Southern Jewish Life
July 2015
Volume 25 Issue 7
Southern Jewish Life P.O. Box 130052 Birmingham, AL 35213 Temple B’nai Sholom, Huntsville, the second-oldest building in Alabama that is still used as a synagogue
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shalom y’all shalom shalomy’all y’all Cover Image: Courtesy Haspel By coincidence, we were already planning to visit Whitney Plantation the morning after the church shooting in Charleston. Whitney, which opened a few months ago along Louisiana’s River Road, is unique in telling its story from the viewpoint of the enslaved. A lot was laid out in a matter-of-fact manner, from the horrors of the institution of slavery to uplifting stories that came from that place in spite of the circumstances. Culinary contributions and notable individuals who are descended from the Whitney slaves were mentioned, obviously not to say that slavery was a good thing, but to remind that out of horror, good can emerge. The shooting at Emanuel AME Church that killed nine was a modern-day horror. It has led to a great deal of unification and solidarity, including a national Shabbat of Solidarity by the Jewish community. Unfortunately, a lot of people have claimed the incident demonstrates the pervasive racism that is “in our DNA.” In 1963, while there were many who were horrified by the church bombing in Birmingham that killed four girls, the country was a very different place. With Klan-riddled police forces and judiciaries, those who killed blacks generally did not have to worry about legal repercussions, and justice took decades. Today, aside from the usual few nutcases one can find on any issue, pretty much everyone wants to see the Charleston shooter wind up beneath the jail — at the very least. Meanwhile, as we are going to press, a suicide bomber walked into a mosque in Kuwait where there were 2,000 at prayer, killing 27. The response? For the most part, silence.
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agenda interesting bits & can’t miss events
On April 29, members of Collat Jewish Family Services’ English as a Second Language class held a party at the Levite Jewish Community Center in Birmingham to celebrate the new citizenship of the last four class members, Larisa Sheinfeld, Tamara Hipp, Coca and Jack Schachter.
Marker honors Georgia governor who commuted Leo Frank’s death sentence On June 17, the Georgia Historical Society dedicated a new historical marker to Governor John M. Slaton, who commuted the death sentence of Leo Frank. Frank was superintendent at a pencil factory in Atlanta who was accused of raping and murdering 13-year-old Mary Phagan. After he was found guilty on questionable evidence, anti-Semitism in the general community bubbled to the surface. Frank, who had become president of B’nai B’rith in Atlanta in 1912, was viewed as a northerner, and regionalism was a factor in the trial. After the conviction, calls from New York papers for a new trial were met with hostility in Georgia. After appeals were exhausted, a petition for commutation was sent to Slaton, who examined thousands of pages of testimony and visited the factory. Slaton was convinced that Frank was innocent but changed his sentence from the death penalty to life in prison, figuring the truth would come out. Riots broke out after his decision, which was announced on June 21, 1915, just before his term ended. His political career at an end, he and his wife had to be escorted to the train station, and they did not return to the state for years. In August 1915, a mob descended on the prison in Milledgeville, abducted Frank and brought him to Marietta, where he was lynched. In 1986, Frank was pardoned by the State Board of Pardons and Paroles because of what had happened to him, and without weighing in on guilt or innocence. Assisting with the marker was Jerry Klinger, president of the Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation. His group has placed markers at the sites of the first synagogue buildings in numerous states, including locations in Pensacola, Mobile, Jackson and New Orleans. Speakers for the dedication included Governor Roy Barnes; Assistant Attorney General Van Pearlberg; Supreme Court Justice David E. Nahmias; Patricia Meagher, Georgia Historical Society, Sheffield Hale, President and CEO of the Atlanta History Center; Shelley Rose, Senior Associate Regional Director, Anti-Defamation League; and Rabbi Steven Lebow, Temple Kol Emeth.
Left to Right: Jerry Klinger, president of the Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation; Patricia Meagher, communications director at the Georgia Historical Society; and Sheffield Hale, president and CEO the Atlanta History Center. July 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 5
agenda Sklar heads Mountain Brook school board The City of Mountain Brook Board of Education named Brad Sklar as its president on June 16. Sklar has served on the Mountain Brook Schools Board for the past four years after being appointed in late 2010 to finish the term of Eli Capilouto, who had been on the board for eight years. A Mountain Brook High School graduate, Sklar is an active member of the community, serving in leadership roles for many organizations and boards. In addition to serving on the Mountain Brook Schools Board for four years, he serves as a chair of the Finance and Taxation Committee of the Birmingham Business Alliance and is a past participant in Leadership Birmingham and Leadership Alabama. He and his wife, Stephanie, have one child in the Mountain Brook School System. In 2001, Sklar received the Joanie Plous Bayer Young Leadership Award from the Birmingham Jewish Federation, where he has also been a vice president. Sklar is a board member and shareholder at Sirote & Permutt Law Firm. After the meeting, Sklar commented, “We are privileged to have Dicky Barlow as a great superintendent in addition to energetic board members. We are excited to continue to work hard to provide the resources necessary for our administrators, teachers and principals to meet the needs of our students. The mission of Mountain Brook Schools is to provide an effective, challenging and engaging education for each one of our students. This has been our mission and our focus in the past and will continue to be so in the future.”
July Belonging in Birmingham You Belong in Birmingham will have several activities in July. On July 12, there will be a brunch at Jackson’s in Homewood at 11 a.m., with participants asked to bring a new or gently used children’s book up to third grade level for the Hess Family Library at the Levite Jewish Community Center. A volunteer reading opportunity is available with the preschool on July 22. The YBIB Summer Party will be at Cantina in Pepper Place, July 16 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. There will be margaritas and appetizers, along with Cantina’s happy hour specials. Guests are welcome. On July 31, YBIB will have a Shabbat at Temple Emanu-El, with cocktails at 5:15 p.m. and dinner following the 5:45 p.m. service. For any or all of these events, contact Samantha Dubrinsky at the Birmingham Jewish Federation.
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6 Southern Jewish Life • July 2015
Birmingham’s Levite Jewish Community Center continues being a monthly site for the University of Alabama’s Osher Lifelong Learning Institute. The member-planned and member-taught courses and “bonus programs” are taught on a wide range of topics. There is no age threshold and no exams, just the pure enjoyment of learning. On July 17 at 10:30 a.m., Eco Three CEO Jonathan Handey will lead “Home Weatherization,” a discussion on energy efficiency and what can be done in older and newer homes. William Gantt will lead a discussion of the Southern Literary Trail, which he founded, on Aug. 14 at 10:30 a.m.
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Luterman Burn Center dedicated The University of South Alabama Medical Center in Mobile held a dedication ceremony for the Arnold Luterman Regional Burn Center on May 5. Luterman, retired Ripps-Meisler professor of surgery at the USA College of Medicine and former director of the burn center, was recognized for his development of the regional burn center and for helping it grow into one of the busiest in the country. “The Burn Center became involved in the development and testing of many new advances in burn care, which gained it a national and international reputation,” Luterman said. When he arrived at USA there was a burn unit, but “there was a need to increase its level of service to that of a burn center,” Luterman said. The change required a joint effort by many departments, from the hospital’s administration to nutrition services. The university’s board of trustees approved a resolution last year to name the facility the Arnold Luterman Regional Burn Center. The new namesake of the USA Medical Center’s regional burn center is “flattered” to have the center named in his honor. Luterman recently retired from the university after more than 30 years of service. He is nationally known as a burn care expert and a medical educator.
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Rabbi Yael Levy leads Shabbat retreat in Baton Rouge Hadassah of Baton Rouge and The Red Shoes Center for Personal and Spiritual Growth are partnering for an inspirational retreat featuring Rabbi Yael Levy. “Sabbath of Psalms: A Deep Yearning” will be held July 17 and 18. It will be an interfaith exploration of the Psalms under the structure of Shabbat. The weekend begins at 6 p.m. on July 17 with Shabbat dinner, followed by teachings, reflection, meditation and song. The sessions on July 18 will be from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., with prayer, guided meditation, Torah and Psalm study. Registration is $50, including dinner and lunch. Levy is director of “A Way In: Jewish Mindfulness Center” and author of books on the Omer and Chanukah. The rabbi at Congregation Mishkan Shalom in Philadelphia, she was also named by the Forward as one of America’s most inspiring rabbis. In November she was in Baton Rouge for another Shabbaton at Red Shoes.
