AI2010_08_12

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Past president of P&A visits the JFS Fit-Fun Day at the Temple Sholom to kosher food pantry J and the J5K Run serve on URJ search committee The Union for Reform Judaism president, Rabbi Eric Yoffie announced in June that he is planning to retire in June 2012. Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Peter Weidhorn, has chosen Mauri Willis, past president of Temple Sholom to be one of 30 members of the search committee to find Rabbi Yoffie’s successor. The search committee is composed of a diverse group representing a wide range of congregational sizes, geography and gender as well as members of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, the American Conference of Cantors, the Women of Reform Judaism and the Men of Reform Judaism. The committee will begin its work in September and hopes to have a recommendation to present at the December 2011

CINCINNATI — Cindy Guttman, Susan Brenner, Ellen Dick, Mike Kadetz and Patti Schneider —dedicated volunteers from the Jewish Federation of Cincinnati’s Planning &

CINCINNATI — On Sunday, Aug. 29, the Mayerson JCC offers children and adults a chance to participate in FitFun Day at the J—a free end-of-summer outdoor festival that is open to the public. This major outdoor festival includes: Family Fun Fest from 3 – 6 p.m., with lots of carnival games, a 3-on-3 basketball tournament, and other fun activities; the J5K Run, a 5K Run/Walk through the streets of Amberley Village, starting at 6 p.m.; and the Rock & Roll Bash, 6:30 – 9 p.m., with live music and opportunities to win cash prizes at games of chance. All activities are based at the JCC in Amberley Village, and advance registration is required for the J5K and the 3-on-3 basketball tournament. From 3 – 6 p.m., families can enjoy the Family Fun Fest. Activities include: carnival games, a moon bounce, a giant inflatable slide, face painting, caricature drawings, zoo animals, kids’ races, “dancing heads,” a photo booth, and more. The Amberley Village fire department will operate a fire truck exhibit, and the Amberley police will give out child ID kits (while supplies last). Picnic food, refreshments and beer

P&A on page 22

JCC on page 22

Jewish Federation volunteers Patti Schneider and Susan Brenner visit JFS Kosher Food Pantry with JFS volunteer Linda Chambers.

URJ on page 19

Clinton-Mezvinsky wedding raises Jewish positions on Ground Zero mosque reveal ambivalence questions about intermarriage By Ron Kampeas Jewish Telegraphic Agency WASHINGTON (JTA) — More often than not, Jewish and Muslim groups come down on the same side of battles over religious liberties. Jewish organizations often file amicus briefs supporting Muslim religious rights in cases where zoning boards try to block the construction of houses of worship or bar the right of a Muslim to grow his beard. “There are a lot of commonalities of interest,” said Nathan Diament, director of the Washington office of the Orthodox Union. That made last week’s announcement by the Anti-Defamation League opposing the construction of a planned mosque near the Ground Zero site all the more remarkable. It was a rare instance of a Jewish

establishment organization explicitly opposing a Muslim project or distancing itself from the role of upholding liberties for all. The $100 million mosque center was proposed by the Cordoba Initiative, a group that promotes interfaith dialogue. Despite their common interests, however, Jews and Muslims have forged few formal alliances, mostly due to their deep differences on Middle East policy and Jewish concerns over Muslim organizations’ ties to radical groups. This has made Jewish groups ambivalent, supporting Muslim rights in principle but reticent in practice to endorse specific Muslim organizations or programs. This ambivalence was reflected in an American Jewish Committee statement supporting the Ground Zero mosque—with MOSQUE on page 22

By Jacob Berkman Jewish Telegraphic Agency NEW YORK (JTA) — Is it possible that the first iconic Jewish picture of the decade is of an interfaith marriage? Photographs taken last Saturday show the Jewish groom wearing a yarmulke and a crumpled tallit staring into the eyes of his giddy bride under a traditional Jewish wedding canopy with a framed ketubah, a Jewish wedding contract, in the background. The couple is Marc Mezvinsky, the banker son of two Jewish ex-Congress members, and Chelsea Clinton, the daughter of the former U.S. president and current secretary of state. The images and scant details of the tightly guarded wedding—dubbed by some the “wedding of the century”—have raised a number of questions about the significance of

Genevieve de Manio

Marc Mezvinsky and Chelsea Clinton during their wedding ceremony, July 31, 2010.

WEDDING on page 22

THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 2010 2 ELUL, 5770 CINCINNATI, OHIO SHABBAT CANDLE LIGHTING TIMES: BEGINS ON FRIDAY 8:19 ENDS ON SATURDAY 9:19

VOL. 157 • NO. 3 SINGLE ISSUE PRICE $2.00

ISRAEL

CINCINNATI JEWISH LIFE

DINING OUT

TRAVEL

$100 million facelift transforms Israel Museum

16th Annual JCC Adams Golf Classic

Bella Luna – Mama Mia recipes, that’s Italian!

Berlin, Germany: A city shaped by history

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