Southern Jewish Life
25TH ANNIVERSARY ISSUE December 2015 Volume 25 Issue 12
Southern Jewish Life P.O. Box 130052 Birmingham, AL 35213
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shalom y’all shalom y’all shalom y’all
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Happy Chanukah! Twenty-five years ago we sent out the first issue of The Southern Shofar to households across Alabama. Two names and three additional states later, we reflect on 25 years of covering a wide range of unique Jewish communities in the Deep South. A more detailed history of the publication is on page 41, along with some of our “greatest hits” and a listing of many (but not all!) major events in our coverage area over the last 25 years. Thanks, of course, to the many people who have worked on this publication over the years, especially our ad guru Lee Green, whose efforts have kept us going for so many years. Thanks also to the advertisers who have been with us over the years. As we send to every Jewish household we know of in our coverage area without a subscription fee, advertising is how this publication is sustained. If you love Southern Jewish Life, let our advertisers know. Also, let those who aren’t advertisers know that they should be! And if you have a business that needs marketing, we’d be thrilled to talk with you. On a personal note, special thanks to my family. Going back to the days when my grandparents (of blessed memory) put on the mailing labels, this has been a family effort. Yes, that is my “younger, bigger” brother who does “that column in the back.” And of course, the talent behind this figurehead, my amazing wife Ginger (a.k.a. Princess), who always has ideas of how to improve the publication and who is responsible for so much of what you see, from concepts to design. We look forward to continuing to serve our communities for years to come. After all, we love what we do and who we do Larry Brook it for. EDITOR/PUBLISHER EDITOR@SJLMAG.COM
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December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 3
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TOLL-FREE 866/446.5894 FAX 866/392.7750 connect@sjlmag.com ADVERTISING Advertising inquiries to Lee Green, 205/870.7889 or lee@sjlmag.com or Jessica Thomas, jessica@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 2015. 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.
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agenda interesting bits & can’t miss events
Members of Birmingham’s Jewish War Veterans Post took part in Birmingham’s annual Veterans Day Parade, which is billed as the oldest in the country, on Nov. 11.
Demographic study underway for Birmingham’s Jewish community A survey of the Birmingham Jewish community is being undertaken be heard as well. by a coalition of agencies and congregations, to understand the demoAbout 200 surveys were mailed to known Jewish households for whom graphics, attitudes, opinions and needs of Jewish residents in the area. there was no known email address. The survey is being undertaken after the 2013 Pew Research Council’s The organizers hope to have all survey responses in by Dec. 15. landmark national study, “A Portrait of Jewish Americans.” Many other Anyone with questions may contact any of the sponsoring organizacommunities, including Nashville, Memphis and St. Louis, have done tions for more information. similar studies since then, and an academic researcher from Brandeis who was involved in many of those studies is consulting on the Birmingham study. Claire Parker of Parker Consulting in Birmingham is overseeing the On Nov. 2, Holocaust process, which began in October with emails being sent to known housesurvivor Ann holds so they could complete an on-line survey that takes about 10 to 15 Rosenheck spoke at minutes. Temple Emanu-El in The responses are confidential and nobody is required to give a name. Dothan. She also spoke On most questions, there is an option to not answer, and space for clariat Troy University fying comments. and participated Only one survey can be completed per household. It requests such inin a Holocaust formation as number of individuals in the household, participation in the educators workshop community if any, current needs and anticipated needs in the near future. for middle and high The sponsoring organizations are the Birmingham Jewish Federation, school teachers. Birmingham Jewish Foundation, Chabad of Alabama, Collat Jewish Here, she receives a Family Services, Knesseth Israel, Levite Jewish Community Center, N. E. proclamation from Miles Jewish Day School, Temple Beth-El and Temple Emanu-El. Dothan Mayor Mike As the online survey continues, there is an effort to find those in the Schmitz, proclaiming area who are unknown to the sponsoring agencies. For them, a link has her as a Righteous been set up: https://www.research.net/r/BhamCommSJL Friend of the City. Those completing the survey can also suggest individuals they know who are Jewish but not involved in the community, so their opinions can
Dothan honors Holocaust survivor
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 5
agenda Music Weekend at Ahavas Chesed
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Ahavas Chesed in Mobile will have a Jewish Music Weekend with Sammy Rosenbaum and Eli Sperling. Rosenbaum will perform at the Dec. 18 Shabbat service, starting at 6 p.m. On Dec. 19, Rosenbaum and his band will perform a musical Havdalah and then a community concert. Rosenbaum will then lead a songwriting workshop for older students in the religious school on Dec. 20. Rosenbaum lives in Atlanta and Elisha Brodsky Photography just released his debut album, “We Are The Ones,” which mixes hip hop drums and Southern guitar, fusing Jewish inspiration with daily struggles and victories. He grew up in Boca Raton, Fla., and in 2012 spent 16 weeks on tour, filming the documentary “Rock Shabbat,” which highlighted American Jewish music and 85 musicians. The Rock Shabbat tour also included Sam Rotenberg and Birmingham’s Asher Krell. The three attended Ramah Darom together for many years. Since then, Rosenbaum has served as the Musician in Residence for retreats and communities around the world. He serves on the board of the Atlanta Jewish Music Festival, working to bring fresh musical experiences to the Metro Atlanta area.
Temple Beth-El Rabbi Randall Konigsburg leads a session at the Global Day of Jewish Learning event on Nov. 15 at the N.E. Miles Jewish Day School in Birmingham. The program was sponsored by the school, Knesseth Israel, Chabad and Temple Beth-El.
Partnership celebration in Rosh Ha’Ayin New Orleans extension available for Birmingham Partnership2Gether is turning 20, and there will be a national celebration of the initiative that has linked Israeli communities with Jewish communities worldwide. The international jubilee will be April 4 to 7, from Haifa to the Negev. Rosh Ha’Ayin is New Orleans’ P2K community, and it is also Birmingham’s sister city in a relationship that goes back to 1981. After the national P2K celebration in Israel, the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans is organizing an extension that celebrates Rosh Ha’Ayin’s partnership through food and music, through April 11. Because Birmingham has a relationship with the community as well, participation from members of 6 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 7
agenda
a boutique and gift shop inspired by the jam band and festival-following culture
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Happy Chanukah — we feature some kitschy Judaica gifts for the hippie in all of us Monday through Friday 9:00 AM - 6:30 PM Saturday 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM 2531 Rocky Ridge Road, Vestavia Hills, Alabama (205) 874-6164 Like us on Facebook to stay updated www.Facebook.com/AnotherDirtyHippie
the Birmingham Jewish community is welcome. The national partnership event’s program fee is $990, and hotel for three nights is $810. The program fee for the Rosh Ha’Ayin extension is $500. Participants book their own flights and arrange their hotel in room blocks that the Federation has reserved. Fees for the Rosh Ha’Ayin extension include all meals, transportation, home hospitality, sightseeing and tips. That part of the cost should be sent to theJewish Federation of Greater New Orleans. A subsidy of $990 to cover the overall event’s registration is available to JNOLA members, the young adults group in New Orleans for ages 21 to 45. The subsidy is not available to those outside of New Orleans. Registration deadline is Dec. 15. The annual Holiday Gift Wrapping fundraiser for Baton Rouge Hadassah will be at the Perkins Rowe Barnes and Noble from Dec. 13 to 24. Montgomery Shlicha Dana Korem will lead the next Café Israel on Dec. 15 at 7 p.m., at Temple Beth Or. The next Food Trucks Friday at Birmingham’s Temple Emanu-El will be on Dec. 11 following the 5:40 p.m. service. Rabbi Elliot Stevens will offer “Tales from the Midrash,” a six-part series about stories that illuminate great figures in the Torah. The series starts on Jan. 5 and meets for six Tuesdays at noon at Temple Beth Or in Montgomery. The first session discusses stories about Adam and Eve. Rabbi Stephen Wylen, visiting rabbi at Beth Israel in Jackson this year, continues his series on Judaism’s Great Debates on Dec. 8 at 7 p.m. with Theodore Herzl vs. I. M. Wise, on “Are the Jews a People or a Religion?” The Jan. 19 debate will be Moses vs. Korach on “The Divine Source of Religious Authority.” On Feb. 2, it will be Geiger vs. Hirsh vs. Frankel on the Three Streams of Modern Judaism. The series will continue until June. The Jewish Federation of Greater Baton Rouge is serving Christmas Eve Day and Christmas Day lunch at St. Vincent de Paul. Volunteers are needed both days, from no later than 10:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. Space is limited and volunteers should reserve a spot by contacting the Federation office. Huntsville’s Temple B’nai Sholom will be volunteering to staff the Huntsville Botanical Gardens Galaxy of Lights on Dec. 24. Nancy and Jerry Fishman are coordinating the volunteers for the evening. B’nai Israel in Baton Rouge announced that the second annual Kenny and Ziggy’s Deli New York Nosh Night will be Jan. 23. The event features specialties from the famous Houston deli. Ticket information will be forthcoming. The next OLLI class at Birmingham’s Levite Jewish Community Center will be Photography for iPhones, Dec. 7 at 10:30 a.m. The free class is taught by Kenneth Kuntz, a teacher of photography and computer products. The next Café Israel in Pensacola with Shlicha Tal Itzhakov will be on Dec. 14 at 6 p.m., at Cactus Flower Cafe on 12th Avenue. B’nai Israel in Baton Rouge will have its annual Habitat for Humanity build on Dec. 12 from 8 a.m. to noon, meeting at the build site. Etgar 36, an Atlanta-based group that takes Jewish teens on civil rights journeys through the South each summer, is doing a journey for adults, Jan. 28 to 31. Stops include Atlanta, Montgomery, Selma and Birmingham. Cost is $350 and just a few spaces remain on the bus. The Mississippi Religious Leadership Conference scheduled a Peace and Reconciliation Service on Dec. 6 at 5 p.m. at Fondren Presbyterian Church in Jackson. The evening includes messages from the Jewish, Christian, Muslim and Unitarian perspectives.
8 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
agenda Nominations open for American Hebrew Academy Honor Society
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The American Hebrew Academy in Greensboro, N.C. is accepting nominations for the academy’s Honor Society, which acknowledges bright, hard-working and talented 8th and 9th graders “who have shown excellence in academics, character, leadership and community service.” Inductees are invited to the Spring Prospective Student Weekend, where they can compete for one of five renewable $20,000 scholarships to the academy. Students may be nominated by teachers, rabbis, Jewish community professionals, camp directors, counselors, coaches and friends. While students are encouraged to consider the Academy for their high school career, it is not a requirement for membership in the Honor Society. The academy is a Jewish pluralistic college-prep boarding school for grades 9 to 12. The student application, adult recommendation and other information are available on the society’s website, ahahonorsociety.org. The application deadline is Jan. 7, and inductees will be announced by Jan. 22.
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Hadassah has appointed Randy Gorod as director of development for the Southeastern United States. Gorod will be responsible for individual major gifts fundraising and capital campaigns, and have oversight over volunteer leadership activities. David Pasternack, chief development officer of Hadassah, announced on Nov. 20 that Gorod would start immediately. He said Gorod’s “vision, fundraising expertise and donor contacts in the region will be an invaluable asset to Hadassah/Southeast as we cultivate annual giving and individual major gifts, develop capital campaigns and expand our volunteer leadership prospects in support of Hadassah’s two world-class hospitals in Jerusalem as well our ground-breaking medical research.” Toby Parker, president of Hadassah/Southeast, said his “wealth of experience and very successful fundraising track record for local Jewish philanthropies and non-profits will be an important resource to Hadassah Southeast as we continue to identify new and creative giving sources and increase our funding base.” The region includes Alabama, the Florida panhandle, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, the Carolinas, Tennessee and Southern Virginia. Prior to joining Hadassah, Gorod was founder and president of Pisgah Consulting, LLC with a client base that included Hillel International, ORT Atlanta, the Center for the Visually Impaired and several local Hillel chapters. Previously, Gorod was senior associate vice president for Israel and Global Philanthropy at The Jewish Agency for Israel. Gorod was Director of Major Gifts at Emory University from 2006 to 2012, where he played a leadership role in Emory’s $1.6 billion Campaign Emory. As Assistant Campaign Director at the Jewish Federation of Greater Atlanta, Gorod helped lead the Community Campaign for Caring to a record-breaking $18 million, its highest level of annual giving, with increased donors contributing at all levels of support. Gorod served as regional director for Young Judaea and was active in numerous capacities at Camp Judaea.
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agenda Headliner announced for JazzFest Shabbat
Touro Synagogue in New Orleans announced that its annual JazzFest Shabbat will be on April 29, featuring Jon Cleary and the Absolute Monster Gentlemen. This will be the second weekend of JazzFest, as JazzFest opens next year on April 22, the night of First Seder.
Jewish deli planned for Baton Rouge
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In an era when Jewish delis have been disappearing, Mike Wampold is planning to open one in Baton Rouge. The deli will be called Milford’s on Third, named after Wampold’s late grandfather, who was a grocer in Alexandria. The deli will be in the Marriott Autograph Hotel, The Watermark, which is being developed in downtown Baton Rouge. Wampold said there will be table and counter seating, takeout and delivery for the deli, which will be complemented by an upscale restaurant in the hotel. Jay Haratsis, general manager of the hotel, said the deli will have “a variety of recipes that he wanted us to work with” from Wampold’s grandfather, and additional items. He said the deli’s cornerstones will be corned beef and pastrami, and they are talking with the top suppliers. They also plan other traditional dishes like matzah ball soup and knishes. While those items may not be well-known in Baton Rouge, he thinks they will catch on. “Good food is good food, and that’s what counts more than anything,” he said. The plan is for the deli to be open by August 2016. Wampold acquired the old Louisiana National Bank building, which later became a state office building, from the Baton Rouge Area Foundation in 2013. In May, when he announced the agreement with Marriott, he said the Watermark will be “the most upscale hotel in Baton Rouge.” A full-service hotel at the corner of Convention and Third Streets, the Watermark will have 148 rooms that Haratsis said will be themed to the building’s banking history. Built in 1926, the 12-story structure was regarded as Baton Rouge’s first skyscraper. Wampold also has the Renaissance and Wyndham Garden Inn in Baton Rouge.
community Days after Paris attacks, French and German diplomats in B’ham discuss extremism It was poignant timing that the AntiDefamation League’s Atlanta office had scheduled a forum in Birmingham for Nov. 18 on “Anti-Semitism and Extremism in Europe,” featuring Atlanta-based diplomats from France and Germany. The Nov. 13 terror attacks in Paris, which left 129 dead and hundreds wounded, cast a somber shadow on the event, which drew a full house to the community room at the Sirote and Permutt law firm. The first half of the discussion dealt with the attacks and their aftermath. French Consul General Denis Barbet opened with the Nov. 24 Washington visit of French President Francois Hollande, where he will speak with President Barack Obama about assembling a worldwide coalition to defeat Daesh. Hollande will also meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Barbet explained that France uses the acronym Daesh instead of ISIS. “We refuse to recognize them as any kind of state, we consider them terrorists.” If Europe unites behind the effort, “united with all democracies to fight against them, we will be able to defeat them,” Barbet said. “The
sooner the better, for everyone.” On Nov. 17, Germany cancelled a friendly match involving the national soccer team after people “connected to the intelligence community” said they had concrete information on a planned terror attack. German Deputy Consul General Thomas Wulfing said in Germany, “everybody is on much higher alert than they were before” Nov. 13. He added that a couple of alleged terror attacks were foiled, and there were arrests in Aachen related to the Paris attacks. Barbet noted that preventing attacks German Deputy Consul General Thomas Wulfing and takes a great deal of international French Consul General Denis Barbet cooperation. “We almost know from where they came, who their targets are. It’s not from. over. We are very aware more strikes will come Wulfing said Germany has “excellent” — we’re going to try to prevent them, obviously.” relations with Israeli intelligence. On Nov. 25, Both said that their countries’ intelligence German media reported the soccer match had forces are working with their counterparts been cancelled based on specific intelligence in Israel. Barbet noted that in the case of the from Israeli sources. Paris attacks, most of the intelligence is being While ADL Regional Director Mark gathered in Europe, because that is where the Moskowitz and local organizer Steven Brickman “organizing, planning, acting and hiding” came expressed solidarity with the people of France at
We also specialize in anniversaries… Congratulations to Southern Jewish Life on your 25th Anniversary
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 11
community the start of the event, Barbet reminded that the 129 who were killed in Paris represented 19 nations, including a student from California. “We are all targets of the terrorists.” Wulfing noted “the attacks on Paris have shown all of us that we’re in this together. It happened to all of us.” The attacks intensified debate in the United States over the wisdom of plans to welcome 10,000 “vetted” Syrian refugees, but the diplomats said there isn’t a similar debate against the refugees going on in their countries, and Barbet warned against conflating the Syrian refugee issue with fighting terrorism. France is taking in 30,000 Syrian refugees in the next two years. While the debate in the U.S. centers on whether terrorists would take advantage of such programs to infiltrate western societies, Barbet said the attackers on Charlie Hebdo and the kosher supermarket earlier in the year “were French. They were not Syrian.” Likewise, the Nov. 13 terrorists were French and Belgian. Barbet and Wulfing both said integrating the refugees into their respective societies is of the utmost importance. Barbet noted that the newcomers will have to accept French law and the openness of French society. “Even Muslims in France won’t accept Daesh imposing a religious structure on political life and law” in the country. Wulfing said the dire situation in the Middle East means the newcomers won’t be looking to leave, so they must be integrated as quickly as possible. “Language is essential, then jobs,” but “they have to integrate… respecting our free and open society.” The overwhelming majority of Germans, Wulfing said, is in favor of welcoming the refugees, because they realize there is no way to send them “back to the hell they came from.” Shifting focus to the original topic of the program, Moskowitz played two video clips — one from French Prime Minister Manuel Valls and one by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, giving recent speeches deploring acts of anti-Semitism in their countries, including Merkel’s condemnation of pro-Palestinian rallies that are little more than covers for overt anti-Semitism. Though France has seen a large number of incidents against the Jewish community in recent years, Barbet said it is a “top national priority” in France to ensure that French Jews feel “they are part of the French identity. France is their home and intends it to be their home for the coming centuries.” Currently, France has deployed 10,000 soldiers to protect over 700 Jewish institutions in the country. Long-term, the “teaching of tolerance and civic education” is key, and France has “maybe the harshest” laws against anti-Semitic acts. Wulfing said one of the “pillars of our existence” is Germany’s relationship with and responsibility to Israel, and he considers it “a miracle” that there is a “growing, flourishing, fantastic Jewish community” in Germany. Germany teaches its youth about the consequences of anti-Semitism and how it paved the way to what happened under the Nazis. One problem, he noted, is that this type of education was not given to refugees, “many of them from regions or countries where there is a heavy indoctrination not only against Israel but Jewish people in general.” They are paying special attention to that and showing them that “any form of discrimination, but given Germany’s history, anti-Semitism in particular, is not tolerable.” Failure to integrate the refugees would lead to a “ghettoed minority in our country with extreme views.” They were asked about comments by some, including Sweden’s foreign minister, saying that the Palestinian situation contributed to the Paris attacks. Barbet dismissed that as a motivation for Daesh, saying “I don’t think they care about Palestinians.” Moskowitz concluded the program by urging the diplomats to ensure that the international coalition that negotiated a nuclear deal with Iran is vigilant in ensuring strict compliance. 12 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
community Tulane medical student Peter Gold hailed as hero, shot while aiding woman Arrest of Euric Cain made three days after incident A Jewish medical student at Tulane University is being hailed as a hero and is recovering from being shot after he stopped his car to assist a woman who was being assaulted. Peter Gold, 25, spotted a woman being carried against her will toward a car on St. Mary Street as he drove along Magazine Street at 4 a.m. on Nov. 20, on his way home after a hospital shift. On Nov. 23, Euric Cain was arrested for the incident and charged with attempted first degree murder, second degree kidnapping, attempted armed robbery and armed robbery. He is being held without bond. A bond hearing has been set for Dec. 3, and a preliminary hearing will be on Dec. 16. When Gold saw Cain and the woman, he turned against traffic onto St. Mary and went to the woman, who by then was laying on the sidewalk. Her attacker, who had taken her purse and entered a vehicle, then emerged from the SUV, demanded any valuables that Gold might have, but Gold wasn’t carrying any money. The attacker pointed a pistol at Gold’s face and pulled the trigger while Gold had his hands
up, but the gun jammed. The attacker then lowered the gun and shot Gold in the stomach, then tried to shoot him in the head again, but the gun jammed a second time. After that, the assailant got back into the car, described as a grey Ford Expedition, and sped off. The woman, who has not been identified, was treated for minor injuries. Gold was upgraded to stable condition on Nov. 23 and is expected to recover. Tulane University put up a $10,000 reward for information leading to an arrest and indictment, and Crimestoppers put up another $2500. Security camera footage was released and helped lead to the arrest. Cain was identified on Nov. 22 and his vehicle was recovered the same day. He was taken into custody at a home at 11:30 a.m. on Nov. 23. Cain has a criminal record that includes charges of possession of a stolen vehicle, several weapons charges, and he was last arrested on Nov. 2 for possession of a stolen cell phone that was taken in a carjacking. After being arrested, Cain made a “full confession” to the armed robbery of the unidenti-
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 13
community fied woman and the shooting of Gold, according to NOPD Superintendent Michael Harrison. Cain was attempting to take the woman’s purse when Gold drove up. Two women were in the house where Cain was arrested. One of them, 17-year-old Nictoria Washington, was arrested as an accessory after the fact for hiding him. She is described as Cain’s girlfriend. “We made a commitment to identify the suspect of this horrific crime and take him off the street and we made good on that promise,” said NOPD Superintendent Michael Harrison. “I am extremely proud of the hard work of the men and women of the NOPD and U.S. Marshals Service who pursued this investigation relentlessly from the start. We will not tolerate this type of behavior in our city. We will continue to do everything we can to prevent these violent acts and use every resource available to apprehend those who choose to commit them.” Mayor Mitch Landrieu said Cain “will likely spend the rest of his life in jail, as he should,” Landrieu said. “And what a waste it is. His life will be lost and Dr. Gold’s life will be changed forever, and the city will continue to be scarred.” Tulane President Michael Fitts expressed “gratitude and relief ” at the arrest. “We continue to keep Peter and the Gold family utmost in our thoughts and ask everyone to do the same. We also ask that everyone continue to respect the Gold family’s need for privacy.” On Nov. 23, Tulane spokesman Mike Strecker released a statement on behalf of the Gold family, saying “Peter continues to improve and remains in guarded condition. The Gold family is very grateful to the doctors and other medical professionals at University Medical Center who are providing such excellent care for Peter. We again ask that everyone respect our family’s need for privacy during this difficult time.” Fitts said Gold “is an outstanding student who represents the best of Tulane in every possible way.” He also noted that Gold has been active
14 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
with Hillel, and both his parents and sister attended Tulane. Gold is from Longwood, Fla., an Orlando suburb, and received his undergraduate degree in sociology from Tulane. He received the department’s Outstanding Student award his senior year. Speaking of Gold, Landrieu said “His courage is another example of the fact that the citizens of New Orleans are not going to turn a blind eye to crime, and that we are going to fight back.” Michael Weil, executive director of the Jewish Federation of Greater New Euric Cain Orleans, called him “a true hero” and said “may he have a speedy successful recovery.” Many classmates, fraternity brothers and professors said they were not surprised at Gold’s actions to rescue the woman, and it was completely keeping in character for him. The Tic Toc Café posted on its marquee “You saved a woman’s life without using a stethoscope. You’re gonna be a great doctor.” Harrison said “we’re very proud of those actions he took, those very selfless actions he took to intervene when he saw something that wasn’t right.” But, he added, “we would admonish citizens to call us, when they have the opportunity to call us.” A crowdfunding page had been set up for Gold’s medical expenses, but was halted after a Tulane representative said the Gold family wishes for donations to be given to Tulane Hillel instead.
