San Diego Jewish Journal July 2014

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JULY 2014 l TAMUZ • AV 5774

Your Health: DNA, stress and medical marijuana ...more inside


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CONTENTS

July 2014

Tamuz/Av 5774

34

COVER: Doctors dish on a host of health problems

28

FEATURE: San Diego-based Israeli artist breathes new life into papier-mâché

46

THEATER: The Fringe Festival returns with all the wonderful weirdness you can handle

50 4 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

OP-ED: Michael Hayutin makes the case for Christian Zionists


52 IN THIS ISSUE: 30 POLITICS:

Sen. Ted Cruz goes to Israel

Good Eats 52 Food

31 FEATURE:

Scholars seek Bible’s original text

34 HEALTH:

Pediatric cardiologist turns to DNA for answers

37 HEALTH:

Dr. Dina Fainman settles into practice in Encinitas

Around Town 10 Mailbag 12 Our Town 14 Event Recap 58 What’s Goin’ On 64 Calendar

38 HEALTH:

Parkinson’s researchers want Ashkenazi Jews

41 HEALTH:

Can meditation reduce dependence on prescriptions?

42 HEALTH:

Medical marijuana grows in Israel

54 BUSINESS: Jacqui Silver

56 SYNAGOGUE:

Congregation Beth Am

In Every Issue 8 The Starting Line 18 Parenting 20 Israeli Lifestyle 22 Dating 24 Spirituality 26 Israel 60 News 63 Diversions 69 Desert Life Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 5


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www.sdjewishjournal.com July 2014 • Tamuz/Av 5774 PUBLISHER • Dr. Mark S. Moss CO-PUBLISHER • Mark Edelstein EDITOR-IN-CHIEF • Natalie Jacobs CREATIVE DIRECTOR • Peter Talhamé ASSISTANT EDITOR • Tinamarie Bernard ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR • Eileen Sondak ADVERTISING DIRECTOR • Mark Edelstein CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Tori Avey, Betsy Baranov, Linda Bennett, Abby Walker, David Ebenbach, Judith Fein (Senior Travel Correspondent), Michael Fox, Jennifer Garstang, Natalie Holtz, Miki Lamm, Pat Launer, Curt Leviant, David Ogul, Pamela Price, Sharon Rosen Leib, Nikki Salvo, Andrea Simantov CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS/ARTISTS Vincent Andrunas, Ediz Benaroya, Leigh Castelli, Leetal Elmaleh, Pepe Fainberg, Steve Greenberg, Pat Krause, Laurie Miller, Paul Ross (Senior Travel Photographer), Angela Sissa, Daisy Varley ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES Ronnie Weisberg (Account Executive), Alan Moss (Palm Springs) SAN DIEGO JEWISH JOURNAL (858) 638-9818 • fax: (858) 638-9801 5665 Oberlin Drive, Suite 204 • San Diego, CA 92121

DINA FAINMAN, M.D. Obstetrician/Gynecologist SPECIALIZING IN: • Adolescent Gynecology • Contraceptive Options • Pregnancy & Natural Childbirth •Minimally Invasive Gynecologic Surgery • Alternatives to Hysterectomy • Bio-identical Hormone Replacement Therapy • Menopause

EDITORIAL: editor@sdjewishjournal.com ADVERTISING: sales@sdjewishjournal.com CIRCULATION & SUBSCRIPTIONS: publisher@sdjewishjournal.com ART DEPARTMENT: art@sdjewishjournal.com LISTINGS & CALENDAR: calendar@sdjewishjournal.com SDJJ is published monthly by San Diego Jewish Journal, LLC. Subscription rate is $24 for one year (12 issues). Send subscription requests to SDJJ, 5665 Oberlin Drive, Suite 204, San Diego, CA 92121. The San Diego Jewish Journal is a free and open forum for the expression of opinions. The opinions expressed herein are solely the opinion of the author and in no way reflect the opinions of the publishers, staff or advertisers. The San Diego Jewish Journal is not responsible for the accuracy of any and all information within advertisements. The San Diego Jewish Journal reserves the right to edit all submitted materials, including press releases, letters to the editor, articles and calendar listings for brevity and clarity. The Journal is not legally responsible for the accuracy of calendar or directory listings, nor is it responsible for possible postponements, cancellations or changes in venue. Manuscripts, letters, documents and photographs sent to the Journal become the physical property of the publication, which is not responsible for the return or loss of such material. All contents ©2014 by San Diego Jewish Journal. The San Diego Jewish Journal is a member of the American Jewish Press Association and the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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AMPUS OBS FAMILY C C A J • r te n e C munity y Jewish Com il m a F ce n re w La ™

s y e n r u o J h s i w e J g n i r i Insp ! t I f o t r a P a Be

entire family e th r fo s m Progra

ns • Youth • Tee e e c y a J p • Cam l • Inclusion o o h c s re P • Babies

wish Culture e J • rs io n e ults • S Fitness • Ad • s c ti a u q A Sports •

g r .o c c j f .l w w w • 0 (858) 457-303

Gary & Jerri-Ann Jacobs Youth Endowment Fund Harry & Jeanette Weinberg Endowment Fund Sigrid and Jack Fischer Scholarship Fund Albert A. and Leanore Hutler Camp Scholarship Endowment Fund Leichtag Foundation The Larry Pidgeon JCC Youth Basketball Endowment Sheila & Hughes Potiker Family Foundation Community Campership Council, Inc. JCamp 180: A program of the Harold Grinspoon Foundation


THE STARTING LINE by Natalie Jacobs Editor of the San Diego Jewish Journal editor@sdjewishjournal.com

What’s in a Name?

E

ver since I moved back to San Diego two years ago, when I introduce myself, lots of people ask, “Are you one of the Jacobs?” They mean the Qualcomm Jacobs, makers of mobile technologies and major Jewish philanthropists. When the question comes up, I usually just laugh and politely say no, but sometimes I think, “I wish.” And sometimes I think, “so what?” On those days when I’m wanting to re-write history, it’s easy to imagine that life would somehow be easier if I came from a different family. But when I’m being honest with myself, I quickly realize that even though my Jacobs live in a different world than the Jacobs, I’ve never really been deprived of anything (except the Cadillac Escalade I wanted at 13, but let’s be real, that was for the best). On other days, I wonder what it matters to the inquirer, anyway. But, of course, none of this is to say that the Qualcomm Jacobs aren’t a wonderful family, it’s just that they’re not mine. For this month’s Health section, I wrote two stories about doctors who are studying genetics to understand two very different diseases (congenital heart defects, pg. 34, and Parkinson’s, pg. 38). Those articles, the influx of inquiry about my lineage and the need to write a column introducing myself to you, dear Jewish Journal readers, got me thinking about what makes me, me. Is it the family I come from? The college I went to? The microscopic double helixes that flow through my veins? Whether or not I voted in June’s primary election? Of course, it’s all of those things and so much more, but I only have 500 words! So let’s start here: I’ve spent the past year-and-a-half as Assistant Editor for the Journal, working under two wonderful Editors who taught me so much about magazine publishing. I’ve learned a ton about the

8 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

“Are you one of the Jacobs?”

Jewish community in San Diego, over in Israel and throughout the world. As Editor, I’m excited to continue to getting to know our vibrant Jewish culture and time-honored traditions. This issue is a great place to jump in, with all kinds of perspectives on health (starting on pg. 34), an in-depth feature on short, avant-garde theater (pg. 46), and a San Diego-based Israeli papier-mâché artist (pg. 28) whose work will amaze you. As usual, there are tons more stories to find within these pages, including a new feature on upcoming and newly released books, television shows, and movies that I’m excited to kick off this month. As you might have noticed in our masthead (pg. 6), we’ve got a whole new team here at the Journal, in addition to me taking on a new position. So I can’t introduce myself without introducing them. Our Creative Director is Peter Talhamé and our new account rep is Ronnie Weisberg. Both are recent San Diego transplants who couldn’t be happier to be a part of the Jewish community here. Stepping into my old role of Assistant Editor is long-time Jewish Journal contributor Tinamarie Bernard. Together, we’re going to be doing some new things and some old things, but they will all be wonderful things. With that, we hope you’ll continue to look forward to seeing us come through your mailboxes each month. A

Into the future:

In our August issue, we’ll have the backstory on the Carlsbad desalination plant, all the details on this year’s Yom Limmud in the Education section, and more interesting political updates. Don’t miss it!


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>> mailbag

We’re Listening! Let us know what you’re thinking.

IN RESPONSE TO ROB COHEN Dear Editor: I agree [with Rob Cohen’s response (Mailbag, June, 2014) to the Pamela Geller article (“Radical Islam: What to Know Now,” May, 2014)]. I saw a similar posting on Facebook about the “Jewish-Islam” issue. I WAS APPALLED!! True, freedom of speech, and we have books such as Bruce Feiler’s “Walking the Bible,” and a book called “The Faith Club,” which discusses understanding between Muslim, Christian and Jew. I believe that Abraham was the father of three faiths. Jeff Loeb University City

IN RESPONSE TO PHILIP GRAUBART Dear Editor: Rabbi Philip Graubart writes in his column titled “Income Inequality, the Spiritual Dimension,” [June, 2014] that income inequality is a moral issue. That may be true but only under very specific circumstances. For instance; if someone made sound financial decisions his whole life, worked hard, and achieved a

FOLLOW US

greater level of wealth than someone who did not do all of those things, there is nothing at all immoral about his superior financial standing. In fact, it is laudable and hopefully will inspire others to follow suit. The fact is that the socialist model described in the article doesn’t work. The best shot we have is the free market system where people are rewarded for their hard work, thriftiness, and yes, divine blessings. The Torah does not take away all property as described in the article. It does, however, make sure that every Jew maintains a connection to his ancestral home (OUR Holy Land), but does not preclude other private property. We, as individuals, have to know when we see a poor person extend his hand asking for help, that we, as individuals, have the obligation to reach into our pockets and help him out. Relying on the State to take care of everyone’s needs makes people less inclined to do their share and take responsibility for themselves or others, as they easily tell the poor person, “Go to the State for your needs.” Rabbi Yeruchem Eilfort Chabad at La Costa Dear Editor: I am still shocked that there remains within the Jewish community, people who are convinced that we should be nice, play nice and be home before dark. Mr. Cohen [in Mailbag, June, 2014] would have you refuse Pamela Geller’s thoughts and ideas and what they are based on, because “they” (Mr. Cohen and his ilk) are uncomfortable. Gee whiz! It isn’t that he can honestly say that she’s wrong, nor is he (or his ilk) able to speak factually at the areas of possible doubt. What he can do, and did, was condemn

the magazine for printing that which she pinpointed to bolster her argument – and, in my opinion, as a politically conservative man, of some education, discernment, intelligence, studied, and political savvy, she’s pretty much right on the money. Mr. Cohen (and his ilk) as happened in Europe, past and present, we won’t be able to fight back - and then he/they will scream for all to hear, why didn’t “somebody” do something…Pamela Geller did exactly that…she rang the warning bell loud and clear. Leonard I. Antick Chula Vista

THE FOOD ISSUE Dear Editor: This issue [June, 2014] was full with many interesting and informative articles but I am not writing to compliment you on the good rather to criticise you on what I saw lacking. The biggest lack as I saw was the ignoring of local kosher restaurants and caterers. A magazine directed at a Jewish audience, especially one that contans Jewish in its title, should be at the forefront of promoting kosher establishments. We have enough secular publications that can feature all the other eateries etc. I would be the first to admit that San Diego does not have the widest of choices when it comes to kosher dining but that does not excuse them from being ignored in an issue dedicated to food. I hope that in the future editions that you will do your part in promoting pride in our G-d given forms of eating. Richard G. Moss College Area

Send us your comments: /SanDiegoJewishJournal 10 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

@SDJewishJournal

editor@sdjewishjournal.com • 5665 Oberlin Dr., Ste 204 • San Diego, CA 92121


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our

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BY LINDA BENNETT & BETSY BARANOV l BETSY1945@COX.NET PHOTOS BY EDIZ BENAROYA

Temple Emanu-El Gala

On May 17, an evening of inspiration, celebration, and community recognition was held at Temple Emanu-El. A special tribute honoring the Geist/Epsten family, one of the founding families of the congregation, was given. Entertainment was provided by world class pianist David Geist, who grew up at the temple. The evening included cocktails, a silent auction, and dinner by Jeff Rossman. Some of the surprise entertainment included a jazzy rendition of “Summertime” sung by Rabbi Devorah Marcus. Among those who enjoyed the sold-out evening were Max and Marilyn Levy, Bea and Bob Epsten, Mary and Jon Epsten, Alana Epsten, Michael Epsten and Rebecca Zaid, Barbara Bloom, Dorothy and Rob Epsten, Ed and Vickie Spilkin, Gail and Mark Braverman, Phil Cohn and family, Gary Kornberg, Myrna and Michael Cohen, Randi and Kelvin Hosking, Mathew and Jennifer Kostrinsky, Tammy Strauss, Mark and Laurie Spiegler, Marion Greenberg, Joe and Hanna Fox. Also, co-president Jim Lewis, Marlene and Marc Hamovitch, Warren Treisman, Debbie MacDonald, Judi Schecter, Sheila and Jeff Lipinsky, Lisa Bennett Nies, Arlene and Danny Orlansky, Jean and Franklin Gaylis, and Marie Raftery and Bob Rubenstein.

Anniversaries...

Happy 50th anniversary to Gayle and Barry Benn.

Birthdays...

Happy 80th birthday to Clive David!

Awards...

Mazel Toz to Bernie Blotner, named to The Financial Times top 400 financial advisors!

Bar Mitzvahs...

Shahar and Sandi Masori’s son Shor had his Bar Mitzvah on April 26 at Temple EmanuEl. Happy grandparents are Don and Nancy Harrison. Of course brother Sky, 7, was there and so was 95 year-old great-grandfather Sam Zeiden. Godfather Yoni Peres (son of Shimon) came in from Israel for this important event! 12 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

Top: Andrea Stein and Jim Lewis. Clockwise from middle right: Sonny and Frank Borkat • Giselle Dunst, Mary Epsten, David Geist, and Andrea Stein • Lee Loventhal and Sandy Silvers.


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Income Generation in Retirement Our conversation on retirement income can help you move from “Can I retire?” to “How can I make the most of my retirement?” While most people understand the importance of saving for retirement, the concept of retirement income planning may be less familiar. Retirement income planning is a holistic process to help address key retirement decisions, effectively manage risks, and efficiently provide ongoing income to meet both the clients’ current and long-term retirement needs. We can support you by providing the guidance needed to make better, more informed choices to help provide a retirement as flexible as you are. As experienced advisors, we take the time to understand your unique goals to help create a plan tailored for you – one that will modify and change over time.

Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 13


be SEEN BY MIKI LAMM l MIKISDJJ@GMAIL.COM PHOTOS BY EDIZ BENAROYA

Hopeful Happy Hour

The term Happy Hour was coined during the Prohibition period and has since morphed into a truly American concept. To honor the history of Happy Hour, YAD hosted their quarterly networking event at The Lafayette Hotel’s restaurant/bar, Hope 46. Recently redesigned to celebrate Americana past, Hope 46 offered YAD guests classic cocktails at an unpretentious, poolside venue. Happy Hour attendees were able to meander around the hotel’s conservatory, play games of oversized chess and checkers, watch the sunset and schmooze with drinks in hand in the private patio. It was, in essence, the perfect unofficial beginning of summer. YAD Happy Hours are the perfect event for young professionals to catch up with one another, as well as for newcomers to learn about the Jewish scene in San Diego. Recent transplant David P. stated: “I really enjoyed the happy hour. As someone new to San Diego, it was a great event to meet a lot of new people in a great social environment.” If you are new to San Diego or have not been involved with Jewish Federation’s YAD, contact the NextGen team at yad@ jewishfederationsandiego.org for more information on upcoming events. Want your event featured in the next Be Seen? Send details to: mikisdjj@ gmail.com.

Top: Michael O’Neal and Jenna Bienenfel. Clockwise from middle: Joseph Berman, Becky Rudin, Jewel Sud, Jaime Nachach and Zach Warburg • Flora Elman and Jenny Chernetskaya • Monika Cohan, Carly Simms and Lee Wollach.

