April 2015 - The Senior Times
Transcription
April 2015 - The Senior Times
Help Generations help kids generationsfoundation.com 514-933-8585 APRIL 2015 www.theseniortimes.com “WE” GENERATION HONOURED FOR CARING TO ACT pp. 3, 4, 18, 19 Advisory service and accompaniment for people over 55 looking for a retirement home. MONTREAL, LAVAL, LAURENTIANS, LANAUDIÈRE, MONTÉRÉGIE 450-966-0001 Toll free 1-855-966-0001 We are here for you 24/7 info@plusbelle-lavie.com / www.plusbelle-lavie.com You are unique, as are our services. And it’s free! VOL. XXIX N 5 O Youth who change the world — and us We devote this issue to children — their desires, their needs Governor-General’s and their effect on us and society. Enjoy our feature stories Caring Canadian Awards about young people who make a difference. presented to 12 outstanding youth p. 3, 4, 18, 19 Barry Lazar: empty nester makes waffles p. 10 Animation Festival, not just for the kids p. 10 Natalie Bercovici: children are our future p. 20 Sibling friction when dealing with dementia p. 25 Sun Youth seniors enjoy camping with kids p. 26 The present and future for Cuba’s children p. 28-29 Imagine The Grief Of Losing Your Spouse or a Parent. Funeral Pre-Arrangements Will Ease The Pain. Talk It Over With Your Loved Ones. Happy Passover! Happy Easter! Joyeux Pessah! Joyeuses Pâques! FAMILYSIDE For FREE information rschmalhaus@ arbormemorial.ca Rainer Schmalhaus 514 606-9426 1155 Robert-Bourassa Blvd. #1312 Montréal (Québec) H3B 3A7 Tel. 514-395-2929 jchagnon-wsl@assnat.qc.ca Wishing all our clients and friends a Happy Easter & a Happy Passover! It’s not too late to buy Florida property. Call me right away! 1- Best Wishes for a Happy Easter & a Happy Passover 2 The Senior TimeS April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com Kayla Panacui receives Caring Canadian Award We’ve all heard about the Me Generation – that’s the Boomers, and in the 1970s, Tom Wolfe coined the phrase to describe the attitude among many that what counts in life is self-realization, not social responsibility. Fast-forward to today, and the image we have is of adolescents absorbed in the virtual world of the iPhone and XBOX, seemingly oblivious to what’s going on around them. Both are clichés, and last month we caught up with more than a dozen local students, who, through personal initiative and hard work, strive to make the world a better place as part of the We Generation. In recognition of the burgeoning volunteer sector among youth, 12 young Quebecers, 8 to 17, received the Governor General’s Caring Canadian Award March 23, given since 1985 to exceptional effort in volunteering to help others and building “a smarter and more caring nation.” Building a Cure, are to be given to fight cancer and build the school in India. Students at John Paul I High School in St. Léonard are involved and expect to raise $50,000! The school-in-India campaign is coordinated with Free the Children, the organization co-founded by Craig Kielburger and his brother Marc who also promote WE Day to encourage similar philanthropic efforts. Craig Kielburger was there as some 2,000 students gathered at Théâtre St. Denis to cheer such initiatives and enjoy entertainment in their honour. Kayla, who received her Caring Laurier-MacDonald students (L to R): Canadian Awards at an Evening Alessia Collaci, Francesca Varrone, animator Vince Lacroce, Kayla Panacui of Champions, says she’s looking forward to travelling to India next Among them was Kayla Panacui, students Alessia Collacci, 16, and year with other students and being 16, a grade 10 student in the Francesca Varrone, 16, joined her as involved hands-on in building International Baccalaureate program assistant captains. A total of $5,000 the school, part of her Grade 11 at Laurier-Macdonald High of the was raised at a spaghetti dinner, personal project. English Montreal School Board in and another $5,000 is expected “Everyone should have the right to St. Léonard. at a second event May 8, with the education, and a lot of kids around Kayla sparked a campaign at her support of teachers and spiritual and the world don’t. Raising the money school to raise $10,000 to help build community animator Vince Lacroce. to build this school really touched a school in rural India, and fellow The proceeds of the event, called me,” she said. Photo courtesy of Vince Lacroce IRWIN BLOCK Nurse on site • Free consultations to get your vaccinations up to date (Shingles, • Ear cleaning • Wound care • and much more Nutritionist on site Call us book your free consultation Personalized blister-pack medication for added • Security • Convenience • Reliability WE BUY GOLD AND ANTIQUES... Providing excellent service since 1975 We Buy entire & partial estates & single items Whatever Your Needs Are: Downsizing, Redecorating, Relocation, Loss of loved ones or Liquidation. ...FURNITURE ...JEWELRY Pre-1980, Dining room, Bookcases, Desks, Fixtures, Lamps, Etc. Gold, Silver, Diamonds, Pens, Watches, Etc. ...COLLECTIBLES ...ART Old Toys, Metal Signs, Collections of all kinds, Etc. Paintings, Bronze, Figurines, Vases, Etc. WE PAY CASH! Best wishes for a Happy Easter and a Healthy Passover Free in-home consultation by a certified appraiser JOHN 514-560-7720 7707 Shelley, Montreal ( Call for appt.) www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior Times 3 Young sisters help build school in Ecuador Tulip Festival May 15 Visit Governor General’s residence Free time at Dow Lake to view over 300,000 tulips, $85 pp Château Montebello June 7 Brunch at Château Montebello Visit the chocolate factory $95pp Niagara Falls June 14-17 3 nights at the Hilton $40 Casino Credit $495 pp dbl, $670 single New York & Empire City Casino Race Track 2 nights lodging at La Quinta Suites Free time to visit and shop in New York $335 pp dbl, $510 single Casino Rama September 8-11 Orillia Boat Cruise lunch 3 nights lodging $30 casino credit $495 pp dbl, $720 single PRICE LEADER IN QUEBEC SIMPLE CREMATION Transport of the deceased, transportation urn, cremation, death certificates, government formalities, remittance of ashes to the family. FREE CONSULTATION 514-367-8387 $687 plus taxes, no hidden charges PLANNING WITH US IN FULL CONFIDENCE* We have been working for you for over 80 years. Your money is protected and deposited in a trust account. We offer services that reflect your perception, your wishes and your budget. *You can ask to meet one of our family advisers at your home, at no added cost MONTREAL SOUTH SHORE NORTH SHORE LAURENTIANS LAVAL 514-367-8387 24h | serviceactuel.com Isabelle Petit, Director of Operations Dino Recine, Director of Sales and Marketing 4 The Senior Times April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com Jasmine Gadbois, 8, and big sister Sophia, 10, students at École Rudolf Steiner in Notre Dame de Grâce, heard about Free the Children from their mom, and first helped clean up garbage from the riverside in Verdun. This summer, they ventured to the Amazon area of Ecuador to “help build a school.” “We put in some nails,” said Sophia. Jasmine really liked her first WE Day, because, “it makes me think, if I was poor, other kids would take care of me, and that’s what I like to do for other kids.” LaSalle 3 ½, 4 ½ Waterfront Clean, quiet building Fridge • Stove Hot water Outdoor pool Sauna • Gym Wheelchair access toulonsurmer@gmail.com toulonsurmer.com “Coach” enters battle for NDP in Mount-Royal An epic battle is set to unfold in Mount Royal riding as the three major parties seek to replace Irwin Cotler, retiring after 15 years as its Member of Parliament. Côte St. Luc Mayor Anthony Housefather is working hard to retain the seat for the Liberals, while three strong candidates are vying to represent the Conservatives. Conservative hopeful Robert Libman ran a full-page ad in the Canadian Jewish News last month to recruit members and outvote his rivals. Pascale Déry had supporter Sen. Jacques Demers on board when she held a “hockey night” at Roasters in the Marché Centrale, March 30. Also seeking the Conservative nomination is Beryl Wajsman, editor of The Suburban weekly newspaper. The nomination meeting is