Southern Jewish Life, New Orleans, September 2020

Page 1

Southern Jewish Life NEW ORLEANS EDITION

HURRICANE LAURA RESPONSE SUMMER CAMP 2021? VIRTUAL HIGH HOLY DAYS INSIDE:

September 2020 Volume 30 Issue 9

Southern Jewish Life Southern Jewish Life 3747 Esplanade Ave., 3rd Floor P.O. BoxWest 130052 Metairie, LAAL 70002 Birmingham, 35213 Temple Sinai, Lake Charles (SJL file)


i

va A ll

2

i

u dS

te

i Lim

Sti s te

!

le b a l

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life


shalom y’all “F--- the Jew.” That’s from history, right? Street rallies in Europe during the Holocaust? No? Modern day? Surely, it’s neo-Nazis trying to gain attention in Europe. Wrong again? Well, that has to be some white supremacist group. After all, they’re the real dangerous haters in society. Wrong on all counts. That chant was heard at the end of August on Melrose in Los Angeles. The entire chant was “F--- the Jew. Kill the cop.” Not exactly a common right-wing sentiment. While the 2017 alt-right “Jews will not replace us” (whatever that means) is well known, the Los Angeles chant was mostly ignored. How did we get to a point in America where one can chant something like that and not feel at least a twinge of “hey, this is wrong”? When leading personalities fell they can freely share “their truth” that includes obvious antisemitism, often echoing the notorious “I’m not an antisemite” Louis Farrakhan, something is amiss. When left-wing groups like IfNotNow, when they bother to acknowledge the existence of antisemitism on the left, say it needs to be ignored for the greater good of social justice or understood as the cry of the oppressed (but according to the same group, as asserted in a recent forum, when it comes from the right, it has to be loudly condemned whether real or imagined), something has gone wrong. It is said that we Jews are the world’s all-purpose scapegoat. In a communist regime, we’re the capitalist pigs. In a capitalist system, we’re the communist infiltrators. What is the worst thing to be in society at a given time? Well, that’s what the Jews are. Today, in many spaces, the Jews are portrayed as the epitome of whiteness and privilege. Exploiting the poor? The Jews. Fomenting a racial divide? The Jews. Teaching American cops how to be racist and oppress people of color? Israel, which means the Jews. All we’re waiting for now is someone to start saying “the Jews are our misfortune.” Whatever happened to the idea that it is unacceptable to blame “the Jews” — or any

SJL Online: sjlmag.com

To subscribe, email subscribe@sjlmag.com

continued on page 6

DON ’ T FORGET TO WE AR YOUR

O N LY AT M Y E Y E D R .

Digital device usage is increasing. Protect your eyes from harmful blue light emitted from your digital devices with ScreenScreen™, our personalized blue light protection solution.

myeyedr.com | 866.693.9336

YO U R E X A M + G L A S S E S M AY B E C O M P L E T E LY C OV E R E D . September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

3


commentary

MESSAGES

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

It is up to us to overcome

I felt honored to come to Birmingham for the first time and fell in love with not just the city Our lives and the lives of every person on Self-quarantining and but the people. You have taken Southern hospitality to a new level with your kind and caring this planet have continued to be affected, di- social distancing are approach to the JCC Maccabi Games. rectly and indirectly, for the past few months by only two of the many Led by the Helds, your hard-working volunteers health were wonderful. They partnered Covid-19. TheSokol basicand sense of security, stability methods prowith your outstanding staff, led interrupted by Betzy Lynch, make the 2017 JCC Maccabi games a huge hit. and normalization have been and tofessionals recommend Iuprooted. want to take opportunity as executive director Maccabi USA tothe say thank you on behalf No,this I am not a physician, nor am I to oftry and prevent of aneveryone expert ininvolved. public health. All I have are my spread and to inhibit personal values, beliefs andthe thoughts that Maccabiah have massgames infection. I had just returned from 20th World in Israel with a U.S. delegation of helped to shape my perception surrounding As Jews, one of inour over 1100, who joined 10,000 Jewish athletes from 80 countries. Back July the eyes of the entire these difficult times. me toand share of more Jewish world were onAllow Jerusalem thesome Maccabiah. This pastfundamental month with 1000 athletes and those with you. Mitzvot is visiting the point. coaches from around the world being in Birmingham, you became the focal The Jewish High Holy Days are once again sick. However, at a time Everyone Jewish community the community at unable large, including a wonderful knocking onfrom our the doors. There seems toand be no when we are to physically visit and take police force, are to be commended. These games will go down in history as being a seminal ways better time to reflect on the past year, while care of others, we must find alternative moment for the Jewishtocommunity wefuture, build to the futureour by support providingand such Jewish also looking forward the hope ofasour to show to wonderful provide assistance memories. in the coming new year. The dramatic impact to at risk groups and individuals in our comthatMargolis this once-in-a-century pandemic has had munities. The Consulate General of Israel to Jed and will continue toMaccabi have on our Executive Director, USAlives, is beyond the Southwest is continuing to work to do just expression. That is why I think the battle against this, adapt in these uncertain times and show this virus is not only in the hospitals and in the that we are here standing with our communisupremacists would like to see pushed back suffering economies. It is in each and every one ties in the Southwest region. From providing On Charlottesville into a corner and made to feel lesser. We stand of us: the very nature of us as human beings, take-home-meals to frontline medical staff with and pray for the family of Heather Heyer, Editor’s Note: This to the communities, andreaction societies is atevents risk. inThat is and hospital workers to offering warm meals who was there standing up to the face of this Charlottesville, by Jeremy why we all havewritten to remember thatNewman, fighting, and to senior citizens from local kosher and Israeli hate. Master of the Alpha Epsilon Pi ThetaisColony hopefully defeating, the pandemic one thing. owned restaurants in the community, we are We recognize the essence the American at Auburn was shared AEPi Doing so, University, while protecting our by most precious doing what we can to help of make a difference. as ato two-century old struggle to rid National, whichand called it “very eloquent” values, beliefs, human character is aand differ- narrative We continue work in fulfilling our obligation ourselves of such and allow those inand praised “our brothers at AEPi Theta Colony at ent challenge altogether. to our fellow mancorners, while keeping ourselves seat at the table that they so deserve. Auburn University and… the leadership they to them Rosh Hashanah is the perfect opportunity othersthe safe. the struggle to fulfill the Ipromise of thethere display on their to campus. ” take a moment remember who we are, what is It isBelieve me when I say, know that of Independence, thatthe “allchallenges men are important to us, and how we can stand together Declaration are no easy solutions to address endowed by their Creator with as a community in the face of these uncertain- created that we equal… currently face. Moreover, unfortunateWhite on to a certain ” We know our work ties, whilesupremacy nourishinghas ourbeen spirita cancer as we look ly, thereunalienable are difficultrights. decisions that have to be our country since its beginning, threatening is far from know we will notOur brighter future. made on a finished, personalbut andwecommunal basis. its Sometimes hopes, its values, and its better backwards. numbers speak forangels. themselves. move morals, values, and strength are being tested to The thatthat tookrelate place to in Charlottesville The events numbers Covid-19 are one theWhen fullestmen extent. and women, fully armed, take represented the worst of this of these cases. Here are a fewnation. figures:Those the glob- to Even in these mostwith challenging the streets in droves swastikastimes, and we who marcheddeath onto the with tikisurpassed torches must do our part al Covid-19 tollstreets has already in having hope for the future other symbols of hate, it is a reminder of how and swastikas so to provoke violence and 650,000 and isdid continuing to climb. In the U.S. relevant and doing what we can for and ouranti-Semitism community. I the issues of racism fear. marched onto the did alone,Those over who 150,000 Americans (at streets this writing) praytoday. to the Almighty that wetoall have are It is a wake-up call thewill work thatthe so to profess an ideology that harkens back to have died from Covid-19. strength to stand up to these challenges. to be done to ensure a better, more Let us a bleaker, more wretched time in of ourpeople, history.we needs When talking about masses define ourselves as righteous. If we so, not welcoming country. But it should notdo come A time women of creeds, tend towhen forgetmen the and individual.​ Th ​ many at is why our without only willawe be doingonthe right thing but we will reflection how far we’ve come. races, religions the wereidea far from far also be able to educate our children and our sages and emphasized that equal everyand single Americachildren was born slave nation. century from safe in our own borders. A time where person is important when they said “Every one children’s ona cherishing lifeAand obeyinto our history we engaged in a war in partyour Americans lived under a constant cloud of who saves one soul is as if he saved a world ing the fundamental Jewish law of “Love ensure we would not continue as one. We racism, and pervasive and its anti-Semitism fullness.​” Remembering thathate. thereThe are to fellow neighbor as yourself. ” ourselves confronted byin theallissue of civil events that took place in Charlottesville served real people behind these numbers is not only found I send to all of my friends of the Jewrights, and embarked on a mission to ensure as a reminder of how painfully relevant these important, but essential. Honoring those who ish communities in the Southwest my personal fair treatment all peoples their issues are today. have been taken by this horrible virus, standing the greetings and hopeofthat we will no all matter be engraved skin color. Although we’ve made great strides, side-by-side with others that continue to feel its in the Book of Life. Auburn’s Alpha Epsilon Pi stands with the a mission still grappling with today. devastating effects, ofand providing aidand to those it isShana Tova we’re to y’all. Jewish community Charlottesville, mostthe vulnerable are thearound tasks atthe hand. with Jewish people country Two of the most vulnerable communities and around the world. We also stand with the in this pandemic the elderly wellthat as inminorities who areare targeted by theashate dividuals withinunderlying health was on display Charlottesville. Weconditions. stand with the minorities of whom these white 4

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

America was also born an immigrant Gilad As Katz is Israel’s Consul General country. early as the pilgrims, many to the Southwest, in found Houston. Hiscountry territory groups and based families in the thealso covers Louisiana and stakes, Arkansas. opportunity to plant chase their future, and be themselves. Few were met with open

July 2020 2020 September

Southern Jewish Life PUBLISHER/EDITOR Lawrence M. Brook editor@sjlmag.com ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER/ADVERTISING Lee J. Green lee@sjlmag.com ASSOCIATE EDITOR Richard Friedman richard@sjlmag.com V.P. SALES/MARKETING, NEW ORLEANS Jeff Pizzo jeff@sjlmag.com CREATIVE DIRECTOR Ginger Brook ginger@sjlmag.com SOCIAL/WEB Emily Baldwein connect@sjlmag.com PHOTOGRAPHER-AT-LARGE Rabbi Barry 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 BIRMINGHAM OFFICE P.O. Box 130052, Birmingham, AL 35213 2179 Highland Ave., Birmingham, AL 35205 205/870.7889 NEW ORLEANS OFFICE 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 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. 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 2020. 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.


agenda interesting bits & can’t miss events

On Aug. 21, Tulane Hillel offered Starbucks drinks and Hillel facemasks to students.

Shell grant of $300k to help restore Louisiana Rosenwald School Shell presented a $300,000 grant to the River Road African American Museum in Donaldsonville, La., to support the restoration of the Museum’s historic Rosenwald School building. Rosenwald Schools began in 1913, in a partnership between philanthropist Julius Rosenwald, president of Sears, and Booker T. Washington, founder of the Tuskegee Institute. After the six initial schools in Alabama, Rosenwald provided seed money for communities throughout the South to build over 5,000 schools for Black students. While over 400 were built in Louisiana, only three or four are known to still exist. The RRAAM Rosenwald School building was built in St. James Parish in the early 1930s. It was moved to Donaldsonville in 2001 in an effort to save the building from demolition. The building, now located at 511 Williams St., is being renovated and historically restored to become part of the museum’s growing campus in downtown Donaldsonville. When completed next summer, the structure will house the RRAAM Rosenwald School for Education, Culture and History, which will provide a modern space for museum visitors and school groups to explore the important role of

African Americans in the region’s history. The facility will also enhance the museum’s ability to provide science, technology, engineering, art, and math (STEAM) programing, healthy eating/ healthy living seminars, and culture and history events, in addition to serving as a center for genealogical research. “The River Road AfriLeft to Right: Tyrone Smith, Shell Convent Refinery Operator can American Museum is and RRAAM Board Member; Emanuel Mitchell, RRAAM Board truly excited about the gift Member; Allen Pertuit, Shell Convent Refinery General Manager; Shell is contributing to our Darryl Hambrick, RRAAM Executive Director; Todd L. Sterling, work,” said Todd L. Sterling, RRAAM Board President; Rhoman Hardy, Shell Vice President RRAAM’s Board President. U.S. Gulf Coast. “Many children, members of the community, and patrons from around the 20 years,” said Rhoman Hardy, Shell Vice Presworld will be the beneficiary of the program- ident U.S. Gulf Coast. “The Rosenwald School ming, and events that the Rosenwald School will bring new resources and opportunity to our for Education, Culture and History will execute region while assisting the Museum in advancing once the building is renovated and available for its mission; one we believe deeply in. This partuse.” nership echoes Shell’s commitment to diversity “Shell’s relationship with the River Road Af- and inclusion both with our employees and in rican American Museum goes back more than the communities in which we operate.” September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

5


agenda ONE STOP

KOSHER FOOD SHOPPING t, Sept. 18

Rosh Hashanah starts Friday nigh

Let Us Cater Your Holiday Meals ey Cakes Round Challahs • Wine • Hon Appetizers • Soups • Entrees

jun.com

Huge Catering Menu on kosherca Order by Sept. 11

ing

Take Out — Catering — Outdoor Din Mon-Thu 10am-7pm

day) • Fri & Sun 10am-3pm (Closed Satur

10

3519 Severn, Metairie • (504) 888-20 www.koshercajun.com

>> Editor’s Note

continued from page 3 other group of people as a group, for that matter — for the ills of society? We have seen that movie before, and we know the ending. While Trump is condemned by many as Hitler Lite, of late, blame-the-Jew rhetoric has been coming from, and accepted by, a completely different part of the political spectrum. Even worse, it is the part of the spectrum where the American Jewish community has traditionally felt more at home — fighting for social justice and helping others. Now, unless we hold views that are deemed kosher — such as ignoring the centrality of the land of Israel in Judaism — we have to beg our way into those spaces. May we please march with you for women’s rights even if we’re part of the 90 percent of American Jews who favor Israel’s existence? May we stand with the LGBTQ community and not be accused of pinkwashing? There are some successes. Certainly, the vast silent majority does not hold to such hate. But there are enough troubling outspoken examples, and their number has been increasing — and the reaction to them lessening. As this issue is wrapping, there are also reports that the new Black Lives Matter organizational platform — as distinct from just the notion that Black lives matter — does not have the anti-Israel rhetoric that the 2016 platform had. There is still a lot of “solidarity with Palestine” rhetoric individually, but the national organizational change is at least something. There is a lot of outreach that has to be done, a lot of change that has to happen, lest the polarization and scapegoating become worse — and more dangerous.

Lawrence Brook, Publisher/Editor

letters Regarding the Black Lives Matter editorial in the July edition: BLM is an openly Marxist destroy-America group uninterested in Black people and their problems. Why would it surprise you they’re antisemitic as well? It never ceases to amaze me how naive you liberals can be. I guess you think Louis Farrakhan is looking out for Blacks as well. Bruce Samuels, MD New Orleans

What do you think?

Send your letters to editor@sjlmag.com, or mail to P.O. Box 130052, Birmingham, AL 35213 6 September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life


agenda With no tourism, Jerusalem’s Alabama Shop goes online to serve Bama nation Just as most Alabama fans won’t be able to get into Bryant-Denny Stadium this year because of coronavirus, Alabama fans aren’t able to travel to Jerusalem to visit the Alabama Shop. So Hani Imam is making it possible to get Alabama swag from Jerusalem online, through the new website bamabazaar.com. “Covid-19 made it very difficult for us,” Imam said. “No tourists whatsoever in Jerusalem.” The store is an unexpected find in the heart of the Arab market in Jerusalem’s Old City, and has been featured in the New Yorker and on “Conan O’Brien.” But for Imam, who attended Alabama from 1985 to 1989 and also lived for a time in Huntsville, it’s a natural extension of his passionate fandom. When he returned to Jerusalem in 1994, he missed the wide open spaces of Alabama and “one of the best football teams ever.” When he took over the family business, he hung a sign as a tribute to the Crimson Tide, prompting questions. He then started making Alabama memorabilia in Arabic, English and Hebrew — and certainly differentiating himself from other stores in the area. While there are the requisite Alabama T-shirts, there are many only-in-Israel items, such as a Crimson Tide painted shofar, ceramic mezuzahs and Alabama kipot. Olive wood items include a Biblical wine cup with the Alabama logo, a Big Al made from a solid block of olive wood, Stars of David, jewelry boxes, coasters — and an olive wood framed plaque commemorating “2nd and 26,” which needs no explanation for a true Bama fan. Silver necklaces declare “Roll Tide” in English and Hebrew. How about a ceramic Bama pomegranate for Rosh Hashanah, or a hand-made silver Alabama pendant with a 2,000-year-old authentic fragment of Roman glass? Imam has two prayers — “better days in the near future” with tourists able to return, and of course, “a national championship season.”

Unmatched Customer Service • Superior Sewing Machine Brands That’s what has attracted sewing enthusiasts from Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, Tennessee, Florida, Arkansas and Louisiana to downtown Homewood for over 70 years!

