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Southern Jewish Life
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Blanketed by the historic January snowfall (starting top left): Goldring/Woldenberg Jewish Community Campus in Metairie, New Orleans Jewish Community Center Uptown, Shir Chadash in Metairie, Beth Israel, Gulfport, Chabad of Pensacola
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In general, one is loath to criticize a beloved institution like the Red Cross. Currently, the humanitarian organization is meeting needs of the Los Angeles fire victims. For decades, summer camps have done their swim lessons based on the Red Cross system. And of course, there are the ever-present blood drives.
But these days, whenever we see a Jewish organization partnering with the Red Cross on a blood drive or other effort, there is a nagging question of why we would do so, given the egregious conduct of the Red Cross during Israel’s hostage crisis in Gaza — just the latest outrage in a long history of anti-Jewish activities by the esteemed organization.
The complete failure of the Red Cross regarding Jews during the Holocaust is well documented, especially the “happy face” report following an orchestrated “inspection” of the Theresienstadt concentration camp.
In 1930, Magen David Adom was founded as the Jewish equivalent of Red Cross, and has been a vital organization in Israel since before independence. It tried to gain admittance to the Red Cross movement as early as the 1930s, but it wasn’t until 2006 that the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement admitted MDA as an affiliate. One of the excuses for barring MDA was that the Star of David was a religious symbol. Yes, that was an explanation by the Red Cross.
The Red Cross symbol was adopted from the neutral Swiss flag, but Muslim countries associated the symbol with the Crusades, and insisted on using a Red Crescent instead. After that, for decades the organization refused to consider the use of any other symbol.
As part of admitting MDA, the organization admitted the Palestine Red Crescent Society at the same time — for which they had to change their own rules that stipulated societies had to be part of a sovereign state, which Palestine has never been.
The Hamas invasion of Oct. 7, 2023, brought back all those memories, as the Red Cross did not visit any of the 251 Israeli hostages taken by Hamas. Though that is
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Southern Jewish Life is an independent Jewish periodical. Articles and columns do not necessarily reflect the views of any Jewish institutions, agencies or congregations in our region.
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one of their main functions worldwide, and they have been able to visit hostages and prisoners under the most challenging of circumstances, they simply wrung their hands and said “Hamas won’t let us,” and stated that any public pressure would be unhelpful. Given that they still have not visited a single hostage — they have only been a glorified Uber service upon their release — how less helpful could it have been?
Representatives of ICRC were pressed to try and visit the hostages, and were even given medicines to deliver to the hostages. The package was later discovered on a shelf in one of the Gaza hospitals, unused. During one encounter, when a hostage family was pressing an ICRC representative, the response was that they, the family members of a hostage in Gaza, should think of what the Palestinians were going through.
In December 2023, the Tennessee-based Christian organization Proclaiming Justice to the Nations, which actively fights antisemitism, called on churches to withhold financial support from the Red Cross because of how it “utterly failed in its mission” in Gaza.
When the first group of hostages was released in 2023, the Red Cross informed MDA about their condition right after they were handed over. Starting with the second round, it no longer did that, leading the CEO of MDA to angrily accuse the ICRC, “you are not neutral.” Eli Bin added, “if all your concern is for the murderers and the family members of terror-
ists who carried out attacks in Israel, then your role is completely non-essential.”
While acting that way regarding the hostages, the ICRC delegation head in Israel was pressing Israel about the conditions for Arab terrorists in Israeli prisons.
In April 2024, the ICRC welcomed a new director general, Pierre Krahenbuhl. His former job? He was chief of the United Nations Relief and Works Administration — the UN agency responsible for perpetuating the Palestinians as refugees. The same organization that has been infiltrated by Hamas operatives, many of whom tok part in Oct. 7, and whose schools teach hatred of Jews and martyrdom in the service of liberating Palestine. He was forced to resign from UNRWA in 2019 due to corruption, abuse of power and ethics violations.
Surely he would treat Israel fairly in his neutral ICRC role, right?
In 2024, Palestinian Media Watch revealed that when the Red Cross visits Palestinian prisoners in Israel, it facilitates paperwork needed by the Palestinian Authority as part of its “pay to slay” program that rewards terrorists with monthly stipends. The proof of imprisonment forms state that the sole purpose of the form is to prove eligibility for those payments. The Red Cross makes sure those forms are signed and delivered, and the Palestinian Prisoner Affairs Authority head called the Red Cross “an essential partner.”
The paperwork has to be filed every three
continued on page 44
Southern Jewish Life Staff
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“Shir Chadash has been the
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Justin Sackett
Copyright 2025. 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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interesting bits & can’t miss events
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U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson from Louisiana met in Washington with relatives of
Dec. 11, 2024. Participating in the meeting were the families of American hostages Keith Siegel, Edan Alexander, Sagui Dekel Chen, Itay Chen, Judi Weinstein Haggai and Gad Haggai, and of their fellow hostages Karina Ariev, Romi Gonen and Naama Levy. Johnson reiterated the U.S. government’s commitment to “take the hostages out from Hamas’s tunnels of death as quickly as possible.”
Current Jewish Learning Institute class has a home-grown feel
Rabbi Yochanan Rivkin was lead writer for “Decoding the Talmud”
While hundreds of Chabad Houses around the world are teaching the newest Jewish Learning Institute class, “Decoding the Talmud,” it has extra significance around here.
Rabbi Yochanan Rivkin, of Tulane Chabad Grads and Anshe Sfard in New Orleans, was the lead writer for the new six-week course, which began in New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Birmingham and Pensacola in late January or early February.
There are usually three JLI courses over each year. Rivkin said the JLI team consists of nearly 50 editors, graphic designers, video producers and copywriters. Each course has an associated textbook.
He spent nearly 500 hours working on the curriculum, which he said was a labor of love. “I have always had a passion for the Talmud — an amazing text that forms the backbone of Jewish intellectual and religious culture — and it was a great pleasure to research and write about this fascinating set of books.”
The course is a combination of Jewish history, theology, law and scholarship. “Everyone has heard of the Talmud, but, unless you have actually studied it, you don’t know what it is. And even if you have studied Talmud, this course will give you tremendous insight into its content, the
way it was composed, and why we should study it,” he said.
There is an increased fascination with the Talmud, for better and worse — with the rise in antisemitism worldwide, there are people who go online claiming to have “read the Talmud” and listing quotes that are either wildly out of context or nonexistent to “prove” Jewish evil, demonstrating that they have no idea what the Talmud actually is.
The course starts with the question of what Jewish law is, with the written Torah and the oral law that was eventually codified in the Talmud, and how learning became central to Jewish practice.
The next class introduces the Mishnah, Judaism’s first legal code and the first attempt to write down oral law. It will introduce the Mishnah’s writing style and tolerance for debate. The third class is about how the sages debated and understood the Mishnah, with the fourth class moving to how those explanations became the Talmud, with the debates woven in with stories and ethical teachings.
The fifth class is about the Talmud’s mode of logic and legal reasoning, fueling deeper learning. The final class details how the Talmud became the center of Jewish law, and the impetus for a library of additional literature over the past 15 centuries.
Photo courtesy of the Hostage and Missing Families Forum Headquarters.
captives held by Hamas in Gaza,
Problem
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BY BEVERLY KATZ, Landscape Designer
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New Orleans JCC debuts Composer in Residence series
The New Orleans Jewish Community Center has launched a new Composer in Residence: New Works Concert Series, with featured guest artists in a week-long residency, culminating in a concert to debut original music from that week.
Pioneered by new JCC Music Director Brian Haas, an internationally celebrated pianist, composer, and arranger, the series will feature an exploration of artistic collaboration, as he works with the guest artists over five days.
Upon arrival, the guest artist begins working with Haas. They are then joined by band members as the week progresses, to augment the process. By Friday, they have a New Orleans rhythm section bringing the 75-minute piece to life, preparing for the Saturday evening debut concert.
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The first composer in resident was Steven Bernstein, a multi-Grammy winning trumpeter from New York City. Bernstein has arranged for Lou Reed, Marianne Faithfull, Allen Toussaint and Bill Frisell. He is the founder of multiple projects, including the Millennial Territory Orchestra and Butler-Bernstein Hot 9. His discography includes four albums in John Zorn’s Radical Jewish Culture series and the celebrated “Viper’s Drag” with pianist Henry Butler.
The next guest artist will be Aurora Nealand, the week leading up to a March 29 concert. Nealand is a dynamic composer, performing with saxophone, accordion and voice, and a social-practice artist based in New Orleans. A driving force in the city’s traditional jazz and improvised music scenes since 2004, Nealand combines deep respect for New Orleans musical traditions with a passion for innovation and storytelling through sound. She leads The Royal Roses, a band that bridges early New Orleans jazz with experimental collective improvisation and sound collage, drawing inspiration from movements like the AACM.
Aurora Nealand is a dynamic composer, multi-instrumentalist (saxophone, accordion, voice), and social-practice artist based in New Orleans. A driving force in the city’s traditional jazz and improvised music scenes since 2004, Nealand combines deep respect for New Orleans musical traditions with a passion for innovation and storytelling through sound. She leads The Royal Roses, a band that bridges early New Orleans jazz with experimental collective improvisation and sound collage, drawing inspiration from movements like the AACM.
She has worked with Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Let Freedom Swing program and serves as a facilitator for Found Sound Nation, fostering global musical exchanges through residencies like OneBeat. In 2023, she premiered “The Book of Communal Howling” with the Instigation Orchestra and debuted “City Songs,” a community-driven sonic mapping project featured at Big Ears Festival and set to expand internationally.
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The first Composer In Residence concert featured Steven Bernstein on Feb. 8.
A co-founder of Sound Observatory New Orleans, Nealand is dedicated to supporting workshops and new music. Her projects have earned her accolades including multiple OffBeat Awards for Best Female Performer, Best Saxophonist, and Best Traditional Jazz Band. Her diverse body of work spans theatrical productions (KindHumanKind), solo projects (The Monocle Ensemble), and collaborations with artists such as Preservation Hall All-Stars, Bill Frisell, Pauline Oliveros, and Animal Collective. Nealand’s performances have graced premier stages and festivals worldwide, including the Montreal Jazz Festival, Berlin Jazz Festival, Lincoln Center, and the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival.
Haas is an internationally celebrated, award-winning pianist, composer, producer and arranger, whose prolific career spans nearly four decades and includes almost 40 albums of original compositions. He began playing piano at age 4, and he won his first International Piano Concerto Competition at just 16, solidifying his life’s mission in music.
While at the University of Tulsa, he founded Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey, a band that has become an institution in modern music, defying genre. Over the past 31 years, JFJO has toured extensively, completing 13 European tours, countless circuits through the Americas, and playing at iconic festivals like North Sea, Berlin, Tampere, and Montreal. They’ve also sold out prestigious venues such as Bimhuis, Snug Harbor, Yoshi’s, and The Blue Note.