expected at the end of April. Where does that leave the New Democratic Party, a distant third in the 2011 election, when its candidate, Jeff Itcush won almost 7,000 votes – the NDP’s best score in the riding since Charles Taylor’s 15,000-votes in 1965 against a victorious Pierre Trudeau? That gap is at the heart of the challenge facing NDP candidate Mario Jacinto Rimbao, 36, a relative unknown when it comes to public affairs, who’s determined to turn the campaign into a three-way race. Party. He started somewhere. Anthony Housefather started somewhere. I’m confident, and convinced there is a chance I can stage an upset.” “One thing I’m good at throughout my life is dealing with people, touching their emotions, their passions, issues and problems. “I understand people, I grew up around different nationalities and backgrounds, and I know how to deal with all of them. I don’t have the celebrity status or the experience politically, but I know how people feel and think.” In the Filipino community, comprising some 10 per cent of the riding, Rimbao is known as “coach” because, for most of the past 20 years, he has volunteered in the Philippines Basketball Association of Montreal. Affable and easy-going, the 36-year-old has deep links to the West End. Born in Montreal, he was raised in Côte des Neiges, on Dupuis, and later in NDG, on Fielding, by Philippinesborn parents. His father is a retired medical technologist and his late mother, a registered nurse. He lives in Brossard with his wife Roanne, a registered nurse, and their year-old Mario Rimbao daughter, Miya Alyanne, and father. “I’m the underdog, without a doubt, but I Rimbao was educated at Loyola High School, always like a challenge,” he says with a confident where he played basketball, volleyball, and smile. competed in track and field. He completed “I have to introduce myself to the people, but CEGEP at Dawson College, and earned his B.A. everyone started somewhere. Robert Libman was in political science and history at Concordia, the completely unknown when he ran for the Equality Continued on page 6 Photo: Irwin Block IRWIN BLOCK Bilingual service offered Efile/TED service Income Tax Services Two locations for your convenience 351 Grand Boulevard Ile-Perrot Tel: (514) 425-4676 M-T-W: 9:00 to 6:00 T-F: 9:oo to 8:00 S: 9:00 to 3:00 2555 Dutrisac Vaudreuil QC Tel: (450) 455-2251 HOURS M-T-W: 9:00 - 5:30 T-F: 9:00 - 7:00 S: 9:00 - 3:00 •Personal •Business •Seniors (Split income) •Rental Income •GST, QST Reports INCOME TAX / IMPÔT Rhonda Schanfield, MBA, CPA, CGA 514-935-5499 • Personal and Corporate Returns • Fill out government forms • Accounting services • By appointment 912 CONTACT OUR QUALITY OF LIVING AGENTS TODAY ! rschanfield@gmail.com www.rcsaccounting.com 2255 Saint-Mathieu, Suite 602, Montreal www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior Times 5 “I’m the underdog, without a doubt, but I like a challenge” Continued from page 5 last five courses while working in the shipping industry. He works for Fednav International, where he sets schedules for deep-sea cargo ships. A longtime and committed social democrat, Rimbao says he decided to run because, following the birth of his first child, he realized how hard it is to find subsidized daycare even in Quebec, which uniquely in Canada has a limited number of spaces at $7.30 a day. (Under a new sliding scale, families earning more than $55,000 will pay more, up to $20 a day.) “The NDP plan of $15-a-day daycare, which is based on the Quebec model, has really touched a lot of people who are having a hard time finding child care. It’s a provincial issue, but Thomas Mulcair’s offer of assistance to the provinces is a great idea.” Rimbao is proud of Mulcair and the NDP’s opposition to Conservative anti-terrorism legislation, which would give police and Canada’s spy agency much broader powers and allow the detention of terror suspects. “It’s creating an aura of George Orwell’s 1984. I read that book in high school and Big Brother was always watching. That’s not Canadian values. “We understand protection, but we also have our freedoms. That’s how we define ourselves as Canadians. It sets up something that is very vague and could lead to something dangerous.” He says he’s upset about the dispatch of Canadian Forces to Iraq and the fact their mandate is “very vague,” noting the tragic Erratum This should have appeared in the March 2015 Housing Issue. The Senior Times regrets the error. Place du Fort 1411 du Fort, Montreal Phone: 514-932-4895 Fax: 514-931-5203 Email: placedufort@creccal.com Website: www.placedufort.com Contact: Lorraine Forrest Size: 1½ to 6½ Included: heat, hot water, electricity, fridge, stove, A/C, indoor pool and indoor parking Nearby: 2 métro stations, Provigo and PA, mall Happy Passover Rabbi Mordechai Tober, Joseph Pastor, Ray Foisy 3801 Jean-Talon West 514-344-1716 death of Sgt. Andrew Doiron after friendly fire from Kurdish forces, returning from a mission in a zone of fighting against the Islamic State forces. “This touches me personally. I have a cousin who went to Afghanistan, who was with the Canadian Forces fighting there. I don’t think the Canadian government is doing enough to support the soldiers when they come back.” The corruption charges against senators Mike Duffy, Pamela Wallin, and Patrick Brazeau only accentuates the timeliness of NDP policy on the Senate, he said. “I’m really supportive of the NDP idea to abolish the Senate,” he says. It was estimated four years ago to cost more than $106 million a year, excluding pension-plan contributions. Rimbao was acclaimed at a riding association meeting at the YM-YWHA on Westbury. irblock@hotmail.com Letters to the Editor Harper’s policies detrimental to our rights and freedoms If Stephen Harper weren’t such a hawk for Israel, would you vote for him? We are electing a Canadian Prime Minister for Canada. His policies for Canada are detrimental to our democratic rights and freedoms. His politics are those of fear, division, obfuscation, and lack of honesty or transparency. He brooks no discussion or openness. He lacks respect for our democratic and social institutions. He sees enemies everywhere and sends tax auditors to investigate charities that disagree with his environmental policies, muzzles Canadian scientists to the degree that, internationally, scientists have garnered over 800 signatures protesting their treatment and our lack of evidence-based policies. With the indefensible cancelling of the longform census, how can we plan long-term for anything, what will these decisions be based on? Harper didn’t plan for diversification of our resource industry and we are now held hostage economically by the Saudis, our friends and allies. Oil is prime. With prices down and the economy at risk, can he still retain the claim as the only person who can direct our economy through troubled times? Where was his foresight in developing alternate fuel sources as well? Harper’s regressive law-and-order bills are meant to distract the public from well-known facts that our crime rates have been going down for decades and we don’t need to institute more punitive and regressive laws. Instead of funding CSIS to be able to do their anti-terrorist work, funding has been cut to the bone. Where is the sense in all this, the evidence-based material on which Harper declaims and proclaims? This is not what Canada is, not my country of compassion and social justice. Does Harper even speak up for human rights anymore? What about Mr. Fahmy, a Canadian journalist imprisoned in Egypt on trumped up charges and being defended by an internationally respected human rights lawyer with whom Harper will not communicate? What about prisoner of conscience Mr. Raif Badawi in Saudi Arabia, sentenced to 1000 lashes and years of incarceration for defending human rights and freedom of speech, whose family was given refugee status and live here in Quebec? While the rest of the world was campaigning for his release, we signed a $15 billion dollar military equipment contract with the Saudis, and our former Foreign Minister praised their human rights record. Is this my Canada? If