SJL New Orleans, Feb. 2014

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Making robots at the Day School

Synagogue from 19th century to become apartments

Rabbis getting heads shaved for Superman Sam

Southern Jewish Life

New Orleans Edition

Bringing Mardi Gras spirit to USY International convention

February 2014 Volume 24 Issue 2

Southern Jewish Life P.O. Box 130052 Birmingham, AL 35213-0052



Southern

Life

With Chanukah so early this year, everyone’s usual December activities and programs were bunched up into late November and the first of December, so the rest of the month was rather quiet. Now we are getting into the season when there are a lot of programs and events happening in communities throughout the region. Many of them are featured in this issue, more are mentioned in our weekly email newsletter, on our Facebook and Twitter feeds, and on our website, sjlmag.com. We are often asked about how to get event information into the magazine. Here’s our Frequently Asked Questions: I have a speaker coming in a week from now. Can I get it into the magazine? Not without a time machine. The reality of magazine publishing is that the process of printing and waiting for the postal service to deliver the magazine takes at least a week and a half. And of course, the magazine is monthly — so if you have an event, be sure to get us information by the middle of the previous month. The earlier the better. Not all is lost, though — we do have the weekly email newsletter and can include it there. I submitted something but you didn’t run it the way we wrote it! When you send something to us, there is no need for a committee to look over what you send and debate every word — because we re-write it into magazine format and make it a story, not a press release. If we receive a release that says an event is going to be the greatest thing in the history of the Jewish South, we’re not going to say that. We’ll quote one of the organizers saying it, but we’re not going to run unattributed opinions, because readers may infer that it’s our opinion. And our opinion is reserved for page 3, or anything clearly labeled as commentary. How much detail do you need? Because we rewrite what we receive, we can take bare-bones information. You don’t have to write the where and when in paragraph form, just send the information. If there is an honoree or speaker, some background is welcome. Why is this person being honored, who is this speaker? Even better, let us know who else we should speak with to fully flesh out a story. Our local newspaper ran this, can you run it? Not without their permission. If it’s a great story, we’d likely want to do our own take on it. The same goes for photos — unless you took the picture, we need to be sure we have the photographer’s permission. Why didn’t you run something about… There are many reasons why something does not make it into print. Perhaps it came in too late to make the print version — or the print version would NOLA

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not be out in time for the event. Sometimes it is an issue of space in the magazine — this is why our advertisers are so important, because more advertising means more pages and more rooms. Let our advertisers know you appreciate them, and if you have a

Between issues, keep checking our website business, please consider joining their ranks! and sign up for our weekly email newsletter We welcome story suggestions. Sometimes Publisher/Editor: by M. emailing subscribe@sjlmag.com. it takes a while for a suggestion to make itLawrence Brook, editor@sjlmag.com into a story because of time constraints and Larry Brook other events that are happening, but be Associate Publisher/Advertising: Lee J. Green, lee@sjlmag.com Editor/Publisher assured we appreciate feedback and ideas. New Orleans Bureau: Alan Smason, alan@dsjv.com Cait Muldoon, Gail Naron Chalew Publisher/Editor: Lawrence M. Brook, editor@sjlmag.com Creative Director: Ginger Brook, ginger@dsjv.com Associate Publisher/Advertising: Lee J. Green, lee@sjlmag.com Photographer-At-Large: Barry C. Altmark Creative Director: Ginger Brook, ginger@sjlmag.com Contributing Writers: Doug Brook Photographer-At-Large: MailingRabbi Address: Barry C. Altmark P.O. Box 130052, Contributing Birmingham, AL 35213Writers: Doug Brook Telephone: Mailing Address: P.O. Box 130052, Birmingham, AL 35213 Birmingham: (205) 870-7889 FAX: (866) 392-7750 Telephone: Story Tips/Letters: Birmingham: (205) 870-7889 editor@sjlmag.com Toll Free: (866) 446-5894 FAX: (866) 392-7750 Subscription Information: Story Tips/Letters: Southern Jewish Life publishedconnect@sjlmag.com monthly and is free by request to members of the Information: Jewish Subscription community in our coverage area of Southern Jewish Life published Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi and NWmonthly and is free by request to members of the Florida. Outside those areas, subscriptions Jewish community in our coverage area of are $25/year or $40/two years. To Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi and NW subscribe, call (205) 870-7889 or mailsubscriptions Florida. Outside those areas, payment to $25/year the addressorabove. are $40/two years. To subscribe, call (205) 870-7889 or mail The publisher is solely responsible for payment to the address above. the contents of SJL. Columns and letters represent views of is thesolely individual Thethe publisher responsible for writers.the All articles that do notColumns have a and letters contents of SJL. byline on them arethe written byof thethe publisher. represent views individual writers. All articles that do not have on Southern Jewish Life makes no claims aasbyline to them are written by the publisher. the Kashrut of its advertisers, and retains Southern Jewish Life makes no claims as to the right to Kashrut refuse any the of advertisement. its advertisers, and retains the right refuse on anyrequest. advertisement. Advertising rates to available Advertising rates available on request. Copyright 2010. All rights reserved, 2014. Allofrights reserved, reprints reprintsCopyright only by permission publisher. only by permission of publisher.

Philosophy: Philosophy: To link the Jewish communities To linkofthe Jewish thethe the Deepcommunities South, to tellof you Deep South, to tell you the fascinating fascinating stories of one another, and andand preserve storiesto ofdocument one another, to the news and events large and small, all aofpart of the document and preserve the news culture of Southern Jewry. eventsrich large and small, all a part of the rich culture of Southern Jewry.

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Front Porch Jewish back in Day School’s name: The Community Day School in Metairie has Jewish in its name once again. The school’s board voted to change the school’s name in January. Originally the New Orleans Jewish Day School, the elementary school became Community Day School in September 2012 in an effort to broaden its appeal to the Reform, unaffiliated and intermarried communities, as well as non-Jewish families. Head of School Sharon Pollin said the vote to become Jewish Community Day School “came from a desire that our school name be in full alignment with our mission and vision, and to ensure that all recognize who we are: a school dedicated to academic excellence, a strong Jewish foundation, and embracing the entire community.” Pollin became the head of school this past summer. According to the mission statement, the school is “grounded in Jewish tradition, fostering spirituality (emunah), dedication to repair our world (tikun olam) and commitment to the entire Jewish people (klal Yisrael).” It is also a place “where families of all backgrounds are welcomed and children are prepared to be engaged compassionate leaders.” The school was founded in 1996 to give New Orleans a community Jewish school. The school had grown to having Kindergarten to eighth grade in 2005, then Katrina struck after the first class of eighth graders graduated. The school remained closed for a year following the flood, then reopened without the middle school, having classes through fifth grade. Since reopening, the school has been working to rebuild enrollment. There will be open houses on Feb. 4 at 9 a.m. and Feb. 7 at 2 p.m. As the 2013 school year got underway, a national story on JTA characterized the school as “crumbling,” which drew outrage in New Orleans. A couple of weeks later, the school’s outreach efforts were mentioned in another JTA piece on Day Schools looking to boost enrollment by attracting non-Jewish students. Kicking for Kids registration opens: Registration is now open for the annual “Kicking for Kids” tournament at the New Orleans Jewish Community Center Uptown. The March 30 event raises money and awareness for children’s programs at the JCC, especially Team New Orleans for the Maccabi Games. Twelve teams will participate in the double-elimination tournament. Teams consist of 12 to 22 people, ages 21 and up. Each team must have at least one JCC member and at least four female players, and registration is due by March 17. All participants receive a T-shirt in the team’s color, food and drink during the day, and if a participant joins the JCC at the gold level on game day, the joining fee is waived. The event will run from 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Free babysitting is available up to age 7, with reservations in advance. Part of the strategy will include purchasing “extras” from the referees before each game. There is no limit to the number of extras purchased, but only two of each type of extra may be used per game. The extras include “Add An Out” for $25, “Extra Foul” for $5, “Steal A Base” for $10 and “Take An Out Away” from the other team for $25. NOLA

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Front Porch

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USY holds convention in New Orleans: For the 63rd annual international convention of United Synagogue Youth, the Conservative movement wanted to step out of its routine — and New Orleans was a perfect place to do that. In recent years the convention has rotated its high school youth group’s conference among a handful of larger cities. This year, not only was it held in New Orleans for the first time, the convention’s programming embraced the host city and its culture. The over 700 delegates were Photo by David Srebnick divided into Krewes that spread through the city to do service projects on Dec. 23, visited sites like Café du Monde and the aquarium, and heard panels of figures from the local Jewish community discuss the city’s Jewish history. A couple of musical delegates who were wandering in Jackson Square were invited to jam with a band that happened to be playing for tourists there. At the opening session, USY leaders were brought in on a Mardi Gras-style float, tossing beads, while a band played “When the Saints Go Marching Photo by Amanda Phillips In.” While that might have seemed unusual to delegates from elsewhere, The “Rebuild and Rejoice” convention was it certainly did not faze the nine delegates held at the Hilton Riverside from Dec. 22 to from Metairie’s Shir Chadash. 26.

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Front Porch Alternative Winter Break: Young Judaea brought a group of teens from around the country to New Orleans for an Alternative Winter Break, volunteering at Green Light New Orleans, the Apostolic Outreach Center Garden, and the Center for Sustainable Engagement and Development in the Lower Ninth Ward. Program Manager Andrew Fretwell said “I am heartened and touched to hear the way our teens are beginning to talk and think about their own lives; in working side by side with those who have lost so much or how get by on so little, I have so many conversations with teens who are considering on a much deeper level the things they have access to that are all too easy to take for granted.”