Machine Sales and Service • Scissor Sharpening

Since 1950

We Take Bring in your old sewing machine, serger or Trade-Ins! embroidery machine for even bigger savings! Located at 1722 28th Avenue South, Homewood

205.870.1931 sewingmachinemart.com Open Tuesday-Friday, 9:30-4:30

Losing Your Mask? Problem Solved! Sidewalk cancels this year’s Birmingham Jewish Film Festival On Aug. 19, the Sidewalk Film Festival announced that the Birmingham Jewish Film Festival scheduled for this November is being cancelled, “with hopes of producing an even bigger and better Festival in 2021,” said Sidewalk Development Coordinator Catherine Wright. “We know that we all wanted this festival to happen,” she said; “however, the pandemic has made this and many other nonprofit events impossible to pull off.” The first Jewish Film Festival was held last year, the first specialty festival produced by Sidewalk, which has become one of the top film festivals in the nation.

Mask Lanyards! Styles for Boys, Girls, Ladies, Men Prices begin at $5, depending on style

We’re Open, Come On In! Inside, Curbside or Delivery Mon-Fri 10am-6pm • Sat 10am-4pm

5101 W. Esplanade Ave (at Chastant) Metairie 504-407-3532 nolagiftsanddecoronline.com September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

7


agenda Jewish Federations from across North America will be coming together for a “Communal Kvell,” a national online program of inspiration, storytelling and entertainment. The event will kick off campaign years across the country and will be a taste of the first-ever Virtual General Assembly for the Jewish Federations of North America. The free event is Sept. 16 at 12:30 p.m. Central, and registration is at jewishfederations.org. Longtime community volunteer Gail Chalew will be honored with the 2020 Oscar J. Tolmas L’Dor V’Dor Award during a virtual reception, Sept. 23 at 6 p.m. on Zoom. The reception brings together beneficiaries of the Tolmas Charitable Trust, and the award celebrates “the unsung heroes of the Greater New Orleans Jewish community.” On Sept. 11, the monthly joint Shabbat service in Baton Rouge will be hosted in the Beth Shalom Zoom at 6:30 p.m. B’nai Israel Rabbi Batsheva Appel will deliver the drash. B’nai Israel in Monroe is planning to hold a baseball exhibit in spring 2021, celebrating members of Monroe’s Jewish community, such as Saul Adler and William Louis Bendel, who had substantial contributions to sports in the area. Anyone with memorabilia for the exhibit is asked to contact Sandra Blate at the congregation. The Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience, which will open in New Orleans early next year, is hosting “Growing Up Jewish in the Delta: A Conversation with Deborah Lamensdorf Jacobs,” Sept. 13 at 7 p.m. The program is free, but registration is required for Zoom. The program will also be on Facebook Live.

Stream the best of WYES anytime, anywhere. With WYES Passport, you can catch up on your favorite shows any time from any device. Our local library is constantly growing with WYES documentaries, plus current and past seasons of PBS shows. Receive WYES Passport and a year subscription to New Orleans Magazine when you become a member at the $60 level.

Sign up or learn more at wyes.org/passport.

8

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

Louisiana State University legendary baseball coach and athletics director Skip Bertman will be one of the guests on the online Maccabi USA Sports Show, Sept. 15 at 7 p.m., hosted by Donna Orender, former WNBA president, and Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans CEO Arnie Fielkow. The show will also feature Ken Babby, owner of the Akron RubberDucks and Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp AA baseball teams. Adi Topolosky, originally from New Orleans and now a sixth grader in the Washington area, made national waves advocating for big-box sporting goods stores to also pay attention to women’s sports, from having team merchandise to shoes branded with female athletes. Footlocker, where the story began, invited her back to the store on Aug. 27 to present her with the Delle Donne sneakers she had originally been looking for, an apology for a clerk’s snide comment about women’s sports and a promise to do a better job of elevating women’s sports.


community

Lake Charles, Alexandria face long road of post-Laura rebuilding For further developments since press time, check sjlmag.com. While damage is still being assessed throughout western and central Louisiana, it is already clear that two synagogues face major repairs, and the small communities will need help accomplishing the task. Hurricane Laura came ashore near Cameron around 2 a.m. on Aug. 27, with winds of about 150 miles per hour, making it a Category 4 storm and the strongest to hit the state since the mid-19th century. On Aug. 31, the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans convened a statewide Zoom call to formulate Outside Temple Sinai, Lake hurricane response. Ellen Sager and Charles Bethany Sorkey, who head the Federations in Baton Rouge and North Louisiana, were on the call, along with Rabbi Raina Siroty of Gemiluth Chassodim in Alexandria, one of the two synagogues that was damaged. Michael Goldman represented Lake Charles as treasurer of Temple Sinai. In Lake Charles, some members of the Jewish community reported “total devastation” of their homes, according to Goldman. “Most have damage but are handling the damage.” The historical 1904 Temple Sinai building suffered roof damage, all windows in the social hall were blown out and there is water damage from the rain, all the files in the classrooms were soaked and the air conditioner was hit. There is also damage to the ceiling in the sanctuary. The anticipated storm surge did not materialize, so the building did not flood; the water damage came from the rain. The congregation’s Torahs had been moved to Abbeville, and on Aug. 31 were being transported to Touro Synagogue in New Orleans for safekeeping. Goldman said that since Hurricane Katrina in 2005, insurance companies have instituted a “named storm deductible” of 5 percent of the insured amount, which means the 50-family congregation is facing a deductible of almost $80,000, which Goldman said “is a tremendous figure.” The water system is “totally out” in Lake Charles, and a chlorine plant fire after the hurricane went through made breathing difficult. Most in the Jewish community have evacuated, Goldman said. Rabbi Barry Weinstein reported that the congregation’s immediate past president lost her home, the incoming president needs a new roof, and the current president needs a new roof and had heavy damage at his downtown office. Weinstein, who retired from B’nai Israel in Baton Rouge in 2008, has served Temple Sinai as visiting rabbi since 2010. This summer, the 55-member congregation announced that he would move to Lake Charles and become the resident rabbi. Weinstein said his Baton Rouge condo was “99 percent packed up” in preparation for the move, but his new home was “seriously damaged” by Laura and needs a new roof. With the prospect of no electricity in Lake Charles for weeks, at age 78 and having undergone extensive medical procedures four years ago, he said the Sinai leadership has insisted he stay in Baton Rouge for now. While he understands the logic, he admitted “I’m torn spiritually.” Siroty said that despite being so far inland, Alexandria had 100 mile September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

9


community

Sanders Painting Residential Repaint Specialist • Interior/Exterior Painting • Wood, Plaster, & Sheet Rock Repair Family Owned and Operated

205/563-9037 Involved Members of Birmingham’s Jewish Community

10

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

per hour winds. Power outages were still widespread, and those who still had water were being advised to boil it. “People had trees hit their roofs, a lot of people have structural damage,” she said. Many in the local Jewish community have century-old retail establishments that were damaged or otherwise affected. Gemiluth Chassodim had windows blown out in the front of the building and in the sanctuary, and roof damage in the sanctuary. A full assessment has not been made “because there is too much going on” and they only know about damage based on where rain collected in the sanctuary and social hall. “The symbol that stood at the base of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem, the 7-branched menorah, that framed the top of the synagogue windows is now bent from the force of the winds,” Siroty said. Those without power and water have gone to stay with friends or relatives in New Orleans or Baton Rouge. Siroty said there will be a lot of cleanup and recovery needed in the area, and a high priority is making sure families will be able to rebuild and stay in Alexandria. The Alexandria congregation serves families from a wide area, including Fort Polk, Opelousas, Natchitoches and other towns, with about 120 families. There is also a small Conservative congregation. Rabbi Judy Caplan Ginsburgh said a tree went through her father’s roof in Alexandria and damaged support beams, and his pier was washed away. She said he commented that this was the worst storm he had seen in the area in his 88 years. In Shreveport, the two synagogues did not even lose power, and Sorkey said they were able to serve as a place for people to assemble during the storm. She said there were a lot of trees down but little significant damage. The congregations in Lafayette and New Iberia reported no significant damage. In New Orleans, part of the mobilization is to help evacuees who are being housed in downtown hotels. On Aug. 28, Federation staff coordinated with the Sheraton and did a Sam’s Club run to provide needed items to evacuees. Cait Gladow, Federation marketing and communications director, said “it was alarming” to see evacuees with just a trash bag filled with what they could grab before having to leave their homes. Arnie Fielkow, Federation CEO, said they are planning a “multi-layer” response, establishing a central address to combine efforts in the Jewish community, see where needs are that can be filled, mobilize volunteers and work with other existing agencies that are already providing services. In the immediate aftermath, the Federation’s first recommendations were Second Harvest for

volunteers and donations, and the Community Foundation of Southwest Louisiana. “There are a lot of areas we can help with” based on their post-Katrina experiences, Fielkow said, and in coordinating efforts. In consultation with the Jewish Federations of North America, it was decided that the New Orleans Federation would be the recipient for hurricane relief contributions, with the partnership of the state’s two other Federations and the Jewish Endowment Foundation of Louisiana. A donation portal has been set up on the New Orleans Federation website. Goldman said the most pressing immediate need in the area is cash. Without electricity and Internet, credit and debit cards are useless, and ATMs aren’t operating. “Cash is the only way of getting items they need,” he said, including food and water, or hotel rooms. Based on Baton Rouge’s experience with the 2016 floods, Sager said gift cards will be an important element of relief as people try to repair their homes and replace what was lost. Roselle Ungar, executive director of Jewish Family Service of Greater New Orleans, said they will have case managers and social workers to provide referrals and support. After the Baton Rouge floods, they helped many people with the lengthy paperwork needed for financial assistance requests. Though the agency is in New Orleans, Ungar noted it is the only JFS in the state “and we’re here to help all the communities in the state.” Down the road, JFS will offer its tele-mental health support. “The overwhelming majority of people going through this now are not thinking therapy sessions, they’re worried about putting a tarp down,” Ungar said. Ned Goldberg, director of Jewish Children’s Regional Service, said the agency checked in with many in the affected areas. The agency works with families who have children with special needs, and Goldberg said those with ongoing needs should contact the agency. Will Samuels has been collecting information on relief efforts and volunteer opportunities, and posting them as a slide show on the Shir Chadash, Pizza Nola and King Cake Hub pages. Nechama: A Jewish Response to Disaster sent a team from its Minnesota headquarters to Lake Charles on Aug. 31 “to perform assessments of the area and determine how we can best serve those affected by Hurricane Laura.” Nechama was on the ground in Louisiana after Katrina in 2005, and in 2016 was in Baton Rouge for an extended time following severe flooding. According to the agency, which recruits volunteers to help gut and repair flooded homes, “we have received calls from communities we have assisted in the past, wanting to help, and others requesting assistance.”


community Putting threats of antisemitism in context Former FBI official Pomerantz speaks at NOLA NCJW webinar By Richard Friedman A former high-ranking FBI official shared thought-provoking and nuanced insights regarding antisemitism and hate crimes on an Aug. 30 webinar hosted by the Greater New Orleans Section of the National Council of Jewish Women, urging his audience not to “cower” in the face of reports showing antisemitic incidents increasing nationally, but also to take proactive security measures. “Jews by virtue of being Jewish stand a greater chance statistically of being a victim of a hate crime or an act of terrorism… and that is why I am speaking to you today,” Steven Pomerantz said at the start of his remarks. Yet, he added later, “When you talk about hate crimes, particularly against the Jewish community… the numbers do not necessarily reflect the condition of the threat to the Jewish community.” The overwhelming number of reports, he explained, are crimes against property — swastikas and hate symbols painted on synagogues, dormitories and other physical institutions. “Most of these do not involve serious crimes,” he said, though stressing that he was not suggesting that such antisemitic acts are not unsettling and disturbing. He noted that we live in a country of 350 million people and that during one recent reporting period, there were 39 physical assaults against Jews. “When looking at the threats to your lives and communities, we have to put them in context,” he said while clearly not minimizing the horrible physical attacks against Jews that have occurred recently, such as the Pittsburgh synagogue massacre. Pomerantz, a former assistant director of the FBI, stressed throughout the hour-long program that his goal was to bring perspective and context to the Jewish community’s concern over the high number of reported antisemitic incidents. In May 2020, for example, the Anti-Defamation League, one of the agencies that partnered with NCJW on this program, reported in its annual audit that “the American Jewish community experienced the highest level of antisemitic incidents last year (2019) since tracking began in 1979, with more than 2,100 acts of assault, vandalism and harassment reported across the United States.”

WHETHER A VIRUS OR TERRORISTS, ISRAELIS DEPEND ON ONE ORGANIZATION WHEN LIVES NEED SAVING.

Israel’s emergency medical service has been on the front lines in the fight against coronavirus while also contending with terrorist attacks, car accidents, and other threats to Israeli lives. But Magen David Adom is not government-funded. Its 25,000 EMTs and paramedics, most of them volunteers, rely on support from people like you for the supplies and equipment they need to perform their lifesaving work. No gift will help Israel more in these difficult times. Keep the people of Israel strong this coming year. Donate to Magen David Adom. Shanah Tovah. Give today at afmda.org/rosh or call 866.632.2763.

afmda.org September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

11


Experience the flavors of over 200 teas

Limited Indoor Seating By Reservation • Patio Seating Curbside Pickup, Free Delivery (5 mile radius) or GrubHub Monday-Saturday 10am-5pm • We Ship Teas Nationwide

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

community Pomerantz has represented the FBI and the law enforcement community on many occasions. He is known as an expert in the areas of terrorism and criminal justice information. During his 27-year tenure, he served three tours of duty at FBI Headquarters, including as chief of the counterterrorism section. In that role, he was responsible for supervising all FBI counterterrorism investigations, both domestically and abroad. Pomerantz, who is Jewish, began his FBI career in Alabama going after the Ku Klux Klan. A desire to educate and combat the recent surge in antisemitism has prompted New Orleans NCJW to develop an illuminating four-part series under the banner “The Plague of Antisemitism.” The program with Pomerantz was the third in the series. Hadassah New Orleans, the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans and the South-Central region of the Anti-Defamation League partnered on the series. Aaron Ahlquist, ADL regional director, moderated the Aug. 30 program. Along with his view that the growing number of incidents should be viewed in context, the long-time lawman shared some additional observations which were unvarnished and unsettling. He is concerned about the stresses and turmoil taking place today in America; from the frustration and anxiety that the Covid pandemic has triggered to the racial turmoil that has erupted in the streets to what is expected to be a bruising presidential election. “This is a volatile mix,” he said, suggesting that historically when there is “volatility and turmoil” Jews are caught in the maelstrom.

Good Relationships

Throughout his remarks, Pomerantz stressed that in addition to strengthening security, which, he noted, can be a deterrent to those who seek to harm a community, Jewish communities should develop good working relationships with local law enforcement, something, he noted, that the New Orleans Jewish community has done. “This is so important. I think that sometimes when I talk to community leaders, they say things like ‘We don’t want to be a pain in the rear end.’ I say ‘Stop — these people are not doing you a favor. They are public servants — that is their job.’” Today, Pomerantz said, antisemitism can emanate from the far right, the far left and Islamic extremists. He noted that one increasingly hears French spoken in Israel, a reflection of the growing number of French Jews who have left their country to immigrate to Israel because of the influx of radical Muslims. Common thinking is that the growth of the Internet has been a major factor in the growth of antisemitism, though this is an assumption this veteran FBI official questioned. “I think we sometimes exaggerate the influence of the Internet,” he contended, noting that hate groups would distribute printed material before the Internet. As he finished his remarks and took questions, he offered an unnerving view of the future. Referring to violent confrontations that have taken place recently between demonstrators and anti-demonstrators, he said that these results were “absolutely predictable.” The stronger the protest movement became, the stronger the anti-protest movement would become. “The worse this gets, the more violence we will see,” he predicted. As the webinar concluded, Pomerantz was asked if he was concerned over the prospect of the upcoming presidential election resulting in violence. His viewers could see that this hardened ex-FBI agent was anguished as he pondered his answer: “I don’t want to even imagine that… I am a lot more worried about violence and extremism just as a result of the climate we are in… armed groups on both sides… nothing good can come of this.” “I can see it continuing regardless of the outcome of the election, and that scares me.” A recording of the program is available from NCJW, ncjwneworleans. org. The final webinar in the series, “Is today’s Anti-Zionism the latest form of antisemitism?” with Rabbi Ammiel Hirsch, senior rabbi of the Stephen Wise Free Synagogue in New York City, will be on Oct. 4 at 3 p.m. 12

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life


community

Congregations prepare for a socially distant High Holy Days

GREG ARCENEAUX CABINETMAKERS CELEBRATING & PRESERVING LOUISIANA’S UNIQUE CULTURE & HERITAGE

Most in region going virtual-only for services Those who are used to traffic jams, remote parking and large crowds for the High Holy Days may have a sense of withdrawal this year, as most congregations in the region will have services online because of the restrictions on gatherings due to coronavirus. Even congregations that will have in-person options are instituting strict limits on the number who can attend in person — generally 50 or fewer. As Rabbi Daniel Sherman of Temple Sinai in New Orleans said, “this is no one’s first choice, but it is the right choice for this year.” Every congregation doing in-person services will require social distancing, no socializing, wearing masks, bringing personal items such as books, tallesim or kipot, temperature checks, and a recommendation that older members not attend in person. Also, anyone feeling even slightly under the weather should not show up.