July 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 7
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The Southwest District of Women of Reform Judaism will have an Area Day for Sisterhoods in New Orleans, Baton Rouge and Jackson. A wine tasting and light lunch will be held at Bin 428 in New Orleans on July 26 from noon to 2 p.m. Temple Beth-El in Pensacola will have a “Summer Lovin’” Talmudic learning series on Jewish views of relationships, intimacy and physical desire. It will be held at the home of Janet and Chuck Kahn in Gulf Breeze for three Wednesdays, starting July 8 at 7 p.m. Beverages, light appetizers or desserts to share are welcome. B’nai Zion in Shreveport is holding a summer film series following the 6 p.m. Shabbat services. Pizza, popcorn and drinks will be served, and each film has a Judaic tie. Admission is free, but donations are appreciated before or after Shabbat. The July 17 film will be “The Jewish Cardinal,” followed by the 2006 film “O Jerusalem” on July 24 and the 1977 classic “Oh, God!” on July 31. Montgomery’s L’chaim League will have a program with Raymond Cohen speaking about the life of Nat King Cole. The July 14 luncheon will be at Temple Beth Or at 11:30 a.m., featuring soul food from Down the Street Café. Reservations are $10 per person and are due on July 11. The North Louisiana Jewish Federation’s annual meeting and dinner will be July 15 at 6 p.m. in Lefkowitz Hall at B’nai Zion in Shreveport. Reservations are required by July 7.
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The eighth annual Temple Beth-El Poker Tournament in Pensacola will be on August 15. Due to renovations, the event will be held at 917 North Palafox. Doors will open at 5:15 p.m. and no-limit hold’em play begins at 6 p.m. The buy-in is $100 for the first 100 who pre-register, or $110 at the door. Re-buys of $100 are taken until 8 p.m. Registration and rebuys are for $3,000 in chips, and there will be a one-time add-on of $5,000 in chips at 8:15 p.m. for $100. There will be free food and a cash bar. The top nine players will receive non-monetary prizes, with first place being a Large Green Egg and second place being a flat-screen television. Rabbi Debra Kassoff will lead a “how to” class for Beth Israel in Jackson on doing a Havdalah service, at the home of Amy and Arty Finkelberg. Dessert will be provided for the event, which is July 18 at 7 p.m.
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On July 10, Beth Shalom in Fort Walton Beach will welcome Rabbi Joel Fleekop and members of Temple Beth-El in Pensacola for Shabbat services at 7:30 p.m. Beth-El is currently undergoing a major renovation (above) and is currently meeting at First United Methodist Church most weekends.
community Springhill Avenue bids farewell as Kunstadt concludes 28 years in Mobile For the first time in 33 years, Springhill Avenue Temple is without a permanent rabbi, and for the first time in 25 years there is a rabbinic opening in Mobile. The congregation said farewell to Rabbi Donald Kunstadt on May 16 at a tribute dinner, held at the Mobile Country Club. The second-longest serving rabbi at Sha’arei Shomayim, Springhill Avenue’s historic name, for the last two decades Kunstadt has been the longest-serving rabbi in the state at the same single pulpit. He had been assistant rabbi and associate rabbi at Temple Israel in St. Louis when he and his wife, Patti, decided it was time to find a pulpit. They had two criteria — for her, it had to be warm. For him, it had to be close to the water. They saw the openings in the rabbinic monthly newsletter. “I had to look up” and wonder “where is Mobile, Alabama?” “It all fell together perfectly,” he said. Also, Kunstadt related that many congregations along the East and West coasts had already adopted “almost a Conservative form of Judaism, and that was never my interest.” In Mobile he found a true Reform congregation that fit more with his philosophy. In retirement, he will be following those two original criteria — warm
and on the water, as he moves to Oxnard, Calif., where he will officiate weddings as “The Surfing Ventura Rabbi.” Kunstadt grew up in the San Fernando Valley, and while in Mobile he started racing sailboats. About 15 years ago he got into surfing while visiting Pensacola Beach. While he and his wife will be moving closer to his mother, their children are in college and medical school in the Southeast. Barry Silverman emceed the dinner, noting how long ago 1987 actually is. “He has seen us through hurricanes, a tornado. He has represented us so well in the community.” He also noted that the oldest Kunstadt child, Ryan, was six months old when they arrived. Jack Friedlander, who was president during the rabbinic search in 1987, said at the event that he was struggling for words. “Almost everyone in this room has shared some life cycle event” with Kunstadt. He especially noted Kunstadt’s ability to work with families who had just lost a loved one, and said he understood Kunstadt’s comment in a Mobile Register interview that each funeral “takes a little notch out of me.” “I was usually Donald’s first call after he was contacted by a family
July 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 9
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member,” Friedlander said. “Every one did take a notch out of him.” He thanked Kunstadt “for the compassion you have shown… unfortunately this was a major part of your rabbinate in Mobile.” He also noted how Kunstadt was ahead of the curve in offering Taste of Judaism classes before the Reform movement started that program, publicly advertising those classes for those who might be seeing a spiritual home, despite some opposition. Kunstadt noted the difficulty rabbis have in tending to communities. He said the congregation’s longest-serving rabbi, Alfred Moses, served 39 years. “Unfortunately… he spent the last years of his life at Bryce Hospital,” Kunstadt said. “It’s always been my goal to avoid that.” A rabbinic calling “is like no other,” as one is a symbol for the community, he said. “I’ve shared with you the most difficult days and many sleepless nights,” Kunstadt said, and “I’ve laughed with you and rejoiced with you when we have had newborns… and I’ve had the honor of marrying so many of you who are here this evening.” Nate Ginsberg, another of the 14 presidents during Kunstadt’s tenure, said “we’re going to miss y’all. You have been part of our family.” Cantor Mark Opatow told Kunstadt that over the last 15 years “I couldn’t ask for a better rabbi to work with.” He closed the evening by reciting Tefilat HaDerech, the traveler’s prayer. After conducting a search this spring for a successor, the congregation scheduled a special meeting for June 27 to approve an interim rabbi for the coming year as they search for a permanent rabbi during the next rabbinic hiring season in early 2016. Kunstadt’s cross-town colleague, Rabbi Steven Silberman of Ahavas Chesed, now becomes the longest-serving rabbi, having arrived in Mobile in 1990.
Truck fire burns luggage on way to Ramah Darom The first day of camp can be hectic, but for Ramah Darom, the Conservative movement’s summer camp in north Georgia, it was even more so this year. On the first day of camp, June 9, about 150 campers arrived at the Atlanta airport. While they made the two-hour journey to camp on buses, the luggage was in a separate truck, which caught fire on the highway. The truck was able to be moved to the shoulder of the highway and the three staffers were not injured, but some bags were burned while most others were saturated by water and had a smoky odor. About 90 percent of the bags had no physical damage beyond water. All affected campers were provided with bedding, some clothing and essential items for their first nights of camp. The day after the fire, camp staff sorted through 300 bags, returning anything that did not require further processing and working to contact families individually about the condition of their bags. In all, over 10,000 items had to be processed and professionally cleaned, with the last of the items reaching camp on June 17. Camp Director Geoff Menkowitz noted as Shabbat approached on June 12 that there is a tradition among campers of sharing clothes for Shabbat, so this time it was on a somewhat larger scale. Bags that suffered fire damage were taken to a restoration company for evaluation, and the camp was working on a bulk source for luggage to replace anything damaged beyond repair. The camp is now working on the procedures for filing claims with their insurance carrier over lost items. Menkowitz said “As I have watched our staff rally and respond to this challenge, I have been filled with a profound sense of appreciation for strength of our camp community.”