Beyond JFJO, Haas’s career includes collaborations with legends like Nikki Glaspie, George Porter Jr., Helen Gillet, The Funky Meters, Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Nolatet, and Les Claypool, among others. His latest project, Punkadelick—a trio with Glaspie and Mike Dillon—released the critically acclaimed Inflorescence in 2023 on Sony Red, followed by a 17-month tour that sold out venues nationwide.
Tickets for the 8 p.m. concert on March 29 are $20, free for ages 13 and under. Doors open at 7 p.m.
Rosh
Ha’Ayin soldier killed in Jenin
An Israeli soldier from Rosh Ha’Ayin was killed in combat and four others were wounded on Jan. 30 during a firefight with terrorists in Jenin in Samaria, the Israel Defense Forces said. Staff Sgt. Liam Hazi, 20, of the Kfir Brigade’s Haruv reconnaissance unit became the first casualty of Operation Iron Wall, Israel’s operation against terrorist networks in Judea and Samaria, which began on Jan. 21.
Of the four wounded, one was severely hurt, and the three others sustained light wounds, according to the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit.
Hazi’s unit was conducting house searches when it encountered a group of armed terrorists who opened fire on the troops at close range, the report said. The terrorists escaped.
Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, the IDF Spokesperson, said in a statement: “We mourn with the family and accompany them in these difficult hours. We continue to act resolutely against terrorism everywhere, including in Judea and Samaria. Tonight, too, we remember those who fell in the battles on Oct. 7, 2023, and the heavy price paid by IDF regular and reserve fighters throughout the war.”
A public notice from the city stated that his funeral would be at 1 p.m. on Jan. 31 in the military unit of the city cemetery. “In coordination with the family, the residents of the city are invited to pay Sergeant Liam their last respect with Israel flags today at 12:00 along Zionot Boulevard,” the city announced.
Prior to Hazi’s death, at least seven soldiers from Rosh Ha’Ayin have been killed since Oct. 7.
Rosh Ha’ayin is the sister city of Birmingham, and Partnership2Gether community for Birmingham and New Orleans.
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From the moment they come into the world, we do our best, trying to get it right. So what happens when something goes wrong?
That’s when we have to get it right.
The Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders at Children’s Hospital New Orleans has the biggest cancer fighting team in the Gulf South and the most advanced therapies that can be found anywhere – all right here, in our own backyard. So they can get right back to being kids again.
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Jen Merryman has been named the permanent executive director at Gates of Prayer in Metairie. She has been serving as the interim executive director.
Temple Sinai in New Orleans is constructing an additional exit to the Feibelman Chapel, which was scheduled for completion on Jan. 20. The exit includes an accessible concrete path to the Palmer Avenue sidewalk. The project is the final security improvement proposed in the congregation’s 2022 FEMA Non-profit Security Grant.
“The Center’s Table” at the New Orleans Jewish Community Center will be on March 13 at 6 p.m., and will feature Adloyadah for Purim. Head Chef Jeff McLennan and Chef Reid Eldridge will demonstrate how the three-course meal is made, giving tips and tricks, plating techniques, and expert-level insight to the food. Reservations are $50 for members, $62 non-members.
Gates of Prayer in Metairie will have a stroll through history as part of its 175th anniversary celebration, with a five week series of in-person or Zoom explorations. The sessions will be on Wednesdays at 7 p.m., starting March 12, looking at the congregation’s history along with what was happening in American Judaism as a whole. The five sessions will start with the congregation’s founding and American Judaism, 1850 to 1865; the Civil War era and rise of Zionism, 1865-1917; the two World Wars, 1917-1945; American attitudes toward Israel, 1948-2000; and the new millennium, Katrina and Covid, 2000-2025.
Jewish Family Service of Greater New Orleans will have a Grief and Bereavement Group for Adults, meeting on Mondays from March 10 to April 21, except on April 14. The group will discuss coping strategies, community building, processing emotions, self-exploration, looking forward and more. Sessions will be at the Uptown Jewish Community Center at 2 p.m. Registration is $40 for all six sessions, and is open to all adults age 18 and up.
JNOLA will view Muses on the Avenue, at Touro Synagogue on Feb. 27 at 5:30 p.m.
The Drag Bingo night coordinated by Temple Sinai Young Professionals and JP NOLA that was scheduled for January was rescheduled to March 27 due to the recent snowstorm. The event will feature Gia GiaVanni, a glitter bar and raffle. The $10 entry includes pizza, beer, wine and a bingo card. Dinner at 6 p.m., bingo starts at 6:30 p.m.
JNOLA will take part in the After Mardi Gras City Park Cleanup, March 5 from 9 to 11 a.m. JNOLA will provide breakfast and coffee. Sign up at the City Park volunteer site and select JNOLA.
The Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience in New Orleans will have a virtual program with Melissa Klapper, co-editor of “The Civil War Diary of Emma Mordecai,” who was “a staunch defender of Judaism, and an ardent Confederate nationalist and slaveowner,” demonstrating the messiness of history and the ambiguous place of Jews in the antebellum South. The program will be on March 12 at 6 p.m.
Gates of Prayer Brotherhood in Metairie will present Casino Night 175, an evening of classic casino games, a VIP Chai Roller room where one can sample rare whiskeys with Rabbi David Gerber, a 50/50 raffle, a buffet and open bar. Proceeds from the event on March 15 will benefit the congregation’s L’dor Vador Capital Campaign and Brotherhood programs, and will be in celebration of the congregation’s 175th anniversary. Doors open at 6 p.m., the buffet starts at 6:30 p.m., and gaming will be from 7 to 10 p.m.
The Jewish Endowment Foundation of Louisiana announced it will hold its annual event on March 30 at 11:30 a.m. at the Higgins HoAnnouncing Our New Substack!
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MSJE gets major gift to name the Chapman Family Research Center
Museum expansion opened in November
In November, the Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience in New Orleans cut the ribbon to open a major expansion. Now, that expansion has a new name, thanks to a major gift.
The naming is the result of a $1.25 million gift from Dave and Amy Chapman Fulton, and honors Amy Chapman’s Southern Jewish ancestors.
The Chapman Family Research Center is located on the museum’s third floor and is a center to give scholars, historians, and people seeking to research their Southern Jewish roots a new home for exploration and discovery.
The center includes spaces devoted to artifact conservation and digitization, a secure vault to hold the museum’s growing archival collection, an oral history and distance learning studio, and a reading room and reference library, where center staff have already begun offering genealogy and artifact preservation workshops.
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“While I was mostly inspired by my dad for his love of family and passion for tracing our family tree,” she said, “our gift is meant to honor the entire Chapman family — my Bubby (Mollie) and Zadie (Nathan), who immigrated from Russia in the early 1900s, and my dad (Norman) and his four brothers (Jake, Harold, Milton, and Julius) who all grew up in Shreveport, La. My cousins and I would not be the people we are today without the example they set with their love of family and close ties to Judaism.”
“Since we opened in 2021, countless people have asked us to help them learn more about their Southern Jewish history,” said Museum Executive Director Kenneth Hoffman. “The Chapman Family Research Center is now an important part of the Museum’s mission to expand their understanding of what it can mean to be a Southerner, a Southern Jew, and ultimately, an American.”
Along with the gift from the Fultons, the museum received financial support from people across the South, particularly the leadership giving of the Perlin Family Foundation, of Fairfax Station, Va., the Ben May Charitable Trust, of Mobile, Joanne B. Fried, of Metairie, and Dr. Ivan Sherman, of New Orleans.
The Museum will host a naming ceremony recognizing the Fultons and
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“Putting You First since 2009”
Crye-Leike - Oxford 1310 University Ave. Oxford MS 38655
Direct 662.401.4632
Office 662.234.5344 polinawrealtor@gmail.com https://oxford.crye-leike.com/
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The Chapman family in Shreveport, appx. 1935
Polina Schlafer Wheeler, REALTOR
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ONE STOP KOSHER FOOD SHOPPING
Dine
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their support for the Chapman Family Research Center at a date to be announced.
Dave Fulton, a native of Eugene, Oregon, received his Ph.D. in mathematical statistics from the University of Connecticut, in 1970. During his academic career, he performed professionally with the Hartford Symphony Orchestra as a violinist. He then founded the Department of Computer Science at Bowling Green State University, serving as its professor and chairman for 10 years. While there, he co-founded Fox Software, which became internationally known for its database management application, FoxPro. Following the sale of Fox Software to Microsoft in 1992, Dave served as Microsoft’s Vice President for Database Products until his retirement in 1994.
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Born and raised in Baton Rouge, Amy graduated from Bowling Green in 1979 with a degree in computer science, and took a job at Dacor, Dave’s software consulting firm, where she worked several years developing database software.
While she worked there, Amy and Dave married and she would bring their children to the office. When Microsoft purchased Fox, she continued as a software engineer. They retired in 1994.
After retiring, they assembled one of the world’s premier collections of stringed instruments, and Dave has played string quartets with three Seattle Symphony members weekly for 16 years. As part of the collecting process, they became friends with many leading violinists, including Isaac Stern, Itzhak Perlman and James Ehnes.
With Amy’s help, he also produced documentary films, including “Homage” and “Violin Masters: Two Gentlemen of Cremona.”
In 2018, they donated their instrument collection to the David and Amy Fulton Foundation, which uses proceeds from their sale to help numerous charitable organizations, with an emphasis on musical causes, medical research and Jewish organizations.
Southern Jewish Historical Society conference announced for New Orleans
The Southern Jewish Historical Society will hold its annual conference in New Orleans this October.
The 49th annual event, held in Louisville this past year, will be from Oct. 17 to 19, in partnership with Tulane University’s Stuart and Suzanne Grant Center for the American Jewish Experience. The conference will take place at the two historic synagogues along St. Charles Avenue: Touro Synagogue on Friday and Sunday, and Temple Sinai on Saturday, along with activities at the Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience.
Touro Synagogue, which is closing in on its 200th anniversary, is the oldest Jewish congregation outside the original 13 colonies.
The conference, which will be themed “New Orleans: Tradition, Resilience and Reinvention,” will also mark the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.
Conferences generally include a Jewish history tour of the host city, that is being planned for Oct. 16.
Requests for proposed papers, panels and roundtables have gone out, with an April 1 deadline. Graduate students, independent scholars, fiction writers, and artists are encouraged to apply. Recommended topics include explorations of the Jewish history of New Orleans and broader themes of Southern Jewish life illustrated by the city.
More information about the conference will be announced soon. The society will celebrate its 50th anniversary in Atlanta in 2026.
David and Amy Fulton
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Two Israelis among the injured in Nola New Year’s Day terror attack
From JNS and SJL reports
In an interview, Israeli Hagai Levin described the impact of the injuries sustained by his son Adi, a member of the IDF Armored Corps, during the New Year’s Day attack in New Orleans by an ISIS-inspired terrorist who murdered 14 people and wounded 57 others. The terrorist also died.
