HAKOL LEHIGH VALLEY The Voice of the Lehigh Valley Jewish Community
MAY 2014 | IYYAR/SIVAN 5774
In Kansas City, a community’s heart continues to beat
Holocaust education advocate to receive Schiff Award
WITH APPRECIATION The Jewish community thanks outgoing president Barry Halper. See page 3.
By JFLV Staff JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY IMAGES
A police car is seen at the entrance of the Jewish Community Campus in Overland Park, Kansas, after deadly shootings there and at a nearby assisted-living facility on April 13. By Victor Wishna Jewish Telegraphic Agency
RABBI JUDA reflects on 39 years at Brith Sholom. See page 10.
Every Friday at noon, my 2-year-old daughter and I rush through the doors of the Jewish Community Center of Greater Kansas City to meet my father for lunch. We are usually late, and the JCC’s Heritage
Center, catering to active seniors (and their preschool-aged guests), is only our first stop. Vivien refuses to leave until she and zayde have had a run of the entire building. At the White Theater, she chatters on about the time
Kansas City Continues on page 29
JWV Commander up to the challenge By Jennifer Lader Editor, HAKOL
GATHER ROUND! Young adults ‘mead’ and greet . See page 16.
No. 367 com.UNITY with Mark Goldstein 2 Women’s Division
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LVJF Tributes
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Jewish Community Center
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Jewish Day School
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Jewish Family Service
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Community Calendar
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The Jewish War Veterans have a dynamic new Commander, retired senior master sergeant Sheila Berg. Originally from Westbury, Long Island, Berg joined the United States Air Force reserves because she wanted to serve our country and sought a challenge. She found it. It would have been easy for Berg to enlist in the army, because her father had spent his career in the army and had found a position for her. But Berg, who at the time already had a college
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degree and a master’s degree in social work, sat for the military entrance exam and chose the Air Force. The exam gauges candidates’ abilities in four areas and Berg made it her personal challenge to pursue the one in which her score had been lowest – mechanical. This wasn’t her only mission: “I was older than everybody else at basic training but still had to keep up with everyone else,” but she easily outran some of the 18-year-olds. To become a mechanic, one of the requirements was to
be able, in one motion, to lift 60 pounds over her head and carry her own 40- to 50-pound toolbox. Did we mention that she was the only female in the post-basic training Jet Engine Mechanic Class. “I didn’t fit the mold,” Berg said. However, she enjoyed both the classroom and shop technical training and eventually won over her classmates. “By the end, we were all friends,” she said. “We helped one another so everyone in our class Sheila Berg
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Marylou Lordi’s efforts at prejudice reduction started small – literally. She knew she wanted to help her children and others develop empathy. At the same time Lordi, a Catholic, was learning about the Holocaust while waiting in the library of her children’s nursery school at Bnai Abraham Synagogue. At East Stroudsburg University, she became the first student in the education department to write a curriculum on teaching the Holocaust. That project grew into the Legacy Exhibit after Lordi teamed up with Shari Spark of the Holocaust Resource Center of the Jewish Federation of the Lehigh Valley. The touring exhibit to educate students about the Holocaust has appeared in more than a dozen schools in Pennsylvania and New Jersey and held a month-long residency at the Sigal Museum in Easton. On June 9, Lordi will accept the Schiff Award for Prejudice Reduction at the Jewish Federation’s Mortimer S. Schiff Memorial Golf Tournament at Lehigh Country Club. Established in 1999 by Vera Schiff to honor her husband Mortimer’s memory, the Schiff award is given to members of the Lehigh Valley community who are committed to spreading and teaching tolerance by both word and action. Past recipients have included the Rev. Dr. Peter Pettit, Jeanette Eichenwald, Julius Jacobs, and Barnet Fraenkel. Although there are museums dedicated to remembering the Holocaust, Lordi realized that many American children never have the opportunity to visit them. So she, Spark and a number of Holocaust survivors as well as a camp liberator who lives locally, take the exhibit and a related program into the schools. “Students see the pictures and read the verses,” Lordi said. “That’s when they get it.” The presentation of the Schiff Award is a highlight of the annual golf tournament, which, like the award, carries the theme of prejudice reduction. Other highlights of the day include a decadent dairy brunch, a putting contest, hours on the green and a grand reverse raffle prize of $5,000. To register by May 16 for the Mortimer S. Schiff Memorial Golf Tournament, or to attend the dinner where the award will be presented, visit www.jewishlehighvalley.org or call 610-821-5500.