community Defunct for 80 years, West Blocton shul leaving a legacy of Jewish learning Congregation Ah-Goodies Ah-Chem in West Blocton may have closed 80 years ago, but it will continue to have a legacy of Jewish learning. The lot where the synagogue once stood and where an historic marker was dedicated in 1997 has been sold and the proceeds are going to the University of Alabama to establish a support fund for students in financial need who are minoring in Judaic studies. The Jewish community of West Blocton started around 1881, and in 1905 the congregation organized, using a phonetic spelling of Agudas Achim. They built a simple white building on Main Street in 1905. The synagogue had one of the first tennis courts in the county. The community peaked soon thereafter at 125 individuals, starting to decline in the 1920s. Soon, services were held only on High Holy Days, with attendance boosted by University of Alabama students who were recruited by cousin Melvin Israel, a fellow student who later became a sports radio announcer for Alabama and went on to become Mel Allen, the legendary voice of the New York Yankees. The synagogue was damaged by a storm in 1936, then by fire, and with the community down to 15 people a decision was made not to rebuild. The building was demolished in 1938, with the ritual items given to Birmingham’s Knesseth Israel. Janet Beerman, great-granddaughter of Wolf Israel, one of the congregation’s founders, said her great-grandfather lived across the street from the shul and her grandfather, Samuel Israel, lived next door. Wolf was also founder of the I&N Quality Store, which now houses the Cahaba Lily Activity Center. When Wolf died, Sam became caretaker of the synagogue property
The historical marker is slated to be placed on a fountain that is planned for the site next door, a job he later handed over to his son, Elmo Israel Ellis, who became a radio legend in Atlanta. After Sam died in 1967, his home was sold to the mother of Tammy Donner, and now belongs to Tammy and husband Gary Donner, who has been fire chief and mayor of West Blocton. Every so often, Donner would contact Ellis, and after Ellis’ death, Beerman, asking to purchase the synagogue property next door. “Out of the goodness of their hearts, they were maintaining the lot, mowing down
July 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 11
community the weeds, keeping watch over it,” Beerman said. “Understandably, the Donners were willing to pay the going rate for property on Main Street in West Blocton.” But Ellis had instructed his daughter not to sell the property for less than $10,000, “which was several times greater than West Blocton real estate was bringing.” A couple of years ago, Tammy contacted her again, and Beerman replied “Tammy, I’d love to sell it to you, but I promised my Daddy, on his death bed, that I wouldn’t take less than $10,000 for it.” Tammy said she understood, but Beerman could hear her disappointment. “Ten minutes later the phone rang again. This time it was Gary. He said, ‘Miss Janet, we’ll give you $10,000’.” It took some time for Beerman to establish clear title to the property, and part of the sale condition was that the marker would remain. Gary Donner told SJL that though the marker is currently down from its original pole, he plans to have a waterfall on the property with the sign placed on it. With the proceeds from the sale, Beerman looked for a naming opportunity to keep the congregation’s name alive. She contacted Knesseth Israel and spoke with Rabbi Eytan Yammer about the items that had been given to the Birmingham congregation in the 1930s. Yammer noted there was an old Torah in poor condition that they did not know any history about, and she thought restoring that Torah, which they figured came from Ah Goodies Ah Chem, would be a fitting tribute. But while the property title issue dragged on, KI went ahead and did a restoration of its Torahs. Beerman then contacted the University of Alabama and found out why her father had insisted on $10,000 — it is the minimum amount needed to establish a named fund. “Kathy Yarbrough, the University’s Director of Development, came to my home in Atlanta and helped me sort through all sorts of options,” she said. Beerman and her brother, “as Representatives of the Successors of John Krentzman, Wolf Israel, and Sam Baer,” established the Ah Goodies Ah Chem Synagogue of West Blocton, Alabama Support Fund. The earnings from the sale proceeds will pay an annual award, in perpetuity, to a student who has chosen to minor in Judaic Studies. The financial assistance will go toward books and other study needs.
Masonic Lodge being demolished
Another West Blocton landmark with ties to the community’s Jewish history is being dismantled. Charles Adams, who organized the 1997 marker dedication for the synagogue, said heavy rains in November led to an exterior wall of the Masonic Lodge sloughing off. Because there are no funds for repair, a demolition company is taking the building down for the bricks and other building materials. Adams noted that the cornerstone, which lists Sam Israel as a member of the building committee, will remain and in the near future there will be a ceremony to open it. “Ironically,” Adams said, “also on the stone is R.B. Keith,” who he said was the local organizer of the Ku Klux Klan. The 1900 Episcopal Church was recently dismantled, an old bank building caved in and the company dismantling the Masonic Lodge wants to do the Strand Theater next. “It really hurts to see the old town landmarks disappear,” he said. One story told about the Masonic Lodge has to do with a large portrait of Sam Israel that was dedicated in the 1950s. As family members came to tour the building, the person conducting the tour noticed that Israel’s portrait was placed facing a large portrait of Jesus and worried how that would be received. According to the story, Ellis reassured him, “that’s fine, after all, they were brothers.”
12 Southern Jewish Life • July 2015
The Rotenstreich family at Hands Up Together
With tribute to Rotenstreichs, CJFS celebrates 25th anniversary As Collat Jewish Family Services marked its 25th anniversary as an independent agency, the group honored “the dynamic duo” of Bunny and Joel Rotenstreich, as event co-chair Sherri Romanoff called them. Joel, she said “doesn’t know a stranger” and Bunny is “a trusted counselor and advisor,” both of whom have been very active in the community for a long time. The Hands Up Together celebration was held on May 11 at the Alabama School of Fine Arts in downtown Birmingham. Euan Morton, who played Boy George in “Taboo” on Broadway and the title role in “Brundibar,” returned to Birmingham as the evening’s entertainment. He performed at Hands Up Together in 2012. Romanoff said the evening had raised close to $190,000, and “all the funds raised after expenses will go directly toward helping keep older adults safely and independently in their homes while enriching their lives.” The Rotenstreichs have been involved with CJFS from its beginning, with Bunny helping resettle immigrants from the former Soviet Union, and currently involved with the new CJFS Cares program for those with memory issues. She noted that the Romanoffs were one of the Friendship Families that
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July 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 13
community they paired the immigrants with after arrival. They have traveled to Israel frequently since 1969, and when Bunny chaired the Birmingham Festival of Arts Salute to Israel in 1985, they hatched the idea of bringing people together through travel. The first Interfaith Mission to Israel was born, with over 100 participants. Several more such trips would follow over the next decade. In accepting the honor, Bunny said their lives have been enriched by the opportunity to volunteer with CJFS, and she urged those in attendance to consider volunteering “with us.” Joel noted that CJFS is “one of the best kept secrets” in the city. “Jewish at its roots, its branches reaching out to others like the arms of a Jewish mother, with love, care and support.” It is the agency’s “eagerness to be an open door for anyone in need” that appeals to them, he said.