“His state fluctuates, but I’m optimistic. I’ll bring my son home. His life will change — he’ll have metal rods in his arms and legs, an open head wound and part of his skull is missing,” Hagai said. The interview was two weeks after the attack.
“There are still injuries we’ll fully understand only in a month when we begin the head rehabilitation process. But he’ll return to us, and for that, we’re moving our home from the Golan Heights to Tel Aviv to be closer to Tel HaShomer Hospital [Sheba Medical Center in Ramat Gan].”
Adi remained bedridden, as does his friend and fellow IDF soldier Y. (who chooses to remain anonymous out of safety concerns). “I miss everyone terribly and am deeply grateful to the Jewish community here for their support,” Y. said. Both Israelis are 23.
The pair’s visit to New Orleans was part of a planned three-month road trip that took them from Nebraska to Los Angeles and then on to Texas and Louisiana, after two tours of reserve duty in Gaza and one in Lebanon. They did not make it to their planned destination of Florida.
Having seen the security camera video of the attack, Hagai said that the vehicle driven by Shamsud-Din Jabbar “hit Adi head-on, crushing his legs and head, dragging him along the road, and pushing his friend to the side.”
Jabbar, who lived in the Houston area, drove a pickup truck around barricades on Bourbon Street at Canal around 3:15 a.m., plowing into crowds on Bourbon Street, which is a pedestrian area at that time of night.
“After hitting the crowd, he exited the vehicle and fired upon local law enforcement. Law enforcement returned fire, and the subject was pronounced deceased at the scene,” the FBI stated. “Two law enforcement officers were injured and transported to a local hospital.”
Among those killed was Kareem Badawi, a freshman at the University of Alabama, who was Muslim and from Baton Rouge.
An ISIS flag was flying from the truck, and investigators found weapons and improvised explosive devices in the vehicle.
Jabbar also planted two bombs using the
powerful explosive RDX, but due to his inexperience in building a bomb, they failed to detonate. Experts said that if they had gone off, shrapnel could have been sprayed for hundreds of yards, and potential fatalities would have been in the hundreds. RDX is often used by terrorists in the Middle East, but is much more rare in the U.S.
On Jan. 2, Rabbi Levi Partouche, a chaplain at New Orleans hospitals, posted that “I spent the latter part of the night in the hospital, with families and individuals, including Israelis who were injured in the attack. Together, amidst pain and uncertainty, we lit the last candle of Chanukah. In that small flame, we found a glimmer of strength—a reminder that even in the darkest moments, light can persevere.”
At first following the attack, Adi was listed as missing, until the local Chabad located him at the hospital and identified him through his credit cards. His phone and passport are still missing. The Jewish community also arranged for an apartment near the hospital for family members.
According to Rabbi Mendel Rivkin from Chabad of Louisiana, Chabad and the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans are partnering to assist the Israelis and their families, including fundraising for their needs. “Food is brought to the hospital several times a day. Streams of people from the Jewish community visit the patients and their families. Visitation rotation has been set up and the support has been amazing.”
Chabad in Metairie held a blood drive to help those injured in the attack, and the drive is dedicated in honor of the two Israelis.
While praising the hospital as operating at an “incredible standard” and saying that “we are receiving exceptional care,” Hagai said that “despite their travel insurance, a single day of hospitalization here costs roughly the equivalent of the entire annual budget of Israel’s healthcare system combined. The expenses will exceed a million dollars.
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and a police officer at a blocked off street, a block from Bourbon Street in New Orleans after an ISIS supporter killed 14 people and wounded at least 35 others early on Jan. 1, 2025.
“We are facing a long recovery ahead. He’s spent two weeks in the emergency room and will need several months in rehabilitation with complex surgeries. We won’t return to Israel before April.” Hagai said.
The family hopes Adi and Y. will be classified as victims of a terror attack, opening up resources from the Israeli government.
In the interview with Ynet, Hagai said Adi has lapses of concentration and often falls into deep sleep, but he surprised him a couple days earlier by asking “how did he do?” It turned out Adi was referring to Israeli NBA
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Photo by Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images.
National Guardsmen
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player Deni Avdija, whose Portland Trail Blazers had defeated the New Orleans Pelicans in New Orleans on Jan. 8, 119-100. For the record, Avdija had 26 points in just 27 minutes to lead all scorers, with six rebounds and two assists.
In remarks to Ynet, Israeli Consul to the Southwest United States Elad Shoshan linked the attack to the extreme anti-Israel rhetoric that has been seen in demonstrations throughout the world, including in New Orleans, and in Houston, where the attacker is from. “The rhetoric of a ‘global intifada’ has grown more extreme, words turned into actions and those actions evolved into acts of terror targeting innocent people—precisely like the attack in New Orleans.”
Shoshan visited shortly after the attack. He said “I am truly inspired and proud of how the local Jewish community in New Orleans has come together in response to the recent tragedy. They have shown incredible support and kindness, offering help, resources and companionship to make sure that the victims and their families don’t feel alone during this tough time.”
“In moments of deep sorrow, the Jewish community truly stands together and cares for one another,” he added. “The consulate is in continuous communication with local and federal authorities, as well as the families of the victims, to ensure all necessary assistance is provided.”
Yaakov Selevan, deputy governor of the Golan Regional Council, sent a video message to New Orleans saying they were “shocked and devastated by the horrible, murderous terror attack” on New Year’s Day. “This is not just an attack on our joint values of freedom and democracy, but also we feel a blood connection” since Adi is from that area.
Selevan thanked the New Orleans community for “embracing our wounded resident, and we pray for the full recovery of all of the wounded.”
His region has suffered over 2,000 drone and missile attacks from Lebanon, Syria, Iran and Iraq in the past few months.
Masjid Bilal, the local Houston mosque near the home of Jabbar, posted on its social media, “If anyone is contacted by the media, it is very important that you do not respond. If approached by the FBI and a response is necessary, please refer to CAIR and ISGH. It is crucial that we stay united at this time as we condemn these terrible acts. Please stay safe.” (JNS sought comment from the mosque. ISGH appears to be a reference to the Islamic Society Greater Houston.)
The Middle East Media Research Institute osted a video of Eiad Soudan, Imam of Masjid Bilal, at a November 2023 youth committee program at the Islamic Center of Greater Houston.
Referring to Jews as “Israelites,” he said that they “like to take control of the economy. Everywhere they go, whatever is the rule, as long as they get to the goal, the means don’t matter.”
He asserted that “Hitler hated the Israelites so bad because of the economy thing, they were in control of the economy, but not only that, they used to consider them a lower level of citizens.” But otherwise, he said, there was nothing unique about the Jews under Nazi rule. “Those who say that only the Israelites paid the price [in WWII] – everybody paid the price, they say thousands of Muslims were killed.”
South Florida Friends
Among the injured was a Jewish student from south Florida. Steele Idelson, 19, was visiting New Orleans with her friend, Elle Eisele, a student at the University of Georgia. The teens played soccer together at Canterbury School in Fort Meyers, Fla., where they were among the first middle school students to play for the varsity team, and both would become team captains.
Idelson is the granddaughter of former Lee and Charlotte Counties Jewish Federation President Charles Idelson. On Jan. 5, he posted a photo of his granddaughter reunited with her friend, holding hands in adjoining beds in the hospital.
Idelson attends San Diego State University.
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““I can’t be more pleased with the professionalism Bridget Sikora displayed throughout the process of selling our house. She was proactive from the beginning with a fabulous marketing plan. She was supportive and motivating during the process. Her effort and willingness to go above and beyond with numerous open houses and agent open houses showed her commitment to us as clients. She remained accessible at all times with simple questions and to address our concerns. She provided us with resources needed to ensure our house was ready for the market. I would recommend her without any reservation. She will go all out to sell your home and find a new one to meet your needs.”
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Opera Birmingham to perform “The Diary of Anne Frank”
By Lee J. Green
The beloved self-portrait of a young Jewish girl and her unending hope for freedom during the Holocaust will be presented in operatic form as Opera Birmingham brings “The Diary of Anne Frank” to the Alabama School of Fine Arts Dorothy Jemison Day Theatre on April 5 and 6, in its Southeast premier.
Russian composer Grigory Frid created the opera in 1968, based on the text of Anne Frank’s original diary, written between 1942 and 1944 while hiding from the Nazis in Amsterdam. The opera’s music director, Lester Seigel, said he understands the significance of project and the lessons of the Holocaust that must still be taught today.
“The story of Anne Frank is tragic, but within her words there is much humor, beauty and innocence,” said Seigel, who was a music director at Birmingham-Southern College before retiring last May. “The music enhances the story and makes it more dramatic.”
Seigel has also been the organist and choirmaster at Canterbury United Methodist Church since 1989, and in the 1980s and 1990s was music director and organist at Temple Emanu-El.
Soprano Kathleen Farrar Buccleugh. who is from Huntsville, plays Anne Frank, backed by a group of chamber musicians from the Alabama Symphony Orchestra.
“It’s called a mono-drama opera,” said Seigel. “We see, hear and feel everything through Anne’s perspective. It’s a tour-de-force and shows the power opera has in telling the story.”
Opera Birmingham Executive Director Lynne Hutton the concert is part of their “Birmingham Speaks – Where Art and Life Intersect” series, featuring performances and community conversations that reflect part of Birmingham’s diverse community.
“We want to highlight communities working together to improve Birmingham,” said Hutton. “Birmingham is home to the state’s largest Jewish community. Jewish leaders joined with black clergy and leaders in the 1950s and 1960s in the fight for racial justice.”
Hutton said they are in discussion with the Alabama Holocaust Education Center, the Levite Jewish Community Center and the Birmingham Jewish Federation to develop a series of conversations about the history and lessons of the Holocaust.
“We want to have some events prior to engage the communities, and we’ll have a talkback following every performance,” she said.
Seigel has directed the music for several other Opera Birmingham productions, including most recently “The Marriage of Figaro” by Mozart. But he said he has never been more excited to lead the music for a production. “This is a story that is so important to me and my family,” said Seigel. “I’m so lucky that I get to do what I love every day and be a part of something that is so impactful.”
Among our recent stories on sjlmag.com:
Texas-style kosher BBQ is hot in New York?
Tennessee man in Goyim Defense League arrested after trying to get into Nashville JCC in an Orthodox rabbi disguise Nashville school shooter had antisemitic manifesto
Celebrating the release of a North Carolina native held hostage in Gaza
Protestors try to disrupt menorah lighting ceremony in Little Rock
Dealing with the weaponization of university conduct officers against Zionist students at Tulane
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Endowment Distributions
Zucker Jewish Community Day School Custodial Fund
Howard and Susan Green Jewish Community Day School
Permanent Charitable Fund
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Photo by Sophia Germer | The Times-Picayune
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294
DONORS
(19% were new donors)
$277,954
$1853
$27,746
BOARD GIFTS (up 17% over last year)
AVERAGE GIFT SIZE (up 51% over last year)
$433,000
Raised during GIVENOLA
#39 out of a total of 1,025 organizations participating in GiveNOLA
#3 out of 32 Jefferson Parish organizations categorized under education. In this category, we also ranked #2 for unique donors (123)
#10 out of 229 organizations in all parishes categorized under education
THE ANNUAL CAMPAIGN FUNDRAISER, a Jazz Brunch honoring Vivian and Richard Cahn.