14 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014


Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 15


the SCENE BY EILEEN SONDAK l NSONDAK@GMAIL.COM PHOTOS BY LEETAL ELMALEH

City Ballet Fundraiser

City Ballet recently held its spring fundraiser on the sprawling grounds of the estate of Dr. Jack and Tammie Wasserman. The afternoon event included a live ballet performance by company dancers, along with live music and a silent auction. Of course, supporters enjoyed elegant cuisine and spectacular desserts to top off the delightful day. City Ballet’s co-directors Steven and Elizabeth Wistrich were beaming with pride at the company’s accomplishments during the past 21 years. Guests were all smiles as well, as they celebrated with the dancers. Since this was the troupe’s most successful fundraiser (adding $30,000 to the company coffers), there were plenty of reasons to toast the occasion. Steven Wistrich grabbed the mic to show appreciation to the crowd for their support – and gave a special “thank you” to the afternoon’s generous hosts before the dancers performed. Although the make-shift dance floor was less than ideal for ballet, the dancers didn’t let that stop them from delivering a memorable mini-concert. The guest list included Jim and Robin Karnik, Jeff and Rosemary Schreiber, Peter Perlman, Alicia Steiner, Mark Weidenhoff, Dr. Myles Schnitman, Evelyn Heidelberg, Ed Leonard, Adam Jacobs, Ariana Samuelson, and Evelyn Guster.

Top: Judy Holmes and Mike Cathcart. Clockwise from middle: Jack Wasserman, Kimberely Green, Natalie Test and Mark Liedenhoff • Sandy Baum, Sheryl Sutton and Anne Marie Sunzeri • Kim Espinoza, Lisa Stricland and Adam Jacobs.

16 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014


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MUSINGS FROM MAMA by Sharon Rosen Leib srleib@roadrunner.com

Mental Health Care: The Big Need on Campus

W

hilst visiting our two eldest daughters at their prestigious and outrageously expensive liberal arts colleges in Claremont this spring, I made several shocking discoveries. First, the President of Pitzer, the small college (1,000 students) that Oldest Daughter attends, earns an eye-popping annual compensation package of $882,000. Second, Middle Daughter’s college, Scripps (950 students), has plans to build an 82-bed dorm for the lofty sum of $18 million. Third, the campus newspaper, The Student Life, revealed that the five Claremont Colleges (known as the 5Cs) have an underfunded, inadequate mental health care center. These articles corroborated the experiences of Oldest Daughter, a Pitzer sophomore. When she left for college two years ago, Pitzer’s Dean of Students assured me that Oldest Daughter could see a psychiatrist at the 5Cs’ Monsour Counseling Center for medication checks and prescription refills to treat her anxiety. Freshman year, Oldest Daughter felt more comfortable making quarterly visits to her “home” psychiatrist. This year, she was ready to make the switch to on-campus care. She ventured into the counseling center where the scheduler told her she couldn’t be seen for a month due to a backlog. Just what is her hefty tuition paying for if not the most basic mental health service? A couple months later, around winter finals, she started feeling extremely stressed. She returned to the counseling center and asked to see a campus therapist to help work through her anxiety and ward off a panic attack. The intake person told her the center was understaffed and because she wasn’t “in crisis” she couldn’t be seen for several weeks. Thankfully, by the time her appointment rolled around, she felt better. She said the counselor-intraining she finally saw seemed inexperienced and wasn’t helpful. I was mad as hell and intended to take action but got distracted by some other crisis and dropped the ball. Reading the May 2 edition of The Student Life 18 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

renewed my outrage. Columnist Julia Austenfeld, a junior at Pomona College, wrote a brave, sorrowful piece about her struggles with depression and the inadequate care she received on campus. Two sideby-side news articles spoke volumes about the colleges’ screwed up priorities. The first highlighted costly construction projects taking place at the 5Cs, while the second discussed the Counseling Center’s request for increased funding to pay for two fulltime psychologists. Just two psychologists to serve a community of more than 7,000 students when Pitzer’s President makes almost $900,000 and an $18 million dollar dorm is in the planning stages? Apparently, campus mental health is getting shafted. While I’m sure that Scripps’ spiffy new faculty offices, Pitzer’s upgraded swimming pool and Claremont McKenna’s monolithic athletic complex will add cachet to their schools’ appeal, what about the fundamental needs of the students themselves? Life-threatening psychiatric illnesses such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia often first manifest during the college/grad school years. How can college campuses not allocate the resources to provide adequate services to address such a basic, potentially life-saving need? Campus administrators should be ashamed of themselves for not making student mental health their utmost budget priority. Furthermore, administrators should make their colleges’ mental health budgets transparent. Students and parents deserve to know how tuition dollars are being allocated. What are the administrators prioritizing? Their students’ mental health or trophy athletic facilities, fancy labs and their own astronomical salaries? Personally, I’d rather have my kids living in safari tents on a campus with good mental health support, than feeling stressed and depressed at a school with lux dorm rooms and inadequate counseling. Come on, you highly compensated college administrators, if you’re the smart ones why are you flunking out on student mental health care?A

Did you know?

The American College Health Association’s national survey found 30 percent of college students reported feeling “so depressed that it was difficult to function” at some point in the school year.


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israeli lifestyle

LIVING ON THE FRONT PAGE by Andrea Simantov

andreasimantov@gmail.com

Re-Creation

I

n Israel, we don’t have Sundays. This isn’t to say that Sunday doesn’t appear on the calendar; but it’s a work day, a full blown, make-a-deposit in the bank and what-time-isyour-doctor’s appointment kind of day. For many Israelis, Friday is a day for mallcrawling and café brunches. Schools operate halfdays so couples can enjoy alone-time and squeeze in a few hours of “dating” before returning to full-time parent duty. But for the religiously observant, Fridays just don’t “cut it,” especially when – like me – one works full time and needs the Friday “day off ” to prepare for the Sabbath. I love being religious but on some days, it just 20 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

doesn’t feel fair. And so, on a recent Friday, I threw down the soggy dishtowel and shouted, “I want to go to the beach! I. Need. Ocean.” My husband, not easily frightened, appeared shaky as he’d never seen me lose-it in such a determined manner. I threw a chicken in a crock pot, found some passable vegetables and tossed them in, covered the mess with an open half-bottle of pinot noir and some spices I couldn’t remember the names of, covered it, grabbed a blanket for the sand and was out the door. The dutiful husband followed. The nearest beach to Jerusalem is 60 kilometers away and takes at least an hour to reach during

Friday traffic. It was already noon and Shabbos was scheduled to arrive at approximately six o’clock. Did I care? Not on your life. My need for sea and sand was nearly manic, replete with a feeling of entitlement that was both foreign and scary. We’d forgotten to bring anything to eat in the frenzy to hit the waves but any thoughts of hunger dissipated the moment I saw the shimmering blue band of water ahead, calling my name. I don’t own a bathing suit but basketball shorts and tank tops work just fine, and the salty brine that washes over pasty city skin doesn’t care if I’m in a bikini, maillot or gym shorts. Now that the Friday beach pattern has been established, the only remaining challenge is which beach. This past week we discovered a patch of shore and water that was so pristine, so beautiful, so inhabited by young and gorgeous people that we had to try it. The only problem was, there was no paved walkway from the parking lot. In order to reach the place, we had to traverse a steep and poorly carved trail down a cliff. It was hard! Halfway down, I questioned our sanity but was too far along to turn back. Wearing foolish flip-flops, I nearly lost my footing several times but the end result was worth it. I’d never been on such a beautiful, unspoiled piece of G-d’s land. The return ascent was equally daunting but the new tradition makes Shabbos that much sweeter, with the knowledge that on the other side of a relentless work week there is respite and abandon. A


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dating

PLAYING WITH MATCHES by Jennifer Garstrang jenscy@gmail.com

Dating Advice: Should you be Listening?

“W

ait three days after a date before calling!” “Don’t ruin a good friendship with romance!” “Your significant other should be your best friend!” There’s a lot of dating advice going around, but is it really worth listening to? As a dating advice columnist, I am obliged to say “YES! And you should read my column every month, and follow my every sentence so this magazine will continue to publish me!” End of article. But seriously, is dating advice actually helpful? After all, relationships are very personal, whereas advice is usually…well, not. Most advice I hear attempts to apply a grand, generalized “always” kind of statement to a situation. (“Honey, all men only want one thing!”) Still, part of being human is living in a collaborative society, and sharing advice is a way that we can all benefit from each other’s experiences. So how can you get value from dating advice in a way that benefits you personally? Well, first off, consider the source. Take a step back and consider who is giving you this advice, and the metaphorical life-lens through which she or he views the world. Is this advice coming from your dad? Your Bubbe? Does this person have the same sensibilities as you? Is this person looking for the same things in a relationship? Is this advice something that comes from personal experiences, or a statistic? Unlike Lot’s wife, salt is your friend, and you should take all dating advice with a grain of it. Now, since this article has, up to this point, been quite abstract (much like dating advice), I will make it personal with a specific example: Me. This particular dating-advice-giver is a 20-something 22 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

secular Jew, who has been successfully cohabitating with my significant other for some time. Religious observance isn’t a central part of my relationship (though I still go to temple! I promise!), and I’m fine with living together before marriage. You should take this perspective into account when applying my advice to your own life. Keep in mind, a person doesn’t have to be your age/culture/religion and share every single life-value to be able to give helpful advice. After all, the most useful advice gives you insight from a perspective you hadn’t yet considered. That said, by being aware of the advice-giver’s lens, and how it both overlaps with and differs from your own, you take that big-picture advice, and make it personal. Lastly, to really start getting value from dating advice, think about the reasons behind that advice. Dating advice does not exist in a bubble. There is usually a purpose to it. “The man should always get the check on the first date,” is, to many people, an outdated suggestion, but it has a purpose: to smooth a potentially awkward interaction and pave the way for a fun and relaxed date. While you may not agree with that exact advice, you still might want to tackle the underlying issue – perhaps by divvying up the cost of the date, or agreeing in advance to dine-and-dash (that’s a joke. Don’t do that!). So, to get personal again, let me share the deepest underlying goal behind my own advice: I want for you to be happy, fulfilled, and whole, whatever your current romantic situation may be. ...And don’t wait three days before calling someone after a date. If you like ‘em, call ‘em! A

Light reading:

Some dating advice books we have around the office: “Hot Mamalah,” “Cool Jew,” “How to Woo a Jew,” and “Life, Love, Lox.”


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Take ten minutes and I’ll show you how. Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 23


spirituality

THE ARTIST’S TORAH by David Ebenbach ebenbach@netzero.com

What Lasts

T

he Israelites of the Torah are an upstart people. They are not a superpower, not an established nation of any kind. Today we have hindsight to tell us that they outlasted most of the other tribes around them, but at the time of the Torah, their future must have seemed uncertain. Why would anyone back then expect the Israelites, homeless and dedicated to a G-d that most people didn’t even recognize, to persist (evolving all the while) across the millennia? More broadly, this makes me think about all the developments and ideas that come forward in any day and age – and about the work that each of us does in our lives. Your accomplishments, your creations, your thoughts and projects – how do any of us know (without the benefit of hindsight) what’s going to fade away and what’s going to last? The parasha Balak offers us an opportunity to think this through. In these chapters, the Moabite king Balak gets nervous about the Israelites, because they’re getting so numerous that they cover the earth (22:5). The king decides to act pre-emptively, hiring a non-Israelite seer/ prophet/magician named Balaam to curse the Israelites – but, when Balaam gets there, he ends up blessing the Israelites three times instead. His blessings include bold predictions: [The Israelites’] kingdom will be exalted (24:7), and they will eat up enemy nations (24:8). This is no small thing, given how powerful these nations are. But Balaam is clear: Moab is doomed, and so are the Amalekites and the Kenites, regardless of their might or the security of their encampments (24:17-24). This must have seemed outlandish to this powerful king – but the fact is that all those prophecies have come true. So, what did Balaam know that the rest of the world didn’t? And what can we learn from him in order to direct our own lives toward work that will last? Well, a few things: First of all, sometimes it helps to get an outside 24 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

perspective. Balak talks to the Israelites’ G-d, but he is not himself an Israelite, and so his feedback is the feedback of an outsider. That can help us, too. Consider the example of artist Judy Chicago, who rewrote her first memoir eight times, each time making it better because of the input of friends. Those friends saw, in the early drafts, what was good enough to last. Then, too, there’s distance. When Balak asks Balaam to curse the Israelites, he positions Balaam up high, at a distance from the people, which allows him a broader perspective on the community he’s assessing. So, too, many people see their own accomplishments more clearly from a distance. That often means time. As songwriter Bob Dylan once said when he’d put out almost 20 albums, “It’s taken me all this time, and the records I made along the way were like openers – trying to figure out whether it was this way or that way, just what is it, what’s the simplest way I can tell the story and make this feeling real.” Third, it’s important to note that Balaam blesses the people not because he wants to, but because G-d tells him to. The Israelites are blessed because they’re connected to something larger than themselves. Does your work go beyond you? As choreographer Anna Halprin has said of her own creative process, “You’re not the center of the universe, you’re just a part of it. So how do you deal with your relationship to all that isn’t you?” Finally, it’s worth noting that, while Balak and Balaam carried on up above, the Israelites down below them on the plains were completely oblivious to what was happening. Instead of ruminating about their future, they were going about their business. They were living out the Israelite idea without pausing to ask, “Will it last?” It’s an important question, but you can’t let it become a preoccupation. Sometimes, these busy Israelites teach us, you have to just throw yourself into your life project and let the blessings take care of themselves. A

 This

month’s Torah portions July 5: Balak (Numbers 22:2-25:9) July 12: Pinchas (Numbers 25:10-30:1) July 19: Mattot (Numbers 30:2-32:42) July 26: Massei (Numbers 33:1-36:13)


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One of our most popular musical plays is back again for a very limited engagement. Revel in some of America’s most beloved songs crafted by the incomparable Ira Gershwin. Along the way, we’re treated to some of the songs Ira created with other well-known composers of the era. This is an evening of glorious music that will have you singing and smiling long after the lights go down. WORDS BY IRA GERSHWIN played to packed houses the first time around, so order your tickets now before we are sold out.

TICKETS: (858) 481-1055 • NorthCoastRep.org 987 Lomas Santa Fe Dr., Suite D, Solana Beach Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 25


I

LAST DAYS IN DIGNITY The Foundation for the Benefit of Holocaust Victims offers much-needed support in Israel By Tinamarie Bernard

israel

“N

ever again!” doesn’t happen without commitment to a greater cause. In the case of the Foundation for the Benefit of Holocaust Victims in Israel, that cause is to support the remaining Shoah survivors in need. Today, there are approximately 192,000 Holocaust survivors living in Israel with 50,000 living below the poverty line. Every day, an estimated 35 pass away due to age or lifestyle related causes. We are all aware that Holocaust survivors are becoming scarce in this world – it has been more than 70 years since the end of WWII. This makes the need to support those who are still with us all the more important. The purpose of the Foundation is to assist the most needy Holocaust survivors in Israel. Established in 1994 for survivors by survivors, the Foundation works most closely with those who survived the horrors of the past but have struggled to rehabilitate their lives or those who find themselves hit with particularly hard times in old age. The Foundation provides home nursing care, financial assistance for medical, dental and vision needs, legal assistance and more.

26 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

They work with government agencies, private donors and philanthropic organizations to raise funds and provide the necessary services to help this aging population spend their remaining days in dignity, through innovative programs that address social, medical and emotional needs. To date, the Foundation has renovated 700 apartments throughout Israel. The goal is to renovate at least 1,000 per year for the next five years. These remodels address the needs of the many survivors who, because of advanced age and medical conditions, are unable to shower or bathe without assistance or an accessible facility. With the correct repairs, they can spend their final years in more dignified living conditions. The Foundation has 1,500 volunteers who visit the survivors in their homes at least once a week. Hearts are lifted and friendships are formed. There are approximately 10,000 survivors who live alone without family support. Volunteer visits brighten lives and serve as the eyes and ears of the Foundation, determining what unmet needs can be addressed. The Foundation has also placed computers

and provided Internet service in 25 cities across Israel. High school students teach the survivors the ins and outs of computer use, providing the next generation a chance to perform community service and create relationships with these elderly citizens. Avi Dichter, a former Israel Minister of Public Security and Minister of Home Front Defense who served in the Knesset from 2006-12 oversees the Foundation on a volunteer basis. Mr. Dichter was born in Israel to parents who survived the Holocaust. He is tasked with bridging the gap between government funding, which is limited and comes with restraints, and private donations, which give the Foundation more flexibility to serve their population, in order to more fully support the aging Holocaust survivors in Israel. To learn how you can contribute to the Foundation and their work throughout Israel, visit kshoa.org.A


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PHOTOS BY PETER TALHAMÉ

FEATURE STORY

RENAISSANCE WOMAN San Diego-based Israeli artist does it all, with flair BY NIKKI SALVO

S

arit Harel is spreading the light. Through her art classes for both kids and adults, this papier-mâché sculptor has brought a warm Israeli consciousness to San Diego, sharing her love of multiple artistic mediums and her unique process with audiences big and small. “Whatever you dream,” Harel says, “you can do it with papier-mâché.” A self-described “big dreamer,” Harel is one of those people who truly lights up a space. Her exotic look, openness and vibrancy draw people to her immediately. Her maternal nature and desire to help make others feel at ease. When she speaks, it is as if colors are swirling around her. She sees herself as a modern Renaissance woman, intrigued by and involved in several art forms including dancing, singing, writing songs and short stories, and papier-mâché sculpting. “I always want to be in the art world,” she says. A performer at heart, as a soldier in Israel she sang in the IDF band, and after her two years in the military, she began studying contemporary music. While at school, she performed in musicals like “Les Miserables” and “West Side Story.” In addition to TV and commercial acting, Harel hosted a show on a local Israeli station. For one episode, she interviewed a woman who changed

28 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

her life. The woman, owner of a professional studio for papier-mâché art, opened up her space to Harel when the young artist expressed interest in the medium after the interview. The woman quickly became Harel’s dear friend and mentor. After six-and-a-half years of working in the studio in Israel, Harel, her husband, and their four children decided to move to San Diego. Encouraged by Harel’s talent, the woman urged her to open her own studio in her new city, and told Harel to “spread the light.” Harel insists this is “not the papier-mâché we worked with as kids in school.” It is more sophisticated than that, by far. The beauty of papier-mâché, she says, is that it’s an unlimited material. For one, the medium is environmentally friendly, consisting of almost all recycled materials. It also incorporates other art forms: painting, collage, sewing, and more. “Garbage – I love it,” she says. When Harel first moved to the United States, she spent many mornings cruising garage sales, and loves to “take a lonely, tore-up chair and turn it into a throne.” She calls papier-mâché a “friendly material” that “obeys you, listens to you.” It’s responsive, malleable, and it’s also reviseable.