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16 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant and wife Deborah receive tree planting certificates at the Kennedy Memorial near Jerusalem
Mississippi governor leads trade mission to Israel Just four days after coasting to a second term in office, Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant led the “largest delegation that we’ve ever taken” to any country on a trade mission to Israel. “Israel is one of the fastest growing and most technologically advanced countries in the world, and Mississippi businesses can benefit from making connections with their enterprises,” Bryant said. “This business development mission to Israel is a cost-effective opportunity for Mississippi businesses interested in developing or expanding trade into Israel to make connections with prospective buyers and generate new investment through international trade.” Last November, Bryant spoke at the International Conference on Homeland Security, then that trade mission was followed up with a Mississippi Meets Israel trade summit in Jackson in April. The 32-member delegation arrived in Israel on Nov. 8, and the next day Bryant addressed the International Unmanned Vehicles Conference in Tel Aviv, speaking of Mississippi’s visions for UAVs. Noting that it was 1:18 a.m. Mississippi time and praising Israeli coffee, Bryant told the crowd “I hope you are surprised when you leave here today. My goal is to make you say ‘wow I had no idea Mississippi was the start-up state, I had no idea Mississippi was so advanced’” in the UAV industry. After the speech, Bryant met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Prime Minister and President Shimon Peres. The delegation also toured the Israel Sci-Tech Schools’ Singalovski Campus to see the latest innovations in the way that education and training are being taught to the future leaders of Israel’s technology industry. The network’s curriculum, which is heavily focused on STEM — Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics — is utilized throughout Europe and in schools in the United States. “We welcome the delegation from Mississippi. In today’s global business environment, it is more important than ever before for countries to work collaboratively to educate the technology leaders of tomorrow, said Israel Sci-Tech Schools Director General Zvi Peleg, “We have learned a lot through our work with different groups in the United States and are excited by the opportunity to collaborate with the State of Mississippi. We believe there is a lot we can share and learn from one another.” The delegation also sought to broaden ties in the medical, cybersecurity and agriculture industries. On Nov. 10, Bryant and the delegation went to the Kennedy Memorial near Jerusalem in rain and fog to plant trees in the JNF forest. There, Bryant said “ I feel compelled to repeat the words said by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to our President Barak Obama at their meeting
community in the White House just a few hours ago. He said that the relationship between the United States and Israel is rooted in shared values, is buttressed by shared interests and is driven forward by a sense of shared destiny.” KKL-JNF Chief of Protocol Andy Michelson noted they would be planting a carob tree, which takes years to produce fruit, and therefore symbolizes preparing for the future. Bryant said he is planting a tree dedicated to Israel, but as it is in the Kennedy forest, it is also dedicated to the United States, and particularly to the state of Mississippi where trees are planted not only for economic reasons but also for the beauty that they add. On Nov. 12, Bryant took part in the opening bell ceremony at the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange. Amnon Neubach, chairman of the board of TASE, called Bryant “one of the best friends of Israel, in the United States.” At the TASE, Bryant said “In Mississippi we believe, so goes America, so goes Israel; our
economies must be strong together. As Governor of Mississippi, I am here to help assist this joint venture continue.” The delegation participated in an overview “Building a Creative Society — The Israeli eco-system” presented by Yoav Z. Chelouche, managing partner of Aviv Ventures and former Co-Chair IATI Israel Advanced Technology. Neubach also presented an overview regarding “Israel’s Economy and Stock Market.” Also on the trip were Bryant’s wife, Governor Phil Bryant with the Director General of Sci Deborah; Secretary of State Delbert Tech, Zvi Peleg Hosemann; Mississippi Development Authority director Glenn McCullough and two Helicopters, which has a plant in Columbus, employees of the trade division. and Huntington Ingalls Industries, which has a Representatives of the Mississippi State Port Pascagoula shipyard that is one of Mississippi’s Authority and the State Workforce Investment largest private employers. Board also went, along with Mississippi During the trip, Bryant spoke about how the Manufacturers Association President and state has Stark Aerospace in Columbus, which CEO Jay Moon and executives from Airbus helps assemble unmanned aerial vehicles.
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 17
community “And, they’re very interested in the Center of Excellence at Mississippi State.” The Federal Aviation earlier this year chose Mississippi State University to run as a National Center of Excellence for Unmanned Aircraft Systems, to coordinate research and development. They also went to the Golan Heights and many other sites across the country. Arieh O’Sullivan, the editor in chief of Israel Broadcasting Authority’s English News, interviewed Bryant, noting Mississippi’s strong support for Israel even though the state has fewer Jews than many apartment buildings in Tel Aviv. Bryant said “all of us have a cultural relationship with Israel, all of us from the early times of our church learning understand how important it is for us to be part of the Jewish culture” which Christianity started from. O’Sullivan was raised in Mississippi, moved to
Israel in 1981 and in 2012 was inducted into the Sons of Confederate Veterans in Biloxi. He wore a Mississippi flag lapel pin for the interview. Bryant said he wanted to make sure “Israel knows Mississippi and the American people stand with them in this difficult time.” After the trip, Bryant reflected on the “absolutely phenomenal” mission. He said Israelis are like Mississippians, that relationships are important. “You don’t just go once and expect you will be doing business.” While they were in Israel, there were two terror attacks in Tel Aviv, and Bryant spoke of how terror groups are now training young teens to carry out attacks. The Paris attacks happened while he was still in Israel. He noted that security experts told them that the lone-wolf attacks will continue world-wide “indefinitely.”
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18 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
One night, two rabbinic installations Two New Orleans-area congregations installed rabbis on the same evening. On Oct. 30, Touro Synagogue installed Rabbi Todd Silverman as Rabbinic Director of Lifelong Learning. Pictured above are Rabbi Alexis Berk, Touro Rabbi Emeritus David Goldstein, Silverman, Cantor David Mintz and Rabbi Uri Allen. Later that evening, Rabbi Alexis Pinsky was installed as assistant rabbi at Gates of Prayer in Metairie. Pictured to the left are Rabbi Robert Loewy, Pinsky, Lisa Romano of the Oscar Tolmas Charitable Trust and Gates of Prayer President Rick Levin.
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community Peri Smilow musical weekend at Baton Rouge’s Beth Shalom Peri Smilow will be the Artist in Residence at Beth Shalom in Baton Rouge this month, with her visit culminating in a concert that is open to the community. A nationally-known touring artist, Smilow has released four albums of contemporary Jewish music. Her most recent album is “Blessings,” which drew on her experiences as a cancer survivor, wife and mother. It was co-produced by Grammy winner Ben Wisch. Her album “The Freedom Music Project: The Music of Passover and the Civil Rights Movement” included an 18-voice choir of black and Photo by Kathryn Huang Jewish youth celebrating the freedom music of their traditions. It was nominated for Best Gospel Album by the Just Plain Folks Music Awards, and she is now replicating The Freedom Music Project experience throughout the country as church and synagogue choirs utilize the magic of music to break down social barriers. Her other albums are “Songs of Peace” and “Ashrey.” SJLad.indd 1 12/12/2012 11:22:58 AM Prior to her professional life in music, Smilow spent 15 years as a nonprofit entrepreneur working with inner-city youth. In 2012 Smilow began touring her new one-woman cabaret act: “Peri Smilow sings The Great [Jewish] American Songbook.” In this show she puts down her guitar and returns to her roots singing the best-known and beloved songs of the 20th century. Gershwin, Kern, Rodgers and Sondheim tunes along with those of many other Jewish composers are part of the presentation. Last December, she teamed with Julie Silver, Beth Schafer and Michelle Citrin to form FourTelling, “four composers, contemporary Jewish musicians and touring artists, moms (at least some of us), friends and all around fabulous women.” They were at the Union for Reform Judaism biennial in Florida last month, and Smilow also represented the Reform movement at the World Zionist Congress in October. At the URJ biennial, she debuted her first songbook, which was funded through a Kickstarter campaign. It contains the music for each of her Alscan’s new network-based security systems original songs from her first four albums. can be monitored and controlled from anywhere. Smilow will lead the Dec. 18 Shabbat service, starting at 7 p.m. The musical Kabbalat Shabbat will be followed by an oneg and musical You can even monitor your business from your castle. presentation, “Nusach America: From the Shtetl to Summer Camp, or how did we get here from there?” Happy Chanukah, and Mazel Tov to Southern Jewish Life The presentation will look at the progression of music in Jewish worship, from Chassidism to instruments on the bimah. Among the discussion points will be the time when it became important for Jewish liturgical music to be “singable” and when the seminaries started requiring cantors to be able to play guitar. On Dec. 19, she will lead a musical service followed by a lunch and Our Business is Minding YoursTM learn on “Matching the Music with the Message,” how to find the “right” CCTV ACCESS CONTROL PERIMETER PROTECTION music for prayers among all the current choices. The service will begin Atlanta Birmingham at 10 a.m. www.alscaninc.com • 800-951-0051 The 7 p.m. concert on Dec. 19 will be preceded by a Havdalah reception with hors d’oeuvres, dessert and wine.
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How a scrawny, shy Jewish kid from Birmingham with an operatic voice became a wrestling star…
Large public Chanukiah lightings continue to proliferate in region
“The Unmasked Tenor”
Editor’s note: These are events we had details about at press time, check sjlmag.com for updates.
by Sam “The Great Kaiser” Tenenbaum Jr. with TJ Beitelman
Each year, more large Chanukiah lightings occur across the South, especially with a Chabad presence in more communities. Chabad started organizing large public lighting ceremonies in the 1970s in New York, soon spreading them to other communities, often choosing very public locations and involving elected officials, and often taking place near civic Christmas displays. For the first time, there will be a major public lighting at The Summit in Birmingham, a collaboration of the Bais Ariel Chabad Center and the Levite Jewish Community Center. It will be at Saks Plaza on Dec. 6 at 4:30 p.m. There will be latkes, live music and a living dreidel. In recent years, Birmingham’s Chabad has done Fire and Ice, lighting an ice sculpture menorah in front of the Chabad Center. One of the longest-running events in the region is Chanukah at Riverwalk, one of the largest annual gatherings of the New Orleans Jewish community. The 12-foot menorah will be lit at the Dec. 6 event. Festivities begin at 4:30 p.m. at Spanish Plaza, with the lighting at 5:30 p.m. There will be a hot latke bar, Chanukah laser light show, dreidel house kids’ activity center, a Kosher Cajun food booth and more. Rain location will be the indoor food court at Riverwalk. Parking will be available at the Hilton parking lot for $5. Conversely, in Baton Rouge there will be the first-ever menorah lighting at the front steps of the State Capitol on Dec. 6 at 4:30 p.m. There will be latkes and children’s activities. In Mobile, the menorah lighting will be part of the city’s “Very Merry Mobile.” The event is scheduled for Dec. 7 at 6:30 p.m. in Bienville Square, with Mayor Sandy Stimpson. There will be crafts, food, dreidels, glow-inthe-dark Chanukah shirts and a concert by Chassidic rock singer Dr. Laz. Chabad of the Emerald Coast will have a Grand Menorah Lighting at the HarborWalk Village stage in Destin, 4:30 p.m. on Dec. 6. There will be latkes and doughnuts, live music and menorahs for everyone. Chabad of Huntsville will have its menorah lighting, latkes and doughnuts on Dec. 6 at 4 p.m. at the Bridge Street Town Centre. Chabad of Southern Mississippi will have the lighting of Mississippi’s largest menorah at Edgewater Mall in Biloxi, in front of the Belk entrance on Dec. 10 at 6:30 p.m.