Evolving over 25 years
In December 1989, Jewish Family Services was incorporated as its own agency after being a committee of the Birmingham Jewish Federation that was “heavily involved in senior adult programming,” Executive Director Lauren Perlman said. Almost immediately, the new group was California Closets creates the perfect storage pressed into service as a flood of Jews started leaving the former Soviet solution for you and the way you live. Call today Union. In 1990, Birmingham resettled 33 New Americans. to arrange your free in-home design consultation. Additional services were added, from welcoming newcomers to establishing a group for the “newly single.” In 1999, the agency was named in honor of the Collats following a Serving Alabama and the Florida Panhandle “flagship gift.” 709 Third Avenue North, Birmingham In 2003, CJFS started the Esther Schuster Personal Care Program with a grant from the Lucille Beeson Trust of Canterbury United Methodist 800.448.1915 CaliforniaClosets.com Church. The Caregiver Support Group also began that year. CURRENTLY, 80 Earlier this year, CJFS launched CJFS Cares, PERCENT OF AL Birm_3.8x5_0415.indd 1 4/16/15 9:55 AM which provides programming for those who CJFS ACTIVITIES have memory issues while allowing their careRELATE TO givers some spare time to attend to errands or SENIOR ADULTS their own needs. The agency has also been called upon after disasters, from helping those who evacuated from New Orleans in 2005 Family Owned and Operated to those affected by the tornado outbreak of April 2011. “Throughout our history we have seen a need and responded to it,” Perlman said. Providing chemical management of lawns and shrubs to Currently, Perlman said, the biggest need is for senior services, and over 1400 accounts in the greater Birmingham area that will only grow as there will be a 42 percent increase in the population Our Team Has Over 50 Years Experience of those age 65 and over in the next 15 years. “That is what we see as our expertise and specialty.” Our small size gives you successful services The agency still meets many other needs, from counseling to English as because of our experience and the consistency a Second Language, working with families of all ages, helping those who of having the same tech working on your lawn are struggling financially and coordinating scholarship assistance. Trust us to ensure you have the best possible lawn! Currently, about 80 percent of staff time is devoted to those age 60 or over, with the main focus being “programs helping people age in place.” The agency serves “everyone” on a sliding scale based on ability to Fertilization pay, and Perlman said the agency has benefitted from the support of the Weed & Vegetation Control Birmingham Jewish Federation, Birmingham Jewish Foundation and the Lime community. To ensure the agency’s future, CJFS is launching a “From The Heart” Insecticide endowment campaign in the coming months. The name was chosen beFungicides cause “we feel our donors give from the heart,” Perlman said, and the heart is a symbol of loving and caregiving. Fire Ant Control Perlman explained, “We need to grow our staff to meet the needs and Aeration provide the services that are being requested of us, so we have to grow our endowments to support that.” Tree and Shrub She praised the leadership, lay and professional, that navigated the agency through the past 25 years. “They have ensured our success. We • 5703 Shadow Lake Drive • Pinson fully expect to continue that for the next 25 years.” e n t r y way
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14 Southern Jewish Life • July 2015
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Gift enhances Judaics at South Alabama Longtime University of South Alabama philanthropists Fanny and Bert Meisler of Mobile announced a gift to establish an endowment to enhance Jewish Studies at USA. The Fanny and Bert Meisler Endowed Professorship in Jewish Studies will expand and deepen the university’s relationship with Mobile’s Jewish community, focusing on the history, religion and culture of the Jewish people. The professorship position extends a program the Meislers had already helped to establish. In August, the university will welcome a new faculty member to USA, David Meola, who currently is a visiting assistant professor of history at the University of the South, where he specializes in German and Jewish history from the Enlightenment through the 19th century with a focus on public expression and popular culture. Meola will serve USA as the Fanny and Bert Meisler Visiting Professor of Jewish Studies. The Meislers’ latest gift will establish a permanent endowment to support a faculty position in Jewish Studies. “Bert and I have long thought about the need to further research and document the history of Jewish people in the Mobile region,” said Fanny Meisler. “It’s our hope and expectation that university students will take advantage of the opportunity to chronicle this history before it’s gone.” “USA is a tremendous asset to Mobile and to the Gulf Coast region,” said Bert Meisler. “We are indebted to the University of South Alabama for providing Fanny and me the means to make this happen.” “Fanny and Bert Meisler have supported the University with substantial charitable gifts, including a leadership role in establishing the Ripps-Meisler Endowed Chair in the USA College of Medicine, providing necessary funding to name the student services center Meisler Hall, and giving extensive support to the University’s athletic programs,” said Joseph F. Busta Jr., USA vice president for development and alumni affairs. “The Jewish Studies Program at USA will bring greater awareness of the impact of the Jewish people on our community, state and region,” said Clarence Mohr, professor and chair of history at USA. “With the generous support of Fanny and Bert Meisler we will explore in greater detail the important issues such as identity, genocide and cultural survival. USA’s classes in Jewish history will be of interest to all those who seek a richer understanding of the Jewish experience.”
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community Moishe House builds community without walls in Jackson In larger communities across the country, including New Orleans, Moishe House has set up a presence with Jewish 20-somethings living together and providing a “hub of Jewish life.” But what about smaller communities that can’t sustain a fullfledged residence? In Jackson, Moishe House Without Walls debuted a few months ago. Lonnie Kleinman, the Institute of Southern Jewish Life’s first Community Engagement Fellow, became a MHWOW host by virtue of having studied for a year at the Pardes Institute of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem. Alumni of resident Moishe Houses, retreat participants and select others are eligible to become MHWOW hosts. Though Kleinman is the local host, she said in Jackson it has been “more of a collaborative effort” with a “good number” of young Jewish adults in the area. In February, Kleinman and Arielle Nissenblatt hosted a Tu B’Shevat Seder with a discussion about sustainability. They plan two events per month — a monthly Shabbat dinner and an event that changes month to month. For example, for Purim they did hamantaschen baking, an event that was sponsored by Jackson’s Beth Israel Congregation. “Beth Israel has been awesome, they called us and want to support us,” she said. Kleinman said the goal isn’t just to “give young Jewish adults in Jackson a chance to get together… but also make these events open to the public so our friends are exposed to Jewish holidays and events.” She is also looking for ways that MHWOW can do some community engagement, which is also what she does at ISJL.
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University of Alabama Bloom Hillel board elections were held the week before final exams. This year’s officers and board members are (left to right): Top row, Zack Rosenberg, Membership, San Antonio, Tex.; Rebecca Fleisig, Public Relations, Mountain Brook, Ala.; Allison Diamond, Public Relations, Norcross, Ga.; Kerri Fogel, President, Atlanta; Elie Allen, Treasurer, Dallas, Tex.; Olivia Byrd, Programming, Pleasant Grove, Ala. Front row, Courtney Winston, Membership, Gardendale, Ala.; Stephanie Arkin, Executive Vice President, Atlanta; and Bianca Levy, Secretary, Atlanta.
Hadassah’s Big & Easy conference The Hadassah Big and Easy Super South Tri-Region Conference was held in New Orleans from April 17 to 19. Above, the night before the conference there was a panel on “Sex, Lies and Politics: Human Trafficking” at Shir Chadash, co-hosted by Hadassah and the Shir Chadash Sisterhood. Top right: Hadassah Southern Region Women of the Year: Amy Sedlis, Birmingham; Arlene Hines, New Orleans; Paula Samuels, Baton Rouge; Nili Friedman, Nashville; Shannon Martindale, Knoxville; Rebecca Alexander, New Orleans. Right: Toby Parker, President, Hadassah Southeastern; Lee Kansas, President, Hadassah Southern; Janice Bernstein, President, Hadassah Southern W2W_halfJewishLife_061015PRT.pdf 1 6/12/2015 1:48:03 PM Seaboard.
July 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 17
community Five Ala. teachers are Lerner Fellows
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The Jewish Foundation for the Righteous selected 30 middle and high school teachers from eight U.S. states and Croatia, Hungary, and Poland, as 2015 Alfred Lerner Fellows to delve into the complex history of the Holocaust as well as learn new teaching techniques for introducing the subject of the Holocaust into their classrooms. Of the 30 worldwide, five are from Alabama. The Summer Institute, an intensive five day course, was held at Columbia University from June 21 to 25. The program is a high-level academic seminar in which participants are exposed to Holocaust survivors such as Roman Kent and to noted Holocaust scholars. It is designed to allow participants to meet in small groups following each lecture, address the specific aspect of the Holocaust that was presented, share teaching concepts, and develop approaches to introducing the subject matter to their students. Teachers selected for the program must be English or social studies teachers at the middle or high school level, have taught at least five years, are at least five years from retirement and currently teach the Holocaust in their classroom. Participants each come from a region of the country where the JFR operates a Holocaust Centers of Excellence in conjunction with a local Holocaust museum or center. International educators were invited to join the seminar in 2001 at the request of the U.S. State Department. “Unfortunately Holocaust education is not mandated in most states. It is important to provide educators with both the historiography of the Holocaust as well as the tools to help them introduce the subject to their students.” said JFR Executive Vice President Stanlee Stahl. Fellows from Alabama are Farrah Hayes of Sardis High School, Sardis City; Michael Gadilhe of John Carroll Catholic High School, Birmingham; Terryl Meader and Norma Arras of Semmes Middle School, Semmes; and Stacia Dialis of the Gulf Coast Holocaust Center, in Mobile.