“If you don’t like something, you can change it,” she says. In her Carmel Valley studio, she shares photos of useful objects like chairs and tables created with papier-mâché, and other pieces like decorative mirrors and an array of hamsas that her students have made. Just as Harel had to learn how to be patient during the year-long process of opening her studio, working with papier-mâché is about enjoying the process, which, in our current culture of instant gratification, can sometimes be a difficult. This patience required of art is one of the principles she encourages and wants to teach students to embrace. She talks about the therapeutic benefits of the medium, the way sculpting calms her students, and describes observing them “becoming a tribe” when they are in the studio. During the classes, “the walls come down. [People become] naked, in a good way. There is no ego inside the studio.” She says one of her biggest accomplishments is creating a space where everyone feels included and relaxed. This “soft, accepting environment helps to bring out their talent,” she says. “Everyone is talented, has dreams. We’re all artists.”


FEATURE STORY

The artist and some of her latest pieces, taken at her home studio in Carmel Valley. Classes are held at the studio in Harel’s home, where Israeli food like fresh bread with tahini and hummus is always on the menu. She extends a warm welcome to her students and wants people to feel like they can call her or drop by anytime, if they need guidance about their craft, help with a piece they’re working on, or just to talk. She says she is used to having the phone “ringing off the hook.” Even with her robust art practice here in

San Diego, she misses performing back home in Israel, and keeps a strong connection with her birthplace by continuing to sing Israeli folk music at local events. For her, the remedy for missing the spontaneity of her culture is to expose her students to a “true Israeli ‘open house’ [lifestyle]. I’m trying to bring that sensibility to my new home.” In the future, Harel would like to work with the elderly and plans to expand her business, to

A Word from the Community:

create a place where, she says, “women can come and feel like sisters.” She describes a therapeutic center devoted to art and body awareness, involving elements like massage, yoga, and dance, as well as sculpture. “Women can commit to a gym,” she asserts, “but they don’t make time for the soul [there].” She promises that her art classes will help nourish the soul in a way that nothing else does, and she’ll be there to light the way. A Jonas Jacobs

J* Company is Special to Me...and All of Us

BY JONAS JACOBS, AGE 13

A

s I grew up, I discovered I loved theater. I thought it was important to people of all ages. But for me, theater was more than entertainment; it became my dedicated hobby. I always knew I had interest in theater, felt a talent inside me, but I did not know how to let it out. I did not want to sit and play video games and be alone, I would rather be face-to-face with other children who share similar interests. Fortunately, I found J* Company. At J* Company, we learn to focus, develop skills and grow in many ways. The incredible staff teaches us how to enter a new environment

and bring out our talents. I’ve discovered and nurtured new talents in my first two shows, “The Wizard of Oz” and “Tarzan.” I plan to audition for every show next season. Because it’s given so much to me, for my recent bar mitzvah, I decided to give back to J* Company. For my “mitzvah project,” I asked my guests to donate to J* Company so that it could continue to bring the art of theater to San Diego children, their families and the entire San Diego community. Thank you, J* Company. A

Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 29


POLITICS

TEA PARTY CANDIDATE VOICES STRONG SUPPORT FOR ISRAEL Senator Ted Cruz makes bold statement on a recent trip to the Middle East BY DMITRIY SHAPIRO, JNS.ORG

PHOTOS FROM GETTY IMAGES

The Senator at a news conference in March.

U

nited States Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, a Tea Party favorite, recently returned to the Capitol after a tour of Europe and the Middle East with Secure America Now, a rightwing security advocacy group. The trip included a two-day stop in Israel, where he met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, members of the Knesset, and Israeli defense leaders. “I went this time because the national security threats to Israel and to the United States have never been greater than they are right now,” Cruz told JNS.org when asked about the purpose of his recent mission. While on the trip, Cruz made headlines by laying out his foreign policy positions regarding Israel during a speech to the Knesset. Cruz unequivocally blamed the Palestinians as being solely responsible for derailing the recent round of peace talks and blasted Secretary of State John Kerry and the Obama administration for criticizing Israel over settlement plans. “I don’t think the United States should attempt to dictate the terms of peace,” Cruz told JNS.org. But, he continued, “if America

can help provide a neutral forum, a venue for positive negotiations, then we should do so. But the American president should not demonstrate arrogance in trying to dictate the terms of any solution for peace.” At least one Jewish organizational leader framed Cruz’s trip in terms of it being a safe move among voters aligned with the GOP base: The pause in peace negotiations between the Israelis and the Palestinians allows politicians to make statements without fear of choosing between sides and, more than two years before the next presidential election, it’s clear that legislators are less influential in crafting foreign policy than the White House. But even groups on the right, such as the Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC), have been hesitant to fully back Cruz, preferring instead more establishment candidates like New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Texas Gov. Rick Perry. At the RJC’s annual leadership retreat in Las Vegas earlier this year, Cruz was not among the invited slate of potential 2016 candidates. The RJC did not respond to a request for

comment. Rabbi Yitzhok Tendler, co-founder of the Young Jewish Conservatives (YJC), doesn’t think that Cruz is just trying to pander to donors with his support of Israel. “I think what’s unique about it is that he is probably the most articulately anti-Palestinian intransigence senator out there right now,” Tendler said. “He’s a guy who’s deeply inspired by the ideal of freedom – from my interactions with him, this is a big deal for him. He’s an ideological purist and he doesn’t mind speaking his mind even if it might be unpopular.” Tendler said that he first met Cruz when he came to address YJC members at their inaugural Shabbat dinner held during the Conservative Political Action Conference in early 2012. “Back then, he wasn’t even a senator and he was passionate about it, so I think it’s sincere. I don’t think there’s any ulterior motive,” he said. “I mean, some of it might be religiously based, but he doesn’t strike me as an evangelical fanatic, so I don’t think that’s where it comes from.” A

L-R: Katherine and Mayor Kevin Faulconer, Michael Bolton, Doreen and Dr. Myron Schonbrun.

30 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014


FEATURE STORY

SCHOLARS SEEK HEBREW BIBLE’S ORIGINAL TEXT The question is, did one ever exist? BY ANTHONY WEISS, JTA

A

ccording to Jewish tradition, the Torah is so sacred that even a single error made on a single letter renders the entire scroll unfit for use. And yet the Hebrew Bible – including the Torah, its first five books – is riddled with corruptions and alterations that have accrued and been passed down over the millennia. Now an international team of scholars is working to fix all that. For the past 14 years, the team behind “The

Hebrew Bible: A Critical Edition” (HBCE) has been laboring on a project to sift through the text and reverse the accumulated imperfections and changes, returning the books of the Hebrew Bible to something like their original versions. The first volume is due out later this year. “It is a little chutzpadik,” acknowledges Ronald Hendel, HBCE’s general editor and a professor of Hebrew Bible at the University of California, Berkeley. It’s also a messy, painstaking and controversial

endeavor that has been criticized by some of the world’s leading biblical scholars. The critics argue that what Hendel and his team are attempting to do is misleading, counterproductive or flat-out impossible. “I think it will actually end up causing more problems,” Michael Segal, a senior lecturer in Bible at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, says. The difficulties in the project stem from the Bible’s long history of transmission from scribe Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 31


FEATURE STORY

to scribe through the centuries. HBCE is trying to reverse engineer that process, to sift through the various extant texts of the Bible and – by analyzing grammatical glitches, stylistic hitches and contradictions of the texts – establish a reading closer to if not the original, then at least the archetype on which the subsequent copies were based. The goal is to rewind the clock as far as possible toward the time when the various biblical texts attained their canonical form, around the start of the Common Era. The text of the Hebrew Bible that is used now descends from what is called the Masoretic text, which was assembled between the sixth and 10th centuries by Jewish scribes and scholars in present-day Israel and Iraq. But even among the various versions of the Masoretic text there are subtle differences. Many of today’s printings of the Hebrew Bible come from the Second Rabbinic Bible, a text assembled in 16th-century Venice. The Jewish Publication Society uses the Leningrad Codex, which, at approximately 1,000 years old, is the oldest complete surviving text. Still others use the 10th-century Aleppo Codex, which the Torah scholar Maimonides praised for its accuracy but has been missing much of the Torah since a 1947 fire. Contemporary scholars who seek to understand the history of the Hebrew Bible’s text utilize a range of other sources, including ancient Greek and Syriac translations, quotations from rabbinic manuscripts, the Samaritan Pentateuch and others. Many of these are older than the Masoretic text and often contradict it, in ways 32 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

small and large. Some of the errors are natural outgrowths of the process of scribal transmission – essentially typos in which the scribe mistook one letter for another, skipped a word or transposed words. In other cases, the scribes may have changed the text intentionally to make it more comprehensible or pious. The level of variation differs from book to book. Hendel estimates that it ranges from approximately five percent in Genesis to some 20-30 percent in books such as Samuel and Jeremiah. While many changes are small, others are more substantial. For example, just before Cain slays Abel, the Masoretic text announces that Cain speaks but offers no dialogue. Both the Samaritan Pentateuch and the ancient Greek translation called the Septuagint supply the missing speech: “Let us go out to the field.” In this instance, emending the text is relatively straightforward. But elsewhere, the task becomes complicated. The book of Jeremiah in the Septuagint is approximately 15-20 percent shorter than the version in the Masoretic text, and the text appears in a different order. In this case, editors are not just dealing with glitches but with entirely different versions of the same text. The scholars behind “The Hebrew Bible: A Critical Edition” argue that textual scholars now have enough evidence at their disposal to make reasonable judgments about where the text has been corrupted, why and how to fix it thanks in large part to the discovery and publication of the Dead Sea Scrolls. These ancient manuscripts, though largely

fragmentary, are by far the oldest Hebrew copies of the Bible, and they gave scholars a key by which to judge the accuracy of the subsequent texts. “The Dead Sea Scrolls have created a new era in the study of textual history of the Hebrew Bible,” Hendel says. “The kind of thing that we’re doing couldn’t have been done even 15 to 20 years ago because the field wasn’t really ripe.” Hendel’s team uses a two-fold approach: In the case of the more limited variations, they make the correction in the text according to their best judgment while noting the variants and the reasoning in the accompanying notes. Where entirely separate versions seem to exist, as in Jeremiah, HBCE will reproduce both side by side, indicating multiple editions. The effort is now bearing fruit as the Society of Biblical Literature is preparing this fall to publish the first HBCE volume, “Proverbs,” edited by Michael Fox, an emeritus professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Hendel hopes the project will continue to print a new volume every year or two. (Up until a few Carynwas Hartglass months ago, the project slated for printing by Oxford University Press and was known as the Oxford Hebrew Bible. Hendel said the project and Oxford parted ways over the scope of an electronic edition. Oxford did not return a request for comment.) There have been various previous attempts to produce a single, corrected text of the Bible dating back for more than a century. All have foundered due to the inherent difficulty in peering back through the centuries. Instead, the preferred method has been to produce what is known in the field as a “diplomatic edition” – that is, a reprint of some version of the Masoretic text accompanied by notes listing possible variants and corrections that one could make to the text. In fact, there are two such scholarly biblical projects currently taking place. One, the Hebrew University Bible Project (HUBP), was established in 1956 to assemble every known textual variant of the Hebrew Bible. Unlike HBCE, the project is designed to assemble variations, not to choose one that is correct. Massively comprehensive and aimed largely at high-level scholars, the HUBP has published only three volumes in its more than half-century of existence – Isaiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel. A fourth, of the 12 minor prophets, is slated for publication this fall.


FEATURE STORY

At the same time, the German Bible Society is producing the Biblia Hebraica Quinta, its fifth version of a diplomatic Hebrew Bible, with the first published in 1906. Intended as a more accessible, single-volume text, it strikes a middle ground, indicating preferred readings but without altering the text itself. The project has published 10 of the Hebrew Bible’s 24 books. Criticisms of the HBCE effort fall into two very broad categories. The first main critique is primarily practical: Is it in fact possible to accurately reconstruct the biblical text after so many centuries, through so many linguistic layers and with so much uncertainty? “The more years I’ve been involved in the study of the history of the biblical text, the less confident I am in deciding what is more original or not,” says the Hebrew University’s Segal, the HUBP’s general editor. To this, the editors of HBCE respond that errors and uncertainty are inherent in any of the biblical texts that one could print and thus unavoidable. “Everyone knows that no manuscript is without error,” Eugene Ulrich, a professor at Notre Dame University and a co-editor of two volumes of

HBCE, says. “You could ask: Why do you want to print a text in which you know there are errors?” But there is also a second, more fundamental critique of HBCE – namely, can such a thing as an original truly be said to exist? Was there ever a moment when the biblical text crystallized into a single version, or has it simply continued to evolve? In other words, by chasing what the field of textual study calls an ur-text, the scholars of HBCE may, in fact, be chasing a ghost. Critics of HBCE argue that in creating a single text, the series will create the fiction of unity where there has always been multiplicity. Hendel argues that what he and his team are presenting is not meant to be a definitive text but simply the most definitive that one can achieve. And he says he is not put off by the criticism. “There’s a lot of pushback in the field. A lot of people think that this is still premature, or just unthinkable,” Hendel says. “But that’s ok, I live in California. We can do new things.” A

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A human cell seen through a microscope.