we get the government we deserve, what does that say about us if we re-elect Harper? Do not be fooled by his appeal to our baser natures. We are better than that. We are Canadians. — Sandra Brown Feature on Pascale Déry should have avoided labels I have to take issue with a couple of points in your article featuring Pascale Déry. Why does it matter what mother tongue she was educated in? All three candidates are fluently bilingual and Ms. Déry’s opponents have more than demonstrated such in many publications as well as in the Quebec National Assembly: Robert Libman as an MNA and Beryl Wajsman at numerous sub-committee meetings there. It’s bad enough when nationalists castigate Anglophone or Allophone citizens for not being “pure laine” enough, no matter what they do or say. For a writer in an English newspaper to brand Ms. Déry’s opponents as “Ashkenazic Jewish” so as to perpetuate an unnecessary (and often wrong) stereotype about them and their community is shameful. Second, Ms. Déry must have almost put a hole in her tongue from the bite when talking about memberships. Political parties are joined by various means other than papers gathered by candidates 6 The Senior Times April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com and supporters and sent to a Party’s national headquarters in Ottawa (on-line for example). There is absolutely nothing on a form to indicate support for any specific candidate and no roll kept as to whether a membership was sent by a candidate or his/her support team. Ms. Déry and the writer obviously also ignore the fact that riding associations have preexisting members who may vastly outnumber any memberships a candidate has solicited. Ultimately any number or subtle hint of a number is useless as the only number that matters is the number of votes the candidate gets at the riding nomination meeting. In fact, it would suggest to me that between that statement and Ms. Déry’s recent musings on social media, that she’s actually struggling to gain traction in the riding and hoping that enough people either not join the party or, if in it, give up the idea of voting at the nomination meeting by presenting this kind of invincible aura. — Robert Gauvin Langlois family receives title Righteous Among the Nations Néret, France — August 1942, Eugène and Alexandrine Langlois, and their daughter, Suzanne, received little Léon. They were honoured March 17 for their courage. Léon Rucker, now 77, lives in Canada with his wife, three children, and six grandchildren. Yet, in Néret, he was among family: His other family – the one that sheltered him from the Nazis when he was only 4. “Suzanne Langlois came to fetch me from my parents in Nice. They received me here, at their home, as if I were one of their six children. I stayed here for two years, far from my parents, but in safety and surrounded by love… “For them it was normal.” Thanks to him, more than 71 years after these tragic events, the Langlois Family is honoured posthumously, with a medal accorded to persons deemed Righteous Among the Nations. François Guguenheim, vicepresident of the French Committee of Yad Vashem, was present, alongside Elad Ratson, Public Relations Director of the Israeli Embassy in Paris, and Alain Espinasse, Prefect of Indre District, to confer the highest Israeli distinction to Josianne Luizy, the niece of Suzanne Langlois, who had passed away in 1996. “My grandparents and my aunt spoke rarely about that episode of their lives,” Josianne explained. “For them, what they did was just normal. They weren’t puffed with pride about it. They were simple people…” Léon Rucker remembers, “hunting for mushrooms with Alexandrine, and the courage of Eugène at work.” The emotion was palpable and reached home, when during the speeches and singing the national hymns of France and Israel, everyone present remembered the Jews killed during the attacks which occurred in Januar y in France and Denmark. “It behooves each of us to contribute to reinforcing the foundations of our Republic and to not remain indifferent to these threats,” said Alain Espinasse. “Being united means also extending a hand, the Continued on page 8 Memory Care you can both feel good about. Discover the Memory and Alzheimer’s Care option that’s the ideal answer for both you and your loved one. At Résidences Symphonie, our Moments® Memory Care Neighbourhood looks like – and is – a true home. The cozy environment is designed exclusively to accommodate the unique needs of seniors with Alzheimer’s, dementia and other memory impairments. 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Visit us during the RQRA Seniors Residence Open House Day 1:00–4:00pm on Sunday April 26 Île-des-Sœurs (514) 767-6792 325 Chemin de la Pointe-Sud Île-des-Sœurs West Island (514) 695-6695 15 Place de la Triade Pointe-Claire www.SymphonySeniorLiving.com Independent Living • Assisted Living • Memory Care Respite • Trial Stays www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior Times 7 Universal Monuments 528 Crépeau Blvd. Masouche, QC Happy Passover John Machalani Sales Director T 514-945-5445 F 450-474-6207 STATCARE CLINIC is now offering: SHINGLES VACCINATION PLEASE CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT WITH THE NURSE Available every Wednesday and Thursday afternoon Please note that not all vaccinations are covered by the Quebec Drug Benefit Plan and may require payment by the patient. 175 Stillview Road, Suite 104, Pointe-Claire 514-694-9282 I BUY WOMEN’S AND MEN’S FUR COATS I pay cash and pick up anywhere in Canada 514-996-0321 recyclefur98@gmail.com On behalf of The Pastor and Parishioners, We wish you a JOYOUS EASTER! St. Richard’s Parish Easter Schedule • April 2nd Holy Thursday Mass - 8:00 pm • April 3rd Good Friday Service - 3:00 pm • April 3rd Stations of the Cross - 7:30 pm • April 4th Easter Vigil - 8:00 pm • April 5th Easter Sunday Mass - 10:30 am • April 5th Easter Sunday Mass - 11:00 am (St. Patrick’s Square) 7070 Guelph Road, Cote St. Luc, 514-488-0778 Bringing you the issues since 1986 Publisher & Editor Office Manager Barbara Moser Thelma Gearey Assistant Editor Sales Manager Kristine Berey Jacquie Soloway-Cons Copy Editor Advertising Gisele Rucker Jodie Alter, Gloria Editorial Assistant Beigleman, Thomas Southmayd Shirley Cohen, Journalists Kristine Berey, Sandra Schachter Irwin Block theseniortimes.com editor@theseniortimes.com Phone 514-484-5033 Fax 514-484-8254 To subscribe $39/year Cover photos Barbara Moser Printing Hebdo Litho Published by Publications Newborn Inc. Contents copyright ©2015. All rights reserved. Legal Deposit: National Library of Canada No. D368087 Dépot légal Bibliothèque Nationale du Québec, 1993. Although every caution is taken by Publications Newborn Inc. to monitor advertising in THE SENIOR TIMES, claims made by advertisers are not necessarily endorsed by Publications Newborn. Commentary on Netanyahu’s “No” to a Palestinian state Here is a selection of comments and opinions on Benjamin Netanyahu’s pre-election “no” to a Palestinian state under his watch in the current climate of regional chaos and violence, and his Likud Party winning the largest number of Knesset seats: Netanyahu, in a post-election interview with NBC, insisted he remains committed to Palestinian statehood – if conditions in the region improve – and to the two-state solution first enunciated in a 2009 speech at Bar Ilan University: “I haven’t changed my policy, I never retracted my speech.” Marie Hart, State Department spokeswoman in Washington, commented that Netanyahu is hard to read: “He said diametrically opposing things in the matter of a week. When you say things, words matter. And if you say something different two days later, which do we believe? “What we’re looking for now is action and policies.” Ari Shavit, Politico Magazine: “…In the last four years: all around the Arab world crumbled into chaos… and the Gaza Strip, from which they had withdrawn, became the heavily armed and hostile base of Hamas, raining down a barrage of missiles on Tel Aviv for 50 days in the summer of 2014. The aggregate result of these traumas is an understandable