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community is only for students. Latkes will be provided and students are asked to bring a dessert. There will also be a game of Dirty Dreidel for those who bring a gift under $10. In Birmingham, the Levite Jewish Community Center, Temple BethEl, Temple Emanu-El, Knesseth Israel, Chabad and the N.E. Miles Jewish Day School are teaming up for a community-wide 8 Crazy Nights celebrating Chanukah. Birmingham’s Temple Beth-El will have its Sisterhood Latke lunch on Dec. 6 at noon, along with a raffle featuring over 50 prizes. That afternoon, Chabad and the LJCC have their Grand Menorah Lighting at the Summit at 4:30 p.m. The LJCC will have a Sh’Bamukah workout on Dec. 7 at 6:45 p.m., a Sh’Bam class with a Chanukah twist. The LJCC will also have a Chanukah luncheon at noon on Nov. 8, and an intergenerational candle lighting at 11:30 a.m. on Dec. 10. On Dec. 8, the LJCC will have the final program of its Jewish Book Month celebration, a screening of “The Return: A Documentary About Being Young and Jewish in Poland,” at 6:30 p.m. The free program will be moderated by Sam Dubrinsky. The annual Chanukah Extravaganza at Birmingham’s Knesseth Israel will be on Dec. 9 at 6 p.m. News Anchor Jeff Eliasoph of WVTM-TV will be calling Bingo games. There will be a 50/50 raffle that evening, and tickets will start being sold for a May 12 raffle with a grand prize of $5,000 or a trip for two to Israel. Tickets for the May raffle are $100. The Chanukah event is $18 for adults, $10 ages 4 to 12. Admission includes one Bingo card, additional cards are $5. The LJCC will have “Chopped/Chanukah Games” on Dec. 10 at 5:30 p.m. There will be a latke cookoff in the style of Food Network’s “Chopped,” and while the teams compete, individuals can have their own competition in the Chanukah Games. There will be a dinner of latkes, vegetarian chili, salad and dessert. Dinner cost is $10 per person, $35 for a family of four. The Overton Group and You Belong in Birmingham will have a joint “Evening of Holiday Spirits” upstairs at The Southern, in Uptown, on Dec. 10 at 5:30 p.m. Temple Emanu-El’s Chanukah celebration will be Dec. 11 at the 5:40 p.m. service. Congregants are encouraged to bring their menorahs. The evening will include the culmination of the Feeling Gelty program, which is held with First Teachers@ Home. Members of the Jewish community can receive a wish list for a family and shop for their Christmas. The non-profit is a non-traditional organization that teaches low-income parents how to prepare their three- or four-year-old children for success in Kindergarten and beyond. The 16-week course teaches academics and positive parenting, and the books and supplies are free to participants. Only those who have completed the course will be eligible to be matched in Feeling Gelty. At the service, the Consecration class will be honored, the Worship Band will perform and it will also be Food Truck Friday. Emanu-El will also have a Chanukah family fun day on Dec. 13 at 9:30 a.m., with a carnival and Brotherhood luncheon following at noon. The luncheon is $10 for adults, $5 for children. Chabad of Alabama will have Latkes and L’Chaims on Dec. 12 at 7:30 p.m., at W XYZ Bar at the Aloft Hotel in Homewood. There will be an open bar, latkes, doughnuts, dairy hors d’oeuvres and more. Admission is $18, or $30 per couple. On Dec. 13, the N.E. Miles Jewish Day School Kids Club will host a Chanukah PJ Library pillow party at Barnes and Noble at the Summit, at 6 p.m. The program is aimed at ages 3 and 4, with story time and singing. Dothan’s Temple Emanu-El will have its family Chanukah celebration on Dec. 11 at 6 p.m. Emanu-El will supply Leon’s Luscious Latkes, drinks and doughnuts for dessert. Congregants are asked to bring a side dish or
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community a main dish to share, along with family menorahs. Cost is $8 per adult, $4 for children under the age of 10, with reservations requested. There will be a Menorah Workshop at the Home Depot on South Memorial Parkway in Huntsville on Nov. 29 at 1 p.m. Reservations are needed. On Dec. 1 there will be a Chanukah Story Hour for children of all ages at Huntsville’s Barnes and Noble in the Bridge Street Town Center, from 4 to 5 p.m. Temple B’nai Sholom in Huntsville will have Legos and Latkes, building menorahs for the first night, on Dec. 6 at 5 p.m. The annual Fry Fest at B’nai Sholom will be on Dec. 11 at 5:45 p.m., with food from Popeye’s Chicken, storytelling and face painting. Entertainment will be provided by retired Huntsville Library storyteller Sara McDaris, who produced “Grunches and Grins” on Alabama Public Television for 19 years. On Dec. 12 at 6 p.m., the Huntsville community menorah lighting will be at Big Spring Park, at 6 p.m. The B’nai Sholom choir will sing and there will be a dinner following. On Dec. 9, Chabad of Huntsville is hosting Chanukah Skate, at Odyssey Skate from 5 to 7 p.m. Admission is $8 and includes music, latkes and skating. Chabad of Huntsville will also have Menorahs and Mojitos, an “adult night of lights,” on Dec. 13 at 7 p.m. Etz Chayim in Huntsville will have its latke party and Bingo on Dec. 13 at 11:30 a.m. Ahavas Chesed in Mobile will have its Chanukah party on Dec. 6 at 6 p.m. Springhill Avenue Temple’s Chanukah dinner will be on Dec. 11 following the 6 p.m. service, with their famous Men’s Club latkes. Reservations are requested by Dec. 4, and are $10 for adults, $5 for children under 10. Dana Korem, Montgomery’s shlicha from Israel, is hosting “Havdalatkes” on Dec. 5 from 5 to 7 p.m., Havdalah and latke cooking for teens, at her apartment. Those interested should contact the Federation office by Dec. 1 for directions. Montgomery’s L’Chayim League will have its Chanukah luncheon on Dec. 10 at Mr. G’s. Reservations are $16. The annual Temple Beth Or Chanukah dinner in Montgomery, coordinated by Sisterhood, follows Shabbat services on Dec. 11. Services will be at 6 p.m. Reservations are due by Dec. 1, and are $12 for adults, $6 for ages 5 to 10. Children 4 and under are free. The 11th annual Hanukkah Hoopla at Agudath Israel-Etz Ahayem in Montgomery will be Dec. 6 from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. There will be a latke lunch and food bazaar, face painting, entertainment and games. Lunch is free with a purchase of $50 or more in the gift shop and bazaar. Temple Emanu-El in Tuscaloosa will have a second-night Chanukah party, Dec. 7 at 5:30 p.m. Latkes and the trimmings will be supplied for the pot-luck dinner. There is no charge but donations are welcome. The University of Alabama Hillel will have its Dreidels and Latkes brunch on Dec. 6 at 11:30 a.m. Chabad at the University of Alabama will hold its first Chanukah party, Dec. 6 at 6 p.m. Along with latkes, make your own doughnuts and menorah lighting, a $50 Target gift card will be raffled. There will also be a community Chanukah party on Dec. 9 at 5:30 p.m.
Florida Panhandle events
Chabad of the Emerald Coast will hold a Chanukah storytime at Barnes and Noble in Destin on Dec. 10 at 5:30 p.m. Beth Shalom in Fort Walton Beach will have its family Chanukah night on Dec. 11 at 7:30 p.m. Chuck London will tell the story of Chanukah and Michael Walker will lead holiday songs. There will be a PJ Library Chanukah celebration at the West Florida Public Library on Spring Street in Pensacola, Dec. 6 at 1 p.m. On Dec. 16, Tal Izhakov will present “How Chanukah is Celebrated in Israel,” at the downtown Pensacola library at 11:30 a.m. 24 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
Young Jewish Pensacola will have its Chanukah party at the home of Rabbi Joel Fleekop, Dec. 6 at 5:30 p.m. Pensacola’s Temple Beth-El will have its Chanukah party on Dec. 12 at 6:45 p.m., at the home of Cindy and Terry Gross.
Louisiana events
The Chanukah celebration at B’nai Israel in Baton Rouge will be on Dec. 11 with a 6 p.m. service and latke dinner at 7 p.m. There will be a white elephant gift exchange, with value not to exceed $20. Reservations are due by Dec. 7 and are $8 for adults, $4 for children. B’nai Israel will also have a latke lunch for the religious school and parents, Dec. 13 at 11:30 a.m. Chabad of Baton Rouge will have Latkes and Lattes for Young Jewish Professionals, Dec. 13 at 7 p.m. Rabbi Judy Caplan Ginsburg will be at Temple Sinai in Lake Charles for its Chanukah event, Dec. 11 at 6 p.m. There will be a Chanukah family event at Agudath Achim in Shreveport, sponsored by the North Louisiana Jewish Federation, featuring Billy Jonas in concert. Open to the community, the event starts at 5:45 p.m. with candle lighting and dinner, with the concert at 6:30 p.m. Cost for dinner is $5 for adults, free for ages 13 and under, with reservations requested. Originally from Chicago, Jonas has lived in Asheville, N.C. for over two decades, where he is active in Temple Beth HaTephila. He performs solo and with the Billy Jonas Band. He is known for making music using “found objects,” discovering music within common items. His album “What Kind of Cat Are You” received a first place/gold award from the American Federation of Independent Musicians and a Parent’s Choice Gold. In 2010 he performed at the White House. On Nov. 22, his new album, “Habayta (Homeward): New Jewish Songs of Joy and Spirit” was released, with proceeds from the evening’s benefit concert going to Kids4Peace, an interfaith teen leadership camp. B’nai Zion in Shreveport will have a Chanukah celebration on Dec. 11 at 6:10 p.m., following a 6 p.m. congregational meeting. There is no charge for dinner, which follows the service, but reservations are requested. The Jewish Community Youth Theatre in Shreveport will present “Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins,” Dec. 13 at 3 p.m. at Agudath Achim. Howard Silberman is producing the play, involving the community’s children.
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New Orleans Area events
Jewish Children’s Regional Service holds its annual Latkes with a Twist party on Dec. 3 at 8 p.m., at Belloq. Chef Daniel Esses of Three Muses will be in charge of the latke bar, there will be a special vodka latke cocktail for the event, a silent auction and live music by Israeli soul singer Eleanor Tallie. Tickets are $25. Rabbi Deborah Zecher will join Northshore Jewish Congregation in Mandeville for a Chanukah Seder and Havdalah on Dec. 5 at 6 p.m. There will be a potluck dinner, and religious school students will participate with some of the material they had prepared for the cancelled religious school Shabbat that was rained out at the end of October. The Chabad Jewish Center of Metairie will have a Menorah Workshop on Dec. 7 at Home Depot in Elmwood. The 4 p.m. program includes building a menorah, a menorah lighting and Chanukah treats, and participants receive a Home Depot worker’s apron. There is limited space, so reservations are required. The Israeli Chanukah party will be at Chabad in Metairie, Dec. 8 at 7 p.m. Chabad in Metairie will have a Shabbat Chanukah dinner, Dec. 11, with candle lighting at 4:30 p.m. A Shabbat party for kids starts at 5:10 p.m., Kabbalat Shabbat at 5:15 p.m. and dinner at 5:45 p.m. There will be a latke bar, sufganiyot bar and kids can make their own Chanukah cupcakes. Reservations are $18 for adults, $10 for children and $50 for families by Dec. 7, or $25 for adults and $15 for children after Dec. 7. The fifth annual Celebrity Chef Latke Cookoff for Young Jewish
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community Professionals will be at Chabad Uptown on Dec. 9 at 7 p.m. A wide range of celebrity chefs from New Orleans have competed in previous years. The Jewish Community Day School’s Chanukah program will be Dec. 10 at 6 p.m. JNOLA will have its young adult Chanukah celebration, “Light it Up,” Dec. 10 at 7:30 p.m. at Purloo. There will be kosher-style hors d’oeuvres, including Southern-style latkes, kosher options and the first drink is free. The evening will also include a clothing drive for Syrian refugees who will be placed in New Orleans in the coming year. Those bringing items get a second drink free. Gates of Prayer in Metairie will have its Chanukah dinner on Dec. 11 following the 6 p.m. service. Matthew Noel, “The Magic Yoyo,” will perform. Reservations are $10 for adults, $5 for children, through Dec. 9. Temple Sinai in New Orleans will have its Chanukah Shabbat service and dinner on Dec. 11. Services at 6:15 p.m. will feature the Sinai Puppets. The Chanukah Menorah Lighting on the Avenue will be at 7 p.m., followed by the Sisterhood Latke Dinner at 7:15 p.m. Dinner reservations are $16 for adults, $8 for children, free for children under 5. Touro Synagogue in New Orleans will have a Chanukah dinner singalong with Cantor Mintz and storytelling with Rabbi Silverman on Dec. 11. There will be a dreidel tournament and sufganiyot bar following the 6 p.m. Shabbat services. Dinner reservations are open to all and are $15 for adults, $10 for children. Beth Israel in Metairie will have a Chanukah party on Dec. 12 at 7 p.m., which will also include a raffle for two courtside seats to the Jan. 6 Pelicans game against the Dallas Mavericks. Chabad’s Mobile Menorah car parade will be at Chabad Uptown starting at 7:30 p.m. on Dec. 12. An after-party will be at Chabad following the caravan. The New Orleans community Chanukah celebration will be on Dec. 13 at 4 p.m. at the Uptown Jewish Community Center. Chicagobased a capella sensation Listen Up! will perform.
Mississippi events
B’nai Israel in Columbus will have a Chanukah potluck, auction and raffle on Dec. 6, with details to be announced. Hebrew Union Congregation in Greenville has its Chanukah lunch on Dec. 13 at 11 a.m., with student performances. Beth Israel in Gulfport will have its family Chanukah party on Dec. 6 at 6 p.m. At Beth Israel in Jackson, the Men’s Club and Sisterhood will hold their annual Chanukah dinner on Dec. 6 at 6 p.m., with brisket and latkes. Family menorahs are encouraged. Reservations are requested by Nov. 23, $12 for adults and $5 for ages 3 to 10, or pay at the door, $15 for adults and $7 for children. 26 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
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741 Veterans Memorial Blvd Metairie 504/833.1286 rudmans.com
Rudman’s is a gift, stationery, Dirty Hippie brings affordable invitation and greeting card clothing, accessories, shop with Judaica and more, unique gifts, and they are especially proud to offer locallly housewares, gifts and designed Louisiana most and withproduced a bohemian twist, toproducts. Individualized service is a specialty with wording and design the retail market.assistance on any time of personal or business correspondence,
and their partnership with industry leaders guarantees a top-notch finished product. Just as there are plenty of Customer service they’re famous for, Jewish hippies out there, Dirty plus free gift wrapping and at-cost UPS shipping around thegifts! country make selecting and sending any gift a pleasure. Hippie has many Judaic
Applause Dancewear
1629 Oxmoor Road Birmingham 205/871.7837 applausedancewear.net
2. REMEMBER: BLUE AND WHITE ARE TRADITIONAL FOR CHANUKAH
Applause Dancewear continues to get a step up on the competition and was the only store in Alabama selected to carry the Betsey Johnson line There’ll be no forgetting this holiday. of Capezio products.
Price upon request.
“We have been doing this for 34 years and we continue to push; to raise the bar,” said Owner Katie Wade-Faught. “We staff our&stores with dancWellington Company Fine Jewelry ers. We are always on trend and we do much research to505 getRoyal our customStreet New Orleans ers what they want and need before they need it.”
504/525.4855 wcjewelry.com
Applause significantly grew its online presence recently at www.applausedancewear.net, allowing customers to Wellington & Co. Fine Jewelry’s team of purchase from across the region from the convenience jewelry associates possesses more than half a of their own homes, along with the brick-and-mortar century store in the Birmingham area. of antique, estate and contemporary
jewelry knowledge and sales experience. Applause also fine recently launched its mobile store Wellington & Co., their passion for what that travels toAtschools, community centers and recital halls products along theycarrying do, combined with the store’s warm with extensive knowledge about the and inviting atmosphere in latthe heart of New est in dance supply.
Orleans’ historic French Quarter enables Here, the Maddie from Dance Momsand is wearthem to provide visitors from around world with a unique inviting shopping ing a beautiful black sequin cami experience top that can unlike be any other.
14.indd 59
worn for performance, but would also be great under a cute jacket for a New Years Eve party! We have paired it with one of their brand new tutus called “Clock Strike Twelve” that have an opaque slip underneath for coverage and just enough tulle to make you feel like the belle of the ball.
10/20/2014 2:21:34 AM
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 27
culture BOOKS
LET THERE BE WATER: ISRAEL’S SOLUTION FOR A WATER-STARVED WORLD by Seth M. Siegel
For those who haven’t been to Israel, it’s easy to conjure up images of desert as a first thought. Those who know Israel, though, likely first think of lush vegetation and landscaping, JNF forests, orchards, and even the most parched areas made green thanks to drip irrigation. How then does tiny Israel, which has struggled with scarcity of potable water, today export billions of dollars worth? How is it that water conservation has become a part of the fabric of daily life, and what technological advances have been made to make all of this possible? There’s pride here in how far Israel has come and how Israel continues to innovate, but that comes with plenty of realism in the human and environmental cost it has taken.
THE BIRTH OF BOURBON
A Photographic Tour of Early Distilleries Photographs by Carol Peachee
Kentucky undoubtedly has a storied past when it comes to beverage production, with over 200 commercial distilleries in operation prior to Prohibition. Far fewer survive today: only 14 invite visitors to come for a taste, one being Heaven Hill, opened in 1934 by the Shapira family. Included in this book, however, are images of long-abandoned facilities, one of those being the T.W. Samuels Distillery (it was T.W. Samuel’s grandson who went on to start Makers Mark). Beautiful photography of rust, crumble, abandon ... this would make a thoughtful holiday gift, especially if included with a bottle of something crafted in Kentucky.
The Illuminated Book of Psalms: The
Illustrated Text of All 150 Prayers and Hymns In short, a gorgeous book. Each open page is framed in colorful print, 50 works of art from illustrated manuscripts (along with notation of their origin) are included, and a texturized silk cover and ribbon marker make this a keepsake — a perfect gift for Jewish or Christian friends.
BOOKS FOR YOUNG ADULTS
PAPER HEARTS by Meg Wiviott
Based on true events, this is the story of the unbreaking friendship of girls at Auschwitz, separated from their families and the world but embued with the unfailing concept of love, hope and fidelity. Touching and heartbreaking, the girls go against convention to care for one another, even constucting a paper heart symbolizing their dreams, which was sure to mean imminent danger if discovered. Today, that heart is displayed at the Montreal Holocaust Memorial Centre as the ‘Heart from Auschwitz’ and is utilitzed as the basis for classroom instruction on the Holocaust. Paper Hearts is 320 pages but written in stanza as poetry, it’s a very fast read that will reside in one’s own heart.
BOOKS FOR CHILDREN
OSKAR AND THE EIGHT BLESSINGS by Richard Simon and Tanya Simon Illustrated by Mark Siegel
On the seventh day of Chanukah in 1938, young Oskar arrives in New York to meet his family. Fleeing his home in Europe, he’s amazed by all the kindness toward him by strangers, including his first ‘American’ conversation in jazz, and a sweet run-in with Eleanor Roosevelt. Before reaching Aunt Esther’s home, he even has the opportunity to help another. Oskar’s father was right: “you have to look for the blessings.” A hopeful book for the holiday or year-round. 28 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
MEDICINE • SURGERY • DENTISTRY
pet care
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From food to insurance to advanced treatments, much has changed in pet care by Lee J. Green Choosing the proper foods for a pet can be confusing, but Riverview Animal Clinic in Birmingham is happy to provide some “food for thought” with some tips on nutrition, combating allergies in the Deep South along with other ways to keep pets happy and healthy. “If you provide your pets with the best diet for them, socialization, exercise and the appropriate health care they can lead long and healthy lives,” said Dr. Arthur Serwitz, one of the founders of Riverview Animal Clinic. Serwitz said with the region usually having more moderate falls and winters, allergies can be more of a problem for pets, considering the humid climate and variety of grasses, pollen, trees, insects, molds, weeds, pesticides and herbicides, as well as fleas and ticks in the region. Some animal breeds also have a prevalence of “allergy problems.” Some of those allergy problems could be food related. But the good news there is that the pet food manufacturers have come up with new specialized foods that can provide pets with the best nutrition while being sensitive to their specific food allergens. “With people you are seeing more gluten-free diet options on the market and the same goes with pets, especially dogs,” he said. “Some dog foods are going gluten-free and cat foods are going grain-free.” Serwitz and Riverview recommend that pet owners always check with a veterinarian first about the best diet for that pet and “they should go with brands that are known, tested and veterinarian-approved.” He said that Riverview also recommends several websites that provide reports on some of the most recommended foods for pets as well as others that post diet and treat recalls to be aware of. If people are thinking of getting a new pet, Serwitz advised considering the many rescue groups, shelters and humane societies. It would be a very good thing to “save a life” and can be the most rewarding. Busy work schedules and home and children responsibilities sometimes conflict with giving and getting pets the necessary exercise and socialization needed. Many resources are available for meeting these demands, such as personal trainers, doggy day care facilities, play groups, pet sitters and pet walkers, dog parks. Be sure to check out the facilities personally and get referrals. Environmental concerns would be another consideration for “puppy or kitten proofing” one’s home environment. Scented candles, Airwick plugins, perfumes, strong household cleaners (especially chorine/Clorox based products), toxic plants, people medicines, yard chemicals and even plastic toys can be hazardous. Today’s veterinary practices have taken advantage of the latest medical technologies and resources, offering advanced dentistry, advanced imaging, new and updated lab testing and clinical diagnostics, cancer diagnosing and therapies, intensive and urgent care facilities, hospitalization, preventive care, and specialized veterinary practice with “boarded” veterinarians in the fields of internal medicine, surgery, dermatology, ophthalmology, dermatology, oncology, cardiology, as well as others. Riverview Animal Clinic
magazinestreetanimalclinic.com 504 891 4115
3458 Magazine Street • New Orleans
Petcetera 11-19-15 Hanukkah.indd 1
December 2015 • Southern Jewish11/19/15 Life 293:48 PM
pet care
recently added an ophthalmologist who specializes in pet eye medicine. “We are lucky in Birmingham to be within a few hours driving to some of the very best veterinary schools in the country: Auburn, Tuskegee, Mississippi State, Georgia, Tennessee, Louisiana State, North Carolina State, Virginia Tech and Florida,” said Serwitz. He also noted that “micro chipping” has become more widespread and accepting in identifying pets. The technology has been around for many years. It is a simple, safe and affordable method to help with lost pet identification, adds Serwitz. Another trend happening now is the offering and purchasing of pet insurance. In Europe it is estimated that pet owners having pet insurance range from 30 to 50 percent. Those numbers are closer to 1 or 2 percent in the United States. But with the rising demands for good and advanced veterinary care, comes the opportunity to add a dimension of protection with pet insurance. There are at least a dozen veterinary insurance providers. “It’s important to get a policy when a pet is younger so it is more affordable. Most cover a good portion of major medical, hospitalization, and interventional surgeries,” he said. “It is important to think of the insurance choices in regard to benefits and deductibles.” There are good websites that compare and rate pet insurance providers. Serwitz said with proper diet, socialization and veterinary care, pets are living longer today while contributing much to the well-being of their owners. “The lifestyles and longevity of our pets, along with the human-animal bond have contributed so much to the quality of their lives as well as ours,” he said.