Small Patients, Big Medicine Pediatric cardiologist studies genes at UCSD BY NATALIE JACOBS

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hen Dr. Paul Grossfeld was gearing up to be a visiting fourth-year medical student at UC San Diego in 1991, he wanted to do a rotation in an area of medicine that was exciting, maybe something like infectious disease. But when residency assignments came out in October of that year, the only thing available was pediatric cardiology. “I remember specifically being disappointed,” Grossfeld says. 34 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

It seemed to the young doctor that there were so many more cutting-edge fields in which to specialize, but he gave it a chance, mostly because he didn’t have a choice. As these things tend to happen, pediatric cardiology was the perfect fit for Grossfeld. “It turned out, once I got exposed to it, I realized it was really my calling and I fell in love with it.” Grossfeld went on to complete his three-year

residency at UCSD. He then stayed on for an additional four years of cardiology training and ultimately joined the faculty there in 1999. Today, he sees patients at Rady Children’s Hospital and serves as an associate clinical professor in the division of pediatric cardiology. He also runs a research lab that is studying the genetic causes of congenital heart defects. These heart defects are the most common type of birth defect, affecting one percent of


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A 3-D MRI reconstruction demonstrates that the loss of the ETS-1 gene impairs function of cardiac neural crest cells. the general population. In San Diego, there are more than 15,000 infants, children and adults with congenital heart disease. At any given time, Grossfeld and colleagues at Rady’s are seeing 25 to 30 kids in the hospital with a heart defect. “It’s probably 20 times more frequent than something else like a cleft palate,” Grossfeld explains. The term “congenital heart defect” refers to a structural impurity in the heart, a result of something going awry during fetal development. Given advances in medical technologies, Grossfeld and pediatric cardiologists like him are able to diagnose these problems as early as the first ultrasound, which usually takes place at around the 20th week of pregnancy. “If there is anything suspicious in respect to the heart [of the fetus], then the infant is referred to one of us who will do a much more detailed fetal ultrasound to look at the heart. “In a fair percentage of cases now,” he continues, “we know that babies are diagnosed prenatally so we’re there practically and sometimes literally in the delivery room waiting for those babies to be born and waiting to manage them immediately after.” While technological developments have improved the standard of care for infants with congenital heart defects, genetics research has improved the likelihood of finding a cure. During his fellowship at UCSD, Grossfeld was taking care of a patient who had many other problems in addition to his congenital heart defect. He had a rare genetic disorder called Jacobsen Syndrome, in which genetic material from the 11th chromosome is missing. The

peculiarities of the symptoms struck Grossfeld and he began to study the disorder. Through 20 years of research, he has made small but important discoveries which have helped him understand the genetic makeup of Jacobsen Syndrome and congenital heart defects more broadly. One of the most exciting was the discovery of the gene that is missing in the Jacobsen Syndrome patients, the one who’s absence causes all the problems. He discovered this by working with mice in his lab. When he deleted the gene from their DNA, they developed the same heart defects as human patients with Jacobsen Syndrome. Since Jacobsen Syndrome patients present other symptoms beyond congenital heart defects, Grossfeld’s research has led to the discovery of several genes that contribute to the intellectual disabilities and behavioral problems that these kids display. “Half of these kids [with Jacobsen Syndrome] have autism and we found the gene that we think causes it, at least in these kids,” Grossfeld says as he references a paper that was recently approved for publication in the journal Genetics in Medicine. “Similarly, a lot of these kids have varying degrees of cognitive impairment and we’ve actually found a gene in this region that causes learning and memory problems. It turns out, the protein that this gene makes happens to be reduced in the brains of patients with Alzheimer’s disease.” This means that Grossfeld’s research has applications beyond the congenital heart defects that affect one percent of newborns. But like most work in medicine, the research can only continue and expand as long as there is money to

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fund it. Grossfeld’s lab at UCSD costs $250,000 per year to maintain two full-time researchers, the mice and all the molecular reagents required to do their work. If the lab wants to foray into Alzheimer’s research, Grossfeld says it’ll cost a couple million dollars. In the United States, there have traditionally been two places to turn to fund academic research in the medical field: the National Institutes of Health and private endowments managed by universities. Both have become harder to get in recent years. “The irony is,” Grossfeld says, “[right now] is the most exciting time in the history of man in terms of science and exploration. It’s also one of the most trying times in terms of funding.” A little more than six years ago, Grossfeld was encouraged by a colleague to seek private funding for his research, through independent donors within the communities he serves. Since then, Grossfeld has hosted an annual fundraiser at the private homes of his main supporters. The location changed a lot in the beginning but for the last three years the event has been held at the Rancho Santa Fe home of Jeff and Linda Church. “When you think about everything I do as a clinician, it’s resting on the shoulders of all the people who before us did research to advance the field to get us to where we are now. I feel an equal moral duty to want to do that. I also happen to love it, so that makes it easy for me.” This year’s fundraiser took place in June. You can learn more about Dr. Grossfeld’s work and how to donate any time at pediatrics.ucsd.edu/ research/grossfeld-lab. A Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 35


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CALL OR EMAIL JACQUI FOR YOUR NEXT HAPPENING! 858-412-5858 • jsilver@san.rr.com

CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR

36 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

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A Jewish Doctor for Women Dina Fainman brings enthusiasm and Jewish values to Encinitas BY ABBY WALKER

PHOTO COURTESY WOMEN'S INTEGRATIVE HEALTH

(L-R): Doctors, Angelica Zaid, Dina Fainman, Sieu Truong and Samina Makani.

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nlike most people, Dina Fainman knew from an early age exactly what she wanted to be when she grew up: a doctor. Decades later, she is an OB/GYN in Encinitas at Women’s Integrative Health. “My parents tell stories of me playing games, pretending to do surgery, or saying that I was going to be a nurse or a cardiologist since I was about four years old,” Fainman says. She solidified her love of medicine while in high school when she participated in a program during her senior year that allowed her to spend half the day working in a hospital alongside physicians and researchers. After completing her bachelor’s degree in biology at Columbia University, while at the same getting a second bachelor’s degree from the Jewish Theological Seminary in art and Hebrew literature, Fainman attended medical school at Albany Medical College. For her residency, she moved back to New York City and worked at St. Luke’s Roosevelt Hospital, which at the time was part of Columbia but has since been bought by Mt. Sinai Hospital.

Born and raised in New York, Fainman didn’t live outside the state until she finished her residency and moved to California with her husband, an Encinitas native, three years ago. “He lived with me in New York for five years and said, ‘Enough is enough. San Diego is so much better,’” Fainman explains. “You don’t have to twist someone’s arm too much to live somewhere like San Diego.” Although Fainman misses her family on the East Coast, she manages to see them several times a year and enjoys getting to know her husband’s local family. As the only member of her family to work in the medical field, Fainman chose the profession completely on her own, but not out of thin air. She was attracted to science and the human body from a young age and began to narrow her focus to obstetrics and gynecology during high school and college. “[Obstetrics and gynecology] are two ends of a spectrum that bring everything together in a woman’s life cycle,” she says. “I have the opportunity to handle everything from adolescent is-

sues to puberty, all the way up to pregnancy and childbirth, and going through all the life changes that women go through, from menopause and beyond.” She particularly enjoys delivering babies and getting to be a part of that life-changing experience with her patients. Since Fainman has only been practicing medicine for three years, her career is still fairly young but she’s looking forward to being a part of her patients’ lives for years to come. Fainman credits her Jewish background for keeping her grounded and providing her with a strong value system from which to base her medical practice. “When it comes to advising patients on choices they have to make, especially difficult decisions, I think having Jewish values helps,” Fainman, whose extended family lives in Israel, says. “It also helps when I have Jewish patients that they can relate to me...I feel like I can counsel patients appropriately because I have gone through all the decisions myself.” To learn more, visit encinitasobgyn.com. A

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One More Test to Wonder About? GENETICS, PARKINSON’S AND ASHKENAZI JEWS BY NATALIE JACOBS

PHOTOS COURTESY MICHAEL J. FOX FOUNDATION

Studying the genetics of some people with Parkinson's could open avenues to new therapies.

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f you could find out with moderate medical certainty when you’re going to die, would you? It’s the kind of question you ask when you’re feeling philosophical but it might become an increasingly more important line of inquiry. Other thought questions that were once purely hypothetical – like, “what if you could know the sex of your baby before it’s born?” – have become realized in recent history. Advances in medical technologies keep this progression going faster and faster and the study of genetics is the new frontier. Sequencing, cataloging and analyzing DNA is an attempt to answer the big, as-yetunanswerable questions, specifically those related to diseases, why we get them and if we can wipe them out. “Genetics has become quite revolutionary in the pace at which we can do things,” Dr. Galasko, a professor in the Department of Neurosciences at UC San Diego, who researches genetic aspects of both Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases, says. Ashkenazi Jews are no strangers to questions about genetics and the diseases they cause. From Tay-Sachs to Gaucher to Cystic Fibrosis,

38 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

doctors have long been advising members of this Jewish population about the risks associated with their gene pool. Recently, genetic testing for the rest of the world has caught up. Doctors and scientists are isolating genes to understand the biological makeup of myriad diseases, and start-up companies like 23andMe are making gene sequencing as easy as an at-home pregnancy test. All of this contributes to a global database of genetic information from which researchers can work in the hopes of better understanding how the human body functions. In many cases, the genes of Ashkenazi Jews remain specifically interesting for these researchers. One such area is Parkinson’s disease. “There are a number of different genes that have been identified for Parkinson’s over the last roughly 20 years,” Galasko, who is also the lead doctor on a genetics study sponsored by the Michael J. Fox Foundation, says. “[The] LRRK2 [gene] was discovered in 2004 in a few families that had Parkinson’s disease. Because of the existence of large banks of DNA among different research groups, people were able

“There are a number of different genes that have been identified for Parkinson’s over the last roughly 20 years.”

within a year or two, to look at how common LRRK2 findings were across the world.” They’ve isolated this gene as the most common genetic factor in Parkinson’s patients. The purpose of the Fox Foundation’s genetics study, called Parkinson’s Progression Marker Initiative (PPMI), is to continue identifying the biomarkers that are associated with Parkinson’s disease. It started out as a study to evaluate the progression of the disease but it recently evolved to focus on genetics because that is where they


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“We stand at a point where treatment studies are being planned to try to delay onset of certain types of symptoms,” Galasko says, “or perhaps to slow progression, but we really need objective measurements to help us initiate these trials and measure their outcomes.”

PPMI makes data and samples available to researchers around the world. see the most potential for discovering something that will impact the onset and progression of the disease. “The idea [for the study] is to identify people who are at risk of developing Parkinson’s because of particular genetic risk factors,” Galasko says. Shortly after researchers determined that LRRK2 is the most significant gene in causing Parkinson’s disease, they discovered that in people with Ashkenazi Jewish backgrounds, it was an even stronger predictor. Ashkenazi Jewish people are more likely to carry the gene (30-60 out of 100) and of the five-10 percent of people who have genetic causes of Parkinson’s, 15-20

percent of them are Ashkenazi. Because of this, Dr. Galasko and the team at the Michael J. Fox Foundation are specifically looking for Ashkenazi Jews to participate in their genetic study. “By identifying milestones within a very well characterized group of people who are LRRK2 carriers,” he continues, “we may be able to identify markers that we can then generalize to a lot of other people who may be at risk for Parkinson’s.” Across the United States, the study is hoping to enroll 250 people with the LRRK2 gene who have Parkinson’s disease and 250 people who are

A biomarker, such as a measurement from a blood sample, could help diagnosis.

carriers but do not have Parkinson’s. Their data will be added to the more than 600 people who are currently enrolled in the PPMI study on the non-genetic side of the equation. Ultimately, they will have a database of well-characterized genetic information that will be used to create new treatments and ultimately maybe cure the disease (though that is still a very distant goal). “We stand at a point where treatment studies are being planned to try to delay onset of certain types of symptoms,” Galasko says, “or perhaps to slow progression, but we really need objective measurements to help us initiate these trials and measure their outcomes.” Involvement in the study for those with LRRK2 requires clinical procedures like blood draws, detailed physical examinations, testing of cognition and smell, testing of movement, and brain imaging. There is also the option to get a spinal tap or lumbar puncture once fully approved for the study. As with most genetic mutations, just because a person carries the gene doesn’t mean he or she will develop the disease. But, this is science and it only works through trial and error. Galasko says it’s about the possibility of catching symptoms early on and working toward a cure. “Knowing how to build this very detailed roadmap using biomarkers provides us with all of the tools to develop treatment studies,” Galasko says. You can find more information about the study by visiting michaeljfox.org/ppmi/genetics. A

Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 39


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Honoring the Memory of Jerome and Miriam Katzin The faculty and staff of the Judaic Studies Program of the University of California, San Diego, are grieved by the recent deaths of Jerome and Miriam Katzin, longtime stalwarts of community support for education and research in general, and Jewish Studies in particular. For fifteen years (1981-1996), as President of the UCSD Judaic Studies Program Board of Visitors, Jerry led the sustained community fundraising that resulted in the establishment of six endowed chairs in Judaic Studies, including the Katzin Chair in Jewish Civilization, in addition to the Program's general endowment. Miriam was equally engaged, also serving for fifteen years as President of the Friends of Judaic Studies. In recognition of their manifold contributions to both San Diego and the University of California in the fields of Jewish Studies, the performing arts, education, social welfare and medical research, the University awarded the Katzins the 2010 UCSD Chancellor’s Medal; Jerry had previously been honored with the Revelle Medal in 1996. Both of these accolades acknowledge exceptional support of the University’s threefold mission of education, research and public service. Without their foresight, wisdom and generosity, it is unlikely that UCSD would have become a center for the study of Jewish civilization. Even while mourning, we also celebrate the Katzins’ memory and legacy. Yehi zikhram barukh! 40 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014


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Mindful Meditation : A natural antidote for stress and depression BY LYNN WALDMAN

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ur feelings matter, as does the level of stress we experience on a daily basis. Recently, Professor Raz Yirmiya and his team at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem found that microglia brain cells (the main form of defense in the central nervous system) are involved in the development of depression following chronic exposure to unpredictable stress. Additionally, the researchers found that the effects of chronic stress can lead to a decrease in the volume of some structures in the brain. While Yirmiya’s research is based on chronic and unpredictable stress, one wonders how everyday stress might impact us. As a therapist in private practice, I see patients who struggle with the effects that stress can wreak on everyday life. Rather than face the repercussions of depression and possible changes in our brain, is there something we can do to avoid such an outcome? As an example, my patient Ellen, a successful attorney and single mother of two teenage children recently remarried after being divorced for many years. While most of the changes for Ellen and her children were positive, she did

feel some stress in her new life. Ellen and her children relocated to her new husband’s larger home in North County, some 20 miles from her previous neighborhood, thus increasing her daily commute to work. Also, Ellen was not used to shared decision making and found herself grappling with this new area of her life. While Ellen believed her marriage was strong, she eventually found herself dealing with some symptoms of mild depression: a loss of energy, some feelings of sadness, a lack of interest in things she previously enjoyed. She did not know how to improve her feelings, or, as she put it, how to “snap out of it.” While Ellen considered taking medication, she understood her feelings were situational and wanted to explore other avenues to alleviate her depression. So Ellen began weekly counseling sessions in conjunction with mindfulness meditation instead. Mindfulness is the sense of being present in the moment, not focusing on the past or on the future. Mindfulness allows a person to tune into his or her current experience and accept it for

what it is. Meditation quiets the mind through focus on the breath; it’s the anchor that keeps us present in our bodies. Meditation teaches us to redirect our mind and to label thoughts as just that, thoughts, and then refocus on the breath. Mindfulness meditation can take some getting used to, especially for mothers who are not accustomed to spending time quieting their mind and focusing on their breathing. But after a short period of time, Ellen began to use mindfulness meditation successfully, becoming an observer of her difficult emotions. Through her meditation practice, She was able to gain space from her stress and to ease into married life as her depression lifted. San Diego is home to two long-standing chavurot dedicated to Jewish meditation. Dr. Burt Bialik leads a bi-monthly Jewish meditation group and Rabbi Wayne Dosick is the spiritual leader of the Elijah Minyan. For tips on how to start a Jewish meditation practice, contact Rabbi Dosick at wdosick@gmail.com A *Identity of clients depicted in this article have been changed to protect confidentiality.

Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 41


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Marijuana in my Medicine Cabinet Israeli companies, doctors and researchers explore the medical benefits of cannabis BY DARRYL EGNAL

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edical marijuana, also known as medical cannabis, is saving people’s lives. Serious, crippling pain is becoming a tolerable dull ache. Cancer patients are no longer suffering from chemotherapy sideeffects or fading away due to lack of appetite. People with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are sleeping peacefully and becoming whole again. And Israel is on board to help this movement grow. Tel Aviv resident Sharon Goldfarb (50) suffers from rheumatoid arthritis. Once it started, the condition deteriorated rapidly. In July 2007, her hands started hurting and by late August, she could barely open them. “I remember before Rosh Hashanah, standing in the supermarket with tears in my eyes, not able to take a carton of milk off the shelf, and having to ask a stranger to put the milk in my cart,” Goldfarb says. Once diagnosed, she was given a host of 42 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

medications to solve a variety of symptoms (fatigue, morning stiffness, difficulty sleeping, swelling, etc.). According to Goldfarb, Methotrexate is the first treatment given for rheumatoid arthritis. “It’s a disease-modified drug and it inhibits your immune system. Methotrexate is toxic and you have to get monthly blood tests. It makes you feel really horrible at certain dosages and I was on the highest dosage there was.” Alternative treatment options Goldfarb learned to managed the symptoms and live with the pain, until a friend, Dr. Bareket Schiff-Keren, a well-known anesthesiologist and pain management expert in Israel, recommended she try marijuana. “I laugh[ed] and roll[ed] my eyes. [I told her] I’ve already sewn my wild oats; I’m not going to start taking drugs,” Goldfarb says. “I was on Methotrexate and other seriously

strong drugs and I laughed at her every time she suggested medical cannabis!” At the beginning of 2009, Goldfarb had a serious, debilitating flare-up and she finally agreed to go to her friend’s clinic. Goldfarb went through a stringent permission process. After mountains of paperwork, she was approved for very limited usage. “This license was for a specific amount every month. Back then, I went to a house in a town north of Tel Aviv, and there was a guy with long hair who listened to Pink Floyd while dispensing the drug. He was in a little one-room apartment, and there was a bowl of weed on the table.” After buying the necessary accessories, Goldfarb managed to roll a joint with her arthritic hands and sat on her porch swing to give it a try. “This is not street marijuana,” she remembers. “We’re talking about very potent cannabis. It takes two minutes to smoke half a joint, and


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Within a year, her dosage of Methotrexate had been reduced by nearly half and about four months ago, Goldfarb stopped talking it completely. In 2010, she had stopped taking her other prescription, Plaquenil, as well.