The following categories played a significant role in JCDS achieving its highest revenue total in our organization's history, as is appropriate for our record growth.
Annual Campaign Efforts | Individual donors (spreading from our own community across the country) support the Day School and its mission throughout the year, including the Annual Event, GiveNOLA, and general donations.
Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans | Support includes monthly allocations and targeted grant funding. Endowment | Distributions from the Charles Zucker Fund and the Susan and Howard Green Fund support school operations and scholarship funds for those who otherwise would not be able to attend JCDS Designated Funds | JCDS receives annual draws from several funds administered by the Jewish Endowment Foundation of Louisiana.
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Grants | Jewish Community Day School receives grant monies from several sources.
Tuition | Our share of revenue coming from tuition continues to grow, which is a sign of fiscal health. Board Contributions | Especially significant is the way in which our board members continue to increase their contributions
Photo by Sophia Germer | The Times-Picayune
To be a leader, you do not need a crown or robes of office All you need to do is to write your chapter in the story, do deeds that heal some of the pain of this world, and act so that others become a little better for having known you. Live so that, through you, our ancient covenant with God is renewed in the only way that matters: in life
During the most difficult of times, much of what gives us hope and propels us forward is the unity of the Jewish community We are lucky enough in New Orleans to have strong leaders who reach across organizations and draw disparate groups together, and few such leaders are as ubiquitous as Vivian and Richard Cahn We are very appreciative that Richard and Vivan allowed us to honor them at this year’s Jazz Brunch supporting the JCDS Annual Campaign on April 7.
Whenever Jews celebrate in New Orleans, the Cahns are there When Jews face challenges and draw together for strength, the Cahns are there They are friends to so many of us, and their support for Jewish Community Day School has been enriching our students’ experience for many years. Not only do they support the school, but they push us to venture out and connect with the broader Jewish community. Given the opportunity to honor Richard and Vivian’s commitment, support came from all corners of the community as we gathered for an uplifting brunch at the Higgins Hotel of the National World War II Museum We are incredibly grateful for the difference Vivian and Richard have made in the lives of our students, as well as the difference they will continue to make in the future
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The Cahns have made possible many collaborative programs between JCDS and Slater Torah Academy, and Children’s Choice Week is a major highlight of the school year. During this magical week, both campuses are offered a kaleidoscope of experiences on myriad topics taught by visiting instructors who are experts in their field. Students shape clay pots in Ceramics, explore the magic of chemistry in Mad Science, perfect their cartwheels in Gymnastics, and so much more! The week culminates with a celebratory lunch uniting the two schools We are deeply grateful to Vivian and Richard Cahn for funding these week-long enrichment courses in our community
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DR. BRAD PHILIPSON
Oscar J Tolmas Head of School
The purpose of this annual letter is to celebrate our accomplishments. Reflections upon this school year, inclusive of its many joys and achievement, nevertheless dwell in the shadow of the tragic events of October 7th, the subsequent war, and our continued hope for the return of hostages In these difficult times, the role of Jewish day schools in perpetuating Jewish continuity is more important than ever
Transgenerational or intergenerational trauma refers to the effects of a traumatic event
occurring before one’s birth. The importance, we, as Jews, place on Jewish continuity is, at least in part, perpetuated by the stories of the Shoah, of pogroms that took place before we were born, and of thousands of years of existential threats to the Jewish people. Because so many have told us we don’t have a right to exist, the continuity of our culture, beliefs, and observances takes on urgency It is something that could so easily be lost were we to take it for granted
Not all feel that urgency. In the eyes of many, the term Jew refers to someone's religious beliefs rather than their peoplehood. The events giving rise to our intergenerational trauma, however, present evidence to the contrary. Jewishness isn’t merely something we believe; it is who we are The victims of October 7th weren’t killed, brutalized, and taken hostage for their beliefs They were targeted for being Jews In a matter of hours, our transgenerational trauma was a mere foundation upon which a fresh trauma was built, one that will yet haunt even those who had not been born on October 7, 2023.
There was and continues to be so much darkness surrounding those terrorist attacks and the subsequent war The lines between humanitarianism and anti-semitism have been inexplicably blurred Never in my career would I have expected to have to make decisions about field trips that take into account the likelihood of encountering antisemitic rhetoric.
Jewish day school education is at the center of that continuity, teaching Jewish children and the children of families choosing to stand with us about what it means to be Jewish, about the joys and the meaningfulness of daily Jewish existence.
And yet we persevere. Rather than shrink from our Jewishness, we celebrate it We double down on our commitment to Jewish continuity, because that is what the survival of our peoplehood requires We come together to mourn the lives lost and pray for the safe return of those who are still hostages. For those of us born after the Shoah, our response to the threats against Jewish continuity are more important than they have ever been before Jewish day school education is at the center of that continuity, teaching Jewish children and the children of families choosing to stand with us about what it means to be Jewish, about the joys and the meaningfulness of daily Jewish existence. We teach them to think critically about the world and about Jewishness because that, too, is part of who we are as Jews
Your support of our school has never been more meaningful or more impactful. Thank you for commitment to Jewish continuity and for your shared belief in the bright light that our students emanate out during very dark times
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SUSAN GREEN
Board Chair
As I write my last contribution to the JCDS Annual Report, I am given pause to reflect on what it has meant to me and the impact on my life and our community Now, more than ever, JCDS and day schools across the world are essential not only to Jewish continuity, but to affirming what our Jewish identity means We are not merely a people of shared beliefs, but a people of shared history, a history rich with accomplishments, customs, and celebrations. Judaism is not something we do, but who we are, and the sanctity of that legacy can be too easily lost in a turbulent world. Our school, led by Dr. Brad Philipson and an impressive team of teachers, staff, and parents, prepares our students for a life of meaning and purpose, but it also cultivates future Jewish leaders. JCDS instills in our students a sense of global citizenship, encouraging them to be informed, compassionate, and stewards of Israel and the world They carry with them the joyful duty of Jewish continuity, and in so doing, they are better prepared to navigate the world writ large By supporting JCDS, we become part of something much bigger than we could ever dream of: a strong, vibrant community day school from which will emanate a new generation of achievement. Support our school and be rewarded with a lifetime of nachas.
T O L M A S S C H O L A R S P R O G R A M
A special thank you this summer goes to the Oscar J. Tolmas Charitable Trust, whose recent gift will sponsor six need-based tuition assistance packages to JCDS students in 2024-2025, establishing a cohort of Tolmas Scholars here at JCDS This program is the product of the thoughtfulness of the leaders of the Trust, Vincent Giardina and Lisa Romano, who, after listening thoughtfully to the needs of the School and the importance of financial sustainability, honed in on the most impactful way to support the JCDS mission. We are very lucky to be the beneficiaries of the Oscar J. Tolmas Charitable Trust’s generosity and the insight of its Trustees.
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D R B R A D P H I L I P S O N
R A B B I M I C H A E L C O H E N
T I F F A N Y C O T L A R
T A Y L O R C O O K E
J E S S I E D O W S A K U L
L A U R E N G E R B E R
L A U R E N G I S C L A I R
J A N N A J A C K S O N
A V E R Y L O S S
Oscar J Tolmas Head of School School Rabbi
Director of Advancement
Green Preschool Assistant Administrator
Director of Admissions
Interim Director of Admissions
Music Teacher/Administrative Support
Director of Business & Operations
Green Preschool Director
Rimonim Teacher
Perachim Teacher
Devorim Teacher
Perachim Teacher
S A R A M O U J I R
Devorim Teacher
S A B R I N A R O U B I O N
A M A N D A R U H L M A N
T A N Y A T R A N C H I N A
L I Z A M O S S
3rd & 4th Grade Teacher
P A U L A A P F F E L M A L I A B A T I S T E
B R I T T A N Y
1st & 2nd Grade Teacher
Science Teacher
PK/K Assistant Teacher Torah Study
Librarian
Kindergarten Teacher
H E M D A H O C H M A N
P J J O N E S
G
Hebrew & Jewish Studies Teacher
Physical Education Teacher
5th & 6th Grade Teacher
Prekindergarten Teacher Torah Study
Librarian Emeritus
3rd & 4th Grade Teacher
Art, Hebrew, & Jewish Studies Teacher
School Counselor
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Nitzanim Teacher
Rimonim Teacher
Nitzanim Teacher
Photo
M E E T O U R T E A M
E X E C U T I V E C O M M I T T E E
S U S A N G R E E N
L I S A K A T Z
Board Chair
Secretary
A D A M M I L L E R
C A R O L E N E F F
G A B E F E L D M A N
Treasurer
Immediate Past President
M I C H A E L W A S S E R M A N
M A X Z W A I N
D R B R A D P H I L I P S O N
Oscar J Tolmas Head of School (ex officio)
P A S T P R E S I D E N T S
G E O R G E F U H R M A N
E D W A R D G O T H A R D , Z " L
H U G O K A H N
L I S K A H N
M A R I L Y N K U L L M A N
D A S H K A R O T H L E H M A N N
R A B B I B O B L O E W Y
C A R O L E N E F F
K A R E N R E M E R
C H A R L E S S T E R N
M I C H A E L W A S S E R M A N
T R U S T E E S
M I C H E L E A L L E N - H A R T
A N G E L A B E E R M A N
B A R R I B R O N S T O N
L A R A C R I G G E R
L A U R A F U H R M A N
L A U R E N G E R B E R
H O W A R D G R E E N
A N N H A R R I S
W I L L I A M H E S S
H U G O K A H N
L I S K A H N
B E N K A R P
A N D R E A L E S T E L L E
C A R O L N E W M A N
W I L L I A M N O R M A N
K A R E N W R E M E R
D A S H K A R O T H L E H M A N N
M A D I L Y N S A M U E L S
L A U R I E S T E R B C O W
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T H E S H I N I N G S T A R O F J C D S
When JCDS opened its doors as New Orleans Jewish Day School in 1996, an immediate shining star on the faculty was a young woman from Texas named Judy Fried. While she took a few years off when her two children were young, Judy has been with us ever since She sent her children to the school, and she and her husband David have been constants at every fundraiser we’ve held To watch her teach is to watch a master artist at work, her warm demeanor belying a calculating purposefulness in every action and word. Children learn numeracy, patterns, and phonics joyfully, with play and encouragement integrated into every activity She is a supportive colleague and a tireless worker We will greatly miss Judy in her retirement, but we are incredibly grateful for her lifetime of dedication and service to JCDS and her heart of gold
A Heart of Gold plaque campaign honoring our beloved Kindergarten teacher Mrs. Judy Fried raised well over our $5,000 goal. Over sixty families will be included on our permanent plaque which will be hung in the school this fall.
