MARCH 2018
PASSOVER New traditions for your seder
Who is the Mystic of Cave Creek?
RODNEY GLASSMAN Committed to Family, Judaism and Arizona
ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 1
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Equal| housing opportunity. 2 MARCH 2018 ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
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ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 5
Arizona Jewish Life • March 2018 • Adar- Nisan 57 78 • Volume 6/Issue 6
19
26
FEATURES
PASSOVER
COVER STORY Rodney Glassman Renaissance Man 26 JEWS WITH ATTITUDE Animal adoption center is a legacy of love 12
Passover opener Tips for a pleasurable Passover New melody and new question for Pesach Passover: A story of faith and hope Community seders and more
BUSINESS Chick-In offers kosher dining at ASU Ins & Outs
ALL ABOUT C AMP
FRONT & CENTER Deena Goldstein: Pop Art Pets Insights on “The Graduate” with author Beverly Gray FOOD Chef’s Corner: Caveman at the seder Taste of Arizona: Curry Corner
32
HOME & LIFESTYLE Windsor Square opens its doors for home tour From the runway: Springtime Style Top 5 trends from Fashion Week
32 34
36 38
40
Kids grow at overnight, day and Jewish camps Wildfire destroyed the site but not the spirit of URJ Camp Newman Shemesh receives ACA accreditation Special needs camps in Arizona 31 Flavors Fun new facilities for Arizona Sunrays Camp directory Kids Calendar
21 22 24
51 52 54 56 58 60 61 64
JLIVING
46 48
6th Genocide Awareness Week – Not On Our Watch 66 Pardes Jewish Day School adds Ted-Ed Club curriculum 68 Federation notes 69 Faces & Places 70 Previews 72 Calendar 74
ISRAEL Healing from tension and trauma in Phoenix and Israel
65
ON THE COVER: RODNEY GLASSMAN
COLUMNS To Life! by Amy Hirshberg Lederman Chef’s Corner by Lucia Schnitzer A Taste of Arizona by Michael Rosenthal Family Time by Debra Rich Gettleman
22 36 38 58
ACTIVELY SENIOR The Mystic of Cave Creek “Mother of Animal Law” driven by tikkun olam Cancer Caregivers Education Program
40
14 16
18 19
58 6 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
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PHOTO BY ADELE HESLINGTON
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A rizona Jewish Life | Adar- Nisan 5778 • Volume 6/Issue 6
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ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 9
FIGHTING THE “ENEMY WITHIN”
Cindy Salt zman Publisher
"How do we justify playing Russian
roulette with our
children's lives every time we send them to school? "
When we moved to Israel in the mid-nineties, one of the first things my husband and I did was to look at the preschool options for our young children. As a young Americanborn mother, I couldn’t help but be a little unnerved when I noticed that all the preschools and educational facilities had an armed guard in front. Since I understood that the threat to our children was real I soon decided that one armed guard could be picked off too easily and decided instead to move our children to the neighboring Kibbutz preschool where any terrorist who wanted to harm innocent children would have many more layers of security to pass through and would hopefully be thwarted in time. Even in the tension-filled days of the intifada, as we experienced that surreal moment of watching our children walk off to school with a lunchbox in one hand and a gas mask in the other, we at least knew we were protecting our children from an “outside enemy,” an enemy we could identify, not an “enemy within” who resides in our schools and blends in. Fast forward to today in the United States, as I watched a news broadcast of yet another horrific school shooting, I kept asking myself, How do we justify playing Russian roulette with our children’s lives every time we send them to school? And how dare we expect our teachers, those who have devoted their lives to educate, inspire and mentor our children, to now be their physical protectors and the first line of defense from a crazy person armed with an AR-15? Today in the U.S. we are fighting a different type of enemy, This enemy looks like all of us and in many ways acts like all of us. In so many ways these enemies within are the net result of our society’s failures – the failure of our mental health care system, gun laws and legislators, indeed the failure of all of us to take action. If the health of a society is judged by how it treats their young (and their elderly), then America, we are failing. But there is hope. Young people are taking decisive action to stop the gun violence. They are impatient and fed up but also smart and savvy and learning to work the system for change. Like any powerful social change, this one is starting organically and authentically. Now is the time to throw apathy and fear to the side and do what is right, Right Now. We are our children’s keepers and protecting them is very much a Jewish thing to do. “Whoever saves one life, saves the entire world” ~The Talmud
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ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 11
Jewswith
Attitude
The Sonia Breslow Adoption Center at the Arizona Animal Welfare League in Phoenix
Animal adoption center is a legacy of love By Leni Reiss
At the Scottsdale home of Sonia and John Breslow, it’s reigning cats and dogs. From her earliest childhood memories in Omaha, NE, Sonia says she had a passion for any animal, but especially “puppies and kittens and rabbits,” and was always bringinag home strays. “My parents tolerated my dedication to a point,” she recalls, “but there was the time one bunny got so fat from love that my mom gave it to our cleaning lady, who turned it into rabbit stew. I was mad for weeks – maybe even to this day,” Sonia says with a rueful smile. She shares that her mom and dad, both Holocaust survivors, did love animals “but they weren’t the priority that they were with me. They valued human life above everything. I too love my family dearly, but my feelings about animals are transcendent.” Armed with that knowledge, and John's desire to honor his wife with a meaningful tribute for her 60th birthday, he went into action. John, whom Sonia lovingly describes as a “humble mensch,” challenged her to plan her own party – which she did. Sonia says she went all out, arranging “a gorgeous event” for friends and family at the Royal Palms Hotel. And as for a present to mark the occasion? “I had everything I could want,” she 12 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
acknowledges, “but I do love fast cars, and I thought, just maybe, John was going to add to my collection.” But John, the retired entrepreneurial owner of a Lincoln, NE gas manufacturing and welding supply company, was headed in a different and spectacularly unique direction. He had been inspired some two years before the birthday by a story on a local newscast about the Arizona Animal Welfare League. Two years in the planning, and a total surprise for the birthday girl, the Sonia Breslow Adoption Center at the Arizona Animal Welfare League’s campus at Washington and 40th St., was completed and ready for its 2012 unveiling, thanks to John’s $2 million donation in Sonia’s honor. Unbeknownst to Sonia, John told party guests to arrive early to the Royal Palms, where they then boarded buses. Sonia, who says she “hates surprises,” was told to board first, so she would be the last to disembark. When the crowd arrived at 25 N. 40th St., they were greeted by a band, television cameras, a brand new building – and draped signage. The unveiling revealed the surprise. “What John did for me,” Sonia says, “is to create a legacy. When he had set the plan in motion, he told the planners to ‘think big,’ and they did.” At the center, some 4,500 dogs and cats are cared for at any given time until lifetime homes are found for them. Hundreds of volunteers are on hand at the shelter
The Arizona Center for Judaic Studies
Jeffrey Plevan Memorial Lecture 2018
Free and Open to All
Photo-illustration components: aircraft - defensetalk.com; Israel Flag - Wikimedia Commons, the State of Israel; Hezbollah Flag - Rasa News Agency - Iran; Hezbollah FIghters - Presstv.com, Iran (Reuters); Iran Flag - wallpapercave.com; Revolutionary Guard - OFFICE OF THE IRANIAN SUPREME LEADER VIA AP; ISIS flags - Reuters, Infowars; Assad - Reuters used in compliance with 17 U.S.C. § 106.
Israel, Iran & Iranian Proxies in Syria in the aftermath of ISIS David Makovsky, PhD. Washington Institute for Near East Policy Chinese Shar-Peis Shumi and Beebee have special places in Sonia Breslow's home and heart.
and to help at special events. Numerous foster families nurture puppies and kittens until they are old enough to be adopted, once perspective owners are carefully interviewed. A capital campaign in conjunction with John Breslow’s donation garnered $1 million to also allow for expansion and renovation of a shelter clinic, a pet adoption center at Chandler Fashion Center, replacement of a puppy mill retail store and more. According to Arizona Animal Welfare League President and CEO Judith Gardner, “Our commitment, as a no-kill shelter, is to help neglected, abandoned, injured and sick animals and care for them until each is adopted into a loving, lifetime home.” She says “The $3 million has afforded us the opportunity to double our capacity to help so many more animals and enable us to further our leadership role in the animal welfare community.” For more information about the Sonia Breslow Adoption Center at the Arizona Animal Welfare League, visit aawl.org.
Monday, April 9, 2018, 7pm 6pm Reception (light refreshments) Environment & Natural Resources 2 Building (ENR2) 1064 E. Lowell St. Parking available next door at Sixth St. Garage - 1201 E. 6th St. For more information, call (520) 626-5758 or visit us at www.judaic.arizona.edu ISIS has been defeated on the battlefield, Hezbollah continues to dominate southern Lebanon, and Bashir al-Assad maintains, almost inexplicably, its hold on power in Syria. The Iranian government acts as the power pulling the strings through its funding of Assad and Hezbollah. What will these proxies do now that the focus in Syria is no longer fixed on ISIS? What can Israel do to prepare for what seems to many experts an inevitable conflict with Iran’s proxies. David Makovsky will address these and other vexing issues facing Israel and the rest of the Middle East.
ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 13
Business
Chick-In offers kosher dining at ASU
Some of the items on the menu at Chick-In.
By Mala Blomquist
Chick-In will celebrate its one-year anniversary at the end of the month; and based on its online reviews, people cannot get enough of this Mediterranean-inspired, fresh, fast-food restaurant. Israeli owner Yariv Elazar says he had never operated a restaurant before but had “a lot of passion to eat.” So when the opportunity arose, he jumped at the chance to open a kosher restaurant on the campus of Arizona State University. “Everything started with the vision of Rabbi Shmuel Tiechtel (Chabad at ASU),” explains Yariv. “The dean at ASU wanted to have a kosher operation, and the rabbi was pushing this through for almost 13 years. I took advantage of the fact that my brother-in-law used to have a sandwich place at ASU – so this was the connection. I was in the right place at the right time.” Yariv’s brother-in-law used to operate Mozart Café, a kosher dairy restaurant on campus. Yariv says that Chick-In is “the closest thing you can find in the United States that makes you feel like you are dining in 14 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
Israel.” Everything is made fresh daily, from scratch, with some items, like the Israeli salad, being made several times a day. “We took modern Israeli cuisine and traditional Israeli cuisine, and we gave it a contemporary interpretation,” he explains. The recipes he started with were all created by family members and then “fine-tuned” by professional Israeli chef Maayan Glass. He helped create the menu and stayed with Yariv to open the restaurant. “We closed for the summer, and when we re-opened in August he came back again until early December,” says Yariv. Maayan wanted to make sure everything was perfect, and he helped to train local chefs and cooks, so Chick-In could continue delivering the quality “street food” cuisine he established. The restaurant uses the best kosher meat and products imported from Israel and local produce. The cost to run a kosher operation is expensive, but Yariv strives to keep the prices affordable because the majority of their clientele are students. Chick-In offers catering and delivery through DoorDash, Postmates, GrubHub and Seamless. Having a location in the middle of ASU can be a little
“The dean at ASU wanted to have a kosher operation, and the rabbi was pushing this through for almost 13 years. I took advantage of the fact that my brother-in-law used to have a sandwich place at ASU – so this was the connection. I was in the right place at the right time.” -Yariv Elazar
challenging. “If you want to dine with us and you are coming from off-campus, you need to find parking, and then there’s a 3-minute walk. Many people find it a little difficult,” says Yariv. He is looking to open another Chick-In in a location that will be easier for nonstudents to get to. “Friends of mine that live in Scottsdale complain that the food is too good and I’m too far away,” says Yariv. Another challenge is that between ASU’s schedule and observing Jewish holidays (including Shabbat) they are only open about 38 weeks out of the year. “Whenever we close for the Jewish holidays I feel like the non-Jewish students get upset,” says Yariv. “I am trying to educate them more about Jewish holidays and what it means to be kosher.” Yariv says that Chick-In gets a lot of repeat customers, good reviews and positive comments. “If you come once, that’s it. We own you. You are not going to let go,” he jokes. “We have established something really, really yummy and I think I was able to transfer our passion and enthusiasm – you can actually feel it when you’re here.” Chick-In is located on the campus of ASU in Wilson Hall at 240 E. Orange Mall in Tempe. For more information, visit chickinaz.com.
Attaching the mezuzah to Chick-In restaurant. From left: Benjamin Muhlmann; Chef Mayaan Glass; Rabbi Shmuel Tiechtel, co-director of Chabad at ASU; and owner Yariv Elazar. Photo courtesy Rabbi Shmuel Tiechtel
ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 15
BIZ
INS INS INS & & OUTS OUTS & OUTS
Alisse Caton
Urban Planner Alisse Caton joins Rose Law Group Rose Law Group is proud to announce Alisse Caton will be joining the Planning and Project Management Department as a planner. “We are very excited to announce Alisse Caton has joined our firm,” said Founder Jordan Rose. “Alisse brings an immense knowledge of land use planning to our already thriving Planning and Project Management team led by our Director of Project Management Chris Webb.” Alisse will be eagerly helping the team with projects from beginning to end. She will work for developers, real estate investment groups and homebuilders to navigate and comprehend developmental procedures. She previously worked at LVA Urban Design Studio LLC, a land planning and landscape architecture firm in Tempe. She has a Master of Science in Geospatial Sciences from Northern Arizona University, and a Bachelor of Science in Urban Planning from NAU as well. In her spare time, Alisse is a volunteer for the McDowell Sonoran Conservancy. “I am excited to join the Planning and Project Management Department at Rose Law Group,” says Alisse. “Rose Law Group represents top clients in our industry, and I believe with my skill set, experience and education, we will add great value to our client’s property and the community.” roselawgroup.com
milk+honey now open for dinner The Valley of the Sun JCC is pleased to announce that milk+honey Espresso Bar & Eatery is now open for dinner Monday-Thursday, 5-8:30 pm. The new sit-down dinner service includes a full bar, linens and wait-staff. “We’ve been open a year with breakfast and lunch and are excited to expand our hours and menu to include dinner in a nice, relaxing atmosphere with friendly staff,” says Dany Marciano, owner of milk+honey. “We pride ourselves in providing exceptional food and service at reasonable prices and invite the community to come in for dinner or to order for takeout or delivery via Door Dash and Postmates.” The mouth-watering dinner menu includes an array of Italian dishes, from appetizers and salads to entrees, pizzas and handmade desserts. A variety of beer, wines and cocktails are also available. There is also 16 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
milk+honey
Ori Green and Oraia Reid
Jeffrey Schesnol
a special kid’s menu. “Having milk+honey open for dinner is just another great benefit for our members and guests. It gives families and friends another opportunity to enjoy our many programs and stay to share a fabulous meal together,” said Jay Jacobs, CEO of The J. milk+honey is located inside The J, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road just south of Sweetwater. Reservations are recommended due to limited seating. vosjcc.org/ café.
New hires for JCF of Southern Arizona Ori Green and Oraia Reid have joined the Jewish Community Foundation of Southern Arizona. Ori, a legacy officer for the JCF, has lived in Tucson since the 1980s. For the past three years, she served as Tucson’s Jewish community concierge. Oraia, a JCF marketing and legacy officer, moved to Tucson from New York City, where she was the founding executive director of a nonprofit called RightRides for Women’s Safety from 2004 to 2012. She returned to college in 2012 and graduated from Columbia University in 2016 with a bachelor’s degree in urban studies.
Jeffrey Schesnol ordained Or Adam Congregation for Humanistic Judaism announced the ordination of Jeffrey Schesnol as Madrikh (ceremonial leader). Jeffrey completed the requirements in December 2016, and was honored by the International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism at the Birmingham Temple in Michigan on Nov. 10, 2017. Jeffrey is the past president of the Valley’s SHJ congregation and has been the ceremonial leader for Or Adam for more than four years. He studied for his ordination through the IISHJ, completing the program in four years. He is continuing his studies for the rabbinate at Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership in Chicago, IL, and the IISHJ in Birmingham, MI. He expects to achieve his rabbinical ordination in 2022. A valued member of the community, Jeffrey has been involved with Humanistic Judaism since 1975, and he has served on various congregations’ boards and as a Sunday school teacher
Stephanie A. Walsh for congregations in Chicago, Los Angeles, Raleigh/Durham and Phoenix/Scottsdale. His own Jewish education started at age 3, shaped by his Orthodox grandfather. He has been married to his wife, Susan, for 53 years and has two daughters, two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. A resident of Phoenix since 2010, he was formerly involved in the furniture and home accessory business and has studied toward an MBA, after receiving a bachelor’s degree in business and psychology. He currently serves as the associate director of the Arizona Jewish Historical Society. oradam.com
Stephanie A. Walsh joins Sojourner Center Stephanie A. Walsh, MBA, has been named director of major and planned gifts for Sojourner Center. Stephanie, a fundraising professional with 20 years’ experience, joins Sojourner Center from the Banner Health Foundation where she served as the development manager for the past five years. Sojourner Center is a domestic violence service organization providing emergency shelter, transitional housing, domestic violence education, safety planning, lay-legal advocacy, case management, a child development center, 24-hour crisis hotline, referral services, community education and healthcare through an on-site clinic. As of mid-2017, Sojourner Center operates as an affiliate subsidiary organization of Jewish Family & Children’s Service. “We knew it was important to have a dedicated fundraising professional on our team focusing on development efforts for Sojourner Center,” says Gail Baer, associate vice president of philanthropic services at JFCS. “Stephanie brings not only a wealth of experience in fundraising but a deep understanding of and social services programming as well.” JFCS, one of the state’s largest providers of behavioral health and social services, had been a longtime partner of Sojourner Center. The two organizations share significant synergies in their missions and programs and an alignment in their organizational cultures. Stephanie, a Phoenix resident, has a Master of Business Administration from Aurora University in Aurora, IL. and a Bachelor of Arts degree from North Central College in Naperville, IL. jfcsaz.org
Sheryl Press, Jaime Fox, Jill Ross
Sean Lieb
Federation adds smiling faces to its staff The Jewish Federation of Greater Phoenix recently added three new members to its professional team. Sheryl Press, director of campaign and Women’s Philanthropy; Jaime Fox, development associate; and Jill Ross, events manager. A participant in the summer 2017 JWRP Momentum Trip to Israel, Sheryl decided it was time to fulfill her desire to make a difference in the Jewish community. She has 20+ years public relations experience, most notably as corporate PR director for Canyon Ranch in Tucson. Though Jaime grew up Jewish she did not connect with her Jewish roots until she lived in Israel during her twenties, where it “felt like coming home.” She feels that same way working with the Federation. Jill recently moved to the Valley. She has 19 years of event planning experience, including seven years with Hyatt. She is glad to use her skills to help Federation.
Sean Lieb is one to watch in commercial real estate Sean Lieb, 28, an Associate at SRS Real Estate Partners was named “20 in their 20s in commercial real estate” in the AZRE January/February 2018 issue. Sean specializes in the leasing and selling of retail, multi-tenant, mixed-use properties and land throughout Greater Phoenix. He has worked with many national retailers such as Advanced Auto Parts, Burger King, Edward Jones, Jackson Hewitt, H&R Block, Orange Theory Fitness, Subway, Cheba Hut and more. Prior to joining SRS, he worked at Cushman & Wakefield where he generated over $17 million in lease and sales transaction volume in less than a two-year span.
ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 17
19 Tips for a pleasurable Passover 21 New melody and new question for Pesach 22 Passover: A story of faith and hope 24 Community seders and more
Passover
(March 31-April 7, 2018)
P
assover, also known as Pesach, is the eight-day observance (seven in Israel) commemorating the freedom and exodus of the Israelites from slavery in Egypt. The seder plate with six symbolic foods takes center stage at the seder, a lavish ritual meal where we retell the story of Passover by reading the Haggadah. In addition to the items on the seder plate, each of which represents a piece of the Exodus story, matzah is featured at both the seder and throughout the festival to represent the unleavened bread the Israelites ate when fleeing Egypt. The first seder will be March 30. In the Phoenix area, you may eat chametz until 10:26 am and in Tucson until 10:22 am. Burn or sell remaining chametz in your home by 11:29 am in Phoenix and 11:25 am in Tucson. Candle lighting (one set works for both Shabbat and Passover) in the Phoenix area is 6:29 pm and 6:24 pm for Tucson. The second seder is Saturday evening, March 31. The seder begins after Shabbat ends at 7:25 pm in Phoenix and 7:20 pm in Tucson.
18 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
Tips for a pleasurable Passover By Mala Blomquist
P
assover, which begins this year at sundown on March 30, is one of the most widely observed Jewish holidays. Every year families gather around the seder table to celebrate their Jewish heritage and commemorate the freedom of the Jewish people from Egyptian slavery and their Exodus from Egypt more than 3,000 years ago. Often Jewish families integrate the old traditions they have shared for generations with innovative elements to keep the children (and many of the adults too!) alert and engaged during the seder. We have compiled some new ideas that you might consider integrating into your seder this year.
COVER YOUR CLOCKS Before the seder begins, cover all the clocks in your home and ask all of your guests to remove their watches. Also, ask guests to put their phones in a basket and put the basket in another room. This way everyone can completely focus on the seder. Talk about being a “slave” to time and technology and see what it’s like not to check the time (or texts or emails) for an evening. PLACEMAT PUZZLES While most young children enjoy the seder, some moments may not hold their attention as long as others. Homemade placements can create a useful diversion when they get distracted. Use poster board or construction paper to create placemats decorated with Passover games and age-appropriate questions. Some ideas can be to create a maze (children can use their fingers to trace their way from slavery to freedom); do a “search and find” where Passover symbols are hidden in a picture; draw two Pharaohs with slight differences and see if the children can find them all; make a word search using Passover terms. CHOOSING A HAGGADAH There are more than 3,000 editions of the Haggadah cataloged in the great library of the Jewish Theological Seminary, and every year more versions appear. The titles show the extensive variety: The Haggadah for the Liberated Lamb (for vegetarians), The Pride Freedom Seder Haggadah: The Stirring of Those Now Chosen (for the LGBTQ community), A Common Road to Freedom Haggadah (reflections by Jewish and African American leaders) and more that touch on topics of modern-day slavery, ecology, peace and justice. Then there is the old standby The Maxwell House Haggadah that was printed originally as a marketing promotion for Maxwell House coffee in 1932 and has been printed continuously ever since. There are estimated to be more than 50 million copies in print! WAIT … THERE’S MORE THAN HAGGADAH Think of ways to tell the story that supplement the Haggadah. You can download a 10-minute play for free at Haggadot.com (you have to register, but it is quick and easy). If you are looking for more humorous options, check out the book Passover Parodies: Short Plays for the Seder Table by Shoshana Hantman. Passover Parodies consists of a series of 10-minute plays designed to entertain and educate. You can also plan to telephone someone you love who isn’t at your seder. Put them on speaker phone, so the person can read a passage from the Haggadah. ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 19
FOUR QUESTIONS … AND MORE After the traditional Four Questions have been asked and answered, invite seder guests to answer four trivia questions that you’ve developed about historical events. They can be questions about Jewish athletes, actors, leaders or something non-Jewish. Have fun and be creative! MATZAH FUN FACTS Cut up small squares of paper and design it to look like matzah on one side (or you can find paper that actually looks like matzah at some scrapbooking suppliers). On the plain side, write interesting matzah facts you have found through research. For example, did you know, in 2010 Chef Jon Wirtis of Shlomo and Vito’s New York Delicatessen in Tucson, created the world’s largest matzah ball. The 426-pound monstrosity was made from more than 1,000 eggs, 125 pounds of matzah meal, 25 pounds of schmaltz (fat) and 20 pounds of potato starch – and was created for the Tucson Jewish Food Festival. Every time you eat a piece of matzah at the seder, have your child read an amazing matzah fact. POURING PARTNERS Since everyone can pretend to be like royalty on seder night, and kings and queens certainly do not pour their own beverages – everyone gets a “pouring partner.” This person will fill their glass with wine or grape juice at the appropriate time. Your guests can pair up and have fun with this. TASTE TESTS During the maror (bitter herb) section of the seder, you could have a “taste test” to have your guests try different foods and rank their bitterness. Traditionally horseradish and romaine lettuce are used, but neither one of those is typically “bitter.” Try items such as arugula, broccoli rabe, chard or turnip greens for a change. You can also have your guests taste matzah from various sources to see which one is the best, or have different guests bring their best charoset and see whose wins a taste test. Just be sure to keep the chef of the charoset a secret until voting is complete. HIDE AND SEEK Many a child is upset at not being the one to find the afikoman (the middle portion of matzah on the seder plate, which is hidden and then redeemed for a prize). One way to include everyone in the search is to create a scavenger hunt. Make envelopes with the children’s names on them holding clues inside. Only the child whose name is on the envelope gets to open that clue. The clues will guide the children to different places where the envelopes will be found. Once the last envelope is found, that clue will lead them all together to the place that the afikoman is hidden. Then, of course, everyone who participated in the search gets a prize. WELCOMING ELIJAH AND ? Before you open the door for Elijah to enter, have guests write down an imaginary guest that will enter with Elijah and what they would say when they first walked in. This can be anyone they want – living or dead. After singing “Eliahu Hanavi,” read the answers aloud. You may be surprised at who your guests invite in!
Whichever traditions you choose to incorporate into your seder doesn’t matter as much as the fact of sharing these traditions, whether new or old, so that they can continue to be passed down to the next generation as they have for almost 3,000 years. 20 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
New melody and new question for Pesach By Teddy Weinberger
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s I was thinking about the upcoming Passover preparations, two distinct thoughts entered my mind. This year, I want to share two recommendations for Passover.
1. We all have our favorite Passover seder melodies. If we are guests at a seder where they sing a different melody to that passage of the Haggadah, then it just doesn’t feel right. Sometimes even within one family there can be competing “must sing” versions of the same passage. Often the solution is to sing both versions. Something incredible, however, has happened to one traditional song of the Haggadah: a competing contemporary melody has succeeded in making it into many homes without having to settle for equal billing with the traditional melody. The new melody has totally displaced the old. I am speaking of the passage “Vehi She’amdah.” In 2009, American-born Israeli singer and songwriter Yonatan Razel created a new melody to “Vehi She’amdah” (“And it was this that has stood for our parents and for us”). He then teamed up with American Hassidic singer Yaakov Shwekey. It became a smash hit not only for Passover and not only for religious communities, but all across Israel. What makes Razel’s rendition so wonderful? As a way of answering this question, we can first consider why the traditional (Ashkenazi) melody held sway for so long. The old melody sounds remarkably close to a work song, which is what we are expecting in this part of the Haggadah (the next passage speaks about how the Egyptians “persecuted us and put us under hard labor”). Thanks to the old melody, you can almost see the slaves groaning under their load of heavy bricks. Along comes Yonatan Razel’s song, and suddenly we realize that the words of this passage don’t jibe with a slave’s work song. In this song, we have a kind of broad take on Jewish history smack in the middle of the Haggadah’s narrative. Razel’s melody, which begins with a feeling of starstruck wonder, gives beautiful voice to the riddle behind “and this has stood.” Just what is “this?” What precisely has stood in our favor despite all our enemies? Answer: I’m not telling. It’s a mystery – and a good discussion starter for your seder. It is the second part of Razel’s song, so climactic and so powerful, that sends the old melody to the history bins. Rather
Yonatan Razel at the piano, his instrument of choice. PHOTO BY OHAD ROMANO
than a recapitulation of the beginning melody (as in the traditional version), Razel’s ending feels like some kind of resolution to the problem of theodicy (how evil can exist if God is all powerful and all good). God is present in the face of all of our enemies. God saves, and as evidence we are still here to sing about it. The melody is so magical that (as in some of the recorded versions) many people repeat the song as a niggun, without the words – something no one was ever tempted to do with the old melody. If you have not yet adopted this song for your Passover seder, Rabbi Google will be more than happy to help you out. 2. At the end of Passover last year, my son, Elie, asked me, “Did you grow spiritually during the holiday?” And I was taken aback. Because in the middle of the many details of Passover, it’s easy to lose sight of this question. After all, Passover is a most demanding holiday. There is much cleaning to do in the days leading up to the holiday and the seder is a major production. The week of Passover cooking on Passover implements with Passover food can be quite challenging. Amidst everything it is good to remember Elie’s question. I am a religious Jew, and I believe that all the holiday’s laws and details are indeed designed for some kind of spiritual benefit, some kind of deepening or uplift. If I go through the entire Passover holiday without thinking about my relationship with the divine, then I have missed something. So this holiday, I’m going to try to remember Elie’s comment beforehand and not after the fact, and I encourage you all to do the same. Happy Passover.
TEDDY WEINBERGER
Teddy Weinberger, Ph.D., writes from Givat Ze’ev, a suburb of Jerusalem just over the Green Line. He and his wife, Sarah Jane Ross, made aliyah in 1997 with their five children. Teddy is director of development for Meaningful, a company that works with Israeli nonprofit organizations.
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to life Passover: A story of faith and hope By Amy Hirshberg Lederman Marc Chagall Lithograph 1966 Then Afterward Moses and Aaron Went and Said To Pharaoh, “Thus Say the Lord God of Israel, Let My People Go”
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was born and raised in northern New Jersey but haven’t lived there since 1976, when a college degree, combined with wanderlust, led me to Arizona where I’ve happily remained ever since. I’ve listened to many jokes over the years about being a “Joisey girl.” I’ve tried desperately to lose my Jersey accent, although I never quite succeeded as my children remind me every time I “tawk” to my parents on the phone – proving, it seems, that “you can take the girl out of New Jersey, but you can’t take the New Jersey out of the girl.” It might appear like a stretch, but I think there’s a metaphor here that is instructive when thinking about the Passover story.
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As a leader, Moses was tasked not only with taking the Hebrew slaves out of Egypt but of taking the “Egypt” out of the Hebrew slaves. In fact, the Hebrew word for Egypt, or Mitzrayim, stems from the root meaning to bind, shackle or imprison. For the Hebrew people, living in Egypt meant over 400 years of bondage, poverty and powerlessness. The midnight escape may have been treacherous, but the real challenge was liberating the Hebrew psyche so that generations of slaves could become freethinking men and women. Back then, there were no seminars on selfempowerment or self-help websites. Enter Moses, commanded by God, to become the first community organizer to inspire independent thinking and action. What tools did Moses have to take the “Egypt” out of the Jewish people? The two key ingredients in the Passover recipe of redemption through revelation were simply these: faith and hope. Perhaps the best “self-help” book of all times is what the 600,000 slaves received seven weeks after their escape as they stood together for the first time at the foot of Mt. Sinai. In a moment which can only be described as formative as well as transformative, the Jewish people entered into the covenant with God with the ultimate words of faith: “We will do, and we will understand.” Those words are the words of a barely formed, fledgling belief that indicate that a ragtag group of ex-slaves could become, as the Torah instructs, “a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.” They are the words that suggest that it is often through doing that we can acquire a deeper sense of knowing. In Hebrew, the word for faith is emuna, which means “to believe.” Having faith means that we believe and trust that there is a greater order to the world although we may not be able to perceive or understand it. Faith can give us a sense of hope in a despairing world; it can help us respond to events and life
circumstances which seem senseless and unfair – like the death of a child, a horrific accident or an act of terrorism. Faith is often the portal to hope. It provides an inner buoyancy that keeps us afloat when we are ready to sink. And hope is what keeps us moving forward. Hope is what inspired the Hebrew slaves to give up all they knew for the idea that they could live a better life in the Promised Land. A Midrash teaches us that when the Hebrew women left Egypt, they left everything behind except the copper mirrors they had used to entice their husbands to have children. Because those mirrors represented hope in the future, they were used to create the priestly basin in the Tabernacle. In this way, Passover teaches us that hope may be the single greatest act of defiance against the politics of powerlessness. The story of Passover encourages us to examine two very Jewish values: faith and hope. It teaches us to examine what enslaves us in our daily lives and gives us the courage and inspiration to leave that behind and move towards something better. And like our ancestors, if we put our faith in that inner voice that guides us along the way we can hope that if we make the journey, we too, may find our own “promised land.”
AMY HIRSHBERG LEDERMAN
Amy Hirshberg Lederman has written more than 300 columns and essays that have been published nationwide, amyhirshberglederman.com
Best wishes from our family to yours for a happy, healthy Passover.
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Community seders and more
Beginning with the words: “Let all who are hungry come and eat,” the Passover seder is a journey that recreates the Israelites’ exodus from Egypt and the great Festival of Freedom with song, story and special festival foods. Here is a listing of some community seders (and other Passover-related events) in the Valley and Tucson. For more events, visit azjewishlife.com/calendar.
MARCH 22
gourmet Passover dinner, the original hand-made shmurah matzah, and four cups
MATZAPALOOZA 5:30-7 pm March 22 at
spiritual insights. Seder is English friendly so everyone can feel welcome.
Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale
RSVP: 928-255-5756 or jewishflagstaff.com
Prepare for the Passover holiday as a family! Learn how to make matzah with Linda Feldman from BJE, decorate a Kiddush cup with PJ Library, create your own seder plate, design a family Haggadah and sing along with your favorite songs. Members: $35; Guests: $50 per family up to 4 people; additional $8 per person. RSVP: 480-634-4949 or youth@vosjcc.org
MARCH 25 PASSOVER FAMILY WORKSHOP & CHOCOLATE SEDER 9 am March 25 at Congregation Anshei Israel, 5550 E. Fifth St., Tucson
of kosher wine. Journey through the Haggadah, with traditional songs, stories, and $45-$50 adults, $$25-$30 ages 4-12, $10 NAU students
PASSOVER SEDER 6:45 pm March 30 at Beth Emeth Congregation, 13702 W. Meeker Blvd., Sun City West The Passover seder will be conducted by Rabbi Tracee Rosen. Professionally catered by Gary Shindler of Designs in Food with a delicious and traditional strictly kosher menu. $55 adults ($50 members), $25 ages 12 and under RSVP: By March 13 to 623-584-7210 between 9 am and 1 pm weekdays
All youth and their families are invited to join in preparing for Passover by bringing to
PESACH SEDER
life our people’s story. Includes chocolate seder. Free.
March 30 at Chabad of Oro Valley, 1217 W. Faldo Dr., Oro Valley
RSVP: By March 21 to 520-745-5550 ext. 227 or caiaz.org
SPECIAL NEEDS COMMUNITY PASSOVER SEDER 1 pm March 25 at Ina Levine Jewish Community Campus, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale Join Gesher Disability Resources for a very special Passover seder. Service led by Rabbi Linder of Temple Solel. RSVP: 480-629-5343 or jacquelyn@gesherdr.org
MARCH 30 CHABAD TUCSON COMMUNITY SEDER 7 pm March 30 at Young Israel Chabad, 2443 E. Fourth St., Tucson Authentic and family-friendly Passover seder led by Chabad Tucson’s Rabbis Yossie Shemtov and Yehuda Ceitlin with full course dinner, insights, stories and songs. $45 adults ($54 after March 25), $25 children RSVP: 520-881-7956 or chabadtucson.com
COMMUNITY PASSOVER SEDER 6:30 pm March 30 at Chabad Jewish Community Center, 1254 W. University Ave., Flagstaff Enjoy the holiday of freedom at an upbeat inspirational seder, complete with a 24 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
Relive the exodus, discover the eternal meaning of the Haggadah, and enjoy a community seder complete with hand-baked matzah, wine and a wonderful kosher dinner. RSVP: 520-477-8672 or jewishorovalley.com
MARCH 30 & 31 JEWISH STUDENTS SEDERS 7:30 pm March 30-31 at Chabad at University of Arizona, 1436 E. Drachman St., Tucson U of A Chabad will be hosting warm interactive seders both nights of Passover. The seder will be English-friendly and not very prayer intensive. RSVP: 520-820-8939 or jewishwildcats.com
MARCH 31 OR ADAM PASSOVER CULTURAL SEDER 5:30 pm March 31 at Cutler Plotkin Jewish Heritage Center, 122 E Culver St, Phoenix Or Adam Congregation is hosting this complete seder. Roast chicken or vegetarian dinner catered by Mark Vanek of The Dancing Chef. Open to members and nonmembers, people of all faiths and all denominations. $50 adults ($40 AZJHS or Or Adam members), $15 ages 11-16, ages 10 & under free. RSVP: By March 23 to 602-241-7870 or azjhs.org
SECOND NIGHT COMMUNITY PASSOVER SEDER 6 pm March 31 at Temple Emanu-El, 225 N Country Club Road, Tucson
Exodus. A community seder that feels like family. RSVP: 480-342-8858 or congregationortzion.org
include a scrumptious kosher-for-Passover dinner. The seder is open to all.
SECOND NIGHT SEDER 6 pm March 31 at Temple Solel’s Social Hall, 6805 E McDonald Dr., Paradise Valley
RSVP: 520-327-4501 or tetucson.org
Conducted by Rabbi John Linder and Cantorial Soloist Todd Herzog. Enjoy a full-
Join Rabbi Batsheva Appel and Cantorial Soloist Marjorie Hochberg for the celebration. Seder will be hamish (home-like), spiritually uplifting, filled with music and
course, traditional, kosher-for-Passover seder dinner.
SECOND NIGHT PASSOVER SEDER 6:30 pm March 31 at Congregation Anshei Israel, 5550 E. Fifth St., Tucson Participate in one of Judaism’s most beautiful and meaningful festivals. Share great dialogue, family participation; supervised children’s play; traditional dinner by Handmaker Catering with entrée option of brisket, salmon or vegetarian. $55 adults ($45 members), $40 children ($30 members), $38 college students & military RSVP: By March 22 to synagoguedirector@caiaz.org
SECOND NIGHT SEDER 6 pm March 31 at Congregation Or Tzion, 9096 E. Bahia Dr. #106, Scottsdale
RSVP: 480-991-7414 or templesolel.org
APRIL 6 SHABBAT PASSOVER EXPERIENCE IN THE DESERT 5:30 pm April 6 at Saguaro National Park, East Broadway Blvd., Tucson Relive our ancestors’ trek in the desert … in 40 minutes instead of 40 years. Easy walk in a beautiful park (1.3 mile) to the picnic area, activities for kids, then a brief Shabbat evening service and gorgeous sunset guaranteed. Bring a kosher-for-Passover picnic dinner, good walking shoes and a flashlight. RSVP: 520-327-4501 or templeemanueltucson.org
A joyful celebration and lots of fun! The seder includes a complete kosher-for-Passover meal and stories to relive the
Featuring a score of your favorite rock hits, including “Blue Suede Shoes,” “Great Balls of Fire,” “Walk the Line” and “Hound Dog,” played by the actors onstage, Million Dollar Quartet is a scorching show packed with red-hot talent!
