boat tour of the Manasquan Reservoir, Howell. Each 45-minute tour leaves from the Visitor Center, Windeler Road, Howell. Tours are offered at the top of the hour from 2-5 p.m. on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, May 6 through Sept. 4. Wednesday tours are offered at 2, 3 and 4 p.m. from July 5 through Aug. 30. Evening tours are offered on the first Friday of each month May through September; call 732-751-9453 as times vary for the evening tours. All tours are weather and water level dependent. The fee is $6 per adult and $4 per child age 12 and under.

The Essential Tremor Support Group meets from 7-9 p.m. on the first Thursday of each month (July 6) at the Jack Aaronson Conference Center at CentraState Medical Center, Freehold Township. Details: 732-462-8304, after 10 a.m.

New Jersey Blood Services is in need of volunteers to work blood drives in Ocean and Monmouth counties. Tasks include assisting donors with registration, watching donors for post-donation reactions and responding to their needs. Details: Jan Zepka, 732-616-8741.

The Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance will meet in the spiritual center of St. Marys Roman Catholic Church, 1 Phalanx Road, Colts Neck, from 7:30-9 p.m. every Thursday. Details: 732-536-5826 or 732-320-0029.

Items for the Datebook may be sent to gmntnews@newspapermediagroup.com. Please send items at least two weeks prior to a scheduled event.

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News Transcript Datebook, June 28 - centraljersey.com

Edelstein hopes to ‘close gaps’ with Russia on defense issues – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on June 27, 2017

Yuli Edelstein. (photo credit:MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)

Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelsteins visit to Moscow will involve discussions aiming to reach agreements on security matters, he said at the start of a meeting Tuesday with Valentina Matviyenko, his counterpart in the Federation Council.

Edelstein praised the cooperation between the defense committees of the two parliaments, but pointed out there are points of disagreement.

Our Foreign Affairs and Defense committees will have to discuss how to close the gaps, he said.

The Knesset speakers comments come at a time of increased spillover into Israel of fire from the war in Syria to which Israel has responded by attacking targets affiliated with President Bashar Assad. Russian forces have been fighting on Assads side since 2015.

Its no secret that there are tensions in our region, and Russia plays a role in the region, Edelstein said at a press conference following the meeting.

These meetings are meant to create a platform for better understanding.

Edelstein said the meetings between the parliamentary defense committees were very serious and a lot was learned.

I think they were able to see things differently in relation to the complex reality in Syria, northern Israel, Lebanon and Iran, he added.

As for other issues, Edelstein said they discussed improving economic cooperation, education, Holocaust remembrance and fighting antisemitism.

Matviyenko kept her comments warm and vague, expressing, as Edelstein did, a wish to further strengthen relations between the two countries, and mentioning her two recent visits to Israel.

We are satisfied with how relations between our countries are developing, she said.

She also said Russia opposes all forms of racism, including antisemitism, as well as Holocaust denial.

Matviyenko was joined by the chairmen of several committees in the Federation Council, including the Defense, Foreign Affairs and Atrategic Affairs committees.

The Knesset delegation included MKs Robert Ilatov of Yisrael Beytenu and Yoel Razbozov of Yesh Atid, both born in the Soviet Union.

On Wednesday morning, Edelstein will give the first speech by an Israeli official to the Federation Council.

He will begin his address in Hebrew, the language it was a crime for him to teach, and point out the symbolism of the event.

Edelstein also plans to praise improved ties between Israel and Russia, including the role of more than a million immigrants from the former Soviet Union in promoting those ties.

In addition, he will point to recent terrorist attacks in Russia and say they have the same roots as terrorism against Israel, calling for unification in fighting it.

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Edelstein hopes to 'close gaps' with Russia on defense issues - The Jerusalem Post

Lakewood Hasidic Rabbi Accused In Sprawling $1M Benefits Scam – Forward

Posted By on June 27, 2017

A New Jersey rabbiand his wife were arrested with three other Jewish couples forunderreporting their incomes to receive government benefits.

The couples, including the rabbis brother and wife, were arrested Monday inraids that resulted from an investigationinto Lakewood, a New Jersey town that is home to a large haredi Orthodox community. More arrests are expected, Ocean County Prosecutor Joseph Coronato said, according to The Associated Press.