For unique gifts, Petcetera leads the pack by Lee J. Green Founded almost 15 years ago as New Orleans’ first full service pet boutique, Petcetera on Magazine Street keeps pets and owners happy with its array of products and services — everything from Judaica chew toys to food and treats, custom cakes, fashionable pet costumes (some straight off New York’s Fashion District runways), grooming, dog walking and pet sitting. Owner Diane Lundeen, an involved member of the New Orleans area Jewish community and Krewe du Mishigas, says “Petcetera has continued to evolve and innovate to meet the changing needs of our customers. We perform a lot of research to bring in many American-sourced, organic, healthy treats and foods. At Petcetera, your pets are our top priority.” Lundeen said they work primarily with local artists, allowing Petcetera to introduce “interesting, one-of-a-kind designs.” Petcetera features a full-service bakery. They can make custom cakes, cookies, pup cakes and scones. They can also accommodate dogs with special dietary needs, including grain-free. Lundeen said during and around Chanukah, they make a good amount of custom blue and white cakes with Chanukah designs for dogs. “A big trend for the holidays is to include pets in holiday meals. With our custom cakes and cupcakes, pups can safely share in holiday festivities,” she said. For owners who want to get their dogs some Judaica toys and treats, Petcetera boasts a collection of chew toys including a pair of squeaky scissors with “moyel” on it, Yenta lips, kosher bones and bagel-shaped plush toys. For those who want to include their dogs in their weddings and other special Simchas, or dress them up formally for a “Bark Mitzvah,” Petcetera has a large selection of apparel and costumes. “Bridedogs and grooms’ hounds are another huge trend. We are selling more tuxedos, bow ties that fit around collars and gowns than ever before,” said Lundeen. Petcetera can also put together a special gift basket pet owners can give to their beloved furry friends, added Lundeen. “Pets give us so much and everyone loves giving back with special gifts for them,” she said. 30 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
pet care
Often overlooked, dental care important for healthy pets by Lee J. Green New Orleans’ Magazine Street Animal Clinic wants to ensure that pet owners can smile because their pets have healthy teeth and gums. MSAC Veterinarian Dr. Scott Gernon is one of the only veterinarians performing advanced dentistry, such as bonding and root canals, for pets in the greater New Orleans area. Pets have dental diseases and problems just like their owners do. Too often, diseases of the teeth and gums go unnoticed but can have serious health consequences. Many of these problems can be avoided by bringing a pet in for regular veterinary dental check-ups and dental cleanings. Annual veterinary dental care and follow-up home dental care will help keep pets’ breaths fresh and gums and teeth healthy. According to Magazine Street Animal Clinic, signs of dental problems in a pet include: • Persistent bad breath — one of the first signs of dental disease • Tartar or plaque build-up (ask a veterinarian how to identify these) • A yellowish-brown crust of plaque on the teeth near the gum line • Red and swollen gums • Pain and bleeding when a pet eats or when the mouth/gums are touched • Pawing at the mouth • Decreased appetite or difficulty eating • Loose or missing teeth
Happy Chanukah!
The clinic uses advanced diagnostic and treatment technology. Veterinary dentistry is considerably more involved, time-consuming and complex than routine dental care is for people at home. Veterinary dentistry requires general anesthesia; the skill of several professionals, and consequently a day’s hospitalization. Some of the dental services the clinic provides include: • Digital dental x-rays • Treatment of advanced periodontal disease • Bonding for fractured enamel • Root canal therapy • Pulp capping • Extractions Dental care does not end with a visit to one’s veterinarian. Brushing a pet’s teeth is an important part of home dental care and the best way to maintain good oral health. If brushing is not possible, other products can be used effectively. The doctors at Magazine Street Animal Clinic can also recommend various dental treats, chews or rinses to keep the teeth clean and the breath fresh. Dental care is just one of the many areas of pet care the clinic can provide for pets in the New Orleans area. Magazine Street Animal Clinic puts much focus into preventative medicine. As medical professionals, they know that the best means to keep pets happy and healthy — as well as minimize the lifetime cost of care — is through routine wellness exams, appropriate vaccines, microchip lost pet ID, behavioral and nutritional counseling, and specialized exams for pets in their senior years. Magazine Street Animal Clinic also provides pet boarding and grooming services, and secure, outdoor exercise areas.
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December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 31
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Keep your pets safe from Chanukah hazards Not only does Hollywood Feed, which has multiple locations across Alabama and Mississippi, offer stores filled with pet food, treats, toys, beds, leashes as well as many other supplies, it also wants to help owners ensure that their beloved pets also enjoy a happy, healthy holiday season. Chanukah should be as enjoyable for your pets as it is for you. Remembering a few things during the season will ensure that everyone relishes in the good food, fun decorations, and family gatherings. Here is a list of things to remember. Take the time to prepare and organize before the holidays, then sit back and enjoy the season. Traditional Chanukah foods such as doughnuts, latkes, and chocolate coins wrapped in gold and silver foil can cause harm to your pets. Sufganiyot are packed with calories, sugar and fat. Ingestion can cause diarrhea and pancreatitis. Latkes can give your dogs the same gastrointestinal upset as doughnuts but can become considerably more dangerous. Consumption of onions, one of the three main ingredients in latkes, may result in fatal Heinz body anemia. Chocolate coins and their metallic foil wrappers can be toxic to pets. Chocolate can lead to severe medical complications and can be fatal while the wrappers can cause stomach upset. Never leave these foods out where a curious pet can happen upon them. Store them out of reach in secure containers. It’s also important to remember to keep a secure lid on the trashcan to prevent sneaky family members from stealing a surprise from the garbage. The menorah is an important part of the eight days of Chanukah. But imagine a lit menorah being knocked over by an excitedly wagging tail, or a dog bumping into furniture and the menorah falling to the ground. There are petsafe options available, such as a battery-operated flameless menorah instead of customary candles. A traditional game played during the holidays can also pose a significant danger to pets. The dreidel might spark enough interest in your dog they accidently swallow it. If ingested, this whirling top can cause life-threatening gastrointestinal obstructions. If someone isn’t planning on celebrating Chanukah at his or her house, but instead will travel to someone else’s home, don’t hesitate to talk with the host about the importance of refraining from feeding table scraps to dogs; making sure decorations are out of reach, and securing the menorah in a safe location. This goes for guests in someone’s home as well. Ensure they understand they shouldn’t feed the dog from the table.
Kaplan brought Maccabi gold back to Huntsville Also part of Guinness World Record Jarrett “J.J.” Kaplan, a senior at Grissom High School in Huntsville, was a huge part of the gold medal-winning Under-18 United States basketball team at the 2015 European Maccabi Games, held in Berlin, Germany this past summer. The European Maccabi Games, which were first held in 1929, run every four years on the second year between the hosting of the Maccabiah held in Israel. The Berlin games are took place 70 years after the Shoah, and 50 years after Israel and Germany established diplomatic ties. The opening ceremonies took place in Berlin’s Olympic Stadium, built in 1936 for the games that were hosted by Nazi Germany, and where Hitler had banned Jewish participation. “Hitler said that Jews would never compete here,” says Dena Sokol, JCC Association’s associate program manager for JCC Maccabi. Adam Chaskin, executive director of Sidney Albert Albany JCC in upstate New York, coached the youth men’s basketball team, with assistant coach Scott Garson of the College of Idaho. “I went to the games in Austria, which
opened in the square where Hitler spoke,” said Chaskin, who added that the historic significance was a huge part of the Berlin games’ appeal. “This was a once in a lifetime opportunity,” said Chaskin. “Competing among such tremendously talented athletes in a city with such historical significance was a phenomenal experience. It was an honor to be present and to coach our young athletes to this gold medal win.” The opening ceremonies took place after all of the athletes visited Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp, where they heard from a 94-year-
old survivor of the camp. “That particular day made an impression on me more than any other day,” said Garson. “Going from a concentration camp to turning around and singing Hatikvah with thousands of Jews at Hitler’s Olympic Park? Wow.” J.J.’s father, Jim Kaplan, said the team never had a “that guy” mentality. “They bonded, they went everywhere together.” Kaplan said another very meaningful aspect was to be with so many other Jewish athletes. Noting that many came from places like New York, Cleveland, Atlanta or Miami, he said J.J.
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 33
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community “is the only Jewish kid in his classes” in Huntsville. J.J. also came home as part of a Guinness World Record — at the Games, the Shabbat dinner set the world record with 2,322 in attendance, far higher than the Jewish population of Huntsville. “To be sitting in a room with that many Jewish people was an amazing experience for him.” To attend the games, J.J. had to miss one of the biggest college basketball recruiting events, the AAU Boys National Championships and Super Showcases in Louisville. But Kaplan said the games turned out to be a bigger opportunity. First, J.J. can say he wore Team USA on his jersey and earned a gold medal, and got experience working under international rules. Also, all of the coaches at the Games except for one were college coaches, “and they were all scouting him.” There were also many other notable figures in the basketball world there, from the college to professional levels. The team started with three days of practice in New York before heading to Europe. They arrived in Berlin on July 26 and the opening ceremonies were on July 28. The first game started on a 20-3 run as the U.S. team coasted to a 112-43 victory over Turkey. On July 30 the U.S. team beat Britain, 86-47, then took a 33-7 first quarter lead the next day en route to a 109-50 victory over Canada. After that game, Garson said J.J. “is getting better every game as he is playing with great passion but also great poise. He has definitely shown he is the best player in the 18-and-under division to this point.” After drilling Germany, 115-31, on Aug. 2, the U.S. team had its most difficult match, against Israel, in the final game of pool play. The U.S. stretched a seven-point halftime lead and won, 98-78, with J.J. scoring 23 points. For the gold medal game on Aug. 4, the U.S. team had to take on Israel once again, but there was no letdown as the U.S. raced out to a 29-7 lead in the first quarter, finishing with an 83-62 win.
Several from region going to Maccabi Pan Am Games in Chile Birmingham’s Goldfarb overall soccer chair The South will be represented at the 2015 Maccabi Pan Am Games in Santiago, Chile, this month. Sponsored by the Latin American Maccabi Confederation, the 2015 Games is an international multi-sport event. Team USA will head to Chile on Dec. 26. The competitions will be from Dec. 28 to Jan. 4. There will be at least 15 countries competing with over 3,000 athletes. Preston Goldfarb, who led the U.S. team to its first-ever gold medal in soccer at the 2013 Maccabi Games in Israel, will also be in Chile as the overall soccer chair. He is also co-chair for the 2017 Maccabi World Games in Israel. Goldfarb just retired as soccer coach at Birmingham-Southern College. Zach Getson of Auburn University and Griffins Rugby in Texas will play on the U.S. rugby team. He has played competitively since high school and tried out for the Maccabi team in 2012, but said he was young and out of shape following two ACL surgeries. The U.S. team has 27 participants, and the round-robin competition will feature 7s and 15s. Argentina and Chile will also field teams. Martin Freeman will be a massage therapist for Team USA, the fourth time he has been to the Pan Am Maccabi Games. Currently living in Silver Spring, Md., he is an alumnus of Auburn, Cumberland Law and Tulane Law Schools. Ross Jacobson of New Orleans will compete in swimming, and Leo Jaffe of Metairie will be on the soccer team. 34 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
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December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 35
Mazel Tov on 25 years of Southern Jewish Life Jenny Katz Birmingham
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Arad Lerner, Mobile’s Israeli Shaliach, celebrates a successful Mobile International Festival, where there was an Israel booth among the dozens of countries represented. Volunteers from the community staff the booth during the festival, which was open to student groups on Nov. 19 and 20, and to the general community on Nov. 21. Lerner thanked “the people of Mobile and the area for all the support you give unconditionally to Israel, specially at these hard times!”
“You are not obligated to finish the work…” (Except for press deadlines) Mazel tov from Mom and Dad Photo by Sarah Farkas
Checking out items at the Temple B’nai Israel Sisterhood sale in Panama City, Oct. 16.
Chanukah gift cards… for the gift of well-being 36 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
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The Freedom From Religion Foundation has sent a letter of complaint to the city of Collins, Miss., asking that the city remove its large collection of Christian displays from Bettie D. Robertson Memorial Park. A local resident reported that the park includes three large crosses, a statue of Jesus carrying a cross, a globe reading “City of Collins” above a picture of Jesus and a bible verse, a miniature church, and Christmas light figures, including Jesus walking on water. Some of the figures are featured in an annual “Christmas in the Park” light display, but remain up year round. “All of the above religious displays are unconstitutional,” wrote FFRF Staff Attorney Elizabeth Cavell in a letter to the city on Oct. 19. “The Establishment Clause prohibits government sponsorship of religious messages,” she said, and in particular, “the religious significance of the Latin cross is unambiguous and indisputable.” “In its current state, Bettie C. Robertson Memorial Park is tremendously unwelcoming to non-Christian citizens,” Cavell wrote. “Citizens of all faiths and no faith have an equal right to use city parks without being surrounded by symbols promoting any one religion. A city cannot have a ‘Christian’ park.” The Covington County Chamber of Commerce said their group owns the displays, not the city, and that the city does not maintain the displays, individuals and groups do. While some stay up year-round, they are lit only from Thanksgiving to Christmas, and the city says this year’s Christmas in the Park will continue as planned. Hundreds assembled on Main Street in support of the displays as the city discussed the issue on Nov. 3. Mayor V.O. Smith, who said there is more than Christian material in the park, said he is consulting with the city attorney to determine the next steps in case the city is sued. He said he told city workers not to remove any of the displays, and to start early on the city’s Christmas decorations.
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community “Rosenwald,” “Deli Man” highlight Mobile Jewish Film Festival Two regional films that have been receiving a lot of publicity will be featured at the Mobile Jewish Film Festival in January. “Rosenwald” and “Deli Man” will bookend the Jan. 10 to 24 event, held at several venues in the city. “Rosenwald,” the story of the president of Sears who teamed with Alabama’s Booker T. Washington to develop over 5,000 “Rosenwald Schools” for black students from 1912 to 1933, will be screened at Springhill Avenue Temple on Jan. 10 at 2 p.m. On Jan. 12 at 7 p.m., the festival moves to the Laidlaw Performing Arts Center at the University of South Alabama for “Phoenix,” about Holocaust survivor and former cabaret singer Nelly Lenz, who returns to Berlin after facial reconstruction surgery for a bullet wound. Though she wanted to look exactly as she did before, the surgeon was unable to make it happen. “The Green Prince” will be screened at 7 p.m. on Jan. 13. It is the true story of Mosab Hassan Yousef, son of a founding member of Hamas, who was ready to fight Israel. But shocked by Hamas members’ behavior in prison and outside, he becomes a well-placed spy for Israel. The Jan. 14 film, also at 7 p.m., will be “Dough,” the story of a widowed Jewish baker in London whose bakery is past its prime and of no interest to his sons. He hires a Muslim teen from Darfur, who sells marijuana on the side. One day some of it accidentally finds its way into the challah dough, leading to a new appreciation for the bakery. The series returns to Springhill Avenue Temple on Jan 17 at 2 p.m. for “Secrets of War,” which is suitable for ages 10 and up. In 1943, 12-year-old best friends Tuur and Lambert are oblivious to the war around them, but Tuur’s father joins the resistance while Lambert’s parents ally with the Nazi party. The arrival of a dark-haired girl further complicates the boys’ friendship. “A Blind Hero: The Love of Otto Weidt” will be at the University of South Alabama Fairhope campus on Jan. 19 at 7 p.m. The docudrama tells the story of a Berlin brush and broom manufacturer who saves most of his staff, who are mostly Jewish and blind, from the Gestapo. For the first time, the film festival is reaching back in time for a classic with the Jan. 20 screening of “Hester Street,” a 1975 period drama. Carol Kane earned an Oscar nomination for Best Actress, playing a Jewish woman who arrives in New York from Russia in 1896 to join husband Jake, who has already been there for years and eager to adapt completely to life in America, shedding all traces of his past — including her. The film will be at the Ben May Library on Jan. 20 at 7 p.m. “Once in a Lifetime” will be screened at Ahavas Chesed on Jan. 21 at 7 p.m. A teacher of rebellious inner city students in France is met with resistance over an assignment about child survivors of concentration camps, until they meet a Holocaust survivor. The festival concludes with Deli Man, a documentary exploring this part of American Jewish culture, centering on Ziggy Gruber of Houston’s Kenny and Ziggy’s. The Jan. 24 screening at 2 p.m. will be followed by a performance of Broadway showtunes and a deli meal. Tickets are available online through the Mobile Area Jewish Federation website, and are $8 per show for adults, $6 for seniors and students. The Baton Rouge Jewish Film Festival, held at the Manship Theatre, announced its lineup last month, consisting of “Deli Man” on Jan. 13, “Mr. Kaplan” on Jan. 14, “Above and Beyond” on Jan. 16 and “Look at Us Now, Mother!” on Jan. 17. Jewish Cinema Mississippi will be Jan. 27 to 31 at the Malco Grandview in Madison, but films had not been announced as of press time. 38 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 39
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The Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans issued a statement on Nov. 16 saying it “strongly supports” allowing “properly vetted” Syrian refugees into Louisiana. Governor Bobby Jindal is among the many U.S. governors who have said they do not want to take in any of the 10,000 Syrian refugees until the Obama administration can demonstrate that a serious process of background checks is in place to keep out terrorists who want to take advantage of the program to enter the country. Refugees are referred by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees, after which the applicant’s potential host country does an interview, medical evaluation and background check, usually lasting 18 to 24 months. In this case, there is an additional process called the Syria Enhanced Review, which has been refined by experiences processing Iraqi refugees over the last eight years. The applicant is then paired with an approved resettlement agency in the host country. Thus far, the approval rate is just over 50 percent. In response to concerns, the Federation statement said “American values are being called into question because of fear of the other, and Jewish values insist we speak up for the voiceless.” The Federation’s statement said “We in New Orleans know all too well what it is like to be displaced from our homes and to have to rely on the generosity and kindness of others. And we as Jews, who have long been an immigrant people, are called to provide chessed — loving-kindness — to those most in need.” Just after the Nov. 13 Paris attacks, a report circulated online implying that 10,000 Syrian refugees were being resettled in New Orleans, with a photo purporting to show the arrival of many such refugees. It became so widespread that the online debunker site Snopes had to do a piece on it. The photo was from refugees arriving in Hungary, and the 10,000 figure was from the total number of refugees coming to the entire United States in the next year, with Catholic Charities in 180 cities receiving Federal grants to work with the families. According to the State Department, since the first refugees arrived in April there have been seven Syrian refugees resettled in Kenner, six in New Orleans and one in Baton Rouge. A report also circulated that a Syrian refugee in Baton Rouge “went missing,” but he had in fact filled out Department of Homeland Security paperwork to be reunited with his family in Washington. At JNOLA’s “Light It Up” event on Dec. 10, the young adults group will be hosting a gift card drive to assist the Syrian families who will be placed in New Orleans, and those who participate get a second complimentary drink.