MARCH 7 - APRIL 15 AT PHOENIX THEATRE Tickets start at $29! Visit PhoenixTheatre.com or call 602.254.2151 for tickets today! ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 25
Photo courtesy Karen Shell 26 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
RODNEY GLASSMAN RENAISSANCE MAN Committed to Family, Judaism and Arizona By Mala Blomquist
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odney Glassman, J.D., Ph.D., is a Renaissance man. His past and present titles include television show host, vice mayor for the City of Tucson, financial advisor, nominee for U.S. Senate, acting town manager of Cave Creek, attorney, children’s book author, vice president of the nation’s fifth largest Boy Scout Council and assistant staff judge advocate at the 355th Fighter Wing, Luke Air Force Base, Arizona. He currently is of counsel at Beus Gilbert PLLC in Phoenix and serves as a Major in the United States Air Force JAG (Judge Advocate General) Corps Reserves where he acts as both a litigator and civil-law attorney alongside active duty JAG’s. This month, Rodney will be transferred from his duty station at Luke Air Force Base in the West Valley to a new assignment, just 100 miles south of the Arctic Circle, with the 354th Fighter Wing legal office at Eielson AFB, Fairbanks, AK. As a member of the Air Force Reserves, he spends five to ten weeks per year on military duty. SERVICE TO COUNTRY Rodney explains his path to becoming a JAG, “I happened to be home (in Fresno) visiting my parents, and we were getting ready to go to an ice hockey game with my then girlfriend Sasha (now his wife). A Hebrew school classmate of mine was visiting the house and shared that she had just left the Navy after failing the California Bar exam. I asked what did that have to do with her military service and she explained that she was a JAG. I said ‘What’s a JAG?’” That question sealed Rodney’s fate as his friend went on to explain the duties carried out by a military attorney. At that moment, Rodney had another goal! Upon returning to Arizona, Rodney contacted the wing commander at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson. He had been a long-time supporter of the base since he first
arrived at the University of Arizona; he played on the Air Force ice hockey team, did legislative work for the base with a Southern Arizona Congressman, and was even invited to join the DM-50 (a business auxiliary group comprised of leaders that educate the community on the vital role that the base plays for the region and economy). The wing commander put Rodney in touch with the head lawyer, the base Staff Judge Advocate, who shared entrance requirements to join. “She said that I first had to pass the bar exam and then she asked how tall I was and how much I weighed,” explains Rodney. “I told her that I was 6 foot 6 inches and weighed 295 pounds. She replied, ‘because of our entrance requirements you have two choices, you can either grow four inches or lose 60 pounds.’ I chose the easier of the choices!” Rodney jokes. He passed the bar exam on the first try, and then called his wife and shared, “I’m going to lose 60 pounds and join the Air Force – she laughed and hung up the phone.” Six months later, Rodney had lost the weight and was sworn into the United States Air Force. Rodney’s commitment to faith and tikkun olam is echoed in his military service, “Being a reservist is about giving back,” Rodney explains. His international travel with the Air Force has provided him with the opportunity to experience many of the great synagogues in Easter Europe and has intertwined his service and his faith. One of these adventures occurred on a trip to Germany where Rodney was invited by the German Air Force to facilitate their International Junior Officer Leadership Development (IJOLD) course at Kauf beuren Air Base. He had one day off before he was scheduled to start teaching, and being outside of Munich, he led a group of fellow officers to Dachau. He had never been to a concentration camp before.
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Clockwise from upper left, Rodney Glassman. PHOTO COURTESY ADELE HESLINGTON
Rodney during his Eagle Scout ceremony on Feb. 25, 1992, with his father, Robert, and mother, Linda. From left: Rodney, Robert and Jeremy at the Western Wall during their 2017 visit to Israel. Rodney’s first trip to Israel with his father in 1987.
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RODNEY GLASSMAN During the course, he learned that Kauf beuren Air Base had been occupied by the Nazis and was seized by the U.S. Army in 1945. The base was the final location of the Nazi Party’s top secret FA signals intelligence and cryptanalytic agency. The history of the base was especially powerful when he was asked, by the German Air Force leadership to provide the invocation at the course’s closing reception. “I had the opportunity to sing Shalom Rav on an active duty German Air Force base, which at one point was an American air base after being a Nazi Air Force base… it was so amazing,” says Rodney. CONNECTIONS TO WATER RUN DEEP Rodney grew up in a farming family in the Central Valley of California with a strong commitment to faith and appreciation for the connection that water holds between Israel and the arid Southwest. In the late 1980s, while Rodney was in grade school, he first traveled to Israel with his father Robert (who is also an attorney and holds a Ph.D.) to learn about developing water technologies in agriculture. “Israel has always been at the forefront of developing and leveraging water technologies whether for high-intensity agriculture, re-use or desalinization,” says Rodney. “Through connectivity, tech-transfer and collaboration between our research institutions we have the opportunity to benefit from the entrepreneurial spirit that both Arizona and Israel share.” Perhaps this early trip was what planted the seeds for Rodney’s educational path. “After earning my MBA and master of public administration from the University of Arizona I was working as a legislative aide for a congressman who represented the majority of the lower Colorado River, and I was serving on the Arizona State Farm Bureau Board of Directors,” he says. “Having grown up in a family where both my father and grandfather were farmers, earning my Ph.D. in Arid Land Resource Sciences from the College of Agriculture at the University of Arizona was a natural extension to the resource work I was already doing,” he explains. Rodney ran for Tucson City Council while in law school and upon his election, championed first-in-the-nation policies for commercial rainwater harvesting and residential gray water plumbing. Rodney is constantly leveraging his community relationships and passion for helping others to make deep community connections with policymakers and business people alike. Recently, he hosted a coffee at his office with Dr. Clive Lipchin, director of the Center for Transboundary Water Management at Arava Institute for Environmental Studies in Israel. Rodney had been connected with Dr. Lipchin through his role as a board member of the Arizona Chapter of Jewish National Fund. Consistent with Rodney’s practice of connecting the dots, Rodney had invited some Arizona state legislators, and nearly a dozen was in attendance. Arizona State Representative Becky Nutt, who represents
RENAISSANCE MAN Greenlee County and a large portion of rural Arizona, was at that meeting and as was so inspired by Dr. Lipchin’s presentation that she reached out and asked Rodney to help her put together a water symposium for the entire Arizona state legislature. With Rodney’s support, Representative Nutt brought together speakers including leadership from FreeportMcMoRan, Inc., Poseidon Water (which recently built California’s largest desalination plant) and Dr. Lipchin. The event was held on the floor of the Arizona State House of Representatives, and more than two-thirds of the legislature were in attendance. “It was great exposure for Israel and Jewish National Fund,” states Rodney. Rodney’s ability to combine his passion with community relationships allow him to get others focused on issues and causes he holds dear, one of which is Arizona’s water policy and water future. “With Arizona’s geographic location at the bottom of the Colorado River, Arizona will always need to be on the cutting edge of water conservation policy and practices,” says Rodney. He adds the state musts also stay “actively engaged in regional water discussions related to the entire Colorado River region and desalinization solutions along the California coast as a method for reducing their draw from the Colorado River.” Recently, Rodney was able to return to Israel in December 2017 as part of a mission organized by the Jewish National Fund. Called “Israel H2O: A JNF USA Tour on the Trail of Israel’s Water Solutions,” the trip hosted water professionals, people from arid climates and those who simply have a love for Israel. Rodney’s father and brother Jeremy accompanied him on the trip. Jeremy is completing his Ph.D. in management from the W.P. Carey School of Business at ASU (the same program that Robert graduated from in 1973). “Having the opportunity to return to Israel and re-walk the steps that my father and I traveled together more than three decades ago was spectacular,” says Rodney. “To know that the commitment to faith and family that our parents instilled in us as children has germinated and inspired us to grow the family we have today, allows me to look forward to the day when we are able to take our daughters to Israel, as a family.” FAMILY AND FAITH Rodney has had tremendous opportunities and life experience and has built a track record of giving back and contributing to the growth of others. “I’m very fortunate to have a wonderful Air Force career, an awesome professional career with outstanding clients, the ability to contribute to our community and most importantly – a spectacular family,” says Rodney. Rodney’s wife, Sasha, is also an attorney and recently completed her service as President of the Madison Elementary School District Governing Board in Phoenix. They have two young daughters, Rose and Ruth. Rodney and Sasha have collaborated on a series of children’s book with sustainability themes. (AZJL featured them on the April 2013 cover.) The main character, Jeremy ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 29
RODNEY GLASSMAN
RENAISSANCE MAN
Juggles Jumbo Jelly Beans.” The first book, Jeremy Jackrabbit Harvests the Rain, explains the importance of rainwater harvesting to the young reader. Since then, they have covered other topics: solar power, recycling and water conservation. The newest topic is public transportation. Their sixth book, Jeremy Jackrabbit Hops on Board, is due out this summer. To date, Sasha and Rodney have distributed more than 250,000 free books to children across Arizona. Being connected and contributing to the Jewish community is very important to Rodney. He has heeded the words his father told him, “When you go to a new community, you always join a synagogue.” The family belongs to Congregation Beth Israel in Scottsdale, where their girls attend Sunday school. Rodney firmly believes that “the most important investment every member of the Jewish community can make is to join a synagogue ... affiliation is key because if only those who plan to attend regularly join synagogues, we won’t have the resources, programs, facilities or leadership necessary to build a strong, vibrant Jewish community.” In addition to serving on the board of the Jewish National Fund Arizona Chapter, Rodney and Sasha chaired the 2015 and 2016 JNF Annual Breakfasts, growing attendance from 400 people to more than 900 people in just two years. As chairs, the couple engaged influential keynote speakers including Dr. Michael Crow, President of Arizona State University and Bret Stephens, Wall Street Journal foreign affairs columnist and deputy editorial page editor. Rodney and Sasha are members of the Grand Canyon Caucus, Arizona’s Pro-Israel Political Action Committee as well as supporters of the Jewish Federation of Greater Phoenix and AIPAC. Rodney is also a former board member of the Desert Caucus, Jewish Federation of Southern Arizona and the Tucson Jewish Community Center. Two years ago, in order to begin instilling an even greater sense of Jewish identity for their daughters, the Glassman family decided to begin observing Shabbat every Friday night. “When you decide to stay home on Shabbat that is a big commitment. Every Friday we stay home, light the candles, say the hamotzi and have dinner around the table so we can visit and simply talk about our lives,” he explains. “It’s wonderful to play games, and for us, it resets the whole week.” If anyone needs a little downtime at the end of the week, it is Rodney. His newest project is running for the Arizona Corporation Commission this August (Republican primary) and November (general election). The Arizona Corporation Commission is Arizona’s fourth branch of government and is the quasi-judicial regulatory body which oversees nonmunicipal public service corporations involving energy, water, telecommunications, pipelines and trains. It also oversees the incorporation of businesses, securities regulation and railroad/ pipeline safety. Rodney has proposed adopting the Arizona Judicial Code of Conduct for the Corporation Commission in an effort to restore integrity and raise the bar regarding ethics for this important statewide elected office. This year’s Arizona Corporation Commission race has added
30 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
Rodney with wife, Sasha, and their two young daughters, Rose and Ruth. PHOTO COURTESY ADELE HESLINGTON
importance to Rodney because if elected, he will become Arizona’s only Jewish, statewide, elected official as well as Arizona’s only statewide, elected official to have served in the military (Arizona is home to more than 600,000 veterans). As he describes it, “Not only do I bring a unique set of private sector experiences and a background in water and natural resources, but through my service, I will have the opportunity to highlight important issues such as Arizona’s water future, engaging our community, and protecting the Jewish State of Israel – all while demonstrating the importance of faith in service.” Luckily for us, Rodney Glassman, Renaissance man, is a part of our vibrant community.
“To know that the commitment to faith and family that our parents instilled in us as children has germinated and inspired us to grow the family we have today, allows me to look forward to the day when we are able to take our daughters to Israel, as a family.� ~ Rodney Glassman
ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 31
Allan Naplan
FRONT & CENTER
Deena Goldstein: Pop Art Pets By Melissa Hirschl
"Fine art comes from my soul and my style is loose and free as opposed to expected and representational." ~ Deena Goldstein
D
eena Goldstein is an artist who loves “capturing moments from life’s inspirational journeys.” A creative dynamo, with an intense passion for multimedia, digital, acrylic and salvage art, Deena created Pop Art Pets a little over a year ago, adding to her already thriving fine art endeavors. With PAP, Deena turns photos into art, enabling her to showcase pets and animals in bold, expressive paintings. She takes great pains to bring out the soulful eyes, spirit and personality of each animal she works with. According to Deena, the response has been overwhelming. PAP was born out of Deena’s desire to give her sister, a dog lover, an “out of the box” gift. After receiving pictures of her chocolate labs,
32 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
Deena compiled a book of paintings she did of them. She named it Pop Art Pups and before long, potential clients were seeking her out. While dogs, horses, and cats are usually in the limelight, an occasional “off the grid” pet like a hamster has also gotten into the act. “I just did two horse pictures for a client, and the woman was so excited,” says Deena. “That’s the best part for me; seeing the joy in their faces when they see the completed piece for the first time.” Deena encourages her clients to provide the photo that best captures their pet and what they love best about them. That could be a candid moment or something goofy like the animal laying upside down with their tongue hanging out. She also does paintings of people with their pets.
Left, Deena Goldstein holds an example of her artwork, in which she turns photographs into paintings. Right, Dogs and cats aren’t the only subjects that Deena paints. With photos of the animals in hand, Deena’s wizardry begins. The photo is the base layer, and most important factor in the painting. “I focus a lot on image clarity and resolution, tones and shadows, with a special focus on the eyes, since they seem to capture the soul of each pet,” explains Deena. The finished painting depends on where she pulls light and shadow out of the photo. “It’s basically a blank canvas at this point,” she explains. Once the editing is finished, Deena adds
the color. She provides her client with four choices on a selection sheet and they decide on the final image which then goes onto the canvas. “It’s taken me years to find an artist that will express my animals in such a vibrant and unique way,” says client Shelby Hoffman. “Deena has perfectly captured the essence of all my animals, from horses to dogs. Her pieces are show-stopping, colorful, and the perfect piece to remember my beloved family member by.” In addition to PAP, Deena pours her energy into her multimedia creations as well, never losing her desire to create her eclectic art; much of which has been written about and exhibited around the Valley in galleries, restaurants, coffee shops and during special events. “I love messing around with colors and lines, layering colors, and seeing what develops,” she says. Fine art comes from my soul and my style is loose and free as opposed to expected and representational.” Deena’s philanthropic efforts include working with Horses Help, a volunteer organization that provides horse therapy for children with special needs. Also, she is active with PACC911, Phoenix Animal Care Coalition, an organization that brings together over 100 animal welfare organizations throughout Arizona to create an effective animal rescue community. “It is very important we celebrate with our sponsors,” says Gregg Goodman, executive director of Horses Help. We want to acknowledge the heartfelt gifts we receive for supporting our amazing therapy horses. Deena’s passion for working with our teams to create a unique treasure is critically important.” When Deena is not creating, she is overseeing the family-owned, fall prevention, home safety business (Measurabilities Home Safety), spending time with family and friends, or actively participating as a Temple Solel member of the board of directors and Sisters of Solel co-chair. Deena also creates custom art for a variety of clients and occasions, such as birthdays, anniversaries, client gifts and fundraisers. ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 33
Insights on “The Graduate” with author Beverly Gray By Mala Blomquist
B
FRONT & CENTER Beverly Gray 34 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
everly Gray will be in Tucson in March for two events surrounding her latest book, Seduced by Mrs. Robinson, How “The Graduate” Became the Touchstone of a Generation. On March 8 at 7:30 pm she will give a talk before a screening of “The Graduate” at the Loft Theater. She will also appear March 10-11 at the Tucson Festival of Books on the University of Arizona campus. The path that led her to write her third book wasn’t what she had in mind when she was completing her doctorate in Contemporary American Fiction at UCLA. She planned a career in academia when she received two very different job offers. One was to work with B-movie legend Roger Corman, and the other was to teach English at a girl’s school. “I went to my professors and asked them which they thought was the better option, and they said, ‘Take the movie job.’ ” says Beverly. She’s never regretted her decision, although she does admit to making some “pretty sleazy movies” but she learned a lot – including not to take herself too seriously. At New World Pictures with Corman, some of her duties included editing scripts, writing publicity material, casting voice actors and collaborating with directors. “I love working with writers and improving others’ ideas,” she says. Beverly teaches aspiring screenwriters at UCLA Extension’s world-renowned Writer’s Program. “I’m trying to help the students be the best writers they can be, given the way they choose to approach it. I don’t promise anyone fame or fortune, or failure, but I want the script to be as good as they can make it – given what their goals are for it.” Beverly had already written two books, Roger Corman, Blood-Sucking Vampires, Flesh-Eating Cockroaches and Driller Killers and Ron Howard, from Mayberry to the Moon…and Beyond and was looking for inspiration for the third, when she realized the interesting turn that movies took in 1967 –they reflected real life. “The baby boomers had been molded by our memories of JFK in 1963, the civil rights movement (both the positive, idealistic side and the other side with civil disturbances and riots) and the Vietnam war,” says Beverly. “The war was affecting our outlook on a day-today basis.” One of the films in that era that particularly interested Beverly was “The Graduate.” “It does not mention the things going on – like racial strife and the war,” she says. “But the movie was very clever and powerful, and young people immediately connected with it.” Beverly comments that “The Graduate” was like a Rorschach test; when she talks to people about the film,
they all view it through the lens of what was on their mind at the time-- from sex to feminism. “For me, the whole party situation at the beginning of the film, where everyone welcomes the homecoming of this graduate and then proceeds to tell him exactly how he should live his life – that I really understood. It was exactly what I was feeling right about then,” Beverly says of how she identified with the film. The underlying Jewish component of the film also fascinated Beverly. The director, Mike Nichols, himself a Jewish immigrant who came to the United States from Berlin as a child in 1939, was looking for a leading man who was out of the mainstream, someone who didn’t seem to fit into the context in which he found himself. Beverly remembers a favorite quote from Nichols, “I kept looking and looking until I found Dustin, who is short and dark and Jewish, which is the way I envision myself.” Hoffman’s character resonated with a generation of young people who didn’t feel quite right themselves. Seduced by Mrs. Robinson, features insight about how the film was made, the various decisions that had to be reached and compromises made. It also touches on parts that aren’t necessarily obvious, like the art direction and the camera work. She also assesses how and why the movie is still with us today. “It was really a fun book to write, and I enjoy talking about it,” says Beverly. For more information about Beverly, including her entertaining blog, Beverly in Movieland, visit beverlygray.com.