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JEF welcomes Legacy director: The Jewish Endowment Foundation of Louisiana has named Patti Lengsfield as the Create a Jewish Legacy development director. Lengsfield was formerly executive director of the National Conference of Christians and Jews. During that period, “Remember the Children” from the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum was in New Orleans and 17,000 public school children viewed that exhibit. She then became Development Associate at Touro Infirmary Foundation. For eight years Lengsfield was director of donor services at The Greater New Orleans Foundation and worked with donors and

their professional advisors to facilitate bequests, trusts, and gift annuities to benefit organizations that were important to them. “We are delighted to welcome Patti to the staff,” said JEF President Carol Wise. “Her extensive knowledge and experience will be a great benefit to our Create a Jewish Legacy initiative.” Create a Jewish Legacy began in 2009 as a partnership of JEF and area Jewish agencies and synagogues. It encourages endowment gifts through bequests, retirement plan beneficiaries, life insurance policies, charitable gift annuities or charitable remainder trusts. Outright gifts are also encouraged.

Cook to present Usdin lectures: Temple Sinai in New Orleans will welcome Michael Cook for the Usdin Lectures on Feb. 7. He is professor of intertestamental and early Christian literatures and holds the Sol and Arlene Bronstein Professorship in JudaeoChristian Studies at Hebrew Union College– Jewish Institute of Religion. Cook is author of “Modern Jews Engage the New Testament: Enhancing Jewish Well-Being in a Christian Environment” and is a leader in the field of Jewish-Christian relations. In 2003, he was one of seven scholars chosen by Catholic bishops to assess the accuracy of the script for Mel Gibson’s “The Passion of the Christ.” Gibson’s reaction to their report sparked the controversy over the film. There will be a clergy lunch with the topic of “50 Years since ‘freed’ from Deicide (1965): Is a Changed Jewish Reaction Now in the Offing?” After evening Shabbat services at 6:15 p.m., he will speak on “An Ever-Rolling Stream: New Jesus Books and Their Disturbing

‘Cafeteria’ Approach.” A cafeteria approach means picking and choosing what one wants to accept, instead of the totality of the teachings. He also spoke at Temple Sinai for the Rabbi Murray Blackman Memorial Lecture Weekend in 2010.

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IberiaBank 5k on Feb. 16 at JCC: The second annual IberiaBank Uptown Classic 5K and Family Fun Run will be held Feb. 16 at the Uptown Jewish Community Center. At 8:30 a.m., there will be the half-mile family fun run, followed by the 5-kilometer race along a new route that goes along Prytania Street to Audubon Park and back to the JCC. Post-race entertainment, food and drinks will be provided on the JCC back field, sponsored by Winn-Dixie. There will be children’s activities. Registration closes on Feb. 10, and is $25 for adults, $15 for ages 17 and under or 65 and over. There is a family registration for two adults and two youth for $60. Southern Jewish Life

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Front Porch Beth Israel in Metairie is holding a Yiddish weekend, Jan. 31 and Feb. 1, featuring Avram Mlotek, a student at Yeshivat Chovevei Torah rabbinical school. He will lead services on Jan. 31 at 5:30 p.m. and tell Yiddish stories following the 6:30 p.m. Shabbat dinner. Advance reservations are required for the dinner. On Feb. 1 at 7 p.m., he and wife Yael Kornfeld will perform songs from his childhood and in modern Yiddish, and will discuss growing up in a famous family of Yiddishists. The concert is co-sponsored by Shir Chadash. Admission is $10, and a kosher wine and dessert reception will follow. Gates of Prayer Sisterhood in Metairie will have “Working It Out” on Feb. 23 from 10 a.m. to noon. There will be circuit training to “support Sisterhood while working out.” Following the 9:15 a.m. Shabbat service at Anshe Sfard in New Orleans on Feb. 8, Lynne Wasserman will be the guest speaker, discussing the upcoming Limmud New Orleans. The series of Shabbat talks follows services and precedes the congregation’s luncheon. Beth Israel and Gates of Prayer in Metairie will team up on Feb. 16 for a Mitzvah Day. Congregants will participate in a range of handson service projects, including at the New Orleans Women’s Shelter, Colonial Oaks nursing home, Animal Rescue New Orleans. There will also be cooking for residents of Bridge House, and assembling supply kits for the military. For those unable to attend, monetary donations to support some of the projects are welcome. The Uptown Jewish Community Center presents an Israel

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Coffeehouse Series featuring film and literature with an Israeli theme, in a relaxed, coffeehouse setting. On Feb. 12, David HarrisGershon will present, “What Do You Buy the Children of the Terrorist Who Tried to Kill Your Wife? A Memoir.” On Feb. 19, the documentary “Garden of Eden” will be screened. The film follows one full year at Gan HaShlosha, better known as the “Sakhne,” one of the largest, most famous and most visited parks in Israel. Both events will take place at 7:30 p.m. in the Grant Board Room. Admission is free and open to the community. A shakshuka dinner will be offered on Feb. 12, and a deli dinner will be available for Feb. 19. Dinners are $5 cash at the door and must be reserved in advance by emailing Liba Kornfeld, Director of Jewish Family Life, at liba@nojcc.org. The Morris Bart Sr. Lecture Series continues at the Uptown Jewish Community Center on Feb. 10 at 11:45 a.m. with John Baron, author of “Concert Life in 19th Century New Orleans.” Baron, a music professor at Tulane, describes how New Orleans was seen as the epicenter of classical music in America before the Civil War, and still rivaled New York, Boston and San Francisco after the war. On March 10 at 11:45 a.m., Brian Horowitz examines “Odessa and the Culture of Eastern Europe.” Located not far from Sochi, site of this year’s Winter Olympics, Odessa was the most innovative Jewish center in modern times. Lunch is available with reservations at least a week in advance. The programs are free for JCC members, $10 for non-members.

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Bringing a taste of Houston’s Kenny & Ziggy’s deli to Louisiana

Paul Katz, Leah Katz, Ziggy Gruber and Moises de la Torre at the LSU pregame party on Nov. 23. Three months after co-hosting a deli lunch with LSU Hillel before the LSU-Texas A&M football game, the famous Kenny and Ziggy’s Deli in Houston returns to Louisiana this month for two events. On Feb. 8 from 6 to 8 p.m., there will be a New York Nosh Night at B’nai Israel in Baton Rouge. Congregational president Marc Sager said “What a great opportunity to meet Ziggy and enjoy his food — a ‘Jewish Foodies’ dream!” Tickets are $40 in advance and $50 at the door, with limited availability. Ticket holders can arrive at any time during the event and will be able to enjoy a buffet of corned beef, pastrami and turkey with all the traditional trimmings, a cheese tray, hot dog station, chopped liver and smoked whitefish salad, and nova lox with cocktail bagels. There will also be an assorted dessert station. Also on Feb. 8 at 6 p.m., the deli will provide dinner in New Orleans at Touro Synagogue’s Texas Hold’em poker tournament. Players can buy in for $100, with dinner included. Non-players can sign up as spectators for $50 and enjoy the dinner. Preregistration is required at TouroSynagogue.com/Holdem-Night. The November event at LSU was to help recruit members for LSU Hillel and establish a Friends of LSU Hillel for future fundraising. Next year a similar event is being planned for College Station. A third-generation deli chef, Ziggy Gruber follows in the footsteps of his father and grandfather, who opened the Rialto, the first deli on Broadway, with customers including Ethel Merman, the Marx brothers and Milton Berle. Before opening Kenny & Ziggy’s, he had Ziggy G’s on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood, a regular stop for a wide range of stars. This past July, Gruber married Mimi McCaughey of Baton Rouge at the Dohany Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary, where his grandfather had his Bar Mitzvah. He proposed to her during Mardi Gras, having arranged for a fiveminute ride on one of the floats. As the float passed her and her family, he held up a sign asking her to marry him.

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TribeFest bringing tomorrow’s Jewish leaders to New Orleans Birmingham native Alison Goldstein Lebovitz a co-chair of National Young Leadership After an inaugural run of two successful years in Las Vegas, TribeFest is coming to New Orleans next month, bringing up to 2,000 young Jewish leaders from across the continent. TribeFest, which will be held March 16 to 18, is the successor to the Jewish Federations of North America’s Washington Conference, which used to be the Federation’s young leadership gathering. A few years ago, the department “really wanted to re-envision and reinvent what the event looked like” and get away from the conference model, said Alison Goldstein Lebovitz. Lebovitz is a National Young Leadership cochair who was involved in planning the first TribeFest. A Birmingham native, she is now a leader in the Chattanooga Jewish community. “The new generation needs to be approached and engaged in a different way,” Lebovitz noted. TribeFest became “an unusual model for the traditional Federation” in that it was not all about the Federation message. It’s “engaging young people where they are,”

having them “connect with Judaism in ways that resonate with them.” She added that they also “want to reach out to people who may not know what their Judaism means to them.” That isn’t an issue for Lebovitz, a graduate of what is now the N.E. Miles Jewish Day School in Birmingham. She is an author, television host of “The A List with Alison Lebovitz” and speaker. She co-founded and is president of One Clip at a Time, a non-profit that promotes student activism through the lens of the internationally-famous “Paper Clips Project” in Whitwell, Tenn. In 2002 she co-founded the Aleph Bet Children’s Center preschool in Chattanooga, and was the 2012 campaign chair for United Way of Greater Chattanooga. She has also served on numerous other boards. When asked about her inspiration for being so involved in the Jewish and general communities, she replied, “Can I just say my parents

and leave it at that?” Her parents, Arlene and Milton Goldstein, who now live in Charlotte, were “highly involved in the community” and “made sure their philanthropy wasn’t just monetary, but their acts and deeds.” Action was “critical to being Jewish,” she said. “It wasn’t just going to the synagogue, it was going to the soup kitchen on Christmas.”