but dangerous shift to the right. “Because the old peace-idea was not replaced by a new peace-idea, many Israelis fear for their future and are no longer willing to embrace American and European peace initiatives… At the same time, some Israelis have developed xenophobic tendencies, that do not stem from inherent racism but from a deep fear the centerleft in Israel and the international community cannot assuage.” politico.com Charles Krauthammer, The Washington Post: “The fundamental reality remains: This generation of Palestinian leadership – from Yasser Arafat to Mahmoud Abbas – has never and will never sign its name to a final peace settlement dividing the land with a Jewish state. And without that, no Israeli government of any kind will agree to a Palestinian state. “Today, however, there is a second reason a peace agreement is impossible: the supreme instability of the entire Middle East… Amid this mayhem, by what magic would the West Bank, driven by a bitter Fatah-Hamas rivalry, be an island of stability? What would give any Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement even a modicum of durability? “…With or without elections, the West Bank could fall to Hamas overnight at which point fire rains down on Tel Aviv, Ben Gurion Airport and the entire urban heartland…” “Any Arab-Israeli peace settlement would require Israel to make dangerous and inherently irreversible territorial concessions on the West Bank in return for promises and guarantees. Under current conditions, these would be written on sand. “Peace awaits three things — eventual Palestinian acceptance of a Jewish state, a Palestinian leader willing to sign a deal based on that premise, and a modicum of regional stability that allows Israel to 8 The Senior Times April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com risk the potentially fatal withdrawals such a deal would entail.” “…That’s essentially what Netanyahu said in explaining – and softening – his no-Palestinian-state statement.” washingtonpost.com/charles-krauthammer David Shulman, New York Review of Books: “The notion that there will someday be two states in historic Palestine has been savagely undermined. We have Netanyahu’s word for it. If he has his way – and why shouldn’t he? – Palestinians are destined for the foreseeable future to remain subject to a regime of state terror, including the remorseless loss of their lands and homes and, in many cases, their very lives, they will continue to be, as they are now, disenfranchised, without even minimal legal recourse, hemmed into small discontinuous enclaves, and deprived of elementary human rights. “Secondly, we may see the emergence in the West Bank of a situation like that in Gaza, with Hamas or other extremist organizations assuming power … there is no way a privileged collective can sit forever on top of a disenfranchised, systematically victimized minority of millions. “...there is an ongoing, intimate, many-layered relationship between Israelis and Palestinians, and what one side chooses to do always has a very direct impact on the other side…If we Israelis fail to cut a deal with the Palestinian moderates, or at least to strive in earnest for an agreement, we will by our own actions bring their extremists to power. “Thirdly, Palestinians will rightly turn to the International Criminal Court in the Hague … and to international forums such as the UN Security Council, where Israel may soon no longer enjoy the protection of an automatic American veto. The international boycott will intensify to a level far beyond what we have seen. “Fourthly, and most important, the moral fibre of the country will continue to unravel…there will be more hyper-nationalist, anti-democratic legislation, more deliberate and consistent attempts to undermine the authority of the courts, more rampant racism, more thugs in high office, more acts of cruelty inflicted on innocents, more attacks on moderates perceived as enemies of the state, more paranoid indoctrination in the schools … more war-mongering, and quite possibly more needless war…” nybooks.com/blogs Selection gathered by Irwin Block irblock@hotmail.com Righeous Among the Nations Continued from page 7 same hand that the Langlois Family extended to the Rucker Family by welcoming Léon. By their selfless act, during one of the most somber periods of our country’s history, all the Righteous are permanent examples and give us hope and confidence in humanity.” Translated by Gisèle Rucker, sister of Léon Rucker, from an article by Christophe Gervais that appeared in La Nouvelle République, March 18, 2015. Israeli journalist decries “excuses” that prevent peace “It’s the end of the masquerade.” That’s how Israeli journalist Gideon Levy characterized the pre-election musing by Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu that he would not agree to the establishment of a Palestinian state alongside Israel. It was something less than a full statement, more like an answer to questions from a notunfriendly journalist, but it angered the Obama administration, with one official saying the U.S. will “re-assess our options.” It also fit Levy’s argument that no Israeli leaders had ever intended to agree to a Palestinian state. “For 24 years at least, Israeli politicians, one after another, misled the Israelis, the world and Palestinians in claiming that the occupation (of land captured in 1967) is about to end,” he told some 300 at Concordia University last month. Levy, a columnist and editorial board member at Ha’aretz newspaper, was kicking off a speaking tour of Canada, sponsored by Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East. For the record, here is what Netanyahu actually said in the interview: “I think that anyone who is going to establish a Palestinian state today and evacuate lands is giving attack grounds to the radical Islam against the State of Israel.” “Anyone who ignores this is sticking his head in the sand.” Asked whether he meant that a Palestinian state would not be established if he were re-elected prime minister, Netanyahu replied “Correct.” Though it was hardly a formal statement, and Netanyahu has backtracked after his party won most seats in the election, Levy argued that the facts speak for themselves. First the alleged obstacle was Yasser Arafat, founder of the Palestine Liberation Organization, who was seen as “too strong;” then his successor, Mahmoud Abbas, was seen as “too weak.” “In between there was terror, and when there is terror you don’t expect Israel to negotiate,” he said. Then came Hamas and Gaza. “You can’t expect us to talk to those Islamists, those fundamentalists.” “Now there is ISIS, and here we have another excuse because ISIS is on the border.” Meanwhile, the so-called “status quo” persists, which is not because more settlements are being Photo: Irwin Block IRWIN BLOCK Gideon Levy built all the time on lands occupied since 1967. Expansionism “has only one purpose – to prevent any kind of peace settlement.” Can Israel continue to flaunt international law and “the majority of public opinion in the world” or will it be “a wake-up call for changing the international discourse,” he asked? “For people like me, the only hope is from the outside… We are now getting the most nationalist, religious, right-wing government that Israel has ever had. “It is on the world’s shoulders to decide if this is acceptable in the 21st century, if this reality is legitimate, and could continue to be supported, financed and encouraged by the free world.” With 600,000 Israelis living in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, the chances for realizing a Palestinian state are “really very, very low.” The alternative is a “one-state solution,” which has been functioning since June 1967, with three regimes, he argued. “One is the façade of a liberal democracy for its citizens, the second is one that discriminates against its Arab citizens, with some rules of democracy, and the third is half an hour away from our homes, one of the most brutal and cruel regimes in the world today.” “It looks like an apartheid regime, it behaves like an apartheid. When two peoples