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CORNER
CAVEMAN AT THE SEDER Photo and recipe by Lucia Schnitzer
Lucia Schnitzer and her husband, Ken, own Pomelo (a full-service restaurant), Luci’s at The Orchard and Splurge (a candy and ice cream shop), all at The Orchard Phx, 7100 N 12th Street, Phoenix. They also own Luci’s Healthy Marketplace, 1590 E Bethany Home Road, Phoenix, which they opened in 2009 in Lucia’s honor after her successful battle with breast cancer. 36 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
Passover begins at the end of this month, and the checklist starts to form with all my to-dos. My biggest focus every year is the food. How do I make Passover healthy for my kids, my husband and myself ? For almost two years, I have been eating a more Paleo diet (a diet based on the types of foods presumed to have been eaten by early humans, consisting chiefly of meat, fish, vegetables and fruit, and excluding dairy or grain products and processed food). I have found this way of eating simple and sustainable, and it keeps my weight stable and my tummy happy. I incorporate Paleo foods during Passover by including protein, healthy fats, vegetables and some selective fruits and nuts. Other then matzah for the seder, the rest of the holiday can be relatively Paleo. I wanted to share a favorite staple here in our home, chicken soup. We eat soup all year round. The healing properties alone are incredible with bone-based soups. From a healthy gut to radiant skin and a boosted immune system – why wouldn’t we have bone broth all the time? There are actual cafés that serve just bone broth, almost like a coffee shop except much healthier and maybe not so addictive. The key step here is to simmer the bones from 6 to 72 hours. After doing so, you can freeze and use the broth as needed or have it available fresh to use throughout the week. I love to add whatever seasonal vegetables that are in season – so I mix it up all the time. I purposely didn’t make this soup with matzah balls, but if you just can’t have chicken soup without the matzah balls, then, by all means, include them. May you have a kosher, healthy and meaningful seder.
No Matzah Ball Chicken Soup
Instructions Place the chicken, onions, carrots and celery in a large stock pot (14 quarts or larger) and add enough water to fill the pot 3/4 ways to the top, approximately 8-10 quarts. Bring to a boil. Let the soup boil gently, uncovered, for 20 minutes, skimming off any froth as it forms. Reduce the heat to low and bundle the sprigs of herbs together with cooking twine and add them along with the celery seed, salt and white pepper. Cover and simmer for 90 minutes. Remove the chicken from the soup after 90 minutes, and pull the meat off the bone. Return the meat back into the pot (be sure no bones get back into the pot). Add parsnips, potatoes, butternut squash and sweet potatoes. Simmer for 90 minutes. Add the leek, zucchini, asparagus and chopped mint. Simmer for 30 minutes. Remove bundled herbs and season with salt and pepper. Serve and enjoy!
IMAGINE
Ingredients 1 whole chicken, 4-5 pounds 3 medium yellow onions, peeled and quartered 6 carrots, peeled and roughly chopped (or substitute 1pound baby carrots) 5 celery stalks, roughly chopped 4 sprigs of bay leaves 4 sprigs of thyme 4 sprigs of rosemary 1/4 teaspoon celery seed 1 teaspoon salt ¼ teaspoon white pepper 4 parsnips, quartered 6 baby potatoes, quartered 1/2 butternut squash, quartered 4 sweet potatoes, quartered (any color) 1 whole leek, chopped 3 zucchinis, sliced 8 asparagus stalks, chopped 6 mint leaves, finely chopped Salt and pepper to taste
WANDER NO MORE
azjewishlife.com ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 37
FOOD RESTAURANT REVIEW
Tandoori Chicken Tikka
Inexpensive excellence can be found in Tempe By Michael Rosenthal
Rarely do I take restaurant suggestions from 11-year-olds, but this sixth grader, who knows my passion for food, was determined that I go to Curry Corner. “Oh yeah,” I said, “What’s your favorite thing to eat there?” Though she enthusiastically listed several different items, she had me at the first thing she said. “Tikka Masala fries.” When I looked up directions to the restaurant, I discovered it had been featured on Guy Fieri’s show “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives” on Food Network, all the more reason to go. Curry Corner, located in Tempe near Arizona State University, is a Pakistani and Indian food restaurant serving a cuisine they lovingly refer to as Indo-Pak. It’s a family affair dedicated to great food at great prices, and they have a huge student following. Their motto, “inexpensive elegance” is emblazoned on their staff t-shirts, and much appreciated by student budgets. Like most ethnic restaurants whose focus is food, there’s not much emphasis on ambiance and décor, and there doesn’t need to be. People aren’t there to be charmed; they are there to be fed. A big screen TV silently plays videos of Indo-Pak cooking, and there’s a portable sound system playing the music of the region. I do notice that the kitchen is about the same size as the dining area. They must need all that kitchen space to produce all that flavor. Though there are dishes that aren’t spicy (most of them are) they are still spiced. That is because dishes from this region are layered with multiple spices, six or seven to a dish, and even if they don’t have a hot chili or hot curry in the mix, they still have a lot of spice flavor. This is what makes Indo-Pak food so popular among its fans, and so unloved among those with milder palates. Over the course of several visits, here is what I had: 38 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
THIS MONTH’S RESTAURANT
Curry Corner $$ 1212 E. Apache Blvd., Tempe 480-894-1276 currycornertempe.com
Contact Michael Rosenthal at a.noshman@azjewishlife.com
Tikka Masala Fries $5.50
(Fries tossed in house masala sauce, topped with feta cheese) This is the dish that brought me here and though it is listed as an appetizer, could have been its own main course entrée. Out comes a golden brown pile of seasoned fries falling off the plate, all drizzled with a creamy sauce and crumbles of feta. It’s the kind of thing that makes your eyes roll back as you take your first bite. I have now learned to always take restaurant advice from an 11-year-old Pakistani girl. These fries are a must try.
itself. I also used their delicious naan bread to soak up the wonderful gravy. As I finished, a single tear ran down my cheek. Though this was a joyful experience, I don’t think it was a tear from joy, but rather a tear from the spicy curry. This one is hot!
Samosas (3 pieces) $3.50
(Crispy pastries stuffed with a spicy blend of potatoes and peas) Here is another appetizer that can easily be shared by two or three people. The samosas are big, crisp, piping hot, and served with two dipping sauces, one is a sweet and sour tamarind, and the other is a cool yogurt with mint. Like the fries, this dish is spicy – but not in a hot way. There is a lot of flavor going on. Samosas Tikka Masala Fries
Palak Paneer $7.50
(Freshly chopped spinach greens (palak) cooked with homemade (paneer) cheese) The menu goes on to describe this dish as the pride of the Punjabi farmland. It’s a vegetarian entrée, finely pureed to almost a thick soup, with chunks of very mild cheese swimming in it. It is not spicy hot, but wow, are there a lot of spices in it. It is great with naan or rice and very healthy. Curry Corner offers a long list of vegetarian dishes. The pastry crust is hearty and crisp.
Tandoori Chicken Tikka $9.00
(Marinated leg and thigh of chicken grilled over charcoal) Much to my delight, when this plate comes, it’s actually two legs and two thighs, and as with all entrées, is also served with your choice of basmati rice or naan bread. This is a lot of quality food for under $10. Should I also mention it’s fantastic? The chicken is marinated overnight in tandoori spices, then skewered and roasted in a very hot tandoori oven. This dish was featured on “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives.”
Fresh Karahi
chicken, lamb or beef $9; goat $11
(Chunks of meat cooked with onions, tomatoes, yogurt, ginger, garlic and homemade spices) Karahi is a cooking method utilizing a thick, deep, circular pot which is ideal for stews. Of course, I chose goat (a kosher animal by the way), because how often do you get to choose goat, and I love the gamey flavor. You could taste every single ingredient, and the meat was so tender. I would mix bites with basmati rice sometimes and other times just eat the stew by
Punjabi Handi
chicken $9; lamb, beef, goat or fish $11
(Traditional style handi made with onions, tomatoes, ginger and garlic) Handi, like karahi, is the name of a cooking vessel, it is deep and used primarily for stews. I wanted to try a lamb dish and just like the menu said it would be, it was cooked to perfection. There were large pieces of lamb swimming in a spicy sauce – perfect over rice or with naan. No tears this time, but it was spicy and absolutely delicious. Curry Corner sits in the middle of a tiny group of mostly ethnic shops and a tattoo place. The first thing you notice when you get out of your car is this wonderful aroma. You know you’re in for good food when you can smell it before you shut your car door. The staff is friendly, some are family, and its focus is great food that won’t break a student’s budget. The customers are widely diverse, all races and backgrounds even though the food is from a specific world region. Why? Because people who love great food, know no borders. I was surprised by the number of people to whom I casually mentioned I was heading to Curry Corner said, “I love that place.” Go on down there adventurers; you will love it. ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 39
Windsor Square opens its doors for home tour By Mala Blomquist
WINDSOR SQUARE HISTORIC HOME TOUR WHEN:
Sunday, March 11 from 11 am to 4 pm WHERE:
Orange and 2nd Street (one block east of Central Avenue and just north of Camelback Road) TICKETS:
$20 day of event ($17 in advance) adults, children ages 12 and under free INFORMATION:
windsorsquarephoenix.com
T
he Windsor Square historic neighborhood in Phoenix was established in 1928 and will turn 90 this year. The first home was completed in 1929 when the city’s population was just 70,000. But the Great Depression, then World War II delayed the neighborhood’s growth. Much of Windsor Square was completed when returning GI’s created a building boom. Families in the 1940s could buy a lot in Windsor Square for as little as $500. In 1955, Uptown Plaza was developed, encouraging more growth north of downtown, as well as additional housing options along Central Avenue. Today, Windsor Square is one of the most desirable historic neighborhoods in Phoenix. It was named by Money magazine as one of the 10 U.S. “Best Big City Neighborhoods to Live In,” and New Times Magazine named it “Best Neighborhood.” The neighborhood will be hosting its 11th biennial home tour on March 11 from 11 am to 4 pm. Participants have the opportunity to tour 12 historic homes featuring some of the latest design trends, while at the same time exploring original classic architectural highlights dating back to the 1930s and ’40s. Visitors will be able to check out offerings of fine arts and crafts vendors, partake in a beer garden, enjoy some 40 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
of the Valley’s best food truck fare and listen to live music. For Windsor Square residents Peter and Kayleigh Diamond, remodeling their historic home was filled with many memories. Kayleigh, along with her younger sister, grew up visiting their grandmother’s home in Windsor Square. After her grandmother’s passing, Kayleigh had the opportunity to purchase the home, undertaking a dramatic remodel while retaining several features from the original design. Now expecting their second child, Peter and Kayleigh are excited to open their “new” home to the tour while sharing photos of the original house and the extensive remodel process. “I have so many fond memories of visiting Grandy; I feel honored that I can pass on this experience to my own children,” says Kayleigh. The couple has dramatically increased the living space of the home which now totals 3,100 square feet, including four bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms, an office, a bar/man cave, two laundries and generous dining and living spaces. Phil Sheinbein and his wife, Ora, did a “ground-up” restoration of their 1945 traditional ranch-style house in 2010. The house had an additional 400 square feet added to its original 1,300 square feet in the 1950s. They added roughly 600 square feet during their remodel, so now the home is at 2,300 square feet. Perfect for the couple and their twin boys, Kol and Lev. The Sheinbein’s home was on the home tour in 2016. “It was incredibly rewarding. My wife and I were so excited to do it,” says Phil. “People were incredibly nice and gracious. It was exciting, and a little odd, to have 1,500 strangers go through your house – at the same time it was thrilling.” Phil says about the home tour, “It’s a great way for the neighborhood, and city, to showcase that there is some history here and we can celebrate that history. Also, people are willing to invest in preserving it, even when it’s more work.” All changes to historic homes must be approved by the City of
Y T L A RE
H C N RA T Y REAL
Phoenix Historic Preservation Office. Instead of a home owner’s association, the neighborhood has the Windsor Square Special Planning District, of which Phil is in his second year as president, having served on the board for three years before that. The planning district deals with the 286 homes and the commercial properties that fall within its boundaries. The boundaries of the Windsor Square district are Missouri Avenue to the north, Camelback Road to the south, Central to the west and Seventh Street to the east. “We have a lot of oversight responsibility,” explains Phil. These responsibilities cover everything from program planning for residents to re-zoning issues. “The city empowered the historic districts when they created these (planning districts) to be able to have more oversight and minimize the impact of the Residential Home Sales, Leasing and Property M commercial interests – we want to preserve the character of the neighborhood.” Serving the Residents of McCormick Ranch S Phil says that the developer who restored Uptown Plaza did Residential HomeSales, Sales, Leasing Property Management Furnished & Unfurnished Rentals Available Y Residential Home Leasingand and Property Management a great job, taking it back to its original red brick and neon Serving the Residents of McCormick Ranch Since 1974 Serving the Residents Ranch Since 1974 Longof&McCormick ShortAvailable Term Lease Agreement attributes. He and his family like to walk or bike ride to the many Furnished and Unfurnished Rentals Year-Round Furnished & Unfurnished Rentals Available Year-Round vibrant and great retailers close by. Long and Short Term Lease Agreements Long & Short Term Lease Agreements The “walkability” of the neighborhood is just one of the many reasons that Phil returned to the North Central neighborhood area where he grew up. “It’s a place where we have a sense of 7353 N. Via Paseo Del Sur • Scottsdale, AZ community,” he says. “Ultimately, this the most critical part. We www.RanchRealty.com 7353 N. Via Paseo Del Sur • Scottsdale, AZ 85258 know our neighbors; we see everybody out – we have a true sense www.RanchRealty.com of community here.”
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ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 41
FROM THE RUNWAY: SPRINGTIME STYLE Top 5 Trends from Fashion Week By Tori Rosenblum New York and London Fashion Weeks brought spring style to the runways. From bold and unexpected prints to plastic pants to an unexpected break-out color, I’m sharing the f ive biggest trends from the designer runways with you. 1) LOVELY LAVENDER Spring 2018’s “it” color is lavender. This pastel purple will replace the popular “millennial pink” as seen in the collections of Victoria Beckham and Michael Kors. The soft hue is one of the statement trends of the year and is showing up in feminine formal wear, skirts, tunics, suiting and knits. Try pairing a lavender blouse or blazer with your favorite pair of dark blue jeans, as it will create a beautiful color contrast. Finish the look with a bold lip and you’ve got a chic look – perfect for any springtime occasion. 2) PATTERN PLAY Channel your inner fashionista by experimenting mixing and matching eccentric patterns. Pair large, bold florals with stripes or polka dots for a unique style. Just because prints may not match, doesn’t mean they don’t complement each other. How to achieve this look: Choose two different patterns that share the same colors or tones. 3) THE YEAR OF PLASTIC You’ll never look at your mom’s dishwashing gloves or your Bubbe’s couch covers the same way again, as brands are taking plastic and rubberized materials and transforming them into unexpectedly chic silhouettes like anorak jackets, skirts, boots and clutches. Clearly, the see-through style is the newest way to show off your layered looks. 4) NOT SO SHORT SHORTS Arizona’s summer heat is on its way and so is the anxiety of wearing short shorts. Not to worry! This spring, the longer bike short and classic preppy short is back in style. So, don’t stress about showing off your legs in cutoff denim shorts, because a longer active-inspired short or a pleated black or khaki short is a much posher option for 2018. 5) FLAUNT THAT BRAND If you’re interested in what brand your favorite celebrity is wearing, look no further than their clothes. Logos are plastered on the shirts, belts and bags of our favorite fashion icons. This trend has been on the upswing since celebrities like Kendal Jenner and Justin Bieber started showing off their Calvin’s, but logo mania has extended far beyond the elastic waistband of underwear. Brand names are being shown off on just about every item of clothing. Springtime is on the horizon, so prepare to push your winter wear to the back of your closet and bring these fashions to the front.
42 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
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Actively Senior
The Mystic of Cave Creek
Barbara Friedkin
By Tamara Parisio
Barbara Friedkin arrived at my home in a Subaru. As she stepped out of the car, her 5’3” frame was perched atop opentoed slides, and she wore a flowing tunic and pants set. Her blonde hair cascaded around her round cheeks that were raised by her smile. “This is The Mystic of Cave Creek,” I thought. It’s a tradition when my mom visits, to meet with a psychic. So, here we are at the table, with a notepad, pens and her tape recorder. Barbara announced that she would begin with prayer. Next, fingers clutching a pen, her hands began to swirl upon the paper. The scribble was legible to Barbara, an occasional letter distinguishable for me. “My darling girl,” she said. Then went on with messages to my mom from my deceased grandfather. My mom was child number nine of 10 and the only one with brown eyes. My grandfather’s eyes were brown, so she was his “special girl.” Through Barbara, grandpa teased mom about divorcing my dad, “you were swept off your feet by his good looks.” Mom admitted that was true. So it was that The Mystic of Cave Creek spent a morning at my table, connecting us with those we love and lost, who love us and linger with us still. Often she was reminded of a personal story. With a ‘click’ the recorder was off, and her tale was on. Barbara leaned back in the chair. “I was born April 29 in 1953, 3 pounds 10 ounces – a Rh factor baby who had a blood transfusion five days later and spent time in an incubator,” says Barbara. “My mother would say, ‘I wasn't born, I was hatched.’ ” We all laughed. 44 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
She continues, “My Jewish-Russian born great-grandmother Sara came to see me. Her first words were, ‘She isn't a good size chicken!’ What’s with the jokes? I learned then that this was the Jewish way to cope with tragedy and pain – laughter through the tears.” Barbara went on to explain that she had always been psychic. In her crib, the stuffed animals would talk to her. Her mother called her Chicken Little because she always warned when something was wrong. She went to Jewish preschool, Sunday school, then Hebrew school. When she was preparing for her bat mitzvah, she realized two things, “I could really sing, and the other thing I learned was what I call ‘magical thinking,’ ” says Barbara. “My Hebrew name, Nessa, means ‘miracle,’ and in Greek it means ‘she knows!’ ” In her twenties, Barbara’s “gift of knowing” became so strong, she could no longer avoid it. “I had dreams that came true – from a man I would meet and love to 9/11,” she explains. “My dreams spoke to me about things that would happen. Like when I was going to meet John Lennon and I told a friend I was afraid he’d be killed before I get to meet him. He was shot that week.” Before she became a medium, Barbara taught theater and music She had been an actress and screenwriter in Hollywood. She was a comedienne for Bette Midler and the warm-up act for shows including “Valerie” with Valerie Harper. In these roles, she found glimpses into her talents. For instance, while moving from table to table among audience members, she tossed out teasing remarks to guests. Later, one guest – a psychologist – informed that she had "read" each person in a way that was oddly accurate.
