Southern Jewish Life, New Orleans, Aug/Sept 2023

Page 1

Southern Jewish Life August/Sept. 2023 Volume 33 Issue 7 Southern Jewish Life P.O. Box 130052 Birmingham, AL 35213 Southern Jewish Life 3747 West Esplanade Ave. 3rd Floor Metairie, LA 70002 NEW ORLEANS EDITION INSIDE:
2 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life

Long-time readers have heard that when this publication began over three decades ago, the idea was that it should not devolve into page after page of “they hate us, and there are fewer of us for them to hate.”

And yes, we endeavor to be a celebration of the vibrant Jewish life found in our Southern communities.

But in the last few years, it has been a challenge. We all know that antisemitism has risen nationally, and our region is not immune. The type of story that was an occasional oddity has now become all too frequent.

We’d reported on the occasional swastika or antisemitic slur. But bricks thrown through synagogue windows? And a shooting outside a Jewish school?

And that’s just in this month’s issue.

Now, the Memphis shooting was not an antisemitic act, as it was perpetrated by a member of the Jewish community who had serious issues. That also shows how we must not have a knee-jerk reaction when there is an incident, but wait until facts are known.

When you see a headline about a shooting at a Jewish school, it is only natural to figure there has to be antisemitism at work. We saw immediate reactions flood the Internet, with advocacy groups making assumptions. We can’t do that — credibility is incredibly important when it comes to fighting antisemitism.

While our antennae are finely tuned to the possibility, not everything is antisemitic. I remember warning the mainstream media about that when there was the rash of bomb threats against JCCs in 2017. As it turned out, it wasn’t “Trump’s America” or anti-Zionists-not-antisemites — it was a disturbed teen in Israel, of all places.

Likewise, the lit propane tank at Temple Beth-El in Birmingham last year was assumed to be an antisemitic attack, but police interviews with the suspect

Brunch Saturday - Sunday, 11- 3pm

Tuesday: Taco Tuesday and $5 Margaritas

Wednesday: 50% off botttle wine and $6 Wings

Thursday: Ladies night: $3 off for Sushi, $4 House wine and $5 Mojito

Sunday: Sushi Special $11

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 3 shalom y’all To subscribe, email subscribe@sjlmag.com SJL Online: sjlmag.com Southern Jewish Life is an independent Jewish periodical. Articles and columns do not necessarily reflect the views of any Jewish institutions, agencies or congregations in our region.
Asian-Inspired Cuisine. Locally loved. 2808 7th Avenue South #117 • Birmingham Umamibham.com (205) 201-4337 Umami Birmingham
every day
Happy Hour 3pm - 6pm

Maccabi USA leader praises Birmingham Games

Southern Jewish Life

I have had the honor of attending many Maccabi competitions around the world. From Israel to Australia to South America, Europe and the JCC Maccabi games around the United States and Canada, I have logged many miles seeing how sports can be a vehicle to help build Jewish identity, especially in our young.

showed no evidence of antisemitic intent — he was just a known arsonist.

However, many recent incidents have definitely been antisemitic. Eight incidents in Pensacola? Unheard of. And yet, here we are, with four troubled teens from apparently upscale backgrounds arrested.

them, and kept things from escalating. They knew what law enforcement needed and had them on speed dial. The preparation worked.

I felt honored to come to Birmingham for the first time and fell in love with not just the city but the people. You have taken Southern hospitality to a new level with your kind and caring approach to the JCC Maccabi Games.

PUBLISHER/EDITOR

Lawrence M. Brook editor@sjlmag.com

ASSOCI ATE PUBLISHER/ADVERTISING

Lee J. Green lee@sjlmag.com

The antisemitic Patriot Front has spray-painted numerous abandoned buildings in our area. The Goyim Defense League continues to throw their flyers on front lawns. Antisemites are bold enough to picket synagogues in Georgia. And our Jewish institutions have security measures far beyond what we had even five years ago.

While Pensacola’s Jewish community does not have a full-time security director, the familiarity between the Jewish institutions and local law enforcement helped in making the arrests. Communities around the region have made similar efforts to work with local law enforcement, just in case.

Led by the Sokol and Helds, your hard-working volunteers were wonderful. They partnered with your outstanding staff, led by Betzy Lynch, to make the 2017 JCC Maccabi games a huge hit. I want to take this opportunity as executive director of Maccabi USA to say thank you on behalf of everyone involved.

It is a travesty that our institutions and organizations have to bunker up in the face of these threats, but that is life in 2023. We have a security tax for being able to worship or gather freely.

V.P SALES/MARKETING, NE W ORLEANS

Jeff Pizzo jeff@sjlmag.com

CREATIVE DIRECTOR Ginger Brook ginger@sjlmag.com

SOCIAL/WEB Emily Baldwein connect@sjlmag.com

It seems wild that Jewish communities like Birmingham and New Orleans would need to have a full-time security coordinator, but we do.

I had just returned from the 20th World Maccabiah games in Israel with a U.S. delegation of over 1100, who joined 10,000 Jewish athletes from 80 countries. Back in July the eyes of the entire Jewish world were on Jerusalem and the Maccabiah. This past month with 1000 athletes and coaches from around the world being in Birmingham, you became the focal point. Everyone from the Jewish community and the community at large, including a wonderful police force, are to be commended. These games will go down in history as being a seminal moment for the Jewish community as we build to the future by providing such wonderful Jewish memories.

The collaboration among those coordinators, local Jewish institutions and law enforcement on every level has been highlighted in recent incidents.

We need our non-Jewish neighbors to say it is enough, this hatred can not continue. We need to remain vigilant. And recent events have demonstrated the value of advance planning, and shown that we need to thank our security coordinators and law enforcement officials.

PHOTOGRAPHER- AT-LARGE Rabbi Barr y C. Altmark deepsouthrabbi.com

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

Rivka Epstein, Louis Crawford, Tally Werthan, Stuart Derroff, Belle Freitag, Ted Gelber, E. Walter Katz, Doug Brook brookwrite.com

On Charlottesville

That collaboration in Memphis kept the school situation there from being tragic. The school had security procedures, followed

Editor’s Note: This reaction to the events in Charlottesville, written by Jeremy Newman, Master of the Alpha Epsilon Pi Theta Colony at Auburn University, was shared by AEPi National, which called it “very eloquent” and praised “our brothers at AEPi Theta Colony at Auburn University and… the leadership they display on their campus.”

supremacists would like to see pushed back into a corner and made to feel lesser. We stand with and pray for the family of Heather Heyer, who was there standing up to the face of this hate.

The Beauty and Importance of Jewish Summer Camp

I have long been a fan of Jewish summer camp, having attended Camp Ramah in Wisconsin, for five summers during my teenage years. Ramah Wisconsin, the oldest camp in the global Ramah system, each summer provided me with 8 weeks of lifetime friends, fun sports, newly-found experiences (such as drama, where I still don’t understand how one of the tallest kids in camp was cast as a Munchkin in the Hebrew-spoken “Wizard of Oz”), and most importantly a deep love for Judaism and the State of Israel.

BIRMINGHAM OFFICE

P.O. Box 130052, Birmingham, AL 35213 2179 Highland Ave., Birmingham, AL 35205 205/870.7889

NEW ORLEANS OFFICE

We recognize the essence of the American narrative as a two-century old struggle to rid ourselves of such corners, and allow those in them the seat at the table that they so deserve. It is the struggle to fulfill the promise of the Declaration of Independence, that “all men are created equal… endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights.” We know our work is far from finished, but we know we will not move backwards.

3747 West Esplanade, 3rd Floor Metairie, LA 70002 504/249-6875 TOLL-FREE 888/613.YALL(9255)

ADVERTISING

Advertising inquiries to 205/870.7889 for Lee Green, lee@sjlmag.com Jeff Pizzo, jeff@sjlmag.com

White supremacy has been a cancer on our country since its beginning, threatening its hopes, its values, and its better angels. The events that took place in Charlottesville represented the worst of this nation. Those who marched onto the streets with tiki torches and swastikas did so to provoke violence and fear. Those who marched onto the streets did so to profess an ideology that harkens back to a bleaker, more wretched time in our history. A time when men and women of many creeds, races, and religions were far from equal and far from safe in our own borders. A time where Americans lived under a constant cloud of racism, anti-Semitism and pervasive hate. The events that took place in Charlottesville served as a reminder of how painfully relevant these issues are today.

Growing up in a relatively small Wisconsin town, most of my Jewish religious life came from my grandparents and parents who instilled in me a life-long passion for my Jewish faith; but it was my Ramah experience each summer which cemented it!

Fast forward 50 years, my wife Susan and I had the tremendous opportunity to relive my Ramah childhood when we welcomed seven Ukrainian youth to the United States in early July. These youth, who are spending a month at Camp Ramah Sports Academy in northern California, arrived in the U.S. as part of a partnership between Maccabi USA (where I serve as a national vice president and co-chair the Ukraine Committee) and the National Ramah organization. For the seven youth, summer camp in the U.S. provides them with a much-needed respite from the horrific war continuing in their country.

Auburn’s Alpha Epsilon Pi stands with the Jewish community of Charlottesville, and with the Jewish people around the country and around the world. We also stand with the minorities who are targeted by the hate that was on display in Charlottesville. We stand with the minorities of whom these white

Susan and I recently spent Shabbat with the Ukrainian youth at the California Ramah camp

When men and women, fully armed, take to the streets in droves with swastikas and other symbols of hate, it is a reminder of how relevant the issues of racism and anti-Semitism are today. It is a wake-up call to the work that needs to be done to ensure a better, more welcoming country. But it should not come without a reflection on how far we’ve come.

and it reinforced why Jewish summer camp is more important than ever. During the course of 24 hours, we welcomed the Shabbat Bride in our all-whites, enthusiastically sang and danced with the campers, spent Shabbat morning and afternoon praying, studying and recreating, ordered our meals in Hebrew, and capped it off with a memorable candlelight Havdallah service on the Pacific Ocean beach, once again singing and dancing as Shavuah Tov (“A good new week”) began. And all of the activities delivered in front of a large Israeli flag, reinforcing our love for the Jewish state (despite the political debate Israelis are currently experiencing — and perhaps best exemplifying why Israel is truly a liberal democracy in which we should all take pride).

Media kit, rates available upon request

SUBSCRIPTIONS

It has always been our goal to provide a large-community quality publication to all communities of the South. To that end, our commitment includes mailing to every Jewish household in the region (AL, LA, MS, NW FL), without a subscription fee

Jewish summer camp, both in our region and nationally, deserves to be supported, given its absolute beauty and importance. At a time when we rightfully worry about the connections between Judaism and Israel and our youth, including my own children, there is no better opportunity to create and strengthen this appreciation and love than by parents sending their children to the wonderful Jewish summer camps we have in our area! It is certainly one of the best investments any of us can make in ensuring our Jewish love and pride continues L’dor V’dor: from Generation to Generation!

America was born a slave nation. A century into our history we engaged in a war in part to ensure we would not continue as one. We found ourselves confronted by the issue of civil rights, and embarked on a mission to ensure the fair treatment of all peoples no matter their skin color. Although we’ve made great strides, it is a mission we’re still grappling with today.

America was also born an immigrant country. As early as the pilgrims, many groups and families found in the country the opportunity to plant stakes, chase their future, and be themselves. Few were met with open

Arnie D. Fielkow is past CEO of the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans.

Outside the area, subscriptions are $25/year, $40/two years. Subscribe via sjlmag.com, call 205/870.7889 or mail payment to the address above.

Copyright 2022. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in whole or part without written permission from the publisher. Views expressed in SJL are those of the respective contributors and are not necessarily shared by the magazine or its staff. SJL makes no claims as to the Kashrut of its advertisers, and retains the right to refuse any advertisement.

Documenting this community, a community we are members of and active within, is our passion. We love what we do, and who we do it for.

4 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life
January 2021
MESSAGES
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
August/Sept. 2023 commentary

agenda

interesting bits & can’t miss events

Jewish Community Day School gains accreditation from ISAS

Members of the New Orleans Section of the National Council of Jewish Women did a special tour of “Yet She is Advancing: New Orleans women and the right to vote, 1878-1970” and “American Democracy: A Great Leap of Faith” at the Historic New Orleans Collection on Aug. 6. Orleans-area ISAS heads. Membership in ISAS both recognizes how far we have come as a school and gains us access to wonderful further opportunities for growth.”

On June 6, Jewish Community Day School of Greater New Orleans was awarded accreditation by the Independent Schools Association of the Southwest. JCDS is only the second school in the New Orleans area to earn ISAS accreditation in the last 25 years.

Upon the recommendation of the ISAS Elementary Commission, the assembled heads of school admitted JCDS by unanimous vote at their annual meeting at the La Posada Hotel in Santa Fe, N.M.

According to the school, “This was the culmination of a three-year process that included rigorous documentation of adherence to standards, a detailed self study, and an accreditation visit by a committee of educators from ISAS schools and ISAS officials.”

With the admittance of the Day School and one other school, the association now has 96 members in its six-state region. There are now 17 schools in Louisiana, with 12 of them in the New Orleans area. JCDS is the fifth Jewish Day School to be admitted.

“I am incredibly proud of the hard work of our faculty, our board, and our community that brought us to this point in our school’s history,” said JCDS Oscar J. Tolmas Head of School Brad Philipson.

Prior to joining JCDS in 2019, Philipson had worked in ISAS schools for almost his entire career, including positions in New Orleans, Oklahoma, and Texas, and was familiar with what the school would be taking on when they began this process.

“The support our school has received from the Jewish community of New Orleans since our founding in 1996 is inspiring. I’m also very grateful to the support we’ve received from both current and former New

On the Cover Fort Walton Beach congregation holds community celebration

Four decades after gathering to establish a Jewish congregation in Fort Walton Beach, several of Beth Shalom’s initial members took part in a ribbon cutting marking 38 years of service to the community.

On July 19, congregants were joined by local officials and the Ambassadors of the Greater Fort Walton Beach Chamber of Commerce. The mayors of Fort Walton Beach, Shalimar and Cinco Bayou also took part.

“We were not just celebrating for ourselves but also for the community at large” Beth Shalom Vice President Gerald Gross said, adding that it was an opportunity for people in the general community to come in and “better understand their Jewish friends.”

As Judge Erwin Fleet cut the ribbon outside the building, he was joined by fellow charter members Cheryl Elul, Jo Fleet, Linda and Art Lester, and Marsha and David Kaplan.