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In May, Ariel Mayor Eliyahu Shaviro visited Mobile and presented Mayor Sandy Stimpson with a certificate of declaration solidifying the bonds between the two communities. Stimpson then presented Shaviro a key to the City of Mobile. Mobile and Ariel became sister cities in 2010. Afterward the Mobile visit, Shaviro and Friends of Ariel Executive Director Avi Zimmerman traveled to Birmingham for an event hosted by Heather and Bruce Johnston, who have spearheaded the JH Israel leadership development facility in Ariel.
L’Shanah Tovah
18 Southern Jewish Life • July 2015
women’s health an annual SJL special section The 2015 Norma Livingston Ovarian Cancer Foundation’s Ovarian Cycle fundraiser was held at Birmingham’s Levite Jewish Community Center in March
Hadassah president: Genetic testing for “breast cancer gene” should not be automatic by Marcie Natan A Silicon Valley start-up has begun offering a genetic screening test for breast and ovarian cancer. The test, administered on a sample of saliva, would inform women if they carry the BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene mutation which puts women at a higher risk for developing breast and ovarian cancer. The test sounds simple enough, but understanding what to do with the results can be a complicated, gut-wrenching journey. Along with the news of the test came a recommendation from Dr. Marie-Clare King — a renowned genetics researcher whose work led to the discovery of the BRCA1 gene — that all women be tested for the gene mutation from age 30 on. MOST WOMEN Although I sit as WHO GET the national presiBREAST CANCER dent of Hadassah, DO NOT HAVE the Women’s ZionAN INHERITED ist Organization of GENE MUTATION America, I write this as a breast cancer survivor. Every woman has to evaluate her own reality before making the decision about testing. The psychological impact of the BRCA test is complex. A positive result can be terrifying and upsetting, but if properly counseled, can also be empowering. Hadassah Medical Organization (Jerusalem) has done extensive research with the BRCA gene mutations that significantly increase a woman’s risk of developing breast cancer. The Hadassah Medical Organization discovered Ashkenazi Jewish women have 20 times the frequency of BRCA mutations than non-Ashkenazi women. Approximately one out of every 40 individuals of
Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry have a mutation in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene, as compared to one out of every 800 members of the general population, according to the Center for Disease Control. According to Dr. Asher Salmon, oncologist and deputy director, Hadassah Hospital Ein Kerem, “30 percent of women tested will have a gene alteration for which we don’t know the significance, whether it is dangerous or benign, leaving women uncertain as to whether they are at risk or not. The results of BRCA testing alone, without genetic counseling and extensive analysis of family history, do not provide women with the complete picture needed to make an intelligent decision about treatment.” As actress Angelina Jolie said in the New York Times: “A positive BRCA test does not mean a leap to surgery. I did not do this solely because I carry a BRCA1 gene mutation, and I want other women to hear this. In my case… surgery to remove my tubes and ovaries was the best option. On top of the BRCA gene, three women in my family have died of cancer.” According to Susan G. Komen, “Most women who get breast cancer do not have an inherited gene mutation. 5 to 10 percent of breast cancers in the U.S. are linked to an inherited gene mutation.” And what about women who test negative for the gene, as I did? I was diagnosed with breast cancer 20 years ago. My sister also had breast cancer and a first cousin died at age 40 of breast cancer. After my diagnosis, both my sister and I decided to be tested due to our strong family history and we both tested negative. However, testing negative for the BRCA mutation obviously did not mean we were risk-free for breast cancer. Had my sister and I not continued with our regular breast health protocols, regular mammograms
July 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 19
women’s health
and breast self exams, neither of us would have discovered our breast cancer reoccurrences in time for successful treatment. Taking a “one size fits all” approach to women’s health is dangerous. Each woman’s body is unique, her circumstances different and her family history critical. I encourage women to consider all of their options before making serious, life-altering decisions. Hadassah has always been in the vanguard of empowering women with knowledge and information to be proactive regarding their health and wellness. Take the opportunity to focus on your own health and choose a healthy lifestyle. Marcie Natan is the national president of Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America, Inc. which owns Hadassah’s hospitals in Israel.
Women can reclaim their wellness by Dr. Farah Sultan
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Your adrenal glands, located on top of your kidneys, can not distinguish between the various stresses in life, whether they are physical, mental or emotional. The adrenals pump out hormones to counteract stress — any stress. They are fight or flight hormones, intended to serve us for only short periods of time. However, today’s stresses are anything but short term, so the hormones flow unabated. If this persists, your body could develop “adrenal type” of person — one who is overactive or exhausted. Excess stress hormones convert muscles to sugar and steal muscle from bones, causing osteoporosis. My protocol covers the five essential keys to resolving the underlying cause of health problems, including detoxification, hormonal optimization, nutrition, fitness and stress management with the right mind-body balance. Excessive stress accelerates aging and leads to poor overall health. Symptoms of that include: general achiness, brain fog, irritability, poor focus, cold sweaty hands, chronic headaches, poor quality sleep, exhaustion, frequent urination, lower sex drive and cramping. Managing your stress will dramatically reduce your ‘sickness’ state of health. But how do you manage stress? • Recognize the early symptoms of stress buildup in your body and how it affects your emotions • Learn to avoid life challenges that lead to stress build-up • Learn how to heal stress buildup that has already occurred. For more information and free seminars go to www.vitalogywellness.com.
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Our 20s are considered our peak years for our vitality, and in our late 30s, our hormones of youth gradually start declining. However, there is no reason why we have to accept this and why we cannot make our third, fourth, fifth or even more decades just like our peak years. In order to live that way, we have to stop reliving the mistakes that prevent ageless living, which hamper recovery and rejuvenation. My revolutionary program is a radical departure from “disease care.” I see patients with the ill-effects of poor lifestyle choices leading to chronic diseases like diabetes, obesity, heart disease, in my wellness center every day. However, I also see these same individuals turn their health around remarkably by not accepting a diminished quality of life laden with too many prescription medications with a myriad of side effects, with the guidance and mentoring we provide at Vitalogy Wellness Center. Being overweight is a symptom of diminished health — a sign that there is something going wrong with your body. It is the same diminished wellness that leads to chronic diseases such as heart disease, hypertension, strokes and other diseases. Excess fat does not really cause these diseases, but is a warning sign of bad habits leading to poor health.
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NEW LIFE, new advances in fertility success New Leaders in Fertility and Endocrinology continues to help families grow through successful fertility medical practices, as well as growing its own family of fertility care facilities with the opening of its Dothan office earlier this year. Based in Pensacola and started by reproductive endocrinology and infertility specialist Barry Ripps in 1994, New LIFE now has offices in Mobile, Dothan, Pensacola, Panama City and Tallahassee. “It is our goal to serve patients who before had to travel to larger cities across the region,” said Ripps. The most helpful recommendations for couples that decide they want to start a family is to get healthy, Ripps advises. A balanced diet, regular cardiovascular exercise of at least 30 minutes every other day and normalizing weight are paramount. Large population studies show that the time required to conceive gets longer with increased weight for both men and women. Similarly, if a woman is smoking or exposed to second-hand tobacco smoke, studies show a marked delay in conception. Electronic cigarettes may be less damaging but there is no conclusive data yet. Ripps said advancing age has a greater negative impact on fertility than healthy lifestyles protect it in the younger years. The evidence suggests that a measurable decline in fertility begins at age 27 for women. “So good advice for women 30 to 35 is to give fertility a 6 to 12 month trial. For women 35 and over, don’t even wait — get basic testing completed before the six-month interval,” he said. Technological advances have “revolutionized options for couples struggling with infertility,” said Ripps. If a fertility problem is present, there is usually a specific therapy that can help. One of the areas in which understanding has been advanced is for couples where no diagnosis is known — referred to as unexplained infertility. “Until recent trials helped us counsel patients, management was mostly trial and error. Now it is clear that unexplained infertility is best managed with Assisted Reproductive Technologies, most commonly In Vitro Fertilization, with a three-times higher chance of childbirth than other options,” he said.