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S I M C H A S
We are shepping nachas for our JCDS alums!
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Josh and Anne Stein and daughter Georgia welcomed Anderson in December 2023
Jordan Miller and Benjamin Smith are engaged to be married in October 2024
Ashley (Sterbcow) Gulick and Jonathan Gulick welcomed son Brooks in June 2024
Nick and Taylor May welcomed son Theo in September 2023
Ezra Remer and Maeve Holler are engaged with plans to marry after Ezra completes graduate school!
Adam Goldberg and Rachel Hirschhorn are engaged to be married in May 2025
Mica (Loewy) & Jasjit Singh, and daughter Eden welcomed Noa in May 2024
Eli Sterbcow and Dr Aryn Jackson Sterbcow were Married in January 27, 2024
H O U S T O N S C I E N C E T R I P
In May, JCDS fifth and sixth grade traveled to the Houston Space Center in culmination of their studies of the Solar System. Upon arrival on Wednesday, they joined students at Houston’s Beth Yeshurun Day School (BYDS) to play games, have popsicles, and tour the school. After a kosher dinner, bowling, and a night at the hotel, they returned to Beth Yshurun for a Tefilah service in the chapel of the world’s largest Conservative synagogue before heading to NASA and the Houston Space Center.
They started with a tram tour of Rocket Park, which holds the Saturn V from the Apollo program, followed by a private tour of the Spaceship Gallery, where they viewed and learned about both authentic and replicated spacecrafts. Students then participated in a classroom STEM activity, where they built and launched their own rockets.
The JCDS group ended the visit with a short film that featured first-hand accounts of astronauts They talked about how incredible it is to see earth from space, all the vivid colors, and the views They also touched on the idea that, from space, there are no borders Instead of countries fighting and political divisiveness and hostility, there's just one community: humankind Lastly, the astronauts discussed how fragile earth seems from afar. It's our home, and we need to take care of it.
While a weather event cut off evening plans and a planned visit to the Judaica museum at Beth Yeshurun the next morning, the trip was more than worthwhile. The students learned a great deal not only from the museum, but about their own independence and their ability to connect with Jewish kids just like them. It was a resounding success thanks to funding from the Jewish Endowment Foundation (JEF).
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E X P A N D E D S C I E N C E P R O G R A M
As JCDS continues to grow and evolve, an important step forward this year was creating a dedicated full-time science teaching position, as well as adopting a formal (as opposed to selfcreated) science curriculum. With the help of funding from the Jewish Endowment Foundation, this year we implemented PhD Science in grades PK through fifth and Amplify Science in sixth grade Both are classified as Tier I science curricula by the Louisiana Department of Education To provide the needed lab materials, we partnered with the STEM Library, who made weekly delivery of whatever materials we needed for the accompanying handson learning. The full-time science teaching role was fulfilled by Malia Batiste, who has earned degrees from Xavier University and Touro University. Malia previously taught at Harlem Children’s Village while earning her Masters. Thank you JEF, for your support of this expanded program!
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C A L E N D A R H I G H L I G H T S
JCDS PK-6 visisted the home of Hugo and Lis Kahn for the Tashlich ceremony. Traditionally, people throw bread or rocks into a natural body of water as a symbol of throwing away our sins of the past year, but JCDS students use dissolvable paper as a more wildlife friendly alternative
JCDS students channeled all their love for Israel into colorful and unique works of art! The final product of "Art from the Heart," an Israel solidarity program sponsored by the Parents Association, was revealed at the Chanukah Extravaganza and then installed permanently in the school cafeteria
JCDS families braved the chilly temperatures to attend the third annual Celebration of the Trees at Longue Vue Gardens. Participants measured tree growth, planted a camellia bush, explored the Discovery Garden to complete a scavenger hunt, planted parsley, created flower crowns, and more!
Alan Newman, AI Software Extraordinaire and JCDS Dad, captivated Ms. Liz's third and fourth graders with a discussion about the rapid advancements made in the field of artificial intelligence over the past decade. This topic sparked further discussion of advantages and even some risks associated with AI
Students visited the Museum of Southern Jewish Experience for a private tour of the museum's core exhibitions as well as an on-site classroom activity exploring the museum's current exhibit on the Rosenwald Schools After their visit, fifth and sixth graders wrote letters to Congressperson Troy Carter detailing why they support the campaign to create a Rosenwald Schools National Park
In observance of Martin Luther King Jr Day, members of the JCDS community met at City Park's Magnolia Playground Everyone joined in to pick up trash in the park, helping to make the world a little better for those with whom we share it.
Marlene Trestman, author of Most Fortunate Unfortunates: The Jewish Orphans’ Home of New Orleans (LSU Press) spoke to students about the history of the Jewish Children's Home and its legacy in New Orleans. After the program, Marlene joined students in the cafeteria, where Army Lt Col Carol Berman led the students through a "Missing Soldier Table" ceremony in honor of Veterans Day
JCDS students were so proud to see IDF soldiers holding their drawings and notes of support sent all the way from Metairie, LA. Items like these remind the brave soldiers what they are fighting for Am Y'Israel Chai!
Structural Engineer NASA Ninoshka Friedman led an engaging educational program about this year’s solar eclipse. The program was covered by Fox 8, WDSU (NBC), and WGNO (ABC)!
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In February, Israeli Educator Elhanan Brown visited JCDS to speak to students about the war in Israel and about achdut (unity). Elhanan shared examples of ways in which Israelis are uniting and supporting one another and talked about ways in which we can support each other and the Jewish community here in the United States
Over 200 guests attended the 2023 JCDS Annual Chanukah Extravaganza, Schmanukah! Through modern renditions of Broadway classics, students learned the true meaning of Chanukah.
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The fifth and sixth graders had an amazing opportunity to hear a book talk by author Ruth Behar at the New Orleans Book Festival at Tulane Dr Behar inspired the students to write down their own stories and to listen to their elders, emphasizing the value of connecting to family and cultural history
Green Preschoolers had a BEE-autiful Kabbalat Shabbat in the shade of the sukkah where they sang songs, blew the shofar, and got to sample sweet treats like apples and honey, grape juice, and round challah This joyful celebration was one of Green Preschool’s monthly themedShabbats
JCDS celebrated Yom Ha’atzmaut 2024 with an IDF theme Students did tons of activities and ended the special day with an Israeli song and dance party.
The Green Preschool community gathered to celebrate Chanukah at the inaugural Festival of Lights sponsored by Susan and Howard Green Children lit the menorah, sang songs, then ran around an illuminated Bart Field (made possible by thousands of multicolored lights) with flashlights, glow sticks, and headlamps The magical activities included enjoying beignets and hot cocoa!
Sixth graders joined students from several other Jewish day schools for our annual Civil Rights trip to Selma, Birmingham, and Montgomery, Alabama The transformative experience included The Civil Rights Memorial Center in Montgomery
Moon Fest has become a tradition that Green Preschoolers (and their teachers!) look forward to each year, and the 2024 event, sponsored by Tracy and George Loss, did not disappoint. Children were dazzled by such out-of-this-world activities as galactic playdough, a rocket ship building launch pad, sensational sensory bins, and Big Dipper bubbles Green Preschoolers rocked out to live music, enjoyed snoballs, and watched rocket launch videos with real NASA scientists.
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With special thanks to friends from Tulane Hillel, JCDS now proudly features a gorgeous sukkah designed by the Tulane School of Architecture
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This year’s JCDS Talent Show included singers, dancers, piano and ukelele players, magic, comedy, and even a karate act! Students brought down the house with the finale song, "Am Y'Israel Chai."
Following the Talent Show, students--along with many guests--danced in their costumes to jazz tunes from Greg Hicks and Friends during the annual Purim Parade
In Jewish Studies, students produced a movie dramatizing a trial of characters from The Garden of Eden. Ultimately, Eve was convicted of two counts; eating from the forbidden fruit and sharing contraband Interestingly, the snake was acquitted of all charges Someone had a great defense attorney
Students were thrilled to have Israeli artist Hanoch Piven visit JCDS Children listened intently to Piven discuss his history and his process in creating his world-reknowned art. Students then used what they learned to create their own self-portraits while Piven went from room to room, offering advice.
The community came together to celebrate all things ROYGBIV! Keshet (the Hebrew word for rainbow) featured activities led by Longue Vue Gardens and Mess Arts In lieu of an admission fee, attendees brought glass items to be recycled by local organization Glass Half Full Sponsors included the JCDS Parents Association, PJ Library, and Prizmah.
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WITH DEEPEST GRATITUDE
Larry Brook, Editor at Southern Jewish Life Magazine
Vivian and Richard Cahn
The Franco Family
Susan and Howard Green
Tracy & George Loss
Jewish Community Center of Metairie
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JCDS Board and Faculty
Jewish Endowment Foundation of Louisiana
Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans
Lis and Hugo Kahn
Oscar J Tolmas Charitable Trust
Our Community Rabbis
Parents' Association President Lauren Gerber, Parents Association Vice-President (Green Preschool) Cece Schneider-McBride and the entire JCDS Parents Association
S U P P O R T
A thriving Jewish day school is key to a vibrant Jewish community. Please support JCDS with a tax-deductible charitable gift.
STOCK SALE | Contact Morgan Stanley at (504)587-9645
TEXT YOUR GIFT | Simply text one of the following to (504)732-9722
General Donation | In Memory/In Honor | Annual Campaign Event BY PHONE | Call us at JCDS! Contact Tiffany Cotlar (Director of Advancement): (504)887.4091
IN-PERSON | Stop by! We would love to thank you in person
VENMO | @JCDS-School
SCAN QR CODE FOR ONLINE GIVING
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JCDS Mission Statement
The mission of Jewish Community Day School (JCDS) is to instill a love of learning invigorated by academic excellence JCDS is grounded in Jewish tradition, fostering spirituality (emunah), dedication to repair our world (tikkun olam), and commitment to the entire Jewish people (k’lal Yisrael) JCDS is a nurturing school where families of all backgrounds are welcomed and children are prepared to be engaged compassionate leaders
At JCDS we ensure that:
Students become inquiring, capable youth who are passionate lifelong learners
Teachers are dedicated to best educational practices
Families are engaged in their children’s academic achievement and holistic development. Ethics and morals of our students are nurtured through commitment to Jewish values
Positive connections to the language, land, culture and people of the State of Israel are created
Children are primed for full participation in our global society.
JCDS considers all applicants for employment and admission without regard to race, color, religion, age, gender, sexual orientation, national or ethnic origin, disability, citizenship, or any other protected status
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Registration open for ISJL’s Southern and Jewish conference
The Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life in Jackson has opened registration for this year’s Southern and Jewish conference, which will be held June 22 to 24 at the Sheraton in Flowood.
Last year, the Institute broadened the conference focus from educators to anyone with an interest in Southern Judaism. Previously, the conference focused on the standardized Judaic school curriculum the Institute had developed, with participating congregations sending educators.
This year’s conference theme is “To Creativity and Beyond,” exploring how creativity can shape Southern Jewish communities.