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 5

A survivor of Auschwitz who travels the country speaking about resilience, tolerance and forgiveness will be in Louisiana next month.

Esther Basch, known as “The Honey Girl of Auschwitz,” says that while she can’t forget what happened to her, she can forgive, because holding a grudge only damages herself.

Basch will speak at the Jefferson Performing Arts Center in Metairie on Sept. 11 at 7 p.m., through Chabad in Metairie.

She will also speak at the BREC Jefferson Highway Park ballroom on Sept. 12 at 6 p.m., through Chabad of Baton Rouge.

Basch was an only child, the daughter of a rabbi in Czechoslovakia, though the town where she grew up was in Hungary when her mother was born — and is now Vinograd, Ukraine.

In 1944, the Germans arrived and forced her family to move to a small area, a Jewish ghetto, where they were starved. Six weeks later, she was forced onto a cattle car to Auschwitz, arriving there on her 16th birthday. By the time she arrived, half of the people in her cattle car were already dead from the five-day journey.

She was selected in one direction, her parents in another — and she never saw them again. She crossed paths with Josef Mengele a few times but was never selected for his medical experiments, instead she was forced to work at an ammunition factory.

In April 1945, she was part of a death march to the Salzwedel concentration camp, where she was liberated by American soldiers three days after arrival.

She received the nickname “honey girl” during liberation. In a nearby town she was offered some honey, but the sudden rush of sugar after a year of starvation was a shock to her system, putting her in the hospital.

She was sent to Prague and Budapest, with the goal being to go to Palestine, led by a 21-year-old named Joe. But they wound up in a displaced persons camp in Germany for six months, where she and Joe married. They eventually went to France to board a ship to Palestine, but were caught in the British blockade and detained in Cyprus.

In late 1946 they were admitted to Palestine, and Joe fought in the War of Independence. They soon moved to Canada, then Brooklyn, having four children.

In 2007, daughter Rachel tracked down Max Lieber, one of Basch’s liberators, who traveled to Phoenix from New Mexico for a reunion. That reunion inspired her to tell her story.

A documentary, “Honey Girl: A Journey of Forgiveness” Is in the works.

In addition to her Louisiana appearances, she was scheduled to speak on Aug. 21 at Chabad in Atlanta, and at the FoCAL Center in Cumming, Ga., on Aug. 23.

In Metairie, tickets are $15 through Sept. 6, higher after. Preferred seating is $32, and student tickets have been subsidized to $5. VIP sponsors are $180 for one person, $250 for a couple, and includes preferred seating and a 6 p.m. meet and greet.

Tickets for Baton Rouge are $20 before Aug. 20, $28 after. Student tickets are $15. Preferred seating is $35. VIP sponsorships are $180, which includes two tickets and a 5 p.m. meet and greet with Basch.

6 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life agenda
MACHINE & CUTTING TOOLS Bringing The World Of Machine And Cutting Tool Technology To You 1-800-462-9519 My Real Estate Goals: Open Lines of Communication Consistently Showing Respect to Clients and Realtors Alike Bringing Decades of Experience with a Creative Energy to the Table and Birmingham Boston Terrier Rescue www.bhambtr.org Donna Farmer 205-266-4625 tomatoe98@gmail.com
“Honey Girl of Auschwitz” bringing message of resilience

JCRS says time to think about Chanukah

It may still be summer, but the application deadline is approaching for the Jewish Children’s Regional Service Oscar J. Tolmas Chanukah Gift Program.

The program distributes packages throughout a seven-state region of Chanukah gifts to Jewish children whose families may be facing financial challenges or exceptional circumstances, with over 200 children served each year. Each gift package contains at least eight age and interest specific gifts, one for each night. The program also sends gifts to Jewish special needs adults and institutionalized adults.

Applications are available at jcrs.org through Sept. 15. Families must live in the JCRS service region of Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee or Texas, and have at least one Jewish parent. The guideline is a family annual adjusted gross income of under $75,000, or other extraordinary circumstances.

The wrap-a-thon, where volunteers spend the day wrapping well over 1,000 gifts, is scheduled for Oct. 15 at Gates of Prayer in Metairie.

MSJE holds program on Leo Frank

After 110 years, the Leo Frank case still resonates.

The Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience will host a program on the lynching of a Jewish Southerner, Sept. 7 at 6 p.m. The free talk, with author Steve Oney, will be in person, with a livestream option available.

Oney is author of “And the Dead Shall Rise: The Murder of Mary Phagan and the Lynching of Leo Frank,” and will discuss why the story was important in 1913, and why it is still being discussed today.

In 1913, 13-year-old Mary Phagan was found brutally murdered in the basement of the Atlanta pencil factory where she worked. The factory manager, a college-educated Jew named Leo Frank, was arrested, tried, and convicted in a trial that seized national headlines. When the governor commuted his death sentence, Frank was kidnapped and lynched by a group of prominent local citizens.

Fallout from the trial and the lynching was one of the factors leading to the establishment of the Anti-Defamation League.

Alabama AEPi honored

At the Alpha Epsilon Pi 110th international convention, held Aug. 9 to 13 in New Orleans, the University of Alabama’s chapter received the Outstanding Chapter Progress award.

To the Families of New Orleans

Our decision to join the professionals at Lake Lawn Metairie allows us to continue our mission to provide families the highest caliber of care in the most beautiful of surroundings. Lake Lawn Metairie proudly serves all congregations and all local cemeteries. Whether planning in advance or at the time of need, we’re dedicated to serving families with professionalism, compassion and attention to detail that is second to none.

Sincerely,

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 7 agenda
A commitment to care. • A Dignity Memorial® Provider 504-486-6331 | LakeLawnMetairie.com

Jewish Family Service of Greater New Orleans will convene its next Girl Power support group from Sept. 13 to Nov. 1. The eight sessions will be on Wednesdays from 4 to 6 p.m. and are for girls ages 9 to 12. Through activities and group discussions, they will improve self-esteem, build confidence, develop social skills, and learn coping skills for stress management. Registration for the eight sessions is $40.

The Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans announced that its 110th annual meeting will take place on Sept. 7 at 7 p.m., at the Uptown Jewish Community Center.

Shir Chadash in Metairie will hold a Mensches and Merriment evening on Nov. 5 at 6 p.m., a gala and dinner honoring Fran and Barry Ivker, Rochelle Sackett, Diane and Mark Schleifstein, Janice and Louis Stern, and Miriam and Bruce Waltzer. The Topcats will be the featured entertainment. Tickets are $180, $72 for ages 36 and younger. Numerous donor levels are available.

Jewish Family Service of Greater New Orleans will hold its Caregiver Support Group on six Mondays from Sept. 11 to Oct. 23, except on Sept. 25. The 4 p.m. group will be for primary caregivers of aging loved ones and/or loved ones with disabilities. The group is a confidential space for sharing, as well as educational resources. Registration is $40 for the six sessions.

Chabad Grads at Tulane will host a mixer with the Jewish Legal Society and Jewish Medical Students Organization, for graduate students and recent graduates, Sept. 7 at 8:30 p.m. at Balcony Bar.

The New Orleans Section of the National Council of Jewish Women announced that Anne Levy will receive the 2023 Hannah G. Solomon Award. The luncheon will be on Oct. 16 at the Pavilion of the Two Sisters in City Park.

Moishe House New Orleans will host “Barbie and Judaism,” Sept. 9 from 2 to 5 p.m. There will be a “Barbie” watch party, followed by a guided discussion of parallels with the principles of Judaism.

Nancy Pesses of Challah Creations will give a round challah making workshop in preparation for Rosh Hashanah, at the Uptown Jewish Community Center in New Orleans. Workshops are Sept. 12 at 6:30 p.m. or Sept. 13 at 4 p.m.

TRIBE at Gates of Prayer in Metairie, JNOLA and Young Adults of Shir Chadash are hosting a pre-Rosh Hashanah “Strike Out Your Sins” bowling event, Sept. 10 from 5 to 7 p.m. at AMF All Star Lanes. The event is open to Jewish young adults, ages 21 to 39.

The next Morris Bart Sr. lecture at the Uptown Jewish Community Center in New Orleans will be on Sept. 11 at 11:45 a.m. Joshua Yukich and Tory Taylor will lead “Beyond Covid-19, Addressing the HIV and Malaria Pandemics: Our Experiences Working in Global Health.” Yukich, an associate professor at the Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, has been working for 20 years to support malaria and other disease prevention and elimination strategies for countries throughout Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and the Americas. Taylor, technical director of the United States Agency for International Development global Data for Impact project at the University of North Carolina, has worked for more than 20 years with USAID and other global health programs to improve the success and reach of HIV treatment and prevention as well as other global public health programming. They will share their experiences working at the forefront of global health. A kosher lunch is available with reservation by Sept. 7. Free to members, $10 for non-members.

The Touro Synagogue Choir will highlight Selichot services at Touro, Sept. 9 at 8 p.m., with a darkened sanctuary and meditative music.

8 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life agenda continued on page 17 815 Focis Street Metairie, LA 70005 504.837.6400 flowers@federicosflorist.com Mon-Fri:7am-1pm Sat:7am-Noon
FAMILY FLORIST Larry Federico, Owner/President Kenny Thone, Co-Owner/Vice President Make any day a special day with a flower arrangement and let that special someone know that they are loved.
Federico’s

Four teens arrested after rash of antisemitic vandalism in Pensacola

After a two-week antisemitic vandalism spree that hit eight sites in Pensacola, including two Jewish institutions, four teens have been arrested by Pensacola police.

The arrests were announced during the afternoon of Aug. 4. Seventeen-year-old Waylon Fowler, 15-year-old Wyatt Fowler, 16-year-old Nicholas Ferry, and 18-year-old Kessler Ferry have been charged with numerous crimes in connection with the eight incidents. The Ferrys are brothers, it is unclear at press time if the Fowlers are related.

Most of the incidents were antisemitic graffiti, but there was also the July 17 incident where a swastika-laden brick was thrown through the kitchen window of Chabad of Pensacola, and the July 28 attack on Temple Beth El, as two bricks were thrown through a bathroom window.

Rabbi Mendel Danow of Chabad of Pensacola said that Police Chief Eric Randall reached out to him to let him know about the arrests. “We are very grateful to the law enforcement for working so hard on this case and G-D willing bring these hate crimes to an end,” he said.

This past week, the community’s rabbis met with Mayor D.C. Reeves to discuss the rash of hate crimes.

After the arrest, Reeves said “Awesome investigative work by our men and women at Pensacola Police Department that clearly delivers an important message: if you conduct cowardly acts of hate in this city in an attempt to hurt or intimidate, we will find you and bring you to justice.”

“The extra hard work of investigators and many others in the Pensacola Police Department paid off today,” Pensacola Police Chief Eric Randall said. “We hope that these arrests can bring comfort and closure not only to those in our Jewish community, but to all citizens of this great city.”

In solving the case, Pensacola Police Officer Mike Wood said “we’ve had help from various sources.”

Though three of the four suspects are under the age of 18, all are being charged as adults. Waylon Fowler is charged with seven counts of felony criminal mischief, enhanced to a hate crime; one count of misdemeanor criminal mischief; one count of felony trespassing in a construction zone.

Wyatt Fowler is charged with seven counts of felony criminal mischief, enhanced to a hate crime; one count of misdemeanor criminal mischief; one count of felony trespassing in a construction zone.

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 9 community Buy first mortgage liens secured by real estate and earn 12% NOLA Hard Money is the largest private mortgage lender for investment property in New Orleans. We are locally owned and operated, with affiliated title and servicing operations. Our loans are conservatively originated at no more than 65% Loan To Value and earn 12% in annual interest payments. Investment properties only, and escrows for taxes and insurance are mandatory. Title insurance included as well. To learn more, please contact us: info@nolahardmoney.com 504-264-6515 2325 Manhattan Blvd, Harvey, LA 70058 Don’t let heartburn spoil your plans. If left untreated, the digestive pain you feel now could lead to other chronic health conditions in the future. Schedule a no-cost preventative health screening today. Take control of your health. Call 504-224-4797 or scan to learn more.
Courtesy Escambia County Jail Kessler Ferry The Pensacola Liberation Center was vandalized on Aug. 3.

Nicholas Ferry is charged with four counts of felony criminal mischief, enhanced to hate crimes; one count of felony trespassing in a construction zone.

Kessler Ferry faces one count of felony criminal mischief, enhanced to a hate crime.

The parents of the Ferry brothers are family law attorneys in Pensacola.

A week after a brick with antisemitic messages scrawled on it was hurled through a kitchen window at Chabad of Pensacola, two bricks with similar messages were discovered in a bathroom at Pensacola’s Temple Beth El on July 28.

Two window panes were broken where the bricks had apparently been thrown. It is not known when the attack took place, as that bathroom is a lesser-used space in the building.

The congregation issued a statement, saying they are working with law enforcement to ensure safety.

“Temple Beth El appreciates the support and concern of the greater Pensacola community,” the statement said. “We are committed to working with our neighbors of all faiths and backgrounds to build an ever more tolerant and welcoming community.”

That afternoon, the congregation had a tour of “The Bias Inside Us,” an exhibit at the Pensacola Mess Hall that details the science and history of bias, followed by a Shabbat service and covered dish dinner.

Beth El Rabbi Joel Fleekop said the exhibit was “intended to help us recognize some unseen biases, to strive to be ever more just and fair people. That is what we must continue to do.”

At the Shabbat evening service, Fleekop used the theme of Shabbat Nachamu, the Shabbat of comfort that follows the commemoration of the tragedies of Tisha B’Av. “We are in need of comfort, but we are also able to find that comfort, to find comfort by being here together in community, by knowing that we are here for one another, that we stand determined.”

He also said that comfort can be found in the concern of neighbors. As he was entering the sanctuary before services, he got a text of

10 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life community
Catering Our food. Your Venue. Celebrate and have your event with us! English Tea Room and Eatery 734 East Rutland St (In Historic Downtown Covington) 985-898-3988 englishtearoom.com Experience the flavors of over 200 teas Full Service Breakfast, Lunch and High Tea Monday-Saturday 10am-5pm We Ship Teas Nationwide
Brick thrown into Chabad of Pensacola

solidarity from Father Joseph Callipare. “The words of Father Joe are not alone, there are others from across our faith communities and other backgrounds that have reached out.”