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later she decided she could do that with her marketing background, and partnered with educators who developed a curriculum. Because of “rigorous standards” for school curricula, it is difficult to add something like this film unless it can be tied to something that is being studied. They broke the film into five segments, each with a lesson plan, “creating a program on how to inspire students to make a difference.” Lebovitz said “children learn how to recognize challenges and create meaningful solutions… and delegate responsibilities.” Schools in 18 states are now using the program, including eight schools across Alabama. There aren’t any in Mississippi or Louisiana yet. She is excited about having TribeFest in New Orleans. When planning started for the first TribeFest, held in 2011, Las Vegas was picked because the city was a draw in its own right. TribeFest is going to be held every other year, but they held it two years in a row in Las Vegas to get it established. Lebovitz said they looked all over the United States and Canada for a community on the same model — a natural draw that had great local partners. “New Orleans rapidly emerged at the top of the list.”

Her parents were also among “the Jewish pioneers” who sent their children to the then newly-formed Day School. ‘The one-room school with the partitions,” she recalled. She also attended Camp Ramah in Massachusetts. “All the things I took for granted” while growing up “really gave me such a solid foundation for my Judaism,” she said. It also helped that she married into a family “with the same upbringing and moral compass.” Now they are raising their three boys “in that same light. It’s not only important, it’s natural.” It also helps to be from “a small Southern Jewish community where it takes every person to make a difference,” Lebovitz noted. “We are the lucky ones. We grew up having to be committed in a forthright fashion to our Judaism.” “One Clip at a Time” started when she attended a brainstorming session in 2007. A documentary had been made three years earlier about Whitwell, where a school project was started to memorialize the Holocaust by collecting 6 million paper clips. The students wound up with over 20 million and a Nazi-era boxcar to house them. “They had been trying to get the film into more schools,” Lebovitz said. A few months

On top of that, TribeFest is being held on Purim, so there will be a Mardi Gras themed Purim party. And of course, post-flood New Orleans has plenty of social service opportunities. Instead of plenaries and breakout sessions, TribeFest has a Main Stage and Mashups. The Big Show takes the place of the traditional exhibit hall. Overall themes include justice and inclusion, faith and culture, Jewish life, innovation and “hot topics.” There is also a Leadership Development Institute that will meet on the morning of March 16, before TribeFest kicks off mid-afternoon. Only a few speakers for TribeFest were announced as of press time. They include actors Joshua Malina of “Scandal” and Ben Platt from “Book of Mormon,” Grassroots Soccer co-founder Ethan Zohn and Livestrong Foundation CEO Doug Ulman. TribeFest chairs are Emma Samuels of Boston and David Kline of Austin. Lebovitz and co-chair Robb Lippitt of Detroit will be among the speakers. They have a one-year term as Young Leadership co-chairs, expiring the end of May. “It’s quick,” she said, “but I wouldn’t trade it for anything.”

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Delegates to the United Synagogue Youth International convention helped the Jieux paint bagels for this year’s parade

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To mark the 18th year of Jewish — er, Jieuxish — Mardi Gras marching in New Orleans, the Krewe du Jieux will hold its first-ever Mardi Gras ball, the Chai Ball, on Feb. 8. The free event is open to the community, and donations will be accepted as a fundraiser for the New Orleans branch of AVODAH: The Jewish Service Corps. The 8 p.m. event at the Valentino Conti House will honor the Krewe’s current and past royalty. The Right Reverend Soul Revue will perform, with beverages provided by the Bombay Club and food from Kosher Cajun. Space at the Chai Ball is limited, so reservations to jieuxkrewe@gmail. 5:54:09 AM com are required. Festive attire or costumes are encouraged. The Krewe du Jieux was created in 1996 by L.J. Goldstein and modeled after groups like Zulu that poked fun at racial stereotypes by embracing and exaggerating them. Instead of Zulu coconuts, Jieuxish bagels became the prized throw. The royalty became the King of the Jieux and the Jieuxish American Princess, with a nod to materialism stereotypes through earrings made of credit cards. The Jieux marched as a sub-Krewe of the Krewe du Vieux, a satirical old-style parade with adult themes. Instead of large floats where the entire Krewe rides, narrow streets in the Quarter necessitated muledrawn floats that hold only the sub-Krewe’s royalty. In the years leading up to Katrina there was a disagreement over the direction and philosophy of the Krewe, leading to a complete split after the flood. The new Krewe du Mishigas kept the marching slot and Goldstein kept the Jieux name. The Jieux then became known as the “Wandering Jieux” for a few years until they found a new home with the krewedelusion parade.

Parade schedule

Both Mishigas and the Jieux will march through the Marigny and Quarter on Feb. 15 in their respective parades. The Krewe du Vieux parade starts at 6:30 p.m. with the theme “Where the Vile Things Are.” This year, the Mishigas will declare “Let My People Go Cup: Partying the Red Sea.” Richard McCormack is this year’s King of the Jews, and Susan Drogin was declared this year’s Jewish American Princess. John Barry will reign as king of the parade. The krewedelusion parade, now in its fifth year, uses a similar route and is shortly after the Krewe du Vieux parade. The parade theme and the Jieux theme are kept confidential beforehand. The Jieux had their coronation and annual Running of the Jieux on Jan. 25. 12

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19th-century New Orleans synagogue becoming apartment building There are some people who practically live at the synagogue. In New Orleans, it will soon be possible to live in a former synagogue. Gregg Morris is turning the former Shaare Tefillah building, which dates back to the 1860s, into one- and twobedroom apartments. Morris bought the building in September 2012, unaware that it used to be a synagogue. He had just finished a project in the Bywater, and “we were looking for another The former Shaare Tefillah undergoes renovation, in this photo project to do.” from mid-December Originally from Los Angeles, he moved to New Orleans three years start at 650 square feet and include off-street ago “on a whim.” A friend of his had moved to parking. A double staircase that was originally in New Orleans a few years earlier. His family has been in the construction front of the building is being replicated to albusiness for decades in California. There was low access to the second floor. no real plan for him to stay in New Orleans When they pulled out framing that was and redevelop properties, but now “I’m here added around the front doors of the sanctuary to stay. I love this city.” by later owners, they discovered a long-forEarly on, he stumbled on the Bywater build- gotten sign for Shaare Tefillah, covered up for ing on Louisa Street and renovated it into a decades. They carefully removed it, it is being mixed-use property. While looking for his restored and will be put back. next project, he was on Jackson Street and A year ago, Morris gave a tour of the buildsaw the former synagogue. “It was love at first ing to Rabbi Robert Loewy, who has been at sight,” he said. “I knew we had to have it and Gates of Prayer since 1984. “He was ecstatic do something with it.” that this part of their history is being put back Then, “when I found out the history it was into use.” more amazing.” The plan is to restore the apThe first floor, which would be where the pearance as close as possible to the original social hall was, is being split into five apartdesign, and to use as much of the original ma- ments. terial in the building as possible, such as the The sanctuary was upstairs. An owner after hard pine and cypress materials. The original the congregation moved in 1920 split the floor brick walls will be exposed as much as pos- with the sanctuary into two floors, putting in a third floor at the level of the balcony. sible inside the apartments. Morris decided to keep the structure unConstruction began in August, and the project is nearing completion. The apartments derneath the balcony visible. For that reason, the four second-floor apartments have sloped ceilings leading to the exterior walls, with the joists that held the balcony rows as a visible feature. On the third floor, there will be three apartments — two in the front and one 1,700-square-foot penthouse across the entire back. Two things influenced that decision — the angle of the morning sun through the windows, and a huge arch spanning the eastern wall of the building, above where the ark was. The third floor apartments will be The arch above where the ark was is a feature of split-level, with loft areas overlooking the third-floor penthouse the living rooms. The open lofts, which

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are inside the roof level, will allow for natural light coming from the windows in the living room level below. The penthouse loft has a view of the entire arch, Morris noted. They rebuilt the original spiral staircase that led up to what was the balcony, and it will lead to the landing for the front two apartments. After the synagogue was deconsecrated, it was used as a school, a storage facility and offices. Prior to Morris’ purchase, it had been vacant for several years. The project is one part of a revival along Jackson Street. Morris is hopeful that plans pan out for development of the five-story former River of Life hospital across the street, which has been vacant since 1979. What is now Gates of Prayer in Metairie began as the Jewish Benevolent Society of Lafayette in 1849. At the time, what is now the Garden District was called Lafayette City. The group started having services and formally became Shaare Tefillah, Gates of Prayer, in 1850. Then an Orthodox congregation, Gates of Prayer met in rented spaces for years, then bought the lot on Jackson Avenue in 1859. During the Civil War, congregants hid the bricks that were going to be used for the building so they would not be confiscated. The cornerstone was finally laid in 1865 and the building was dedicated on April 5, 1867. Gates of Prayer originally conducted services in German, migrating to English by the end of the 19th century. In 1904, the congregation joined the Reform movement, following Temple Sinai and Touro Synagogue. After World War I, a growing Gates of Prayer built a new facility on Napoleon Avenue, then an education and social center five years later. The move to Metairie came in 1975.