ISJL Regional Service

The Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life, which provides rabbinic services and programming to communities in a 13-state region, will produce High Holy Days streaming services. The tentative schedule is for Rosh Hashanah at 7 p.m. on Sept. 18, 10 a.m. on Sept. 19. On Yom Kippur, Kol Nidre will be at 7 p.m. on Sept. 27, then services at 10 a.m. on Sept. 28, a prerecorded Yizkor service at noon, a live Yizkor at 4:15 p.m., and concluding service at 5 p.m. The services will use “Gates of Repentance.” Registration is required to receive login information.

Bautac Chair Part of a past six-month exhibit at the Ogden Museum of Southern Arts

Greg Arceneaux Cabinetmakers 17319 Norwell Drive • Covington gregarceneaux.com • 985-893-8782

The South East Chavurah, located on the Mississippi and Alabama coast, will have a Zoom service on Sept. 19 at 10:30 a.m. Call (228) 6230279 for login information. This list will be updated on our website, sjlmag.com, as more congregations release their information. Check with individual congregations as needed for Zoom links and service times.

Alabama The congregations involved in the joint Alabama Havdalah each week — Agudath Israel-Etz Ahayem in Montgomery, Emanu-El in Dothan, Beth Shalom in Auburn and Ahavas Chesed in Mobile, will have a Selichot service on Zoom, following the 7:30 p.m. Havdalah on Sept. 12. Temple Beth-El in Anniston announced that all High Holy Day services would be cancelled. Beth Shalom in Auburn will have virtual services led by Rabbi Arturo Kalfus and his wife, Phyllis Meyers. Rosh Hashanah services will be 7 p.m. on Sept. 18. Times for Sept. 19 and 20 have not been announced. Kol Nidre will be Sept. 27 at 7 p.m., and likely at 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. on Sept. 28. Birmingham’s Temple Beth-El will not have in-person services, but will have a meditative Prayer Walk for the mornings of the High Holy Days, with a pre-set course for masked and socially-distanced groups. Rather than just having a virtual service, Rabbi Stephen Slater said this would be an opportunity to see others in person for the first time in six months. A video stream of the program will be made available for those who cannot venture out. The walk will include stations along the course where certain prayers or reflections will be done. A portable ark will be brought to the course and the Torah reading will be broadcast. The paths will be about an hour in length, and on the first day of Rosh Hashanah, several pastors and leaders in the Black community have been invited to take part. The walks will be held on both mornings of Rosh Ha-

WITH A MILLSAPS DEGREE, YOUR DREAM JOB IS WITHIN REACH.

TEN YEARS AFTER ENTERING SCHOOL, MILLSAPS GRADUATES HAVE THE HIGHEST AVERAGE SALARY OF GRADUATES FROM ANY COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY IN MISSISSIPPI.*

WE TAKE YOU HIGHER. MILLSAPS.EDU

* SOURCE: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION COLLEGE SCORECARD WWW.COLLEGESCORECARD.ED.GOV

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

13


community shanah and on Yom Kippur. Reservations are required, and the location will be given when reservations are made. Evening services will be done over YouTube and Facebook. Beth-El’s services will be Sept. 18 at 6 p.m., then the walking services will be from 9 to 11 a.m. on Sept. 19 and 20. Tashlich will be set up during the Sept. 19 service. A virtual garden service will be online at 9:30 a.m. Online afternoon services will be 5:30 p.m. on Sept. 19, and 7:40 p.m. for Havdalah on Sept. 20. In-person Tashlich will be at Avondale Park on Sept. 20 at 5 p.m. On Yom Kippur, Kol Nidre will stream from the sanctuary at 6 p.m. on Sept. 27. The outdoor walking service will be from 9 to 11 a.m., with a virtual service at 9:30 a.m. Afternoon services will begin at 5:45 p.m. Before the first Rosh Hashanah evening service and Kol Nidre, a Zoom “Hallway Channel” will be open for meeting virtually. For those unable to attend the walks, there will be a drive-by Shanah Tovah in the Beth-El parking lot on Sept. 17 from 4 to 6 p.m. Beit Ariel Chabad in Birmingham is planning outdoor services for the High Holy Days, under a tent. All participants will be required to wear masks, and there will be social distancing between individuals or families. Each morning there will be three one-hour services with time to disinfect between services. The 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m. and noon services will be by reservation only due to capacity limitations. There will be a family Shofar in the Park on Sept. 20 at 4:30 p.m. in Chabad’s backyard, socially distanced with Rosh Hashanah munchies. Knesseth Israel will have in-person services, with strict limits on attendance due to space. Information is available from the congregation. Birmingham’s Temple Emanu-El will not have in-person High Holy Day, Sukkot or Simchat Torah services this year. Services will be on Livestream, Facebook and YouTube. The Sept. 18 service will be at 7:45 p.m. A contemporary service will be at 9 a.m. on Sept. 19, with the regular Rosh Hashanah service at 10:30 a.m. There will be a family shofar service in person at Veterans Park in Hoover at 4:30 p.m., with social distancing required. On Yom Kippur, Kol Nidre will be at 7:45 p.m. on Sept. 27. A family service will be at 9 a.m. on Sept. 28, with the traditional morning service at 10:30 a.m. The afternoon service begins at 1:30 p.m., followed by a program with Julian Resnick, founder of Journeys Making Meaning: Guiding the Jewish Story in Israel and Around the World, at 2:45 p.m. A healing service will be at 4 p.m., followed by Yizkor and the evening service at 4:30 p.m. At Dothan’s Temple Emanu-El, Zoom services continue but as of Aug. 7, an in-person option for those willing to take the risk was available, with social distancing. The Shabbat services were being used “to work out the kinks” enabling in-person options for the High Holy Days. B’nai Israel in Florence will have virtual services “for the health and safety of everyone,” said Rabbi Nancy Tunick. She will broadcast from the B’nai Israel sanctuary rather than her home in Nashville, “to bring everyone a service that feels closer to what we typically experience during the High Holidays.” Services will be on Facebook Live and the web link, along with some Zoom breakout rooms to socialize. There will also be opportunities to participate in readings during the live broadcast. Etz Chayim in Huntsville will have mostly virtual services, with members picking up books and New Year booklets on Sept. 13. Virtual services will be held on Sept. 18 at 7:15 p.m., Sept. 19 at 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., and Sept. 20 at 10 a.m. There will be an in-person Tashlich and shofar blowing at Aldridge Creek at Weatherly at 4 p.m. Yom Kippur services will be virtual, Sept. 27 at 6:15 p.m., and Sept. 28 at 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. A masked sukkah build will be held on Sept. 30 at 2 p.m. Temple B’nai Sholom in Huntsville announced that “it is most prudent to worship virtually” rather than have High Holy Day services in the sanctuary. The congregation has contracted with Cantor Ted Labow, who is working with Rabbi Berk on planning the services. The congregation is 14

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life


community working on procedures to provide “loaner” copies of the High Holy Days prayerbook, and has links to discounted physical copies and Kindle editions that congregants can purchase. B’nai Sholom members were asked to submit a Shana Tovah family video of 5 to 8 seconds for a montage that will be played during the Zoom service. Ahavas Chesed in Mobile will hold services over YouTube, at 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 18, and 10 a.m. on Sept. 19 and 20. Kever Avot will be on Zoom, Sept. 27 at 12:30 p.m. Yom Kippur starts online at 6:30 p.m., then continues on YouTube at 10 a.m. on Sept. 28, with a combined healing and Torah service with Agudath Israel in Montgomery on Zoom at 4:30 p.m. The afternoon service will be on YouTube at 5:30 p.m. Rabbi Natan Trief, formerly of Beth Shalom in Baton Rouge, will lead virtual High Holy Day services for Springhill Avenue Temple in Mobile. The service will be broadcast from the Springhill Avenue sanctuary for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, while the intermediate Shabbat will be led from his home in Atlanta. Agudath Israel-Etz Ahayem in Montgomery will be holding its services online. On Yom Kippur afternoon, Sept. 28 at 4:30 p.m., there will be a Zoom joint healing service and Torah reading with Ahavas Chesed in Mobile. Montgomery’s Temple Beth Or will have services livestreamed on its website, Facebook Live and its YouTube channel. Tuscaloosa’s Temple Emanu-El announced it will not have in-person High Holy Day services, “in the best interest for the safety and health of our temple family.” Virtual services will be held via Zoom and on the congregation’s private Facebook page.

Florida Panhandle Chabad of the Emerald Coast in Destin will hold the traditional Rosh

Hashanah service for a smaller group than usual, and then there will be a family outdoor shofar ceremony with individually-packaged traditional Rosh Hashanah foods, Sept. 20 at 2 p.m. at the Morgan Sports Center pavilion. The picnic is open to all, reservations are required. Beth Shalom in Fort Walton Beach will hold services in person and on Zoom. All those planning to attend in person must sign up online. There is a maximum of 50 allowed in the building for each service, and each service is a separate request. Masks are mandatory, anyone who does not arrive with one will have to leave. The in-person slots will be for members, though on Sept. 11 any remaining slots will be available for non-members. Prayer books will be lent to members, with pickups from Sept. 14 to 16 and returns from Sept. 29 to Oct. 1. There will be a sign-up sheet for those borrowing books. Rosh Hashanah Services will be held Sept. 18 at 8 p.m., Sept. 19 at 10 a.m., and Tashlich at AJ’s on the Bayou at 1 p.m. Yom Kippur services will be Sept. 27 at 8 p.m., and Sept. 28 at 10 a.m., 3:15 p.m., Yizkor at 4:20 p.m. and Ne’ilah at 5:15 p.m. There will be no communal break-the-fast. B’nai Israel in Panama City will have services conducted by Rabbi Bruce Aft, as well as a student rabbi, and B’nai Israel’s cantorial soloist, Daniel Sternlicht. Virtual services will be conducted from within the Temple and several remote locations via Zoom conference link. There had been plans for a limited number of members attending in person, but the board decided that given the situation in Bya County, services would be virtual only. After a survey of members, B’nai Israel in Pensacola will open for in-person services during the High Holy Days, with assistance from a new member who is a former CDC epidemiology surveillance officer. Thirty-nine signed up for in-person services in the 264-seat sanctuary, and guests will be limited to invited military and selected extended family.

Experienced • Respected • Fair and Honest Committed to Equal Justice

Vote #77 • RobinGiarrusso.com Early Voting October 20-27 Election Day November 3 Paid for by the Robin Giarrusso Campaign Fund

Judge Robin Giarrusso is

immediate past president of

Temple Sinai and a vice president of the National Council of Jewish Women, New Orleans section

L'Shana Tova September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

15


community For those attending, masks are required and there will be no handshakes or hugs. Seating will be arranged in advance. The Torah will remain on the bimah, those with aliyot will recite them from their seats. Services will be at 6:30 p.m. and 9 a.m. for Rosh Hashanah. Yom Kippur services will be at 5:30 p.m. on Sept. 27, then 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on Sept. 28. All services other than the High Holidays will remain on Zoom. Temple Beth El in Pensacola will hold its services virtually, on the Beth El website and Facebook Live. A schmooze will be on Sept. 18 at 5 p.m. on Zoom. Services will be at 7 p.m. The morning service will be at 10 a.m. on Sept. 19. A discussion group will be on Zoom at 1:30 p.m., and an in-person family service and tashlich is planned for Bayview Park at 5:30 p.m. Kol Nidre will be Sept. 27 at 7 p.m. The morning service will be at 10 a.m. on Sept. 28, followed by Zoom discussions on Avinu Malkeinu at 1 p.m. and the Book of Jonah at 2:30 p.m. An in-person Yizkor is planned at the Beth El cemetery at 4:15 p.m., which will also stream on the website and Facebook. Concluding services will be at 6 p.m.

Start a vacation as a couple. Return home to start your family.

Discover How at our NewLIFE Website.

Louisiana

Barry A. Ripps, MD

Fellowship-trained and Board Certified in Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility

www.FertilityLeaders.com

Pensacola • Panama City • Tallahassee Mobile • Dothan • Destin • Biloxi Recognized by Best Doctors, Inc. Best Doctors in America THE TOP DOCTORS IN AMERICA

R

GLOBAL Challenge ISRAEL Needs Us Now INVEST IN ISRAEL BONDS Today THE ISRAEL BONDS HIGH HOLY DAYS APPEALS 5781

2020

INVEST ONLINE AT ISRAELBONDS.COM OR VIA THE ISRAEL BONDS APP

Development Corporation for Israel 3525 Piedmont Road, Building 6, Suite 250 Atlanta, GA 30305 atlanta@israelbonds.com • 404.817.3500 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. Issues subject to availability. Member FINRA. Photo: Adobe Stock

16

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

Gemiluth Chassodim in Alexandria will broadcast “physically apart, spiritually connected” services over Zoom. Previously-announced in-person options will not take place due to hurricane damage. Services will be Sept. 18 at 7:30 p.m., Sept. 19 at 10:30 a.m. for Rosh Hashanah, 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 27 for Kol Nidre, and 10:30 a.m. on Sept. 28 for Yom Kippur, with a 1:30 p.m. Torah study session and 4:45 p.m. Yizkor. Additional services will be Shabbat Shuvah on Sept. 25, Sukkot on Oct. 2 and Simchat Torah on Oct. 9, all at 6 p.m. via Zoom. B’nai Israel and Beth Shalom in Baton Rouge will have a joint Selichot service, Sept. 12 at 7:30 p.m. on Zoom. B’nai Israel in Baton Rouge is planning to hold High Holy Day services virtually. Services will be at 7 p.m. on Sept. 18, followed by “coming together as community” at 8:15 p.m. On Sept. 19, B’nai Israel will host a youth service for both congregations at 8:45 a.m., followed by the morning service at 10 a.m. Tashlich will be Sept. 20 at 9 a.m. On Yom Kippur, Kol Nidre will be at 7 p.m. on Sept. 27. The 8:45 a.m. joint youth service on Sept. 28 will be hosted by Beth Shalom, followed by services at 10 a.m., the Book of Jonah with Rabbi Batsheva Appel at 1:30 p.m. afternoon service at 3 p.m., Yizkor at 4:30 p.m. and Neilah at 5:30 p.m. Beth Shalom will have a maximum of 15 members in-person for services. Reservations are required, and only one in-person slot per member. They will have Rosh Hashanah evening services on Sept. 18 at 7 p.m. over livestream. The morning service will be livestreamed both days at 10 a.m., an on Sept. 20 there will be in-person Tashlich at 3 p.m. at United Plaza Lakes. Yom Kippur will be livestreamed at 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 27. On Sept. 28, services will be at 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. on livestream, and a 5:30 p.m. Yizkor on Zoom. Beth Shalom is also offering 10-minute slots that can be reserved in the sanctuary for contemplation or meditation, seated or in front of the ark. Slots are on the half hour from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. from Aug. 25 to Sept. 15, and a few evening slots will be available. Advance signup is required. With Hebrew Union College holding its fall classes entirely online, student rabbi visits will also be virtual. Temple Shalom in Lafayette is working out a virtual High Holy Day schedule with Student Rabbi Shirah Kraus. Temple Sinai in Lake Charles will have services led virtually by Rabbi Barry Weinstein in his home, with vocalists from the congregation. B’nai Israel in Monroe started doing in-person services in mid-August, along with the virtual option. Reservations are required for those who want to attend in person, so social distancing precautions can be taken. B’nai Zion in Shreveport is holding virtual services, and is working on other creative options. Times will be announced for Rosh Hashanah and


community Yom Kippur services. At Agudath Achim in Shreveport, there will be in-person services as well as a livestream on the congregation’s website. The Rosh Hashanah evening service will be on Zoom, Sept. 18 at 6 p.m. Morning services are 10 a.m. both days, and there will be a family experience with Eliana Light at 2 p.m. on Zoom both days. Second night services are at 8 p.m. Sept. 19. Kol Nidre will be at 6:30 p.m. on Sept. 27. Services on Sept. 28 will be at 10 a.m., 6 and 7 p.m., and a 2 p.m. family experience on Zoom.

A commitment to care.

New Orleans Area Northshore Jewish Congregation in Mandeville will hold its services continued on page 18

Mother, daughter linking their congregations Steigmans pair Northshore with St. Joseph, Mo.

While Ellen Steigman has been the soloist at Northshore Jewish Congregation in Mandeville since 2004, for this year’s High Holy Days she will be bringing in some professional help — her mother, the rabbi. Rabbi Linda Steigman of Temple Adath Joseph in St. Joseph, Mo., will take part in a joint virtual High Holy Days joining both congregations. During this time of the pandemic, the two congregations will share Rabbi Linda Steigman virtual services with a focus on uniting their congregants in spiritual reflection and prayer, while the Steigmans will work at what they both love, bringing the best of Judaism to their congregations. Rabbi Steigman was ordained from the New York Campus of Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in 2004. She has served congregations in Michigan, Texas and Alaska as a student rabbi, and in Virginia and Pennsylvania after being ordained. She moved to Kansas City in 2008 and has been the rabbi at Adath Joseph from 2009 to 2011, and again since 2013. Before rabbinical school, Rabbi Steigman served as the outreach director for the Pennsylvania Region of the Union for Reform Judaism, working with interfaith couples, and then worked in New York as the director of programming for National Hadassah. Since coming to Kansas City, Rabbi Steigman has completed chaplaincy training, and has worked for hospice and now visits seniors on behalf of one of the large congregations in the area, as well as providing a Lunch and Learn for seniors on the Jewish Senior Campus. Rabbi Steigman said “I have visited NJC both as Ellen’s mom and as a visiting rabbi, and have enjoyed rekindling relationships on Zoom and meeting additional members of the congregation.” While this year’s holidays will be a new experience, she encourages members “to surround yourselves with Jewish objects and art as you try to create a sacred space around your computer. We will all will miss the physical comfort of our congregations’ sanctuaries, but we will be safe from infection as we remain in our homes. A bittersweet resolution to be sure, but Ellen and I will endeavor to make it a sweet New Year for all of us.” Ellen Steigman regularly leads Friday night services and tutors B’nai mitzvah students at Northshore. She teaches English at Fontainebleau High School in Mandeville. Prior to her teaching certification, she worked for a variety of Jewish organizations including Hadassah, Hillel of New York, the New Orleans Jewish Community Center and the Jewish Community Day School in Metairie. She and her husband John Valentino moved to Mandeville in 2001.