Fleekop also said there is comfort in working toward the future. As his phone was blowing up with texts and messages during the afternoon, he set it aside for a b’nai mitzvah lesson for Isaac and Lillian Haims, who will have their celebration next weekend. “The urgency to respond to an act of hate had to be set aside to focus on the future, to focus on young people who are preparing to affirm their commitment to Judaism.”

He said that the physical damage to the building will be repaired quickly. “What matters most is that this not deter us in our commitment to our Jewish community and our Jewish values,” and in being a welcoming congregation.

Beth El, which is Reform, is the oldest Jewish congregation in Florida, and is about a mile from Chabad. The building had an extensive renovation in 2016.

In less than two hours, one article on Yahoo News about the incident had over 140 comments, a large proportion of them antisemitic.

Danow said the brick from the July 17 attack on Chabad would be used in a prominent place in their new facility, plans for which have now been accelerated. The campaign to fund the new building includes the opportunity to “buy a brick” for $54.

About 100 community members attended a “Light Up Pensacola” Shabbat of Light at Chabad on July 21.

In addition to the Beth El and Chabad attacks, there were swastikas and white power messages were painted on East Hill Animal Hospital, about halfway between Chabad and Beth El. Similar graffiti was found at the old Amtrak station.

There was also antisemitic graffiti at the end of a dead-end street by the I-110 off ramp near Gregory Street. On July 30, antisemitic graffiti was found on a building on South Palafox.

On Aug. 2, members of the Al-Islam Dawah Center found antisemitic graffiti on the door to their facility.

Numerous swastikas were also painted on the Pensacola Liberation Center on Aug. 3.

The center posted that “this disgusting, fascist vandalism campaign is an assault on all Jewish, Black, Latino, Asian, and LGBTQ people. It is an assault on all working class people of Pensacola. We will not be intimidated and we will not allow these fascists and nazis to continue their harassment campaign in our community.”

The PLC held a Night Our for Safety and Liberation on Aug. 4, to clean up the graffiti.

On March 4, the PSL’s International Women’s Day event was targeted by teens holding a Confederate flag and doing Nazi salutes. According to the PSL, “They repeatedly shouted racist and antisemitic slurs while attempting to physically intimidate attendees and unsuccessfully attempted to force their way onto our microphone. While carrying the Florida state flag they shouted “white power” while doing the Nazi salute. All but one wore a face mask in a cowardly attempt to conceal their identities.”

There has been speculation that the masked teens are the same ones who did this recent vandalism spree, but that has not been confirmed.

There was also a report in the Pensacola News Journal of an antisemitic incident at the Pensacola Navy Lodge on Aug. 3, but no details were available.

According to Pensacola Police, additional arrests are possible.

Just before Shabbat following the arrests, Danow told WEAR-TV that there would be an extra L’Chaim on Shabbat, “for the prosperity and the peace in the Jewish community and entire Pensacola community.

“How is it that we have four teens in Pensacola where this is their pasttime? They find this as entertainment when they’re hurting so many people.”

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 11 community
NOLA Detox and Recovery Center is a comprehensive addiction treatment program offering residential and outpatient care. Call 504-446-1111 for more information or to claim your recovery date.
Chris Copeland and Dan Forman, Co-Founders
www.noladetox.com EXPERIENCE our learn about our VISITNATCHEZ @ FOLLOW US “The temple, built in 1905, houses the oldest Jewish congregation in Mississippi. Its stained glass windows and ark of Italian marble make this synagogue one of the loveliest and most historic in the region.” www.natcheztemple.com Culture History plan your TRIP TODAY at visitnatchez.org
Located in New Orleans

Try Our Same Day Delivery Service!

community

Former student charged in shooting outside Memphis Jewish school

Bowman shot by police after incident, father had been killed by police 20 years ago

On Aug. 2, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation filed several charges against Joel Alejandro Bowman, 33, who had tried to enter the Margolin Hebrew Academy-Feinstone Yeshiva of the South in Memphis on July 31, but after being refused entry, fired shots outside the building and was wounded in a confrontation with police an hour later.

Bowman, a former student and member of the local Jewish community, was charged with one count each of Carrying Weapons on School Property, Reckless Endangerment, Criminal Attempted Second-Degree Murder, Possessing a Firearm During the Commission or Attempt to Commit a Dangerous Felony, and Assault Against a First Responder.

Bowman was taken to Regional One Hospital in critical condition, and was still in the ICU as of Aug. 8. According to court records, bond was set at $750,000 on Aug. 4 after a video arraignment. A court date was set for Aug. 10, then continued to Aug. 24 as Bowman was still in the hospital. Mitchell Wood is listed as lead attorney.

Judge Karen Massey of the Shelby County Criminial Court scheduled a mental evaluation of Bowman for Sept. 11.

Classes for the year were not to begin at Margolin until Aug. 17, but staff and contractors were at the school when Bowman arrived. According to the Memphis Police Department, a call was received at 12:20 p.m. that a man with a handgun was outside the school.

According to a court affidavit, after Bowman could not get past the school’s security measures, he spoke with a contractor from A to Z Construction Services in the parking lot, then fired two shots at him, but did not hit him. He fired another shot while heading to his truck, and a fourth shot as he was leaving the parking lot before police arrived.

He drove a maroon Ram pickup truck with California plates, and the school was able to provide a photo of Bowman and information about the truck. Other schools in the area did lockdowns as police looked for the vehicle.

Soon, there was a sighting in Bartlett, and officers located the suspect. They did a traffic stop at 1:40 p.m., during which the suspect exited the vehicle with his gun reportedly pointed at one of the officers. That officer fired his duty weapon, critically injuring Bowman in the chest.

Local authorities praised the security procedures in place at the school, saying they prevented a larger tragedy and led to Bowman being apprehended quickly.

“That school had a great safety process and procedure in place, and avoided anyone being harmed or injured” Memphis Assistant Police Chief Don Crowe said.

Michael Masters, national director of Secure Communities Network,

12 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life
Caught on security footage: Joel Bowman attempts to enter Margolin Hebrew Academy.
HIGH AVAILABILITY Same Day Delivery is available 7 days a week. FAST Orders placed by 6pm will be delivered on the same day. FLEXIBLE We can deliver to your home or o ce. CONVENIENT No more carrying large heavy bags! We do all the heavy lifting for you. FREE DELIVERY On Same Day Delivery orders over $49.

which consults with Jewish communities across the country on security issues, said the outcome in Memphis “was not luck or an accident, but because of hard work between key partners,” including the Memphis Jewish Community Partnership, Memphis Police, Margolin and SCN.

Masters had stated that Bowman’s targeting of the school was personal in nature.

Members of the community who know Bowman said he has been dealing with mental illness for many years, and it has been an issue in his family, including an incident 20 years ago where Memphis Police killed his father.

WREG-TV quoted Brittney Eshelman-Worch, who also attended the school. “Genuinely to the core, I don’t think he would ever intentionally hurt someone,” she said. “He has struggled with mental health for a number of years.”

Echoes of 20 years ago

According to court filings, on May 14, 2003, Susan Bowman called 911 to report that her husband, Anthony, was “acting erratically and appeared to be emotionally distraught,” had left home and that he was taking medication for bipolar disorder.

When Anthony Bowman, his wife and police returned to the home, Anthony Bowman threatened to kill himself and held a gun to his head, then ran outside with the gun pointed to his head, at which point the police shot him multiple times, killing him. He was 44.

In a 2004 suit against the city, Susan Bowman stated that Anthony Bowman was not a threat to anyone else, and that she and their son, Joel, were “within the ‘zone of danger’ when Dr. Bowman was killed” and saw everything.

A Facebook post on Joel Bowman’s page just before noon on July 31 read “Gots time on my hands, ‘Home’ Court Visit.”

Six days earlier, he posted “Every night for the last 20 years I’ve gone to sleep & been confronted with “The Memory” of my Fathers death. It’s not a “Memory”, it’s a Damn 4K UHD “Fully immersive” experience.”

He also recently posted about how his grandfather had committed suicide, making his grandmother “bed-bound with sorrow” until she died of cancer, and how his grandfather’s actions “killed my father” and tried to get him as well.

Bowman had been living in Stanton, about 40 miles northeast of the school, and runs Dancyville Farms. He had posted on July 24 that he soon would be offering produce, fruit, fresh cut flowers and honey, and referenced a “before” drone video of the property he posted on YouTube five years ago.

On July 29 he posted a photo of his father’s grave and wrote about a “therapy breakthrough.” That same day, he also posted about a visit to a gun store near his farm, saying he had contacted the Sheriff’s office about a confrontation with someone in a Ram truck. He had already owned a gun prior to that visit.

The Jewish Federations of North America said they are “relieved that Margolin Academy’s ‘great safety procedure and process’ helped keep it safe during this terrifying attempted shooting. We are grateful to law enforcement, Secure Communities Network and the Jewish Community Partnership of Memphis for their quick response.”

They added that it is also a “stark example” of the importance of the Nonprofit Security Grant Program, and of #LiveSecure, which ensures every Jewish community has a security initiative to train schools, synagogues and community centers on how to stay safe.

Toni Williams, Superintendent of Memphis-Shelby County Schools, said “The entire MSCS family wraps its arms around the Margolin Hebrew Academy family. Your alertness amidst the unimaginable was heroic. We stand united in combating gun violence and keeping our students and staff safe.”

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 13 community

The power of summer camp — and Southern Jewish communities

When the lights went out at Jacobs Camp for an extended time, the massive impromptu road trip began

One of the unheralded qualities necessary in Southern Jewish communities is the ability to pivot — but Jewish interconnectedness around the region often makes it easier.

That was evident for the Henry S. Jacobs Camp in Mississippi, which in the past has dealt with challenges including Covid, and been a place of refuge for those evacuating from the paths of hurricanes. This June, it was the camp that wound up needing a place of refuge, with a full complement of first session campers.

A major thunderstorm hit the Utica area early in the morning on June 16. While there was no significant damage to the camp, the power was knocked out.

Camp Director Anna Herman said they planned for the outage by renting emergency lights, held a Glow Stick party at breakfast and served pizza for Shabbat dinner. Aside from that, they tried to have a normal camp Friday, despite the heat and the lack of electricity.

As it became apparent that the damage to the electrical infrastructure in the area was extensive, plans began to move everyone to Jackson for Saturday if the power was still out. Jackson itself was dealing with widespread outages, including at Beth Israel, which wound up being out for almost a week. Beth Israel Rabbi Joseph Rosen, though, was spending the week at Jacobs Camp.

Abram Orlansky, a camper parent and Camp Committee member, volunteers as an indoor soccer coach at the Jackson YMCA. He contacted the YMCA director, and on Saturday the camp had arranged for several buses,

and the Flowood and Reservoir YMCA locations welcomed the campers with air-conditioned space, as well as plenty of floor space for sleeping bags. With assistance from the local Jewish community, “our staff magically re-created the camp Shabbat experience for our campers with a variety of Shabboptionals and a special sno-cone treat,” Herman said, and the

14 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life community
Henry S. Jacobs Camp Director Anna Herman helps campers board the buses on the last-minute HSJ Magical Mystery Tour

campers also enjoyed skating and bowling excursions.

But the power wasn’t coming on in Utica any time soon, and the camp leadership knew they needed to find a place with beds and showers.

Isaac Nuell, Union for Reform Judaism associate director for strategic initiatives, and Melissa Frey, managing director of URJ Camps and Immersives, researched options, finding that the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Baton Rouge had enough space for the entire camp.

Linda Posner of Baton Rouge, immediate past Camp Committee chair, said “much of the city was in Omaha for the College World Series, but our bench is deep, and we knew we could do whatever needed to be done.”

With the power still out on Sunday morning, the next stage of the “HSJ Magical Mystery Tour” was launched, and buses headed to camp for a quick re-packing of overnight bags before departing for Baton Rouge.

“Moving 380 people on the fly, along with an entire camp’s worth of art supplies, sports equipment, snacks, toothbrushes and loveys, plus our full medical team, was no small task, but we were not working alone,” Herman said.

As the campers headed south, Nuell in North Carolina and Frey in Indiana coordinated room assignments for the night. Posner noted that each double room needed an additional single bed for a counselor, and while the hotel had some rollaway beds, there weren’t close to enough.

The Posners, who had been out of town, headed back to Baton Rouge, with Frey ordering every air mattress from every Target store in a path from Alabama to Louisiana. Camp Committee Chair Gary Lazarus sent the Posners directions to each store along the way. “Between stops, we made phone calls to secure meals, snacks, security and a medical team,” she said.

When they arrived with the air mattresses, a group of volunteers had already assembled to inflate and place the mattresses in the various rooms.

Rabbi Sarah Smiley, in her first full summer with the Unified Jewish Congregation of Baton Rouge, was supposed to have traveled to Utica that day to receive her introduction to the camp as a week-long faculty member. Instead, “Jacobs Camp came to me in Baton Rouge.”

When the buses pulled up to the hotel, the ballroom had been transformed into a camp dining hall, with a big “Welcome Home Jacobs Camp” banner. A hot dinner had been hastily arranged by the Kantrow Altons, camp parents who own Bistro Byronz, which had been closed that day. Security was arranged by a camper parent who is a police detective and got colleagues to show up despite it being Father’s Day. A medical team of camp nurses and doctors also joined in.

“When the leadership decided to bring the entire camp to Baton Rouge, I witnessed beauty,” Smiley said. “Not only the leadership team and staff of Jacobs Camp, but many members of the Jewish community of Baton Rouge stepped up.”

As room keys were handed out during the late afternoon, word came that the power was back on, but Nadav Herman and his team that had stayed behind needed time to get everything restored so the campers could return the next day.

Posner said there was “an epic slumber party on two floors of the Baton Rouge Crowne Plaza” and fun at a local arcade the next morning.

“Our campers could not have handled the transition to the hotel in Baton Rouge more beautifully,” Herman said. She reminded the campers that they were representing the camp, and “the hotel staff told us over and over again what a great group we have, and it was no surprise at all.”

Posner observed that the hotel had probably never experienced 360 voices singing Birkat Hamazon, as they did after breakfast on June 19. “For those of us fortunate enough to witness it, the sound was familiar,

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 15 community

דימתלForever For Israel For Your Family Israel Bonds

but the closing words landed with a different kind of gratitude.”

Later that day, everyone headed back to Morrison Road in Utica. “Passing through the Jacobs Camp gates has never felt so sweet as it did on Monday when we brought our campers back home,” Herman said.

Posner said that though the task was “immense,” it seemed “normal.”