Her vocal talents led her to befriend icons such as Bette Midler and Dolly Parton. Additionally, Barbara co-wrote the musical “Breakfast in Marin” which, she hopes, returns to the stage. Once, while visiting Arizona, a man in a rock shop told her she would be The Mystic of Cave Creek – a premonition of things to come. After the Los Angeles earthquakes, Barbara moved to the stable soils of Carefree. She continued work as an acting coach and began doing readings, thus becoming The Mystic of Cave Creek. “I work through prayer and ask my clients to pray silently in their own way, according to their own faith or belief,” explains Barbara. “I write down things. I never know what it is going to be and, still to my surprise, it is on the money with details I could never know!” She asks clients to save their questions. “I get names, places, dates – details are the proof,” says Barbara. “I recently read a gal in Carefree. The reading contained a lot of names – all but her father’s. I felt it was his spirit around her, and I would not let her tell me his name. In a last-ditch effort, I prayed hard and insisted on being informed! Then it came to me. Alan! With a smile, she confirmed it.” Time spent with The Mystic of Cave Creek is enriching. There are so many heart-warming revelations in Barbara's readings. “I don’t know why I have this gift, I just have it and try to help people get peace of mind in their lives. We are really never alone,” Barbara says, “I try to give proof, so people have faith.” For more information, visit themysticofcavecreek.com.
CREATIVE AGING
Participatory arts classes for those 60+
Jewish Family & Children’s Service
Stay engaged, have fun, & meet new people
New Sessions beginning the week of March 26.
Story Telling | Tuesdays: 10 am-noon Valley Of the Sun JCC, 12701 N Scottsdale Rd, Scottsdale
Let’s talk about something retirement communities hardly ever mention. Accreditation. Because having the confidence and peace of mind of accreditation is important. So, let’s talk. La Siena is accredited by CARF International. It’s an independent organization that sets exceedingly high standards for care and service. It’s a lot like an accreditation for a hospital or college. Or a five-star rating for a hotel. But like most things in life, you have to see it to believe it. So, let’s talk some more at a complimentary lunch and tour. Please call 602.910.6319 to schedule.
Israeli Dance | Tuesdays: 2 pm-3 pm Congregation Beth Israel, 10460 N 56th St, Scottsdale
Voice Lessons | Wednesdays: 10 am-noon Temple Chai, 4645 E Marilyn Rd, Phoenix
Story Telling | Thursdays: 10 am-noon Temple Beth Shalom, 12202 N 101st Ave, Sun City
I n de p e n de n t & A s s i s t e d L i v i ng
909 East Northern Avenue • Phoenix, AZ LaSienaSeniorLiving.com • 602.910.6319
www.jfcsaz.org/creativeaging or call Janet Rees at (480) 599-7198
ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 45
Actively Senior
“Mother of Animal Law” driven by tikkun olam
Joyce with Deja, her American Staffordshire terrier. A widow, Joyce has “lived with companion animals” most of her life and now lives with Deja and two cats, Marley and Frankie.
By Deborah Moon
When Joyce Tischler was a law student 40 years ago, animal law didn’t exist. Now the Animal Legal Defense Fund Joyce cofounded in 1979 has three offices on the West Coast and thousands of attorneys protecting animals’ rights. For Joyce, protecting animals is all about tikkun olam, mending the world. “Tikkun olam runs very deep for me,” she says. “I never wanted to practice in a big firm and make a lot of money. I wanted to work for a cause and change the world.” Joyce, who is 63, has been called the “Mother of Animal Law.” As a law student she wrote a groundbreaking article for the law journal at the University of San Diego School of Law: “Rights for Nonhuman Animals: A Guardianship Model for Dogs and Cats.” She served as the founding director of ALDF for 24 years and is now general counsel at ALDF, which is headquartered in San Francisco with offices in Portland and Los Angeles. ALDF protects the lives and advances the interests of animals through the legal system. As an attorney who has devoted her life to animal welfare, 46 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
Joyce doesn’t expect everyone to jump in as deeply as she has. But given the love and care so many of us lavish on our dogs and cats, she does hope everyone will take one small step toward improving the lives of animals. “There is a lot of information on the internet about problems faced by animals,” she says. “Many people don’t want to know the painful truth. Allow yourself to be broken open to the suffering.” As it says in Ethics of the Fathers, “You are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are you free to desist from it.” We cannot be bystanders, we have to start somewhere, and it doesn’t really matter where: pick an issue, pick a species, pick what you are passionate about, then roll up your sleeves and take action,” says Joyce. Herself a vegan, she encourages others to consider adopting Meatless Monday to reduce the demand for animals raised in intense confinement on factory farms. Or volunteer to clean cages, walk dogs or play with cats at an animal shelter. Or visit aldf.org and sign up for action alerts. Attorneys can do pro bono work to help ADFL extend its reach.
“Whatever level you want, there is so much people can do,” she says. “It starts with tikkun olam. This concept encourages each of us to stretch our hearts and embrace more of this world. To stand beside the wounded and the defenseless, to embrace those who suffer, to acknowledge and reach out to those who are ignored or abused. … The world needs more generosity, more mercy and better care.” Joyce grew up in a culturally Jewish home. The family attended synagogue on the holidays and she spent summers at a Jewish camp in the Catskills. She says her commitment to tikkun olam grew out of her exploration of concepts she encountered on the Days of Awe. “I had to teach myself a lot,” she says. She took Yiddish in college and visited Israel when she was 19. But she notes Birthright didn’t exist then, and Israel was just part of her travels. By contrast, when her daughter, Margeve, now 27, went to Israel on Birthright, she was so moved that she took a volunteer job at a hostel in Tel Aviv in exchange for a place to stay and spent two and a half months experiencing Israel. Joyce says that now, “The Days of Awe have become a very special time of the year for me, not only as a Jew, but as a human being striving to be my best version of myself.” For the first few years, ALDF (initially called Attorneys for Animal Rights) was a group of attorneys who met monthly to study state and federal laws relevant to animals and the abuse animals suffer. In 1981 Joyce filed a case against the U.S. Navy to halt its plan to shoot approximately 5,000 feral burros at its Weapons Testing Center in China Lake, CA. The Navy had already killed more than 600 burros before Joyce filed the suit, which lasted eight months but ensured no more burros were killed. The victory netted the group a grant from the Animal Protection Institute, which enabled her to begin to work full time for ALDF, with a first annual budget of $12,000. Since then, the group’s website notes, “ALDF has sued to stop bear hunts, mountain lion hunts, the removal of wild horses from federal lands, and challenged the intensive confinement of farmed animals and even the ‘patenting’ of animals. We’ve assisted prosecutors in numerous cruelty cases, rescued animals from hoarders and saved the lives of many animals, including dogs, cats, birds, chimpanzees, horses and, of course, those beautiful burros.” Although ALDF remains the only specifically animal law-focused organization, today most animal protection groups have lawyers and a legal strategy, something Joyce recommended that they do as early as 1986. In addition, there are now over 180 student chapters of the Animal Legal Defense Fund in law schools across the United States and Canada. In Arizona, there are chapters at Arizona State University Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law in Tempe; Arizona Summit Law School in Phoenix and University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law. “One of the things I am enjoying about getting older is that a lot of the constant chatter in my head has fallen away – the doubts, the worries, the second guessing that defined my younger years,” she says. “I can see now that I’ve done exactly what I was put on this earth to do. I’ve been able to put my beliefs and values into action.”
The great outdoors and the great indoors, all in one. Have you ever noticed that folks always say the great outdoors? Well, what about the great indoors? Can’t they be great, too? They sure can. And the Casitas at Maravilla Scottsdale are a perfect example. Some would say it’s about as beautiful as a retirement community can be. The Casitas have all the luxury you can imagine on the inside. But here’s the best part. Maravilla is located smack-dab in the middle of the great outdoors. Come experience the great indoors AND outdoors for yourself at Maravilla Scottsdale.
7325 E. Princess Blvd. Scottsdale, AZ • 480.359.1345 MaravillaScottsdale.com Ca sita s | Cou rt ya r d R esidences In depen den t & A ssisted Li v ing | Memory Ca r e
ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 47
Cancer Caregivers Education Program
Actively Senior
Do you care for one of the more than 33,000 Arizonians diagnosed with cancer every year? Barbara Kavanagh does, and is dedicated to cancer caregiver education. Barbara is the president and CEO of Arizona Myeloma Network. “When my husband was diagnosed with multiple myeloma 26 years ago, we were devastated and felt so alone,” says Barbara. “We had no idea of how to battle this devastating cancer and decided to try and learn all we could about
adults (16,400 men and 14,370 women) in the United States will be diagnosed with MM in 2018, and an estimated 12,770 people are predicted to die from the disease. The five-year survival rate for MM is approximately 49.6%, versus 31% in 1999. When cancer invades the home, suddenly everyone becomes a cancer caregiver, including friends and neighbors. “Everyone caring for a cancer patient needs to come to our seminars for their own health and wellbeing,” says Barbara. Every seminar is free to the public. Attendees walk away knowing how to advocate for their loved one and have an opportunity to talk with local resources that can help. “I really hope people caring for a cancer patient join us on Saturday, April 28, at the Embassy Suites Hilton at Stonecreek Golf Course,” Barbara says. “Your cancer caregiver experience is important to us as we develop new seminars for 2018.” The topic for this program is “Helping your loved one deal with side effects.” Cancer Caregivers Education Program seminars deliver practical knowledge, skills and strategies necessary to effectively care for the cancer patient and themselves. CCEP is now available as a customized program for companies and healthcare organizations that want to help employees struggling with cancer. Employers know how much it costs them in lost productivity and absenteeism when someone is the primary
The Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation and Arizona Myeloma Network
Barbara Kavanagh
treatment.” They started the Arizona Myeloma Network to share this knowledge with others. Collaborating with outstanding cancer facilities and organizations such as The Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation, they can help to improve the quality of life for both patients and their family of caregivers. “That is why we launched the Cancer Caregivers Education Program. Our mission promises to educate cancer caregivers for their wellbeing and improved patient outcomes.” Multiple myeloma is a cancer of the plasma cell. It is the second most common blood cancer. An estimated 30,770 48 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
MMRF Patient Summit When: March 24 from 7:45 am to 4 pm Where: Scottsdale Resort at McCormick Ranch, 7700 E. McCormick Pkwy., Scottsdale Information: Visit themmrf.org/scottsdalesummit to register or contact Beth Ann Karlehag at karlehagb@themmrf.org
Cancer Caregivers Seminar “Helping your loved one deal with side effects” When: April 28 from 8:30 to 11:30 am Where: Embassy Suites by Hilton at Stonecreek Golf Course, 4415 E. Paradise Village Pkwy. S., Phoenix Information: Visit azmn.info/care to register
Enhancing Life — ® Advancing Wellness
Home of the Jewish Family & Children’s Services ~ Center for Senior Enrichment
WE OFFER A COMPLETE CONTINUUM OF CARE • Independent Living • Assisted Living • Skilled Nursing (CMS 5-star & HSAG Platinum Level) • Memory Care
www.palazzohc.com 6250 N. 19th Avenue • Phoenix • AZ 85015
602.433.6300
ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 49
Your Care Agency A S S I S T E D L I V I N G C O N S U LTA N T S
WHAT WE DO • Educate you on the options • Locate Assisted Living • Guide you through the process • Arrange for movers • Referrals to other services
HOW WE DO IT • Face-to-face meeting and assessment • Background check each place • Agent comes on tour with you • Assistance with paperwork
Contact: Jonathan Shaw 480-203-5983 JShaw@YourCareAgency.com www.YourCareAgency.com
caregiver for a cancer patient. Educating the cancer caregiver is the first step in building healthier communities and addressing a very real social issue. In Arizona alone, more than 38,000 will hear that they have cancer in 2018. For every one patient, there are as many as three informal family members, friends and neighbors that care for them. This is only the newly diagnosed. What about the other hundreds of thousand survivors? That is the impact on the communities where we live, work and play. There is another important support event happening this month. The Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation and Arizona Myeloma Network will hold their first joint MMRF Patient Summit on March 24 from 7:45 am to 4 pm at 7700 E. McCormick Pkwy. in Scottsdale. The Patient Summit is a free educational program designed to help patients and caregivers learn more about multiple myeloma, the second most common blood cancer, and how to optimize their journey with the disease. Program Chair P. Leif Bergsagel, M.D. from the Mayo Clinic, will be joined by multiple myeloma experts who will discuss treatment options for all stages of the disease, clinical trials, and management of symptoms and side effects. For more information on the Arizona Myeloma Network, visit azmyelomanetwork.org.
Architectural Rendering
We’re adding 34 new patio homes to the iconic neighborhood north of Beatitudes Campus. With a vibrant social life, lifelong learning opportunities, and exceptional peace of mind for today and tomorrow, it’s our way of inspiring a whole new view of senior living.
Beatitudes Campus is a not-for-profit life plan community founded by the Church of the Beatitudes. We welcome people of all faiths with open arms. 50 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
52 Wildfire destroyed the site but not the spirit of URJ
Camp Newman
54 Shemesh receives
ACA accreditation 56 Special needs camps in Arizona 58 31 Flavors 60 Fun new facilities for
Arizona Sunrays
61 Camp Directory 64 Kids Calendar
A KIDS GROW AT OVERNIGHT, DAY AND JEWISH CAMPS
necdotal evidence has long shown that summer camp helps children learn valuable life skills that enhance their lives in college and beyond. Jewish sleep-away camps have the added benefit of creating confident, engaged Jewish adults. In recent years, two studies have come out with statistics that prove the stories. The 2011 Camp Works study from the Foundation for Jewish Camp (jewishcamp. org) revealed that adults who attended a Jewish camp in their youth are “30% more likely to donate to a Jewish charity; 37% more likely to light Shabbat candles; 45% more likely to attend synagogue monthly or more; and 55% more likely to be very emotionally attached to Israel.” Last year, the American Camp Association (acacamps.org) completed Phase 1 of its five-year Youth Impact Study. ACA Director of Research Dr. Laurie Browne says these preliminary findings point to the numerous ways camp prepares children for college, careers and beyond. Following are some of those emerging themes: Camp appears to be a key context for developing relationship skills. Preliminary findings suggest that camp is an integral
part of a young person’s overall learning, alongside school and other educational contexts. Camp is a unique learning experience that appears to promote skills transferable to 21st-century school and work contexts. Camp gives campers the opportunity to practice being around and appreciating people with attitudes, values and abilities different from their own. Year two of the study will determine the most distinct and transferable outcomes of camp and the camp mechanisms that promote these. Fortunately, families do not have to limit themselves to one type of camp. Many families opt to send kids to sleep-away camp for a portion of the summer and then use day camps as an add-on option for kids who still have free time before school starts. Day camps are perfect for kids who have other part-time summer obligations such as sport teams or family vacations. Day camps allow children to explore new interests or develop existing skills. Special-interest camps such as art, theater, science and sports camps give children the chance to explore their interests or to experiment with a new area in a non-threatening setting.
ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 51
Wildfire destroyed the site but not the spirit of URJ Camp Newman By Mala Blomquist
Amid the charred vegetation, Camp Newman’s Star of David survived.
W
ithin three weeks of the Oct. 8, 2017, wildfire that destroyed URJ Camp Newman, a site to hold their 2018 summer camp was located. The Union for Reform Judaism camp will convene at the California State University Maritime Academy in Vallejo, about an hour southwest of the Santa Rosa camp. “We have exclusive use of the facilities while we are there. It will be smaller, but we are excited to be able to run camp and offer it to the community,” says Camp Director Rabbi Erin Mason. Last year, URJ Camp Newman celebrated 70 years of Jewish camping in the West. Although they have had various names and locations of the decades, they had been at the Santa Rosa location on Porter Creek Road for more than 20 years. They have no idea when they will be able even to begin the process of rebuilding as they are still waiting for the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers to begin their clean up. “We have been pushed back a few time due to the enormity and vast amount of clean up in the area,” explains Erin. “We have been told three different dates when they think clean up will be complete, but they are really just starting the process. Once they come in and clean up, then we have to go back in and see what it looks like from there. We are not going to know our timeline for at least another six months.” There are a couple of things that survived the devastating fire, and when you consider that they are made of wood – it’s pretty extraordinary. The first is the giant Star of David that sits on the hill. The Star is constructed of wood but is mounted 52 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
on a large rock. “It is a sight – seeing it in person,” says Erin. “When you are standing in the middle of camp and you can look up and see the Star – it’s pretty amazing.” Another survivor of the fire is a shed that contained sacred texts, prayer books and the tallitot. “It’s a wooden shed that you can see where the flames went underneath, and you can see where the flames were on the trees around it, but the shed is untouched,” says Erin. The outpouring from the camping community has also been incredible. In addition to their summer camp program, Camp Newman also offers retreats throughout the year to local congregations and other organizations. Trying to find a new location for these retreats has proved challenging. “Every time we call someone and ask to set up a tour [of their camp facility] the first thing they say is, ‘Our hearts are with you. We will do whatever we can to help you,’ The feeling is not only from the Jewish camps that are part of our network in the Bay Area and California but across America,” explains Erin. Many individual campers from across the United States are doing mitzvah projects for their b’nai mitzvah that benefit Camp Newman. Two children from sister camp URJ Goldman Union Camp Institute in Indiana are making mezuzot and sending them. “We need mezuzah for every single dorm room,” says Erin. From that first evening when they were processing what was happening, Erin says they knew one thing for sure: “Camp Newman is about community, that what makes camp are the people and the community that we create together – that is
stronger than any site.” Even though they felt this way, camp staff was still nervous about how the community would react to having camp at this new location. When they opened up summer registration, the reservations started pouring in. “It was such a validation of what we had already felt from our community – that they just want to be together, they want the experience that being at Camp Newman gives them,” says Erin. “Even though we are at a different place, we are going to have the same ruach, we are going to have the same community, and we are going to have the same love of camp that we had when we were at Porter Creek.” California State University will offer some opportunities that their forest location did not have including an Olympicsize swimming pool and an indoor beach volleyball court. But there are also significant activities that they don’t offer, including the high elements ropes course. “That is an integral part of our program, and we think it is so important in terms of building confidence, resilience, trying new things and pushing yourself to new heights – literally,” says Erin. They are currently looking for a place that to take campers offsite so they can still create this experience for them. They are facing each new challenge as it arises. “This whole experience has been such a dramatic learning curve,” explains Erin. “You never wish to learn, in this way, how you or your community respond to tragedy and crisis. What we’ve found is such positivity and support for the work that we do. It’s really been uplifting to our whole team.” For more information on URJ Camp Newman, visit campnewman.org.
Draw • Paint • Sculpt
Experiment with the Fundamentals of Fine art Offering year-round art classes and week long summer programs. Classes are designed for artists of all skill levels, ages 6-18, and are taught by professional working artists. The Scottsdale Artists’ School also offers a variety of adult art classes for absolute beginners - advanced artists!
YOUTH & TEEN ACADEMY
scottsdaleartschool.org
I
480.990.1422
6POINTSSPORTS.ORG/CALIFORNIA CAMPNEWMAN.ORG 6POINTSSCITECH.ORG/WEST ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 53
Shemesh receives ACA accreditation By Mala Blomquist
I
n October 2017, Shemesh Summer Day Camp at the Valley of the Sun Jewish Community Center received accreditation from the American Camp Association. ACA accreditation means that Shemesh Camp at The J submitted to a thorough review of its operations, from staff qualifications and training to emergency management, and that it has complied with the highest standards in the industry. “We had been prepping for a few years,” explains Megan Rich, director of Shemesh Camp at The J. “I thought it was really important that parents feel that everything we are doing is to a certain standard, above and beyond local regulations.” In the fall of 2016, the staff at Shemesh started to examine
WE ARE WHERE HIGH-QUALITY ARTS AND SUMMER CAMP MEET 3rd through 9th graders can join our inclusive community for two week sessions in Redlands, California.