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On Jan. 4, Judy Caplan Ginsburgh of Alexandria, La., was among 17 new rabbis ordained by the Jewish Spiritual Leaders Institute. JSLI is an interactive on-line rabbinic study program which takes life experience into account and stresses universalism and inclusion. In recent years, Rabbis Barry Altmark of Birmingham and Nancy Tunick of Nashville, who serves B’nai Israel in Florence, were ordained there. To mark the occasion, the entire class made tie-dye tallesim that they wore at the ordination in Delray Beach, Fla. Five generations of the Caplan and Ginsburgh family took part in the ceremony. Pictured above with her (center) are her mother, Jacque Caplan, father Ed Caplan, granddaughter Maddie Sermons, son Jonathan, husband Bob and great-aunt Edythe Cohen.


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Puckett’s new book details how the Holocaust compelled Alabama’s Jews to work together “In the Shadow of Hitler: Alabama’s Jews, the Second World War and the Holocaust” was not the book that Dan Puckett intended to write. Puckett is an associate professor of history at Troy University, and the book was released by the University of Alabama Press on Jan. 31. Using the Holocaust as a focal point, Puckett explains the internal atmosphere of Alabama’s Jewish community and its place in the broader community, then details how those situations change with the events of World War II. In a graduate European History seminar at Mississippi State, his professor was looking at the press in the South “and how they were reacting to Nazism” while it was happening. Puckett was assigned to explore his hometown paper, the Birmingham News. He looked at the white press, the black press, how it affected the white Christian community and the black community. When he came back to school and presented his findings, his professor asked what was going on in the Jewish community of Birmingham at that time. “So I said I’d take two weeks and look at the Jewish perspective.” Years later, he said, “I was going to look at the African-American reaction to Nazism and the Holocaust,” and do a book on that. In that work, “I was going to delve deeper into the Jewish community. Two chapters is what I planned” about the Jewish response. He traveled the state, visiting some synagogues and doing research. “There was information, but not a whole lot.” At Troy he received some funding enabling him to research his book in New York. He lined up a to-do list of archives and history centers about the African-American experience. He also planned a day at the Center for Jewish History at the start of the trip, to get the Jewish part out of the way so he could concentrate on the bigger work. Instead, he spent the entire week and a half at the Center for Jewish History. “I found more material in New York than I did in Alabama” about the state’s Jewish community. It became clear as he was working on the Jewish chapters that “there was a story that needed to be told and a book that needed to be written.” He contacted the University of Alabama Press and told them that the book they agreed 16

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to publish would wind up being two books, and they agreed to the change. The book chronicles “how the Jewish community came together” in many ways from its deep divisions of the early 20th century. By the time the Nazis were rising to power in the 1930s, the division “was very stark” in Alabama’s Jewish community. “There were a lot of cultural and class divisions” between the Reform, German Jews and the Eastern European Orthodox Jews who came later. He chronicled the range of divisions in several of the larger Jewish communities across the state. Battling Nazi Germany “is the beginning of a process where they will start to work together in a number of things,” Puckett said. It was also a time when Jews started lobbying support from politicians and Christian ministers, with great success. Among the items covered in the book is the Alabama Legislature’s passage of a 1943 bill calling for the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine, but there were many more initiatives from the Jewish community involving the larger community. Puckett noted the Jewish community also had to come together to assist their sons who were going overseas, Jewish soldiers who were stationed at nearby military bases, and in resettling refugees. When veterans returned from the war, they were able to further bridge the divides, he added. The book also sets in context the Jewish community’s role in Alabama society. It opens with the Scottsboro Boys trials in the 1930s, where there was a lot of anti-Jewish sentiment directed at the lawyers from New York who came to the state and defended the nine blacks who were falsely accused of raping two white women. He delves into the divide between the “outsider” Jew and the Southern Jew, something that would continue to resonate through the Civil Rights era. Though the Jewish community came together in the 1940s, there was still a major divide over the idea of Zionism. “There was a tremendous working out of differences” on the issue, Puckett noted. Each community in the state was divided, with many Reform Jews opposed to the creation of a Jewish state and many in the Con-

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Shave and a mitzvah… for kids Two area rabbis taking part in pediatric cancer event in memory of “Superman Sam” On March 31, Mississippi Rabbis Debra Kassoff and Matt Dreffin will shave their heads, along with dozens of their colleagues from across the country. The “36 Rabbis Shave for the Brave” is in memory of “Superman Sam,” the son of Rabbis Phyllis and Michael Sommer of Chicago, who died on Dec. 14 at the age of 8. Kassoff was classmates with the Sommers at rabbinical school. She and Michael Sommer met during interviews at Hebrew Union College Sam Sommer in Cincinnati. “They’re people I have shared a significant chunk of experiences with,” Kassoff noted. The Sommers had their first child while they were all still in rabbinical school. Then Sam was about six months older than Kassoff ’s oldest daughter. After graduating, Phyllis Sommer started the Ima on the Bimah website about Jewish parenting. “Even though we haven’t been geographically near each other for years, I still feel very connected,” Kassoff said. Sam was diagnosed with refractory acute myeloid leukemia on June 12, 2012. He received a bone marrow transplant on Aug. 27, 2013. Nationally, a bone marrow donor drive was held in his honor during the High Holy Days. Through the rabbinic network and Phyllis Sommer’s “Superman Sam” website, word of Sam’s illness spread throughout the Jewish world. In October, Phyllis Sommer talked about shaving her head in solidarity with him and to promote awareness of pediatric cancer. She and colleague Rabbi Rebecca Einstein Schorr came up with the idea for the 36 rabbis campaign, with “36 slightly-meshugene, but very devoted rabbis who are yearning to do something” and a goal of $180,000 for pediatric cancer research. They started getting the word out and signing up rabbis. Kassoff said “Immediately when I saw it I knew it was something I wanted to do, and I needed personally to be a part of it.” Kassoff serves as rabbi of Hebrew Union Congregation in Greenville, and goes monthly to Temple Or Hadash in Fort Collins, Col. Dreffin, assistant director of education at the Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life in Jackson, had a different route to involvement in the campaign. He noticed on Facebook that many of his colleagues were changing their profile pictures to a Superman logo. “As an avid comic book reader, I was intrigued and had to know why,” he said. The Institute’s Education Fellows also heard about the campaign and “came running into my office telling me how I had to do it.” Dreffin has often grown or dyed his hair for Purim or for other Jewish educational endeavors. “I thought, how much more important to do it for this reason.” The shaving event will be at the Central Conference of American Rabbis’ annual convention, which will be in the Sommers’ hometown of Chicago from March 30 to April 2. It was originally hoped that Sam would be in attendance, but two weeks after the campaign began Sam had a relapse and there were no further treatment options. The campaign gained momentum at the Union for Reform Judaism’s bi-

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ennial convention in San Diego in December, as participants sported buttons declaring that they were shaving their heads, and to ask them why. Then word of Sam’s death came during the conference. “I did not have any idea how quickly we would lose him,” Kassoff said. “Now that he’s gone, we’re doing it in his memory.” At press time, there were 81 rabbis signed up and $268,000 raised. And it isn’t just Reform rabbis — there is a team called Conservative/ Masorti Rabbis for a Cure. The initiative is also to spread awareness of the special challenges posed by pediatric cancer. Of all cancer research funding, just four percent goes to pediatric cancer. Many treatments that are used to fight cancer in adults are not appropriate for children, and there is little drug research aimed specifically at pediatric cancer. Kassoff noted an additional issue — “if they survive the cancer, they suffer life-long effects from the treatments.” Kassoff is not yet certain if she will be in Chicago for the convention. “There will be some rabbis who participate from a remote location,” and she does not attend, she will have it done in Greenville. Dreffin will be in Chicago, “which, needless to say, greatly disappointed my staff as they were hopeful that they would be the ones doing the shaving.” The campaign is being coordinated through the St. Baldrick’s Foundation. As of press time, Kassoff had raised over $3000 toward her $5000 goal. Her page can be accessed at http://www.stbaldricks.org/ participants/mypage/660886/2014. Dreffin’s page can be found at http://www.stbaldricks.org/participants/mypage/660973/2014

>> Puckett servative and Orthodox community in support. How deep the divide was depended on the personalities of the local rabbis and some prominent congregants. In Birmingham, Rabbi Morris Newfield, who served Temple Emanu-El from 1895 to 1940, was not a Zionist. His successor, Rabbi Milton Grafman, was an outspoken Zionist, much to the consternation of some who had hired him. The issue of Zionism “deeply split the Birmingham community,” Puckett said. “Montgomery was probably the hotbed of anti-Zionist sentiment” under Rabbi Eugene Blachschleger. Many Temple Beth Or congregants were members of the anti-Zionist American Council for Judaism. After the concentration camps were opened and the extent of Nazi devastation revealed, Puckett said “Zionism became a fact of life… Many Reform Jews came to that realization, but many did not.” Even today, Puckett said, in his interviews with older members of the community there were still some who had anti-Zionist sentiment, especially in Montgomery. Today at Temple Beth Or in Montgomery, there is an Israeli flag on display with the United States flag. “That’s something you would have never seen in those years.” The book continues with the emergence of Israel and the resettling of refugees, and concludes with a discussion of Holocaust commemoration and education in the state today. In his talk at the Southern Jewish Historical Society’s annual conference in Birmingham last November — which he helped organize — Puckett noted that working on this book “has really changed my outlook on what I want to study.”