“Everyone did what needed to be done — often before they were even asked — because this is what real communities do,” Posner said. “In this part of the country, where our Jewish communities are small, we are also integral parts of our larger, secular communities,” and those relationships made everything possible. “Our amazing Jewish communities in Jackson and Baton Rouge said hineini with more enthusiasm than we could have asked for… they took care of us.”

They were also assisted by the national URJ staff. In addition to Nuell and Frey working remotely, Debby Shriber, executive director of the URJ Northeast Camps, was on the ground for the adventure.

To help with the unexpected costs, the camp posted an online fundraiser at jacobscamp.org/offsitefun and has raised about $9600 toward a $20,000 goal as of press time.

Herman said those days were “nothing short of extraordinary, thanks to our entire community. There is nothing our camp family can’t do together, and I am so grateful.”

ISJL names new development director

The Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life announced that Olivia Renata Zale is their new director of development.

Joining the team in August, Zale is already familiar with the ISJL’s work. She is the current vice chair of the M.B. and Edna Zale Foundation, based in Dallas. The Zale Foundation has supported the ISJL for a number of years.

Zale also has many strong ties to the South: her family’s roots are in Dallas, and her parents lived in Lafayette for several years.

“I have long admired the incredible work of the Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life and am thrilled to be joining the organization as its director of development,” Zale said. “I am excited to immerse myself in the community and work alongside our supporters to grow the ISJL and further the mission to support, connect, and celebrate Jewish life in the South.”

Zale joins a well-established ISJL team, along with several new ISJL staff members hired over the summer, including Rabbi Salem Pearce, ISJL Director of Spirituality, and two program associates, Ana Berman and Rebecca Rich. The Institute serves a 13-state Southern region.

USIEA holding event in Mobile

The U.S.-Israel Education Association, based in Birmingham, will have a community event in Mobile on Sept. 5 at 5:30 p.m. at the RSA Battle House Tower. Speakers will include founder Heather Johnston, U.S. Rep. Jerry Carl, and Auburn Basketball Coach Bruce Pearl, who is a member of USIEA’s board.

Founded in 2011, the organization brings senior members of Congress to Israel, including beyond the Green Line, to see Israel’s security situation. The first such trips included a visit by high-level Congressional representatives to the then-classified Iron Dome installations that were being developed, prompting those representatives to greatly boost U.S. support.

There are also efforts to promote business ties between Israelis in the territories and Palestinian entrepreneurs.

USIEA is an outgrowth of JH Israel, a national leadership center in Ariel, in the heart of the territories, which is also Mobile’s sister city in Israel. The Johnstons assisted in developing the center two decades ago.

16 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life community
L’Shana Tova
2023 – 5784
SCAN TO INVEST ISRAEL @ 57 Development Corporation for Israel. This is not an offering which can be made only by prospectus. Read the prospectus carefully before investing to fully evaluate the risks associated with investing in Israel bonds. Member FINRA. Development Coporation for Israel 3525 Piedmont Road, Building 6, Suite 250 Atlanta, GA 30305 404.817.3500 • atlanta@Israelbonds.com

The service will be in person and livestreamed.

Gates of Prayer in Metairie will have a multi-generational “Melodies of Our Past” on Sept. 9 at 8 p.m. as a Selichot service. There will be a dessert reception, and livestream will be available.

Shir Chadash in Metairie will have Selichot on Sept. 9 at 8:15 p.m., with Havdalah, then the screening of “50 Children: The Rescue Mission of Mr. and Mrs. Kraus.” Gilbert and Eleanor Kraus rescued 50 children during the Holocaust. Selichot will follow the screening.

Temple Sinai in New Orleans will have a dessert reception on Sept. 9 at 7 p.m., with Havdalah, followed by the Selichot service at 7:30 p.m.

TRIBE at Gates of Prayer in Metairie will have a wine and cheese tashlich on Sept. 16 at 6 p.m. at City Park.

Moishe House in New Orleans will have a 5784 Mood Board designing session, Sept. 14 at 6 p.m. The mood board is a visual roadmap of future aspirations, made into a mosaic. Moishe House will also host a Rosh Hashanah oneg, Sept. 16 from 3 to 4 p.m.

Weiss, Tishby headline Future of Hope program

Gates of Prayer in Metairie will hold two book discussions in preparation for its “A Future of Hope” program on Nov. 14.

Bari Weiss and Noa Tishby will participate in the November chat, moderated by Ted Deutsch.

Weiss is author of “How to Fight Anti-Semitism,” which Rabbi David Gerber will discuss on Oct. 2 at 7 p.m. Weiss is a founder of The Free Press and host of the Honestly podcast. She was a columnist at the New York Times, resigning in 2020 after harassment at work, as her pieces often strayed from the mindset of many of the writers and editors. In 2021, she won the Daniel Pearl Award for Courage and Integrity in Journalism.

Tishby wrote “Israel: A Simple Guide to the Most Misunderstood Country on Earth.” An actress, producer and activist, she was Israel’s Special Envoy against Antisemitism and Delegitimization. She sold “In Treatment” to HBO, the first Israeli show to become an American series. Gerber will discuss her book on Nov. 5 at 7 p.m. Both discussions are in person and online.

Deutsch represented Florida’s 22nd district in Congress from 2010 to 2022. He is now CEO of the American Jewish Committee.

The “Future of Hope” chat will be on Nov. 14 at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are available online.

With the growing threat of a war with Hezbollah, we can’t ensure this Rosh HaShanah will usher in a peaceful year. But with a new campaign to add 300 urgently needed ambulances to MDA’s fleet, we can save lives no matter what 5784 brings.

Make a donation today or contact us about how you, your family, or synagogue can provide the ambulances MDA will need.

Visit afmda.org/give or call 866.632.2763.

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 17 continued
8 >> Agenda community
from page
As Israelis rejoice in the sound of the shofar, we’re also preparing for the wail of the siren.
In — Take Out — Catering
10am-7pm • Fri & Sun 10am-3pm
Severn, Metairie (504) 888-2010 www.koshercajun.com Outside the New Orleans area? We will ship your order to you!
ONE STOP KOSHER FOOD SHOPPING Dine
Mon-Thu
(Closed Saturday) 3519

MOVING to a LARGER SPACE

Somatic Experiencing PractitionerTM

WHO CAN BENEFIT?

Executives, Emerging Leaders, Parents, Retirees and other Curious Individuals

WHAT CAN WE ACCOMPLISH?

• Increase your emotional and social intelligence

• Find your current purpose and take action towards attaining it

• Strengthen, restore and understand your boundaries

• Improve your decision making

• Improve your emotional regulation and emotional courage

205.936.9675

caryn@coachcaryn.com www.coachcaryn.com

Built in Mississippi, sailing for Israel

On Aug. 8, the Israeli Navy received the first of two landing crafts built at Bollinger Shipyards in Pascagoula.

The ceremony dedicating the INS Nachshon was led by the Commanding Officer of Haifa Naval Base, Rear Adm. Tal Politis, and senior officials in the procurement delegation of the Ministry of Defense.

Rabbi Steve Silberman of Ahavas Chesed in Mobile attended the ceremony, along with his wife, Manette. Silberman said there were brief remarks, then the American flag was raised as the Star Spangled Banner played. The American flag was then lowered, replaced by the Israeli flag as Hatikvah was played.

“Jewish, Israeli, American and maritime history were changed at a shipyard in Pascagoula,” Silberman remarked. “A high-tech vessel designed and constructed in accordance with Israeli specifications by American engineers and American workers, financially underwritten by American foreign assistance for Israel, showcases cooperation, friendship and a shared goal of Israel’s safety and wellbeing.”

The project began four years ago, and was financed through U.S. military aid to Israel, almost all of which must be spent in the United States. The Nachshon is about 95 meters long, 20 meters wide and weighs about 2,500 tons. It will set sail for Israel in a few months and will be operational in 2024.

According to the Israel Defense Forces, the team of the landing craft consists of dozens of naval combat soldiers, with a quarter of them being female. The commanding officer has the rank of Lieutenant Commander.

The IDF stated that the crafts “will act as a central pillar in adapting the Israeli Navy to the modern and multi-arena battlefield. Among other things, the landing crafts will serve as a logistical axis for transporting equipment as well as the soldiers in near and far areas.”

Politis said the craft’s completion “marks a significant milestone in adapting the Navy to the modern battlefield.”

The Israeli Navy used landing craft from the beginning in 1948, but the last of their crafts was decommissioned in 1993 when it was determined that there was no need for newer models. In recent years, the Navy sought to restore that capability.

Vice Admiral David Saar Salama, commander in chief of the Israeli Navy, told the first crew of the Nachshon that they “have a great privilege today, writing a chapter in the history of the Israeli Navy.” He referenced the craft’s name, as a midrash says that the Red Sea did not part when Moses waved his staff over it, but only after Nachshon wandered into the sea up to his head. “You are the pioneers of the way, the first to jump into the water and carve a new path in the heart of the seas,” Salama said.

18 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life Mon-Fri 10am-6pm, Sat 10am-4pm METAIRIE 5101 W. Esplanade Ave at Chastant DESTREHAN 3001 Ormond Blvd. at entrance to Ormond Estates 504-407-3532 nolagiftsanddecoronline.com
Center in Metairie —
a few steps away community
Same Shopping
Just
Navy receives landing craft constructed in Pascagoula Rear Adm. Tal Politis, Haifa Naval Base commander, speaks at the ceremony Caryn Corenblum
J.D., LICSW
ICF Professional Certified Coach
COACHING
COACHING
COACHING
EXECUTIVE
• LIFE
LEADERSHIP

R E P O R T A N N U A L

2 0 2 2 - 2 0 2 3

20 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life
August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 21

OTHER GIVING (GRANTS, DISTRIBUTIONS, AND RESTRICTED REVENUE)

Private Unrestricted Grant Distribution

Howard and Susan Green Jewish Community Day School Operating Support Charitable Fund

Endowment Distributions

Zucker Jewish Community Day School

Custodial Fund

Howard and Susan Green Jewish Community Day School Permanent Charitable Fund

Monthly Core Allocations

Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans

Jewish Endowment Foundation of Louisiana

Annual Distributio ns

Jewish Day School Scholarship Designated Fund

Esther Sinauer Scholarship Fund for Jewish Education

Neil and Albert Hyman Scholarship Designated Fund

Maurice and Harriet Handelman Donor Advised Fund

Unrestricted Grants

Southwest Louisiana Area Health Education Center CARES Act COVID Testing Grant

State of Louisiana

Restricted Revenue

Goldring-Woldenberg Campus Cafeteria

SMART Display

Lisa & Brian Katz

Joint Athletic Program Partnership with JCDS and Slater Torah Academy

Richard and Vivian Cahn

Restricted Grants

Smart Panels/Adjustable Tables

Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans

Engage Grant with PJ Library

Prizmah

STEAM curriculum Enrichment with Limudei CodeEsh including KIBO Robots

Bruce J. Heim Foundation and the David Lear Sulman Computing, Science, and Engineering Fund for Jewish Day Schools

Preschool Development Project Grant

Legacy Heritage Fund

JEF Constituent Agency Block Gra nt

Fifth and Sixth Grade Social Justice Trip to Memphis, TN

Sukkot Family Barbeque

Visiting ISAS Accreditation Team Expense Subsidization

Jewish Endowment Foundation of Louisiana

REVENUE TOTAL $1,826,960

EXPENSE TOTAL $1,900,588

14 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 0 250,000 500,000 750,000 1,000,000 1,250,000 Tuition Annual Campaign Restricted/Unrestricted Grants Private Unrestricted Grant Federation Allocations Endowment Distributions 0 500,000 1,000,000 1,500,000 2,000,00 Curriculum & Faculty Occupancy Administration Marketing & Development
BY THE NUMBERS 2022-2023
55% 24% 12% 2% 4% 3% 88% 5% 5% 2%

Donors 280

(up 18% over last year)

$322,000

Of donors were new.

(up 7% over last year)

$210,000 In grants

17% Raised for this year's Annual Campaign fundraiser, a Jazz brunch at NOCHI honoring Alvin (z"l) and Madilyn Samuels.

$1,230 Average gift size of $26,000 Raised for GiveNOLA

JCDS Board of Trustees' gifts totaling

$230,000

58 out of 951 total organizations

13 out of 207 organizations in education up 18% over last year (up 93% over last year)

The following categories played a significant role in JCDS achieving its highest revenue total in our organization's history, as is appropriate for our record growth.

Annual Campaign Efforts | Individual donors (spreading from our own community across the entire country) support the Day School and its mission throughout the year, including the Annual Event, GiveNOLA, and general donations.

Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans | Support includes monthly allocations and targeted grant funding. Endowment | Distributions from the Charles Zucker Fund and the Susan and Howard Green Fund support school operations and scholarship funds for those who otherwise would not be able to attend JCDS.

Designated Funds | JCDS receives annual draws from several funds administered by the Jewish Endowment Foundation of Louisiana.

Grants | Jewish Community Day School receives grant monies from several sources

Tuition | With enrollment at a record high, tuition revenue is at a record high

Oscar J. Tolmas Charitable Trust | A generous unrestricted gift to support school operations

RECRUITMENT | RETENTION |

119 STUDENTS 8 GRADE

TH

SUCCESS EVENT

ENROLLMENT

Total Enrollment for Fall 2023 is expected to reach a record high of 119 students, a 14% increase from Fall 2022 Each of the Green Preschool classrooms, along with prekindergarten through second grade classrooms, are all full

The current fourth graders are expected to have the opportunity to stay through eighth grade, enabling continued enrollment growth and sustainability.

The 2022/2023 school year included a calendar packed with community engagement This included several events on which JCDS partnered with PJ Library that were funded by a generous grant from Prizmah Some highlights include the Shavuot Ice Cream Social, the Family Fun Fest, and the Sukkot BBQ, which together drew hundreds of people

JCDS is committed to strengthening our community through increased partnerships, events, and engagements.

August/Sept. 2023 • The Jewish Newsletter 15
2022/2023 HIGHLIGHTS
JCDS Ranked 2 out of 27 organizations in Jefferson Parish education category

DR. BRAD PHILIPSON | Oscar J. Tolmas Head of School Chair

Were I to contemplate the platonic ideal of a school for myself as an educator and for my child as a parent, I would be hard-pressed to come up with a conception better than Jewish Community Day School From the hard work and dedication of the faculty to the support and insight offered by the Board of Trustees and our parent body, along with the inspiration that comes from our students, JCDS is truly a magical place That it is a place where Jewish identity is honored and celebrated adds depth and meaning to both the work we do here and the experience my own child enjoys.