are sharing one piece of land, one people has all the rights in the world, the other has no rights whatsoever. “If this is not apartheid, what is apartheid? “Israeli society is in total denial, but will the world tolerate another apartheid state in the 21st century, with democracy for some people and apartheid for the others?” he asked rhetorically. “Can someone be half-pregnant, halfdemocratic? Can Israel continue to find excuses with the only excuse, the unofficial religion of Israel, namely security? “What about the security of Palestinians?” he asked. None of the estimated 2.65 million West Bank Palestinians had the right to vote in the Israeli election. Meanwhile, the occupation and peace and two states or one were not discussed in the campaign, he noted. Although Netanyahu is neither loved nor appreciated, he wins elections. “He understood that fear is the best way to be elected and re-elected. “Everything in Israel is an existential threat,” he said, in a mocking tone. The Tel-Aviv-born son of Holocaust survivors, and an aide for four years to Shimon Peres, Levy said it was in the late 1980s when he visited the Occupied Territories that he started to realize that “this is the biggest story of Israel and there is almost no one to tell this story.” This has not won him many friends in Israel, though he has received many awards for his journalism, and this past year he had to hire bodyguards to protect him and his family. Levy continued for some 90 minutes, including a question-and-answer period, but one of his harshest judgments was this: “Israelis don’t perceive the Palestinians as equal human beings like them – that’s the core of everything. “As long as this will not change, nothing will change.” Suzanne Lamarre Nadia De Riggi NotaireS • Notaries 3333 Cavendish Blvd. Suite 198 514-484-2788 2007-2013 TM www.jjcardinal.ca Happy passover & Easter to all our clients www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior Times 9 Creative cooking when the child moves out I am looking for a new word, something positive for the emotional state parents feel when a child moves out. I know that some parents speak of a Flavour Guy kind of post-partum depression when their child Barry Lazar leaves home, but that wasn’t our experience. Or, as Martha Stewart might say, “and that’s a good thing.” But there really isn’t a word in English to describe it. Latin looked like a good place to start. Google the first year at Hogwarts. Point to the door, say Translate recommends I consider egressus filius, egressus filius and your child leaves. Just like that. which sounds like something they’d teach during Amazing. For now, I kind of like wunder-phoria which combines wunderkind, which she is, with euphoria. 24 In an old joke, a seeker of wisdom asks a sage, hours “I have a question that has troubled me all of my life. How do I know when life begins?” “That’s Weather permitting Airport reservations guaranteed Special Attention to the Elderly Pick-Up & Delivery info@atlastaxi.qc.ca www.atlastaxi.qc.ca Senior Residence Fulfilling Needs at Every Stage easy,” the sage answers. “It begins when the kids move out and the dog dies.” Well, we are on our third cat and she is in superb health. Besides, cats require far less care than dogs. There is something inherently independent in their nature that suits her and us just fine. Likewise, kids, when they reach a certain age, are inherently independent. And that is a good thing too. So now, we have a guest room. Sarah moved out. Not too far. She is within laundry-walking distance. But all of a sudden we have a spare room. It took time to actually realize this. Part of me was saying, well, she might need to spend the night here. I mean she is almost a whole metro stop away and our weather is iffy... but that hasn’t happened. So after two months of stalling, the wunder-phoria kicked in. We moved inessentials out of her room and shopped around for a double-bed-sized futon. I let her know that we had made the transition. I hoped she wouldn’t take it too hard. “Oh,” she said, “how come it took you so long?” Our first houseguests visited us for a long weekend recently. Although bitterly cold weather forced us to spend more time indoors than we had expected, to my surprise, we still had a great time. On Sunday morning I made waffles for all of us. This recipe is based on one from an old Reader’s Digest book, Creative Cooking. It makes a waffle that is both crusty and tender and is a great excuse for getting a waffle iron if you don’t have one. The secret to these waffles is to let the batter sit overnight. Waffles $995 Starting at (after tax credit) Included: all meals, snacks and medical supervision Residence for autonomous and semi-autonomous seniors In a large bowl, mix together a 1/2-cup of warm water (110F or 43C), a tablespoon of dry yeast (1 package), 2 cups of warm milk, a 1/2-cup of melted butter, a teaspoon each of salt and sugar, and a half teaspoon of vanilla extract. Beat in 2 cups of flour. Mix well. Cover and let this sit overnight at room temperature. Do not refrigerate. When you are ready to cook the waffles, mix in two eggs and a dash of baking soda. Pour the batter onto a hot waffle iron and cook until steam stops escaping or according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Recipe serves four but if there is too much batter, make them all anyway. Extra waffles freeze nicely and heat up quickly in a toaster oven. In fact, we served these the next time we had houseguests too. Granite Lacroix inc. 1½ to 4½ Monument manufacturer for three generations Visit our website to view our promotions Our craftsmen are renowned for the care with which they customize your monument. Joy has no age limit! Our Services • Engraving, cleaning and restoration • Porcelain portraits and ornaments • Free home consultation • Indoor and outdoor showrooms • Member of the Association des Détaillants de Monuments du Québec 450-669-7467 12300 Laurentien Blvd., Montreal, H4K 2Z6 514-335-1881 manoirgouin.com 10 The Senior Times April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com www.granitelacroix.com 1735 Des Laurentides Blvd., Vimont, Laval Taking stock of end-of-life care Until recently, it was a crime in Canada to assist others in ending their lives. Those grievously and irremediably ill and in pain could not seek a physician’s assistance in dying. A person facing this prospect had two options: take his own life prematurely, often by violent or dangerous means, or suffer until death occurred from natural causes. But a woman with a neurodegenerative disease wanted to die in dignity and challenged certain sections of the Canadian Criminal Code before the courts. The Supreme Court of Canada held that provisions of the Criminal Code unjustifiably infringed upon the Charter of Rights and should be voided to the extent that they prohibit physician‑assisted death for a competent adult person who (1) clearly consents to the termination of life and (2) has a grievous and irremediable medical condition (including an illness, disease, or disability) that causes enduring suffering, intolerable to the individual in the circumstances of his or her condition. It further held that an individual’s response to a grievous and irremediable medical condition is a matter critical to their dignity and autonomy; The prohibition denied such persons the right to make decisions concerning their bodily integrity and medical care thus infringing on their liberty and leaving them to endure intolerable suffering. Even before this Supreme Court judgment had been rendered, Quebec had drafted a new law scheduled to take effect in December of this year. The title of this law is “An Act respecting end-of-life care”. End-oflife care is defined as “palliative care provided to end-of-life patients and medical aid in dying”. Medical aid in dying means “care consisting in the administration by a physician of medications or substances to an end-of-life patient, at the patient’s request, in order to relieve their suffering by hastening death”. The purpose of this law is “to ensure that end-of-life patients are provided Legal Ease