The FBI and the New Jersey State Comptrollers Office launched the probe.

By underreporting their incomes, Rabbi Zalmen Sorotzkin and his wife, Tzipporah, and the other couples defrauded state and federal assistance programs of over$1 million, according to criminal complaints, AP reported.

The Sorotzkins were charged in state court withillegallycollecting more than $338,000 in benefits. They will plead not guilty, their attorney said, according to AP.

Another couple, Mordechai and Jocheved Breskin, was charged with illegally collecting $585,000.

In federal court, Zalmen Sorotzkins brother, Mordechai, and his wife, Rachel, were charged with another couple, Yocheved and Shimon Nussbaum, withillegally collecting benefits, including Medicaid.

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Lakewood Hasidic Rabbi Accused In Sprawling $1M Benefits Scam - Forward

Nostalgia is key ingredient in your pastrami on rye, says SFSU prof – Jweekly.com

Posted By on June 27, 2017

The reception catered by Wise Sons Jewish Delicatessen set the tone for the evening: a talk about food with San Francisco State University Jewish studies professor Rachel Gross.

Though many Jews might claim to be experts on Jewish cuisine or innovators in the kitchen, Gross is one of the regions most knowledgeable academics when it comes to understanding why certain trends in Jewish commercial cooking exist as they do today.

Why did Michael Siegel, owner-chef of the now-defunct Shorty Goldsteins Jewish deli, draw on his family tree and family recipes as part of the restaurants marketing? What exactly is kosher-style, as opposed to kosher?

These questions came up in Feeling Jewish: Buying and Selling American Jewish Nostalgia, Gross inaugurallecture asthe John and Marcia Goldman Chair in American Jewish Studies at SFSU, a position she startedin August 2016.

The sold-out lecture, which she gave June 15 at the Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco, was in part based on her research for an upcoming book,which will have the same title as the talk.

In recent years, Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine has experienced something of a cultural revival; in the Bay Area, think Wise Sons or Sauls Restaurant and Delicatessen in Berkeley. More than ever before, words like local and sustainable are coming up as selling points for pastrami sandwiches and matzah ball soup, and Gross set out to explain why.

Rather than simply reproducing recipes from Ashkenazi Jews Eastern European past, and immigrant heritage in the U.S., restaurateurs and purveyors of Jewish food are deliberately making American Jewish food fit for the 21st century, she said.

[Culinary innovators] have lost faith in the legitimacy of American Jewish culinary norms and institutions, mainly mainstream Jewish delis, restaurants and manufacturers. Their work emphasizes sustainability, reliance on local goods and the slow food movement. They tout their artisanal production, culinary creativity or a playful irony, all of which demonstrate a campy nostalgia that brings American Jewish history to bear on the present.

Gross traced this culinary revival to a central theme: nostalgia, which she described as a sentimental longing for Jewish communal origins that cannot be fulfilled. [Foodmakers] products create an emotional connection to specific Jewish pasts.

Nostalgia functions as both religion and culture for American Jews.

Specifically, American Jews buy and sell products such as sandwiches at Jewish delis that speak to American Jewish immigrant culture in the 20th century, as well as harkening back to Central and Eastern Europe. Nostalgia functions as both religion and culture for American Jews, Gross said.

Gross calls Jewish culinary innovators who use nostalgia in their marketing, product choice and creation revivalists, and she shared stories from across the country on how or why businesses fit into her thesis.

Zach Kutsher, who ran Kutshers Tribeca restaurant in New York City, sought to recreate an experience that riffed on his familys now-demolished resort in the Catskills. Kutsher elected to serve kosher-style food, which to him meant that his eatery didnt serve treyf (unkosher) menu items such as pork and shellfish, but it did source meats exclusively from animals that would be considered kosher though they were not halachically so.

On the other hand, some Jewish delis throw out the laws of kashrut altogether.

Ken Gordon, owner of Kenny and Zukes Delicatessen in Portland, Oregon, told Gross in an interview, Youre either kosher, or youre not. In a move that decidedly bucked tradition, Gordons restaurant recently added bacon to the menu after it received requests for bacon and eggs.

Sometimes finding the balance between nostalgia and a modern sustainable food sensibility can be a real pickle. Literally.