Fla. State grad a Birthright Israel Fellow
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Nearly 100 Jewish professionals and leaders gathered in September — along with experts in Jewish, Israel, and experiential education — at the third Birthright Israel Fellows training seminar. The professional development program aims to increase the quality of the Birthright Israel experience through more highly skilled staff. Aniko Gomory, a recent Florida State University graduate, is one if this year’s participants. Born in California, her family moved to Tallahassee when she was six years old. At Florida State, she was deeply involved with Hillel and the Israel advocacy group on campus. She made three trips to Israel as an undergraduate and worked for JNF in the Israel advocacy and education department. Launched in 2014, Birthright Israel Fellows was developed after research demonstrated that the strength of the educational staff is a key factor in determining the quality of the trip. Birthright Israel has sent more than 500,000 young Jewish adults to Israel from more than 66 countries and from all 50 U.S. states.
25 years southern shofar • deep south jewish voice • southern jewish life
Three names reflect 25 years of evolving as region’s Jewish magazine Some things don’t change — when we made our debut as The Southern Shofar in December 1990, our cover story was about a study of the Birmingham Jewish community that would lead to the expansion of the Jewish Community Center campus. In this issue, we have an article about a demographic study that has been undertaken in the Birmingham Jewish community. Well, it’s in the Deep South edition, not the New Orleans version. In other words, while some things don’t change, many other things do. The past 25 years have brought tremendous change in the news industry, and to this publication. Southern Jewish Life began in 1990 as The Southern Shofar. For years, the community in Birmingham had expressed a desire for a good Jewish newspaper. I’d worked at a publishing house and a student newspaper, and felt that it could be done. After speaking with dozens of people in the Jewish community and visiting other Jewish newspapers in the region, I began covering stories on Oct. 1, 1990 for the debut issue, December 1990, which would be a Chanukah present to the community. One major focus was to string together the smaller communities in Alabama, and eventually the region, helping isolated communities feel part of a larger community. The first issue was 16 pages, black and white. The major question many people had was whether there was enough news in the community to fill 16 pages every month. That was never a problem. The paper continued to grow, joining the American Jewish Press Association, the national organization for Jewish newspapers, in 1993. The first national award came in 1995. On occasion, The Southern Shofar scooped the secular press. There was a conscious decision to become an
independent paper, though most smaller-community papers are either owned or heavily subsidized by their Federations. Prior to 2005, that was the case with the Jewish News in New Orleans. In 1998, we covered the Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience’s “Alsace to America” exhibit in Jackson, and noticed the Mississippi Jewish Record, a publication which had begun a few months earlier. The Record would last only a couple more issues. Upon hearing that the Record had folded, we took the idea of expansion into Mississippi off the back burner, figuring the community was now accustomed to having a Jewish newspaper and we should fill the void. In late summer 1999, we spread dozens of Jewish newspapers on the living room floor, the first step in formulating both a new design and a new name for the publication. In September 1999, Deep South Jewish Voice made its debut in Mississippi, and jolted many in Alabama’s Jewish community who were accustomed to the old name, Southern Shofar. While the old name made sense in the Jewish community, there was a problem of identification and name recognition in the general community, especially among potential advertisers. One group sent sports-theme press releases to “The Southern Golfer.” Others thought the publication was a “Southern Shopper.” And then there were the jokes about limo drivers… The big transition in 1999 also introduced color to the paper, which until then had been just in black and white. The paper also outgrew its original printer in Birmingham. In the early days, physical pages were printed on a laser typesetter, photos were screened conventionally (and expensively) and pages were assembled with hot wax on large flats. Now, the magazine is done entirely on computer, with the pages being uploaded to Florida for printing. In 2002, DSJV expanded again, adding the
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 41
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25 years Florida panhandle to the coverage area. In 2004, that area would be ravaged by Hurricane Ivan, and we never thought we’d see anything like that again. Little did we know. In 2003, the paper shifted to a twice-monthly schedule, to get news out in a more timely fashion. The following year, we decided to phase out subscriptions within the coverage area and send automatically to all known Jewish households, funding the paper entirely through advertising — please be certain to express your appreciation to our advertisers. Those outside our coverage area can still subscribe, and many who used to live in the region choose to do so. After Hurricane Katrina, the New Orleans community had been scattered across the country. The Jewish News was shut down, its mailing list pointless. We contacted the Federation-in-exile and volunteered to serve the community for as long as needed. Also, our office was inundated with calls from across the country, seeking information and stories about the storm. With our online presence we got the word out to community members, started sending stacks around the region and to New Orleans as the community started to return. A few months later, when bulk-rate mail started being delivered again, we started building a mailing list. Following precedent, we also started serving the rest of Louisiana’s communities. In 2008 the economy tanked from the real estate bubble, and like so many print publications, we lost entire categories of advertisers. A shakeup began in the newspaper world that continues to reverberate today, and many Jewish communities lost their periodicals. Because of evolving technologies, for some time we had already thought about becoming more of a regional magazine than a newspaper. In August 2009, Southern Jewish Life made its debut. When we began in 1990, the Internet was little-used by the public. It was the mid-1990s when most Jewish newspapers got email addresses for delivery of wire service content, and around that time we became one of the first Jewish publications with a website. When we started, to get more than the paragraph or two about Israel and the Middle East in the daily newspaper (what a concept), one had to wait for our monthly issue. In the Internet age, wire service material is old news by the time a print publication gets printed and mailed. It’s the local content that differentiates us, so we dropped JTA material and chose an entirely local focus. More recently, we started two separate editions — a regional edition and a New Orleans edition. The New Orleans edition now has the monthly newsletter of the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans and constituent agencies as an insert. Today, we naturally have our monthly print magazine, but we have so much more. Each week, This Week in Southern Jewish Life is emailed to readers far and wide, with the most comprehensive look at the week’s events, locally and across the world. Our website continues to have breaking news and items that occur between print editions. We also have a very active Twitter feed, with over 5,200 followers, and the feed is also visible through our Facebook page. We’re also on Flickr, Periscope, Instagram, Vine and Pinterest, and our entire layout, looking just like the print edition, is available online at issuu.com/sjlmag. Southern Jewish Life has continued to evolve, but one thing remains constant — the desire to cover the small and large Jewish communities and have the scattered Jewish communities of the Deep South feel like they are part of a larger community. Through Southern Jewish Life, the rest of the Jewish world has become more aware of Jewish life in the region. We still routinely get the “there are Jews down there?” but through these pages people nationally get more of an appreciation of what the South has to offer. We are a unique publication for a unique Jewish community. There’s still so much to explore, even after 25 years. Please continue to join us on this adventure as we chronicle our communities.
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 43
25 years Editor’s Notes: Some Recollections from Behind the Camera Over the last 25 years there have been some wild and memorable stories that we have covered, leading us to proclaim that ours is a unique magazine for a unique community. From marching with Jewish Krewes in New Orleans to uncovering stories in the middle of nowhere, from rallies with packed houses to Rosh Hashanah in a tiny community with 25 in attendance, the stories abound. Here’s a few.
think-tank Institute for Historical Review, and Jewish community from their plans. It was founded the Populist Party, which ran David a strategic move — the year before, when Duke as its presidential nominee in 1988. Countess brought notorious Holocaust denier Most surreal story: Covering the 1995 David Irving to town, he railed against Jewish inauguration of Alabama Governor Fob James, pressure, real or perceived. Without Jewish which featured a shofar blast, recitation of the involvement, the students reasoned, Countess Ten Commandments in Hebrew and English, the couldn’t just dismiss any protests as Jewish singing of “Hatikvah,” and the first invocation rabble-rousing. One couple in attendance wore was given by a visitor from Jerusalem wearing concentration camp uniforms — not to protest an Alabama flag kipah (the Alabama flag is a St. the deniers, but to protest abortion. Their outfits Oddest schedule juxtaposition: Departing Andrews Cross), and as that invocation from had large yellow stars on their backs, with the United Jewish Appeal’s national Young the Psalms was given completely in Hebrew, drawings of fetuses inside. Leadership biennial in Washington in 1992, the other reporters on the media platform were Biggest intimidation fail: In July 2005, Larry getting in my car and hearing on the radio that extremely puzzled. The Israel content was due to Darby invited David Irving to speak at the the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina, the Jameses being passionate Christian Zionists Holiday Inn in Prattville, near Montgomery. had just been bombed. But the juxtaposition who believe God blesses Alabama because of its Darby had headed the Atheist Law Center was my next destination — the offices of Liberty friendship with Israel. The Jewish community, and been a key figure in protests against “Ten Lobby, visiting a college friend who had taken a though, would battle with him over church- Commandments Judge” Roy Moore, and the job there, not realizing there were “people like state issues. Irving invitation roiled the atheist community that” in the world. Described by others as the On the surface: When local Holocaust denier nationally. Darby would later go on to say he largest anti-Semitic organization in the country, Robert Countess brought fellow denier Robert had become born again and ran for Alabama Liberty Lobby was an extremist group founded Faurisson to speak at a room he reserved at the attorney general in the Democrat primary. At by Willis Carto, and its newspaper, Spotlight, University of Alabama at Huntsville in 1994, the event, once they figured out who I was, they peddled in anti-establishment conspiracy some students decided to counter-program and insisted that it was closed to the press. After theories, often with Jews as the focus. At one hand out flyers to those attending the Faurisson putting my camera and notebook in my car I time it claimed a circulation of over 300,000. lecture — but they purposely excluded the re-entered as a regular citizen — but that did Carto also established the Holocaust denial not fly and they insisted that I leave their private
HADASSAH congratulates Southern Jewish Life Magazine on its 25th Anniversary! We appreciate your reporting of Jewish news along the Gulf Coast states. May you go from strength to strength!
44 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
Wishing all my friends and supporters in the Jewish community a very Happy Chanukah
event. Irving himself followed me through the lobby and stood in front of me — he is rather tall — and told me in no uncertain terms that I was not welcome there, nor was anyone who I represent. Basically, it was a pathetic attempt at intimidation, and it was a struggle to keep from busting out laughing. During his 1993 appearance in Huntsville, Irving was eager for publicity, but losing the high-profile libel suit Irving filed against Deborah Lipstadt apparently took a lot of wind out of his sails. Characters: The anti-Jewish and anti-white rhetoric of Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan has been well-documented. When he came to Birmingham to speak to a packed house at the Alabama Theater, I had to go cover it, much to the consternation of a lot of people who thought I was nuts. Yes, aside from the sound board tech I was the only white person in the building. Yes, many of them knew exactly who I was. Yet despite the rhetoric coming from the stage, every single person there was unfailingly pleasant and polite.
Judge Sidney H. Cates, IV Orleans Civil Court, Division C
Biggest electoral head-scratcher: Okay, nobody predicted Fob James would be elected governor of Alabama in 1994 — the expressions of fellow reporters at his campaign party as the results came in confirmed that. But the most bizarre result came from Darby’s 2006 attorney general run. Aside from Tim Lennox at Alabama Public Television, we were pretty much the only ones exposing Darby’s true nature — he was posting extreme racist rants online and hung out at a New Jersey White Power retreat while running for office. When it finally was noticed a week or so before the primary, the party said they couldn’t take him off the ballot; besides, he was seen as a nobody with no chance, so why publicize him? He wound up with 44 percent of the vote — and it was largely the black vote, because the mainstream candidate had been involved in prosecuting a well-liked black figure in Mobile, and votes for Darby were seen as payback. Never mind who Darby actually was. Come to think of it: Covering a rally in defense of Ten Commandments Judge Roy Moore in Montgomery and realizing that among the hundreds there, I was likely the only person around there who could read the Ten Commandments in the original Hebrew, let alone chant them. Never would have imagined: Riding in the back of a pickup truck in 1995 with Israeli Consul General Arye Mekel in the passenger seat, as we bounced through a cow pasture in Claiborne, Ala., heading toward the woods. Tucked away, we were shown a littleknown Jewish cemetery, from a community that died out in the 1850s. The cemetery’s most recent burial was from 1898. Mekel was spending two days in Harper Lee’s hometown of Monroeville, 10 miles east, and invited the local crew from “To Kill A Mockingbird” to perform in Jerusalem, which they did. Wrong number? Birmingham’s Conservative congregation, Temple Beth-El, and Reform Congregation Temple Emanu-El are a block from each other, which leads to constant confusion. It is common for nonJewish Bar Mitzvah guests to wander into the other’s service, there have even been hearses delivering caskets to the wrong place. In 1992, Beth-El was contacted by an out-of-town patient at a nearby hospital asking for service times for Shavuot. The patient lost the directions but remembered Highland Avenue, so that Sunday, which was Shavuot, he went to Highland Avenue and saw “Temple.” Upon entering the sanctuary at Emanu-El, he noticed that nobody was wearing a yarmulke; since he
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 45
25 years Temple Sinai of New Orleans congratulates you on your silver anniversary
Mazel Tov and Continued Success! Cynthia and Raymond Tobias Birmingham Remembering Dr. Carl and Bessie Geffen Wilensky Jane Wilensky Ravid Newton, Mass
Mazel Tov and Happy Chanukah! Morris and Cathy Bart New Orleans
Mazel Tov on 25 years of great journalism! Sally and Richard Friedman Birmingham
thought he was going to a Conservative congregation, that puzzled him. He sat down… then he started hearing preaching about Jesus, and started looking around in bewilderment. He approached an usher, who told him about the fire at Independent Presbyterian Church, which led to the church meeting at Emanu-El for a few months. The usher brought him down to Beth-El, where he was eager to share his bizarre story. EmanuEl’s Shavuot service was later that morning in the chapel. Who would have thought 2: Growing up at the Birmingham Jewish Day School, I learned about the Middle East conflict and the hostility of Israel’s neighbors. Never would I have dreamed that in 1995, soon after the Israel-Jordan peace treaty, those of us on the International Jewish Media conference in Israel would have a 3-day optional extension to Jordan. When I mentioned to Bennie Bilsky, conductor of the Rosh Ha’Ayin Mandolin Orchestra, that we might have an audience with King Hussein, he said the orchestra was invited to perform in Jordan and could I bring the king a gift? It turned out we did get an audience, so I brought that large envelope from Rosh Ha’Ayin. We entered the palace and were ushered into a room. Nobody inspected us. Cameras were set up to broadcast our visit on Jordanian television. Soon, King Hussein came in and sat at a table and spoke for a few minutes, then we lined up for a handshake and photo-op. And I was carrying this envelope that nobody had looked at. When it was my turn, I told the king about our sister city’s orchestra and they hoped he would be able to attend the concert when they perform in Jordan. He said “Inshallah” and took the package. Given the extreme security when Israel’s prime minister spoke to us at our Jerusalem hotel, and how we could not get within 30 feet of the stage (for a group of Jewish journalists), this was mind-blowing. Also amazing was the parting gift, a bound volume of the king’s recent speeches. While many reached for the English version, there was no way I was going to pass up the Hebrew one! Best buds: A couple of years later I met Ginger, who would become my wife and the creative mind behind a lot of what you see in the magazine. When we were first dating, one of her co-workers said “the way you talk about him, he must be best friends with King Hussein.” She did not know of the Jordan trip yet. When she told me that, I scanned and emailed her the photo of me with King Hussein, and it got the anticipated reaction from her co-worker. It’s like finding yourself in the obits: A popular feature in Moment magazine is Spice Box, where readers send in amusing items, such as
Mazel Tov Southern Jewish Life for 25 Years! From your friends at JCDS 46 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
We never forget...
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Congratulations and thank you for sharing news of the Jewish South all these years! Temple Beth-El, Pensacola
It is wisdom calling…my cry is to all humanity. Proverbs 8 Mazel tov, SJL, on 25 years of wise and devoted reporting. Best wishes for many more years to come. Shira & Matthew Goldberg Birmingham
25 years non-Jewish businesses that use unlikely Hebrew names or odd typos. Basically, if you publish, it’s like reading the obituaries — you don’t want to find yourself there. Then one day the unmistakable layout of The Southern Shofar was there on the page — an item about how Temple Beth Israel in Gadsden, a small Reform congregation, was going to experiment with holding Shabbat morning services. “I dunno, might start a trend!” was Moment’s comment. Relieved that it wasn’t some error on our part, I never responded — but others did, taking Moment to task for making fun of Beth Israel and for not understanding the realities of tiny, isolated congregations. Forget the speech: The 1991 annual dinner at Birmingham’s Jewish Community Center, where Garth Potts was introduced as the new executive director. An hour before the event, the U.S. started bombing Iraq in the first Gulf War, and the dinner was interrupted by a broadcast of President George Bush’s address to the nation. When Potts took the podium, given the events of the night, he tore up his remarks and said just three sentences. Reporting Fail: In 2004, after Hurricane Ivan, we saw a crawl on CNN that a Temple had been destroyed in downtown Pensacola. An abandoned warehouse next to the parking lot where Beth-El’s first location was fell into the lot. A reporter saw the rubble, then saw a historic marker noting the site of the first Jewish house of worship in Florida, and reported that Beth-El had been destroyed. The actual Beth-El building, a mile further inland, sustained minor damage.
Interesting People:
Rev. Clyde Lott, a cattle breeder and Pentecostal preacher from Canton, Miss., had a goal in the early 1990s: To breed the red heifer mentioned in the Bible, as it is needed to purify the Temple Mount for an eventual Third Temple. He also hoped to revolutionize the beef industry in Israel. In the early 1990s, Susan Huelsing developed a line of Judaic T-shirts under the label “Strictly Kosher.” They were sold nationally not from New York or California, but from Foley, Ala. Ironically, we interviewed her in her booth at the Shrimp Festival in Gulf Shores, where she was selling shirts mostly from her non-Jewish designs. Rev. J. David Davis described how he went from being “to the right of Bob Jones” to, after studying the Hebrew Bible, leading congregants at his Emmanuel Church in Athens, Tenn., to take down the “pagan” steeple and cart it off to the city dump. He became a leading figure in B’nai Noah, non-Jews who study Jewish texts without an intent to convert, but to follow the seven Noahide laws Judaism teaches are mandated for all of humanity. 48 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
Free Living Trust Event Who Is Inheriting More Money From Your Estate: The Government Or Your Family?