Joyce Blond Frank B.A., B.C.L., LL.M. care that is respectful of their dignity and their autonomy.” The care is to be administered with compassion, understanding, courtesy, respect and fairness. Under the terms of this new law, every person whose condition requires it has the right to receive end-of-life care, subject to the specific requirements contained in the Act. For those living with incurable pain, this may be a dream come true. But for others, especially seniors, it has caused much concern over the creation of a “slippery slope” leading to removal of protection of those who are vulnerable. The court felt that a permissive regime with properly designed and administered safeguards is capable of protecting vulnerable people from abuse and error. The care to be administered under the Quebec legislation will only result where there exists “freely and clearly expressed wishes with respect to care, in particular by establishing an advance medical directives regime.” The physician must make sure that the request is being made freely; i.e., by ascertaining that it is not being made as a result of external pressure. Consent to continuous palliative sedation must be given in writing on the form prescribed by the Minister and be filed in the patient’s record. This law regulates in detail how endof-life care is to be carried out. Those who request terminal palliative sedation must “be informed of the prognosis, the irreversible and terminal nature of the sedation and the anticipated duration of the sedation. It obliges the physician to inform the patient and his close relations of the policy of the institution with respect to end-of-life care and provide the patient with all the information regarding therapeutic possibilities and palliative care, which he requires in with others if he so wishes. As order to make an informed decision. further protection to the patient, In Quebec, to be eligible to obtain an eleven-member Commission on medical aid in dying, the patient end-of-life care has been created to must be capable of consenting, be at examine all matters relating to endthe end of life, suffer from a serious of-life care, to advise and report to and incurable illness, suffer from the Minister and to oversee that the an advanced state of irreversible provisions of the law are carried out. decline in capability and “experience The Act provides for the creation of constant and unbearable physical or a special register of advance medical psychological suffering which cannot directives prepared by individuals in be relieved in a manner the patient the event that they become incapable deems tolerable.” If the patient does of giving consent to treatment at a not meet these criteria, the aid cannot future time. When a patient becomes be obtained. The request must be incapable of providing consent, the made by the patient on a special form physician can consult the register signed by him and countersigned by a and act accordingly. It is to be noted health or social services professional. that health-care instructions already It may be withdrawn at any time. provided in a Mandate in the Event of Before administering the medical Incapacity do not constitute advance aid requested, the physician must medical directives under this Act assure himself that the patient is and those who wish to have advance eligible for the aid and must consult medical directives should see their a second independent physician to lawyer or notary. confirm that the eligibility criteria The Quebec Act respecting end-ofhave been met. He must also make life care was approved last June and is sure that the request has been scheduled to become law in December made voluntarily and without any 2015. Although healthy people often external pressure, that the patient don’t like to think about end-of-life understands what options are issues or pain, palliative care and available 2015.04 to him[Senior and has hadAGItheLindsay aggressive perhaps now is 1 Times] Lecturetreatment, Series MtlWI v3.2 v3.pdf opportunity to discuss his request a good time to start. C M Y CM MY CY CMY K Knitters bring comfort to sick kids Volunteer knitters are busy this season making kimono-style baby booties to raise money for The Lighthouse, Children and Families. Created in 1999 and also known as Le Phare Enfants et Familles, the charity seeks “to brighten the lives of seriously ill children and families…through respite care, variable length stays at Maison André-Gratton (Mount Royal East) and a panoply of services to make life as healthy and happy as possible.” Booties, small and medium, sell for $10 each and are wrapped individually with a card stating all proceeds support a child’s stay at The Lighthouse. To volunteer or contribute, contact Kelly Acevedo at detaviracevedo@gmail.com or 438392-5245. phare-lighthouse.com — Gisele Rucker www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior Times 11 201 LOOSE DENTURE Do you eat what you can at a restaurant or what you want? We can help: Mini implants without any surgery FREE CONSULTATION Quick, Painless & Affordable Call for your FREE complimentary consultation ... where smiles begin DR. R. MIRMOOJI, DMD, GENERAL DENTAL PRACTITIONER SIMON MOMEJIAN, DD, DENTUROLOGIST, DR. N. ATTARAN, DMD 4935 St. Charles Blvd, Office 104 Pierrefonds, Quebec 514-675-3332 UIN GO W. D BLV VD BL P ST. www.msmiline.com DS ON EF R IER CH AR LES BL VD INCONTINENCE disposable briefs e and mor FREE DELIVERY PRODUCTS UNBEATABLE PRICES Ask for your FREE SAMPLE! •Protectiveundergarments •Incontinencepads •Glovesandwipes •Mobilityaids •BathroomSecurityProducts •PersonalService TENA - ATTENDS - AMG 5300 Côte St-Luc Road Montreal H3X 0A3 514 483-5300 www.vistaresidence.ca Upscale living complex for active seniors EXPERIENCE LIFE AT VISTA TAKE PART IN OUR ACTIVITIES CALL NOW TO BOOK YOUR ACTIVITY 514 483-5300 AUTONOMOUS UNITS The 17th edition of the Blue Metropolis International Literary Festival, April 20-26, offers book lovers, readers, and writers alike, a substantial buffet: 260 events featuring celebrated authors from 12 countries, including 104 free activities for kids within its Children’s Festival. Novelist Nancy Huston of Calgary (Bad Girl), winner of this year’s $10,000 International Literary Grand Prix, Dominican writer Junot Diaz (This is How You Lose Her), and American writer Russell Banks (Cloudsplitter) headline a roster of authors, illustrators, artists, journalists, publishers, and storytellers of international calibre. Along with readings, lectures, and interviews in English and French, events take place in six other languages, unmediated by translation into either official language. Blue Met will also present films, dance, and a variety of cultural events, such as the Mile End Series featuring a Mordecai Richler Walking Tour. At the press launch, William StHilaire, President, General Manager and Artistic Director, presented the Fest’s social and educational William St-Hilaire programs. A new micro-Festival, called Books and Well-Being, explores the link between art and mental illness, during the weekends of April 18-19 and 25-26. Other new series at Blue Met are Performigrations, an international media-art lab program on mobility; a Literary Film Series featuring films from Latin America; Caribbean Dreams; and Indigenous Writing. Generosity and Literature will examine the relationship between empathy and reading novels, with talks by several prominent Montrealers from the world of philanthropy. Most events take place at Hôtel 10, corner Sherbrooke St. W. and St. Laurent Blvd. For programming details, venues, and prices ($0 to $25), visit bluemetropolis.org Residence Alexis-Nihon 3 1/2 starting from $915 a month • Apartments (studios, one or two bedrooms) with private terrace • À la carte services available ASSISTED LIVING UNITS • Nurse and/or health care attendant on site You will have access to skilled health professionals as well as a wide range of services to cater your needs. GISÈLE RuCKER Residence managed by Cogir • Studios and apartments including meals and housekeeping VISTA OFFERS ACTIVE LIFESTYLE BASED ON SECURITY, ELEGANCE AND COMFORT. blue