Gross cited the example of Sauls Deli in Berkeley, run by Peter Levitt and Karen Adelman. The average customer is likely unaware that sour pickles typically found at Jewish delis like Sauls require fresh cucumbers and up to 20 days in the pickling jar. Because locally grown cucumbers are often unavailable in the winter, Sauls had an issue.

Participating in the Bay Area sustainable food movement, Adelman and Levitt began to buy more local and seasonal ingredients, Gross said. But as they altered their menu they ran into a pickle problem For a period of time, customers had to put up with having half-sour pickles at Sauls, only on seasonally appropriate months.

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Nostalgia is key ingredient in your pastrami on rye, says SFSU prof - Jweekly.com

Friends, psychologist testify on behalf of convicted cop killer during mitigation – ABC6OnYourSide.com

Posted By on June 27, 2017

Attorneys for Lincoln Rutledge spent another day trying to convince a Franklin County jury to spare his life for shooting and killing a Columbus Police SWAT officer. (WSYX/WTTE)

COLUMBUS, Ohio (WSYX/WTTE) -- Attorneys for Lincoln Rutledge spent another day trying to convince a Franklin County jury to spare his life for shooting and killing a Columbus Police SWAT officer.

The same jury found Rutledge guilty of aggravated murder and eight other counts in the death of Officer Steve Smith.

Friends testified Tuesday, saying they could not imagine that Rutledge would be able to do something like this. They called him laid-back and said he was an outdoorsman who enjoyed off-roading and shared a love of Jeeps. But friends acknowledge that Rutledge had changed and was struggling with psychological problems.

Shawn Brown, of Knoxville, Tennessee, described himself as Rutledge's best friend. Brown had learned through other friends that authorities had a warrant to pick him up for a mental evaluation. At the same time Rutledge had fled to Missouri, Brown paid for a plane ticket to send his friend back to Columbus. After the violence, Brown blamed himself.

"Every badge, every cruiser, every law enforcement officer that we passed had a black stripe across their badge and it was because of what my best friend did," he testified. "I bought the freaking plane ticket that brought him back here."

Also on the stand was a psychologist who treated Rutledge. She said he suffered from delusions, paranoia and anxiety and may not have been able to process it when SWAT officers tried to serve a warrant on him in April of last year. Dr. Galit Ashkenazi speculated on what Rutledge may have been thinking.

"Maybe its the mafia coming after me. Maybe they're trying to assassinate me," she said. "At that point, he doesn't see anything. He's just hearing contradictory things and he thinks someone is there to hurt him."

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Friends, psychologist testify on behalf of convicted cop killer during mitigation - ABC6OnYourSide.com

PJ Library’s free books for kids spur Jewish connections, study finds – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on June 27, 2017

Families that receive free Jewish childrens books from the Massachusetts-based PJ Library say the program has helped them feel more connected to their Jewish communities, with interfaith families especially sayingit has spurred them to celebrate Jewish holidays and Shabbat and to learn more about Judaism, a new study found.

The study, released Tuesday by PJ Library and the Harold Grinspoon Foundation, found that 69 percentof participating families say the program has helped them feel more connected to their Jewish communities, whether by attending programs run by PJ library itself or activities run by local Jewish institutions.

Respondents also saythe program helps them feel more knowledgeable and confident about how to engage in Jewish traditions with their children (83 percent), and 91 percent say the program is a valuable parenting tool.

More than half of intermarried couples who subscribe said the program makes their family more likely to observe Shabbat, and 64 percent said it makes them more likely to observe Jewish holidays. Nearly 90 percent of intermarried respondents said the books helped them learn more about Judaism, according to the triennial survey.

More than 25,000 users responded to the survey, which was conducted with the external evaluation firm Informing Change.

The program, launched in 2005 by the Grinspoon Foundation, now sends one book a month and occasional music CDs to 170,000 children ages 6 months to 8 years among 125,000 families in the United States and Canada. A parallel program, Sifriyat Pijama, operates in Israel. PJ Library estimates that its books are read 6.5 milliontimes a year. Local Jewish federations and other institutions partner with the foundation in covering costs.

The findingsconfirm the goals of the programs founders, who hoped that bringing parents and children together over Jewish-themed books would not just be worthwhile in its own right, but inspire them to connect with other Jewish programs and institutions.