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February 2014

Southern Jewish Life


Seniors

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By Lee J. Green Interim Home Health Care and its Birmingham office want to do their part to keep seniors in need well-cared-for in their own homes. Lloyd Ford, who had almost 25 years of healthcare executive management experience, primarily with hospitals, before purchasing the Birmingham Interim Home Health Care office last July, said home health care providers can today offer more medical services in the home, and that is where things are trending. “I think we’re moving toward having ‘hospitals in the home’ and virtual offices for some physicians,” said Ford, who owns and runs Interim Birmingham with his wife Melissa, a registered nurse. “There are certain things, especially something like trauma, that patients have to go to the hospitals for. But with hospitals stays getting shorter, on average, due to insurance issues we’re seeJust about anyone will ing a push toward more medical tell you they would care services and rehabilitation delivered in the home. Just about rather be at home anyone will tell you that’s where than in a hospital they would rather be anyway.” Infusions are already being performed by experienced medical home health providers and Ford sees a day in the not-too-distant future that chemotherapy, dialysis and other related medical procedures could be performed in homes. Interim Home Health Care offers home infusion therapy, skilled medical and nursing care, non-medical care and support as well as healthcare staffing. The corporation has been around since 1966. Ford advised seniors and those authorizing their healthcare to ask as many questions as possible to understand what kind of care is needed, what kind of care will be provided, and all of the costs associated with it. “Some of our service costs, for example, are covered to a certain level by long-term insurance (non-medical) and health insurance (medical),” he said. “But having worked for so many years in the healthcare industry, I understand how confusing it can be for a patient and family member to understand. We are happy to advise.” Ford said he got into the healthcare industry in the first place because of the difference it can make in peoples’ lives and that it can save lives. “The reason why I got into the healthcare industry and why I wanted to do this is because I enjoy knowing that I contribute to peoples’ wellness. That is the greatest reward,” he said.

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St. Vincents offers discount tests for Heart Day Because symptoms of heart disease can be difficult to detect, screening is important. At St. Vincent’s Health System in the Birmingham area, Feb. 15 — the day after Valentine’s Day — will be Heart Day. From 6 to 11 a.m. St. Vincent’s will offer four heart tests for $40 — a $350 value. The tests will be available at nine St. Vincent’s locations in the area. Participants will receive an EKG, a lipid profile, a blood pressure screening and a basic metabolic profile. T-shirts will also be given out. Registration is requested by Feb. 7 by calling Dial-A-Nurse, (205) 9397878. Go to stvheartday.com for a list of locations and documents needed for the screening. Southern Jewish Life

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Fairhaven expanding facilities, growing Jewish population By Lee J. Green Fairhaven Retirement Community has been a fixture in the Crestwood area of Birmingham for more than 50 years. But there is much new about the place, including a campus redevelopment and expansion coming this year and an increase in the number of Jewish residents, thanks in part to Julie Marcus, who has been Fairhaven’s director of marketing since last fall. “We know that the large Baby Boomer population is getting to that age where they need options for retirement, assisted and nursing care living,” said Marcus, an involved member of the local Jewish community. “Fairhaven wants to be there to meet their needs and to provide a community that offers everything a senior wants.” Fairhaven has been around since 1961 and offers independent living apartments, assisted living apartments, specialty care assisted living (memory care), rehabilitation services and skilled nursing care. “Thanks to a partnership with (the University of Alabama at Birmingham), we have the only on-site dental clinic at a retirement community in the state of Alabama,” said Marcus. “We also partner with UAB’s Center of Aging. We have a geriatrician who can be a resident’s primary care physician… and skilled nurses from UAB. Plus our rehabilitation program is state of the art.” Rehabilitation consists of 20 private rooms in one building on Fairhaven’s campus and skilled medical resources. “Most are there temporarily but some have said they like it so much that they have stayed in those units,” she said. Some of those in independent living can have emergency call buttons and residents also signal staff to tell them they are awake and if everything is fine. Marcus said she could not give too much detail about the expansion nor give a time frame, but she did say the first phase will add a significant amount of two-bedroom assisted living units and that the rest of the Fairhaven community would be fully functional during the campus redevelopment. One of her goals is to grow the partnerships between Fairhaven and the N.E. Miles Jewish Day School and Collat Jewish Family Services, as well as start a partnership with the Levite Jewish Community Center. “We’re just a couple of miles down Montclair. We’d like to work with the LJCC and Buz-a-Bus to give the opportunity for our active seniors to join the JOY (Jewish Older Years) Club and to enjoy senior fitness,” said Marcus. In 2013, a group of Fairhaven residents attended a symphony event at the Day School. Sheri Krell brought some of the Day School students to Fairhaven on Dec. 3 for its Chanukah


party, featuring traditional songs, latkes and a chocolate fountain. Rabbi Barry Altmark led the service portion. “When the kids get together with the seniors, it is something very special. This always creates lasting memories for everyone,” added Marcus. She said all active residents enjoy activities such as musicians that are brought in, hanging out in the Fairhaven coffee shop/juice bar, which is open around the clock every day, watching old movies, trips to the museums, restaurant, arts events and the Pepper Place Farmer’s Market. Marcus said Fairhaven prides itself on having residents live there for a long time and employees who have longevity with the community. “Fairhaven is what it is because of the people that live and work here. And if someone’s health needs change, we can keep them in the community and just move them from one area to another,” she said.

Continuous care at home provides intense support In times of crisis, those facing a terminal illness need an option other than the Emergency Room for care. Also, surveys show that when facing end of life, the vast majority of people in the United States would prefer to die at home, free of pain and surrounded by their loved ones. Unfortunately, the majority of people die in a facility, away from their family, and experiencing unnecessary discomfort. Continuous Care is a service that can help with both of these issues, often the situation many terminally ill patients and families find themselves in. Designed to provide intensive hospice support at bedside in the home, over extended periods of time, from a minimum of 8 hours up to a maximum of 24 hours per day, Continuous Care provides the patient and their loved ones with comfort, compassion, and dignity right in the comfort of their own home. The model for quality and compassionate care at the end of life, hospice involves a team-oriented approach providing pain and symptom management. Emotional and spiritual support is expressly tailored to the patient’s goals of care. One of the four levels of care of the Hospice Medicare Benefit, Continuous Care is provided for patients who require predominately nursing care to achieve palliation or management of acute medical problems associated with a terminal illness. Available 24 hours per day, 7 days per week, Continuous Care is covered 100 percent by the Hospice Medicare/Medicaid benefit and most private and managed care insurance plans, however in some instances, prior authorization may be required. Continuous Care is provided wherever the patient calls home — an assisted living facility, nursing home, or home of a family member — by experienced nurses and certified nursing assistants who are available to provide direct care for uncontrolled agitation or anxiety, respiratory distress, nausea and vomiting, pain or in instances of family or caregiver crisis. Robust staffing is essential for providing Continuous Care. Due to the cost involved, many hospice agencies, while they do provide the service as one of the levels of care, do not specialize in providing Continuous Care. St. Joseph Hospice has made a commitment to ensure staffing levels are always maintained so that the team is ready to meet the needs of patients, their families and caregivers who require intense care in the home. Medical directors, certified in Hospice and Palliative Medicine, act as consultants to the patient’s physician, are full time and available for consult at all times. St. Joseph Hospice works to honor the wishes of those individuals with a terminal illness and provides medical, psychosocial and spiritual support to those facing end of life due to a terminal illness. Located throughout Louisiana, Mississippi and now in Mobile, St. Joseph Hospice has earned a reputation as a leader in the hospice industry. More information: www.StJosephHospice.com.

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Seniors Greenbrier/Noland reflects on a century of care Last year, Noland Health Services, which owns Greenbriar at the Altamont senior living community, celebrated its 100th birthday. The company traces its origins to physician and philanthropist Dr. Lloyd Noland, who in 1913 came to Jefferson County at the invitation of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Land Company to address the public health needs of workers. Soon after arriving in the “Magic City,” Noland presented plans for a company hospital that would serve as the foundation of a community health network of services. Growing from the progressive system envisioned by its founder, Noland Health Services today follows this inspirational vision by operating as a private, not-for-profit health care organization, and is one of the largest providers of multilevel senior living communities in Alabama. One of the centerpieces for Noland’s services in the area is Greenbriar at the Altamont in the popular Highland Avenue neighborhood. The senior living facility is located in the historic Altamont Apartments, which was recently named to the National Historical Registry. “Located in a building that is a significant part of the development of Highland Park, Greenbriar is rich in history and celebrating our heritage is very important to us,” said Executive Director Jennifer Shunnarah. “We have built on that history and strive to offer our senior residents services and amenities in keeping with the spirit of those offered by the Altamont Apartments.” Residents at Greenbriar at the Altamont enjoy a host of activities and events to stay active and

engaged. Greenbriar offers its residents regular art classes, exercise classes, Wii bowling tournaments, craft classes and outings to museums as well as arts and music events. The community also regularly hosts local performers including individual members of the Alabama Symphony Orchestra, and just a few weeks ago an acapella group from Yale University gave a special performance in the decorated grand lobby. Other annual events include a costume ball, a Best Friends Tea, a Resident Appreciation Day and other festive holiday celebrations. During the past few years, Greenbriar has partnered with Greystone Elementary School for an inter-generational project. The second graders regularly connect with a group of seniors using Skype, as well as some in-person visits. For its Jewish residents, Greenbriar offers Shabbat services the second Friday of every month. The community partners with the Levite Jewish Community Center and Collat Jewish Family Services for other Jewish cultural enrichment opportunities as well as holiday celebrations. Moreover, the building is conveniently located only a few blocks from Temples EmanuEl and Beth-El. Greenbriar offers independent living, assisted living, short-term rehabilitation and skilled nursing to its residents. Noland Health Services also owns multi-level-care and senior living facilities in Bessemer (Oaks on Parkwood), McCalla (Woodlands at Tannehill), Pell City (Village at Cook Springs), Sylacauga (Sylacauga Health and Rehab) as well as the Roebuck section of Birmingham (East Glen Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation).