Met hosts huston, Diaz, banks • Assistance with daily living activities • Cueing services provided for meals CARE UNITS • Professional and passionate healthcare staff • Help and support 24/7 • Comfortable rooms Eligibility Persons 55 years or over and with revenues over $14,000 a year Services Included Electricity, heating/hot water, basic phone line, cable TV, 7 meals a week, security 24 hrs a day, easy access to public transportation, social activities Affordable housing program Tax credit for seniors 32% on services, possibility of housing allowance 1200 Alexis-Nihon Boulevard Saint-Laurent 514 337-2005 12 The Senior TimeS April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com Making a special connection Laughter keeps us healthy! Photo: Suzie Russel RITA AND JEAN-LOUIS LAMARCHE, AT CHARTWELL SINCE 2012. Here at Sun Youth Françoise Boucher Members of the Sun Youth Seniors Club enjoying the lake at the organization’s summer camp. “If grandparents did not exist, we would have to invent them.” Inspired by this idea, Sun Youth inaugurated a few years ago its House of Wisdom, a cabin made especially for seniors, on the premises of its Rivière-Rouge Summer Camp located in the Laurentians. This initiative was intended to benefit both the young campers and the seniors, following an observation made that many children attending Sun Youth’s camp during the summer had no grandparents in their lives. As well, among seniors attending our Seniors Club, several felt that giving a bit of love and attention would light up their lives. Our organization believes that children would benefit greatly from the love and individual attention of a grandparent. We have a perfect setting for our campers and seniors to meet and share. Our summer camp now offers three sessions where children and seniors enjoy activities that will allow them to find what they need in one another. Up to 12 seniors can attend each session and stay in the House of Wisdom. During such activities as tennis, reading, biking, or cooking, all campers can enjoy the presence of seniors. Personalized activities are suggested to seniors and children without grandparents, allowing them to spend time together. “At the end of each camp session, we do an evaluation with our campers of all the activities they were offered during their stay, and this initiative is always mentioned as one of the activities enjoyed the most”, says camp Director Johanne Saltarelli. “It is also very popular among seniors, judging by the number of applications we receive each year.” Every relationship is unique. Children keep seniors in touch with the present while giving them a glimpse of what the future holds. Meanwhile, seniors are able to teach children about the past, giving them a better understanding of where they come from. Let us help you achieve a beautiful smile We work with all senior residences Three years ago, Rita and Jean-Louis visited the Chartwell residence they’ve been calling home ever since. Now it’s your turn to discover a Chartwell house and who knows, make it your home as well. Join us for our special laughter workshop during the RQRA Open House. CHARTWELL.COM Make us part of your story. OPEN HOUSE Sunday April 26 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 10% OFF FOr SENIOrS FrEE CONSULTATION HOmE vISITS ALL DENTAL pLANS Free cleaning of your dentures John Schweitzer d.d. 5845 Cote-des-Neiges, Suite 300 montreal, Quebec, H3S 1Z4, 514-738-2279 CHARTWELL CASTEL ROYAL 5740 Cavendish Blvd., Côte Saint-Luc • 438-228-9293 CHARTWELL MANOIR KIRKLAND 2 Canvin Street, Kirkland • 438-538-8472 CHARTWELL LE WELLESLEY 230 Hymus Blvd., Pointe-Claire • 438-538-8474 Conditions may apply. www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior TimeS 13 Orange you glad it’s not called red? Dedicated readers of the Word Nerd column might remember that five years ago I explained The Word Nerd that, lexicographically, at least, there is no debate Howard Richler that the egg preceded the chicken. It arrived in the English language in the 9th century, whereas chicken only made its debut a century later. Today I will address the equally weighty conundrum of whether the colour orange or the fruit orange deserves the honour of being first. colour orange only appears more than 100 years Whereas the earliest citation of orange the fruit later. Actually, there was no word for the colour is from the beginning of the 15th century, the orange in Old English and a castle decorator would have had to say geolu-read, “yellow-red” to describe a throne that was orange-coloured. $ $ INCOME TAX $ $ The orange has enjoyed an exotic etymological AWAN BUSINESS CONSULTANTS INC. odyssey over the millennia. Around 2,500 Chartered professional accountants (CPA) years ago, the orange made a trip to India Professional Accounting,Tax, Business Advisory Services, from southern China. A Sanskrit medical & Commissioner of Oaths text describes the narangah, valued for its 514-227-8765 curative powers. It was a bitter orange, often 6900 Décarie Blvd., Suite 3250 now referred to as a Seville orange, and (Décarie Square) Montreal QC H3X 2T8 the word probably derives from one of the email: awan.irshad@sympatico.ca Dravidian languages of southern India, such as Malayalam or Tamil, where the term naru meant fragrant. Its journey, however, was just on its first leg because from India it travelled to Persia, where it was rendered as narang, and to Arabia, where it was called naranj. In the Middle Ages, Muslim merchants brought this bitter type of orange to Sicily and before long We speak your it was available throughout Europe. The sweet language! variety (sometimes called a China orange) that English, French, we associate with this fruit reached Europe 50 info@servicesrelive.com Romanian, Hebrew, www.servicesrelive.com Hungarian years later when Portuguese sailors imported it from India. Sweet oranges were considered a luxury and, until the middle of the 19th century, a delicacy mostly enjoyed by the aristocracy. Westminster Dental Clinic The Arabic word naranj was swallowed, in • Comprehensive dentistry some cases, almost whole in several European languages; e.g., Byzantine Greek nerantzion, • Gentle touch Italian narancia, and Spanish naranja. But the • Senior Discounts available first letter “n” is often changed or removed Passover and Easter greetings entirely as in the Portuguese, the Italian arancio, to our friends and patients arancia, or the late Latin aurantium. The loss of “n” may have occurred in a linguistic process Dr. Ewa Babarowski D.D.S. 514-931-8636 Over 20 years of experience called rebracketing that gave us English words uncle from nuncle and apron from napron. 5555 Westminster, Suite 400, Côte St. Luc When preceded by an indefinite article such as Dr. Ewa Canada a or an in English, or une or uno in Romance languages, the “n” can disappear. The opposite process can also occur; an “n” can be added to a word that didn’t originally have one. For example, a “newt” was originally in Middle English rendered as “an eute” and a “nickname” was an “eke name.” The Latin aurantium referenced before was probably also influenced by the word aurum, “gold”, since the fruit had a golden colour. Although we see a progression towards the spelling of “orange” in both English and French, this form of the word is due to a coincidence. In the south of France, there once was a Roman city named Arausio. In Provençal, a dialect of the Romance language Occitan, the name of the city morphed into Aurenja which was becoming a centre of the orange trade and Aurenja was nearly identical to the Provençal fruit word auranja. From here it was a small step to orenge and finally orange for both the city and the fruit. And orange (or should I say Orange) was not finished with its frequent travelling. In the 16th century, Philibert de Chalon of Orange was awarded a good chunk of the Netherlands by Emperor Charles V. When he died, his title passed to his German nephew, William of Nassau, Prince of Orange, who established the Dutch Republic and the House of Orange. As William organized Protestants in Holland to struggle against Catholic Spain for independence, both the name and the colour became associated with the Netherlands. In a couple of generations, however, orangeness would travel once again. William’s grandson William III became King of England in the late 17th century. Because he defended the Protestant population of Ireland, the Protestants there became known as the Orangemen in his honour. Incidentally, an orange’s colour has nothing to do with its ripeness. Oranges turn orange only as a result of cold weather, which breaks down a membrane protecting their green chlorophyll. Howard’s book Word Play: Arranged & Deranged Wit will be published in 2015. Hon. Irwin Cotler Hon. Stéphane Dion Marc Garneau Francis Scarpaleggia P.C., O.C., M.P. Mount Royal 514-283-0171 irwincotler.ca P.C., M.P. Saint-Laurent– Cartierville 514-335-6655 stephanedion.liberal.ca M.P. Westmount – Ville-Marie 514-283-2013 marcgarneau.liberal.ca M.P. Lac-Saint-Louis 514-695-6661 scarpaleggia.ca Best wishes for a Happy Passover and a Happy Easter! Meilleurs voeux à l’occasion de Pesach et de Pâques! 