it takes your brain about three minutes to get the effect. I was literally hallucinating. It was disastrous. I was feeling horrible and I realized that I had smoked too much. Everybody has different tolerance levels and mine is extremely low. Today, however, I know that I can smoke two hits of a joint, three at the most.” Smoking a joint is not the only way to use medical cannabis. Goldfarb sometimes cooks and bakes with it, and it also comes in capsules or oil used under the tongue. It can also be vaporized using a special machine. After getting used to the dosages, Goldfarb saw results right away. “I can tell you that it really helps the pain. You can still feel it, but it’s a tolerable pain. Kind of like when you go to the dentist and get a Novocaine injection. ... Since I’ve been using it, I sleep through the night, it lowers my stress levels and I’m not in so much pain,” she says. Within a year, her dosage of Methotrexate had been reduced by nearly half and about four months ago, she stopped talking it completely. In 2010, she had stopped taking her other prescription, Plaquenil, as well. A doctor’s point of view Goldfarb’s friend, Dr. Schiff-Keren, is one of many Israeli pain management specialists who believe in medical cannabis. She has been prescribing it for her patients since 2003, even though, she says, there was no such thing as medical cannabis in Israel at that time. “I just told the patient to get hashish from

PHOTO COURTESY TIKUN OLAM

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(L-R): Tikun Olam patients, Dudu, who suffers from phantom pain and PTSD after losing his legs in a terrorist attack, and Alexander Barak, a paralysis patient who passed away. wherever [they could find it],” she says. Today, she treats nearly 2,500 people for all types of ailments. “I am a pain specialist,” she continues. “Medical marijuana, in comparison to other pain medications, has far fewer side-effects and complications. There is no treatment that suits everyone, but relatively, this one is very effective. The marijuana doesn’t take the pain away, but it turns it into a tolerable experience.” While there may be fewer side effects, SchiffKeren is careful to note that not all patients benefit from its use. Some people panic when they lose control, and some have a tendency to develop tachycardia or any kind of tachyarrhythmia (irregular heart beat). Additionally, the use of medical cannabis in teenagers and young adults is still viewed as risky by most medical practitioners. Young adulthood is an important time when the brain is still developing and hormones are all over the place. Some research has shown that the use of marijuana in teenagers can cause or exacerbate depression, psychosis or schizophrenia. This means a teenager with cancer who is going through chemotherapy and is in pain, suffering from nausea and lack of appetite presents a real dilemma for doctors. In the meantime, researchers are continuously working to find marijuana strains that don’t have a psychoactive effect. Research and experience Tikun Olam is one of the few marijuana organizations in the world with an enormous

amount of research behind it. Yitzhak (Tzachi) Cohen, an entrepreneur with a background in Kabbalah, started Tikun Olam in 2006 after he returned to Israel from the United States. When he lived in California, he became aware of the many medical uses of cannabis and decided that this was his mission in life, his way to help “repair or heal the world” (hence the name). At the time, there were only about 25 people in Israel who had been given special licenses to use medical cannabis. Cohen applied to the Ministry of Health and he was given a license – the first in the State of Israel – to grow and supply medical-grade cannabis for patients. Throughout the next four years, he developed various unique strains of the plant. By 2010, he was treating nearly 800 patients – for free. “You could not take any money from patients at that time,” Ma’ayan Weisberg, Tikun Olam’s spokesperson, says. “Tzachi had 800 patients and it was becoming a financial problem. He thought the government would help him because he was helping people, but he received no funding whatsoever.” Taking the next step “In 2009, Tzachi approached Maccabi (one of Israel’s HMOs) with a pitch: he said he could save them 60 million shekels a year on health insurance for its members. He presented usage data on 3,000 of his past and current clients. “The management at Maccabi realized what an amazing idea it was,” Weisberg says. “They Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 43


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Farmers work tirelessly to cultivate medical cannabis in Israel.

saw that the patients Tzachi was treating had reduced their medication, were sleeping better, were feeling better, were eating better, and in general, their wellbeing had improved so they went less to the hospital, they went less to the doctor and they needed less medical treatment.” Maccabi agreed to support him and they went to the Ministry of Health together. The government still doesn’t give any money towards the project, but companies supplying medical cannabis are now allowed to charge patients a set amount of 370 shekels (slightly more than $100). Today, there are eight companies participating, but Tikun Olam remains the most robust (they cultivate their own plants and offer the guidance of a professional nurse for patients). Since its founding, Tikun Olam has provided quality care for its patients while developing professional standards for growing medical grade cannabis (creating new standards for the field). In the field of production, emphasis is put on special methods which focus on increasing production of the active ingredients – mainly tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD) – so that medical grade plants may be grown. Medical cannabis is produced in a careful and sterile way, beginning with the stages of planting, harvesting and processing; right up until it reaches the patient. The company’s facilities (growing and processing) are located in the northern part of Israel and are secured according to the highest growing standards. To date, the company has developed 12 strains of medical cannabis for different uses 44 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

and it serves 4,000 patients – nearly a third of the 14,000 patients receiving medical cannabis throughout Israel. “Many people suffer badly from the side effects of the medications they take,” Weisberg says. “Many of them can’t be alone and they can’t work because the drugs are too strong. If you are a pain patient and you take morphine, you can’t function. Our patients are going back to work, back to parenting their children and are able to be part of society. “We have reached the point where 85 percent of our patients are completely satisfied with their

Captions Make the World go Round treatment. I don’t think you can say that about almost any other treatment there is today.” While there is undeniable success, Weisberg, like Dr. Schiff-Keren, cautions that it’s not for everyone. “People should not now go home and smoke cannabis,” she says, “but I think it should be provided to people who need it.” Medical cannabis is now used in Israel to treat the symptoms of many diseases including Alzheimer’s, all types of arthritis, autism, cancer, chronic pain (considered a disease, not a symptom), epilepsy, fibromyalgia, glaucoma,

Medical cannabis comes in different forms, from capsules and oil drops to pre-rolled cigarettes, cookies and ointments.

PHOTO BY DIMA HAVER

PHOTO COURTESY TIKUN OLAM

To date, the company has developed 12 strains of medical cannabis for different uses and it serves 4,000 patients – nearly a third of the 14,000 patients receiving medical cannabis throughout Israel.


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Close-up of the cannabis flower.

PHOTO COURTESY TIKUN OLAM

Captions Make the World go Round

ALS and multiple sclerosis, PTSD, Parkinson’s, Crohn’s Disease, and in some cases, HIV and AIDS. Over the years, Tikun Olam has initiated and maintained cooperation with doctors, scientists, department heads, nursing facilities and other medical institutes in Israel and abroad. The legal aspects In Israel, the law defines marijuana as an illegal and dangerous drug, and there is still no legislation regulating its use for medicinal purposes. However, Israel’s Ministry of Health issues special licenses that allow thousands of patients to receive medical cannabis. In the United States, California in 1996 became the first state to pass a law allowing the use of medical marijuana. Since then, 21 other states and the District of Columbia have followed suit, and at least four other states, including New York, appear to be on the brink. Colorado and Washington have legalized marijuana for

recreational use as well. At the U.S. federal level, however, marijuana remains classified as a Schedule I substance under the Controlled Substances Act. Schedule I substances are considered to have a high potential for dependency and no accepted medical use, making distribution of marijuana a federal offense. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures’ website, in October of 2009, the Obama Administration sent a memo to federal prosecutors encouraging them not to prosecute people who distribute marijuana for medical purposes in accordance with state law. But this does not apply to research. Back in Israel, Tikun Olam’s Weisberg believes the restrictive federal law is why quality research is not being conducted in universities and hospitals in California and the other states. “Most of them get federal grants; they are funded by the federal government so they are not willing to do research with companies

who produce medical cannabis,” she expalins. “Because it is illegal, they could lose their grants; so it is a Catch-22 situation. They have loads of applications. They could accumulate enormous amounts of data, but nobody has been doing it – unlike here where there has been collaboration for decades. The Israeli government has always allowed us to do research.” Legalizing medical marijuana is a debate that continues worldwide, but the patients who have been granted licenses swear by it. “There are always political issues around the topic of medicinal cannabis,” Goldfarb, the patient with rheumatoid arthritis, says, “But I would certainly advocate for it. ... I can climb mountains again! In my opinion, it saved my life.” Dr. Schiff-Keren agrees. “For the sake of the people who need it, medical marijuana should be legal. ... Prohibition creates a black market around a plant that can bring benefit and relief to human kind!” A Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 45


Short, Sweet and Spicy Samples from the 2nd Annual San Diego International Fringe Festival BY PAT LAUNER

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PHOTO COURTESY BODHI TREE CONCERTS

THEATER


THEATER

Ray Jessel: Writer, musician, and 85-year-old bad boy Ray (no relation to the late comedian, George Jessel) was born in Cardiff, Wales. “There were quite a number of Jews there when I grew up, about 2,000 families and three shuls,” the avuncular Jessel says by phone from his home in Los Angeles. His grandfather was one of the co-founders of the Orthodox synagogue in Cardiff, where Jessel had his bar mitzvah.

The intertwined limbs and controlled movements of Tamara Saari Dance will be on display at five Fringe shows. “Following the Jewish tendency to be musical,” young Jessel started piano early. He earned a degree in music from the University of Wales, and won a scholarship to study composition for a year in Paris. He emigrated to Canada and served as music director for a Reform temple, writing music for the choir. He became an orchestrator/composer for CBC radio and television. In Toronto, he got involved with musical theater, and that changed his life. Jessel wrote material for “Upstairs at the Downstairs” revues in New York, and created songs for the Sherlock Holmes musical, “Baker Street,” which ran on Broadway (1965). He wrote the score for “Helzapoppin,” which premiered at the Montreal Expo in 1967. He wrote songs and comedy sketches for “The Dean Martin Show,” “The Carol Burnett Show” and “The Captain and Tenille Show.” He wrote the two-hour TV episode, “Love Boat, the Musical,” starring Ethel Merman, Carol Channing, Cab Calloway and Della Reese. He created gags for Bob Hope and Groucho Marx, even Muhammad Ali. Jessel’s songs have been recorded by Louis Armstrong, Sammy Davis, Jr., Vicki Carr, John Pizzarelli, Al Jarreau and Michael Feinstein. In 2002, he finally decided to perform his own comic songs, making his cabaret debut at age 72 (“Ray Jessel: The First 70 Years”). He’s played Hollywood, Toronto and New York, receiving several national cabaret awards. “Everything comes together in my act,” he says. “Comedy, music, serious songs” (the latter co-written with Cynthia Thompson, his wife of 25 years). In preparation for his San Diego appearance, he wrote and recorded a song

promoting the Fringe, which will likely be used at other Fringes. But we get it first! One of Jessel’s most-requested songs (fondly referred to as “The Penis Song”) is “What She’s Got,” which appears on his second CD. Ever the provocateur, Jessel has entitled his San Diego show, “Life Sucks…and then you Die.” (Two free performances, at the Central Library). A long time coming For the past six years, Jonathan Rosenberg has been working on his first musical, “Long Way to Midnight,” about a family, a divorce, a mid-life crisis and a man’s journey to growing up. “It’s about how family influences the decisions we make in middle age,” Rosenberg, who learned a lot from his own divorce and from his mother’s fellow residents at San Diego’s Seacrest Village, says. The acerbic-but-loving grandma has been the favorite character in the five readings of his ever-evolving piece. “The grandmother (age 80) and granddaughter (age 10) have a very strong bond,” Rosenberg explains, “and between them, they’re trying to straighten up the father. Their private language is Yiddish.” “The play is also about aging parents and unfulfilled dreams,” Rosenberg continues, referring to the father’s desire to be a rock star, having to choose between fantasy and responsibility. The abridged Fringe version of the musical features 13 songs and several Jewish characters. “But it’s universal,” Rosenberg asserts. “Any ethnic group trying to keep its language and traditions alive will be able to relate.” Like the writer and producer, the play is Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 47

PHOTO COURTESY TAMARA SAARI DANCE

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here’s always been theater that exists outside the comforts of the mainstream. Here in San Diego, we’re a bit more traditional but the second annual San Diego International Fringe Festival is working to change that. Billed as “one of the largest performing arts events on the West coast,” 73 sharp, eccentric, avant-garde and unexpected shows will charm, shock and mystify San Diego audiences for 10 straight days. Every presentation lasts only 45-60 minutes. The artists receive 100 percent of their box office sales and tickets are eminently affordable ranging from free to $10. The focus, Fringe executive producer/director, Kevin Charles Patterson, says, is on “promoting artists, creating community, and encouraging the development of San Diego as a destination for innovative artistic expression.” Last year’s inaugural Fringe was three days long at three different venues. Produced on a shoestring, it garnered a San Diego Theatre Critics Circle award for “Outstanding Special Event.” This year, there are 17 downtown venues, featuring 300 participants and more than 80 productions. Birth o’ the Fringe The Fringe Grande Dame is the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, which launched in 1947. San Diego’s began when Patterson, who owns the Academy of Performing Arts in La Mesa, was seeking a new project. “It started out as something to fill a void in my life,” he says, “and turned into the biggest gift to the community.” Last year’s Fringe had zero budget. The venues were donated, and some sponsorships were available. This year, there’s a $30,000 in-kind donation of the Spreckels Theatre stage, and a Horton Theatre Foundation grant for use of the Lyceum. Total attendance last year was an estimated 38,000 (including drop-bys for buskers/street performances); ticketed attendance was more than 3,000. There are so many show options this year but a few have Jewish connections, so let’s get to know those.


THEATER

PHOTOS COURTESY RAY JESSEL AND IRA BAUER-SPECTOR

Comic writer Ray Jessel will have you in stiches.

Ira Bauer-Spector in full Bette Midler drag poses for “Miss M Saves the Universe.”

bi-coastal, set in San Diego and New York. Rosenberg grew up in the Bronx, next door to his mother’s parents, who spoke only Yiddish. After getting his master’s degree at the University of Michigan, he worked as a print journalist. He moved to San Diego in 1981 and earned a doctorate in psychology at USIU/Alliant. He’s performed in bands for years. “In some ways,” Rosenberg admits, “the main character, Michael, is like me: well-meaning but misguided at times. He has a fraught relationship with his mother, but she always knew what was best for him.” (Three dates at the Lyceum Theatre.) Ira and Miss M save the universe How do Bette Midler and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Wendy Wasserstein relate to the San Diego Fringe Festival? It’s a circuitous route. Wasserstein once wrote a comical one-act, “Bette and Me,’” explains playwright-director Ira Bauer-Spector, who has an MFA in Musical Theatre from SDSU. “It was about their connection, and paid tribute to all Bette had done for women. “When I formed my Breakthrough Workshop Theatre a few years ago, I created ‘The Bette Midler Project,’ a kind of companion piece, written in a similar structure, based on my love for Bette and all she’s done for the gay 48 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

community. I’ve expanded that into a one-hour play called ‘Miss M Saves the Universe.’” Bauer-Spector plays the title character, in drag, switching wigs and costumes. “I’m not trying to be Bette Midler; I’m a fictional character inspired by her. Miss M is a sort of guardian angel who’s visited me at various times of my life – at age 12, in college, and as an adult.” Three other actors play those versions of Bauer-Spector. “It’s a personal piece about me as a person and an artist,” he says. “I grew up gay, fat, Jewish and nerdy, in small-town Colorado, with a lot of struggle. In second grade, I was called a ‘Jesuskiller.’ I always found peace and connection through my love for Bette.” Bauer-Spector (who hyphenated his name after marrying Nathan Bauer – eight times, in different states) grew up in a very Jewish household, going to two different Denver synagogues: his father’s Conservative shul (bar mitzvah), and his mother’s Reform congregation (confirmation). Now, he happily continues to act, direct, and run his theater company, whose mission is to present socially-relevant theater. “The first five minutes of ‘Miss M,’” Spector promises, “might be some of the most memorable you’ve seen in the theater.” (Three performances at the 10th Avenue Theatre).

“In some ways,” Rosenberg admits, “the main character, Michael, is like me: well-meaning but misguided at times. He has a fraught relationship with his mother, but she always knew what was best for him.”

From the (somewhat) didiculous to the sublime At the Fringe, Bodhi Tree Concerts is presenting “Seven Deadly Sins,” a satirical “sung ballet” by Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht. In the 1930s, “the Jewish Weill and Marxist Brecht represented everything that was anathema to the Nazis,” Diana DuMelle, co-founder (with husband Walter) of Bodhi Tree, says. Weill’s father was a cantor; he was brought up in a religious family in the Jewish quarter in Dessau, Germany. Although he was a prominent composer and his collaboration with Brecht, “The Threepenny Opera,” was the biggest hit of 1920s Germany, Weill was denounced for his views and sympathies.


PHOTOS COURTESY A LITTLE BIT OFF AND NOCO DANCE

See incompetent aviators Beau and Aero on the Fringe mainstage.

NOCO Dance gets raw and meaty.