Years of Southern Jewish Life 1989
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Beth Israel in Greenwood closes, but Ellis Hart maintains it as a member of URJ. B’nai Jeshurun closes in Demopolis, deed given to neighboring Trinity Episcopal Church. Touro Synagogue builds the Norman Synagogue House, containing the Forgotston Chapel, the Shushan Assembly, the Bowsky Gardens, the Grant-Meyer Garden Pavilion, the Jacobs Social Hall and the Good Family Foyer. Mikvah Chaya Mushka opens in New Orleans. Beth Shalom founded in Auburn. Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience built at Henry S. Jacobs Camp in Utica.
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1990
The Southern Shofar prints first issue. Ohel Jacob, Meridian’s Orthodox congregation, disbands. Birmingham undertakes Jewish community study to assess needs and feasibility of major fundraising for expansion of the Montclair Road campus. Chabad of Louisiana establishes the Chabad Jewish Center of Metairie. Ahavas Chesed in Mobile dedicates its current building.
1991
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Natchez’s B’nai Israel enters partnership with Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience, with a history exhibit in the basement and agreement that building will become a museum when the congregation closes. David Duke loses runoff for Louisiana governor, with 39 percent of the vote. MOSAIC: Jewish Life in Florida debuts in Pensacola. Birmingham’s three congregational rabbis lead joint community mission to Israel. Chabad of Alabama opens facility in former bank building in River Run. Vandals spray-painted swastikas on Agudath Israel and Etz Ahayem in Montgomery. Birmingham community study shows desire for major expansion and “first-class facilities” at the current JCC location. Major problems with old outdoor pool make that the first project. Auburn’s Beth Shalom installs first rabbi. New Beth Israel cemetery dedicated at Elysian Fields Avenue in New Orleans. Centennial held for Port Gibson’s Gemiluth Chassodim building (left), shortly after local bed-and-breakfast operator Bill Lum bought the building to keep it from the wrecking ball. Pine Tree, Birmingham’s Jewish country club, opened membership to non-Jews.
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1992
B. Stern torn down in Amite after 120 years in business. Rodeph Sholom and Yeshurun Synagogue merge to form Temple Shalom in Lafayette, reversing a 1973 split. Beth Shalom in Auburn dedicates its first building, the former Christian Science reading room. The Jewish Community Center in Mobile “goes on hiatus” but never does re-open. Several major donors propose moving Birmingham’s JCC to Liberty Park, but after an extensive community discussion, the decision is made to go forward at the current site. Marvin Reuben receives the Hub Award in Hattiesburg, the mayor proclaimed Marvin Reuben Day. Jewish Studies department established at Louisiana State. Baptist Church in Woodville gives the Wilkinson County Museum the furnishings it received when Beth Israel closed in the 1920s, museum put together an exhibit on the Jewish history of Woodville. Henry Klein Memorial Congregation in Rolling Fork, Miss., closes.
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 49
25 years
SJL, in 25 years you’ve reached thousands of homes, published more than 10,000 articles and touched the lives of countless Southern Jews. During that time, I’ve had the privilege of sending more than 1500 people to Israel, and many of the topics you covered in your paper were brought to life overseas. Mazel Tov — and here’s to another 25! Karen Allen • karenallen@giltravel.com
In Memory Of Herc Levine “Southern Jewish Life’s #1 Fan”
National controversy erupts over Mississippi Governor Kirk Fordice’s comment that the U.S. is a Christian nation. Alabama’s Jewish Congressman, Ben Erdreich, defeated in re-election bid. A fire prompts Independent Presbyterian Church in Birmingham to meet at Temple Emanu-El. Azalea City BBYO brings the youth group back to Mobile for a few years, hosting a Cotton States Regional convention. A small group of skinheads held a rally at Linn Park in Birmingham, an interfaith coalition soon followed with a march from 16th Street Baptist Church to “take back” the park. Montgomery Museum of Art hosts Treasures of the Jewish Museum exhibit. American-Israel Chamber of Commerce established in Atlanta to promote trade ties between Israel, Southeastern states.
1993
Beth Israel in Jackson dedicates a Holocaust Torah, as does Agudath Israel in Montgomery. Project Cabinet approves $10 million project for expanding Birmingham JCC and other agencies on campus (groundbreaking photo below). “Terror in the Night: The Klan’s Campaign Against the Jews,” Jack Nelson’s book about the late-1960s bombings in Mississippi, is released. Birmingham JCC approves “limited” Shabbat afternoon opening. Auburn Track Coach Mel Rosen inducted into Alabama Sports Hall of Fame. Temple Beth-El in Birmingham embarks on major addition. Major roof and exterior renovations at Huntsville’s Temple B’nai Sholom. Issue of non-Orthodox Judaics teachers leads to two-track system at Birmingham Jewish Day School. University of Alabama at Huntsville student group takes suggestion of local activists and invites two speakers who are major Holocaust denial figures. Saying they were “misinformed” about the speakers, they rescinded the invitations, but the activist rents a room and brings in David Irving anyway.
1994 Congratulations! We are very proud of you!
Russ and Dee Fine Birmingham
Congratulations on 25 years of Southern Jewish Life Colin and Hannah Helman Birmingham
50 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
Milestones in Mobile: Springhill Avenue Temple celebrates 150th birthday, Ahavas Chesed marks 100 years. The new Birmingham Jewish Day School building opens its doors, but the project superintendent dies of heart attack the night before. The newly-expanded JCC held its grand opening on Oct. 30. Museum opens in Birmingham to celebrate legacy of Samuel Ullman and his poem, “Youth,” most notably in Japan. Iris Gross, national head of NCJW, becomes director of the Birmingham Festival of Arts. Natchez Jewish Homecoming held at B’nai Israel, drawing about 200. Anti-Semitic graffiti painted on streets in Jewish neighborhood of Mountain Brook, near Birmingham. After 29 years, Rabbi David Baylinson becomes rabbi emeritus at Temple Beth Or in Montgomery. Photographer Bill Aron does a swing through Alabama for his Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience series. Non-Jewish students organize response to appearance of Holocaust denier Robert Faurisson at the University of Alabama at Huntsville. Birmingham’s Temple Beth-El dedicates $2 million cultural center, new classrooms.
1995
Inauguration of Alabama Governor Fob James includes a shofar blast, Hatikvah and readings in Hebrew. Rabbi Milton Grafman, a towering presence in Birmingham who served Temple Emanu-El from 1941 to 1975, died. N.E. Miles, a huge supporter of Jewish education, died a month later, and the community also lost General Ed Friend Jr. that summer. New Orleans Jewish Day School opens with an inaugural class of 14 students.
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HAPPY CHANUKAH
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December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 51
25 years Mazel Tov on 25 Great Years! Birmingham’s Jeremy Royal wins national High School Heisman Award. A Decatur radio station yanks a talk show host off the air after he threatens members of Huntsville’s Jewish community by name. Hurricane Opal cancels Yom Kippur along the coast. A Torah from the congregation in Hot Springs, Ark., was sent to a new home in Jerusalem. Rabbi Cynthia Culpeper installed at Agudath Israel in Montgomery, the first fulltime female pulpit rabbi in the state. Plans approved for the establishment of Ramah Darom, a Conservative movement summer camp in north Georgia. The ACLU filed suit against Etowah County Circuit Court Judge Roy Moore over his exclusively Christian prayers in jury sessions and his display of the Ten Commandments.
Congratulations, Cousin! Judith Michaelson Birmingham
Mazel Tov on 25 years of Southern Jewish Life
1996
Northshore Jewish Congregation founded in Mandeville. Rabbi Cynthia Culpeper told her congregation, Agudath Israel in Montgomery, that she had been diagnosed with AIDS. Southern Baptist Convention causes controversy by passing a resolution calling on the conversion of Jews, an official later chalked up Jewish outrage as a fundraising tactic by Jewish groups. L.J. Goldstein establishes Krewe du Jieux, the first Jewish Mardi Gras Krewe in New Orleans, marching in the Krewe du Vieux parade. Using a rural Alabama cast entirely of non-Jews, Greg Thomas launches touring production of “I Never Saw Another Butterfly.” Festival of Jewish Life officially rededicates Jewish Community Campus in Birmingham. Memorial park for Jesse Owens, who shattered the “master race” argument in the 1936 Olympics, dedicated in his hometown of Oakville, Ala. A tornado warning issued just before the end of Shabbat services in Birmingham, tornado struck about half a mile from Temples Beth-El and Emanu-El, and blew roof off clubhouse at Pine Tree Country Club. William Bremen Jewish Heritage Museum opens in Atlanta. A month after Parisian was sold to Proffitt’s, Emil Hess died in Birmingham. Mobile Museum of Art does “Building Bridges” exhibit for Christians, Jews and Muslims to celebrate common ties to Jerusalem. Etz Chayim in Huntsville rebuilds sanctuary because of structural issues in the building. Lutheran family files suit against schools in Pontotoc County, Miss., over Bible readings. Ruttenberg Family Foundation established as largest charitable gift to a Jewish organization in state history.
1997
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Sue and Wayne Willis (right) file suit on behalf of their children against Pike County, Ala., public schools, alleging anti-Semitism and religious harassment. Birmingham, Montgomery NCJW celebrate centennials. Noted New Orleans artist Ida Rittenberg Kohlmeyer died. Mississippi Jewish Record newspaper established, would last eight issues. Dothan’s Temple Emanu-El renovates. West Blocton, Ala., dedicates historic marker where Orthodox congregation Ah Goodies Ah Chem stood until 1938. Monroe’s Jewish community merged with the Shreveport Jewish Federation. “Home for the Holidays” reunion at Selma’s Mishkan Israel kicks off efforts to preserve the historic building. Governor Fob James leads Alabama trade mission to Israel. Holocaust Torah dedicated at Temple B’nai Sholom in Huntsville.
1998
Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience opens new Alabama exhibit. “Alsace to America: Discovering a Southern Jewish
Heritage” exhibit held in Jackson. Rabbi Elana Kanter of Birmingham wins national Covenant Award for Outstanding Jewish Educators. Beth Shalom in Fort Walton Beach finishes expansion. Bais Ariel Chabad Center in Birmingham opens. Birmingham JCC renamed in honor of Ted Levite. Or Hadash Humanistic Congregation founded in Birmingham. Alabama native Mel Allen, the “Voice of the Yankees,” added to Yankee Stadium’s Memorial Park. Hurricane Georges brought a Yom Kippur with floods and power outages in Biloxi, Mobile. University of Alabama holds first Jewish student recruitment weekend. Alabama elects Don Siegelman governor (above), meaning the state will have a Jewish First Lady. Siegelman is Catholic. Group mailed Jesus movie videos to every household in Alabama.
1999
Chevra Thilim and Tikvat Shalom merge to form Shir Chadash in Metairie. Chabad facility dedicated in Metairie. Henry S. Jacobs Camp dedicates major renovations from a $5.5 million campaign. Springhill Avenue Temple builds the Ben May Chapel. “Delta Jews” debuts on public television. City of Florence purchases the Frank Lloyd Wright Rosenbaum House, turns it into a museum. The house still has the family mezuzahs. University of South Alabama renames the Business College for the Mitchell family. The 10,000-seat Mitchell Center was also dedicated. Gulfport school board reverses course, allows student to wear Star of David necklace in class. Jacobs Camp Director Macy Hart receives national Covenant Award for Outstanding Jewish Educators. Controversy at the University of Mobile after some Jewish donors learn of school policy not to hire anyone who is not a professing Christian. Alabama Legislature approves establishment of Alabama Holocaust Commission. Laurence Leyens purchases B’nai B’rith Literary Club building in Vicksburg and renovates it. Southern Baptist Convention marks the High Holy Days by issuing a pamphlet on how to pray for Jews’ conversion to Christianity. Edward Cohen’s book, “The Peddler’s Grandson: Growing Up Jewish in Mississippi” is released. After year of controversy, Willis family leaves Pike County and moves to Wisconsin. Centennial weekend held for Selma’s Mishkan Israel.
2000
Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life established with inaugural event in New Orleans. Jackson-based group provides services for smaller Jewish communities in 12-state region. Ohel Jacob building in Meridian torn down. Jonathan Cohen becomes director of the Henry S. Jacobs Camp. Jewish Family Services in Birmingham named for Collat family.
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 53
25 years Major renovation at Gates of Prayer in Metairie with new office and educational wings. “Troubled Memory: Anne Levy, the Holocaust and David Duke’s Louisiana” published. Traveling Holocaust education trunk dedicated at 25th anniversary of Mobile Christian-Jewish Dialogue. J. Greg Thomas, who did Holocaust dramas with rural Alabama youth, forced to leave Hamilton after backlash from erroneous reports that he was causing non-existent lawsuits over prayer and other religious activities in area public schools. Birmingham’s Temple Beth-El dedicates new sanctuary.
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Historical marker dedicated on East Chase Street in Pensacola at site of first Jewish house of worship in Florida. Birmingham’s Temple Emanu-El begins largest reconstruction and expansion project in Alabama Jewish history. During construction, Emanu-El would meet for over a year at Southside Baptist Church. Hebrew Union Congregation in Greenville opens its Jewish history museum. Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore brings a 5,300-pound granite Ten Commandments monument into courthouse overnight, setting off controversy and lawsuits. Samuel Ullman became first Jew named to Alabama Men’s Hall of Fame. ISJL debuts Jewish Cinema South in Montgomery, Mobile and Nashville. Sephardic congregation Etz Ahayem merges with Agudath Israel in Montgomery.
2002
Northshore Jewish Congregation in Mandeville purchases a former church building for first permanent home. Temple Beth Or has sesquicentennial weekend, including services at its first home, now the Catoma Street Church of Christ, built in 1860. Alexandria Museum of Art and Gemiluth Chassodim present exhibit, “From Anatevka to Alexandria.” Nephews of the Antars of Fairhope were killed in an al-Qaeda terror attack in Kenya. Agudath Israel in Montgomery rescues stained-glass windows from former building upon learning the church that had been meeting there wince 1957 was planning to tear the building down. Boeing in Huntsvill begins partnership with Israel to develop Arrow Missile project. Two brothers from Lexington, Miss., the Herrmans, leave largest bequest ever received by Hebrew Union College, $10 million. Federal judge rules Roy Moore’s Ten Commanements monument in Alabama Supreme Court building is unconstitutional, must be removed. Hurricane Lily takes out the outdoor chapel at Jacobs Camp, prompting a rebuilding during the following summer. Montgomery Federation changes name to Jewish Federation of Central Alabama. “Shalom Y’all,” the film by New Orleanian Brian Bain, and “Shalom Y’all,” the coffee-table photography book by Bill Aron, are both released. Sons of Confederate Veterans in Mobile name chapter partly after Joseph Moses, a Jewish soldier. Houston, Shreveport, Austin and Jackson join the ISJL’s Jewish Cinema South circuit.
2003
Goldring/Woldenberg Jewish Community Campus opens in Metairie, housing the Day School, Federation and JCC. ISJL holds first Educator Conference to unveil standardized curriculum developed for religious schools in the region, regardless of size. Beth Israel in Clarksdale closed, one of the Torahs was sent to Camp Blue Star in North Carolina. Memorial service held at NASA in Huntsville for astronauts killed in Space Shuttle Columbia disaster, including Israeli Ilan Ramon. Temple B’nai Israel in Panama City dedicates building. Actress Nell Carter, a Birmingham native, died. Roof and brickwork restoration done on Touro Synagogue. “Messianic” group given use of the historic Gemiluth Chassodim building in Port Gibson by non-Jewish family that had saved it from demolition. Student Media Center at Mississippi State named for Henry Meyer. Birmingham’s Knesseth Israel embarks on $8 million campaign to completely rebuild its shul. 54 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
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25 years Alabama CommUnity Torah completed at Chabad in Birmingham. ISJL hires Rabbi Debra Kassoff as first circuit-riding rabbi. Palestinian suicide bomber kills one in attack at Rosh Ha’Ayin supermarket. Tuscaloosa’s Bert Bank named National Veteran of the Year. Birmingham’s NCJW Section closes.
2004
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56 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
Beth Israel in New Orleans celebrates its centennial. Dothan’s Temple Emanu-El holds weekend to mark 75th anniversary. Hurricane Ivan causes major damage along Alabama coast, Pensacola, both Pensacola congregations have minor damage. Standard Club, the Jewish country club in Montgomery, closes. B’nai Israel in Columbus, Miss., dedicates a new Torah, given from Temple Beth Or in Montgomery. Mississippi Legislature approves establishment of Mississippi Holocaust Commission. For 40th anniversary, Philadelphia, Miss., finally hosts community-wide memorial for three slain civil rights workers. Jack and Florence Goldin Sports Complex dedicated in Gulfport. Westboro Church pickets Jackson’s Beth Israel.
2005
Hurricane Katrina makes Biloxi’s Beth Israel building unusable; levee breach floods New Orleans, leading to lengthy exile for the entire community. Biloxi congregation starts meeting at Beauvoir United Methodist Church. On the day Katrina struck (though unrelated to the storm), Birmingham Jewish Federation President Susan Goldberg and Rabbi Cynthia Culpeper died. Chanukah event at Uptown JCC marks first community-wide event for New Orleans Jewish community since the storm. “Jacobs Ladder” warehouse set up in Utica for distributing storm relief goods. Beth Shalom in Baton Rouge flooded by Hurricane Rita. Opera House at Meridian’s Marks-Rothenberg building being renovated and turned into the Riley Center for the Performing Arts. Historical marker erected at Adath Israel in Cleveland. Another one placed at Conoco station in Jackson, which was the former site of Beth Israel, the first synagogue building in Mississippi. West Feliciana Historical Society museum in St. Francisville debuts permanent exhibit about the town’s Jewish history. Jacobs Camp holds Double Chai reunion weekend. City of Birmingham establishes official sister city relationship with Rosh Ha’Ayin in Israel and al-Karak in Jordan. Mobile Exploreum hosts major exhibit of Dead Sea Scrolls. Temple Beth-El in Lexington (right) celebrated its centennial. B’nai Israel in Columbus celebrated its 125th anniversary. Klansman J.B. Stoner, suspected of the attempted bombing of Birmingham’s Temple Beth-El in 1958, died. Edgar Ray Killen convicted in the 1964 murder of civil rights workers Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner and James Chaney in Neshoba County, Miss. Rabbi David Goldstein retires as rabbi of Touro Synagogue in New Orleans. Jasper’s Temple Emanu-El closes, remaining members join Birmingham’s Temple Emanu-El. Sigma Alpha Mu recognized by the Inter-Fraternity Council at Louisiana State University. Montgomery NCJW holds final event. Birmingham’s Knesseth Israel decides to build at a different location.