According to the Institute, the conference is for clergy, lay leaders, educators, parents, synagogue board members, folks who chose Judaism and/or are raising Jewish children. It draws from across the Institute’s 13-state coverage area for networking opportunities, and attracts national educators as speakers and session leaders.
In the past, the conference programming has been divided into tracks and wildcard sessions. Now, there will be themed learning blocks for a variety of audiences. This year’s themes center on creativity with communication, community building, spirituality, programming , and “beyond the building.” There will also be a “choose your challenge” with a selection of challenging topics.
In addition to the conference, there are new optional opportunities to explore Jackson before and after the conference. On June 21, there will be a Shabbat experience with Rabbi Salem Pearce, the Institute’s director of spirituality. That will be followed by a trip to the Museum of Mississippi History. On the afternoon of June 24, there will be a visit to the Mississippi Civil Rights Museum with Institute staff.
There is no registration fee for the conference, just the cost of room and meals. Early registration for the conference by April 1 is $500 double occupancy, $600 for a single, and additional night options on June 20, 21 or 24 are $162 each.
MSJE steps into time machine for middle school essay contest
If you lived 100 years ago and did a time capsule for your descendants with three items and a letter, what would you say? And if you came back to the present to do a similar time capsule that would go back 100 years, what would you respond?
The Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience in New Orleans is asking those questions to middle school students throughout the South for its annual Middle School Writing Contest.
The contest is open to all students in grades 5 to 8 from Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia. There is a $500 prize for first place, with $250 for second place and $100 for third place. Winning entries will be posyted on the MSJE website.
Submissions will consist of two letters, one from the point of view of a past relative, and one from the student’s current perspective. While the museum recommends doing family tree research and figuring out who would be “sending” the first letter, the submissions are not research papers or summaries of history.
Both letters should have some biographical information and an explanation of the three items showing what the writer values within family or community. Personal examples and experiences are ideal. The two letters combined must be no more than 600 words.
Additional information on the specifications for the submissions is on the MSJE website. The deadline is April 16.
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One of many sample Ten Commandments posters that Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill said is constitutional
Appeals court hears arguments over Louisiana’s Ten Commandments law community
By Andrew Bernard of JNS, and SJL reports
The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals heard arguments in Roake v. Brumley on Jan. 23 over a Louisiana bill mandating the display of the Ten Commandments in the state’s public schools.
The plaintiffs in the case, a group of public school parents represented by the American Civil Liberties Union, argued that the three-judge appeals court panel should uphold an injunction against the bill on the grounds that it violates the religious establishment clause of the First Amendment.
“We have Christians, we have Jews, and they are all—those who chose to bring this case—united in the concern that their children will be coerced,” said Jonathan Youngwood, a lawyer for the plaintiffs. “Many of our clients believe in the Ten Commandments, but they believe it’s their job to teach their children about the Ten Commandments, not the job of the state.
There are three Jewish families among the nine plaintiffs, and among their arguments is that the Ten Commandments version mandated by the law is at odds with the Jewish version, which could confuse Jewish students as to which version is correct, and makes the Christian version de facto established by the state.
In June, Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, a Republican, signed H.B.71 into law. The law made Louisiana the first state to mandate posting the Ten Commandments in all K-12 classrooms, as well as at universities that receive public funding. The display must be poster-sized and be in a “large, easily readable font,” and is to be funded through donations, not through public funds.
The posters are to be accompanied by a four-paragraph explanation of how the Ten Commandments were part of public education for almost three centuries.
In November, the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana agreed with the plaintiffs to place an injunction on the law.
Earlier this month, Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill gave guidance to schools and universities on how to comply with the new law, which was slated to go into effect on Jan. 1. In a news release, she said the law “is plainly constitutional because there are constitutionally sound ways to implement it.”
She calls on schools to display one of four posters, alongside other educational displays, such as the Declaration of Independence, Mayflower
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commandments mandated by H.B.71 is distinctly Protestant, with additional changes to address Catholic sensitivities.
The bill prescribes one specific English translation that divides the Ten Commandments into 12. The version includes “Thou shalt not kill,” a translation popular among Christians, but the original Hebrew references “murder.”
Most of the longer commandments are abridged, though the commandment about honoring parents continues, “that thy days may be long upon the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee.”
The bill’s version “does not match any version or translation found in the Jewish tradition,” the original complaint reads.
“The version of the Ten Commandments mandated in H.B.71 omits key language and context that is included in the version set forth in the Torah,” it states. “For example, it is missing the important message in the Jewish story about God bringing the Israelites out of Egyptian slavery to freedom. It also summarizes other commandments instead of including the text
As such, one of the plaintiffs noted, it takes a sacred foundational document of Judaism and reduces it to a broad statement of civic morality, erasing the Jewish significance.
In the November order, U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana Judge John deGravelles said the families opposing the law had “easily established a likelihood of success” in their case.
At the Jan. 23 hearing, Judge Catharina Haynes said she respects the Ten Commandments, but expressed skepticism as to why they have to be in every classroom in the state. Haynes also remarked that it was clear state representatives had a religious purpose in mind when passing the bill.
During the law’s passage, Representative Dodie Horton, the primary sponsor of H.B.71, said the law would “have a display of God’s law in the classroom for children to see what He says is right and what He says is wrong.”
Rep. Sylvia Taylor stated that “A lot of people, their children, are not attending churches or whatever… So what I’m saying is, we need to do something in the schools to bring people back
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to where they need to be.”
Rep. Roger Wilder, a co-author of the bill, said opponents are “waging a war on Christianity,” and bemoaned that if his wife were a teacher “she would be asked to teach evolution which is in complete contradiction with the theory of creation that we believe out of the Bible.”
The U.S. Supreme Court has made differing rulings about the state displaying the Ten Commandments.
In 1980, the court ruled in Stone v. Graham that a Kentucky law similar to H.B.71 mandating the display of the Ten Commandments in classrooms was unconstitutional because it lacked a “secular legislative purpose” as required by the 1971 ruling in Lemon v. Kurtzman.
In a pair of 2005 cases, the high court reached differing conclusions about the legality of displaying the Ten Commandments, holding that it was allowed if placed in a historical and social context and forbidden if displayed in isolation or for a religious purpose.
According to Becket, a decision in the case is expected by the spring. The judges indicated they understand the need to have a decision soon.
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Coach Pearl keeps focus on No. 1 team, and Israel
By Lee J. Green
Even with his laser focus on coaching the No. 1 NCAA men’s basketball team, Bruce Pearl always takes time to voice his support for Israel and Jewish communities across the South.
Pearl, who last month became the all-time winningest basketball coach on The Plains, spoke on Jan. 20 to the Birmingham Tip-Off Club.
“It’s an honor to be here and to speak on Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday. All that he did was so important in giving every man and woman the chance to live in freedom and equality,” said Pearl, adding that “you don’t think a Jewish coach in Auburn, Alabama doesn’t realize what a great country this is and how much we appreciate those who came before us to give us these opportunities?”
Pearl said he also speaks out in support of Israel and his pride in his Jewishness any chance that he gets. His grandfather escaped the Holocaust at age 11 and “this country welcomed him with open arms. I love my country and my Jewish homeland.”
He said he feels there needs to be more education about the current state of affairs in Gaza
and Israel. “I’ve been to Israel eight times and I’ve been to the Gaza strip. I know the situation over there. Our complete focus and support need to be for the release of every hostage and the eradication of Hamas,” said Pearl.
In the summer of 2022, Pearl took his Tigers “on a trip of a lifetime” to Israel to play some exhibition games and to learn about the history and culture of the land.
“It was such an incredible, moving experience for all of us. It brought us closer as a team.”
Pearl grew up in Boston and played basketball in high school. He was a team manager for the Boston College Golden Eagles under legendary coach Tom Davis, and in the 1981 NCAA tournament, Pearl was asked to take over as the school’s mascot.
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“The student playing the mascot was sick so I took one for the team,” he said. “I’m so passionate about the game and the fans, but I realized perhaps wasn’t suited to be a mascot. I kept accidentally hitting the broadcast mic in the suit and making loud noises during the broadcast. I almost got kicked out of the game.”
Pearl would follow Davis to Stanford and Iowa before earning his first head coaching gig in 1992 at Southern Indiana. He would go on to coach at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and then the University of Tennessee from
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Rabbi Shalom Posner helps Coach Bruce Pearl put on tefillin on the Auburn basketball court
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CJFS CARES Respite Is Growing!
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In 2014 he was named Auburn’s head coach, and in 2019 he took the Tigers to the Final Four. Earlier this season, he became Auburn’s winningest coach of all time and as of press time, his 20-1 Tigers were ranked number one in the nation, with three consecutive weeks as the unanimous top pick.
When asked what’s special about this team and his 2019 Final Four team, Pearl said “when everyone is focused on playing unselfishly and doing anything they can to help the team win, you can achieve great things. We look for players who have strong character and understand the importance of always trying to improve.”
Teamwork and adventure at Space Camp
How do you bring Science, Technology, Engineering and Math subjects to life? You give them hands-on activities and real-world (and off-world) scenarios. That’s the formula for the longest running and largest STEM camp program in the world – Space Camp.
Starting in 1982 at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville, Ala., Space Camp has shown young people how a fascination with space can become a career. The spark of interest in a 10-year-old can ignite a passion to become an engineer, a scientist and even an astronaut. Take Christina Koch, who attended Space Camp five times as a child. She studied electrical engineering and physics and is now set to orbit the moon on the Artemis II flight scheduled for later this year.
Three other STEM programs fall under the Space Camp umbrella: Aviation Challenge, Space Camp Robotics and U.S. Cyber Camp. The programs emphasize teamwork, problem solving and critical thinking skills to engage students. Aviation Challenge began in 1990, applying Top Gun-style training to interest kids in careers in the military and aviation. Space Camp Robotics followed in 2014 to emphasize the engineering and entrepreneurial aspects of space exploration, and U.S. Cyber Camp formed in 2017 with an emphasis on cyber security.
So how do you get kids engaged in STEM subjects in a camp setting? You make it fun. From the get-go, campers are immersed in their activities as members of a team. They make friends, laugh a lot, and experience new things. They learn the importance of leadership and how each person’s performance contributes to the success of their team. They gain confidence and independence.
Those are lessons that apply when they get back to the classroom and wherever life takes them.
For more information on Space Camp and its sister programs, visit rocketcenter.com. 2005 to 2011.
community
Crossing the Bridge
Jewish groups will gather for 60th anniversary of Selma march
Sixty years after a large number of Jewish activists from across the country descended on Selma for the Selma to Montgomery March for civil rights, Jewish groups are planning to gather in the city for the 60th anniversary of Bloody Sunday.
The National Council of Jewish Women and Workers Circle are planning weekend events around the Selma Jubilee, and other Jewish organizations are invited to a late-morning event on March 9 at Mishkan Israel, Selma’s historic synagogue. Specific timing for the events will be announced the week before.