“When, in 1933, he found out that he and his wife, Lotte Lenya, were on the Nazi blacklist, and were due to be arrested,” DuMelle reports, “they fled Germany and crossed into France. In Paris, he reunited with Brecht, who had also left the country, fearing Nazi persecution.” “Seven Deadly Sins,” originally written in German, later translated by Anglo-American poet W.H. Auden, was Weill and Brecht’s final collaboration. “Even after his move to America,” DuMelle continues, “Weill never forgot his roots. Unlike many emigrés who downplayed their Jewishness, he was an early figure in memorializing the Holocaust and raising public awareness of the plight of Europe’s Jews.” Now, along comes Bodhi Tree Concerts, formed “to highlight local performers, put on concerts and give all the proceeds to charity.” In three years, they’ve presented 10 concerts benefiting 10 organizations. One of their Fringe performances (July 13) will benefit the San Diego Opera, where DuMelle and her husband met; she as stage manager, he as a singer. DuMelle, a San Diego native, isn’t sure “Seven Deadly Sins” has ever been done here. Walter performed it in New York City, and will reprise his role of Mother (written for a bass). Set in America, the piece follows two young women, Anna 1 and Anna 2, on a journey to

find their fortune. Tempted by the titular sins, they become disillusioned by capitalism and the American Dream. “The family quartet weighs in, calling the Annas lazy and slutty. It turns the idea of sin, and good and bad, on its head, and really makes you think.” (Five performances, Lyceum Mainstage) The French connection Mindy Donner is a little obsessed with French author Colette (1873-1954, best known for her novel, “Gigi”). “I read five biographies of her. She led about seven lives.” In Belle Époque France, Colette was a scandalous lover of women – and men (including her stepson), a writer of 50 novels, a music hall dancer, member of the Belgian Royal Academy and a Chevalier of the French Legion of Honor. During the German occupation of France, Colette aided her Jewish friends, including her husband, whom she hid in her attic all through the War. When asked to name names, she declared, “We would prefer death to informing.” Colette, according to Donner, is “the archetype of Miss Peg, who’s an archetype for women of a certain age,” in the San Diego Guild of Puppetry presentation of “Matinee with Miss Peg,” which

Donner wrote and performs. She’s been working on the story for three years, with assistance from theatermakers Lisa Berger and Liz Shipman. Miss Peg, she says, “transfigures her memories in order to live the life she wanted. It’s a little surreal, poetic. An homage to my mother’s generation. My mother had dementia before she died. Miss Peg doesn’t, but some of her words and actions were informed by my mother’s disease. The story is conveyed using many different modalities of puppetry.” Donner, raised in a Chicago suburb, in a “somewhat observant, Conservative family,” has lived a few lives herself. She’s been a contemporary dancer, arts educator, weaver, and businesswoman (costumes and fashion). She had her first stilt-walking lesson a few years ago, at age 65. Her motto is: “You gotta go for it…what’s the alternative?” (Three performances, 10th Avenue Theatre Cabaret) Something for everyone Clearly, the Fringe has something for any artistic palate. You have 11 days to sample, nibble and savor. A The 2nd annual San Diego Fringe Festival runs July 3-13, at various downtown locations. Info and Tickets: (619) 460-4294, sdfringe.org. Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 49


OP-ED

A Precious Vein of Israel Support Mexican Zionists should be embraced BY MICHAEL HAYUTIN

I

f I where to spin a globe and arbitrarily stop it with my index finger, chances are, my finger would land on a nation that does not support Israel. Even nations not actively working against the interests of the Jewish State passively allow libelous and vicious attacks to go unchallenged. In such a world, common sense grounded in a simple concept called self-preservation should move supporters of Israel to nurture those people and groups that embrace Israel. To my great disappointment though, significant segments of America’s Jewish community find ways to alienate friends of Israel. My first glimpse into this kind of counterproductive behavior came as I listened to rabbi after rabbi, along with the ADL and most of the leadership of the Reform Jewish community, find reasons to condemn a ministry called Christians United for Israel (CUFI). I listened to their objections and then explored who these Evangelical Zionist are, what they actually believe and why they are so committed to the Jewish State. I found that the Jews who harbored animus toward the group’s founder and the tens of millions in his flock were largely misinformed

50 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

and highly emotional about their attitudes. They were making judgments based on a lack of accurate information and political biases having nothing to do with Israel. Earlier this year, I discovered another underappreciated group of Jewish allies. Apparently, there is and has been for quite some time – decades in fact – a movement among Hispanic Churches whose mission includes unqualified support for both the Jewish state and Jewish people. On both sides of the border, Mexican and Mexican–American Christians gather on Sundays to celebrate their Christianity and commitment to Israel. They are neither messianic nor are they in the business of converting Jews. For them it is a religious imperative. One day, I approached a small storefront church on Apple Street in Oceanside. Before I had even reached the entrance, a young man named Moses welcomed me and iterated his great support for Israel. One after another, the parishioners treated me as an honored guest. Once inside, an American flag hung on one side of the bema and an Israeli flag on the other. On

the wall, above a framed photograph depicting the Western Wall and outlining the clock in the rear, a Star of David. My heart soared. My eyes welled up. The service was inspirational and the talk likewise. Even with the inconvenience of a translator, a palpable connection of lovers-ofIsrael filled the room. The afternoon climaxed with Jews and Christians, Mexicans and Americans dancing to chorus after chorus of hevenu shalom Aleichem while waving Israeli flags. It is our sacred obligation to offer a profound “thank you” to these people. It is in the interest of a secure Jewish State that we make it our business to mine this vein of support. Like most gold mines, this one represents a rare find in this Israel-hating world. I urge every Jew in San Diego to take the time one Sunday morning to visit a Spanish-speaking Zionist Church. Let them know how much we care and how grateful we are for their support. Unlike CUFI, these Zionists have yet to be mischaracterized for having suspicious motives. See for yourself. A


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A large proportion of Holocaust survivors in Israel live below the poverty line. For their benefit, the foundation created an Emergency Fund that provides immediate assistance such as eyeglasses, hearing aids, walkers, pharmaceuticals, various medical devices and dental care which are not fully covered by healthcare or welfare in Israel. Survivors can also access the fund for housing renovations allowing them to live in dignity.

• Board certified in female and male pelvic health (APTA) • Certified in orthopedic manual therapy of the spine (IAOM-US) • Certified strength and conditioning specialist (NSCA)

Debbie Cohen

PT, MS, CSCS, COMT, WCS

This important emergency aid has an immediate impact on the survivors’ health and quality of life For donations please contact us at: riki@k-shoa.org www.k-shoa.org

The Next Step on Your Jewish Journey (Grades 7-12)

• Embrace your community & cultivate friendships in a dynamic & open environment of nearly 100 students • Stimulate your mind as outside speakers, engaging faculty, Beth Am rabbis & other religious leaders teach interactive classes, including student electives, on relevant topics (see blue frame) • Develop your potential , strengthen your Jewish identity, learn to advocate for Israel & engage in service projects • Mondays 6:15–8:30 pm

h 4C

Hebrew for Credit

Learn Hebrew after school & free up your schedule for additional electives or activities (Grades 8-12)

• Credit accepted by high schools in San Dieguito Union, Poway Unified & San Diego Unified School Districts • Modern Hebrew conversation, reading & writing • Multiple levels of study available • Mondays 5:45–8:30 pm & first Wednesday monthly 6:30–7:30 pm in conjunction with the Sabra program For more information, contact Rabbi Matthew Earne rabbie@betham.com (858) 481-8454 5050 Del Mar Heights Road | San Diego, CA 92130 | www.betham.com

Hebrew · Israeli Dance · Zionism · Torah Yoga · Israeli Cooking · Tradition · Advocacy for Israel ·

Comparative Religion · Israeli Music and Movies · Tikun Olam · JNF Caravan for Democracy ·

Jewish Values and Ethics · Arts and Culture · Israel ·

Leadership · Hebrew Basketball · Jewish History ·

Call for more information and courtesy phone consultation. 619-265-8865 www.pelvicwellnesspt.com

Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 51


in the kitchen WITH

TORI AVEY

ISRAELI SALAD WITH PICKLES AND MINT

Tori Avey is an awardwinning food writer, recipe developer, and the creator of the popular cooking website toriavey.com. She writes about food history for PBS Food and Parade. com. Follow Tori on Facebook by searching for “Tori Avey” and on Twitter: @toriavey.

52 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

We all know that salad is good for you. Eating leafy greens is important, but I can only chew on so much lettuce and spinach before I start feeling like a goat. Israeli salad is different…it’s got a cold, delicious crunch that I really enjoy. The fresh, crisp mixture of diced cucumbers and tomatoes is much more fun to eat than a plain old leafy lettuce salad. Israeli salad has pizazz, character, attitude. It’s the hipster cousin of the salad family. Israeli salad evolved from other similar Middle Eastern salads, including salad shirazi from Iran and coban salatsi from Turkey. When Jews began making aliyah to Israel in the late 1800s, these salads became popular on the kibbutzim because of the simple, easyto-grow ingredients: cucumbers, tomatoes, onions, peppers, and parsley. Over time, ingredients were added or taken away, but the basic components remained the same: cucumbers and tomatoes dressed in olive oil, lemon juice, and salt. The vegetables are always diced; how finely they are chopped depends on personal preference. Some cooks prefer to dice the vegetables very small, a practice that started in the Ottoman Empire. Other cooks prefer a more chunky texture. I like it both ways. In our home, this salad is part of our regular meal rotation. My husband grew up eating it in Israel as a year-round addition to the breakfast, lunch, or dinner menu. Believe it or not, I especially enjoy Israeli salad in the morning. Try it on the side of your breakfast omelet instead of those greasy fried potatoes. Breakfast of champions! This stuff fills you up without adding inches to your waistline. Dressing it with a little extra virgin olive oil gives it a flavor boost and a dose of healthy fat. This simple, fresh salad complements a variety of dishes, and just like a great pair of skinny jeans, you can dress it up or down. Add heirloom tomatoes (in season) for sweetness, thinly sliced cabbage for fiber, jalapeños for heat, feta cheese for saltiness, chopped cilantro or parsley for a fresh herb flavor. There are so many possibilities!

In this version, I’ve added chopped fresh mint and diced dill pickles to the mix, inspired by a salad I enjoy at News Cafe whenever we visit Miami. They serve it with a green herb dressing, but I prefer it with a drizzle of olive oil and a simple splash of fresh lemon juice. If using Persian cucumbers (the very small ones), there is no need to peel them, though you can if you wish. Serve it over a bed of spring greens if you want to make it extra healthy – while Israeli salad doesn’t generally contain lettuce, News Cafe serves it this way and I enjoy it. The cold, salty crunch of pickles is a perfect complement to the sweet tomatoes and refreshing cucumbers. Garnish with olives or pepperoncini, if desired. The fresh mint makes this salad crave-worthy. Crave-worthy salad, really? Trust me, it’s delish!

ISRAELI SALAD WITH PICKLES AND MINT 2 lbs. Persian or English cucumbers, diced (if using English cucumbers I recommend peeling them; Persian cucumbers don’t need to be peeled) 2 lbs. ripe tomatoes, seeded and diced 3 large dill pickles, diced 1 bunch chopped fresh mint 2 tbsp. extra virgin olive oil 2 fresh lemons, juiced, or more to taste ½ tsp. salt, or more to taste 1 cup mixed spring greens (optional) You will also need: 9x9 inch square baking pan, small saucepan, mixing bowls, nonstick cooking spray Total Time: 10 minutes Servings: 4 side servings Kosher Key: Pareve


PHOTOS BY TORI AVEY

Combine cucumbers, tomatoes, dill pickles and mint in a salad bowl. In a small bowl, whisk together olive oil, lemon juice and salt. Pour over the salad mixture. Toss vegetables to coat. Taste the salad. Add additional salt and lemon juice to taste, if desired. Toss again before serving. Make a bed of spring greens (optional) and mound the salad on top. Serve. A

IKWTA Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 53


B

FOR THE LOVE OF MUSIC

Legendary performer brings the magic of music to San Diego By Tinamarie Bernard business

Jacquelyne Silver

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enowned pianist Jacquelyne Silver sits at the grand Steinway piano in her San Diego home and the well-honed keys begin to dance under her fingertips. A melodic rush of Ragtime music floats through the air. A performer since age 8 with a career that spans more than 50 years, this former child progeny (she entered Juilliard at 15) shows no signs of slowing down. In her long career, Ms. Silver has worked in close collaboration with musical giants like Leonard Bernstein, Marilyn Horne, Luciano Pavarotti and many others. She’s appeared on the Today Show and performed at Carnegie Hall, the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts and the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. From Beethoven to Gershwin to cabaret specials, she performs to sold out audiences who delight in her storytelling, singing and piano expertise. “Music is an exciting and spiritual experience for me,” Silver explains. “As a performer, I love the magic of music no matter what it is.” Though ragtime is her specialty, she performs and creates pieces in multiple musical genres. She is currently creating a one-woman cabaret show and believes that music is a powerful experience 54 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

for performers and audiences alike. Most people think music is something we experience through the ears, she explains, but that isn’t exactly accurate. “You never forget how music feels in the body,” Silver, who loves to introduce her private students to the playful and joyful experience of learning, says. “It’s indelible. You can’t make it happen either. It happens on it’s own. Music is a kinesthetic experience.” Silver recalls one performance that changed her life. In the mid 80s, she performed with Marilyn Horne at the Lincoln Center. “We were both so hot…like a ball of fire and the audience felt it. We had to do five encores because we couldn’t get off the stage.” In addition to stage performing and special event entertaining, Silver teaches piano to students ages 5-70. Her favorite part is sharing the joy that she continues to get from music, so that they too might feel the same way. “I love to watch [my students] have those ah-ha moments and have fun.” Most of her students are children and with them, she places particular emphasis on letting creativity flourish.

“I ask them what color they are hearing. They laugh. We have a great time all the while they are learning!” Everyone has the creative spark, she says. Her intent is to take that spark and “let it fly! Nurture it. Set the flame.” “Being creative is difficult,” she says. “You just have to take the first step.” Silver believes anyone can play the music they want to hear. “I always say to my students, it’s about dislodging fear. You can do it and enjoy it!” Then she shows them the beauty of tickling the ivories and offers tips on how to get intimate with the piano, as if it were a friend just waiting for a visit. A ______________________

SILVER STUDIOS (858) 412-5858 jsilver@san.rr.com


METRO FLOORING QuaLIT y y Ou caN s TaNd ON

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The facilities of choice for the Jewish Community.

We’re proud to serve the Jewish community with Sholom Mausoleum, Sholom Gardens and King David Garden. Greenwood is also honored to have been able

Support our dog’s Hebrew education! Students Give the Gift of Sight to Israeli Blind Students are urged to help sponsor a puppy, either as a class Tzedakah Project, or as a Mitzvah Project for their Bar or Bat Mitzvah, to assist blind Israeli veterans and civilians in regaining their lives.

to provide you with quality service, affordable options and strict adherence to the principle of Kavod HaMet for more than 96 years. It’s no wonder more people in the San Diego area choose Greenwood Memorial Park and Mortuary in their time of need.

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www.israelguidedog.org Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 55


SYNAGOGUE

Tikkun Olam in North County Beth Am and Peter Yarrow join forces for One Night Only

PHOTO COURTESY OPERATION RESPECT

by natalie jacobs

Peter Yarrow sings his hits at an Operation Respect fundraiser.

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ongregation Beth Am has been serving the Conservative Jewish community of North County with compassion and considerable emphasis on tikkun olam since 1982. Since then, they have grown to offer a full spectrum of religious, educational and social programming. Acclaimed Jewish musician and noted activist Peter Yarrow of the 60s groove troupe Peter, Paul and Mary, has been working to make the world a better place since long before Beth Am was established in the early 80s. But, the year of Beth Am’s inception, Yarrow received the Allard K. Lowenstein Award for his extensive work in human rights. Both Beth Am and Yarrow have continued working to repair the world, in ways big and small, ever since. In 2000, Yarrow expanded his human rights 56 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

platform to take on school violence by helping to start Operation Respect. This program creates curriculum for school children to learn tolerance and respect, and to promote civility and conflict resolution. Their mission is to “assure each child and youth a respectful, safe and compassionate climate of learning where their academic, social and emotional development can take place free of bullying, ridicule and violence.” To raise money for the nonprofit, Yarrow tours to synagogues and other organizations around the country. As part of their commitment to repair the world, Congregation Beth Am will host Yarrow and his benefit concert on Sunday, July 13. Given the synagogue’s extensive youth programming, joining forces with Yarrow and his anti-bullying campaign is a no-brainer. The whole community is welcome for this

evening that the Congregation promises will be “fun for the whole family.” Children will be invited up to the stage to sing one of Yarrow’s famous songs. Beth Am’s sanctuary holds 500 people, and overflow will be available in the social hall. General admission tickets are $30 for adults ($20 for adult CBA members) and $20 for children (CBA child members are $15). Preferred seating is available at $40 per adult and $30 per child. The sponsorship package is $500 and includes 4 VIP tickets, a signed CD from Peter Yarrow and a private reception after the concert. For more information and to purchase tickets, contact Susan Mualim, Director of Activities and Communications for Beth Am, at (858) 4818454 ext. 22 or susan@betham.com. A


CELEBRATE SAN DIEGO OPERA 2014–2015 SEASON

SUBSCRIBE TODAY!