Elderly patients are at high risk of problems associated with the hip, ranging from fracture to arthritis. A program has been developed at the University of Alabama at Birmingham Highlands to mobilize elderly patients immediately and to minimize hospitalization. Early mobility will allow the patient to reduce the risk of blood clots, lung problems (pneumonia) and confusion (sun downing). The program consists of three concepts: a muscle-sparing anterior hip approach, long lasting local anesthetic and avoiding general anesthesia. General anesthesia has post-operative side effects which include urinary retention, nausea, confusion and lack of energy. The direct anterior hip approach has allowed patients to sleep in any position they want after the surgery and more importantly there are no restrictive precautions, since the likelihood of dislocation is negligible. Early mobility is very important for the elderly patient. It not only allows the patient to return to activities of daily living, but improves their mental wellbeing. “This program is a major advancement in the care of not only the elderly patient, but all hip replacement patients. Most patients stay in the hospital one to two days,” said Dr. Herrick J. Siegel, Associate Professor of Surgery and total joint

replacement surgery at UAB Medical Center. Siegel added, “it’s a pleasure seeing the rapid recovery most patients are able to achieve. The stability of the hip after surgery in combination with significantly less pain then traditional hip replacements will benefit the elderly patient most of all.” Approximately 20 percent of orthopedic surgeons are using the direct anterior approach. Although it was initially felt to benefit mostly young, healthy patients to return to recreational activities and work, it now appears that the elderly patients also see a tremendous benefit. “It is important to find an experienced joint surgeon that regularly performs this approach. At UAB Highlands, I have performed more than 5,000 hip surgeries. During the past two-and-ahalf years, this approach and recovery program is my standard protocol,” said Siegel. He is currently involved with the development of a new hip implant to continue to improve the direct anterior approach. Siegel also teaches courses nationally and internationally to orthopedic surgeons. “Our fragility fracture program at UAB Highlands complements this new hip program well for those patients with hip fractures,” he said. For more information, go to www.uabsos.com.

By Lee J. Green

Rapid Hip Recover reduces complications

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Southern Jewish Life


Better hearing involves technology, brain training and rehabilitation Birmingham Hear Lab LLC Owner Tom Sholten believes that investing in turning hearing loss into hearing gain, through advanced hearing aid technology and dedication to auditory rehabilitation, is always a sound health investment. “Hearing clearly is so important in our everyday lives and our regular interpersonal communication,” said Sholten, who has more than 30 years of experience as an audiologist. “You want to be able to hear and understand what your spouse says, what your kids say, what your co-workers say. Through advanced digital hearing aids and a dedication to rehabilitation exercises, it is possible to greatly improve one’s hearing and thus quality of life.” Most of Sholten’s clients are seniors, though he has his share of younger patients. That includes Homewood Family Medicine’s Dr. Scott Weisberg, an involved member of the Birmingham area Jewish community. Weisberg has become a marathon runner in recent years. He was close enough to the bombings at the Boston Marathon finish line last April that he suffered some significant hearing loss. Weisberg is working with Sholten to address those issues and he has recommended Sholten to his own patients. The largest segment of the U.S. population is Baby Boomers, and those born on the early end of that generation are just hitting their senior years.

“Many of these Baby Boomers grew up going to rock concerts, so we’re seeing some people come to me (before their later senior years) looking for solutions to hearing loss.” Over the years, especially in the past five to 10 years, hearing aid technology has changed dramatically. The digital age has opened the door for hearing aids to become much more sophisticated. They can be programmed to adjust to differing environments. “We can recognize sounds that are more difficult to hear for someone. A hearing aid can be programmed to increase the volume when consonants are spoken but not for vowels. They can make only the softer sounds sound louder so speech comes across as clearer and easier to understand. These are smart devices that can be programmed and customized for a client. The devices learn and adjust,” said Sholten. “It’s not just about amplifying everything, which was all most of the old analog devices could do.” He said back in 2000, the hearing aid industry was 15 percent digital and 85 percent analog. But Sholten said he has always been an “early adopter” and was 85 percent digital even back then. Another thing that has revolutionized the hearing aid industry is Bluetooth wireless control. “It is possible to be in your convertible driv-

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ing 60 miles an hour down the highway with the top down and communicate with hands-free control on the cell phone and everything sounds crystal clear,” said Sholten. The biggest innovation in the hearing industry during the past 30 years, according to Sholten, has nothing to do with technology. It’s a membership option offered by Hear Lab LLC that allows for affordable hearing solutions with low monthly payments. “Many insurances won’t cover this or will only cover enough to get some of the cheapest hearing aids that won’t work well enough for someone,” he said. “This membership solves that quandary and helps to ensure that a clients can get just what they need at costs they can afford, with the protection of a warranty too.” But hearing aids alone are only part of the equation. Hear Lab LLC emphasizes rehabilitation exercises as part of an advanced regime to improve both hearing and comprehension. “Most other hearing aid places just sell you the devices and tell you how they work. They don’t take the time for audiology rehabilitation. The rehabilitation improves hearing 28 percent without doing anything to the hearing aid,” said Sholten. “The most important part of the hearing industry is understanding speech.”

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Seniors Tulane’s Friedlander leads education on head, neck cancer detection By Lee J. Green

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Significant advancements have been made in the treatment of head and neck cancers. But Dr. Paul Friedlander, chair of otolaryngology and clinical associate professor of surgery at Tulane University School of Medicine, continues to push for greater detection education as well as screening opportunities for those in need, in an effort to push down the mortality rates of those cancers. “Head and neck cancer is the sixth most common cancer nationally,” with 40,000 cases per year along with 30,000 additional thyroid cancer cases. “Many of the cases are with those who are in their 50s, 60s and senior years,” said Dr. Friedlander, a New Orleans native and lifelong member of Temple Sinai. While many of the cancers are treatable with early detection, the warning signs are not as easy to detect by most individuals. Approximately two-thirds of all patients first diagnosed with a head or neck cancer are already in the advanced stages of the disease. “It is difficult because the symptoms can mimic other symptoms for something less serious. For example, a symptom of tonsil cancer is a persistent sore throat. But if the sore throat lasts two to three weeks, it could be something more serious,” he said. “Another common symptom might be difficulty swallowing. As we get older, especially for seniors, it becomes more difficult to swallow. But when something becomes chronic and too painful, it should be addressed.” Friedlander said swelling in the neck or a neck mass that won’t go away also could be a warning sign. “I advise anyone not to let it linger. Go see your primary care physician or ENT specialist,”

Woldenberg Village knows about Tikkum Olam By Lee J. Green In late December, residents at the Woldenberg Village retirement community, which is under the Touro Infirmary umbrella, were treated to music from young, talented jazz musicians in town for the United Synagogue Youth International Convention. The sounds of “Tikkum Olam” or “Repairing the World” filled the air and the young musicians bonded with the senior residents. “As part of the Jewish religion, the value of ‘Tikkum Olam’ or ‘Repairing the World’ is very important. The students displayed this important value to our residents through the art of music and loving kindness,” said Woldenberg Director of Activities Rita Austin. The jazz ensemble visited with residents and performed at The Azaleas Assisted Living Community as well as Willow Wood Skilled Nursing Facility, both located on the campus of Woldenberg Village. The students, ranging in age from 15 to 18, played jazzy versions of “Dreidel,

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he said. Friedlander was trained as an ENT doctor with a specialty in head and neck cancer. He earned his medical degree from LSU and interned in general surgery at Charity Hospital in New Orleans. He completed residency in general surgery at George Washington University; otolaryngology at LSU as well as head and neck surgery at MD Anderson Cancer Center. His fellowship was also in head and neck surgery at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. He started practicing 1997 in New Orleans. Friedlander said that at that time, most head and neck cancers were treated with surgery. Advancements have allowed for more effective and less invasive treatments today employing chemotherapy, radiation as well as robotic surgery. “We’ve made great gains in treatment but because there had not been great gains in screening and early detection, we’re not seeing a decrease in the national mortality rates,” he said. “Unlike breast cancer (mammography) and prostate cancer, there really hasn’t been a national screening protocol along with that level of awareness.” Friedlander saw a need to raise awareness and provide free cancer screening opportunities to those in need. In 2009, he formed a community organization called Healing Hands Across The Divide. The group, led by Friedlander and involving medical students, goes out into mainly the inner-city communities of New Orleans to offer free neck cancer screenings. “Once a month we’ll get out there into a community and offer free screenings as well as educational opportunities,” he said. “Our motto is that all problems can be solved, but the solutions need to be reasonable.”