The dream of a pluralistic Jewish day school in our city has not, however, always been assured. While the New Orleans Jewish Day School started off strongly in its first iteration, from 1996 to 2005, its reopening after Hurricane Katrina was uncertain. I’ve recently come across admissions notes from that recovery year, counting the likely returns, the undecideds, and those who had moved away From a high of 85 students in the 20042005 school year, it took until 2011-2012 to build back up to 51 students Somewhere in this time, amidst school identity struggles and the economic aftermath of the subprime crisis, enrollment fell to only 27 students for 2013-2014, Sharon Pollin’s first year as head of school The school’s continued existence was called into question Dr Pollin, an experienced Jewish educator, re-established the Jewish identity of the school, injecting joyous observance into daily life When I arrived at JCDS in the summer of 2019, enrollment, with the inclusion of Green Preschool, had grown to 71 students, 47 of whom were in PK-6. The existential threat seemed to have passed, and those familiar with the school were excited by its momentum.

One challenge that remained, though, was spreading the word about the wonderful work taking place here

The very generous gift from Susan and Howard Green to establish Green Preschool certainly helped in this regard It was time, however, for JCDS to connect with the larger independent school world, to retain its Jewish identity while benchmarking its general studies program, as well as its operations and governance, against the best schools in the region Amidst the lockdown in the spring of 2020, we prepared our initial application to the Independent School Association of the Southwest (ISAS), the most prestigious accreditation available to schools from Louisiana to New Mexico. So began thirty-six months of rigorous documentation, revision of policies and procedures to meet standards, and countless hours of discussions, typing reports, and more discussions After a recommendation by our visiting committee chair, votes of the ISAS Standards and Executive Committees, and then of the assembled ISAS heads of school on June 6, 2023, JCDS officially became accredited The congratulations poured in from our peer schools, both the ISAS schools locally and other Jewish day schools with whom we ’ ve worked nationally This outcome is a testament to our hardworking faculty, our dedicated Board of Trustees, our supportive parents, and our inspiring students We’ve begun a new chapter in the history of the school, and we ’ re expecting enrollment growth to nearly 119 students when we open the doors in August. The state of our school is thriving.

SUSAN GREEN | Board Chair

As the Chairman of the Board of JCDS for the past three years, my understanding of education has evolved beyond the mere transmission of knowledge Education is a transformative journey that empowers students, preserves our Jewish heritage, fosters holistic development, strengthens community bonds, and prepares future global citizens I am incredibly proud of the role JCDS plays in shaping the lives of our young students and ensuring the continuity of our cherished Jewish traditions. Through education, we enable our students to embrace their unique identities, contribute to society, and become lifelong learners committed to making a positive difference in the world.

Our recent accreditation as a member of ISAS has demonstrated our community’s dedication to our future in New Orleans Thank you for believing in us

16 August/Sept. 2023 • The Jewish Newsletter

FACULTY 2022-2023

LEADERSHIP TEAM

Dr Brad Philipson |

Oscar J Tolmas Head of School

Rabbi Michael Cohen | School Rabbi

Tiffany Cotlar | Director of Development

Jessie Dowsakul | Director of Admissions

Lauren Gisclair | Music Teacher/ Administrative Support

Janna Jackson | Director of Business & Operations

Avery Loss | Green Preschool Director

PREKINDERGARTEN-SIXTH GRADE FACULTY

Liz Amoss | 3rd & 4th Grade Teacher

Paula Apffel | 1st & 2nd Grade Teacher

Judy Fried | Pre-K & K Teacher

Carol Garcia | Pre-K & K Assistant Teacher

Hemda Hochman | Hebrew & Jewish Studies Teacher

PJ Jones | Physical Education Teacher

Eliza Kase | 5th & 6th Teacher

Cameron Lowry | 1st & 2nd Teacher

Rabbi David Posternock | Torah Study

Debbie Schlackman | Librarian

Goni Sondak | Art, Hebrew, & Jewish Studies Teacher

Amanda Whalen | STEAM Teacher

Margaret Winston | School Counselor

GREEN PRESCHOOL FACULTY

Alexa Craig | Perachim

Adrienne Falgout | Nitzanim

Anna Fesmire | Devorim

Sara Moujir | Rimonim

Genesis Mata | Classroom Support

Terrance Perkins | Physical Education Teacher

Sabrina Roubion | Devorim

Amanda Ruhlman | Nitzanim

Amy Stern | Perachim

Tania Velasco | Rimonim

Brigid Viguerie | Preschool Art Teacher

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

Susan Green | Board Chair

Lisa Katz | Secretary

Adam Miller | Treasurer

Carole Neff | Immediate Past President

Gabe Feldman

Michael Wasserman

Max Zwain

Dr Brad Philipson | Oscar J Tolmas Head of School

TRUSTEES

Michele Allen-Hart

Angela Beerman

Barri Bronston

Lara Crigger

Emily Dvorin

Laura Fuhrman

Lauren Gerber

Howard Green

Ann Harris

William Hess

Hugo Kahn

Lis Kahn

Barbara Kaplinsky

Ben Karp

Andrea Lestelle

Carol Newman

William Norman

Karen W Remer

Dashka Roth Lehmann

Madilyn Samuels

Laurie Sterbcow

PAST PRESIDENTS

George Fuhrman

Edward Gothard, Z"L

Hugo Kahn

Lis Kahn

Marilyn Kullman

Dashka Roth Lehmann

Rabbi Bob Loewy

Carole Neff

Karen Remer

Charles Stern

Michael Wasserman

MEET OUR TEAM

AN IMPORTANT MOMENT IN JCDS HISTORY

On Tuesday, June 6, Jewish Community Day School was awarded accreditation by the Independent Schools Association of the Southwest (ISAS) ISAS-accredited independent schools are known for their commitment to providing students with a learning environment that meets the highest academic, ethical, and professional standards This was an arduous three-year process that required rigorous adherence to standards and an intensive self-study documenting and assessing all aspects of the school, followed by a review by a visiting committee of peers from ISAS schools After approval by the ISAS Standards Committee and Board of Directors, admission was ratified by a unanimous vote of the heads of the current ISAS schools

ISAS-accredited

This prestigious accreditation is only the second granted in the New Orleans area in the last 25 years, making JCDS the twelfth ISAS school in the metro area and the seventeenth in the state JCDS is also only the fifth Jewish day school school to join the 96-school association that encompasses six states

While the process itself has already fostered important growth in our operation of the School, the continued opportunities for benchmarking, collaboration, and professional development promise to play an important role in the future of JCDS

A TRIP TO REMEMBER

This February, with the help of a grant from Jewish Endowment Foundation, JCDS fifth and sixth graders traveled to Memphis to see the National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel. Traveling alongside them was Leona Tate, member of the New Orleans Four, who, along with Ruby Bridges, Gail Etienne, and Tessie Prevost, desegregated New Orleans public schools more than sixty years ago. One of the trip's highlights included students standing at Ms. Leona’s side as she for the first time saw her name in an exhibit at the museum. Students also visited Bornblum Jewish Community School, where Tate addressed the student body, and toured the Stax Records Museum and the Belz Museum of Asian and Judaic Art. This JEF-Funded experience was the pinnacle of a year spent studying social justice and the Civil Rights movement that also included trips to the TEP Center (formerly McDonogh #19 Elementary School) in the Lower Ninth Ward and to Whitney Plantation. We are thankful that our students were able to have this experience alongside someone who not only lived through these important moments in our nation's history, but who also continues to play an important role in social justice in our local community

18 August/Sept. 2023 • The Jewish Newsletter
JCDS students don’t only learn about history and Jewish values; they discover what has shaped our world and engage with primary sources
independent schools are known for their commitment to providing students with a learning environment that meets the highest academic, ethical, and professional standards.

HONORING ALVIN (Z"L) AND MADILYN SAMUELS

This past spring, Jewish Community Day School held a Jazz Brunch supporting the 2022/23 Annual Campaign. This event honored Alvin (z”l) and Madilyn Samuels. JCDS is fortunate to recognize many “good names ” who have made pluralistic Jewish education possible in our community over the past twenty-seven years. This year, it was our privilege to honor Alvin and Madilyn, two such esteemed individuals. The Samuels family has been ever-present at JCDS, as students, parents, and grandparents, serving on the Board of Trustees, attending numerous school events, and through significant financial support. Their support has included an incredibly generous gift, given in memory of Patti Arnold Samuels, that helped build our current campus With the passing of Alvin Samuels on December 30th, our Jewish community lost a giant The Jazz Brunch drew over 160 guests including family members and some of the Samuels' closest friends to honor Madilyn and remember Alvin.

A BLESSING ON YOUR HEAD, MAZEL TOV, MAZEL TOV

Is there any greater happiness than seeing those you love happy? We are shepping naches for our wonderful JCDS alums who, in addition to maturing into incredible adults, are adding great joy and love to the world as they find their besherts and create their own little nuggets of joy. Many mazels to them, to their parents, and to us for getting to be an important part of their journey. Our place on this earth is marked both by those whom we have impacted and those who have impacted us; the JCDS we know today is a product of everyone who was a part of our school in the past, and JCDS will always be a part of the identity of our alumni as they continue to share their love and joy with the world

2023

2023

2023

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 19
Rachel (Fertel) and Oded Keneresh were married in Tel Aviv in June 2023 Ashley (Sterbcow) and Jonathan Gulick were married in February 2023 Dr Simone Fertel and Dr Dan O'Shea became engaged in July 2023 Allison Fuhrman and Benjamin Schindler are engaged to be married in December 2024 Geoffrey and Anna Samuels welcomed their first baby, Hudson Mark Samuels, in May Rebecca (Brown) and Avi Eisenstadter married in November 2022 Ben Gothard and Bridget Lavigne became engaged in February Melissa (Fuhrman) & Jason Schwarz welcomed their first baby, Eilah Leigh, in February Sarah (Brown) and Oren Dayan had their second child, Gavriel Yosef, in April Eli Sterbcow and Aryn Eli are engaged to be married in January 2024

WITH DEEPEST GRATITUDE

Larry Brook, Editor at Southern Jewish Life Magazine

Vivian and Richard Cahn

The Franco Family

Susan and Howard Green

Laura and David Kulick

JCDS Board and Faculty

Jewish Endowment Foundation of Louisiana

Jewish Community Center of Metairie

Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans

Lis and Hugo Kahn

Legacy Heritage Fund

Our Community Rabbis

Oscar J Tolmas Charitable Trust

Parents' Association President Lauren Gerber, Parents Association Vice-President (Green Preschool)

Cece Schneider-McBride and the entire JCDS Parents Association

A thriving Jewish day school is key to a vibrant Jewish community Please support JCDS with a tax-deductible charitable gift

JCDS Mission Statement

The mission of Jewish Community Day School (JCDS) is to instill a love of learning invigorated by academic excellence

JCDS is grounded in Jewish tradition, fostering spirituality (emunah), dedication to repair our world (tikkun olam), and commitment to the entire Jewish people (k’lal Yisrael) JCDS is a nurturing school where families of all backgrounds are welcomed and children are prepared to be engaged compassionate leaders

At JCDS we ensure that:

Students become inquiring, capable youth who are passionate lifelong learners

Teachers are dedicated to best educational practices

Families are engaged in their children’s academic achievement and holistic development

Ethics and morals of our students are nurtured through commitment to Jewish values

Positive connections to the language, land, culture and people of the State of Israel are created

Children are primed for full participation in our global society

22 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life
BY PHONE | Call us at JCDS! Contact Tiffany Cotlar (Director of Advancement):
IN-PERSON | Stop by! We would love to thank you in person VENMO
@JCDS-School SCAN QR CODE FOR ONLINE GIVING S U P P O R T
STOCK SALE | Contact Morgan Stanley at (504)587-9645 TEXT YOUR GIFT | Simply text one of the following to (504)732-9722 General Donation In Memory/In Honor Annual Campaign Event
504.887.4091
|
3747 West Esplanade Avenue
Metairie, Louisiana 70002
|

New Orleans, Birmingham teens compete in JCC Maccabi Games in Israel

For the second time ever, the Jewish Community Center Maccabi Games were held in Israel.

Birmingham sent eight teens to the Games, and New Orleans had a delegation of four athletes at the games in Haifa, which took place July 9 to 13.

The Birmingham delegation consisted of flag football players Ben Davis, Eli Brook, Micah Goldis, Jonah Kipp, and Bobby Rutkoff; soccer players Miles McMillan, Ari Altmann and Dylan Bor, and staff members Katie Hausman Grace and Cody Bass.

The New Orleans team included flag football player Noah Dunn, baseball player Ethan Dulitz, and soccer players Alyse Dulitz and Lili Arjmand. New Orleans JCC Sports Director Neal Alsop was the flag football coach.

The JCC Maccabi Games are for teens and are usually held at JCCs in the United States. Next summer’s games will be in Houston and Detroit. They are not connected to the World Maccabiah Games, an adult Olympic-style gathering that takes place in Israel every four years.

After the Maccabi competitions were over, the delegations, consisting of some 700 athletes, spent two weeks touring Israel.

The 17U girls soccer team, coached by Cody Bass of the Levite JCC in Birmingham, brought home a silver medal. The Green team consisted of athletes from New Orleans, Central New Jersey, Houston Maccabi, Phoenix, Shames JCC on the Hudson, Long Beach and Palisades.

Margot Beerman, DDS

Dr. Beerman grew up in Metairie, attended Metairie Park Country Day School, graduated from the University of Alabama at Birmingham and then earned her Doctor of Dental Surgery degree from LSU School of Dentistry.

She is a member of Spear Study Club and the American Dental Association, Louisiana Dental Association, and New Orleans Dental Association. She has her Botulinum Toxin Certification from the American Academy of Facial Esthetics. She is on the Jewish Family Services Board and the Tribe Board at Congregation Gates of Prayer.