La bohème January 24, 27, 29, February 1, 2015

Don Giovanni February 14, 17, 20, 22, 2015

Nixon in China March 14, 17, 20, 22, 2015

Captions Make the World go Round

SPECIAL EVENTS Ailyn Pérez & Stephen Costello in Recital September 5, 2014

We’ll meet again: The Songs of Kate Smith Stephanie Blythe & Craig Terry December 11, 2014

50th Anniversary Celebration Concert April 18 & 19, 2015

El Pasado Nunca se Termina

The Past is Never Finished April 25, 2015 at 2pm & 7pm

SUBSCRIPTIONS ON SALE NOW sdopera.com • (619) 533-7000 Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 57 JJ_July14.indd 1

6/18/2014 8:54:32 AM


D

WHAT’S

GOIN’

ON?

July Al Fresco

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(L-R) Richard Thomas, Blair Underwood, and Kristen Connolly star in Shakespeare’s “Othello,” at The Old Globe through July 27.

I

n summer, San Diegans enjoy being entertained under the stars. And this year, there are plenty of great choices to fill the bill – including Summer Pops and the Old Globe’s Shakespeare Festival. But don’t overlook the bounty of outstanding offerings on year-round

58 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

stages. Among them are the La Jolla Playhouse’s re-imagined classic, “The Orphan of Zhao” and the West Coast premiere of “Ether Dome,” the Globe’s stagings of Stephen Sondheim’s “Into the Woods” and “Quartet,” and the Lamb’s ambitious take on the epic musical, “Les Miserables.”

The La Jolla Playhouse will start the month off on July 8, with BD Wong (of “M. Butterfly”) in the sweeping epic, “The Orphan of Zhao.” This new adaptation of the classic, directed by Carey Perloff, has been called “the Chinese Hamlet,” and has inspired countless operas, plays, and

PHOTO BY JIM COX

by eileen sondak • nsondak@gmail.com


PHOTO BY RANDY ROWANG

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David McBean in Cygnet Theatre’s production of "Pageant." on “Les Miserables.” Based on the brilliant novel by Victor Hugo, “Les Mis” (as it’s affectionately known) is a masterpiece of music and storytelling. The show will grace the Lamb’s Coronado stage July 18-Aug. 24 – with Sam Zeller (Teyve in “Fiddler on the Roof ”) in the lead. Robert Smyth is directing. The popular “Boomers: The Musical Revue of a Generation” is merrily ensconced at the Horton Grand Theatre through the end of August. The Lyceum Theatre is hosting the hit New York comedy, “My Son the Waiter” through July. The piece, penned by Brad Zimmerman (who stars in the show as well) has been playfully dubbed “a Jewish tragedy,” and promises to be 90 minutes of non-stop laughter. Cygnet is gearing up to unveil “Pageant,” a hilarious send-up of beauty contests. The comedy – with an all-male cast – will be staged at the Old Town Theatre July 10 through Aug. 31. Moonlight Stage Productions will give “Mary Poppins” an alfresco staging on July 16. The family-friendly musical – a Southern California premiere – features the same sets and costumes as the Broadway hit, and you can catch it at the Moonlight Bowl through Aug. 2. The Welk is featuring Rex Smith in “Grease” through July 27. The musical will take audiences of all ages back to the antics at Rydell High, with songs that include “Greased Lightnin’” and “Summer Nights.” San Diego Junior Theatre is bringing “Snoopy” to its Casa del Prado home through July 13. Following on July 25, is “In the Heights,” a musical that earned several Tony

Awards in 2008. This ambitious work (set to play at Junior Theatre’s Balboa Park home through Aug. 10) is recommended for crowds 10 and older. The Museum of Contemporary Art in La Jolla recently added “Treasures of The Tamayo in Mexico City,” an exhibition that reflects a synthesis of pre-Columbian imagery and Mexican folk forms with modernist movements from the U.S. and Europe. “Tim Youd: The Long Goodbye,” will be on view until Aug. 31. The Reuben H. Fleet Science Center’s newest exhibition, “Illusions: Nothing is as it Seems” lives up to its name and should make science fun for everyone. The Fleet’s IMAX film, “Journey to the South Pacific,” narrated by Cate Blanchett, takes audiences on an exotic tour of the locale that is home to more than 2,000 species. The museum offers several permanent exhibitions, including “Tinkering Studio,” “Block Busters,” and “Origins in Space.” Mingei is showcasing “A Golden Age of Marketing Design” through Aug. 17. “Surf Craft” opened in June. The San Diego Air and Space Museum extended its “Ripley’s Believe it Or Not” exhibition and added more kid-friendly activities. You can immerse yourself in this bizarre show until the end of 2014. The Birch Aquarium’s Green Flash Concert Series will feature Steve Poltz on July 16. This month’s “Sea Days” event is a “Sharks Celebration,” slated for July 19. A

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films. With its dramatic twists and turns and gripping storyline of revenge and murder, “Orphan...” should deliver a thrilling theatrical experience. The play will be performed on the Mandell Weiss Stage through Aug. 3. The Playhouse will feature Elizabeth Egloff ’s “Ether Dome,” (based on the true story of the discovery of ether as an anesthetic). The play deals with the euphoria and devastation of the discovery, and explores the battle between altruism and ambition. This fascinating work (a co-production with Huntington Theatre Company) will be ensconced at the Mandell Weiss Forum July 11 through Aug. 10. The Old Globe’s summer Shakespeare Festival featuring “Othello” – a classic tragedy of love and jealousy, directed by Barry Edelstein – continues to hold court on the outdoor stage through July 27. Blair Underwood stars in the title role, and Richard Thomas (in his Globe debut) plays Iago. The Old Globe’s two indoor productions are just as noteworthy. The Main Stage will feature Sondheim’s musical masterpiece, “Into the Woods” (a show that had its origins on this very stage). The show takes over the theater July 12, where it will remain through Aug. 10 – showcasing an inventive new take on the fairy tales as they move into the unknown territory beyond “happily ever after.” You won’t want to miss this happy homecoming! “Quartet,” a comedy based on the appealing movie about three former opera singers forced to face a grudge from the past (in the form of a diva) is heading to the Globe’s White Theaterin-the-round July 25. Directed by Globe favorite Richard Seer, “Quartet” will stay put through Aug. 24. The San Diego Symphony’s Summer Pops season moves into its patriotic mode on July 4-5, when Maestro Bill Conti conducts “Star Spangled Pops” at Embarcadero Marina Park South. Boz Scaggs is on tap for July 11-12, followed on July 13 by “Pops Goes Classical: A Night in Hungary.” The music continues with Abba on July 18-19, and (with a nod to Comic Con) Pops presents “Video Games Live” on July 24. “Danny Elfman’s Music from the Films of Tim Burton” is next on July 25, and “Star Trek: The Movie” arrives on July 26. North Coast Repertory Theatre is ready to unveil a frothy confection, titled “Romance/ Romance,” a musical about the embarrassing moments in romance. This off-Broadway sensation (which made a successful move to Broadway) is ready to delight audiences at NCR’s Solana Beach home July 9-Aug. 3. The Lamb’s will stage one of the greatest musicals of all time when it puts its own stamp

Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 59


N news

The Union for Reform Judaism (URJ) announced last month that Anna Blumenfeld Herman will be the new director of the Henry S. Jacobs Camp in Utica, Miss. Jacobs Camp, which has served more than 10,000 Jewish children since 1970, is regarded as a center of Southern Jewish life, helping to build Jewish identity and confidence for kids from diverse backgrounds. Ms. Herman began her new role in late June.

San Diego Ranks Eighth on Annual Fit City Index

PHOTO COURTESY SENATOR BLOCK

URJ Announces New Director for Jacobs Camp

(L-R): Ellen Moss, SDJJ Publisher Dr. Mark Moss, Senator Marty Block. The Jewish Journal was founded by Dr. Moss and Mark Edelstein in 2001.

San Diego ranked eighth in the American College of Sports Medicine’s American Fitness Index. The score, 69.2 out of a possible 100 points, reflects a composite of preventative health behaviors, levels of chronic disease conditions and community resources and policies that support physical activity. Washington D.C. metro area took the top spot. The results, completed with support from the Anthem Blue Cross Foundation, were unveiled at the group’s annual meeting.

San Diego Jewish Journal Honored as 2014 Small Business of the Year PHOTO COURTESY ANNA BLUMENFELD HERMAN

Senator Marty Block selected the San Diego Jewish Journal as the 2014 Small Business of the Year from his Senate District 39. Journal Publisher Dr. Mark Moss attended the award ceremony in Sacramento in June. The Journal joins approximately 80 small businesses out of 3.3 million in the State of California to win this honor. In addition, in January of this year, Senator Block founded the California Legislative Jewish Caucus after a Memorandum of Understanding was signed between Governor Jerry Brown and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The caucus, made up of 13 members from the Senate and the Assembly, intends to proactively combat anti-semitism in the state. Among other activities, the Caucus will gather funds for schools in California to take field trips to the Holocaust Museum in Los Angeles. This initiative started with the Rialto School District after controversy arose over an anti-semitic essay assignment in an eight-grade class. The assignment asked students to consider arguments about whether the Holocaust was an “actual event” or a “propaganda tool.”

Israeli Entrepreneurs Bring Innovation to An Overlooked Device

Living in the fast-paced world of evolving mobile technology, two Israeli entrepreneurs have invented what they hope will revolutionize the one device that they feel “got left behind” and seemed to miss the mobile revolution: the printer. Tuvia Elbaum and Matan Caspi, both 29 and students at the Jerusalem College of Technology (JCT), designed the world’s first truly practical and fully operational mobile printer. Known as the “Mini Mobile Robotic Printer,” and slated to be available to the public in 2015, the printer – measuring 10 centimeters by 11.5 centimeters and weighing 300 grams – will allow students, business professionals, and anyone in need to print work on the go.

60 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014


N news

Israel Selects Reuven Rivlin

For the second year in a row, two San Diego Jewish Academy 5thgrade students entered and won the “My Family Story” international competition. The competition, also known as the Shorashim Project, provides a forum for students from Jewish communities around the world to come together to tell the story of the Jewish People. The project of Yanai Ben, one of this year's winners, involved a pomegranate. The second SDJA winner, Gabriel Simpser, featured a synagogue to represent his family story.

PHOTO COURTESY SAN DIEGO FEDERATION

Israel’s 120-seat Parliament chose long-time Likud member Reuven Rivlin as the country’s next president. He will succeed the popular Shimon Peres, who retires this month at the age of 90. As Israel is a Parliamentary Democracy, voters choose a party, not an individual candidate and the Presidency is a symbolic position. Rivlin, who served two terms as speaker of the Knesset, has been a member of the Israeli Parliament for nearly 20 years.

SDJA Students Achieve Another Unprecedented “Double Win”

Miriam and Jerome Katzin z"l

Local Philanthropists Die at 96

Former Director at Qualcomm Inc., local philanthropist and noted community member Jerome Katzin z”l passed away on June 14 at the age of 96. Katzin’s wife, Miriam z”l, passed away 10 days prior, also at age 96. In a statement, Federation President and CEO Michael Sonduk said “Jerry and Miriam were both longstanding members of our San Diego Jewish Community and extraordinarily generous supporters of many, many causes. We will be eternally grateful to them for their friendship and support. All of us at the Jewish Federation join in offering our most sincere condolences to the family.” Jerome and Miriam are survived by their sons David and Daniel, and their daughter Diane. A public memorial service for Jerome was held on June 17 at Congregation Beth El. The family has requested that donations in honor of Jerry and Miriam be made to the Seacrest Foundation, Fund for Charitable Care at the Katzin Residence (Alzheimer’s Unit), 211 Saxony Road, Encinitas, CA 92024.

Beth Israel Men’s Club Hosts Community Dinner Forum

On July 16, the Beth Israel Men’s Club will host the congregation's President, Meg Mandel, at a dinner forum for the San Diego Jewish community. The event starts at 6:30 p.m. Both men and women are invited to attend. Mandel has been an active member of Beth Israel since she and her family moved to San Diego in 2006. She chaired Beth Israel’s Development Committee, sat on the Executive Committee, Campaign Cabinet, Membership and Education committees. She also serves on the Board of the Women’s Division of UJF, and served as co-chair of the La Jolla Lunch Club. Contact Judi Schwartz at (858) 900-2598 to R.S.V.P. and purchase tickets.

Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 61


N news

Tel Aviv University Researchers Make Breast Cancer Discovery

A new research study completed by affiliates of Tel Aviv University found a link between breast-specific genes and the pathology of breast cancer. Dr. Ella Evron and Dr. Ayelet Avraham of the Assaf Harofeh Medical Center found that gene regulation, the process that shuts off certain parts of a cell’s DNA in healthy breast tissue, may play a critical role in the development of breast cancer. The study results were recently published in the journal PLOS ONE.

Pauline Green Selected as Brandeis Committee President

Pfizer Inc. Receives Kosher Certification for Elelyso

Long-time San Diego resident Pauline Green has been selected as the Brandeis National Committee Western Region President to hold the post from 2014 to 2016. Green has been a member of the Brandeis National Committee since 2002 and served as President of the Rancho Bernardo Chapter from 2007-2009. “I am thrilled,” Green said of the appointment. “I am very committed to the mission of the Committee.” There are 55 chapters nationwide credited with raising more than $115 million for the university.

The Orthodox Union (OU) recently granted kosher certification to Pfizer Inc.’s drug Elelyso. The drug, used by injection, is an enzyme replacement therapy for the long-term treatment of adults with Type 1 Gaucher disease. Elelyso, which was approved for use in May, 2012, is the first prescription medication to be certified kosher by the OU. “Type 1 Gaucher disease is a rare disease, most frequently found among individuals of Ashkenazi Jewish descent, which has a significant impact on patients and their families,” said Rory O’Connor, Pfizer’s Senior Vice President, Head of Global Medical Affairs, Innovative Pharma Business. “This certification reflects Pfizer’s commitment to all patients suffering from Type 1 Gaucher disease.” “In a life or death situation,” said Rabbi Menachem Genack, CEO of OU Kosher, “Jewish law clearly sets aside the kosher status of a prescription medicine, but in other cases, it is preferable and sometimes recommended that a medicine be certified kosher. We commend Pfizer for taking this step and making this commitment to the Jewish community.”

Golf and Tennis Tournament Fast Approaching

Guardians of San Diego, a nonprofit founded in 1945 for the sole purpose of raising funds for Seacrest Village Retirement Communities, will host its 23rd annual Golf and Tennis Tournament July 28 at the Del Mar Country Club. Titled “Take a Swing for Seniors,” the event is co-chaired by Earl Altshuler and Devin Chodorow. Individual tickets for tennis players are $225 each or $400 per tennis couple. Golf cost is $500 per person. Golfers 35 and younger are $300. More than 100 participants are expected to attend. To register, visit weblink.donorperfect.com/gtregistration.

62 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014


JULY In this new monthly feature, we’ll highlight the latest television, book and movie releases for you to explore when you have some down time. By Natalie Jacobs “The Immigrant” Director James Gray’s period drama “The Immigrant” made its U.S. debut in May after being released in the UK last year. The film, which takes place on Manhattan’s Lower East Side in the 1920s, follows Polish-Catholic immigrant Ewa (Marion Cotillard) from the time she arrives on Ellis Island, is separated from her sister and meets Bruno, a Jewish pimp played by Joaquin Phoenix. Jeremy Renner is a breath of fresh air as Bruno’s magician-cousin (and Ewa’s eventual love interest), Emil. Gray, whose films explore a widerange of Jewish characters, creates a unique personality in Bruno, whom he says is based on a reallife pimp from the Lower East Side of Manhattan. It’s a story of family bonds and hard choices, one that should be enjoyed for years to come. “The Immigrant” will be available for rent and streaming soon.

D diversions

“Monstress” Recently announced for the county-wide reading initiative One Book, One San Diego. More information at sandiegolibrary.org.

“Becoming Freud: The Making of a Psychoanalyst” Explores the infamous dream interpreter and sex theorist’s first 50 years.

Philip Roth on “The Colbert Report” Pulitzer-prize winning novelist Philip Roth will be the sole guest on a special books edition of “The Colbert Report” on Comedy Central this month. Previous guests on “cOlbert’s Book Club” (the capital O is a nod to Oprah’s book club) include Tobias Wolff, Shane Salerno and Mariel Hemingway. Exact air-date had not been announced at press time, check local listings.