2006
Split results in newly-formed Krewe du Mishigas marching in the Krewe du Jieux’s former spot in the Krewe du Vieux parade in New Orleans, while the Krewe du Jieux becomes the “Wandering Jieux,” marching with KAOS and eventually finding a new home with the krewedelusion parade. Another split, this time in Pensacola, results in formation of Kavod La’Olam, a
congregation that had a Reconstructionist/Reform style. University of South Alabama Cancer Research Institute renamed the Mitchell Cancer Institute following $22 million gift from Mitchell family. Later that year, Meisler Hall dedicated for the Meisler family. Beth Israel in New Orleans buries Torahs ruined by the flood, announces receipt of the first two of five Torahs that would be donated from across the country. To help with the recovery, New Orleans International Jewish Music Festival held. B’nai Israel in Florence celebrates centennial. Mustafa Ceric, Grand Mufti of Bosnia, speaks at Temple Emanu-El in Birmingham. Showdown with the Presbyterian Church USA over consideration of a boycott-Israel motion at its biennial conference, held in Birmingham. Beth El in Helena, the oldest synagogue in Arkansas, closes. Torah said to be from family of Rabbi Kawaler before the Holocaust dedicated at Agudath Achim in Shreveport. Birmingham Jewish Federation launches Next 100 Years campaign. Marker dedicated in Mobile at site of first Sha’arei Shomayim building, denoting first synagogue building in Alabama. Marker unveiled at B’nai Israel, Mississippi’s oldest Jewish congregation, in Natchez. Birmingham’s Temple Emanu-El donates Torah to new Reform congregation in Rosh Ha’Ayin. Larry Darby, candidate for attorney general in Alabama Democrat primary, calls for Israel’s destruction.
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Blumberg Family Jewish Community Services established to attract Jewish families to Dothan with incentive package of as much as $50,000. United Jewish Communities makes last Katrina relief allocations, after raising $28.5 million. Beth Israel, an Orthodox congregation, established in Destin. Tuscaloosa’s Temple Emanu-El sells Skyland Boulevard facility, plans on-campus building. Knesseth Israel in Birmingham holds Torah procession to dedicate new building. Baton Rouge Jewish Film Festival debuts. JH Ranch in Birmingham embarks on project to build national leadership center in Ariel. Jacobs Camp rebuilds dam that was damaged in Hurricane Katrina and refills Lake Gary. National World War II Museum in New Orleans hosts Anne Frank exhibit. First attempt at Shabbat 1000 at Tulane University draws 650 to dinner. Birmingham’s Temple Beth-El and Levite Jewish Community Center hold centennials, Emanu-El celebrates 125 years, Tupelo’s B’nai Israel celebrates 50th. New Orleans Federation launches Newcomers Incentive Program with goal of 1,000 new families in five years. Vandals flood damaged Beth Israel building in New Orleans. Pastor John Hagee addresses Christians United for Israel event in Jackson. Mayer “Bubba” Mitchell dies in Mobile.
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2008
Pensacola’s Israel Shlicha, Michal Elboim, was killed in a boating accident. Chabad at Tulane dedicates new facility. Beth Shalom in Baton Rouge completes renovations from Hurricane Rita damage. For Israel’s 60th birthday, Meitav, new Rosh Ha’Ayin musical group, makes U.S. debut in Birmingham and New Orleans. Birmingham International Center’s salute for year is Jordan and Israel. Gadsden’s Beth Israel holds centennial. New Orleans Federation issues five-year Strategic Plan for Rebuilding and Renewal. Hurricane Gustav postpones events for third anniversary of Katrina, including unveiling of marker where Beth Israel Torahs were buried in New Orleans. In time for school’s 36th birthday, Valerie Thompson becomes first alumna to be president of N.E. Miles Jewish Day School. JCRS starts sending out books from PJ Library to households in the region. John Cohen succeeds legendary Ron Polk as Mississippi State baseball coach. Ariel, Mobile become sister cities. Agudath Achim in Shreveport becomes movie set for “Leaves of Grass.”
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December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 57
25 years Cafe du Monde becomes kosher certified. AVODAH: The Jewish Service Corps and Moishe House open in New Orleans.
2009
B’nai Sholom in Brookhaven officially disbanded, Temple Beth-El in Lexington disbanded. Beth Israel dedicates new facility in Gulfport. The previous building in Biloxi was unusable after Katrina. Preston Goldfarb of Birmingham-Southern coaches U.S. national soccer team at Maccabi Games in Israel. Southern Jewish Historical Society has convention in New Orleans, as do United Jewish Communities Young Leadership and Jewish War Veterans. Achdut Israel opens in Panama City. B’nai Israel in Baton Rouge celebrates 150th anniversary, dedicates new Torah for the occasion; Gemiluth Chassodim in Alexandria also has 150th. Jules Lazard Post 580 of the Jewish War Veterans revived in New Orleans. Max’s Deli opens in Birmingham. ISJL curriculum expands to Institute’s entire 13-state region. Gilad Shalit, abducted Israeli soldier held in Gaza, named honorary New Orleanian. Two men arrested for spray-painting anti-Jewish messages in Mobile, but on a “messianic” congregation. Sister Cities International honors Birmingham and Rosh Ha’Ayin for their partnership. Aronov Homes participates in episode of “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition” in Montgomery. Israel’s Stark Aerospace opens third facility near Columbus, Miss.
2010
New Mikvah Chaya Mushka opens at the RINGGER Center at Chabad Uptown in New Orleans. Beth Israel in Gadsden closed, building is now a city performance arts center. Like Jasper in 2005, the remaining members join Birmingham’s Temple Emanu-El.
58 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
Tuscaloosa’s Temple Emanu-El dedicates new building in the “God Quad” on campus. First LimmudFest New Orleans held, while Birmingham has inaugural “When Pigs Fly” kosher barbecue competition. After discovering planned Orlando venue was inadequate, Jewish Federations of North America held its General Assembly and International Lion of Judah conference in New Orleans. Three Israeli chefs did a series of events in New Orleans and Birmingham. Anne Frank tree planted in Birmingham’s Civil Rights District. Chanukiah from flooded Beth Israel in New Orleans used for White House ceremony. Gates of Prayer in Metairie marks 160th by burning mortgage. Beth Shalom in Fort Walton Beach celebrates 25th. ZBT kicked off campus at Tulane for violations of hazing policy.
2011
Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience closes at Jacobs Camp so camp can have use of building, new museum location being explored. Central Conference of American Rabbis convention in New Orleans. New Hillel buildings completed at University of Alabama, next door to new Temple Emanu-El, and at Tulane. New Orleans native Richard Stone elected chairman of Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. Zeta Beta Tau at Alabama celebrates renovations to its house. Jackson’s Beth Israel has 150th anniversary. Jewish groups respond to massive tornado outbreak in Alabama. David Aresty of Alfred Dunner arranges donation of $1 million in clothing. Four New Orleans chefs do a culinary excursion through Israel as an exchange program with Rosh Ha’Ayin.
It’s much easier to send than a basket of latkes… Freedom Riders welcomed to South on 50th anniversary. Rabbi Menachem Youlis, “Indiana Jones of Torahs” arrested for falsifying rescue stories about scrolls he sold; one was the “Kawaler family Torah” in Shreveport and another was one dedicated at Beth Israel in Metairie. Dan Nichols, E18hteen do Southern Sukkot concert tour leading to “Road to Eden” documentary.
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2012
“Curious George Saves the Day: The Art of Margret and H.A. Rey” finishes national tour at Mississippi Museum of Art. Beth Israel holds last minyan in Lakeview building, dedicates new home next to Gates of Prayer in Metairie. Former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman steps into boxing ring for Levite JCC fundraiser in Birmingham. With jazz gala, Jewish Children’s Regional Service starts annual series of Jewish Roots events. Eruv established in Birmingham, around Knesseth Israel and Chabad. Jewish Community Centers Association holds convention in New Orleans. First national conference on preservation of Rosenwald Schools held at Tuskegee, on 100th anniversary of initiative’s start. Andre Tippett named to Alabama Sports Hall of Fame. Dedication held for Sigma Alpha Mu house at LSU. Reform Jacobs Camp, Orthodox Camp Darom have Jewish Unity Day on July 4. Jewish community in New Orleans tops pre-Katrina numbers. New Orleans Jewish Day School changes name to Community Day School in effort to broaden enrollment. Restored Temple Sinai in St. Francisville rededicated. NOLA Bakery opens in Tel Aviv. Dec. 25 tornado damages Springhill Avenue Temple in Mobile.
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2013
Chabad of the Emerald Coast established in Destin as Rabbi Shaya Tenenboim arrives to head Beth Israel. Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans celebrates centennial, Etz Chayim in Huntsville marks 50 years. Florala Memorial Hospital, which contains stainedglass windows from the former Temple Beth Or in Montgomery, closed. Alpha Epsilon Pi revived at the University of Alabama. Beth Israel in Jackson vandalized. Zeta Beta Tau at Alabama celebrates rededication of house, alumni weekend; ZBT revived at Tulane. Sigma Delta Tau, the historically-Jewish sorority at the University of Alabama, draws national attention as first Panhellenic sorority at Alabama to elect a black president. Tribefest, United Synagogue Youth, Reconstruction
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 59
25 years ist Rabbinical Association national conventions held in New Orleans. University of South Alabama announces record $50 million gift from Mitchell family. Louis Farrakhan, Nation of Islam slam Alabama’s Jewish community. President Obama presents Tony Kushner with the National Medal of the Arts. Birmingham’s Preston Goldfarb leads U.S. soccer team to first-ever gold medal at Maccabi Games in Israel. Knesseth Israel won’t have to vacate new Birmingham facilty, Friedman family buys it and renames it the Friedman Center for Jewish Life. Shaare Zedek in Morgan City closes. Peter Wolf publishes “My New Orleans, Gone Away.” Declare Your Freedom Zionist student festival debuts in New Orleans. 18-foot obelisk dedicated as Holocaust memorial in downtown Alexandria. LSU names baseball field for Skip Bertman. New Orleans/Israel Partnership for Emergency Response and Medicine held, bringing Israeli experts for three days of collaboration.
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60 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
Chabad of Southern Mississippi established under leadership of Rabbi Akiva and Hannah Hall, Chabad of Mobile also established with Rabbi Yosef and Bina Goldwasser. Renovation completed at Chabad of Louisiana’s Uptown location. Scott Cowen retires as Tulane president. Panama City’s Achdut Israel builds a mikvah. Alpha Epsilon Pi at Auburn achieves colony status. Nate Salant retires as head of the Gulf South Conference, Mike Slive steps down as head of Southeastern Conference. Day School, synagogues become overnight refuges during sudden snowstorm in Birmingham. Old Shaare Tefillah building in New Orleans becomes The Synagogue apartments. Jewish Community Day School is new name for community’s school in Metairie. Gulf Coast Holocaust library moves to University of South Alabama. Oscar J. Tolmas Charitable Trust established in New Orleans. Pensacola’s B’nai Israel writes new Torah. Alabama-Israel Task Force debuts. Hillel established at UAB, Jewish War Veterans in Shreveport. Florida rabbi finds seven sets of tefillin at Unclaimed Baggage in Scottsboro, reunites all with their owners. Birmingham’s Asaf Stein sees action serving with IDF in Gaza operation. Torah Academy opens new post-Katrina building in Metairie. Bruce Pearl becomes head coach of Auburn basketball. Legendary Mississippi State Bulldogs radio broadcaster Jack Cristil died.
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Uptown JCC in New Orleans announces major capital campaign, expansion. The defunct Shaarey Zedek in Morgan City sells its building. Chabad of Baton Rouge opens, under direction of Rabbi Peretz and Mushka Kazen. “Shaya” opens in New Orleans, Alon Shaya’s Israeli restaurant would win a slew of national awards. Birmingham’s Asaf Stein receives Israel Aliyah Prize at Knesset. Beth Shalom in Auburn has 25th anniversary. Full house at Selma’s Mishkan Israel for event celebrating Jewish involvement in 1965 Selma march. Pensacola’s Beth-El embarks on major renovation, expansion. New Orleans Temple Sinai Cantor Joel Colman does motorcycle road trip through South, performing at smaller congregations. Alabama Shoals area establishes relationship with Beit El. Mississippi Meets Israel business development event held in Jackson, Gov. Phil Bryant leads mission to Israel in November. Rabbi Donald Kunstadt retires after 28 years at Springhill Avenue Temple, Mobile. Wide range of events commemorate 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.
Our Greatest Hits SJL has received numerous national journalism awards The Simon J. Rockower Awards are the highest honor given in the field of Jewish journalism, and we have 13 such honors on our wall, plus one that was technically submitted in our name. The awards are presented by the American Jewish Press Association at its annual conference. This year’s conference was held in conjunction with the Jewish Federations of North America General Assembly in November. The Rockowers began in 1980 with an endowment by Philadelphia philanthropist I. Budd Rockower, marking the 100th anniversary of the birth of his late father, Simon Rockower. The awards were established to encourage groundbreaking journalism in the Jewish newspaper industry. Most awards are broken down into three categories — newspapers above and below a circulation of 15,000 copies, and magazines. The newspapers send in their entries each January, encompassing the previous calendar year. A panel of volunteers, recruited from secular, mainstream publications, judges the entries. In a typical year, there are roughly 800 to 900 entries. While we used to compete in the small newspapers category, we are now in the magazines category, competing with the likes of Hadassah, Reform Judaism, Moment, CJ and others.
First Rockower
Our first Rockower, second place for “Excellence in Investigative Reporting,” was presented in 1995 for the May 1994 story exposing Birmingham’s “Jewish Star” newspaper. At the 1994 convention, held just after the story broke, other editors called it one of the most unusual they had ever seen. The Star had been publishing in Birmingham since 1976. When we began The Southern Shofar in 1990, a Birmingham News article called us an “upstart” against the “older, more established” Star. The 1994 articles exposed that the Star’s publishers were closet “messianics” who had tried to convert a retired Israeli official in Jerusalem. It also chronicled questionable advertising practices, including accusations from local businesses that the Star threatened boycotts by the Jewish community against those who would not advertise. A 1985 letter, signed by all of Birmingham’s rabbis and asking about these charges, was never answered, and most contact with the Star by local Jewish organizations ended. The Star finally acknowledged the controversy two years after our series and changed its focus to open missionizing, complemented by a cable access television show. Both disappeared about 10 years ago.
Bizarre inauguration
In 1996, we won first place in “Excellence in Editorial Writing” for “The Inaugural Dilemma.” When Fob James was elected governor of Alabama in 1994, the Jewish community braced for fights over church-state issues such as school prayer. Nevertheless, there was also the knowledge that the Jameses are passionate Christian Zionists, and remembered a 1981 Israel Independence Day celebration at the Governor’s Mansion during his first term. Ahead of even the secular press, the Shofar reported that the January 1995 inauguration would be heavy on tributes to Israel. Organizers had even asked area synagogues for a Torah to be used during the inauguration; the request was refused. After the inaugural parade, Rabbi Eliot Sherman of Jerusalem blew a shofar, then began to read the Ten Commandments in Hebrew, then English. James’ cousin, Dorothy James Parker, then sang “Hatikvah” All of our Rockower-winning articles can be found in their entirety at sjlmag.com.
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 61
Happy Chanukah and Happy 25th Anniversary!
Rabbi Eliot Sherman of Jerusalem sounded the shofar at the inauguration of Alabama Governor Fob James in 1995.
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accompanied by the Montgomery Symphony Orchestra, and Zev Dolinsky, son of the man the Jewish Star publishers had tried to proselytize, gave an invocation, reciting one of the Psalms in Hebrew. In the editorial, we stated that while the ceremony was flattering and tastefully done in and of itself, it was inappropriate for the inauguration of a governor. After all, the national anthem of another country was played, but not the state’s own official song.
Moore controversy
Lest anyone think that the controversy over former and once again current Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore began in Montgomery, the issue dates back to 1995 when he was still a circuit judge in Etowah County. After an advisory was sent out to Alabama judges on the issue of religious displays and prayers in the courtroom, a suit was filed against Moore because he maintained both practices and refused to stop. The invited clergy were exclusively Protestant; during a radio interview one of Moore’s spokespeople claimed not to know that there was a Jewish congregation in the county, when it was actually located one block from the courthouse. Moore remained defiant, and legislators rallied to his cause. The case was eventually thrown out on a technicality over legal standing. During the height of the controversy, we published “Step Down, Rev. Moore,” which won a Rockower for “Excellence in Editorial Writing” in 1996. In it, we stated that any citizen who said it was his “duty” to disobey a court order would find himself in jail, so how can a judge publicly do that without undermining the entire court system? It also noted that Moore had spoken publicly about the “evils” of homosexuality, yet refused a petitioner’s request for a different judge in a case involving child custody where one of the parties was a lesbian. Noting that judges must maintain an aura of impartiality, and this case was a clear violation of that aura, we concluded that Moore should trade his judicial robes for pulpit robes, because the latter is where he is clearly more comfortable.
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62 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
At the awards for 1996, held in June 1997, we won a Rockower that was a complete surprise. That year, journalist Yossi Abramowitz shopped an investigative series about the Jewish National Fund to AJPA member papers. The series alleged lavish expense accounts by the national office, and that a very small percentage of the money raised in the United States ever made it to Israel. JNF immediately attacked Abramowitz’s credibility. About a dozen publications chose to run the story, including this one. The series ultimately was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, and a staff shakeup occurred at JNF. To reward the papers that stuck with him, when Abramowitz applied for the Rockowers, he submitted his entries in the names of papers that ran
6/11/15 8:51 PM
the stories. He submitted a follow-up commentary, “Audacity of the Wolves,” in our name, and it won a Rockower for commentary. Abramowitz won five Rockowers that year.
belittle our fears of Christians coming to ‘steal our souls,’ there is no other way, in our perspective, to describe it.”
After-Seder entertainment
In 1998, a group set out to send a copy of “Jesus,” a Campus Crusade for Christ film based on the book of Luke, to every household in Alabama in time for Easter (and, of course, Passover). In “A Response to the Jesus Video,” which won the Rockower for “Excellence in Commentary and Editorial Writing,” we explored theological differences between Judaism and Christianity, emphasizing that it was far more complex than whether or not the messiah has come. We also cautioned that “it is never enough to define ourselves by what we are not. If we do not have a positive message, then our efforts are pointless. We become ‘Not Christians’ rather than Jews.” The editorial concluded that the video distribution organizers have every right to send their videos, but “we have no obligation to buy in.”
Persecution?