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 Jewish cemeteries. We’re dedicated to helping you and your loved ones create a meaningful Jewish service that truly captures the essence of the life it represents. Sincerely,

Stephen Sontheimer & Billy Henry

A Dignity Memorial® Provider 504-486-6331 LakeLawnMetairie.com

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

17


community

Happy New Year! Kirk Talbot

10th District Louisiana State Senate

18

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

virtually, with Rabbi Linda Steigman and soloist Ellen Steigman. The schedule will be posted soon. Shir Chadash in Metairie will stream its services for the first time ever, as a response to the pandemic and in coordination with rulings from the Conservative movement’s Committee on Jewish Law and Standards. Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur Shacharit services will be broadcast from an outdoor location, and the Torah and Musaf services will be broadcast from the sanctuary. A “holding minyan” of volunteers is being assembled in advance so there is an in-person minyan allowing for Torah reading and the repetition of the Amidah. A shofar and Tashlich service will be broadcast from the levee on the second afternoon of Rosh Hashanah. Selichot will be done over Zoom, and children’s services will also be livestreamed. Members will receive a High Holy Days gift bag with a machzor, Yizkor book and program book, and additional materials for families with children. Yizkor will be held on Sunday morning over Zoom between the holidays. Beth Israel in Metairie will hold in-person services with limited attendance, and services on Zoom and streaming where Halachically possible. Plans are for Yizkor to be on Sunday morning before Yom Kippur, Sept. 27 after the 8:30 a.m. minyan, and Kol Nidre at 4:30 p.m. so they can be broadcast. There will also be a pre-Rosh Hashanah Seder with apples, honey and a cooking activity at 4 p.m. on Sept. 18, on Zoom. Members have been asked to submit a request form for in-person services, with the understanding that a request does not guarantee a seat. Children approaching Bar and Bat Mitzvah age need to get approval from Rabbi Pernick, younger children will not be admitted. Those 65 and older are not prohibited but are being discouraged from attending, due to health risks. In-person services are both evenings of Rosh Hashanah, along with morning and afternoon services. Yom Kippur in-person services are in the evening, morning, musaf, afternoon and concluding. There will be a kids’ tashlich on Sept. 20 around 2:30 p.m. by the levee. Gates of Prayer in Metairie starts the season with a Selichot concert with Jordan Lawrence, Sept. 12 at 8 p.m. Reservations are required, and the concert will be livestreamed. All services will be available online, but there will be an in-person component with a maximum of 50 in attendance, for as many as five sessions per service, assuming Jefferson Parish is in Phase 2 or 3 — services will be online only in the event of Phase 1. The sanctuary wall will be removed so social distancing can go into the social hall. Social distancing and masking restrictions will be observed. Reservations are required for all in-person services, which will last 40 minutes. Rosh Hashanah evening services will be on Sept. 18 at 8 p.m. If there is demand, additional services will be added at 6 p.m. and 4 p.m., then 8 p.m. and 6 p.m. on Sept. 19. Rosh Hashanah morning will be at 10:15 a.m. online, 11 a.m. in person. If there is demand, services will be added at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m., then 11 a.m. and 9 a.m. on Sept. 20. Tashlich will be in person with Rabbi Bob Loewy at Bonnabel Boat Launch, Sept. 19 at 4 p.m. An in-person Yizkor and healing service will be Sept. 25 at 8 p.m., with additional services at 5 and 7 p.m., then 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. on Sept. 26. Kol Nidre will be on Sept. 27 at 8 p.m. online, 7 p.m. in person. Additional services as needed would be at 8:30 p.m., 5:30 p.m., 10 p.m. and 4 p.m. Yom Kippur morning starts at 10:15 a.m. online, then 11 a.m. in person, with added services at 9 a.m., 1 p.m., 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. Online services continue with Tikkun Midot Hanefesh on Sept. 28 at 1 p.m., a healing and Torah service at 3 p.m., then Yizkor and Neilah at 4:30 p.m. Chabad at Tulane will have services and Rosh Hashanah dinner in the backyard at the Rivkin home on Sept. 18 and 19 at 6 p.m. Space is limited to 50, and dinner will be under tents. Rosh Hashanah morning services will be at Anshe Sfard. On Sept. 20, there will be an outdoor shofar sounding in the Rivkin backyard at 2:30 p.m. At 6 p.m., Chabad and


community Tulane Hillel will have a joint Tashlich and shofar service at Audubon Park. Chabad in Metairie will have an indoor evening service on Sept. 18 at 6:45 p.m. Full Rosh Hashanah morning services will be 9:15 a.m. indoors, and a 45-minute outdoor service under a tent at 9:30. On Sept. 20, there will be an adult outdoor service and a family service at 6 p.m., and Tashlich by the lake at 6:30 p.m. On Yom Kippur, Kol Nidre will be indoors at 6:30 p.m. on Sept. 27. Services on Sept. 28 will be indoors at 9:15 a.m., Yizkor at 11:30, mincha at 5:15 p.m. An outdoors Neilah and Yizkor will be at 6:15 p.m. There will be limited space, Covid protocols will be followed and reservations are required. At Touro Synagogue in New Orleans, major services will be broadcast on WLAE-TV and on the Touro Facebook page. There will also be Zoom sessions and a few small outdoor, in-person gatherings, with all of the in-person events requiring reservations on the Touro website. Selichot services will be held in person, outdoors, by reservation. Services are Aug. 23 at 10 a.m., Sept. 1 at 6 p.m. and Sept. 7 at 10 a.m. The Sept. 1 service will also be livestreamed. On Sept. 12 at 8 p.m. there will be a brief Selichot for Racial Justice at Bowsky Garden. Attendance will be limited, and the service will be livestreamed. Rosh Hashanah services will be on television and online, Sept. 18 at 8 p.m. and Sept. 19 at 10 a.m. There will be no in-person attendance. At 5 p.m. and 6 p.m., there will be Tashlich gatherings at City Park. Rain date is Sept. 20. On Shabbat Shuvah, Sept. 25 at 6 p.m. on Zoom and Livestream, Prof. Jonathan Judken of Rhodes College will speak on “Judaism in the Age of Black Lives Matter.” Yom Kippur services will be televised and online, Sept. 27 at 8 p.m. and Sept. 28 at 10 a.m., and the concluding service starting at 4 p.m. There will be several afternoon programs, including a “congregational voices” afternoon service at 3:15 p.m. on Zoom and Livestream. From 12:30 to 3:30 p.m., members can reserve a 20-minute block to sit in the sanctuary for personal reflection. There will be limited capacity, temperature screening and masks required, and seats will be used only once over the course of the afternoon. Learning sessions on Zoom and Livestream start at 1 p.m. with “The Biblical Origins of Yom Kippur” with Jason Gaines, “Guilt, Shame and Self-Compassion: Creating a Path Toward Self-Forgiveness and Everyday Holiness” with Joseph Bodenmiller at 2 p.m., and at 3 p.m., “How People Change” with Kevin Wilkins. Sukkot will be in person and Livestream on Oct. 2 at 6 p.m., and will also be a celebration of Rabbi Todd Silverman. An outdoor Simchat Torah will be Oct. 9 at 6 p.m., and an online Yizkor will be held at 10:30 a.m. on Oct. 10. Though the sanctuary at Temple Sinai in New Orleans has been redone during the summer, there won’t be a huge High Holy Days reveal, as most of the services will be done online via livestream, Zoom and Facebook Live. Because of the size of the sanctuary, they will offer an in-person option for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur evening services, with limited seating and social distancing. There will be no choir, and those attending in person will need to sing more quietly than normal, but aside from that their goal is to have services “as comfortable and familiar as possible.” Services will also be broadcast on WRBH-FM (88.3), Sept. 18 at 7:30 p.m., Sept. 19 at 10 a.m., Sept. 27 at 8 p.m. and Sept. 28 at 10 a.m. Anshe Sfard in New Orleans will have in-person services on both mornings of Rosh Hashanah, at 9:30 a.m. There will be limited seating, by reservation. After members are taken care of, non-members will receive seats on a first-come, first-served basis. On Yom Kippur, the morning service will be inside, but there are plans in the works for Kol Nidre and Neilah outdoors.

COVID-19 SWAB & ANTIBODY TESTING Walk in only Curbside care for those with active symptoms Fast, accurate results

NOW OPEN at 1337 MONTCLAIR ROAD BIRMINGHAM | 205.203.8226 IN MISSISSIPPI

BRANDON | CLINTON | FLOWOOD | JACKSON RIDGELAND | HATTIESBURG

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life 19


community Mississippi

Start the School Year with Confidence! • 1-On-1 Tutoring • In-Home and Online • All Subjects, All Ages • SAT/ACT Prep • Proven Study Skills • Foreign Languages

504-308-1069 clubztutoring.com/neworleans

B’nai Israel in Columbus will announce its service schedule soon. In Gulfport, Beth Israel will have virtual services just before sunset, and in-person services during the holidays, with reservations available on the congregation’s website. A pre-holiday Zoom program will be at 5 p.m. on Sept. 18 and Sept. 27. For Rosh Hashanah, services will be at 7 p.m. on Sept. 18, with a light Kiddush to follow. The morning services will be on Sept. 19 and 20 at 10 a.m., with a light Kiddush to follow. On Sept. 20, there will be an early shofar service at 9 a.m. in the Jack Goldin Memorial Garden for those unable to attend services inside. Kol Nidrei will be at 6:30 p.m. on Sept. 27. Yom Kippur services will be at 10 a.m., with Yizkor at 11:30 a.m. Mincha and Neilah will start at 6 p.m. For those unable to attend, there will be an early morning Yizkor at 9 a.m., also in the garden. There will be children’s programs and babysitting at all daytime services. Hebrew Union Congregation in Greenville will have services on Zoom. B’nai Israel in Hattiesburg remains virtual for services. Rosh Hashanah will be 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 17 and 10 a.m. on Sept. 18. Yom Kippur will be at 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 27, 10 a.m. on Sept. 28, with a family service at 2 p.m., afternoon service at 3 p.m., memorial service at 4 p.m. and concluding service at 5 p.m. Beth Israel in Jackson was the first congregation in the region to definitively rule out in-person services. The June 24 announcement was made by the congregational board and Rabbi Joseph Rosen. “We will be sure to be diligent in seeing that our congregation will be well equipped to offer a quality spiritual opportunity,” Rosen said. The Jewish Federation of Oxford will hold virtual services and programs with student rabbi Ezra Leventhal. A native of the San Francisco Bay area, Leventhal is a second year student at Hebrew Union College in New York, but currently distancing from Santa Rosa. The Zoom services will be on Rosh Hashanah evening, then the next morning. A children’s service will also be held. Yom Kippur services will include Kol Nidre, morning services and neilah, with an emphasis on readings. Service times have not yet been set.

Judah Touro Society honorees in year of Covid? The entire staff In a year of unprecedented events, the Touro Infirmary Foundation made a unique selection for this year’s first-ever virtual Judah Touro Society Award gala. The previous honorees, who vote on the recipient each year, unanimously chose to honor the entire Touro family, the staff fighting the Covid pandemic. Meredith Maxwell, Touro Infirmary Foundation Board Chair, said the honor is for “every individual who serves the people of New Orleans with courage, conviction and compassion” throughout the crisis. “In a time of true need, we saw our staff ’s true colors.” She noted that the mortality rate per 100,000 in New Orleans was almost three times that of New York. Proceeds from this gala will go toward a new community health fund, which will support efforts to fight “health outcome inequities and work to improve access to healthy living in all communities.” The True Colors gala will be on Nov. 19. Viewing information will be released soon. Tickets are $200, with patron levels starting at $500, and sponsorships from $1500. 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. 20

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life


An Official Publication of the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans

THE

JEWISH NEWSLETTER September 2020 | Elul 5780

Vol. XV No. 3

Together, but virtually.

A Letter from Arnie Fielkow Dear Jewish community members, I hope that you and your families are well as we continue to endure the COVID-19 crisis. It has now been six months since our local community and the entire world changed in ways we never thought imaginable, evoking emotions many of us in New Orleans experienced 15 years ago with Hurricane Katrina. While the two events are very different, both have caused horrific loss of life and economic devastation, but have also brought our Jewish community even closer together as we collectively experience what I see as four distinct phases: sadness, unity, resiliency and optimism. Just recently, we marked Katrina's 15-year anniversary that brought back the memories of great sadness resulting from our nation's worst-ever manmade disaster. No matter where we were located, none of us will ever forget that August 29, 2005 Monday morning when we watched with horror as our beloved city went under water, and the days after when we watched the chaos and tragedy that ensued. As in 2020, the greater New Orleans community, in August and September 2005, suffered a major blow in terms of both human and economic loss, and all of us in those days were asking ourselves whether our lives would ever be the same. For all of us who experienced that disaster, and even for those who have come to our great city afterwards, Katrina will always represent a shared, defining moment in our lives that will remain with us forever. That same element of sadness is again with us today as over 180,000 Americans have so far perished due to COVID-19, including over 4,800 from our own state. Like with Katrina, we have been brought to tears as we have recounted the family, friends, and neighbors no longer with us. And we rightfully ask, with much grief, how such loss can occur in the most powerful and prosperous country in the history of the world. Yet throughout both of these periods of sadness, it was, and continues to be, heart-warming to see our greater New Orleans Jewish community come together in unity to help, support, and nourish each other as well as the community at large. Shortly after New Orleans went into stay-at-home mode last March, dozens of our Jewish community members, especially many of our JNOLA members, responded to a joint Federation/JFS volunteer initiative involving the delivery of much-needed food, medications, and emotional support to those in need within our community. Soon thereafter, Federation also launched a Take Home Meal program for health care workers in our community, whereby 6,600 meals – prepared by some of our local Jewish businesses - were provided to doctors, nurses, technicians, and staff on the front lines of the COVID-19 battle at five different local hospitals. Our community's unified response is not surprising as many of us saw similar stories of courage 15 years ago. Will one ever forget the images of Rabbi Isaac Leider, from the Jewish group ZAKA, rescuing submerged Torah scrolls out of the flooded Lakeview Beth Israel synagogue? Or Dr. Juan

(continued on the next page)

September 2020 • The Jewish Newsletter

21


(continued from the previous page)

Gershanik heroically saving the lives of sick premature newborns, including climbing the steps to the roof of a flooded hospital, manually respirating one of the children, and tightly holding him in his lap during a life-saving helicopter flight to a Baton Rouge hospital? Or that joyful moment in late September 2005 when hundreds of New Orleanians, from all congregations, gathered in Houston for Rosh Hashanah services led by our own Rabbi Bob Loewy? Although it had been only a few weeks since we had evacuated from New Orleans for Katrina, all of those in attendance embraced each other with hugs and tears of happiness as we assured each other that all would be fine. It was a High Holiday moment that will forever be etched in our memories. The past six months have also once again demonstrated the resiliency of New Orleanians. Despite the health risks to themselves and their families, our brave first responders have stepped up to serve their fellow citizens. Whether it be stocking the grocery shelves, delivering mail, or being on the hospital front lines each and every day and helping keep people alive, New Orleanians – many from our own Jewish community – have once again demonstrated their compassion, care, and devotion to each other in the face of crisis. Similarly, 15 years ago, our fellow New Orleanians, despite the loss of their homes, businesses, and life possessions, found the energy to get back on their feet and vowed to bring back the city and community we all love. I remember watching with amazement residents gutting and rebuilding their own homes and businesses during the day, and then having the energy to attend community meetings at night, both with the goal of creating an even stronger community. And for this newly-elected Jewish New Orleans Councilmember at that time, the late 2000s gave me the privilege of watching with great pride how "my" community also got back up on its feet by significantly increasing the local Jewish population post-Katrina through an innovative Federation "Newcomers" program. So as the Jewish New Year approaches, just like it did at this time 15 years ago, we all have an opportunity to look to the future with a sense of hope and optimism. In the aftermath of Katrina, New Orleanians vowed to not just bring our community back, but to make it better than it was before that fateful late August 2005 morning. Whether it was stronger levees and flood protection, a more diverse economy, reformed public housing, or an unwillingness to further accept government corruption and fraud, New Orleanians demanded, and succeeded, in creating a better city. Likewise today, we look forward with hope to a time soon when an effective vaccine and therapeutic treatment will exist to combat the health crisis, and Americans will once again be able to return to their lives and businesses with a sense of normalcy. We also hope that the ensuing months will bring with it the elimination of divisive politics which has split our country in unprecedented ways, and brought forward the ugly faces of antisemitism, racism, and other forms of hate. And perhaps the New Year will even bring with it a new era for Israel and the opportunity for Middle East peace as encouraging regional alliances are being developed. 2020 has been one heck of a year and one I am sure we all wish we could fast forward. Yet, despite the angst and pain, we are all here together, supporting each other, and looking forward to a better day for our families, our community, and our world. The upcoming Jewish holidays represent an opportunity to reflect, re-energize, and commit ourselves to tikkun olam (repairing the world). Let us accept this challenge with zest and determination, and with appreciation and thanks for all the good things we have in our lives. May the New Year, 5781, be a happy, healthy, and fulfilling one for each of you and your loved ones. Shanah Tovah Umetukah (A Good and Sweet Year)!