“Prisoners of War: Season One” Like most hit U.S. television shows, “Homeland” isn’t a U.S. original – it’s based on an Israeli series that follows the lives of three recently freed soldiers, called “Prisoners of War.” Now for the first time, you can get the original drama’s first season on DVD. To be released July 8, the set includes all 10 episodes as well as interviews with the cast and creator Gideon Raff. Order copies at shoutfactory.com.

“Turning Judaism Outward: A Biography of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson” In memory of the Rebbe. Order copies from kolmenachem. com.

Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 63


TAKE NOTE JULY 1-31

by tinamarie bernard

With July upon us, there are plenty of fun outings for you to indulge in this month. From beer tasting, live music and sand castles to golf tournaments and book signings, we’ve picked a few highlights from across the county for summertime adventures. Be sure to check out our online calendar at sdjewishjournal.com/site/events-calendar for a more complete listing of events. First up, put on your red, white and blue and join Barons Market for a day of delicious beer and food pairings. The July 2 tasting features untraditional Fourth of July appetizers paired with Belching Beaver brews to celebrate our national holiday and benefit the San Diego Food Bank. The Beer Bash goes from 6-8 p.m. and will be held at Barons Market Point Loma, located at 4001 W. Point Loma Blvd. Tickets are $10 and space is limited. Purchase tickets at baronsmarket.com. Old Town San Diego State Historic Park is hosting an oldfashioned Fourth of July Celebration from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday, July 4. This event is free. Enjoy a parade, live music, food and more. The park is located on San Diego Avenue and Twiggs Street. For more information about the historic Fourth of July celebration, visit parks.ca.gov/oldtownsandiego. The recent Pew survey on American Jewish life has generated a lot of conversation and controversy. Keep the conversaion going with The Center for Jewish Culture, Congregation Beth Israel and the Lawrence Family JCC with Pewish and Jewish: The American Jewish Experience from the Late 20th Century through Today. Taught by Joellyn Zollman, Ph.D., the course will consider what historians and sociologists have identified as the great themes and challenges of the late 20th century American Jewish experience, like the Holocaust, Israel, feminism and spirituality. This four-week class is scheduled for Thursdays, July 10-July 31. Morning sessions will be held from 10-11:30 a.m. at Congregation Beth Israel; evening sessions from 7-8:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Family JCC. Register by calling Ilene Tatro at (858) 362-1154. Later in the month, head down to the South Bay for the Imperial Beach Sun and Sea Festival. Celebrate the birthday of Imperial Beach on July 18 with sandcastles, an open-air marketplace and more. Sample a variety of foods at the expanded Farmers Market and International Food Fair on Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Pier Plaza and along Seacoast Drive. And check out two stages of musical entertainment and children’s activities throughout the day on Saturday. For more information, visit sunandseafestival.com. Finish out the month with the Center for Jewish Culture and their 20th Annual Book Fair with master storyteller Daniel Silva. Silva will share insights into his newest Gabriel Allon book, The Heist. Lecture and signing to be held at the Lawrence Family JCC on Thursday, July 24 at 7 p.m. Tickets, $27 for members and $32 for nonmbembers, include a free book and can be purchased at sdcjc. org. A 64 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

BEST BETS

Mark your calendar.

BARONS MARKET BEER BASH & FOOD TASTING July 2 6 p.m. Barons Market Point Loma 4001 W. Point Loma Blvd San Diego, CA 92111 OLD TOWN SAN DIEGO FOURTH OF JULY July 4 10 a.m. Old Town San Diego San Diego Avenue and Twigg Street San Diego, CA 92110

PEWISH AND JEWISH July 10 – July 31 Times vary Congregation Beth Israel and the Lawrence Family JCC San Diego, CA 92037

IMPERIAL BEACH SUN AND SEA FESTIVAL July 18-19 9 a.m. Portwood Pier Plaza 10 Evergreen Avenue Imperial Beach, CA 91932


SAN DIEGO JEWISH

SENIOR EVENTS JULY 1-31

Lawrence Family JCC 4126 Executive Drive, La Jolla Contact Melanie Rubin for details or to R.S.V.P. (858) 362-1141. “My Son the Waiter: A Jewish Tragedy” Sunday, July 27, 1 p.m. Ninety minutes of non-stop laughter. Meet the bus at the Lawrence family JCC for the matinee show at the Lyceum Theatre downtown. Cost is $54 for members, $65 for non-members. R.S.V.P. is required. Film Fans/Film Favorites Fridays, 1:30 p.m. Watch newer films except an oldiebut-goodie on the last Friday of the month. Seniors Doubles Tennis Mondays,Wednesdays and Fridays, 8 a.m. Free for members, $15 per day for nonmembers. Contact the JCC Fitness Desk at (858) 362-1337 for more information. Evening Social Bridge Tuesdays, 7 p.m. For intermediate and advanced players, Chicago scoring, bring a partner. Cost is $2 for members, $3 nonmembers. Feldenkrais (Awareness through Movement) Wednesdays, 10:30 a.m. Class is designed to minimize strain on bones and joints. Cost is $7 for members, $12 for nonmembers.

Call (760) 436-4005 Jewish War Veterans meetings Second Sunday of each month, 11 a.m. Preceded by a bagel/lox breakfast at 10:45 a.m. San Diego North County Post 385.

Oceanside Senior Center 455 Country Club Lane, Oceanside Call Josephine at (760) 2952564 North County Jewish Seniors Club Third Thursday of each month, 12:30 p.m. Join us to hear speakers and/ or entertainment at our monthly meetings. Light refreshments served. Visitors welcome.

On the Go excursions A program of Jewish Family Service, On the Go provides transportation to events throughout the county for homebound seniors. For information on any of these excursions, please call (858) 637-7320. Viejas Casino and Outlet Center, Alpine Tuesday, July 15, bus leaves at 11 a.m. Cost is $15, pay by July 8. TICO Annual Pops Concert: Music from Near and Far Sunday, July 27, bus leaves at 1

Joslyn Senior Center 210 Park Ave./Broadway, Escondido

Paradise Village 2700 E. 4th St. Call (858) 521-8694 Jewish War Veterans meetings Second Sunday of each month, 10 a.m. Preceded by a bagel/lox/herring breakfast at 9:45 a.m. Greater San Diego Post 185. JFS University City Older Adult Center 9001 Towne Centre Drive, La Jolla Call Aviva Saad for details or to R.S.V.P. (858) 550-5998. Celebrate the 4th of July Thursday, July 3, 10 a.m. Enjoy the music of Russell Paihinui. Lunch available at noon with reservation. Cost is $7. Brain Games, Exercise and Dancing Wednesday, July 15, 10 a.m. Musical performance by Music Station. Lunch available at noon with reservation. Cost is $7. Bingo, Exercise and Dancing Wednesday, June 23, 1 p.m. Enjoy the music of Peter Seltzer. Lunch available at noon with reservation. Cost is $7.

ON THE GO EXCURSIONS

For information, please call (858) 637-7320 TICO Annual Pops Concert: Music from Near and Far Sunday, July 27, bus leaves at 1 p.m and returns at 5. Cost is $26 due by July 18.

p.m and returns at 5. Cost is $26 due by July 18. “Les Miserables” CYT Mount Helix Open Air Amphitheatre Thursday, July 31, bus leaves at 7 p.m. and returns at 10:45 p.m. Cost is $75 due by June 31. JFS No. County Inland Center 15905 Pomerado Road, Poway Call Melinda Wynar at (858) 674-1123 for details. R.S.V.P. for lunch by Monday at 12:30 p.m. After Ansel Adams with Kevin Linde from the Museum of Photographic Arts Monday, July 7, 11 a.m. Laughter Yoga with Michael Coleman Wednesday, July 16, 11 a.m. Jewels in America’s Crown: Yellowstone, Crater Lake and Yosemite with historian, Mark Carlson Monday, July 28, 11 a.m. JFS Coastal Club at Temple Solel 3575 Manchester Ave., Cardiff by the Sea Call Melinda Wynar at (858) 674-1123 for details. R.S.V.P. for lunch by Monday at 12:30 p.m. Nutrition for Adults with Violet Novakovich, RN Tuesday, July 1, 11 a.m. Women’s Museum of San Diego: Preserving the Past: Inspiring the Future Tuesday, July 8, 11 a.m. Protecting Yourself from Identity Theft with Lauren Holt from the Better Business Bureau Tuesday, July 22, 11 a.m.

JFS College Avenue Center 4855 College Ave., San Diego Call (858) 637-3270 for details or to R.S.V.P. Independence Day Celebration Thursday, July 3, noon Join us as we celebrate our country’s declaration of independence and a very American meal of barbecued chicken and corn on the cob. After lunch Emma’s Gutbucket Band will play original American music including bluegrass, country, folk and patriotic tunes. Gmail, part 2 with Joan Kushinoff Wednesday, July 9, 1 p.m. Creating contacts and using the Gmail calendar. The cost for this class is $3. Job Search for the Seasoned Worker with Camille Harris Tuesday, July 15, noon Searching for a job in today’s market can be difficult and at times stressful. It requires specific skills so join us and discover how to develop a plan and the skills needed to get your job search moving. The cost is $10. Joke Day: Jokes and Floats Thursday, July 24, 12:30 p.m. It’s open mic at College Avenue so bring your jokes and we’ll provide the root beer floats and fun. High Society Jazz: Dixieland, Jazz and Swing Friday, July 25, 12:30 p.m. Enjoy the swingin’ sounds of the Society Boys as they return to perform for us. A

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The Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem sends our deepest condolences to the entire Katzin Family, on the loss of their beloved patriarch and matriarch Jerome and Miriam Katzin z�l devoted friends and benefactors of Jewish education in Israel and around the world. Generosity was at the core of Jerome and Miriam’s essence. Their passion for the Jewish people and Israel is evident from the tzedakah which they contributed in all spheres of Jewish life: cultural, educational, and for those in need. The friendship forged between the Katzins and the Schechter Institute is profound, and over the years Jerry and Miriam z"l have supported the Schechter Graduate School and the TALI Education Fund, construction of our new facilities in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, and endowed the Presidential Chair in Jewish Studies. Their generosity and friendship have made a major impact on Jewish education in the State of Israel. Rabbi Prof. David Golinkin , President of Schechter, reacted to their passing: "Every Shabbat we bless those who 'faithfully occupy themselves with the needs of the community'. Jerry and Miriam z"l were the epitome of this prayer. They supported the local Jewish community and Jewish education in Israel with faithfulness, generosity and great humility. They will be sorely missed by the thousands of people whose lives they enhanced." Yehi zikhram barukh. May their memory be a blessing.

68 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014


desert life

PALM SPRINGS by Pamela Price

pamprice57@gmail.com

PHOTO BY DONNA RAIDER

Women Make a Difference for the Desert’s JNF

Attendees at the recent JNF women's luncheon sit for presentations by Lisa Klug and Nina Paul.

T

he Jewish National Fund has made a profound impact in our Desert. Many of us have grown up with JNF, with their roots in Israel dating back to 1901. Today, women in the Desert and beyond are taking a leading role in supporting their programs. Recently, JNF and the women of the Desert held a program called “Women Making a Difference.” It was a beautiful afternoon held at the residence of Joan Holland. A kosher lunch was served to 70 guests in this historic home with legendary links to William Randolph Hearst. Guests were welcomed by event-chair Evelyn Binsky and Debbie Orgen-Garrett, co-chair. Nina Paul, a member of Makur, JNF’s layleadership support group, shared news about JNF’s projects in Israel. Paul discussed current projects sponsored and supported by the Sapphire Society which requires a $5,000 annual commitment.

Later, JNF announced an ambitious campaign to raise a billion dollars throughout the course of the next decade in order to support more projects that will positively impact Israel’s economic growth and development. Featured speaker Lisa Alcalay Klug, author of “Cool Jews” and “Hot Mamalah,” brought smiles and laughter to the entire audience. Klug is the daughter of a Holocaust survivor and, she explains, “a descendent of a long line of Sephardic women who migrated to Israel in the 1800s.” It’s understandable why Lisa, an Amazon bestselling author, journalist and media coach, has been met with success in the Jewish literary scene and beyond. Helen Varon of Coronado and Rancho Mirage, a long-time JNF supporter, was delighted with the event. She commented: “The kosher cuisine was outstanding and elegantly served. Mrs.

Holland, a gracious, charming hostess, revealed the history of her home and art collection, noting the estate was originally built for Marion Davies, a legendary film star of the silver screen era in the 1930s. Lisa Klug’s humorous comments were clever and her spin on Jewish traditions were original. A good time was had by all.” The 2014-15 JNF season is a kaleidoscope of events with the “Love of Israel Dinner” slated for December 15 at the Rancho Las Palmas Resort in Rancho Mirage. Cantor Alberto Mizrachi of Chicago is the guest artist and the honorees are Roberta and Allan Nyman. JNF connects American Jews to the people of Israel as never before with the goal of implementing unique projects to strengthen Israel in the long term. For questions about JNF in the Desert, contact Donna Raider at (760) 864-6208 ext. 989. A

Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 69


UCSD Faculty Club ONE OF THE MOST LOVED MUSICALS OF ALL TIME AT LAMB’S CORONADO directed by Robert Smyth July 18 - Aug 24 Rarely do you get to experience it's power in such an intimate setting. As we did with FIDDLER ON THE ROOF, 1776 and THE MUSIC MAN, Lamb's brings its own unique magic to Victor Hugo's epic story about the nature of law and grace. 1142 ORANGE AVE, CORONADO

ALSO...NOW PLAYINGj THE HIT MUSIC REVUE OF A GENERATION ! THE HORTON GRAND THEATRE

BOOMERS LAMBSPLAYERS.ORG • 619.437.6000 70 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

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THE HIT NEW YORK COMEDY IS NOW IN SAN DIEGO! From The Producers Of MY MOTHER’S ITALIAN, MY FATHER’S JEWISH & I’M IN THERAPY!; RESPECT: A MUSICAL CELEBRATION OF WOMEN and YOU SAY TOMATO, I SAY SHUT UP!

Philip Roger Roy and Dana Matthow present

HURRY! FI NAL WEEKS!

Written By & Starring BRAD ZIMMERMAN

If you ever longed for something, desired it with all your heart… and were willing to wait tables for 29 years to pursue that dream, My Son The Waiter will give meaning to your Life! SEE IT IN SD BEFORE IT OPENS THIS OCTOBER IN NEW YORK CITY! “HILARIOUS.”

-- Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel

“AN ABSOLUTE MUST-SEE.” --Palm Beach Arts

“A MUST SEE. IT’S HYSTERICAL, HEARTFELT, TIMELY AND POIGNANT.I CRIED, I LAUGHED, I FORGOT WHERE I PARKED.” -- Brad Garrett

“HILARIOUS! THE HUMOR IS UNIVERSAL!” -- SD Union Tribune

SD JEWISH JOURNAL DISCOUNT

$7.50 OFF EACH FULL PRICE TICKET Must use Code JJ07. Not valid with previously purchased, discounted or group tickets. Must purchase by July 15th.

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SHOWTIMES: Wednesday 7 pm, Thursday 2 & 7, Friday 8, Saturday 2 & 8, Sunday 2 & 6 pm

79 Horton Plaza San Diego, CA 92101

Box Office: 619-544-1000 • Groups (12+): 1-888-264-1788 • PlayhouseInfo.com Tamuz •Av 5774 l SDJewishJournal.com 71


“Artistic Director Barry Edelstein is well positioned to make The Old Globe’s Shakespeare Festival the preeminent West Coast outlet for outdoor Shakespeare.” Charles McNulty , Los Angeles Times

"O beware, my lord,of jealousy. It is the green-eyed monster…” With a superb cast led by Blair Underwood (“Ironside,” “Sex and the City”), Richard Thomas (“The Waltons,” “The Americans”), and Kristen Connolly (“House of Cards”), Edelstein gives us a riveting, intense, and intimate production where poetry soars and swords clash, where true love and wrenching jealousy collide.

By William Shakespeare Directed by Barry Edelstein

Must Close July 27!

Richard Thomas, Blair Underwood, and Kristen Connolly. Photos by Jim Cox.

“I fell head over heels! Fun, poignant, and truly enchanting.” Ben Brantley, The New York Times

The McCarter Theatre Center in Association with Fiasco Theater Production of

INTO THE WOODS Music and Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim Book by James Lapine Originally Directed on Broadway by James Lapine As Reimagined by Fiasco Theater Directed by Noah Brody and Ben Steinfeld

July 12 - August 10

Richard Thomas, Blair Underwood, and Kristen Connolly. Photos by Jim Cox.

72 SDJewishJournal.com l July 2014

One of the greatest musicals of all time returns in triumph to its birthplace, nearly three decades after its world premiere at The Old Globe, in an inventive new production from the critically acclaimed Fiasco Theater!

(619) 23-GLOBE (234-5623) www.TheOldGlobe.org


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