Birmingham’s Temple Beth-El and the Unitarian Universalist Church of Birmingham will also meet up at the Mishkan Israel event. The Jewish Federation of Central Alabama also plans to march.
Noelle Damico, director of social justice for the Workers Circle, said they are bringing a group of young activists to Selma to be trained on history and organizing skills, “to keep fighting some of these very basic freedoms… that are apparently still up for grabs.”
As they have been exploring their history and archives, they found that Workers Circle members had been in Selma in 1965.
During the “year of racial justice reckoning” in 2020, the Workers Circle did a “deep dive” into what it meant for them to fight systemic racism. One important factor was “to be invested over the long haul in building solidarity with groups on the ground working for today’s civil rights and voting rights, and democracy issues.”
They partnered with Black-led organizations on the grassroots level, and in 2021 worked with Black Voters Matter and “we were all getting arrested together in front of the White House.”
In 2022, Workers Circle co-sponsored the annual Selma march, and “each year we have returned.” Damico said they continue to go because it is part of their history, but also because of the current societal challenges. “Selma is an incredible place to learn, to continue to build our connection on the ground” so they can be strengthened nationally.
Rachel Faulkner, NCJW senior director of national campaigns and partnerships, said their trip will “dive into what the relationship between Blacks and Jews looked like during the Civil Rights movement.” She said the story is usually told from the viewpoint of northern activists, and “it’s important for us that the Southern story is told, and that story we know is a bit more complicated.”
They will also explore what it means to be in-
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“Gary became part of the family. When my husband and I first decided that we would put our toe in the real estate waters, I knew the only person I wanted to represent us was Gary. He’s a real gem!” — ST, Metairie
“As first time home buyers, my wife and I were very unfamiliar with the process of purchasing a home. From the moment we met Gary to the day we closed he was great about answering all our questions, walking us through the process and being an advocate for us. I recommend Gary to anyone in the New Orleans area looking to purchase a home.”
— DH, New Orleans
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Gary Lazarus
Buyer/Seller Representation
Investing & Consulting
Cell: 504.382.2603
Office: 504.866.7733
gary@garylazarus.com www.garylazarus.com
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RE/MAX N.O. Properties
8001 Maple St | New Orleans, LA 70118
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Each Office Independently Owned and Operated
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community
volved in social justice today, and when “coalitions are harder for Jews to be in” because of anti-Israel activism by many traditional allies. “What is my place in the movement right now” in the fight for reproductive rights, civil rights, the LBGTQ community, gun violence “all the things we work on across the country,” Faulkner said.
While the Black and Jewish communities are generally thought of as distinct from each other, Faulkner said that as a reminder of how communities intersect, they will have many Jewish women of color in the delegation, including herself. This will “honor the way the communities are already bridged.”
Among other participating groups are the Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life, T’ruah, Keshet, Bend the Arc, the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, Women of Reform Judaism, Mishkan Chicago, the Jewish Women’s Archive and the Jewish Council for Public Affairs.
The Workers Circle delegation will arrive on March 6, with scholars in residence including Lilliane Kshensky Baxter, senior non-violence trainer at the King Center for Non-Violence; Josh Parshall, former director of history at the ISJL; and Anthony Russell, consultant to Workers Circle.
The NCJW visit begins on March 7 with optional visits to civil rights sites in Birmingham, including the new Beth-El Civil Rights Experience. The weekend officially begins with a Shabbat dinner. On March 8, there will be a day trip to Montgomery, with visits to the civil rights museums and sites, along with a visit to Agudath Israel-Etz Ahayem.
The group will then travel to Selma on the morning of March 9 for the event at Mishkan Israel and the Bridge Crossing.
At the 50th anniversary in 2015, Mishkan Israel hosted hundreds at a commemoration that included Susannah Heschel, daughter of Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, a close friend of Martin Luther King Jr. who marched with him in Selma; David Goodman, brother of Andrew Goodman, who was murdered by the Klan in Mississippi in 1964 while working for voting rights; Rabbi Jonah Pesner, director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism; and North Carolina NAACP leader Rev. William Barber.
A surprise guest was Peter Yarrow of Peter, Paul & Mary, who went there specifically to sing “Blowing in the Wind” in that venue.
Three attempts to march
At the start of 1965, Blacks in Dallas County pushed back against public officials who made it almost impossible for Blacks to register to vote. There were numerous demonstrations, but the restrictions remained.
On Feb. 18, a march took place in Marion, but they were attacked by a mob. State troopers shot and killed Jimmie Lee Jackson, leading to daily vigils for him in Selma. A march to Montgomery was proposed to protest his death and call for enforcement of voting rights.
Governor George Wallace then issued a declaration that the march, planned for March 7, “cannot and will not be tolerated” and ordered state troopers to do whatever they needed to prevent it.
After morning services at Brown Chapel on March 7, about 600 marchers lined up behind SCLC’s Hosea Williams and SNCC President John Lewis to head to the Edmund Pettus Bridge over the Alabama River, for the trek along U.S. 80 to Montgomery.
On the county side of the bridge the demonstrators were ordered to turn around, so they knelt as planned. The troopers surged forward, swinging their clubs and firing tear gas and a free-for-all ensued as the troopers chased the demonstrators back through downtown Selma. Roughly 100 of the 600 marchers were injured. The events of “Bloody Sunday” were immediately broadcast worldwide.
A second march, on March 9, drew from around the country, but was postponed by King due to ongoing Federal litigation. The third march, which successfully went from Selma to Montgomery, began on March 21 with 8,000 demonstrators protected by 2,000 troops.
On April 18, a Federal court struck down Selma’s voting registration restrictions. The Voting Rights Act was signed into law on Aug. 6, 1965.
Jewish, Muslim comedians bridge the gap at JCC performance
Muslim and Jewish comedians will unite in New Orleans for an evening of laughs without politics, as Comedy for Peace makes its local debut.
They will perform at the Uptown Jewish Community Center on March 22 at 8 p.m. After the show, there will be a question and answer session focusing on the power of comedy to bridge cultural divides.
Comedy for Peace was established in March 2019 to bring the Jewish and Muslim communities together through humor and mutual understanding, with top Jewish and Muslim comedians. More recently, a couple Christian comedians have joined the effort in some shows. They have traveled throughout North America, playing mainly at comedy clubs, Jewish Community Centers and universities. In February, they performed in Atlanta and Austin, and did a South Florida tour in December. In November they were at the New York Comedy Festival, in a benefit for The Parents Circle— Families Forum. They have also done benefits for Nurses in New York, and for Ukrainian refugees.
The founder, Dotan Malach, who also goes by Erik Angel, is an Israeli who moved to New York a few years ago, appearing in prestigious comedy venues. He tours Europe regularly, has opened for major headliners including Maz Jobrani, and has performed in Tokyo and Israel.
He founded the group figuring that while the politics are not easily solved, on a personal level, everyone is a human being who wants to work and live together in peace. They model that by being on stage together, laughing at themselves and each other without politics involved.
From the group of about a dozen comedians, also slated to be in New Orleans are Tehran Von Ghasri and Kaneez Surka.
Von Ghasri is a rising comedian who has been seen on Comedy Central, HBO and Fox, performing regularly at the Laugh Factory in Los Angeles. Based in Hollywood, he has a diverse background, with Black, Persian, Muslim and Jewish influences.
Surka is a Muslim from India, with roots in South Africa. She has produced and performed in her Netflix Special, “Ladies Up,” Netflix’s “Comedy Premium League” as well as Amazon Prime Video’s improv specials “Something From Nothing” and “Improv All Stars - Games Night.”
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As part of the Cathy and Morris Bart Jewish Cultural Arts Series, the event is free and open to the community. Reservations are available through the JCC website.
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Mandeville
Jewish Family Service of Greater New Orleans is hoping that its efforts to keep growing how it serves the community really take off, with its annual fundraiser, “Take Flight with JFS,” at the New Orleans Lakefront Airport.
The March 20 event will honor Stanley and Ellen Kessler, whose longstanding philanthropy “has helped elevate the Jewish community to new heights.”
Take Flight with JFS will feature a dairy dinner, cocktail hour, vintage plane on display, photo booth, swing dancers, and more.
Funds raised during the 6:30 p.m. high-flying event will benefit JFS’s essential programs, including the Case Management Program, Affordable Counseling Program, and Financial Resource Center. These programs provide vital support to individuals and families navigating challenges related to financial stability and mental health care.
“We are thrilled to invite the community to join us for an unforgettable evening that will support the important work we do,” said Roselle Ungar, JFS executive director. “With the support of our generous patrons and sponsors, we will
continue to uplift and empower those in need throughout the Greater New Orleans area.”
Known for their quiet yet powerful support, the Kesslers have been champions for Jewish life and social good for many years, locally and around the world.
The Kesslers met at their 25th high school reunion in Miami in 1984, blending their families. Their community involvement has included such diverse activities as developing a new congregation in Bentonville, Ark., and hosting Israeli Defense Forces soldiers in New Orleans.
Ellen Ruth Levy is a native of Hialeah, Fla., who moved to New Orleans in 1984 to practice family law. Stan Kessler was born in New York but moved to Miami at age 5. He developed a sales agency with seven salespeople in Louisiana, Arkansas and Mississippi, with Walmart as his primary customer.
They have been active in Shir Chadash since it was Tikvat Shalom, chairing numerous events and becoming active in Sar-el, Volunteers for Israel, working at three different programs at Israeli army bases. In 2003, they received the President’s Award from Israel Bonds. Ellen
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Ellen and Stanley Kessler
served on the boards of Jewish Family Service of Greater New Orleans and Jewish Children’s Regional Services.
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After Hurricane Katrina destroyed their home, they moved to Bentonville, becoming active in the development of Etz Chaim. While Ellen was legal advisor, Stan was membership chairman, working to identify Jews in northwest Arkansas. They were honored with the Tikkun Olam Award by the Arkansas Jewish Federation in Little Rock, presented to them by former President Bill Clinton.
After six years away, they returned to New Orleans and resumed their work with Shir Chadash, and the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans’ Partnership program with Rosh Ha’Ayin. They have hosted musicians from Rosh Ha’Ayin, along with programs featuring IDF soldiers in their home. Stan is working with the Federation on an effort to create a group of high school students of different races and religions to travel to Israel together.
The Kesslers co-sponsored the Federation’s Oct. 7, 2024, anniversary commemoration, and are also heavily involved with Jewish National Fund and AIPAC.
Patron and sponsor opportunities are available for the gala, offering various levels of recognition and involvement. Tickets and sponsorship opportunities for Take Flight with JFS can be purchased online at the JFS website, or by calling the JFS office.
Touro welcoming VIPs for parade viewing
With Mardi Gras season underway, the special bleachers are appearing outside Touro Synagogue for the Krewe of VIPs.
Led by Juan Gershanik, Hal and Kathy Shepard and numerous other volunteers, the Krewe of VIPs provides a dedicated space for those with disabilities or special needs to view Mardi Gras parades from a special wheelchair accessible platform, so they do not have to fight the crowds along St. Charles Avenue.