Arnie D. Fielkow | CEO | Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans

2020 Jewish Federation Nominating Slate In accordance with the By-Laws of the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans, the Federationis once again publishing notice of the persons nominated to serve as Officers and Trustees. Nominees will be formally elected during the virtual Annual Meeting on September 10, 2020. Donors to the 2020 Annual Campaign, who are a part of a Jewish household, are considered members of the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans and are eligible to vote at the Annual Meeting. Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans 2020 Nominating Committee Report Brian D. Katz, Board Chair Designate To Be Elected for a First Two-Year Term 2020-2022 Sandy Cohen • Ina Davis • Catherine Frank Alex Gershanik • Sara Lewis • Randy Roig • Jon Schlackman • Sarah Schatzmann • David Zapletal Respectfully Submitted, Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans Nominating Committee Henry A. Miller, Chair 22

September 2020 • The Jewish Newsletter


Register now for the 107th Annual Meeting The Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans’ 107th Annual Meeting will take place virtually on September 10 from 7:00 - 8:00 p.m. The meeting will include the election of Board Chair-Designate and Board members (slate on opposite page). Donors to the 2020 Annual Campaign, who are a part of a Jewish household, are considered members of the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans and are eligible to vote virtually for officers at the Annual Meeting. This event will be held via a Zoom webinar, and the registration link is below. Rabbi Yossie Nemes of Chabad Metairie is offering the invocation. Cantor Joel Colman of Temple Sinai will sing the national anthem and Hatikvah, and Cantorial Soloist Jordan Lawrence of Congregation Gates of Prayer is providing musical entertainment. After the election is concluded, stick around for a joyful celebration of our community’s resilience and endurance, complete with music and local celebrities. The meeting will celebrate Mara Force, the 2020 recipient of the Herbert and Margot Garon Young Leadership Award. Bruce Pearl, head coach of Auburn University’s men’s basketball team, will speak.

SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS:

Presenting Event Sponsor Sher, Garner, Cahill, Richter, Klein, & Hilbert L.L.C Platinum Partner Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana | Hancock Whitney | Schoenbaum Family Foundation | Oscar J. Tolmas Charitable Trust Gold Partner Humana | Lakeside Toyota and Northshore Toyota | Metairie Bank | Patrick F. Taylor Foundation | Touro Infirmary Silver Partner Highflyer Payroll | Lake Lawn Metairie Funeral Home | Consulate General of Israel in Houston

We hope you’ll join us for this special virtual evening. Register now at

meetings.jewishnola.com/annual meeting.

September 2020 • The Jewish Newsletter

23


Goldring Family Foundation Center for Jewish-Multicultural Affairs nears launch Launching in October, the Center for Jewish-Multicultural Affairs is an in-house initiative of the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans which contains all of the Federation’s external relations programs, and directly reaches out to the wider community, both Jewish and non-Jewish. The Center is initially focusing on four primary outreach areas: [1] African-American relations; [2] LGBTQ relations, through the existing Jewish Pride New Orleans (JP NOLA) program; [3] Latin-American relations; and [4] multi-faith relations. What’s the mission of the Center? The Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans: Center for Jewish-Multicultural Affairs is committed to 1) fostering relations between the local Jewish community and the local African-American, Latin-American, and Multi-Faith communities as well as (2) enhancing opportunities for the LGBTQ Jewish community, and in so doing will seek to build and maintain strong, mutually beneficial, and lasting partnerships with the wider community in the region. Through extensive, impactful outreach programming within and outside the local Jewish community, the Center is one of the primary mechanisms by which the Federation will put into practice the Jewish tenet of tikkun olam (“repairing the world”), while simultaneously increasing the visibility of the Federation, engaging increasingly larger segments members of the Jewish community, and helping to counter the rising tide of anti-semitism. The Center will seek to serve as a gateway, providing education and information about the Jewish community to other groups in the area – and vice versa – with the goal of creating a heightened understanding and shared purpose between the Jewish community and these groups. The Center for Jewish-Multicultural Affairs is led by an Advisory Council co-chaired by Bradley Bain and Ina Davis. It was made possible by a generous gift from the Goldring Family Foundation. Learn more at jewishnola.com/multicultural.

Kvell with us! On September 16, join the Jewish Federations of North America at 12:30 p.m. CT for a day of kvelling and comedic relief with special celebrity guests (like Dan, Sarah, and Eugene Levy of the famed Netflix series, Schitt’s Creek), musical performances and more! Join our Federation, in celebration with the Jewish Federations of North America, to hear about the impact you’ve had during this challenging time — in our community and around the world.

RSVP now: cvent.me/5VMblD

Announcing the Solomon Mental Health Fund JNOLA, generously sponsored by the Oscar J.Tolmas Charitable Trust, is proud to present the Solomon Mental Health Fund in honor of our friend, Sunny. The Solomon Mental Health Fund aims to ensure that members of the Jewish community who need mental health services can receive them, regardless of financial situation. If you are JNOLA-aged (21-39 years old) or JNEXT-aged (40-59) and want to make your mental health a priority, JNOLA and JNEXT support you. How does it work? Through a partnership with Jewish Family Service, a long-running social service agency and constituent agency of the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans, community members can request services directly through them. Simply inform your intake counselor that you wish to use the Solomon Mental Health Fund from JNOLA and JNEXT and they will invoice us directly for the service. If you have insurance, Jewish Family Service will invoice us for the cost of your copay. All of your information will remain private at Jewish Family Service. In general, Jewish Family Service takes Medicaid, most private insurances, and has a very affordable sliding scale based on household income. To contact Jewish Family Service, call 504-831-8475 or visit jfsneworleans.org. Questions? Contact JNOLA Manager, Tana Velen, at tana@jewishnola.com. 24 September 2020 • The Jewish Newsletter


Jewish Family Service This New Year, Sow Seeds of Hope for Our Community Rosh Hashanah kicks off Jewish Family Service’s annual Friends of JFS campaign. This year-end appeal funds our essential social services, such as case management, counseling and our Financial Resource Center, which specifically aids Jewish families and individuals. By becoming a friend of JFS, you bring transformational aid, growth, and security to our community’s most vulnerable members. Everyone experienced pain or loss in the past months, but the ongoing pandemic is devastating the health and well-being of our clients. JFS is also receiving numerous new clients who have never required aid before. Listen to their stories, and join JFS in sowing seeds of hope for our community to reap in the years and decades ahead.

September 2020 • The Jewish Newsletter

25


Jewish Endowment Foundation Open a Donor Advised Fund! A donor advised fund, or DAF, is a giving vehicle you can establish at the Jewish Endowment Foundation of Louisiana. It allows you to make a charitable contribution, receive an immediate tax deduction, and then recommend grants from the fund over time. You can contribute to the fund as frequently as you like, and then recommend grants to your favorite charities whenever it makes sense for you.

1 2 3 4 5

You make an irrevocable contribution of personal assets, including cash, stock, or real estate. You immediately receive the maximum tax deduction that the IRS allows. You name your donor advised fund account and any successors or charitable beneficiaries. Your contribution is placed into a donor advised fund account where it is invested and grows tax-free. At any time afterward, you can recommend grants of $100 or more from your account to qualified 501 (c) (3) charities.

For more information, please call or email Bobby Garon (bobby@jefno.org) or Patti Lengsfield (patti@jefno.org) at (504) 524-4559.

Tulane Hillel What’s happening at Tulane Hillel? While many things have changed at Tulane Hillel, our mission of creating relevant, innovative, and welcoming Jewish community remains steadfast. We’ve pivoted and put in place clear systems to ensure the safety of our community while simultaneously serving as a home-away-from-home for our students. For more information, visit our website at: https://www.tulanehillel.org/covid-faqs/.

How are we creating community on campus? As we welcome students back to campus and write this next chapter together, we’re working to ensure this story is one of connection, growth, learning, and joy. In late August, freshmen found their way to Tulane Hillel and were matched with their peers through our “Find Your Wave” program. They also attended the first of many outdoor, small group events pictured here, including: Kayaking along Bayou St. John and enjoying the fantastical world of the Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden in City Park.

What’s new at the Mintz Center? New Hours: Monday-Thursday 9 a.m.-8 p.m., Friday 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Sunday 10 a.m.-6 p.m., and closed Saturdays in observance of Shabbat.

by reservation at: https://www.picktime.com/ tuhillel. Rimon: Open with pickup available at our Burthe St. entrance, or for dining under our newly constructed outdoor tent. To order, call 504-232-0758, or find them on Grubhub! [Download the Grubhub App > Create an Account > Visit Settings > Select Campus Dining > Select Tulane University > then search Rimon!] Shabbat: Our Take-Home Shabbats are free and open to all students each Friday. Know a student looking to participate or host their peers? They can register at: https://www.tulanehillel.org/doshabbat/.

Mintz Center: Our downstairs lounge is TJL (Tulane Jewish Leaders): We’re lookopen on a “walk-up” basis, and has been rear- ing forward to continuing our nationally-recranged to provide a bright, comfortable, and ognized program, with initiatives created and clean space. Upstairs study space is available led for students by students. 26

September 2020 • The Jewish Newsletter


Jewish Community Center The 2020 Elections and the Jewish Vote The results of the November election are not only important for us as a society but also for our community. Toward that end, Dr. Steven Windmueller has begun an election analysis, “The Wind Election Report.”

Studies at the Jack H. Skirball Campus of The Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Los Angeles. He is the author of four books and numerous articles, and holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from University of Pennsylvania.

The Morris Bart, Sr. Lecture Series at the J offers fascinating topics for diverse interests and features experts in the fields of history, the environment, religion, politics, food, music, social justice, and so much more. Currently held by Zoom, all of these lectures are free and open to the community. All lectures will As a political scientist, Wind- be at 11 a.m. Details for these upcoming talks, mueller’s work in Jewish political as well as videos of previous lectures, can be behavior has been central to his found at nojcc.org/bartlecture. research and writing. His 2014 Girl in Black and White: The Story of book “The Quest for Power” examines how Mary Mildred Williams and the Abolition different Jewish communities interacted with Movement the public square, creating a body of practice Jessie Morgan-Owens, Ph.D. Dean of Studies, helpful to their role in modern politics. Bard Early College in New Orleans

Join us on Oct. 19 at 7 p.m. as he presents “The 2020 Election: What We Need to Understand about America and Its Jewish Roots,” a nonpartisan analysis of the upcoming election designed to inform audiences about the diverse and significant roles Jews have played in American politics. Scheduled between the second and third presidential debates, this discussion is particularly Presented via Zoom, this event is free and timely. open to the community but registration is Windmueller is the Rabbi Alfred Gottschalk required. Visit nojcc.org for details and to Emeritus Professor of Jewish Communal register. l l l

Morris Bart, Sr., Lecture Series

Center Celebration 2020… A Virtual Affair

<

Save The Date… Saturday, November 14, 2020 7:00 PM This year’s Virtual Center Celebration offers a “best of” previous events, featuring an eclectic mix of entertainment from Broadway show tunes to New Orleans jazz, comedy acts and more — all from the comfort of home. Watch for more details!

Monday, September 14

A Glimpse at the Strange and Wondrous World of Elephant Medicine Dr. Ellen Wiedner, VMD, Dipl. ACVIM, Dipl. ACZM, Dipl. ECZM New date: Tuesday, September 22 Creole Italian: Sicilian Immigrants and the Shaping of New Orleans Food Culture Justin A. Nystrom, Ph.D. Peter J. Cangelosi/ BEGGARS Distinguished Professor of History, Loyola University Monday, October 12 Medieval Manuscripts of the Marciana Library in Venice, Italy: The Song of Roland Tomás Martin, Ph.D. Visiting Assistant Professor of Languages and Cultures, Loyola University Tuesday, October 20 Reflecting on Protest: Conversation with a Freedom Rider and Civil Rights Activist Doratha “Dodie” SmithSimmons Monday, November 9 Justice within the Immigration Laws Laila L. Hlass, Professor of Practice and Director of Experiential Learning, Tulane University Monday, December 14

September 2020 • The Jewish Newsletter

27


Jewish Community Day School Finding Our Voice in the Time of Covid Judaism has a long history of adapting during trying times. There is a famous story of Rabbi Israel Salanter publicly eating on Yom Kippur during a cholera epidemic in 1848. He wanted to make it clear to everyone that when someone’s health is at risk, it is a mitzvah to do whatever it takes to stay healthy. While JCDS certainly hasn’t had to resort to the extremes of Rabbi Salanter’s example, we have certainly had to adapt in order to minimize the risks during a pandemic. One example is how we pray together each morning. Whereas we used to gather as a school Rabbi David Posternock in the Beit Midrash, now each class joins for (Beth Israel) teaches the Zoom prayers. To minimize potential spread weekly parsha each Thursday of COVID-19, no singing is allowed. Instead, from the JCDS Beit Midrash we have incorporated more elements of percussion and movement into our services.

Rabbi Michael Cohen leads tefillah virtually from the JCDS Beit Midrash

It has been a fascinating chance to explore elements of spiritual practice that traditional tefillah doesn’t always emphasize, like meditation, mindfulness, and breath work. Like generations before us, we are finding a way to move forward during a crisis. There is an old saying that when God closes a door, God opens a window. Here at JCDS, we are discovering the hundreds of windows we never thought to explore before. Innovation and adaptation are now a standard part of our daily routines. Like Rabbi Salanter, we know that regardless of what shape it takes the most important thing is for us to keep the Jewish spirit alive. And that’s exactly what we’re doing. — Rabbi Michael Cohen

JCDS Opens Doors On Schedule From the adorable first day pics taken at home to all of the “eyesmiles” above the masks on-campus, JCDS students were thrilled to return to campus in August. The faculty worked hard all summer to prepare classrooms and procedures that adhered to the latest research on the prevention of the spread of COVID-19. With the help of the folks at the Ochsner Safe to Return program and the best of the guidelines from government authorities, JCDS developed safety protocols that have since been shared forward both locally and nationally to peer schools, just as we consulted the protocols of other schools across the nation in developing our own. We’re asking a lot of our teachers and families, but they are giving it their all to make sure JCDS students, whether on campus or through distance learning, get the best educational experience possible. 28

September 2020 • The Jewish Newsletter

JCDS 3rd and 4th grade teacher Liz Amoss was thrilled to be notified of her student’s poem being recognized by Stone Soup Editor Emma Wood. Benny D.’s The Mixture of Nature made Honor Roll in this December’s Stone Soup issue! Only 10% of the work the magazine receives is recognized in this way. Stone Soup is a literary magazine founded in 1972. The magazine publishes children’s work from around the world.


When you can’t go on the road… Virtual cultural events part of ISJL’s pandemic pivot So many of the programs coordinated by the Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life in Jackson provide in-person Jewish experiences to communities throughout the region. But what happens when the country shuts down and in-person events aren’t possible? The Institute had to quickly change its method of delivering its programs. Ann Zivitz Kientz, director of cultural programming, said she had to pivot and “bring our performers into new rooms… through Zoom.” Each department had to adapt. The education department, which oversees the standard religious school curriculum developed by the Institute for dozens of congregations around the region, could not send Education Fellows on the road to congregations that weren’t meeting in person. They de-veloped ways to deliver the curriculum online, and the annual educators conference in June — a requirement for each participating congregation — was held virtually and drew 300 participants. The Heritage and Interpretation department developed virtual Southern Jewish road trips, and re-cently introduced Virtual Vacations, a weekly gathering to explore a Southern Jewish place or top-ic. The Rabbinic Services department also could not travel to communities as usual, so streaming services and support for congregations trying to navigate the virtual waves became the mission. Kientz explained how her department shifted from in-person to virtual experiences, providing nu-merous events over the summer. “We first experimented with multi-community-performance ex-periences over Zoom in May, with four Federation partners on board to work together and offer high-quality Jewish programming virtually,” she said.

In June and July, there were three Thursdays of programming each month, featuring scholars and musicians, and closing the summer with a Dan Nichols concert that drew over 225 families in 12 communities. These events have all had stellar attendance, with between 85 and 250 households participating in each event,” she said. Kientz said more programs are in the works for the rest of 2020 and into 2021 and will be an-nounced soon. “These past four months, we have been privileged to work with many congregations, Federations and JCCs across 12 of the 13 states in our region,” she said. “Despite the pandemic, we’ve helped communities come together through shared-expense cultural programs.” Participating communities co-sponsor an event, then the Zoom link is distributed to that communi-ty’s members. “The ISJL’s shared-expense model for programming isn’t new,” Kientz said, “but be-ing able to share the expenses all on one evening over Zoom makes it possible for almost everyone to participate.” The events also help support Jewish artists and scholars at a time when they aren’t able to tour or travel for lectures. Programs have featured Jewish Blues musician Saul Kaye, scholar and author Joel Hoffman, comedi-an Benji Lovitt, musician/storyteller Batsheva, comedian Joel Chasnoff, folksy band The Ruach, the Los Angeles-based Jewish Women’s Theatre, and composer and musician Dan Nichols. The final event of the summer, scheduled for Sept. 3, features Jewish Americana musician Joe Buchanan. Congregations or communities interested in taking part in future programs can contact Kientz at akientz@isjl.org.