Southern Jewish Life

Dreidel, Dreidel” and “Hava Nagila,” as well as famous New Orleans classics such as “When the Saints Go Marching In.” After performing, the students gave an informal discussion and lesson on the history of jazz music in New Orleans. “This is just one of the many exciting events that are held at Woldenberg Village every day,” said Rita Austin. “Life is meant to be enjoyed, and that is our focus for our residents’ care.” Woldenberg Village is a continuum-of-care retirement community which offers 60 independent living garden apartment homes, 60 assisted living apartments, a 120-bed skilled nursing care facility, and an outpatient rehabilitation center that specializes in physical and occupational therapy. The campus also offers on-site Shabbat services every Saturday and observance of all Jewish holidays. In addition, Woldenberg Village is smoke-free, pet-friendly, and features beautifully landscaped grounds. For more information about Woldenberg Village, visit www.liveatwv. com.


Jewish Family Service offers ways for seniors to remain independent As the senior population continues to grow, Jewish Family Service of Greater New Orleans aims to help people stay independent as long as they can, and still have a good quality of life. The agency offers several programs for seniors, some of which have been in existence for decades. For example, the agency has offered the Lifeline personal emergency response system since the 1970s, said Jane Levine, Lifeline representative. The Lifeline communicator plugs into a land-line phone, and the client wears a Lifeline unit as a necklace or bracelet. In case of a fall or other emergency, help can be summoned immediately by pressing the remote unit’s button. The buttons are waterproof and were designed with the bathroom in mind, because many falls happen there. Levine said they tell clients that once they put on a button, “there’s no reason to take it off.” There are two types of systems. The newest system has an auto-alert service. There is a built-in fall detector in the sensor, so if a wearer were to fall and be unable to push the button for help, the sensor would make the call. “In many ways, it’s a game-changer,” Levine said. The standard model requires the wearer to push the button to activate it. The button can also be programmed to summon nearby relatives instead of the call center, if that is preferred. The agency provides this service on a month-to-month basis with no contractual obligation. Unlike commercial providers of similar systems, JFS is able to offer them to clients on a sliding fee schedule based on ability to pay. Levine said this year there will be a new technology that does not require a land line — so it can be worn anywhere in the country and be able to summon help. “We have a lot of very active seniors,” she said. “As Baby Boomers age, the technology will keep pace with them.” Fran Dinehart said another important program for seniors and disabled clients is the Homemaker program, which was started in 1975. Homemakers visit weekly or twice a month, providing a range of services, from light housekeeping to laundry to shopping to light maintenance. The agency has an “excellent staff of homemakers” who have been with JFS for many years. “Because of our staff we’re able to provide such good quality of service,” Dinehart said. As with other JFS programs, it is done on a sliding fee scale according to ability to pay. “It is really unique that we are able to do that,” she noted. Also unique to the JFS program is the ability to provide a transportation component for errands or doctor appointments. The Bikur Chaverim program, “visiting friends,” matches adults who are homebound or partially homebound with volunteers that visit on a regular basis. Dinehart said they match clients with visiting friends based on mutual interests, so the two already have something in common. They may even have known each other years before. It isn’t just young volunteers — many of the visiting friends are older, sometimes the same age as the clients they visit. “It really provides a lifeline for people who would otherwise be very isolated,” Dinehart said. Isolation is a problem in society, Levine added. After Katrina and the flood, “so many families were split up and some did not return,” leaving elderly relatives behind. These programs help extend the time seniors can live independently, NOLA

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“aging in place” as it is known. It is more cost-effective to find ways to help people stay at home than be in a health care environment. Currently, JFS is undergoing an assessment of its services and seeing where the community’s needs are. The agency serves the entire New Orleans community from offices in Uptown, Metairie and the Northshore. Jewish Family Service also provides other services, such as counseling and case management. Levine noted, “it’s not just about life, it’s about quality of life.”

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The Rohr Jewish Learning Institute will present “To Be a Jew in the Free World: Jewish Identity Through the Lens of Modern History,” the institute’s new six-session Winter 2014 course that will begin during the first week of February. In New Orleans, Rabbi Mendel Ceitlin of Chabad Jewish Center will conduct the six course sessions at 7:30 p.m. on six Wednesday evenings beginning Feb. 5 at Chabad Jewish Center in Metairie. Bais Ariel Chabad in Birmingham will hold the classes on Wednesdays at 7:30 p.m. starting on Feb. 5, and on Thursdays at 10 a.m., starting Feb. 6. Rabbi Yossi Friedman will lead the sessions. “A recent PEW study exposed that 22 percent of Jews identify as ‘Jews with no religion’ and for many, this is a clear indication that the landscape of Jewish identity is changing rapidly” said Rabbi Zalman Abraham of JLI’s headquarters in Brooklyn, N.Y. “Our objective with this course is to initiate a discussion about Jewish identity, why it is still relevant, and what we can do to make it something our children and grandchildren will cherish for generations to come.” In “To Be a Jew in the Free World,” participants will confront questions of allegiance and issues in which Judaism and contemporary society appear to be in conflict. Looking into the past, the course explores a series of fascinating case studies, such as arguments made in the 1650s to convince Oliver Cromwell to readmit Jews to England, and how Ulysses S. Grant’s 1862 expulsion of the Jews in western Tennessee and northern Mississippi became a defining issue in his presidential election. “The subject of identity is close to the hearts of many in our Jewish community, yet it’s a subject that is rarely discussed nowadays,” said Ceitlin. “The course provides a rare opportunity to address this issue that will benefit the wider community of New Orleans, and we invite everyone to attend.” Like all JLI programs, “To Be a Jew in the Free World” is designed to appeal to people at all levels of Jewish knowledge, including those without any prior experience or background in Jewish learning. All JLI courses are open to the public, and attendees need not be affiliated with a particular synagogue, temple, or other house of worship. Interested students in New Orleans may call (347) 351-6476. Cost is $75, with a 10 percent discount for couples and returning JLI students. In Birmingham, cost is $89 for individuals and $135 for couples. Registration can be done at myjli.com.

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JCRS turning on lights for Broadway-style Gala Both families are long rooted in Greater New Orleans and, between In his acceptance speech for one of his record-breaking 12 Tony Awards for “The Producers,” Mel Brooks thanked an “avalanche of them, have been active members of the Shir Chadash, Temple Sinai, Gates of Prayer, and Anshe Sfard congregations. Since Hurricane KaJews” for the gift of American Broadway musicals. To celebrate the Jewish legacy in theater — from the Yiddish The- trina, Dan and Florence Scharff have relocated to Baton Rouge and atre to Gershwin, Sondheim, Rogers and Hart joined Temple B’nai Israel; and Jeannie, Hyman and Connie Tolmas moved to Dallas, where –— the Jewish Children’s Regional Service will present “Jewish Roots of Broadway: A Musical they joined Alan and Gina as members of ConNight from Gershwin to Godspell” as its annual gregation Tiferet Israel. gala, March 22 at the National World War II The gala event will include a pre-event cockMuseum Freedom Pavilion in New Orleans. tail reception, dinner and feature a musical The evening will honor members of the history of the influence and accomplishments Scharff and Tolmas families for their dedicaof Jews in theater. This JCRS event continues the “Jewish Roots” theme from its 2013 “Jewtion, leadership and generosity in support of ish Roots of Comedy” and 2012 “Jewish Roots JCRS’s mission to provide a financial safety net for vulnerable Jewish children and families with of Jazz” successful fundraisers. Both previspecial needs assistance, educational scholarous events have sold out, and while it is being ships and Jewish summer camp experiences. Scharff (above) and Tolmas (below) families moved to a larger venue this year, a sellout is still anticipated. Several members of each family have served on the JCRS board over the past decades, and The musical program is being produced by Harry Mayronne, an acclaimed New Orleans each has provided a JCRS president, Lee Scharff from 1997 to 1999, and Jeanie Tolmas, from based musician, composer, producer and pup2003 to 2005. peteer. For his work in theatre, Mayronne has The Tolmas family members being honreceived numerous awards for musical direcored are Hyman and Connie Tolmas and their tion for shows including the 2010 Allways daughter Jeanie and son and daughter-in-law, Lounge and Theatre production of The ThreeAlan and Gina Tolmas. Members of the Scharff penny Opera. Vocalists will include Amy Alvafamily being honored are Dan and Florence rez, Darcy Malone, and Christopher Wecklein. Scharff and their son and daughter-in-law, Lee Proceeds from “The Jewish Roots of Broadand Susan Scharff. way” will enable JCRS to directly assist greater Alan and Gina Tolmas, along with Jeanine numbers of vulnerable Jewish youth and famiTolmas, are current members of the JCRS Board lies in the region who need the necessary asof Governors. sessments, therapies and tools for children with “We are proud to recognize these wonderful special needs, provide scholarships for children individuals who make up such fine families,” explained JCRS President to attend Jewish summer camps and offer college aid for Jewish youth. Leon Rittenberg III. “The members of these families have served JCRS Patron tickets begin at $200 per person. Group packages, event in various capacities and are known throughout Greater New Orleans, sponsorship and reserved tables are available. Reservations are availBaton Rouge, and Dallas for their volunteerism and generosity, as well able at www.jcrs.org or by calling (800) 729-5277. Also, JCRS has seas for their professionalism and community service.” cured discounted hotel rooms for out-of-town guests.