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Weigh to Wellness helps achieve success Weigh to Wellness helps patients lose weight and keep it off. The Birmingham clinic opened in June 2014 as a fulfillment of Leslie Ellison’s passion for treating patients in their quest of a healthier lifestyle. “We have a dedicated, experienced staff equipped with the knowledge and tools available to help patients achieve life-changing experiences,” said Ellison, who has more than 18 years of experience in the industry. Dr. Timothy H. Real is board certified in obesity medicine and serves as Medical Director for Weigh to Wellness. “We’re able to recognize many psychological and genetic factors that can cause obesity, then design processes specific to each person for optimized results.” While it is obviously not true in all cases, women generally have a higher percentage of body fat than men. There are many reasons why women have more body fat than men. One is biological. Body fat content is 25 percent for women at normal size compared to 15 percent for men. All other things being equal, such as age and exercise levels, women require fewer calories per pound of body weight daily than do men. Men typically prefer meats which are higher in protein. On the other hand, women tend to gravitate towards food that are rich in carbohydrates. Weigh to Wellness can tailor a program geared toward women and men. Weigh to Wellness offers its own scientifically-designed line of meal replacements and protein supplements which can often simplify the process for some patients. They can use them as healthy snacks or meal replacements. Many of products offered at Weigh to Wellness are kosher, vegetarian and gluten-free. Ellison said they offer nutrition education and discuss the importance of keeping a healthy balance of carbohydrates to protein. They educate patients on food choices by providing helpful handouts with healthy recipes, better snack options, foods to avoid and examples of proper serving sizes. “Weigh to Wellness offers free lifetime maintenance to each patient, so they remain accountable,” said Ellison. “I often tell patients that I can’t think of one thing that I love that I don’t have to maintain.”
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women’s health
Hadassah makes great strides in women’s health and wellbeing by Lee J. Green Hadassah has put its heart in heart health research and care, as well as breakthroughs in the treatment and possible cure of breast cancer, ALS and macular degeneration, to name a few. But above health care for (primarily) women and children in need, Hadassah is about a commitment to Israel and a goal to help promote peace in the Middle East. “I give my money and volunteer for Hadassah because I believe medicine to be one path to peace for the Middle East. Hadassah serves all nationalities, races and religions. We offer our research, our knowledge and medical access to those in need. This strips away the barriers of religious hatred,” said Sherrie Grunfeld, a past president of the Birmingham chapter and a member of the Hadassah Nurses’ Council. “Does your child need medical care for his diabetes? Come to Hadassah. Does your mother have heart problems? Come to Hadassah where your doctor could be a Jew or a Muslim and the hospital is state-of-the-art. You will get the best possible care. This is our way to promote peace in the Middle East,” said Grunfeld. Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America, is a volunteer organization that inspires a passion for and commitment to its partnership with the land and people of Israel. It enhances the health of people worldwide through its support of medical care and research at the Hadassah Medical Organization in Jerusalem. Hadassah empowers its members and supporters, as well as youth in Israel and America, through opportunities for personal growth, education, advocacy and Jewish continuity. After building six hospitals that were given to municipalities across the country, Hadassah established two hospitals of their own — Hadassah Mount Scopus, a community hospital built in 1939, and Hadassah Ein Kerem, a tertiary care facility built in 1961. Ein Kerem is home to the Charlotte R. Bloomberg Mother and Child Care Center and the new impatient facility — the Sarah Wetsman Davidson Hospital Tower, dedicated in 2012 to commemorate Hadassah’s 100th year. “I went to Israel in 2012 to celebrate Hadassah’s 100th anniversary and dedicate the new Sarah Wetsman Davidson Hospital Tower, our gift to the people of Israel. Walking into the atrium of the new hospital was magical. It took my breath away. These state-of-the-art, beautiful facilities are helping so many people,” said Grunfeld. Over the past decade, Hadassah’s leading stem cell researchers have made major breakthroughs regarding transplanted stem cells and their value in treating patients with multiple sclerosis, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and macular degeneration. A Hadassah oncologist recently developed a blood test that reveals it is possible to predict the presence of harmful BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations in otherwise healthy women using a novel technology called gene expression profiling. Having identified BRCA mutations that are specific to women of both Persian origin and in the Ashkenazi Jewish communities, Hadassah has pioneered the testing of these women who have a history of breast cancer in their family. Women with BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations have between a 50 to 80 percent chance of developing the disease. They also have a 25 to 60 percent life risk of developing ovarian cancer. Hadassah also has pioneered women’s heart health research and treatments. An alarming reality is that 500,000 women in the U.S. die of heart disease every year, double the amount of deaths from all types of cancer. One in three women over the age of 20 has some form of cardiovascular disease. But 82 percent of heart disease is preventable. Symptoms for many diseases do not present the same way in men and women, and according to Hadassah, too many research institutions still ignore the role of gender in medical outcomes. Heart disease is the num-
22 Southern Jewish Life • July 2015
women’s health
ber one killer of women, yet only one-third of research subjects are female. Hadassah wants to change that. The Hadassah National Center for Nurses Councils that Grunfeld is also very involved with was founded in 1990 by Nancy Falchuk and Rachel Albert. Its mission is to establish an international partnership with the nursing division of Hadassah Medical Organization; to meet the special educational, social and professional concerns of nurses in the U.S. and Israel, and to enhance and support the nursing profession in both countries. Hadassah is offering free membership for the first year for women who join soon. For more information about the organization, volunteer opportunities and chapters in one’s area, go to www.hadassah.org.
When to screen? When to check up? Touro Infirmary offers women advice While juggling responsibilities of work, family life and other obligations, women might need to be reminded to make time to take care of themselves. Staying on top of regular wellness visits and preventative tests and screenings are vital for healthy women of all ages. Preventive visits and yearly wellness exams are covered by most insurance plans, and are good practice in staying on top of one’s health. Depending on age and any concerns a woman may have, one’s doctor will perform a variety of measurements and screenings. Screening tests, such as blood pressure checks and mammograms, look for diseases before symptoms appear. The screening guidelines below apply to most women. However, a woman should speak with her physician about when and how often to be screened. Pelvic Exams: Every two to three years beginning at age 21, or as your doctor recommends. Blood pressure check: Every year; more often if recommended by your doctor. Cholesterol screening test: Every 5 years beginning at age 45; screening may be done in younger women or more often if recommended. Skin Exam: Skin cancer is the most common form of cancer in the United States. Women age 18 or older should perform skin self-exams monthly, and annually by a doctor. Breast Exam: Clinical breast exams should be performed every three years by a doctor beginning at age 18. Monthly self-exams are also encouraged. Mammogram: Every one to two years beginning at age 40, possibly earlier if one has a strong family history or certain risk factors. Mammography remains the key tool for early detection of breast cancer, which is the best defense in beating the disease. Glucose/Diabetes Screening Test: Every three years beginning at age 45. Screening for Colorectal Cancer: Begin screening at age 50. One’s doctor will recommend which screening tests and frequency are right for them. Osteoporosis: Bone density screening is advised for all women ages 65 and older. Postmenopausal women below age 65 who have osteoporosis risk factors are recommended to get screened sooner. Vaccines: Speak with a doctor about vaccination records. Certain boosters, such as the TDAP, are recommended every 10 years. A woman should receive the flu vaccine annually, and adults over age 65 are encouraged to receive a one-time pneumonia vaccine. Weight: The best way to learn if someone is overweight or obese is to find out their body mass index, a ratio between height and weight. A BMI between 18.5 and 25 indicates normal weight. If a woman is above this threshold, speak with a doctor or nurse about healthy diet and weight loss strategies. A normal BMI reduces risk for chronic conditions, such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease. For more information and education, go to www.touro.com.