The stands will be reserved for the VIPs on Feb. 22 for the Pontchartrain, Choctaw and Freret parades, on Feb. 27 for Babylon, Chaos and Muses, and on March 1 for Iris and Tucks.
On Feb. 21 and 28, the gates will open at 4 p.m., with Shabbat prayers and candlelighting at 5 p.m., followed by viewing of the evening’s parades.
For all sessions, members can enjoy the vantage point from Touro and have access to bathrooms. Non-members must be accompanied by members and are charged $20 for adults, $10 for ages 5 and under. Coolers are welcome but must remain outdoors, and no pork, shellfish or glass is allowed.
During other parade dates, the facility is closed.
Critical (acclaim)
“He periodically spells my name right.”
– Moses
“Yes, we gave him a graduate degree. We’re looking into it.”
– chancellor, Jewish Theological Seminary
“Half of the things he says I said, I never said. Including this.”
– his mother
“He knows more about Judaica than most, and you won’t find any of it in this book.”
– his fourth-grade teacher
“I’ll deal with him.” – The Almighty Big G
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A commitment to care. •
To the Families of New Orleans
Our decision to join the professionals at Lake Lawn Metairie allows us to continue our mission to provide families the highest caliber of care in the most beautiful of surroundings. Lake Lawn Metairie proudly serves all congregations and all local cemeteries. Whether planning in advance or at the time of need, we’re dedicated to serving families with professionalism, compassion and attention to detail that is second to none.
Sincerely,
Stephen Sontheimer & Billy Henry
community
>> Commentary continued from page 4
months — which explains why the Red Cross visits Palestinian prisoners far more frequently than any others in the world.
Some might argue that the PA is merely taking care of families whose breadwinners are imprisoned, a form of welfare. But if that were the case, there wouldn’t be a sliding scale that rises based on the number of Israelis killed or wounded, rather than the size of the prisoner’s family. And it wouldn’t be so much higher than the typical household income in Palestinian areas.
As is commonly noted in economics, to get more of a certain activity, subsidize it. Including terrorism.
The ICRC responded that it provides an Attestation of Detention, as is done in many parts of the world, but is not involved in any stipend program of the PA. Well, yes, but it does enable the process. Without protest.
In demanding that the ICRC stop facilitating the documents, the Simon Wiesenthal Center noted how “During World War II, the International Red Cross completely ignored the murder of Jews in Nazi concentration camps. To date, the Red Cross has not visited Israeli hostages in Gaza.”
When the Gaza ceasefire was announced in January, everyone expected the Red Cross to take part in their Uber role and look like they were actually doing something. Little did anyone anticipate what that “doing something” would entail, as Hamas turned the hostage handovers into massive public spectacles — itself a war crime — including mock “graduation” ceremonies with backdrops filled with slogans about the coming destruction of Israel. The hapless Red Cross representatives on hand took part in the dog and pony show, co-signing the Hamas certificates that were then presented to the hostages.
Rather than facilitating a quiet, easy handover, they simply watched as the hostages were forced to do a long walk toward them as they were mocked, jeered and jostled by an angry crowd of Hamas fighters who were in uniforms that they never wore during the actual war, when they were trying to blend in as civilians (another war crime).
Despite meekly taking part in the Hamas “Pallywood” productions, the ICRC somehow found their voice and had the chutzpah to condemn Israel for photographing Palestinian prisoners being released as the other part of the deal. Israel does the photos as verification to prevent lies about the prisoners’ condition or how they are released.
The crowning outrage comes from Gadi Moses, the 80-year-old hostage who was released on Jan. 30. He reported that one time during his 482 days of captivity, when he was being transported to a different location, he was locked in a sweltering pickup truck for 12 hours, under a Red Cross office in Gaza, and thought he would die of heat exhaustion. One might be tempted to cynically say that since the Red Cross wouldn’t go out to visit the hostages, Hamas brought one to them. There is no indication the Red Cross knew he was there, but the irony…
The ICRC is fully aware of the controversy, its website has a “frequently asked questions” page devoted to answering criticism of its actions, where they state that they have continuously called for the unconditional release of the hostages and defend their low-key approach.
Now, the American Red Cross has generally had a good record despite all this, and for years advocated for MDA to be included in the international system. But as a whole, the ICRC has repeatedly demonstrated that it is no friend of Israel or the Jewish people. So even though the U.S. affiliate may be okay, a message has to be sent that we are simply not going to sit back and take it. There are plenty of other partners out there for blood drives and disaster relief.
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Lawrence Brook, Publisher/Editor
>> Agenda
tel. There will be a patron reception starting at 11 a.m. Lynn and Rabbi Bob Loewy will be honored with the Tzedakah Award. Jill Israel will receive the Endowment Achievement Award. Bonnie Lustig will receive the Saundra K. Levy and Helen A. Mervis Jewish Community Professional Award, and Alan Franco will finish his term as board president.
The annual Adloyadah Purim celebration at the New Orleans Jewish Community Center Uptown will be on March 16 at 11:30 a.m. Open to the entire community, there will be carnival rides and games, music, Israeli food, Hamantaschen and snowballs.
Chabad of Baton Rouge will have Purim in Morocco on March 14, with a Henna artist and Moroccan buffet dinner. Reservations are $18 per adult, $10 per child, $40 family maximum. Moroccan costumes are welcome.
Hadassah New Orleans will have a Shabbat Zachor celebration of the organization’s founding in 1912, with its ties to the Purim story. The service will be at Shir Chadash in Metairie on March 7 at 6 p.m.
The Morris Bart Sr. Lecture Series at the Uptown Jewish Community Center in New Orleans continues on March 10 at noon with a view of the New Orleans Music Scene. The speaker will be Howie Kaplan, owner of Howlin Wolf.
Gates of Prayer in Metairie will welcome Rabbi Andrea Goldstein of Shaare Emeth in St. Louis for its Landau Lecture Series weekend. The founder and director of the Jewish Mindfulness Center of St. Louis, she will speak on The Repair of the Soul at the 7 p.m. Shabbat service
continued from page 8
on March 7. A dinner will follow, with the theme of Expanding Joy. On March 8, there will be a Torah study at 9:15 a.m. on Tiferet: An Exploration of Beauty and Balance. At the 10:30 a.m. service she will speak on The Practice of Rest— Shabbat as a Spiritual Practice. At 7 p.m., there will be a Havdalah at Rabbi David Gerber’s home, with the theme of Cultivating Compassion.
>> Rear Pew
continued from page 46
It’s unclear what David’s specific physical handicap was, but he had some kind of arm impairment. After all, it’s well known that he defeated Goliath with his sling.
David was denied the chance at a House that David Built, an honor which went to his son who built what some call Solomon’s Temple. David did get his own star, however, a few thousand years before the creation of the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Centuries later, Jeremiah became one of the major prophets. He started out as a bullfrog but was a good friend of mine. Good enough that he received a deal for one book bearing his name, and he also ghost wrote Lamentations and both books of Kings. All this after being born on a rare Middle Eastern three dog night.
Doug Brook has been hired over the decades by a diverse group of employers, sometimes inclusive of equity. It was enough for him. To acquire both FIVE-star rated Rear Pew Mirror books, read other past columns, or listen to the FIVE-star rated Rear Pew Mirror podcast, visit http://rearpewmirror.com/.
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DEI-aynu
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Throughout the Bible, the Jewish people had a diverse mix of leaders. Some were hesitant to lead. None were perfect leaders. Each came to their role with unique backgrounds, none of which would satisfy people’s widely varying expectations for what makes someone qualified.
For example, Moses had a lifelong disability related to a particularly important part of leadership. “I am slow of speech and slow of tongue,” he semi-intelligibly said.
Moses was also a reluctant leader. “Who am I to go to the king and bring the Israelites out of Egypt?” Moses didn’t seek the job, didn’t apply for the job, and kept trying to get out of the job.
Despite all that, Moses ended up leading his people to freedom and through an entire generation in the wilderness without a GPS or tranquilizers. And he ended up getting a five-book deal that turned into an all-time bestseller.
Joshua was one of the 12 spies that Moses sent to scout The Promised Land. Upon their return, 10 of the spies engaged in fear-mongering and lies to try to sway popular opinion among their nation.
Joshua was one of only two who spoke factually, which helped keep his nation on course toward the ideology and destiny that had always defined them.
He eventually succeeded Moses in leading the Israelites and, while he got only a one-book deal, but was also immortalized in the name of an iconic tree which itself became the name of an epic rock album by U2.
Looking earlier, Joseph took great pride in his rainbow-colored coat. While happily sporting it out and about he was attacked by his 11 brothers, who ultimately threw him into a pit and sold him.
Jewish history has a diverse group of leaders
Joseph had a mental condition which made him unique relative to everyone around him: the ability to interpret dreams. He was also a foreigner brought to Egypt against his will from another land and sold into slavery.
Nonetheless, Joseph’s rare ability helped elevate him into a position of great prominence from which he helped avert the impact of a heavy famine, demonstrating intellectual skills that nobody around him possessed.
Unlike his brothers, Joseph didn’t get an Israelite tribe named after him, but he got his own Broadway musical – even though he had to share top billing with his coat.
Jumping ahead in time, Ruth joined the ranks of the most notable from Jewish history, during a time when very few women were even mentioned.
As if that weren’t unusual enough for biblical times, Ruth was not born Jewish. She became a Jew by choice, which is not a practice that many would expect to exist in those days.
Ruth was one of only two women to get her own book deal in the Bible, but was also immortalized in the nickname of an iconic stadium (albeit for a team that’s not to be mentioned in polite company): The House that Ruth Built.
Three generations later, Ruth’s great-grandson rose to become the second monarch of the biblical kingdom of Israel. As a youth, David was adept with a lyre but at least he was honest about it.
Images of Last Year
Catching up on event photos from 2024
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Last March, the Jewish Endowment Foundation of Louisiana held its annual event and presented its annual awards. Pictured clockwise from top left: JEF Executive Director Bobby Garon, Annual Event Chairs Howard and Susan Green, and JEF Board President Alan Franco. Lindsay Baach Friedmann, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League’s South Central Regional Office, received the Helen A. Mervis Community Professional Award. Leon Rittenberg III received the Young Family Award for Professional Excellence. The Tzedakah Award went to Linda and Richard Friedman.
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Last May, Susan and Bill Hess hosted the National Council of Jewish Women’s Gelato Soiree, raising funds for the Section’s numerous community service projects. The event featured a buffet dinner and frozen treat dessert bar. Pictured clockwise from top left: Susan Hess. Bill Hess, Jody Portnoff Braunig and Loel Weil Samuel; Gail Chalew, Elizabeth Hefler of Whitney Bank and Barbara Kaplinsky; Kathy and Dana Shepard; Diana Mann and Robin Goldblum.
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Photos by Donna Matherne
Photos by Jeff Strout
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