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February 2014

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Limmud NOLA brings everyone together for Jewish learning Registration is now open for this year’s Limmud New Orleans, a regional weekend of Jewish learning for all ages and all levels of knowledge. The volunteer-led weekend brings together Jews of all background for a celebration of Jewish culture, arts, learning and teaching. All of the presenters are volunteers, with a heavy reliance on local talent, supplemented with some national figures. Among the presenters will be Clive Lawton, who founded Limmud England 30 years ago. Scholar-in-residence at the London Jewish Cultural Center, Lawton will be making his debut as a presenter in New Orleans, though he has visited twice before. There will be over 90 sessions in the categories of history, arts and culture, spirituality, Israel, social justice, contemporary Jewish life, family, text and thought, and Southern Jewish life. Sessions include a 50th anniversary discussion of the impact of Nostra Aetate on Catholic-Jewish relations, a history of pickle making, “Punk Jews,” print making, Jews and atheism, Chassidic dance, investing in Israeli companies, the New Orleans connection to touring Israel, wine tasting, Jews Pursuing Justice, “How Jews in the U.S. became white,” “Jewish lawyers, Islamic law,” puns in the Bible, Jewish Dryades Street and a panel on JNOLA. This year, Limmud will make history with its expansion over Shabbat. Limmud NOLA chair Gail Chalew said “many Limmud events include Shabbat and offer religious services of all denominations. But this will be the first Limmud ever to have all the synagogues themselves offering services under one roof, under Limmud auspices.” The community’s synagogues will all hold their services under one roof, at Temple Sinai. Touro and Gates of Prayer will have a joint service with Temple Sinai in the sanctuary, while Shir Chadash will hold Conservative services in the chapel, and Beth Israel will have an Orthodox service elsewhere in the building, led by the congregation’s new rabbi, Gabe Greenberg. After individual services, participants will come together for meals. For those who do not travel on Shabbat, Limmud is emphasizing home hospitality around the Temple Sinai area. Limmud starts with registration on March 7 at 5 p.m. at Temple Sinai, and runs through 5 p.m. on March 9. The Sunday sessions will be at the Lavin-Bernick Center at Tulane University. This year also introduces a Young Limmud program for ages 4 to 12. There will be music, nature walks, art activities, a joint parent-child social action activity, and storytelling with nationally known children’s book author, Amy Meltzer. Babysitting will be available for ages 1 to 3. Chalew said everyone is encouraged to spend a weekend in a Jewish world with several hundred fellow Jews interested in expanding their Jewish horizons. “You will have meals with people from all streams of Jewish life, have the opportunity to celebrate Shabbat by taking a nature walk, learn more about everything from pickle making to Torah text, take part in designing a Limmud mural, be entertained by visiting comedians and artists, gain new insights into the Jewish past and present in Louisiana,” Chalew said. “You will see old friends and make new ones — that’s the Limmud experience.” Registration includes as many sessions as one wants to attend, kosher meals and snacks. Through Feb. 28, registration for all three days is $75 for ages 30 and up, $40 for ages 18 to 30 and $15 for children. For those attending just Saturday night and Sunday, registration is $50 for adults, $25 for young adults and $5 for children. Pricing increases after Feb. 28. Registration is online at limmudnola.org. NOLA


Adar I coinciding with the one day of Rosh Chodesh February — three giant leaps for menschkind. But, in Talmudic fashion, it must be asked, if comedy and bad things each happen in threes, wouldn’t bad comedy work in three times three? Look no farther than Adar’s most famous holiday, Purim, which while it stays in the original Adar (Adar II), is still recognized in the second Adar (Adar I) as Purim Katan. Purim has three days of related observance: Purim itself, the Fast of Esther, and Shushan Purim. Thus, a third hat trick — a hat trick of hat tricks! Thus, this instance of Rosh Chodesh Chodesh is more monumental, of greater significance and theological impact, than either Kol Nidre the 13th or Thanksnukah. Now, who can argue with that? Anyone? Doug Brook is a writer in Silicon Valley who, as a child, collected so many calendars that updating them all currently has him toiling away somewhere late in 1997. For past columns, other writings, and more, visit http://brookwrite.com/. For exclusive online content, like facebook.com/the.beholders.eye.

Uptown Chabad House named for Btesh family On Jan. 7, the New Orleans Uptown Chabad House became the Btesh Family Chabad House. At a cocktail reception in their honor, Isaac and Bety Btesh of Panama dedicated the house at 7037 Freret in memory of Isaac’s mother, Pamela Farida, and in honor of his father, Alberto Btesh. Rabbi Mendel Rivkin said Isaac Btesh’s relationship with Chabad in New Orleans dates back to 1977, when he became a student at Tulane. In the mid-1970s many Jewish families in Panama started sending their children to Tulane, and he was part of that trend. Btesh became involved in what was then a relatively new Chabad House at Tulane, developing a close relationship with Rabbi Zelig Rivkin and the late Rabbi Zalman Itkin. After graduation, he returned to Panama and currently is CEO of Multibank in Panama, which he and his father co-founded. Btesh and his wife have been long-time supporters of Chabad, and were honored at the 25th anniversary dinner in 2000, along with Caron and Stan Bleich. A building dedication honoring all of the donors for the recent complete renovation of the Chabad House will take place later this year.

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The year 5774 first brought Kol Nidre the 13th, the last time that will occur in a September in the lifetimes of any of our exponentially great-grandchildren. Then it gave us Thanksnukah, the exceptionally extraordinary elision of Erev Chanukah with Erev Yom Turkey. Now, before even the midpoint of the hockey season, 5774 has gotten the hat trick. Neither the minor holiday of Yom Kippur (how big a Jewish holiday can it be, with no special meals?) nor the even more minor festival of Chanukah (how big a Jewish holiday can it be, with no special sermon?) holds a havdalah candle to the end of this trilogy. This February 1 is not only Rosh Chodesh February, but also Rosh Chodesh Adar — on the same day! Despite its obviously superior importance, both theologically and culturally, some people don’t even realize this winter blessing is happening. One can conclude only that the media is too exhausted after its overly extensive cover- This month’s calendar age of Thanksnukah, and its unconvergence has derly extensive coverage of Kol more significance Nidre the 13th. But this doubled start of the than Thanksnukah did new month is no ordinary Rosh Chodesh Chodesh. Of course, it’s mathematically possible for a Rosh Chodesh to occasionally fall on the first day of a secular month. But there’s many reasons why this instance is especially noteworthy. This Rosh Chodesh Chodesh is at the start of two leap months. Of course, February is the occasional recipient of a leap day, though not this year. And this is also the start of Adar I. You see, 5774 is a leap year, in which a leap month — a second Adar — is added. So, why is Adar I so special, if the second Adar is the leap month? Because the second Adar — the one that’s added — is Adar I. Adar II is the normal Adar from every year. (Don’t believe it? Ask your rabbi. And then blame your rabbi, on behalf of his or her profession.) Why is it called Rosh Chodesh Chodesh? Obviously, because it’s the start of two months — in this instance, February and Adar I. Seriously. Dare your local rabbi to show you any instance in the Talmud where a rabbi disagreed with the usage of Rosh Chodesh Chodesh for such an event. They won’t find one. However, this Rosh Chodesh is a two-day Rosh Chodesh. (Yes, some of them are.) So, with this third day of new-monthitude, why is it not Rosh Chodesh Chodesh Chodesh? Because that would just be silly. While the Talmud doesn’t decry this nomenclature either, ask your rabbi whether calling this event Rosh Chodesh Chodesh Chodesh would be silly. The answer will be “who sent you… stop wasting my time,” which is ancient Aramaic for “yes.” But they say comedy works in threes. They also say that bad things happen in threes. Therefore, bad comedy must work in two threes. Given that, Rosh Chodesh Chodesh being the third in the 5774 calendrical anomaly hat trick is actually two hat tricks in one. This second hat trick, of course, is the hat trick of two days of Rosh Chodesh

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NOLA


Day School students enjoy “Children’s Choice” Last month, Jewish Community Day School students selected from three unique experiential learning choices as part of the school’s innovative Mid-Winter Children’s Choice program. Head of School Sharon Pollin quoted John Dewey as stating “...the doing is of such a nature as to demand thinking.” Each selection came with 10 hours of concentrated learning during one week. Pollin engaged Red Stick Robotics to lead robotics learning for groups divided by age. “Red Stick has established the first and onlyBuilding Engineering, Science and Technology Robotics hub in Louisiana, and we have been absolutely thrilled to work with them,” said Pollin. “I like that we actually get to build our own robot,” said kindergartner Mikey Neal. Art Studio was led by local artist and Day School teacher Chris Clark. First grader Sam Shaya was happily surprised. “We are making palm trees that grow here in New Orleans and also in Israel,” he said. “I thought we were just going to

draw and paint them, but instead we’re building them so it’s really fun.” Students are using their sculptures to create family trees. The Green Dream group focused on several Big Ideas that go along with creating the school’s first garden. Led by Pollin, students learned how Jewish tradition has a long history of caring for the earth. “The Torah tells us to both care for and work the earth, and additional commentary discusses the idea of Bal Tashchit, the commandment Left, third grader Joseph Todd works on his sculpture in Art Studio. not to needlessly destroy.” Kindergartener Isaac Third grader Opal Radding said Above, “I like that everything about our Morales building the JCDS garden garden is organic, which means bed. On top of front cover, fourth that we are not using any chemi- graders Jonah Benjo and Penina cals. I loved going to the farm and Berman program their robot. especially building our garden.” The week of project-based learning culminated with students presenting their work to the community on Jan. 17. “It’s been a community effort, with great parent and teacher volunteers,” Pollin said. The school will be having open house events on Feb. 4 at 9 a.m. and Feb. 7 at 2 p.m. for prospective students.

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