Learn more and register today
HavayaArts.org / 833-HAV-ARTS
Arizona Residents: We’re making joining us for our inaugural summer even easier by subsidizing travel to California!
54 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
Shemesh Camp Director Megan Rich, left, and Youth Coordinator Ali Gates are excited that the Valley of the Sun JCC’s Shemesh Camps have received accreditation from the American Camp Association. their practices and procedures and submitted the paperwork to begin the process towards accreditation. In May 2017, the first ACA “visitor” (volunteer representative who is in the camping industry and has received special training) came to The J to meet with Megan and go over the standards and ACA guidelines that are required for accreditation. Then in July last year, the ACA sent two visitors to observe
summer camp in action and to review all the paperwork to assure camp practices conformed with the submitted paperwork. “They were here for five to six hours reviewing everything from making sure that we had batteries in the smoke detectors to our procedures on taking kids on field trips,” says Megan. “It’s a very involved process, and then you don’t know officially that you’ve passed until October.” Camp Shemesh did receive the accreditation for three years, at which point they will need to seek re-accreditation. “In the in-between years you fill out something online to show that you are following their procedures, and every three years they come and do the same process again,” explains Megan. For Megan, to be ACA accredited is worth the work. She has been working at camps, in one capacity or another, for more than 15 years; after receiving her law degree, she had decided that kind of work wasn’t for her. “Camps can have policies and procedures of their own, but by being ACA accredited, it shows that we follow the highest standards across the country,” she says. In addition to their standards for the health and safety of the campers, ACA also requires staffto-camper ratios that are lower than most states mandate and that goals for camp activities must be developmentally based. “Parents will know that the well being of their child has been thought about throughout,” says Megan. “From safety to training, programming, the facility – it’s really that the parent can drop their child off and know that everything they can think of has been taken care of – and is the top standard in the business at the same time.” Every camp program The J offers, including Chaverim, Ruach, CIT, sports, arts and more is under the umbrella of Shemesh, so all camps are ACA accredited. “It was a lot of work but the motivating factor was that we knew the outcome was going to be something that parents are proud to send their child to camp and confident to send their child to camp for the first time as well,” says Megan. Shemesh Camps at The J offer a year-round camp program with 10 full weeks of summer camp, School’s Out Days and holiday camps. For more information and to register, call 480-634-4949 or visit vosjcc.org/shemeshcamps.
WHY AN ACAACCREDITED CAMP?
American Camp Association Accreditation (acacamps.org) means that your child’s camp cares enough to undergo a thorough (up to 300 standards) peer review of its operation – from staff qualifications and training to emergency management. American Camp Association collaborates with experts from the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Red Cross and other youth-serving agencies to assure that current practices at your child’s camp reflect the most up-to-date, research-based standards in camp operation. Camps and ACA form a partnership that promotes growth and fun in an environment committed to safety.
ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 55
Camp Not-A-Wheeze
Miracle League of Arizona
Special needs camps in Arizona For more than 100 years, organized camps have been serving individuals with special needs. In 1899, Emma Haskell, a Chicago teacher took her physically challenged students on a two-week camping trip. In 1901, she established a permanent site in Wisconsin for campers with special needs. These programs were the beginning of the camp community’s response to issues affecting campers with a wide range of needs including medical, intellectual and physical. In Arizona, we are fortunate to have a variety of camps available that provide programs for those with special needs. ARIZONA CAMP SUNRISE azcampsunrise.org Arizona Camp Sunrise is dedicated to providing an exciting, medically safe camp program for children who have or have had cancer and their siblings. ARIZONA MAGIC OF MUSIC & DANCE azmagic.org Arizona Magic of Music & Dance provides an authentic theatrical experience for children and youth with physical or cognitive disabilities to enrich their lives through the pride and joy of performance. High school and college volunteers develop empathy and leadership skills as they help actors transcend their disabilities and discover magical possibilities. ARIZONA RECREATION CENTER FOR THE HANDICAPPED archaz.org ARCH is a 5-acre recreation center in the heart of Phoenix, offering a full range of skills-based programs and activities, enabling adults and children with developmental disabilities to obtain higher levels of physical well-being, pride, independence and self-esteem. CAMP ABILITIES TUCSON campabilitiestucson.org Camp Abilities is a privately funded educational sports camp for children and young adults who are blind, deaf-blind or have multiple disabilities including visual impairment. The camp provides sports 56 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
instruction, adapted to individual needs, and 1:1 coaching for each child. Camp Abilities Tucson serves 25-30 athletes with visual impairments each summer. CAMP AZDA diabetes.org Camp fosters fun, independence, self-confidence and expands children’s knowledge of diabetes while making friends who understand what it’s like living with diabetes and creating experiences that last a lifetime. CAMP CANDLELIGHT epilepsyaz.org For an entire week, children with epilepsy come together from across Arizona and the Southwest to enjoy all the fun activities and friendships that come with a trip to summer camp and make memories that will last a lifetime. CAMP CIVITAN civitanfoundationaz.org Civitan Foundation offers week-long camp sessions throughout the summer, and weekend adventures once a month during the rest of the year. Founded in 1968, Camp Civitan is a 15-acre wheelchair accessible facility for developmentally disabled children and adults in the cool Northern Arizona pine country town of Williams. CAMP COURAGE azburn.org/camp-courage The Arizona Children’s Burn Camp, Camp Courage, was created to
Camp Candlelight
address the emotional needs of children who have suffered severe burn injuries. Today, approximately 80 youth burn survivors from around the state attend this free, therapeutic camp each year. CAMP HONOR arizonahemophilia.org Camp Honor’s mission is to enrich the lives of children affected by an inherited bleeding disorder by providing life-changing camp experiences that are exciting, empowering and educational, in a physically safe and medically sound environment. CAMP KESEM campkesem.org/asu Kesem is a nationwide community, driven by passionate college student leaders, that supports children through and beyond their parent’s cancer. A program of Kesem, Camp Kesem operates free summer camps for children who have been impacted by a parent’s cancer. CAMP NOT-A-WHEEZE campnotawheeze.org In a traditional camp setting asthma education is integrated with recreational camp activities. This empowers children to understand and avoid their asthma triggers, recognize warning signals of an oncoming episode, properly use their medications, and exercise control over their disease. EASTERSEALS BLAKE FOUNDATION easterseals.com More than just a summer camp, Easterseals Blake Foundation’s Campo del Oeste provides Pima County youth with year-round nature-based experience in the Sonoran Desert. We strive to empower youth to be a positive force for change in their lives and community. LIONS CAMP TATIYEE arizonalionscamp.org Lions Camp Tatiyee provides a week away from home, free of charge, for special needs campers in Arizona to empower them to grow socially, physically and emotionally by trying new activities and challenging personal limits.
Camp Kesem
MIRACLE LEAGUE OF ARIZONA mlaz.org The Miracle League of Arizona is a non-profit organization in North Scottsdale, dedicated to providing a safe, successful and enjoyable baseball experience for children, teens and adults with disabilities or special health care needs. They offer adaptive baseball, at an accessible stadium, removing the barriers that would normally keep individuals off the baseball field. PHOENIX CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL’S CAMP RAINBOW camprainbow.org Camp Rainbow is for children who have, or have had cancer or a chronic blood disorder and are patients of PCH’s Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders. SEEDS FOR AUTISM seedsforautism.org SEEDs for Autism offers summer day camps to youth 15 and older who are interested in learning new skills, while also having fun. The focus is on social skills, while also providing opportunities to learn a wide range of hands-on skills as team players. STEPPING STONES OF HOPE steppingstonesofhope.org Stepping Stones of Hope is dedicated to providing comprehensive support-based programs, continuum of care and education to grieving children, teens, families, adults and communities. Offers camp programs for children, teens, adults and families. THE FRIENDSHIP CIRCLE fcaz.org Summer Day Camp is an exciting program that will give children with special needs a fun and active summer. Camp will provide the opportunity to experience the fun of summer while developing a friendship with a volunteer. The social skills opportunities combine learning critical social skills with a fun and engaging camp experience.
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31 Flavors
By Debra Rich Gettleman
I
am the opposite of a creature of habit. I never buy the same laundry detergent twice. I switch breakfast cereals each time I replenish my supply. I have never repeated the same nail polish color within a two-month time span. But there is one thing in this world about which I am completely consistent: BaskinRobbins ice cream. I have ordered the same two flavors of Baskin-Robbins ice cream since I was seven years old; mint chocolate chip and pralines ’n cream. These two flavors are not only the finest ice cream flavors on the planet, but they are also the flavors that bring me back to everything beautiful from my childhood. (And there wasn’t a lot of beauty back in Lincolnwood, Illinois.) We used to go to the Baskin-Robbins store on Touhy Avenue that was owned by a sweet older man named Mr. Marmelstein. I remember the first time I tasted the icy delight, the first time my top scoop plummeted off the apex of my sugar cone, the first time I saw my dad relish in ice cream heaven. My mom’s favorite flavor was jamoca almond fudge, dad never strayed from rum raisin, and Grandpa Irwin was a butter pecan man. Baskin-Robbins was the one place in the world where things were constant, and you always got exactly what you wanted. I do remember one frightful visit where peer pressure from my gaggle of tween gal pals persuaded me to order pink bubblegum instead of one of my trusted favorites. I regretted it instantly. Once I discovered the first nugget of bubble gum and started chewing, I had a horrible realization. How could I chew and lick at the same time? It was a conundrum of epic proportion. The more gumlets I uncovered, the less pleasurable my ice cream lapping became. It may have been the only time in my life that I failed to finish a double scoop of my American gelato treat. It wasn’t until several years ago that my husband, Mark, schooled me in how to eat pink bubble gum ice cream. “You pull out the pieces of gum and spit them into a cup,” he said with a tone that screamed of shock at my obvious childhood idiocy. “Then when you finish the ice cream you chew the gum.” I don’t think it would have mattered one bit had I known the proper pink bubble gum protocol. It was still a betrayal of my mint chocolate chip and pralines ’n cream faves that I would have to live with for the rest of my life. Since then I have never strayed from my tried and true ice cream BFFs. Cut to today. My eldest son, Levi, got all four wisdom teeth
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out. It was a traumatic experience for my 17-year-old son who has never met a medical procedure that didn’t totally freak him out. I stocked the freezer with plenty of B-R. On the way home from the oral surgeon I asked Levi if he wanted me to stop for a milkshake. “Reary mom?” he asked, his mouth full of gauze, “Dat ould ee great.” I assumed he’d want a mixture of chocolate fudge and Gold Medal Ribbon, his obvious favorites. But when I asked him just to double check, he seemed uncertain. I was stunned. I figured it had to be on account of the anesthesia. Clearly, it was messing with his brain. But he explained in his mealymouthed stupor that he could never pick favorites of Baskin-Robbins ice cream because there were so many delicious flavors and that B-R was always introducing more. I couldn’t believe it. He didn’t have favorites? How was this young man related to me? He ended up ordering a chocolate fudge/Gold Medal Ribbon milkshake because the choices were too overwhelming. I wondered if that was the reason I’d never tried the other 29 flavors. Maybe I was just too scared to take a risk when I knew how much I adored my favorite flavors. Or maybe I just buckled under the weight of such a pivotal decision. Perhaps I had mistakenly judged my risk-averse behavior as unwavering loyalty. I suddenly didn’t know myself at all. It was frightening. “Aren’t ou gonna get some?” Levi asked as I readied to pay for his shake. “Of course,” I assured him. I just needed to decide what to order. I sampled pistachio almond, Mississippi mud and York Peppermint Patty. It was a tough choice. They were all delicious. A line was forming behind me and I started to feel pressured to make a quick decision. “I’ll have a…a… double scoop of…um… well…um…mint chocolate chip and pralines ’n cream,” I blurted out feeling half ashamed and half proud of my steadfast allegiance. Levi looked at me with a twinkle in his eye and a knowing grin, “Ood choice, om,” he snickered as we walked back to the car. Debra Rich Gettleman is a mother, blogger, actor and playwright. For more of her work, visit unmotherlyinsights.com
SUMMER HAPPENS
HERE
MAY 29 - JULY 27 K
Malibu, CA Learn More and Register: wbtcamps.org/az
https://TOUCHBASE.SUSD.ORG 480.484.7900
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Fun new facilities for Arizona Sunrays
Arizona Sunrays’ 34,000-square-foot gym on 32nd Street.
By Mala Blomquist
W
hen children sign up for summer camp this year at Arizona Sunrays Gymnastics & Dance Center, they will have two new locations to choose from. The first is the Sunrays’ 34,000-square-foot gym at 15801 N. 32nd St. in Phoenix that opened in September of 2017 and the second is at 3923 E. Indian School Road in the Arcadia neighborhood, which opened this January. The gym on 32nd Street has been years in the making and a labor of love for Sunrays’ owners Julie and Dan Witenstein. They realized that rather than expanding to different locations, “We wanted to stay in the area that supported us,” says Julie. So they purchased an empty lot and built a state-of-the-art facility down the street from their original location. When you walk into the new gym, although it is much larger and brighter than their old gym, it still feels like Arizona Sunrays. There is a large open area with gymnastics equipment, seating for parents, an upstairs observation area, dance rooms, classrooms and a small café. “We wanted a really open, flexible space that we could change for any activity in the future,” explains Julie. The space is filled with television screens and as Julie says, “We have cameras everywhere – for both safety and transparency.” Parents can watch their child in dance class while they are sitting at a table in the gym area. Everything from the lights to the music can be controlled in a specific area using iPads located on the walls. An iPad on a stand at the entrance lets parents check class schedules or make a payment conveniently. Along with the use of cutting-edge technology, the gym was built with energy-efficient design. There are 17 skylight tubes, LED lighting and long narrow windows to let in lots of natural light. A chalk filtration system located above the uneven bars 60 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
keeps the gymnasts from breathing in the dust, and another system continually keeps air circulating. The floors were also given special consideration during construction. Constructed by the same company that installs dance floors for Ballet Arizona, the three dance rooms have raised maple floors with rubber underneath. In the main gym, the concrete was poured with pits and channels to allow for padding to be added. A gymnast can try a new move and land in the foam pit without ever touching a hard surface. The runway leading up to the vault is specially padded to help eliminate shin splints. In addition to classes and camps, Sunrays also offers a preschool five days a week for ages 3 to 5. Active Preschool is a licensed program with two teachers, Cindy Soultanian and Carin Gallett. Class is held in the morning and includes gymnastics and music daily, with dance, yoga and Ninja Zone activities offered weekly. At the beginning of the year, Sunrays began new partnerships with both Southwest Autism Research & Resource Center and the Civitan Foundation. Sunrays will hire people affiliated with both of these nonprofit organizations to give them valuable employment experience. They also have a Sunrays Gives Back Program that combines various philanthropic efforts encouraging community outreach. Julie and Dan have been committed to this community for more than 27 years; some employees have been with them since Sunrays’ beginning. From the staff to the students, you get a feeling of family at the gym (they even have an in-house daycare for their employees). Sunrays offers classes seven days a week at their 32nd Street location and four days a week at the gym in Arcadia. Both locations offer Supercamp year-round, during holiday breaks and in the summer. Camp is offered half- or full-day with extended care in the morning and afternoons available. Even though Julie admits that building the new gym was “the most exciting thing I’ve ever done” what she and Dan have brought thousands of students over the years is also exciting. “Gymnastics and dance are what a body wants to do naturally,” explains Julie. “You don’t need a ball; you don’t need a racquet – kids just need what they already have – and a safe place to do it.” For more information on the camps and classes offered at Arizona Sunrays, visit arizonasunrays.com.
CAMP DIRECTORY DAY CAMPS Animal Camp at Arizona Animal Welfare League 15 N. 40th Place, Phoenix 602-273-6852 ext. 121 • aawl.org/camp Our campers will learn about animal veterinary needs or learn about the wide variety of animal jobs available (and the steps to get them!) or have a blast learning cool animal facts while using their investigative skills to solve an animal mystery! As You Wish Pottery Summer Classes 6 Valley locations 949-287-9676 • asyouwishpottery.com Our rainbow of classes will color up some fun each week as your child paints their way through a kaleidoscope of color with creative tools like bubbles, Q-tips and more! Kids will be saturated in color as they brush, flick, splatter, sponge and paint pottery while capturing the rainbow with expert, step-by-step instruction from our Artistic Adventure Guides! Camp Kol Ami 15030 N. 64th St., Scottsdale 480-951-5825 • templekolami.org/early-childhood-center Camp Kol Ami welcomes infants through pre-K for nine weeks starting May 29. Camp Kol Ami has a highly qualified and enthusiastic
staff committed to ensuring that your children will be cared for in a safe, nurturing and stimulating environment. All campers enjoy daily splash pad play, individual attention and loving care from our experienced teachers. Ignite Day Camp 5048 E. Oak St., Phoenix 602-389-8600 • ignitedaycamp.org Spark your child’s creativity and interests in the summer at Ignite Day Camp! Powered by New Way Academy. Ignite offers academic programs, sports, recreational activities, fine arts and hands-on learning experiences designed for a variety of learning and ability levels for students in grades K-12. Miró International Preschool Summer Program 11211 E. Via Linda, Scottsdale 480-630-5560 • miropreschool.com Miró International Preschool will be offering 8 weeks of summer programs for ages 1-5 with indoor and outdoor activities; where we incorporate STEAM learning every day. Our programs group children by age and encourage their growing ability to make choices, work with others, and assume responsibilities. Phoenix Theatre Summer Camp and Master Classes 100 E. McDowell Road, Phoenix 602-889-7608 • phoenixtheatre.com/summercamp
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Campers have fun learning collaborative skills while putting together a different musical revue each week based on popular musicals and contemporary hits. Learn music, choreography and scene work while rehearsing a show to perform every Friday for family and friends. Each age group tackles more challenging material and works with professional teaching artists to create new and exciting experiences every week! Scottsdale Artists’ School -Youth Academy Fine Art Camp 3720 N. Marshall Way, Scottsdale 480-990-1422 • scottsdaleartschool.org Campers create art in our professional art studios with experienced teaching artists. Each session will explore a different theme and include many artistic mediums such as drawing, painting, clay and mixed media. Beginners to advanced. Youth Art Show & Reception at the end of each week. Extended day available. Shemesh Summer Camp at The J 12701 N. Scottsdale Road #201, Scottsdale 480-634-4949 • vosjcc.org/shemesh Our camp creates memories that will bring a smile to your child’s face long after summer ends. Nurturing staff, weekly field trips, heated pools, giant splash pad, enriching specialties and just plain ol’ fun make everyday a new adventure! American Camp Association accredited. AZDHS licensed. Summer Camp at the Children’s Museum of Phoenix 215 N. Seventh St., Phoenix 602-253-0501 • childrensmuseumofphoenix.org Give them a summer packed with hands-on learning and fun! Each week includes games and activities designed to cultivate the minds and muscles of children ages 5-8, plus plenty of time to explore all three floors of the Museum’s imaginative exhibits. They’ll build confidence, make new friends and life-long memories! SUPERCAMP 15801 N. 32nd St., Phoenix 3923 E. Indian School Road, Phoenix 602-992-5790 • arizonasunrays.com Gymnastics, dance, yoga, zip line, bounce house, sports and more. Ages 3-13. Half-day (8:30 am-12:30 pm) and full-day (8:30 am-3 pm) options as well as extended care before (7:30-8:30 am) and after (3-6 pm) normal camp hours. Weekly themes and guests. SUSD Summer Sports and Kid’s Club Athletics Various SUSD school locations 480-484-7900 • touchbase.susd.org Get out of the heat and into the game! Scottsdale Unified School District is offering a wide array of amazing camps this summer! Dates, times and prices will be posted on touchbase.susd.org in April. Athletic camps for grades 1-12. Kid’s Club Camps for ages 5-14.