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 31 $79 New Patient Special Comprehensive Exam, Dental Cleaning, Bitewing Xrays, Panoramic Xray ($436 value, limit one offer per patient, paid in advance. Excluding insurance) Codes D0150, D1110, D4355, D4346, D0274, D0330 www.magnoliamoderndentistrynola.com/meet-our-dentist 4428 Conlin Street, Suite B, Metairie LA 70006 (1 block off West Esplanade & 1 block off Transcontinental) 504-888-9408 Proudly Serving Metairie and Greater New Orleans General Dentistry • Restorations • Facial Esthetics
The Birmingham delegation to the JCC Maccabi Games New Orleans delegation at the opening ceremony

community RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION EXPERT STEPHEN FLEISHMANN

Stephen Fleishmann, owner of Titan Construction, has more than 25 years of construction experience and more than 15 years of experience in legal consulting. He is a highly skilled expert witness in the area of value and causation of construction defects and deficiencies.

u Construction Damage / Defect assessments

u Cost estimation, which may include replacement or reproduction cost estimates

u Narrative presentations and reports with inspection findings and conclusions

u Code Interpretation

u Expert witness testimony for depositions, mediations and settlement conferences, and arbitrations and trials

u Expert opinion on residential construction, design/construction defects, building envelope evaluation, and means and methods assessment

u Pre-case evaluations

u Site inspections

u Litigation support

u Case analysis

504-913-3030 forensicconstruction.com titanconstruction.com Stephen@titanconstruction.com

Licensed in Alabama, Florida and Louisiana

The Green team placed first in the preliminary stage, going 3-0-1, with a 10-0 win over Ashdod, 8-3 over JTeam and 10-3 over Purple. The only draw was 4-4 against Blue, which was Bay Area and Tucson. Purple consisted of Greater Washington, Los Angeles Westside, Los Angeles Valley, Montreal and Orange County.

In the tournament rounds, Green advanced with a 7-3 win over JTeam, but lost the gold medal match to Blue, 6-1.

In 17U boys baseball, the Green team consisted of New Orleans, Cleveland, Greater Washington, Philadelphia and Vancouver. The team was seeded second in the five-team tournament after going 3-1 in the round-robin part of the tournament, as did Los Angeles West, which was seeded first due to tiebreakers, and Israel, which was seeded third.

In the playoff, the Green team lost to eventual gold medal winner Israel, 8-2, and then was shelled by the Blue team of Central New Jersey, Los Angeles Westside, Long Beach, Orange County and San Diego, 16-2, in the bronze medal game. The Blue team had gone 1-3 in the preliminary rounds.

In 17U boys soccer, Birmingham was the Green team with Shames on the Hudson and Los Angeles West. In the eight team field, Green placed last, losing all four matches, with the closest being a 7-6 loss to the Purple team of JTeam and Atlanta. They were eliminated in the playoff by eventual bronze winner Bay Area, 7-1.

The Birmingham and New Orleans U17 flag football athletes fared the same in their tournament, going 0-4 as the Purple team in the preliminary and being seeded fifth out of five teams, falling to the Blue team in the playoff, 46-12. Both Israeli national teams, which faced each other for the gold, scored shutouts against Purple.

The Purple team also included Cleveland and Toronto. The blue team was The Center, J Team, Long Beach, Alberta and Miami Beach.

NFTY planning regional in New Orleans

The National Federation of Temple Youth’s Southern region is planning a conclave in New Orleans the weekend of Nov. 3 to 5.

The conclave, co-hosted by Touro Synagogue, Temple Sinai and Gates of Prayer, is a weekend-long experience during which Jewish teens will gather from Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas and Louisiana. NFTY is the high school group for the Reform movement.

Participants will learn and pray together, perform community service and acts of Tikkun Olam, and enjoy hangout time and chances to make new friends.

Registration information will be available in September.

32 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life
Silver medals for the U17 girls soccer team

health/wellness

an annual SJL special section

September is ovarian cancer awareness month

When celebrating the High Holy Days in September, perhaps incorporate some teal into your wardrobe.

The Norma Livingston Ovarian Cancer Foundation hosts Together in Teal on Sept. 10 at Aldridge Gardens, one of several events and observances for Ovarian Cancer Awareness Month.

Together in Teal will feature music, food, crafts and vendor tables, and a highlight will be a butterfly release to “symbolize ovarian cancer survivors as well as those who we’ve lost.” This will coincide with “very moving” presentations from ovarian cancer researchers and physicians.

“We want to celebrate the brave women and their families while raising awareness about the disease,” said Norma Livingston Ovarian Cancer Foundation Executive Director Ashley Thompson. “Unfortunately, a simple and reliable screening method is not currently available for ovarian cancer. Our goal is to increase understanding of the signs and symptoms of the disease and educate women on the importance of preventative care.”

Thompson said Together in Teal launched last year and is one of several big programs and initiatives for the Foundation. They also host the Mother’s Walk 5K the Saturday before Mother’s Day.

“Through the sale of our statewide Driving Out Ovarian Cancer car tag, the NLOCF has raised more than $1.6 million to fund local research through the Division of Gynecology/Oncology at UAB,” she said.

Most of the funds raised from the special events go directly to ovarian cancer patients and to increasing awareness.

In the Foundation’s Just A Need program, ovarian cancer patients receiving chemotherapy are gifted a set of cold mittens and socks in a specially designed cooler to wear during infusions. These cold packs help reduce the side effects of neuropathy.

“Patients and their families can reach out to Just A Need for emotional support, gas money for transportation, medical bill assistance and meals,” said Thompson.

According to NLOCF Board Member Meagan Farmer, who is a genetic counselor and senior marketing manager for Ambry Genetics, one in 40 Ashkenazi Jewish women has a BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene mutation, which is 10 times greater than the general population.

Mutations in BRCA genes raise a person’s risk for getting ovarian,

6 0 5 M E T A I R I E R D M E T A I R I E , L A 7 0 0 0 5 5 0 4 3 0 9 8 7 7 8 | @ H E M L I N E M E T A I R I E

If you enjoy Southern Jewish Life

breast and uterine cancers. That is why Ashkenazi Jewish women are at higher risk at a younger age. If one’s mother or father has a BRCA gene mutation, that woman has a 50 percent chance of having the same gene mutation.

“We all have BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes. They are tumor suppressor genes,” said Farmer, who worked at UAB in the Cancer Genetic Counseling Program from 2012 to 2022. Certain hereditary mutations in those genes keep them from working properly.

Women with BRCA1 gene mutations have a 39 to 58 percent risk of getting cancer during their lifetime, while BRCA2 mutations pose a somewhat lower risk.

She said 5 to 10 percent of cancers have a hereditary cause. That risk is up to 20 percent for people with epithelial ovarian cancer. Anyone with a personal or family history meets national guideline criteria for genetic testing.

“If anyone has a family history, I recommend they see a genetic counselor and do genetic testing,” she said. “It’s especially important with ovarian cancer, since there is really not a screening that can be done… and sometimes they are silent.”

Lori Livingston founded the nonprofit Norma Livingston Ovarian Cancer Foundation in Birmingham in January 2004 to honor her mother.

Norma Livingston was a healthy, active 65-year-old woman in the Jewish community who was rarely sick and very proactive about her health.

She went to the internist complaining of weight gain, abdominal discomfort and a chronic cough. When the diagnosis was finally made, Norma had stage four ovarian cancer. She endured nine hours of surgery and countless rounds of chemotherapy. Sadly, she lost her fight just more than a year later.

“We want women and their families to know there is support and we’re going to continue the fight for the cure,” said Thompson.

Total Skin offers new skin wellness treatments, locations

Total Skin and Beauty Dermatology helps its patients with anti-aging solutions and proactive skin wellness education.

Dr. Melanie Appell said she recommends new fillers including Defyne and Refyne “that move with the face to give a natural appearance.”

She said Contour helps to volumize areas that diminish with aging, and the use of a cannula makes volumizing areas very natural as well.

Appell also recommended some newer, minimally invasive skin treatments for women. COV2 is an at-home treatment that improves the external appearance of the vagina as well as the internal aspect of sexual enjoyment.

“It’s a no-downtime product that is used in the privacy of one’s own home. The cost is relatively low and it’s non-invasive,” she added.

The skin pen and BBL are also minimally invasive products that improve facial appearance, dark spots and redness.

Dr. Jimmy Krell said that in this region, skin cancers on the shins of women are more common.

“This is most definitely from women wearing skirts and dresses, being outside during much of the year in the South, with so many months of warm weather,” said Krell. He recommended looking out for any spot that bleeds regularly for several weeks, and non-healing sores.

Total Skin and Dermatology offers four clinics — in Birmingham, Trussville, Gardendale and Bessemer. They will be moving their Birmingham location from the Ash Place building in Southside to the Woodward Building on 1st Avenue North.

“Our goal is to help reach as many people as we can while being in convenient locations for our patients,” said Appell.

34 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life health/wellness
Zamat, Financial Advisor, First Vice President-Investments Birmingham, AL Location 2501 20th Place South, Suite 350 Birmingham, AL 35223 205-414-2151 www.SWZWMGROUP.com Investment and Insurance Products: NOT FDIC Insured / NO Bank Guarantee / MAY Lose Value Wells Fargo Advisors is a trade name used by Wells Fargo Clearing Services, LLC, Member SIPC, a registered broker-dealer and non-bank affiliate of Wells Fargo & Company CAR-0521-03268 New Orleans, LA Location 1250 Poydras Street, Suite 2400 New Orleans, LA 70113 504-569-2403 Boca Raton, FL Location 5355 Town Center Road, Suite 600 Boca Raton, FL 33486 561-338-8015
Pictured from left to right: Alan Weintraub, Financial Advisor, First Vice President-Investments, Bari Bridges, CFP®, Financial Advisor, Steven Wetzel, Financial Consultant, Linda Hodges, Senior Registered Client Associate, Jonathan Schlackman, Branch Manager, Senior Vice President-Investments, Alan Brockhaus, CFP®, ChFC®, Assistant Vice President, Branch Liaison, Joshua
Please visit our advertisers! They are the ones who keep the presses rolling, so we can continue serving the community Let them know you appreciate them!

Overcoming the city of excess? NOLA Detox breaks the mold in treating addiction

When it comes to sober living, New Orleans is generally not the first place that springs to mind. NOLA Detox not only thinks it is possible, but New Orleans is an integral component to the experience of overcoming addiction.

Dan Forman and Chris Copeland started NOLA Detox almost two years ago, with the idea of innovating how treatment is done. Forman comes from a health care background and Copeland has long roots in New Orleans hospitality — and both are in long-term recovery from addiction.

Forman said “for years, if you wanted quality addiction treatment care and you live in New Orleans, you had to leave New Orleans to get it.”

They set out to “bring quality treatment to New Orleans unlike what the city has ever had, by utilizing what makes New Orleans so special,” including the food and music.

They have partnered with LSU Heath to provide addiction psychiatry services, with a very low patient to counselor ratio. They offer the “full continuum” from detox to residential extended living to outpatient services. “And it’s all here in New Orleans,” Forman added.

Copeland said people often feel that when they have to stop after drinking a lot or doing drugs, their life is over and they aren’t going to have any fun. “That’s not the case… you can have fun with a community, you can still listen to good music, eat good food, enjoy festivals,” he said. Through group outings, “we show them in a short period of time how much fun they can have.”

He added, “you can enjoy everything New Orleans has to offer, without drinking or drugs.”

As an example, in April they had a NOLA Recovery Lounge, a sober safe space at Gates of Prayer’s GatesFest music festival in Metairie.

At NOLA Detox, “the hospitality factor” is emphasized. By treating people well, it “allows us to engage them in treatment,” Daniels said.

Copeland’s father started Popeye’s, his uncle started Tastee Donuts and there are Copeland’s restaurants around the area. He takes his hotel and restaurant industry and his family’s philosophy of “always taking care of guests, what to do to make them feel special” and applies it to addiction recovery.

Their facility has hotel-quality queen beds, which Copeland said is “unheard of.” Rather than a cafeteria with a couple options, the residents can design their meals from six choices “as if they were in a five-star hotel.” Rooms have a 40-inch television with basic cable, while Copeland said “most treatment centers don’t have a TV in the whole facility.”

Copeland noted that patients who are detoxing often have sugar cravings, especially at night. They have an Otis Spunkmeyer oven for fresh cookies, along with cold milk before bed.

Another emphasis on individualized attention is how they answer the phone whenever someone calls for help, instead of relying on voicemails or emails. “Even if a person calling is not coming in for treatment, our goal is to leave them in a better place than when they called us,” Forman said, and give them a change to “embrace the thought that life can be better.”

They try to remove all obstacles to seeking treatment, including financial barriers. They accept most insurance as well.

He said addiction is a highly-treatable illness. “We do it well, but it does

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 35 health/wellness

require a commitment of time on behalf of the patient.”

They noted that during the pandemic, New Orleans had the highest increase in usage of Narcan in the country. That drug is used to revive people who have overdosed on opioids. “We became the center of the opioid epidemic nationally,” Forman said, giving them a sense of urgency to open their doors.

They also felt it was a way to give back after their own recoveries, based on their own experiences. And since they both have deep roots in the city, “we definitely want to help our neighbors here,” Copeland said.

They have already attracted patients from across the country who are “very attracted to getting sober in New Orleans,” Forman said.

Fighting addiction is also fighting homelessness and crime, Copeland said. “People do some really bad things, but it isn’t who they are, because they are chasing their addiction and feel like they are going to die. Once they get sober, they give back to the community.”

It is also a matter of repairing the world with each person they help, Forman said. He reminds that one person overcoming addiction affects countless other people — relatives, friends. “That’s our way of giving back to the world.”

Applause Dancewear in step with dancers, molding female entrepreneurs

Katie Wade Faught grew up dancing and learning about successful entrepreneurship from her parents.

The owner of Applause Dancewear in Homewood said her employees are always in step with what dancers are looking for.

“We’re all dancers and we’ve all been on the other side of the counter,” said Faught. “We want every dancer who comes in here to feel good and pretty. We can accommodate all shapes, sizes and ages. Our focus is always on inclusivity.”

Faught’s parents started Applause in 1981 and she started helping out in the store when she was seven. “We’re on our third and fourth generation of customers here,” she said. “That’s what makes it so rewarding — to see customers come in and then pass on their love of dance to their kids and grandkids.”

She said running a successful dancewear business involves having good people on the team. Erica Thomason has been Applause’s manager for 16 years and they hire many high school as well as college-aged dancers.

“We know they are attuned to the needs of dancers and they can gain some valuable experience in customer service, responsibility and management,” said Faught.

“Some of the best advice I can give to other small business owners is to find great employees who you can mentor and who you trust with your business,” she said. “Take the time to build those relationships and teach them to be strong, empowered women.”

Faught said they have grown the business over the years and customized their inventory to meet customer needs.

