Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle 2-1-19

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P I T TS B U R G H

February 1, 2019 | 26 Shevat 5779

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Candlelighting 5:20 p.m. | Havdalah 6:22 p.m. | Vol. 62, No. 5 | pittsburghjewishchronicle.org

NOTEWORTHY LOCAL Hillel JUC wins recognition for education effort

Pirates score a hit at JCC and CDS

Community rallies to ease Druze family’s pain during crisis

According to leaders, students want more than just holiday experiences, social events.

By Toby Tabachnick | Senior Staff Writer

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Charities. The visit to Tree of Life gave those Pirates a chance to pay their respects to the community and to show their support. While at J Café, Kramer and Newman served lunch to the patrons, while pitcher Kingham went table to table to schmooze, pass out knit Pirates hats and sign autographs. From Jan. 23 to 25 the Pirates hosted about 30 events in 11 cities in the greater Pittsburgh area, including stops in Erie, Altoona and Morgantown, W.Va., home of the West Virginia Black Bears, the Pirates Single-A affiliate. Events included a meal delivery to all six Pittsburgh Police Zone stations on Friday and visits to several non-profit community organizations. “This is the part of giving back to the community,” said Kingham. “The least we can do is to support the community that supports us.” He was moved, he said, by the CARE-avan’s stop at Tree of Life. “It’s real when you step inside the

ihab Falah always had a knack for bringing family together. The 25-year-old Druze from Kafr Sumay`A, a village of 2,500 people in northern Israel, loved hanging out with his sisters, brothers, parents and cousins even more than with his friends. By Thursday each week, Eihab, a captain in the Israel Defense Forces, would message his family’s WhatsApp group to arrange weekend plans. His cell phone was filled with photos of his family. What Eihab could not have expected was that his family would grow exponentially, and include dozens of Jewish Pittsburghers, in the span of six weeks. Eihab was diagnosed with a rare and aggressive brain cancer on May 25, just weeks away from beginning medical school. In October, when efforts at Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem could not get the cancer under control, the Falahs learned of a surgery at UPMC Presbyterian Hospital that offered hope. The Falahs had never heard of Pittsburgh until that week, the same week of the Tree of Life synagogue shooting. “We kept listening to the news,” said Eihab’s sister Eva, a medical student in Israel. “It was so awful — the shooting. But what happened in Pittsburgh after the shooting, the whole community of Pittsburgh came together, saying they were ‘stronger than hate.’ We fell in love with it then.” “We asked Eihab if he was afraid to go there after the shooting,” said his oldest sister, Batla, a cardiologist in Israel. “He said, ‘to the contrary.’” The family did not know a soul in Pittsburgh, but that was about to change in a big way.

Please see Pirates, page 16

Please see Druze, page 16

LOCAL Temple Emanuel picks rabbi

 Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Nick Kingham chats up patrons at the J Café at the JCC of Greater Pittsburgh. Photo by Toby Tabachnick

Erie native Rabbi Aaron Meyer to lead South Hills congregation. Page 3 LOCAL Seeing it for themselves

State politicians take bipartisan tour of Israel coordinated by the Pennsylvania Jewish Coalition. Page 4

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By Toby Tabachnick | Senior Staff Writer

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he Pierogis that showed up at J Café on Jan. 23 were not the usual lunchtime fare at AgeWell Pittsburgh’s kosher meal program for senior citizens. But when Cheese Chester and Jalapeno Hannah, mascots of the Pittsburgh Pirates, came to see what was cooking among the diners at the Jewish Community Center of Greater Pittsburgh — along with Pirates players Nick Kingham, Kevin Kramer and Kevin Newman, and coaches Kimera Bartee and Tom Prince — they were a welcome addition to the noontime meal. The JCC was the second stop of the Pirates CARE-a-van on its trip to Squirrel Hill last Wednesday, following a visit to the Tree of Life synagogue building where the Pirates viewed the memorial to the 11 victims of the Oct. 27 anti-Semitic murders and learned about their lives. “Many of the players were not here during the off-season” when the attack occurred, explained Jackie Hunter, director of Pirates

keep your eye on PittsburghJewishChronicle LOCAL

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