We take seriously that each night parents are inviting us to join their family during one of the days most treasured moments before bedtime, Winnie Sandler Grinspoon, president of the Harold Grinspoon Foundation, said in a statement.Parents have told us that the PJ Library books their families receive each month not only help them feel more capable of raising Jewish children, but also make them more excited to pass on the traditions and beliefs they cherished in their own childhoods or have come to cherish as adults.

The survey also found thatsubscribers had relatively high Jewish involvement. While the 2013 Pew Research Centers study of American Jews found that 30 percent do not affiliate with a denomination, the number was only 10 percent for PJ Library subscribers.

And whilethe Pew study found that the intermarriage rate since 2000 is 58 percent, its less than half that, 28 percent, among PJ Library subscribers.

The studys authors said they were not surprised that PJ Library families are more likely than the general population to be affiliated with Jewish organizations, since families usually hear about the program through synagogues, federations or Jewish community centers.

Among subscribers, satisfaction rates are high. Nearly two-thirds of subscribers, according to the study, read the books at least weekly, and 95 percent read them at least once a month. Virtually all respondents 99 percent said they have been influenced or supported by PJ Library. A majority of families responded that the books made them more likely to use a charity box or to increase their Jewish involvement in some other way, and 83 percent saidit helpsthem feel more knowledgeable and confident about how to engage in Jewish traditions with their children .

Books are a natural way to invite people into a global community and to pass values and traditions onto the next generation, ensuring our children and their children grow up connected to their Jewish heritage, said Harold Grinspoon, a real estate developer in western Massachusetts and the founder of PJ Library.

Responses to the study, which was funded by the Harold Grinspoon Foundation, were gathered between November 2016 and January 2017. The studyhad a 1 percent margin of error.

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PJ Library's free books for kids spur Jewish connections, study finds - Cleveland Jewish News

Decaying relations with Diaspora yield bold words in Israel, but little action – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on June 27, 2017

JERUSALEM Israeli politicians rushed to condemn their governments decision Sunday to freezea plan promoting pluralistic prayer at the Western Wall.

Voices from across the political spectrum, including members of the governing coalition, criticized the vote by the Cabinetas a recklessaffront to American Jewry. They warned it could weaken the communitys support for Israel.

Canceling the deal constitutes a severe blow to the unity of the Jewish people and communities as well as the relationship between Israel and Diaspora Jewry, Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman said in a statement.

However, as in the past, such concerns were not enough to affect policy: An overwhelming majority of the Cabinet voted in favor of freezing the plan. Amid the outcry, haredi Orthodox politicians celebrated another success in preserving the powers and privileges granted to their community by the state.

When Israel approved the Western Wall plan in January 2016, it was widely hailed as a historic compromise between non-Orthodox and Orthodox Jews. The Reform and Conservative Jewish movements, the multi-denominational Women of the Wall prayer group and the haredi Western Wall rabbi negotiated the plan over several years.

They agreed to significantly upgrade the egalitarian prayer space at the southern end of the Western Wall plaza and allow leaders of the Reform and Conservative Jewish movements to manage it. In exchange, the Western Wall Heritage Foundation would maintain control of the main prayer section. Women of the Wall, which for nearly two decades has protested limitations on prayer rites in the womens section of the familiar Western Wall plaza, wouldmove to the expanded space, known as Robinsons Arch.

But when the plan was made public, haredi leaders decried the concessions to what they sawas illegitimate forms of Judaism, and Rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz, who heads the Heritage Foundation, quickly withdrew his support. The haredi political parties have since pushed the government to scrap the plan entirely, which it came just short of doing Sunday.

Among the Cabinet ministers, only Liberman, the head of the hawkish Yisrael Beinteinu party, and Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz, a member of the ruling Likud, voted againstthe freeze.In announcing the decision, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had appointed Likud Minister Tzachi Hanegbiand Cabinet Secretary Tzachi Braverman to draft a new plan for the site.He said construction on the pluralisticprayer section would continue uninterrupted.

Rabbi Rick Jacobs, the head of the Reform movement and a vocal advocate of the plan, called the governments decision an unconscionable insult to the majority of world Jewry.

The stranglehold that the Chief Rabbinate and the ultra-Orthodox parts have on Israel and the enfranchisement of the majority of Jews in Israel and the world must and will be ended, he said Sunday in a statement. We are assessing all next steps.