She said they can customize a “Back-to-School” package for customers and have recently received a large new selection of dance bags.

They are the largest dancewear provider in the state of Alabama, with an extensive inventory of shoes, tights and leotards by leading companies in the industry.

“We’re always keeping up with what’s new and asking our customers what they are looking for,” she said. “We’ve been doing this for 42 years and have develop some great relationships with (the suppliers). If it’s not in the store, we can definitely find it for them.”

36 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life health/wellness
REQUEST A FREE QUOTE CALL NOW BEFORE THE NEXT POWER OUTAGE *To qualify, consumers must request a quote, purchase, install and activate the generator with a participating dealer. Call for a full list of terms and conditions. Contact a Generac dealer for full terms and conditions $0 MONEY DOWN + LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT OPTIONS (205) 900-7298 7-year Extended Warranty* – A $735 Value! FREE Whether you are home or away, protect what
most from unexpected power outages with a Generac Home Standby Generator.
matters
Most Special Section articles by Lee J. Green

Paul Barron to be honored by Touro Foundation’s Judah Touro Society

The Touro Infirmary Foundation in New Orleans announced that Paul Barron will be the recipient of the 2023 Judah Touro Society Award.

The Judah Touro Society Award has been given each year for the past 33 years to a member of the Touro family who has demonstrated outstanding leadership and support of the hospital. Honorees are nominated by the members of the Judah Touro Society and selected by past recipients of the award.

Named for the 19th century philanthropist and founder of Touro Infirmary, the Judah Touro Society is composed of benefactors whose generosity and dedication to the values and mission of Touro Infirmary place them among the hospital’s strongest and most committed supporters. Members commit to annual giving programs at $1,500 or above.

Barron has been a dedicated supporter of Touro for the last 40 years.  He was appointed to the Touro Governing Board in 1988. He served as secretary from 1994 to 1996, vice chairman in 1996 and 1997, and chairman from 1997 to 2000. Under his leadership, Touro purchased Woldenberg Village and undertook a $30 million renovation to add the assisted living facility and nursing home to the facilities’ campus.

Other achievements during Barron’s tenure included adding an 8th floor to the hospital’s patient tower, implementing a corporate compliance program, refinancing its 1993 bonds and issuing $52 million in new bonds. Today he is spearheading the formation of an aphasia support group at Touro to provide valuable resources to patients who have experienced stroke and traumatic brain injuries.

The award will be presented at the Judah Touro Society Dinner on Nov. 2, at 6 p.m. at the Audubon Tea Room. Individual tickets are $200 and are available online.

38 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life health/wellness
Fine Jewelry • Local Art • Furniture Restoration 1811 29th Ave South Homewood, AL 35209 205-874-1044 wallaceburke.com
Before and After Furniture Restoration Alabama’s #1 Source for Gold & Silver We Buy and Sell Precious Metals No Sales Tax 1564-A Montgomery Highway, Hoover 205.822.4900 Gold Silver Special Israel Commemorative Coins
WALLACE BURKE The Barrons at the ceremony announcing the award for this year

Home-town practice

Margot Beerman opens Magnolia Modern Dentistry in heart of Metairie

Dr. Margot Beerman is a New Orleans native, now practicing at Magnolia Modern Dentistry, located in the heart of Metairie, close to all of the synagogues, the Jewish Community Campus and Torah Academy.

Beerman is a member of Gates of Prayer Synagogue, and graduated from Metairie Park Country Day School. She went on to study finance at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and then completed her Doctor of Dental Surgery degree at Louisiana State University School of Dentistry.

Her senior year of high school included an opportunity to do a twoweek externship. She was interested in becoming a physician, but her childhood dentist asked her to do the externship with him. “I’m glad he did, because I really fell in love with dentistry during that externship,” she told SJL.

That experience showed her that dentistry was her path because of the joy it can bring to patients. “I’ve always been good with my hands and artistic,” she said, and dentistry is “a great work-life balance, a great profession that more women are going into.”

After graduating, she did not want to go the “corporate route” inside a large practice, so after gaining experience at various dental offices, she opened Magnolia Modern Dentistry in June 2023.

Beerman emphasizes “making the connection” with patients. She shared, “people are often very stressed about the dentist, so I want to connect with them and spend time getting to know each patient to make them feel comfortable and welcome.”

In addition to general dentistry, she does Botox work for TMJ and aesthetics, and offers same-day crowns. She runs a family office, so she particularly enjoys seeing children and families. The office is “modern but comfortable,” with all the latest technology.

Being located convenient to Jewish institutions in the area was important to Beerman, as she and her family remain very involved in the community. She serves on the board of Jewish Family Service of Greater New Orleans and on the Tribe board at Gates of Prayer. She regularly hosts Shabbat gatherings with many guests. “We love connecting the young adults,” she said, and “Tribe has really given us an avenue to do that, and we’re growing.”

Her family has also been very active with the Jewish Children’s Regional Service. Her father “believed in their mission, because we wouldn’t be where we are without them.”

Six Beerman siblings were Jewish Children’s Home residents in the 1920s, while more recently, family members have served in leadership positions within JCRS, including Marc Beerman as president from 2015 to 2017. The Beerman family was honored at the 2020 JCRS Roots of Rhythm and Blues Gala.

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 39 health/wellness
OVER 25 YEARS ExtErior DEsigns, inc. BY BEVERLY KATZ, Landscape Designer Problem Yards Our Specialty Landscape & Courtyard Plans Construction & Maintenance CALL (504) 866-0276 or VISIT exteriordesignsbev.com Advertise in Southern Jewish Life Call Lee Green, (205) 870-7889 In New Orleans, Call Jeff Pizzo, (504) 432-2561
Margot Beerman invites you to visit her at her brand-new practice located in Metairie.

Come Join Our Family!

We would welcome the Opportunity to Share our Address with You.

We are excited to welcome new residents and their families to Brookdale University Park.

When you arrive for a tour, you will be greeted by our friendly staff and residents. You will notice our walking paths, putting green and refreshing outside areas for you, your family and friends to enjoy. Once you move in, you are free to come and go in the community as you wish, and visitors are always welcome! Including your 4-legged friends.

Our community is your local source for overcoming challenges that older adults face as well as providing an environment where friendships can cultivate and flourish.

Reach out to us today and learn how we can help connect your interests with those of like-age friends.

Director: “Golda” film timely, given current events

“Golda” director Guy Nattiv said the movie that digs deeper about Israel’s first and only female prime minister, Golda Meir, is very relevant to what his native country is facing today.

Nattiv won the 2019 Academy Award for Best Live Action Short with “Skin,” which came out in 2018 and was proceeded by a feature-length film of the same name. “Golda” premiered at the Jerusalem Film Festival on July 14.

For the last seven months, there have been weekly demonstrations against the current government in Israel. “I went and demonstrated with my father recently,” said Nattiv. “I miss leaders such as Golda who take responsibility; are humble and take care of the people versus taking care of themselves. As it was during the Yom Kippur War, this is a pivotal time for our country. In a way, we are fighting for the future of our country.”

“Golda,” which stars Helen Mirren as Golda Meir and Liev Schreiber as Henry Kissinger, releases on Aug. 25. It will screen at a few theaters in the region.

Nattiv said he wanted to show a side of Meir that many likely not have seen before. Centering on events surrounding the Yom Kippur War in 1973, the film portrays Meir being unprepared for aggression from neighboring Arab countries, then overseeing a military response that transformed from fumbling to triumphant. It eventually led to Israeli-Egyptian peace in 1979, five years after Meir left office.

“There is so much we don’t know about what she went through during the war and the significant hurdles she faced,” he said. “We want people to come into this movie not thinking they are watching a classic bio-pic or a ‘propaganda’ piece. ‘Golda’ paints a real picture of the war and how difficult it was for her.”

Nattiv said Mirren “is one of the best actresses of our time and really reminded me of Golda. She plays Golda with much depth, strength and humility.”

Mirren is not Jewish, but during a press conference before the screening at the Jerusalem Film Festival, researchers with MyHeritage presented Mirren with evidence linking her to Meir.

The connection is distant, stretching back through Mirren’s paternal Russian ancestry. The genealogy also links Mirren with two Israeli presidents — Chaim and Ezer Weizman.

She told JTA that the connection is “miraculous. It just goes to show that we are all one family, actually. In times of divisiveness and strife as I know Israel is in right now… it would be a very good thing to remember that fact.”

Mirren’s connection to Israel dates back to

40 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life continued on page 43
University Park Dr., Birmingham, AL 35209
205-870-0786
400
|
Floor Plans
Choose From
• Array of
to
Centrally Located in Homewood
Close to Medical Facilities, Shopping and Social Outings
Updated Amenities
24-Hour Concierge
Nurse On Site
Social Activities
community

New Orleans JWV holds installation

On July 9, the Ben Katz Post 580 of the Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A. held its installation at Kosher Cajun in Metairie. Ron Sivernell of Dallas, department commander for the JWV Department of Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana and Oklahoma, officiated.

Carol Berman continued in her role as post commander.

Other officers are Elliott Bain, senior vice commander; Ed Young, junior vice commander; Nathan Lew, Judge Advocate; Joel Picker, quartermaster; Judy Newman, adjutant; Gerald Newman, chief of staff; Rabbi David Posternock, chaplain; Jack Gross, NMI representative; Louis Trachtman, surgeon; Hilton Title, color sergeant; Leon Pesses, officer of the day; Jack Gross, patriotic instructor/NMI. Lew Shuman is outgoing adjutant.

In addition to the installation, there was a discussion of D-Day, a round of Judge Sol Jeopardy, and discussion about a Nov. 7 program that JWV will hold at Temple Sinai. The event will feature author Marlene Trestman as part of the Judge Sol and Jackie Gothard JWV Women’s Speaker Series. Trestman’s new book is “Most Fortunate Unfortunates: The Jewish Orphans Home of New Orleans,” scheduled to be released in October.

Sivernell said that “many people say JWV is the best kept secret. Actually, it’s the worst secret to keep.”

Established in 1896, “we were the first veterans service organization, and we have been doing it continuously.”

The organization “provides services to every veteran. We don’t just provide services to Jewish veterans.”

Current Jewish soldiers receive free membership until one year after leaving the military. Active members are honorably discharged Jewish

Born to Care

If there’s one thing we were born to do, it’s care for people. Not only for the babies we deliver every day, but for everyone in the city we serve. We were born to keep hearts strong, seniors healthy, keep hope alive, and keep all of New Orleans happy and healthy. Because at Touro, we were Born to Care.

Department Commander Ron Sivernell installs Post Commander Carol Berman and other officers on July 9

U.S. veterans who served during a war or conflict. Associate members served during a time without war or conflict, or served for an allied military during war and later became a U.S. citizen.

Patrons are family members of veterans, community leaders, veterans of other faiths or anyone else who supports the mission and values of JWV.

Current posts in the region include New Orleans, Birmingham, Huntsville and the Pensacola area.

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 41 community
Learn more at touro.com
Touro_Brand-Campaign-Print-Ad_Southern-Jewish-Life-23-5737.indd 1 7/13/23 1:19 PM

November opening for WWII Museum’s Liberation Pavilion

The National WWII Museum will open the highly anticipated Liberation Pavilion, its final permanent exhibit hall, and officially dedicate the Col. Battle Barksdale Parade Ground, an outdoor gathering space in the heart of the New Orleans campus, on Nov. 3 — in time for the last surviving members of the World War II generation to experience what has been built in their honor.

One emphasis of the new pavilion will be bearing witness to the Holocaust. The pavilion will also explore the end of World War II, the postwar years and how the war continues to affect the world today. The three-story pavilion, made possible through the support of private donors and the State of Louisiana, houses two floors of exhibit space featuring first-person accounts, iconic imagery, powerful artifacts and immersive environments, as well as a thirdfloor theater offering audiences a brand-new cinematic experience.

The November celebration will mark the completion of the $400 million Road to Victory Capital Campaign that has propelled the extraordinary growth of the Museum’s campus from one exhibit hall to seven pavilions over the past two decades. The public announcement of this historic milestone capped off the Museum’s June 6 commemorations of the 79th anniversary of the D-Day invasion of Normandy, and the 23rd anniversary of the Museum’s grand opening.

“The National WWII Museum has the incredible responsibility and privilege of telling one of the most important stories in human history. Liberation Pavilion will be a powerful addition to the Museum experience, providing visitors with a deeper understanding of the cost of our victory and the war’s enduring impacts,”

said Stephen J. Watson, museum president and CEO. “This milestone moment will be a celebration of the Museum’s unbelievable growth but also a special opportunity to pay tribute to the men and women who helped secure victory in World War II and reflect on our own role in carrying on their legacies.”

The Pavilion’s first floor galleries, “Finding Hope in a World Destroyed,” will honor the sacrifices of the WWII generation and explore the immense cost of war with exhibits on the Holocaust, Anne Frank, faith in wartime, and the Monuments Men and Women. The first floor will also include a panoramic theater with personal testimonies from Holocaust survivors and the U.S. forces who liberated them, as well as an interfaith chapel to provide a quiet space for contemplation.

The second floor of Liberation, the Goldring Family Foundation and Woldenberg Foundation “Forces of Freedom at Home and Abroad (1945–Present),” will explore the war’s impact in the postwar period and its lasting legacies today. Exhibits will examine the rebuilding efforts of a world destroyed, the war crimes trials, the emergence of the U.S. as a world “superpower,” movements for social change and civil rights, new technological innovations and the war’s impact on foreign policy. An interactive gallery will provide a reflective space for visitors to voice their thoughts on the war’s legacy and what it means today.

On the third floor, the Priddy Family Foundation Freedom Theater will offer audiences a multimedia experience focused on what was at stake during World War II and the meaning of Allied victory. The production, being developed by The Hettema Group, will highlight how freedom and democracy

were nearly extinguished from the world in the 1930s and 1940s while also portraying how America helped to defend and promote freedom and human rights after World War II. At a pivotal moment in the show, the theater audience platform itself will rotate.

Adjacent to Liberation Pavilion, the 24,000-square-foot Col. Battle Barksdale Parade Ground is an impressive outdoor space at the heart of the Museum’s campus. Its dedication comes almost two decades after the first major donation to the Road to Victory Capital Campaign by Donna and Jim Barksdale, then a Museum trustee, who earmarked the funds for a future parade ground in honor of his uncle Colonel Battle Barksdale, an Army officer in World War II.