For many years, we used the same printer as the Alabama Baptist, and often had our own version of interfaith dialogue in the pre-press room. A 1997 series of articles, “Persecution in Israel,” in the Alabama Baptist, prompted our written response. The series, which coincidentally ran during the High Holy Days, spoke of the problems Christian missionaries faced in Israel, a thenpending “anti-missionary” bill in the Knesset, and the problems faced by “messianics” in Israel. In “Persecution in Israel?”, which won the Rockower for “Excellence in Editorial Writing,” it was pointed out that it is “the height of arrogance” to approach others and tell them their religion is “incomplete” or that they are “spiritually blinded.” Christians who are in Israel because that is where their savior lived are respected. Those who are in Israel because they see easy pickings in the Jewish population will naturally encounter problems. “Sorry to disappoint,” the piece continued, “but after being kicked out of most countries in Christian Europe because we refused to abandon our faith, we established Israel so we could live as Jews among our brethren… for missionaries to then come into Israel and whine about our reluctance to accept those who would turn us away from the religion of our forefathers is mind-boggling.” The piece further explained that Judaism accepts the righteous of all nations as worthy of the world to come. “While your articles seem to
Yiddishkeit in the Passover Passover was once again the theme for a 2000 piece that won first place for “Excellence in Editorial Writing.” Each year, “Jews for Jesus” sends emissaries to churches across the country to lead Passover Seders, including dozens in our region. Many churches, the editorial pointed out, are eager to learn about the Jewish roots of their faith. By exploring more about Judaism, they come to a better understanding about the life and times of Jesus, deepening their faith. The Passover Seder is a natural learning point, because some (but not all) of the accounts of the Last Supper in the Christian Bible point to it being a Seder. But when they bring a “messianic” group in to do the Seder, they get something vastly different, with all of the symbols
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 63
25 years reinterpreted to represent Jesus. Clearly, these churches are not getting the authentic Seder experience that one would find in any Jewish home. In “For Those Who Do Not Know Where To Ask,” we urged Jewish communities in the region to be more pro-active in making knowledgeable community members available to churches who genuinely want to learn more about Judaism, so fewer of them wind up becoming confused about Jewish belief and practice.
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Revival controversy Also that year, DSJV won first place in “Excellence in Spot News Reporting” for “Holocaust drama director leaving.” Greg Thomas was director of the Hamilton Community Theater in rural northwest Alabama. He organized a production of “I Never Saw Another Butterfly,” with local children from the entirely non-Jewish county. The performances were a rousing success, and toured the state. He followed it up with the first-ever Alabama performance of “Brundibar,” a Hans Krasa play that was performed for Red Cross inspectors at the Theresienstadt concentration camp. In April 1999, he saw that the local high school had a Christian revival service during school hours. He contacted the Anti-Defamation League to send materials to the school about what was permissible under the law, to prevent the possibility of court battles should the opening of the new Interstate 22 lead to an influx of non-Christian families. Then, that September a teacher started spreading a rumor that Thomas had “turned the high school in to the Jewish league” and had filed a suit against the school. That led to many parents pulling their children from “Brundibar,” with one calling him “Hitler taking away their right to pray.” A boycott against the theater was initiated by the teachers, though the school system denied its existence. The theater’s board rewrote the bylaws to eliminate Thomas’ position in November. Shortly thereafter, Bevill State Community College also eliminated his position. Thomas was theater specialist the following summer at the Henry S. Jacobs Camp, then spent several months looking for work before taking a position with the Garland Civic Theatre in Texas. He died in March 2003. Moore Again At the AJPA conference in 2002, Judge Moore was the gift who keeps on giving. With the controversy over then-Chief Justice Moore’s Ten Commandments three-ton monument in the State Judicial Building, we ran an editorial entitled “Ten Problems with the Ten Commandments.” Moore’s monument, which the editorial stated was becoming a graven image, had a unique blending of different versions of the Ten Commandments on it, resulting in 11 commandments on the two tablets. In the editorial, we pointed out some theological issues between Jewish and Christian interpretations of the commandments, and their historical context. For example, the Jewish version has as its First Commandment “I am the Lord Your God who brought you out of the Land of Egypt,” which makes no sense for Christians. That is why the last phrase is eliminated in Christian versions, and part of the Jewish Second Commandment, “You shall have no other gods before Me” is added. Besides, the editorial asks, where in the legal code is any of that subject to prosecution in any United States court.
64 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
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Another dispute is over the commandment over the Sabbath. The editorial notes that there are no laws mandating the closing of businesses from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday. Nor is there any law in the U.S. requiring one to honor parents. Also, Christianity holds that Jesus came to free humanity from the “curse of the law,” of which the Ten Commandments is a central part. How then does the hyper-reverence of the Ten Commandments square with that theology? In all, no more than three or four of the Ten Commandments have any relevance to the U.S. legal system, making the push to have them enshrined in courthouses nationally all the more puzzling.
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In 2005, we won first place for “Excellence in News Reporting” for “Salvaging Holiday Spirit in Mobile.” The annual downtown Christmas parade in Mobile had invited the Jewish community to sponsor a Chanukah float in the 2003 parade, and there was also a Kwanzaa float scheduled. To reflect the diversified entries, parade organizers changed the parade’s name during the summer to the Jolly Holiday Parade. A couple of weeks before the parade, when organizers were speaking about the parade before the City Council, the name change away from Christmas became a major issue. At the next week’s meeting, most of the time was spent discussing the issue, and the council voted 5-0 to ask the parade board to change back to the old name, or lose city funding — which, as it turned out, had happened before the controversy started. Local radio personalities decried the “assault on Christianity,” and the parade was temporarily cancelled because of the heated rhetoric and security concerns. At the last minute, a compromise was reached, and the “Mobile Christmas and Holiday Parade” rolled as scheduled. In the aftermath, many parade organizers were shell-shocked by the controversy, and the Jewish community did not participate in 2004. Because our article was in the January 2004 issue it was in the 2005 contest. That year we also won third place in a special category, Overall Excellence for the smallest papers.
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In 2006, we received the first place Boris Smolar Award for Excellence in Comprehensive Coverage for “Devastating Blow,” our extensive coverage of Hurricane Katrina, the levee breach and flood and the aftermath. We had the first photos of the damaged Beth Israel in Biloxi, covered the first services back in New Orleans and with our web presence complementing the print coverage endeavored to tell the story of the Jewish communities of New Orleans and the Mississippi coast to the world. It is a story that would dominate our pages for well over a year, and continue well beyond as a recurring undercurrent. We also received a third-place award for excellence in personality profiles for Judith Michaelson’s story about Michael Saag’s continuing work in the battle against AIDS. Saag is director of the 1917 AIDS Clinic at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and an internationally renowned researcher. In 2014, we won the second place Rambam Award for Excellence in Writing About Health Care for “Israelis Help New Orleans Prepare for the Unthinkable,” our coverage of the New Orleans Israel Partnership for Emergency Response and Medicine. The December 2013 conference brought numerous Israeli experts to New Orleans for several days of consultations and cooperation. Not surprisingly, first place in the category went to Hadassah magazine.
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 65
community
Vic van Leeuwen, Celia Cantor, Sandra McGuire, Sue Hassett, Ann van Leeuwen and Blair Eurton took part in the Liz Hurley Ribbon Run in Huntsville. Temple B’nai Sholom had 12 members in its team for the breast cancer fundraising event on Oct. 17.
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Veterans continue to serve after war
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What does one do when he is wounded in war but wants to continue serving his country? On Dec. 13, author Joe Klein comes to Montgomery to discuss his book, “Charlie Mike,” at the Montgomery Museum of Art. The program is at 6:30 p.m. Eric Greitens, a highly-decorated Jewish Nacy SEAL and Rhodes Scholar has been guided by the principle of Tikkun Olam. After being wounded in Iraq, he came home and found his fellow veterans wanted to continue to serve, regardless of the severity of their injuries. Greitens founded The Mission Continues, which provides paid public service fellowships for wounded veterans. One of the first Fellows, Jake Wood, founded Team Rubicon, organizing veterans in disaster relief projects, from Haiti to Hurricane Sandy. Klein will visit Montgomery through the Jewish Book Council network. The next author program will be Jan. 14 at 7 p.m. at Temple Beth Or, with author Renato Barhona discussing “The Odyssey of the Ship with Three Names,” which rescued over 7,700 Jewish refugees from the Balkans and transported them to Israel.
On Nov. 15, members of the Beth Shalom Sisterhood in Baton Rouge visited Painting With a Twist to paint Torah scrolls. 66 Southern Jewish Life • December 2015
nosh
jewish deep south: bagels, biscuits, beignets
The Sweet Potato & Chard Risotto with Parmesan, Rosemary and Nutmeg we made from a PeachDish kit
MEAL KIT DELIVERY
ON YOUR DOORSTEP Blue Apron and the like will deliver all the makings of a (probably pretty great) meal to your door. The rest is up to you.
KOSHER
WELCH’S + MANISCHEWITZ Welch’s and Manishewitz have joined forces to take on the monopoly on kosher grape juice that Kedem currently enjoys. Scheduled to be in stores this January, the new bottles will display both logos, have no preservatives or artificial ingredients, and will sport the Orthodox Union hechsher as Kosher for Passover and all year.
Meal kit delivery is hot. Mix that feeling of accomplishment from making a home-cooked meal with the convenience of having all the ingredients needed delivered to your door, completely cutting out the grocery store, and voila, the whole thing sounds like one of the most genius ideas ever. We tested each of the big sources: Blue Apron, Hello Fresh, Plated, PeachDish and Home Chef to see how easy, economical and delicious food subscription could be, and if it can be done kosher. Hopeful but with a healthy amount of skepticism, ultimately we were impressed. Really impressed. First, let’s talk about kashrut. None of the services about mentioned had kosher-specific plans. That is, while we could have ordered plans Recipe card from Hello Fresh for each with meat, none of those from any company — currently — had all ingredients under supervision. Our next-best option was to order a plan of all vegetarian dishes. Here’s the thing, though: in no instance did all those ingredients, like the dairy components, have a hechsher where appropriate. With a big however, if your refrigerator and pantry are stocked with kosher basics, that’s an easy work-around. The only time we found that following a recipe and substituting our own kosher ingredients would have required more thought were instances calling for specific cheeses, like queso para freir, fontina, and such. With the ability to select recipes for each shipment, though, that’s a complication that could be avoided entirely. The kits are delivered via express delivery services like FedEx, and the box from each company was delivered on the day expected and found to be well-packed inside with plenty of protective layering and most importantly, cold ingredients. Home Chef, PeachDish, and Hello Fresh put all the ingredients for each recipe in their own interior bag or box, while we had some sorting to do with Blue Apron and Plated. Inside, we easily found the recipes for each
COOKBOOK
THE JEWISH BAKER’S PASTRY SECRETS by George Greenstein with Elaine Greenstein, Julia Greenstein, Isaac Bleicher
The late James Beard award winner George Greenstein finished this book before he died, and filled its pages with recipes for the delicious staples of the European bakery: strudel, stollen, danish, puff pastry, including complete chapters dedicated to bundt and babka. Page after page spells out variations on the basics and resurrects offerings once popular and now rarely attempted. Bienerstuck, a yeast-raised coffee cake with caramelized honey and nuts, filled with cream custard (which sounds presentationworthy at Rosh Hashanah) assuredly deserves a place back at the table. Greenstein’s introductions with histories and remembrances, guidance with method and technical advice obviously come from one with many years of hands-on experience. His baker’s secrets even include ways to ‘right’ bakes that are going the wrong way. And most recipes call for ingredients that are already present in most pantrys. The only thing one could wish for would be the addition of photography for those of us who appreciate seeing the finished result. Overall though, a very useful guide.
December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 67
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box and all included images of not only the finished dish, but several steps in between in full color, which we found very reassuring, especially when cooking with ingredients we don’t often use. And that was part of the fun: Blue Apron’s kit had us making arepas, and in a PeachDish recipe, we were cooking tempeh ‘bacon’ as a component in a kale and sweet potato salad. None of the recipes given from any source were super-exotic, but none were boring, either. And although they were vegetarian, we gratefully weren’t stuck with just salads or sad riffs on pasta-with-sauce in any of the boxes. We found the instructions for each dish across the board to be very clear. All ingredients were fresh, and some came already cut to size, making mise en place a snap. Recipe times were pretty accurate, and we got the impression that the recipes themselves were very well tested. Blue Apron in particular got extra marks for being sensitive to how many pots and pans were being utilized (finish a step, wipe out pan, continue). The only element we were really expected to have on-hand across the board was olive oil. Some even included salt in their kit. Portion size was generous across the board and we found Home Chef especially so. Each fully embraced seasonality, so our fall kits were composed of late-season ingredients like root vegetables and winter squash, making for lovely autumnal flavors. So let’s get to the best part: taste. Three kits had really outstanding dishes we’d make over and over again — which made us very happy with the idea of keeping those recipe cards forever. Hello Fresh’s Mushroom Ragu with Crispy Polenta Cakes was easily our favorite. Plated’s Sesame Noodle Bowl with Roasted Mushrooms was incredible, as was their Cheesy Orzo Risotto with Heirloom Cauliflower. Blue Apron’s Creamy Broccoli & Fennel Casserole with Mafalda Pasta & Fontina Cheese was just right. While the Home Chef and PeachDish offerings were good, we had just as high hopes that we’d love what they’d pack in an upcoming box as much as the
Cheesy Orzo Risotto with Heirloom Cauliflower from Plated
other favorites this particular week. One plus for our region in particular is that PeachDish is based in Atlanta and takes particular pride in sourcing from a number of regional suppliers, like D’evereux Foods in Natchez, Belle Chevre in Elkmont, Ala., and Serenbe Farms in Georgia. Their recipes also have a Southern slant: the first week of December, their meatbased options included chicken and dumplings, mustard greens in potlikker with noodles, and mayhaw-glazed chicken with collard slaw. As for cost, they all vary but not greatly. Three dinners for two people is $72/week from Plated. Blue Apron charges $69.92 for two dishes weekly for a family of four. Home Chef simply charges by serving at $9.95 each. PeachDish offers two weekly meals for two at $50. A box with three classic meals for two is $69 from Hello Fresh. All of the above feature free shipping. Skipping a week is no problem, either. Many of have discount incentives for first shipments, which makes giving these a try even more enticing. Will any of the current big players in the future offer a completely kosher box, even in their vegetarian or vegan options? That’s uncertain. There is one company that calls themselves ‘the world’s first Glatt Kosher meal kit delivery service’ — Kitchn Synch (kitchnsynch.com). They are under supervision by KOF-K, but while they deliver by hand in areas like New York and Philadelphia, they aren’t yet in the South, and they don’t ship. Their service with three dinners for four is listed as $179.80. The ability to choose recipes that sound especially tasty, the fun of trying new recipes that actually work out, and the convenience factor makes the popularity of these meal kit delivery companies completely obvious. We can’t wait for our next box.
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The University of Alabama’s Psi Chapter of Zeta Beta Tau announced it will hold a centennial reunion weekend from March 4 to 6. The weekend will celebrate “100 years of vibrant Jewish life on the University of Alabama campus,” including ZBT legacy organizations Kappa Nu and Phi Ep. The weekend will kick off with a reunion reception at the Paul W. Bryant Museum on March 4. On March 5 there will be a memorial service for ZBT, Kappa Nu and Phi Ep brothers, hosted by Hillel. A Founders and Leadership luncheon will follow, honoring those who founded the three fraterni-
ties, served as officers or were in the Student Government Association. Information is being requested to help identify all of those individuals. There will also be a “behind the scenes” presentation on the university’s master campus plan, and the inaugural presentation and reception for the ZBT Psi Chapter Hall of Fame. The weekend will conclude with brunch on March 6 at the ZBT house. Photos are requested for the event’s Facebook page, and for use in a program and video. More information is available at uazbtcentennial. com.
Continued from page 70
FA M I LY
EYE
CENTER
Twenty-five is also the average number of dreidels purchased over the years by the average Jewish household, due to some being chewed, chased under couches by pets, broken, or thrown at siblings who obviously cheated at the game.
Coverage
No, there are not 25 square yards of branches covering a typical sukkah. 25 is the number of years that Southern Jewish Life (nee The Southern Shofar, then re-nee’med Deep South Jewish Voice) has covered Jewish news, both local and abroad, in the Deep South region. Twenty-five years since the creation of this gift to the region brings together these three 25s in their Judaic significance. Tying them together in this way, in this column makes perfect sense because, as many Jewish comedians will attest, comedy works in threes.
A mi A be l Epste in, O.D. Former Director of Contact Lens Services at UAB School of Optometry. Graduated #1 in her class of 1998.
Doug Brook is a writer in Silicon Valley who has written for Southern Jewish Life since 1996. In six years, this column will catch up to being just as old as the magazine. In unrelated news, his high school is revisiting his math grades. For past columns, other writings, and more, visit http://brookwrite. com/. For exclusive online content, follow facebook.com/the.beholders.eye.
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December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 69
rear pew mirror • doug brook
By any other number Numbers are integral to Judaism. The times that they come up as significant in Jewish tradition have no equal. Additionally, there’s even a book of the Torah called “Numbers.” It’s no surprise how important they are to a people who so often find themselves divided. When Judaism gets self-interested in numbers — outside of accounting offices — it often circles around certain Greatest Hits numbers. Almost several of you can name numerous significances attached to seven, 10, 12, 13, 18, 40, 70, 120 and 1969 (#LetsGoMets). However, it is timely to explore the Judaic importance of the oftignored number 25. Judaism sometimes enjoys the multipliers of significant numbers along with the numbers themselves. For example, 18 is significant as the numerical equivalent of “chai” (the life, not the tea), but people often denote (or donate) in double-chai, triple-chai, or chai plus zeroes at the end. With that in mind, 25 has two significant multipliers: Holidays. Add up all major, minor, and modern Jewish holidays, and add one day for all the Rosh Chodeshes. The result is 50 (25 times two) holy days in the year. Similarly, take the 49 days of the Omer, add the first day of Shavuot (which the Omer leads up to)… 50. (Still 25 times two. Hasn’t changed since the last paragraph. Even using Common Core math.) Ignoring the multipliers, there are three significant significances of 25 in YOU KNOW Judaism today.
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WHAT 18 MEANS IN JUDAISM. WHAT ABOUT 25?
Creation
No, the world was not created in 25 days. Twenty-five is the day in the month of Elul upon which Creation began. Falling nearly a week before Rosh Hashanah, most people don’t notice this day every year, because they’re too busy cramming in transgressions so they’ll have something for which to atone on Yom Kippur. How can we know that this was really the day when Creation started? It was recently confirmed when archaeologists unearthed a well-preserved sheet evidently torn off from an ancient calendar on which was printed “Elul 25” along with a handwritten notation of two words, “heavens” and “earth,” each followed by a checkmark. Of course, it’s ironic that Creation began on a Sunday, but the sun was created later, and that starting on Sunday meant Tuesday was actually day three, and not day two. But why didn’t Creation start on the first day of the month? In the history of the universe, no construction project is known to have started on schedule.
Chanukah
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No, Chanukkah does not last 25 days. Though if it did, counting the number of candles needed would be a good lesson in factorials. Twentyfive is the day in the month of Kislev that begins the festival of Hanukkah, a holiday with 25 different spellings in the English language. (See if you can figure out all 25!) This festival of lights and of light gift-giving involves the eating of, on average, 25 latkes every December. It sometimes also leads to the eating of 25 sufganiyot, which is followed by a 25 percent boost in Krispy Kreme stock, and the consumption of roughly 25 Alka Seltzers per person. continued on previous page
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December 2015 • Southern Jewish Life 71