Tzipi Livni, a prominent lawmaker in the opposition Zionist Union political coalition,took to Facebook to explain why Israeli Jews should be concernedabout the feelings of their American counterparts when it comes to prayer at the Western Wall and a new bill that would require the state to recognize only conversions completed under the auspices of the haredi-dominated Chief Rabbinate.

Why do we care about Jewish Israelis from the Western Wall and the Conversion Law? Because it is important to us that Israel remain the state of the Jewish people and that Judaism be what connects us and not what divides us, Livni said Sunday in a post.

The cancellation of the Western Wall arrangement and the new conversion law tear the Jewish people apart. The prime minister of the Jewish people divides them for the purpose of political survival, and gives the ultra-Orthodox parties a monopoly over the Judaism of all of us.

Shuki Friedman, the head of religion and state research at the Israel Democracy Institute think tank in Jerusalem, saidmany Israelis resent theinfluence that haredi leaders exert over state institutions. But, he said, most people do not prioritize issues of religion and state, nor do they embrace liberal forms of Judaism.

Unfortunately, this isnt something that will shake up Israeli politics. The storm is mostly in the media, Friedman told JTA. Generally speaking,the Reform and Conservative movements have failed in Israel, and the public isnt really concerned about them. Therefore, mainstream politicians arent going to challenge the haredim on an issue like the Western Wall.

Meanwhile, he said, the haredi political partieshave an almost singular focus on protecting their narrow interests. That makes them useful to forming and maintaining governing coalitions, butat the cost of accommodating those interests.

Health Minister Yaakov Litzman of the haredi United Torah Judaism party welcomed the Cabinet decision as a victory over liberal Jews.

This decision sends a clear message to the entire world that Reform Judaism has no access to or recognition at the Western Wall, he said Sunday in a statement. I thank the rabbi of the Western Wall, Shmuel Rabinowitz, and the chief rabbis of Israel. To their merit we were able to sanctify Gods name.

Also Sunday, government ministers approved a bill that would require the state to recognize only conversions conducted under the auspices of the Chief Rabbinate. The conversion bill, drafted last month by Interior Minster Ayreh Deri, head of the haredi Shas party, apparently aims to circumvent a March 2016 Supreme Court ruling that allowed those who undergo private Orthodox conversions in Israel to become citizens under the Law of Return.

Since helping to form the current government in 2015, haredi politicians have rolled back various efforts to reform the relationship between synagogue and state many of them enacted under the previous government, which did not include them.

In November 2015, the Knesset postponed and watered down a law that would have ended the traditional exemption from military conscription for most haredi men. And in July 2016, Education Minister Naftali Bennett assumed the authority to ignore a law slashing statefunding for haredi schools that do not teach math and English.State funding for yeshivas has reached record highs three different times under the current government.

However, some Israelis are mounting challenges to the religious status quo outside of the Knesset. The Cabinets decision came on the day of a High Court of Justice deadline for the state to respond to petitions on its failure to implement the Western Wall plan and build the pluralistic prayer space. How the court would react to the freeze was unclear.

Also, in an unprecedented move, the semi-official Jewish Agencyissued a resolution on Monday calling on the government to reverse its decision, saying the movewas un-Zionist.

We deplore the decision of the [Government of Israel] which contradicts the vision and dream of Herzl, Ben-Gurion and Jabotinsky and the spirit of the Zionist movement and Israel as a national home for the entire Jewish people and the Kotel as a unifying symbol for Jews around the world, said the resolution, which the agencysboard of governors passed unanimously.

Theodor Herzl, David Ben-Gurion and Zeev Jabotinskywere perhaps the most important Zionistleaders of the 20th century.

We declare that we cannot and will not allow this to happen. We call on the GOI to understand the gravity of its steps and accordingly reverse its course of action, the resolution continued.

Stuart Eizenstat,the formerU.S. ambassador to the European Union, was at the Cabinet meeting Sunday beforethe vote to freeze the Western Wall plan. He presented a report by the think tank he co-chairs, the Jewish People Policy Institute, that urged the government to promote Jewish pluralism, in part to ensure the continued support of American Jewry.

While dismayed bythe ministers decision, Eizenstatsaid he felt his message was heard.

Ive beendoing this for many years, and Ive never seen a meeting that lasted so long nor one that had such a spirited debate, he told JTA. There was tremendous engagement on our point by nearly all the minsters. It was clear they took it seriously.