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RESIDENTIAL CAMPS
CAMP DIRECTORY
6 Points Sci-Tech Academy West 18401 Burbank Blvd. #221, Tarzana, CA 310-912-7335 • 6pointsscitech.org/west Campers entering grades 5-10 spend 12 days exploring robotics, video game design, astrophysics and roller coaster physics plus a host of other fun activities in a warm setting with campers who share similar interests. Throughout their experience, campers explore what Judaism means to them and how this complements their interests in science and technology. 6 Points Sports Academy California 18401 Burbank Blvd. #221, Tarzana, CA 310-912-7335 • 6pointssports.org/california At 6 Points Sports, Jewish athletes entering grades 4-11 from all over North America participate in a unique camping experience that offers elite skill development training and all the beloved traditions of Reform Jewish camping. Within our kind and nurturing community, campers form friendships for life while feeding their passion for their chosen sport. BBYO Summer Experiences Various locations 480-481-1788 • bbyo.org/summer Meeting someone from another country. Learning a hobby. Finding a new connection to Judaism. These are some of the unforgettable moments that happen at BBYO Summer Experiences! At summer camps, on college campuses, and in countries around the world; leading, learning, serving communities, and experiencing Judaism all create unforgettable summers.
Havaya Arts University of Redlands, 1200 E. Colton Ave., Redlands, CA 833-428-2787 • havayaarts.org Havaya Arts is a brand new Jewish overnight arts camp. Campers learn from working artists who are experts at teaching to a variety of levels. Campers can choose from one of our four core disciplines during each two-week session; electives allow young artists to continue working in their core discipline or to explore another field. URJ Camp Newman 711 Grand Ave. #280, San Rafael, CA 415-392-7080 • campnewman.org Come for the friendship, adventure, community and love of Judaism. Guided by experienced staff and Jewish professionals, we offer 25 traditional and specialty summer sessions from 9 days to 8 weeks for campers entering grades 3-12. Wilshire Boulevard Temple Camps 11495 E. Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu, CA 213-835-2196 • wbtcamps.org WBT Camps is comprised of Gindling Hilltop Camp and Camp Hess Kramer. Both camps are located in beautiful Malibu, CA and both offer campers a wonderful opportunity to learn and grow in a Jewish communal living environment. The camps offer a program of sports, swim, high and low ropes course, education and cabin activities.
B’nai B’rith Camp Devil’s Lake, Otis, OR 503-452-3443 • bbcamp.org B’nai B’rith Camp is a vibrant and inclusive community rooted in Jewish values that offers activities including the arts, athletics, lake activities, outdoors, swimming, leadership development, social action, Jewish identity, Israeli culture and Shabbat celebrations. At BB Camp, every summer is an opportunity for deep, meaningful and lifelong friendships. Friendly Pines Camp 933 E. Friendly Pines Road, Prescott, AZ 928-445-2128 • friendlypines.com An Arizona Tradition since 1941, Friendly Pines Camp turns childhood moments into life’s rich memories. Offers a traditional program of over 30 activities. Campers from around the world choose from a list that includes horseback riding, waterskiing, rock climbing, sports, performing arts, fine arts, pets, hiking, canoe and kayaking and more.
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K I DS & T E E N S C A L E N DA R ONGOING: CLUB J AT THE VALLEY OF THE SUN JCC Provides after-school programming ranging from sports to cooking and crafts to Israeli culture and more for those in K-8. Transportation from nearby schools available. Valley of the Sun Jewish Community Center, 12701 N Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale. 480-634-4949 or youth@vosjcc.org, vosjcc.org. J CARE AT THE EAST VALLEY JCC Parent drop-off or bus transportation from area schools for grades K-7. Includes homework club, cooking, Israeli culture, dance, sports, gymnastics and more. Early pick-ups from Kyrene schools on Wednesday early dismissals. East Valley Jewish Community Center, 908 N Alma School Road, Chandler. Contact Jeff at 480-897-0588 or hastj@evjcc. org, evjcc.org. J-CARE AFTER-SCHOOL PROGRAM AT THE TUCSON JCC Includes a variety of activities, Homework Hangout program (help from education specialists), arts, sports or teens can hang in the Youth Lounge. Bus transportation from schools available for K-12. Tucson Jewish Community Center, 3800 E River Road, Tucson. Contact Corey at 520299-3000 ext. 256 or ccravens@tucsonjcc.org. MARCH 2 TOT SHABBAT, service 5:45 pm; dinner 6:15 pm at Congregation Anshei Israel, 5550 E 5th St., Tucson. Special Kabbalat Shabbat Service for young families to welcome the Sabbath with stories and songs, followed by kid-friendly Shabbat dinner. $25 per family (2 adults & up to 4 children). Additional adults $10 per person. RSVP to Kim, 520-7455550 ext. 224 or edasst@caiaz.org. TARGET FREE FIRST FRIDAY NIGHT at the Children’s Museum of Phoenix, 215 N. Seventh St., Phoenix from 5 to 9 pm. Experience the museum for free each first Friday of the month. For more information, visit childrensmuseumofphoenix.org. MARCH 2, 9, 16, 23 & 30 MOMMY & ME ROCK SHABBAT at Temple Kol Ami Early Childhood Center, 15030 N 64th St., Scottsdale from 9 to 10:30 am. Teacher-led class for moms and their children ages infant to 2 years. Moms connect and share experiences while their children learn and grow. Classes are just $5 per class (or $35 for a 10-class pass) for Temple Kol Ami members. Non-members pay $10 per class (or $75 for a 10- class pass). For registration or information contact 480-951-5825 or tkaecc@ templekolami.org. MARCH 3, 10, 17 & 24 CAMP SHABBAT for ages 6-10 years at Congregation Bet Shalom, 3881 E. River Road, Tucson from 11 am to 1 pm. A wonderful, fun, learning experience with Israeli teens. Free. No RSVP required. For more information, call 520-577-1171 or rabbi@cbsaz.org. MARCH 4 SUPER STEM at the Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale from 9:30 to 11:30 am. Spend the morning building and designing with us! See who can create the tallest cardboard tower, or the largest LEGO creation or see what you can create on the light table! Imaginations are required. Members: Free; Guests: $5 per family of up to four; $2 per additional person. For registration or information contact 480-659-7769 or earlychildhood@vosjcc.org.
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SUMMER CAMP SNEAK PEEK at the Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale from 9:30 to 11:30 am. Opportunity for past and potential campers to meet the staff, sample fun camp activities and for parents to learn more about the many camp options, from science to circus school! For more information and to register for Shemesh Summer Camp at The J, visit vosjcc.org/shemesh. MARCH 5, 12, 19 & 26 PARENT-TOT CLASS for ages up to 24 months and their parent(s) at Congregation Anshei Israel, 5550 E 5th St., Tucson from 9 to 11 am. Participants sign songs, make art projects, read stories, have a snack and share parenting advice. Free. For more information, contact 520-7455550 ext. 229 or lynne@caiaz.org. MARCH 18 PASSOVER PARTY at the Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale from 9:30 to 11:30 am. Interactive Passover stations and activities. Also, make your own 10 plague bags. Members: Free; Guests: $5 per child. For registration or information contact 480-659-7769 or earlychildhood@vosjcc.org. MARCH 24 KIDS KARNIVAL! KIDS NIGHT OUT at the Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale from 6 to 10 pm. Kids play games, have their faces painted and learn some cool new moves as they dance the night away during this fun, carnival-themed evening! Movie: “Leap!” Members: $10; Guests: $20. Price per child. For registration or information contact 480-634-4949 or youth@vosjcc.org. MARCH 25 FAMILY PASSOVER COOKING CLASS at the Tucson JCC, 3800 E River Road, Tucson from 1 to 3 pm. Get ready for the holiday of Passover by learning some new, fresh, and delicious kosher for Passover recipes that everyone in your family will enjoy. This class is especially geared for second through fifth graders with their adults, but everyone is welcome. $10 per child. Each child must be accompanied by an adult (at no charge). For more information, contact Jennifer Selco at jselco@ tucsonjcc.org. KIDS IN THE KITCHEN at Chabad of the East Valley, 875 N McClintock Dr., Chandler at 12:15 pm for children in grades 1-6 to experience the joy of kosher cooking. Children will have the opportunity to roll up their sleeves, cook, bake, and decorate fabulous foods, take home their own handmade creations and collect delicious recipes in their own recipe book. $12/per class. RSVP to youth@chabadcenter.com. PASSOVER PAINTING PARTY for ages 6 & up and their parent(s) at Congregation Anshei Israel, 5550 E 5th St., Tucson from 2 to 4 pm. Join us to paint a Miriam and/or Elijah wine glass. Includes apron, brushes, paints and professional instruction. $36/person. RSVP by March 20 to 520-745-5550 or receptionist@caiaz.org. MARCH 31 OPEN HOUSE at Friendly Pines Camp at 933 E. Friendly Pines Road in Prescott from 11 am to 2 pm. Bring the whole family for an exciting day of camp tours, wagon rides, toasting marshmallows, zip line rides, drawings for prizes, delicious refreshments, and more. A complimentary buffet lunch, hot Dutch oven biscuits with honey butter, and ice cream cones will be served. Camp is for ages 6-13. All your questions about the sleepaway camp experience will be answered! 928-445-2128 or friendlypines.com.
Israel
Healing from tension and trauma in Phoenix and Israel
survivors. And there is the trauma experienced by Palestinians from war and displacement, and there is also a large part of the Sephardic Jewish population who experienced displacement. Because of her Phoenix resident David Berceli, Ph.D. developed Tension and perspectives working in a country with such a high degree of trauma as Trauma Releasing Exercises™ (TRE) after working in war-torn areas. part of the culture, she wrote a chapter on trans-generational trauma He realized in areas with widespread trauma; there weren’t enough in Berceli’s book about TRE, Shake it Off Naturally. psychotherapists to provide treatment. So Berceli developed simple With this widespread prevalence of trauma in Israeli society, most movement techniques to elicit the body’s own natural tremor response to release the stored tension in the body. TRE can be taught in a group people do not label it as such. “They talk more about stress and find hearing about TRE very interesting, yet it can be a very big step for setting, and most people can do TRE on their own as a self-help people to take the next step of experiencing it,” method after learning the movements. says Bloom. In 1995 and 1996 Dr. Berceli gave Still, quite a few people are taking that step. training sessions in TRE both in Israel When I spoke with Bloom while I was in and the West Bank. He found that Netanya, Israel shortly before the High Holy after learning about trauma and doing Days, she had just taught a Module I class in TRE, both groups were able to feel Jerusalem, the first step for people seeking to more connected and safe, and care about become TRE providers and teach others. Not each others’ pain. In a city filled with counting the eight people in that class, there violence, people can be in a room of are eight to 10 other people in the process of five people, and sense that one room is becoming certified as providers, some close to safe, while the rest of the world appears finishing and others at the beginning. They will dangerous. “I was surprised by it too,” join the six other providers currently certified, he says, especially when there were bus some along the coastal area, and the newest in bombings in Jerusalem during the time the Jerusalem area. he was teaching there. “I was fascinated Bloom sees a need in so many places, among when three or four of us hid in the same veterans, elders, refugees, children – really the doorway and felt safe there with each Anya Bloom whole population. Reflecting on her own life, other, felt safe in the midst of violence; Bloom says, “having an 18-year old, I see the safety is relative according to the importance of building resiliency as young people go through changes context.” in their lives.” So Bloom is exploring steps to make TRE more Berceli has been back to the region since then, but he no longer accessible to young people at the end of their high school years who does TRE training now that an Israeli, Anya Bloom, has become are needing to choose their life paths. certified as a trainer. Bloom is “very dedicated and persistent,” says In the Phoenix area, Susan Shifman is a member of the Jewish Berceli. community who works with both individual clients and also trains Bloom came to TRE after many years of working as a physical providers. In working with clients healing from trans-generational therapist, from what she described as a “conventional background trauma, she notes that they did not identify that initially as the issue but aware of mind-body connections.” Six years ago she met South when they showed up seeking help for stress and depression. African Melanie Salmon, who introduced TRE to South Africa. After several visits utilizing TRE, these clients began sobbing for When she told Bloom about it in detail, the method “immediately what had happened to family members, grandparents, parents, aunts, made sense,” says Bloom, who liked that it was entirely physical, uncles, and for one, a brother who was in a displaced persons camp without a need to talk about the experience. She also liked that it as a young child. They connected more deeply to the stories they had could be taught in a group and that it was a tool that people could be been told by family members, of Kristallnacht (November 9, 1938, empowered to use on their own. When she decided to learn to teach when more than 250 synagogues were burned, more than 7,000 TRE, she knew that she would go on and become a person to train Jewish businesses were sacked and looted, and tens of thousands of other providers, and Salmon told her to learn directly from Berceli, so Jews were sent to concentration camps), and of the loss when there Bloom studied with him in the United States and Europe. were large families living in small towns and villages and everyone Bloom sees a great need for TRE for many reasons. Most adults knew everyone, and the shul was such a gathering place. TRE helped in Israel are veterans. She noted that while there are people who are them “to connect emotions to memories,” says Shifman. “It was very recognized as injured by serving in the military, others carry effects of profound.” post-traumatic stress as well. There are also other aspects of trauma, To learn more about Susan Shifman and TRE in the Phoenix area, such as the vicarious trauma of knowing others who have experienced visit tre-arizona.com/about. traumatic incidents from the Holocaust, war or terrorism. She noted And to learn more about Anya Bloom’s project of providing TRE to that trans-generational trauma (the effects of trauma on subsequent young people, visit tre-israel.com. generations) is well documented among families of Holocaust By Deborah Mayaan
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L iving
J
6th Genocide Awareness Week – Not On Our Watch
Genocide Awareness Week, April 9-14, is a series of lectures, exhibits and storytelling by distinguished survivors, scholars, politicians, activists, artists, humanitarians and members of law enforcement. This week-long event seeks to address how we, as a global society, confront violent actions and current and ongoing threats of genocide throughout the world, while also looking to the past for guidance and to honor those affected by genocide. Throughout the week, topics covered include Respect and Tolerance in Modern Society, The Armenian Genocide, Cultural Genocide of Indigenous Peoples in the 21st Century, PostTraumatic Stress Disorder and Post-Traumatic Growth, Italian Jewry During WWII, The Looting of Artworks as a Means of Genocide and many more. Genocide Awareness Week is hosted by Scottsdale Community College at 9000 E. Chaparral Road in Scottsdale and sponsored in part by local and national organizations. This event is free and open to the public. In addition to the presentations, there are other events being held in conjunction with Genocide Awareness Week. These include a community kick-off event, special exhibits on display and a memorial service.
COMMUNITY KICK-OFF EVENT The Children of Willesden Lane
April 4 at 7 pm Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts, 7380 E. Second St., Scottsdale In 1938, Lisa Jura, a young Jewish girl in Vienna, dreamed she would become a concert pianist. Her dreams were shattered when German troops took over her homeland. She became a refugee, one of 10,000 children brought to England before World War II as part of Kindertransport – a mission to rescue children threatened by Nazis. Concert pianist Mona Golabek, Lisa Jura’s daughter, will perform her mother’s story, The Children of Willesden Lane, in a stage performance. This concert is the opening event of Scottsdale Community College’s Genocide Awareness Week. Leading up to the performance, Phoenix Holocaust Survivors’ Association and its Generations After the program, in conjunction with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, are sponsoring Willesden Read and providing 2,500 copies of Mona’s book to area schools. Theater-goers are invited to a dessert reception after the show when they will view the Holocaust artwork of local artist Robert Sutz. Tickets are $20 and $40. For more information, visit Maricopa.edu/GAW-Event
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SPECIAL EXHIBITS
There are several exhibits on display during, and continuing after, the event:
Then They Came for Us…
March 1-April 30 Student Center Lobby Provided by the East Valley Jewish Community Center and Center for Holocaust Education and Human Dignity, this exhibit explores three distinct events – the Holocaust, the treatment of Black people in Europe, and the domestic struggle for civil rights.
Who Am I? Young Minds Forced to Choose
April 1-30 Student Center Lobby Created by the Arnold-Liebster Foundation “Who Am I?” drops viewers into a firsthand experience of young Jehovah’s Witnesses who suffered because they refused to accept Nazism and explores the difficult questions they had to answer.
We Remember: The Holocaust Art of Robert Sutz
April 9-14 Turquoise Room, Student Center Award-winning fine artist Robert Sutz presents a collection of likenesses of Holocaust survivors and a way for future generations to connect with the faces and experiences of those who survived the atrocities of the past.
Before I Die Wall
April 9-14 East Patio Student Center The wall poses a simple question: What do you want to do before you die? Over 2,000 chalkboard walls have been created in more than 70 countries and more than 35 languages, inviting viewers to connect with profound personal truths about what is really important.
GENOCIDE MEMORIAL SERVICE
There will be a memorial service held at the Scottsdale Community College Genocide Memorial on Aril 24 at 9 am. The memorial is located in the center of campus near the SL Building. For more information, contact John Liffiton at 480-4236447 or john.liffiton@scottsdalecc.edu. For the schedule and entire list of presenters, visit scottsdalecc.edu/genocide.
March 20, 2018 | 11am Featuring MASKIT, Israel’s iconic House of Fashion An empowering, enchanting & historic story of revival Register by March 2 at jewishphoenix.org/ignition
WOMEN’S PHILANTHROPY
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Pardes Jewish Day School adds TED-Ed Club curriculum Pardes Jewish Day School has incorporated TED-Ed Club into their 21st CenturyLearning curriculum. A division of TED-Ed Lessons Worth Sharing, the program includes a network of over 3,000 clubs in 115 countries. It enables Pardes students to participate in a global movement that empowers youth to seek their passions and share them with inventiveness and imagination. In TED-Ed Clubs, students work together to discuss and celebrate creative ideas. Club leaders receive TED-Ed's flexible public speaking curriculum to guide their school's club and to help inspire tomorrow's TED speakers and leaders. According to their website, TED-Ed clubs are “designed to inspire students to step up and lead the next generation of ideas worth spreading... The program supports students in discovering, exploring and presenting their big ideas in the form of short, TED-style talks.” Twice a week, seventh-grade students will engage in a series of explorations designed to help them present an amazing club talk on an idea about which they are passionate. Along the way, students will become experts in identifying the elements of a great idea; researching, developing and presenting an idea; creating visuals to tell a compelling story; and using best practices for camera, lighting and sound.