July 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 23
women’s health
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24 Southern Jewish Life • July 2015
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St. Vincent’s Health System is where babies come from, and with their new Monogram Maternity program, it’s also where expectant mothers can plan their birth experience. Monogram Maternity offers a wide range of resources for expectant moms, including a Birth Designer, special discounts on fitness and spa services, a free prenatal lactation consultation and Blessed Beginning — a specialty boutique located within the Monogram Maternity suite. The Birth Designer meets one-on-one with the expectant mother to discuss birth wishes that are the best fit for the patient. This includes introducing the expectant mothers to the Birth Experience Room, which offers a wide variety of items and options for mom to use during labor. The Birth Designer and patient communicate closely with the patient’s physician to ensure the mother’s birth wishes are what her OB feels is medically best for mom and baby. As part of the Monogram Maternity program, St. Vincent’s Health System also offers a wide variety of prenatal classes including Understanding Your Birth, Daddy 101, Skills for Labor and Delivery, and more. Madonna Nichols, OB Service Line Director for St. Vincent’s Birmingham said the program was slowly rolled out a year ago and was going through the refinement process until they were ready to launch with the #IDecideHow campaign in March. “Our goal is to create the most memorable, pleasurable birthing experience for expectant mothers, “ said Nichols. “Monogram Maternity is the epitome of person-centered care.” A couple years before implementing the program, research began involving nurses, administrators and other care professionals. They looked at what St. Vincent’s was doing and best practices across the country. “We looked at pre-natal and post-natal,” she said. “What makes this unique and best serving of expectant mothers is that Monogram Maternity is designed by the experienced nurses who are with the expectant mothers.” Nichols said they start working with women usually after 34 weeks from conception. But in September St. Vincent’s Health System plans to start a related program geared toward early pregnancy. “We want to provide them with answers to their questions, from care to financial,” she said. Thus far the response for Monogram Maternity has been very positive. “Expectant mothers are asked ‘what are your dreams for the birthing experience?’ They like it in that it is all geared toward them and what they want out of it. They have it in their head what they want the birthing experience to be like and we put a plan on paper, then put it to practice,” added Nichols.
features Kickstarting life after cancer Bill Aron’s new book profiles survivors making most of “new normal”
In many Southern Jewish communities, Los Angeles photographer Bill Aron is known for his “road trips” through the region in the 1990s, culminating in exhibits coordinated by the then-Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience and the book, “Shalom Y’all.” But for Aron, the 1990s were also a time of great struggle, leading to his new book, “New Beginnings: The Triumphs of 120 Cancer Survivors.” In 1993, at the age of 52, he was diagnosed with prostate cancer. After surgery and 14 months of remission, it came back. “That was worse than the original diagnosis, because that mean it had gone systemic, he said.” He attended a support group, where one of the other participants said “cancer was the best thing that ever happened to me.” Aron was so stunned by that statement that he broke the no-commenting protocol and blurted out, “you have got to be kidding me.” But as he met more and more cancer survivors, he found that they echoed the same sentiment. “They became my teachers in learning to accept my mortality, accept my limitations, but also accept my strengths.” The book is not about the disease, he said, but the individual and psychological stages one goes through when navigating the disease. Aron said after diagnosis and treatment, “all the busy-ness ends” and there is “kind of a silence. You’re left there, and everybody expects things to go back to normal, but they can’t.” After that, one generally accepts that they have a “new normal” from the experience of being diagnosed with a life-threatening illness. “Once you get there, you’re open to a new beginning.” It took him a while to get there. His early-onset prostate cancer came with a very high Gleason score, and had gone beyond the prostate. He found an oncologist in Los Angeles who specialized in prostate cancer and became his first macrobiotic patient. “Sugar and glucose are fuels for cancer” once one is diagnosed, he said. In 2004, he had a large tumor in SHEHECHEYANU his lower abdomen, leading to chemo and TAKES ON A two years of hormone blockage. He finally came off everything in 2006 and “I’ve been WHOLE NEW MEANING WHEN okay.” Aron started the book project YOU HAVE in 2006, working with the Cancer CANCER Support Community in Los Angeles to find survivors willing to discuss their experiences. The result is a book “I wish had existed when I was diagnosed.” He did interviews and portraits with each survivor, and “I left each session with a feeling of incredible closeness to these people.” Recently, as the book came out, he had a reception for those who were profiled, and he hired two of the survivors who had become healthy chefs to cater. While the number 120 has significance in Judaism as the maximum human lifespan, Aron said it was a coincidence that he wound up with 120 profiles — it was mainly that his publisher wanted him to stop so the book could be completed. Among the 120 profiles there are several rabbis. He had already been
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features friendly with three — Ed Feinstein, William Cutter and David Wolpe, whose wife, Eileen, is also a cancer survivor. The cover photo is of two young women who went to Loyola Marymount University and pledged the same sorority, not knowing each other previously. Only after they became friends did they realize that they both were cancer survivors. Though the profiles come from all ethnicities and age groups, Aron considered it a “deeply Jewish project” because when most people came to the “new normal” stage, they decided to do something good with their lives. He quoted Rebecca Gifford, who was diagnosed at age 22 and said life “is about joy, about living our soul’s purpose, and about contributing to the greater good. I live every moment with that in mind.” “That’s the essence of tikkun olam,” Aron said. One of the profiles is of Matthew Zachary, diagnosed at age 21 and later the founder of Stupid Cancer, Inc., which promotes cancer screening awareness among young adults because five-year survival rates for older people were skyrocketing while remaining flat among young people. One profile is of a woman who also survived the Holocaust. Many seek to give back to the “cancer community” and help others the way they were helped. Aron referenced the daily prayer book and its message that “every day is a creation day. Cancer really makes us mindful of that.” “Shehecheyanu takes on a whole new meaning when you have cancer.”
Regional events to draw Jewish singles Weekends planned for Austin, Memphis
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205.989.0053 26 Southern Jewish Life • July 2015
Jewish singles have their pick of two upcoming regional weekends, as The Chosen Weekend returns to Austin on July 17, and the Bluff City Bash debuts in Memphis on Aug. 28. The Chosen Weekend brings together Jewish young adults, ages 2240ish, from across Texas and beyond to provide an opportunity for Jewish young adults to meet each other in a fun, dynamic environment, and connect with other Jews from across the region. After over 250 people attended last year, this year’s organizers expect over 350. The Chosen Weekend is an independent event hosted by an Austin-based committee of community members. Co-chairs of this year’s event are Samantha Tugentman and Leza Abramov. The weekend’s events will all take place at venues throughout downtown Austin. The weekend kicks off with a Shabbat dinner in a hip downtown restaurant, followed by an after party. A Saturday afternoon pool party is followed by a “Party of 8 Dinner,” where participants are matched into groups of eight to meet more people from other cities with similar interests. The Chosen Night Party is the crown jewel of the weekend and features an open bar, DJ, dancing, prizes, and networking. A Sunday morning brunch concludes the weekend. Attendees can pick and choose which events they want to buy tickets to based on their particular interests. More information: chosenweekend.splashthat.com. The Memphis event was aimed toward Jewish singles ages 21 to 39 in Southern communities, but has been opened to New York and Los Angeles “by popular demand.” After a Shabbat dinner of Corky’s barbecue, there will be late-night socializing downtown. On Aug. 29, there is a catered brunch at a South Main Historic Art District gallery, followed by free time to explore Memphis attractions. That evening there is a party at an underground club, and a farewell breakfast on Aug. 30. Registration for the weekend is $50. For more information, visit bluffcitybash.com.