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Decaying relations with Diaspora yield bold words in Israel, but little action - Cleveland Jewish News

Jewish groups criticize Supreme Court travel ban decision – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on June 27, 2017

The Anti-Defamation League expressed mixed feelings in regards to the state of US President Donald Trump's Middle East travel ban.

The Supreme Court on Monday lifted the injunction from Trump's travel ban while making sure the ban will not effect people who are able to prove ties to American institutions or US citizens.

Originally, the ban was meant to be enforced on citizens from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen to prevent them from entering the US for a period of 90 days from the date of enforcement. Refugees from these countries would be denied entry for a period of 120 days.

While praising the Supreme Court justices for ensuring the ban will not effect individuals with ties to Americans or US institutions, ADL CEO Jonathan A. Greenblatt warned against repeating past mistakes.

Pointing to the plight of Muslim refugees from the countries effected by the ban, Greenblat said that "closing the door to refugees whose very lives are at stake has echoes of when the United States refused to provide refuge and turned away Jews."

The Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS) also expressed its displeasure with the Supreme Court's decision.

Certainly in the case of refugees, this order will have a tragic toll on those who have fled for their lives and played by our rules to find refuge in the United States. Said HIAS President Mark Hetfield.

President Trump said that the Supreme Court decision was "a clear victory for our national security."

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Jewish groups criticize Supreme Court travel ban decision - The Jerusalem Post

Jewish Groups Demand Apology After ‘anti-Zionist’ Chicago Dyke March Justifies Ban on Jewish Pride Flags – Haaretz

Posted By on June 27, 2017

Anti-Defamation League and Simon Wiesenthal Center say that Dyke March organizers should apologize to the women for what it described as an 'outrageous' action

Jewish groups denounced the banning of Jewish Pride flags at a march in Chicago celebrating the lesbian community and called for an apology.

Organizers of the 21st annual Chicago Dyke March told the three women asked to leave the march that the rainbow flags with a white Star of David in the center would be a trigger, or traumatic stimulus, for people who found them offensive.

A Dyke March collective member told the Windy City Times that the women were told to leave because the flags made people feel unsafe, and that Sundays march was anti-Zionist and pro-Palestinian.

The Anti-Defamation League said in a statement Monday that march organizers should apologize to the women for what it described as an outrageous action.

The community of LGBTQ supporters is diverse and that is part of its tremendous strength, said Jonathan Greenblatt, the ADLs CEO. Both the act and the explanation were anti-Semitic, plain and simple. We stand with A Wider Bridge and others in demanding an apology. We appreciate the Human Rights Campaigns support and we call on other leaders from LGBTQ and progressive communities to join us in condemning this exclusion.

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The Human Rights Campaign, which calls itself the largest national lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer civil rights organization with 1.5 million members, tweeted its support for the women.

Marches should be safe spaces to celebrate our diversity and our pride. This is not right, the group wrote.

The Chicago Dyke march in a statement issued late Sunday said that Palestinian and Jewish anti-Zionist marchers approached the women and expressed concern about the flags since they are visually reminiscent of the Israeli flag due to the placement of the Star of David in the middle, and because such flags are widely used in pinkwashing efforts.

The women were asked to leave, according to the statement, after they began defending the state of Israel and Zionism as a whole. The statement continued: It became clear that the political position of the marchers was at odds with the anti-racist and anti-Zionist ethos of Dyke march Chicago.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center, a Jewish human rights NGO, also denounced the banning of the Jewish Pride flags, saying it brings disgrace to a movement that is dedicated to equal rights for all.

Equal rights that is except for Jews who dare to celebrate their ties to their people and the Jewish homeland, Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the center, said in a statement.

He added: The unbridled hypocrisy and anti-Semitism of these campaigners degrades the cause for equality for all in our society and for LGBTQ rights around the world.

The Chicago Jewish Voice for Peace, which backs the anti-Israel Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, offered its support to march organizers, retweeting its statement that We stand 100% w @DykeMarchChi more coming, heres partial teaser: @AWiderBridge whose staffer was asked 2 leave partners w Israeli military!

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Jewish Groups Demand Apology After 'anti-Zionist' Chicago Dyke March Justifies Ban on Jewish Pride Flags - Haaretz


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