ExtErior DEsigns, inc.

By Beverly Katz

ExpEriEncED tEam DEsign anD construction our spEcialty Over 25 years experience and A+ rating with BBB New Orleans

(504) 866-0276

exteriordesignsbev.com

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

29


community Roving in Place New ISJL traveling rabbi looks forward to hitting the road

L ’Shana Shana Tova to my friends and supporters in the Jewish community Judge Sidney H. Cates, IV Orleans Civil Court Division C

Thank you for your support!

30

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

As the new director of rabbinic services at the Jackson-based Goldring/ Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life, Rabbi Caroline Sim was hired to travel to Jewish communities in a 13-state region that are underserved and unable to maintain their own rabbinic presence. Little did she expect to be arriving at a time what that travel would be Rabbi Caroline Sim impossible due to coronavirus. Unable to hit the road, Sim said the pandemic gave the Institute “an opportunity to think about the things we have always done, in a new way.” She said, “I can’t go to communities and I miss that, but it has given me the opportunity to interact and dialogue with more people across the board.” There have been meet-the-rabbi Zoom meetings, and she is also connecting with communities remotely. “I can’t get to every single community, so it would be nice to do that” through virtual events. Usually, the Institute’s rabbi goes to a smaller community to conduct High Holy Day services. “Now I am helping a lot of communities for their High Holidays,” providing resources and assistance for congregations that have to figure out the world of online services. But going online isn’t the entire answer. “With congregations aging – even if you have Zoom and ways of connecting digitally, that’s not necessarily a viable solution for everyone,” she said. There is still a lot of additional outreach work “even if I can’t physically be there.” With the timetable for getting back on the road uncertain — and likely not soon — “we are looking more on what we can do now” to expand outreach and services. For Sim, joining the Institute was a return to the region, as she served two congregations in the ISJL region while a student rabbi — Temple Israel in Paducah, Ky., and Temple Emanu-El in Dothan. “I’m really happy to be back.” She also served congregations in Ohio and Michigan. “I loved Dothan,” Sim said. “It was a really warm, loving and inclusive community.” “I had never seen cotton actually growing until I got to Dothan,” she added. Being from Ohio, “I’m used to corn.” Sim grew up in the Cincinnati area and “in the back of my head” always felt that being a rabbi would be a path for her. “I was one of those kids that loved Sunday School and Judaism from a very young age.” She graduated from Ohio State with a degree in English, French and European studies. She was then a teaching assistant in English classes for elementary school students in Paris. She considered enrolling in rabbinical school, but “didn’t feel comfortable as a 22-year-old” giving life advice. Because the economy tanked after she graduated, she tried a few different endeavors, but “one thing that had been consistent, I always taught in some capacity” since high school. She taught Sunday School at the congregation where she had gone since Kindergarten, and one day when listening to advice the rabbi was giving to a family, she knew “this is what I want to do with the rest of my life.” She earned a graduate certificate in Judaic studies from the University of Cincinnati, spent six months teaching herself Hebrew and applied to Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, conveniently right there in Cincinnati. Most students take student pulpits for one or two years, or just the High Holy Days, she said, but she had student pulpits all four years. “I wanted to experience different cultures, different ways of being Jewish, different


community ways of being an American Jew.” She also was figuring that eventually, she would teach part time and be a part-time rabbi in a smaller community. “I always had a small pulpit in mind.” Serving smaller communities as a student rabbi “has been incredibly enriching and joyful,” Sim said. “These communities might be small, but they are still very important.” She was ordained in May at HUC-JIR, and is working on becoming a soferet, a scribe. She was not aware of the opening at ISJL until a friend mentioned it to her. “The more I read, the more I was intrigued,” she said. Knowing the outgoing ISJL rabbi, Aaron Stucker-Rozovsky, she called him to learn more about the position. Stucker-Rozovsky just began as the rabbi at Beth El Congregation in Winchester, Va. She found a “real sense of community” at the Institute, “another thing I look for when I think about being Jewish.” There is also a “wonderful family feeling” among ISJL “alumni,” and “I really value that mentality” as it also benefits the communities served by the Institute. Moving to a Mississippi was never a question, as “I knew there were a lot of communities like Dothan and Paducah that are here. Having been to Dothan, learned and grown with them, gave me a better idea of what Southern Judaism looks like, and I don’t think you can get that from a book.” Driving all over the region does not faze her, as she drove five and onehalf hours to Paducah. “You see a lot more” by driving rather than flying, she said. Of course, it will be a while before she gets to do that. “I am looking forward to getting back on the road,” Sim said, “but until then we still have a lot to do.”

ISJL organizes Virtual Vacations With vacations interrupted this year by the Covid pandemic, the Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life has instituted a weekly Virtual Vacation, featuring interactive digital events with museums, historic sites, scholars, chefs and more from across the region. The 11 a.m. Tuesday sessions will be on the ISJL Facebook page, and started with an Aug. 25 discussion of “Why Study Southern Jewish History,” with ISJL Director of History Josh Parshall. For those who sign up, every Thursday there will be an email with resources, links and educational materials. The weekly updates will be about the week’s theme, with a video or song about the program, a recommended article, a home activity and additional links. The Sept. 1 session was a virtual visit to Mississippi’s oldest Jewish community, Natchez. Sept. 8 will be an exploration of Summer Camp Magic, Sept. 15 will be Jews and civil rights, and on Sept. 22 there will be a virtual visit to Selma’s historic Jewish community. Additional sessions are being planned, and the series will continue as long as there is demand for further sessions. “Our goal is to introduce people to key ideas, themes, moments, places, and people in the Jewish South through engaging, interactive programs that draw on our network of historians, scholars, museum professionals, and others,” ISJL Director of Heritage and Interpretation Nora Katz said. In September and October, there will be a particular emphasis on the history of southern Jews and Civil Rights, “with an emphasis on contemporary organizing for voting rights and civic engagement.” In addition to the Virtual Vacation, ISJL offers an online Virtual Road Trip through the Jewish South.

Touro Senior Emergency Care Louisiana’s highest accredited senior emergency room

Our community deserves extraordinary. Emergency Care

touro.com/emergency

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

31


Next Year In… Utica Clayton Cleveland Hendersonville

After summer of shutdowns and fiscal uncertainty, regional camps determined to open for 2021 On a typical Friday night in the summer, campers dressed in white follow a guitar-wielding song leader near Utica, singing their way to welcoming Shabbat. On Saturday evening near Clayton, Ga., hundreds fill the amphitheater for a Havdalah service that turns into a lengthy, high-energy Israeli music dance party that would exhaust a Zumba instructor. This summer, though those sounds did not echo in the valleys or across the fields, as most summer sleepaway camps cancelled their sessions due to the uncertainty surrounding the coronavirus pandemic. Anna Herman, director of the Henry S. Jacobs Camp in Utica, said that all summer, “walking from the house to the office, I had to put blinders on and pretend” that the camp wasn’t empty. “It was so depressing.” Also depressing for camp supporters was the thought, back in the spring, that without a summer session, many camps could be forced to close permanently. But camps in this region report that though the year has been a huge struggle, they are in decent shape heading into what they hope is a more normal 2021. Camps in the region instituted several measures to ensure that

32

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

their doors would be able to open in 2021 and beyond, from asking parents to roll over their 2020 tuition to the 2021 session rather than ask for a refund, or even make the 2020 tuition an outright donation, to launching fundraisers, participating in a major matching grant program from the Harold Grinspoon Foundation and seeking other grants. The camps also received allocations from the Paycheck Protection Program. Though the bulk of activity is during the summer, camps are yearround operations, with staff expenses, recruitment activities and continual maintenance and insuring of facilities. By the time summer starts, a substantial portion of the year’s revenue has already been spent. Jacob Fijman, development manager at Jacobs Camp, said in April they forecasted that the camp would lose $850,000 by cancelling summer sessions. Herman said “not having summer revenue could potentially close the camp forever… we are so beyond lucky to have a community that says we will not let that happen to Jacobs Camp.” On Aug. 27, they announced their Sustainability Campaign had raised over $980,000, and they were the first camp in the Reform


community movement system to meet its campaign goal. Now, the camp is shifting focus to 2021 scholarships and Covid protection supplies through a “Road to Welcome Home Campaign.” Jacobs Camp staff also had three weeks of furloughs and pay cuts to help make it through. At Ramah Darom, which is set up as a summer camp and year-round retreat center, 80 percent of the annual income comes from camp and the Passover Retreat, both of which were cancelled this year. Because of the “substantial impact” of the shutdown, Ramah Darom CEO Walter Levitt said they launched an emergency fundraiser, and “many generous foundations, donors and Ramah Darom families have helped us weather the storm.” Camp Barney Medintz, located in Cleveland, Ga., said the summer was “a serious challenge.” The sleepaway camp of the Jewish Community Center in Atlanta relied on their close ties with the Grinspoons, help from the Atlanta Jewish Federation, camp families, alumni and foundations from around the country. Camp Barney Director Jim Mittenthal said “we are extraordinarily grateful for the support we received” and they are in “a good place” for operating in 2021. In addition to the fundraising, Ramah Darom decided to generate activity by holding Mishpachah B’Ramah, a series of physically-distanced family getaways. The two, three or five night all-inclusive kosher getaways were held throughout August and are being planned for Sukkot, Thanksgiving, Winter Break, New Year’s, King Weekend and President’s Day Weekend. There will also be a women-only weekend in November and an adult-only Shabbat in February. The retreats are limited to about 50 people, who maintain distancing outside of their own family units, but the entire camp facility is open to participants. Geoffrey Menkowitz, Ramah Darom director, said the getaways were designed as “a respite in a safe place for families in need of a break and change of scenery.” With so much uncertainty in the early days of the pandemic, Jacobs and Ramah Darom cancelled their sessions on April 30; Camp Barney followed two weeks later. According to the American Camp Association, between 20 and 30 percent of overnight camps nationally opened this summer. Not every opening was successful. Camp directors throughout the region noticed the experiences of YMCA Camp High Harbor in north Georgia, located just a few miles from Ramah Darom. That camp required only a negative test within 12 days of arrival, and though social distancing was promoted, masks were not required for campers. Two days after the camp opened, a teen counselor who passed the initial screenings came down with symptoms and tested positive. They started sending campers home, and the camp closed six days after opening. Out of 344 from the camp for whom test results were available, 260 tested positive. Seth Herschthal, third-generation owner of Blue Star Camps in Hendersonville, N.C., which did have a session this summer, simply said “our approach to opening was different from theirs.” (See story, page 36). With the cancellation of summer sessions, the camps were thrown into a world “that hasn’t been our core business,” Mittenthal said — providing an online connection. Camps are “experts in in-person immersive programming, and we just ran into this new remote space,” Herman said. About 200 Barney staff and alumni started working on a summer of virtual events several days each week, including a major weekly event, such as a concert. One week, Mittenthal interviewed Rich Recht, who then did a concert for the camp families. They launched a S’Bread The Love challenge to bake challah for friends and neighbors, and had a community art project to decorate leaf temSeptember 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

33


community plates for a community tree art project. There was also an Israel Day and a Virtual Color War. Ramah Darom did Kayitz BaBayit, “Summer at Home,” with four weeks of online events coordinated by age groups. Most days there were live small bunk activities or community programs, and on Tuesdays a range of pre-recorded activities were uploaded. Camp-wide Kabbalat Shabbat and Havdalah were centerpieces each week. In all, 435 campers and 90 volunteer staff participated in the virtual camp. Audra Kaplan, associate camp director, said “that far exceeded what we were planning,” and it really brought the community together. The oldest campers, Gesher, had their own programming and leadership development sessions. Over 40 of them became counselors in training to assist with the younger camper programming, and Kaplan said that gave the Gesher campers hands-on professional development they would not have otherwise had. When Ramah Darom cancelled, one of the most common questions was about Gesher and the campers who would miss their final year as campers. “Our hope is to bring them back to campus at the start of the summer, before the Israel Seminar,” Kaplan said. Kaplan said it “was really touching” to see how many staff volunteered to coordinate parts of the virtual programming. Ramah also did a virtual session for Camp Yofi, their program for campers with ASD. Jacobs Camp launched HSJ365, with a range of activities by age group. Herman said virtual experiences are here to stay, “no matter what happens in the future,” as the remote experiences also had the power of community and can continue year-round. Kaplan said Ramah Darom will continue with camper engagement

during the year, picking back up after the holidays. A centerpiece will still be Havdalah, with camp families volunteering to host each week. Each year, Camp Barney has a dozen events at JCCs around the region. Mittenthal said this year, the reunion and presentation may have to be done virtually, or later than the usual November timeframe. The lack of camp also affected the Israeli shlichim who spend summers interacting with American kids at camp. The Jewish Agency for Israel and The iCenter launched Shlichim.IL to keep these cultural ambassadors as a central, meaningful part of the camp community. “The bonds between shlichim and campers are incredibly special, and often very deep, even after just one summer,” says Lapid Levi, director of the The Jewish Agency for Israel Summer Shlichim Program. “These personal relationships not only are an integral part of the camp experience, but they are proven to be some of the most meaningful Israel engagement and education. Our shlichim and camps are working together to make sure campers continue to have these memorable experiences.” Though participation had to be done online, there were still 81 Israelis who engaged in the usual training and were assigned to camps. Danny Herz, director of 6 Points Sports Academy in North Carolina, said “Mai Ziegel has been amazing, all while recovering from the virus, and did great work bringing Israel to our campers. Guy Noga was fantastic and really showed why he is so awesome and why we and our campers love him so much. I am so happy Shlichim.IL worked out, and am so appreciative that The iCenter and Jewish Agency for Israel made this happen.” Now, attention is shifting to a 2021 season, whatever it looks like. Herman said the camps will “really lean on” the national organizations

Consistency

for more than a century

Private Dining PERFECT for Weddings, Rehearsal Dinners, Showers and More

World Famous New Orleans Cuisine Impeccable Service Learn more at galatoires.com/private-dining or email sales@galatoires.com.

34

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life


community for best practices, especially the experiences of camps that did open this summer. They will also learn a lot by watching how schools are reopening this year. “We are all deeply committed to a 2021 camp season. We believe it can happen” with advances in testing and treatment, Herman said. On Aug. 26, the Center for Disease Control released a study of four Maine camps that had successful summers, explaining how they were able to operate safely. Mittenthal said nobody can talk about next May with 100 percent certainty, but “we are driven to do everything we can.” Many camps are opening registration this month for returning families. “It will be fun for people to start thinking about next summer,” Kaplan said, and for kids to have something to look forward to. Over 200 Ramah Darom families rolled over their tuition from this year to next summer. Mittenthal said they are working on a playbook with different scenarios for how next summer would look, based on the amount of progress made in the fight against Covid. “By design, we are a community that is opposite from social distancing. The concept of separating people is goofy at overnight camp.” The plan for next summer “isn’t just to get people on Camp Barney soil, it’s to have this meaningful and exciting experience, as close as possible to normalcy.” From staff, families and campers, Mittenthal said there has been an attitude of doing whatever it takes, as they consider camp “essential in their lives, not just a place where they spend a couple weeks or a month each summer.” Herman said “people missed camp and we missed them,” and she expects next summer to sell out. “Nothing will be as sweet as our first opening day, when we have the kids back home” at camp, Herman said.

JCRS Chanukah gift program registration underway Jewish Children’s Regional Service is already organizing this year’s Oscar J. Tolmas Chanukah Gift Program. Based in New Orleans, JCRS is the oldest Jewish children’s social service agency in the United States. The gift program focuses on Jewish families with children who are in need, special needs Jewish children and institutionalized Jewish adults. To register their children for Chanukah 2020, parents needs to go to the JCRS website, www. jcrs.org, and find the Oscar J. Tolmas Chanukah Gift Program. There is a simple from to fill out and submit to JCRS. Eligible Jewish families must live in the states of Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee or Texas.

“Southern Jewish Life is a vital community asset” Help Support Independent, Quality, Original Southern Jewish Journalism! We thank you for your continued support as we tell our stories — the stories of Southern Jewish Life!

www.supportSJL.com

Thank you Temple Sinai…

For allowing us to partner and participate in the renovation of your Historic Sanctuary — one of the most beautiful Sanctuaries in the South! May you have many more meaningful years in your spiritual home.

www.marsigliaconstruction.com

504.733-8341

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

35


Residential – Industrial – Commercial Shanah Tovah! No Need to Worry About Your Plumbing This Year! We’ll Take Care of Everything… Serving Birmingham Since 1977!

Plumbing • Sewer Work Backhoe Service • Gas Piping No Job Too Large or Too Small

FREE ESTIMATES 205-956-6882 | 205-823-0175 | 205-326-6861

Happy New Year 5781

36

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

On Aug. 1, the Five Year and Ten Year campers celebrated at Blue Star’s Friendship Service.