The beginnings of the Museum date back to 1990, when University of New Orleans professors Stephen Ambrose, PhD, and Gordon H. “Nick” Mueller, PhD, discussed plans for a modest D-Day museum.

“We have achieved something beyond what Stephen Ambrose and I could have imagined when we set out to create The National D-Day Museum,” said Mueller, Museum president and CEO emeritus. “Steve often spoke of his dream for the Museum to serve as a ‘love song to democracy,’ a dream that has come true over the past 20 years. Now, we can more fully thank the WWII generation and show the world what their fight for freedom means today.”

The Nov. 3 grand opening will be part of the Museum’s weeklong “D-Day to Liberation: Road to Victory Celebration,” which will include a series of private and public events to honor the WWII generation and thank the many supporters who made the campus expansion possible. During this weeklong celebration, The National WWII Museum will also host Medal of Honor Recipients and their families in New Orleans for the 2023 Congressional Medal of Honor Society Convention, presented by the Stephen G. and Regina Oswald Foundation.

42 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life
Artist rendering of Holocaust liberation exhibit National World War II Museum Liberation Pavilion

Jewish Broadcasting Service expands programming, reach in region

Jewish Broadcasting Service Acting CEO Darah Golub remembers back in 2005, when her father, Rabbi Mark S. Golub, said American television needed a Jewish channel.

Today, JBS is a non-profit Jewish television network, supported by donations from viewers and foundations, and is available in more than 70 million households worldwide and in the U.S. on Spectrum, Direct TV, Comcast, Hotwire, Roku, Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV and many other TV providers. Viewers include already committed Jews, those on the periphery and people new to the Jewish community.

Spectrum, by Sept. 1, will bring JBS to their

lineups in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Tennessee, NW Florida and North and South Carolina in their southern service areas.

JBS programming covers the panorama of Jewish life. Features include daily news direct from Israel and the JBS News Desk, roundtables and interviews about the current political climate with leading figures (“Eye on Israel”), High Holy Days and weekly Shabbat services, programming for children, the award-winning Israeli drama series “Srugim,” and Jewish and Israeli films. Also featured are Hebrew lessons and Talmud study and profiles on Jewish film directors, authors and musicians. As Golub says, “there is something for everyone, including sports.”

Golub said as they grow the network they hope to highlight regional stories, including those from the Southern Jewish Life magazine coverage area.

JBS Chief Marketing Officer David Brugnone, who has been with the network since the beginning, said they continue to look at opportunities for growing content and getting into more households through the emerging streaming platforms.

“Many of our viewers really like traditional

TV. And we are definitely embracing the new streaming media and looking at more programming that is of interest to our younger Jewish viewers… as well as how they consume media,” said Brugnone.

Adds Golub, “it’s a balance. We want to honor and continue that tradition while at the same time focusing on the future.”

continued from page 40 >> Golda

1967, when she traveled with a Jewish boyfriend to work for a month on a kibbutz in the north part of the country.

Nattiv said he and “Golda” screenwriter Nicholas Martin did much research to get a full picture of Meir. They spoke with her bodyguard, press secretary and her family about the prime minister who served Israel from 1969 to 74.

“We learned a lot about Golda as a leader, but much more so, as a person,” he said. “That’s what the heart of this movie is all about.”

Nattiv lives in Los Angeles with his wife and producing partner, Jaime Ray Newman, and their two daughters. He and Newman run New Native Pictures, which is focused on developing risk-taking, original and socially relevant content for the screen.

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 43 culture What’s Your TRADITION? www.galatoires.com
JBS series “In the Spotlight” with host Abigail Pogrebin

Well-informed communities are stronger communities

Help Strengthen Our Southern Jewish Communities — By Supporting Independent, Award-Winning Original Jewish Journalism!

Southern Jewish Life tells our story, keeping our communities connected and informed!

Yes, I want to help keep our communities

Name/s

r I want this to be anonymous

As you want to be acknowledged in our alphabetical supporter listings

Address City State Zip

Phone

Email Address (for our weekly e-newsletter):

Southern Jewish Life Online: www.supportSJL.com or call 888.613.YALL (9255)

r I am interested in partnering with Southern Jewish Life to develop marketing strategies to grow my business!

Please Indicate Your Support Level

r $10000 SuperMensch

r $5000 Publisher

r $1800 Editorial Circle

r $1000 Reporters

r $500 Columnists

r $360 Headliners

r Check Enclosed

r $180 Correspondents

r $100 Typesetters

r $54 Friend of SJL

r $25 Voluntary Subscriber

r $ Other

r Credit Card: We can process Mastercard, Visa, Amex and Discover

Card Number

Expires CVV (4 digit for Amex)

Card Billing Zip

Feel free to call us or use supportSJL.com for card payments

r Monthly Supporter: Please Charge My Card $________ Monthly

Gail Chalew installed as NCJW president

Gail Naron Chalew was elected president of the National Council of Jewish Women’s Greater New Orleans Section at its closing event and installation reception on June 11.

Chalew is an editor specializing in academic books and articles, as well as a committed volunteer working toward the betterment of the New Orleans Jewish community. A former editor of the New Orleans Jewish News, she also wrote extensively on the New Orleans Jewish community’s experiences during and after Katrina for the national press.

Becoming involved in NCJW made perfect sense to Chalew because of its commitment to the well-being of women and children and its stance on human rights. Chalew has co-chaired NCJW Way, been recording secretary, and served as vice president of programming.

The founding chair of LimmudFest New Orleans, Chalew has guided its growth through its first seven conferences. In addition to its large biennial festival attracting hundreds of participants, Limmud also has sponsored engaging learning opportunities throughout the year.

She addressed NCJW leaders on “Healing a Broken World.”

“My overarching goal as president is to provide the structure and opportunities for our members to make their voices heard and help improve the well-being of women and children, and to continue the NCJW legacy, which we are all so proud of,” Chalew said.

“We will begin the programming year with a workshop on the nuts and bolts of advocacy, which will be open to the entire membership and will guide our path forward,” she said.

Gail Fenton Pesses, who finished her two years as president, welcomed the nearly 70 members attending the event at the Windsor Court.

“I am so grateful to my outstanding Executive Committee for the inspiring leadership and support you offered, and to my Board of Directors for your hard work, your feedback and for caring so much,” Pesses said. “To the Past Presidents who offered me advice and guidance throughout my presidency, thank you.”

Reflecting on her time as president, “I am, once again, in awe of what bright, educated and motivated women can accomplish when working

44 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life
connected through
Celebrating 33 Years of Covering and Connecting Our Communities
Thank You
Supporting Southern Jewish Life Mail to: P.O. Box 130052 • Birmingham, AL 35213
for
NCJW officers are: (Front row, left to right) Carol Newman, Loel Samuel, Diana Mann, Kathy Shepard, Barbara Kaplinsky. (Back row) Susan Constant, Gail Chalew, Robin Giarrusso, Gail Pesses, Susan Hess. Not pictured are Jody Portnoff Braunig, Sara Lewis, Tricia Kirschman, Al Page, Karen Sher. Outgoing President Gail Pesses passes the gavel to Gail Chalew

together,” Pesses said. “It is because of you that we have been able to do all of this. Your dedication, your feedback, your stepping up has been at the heart of all we have accomplished.”

Other featured speakers were Nominating Committee Chairperson Ina Weber Davis, and Installing Officer and NCJW GNO Vice President Judge Robin Giarrusso. The invocation was performed by Dani Levine, Director of Social Impact, Hillel International, and the Hamotzi by Gail’s husband Stuart, and daughters Naomi and Hannah Chalew.

Also installed as officers were Executive Vice-President Jody Portnoff Braunig; Vice Presidents Susan Constant Greenberg, Judge (ret.) Robin Giarrusso, Sara Lewis, Carol Newman, and Karen Sher; Corresponding Secretary Diana Mann; Financial Secretary Loel Samuel; Treasurer Kathy Shepard; Assistant Treasurer Tricia Kirschman; and Ex-Officio Past Presidents Gail Fenton Pesses and Susan Hess.

Elected board members are Jessica Bach, Sylvia Finger, Lilli Geltman, Barbara Greenberg, Robin Goldblum, Amelia Halstead, Ronda Kottle, Carole Neff, Nancy Pesses, Killian Philipson, Tana Velen and Lynne Wasserman.

Celia Katz and Florence Schornstein continue as NCJW honorary vice presidents.

>> Rear Pew

continued from page 46

The kingdom of Judah was populated by people descended from worshippers of the Golden Calf, and The South is populated by people who worship Golden Flake. Shofar blasts throughout the kingdom of Judah would signal days of pious worship based on the moon, and the South worships Moon Pies.

The most important commonality between The South and the southern kingdom of Judah: Even in the Old City of Jerusalem, right on David Street in the Shuk, there’s an Alabama Store. Roll Tide.

Doug Brook realizes that, with the magazine’s expanded coverage area, his column is going south now more than ever. For more, listen to the FIVEstar rated Rear Pew Mirror podcast at https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/ show/rearpewmirror or any major podcast platform. For past columns, visit http://rearpewmirror.com/

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 45 community
NCJW board members are: (Front row, left to right) Carole Neff, Barbara Greenberg. (Back row) Jessica Bach, Killian Philipson, Ronda Kottle, Sylvia Finger. Not pictured are Lilli Geltman, Robin Goldblum, Amelia Halstead, Nancy Pesses, Tana Velen, Lynne Wasserman.

The Southern Kingdom

In the world today, there is a country that’s an all-too-rare beacon of democracy shining bright amid the world around it. Particularly in recent years, as seen daily in the news, this country struggles with the world’s perception of it while it endures internal trials the likes of which have been seldom seen in its history.

It began as a single, unified nation. After nearly a hundred years, the country literally split into two — the north versus the south — and was arguably never the same again. One of the most divisive events in its history was an instance of violent dissent regarding succession in its leadership.

Of course, this is about Israel. Three thousand years ago, the united kingdom of Israel was initially ruled by kings Saul, David and Solomon. Not at the same time, of course. After the death of Solomon, the last of these three kings, the inheritance of the throne was highly contested.

Solomon had successfully inherited the throne from David. However, at the end of Solomon’s reign, 10 of the tribes rebelled against his son, Rehoboam, resulting in them splitting off into the northern Kingdom of Israel. Solomon had left behind controversial edicts that his son ultimately paid for by having his kingdom permanently split.

This left just the tribe of Judah to become the Kingdom of… Judah. They were soon joined in their southern realm by the tribe of Benjamin, and some of the non-territorial priestly tribe of Levi.

The capital of Judah was Jerusalem, which had been the final capital of the unified kingdom of Israel though there were three other capitals prior — much like the eventual capital of the United States, Washington. (Listen to all the googling that people are doing.)

It’s true, Jerusalem wasn’t the original capital. It would need to have existed from the beginning and, as the name indicates, the City of David was built by… David.

The two kingdoms were separated by the Mazon-Dibon Line. They contentiously coexisted for about 200 years until the north was defeated by Assyria. The 10 tribes of the fallen northern kingdom are commonly called the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel.

Most of Western, European Judaism is regarded as descended from Judah, though various populaces around the world claim descent from some of those “lost” tribes.

Some scholars say that the Southern kingdom wasn’t especially developed and fortified until after the kingdoms split. Nonetheless, the Kingdom of Judah is where many events made famous in Sunday School classes occurred, including the destruction of the Temple, the Egyptian pharaoh Shishak taking the Ark of the Covenant to the city of Tanis and placing it in the Well of Souls, and the tragic lox shortage of 623 B.C.E.

One difference between the Southern kingdom of Judah and the southern United States is the variety of locales each encompasses. The kingdom of Judah didn’t extend as far as Cairo, Memphis, Lebanon, Ashkalon, Dothan, or Shiloh. But the American South encompasses Cairo (Georgia), Memphis (duh), Lebanon (Tennessee), Ascalon (Georgia), Dothan (Alabama), or Shiloh (Georgia).

Hebron is a rare city which is found in both the kingdom of Judah and The South (Kentucky), though they don’t share the same zip code. And while it might seem like there’d be other parallels, Montgomery isn’t counterparted even by a Mount Gemorrah, there are many rocks in the Middle East but none named Little Rock, and Hilton Head lacks a parallel Rosh Hilton.

46 August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life rear pew mirror • doug brook Commentary that really goes South continued on previous page RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL ONE-DAY CONCRETE FLOOR COATINGS From The Best In The Business 855-681-1140 “Professional group of guys who show pride in their workmanship. The concrete looks wonderful and the dedication they have shows in the nal products' outcome.” —Tristan K. Premium Floor Coatings, Installed In 1 Day! Lifetime Warranty Durable Low Maintenance Product More Durable Than Epoxy Experienced Installers 12 Hours - To Walk ON, 24 Hours - To Move Heavy Items and Only 48 Hours - To Drive On! $500 OFF Your Next Project When Calling Today!* 6 months same as cash nancing LIMITED TIME *Offer cannot be combined with additional offers and must be presented at point of sale. Expires 7/30/2023. Call today

More Southern Jewish Life in Three Steps…

1. Are you receiving This Week in Southern Jewish Life?

Our FREE comprehensive e-news contains the latest news between the print editions of Southern Jewish Life. To receive our e-news:

Use the QR code to the right to go to the signup page online

Or… Send your email to subscribe@sjlmag.com

Or… use the signup section at sjlmag.com

Or… write your email address here and send us this page!

Subscribe me! My email is:

2. Print Edition or Online?

Would you like to read Southern Jewish Life online instead of receiving a hard copy by mail?

If you would, then email your name and address to subscribe@sjlmag.com to let us know, or mail this page to us.

I want to read Southern Jewish Life online! Email

3. Subscribe to Southern Jewish Life Regional Edition!

Our new Regional edition, covering the area from Virginia to East Texas, will be online and by subscription, with a lot of material not in our print editions. You won’t want to miss an issue! (Individual issues will also be available for purchase)

Use the QR code to the right to go to our online subscription page

Or… send us this form (and a check or credit card info) to subscribe!

m 1 Year ($24) m 2 Years ($40) m This is great! Here’s additional support ($______)

Name

Email (necessary for online access)

Address

August/Sept. 2023 • Southern Jewish Life 47
City State Zip
Name Address
City State Zip
Exp. CVV Billing Zip Mail To: Southern Jewish
PO Box 130052, Birmingham AL 35213 subscribe@sjlmag.com • sjlmag.com Note: Contributions to SJL are not tax deductible
If charging: Card Number
Life,

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.