Tougaloo President Beverly Wade Hogan accepts Ernst Borinski’s award from John Bower at the awards dinner
Millsaps recognizes Ernst Borinski at Rabbi Nussbaum Awards event Ernst Borinski, a German Jewish scholar who fled the Nazi regime and wound up teaching at Tougaloo College in Mississippi was recognized posthumously at Millsaps College’s Rabbi Perry Nussbaum Civil Justice Awards Dinner on April 23. The Nussbaum dinner and lecture series honors the former rabbi of Jackson’s Beth Israel Congregation, who was active in the civil rights struggles of the 1960s and was the target of Klan bombings at Beth Israel and at his home. Each year individuals are recognized for their selfless contributions to the civil rights movement in Mississippi and beyond. Last year, the award and lecture series was expanded to honor more contemporary work around civil and social justice issues. After arriving in the United States, Borinski entered the U.S. Army, then completed his doctorate in sociology at the University of Pittsburgh after the war. He arrived at Tougaloo in 1947, one of many Jewish academics who wound up at historically black colleges in the South because of anti-Jewish quotas and prejudice at northern institutions. He was influential in developing Tougaloo’s sociology department, and taught students to uncover injustices and speak out. He also hosted interracial Social Science Forums, which kept him under watch by the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission. Millsaps President Robert Pearigen said Borinski was “an unforgettable human being.” The social science forums were “rare opportunities for critical dialogue” on issues of the day, and for many it was the first opportunity they had to discuss racial issues. Pearigen said Borinski was “exactly what was needed during that time.” Tougaloo President Beverly Wade Hogan, who was a student of Borinski’s, said his legacy “continues to lie in the hearts and minds of anyone he touched throughout the years.” She called Borinski “one of the great champions” of “justice, fairness and equality.” Though Borinski died in 1983, “he still finds a way to bring people together.” Besides Borinski, a group of four former students from Millsaps were recognized at the dinner for their role in organizing demonstrations following the killings of students at Jackson State during protests in 1967 and 1970. Those alumni also gave the Nussbaum lecture on April 24, “The Courage of Their Convictions: Millsaps Students Resist the Status Quo.” They were Rev. Tonny Algood, David Doggett, Jeanne Middleton-Hairston and Kay Sloan, with Dr. T.W. Lewis, Professor Emeritus. The awards and lecture series are underwritten by John Bower, a close friend of Nussbaum’s.
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July 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 27
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28 Southern Jewish Life • July 2015
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Brixx Wood-Fired Oven Pizza by Lee J. Green Brixx Wood-Fired Oven Pizza has built a reputation in the Carolinas, Virginia and Georgia for honing its “craft” — creative wood-fired oven pizza and other Italian specialties, many of which either are kosher-style or can be made kosher-style with vegan cheese, along with having a wide selection of craft beer on tap. In April, Brixx opened its first Alabama location in Hoover’s Patton Creek shopping center. Thus far, the reception has been as warm as the 700-degree wood-fired ovens its pizzas are cooked in. “Our focus is on high-quality food, beverage and excellent service at reasonable price points,” said Brixx Birmingham Operating Partner Justin Allgood. “When people come in, they are surprised by how diverse the menu is and by our extensive craft beer selection.” He said the Brixx founders came up with the idea while on a ski trip to Colorado. They brought the idea back to Charlotte, N.C. and opened the first Brixx location in 1998. Now there are close to 30 locations in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, Indianapolis, and more coming soon in Colorado and Illinois. At the Birmingham area location, 24 craft beers are always on tap. Each location carefully selects its own collection of craft beers including beers from local craft breweries in the area or state. They also have 14 wines by the bottle or the glass. All of the pizzas are 10 inches. Some of the options are more conventional, but others are more unique, including the Mexican Pizza, Sweet Thai Pizza and the Pear and Gorgonzola Pizza. Gluten-free pizzas are also available. Other kosher-style pizzas include Greek, Artichoke, Wood-Roasted Tomato, Wood-Roasted Vegetable, Wild Mushroom and Margherita. Kosher-style appetizers include bruschetta, cheese plate with pita, spinach artichoke dip and Brixx Stixx with Parmesan. Several salads and pasta dishes are kosher-style or can be made so, as well as sandwiches. Meatballs have no pork in them. All of the salad dressings are made in house. “We are happy to customize anything to make it kosher-style. We even have vegan cheese if someone want to have kosher-style meats on their pizza with vegan cheese,” said Allgood. Brixx seats 110 people inside and 50 on the patio. It is open 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Monday through Saturday and 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Sunday. After 10 p.m., Brixx offers buy-one-get-one-free pizzas and appetizers. Happy hour specials are from 3 to 6 p.m. every day.
Continued from page 30
And just when I thought I could stand on my own Oh baby those memories come crashing through And I just can’t go on without you. It’s a love song. Nearly every Air Supply song for 40 years has been. Okay, so the Big G might not take well to the “oh baby.” But doesn’t the song mirror the intent of the cantor? Approaching the Big G in supplication, looking back at recent events, as someone who has strayed and feels empty for it? Admitting to shortcomings, and asking for the chance to come back? If that wasn’t convincing enough, try the second verse. On my own, I’ve tried to make the best of it alone I’ve done everything I can to ease the pain But only you can stop the rain I just can’t live without you, I miss everything about you. <chorus> Who can stop the rain? Who is the one without whom there would be no life? The more you compare the song to the Hineni, the more it fits. Try it yourself. Join the almost-more-than-one people who have been thinking through these lyrics during the Hineni for the past several years. Doug Brook is a writer in Silicon Valley who is a lifelong, devout Air Supply fan. He has met Graham and Russell — the two men who are Air Supply — twice. After this, they probably won’t let there be a third. For past columns, other writings, and more, visit http://brookwrite.com/. For exclusive online content, follow facebook.com/the.beholders.eye.
July 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 29
rear pew mirror • doug brook
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It’s that time of year. Synagogues are mailing about High Holy Day tickets, entries in Yizkor books, and other things that help each year feel shorter than the Mets’ tenure in first place. Therefore, it’s their fault — and not this column’s — that Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur feel so close. In the 1980s, in New York, Crazy Eddie’s would have Christmas sales in August. In the spirit of Christmas sales past, this is a High Holy Day column in July. One of the unique prayers in the Yom Kippur service is the Hineni. Literally, it means “Here I am.” It’s an introductory supplication sung by the cantor, as the representative of everyone. Even that guy who disbanded UAB football. (Who needs to atone more?) It begins “Here I am, deficient in good deeds, trembling in awe…” You get the idea. Lots of praise of the Big G, leading up to a plea for mercy and return while reflecting on mistakes — on moments of straying — during the past year. It’s a lovely prayer, often chanted as the cantor enters from the back of the sanctuary, IT’S CRAZY approaching the ark from among the people. EDDIE’S HIGH But people today don’t always get into even the more grand liturgy. Even those who do HOLY DAYS sometimes don’t really get into what it means. COLUMN IN So, in an age of inclinations to modernize JULY! melodies, services, and the trendy colors for kippot, this column proposes a change. This 12:52 PM proposal is early enough that there’s plenty of time for religious committees around the world to carefully consider how quickly they will reject it outright. Proposition: Replace the Hineni prayer with Air Supply’s 1981 hit song, “Here I Am.” Before going further, a point of clarification. Most of our three readers are probably confusing this with the other Air Supply hit from the same album, “The One That You Love.” That song’s chorus begins “Here I am, the one that you love…” This confuses an absurd number of people. The actual song “Here I Am” merely begins with those three words. The chorus is “Just when I thought I was over you…” which is the song’s subtitle. There’s so much confusion about most prayers, that this confusion makes the song fit right in with them. But if that’s not qualification enough, consider the underlying meaning and intent of the Hineni prayer as you read the lyrics of “Here I Am”: Here I am, Playing with those memories again And just when I thought time had set me free Those thoughts of you keep haunting me. Holding you, A feeling I never outgrew Though each and every part of me has tried Only you can fill that space inside So there’s no sense pretending, My heart, it’s not mending. Just when I thought I was over you continued on previous page
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32 Southern Jewish Life â&#x20AC;˘ July 2015