Blue Ridge Bubble How Blue Star was able to hold a camp session this year Lauren and Seth Herschthal, third-generation owners of Blue Star Camps in Hendersonville, N.C., may have 73 years of family summer camp experience to draw on, but even for them, the summer of coronavirus was unprecedented. Nevertheless, while around 90 percent of sleepaway camps nationally decided to shut down this summer, they assembled their leadership team, consulted with a wide range of medical experts and decided that they would try to move forward with summer camp in some form. The Jewish camp successfully opened for a four-week “Super Session” and then held a family retreat week. Seth Herschthal said “we engaged our entire camp community and there was a surprisingly high number of overall families who not only were willing to wait as long as they had to for us to make a final decision, but also expressed a willingness to do what it would take in terms of advanced protocols and procedures, for their children to have some sense of normalcy for some period of time, some way just to be kids as the reality of virtual school and staying at home continued to wear on all of us.” With seven decades of connections and expertise to draw from, they went through a 10-week process of scenario analysis, financial modeling, pro-forma budgeting, “just trying to figure out the different ways we could operate during the summer.” They consulted with medical experts at places like Emory, the University of North Carolina and Miami, as well as the Centers for Disease Control and the American Camp Association. “This was difficult, because there was a lot of noise that all of us were navigating through the spring, trying to tune out some of the more emotional based information and stay focused on the facts,” Herschthal said. “It is not to say that Lauren and I weren’t nervous.” But he said their medical team was confident that, if they could secure robust testing and adequate protective equipment, “we could do it.” As a family-owned camp, it was their call. Several smaller sessions were discussed. There was also a proposal, if the camp could not open, to make it available as triage space if local hospitals needed additional space from an outbreak, but the hospitals never had a need for extra space. They decided to open the camp for one four-week Super-Session in the middle of the summer. “The idea was open, create a bubble, close, done,” he said. “Once we did all the work to get the staff and campers into our bubble, nobody left until camp was over.” Those parameters were far more strict than a typical summer. Normally, the camp has a capacity of 700 campers for each of the two sessions. The Super-Session had 350 campers, half of the usual housing capacity, and because some campers usually come both sessions, only about 25 to 33 percent of the usual number of campers for the summer.


community The Herschthals, who have camp-age kids of their own, never left their house in Raleigh until it was time to drive to camp. Immediately upon arrival, the staff, leadership, kitchen workers — everyone at the camp — used a throat swab test, with the results coming back in 48 to 72 hours. The counselors, who had been asked to do a home quarantine 7 to 14 days before arrival, also were tested when they arrived. Usually, counselors have a seven-day orientation before camp starts. This year, echoing CDC quarantine guidelines, they had a 14-day “quorientation.” A week after arriving at camp, everyone was tested again, so by the time opening day hit, everyone had at least two negative tests. Campers were sent a saliva-based test a week before opening day, with the camp and their parents receiving the results at the same time. As with the staff tests, there were no positive tests, and all campers and their families were told to quarantine until camp after taking the test. On opening day, the campers were assigned a time to arrive by individual car — no group transportation or flights. Opening day was off camp property, about 5 to 7 minutes away, where the families were greeted by medical team members “in full alien-looking PPE.” All families were masked and stayed in their car as a Quidel Sofia test was administered, with results coming back within 15 minutes. At the same time, there was a finger-stick antibody test administered, “just to have extra data for potential contact tracing onsite.” Once the results showed negative, parents were able to drive to the camp gate, where the campers were dropped off without the family driving into camp. Aside from the staff already there, “no adult set foot on our campus,” Herschthal said. There were two campers from different families who tested positive at the off-site location. They were re-tested, and both the re-test and antibody test were positive, so they were not able to go to camp. Herschthal said they had been open with all families beforehand that this would be the case for anyone testing positive, and they kept in touch with those families during the session. He added that this was the reason for having the arrival screenings off-site. For the first week of camp, all activities were done solely with one’s bunk. The half-filled bunks had eight campers and two counselors. Herschthal said this was “unusual” for a camp that operates under “camper choice” for activities, but necessary. “We had to reinvent our entire daily schedule.” But pandemic or not, looking at everything periodically is “a healthy overall exercise,” though stressful under these circumstances. After the first week, all campers and staff were tested again, and after everyone tested negative the restrictions loosened somewhat, with units of three cabins able to do activities together. Masks, hand-washing and social distance protocols remained in place through the rest of the session. “We put a lot of time, energy and resources” into making the camp a safe environment. Hand-washing stations operated by foot pedals proliferated. Every year, the camp promotes a theme, such as kindness or the environment. This year, mask wearing and hand washing became the themes, including “making a real time ongoing camp style PSA.” Led by staff modeling, masks became “catchy and cool,” with tie-dyeing masks, sports rivalries on masks. “It became an accessory.” A concern had been whether the summer would still feel like camp, and Herschthal said once the session started, it did. “Yes, it was different, there were no field trips, our staff days off were on the mountain… The overwhelming feeling during it and after was campers and staff just feeling grateful to be able to have some freedom, be with their friends, be doing stuff, have a break from their parents, their house and their screens.” After the session, there was a break for a few days as the camp was deep cleaned, then they welcomed 15 to 20 families for Catskills and Camp Blue Star, a four night, five day family retreat at the camp. Even though there was a session and the retreat, “we’re still operating

Locally Owned and Operated Since 1991 We Specialize In… u Care Management u Family Consultation u In-Home Care u Alzheimer’s & Parkinson’s Care u Peace of Mind

3421 N. Causeway Blvd., Suite 502 Metairie, LA 70002 504-828-0900 www.HomeCareNewOrleans.com

Where can you find care with a personal touch? Poydras Home, a retirement community in the heart of New Orleans. �e �uild rela�onships and care for loved ones like part of the family. Independence and a sense of community are nurtured in our Garden House apartments. The Assisted Living program in Oak House, along with our healthcare exper�se and innova�ve memory support programs, ensures even the most complex needs are met with a caring touch.

5354 Magazine Street, New Orleans, LA 70115 504‐897‐0535 www.poydrashome.com September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

37


community at a loss for the year,” Herschthal said. But “we’re going to be okay” moving forward. The camp received funding from the Paycheck Protection Program, but because it is not a non-profit, Blue Star has been unable to participate in many of the fundraising programs that have helped other camps cope with the year. Many “very understanding camp families” rolled over their tuition money to the 2021 season, and for the next several years the heavy investment in capital improvements will be at “a much more modest amount.” Herschthal said there are a lot of family-owned multi-generational camps in the area, and the pandemic led to a lot of best-practices sharing and new relationships among the camps. Lessons from this summer can be applied toward next year’s camp experience. “We learned a lot from this past summer,” Herschthal said. Now, they are planning different scenarios for whatever next year will look like — and looking forward to the camp’s 75th anniversary in 2022.

Sol Gothard Lifetime Achievement Award (2012) National Organization of Forensic Social Work

Judge Richard Ware Award for Child Abuse Prevention (2014) Louisiana Children’s Trust Fund Board

Louisiana lawyer since 1978 Child abuse/domestic violence victim advocate — 42 years B.S. Tulane 1974 • J.D. Loyola Law ‘78 • LL.M. (advanced law degree) Loyola Chicago Law 2011. Earned law degree while a probation officer in the Jefferson Parish Juvenile Court Created program to give lawyers to abused kids Appointed special assistant DA in 19 parishes Tried cases in 50 Louisiana courts Argued in every LA appellate court Tried cases in 45 other states Admitted also in PA, the U.S. Supreme Court; the U.S. 3rd , 4th, 5th and 9th Circuits Courts of Appeals; and the U.S. District Courts for the Eastern, Midwest and Western Districts of LA, the Northern and Eastern Districts of TX, the Northern District of OH, the District of CO, and the Western District of PA Wrote over 25 laws for child abuse/family violence victims, and to prevent infanticide

Trained lawyers, judges, police and psychologists at national and state programs for the ABA., the U.S. Dept. of Justice, the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, the Institute on Violence, Abuse and Trauma, domestic violence coalitions, child welfare agencies, and law schools Honored by Justice for Children, The Northern Plains Tribal Inst., The National Association of Social Workers, the Young Lawyers Division of the ABA, The LSU School of Social Work, the Louisiana Foster Parent Association, and the United Way Preeminent “A-V” highest rating from lawyers and judges for ethics and ability — 30 years U.S. Supreme Court win for sexually abused kids Adoption and foster care reform work Defended state in roadway suits Proud father of 4 and grandfather of 3 Cases and writings cited in legal textbooks Staunch defender of due process and First Amendment rights Extensive civil, criminal, and appellate experience nationwide.

Elect

RICHARD DUCOTE

Judge, Div. J, 22nd Judicial District (St. Tammany & Washington Parishes)

Early voting October 20-27, Election Day November 3 Paid for by Richard Ducote

38

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

La. supremacist’s Trump campaign contributions receive media attention The Popular Information website revealed on Aug. 31 that Morris Gulett, a Louisiana-based white supremacist, donated over $2,000 to the Trump re-election campaign in a series of almost 30 donations from 2017 to 2020, with none of the donations exceeding $100. Gulett was among those vying to succeed Aryan Nations founder Richard Butler. In 2010, after serving time for conspiracy to rob a bank, he established the Aryan Nations by its other name, the Church of Jesus Christ Christian, in Converse, La., about an hour south of Shreveport and half an hour west of Natchitoches, near the Texas line. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, he is now in Mansfield, half-way between Shreveport and Converse. Mansfield, according to the 2010 census, is 77 percent Black. In 2015 he apparently left the Aryan Nations and established the Church of the Sons of YHVH. The now-defunct website said they “stand on the principles of racial segregation and White racial supremacy,” that “Through miscegenation and integration, we have become an abomination to He who created us” and “We understand that the Jew is the literal child of Satan and is the natural enemy of the White race, the Children of God.” The Forward, which also reported on the donations, had first mentioned Gulett’s contributions in July 2018, but the Trump campaign did not respond to the Forward’s inquiries.


Stein-Mart files for bankruptcy, closing stores

National retail chain’s story began with a Jewish peddler in the Mississippi Delta Stein-Mart, a 283-store retail chain with roots in Mississippi’s Jewish community, announced on Aug. 12 that it is filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and will close “a significant portion, if not all,” of its stores, which are in 30 states. “The combined effects of a challenging retail environment coupled with the impact of the Coronavirus pandemic have caused significant financial distress on our business,” Chief Executive Officer Hunt Hawkins said in a statement. “The Company lacks sufficient liquidity to continue operating in the ordinary course of business” and determined the best course of action would be to liquidate its assets in a going out of business sale. The going out of business sales are expected to begin this weekend, with stores closing by the fourth quarter. There are eight locations in Alabama, seven in Louisiana, six in Mississippi, and locations in Pensacola and Destin. The release said that “any and all strategic alternatives” are being evaluated, including the sale of its e-commerce business and intellectual property. In June, the company had indicated in a regulatory filing that with the pandemic, there was “substantial doubt” the company would make it into next year. Over 40 major retailers have filed for bankruptcy this year, up sharply from last year. The company closed its retail locations on March 18, reopening its stores with reduced hours starting in April. But in the first quarter,

before the pandemic kicked in, sales had fallen to $124 million from $314 million in the same quarter a year earlier. In February, the chain had 9,000 employees, and as of May 30 there were 8,400 employees, with 5,200 furloughed. Total sales in 2019 were $1.22 billion, down from $1.36 billion in 2016. A planned merger that had been agreed to in January was terminated in April. Sam Stein immigrated from Russia to New York in 1905, fleeing from the czar and his disapproving family, with $43 in his pocket and settled in Greenville, Miss. As with so many other new Jewish arrivals, he started off as a traveling peddler, selling to farmers throughout the Delta. He eventually was attacked, shot in the arm and robbed on the way to Vicksburg. After recovering, Stein sold jewelry in front of Finlay’s Drug Store in Greenville, and having attracted backers, opened a clothing store, known as Sam Stein, in downtown Greenville in 1908. Unlike other merchants who sought a high-end clientele, Stein stayed with his peddling roots and offered affordable merchandise to less-affluent whites and blacks. Stein’s four children helped grow the store, with Jake taking the reins in 1932. Jake Stein was president of the Chamber of Commerce and the city’s minor league baseball team, and served on the city council. He struck a deal with Saks Fifth Avenue to receive their returns and unsold merchandise, and transitioned the store from general goods to being a discount retailer, with hefty discounts off department store prices.

When Jake Stein enlarged the store, he wanted to give it a new name. An uncle referenced a friend in Arkansas who was using the “mart” suffix to his name, Sam Walton. Jake’s son, Jay, attended the retail sales program at New York University, then came back to succeed him as chief executive officer in the 1970s. Jay and Jake would clash over the idea of expanding, but Jay saw the volume of sell-off goods from high-end retailers and figured there would be other cities besides Greenville that would like a shot at those items. In 1977, Jay Stein opened a temporary second location in Memphis, which was a huge success. The Memphis location was followed soon by Nashville. Regional growth continued, with a focus on upscale brands at bargain prices, and in 1984 the company’s headquarters moved to Jacksonville. In 1992, there were 45 Stein-Marts and it became publicly traded on the NASDAQ. Jay Stein stepped down as CEO in 2001, but returned in 2011 to revitalize the stores. Stein retired again in 2016. A 2013 profile in USA Today noted that Stein-Mart was thriving at a time when regional stores were closing or being acquired. The article referred to Stein-Mart as having the feel of a smaller Macy’s but with prices like TJ Maxx. In 2003, a historical marker was erected at the site of the first Stein store in Greenville, and a history of the chain, “Stein Mart: An American Story of Roots, Family, and Building a Greater Dream” was published in 2004. September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

39


community Major gift for Tulane Center for Sport The Tulane Center for Sport, which is devoted to the study, research and support of all areas where sport engages society, has received a $5.5 million gift from the Douglas Hertz Family Foundation. The Hertz Family Foundation fund will support initiatives for current faculty members and leadership, attract prominent faculty members, visiting professors and adjunct instructors to the center while continuing to support and expand its existing nationally recognized programs, along with building on emerging industry sectors. The gift will also assist with an administrative position that will oversee the planning, coordination and implementation of sports law competitions, the Tulane Sports Executives Club, the Tulane Center for Sport Speaker Series, career services opportunities and other initiatives. The Center explores the role of sports not only as entertainment or competition on the field of play, but in human health, complex legal issues, labor agreements, sports marketing and finance, media, data analytics, venue architecture and much more. “This generous gift continues the Hertz family tradition of providing transformative support to the academic mission of Tulane,” said President Michael Fitts. “This gift will strengthen the Center for Sport’s role as a national leader in the study of athletic competition and its far-reaching impact on so many aspects of the human condition.” “Our family is thrilled to support the vision of interdisciplinary studies on a subject that has become so important in the daily lives of many Americans,” said Doug Hertz, a Tulane graduate who is the immediate past chair of the Board of Tulane. Hertz, his wife Lila Loewenthal Hertz, daughter Amy Hertz Agami, son Michael J. Hertz and sister Patricia Jill Hertz Reid each graduated from Tulane. The Hertz family established the Lila L. and Douglas J. Hertz Endowed Chair in Psychology in 2007, named the Doug and Lila Hertz Center in 2011, were lead donors to Yulman Stadium, donated to the A. B. Freeman School of Business and the New Orleans Culinary & Hospitality Institute and has made numerous other significant contributions in support of Tulane. Doug Hertz has been president and CEO of United Distributors, the largest alcoholic beverage wholesaler in Atlanta, since 1984. He serves on numerous boards, is a past president of The Temple, and a limited partner in the Atlanta Falcons.

The Hertz Family: Front row, left to right, Zach Agami, Jill Agami, Noah Agami, Elle Hertz; Second row, Ronnie Agami, Amy Agami, Doug Hertz, Lila Hertz, Emily Hertz, Michael Hertz and Jennings Hertz. (Photo courtesy of the Hertz family) 40

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life


community Defending New Orleans from Rip-Offs FOX 8 Defenders, NCJW mark 10 years of partnership The New Orleans Section of the National Council of Jewish Women and FOX 8 are celebrating the 10th anniversary of their partnership in FOX 8 Defenders. FOX 8 Defenders is NCJW’s longest running and most visible community service project, and one of its most successful endeavors. FOX 8 Defenders tackles a host of issues that affect people in communities across WVUE’s viewing area, from the Northshore to the Southshore, and from the River Parishes to the Bayou Region. The program has fielded over well over 15,000 calls and emails in the past 10 years, saving Louisiana consumers nearly $3 million. The award-winning consumer advocacy program has helped Louisianans find answers to dealing with hucksters and scam artists, as well as educating the community in general when it comes to IRS, Social Security or travel scams. For other cases, FOX 8 Defenders exposes quality of life issues and works to get answers from different municipalities and, when NCJW volunteers believe it is necessary, a FOX 8 Defenders investigation is conducted. The program was brought to New Orleans from the NCJW national convention in St. Louis almost 27 years ago by Hannah Solomon recipient and past Section President Babette “Babs” Isaacson. With help from Lois Shepard, the program grew through the years, receiving recognition and awards, including a regional Edward R. Murrow award. NCJW teamed with WVUE-FOX 8 in July 2010 after spending 15 years with another local TV station. FOX 8 and NCJW just signed an extension of the contract, entering the 11th year of the partnership. Shelley Brown, anchor and reporter at FOX 8, has been the reporter for most of the years, and has been recognized by the Louisiana Associated Press and the Press Club of New Orleans, and also received a Suncoast Emmy along with the regional Edward R. Murrow Award, for the ongoing series “Limo Bus Investigation.” Susan Tramontana, executive director for the past 15 years, said “for some people, we are their only hope for help. Their situation may not always make it on air, but our volunteers listen and work to point them in the right direction as far as resources that may exist can help. We are a sounding board, a source of information, a source of help, and obviously a source of multiple successes.” Over 65 NCJW volunteers have spent countless hours helping consumers, and their dedication has continued during the pandemic, as they have had to work by remote. In the early months of the shutdown, the volunteers logged over 500 calls a month, a 300 percent increase. Loel Samuel, past president of NCJW, became chairman of Fox 8 Defenders in 2016, succeeding Bresler and Isaacson. Samuel said the Fox 8 Defenders program “more than fulfills” the NCJW mission of turning progressive ideals into action, working for social justice. “We all are grateful and proud for the opportunity to do so.”