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“I want students to be empowered to find their voices and speak up on issues important to them,” says Anna Lock, who teaches seventh-grade humanities at Pardes. She and Lezlie Strolle, the school’s technology integration specialist, have officially teamed up to be the Pardes’ TED-Ed Club leaders. By the end of the club cycle, each student will have filmed a TED-Ed Club talk, and may be featured on TED-Ed social media outlets, the website ed.ted.com, the TED-Ed Clubs YouTube channel, or possibly on the TED stage! Pardes is a private, independent school and a 21st Century Learning institution serving students in kindergarten through eighth grade. The school’s academics combine a rigorous secular program featuring innovative practices, design thinking and project-based learning with a Jewish studies program designed to ignite students’ curiosity while finding meaningful ways to bring Judaism into contemporary life. The result is motivated students who, upon graduation, are accepted into Phoenix’s finest high schools. At Pardes, students are provided the personalized attention they need to develop the skills and knowledge to flourish as mature, well-rounded confident and academically prepared young adults.
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FEDERATION NOTES Federation Notes: Honoring women By Marty Haberer
March is National Women’s History Month and throughout our history, women have played a significant role, from the first Jewish woman, Sarah, to Purim’s celebrated Queen Esther. For those who do not know the story, King Ahasuerus has unknowingly taken a Jewish woman to be his queen. Her cousin Mordecai uncovered and prevented a plot to kill the king and Haman, the king’s advisor, becomes jealous when Mordecai refuses to bow down to him. Haman vows to destroy the Jewish people. Learning this, Mordecai asks the queen to intercede. The queen does so, revealing herself as a Jew and saving the Jewish people. An interesting fact – the queen’s name is actually Hadassah but is known as Esther, the Hebrew word meaning “hidden,” as she kept her identity hidden from the king to avoid persecution. Today we see the embodiment of Esther in the women of Women’s Philanthropy. This group recently completed several acts of loving kindness throughout our community during their Mitzvah Day. Our Lions of Judah each contribute a minimum of $5,000 to the annual campaign to help Jews in need. And, on March 20, hundreds of women will gather during IGNITION! to express their commitment to tikkun olam and to honor four amazing women: Alison Feinberg, Benée Hilton-Spiegel, Bari Kanefsky and Julee Landau Shahon. Through Women’s Philanthropy, women of all ages and stages in their life’s journey make a personal and financial commitment to support the Jewish community locally, in Israel and in Jewish communities worldwide. I am honored to work with so many bright, passionate and dedicated women – on our staff, among our volunteers and within the community. Ladies, you are truly modern-day Esthers, providing strength, leadership and compassion. Thank you. Marty Haberer is the CEO of the Jewish Federation of Greater Phoenix.
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L iving
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S E C A F & PLACES
MOVIE MONDAY – Jewish Family and Children’s Service’s Creative Aging program held a Monday Movie Matinee featuring Max McQueen, former film critic for the Tribune papers, on Jan. 22 at the Bureau of Jewish Education. CONCERT FOR A CAUSE – On Jan. 29 the Judaic Cultural Orchestra performed at Tempe Center for the Arts. The concert raised almost $50,000 for the new American Friends of Magen David Adom Blood Center in Israel. Pictured: Barbara Zemel and Jay Bycer (co-presidents of Arizona AFMDA) in front of MDA's ambulance that will serve in Israel.
NOTEWORTHY EVENT – Congregation Beth Israel, Arizona Opera and the ASU Center for Jewish Studies collaborated on Jan. 31 to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the birth of Leonard Bernstein, and an appreciative audience at CBI enjoyed a magnificent musical event. The evening included performances by members of the Pullin Studio program of Arizona Opera and a talk on “Bernstein: The American Jew” by Dr. Hava Tirash-Samuelson. She is pictured at left, with Robert Tancer, past opera president, and his wife, Shoshana. Photo by Leni Reiss 70 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
LADIES WHO LUNCH: The Jewish Genetic Diseases Center of Greater Phoenix held their annual luncheon on Jan. 25. Pictured from left: Wendy Carriere (executive director), Carol Abrams (board president), Danielle Gross and Cindy Sigona (Event co-chairs).
MITZVAH DAY – First and sixth graders work together painting flower pots at Pardes Jewish Day School during Operation Fix-It, Mitzvah Day 2018 that took place on Jan. 26.
SUPER SUNDAY – Scottsdale Post 210 of the Jewish War Veterans of the United States held its 6th Annual Super Bowl Party at the Arizona State Veterans Home in Phoenix on Feb. 4. Photo by Steven Troy
TIME FOR A CHANGE – As part of the Synagogue Vegan Challenge, Michelle Berman, MS, RDN, CDE, FAND, spoke to Temple Beth Sholom of the East Valley and shared sample ingredients to vegan meals.
START ME UP – On Jan. 24, Valley Beit Midrash welcomed Marty Haberer from the Jewish Federation of Greater Phoenix to present to their Start Me Up! Fellows. Marty led a vibrant discussion on how to engage within the Jewish community. Pictured left to right: Rabbi Nate Crane, Ross Kader, Marty Haberer, AJ Frost, Shira Charyn (front), Akiva Elhart, Jesse and Rayba Charyn.
ATC ATTENDEES – Shoshana and Bob Tancer enjoyed a performance of “Outside Mullingar” presented by the Arizona Theatre Company on Feb. 18 at the Herberger Theater Center. The romantic comedy was written by John Patrick Shanley, the author of Doubt and Moonstruck. Photo by Leni Reiss
STRENGTHENING THE ISRAEL CONNECTION – Local pro-Israel activists Meir Jolovitz, at left, and Jake Bennett flank Rabbi Yishai Fleisher on Feb. 7 prior to his address at the Ina Levine JCC. Fleisher, the international spokesperson for the Jewish community of Hebron and an Israeli broadcaster, tours worldwide to address issues enhancing the world’s connection to Israel. Photo by Leni Reiss
A PLACE OF LEARNING –At Limmud AZ on Feb. 11 at the ASU Memorial Union in Tempe, hundreds of attendees of all ages enjoyed a cornucopia of challenging, entertaining and enlightening sessions. Among presenters were Rabbi Elana Kanter of The Jewish Women’s Learning Center; and singer, songwriter and educator Naomi Less (shown in class with Douglas Lev); and Ira and Linda Simon stopping between sessions to pick up copies of Arizona Jewish Life. Photos by Leni Reiss
YOUNG PROFESSIONALS – On Jan. 27, Valley Beit Midrash, Schmooze and Moishe House Phoenix hosted a Havdallah and wine event for the Young Professionals group. Participants enjoyed a beautiful Havdallah service led by Rabbi Dr. Shmuly Yanklowitz, President & Dean of VBM, alongside Doug and Rachel Passon. The event allowed participants to network while tasting a variety of Kosher for Passover wines. Pictured from left to right: Back row: Jakob Khazanovich (MH), Cory Shapiro (S), AJ Frost (VBM), David Wolfe (MH) and Brandon Welner (MH) Front rowt: Lisa Rohdeman (S), Rachel Corcos (MH) and Meghan Dorn (VBM)
FEINSTEIN FANS – Lois and Steve Tager were among the fans on Feb. 8 at Scottsdale’s Highland Church enjoying the soldout show headlining Michael Feinstein. The multi-talented performer was making his first appearance at Arizona Musicfest. Photo by Leni Reiss ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 71
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PREVIEWS
DISCOVER YOUR INNER ARTIST AT JFCS MEMORY CAFÉ
Jewish Family & Children’s Service is pleased to announce its March Memory Café will feature the multi-talented visual artist, Tessa Windt at Beth El Congregation, 1118 W. Glendale Ave. in Phoenix on Thursday, March 1 from 10 to 11:30 am. Visual artist Tessa Windt has worked with individuals aged 55 to 103; exploring the opportunities found within moments of creative engagement to build connection and address the
Tessa Windt
isolation faced by many older adults. Tessa has worked with the Mesa Arts Center on their Creative Aging Engagement program since 2011. The Memory Café is for those with memory loss and their care partners. The challenges of living with memory loss can strain or even sever social connection at a time when it is needed most. Memory Cafés are one way individuals with memory loss and their care companions are coming together to make new friendships and support one another. There is no charge to attend, but registration is required. To register or for further information, please e-mail Kathy.rood@ jfcsaz.org or call Kathy at 602-452-4627.
PURIM IN CHINA
Eat, drink and celebrate the most joyous day on the Jewish calendar at Purim In China on March 1 from 5 to 8 pm at Congregation Chofetz Chayim at 1550 E. Fifth St. in Tucson. Serving up great kosher Chinese food (no MSG), plenty of wine and even some Jewish chopped liver. Live entertainment includes martial arts demonstration and Jewish music. Chofetz Chayim invites you together with friends and family for Purim In China – a truly unique community-wide Purim happening! Cost is $25 adults, $12 ages 3-12 and $15 for students. Reservations required at 520-477-7780 or yzbecker@ me.com.
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VOSJCC TO CELEBRATE ISRAEL’S 70TH WITH COMMUNITY MURAL
The Valley of the Sun JCC is celebrating Israel’s 70th anniversary by creating and displaying a community mural. People of all faiths and backgrounds are invited to submit their photos and memories to be included. “The J is excited to create a mural to truly represent community and its passion for Israel with photographs, personal thoughts and a bit of Israel’s history over the last 70 years. We invite everyone to be a part of it by submitting their photos and favorite memories by March 16,” said Kim Subrin, COO. “As someone who has been to Israel six times, I can say that every time I step off the plane in Tel Aviv, I am amazed that I instantly feel at home. Each trip brings new experiences and allows me to see Israel through a new lens.” Submitted photos and memories will be combined with interesting historical facts to create a mural which will be on display in The J’s lobby at 12701 N. Scottsdale Road in Scottsdale from April 8-30. Members of the community are invited to submit their photos and memories by March 16 at vosjcc.org/israelmural.
DOLLARS & SEN$E: FINANCIAL LITERACY FOR WOMEN
Join Jewish Free Loan for their third annual Women's Financial Literacy event on Sunday, March 18 from 2 to 4 pm at The New Shul, 7825 E. Paradise Lane in Scottsdale. Learn about saving, spending, investing and giving and how to incorporate tips from financial experts and philanthropists into your life through a fun and interactive program. Jewish Free Loan, The Women's Jewish Learning Center and National Council of Jewish Women are co-sponsoring this free event that is designed to empower women to take control of their financial well-being at any age. RSVP to programs@jewishfreeloan.org or call 602-2307983.
IGNITION! 2018
The Women’s Philanthropy of the Jewish Federation of Greater Phoenix is holding its annual Ignition! Luncheon on Tuesday, March 20 at the Hilton Scottsdale Resort & Villas at 6333 N. Scottsdale Road in Scottsdale. Registration begins at
PREVIEWS
BETH AMI TEMPLE SPEAKER SERIES
Professor Hava Tirosh-Samuelson will speak on the subject of "Judaism and the Environment" as part of the Beth Ami Temple Speakers Series on Friday, March 23 at 7:30 pm at Beth Ami Temple located inside Palo Cristi Church at 3535 E. Lincoln Dr. in Paradise Valley. "We live in the midst of a human-made ecological crisis that impacts all aspects of life and that will negatively impact the future of humanity on Earth. Judaism has a profound and timely message that addresses our ecological crisis: the
Sharon Tal
10:15 am and the program and lunch begin at 11 am. Women’s Philanthropy is dedicated to the connectivity, continuity, and vibrancy of the community, Israel and the Jewish people. The special guest for this year’s event is Sharon Tal, lead designer of Maskit, Israel’s iconic House of Fashion. Maskit is a luxury women’s ready-to-wear brand founded in 1954 by the extraordinary vision and determination of Mrs. Rut Dayan, widow of Israeli general and politician Moshe Dayan. She founded Maskit as a fashion house that allowed her to create jobs for new immigrants, while preserving Jewish ethnic crafts and culture of the various communities living in Israel. Maskit became the first and only Israeli fashion house, drawing the attention of talented designers and Paris-based fashion houses including Christian Dior, Yves Saint Laurent and Givenchy, which resulted in several collaborative efforts. A Maskit trunk show follows the luncheon. Couvert is $75/person, $36 for those 35 and under and students; and a $180 minimum commitment to the Federation’s 2018 Annual Campaign. RSVP by March 2 to 480-481-1752 or jewishphoenix.org.
Hava Tirosh-Samuelson
world was created by God and humans are responsible for its perpetual care as part of their covenant with God," says Hava. She has established herself as a top scholar in contemporary Jewish philosophy. She is director of Jewish studies at Arizona State University and also a professor of history in the School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies. Professor Tirosh-Samuelson was named Regents’ Professor in 2017, was a visiting fellow at Oxford, and is the editor in chief of the Library of Contemporary Jewish Philosophers. She works closely with civic organizations, including the Phoenix Symphony and the Desert Botanical Garden A brief Shabbat service will be held before Hava speaks followed by a question-and-answer session with the congregation. Light refreshments will follow. The event is free to attend, but reservations are requested. For more information, contact 602-956-0805 or bethamitemple@hotmail.com. ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE | MARCH 2018 73
Through May 1
MARCH CALENDAR
We Remember – Extraordinary Stories of Holocaust Survivors at the Arizona Jewish Historical Society, 122 E. Culver St., Phoenix. Exhibit features a partial exhibit of artist Robert Sutz’s original work. A permanent gallery is planned for the future. Contact Jeffrey Schesnol at jschesnol@azjhs.org to arrange a tour.
March 1 Discover Your Inner Artist at JFCS Memory Café. See page 72. Purim in China. See page 72.
March 2 Brighter Tomorrow/ Hope Luncheon at Arizona Biltmore Resort, 2400 E. Missouri Ave., Phoenix from 11:45 am-1:30 pm. This important fundraiser event is an opportunity to learn more about the affiliation agreement between Jewish Family & Children’s Service and Sojourner Center, and the impact each organization has on the well-being of over 50,000 people in the Phoenix Area. All proceeds from this year’s luncheon will benefit both JFCS and Sojourner Center. For more information, visit jfcsaz.org or sojournercenter.org.
March 3, 10, 17 & 24 Shabbat Cholent Study at Shalom Home, 813 E. Glendale Ave., Phoenix from 11:30 am-12:30 pm. Join Shalom Home every Shabbat morning to learn and discuss the weekly Torah portion with a 2018 perspective. Come enjoy meat and vegan varieties of cholent (prepared with love and made from scratch) along with Shalom Home baked challah. For more information, contact Jesse at 480-619-3344 or shalomhomeaz@gmail.com.
March 4, 11, 18 & 25 Yoga at Lululemon at the Quarter at the Scottsdale Quarter, in the courtyard behind True Foods, 15247 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale. Bring a yoga mat and dress for a beautiful, flowing outdoor practice. All levels welcome. Free. For more information, contact 480-481-7090 or healthandfitness@vosjcc.org.
March 4, 15, 19, 27 & 29 The Children of Willesden Lane Book Talk at Temple Beth Emeth on March 4 at 2 pm; Scottsdale Public Library, Mustang Branch, on March 15 at 4:30 pm; Sun City Public Library on March 15 at 2 pm; Ina Levine Jewish Community Center on March 19 at 1:15 pm; ASU, Osher 74 MARCH 2018 | ARIZONA JEWISH LIFE
Lifelong Learning Institute at OneAZ Credit Union Corporate Office on March 27 at 10 am and ASU, Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at ASU, Phoenix downtown campus, on March 29 at 10:15 am. Community reading featuring the book by Mona Golabek. For more information, visit willesdenlaneaz.com.
March 8 Brandeis National Committee – Tucson Chapter 22nd Annual Book & Author Day at the Skyline Country Club, 5200 E. St. Andrews Dr., Tucson. Authors featured include David Bianculli, Talia Carner, Bruce Handy, Mike Lawson with moderator Victoria Lucas. Activities include book signings, Q&A, silent auction, boutique aisle and buffet luncheon. $80/person. For more information, contact Sheila Rothenberg at 917579-8030 or sheila.tucson@comcast.net.
March 9 JNF Annual Breakfast for Israel at the Arizona Biltmore, 2400 E. Missouri Ave., Phoenix from 7:30 to 9 am. Ambassador Danny Ayalon will be the keynote speaker. He served as Israel’s Ambassador to the United States. While a Member of the Knesset, he also served as Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs. Playing a critical role in Israel’s decision to fund private aliyah, he also founded the nonprofit organization “The Truth about Israel,” which has educated millions of people about Israel. No cost to attend. Dietary laws observed. Sponsorship opportunities available. Please contact Deb Rochford at drochford@jnf.org or 480-447-8100 ext. 980.
March 11 Managing Chronic Pain: The Mind-Spirit Connection at the Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale from 9 to 10:30 am. Learn about the powerful science around the mind-body connection and how it can help manage chronic pain without risky medications or invasive procedures. Featuring UofA’s Dr. Ben Bobrow, Distinguished Profession of Emergency Medicine, and Dr. Carl A. Hammerschlag, one of the world’s leading proponents of psychoneuroimmunology (mind-spirit-body medicine). Free, but registration recommended, vosjcc.org/mindspirit.
9 am to 3:30 pm. There will be a panel of five bestselling authors featured: Tina Brown (The Vanity Fair Diaries: 1983-1992), A.J. Finn (The Woman in the Window), Kristin Hannah (The Great Alone), Tayari Jones (An American Marriage) and Steven J. Ross (Hitler in Los Angeles: How Jews Foiled Nazi Plots Against Hollywood and America). The moderator for this event will be Lindsey Reiser, weekend news anchor at CBS 5 News. For more information, contact Carol Abrams, event chair at 480-442-9623 or bncphxba@gmail.com.
March 15 An Oasis in Time: How a Day of Rest Can Save Your Life at the Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale from 7 to 8:30 pm. Organizational change expert Marilyn Paul, Ph.D. shares a complementary solution focusing on the profound benefits of taking a day off each week for deep rest and nourishing renewal. $18 donation. Register at vosjcc.org/oasisintime.
March 18 Dollars & Sense: Financial Literacy for Women. See page 72.
March 20 Ignition! 2018. See page 73.
March 23 Beth Ami Temple Speaker Series. See page 73. How to Attract, Maximize and Retain Your “Keep for Lifers” at the Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale from 8 to 9:30 am. “Keep for Lifers” are the key people in companies that they never want to see leave or start working for a competitor. Learn how to attract, maximize and keep them. $5 donation per session. Register by calling Andrea Quen at 480-481-1753 or andreaq@vosjcc.org.
J Talks: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Stories with Carlos Galindo-Elvira, Arizona Regional Director of the Anti-Defamation League at the Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale from 1 to 2 pm. Carlos Galindo-Elvira shares his journey to Judaism and how his work at ADL is countering bigotry, anti-Semitism, discrimination and hate in all forms towards all groups. Members: Free, guests: $5. For more information and to register, contact 480-481-7024 or cherylb@vosjcc.org. March 12 Brandeis National Committee – Phoenix Chapter 2018 Book & Author Luncheon at The Sheraton Grand Phoenix, 340 N. Third St., Phoenix from
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