Happy Rosh Hashanah Israeli Specials Every Day in September New Covid Hours: Tues.-Sat., 5 to 9 p.m. NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH! Tues.-Fri., 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Dine In or Call For Pick-Up

Closed Mondays

NOW SERVING BRUNCH

EVERY SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. See Our Facebook Page for Daily Menus and Special Offerings! /AcropolisOnFreret

4510 Freret Street • (504) 309.0069

www.AcropolisOnFreret.com

ROSE SPECIAL!

Roses! Cash & carry in paper only

$7.50

Offer Valid Through Sept. 28, 2020

JNOLA to hold virtual New Year toast Every year, JNOLA does a Rosh Hashanah New Year’s Toast at a venue in town. With everyone ready to put this year behind, JNOLA’s toast will naturally have a different, virtual look this year. The Virtual Toast will be Sept. 17 at 6 p.m. on Zoom. Those in the greater New Orleans area who register can have a bag of items delivered to their door, containing items used for the toast, including a Zony Mash Beer Project four-pack. There will also be a mini-challah from Casablanca, a balloon for the program, a bottle of honey and more. Bags will be delivered by masked JNOLA board members on Sept. 15 and 16. There is also a fundraiser for Hurricane Laura relief.

Pick them up today at both locations! 750 Martin Behrman Ave Metairie • 504-833-3716

1415 N. Hwy 190 Covington • 985-809-9101

Villeresflowers.com September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

41


Coming Soon…

community

Most Jewish publications publish some kind of annual Community Guidebook.

Fighting antisemitism from a different perspective

Southern Jewish Life’s Guide is different. SJL’s Guide is more than a listing of organizations, institutions and congregations… it is a portal to the history of the Jewish communities of the Deep South, and a guide to the present. And it will be mailed to every known Jewish household in the region. It will also be made available throughout the year at select stores and institutions, for those looking for information about the region, and especially for newcomers and those who are contemplating a move to the region. SJL’s Guide gives a history of each institution, and finds the often-overlooked sites and fascinating stories in communities throughout Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and the Florida panhandle. This is a first-ever keepsake edition that will be widely read and referred to…

Reserve your ad space today! Deep South Lee Green, (205) 870-7889 New Orleans Jeff Pizzo, (504) 432-2561 42

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

Jewish group taps Christian woman with Mississippi roots By Richard Friedman The bad news for the American Jewish Committee is that its business — anti-Semitism — is booming. The good news is that AJC has made a bold decision in response — to send Holly Huffnagle, a 33-year-old Christian, with family roots that course through the Deep South, to the forefront of this battle. If energy, determination, knowledge and a fresh point of view can help turn back this growing scourge, then AJC, one of America’s oldest Jewish advocacy groups, has picked the right person to lead the charge. Huffnagle’s promotion earlier this year from assistant director of AJC’s Los Angeles office to its U.S. Director for Combating Antisemitism has caught the attention of many, mainly because Huffnagle is not Jewish. “My goal is to bring a perspective from outside the Jewish community,” she explains. “I just happen to be Christian.” Antisemitism, she emphasizes, is not just a Jewish problem; when it erupts it endangers the broader society as well. Her Jewish colleagues at AJC have applauded her appointment. Huffnagle has built an impressive resume as a leader in the fight against antisemitism. She’s taught American Christians about antisemitism and its link to anti-Zionism; worked at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington and served in the U.S. State Department’s Office to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism. She also has spent extended time in Poland studying the Holocaust. She does acknowledge that her Christian upbringing has been a factor in her wanting to combat antisemitism because, she believes, so much of the haHuffnagle’s tred and violence against Jews over grandmother the centuries played violin has stemmed from Christian for services at attitudes, actions Temple Beth-El in and teachings, even if Christian Lexington, Miss. anti-Judaism is no longer such a pervasive contemporary source. “Many of the antisemitic tropes and conspiracies used by the far-left or Islamist extremists today are borrowed from Christian anti-Judaism and medieval Christian Europe,” notes Huffnagle. “I think where I got started working on Jewish issues and anti-Semitism was really through learning about the Holocaust while studying in

Europe with Westmont College,” explains Huffnagle. “For me, as a Christian, I had a hard time understanding how the Holocaust — the murder of 6 million Jews — could have happened in Christian Europe. I did not know the history of Christian anti-Judaism — it was a big wake up call.”

Southern Roots

Huffnagle, who grew up in California, is descended from ancestors who arrived in the port of Charleston in the late 1600s. Her family history on both sides runs through the South. Her forebears would make lives for themselves in Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi, among other Southern states, as their journey in America unfolded. The family’s roots in Mississippi made a deep impression on Huffnagle while growing up. Through summer visits, seeds were planted that would play a role in who she would become. As a result of these visits, she began delving into her family’s Southern history, some of which made her proud and some of which made her uncomfortable. She speaks with pride about her Mississippi grandfather, a personable Baptist preacher, standing up for the rights of Blacks and sticking his neck out when it wasn’t easy. Explains Huffnagle, “My grandfather saved a Black man from being lynched in the 1940s. He was young — in his 20s. And his father-in-law, my great-grandfather, risked his life to help Black Mississippians vote in the 1960s. He was older — in his 60s — but it was a cause he had been passionate about for most of his life.” At the same time, there’s an acknowledgement that other ancestors were segregationists, fought for the Confederacy and owned enslaved human beings. “Yes, my family history is quite complicated, and not everyone acted righteous-


community ly, and even those who did, didn’t do so all the time.” One story she tells reflects her journey in coming to grips with her family’s past. One of her relatives on her mother’s side was the famous Confederate General J.E.B. (James Ewell Brown) Stuart, a member of a slave-owning family. “I had an interesting experience in October 2017,” explains Huffnagle. “There was a high school in Falls Church, Va., which bore the name of J.E.B. Stuart. That October, the school board voted to change the name to Justice High School.” The name change was in response to Stuart being a Confederate general and an association with slavery. “I thought about it — my relative’s name is being removed from a high school,” remembers Huffnagle. “Should it make me sad? Angry? I think it might have, if I hadn’t been so exposed in my work to the necessity of understanding the perspectives — and the pain — of the other.”

This Week In Southern Jewish Life The South’s Most Comprehensive Weekly Jewish News Email To Subscribe, send an email to subscribe@sjlmag.com

Jewish Friendships

Huffnagle also discovered her family had connections to the Mississippi Jewish community. Her grandmother played the violin at religious services at Temple Beth-El in Lexington. Her grandfather was given a leather-bound Jewish Publication Society edition of “The Torah” as a gift from Jewish friends. In a recent virtual interview, she showed the book as well as a printed program from the synagogue featuring her grandmother’s name. While that keepsake program is a source of pride for Huffnagle, as a student of the Holocaust she noted its additional significance: “The program was from June 1941, the same month as ‘Operation Barbarossa,’ a turning point in Adolf Hitler’s expansion of power.” In her new role at AJC, Huffnagle will coordinate and track her organization’s efforts to combat antisemitism nationally. Her job additionally allows her to develop and initiate new projects and campaigns. She will soon be moving from California to Washington, because her job also entails working with the federal government on antisemitism issues. While Huffnagle’s assignment is dreadfully serious — helping to combat the worst antisemitism since the Holocaust — she remains upbeat, energetic, fresh and inspiring. These traits, coupled with her knowledge, passion for her work and uncompromising sense of purpose, create a formidable mix. So much so that this young and determined national leader clearly is primed and ready to tackle the booming business of anti-Semitism, and not just on behalf of AJC but on behalf of concerned people everywhere. September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

43


community Lauren Sobel killed in rock climbing accident

HAVE A BRIGHT, FESTIVE NEW YEAR! Have You Ordered Your Rosh Hashanah Flowers?

We Are Open for Delivery Orders, Walk-In or Curbside Bouquets • Bouquet Wraps • Boutonnieres Centerpieces • Vases • Aisle Decorations & Pedestals

Federico’s FAMILY FLORIST

815 Focis Street Metairie, LA 70005 504.837.6400 flowers@federicosflorist.com Larry Federico, Owner/President

44

Kenny Thone, Co-Owner/Vice President

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

Lauren Sobel, an Alexandria native and former Henry S. Jacobs camper and staffer, died in a rock climbing accident in New York on Aug. 9. She was 25. Sobel, a resident of Brooklyn, was leading a climb with two friends around 3:30 p.m. at the Trapps Trailhead area of Mohonk Mountain Preserve when she lost her grip while setting protection gear about 70 feet up the rock face, according to a New York State Police report. Three additional safety measures all failed. She fell about 50 feet and was pronounced dead at the scene. Her older sister, Ellie Sobel Whitcher, said on Facebook that Sobel was “an incredibly amazing, bright, brave, and kind person who loved and was loved by many.” Whitcher said “Helping others, people with disabilities, and especially veterans, to inclusively participate in climbing was very rewarding for Lauren. We are grateful that at the end of her life, she was pursuing her passion.” Sobel was a municipal research strategist with Bank of America, specializing in transportation infrastructure. Her father, David Sobel, told the New York Post that she had always been adventurous and looking to experience new places. As a teen, she wanted to visit France, so he told her it was a deal if she made straight As and became fluent in French. She did, winning the state French convention. An alumna of the Louisiana School for Math, Science and the Arts, she graduated from Tulane with a degree in political economy. At Tulane, she was a research assistant in the political science department, helping Mark Vail research his book, “Liberalism in Illiberal States: Ideas and Economic Adjustment in Contemporary Europe.” She was in the Columbia University Post-Baccalaureate Business Program and the Cal-Berkeley Extension’s Financial Planning and Analysis Professional Certificate program, which she was to complete this December. A certified climber, Sobel volunteered with Adaptive Climbing Group of New York, which helps those with disabilities to climb. She also worked with Crux Climbing, which expands access to rock climbing for the LGBTQ community. She first started climbing while helping military veterans who were amputees climb at indoor facilities. For her volunteer work with veterans, she was recognized with a volunteerism award from Bank of America. She was a camper at Jacobs Camp from 2001 to 2009, and on staff in 2011. Adaptive Climbing Group held a virtual memorial on Aug. 11, with assistance from the Climbers Grief Fund of the American Alpine Club.


community >> Rear Pew Mirror

continued from page 46

Finally, Yom Kippur from home has some serious challenges. Contrary to various interpretations revolving around sadism, the intent of fasting and being in synagogue all day is simply to eliminate all distraction so one can reflect, unless one is a vampire. Houses house a plethora of distractions. Fasting, with the kitchen right there. Focusing, while the interwebs lurk right behind that Zoom window. This column, sitting right there on the coffee table waiting to be read again. Good luck. I’ve got nothing. May you be inscribed in the Big G’s upcoming 5781 best-seller, entitled “The Book of Life But Only If Next Year Doesn’t Suck Like This One.” Doug Brook will look forward to the High Holy Days until the fourth dimension forces him to look back on them. To read past columns, visit http://brookwrite.com/. For exclusive online content, follow facebook.com/ rearpewmirror.

THE EXPERIENCE TO DELIVER REAL REFORM

You’ve Got to Have Friends NCJW presenting Best Friends program In the spirit of the sentiment “to have a friend, you have to be a friend,” the National Council of Jewish Women, Greater New Orleans Section is hosting a Best Friends Forever Zoom on Sept. 30 at 7 p.m. Presenters include Deena Gerber, Leslie Becker Crane and Ashley Barriere. Gerber will speak on friendship from the vantage point of a grandmother and a former Tulane University Professor of Social Work. Crane, a life strategist and confidence coach, will talk about friendship from the point of view of a millennial newlywed. Barriere, a New Orleans attorney and a BFF to a large group of friends known as “the herd,” will moderate. The program seeks to shed light on the healing benefit of friendships, demonstrate what it means to have a friend at all stages of life and explore the “magical glue” that keeps friends together. According to Karen Sher, NCJW membership vice president and organizer of this program, this unique friendship-themed Zoom meeting is open to all NCJW members and the community at large. Each member is encouraged to invite a special friend — a prospective member. “Flip through our NCJW Blue Book Directory, see who is missing from our membership roster and invite them!” Sher said. Gerber has been an active Social Worker for more than 40 years, including during the nearly 20-year period when she was executive director of Jewish Family Service. She served as adjunct professor at Tulane University School of Social Work from 2009 to 2017. Gerber is currently in private practice specializing in LCSW licensure supervision. In 1994 Gerber co-authored “Caring for the Elderly — A Workbook for Caregivers.” Crane is the CEO of “Better with Becker,” which aids clients in tackling problems, identifying opportunities and creating solutions. Her clients rediscover their true joy and learn to love and embrace their uniqueness. Crane leads clients to leverage key relationships, resources, and process improvement to drive both organizational and personal successes. She is a graduate of the NCJW WAY Leadership program. Barriere works at Keller Lenkner LLC, a leading national law firm representing a broad array of clients as plaintiffs in complex litigation at the trial and appellate levels, where she specializes in multidistrict and complex litigation. Since 2018, she has served as Mayor Cantrell’s appointee to the Quality Assurance Committee for the New Orleans Inspector General. Barriere is a current member of the 2019-2020 Katz-Phillips leadership program. To register, contact Karen Sher at karenandleopold@gmail.com, or call her at (504)-723-5492. The Zoom will be capped at the first 100 registrants.

PAID FOR BY THE COMMITTEE TO ELECT KEVA LANDRUM DISTRICT ATTORNEY

ELECTION DAY: NOVEMBER 3, 2020 Early Voting: October 20 thru October 27, 2020

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

45


rear pew mirror • doug brook

Bye Holy Days

ELECTION DAY: NOVEMBER 3 info@foretforjudge.com • 3330 N. Causway Boulevard, Metairie, Louisiana 70002

foretforjudge.com Paid for by the Committee to Elect Chick Foret Judge

Coming soon…

A new magazine for Israel’s Christian friends

israelinsightmagazine.com

THE FRENCH QUARTER IS CALLING Our Flexible Rate allows you to change or cancel your reservation up to noon (12pm) local hotel time on day of arrival.

Old77Hotel.com 535 Tchoupitoulas St, New Orleans, LA 7013 ~ 504-527-5271

46

September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

Nearly both readers of this column have no doubt joined their fellow humans in eagerly anticipating the end of 2020. Some people’s reasons are different than others’ reasons, and some of them are even right about it. Just ask them. Regardless, this it-can’t-end-soon-enough sentiment has been prevalent throughout society amid 2020’s ever-growing pandemics of Coronavirus and corruption, onset of sheltering in place and feeling out of place, and departure of Barbara Walters from the airwaves. It didn’t even wait, as it does most years, until the Mets were eliminated from postseason contention two weeks before the abridged baseball season began. While Nov. 3 is popularly — as well as electorally — circled on calendars nationwide, so is Dec. 31. To find the last time when the end of a year was this eagerly anticipated by this many people, one must go all the way back to 2019. But why wait four more months until next year? The Jewish calendar has a New Year’s Day much sooner, in September. In fact, it has two days of it, so there’s plenty to share. There are many resources that legitimately explain the High Holy Days, so instead of re-explaining them here, the following expounds on uniquenesses that are unique to this unique year. This year’s Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur will be unlike any that came before. In some ways, it might actually be good; in others, less so. One difference is that, to get a head start on next year, those who take the rare opportunity to attend services in person this Rosh Hashanah will receive a form for how they want to appear in next year’s yahrtzeit book. For everyone who will be home-shuling this holiday season, it will be tempting to not dress as they would if going to synagogue. This is a great and terrible thing. First of all, please dress. In something, at least. It’s a time for baring our souls, but not our soles — or anything above them. More to the point… On the one hand, when attending from home instead of together, it is even more incumbent to do whatever we can to create Never has a a sacred space for ourselves in respect to new year been ourselves, each other, and the Big G. After all, houses aren’t synagogues, and this is the season of seeking forgiveness and inso eagerly scription in next year’s Book of Life. anticipated On the other hand, the Big G is likely to get in several giggles because of people wearing a dress or shirt, tie, coat, and slacks, along with slippers once featured at Kids ‘R’ Us. And, yes, you should pick up the place a bit. Nobody’s Wednesday socks have ever been on the floor in the room next to Rosh Hashanah services. Come on; it’s Saturday already. (Thursday socks are understandable.) A benefit of online services is that there is far less consternation about someone sitting in another person’s seat in the sanctuary. The preferred location on the couch is a different matter, but at least is an internal matter to resolve rather than a family feud that could end up before the synagogue board and mediated by Steve Harvey. The onset of remote services raises some issues of cybersecurity but the good news is that it addresses various issues of synagogue security. With everyone tuning in from home, it’s thankfully far more difficult for an assailant to carry out a mid-service mass shooting. continued on previous page


September 2020 • Southern Jewish Life

47


48

September 2020 • Southern Jewish 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.