14 The Senior Times April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com We would like to extend to you our best wishes for a very Happy Passover & Happy Easter! Meilleurs voeux à l’occasion de Pessah et de Pâques! David Birnbaum MNA for D’Arcy-McGee Parliamentary Assistant to the Premier 514-488-7028 Marguerite Blais MNA for Saint-Henri–Sainte-Anne Vice-chair of the Committee of the National Assembly 514-933-8796 Jean-Marc Fournier MNA for Saint-Laurent Minister responsible for Canadian Intergovernmental Affairs and the Canadian Francophonie Minister responsible for Access to Information and the Reform of Democratic Institutions Government House Leader 514-747-4050 Geoffrey Kelley MNA for Jacques-Cartier Minister responsible for Native Affairs 514-697-7663 Guy Ouellette MNA for Chomedey Assistant to the Minister of Public Security 450-686-0166 Carlos Leitão MNA for Robert-Baldwin Minister of Finance 514-684-9000 François Ouimet MNA for Marquette First Vice-President of the National Assembly 514-634-9720 Hélène David MNA for Outremont Minister of Culture and Communications Minister responsible for the Protection and Promotion of the French Language 514-482-0199 Gilles Ouimet MNA for Fabre Chair of the Committee on Institutions 450-689-5516 Kathleen Weil MNA for Notre-Dame-de-Grâce Minister of Immigration, Diversity and Inclusiveness 514-489-7581 www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior Times 15 Animaze features the man behind iconic heavy Metal KRIStINE BEREy Critics have described the five-decade career of Gerald Potterton —animator, director, producer, writer, illustrator and painter—as “colourful” and “eclectic.” While one word can’t capture the essence of his work, his irreverent, ironic sense of humour is everpresent. “You’ve got to laugh, the world is too serious,” he says. Known for the sci-fi cult film Heavy Metal (1981) and Yellow Submarine (1968), Potterton could have fun even with films bearing dreary titles such as Fish Spoilage Control (1956). In this educational short, Potterton’s second produced at the National Film Board, invading battalions of little red demons demonstrate the dangers of mishandling fish — without putting anyone to sleep. Now 84, working in Cowansville, Potterton recalled leaving his native England, where he had worked on Animal Farm (1954), the first animated feature made there. “We saw wonderful films like Norman McLaren’s Neighbours (1952) and The Romance of Transportation (1952), still as good as Best wishes for a Happy Passover Gerald Potterton, with his painting of a spitfire the day it was made, about travelling across Canada 100 years ago. It all seemed so fresh and clean. I’ve always had a thing about the environment, clean air, fossil fuels and all that stuff.” Hired by the National Film Board in 1954, Potterton completed My Financial Career (1962), based on a text by Canadian humorist Stephen Leacock, and Christmas Cracker (1963), both animated shorts earning him Academy Award nominations. The Selfish Giant (1971) produced through Potterton Productions was also nominated for an Oscar. His animated and live action films number over 40, including notable collaborations with Buster Keaton in Keaton’s 87th film The Railrodder (1965) and playwright Harold Pinter in Pinter’s People (1969). Potterton admires Walt Disney’s Pinocchio as “one of the greatest animated films”. But he’s not a fan of full animation, because “half the time, it’s not very funny.” He aims to get to the point with the least amount of lines, to put a message across with humour. “It’s the difference between a Picasso sketch and John Constable landscape. It’s beautiful, but Picasso went to the essence and, in his simplicity, influenced all those who came after.” Among Potterton’s current projects, one animated short has a very personal meaning for him. “Always in the wings” is High Flight, inspired by a 1941 poem of the same name written by 19year old Royal Canadian Air Force pilot John Magee. The film pays homage to the idealistic young men who lost their lives during the pivotal Battle of Britain in WWll. Gerald Potterton’s film Heavy Metal will be screened at Animaze, the Montreal International Animation Film Festival, April 16-19. The festival celebrates all forms of animation from stop-motion to computer-generated images. Info and schedule: lemiaff.com Special Passover menu Bring your Matzoh Ball soup own wine Sea Bass 6535 Somerled, Montreal Grilled Lamb chops Tel: 514.487.8541 Oreganos Chicken pizza pasta paradise real Italian and mediterranean goodness ENJOY GAmE NIGHT SpECIALS 10 % OFF with this coupon OvEr 10 KINDS OF BEEr Open 7 days a week for lunch and dinner 11 am to 10 pm weekdays 11 am to 11 pm weekends 45 Westminster N. montreal West, H4X 1Y8 two kids in a hammock: Beryl Moser & Syd Barsky in Puerto Rico Villa du Souvlaki “Best Souvlaki in Town” HAPPY PASSOVER & HAPPY EASTER TO ALL OUR CLIENTS HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO ALL OUR FAITHFUL FRIENDS & CLIENTS Mon. to Sat: 11 a.m. - 10:30 p.m. Sun: 11 a.m. - 10 p.m. Pick Up Orders Call 514-489-2039 5347 Sherbrooke St. W., Montreal 16 The Senior TimeS April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com Dining Minium order 7 meals Free Delivery 514-713-1951 (maximum 2 persons per coupon) except holidays and festivals Meal includes tomato juice or coleslaw, 1/4 chicken leg, french fries, sauce, bun and choice of soft drink. 10.15 + taxes Snowdon Deli The best Deli in town since 1946 O DA U RESTAURANT Daou U P $ www.comfortmeals.ca DE 9 15 15 comfortmeals@sympatico.ca CE HAPPY EASTER & HAPPY PASSOVER TO ALL OUR FRIENDS & CLIENTS Valid with this coupon on dining room orders only Offer expires May 10, 2015 IS IN A complete quarter chicken meal... now that’s an extraordinary deal! Gift Certificates Available 1975 S Fine Lebanese Cuisine Catering & Banquet Service 2373 Marcel Laurin, St-Laurent 514-334-1199 519 Faillon East, Montreal 514-276-8310 Owner: Daou family Fax: 514-334-6720 A Happy Easter and Passover to all our Faithful Clients and Friends Foods for all occasions Party trays • Party sandwiches • Shiva platters • Salads • Take-out 5265 Decarie Blvd. 514-488-9129 www.snowdondeli.com Kosher Sweet Shop Happy Holidays to all our faithful clients & friends! Specialists in April 3: closing at 3 pm & re-opens on April 12 Take out only: starting April 6 from 9 am to 3 pm Chocolate & Macaroons RESTAURANT KAM SHING OPEN 7 VA N H O R N E DAYS A WEEK 11 AM - 11 PM CANtONESE & SZECHAuAN CuISINE HAPPY PASSOVER TO ALL OUR FRIENDS & CLIENTS Full Course Lunch Monday - Friday 11 AM - 3 PM • DINING ROOM ONLY SPECIAL 90 & $ 78 7. $ • Light breakfast served all day • Lunch with home-made soup • Assorted sandwiches, breads, muffins, salads • Irisistible pastries, macaroons, pies, cup cakes, cookies • Cakes for all your special occasions in all flavours: cheese, chocolate mousse, hazelnut, fruit, tiramisu, & gluten free • “Kosher pareve”, good for dairy intolerant people 8. 4771 VAN HORNE (Corner Victoria) 514-341-1628 514-488-8500 3855 Decarie, N.D.G. Mon-Thurs: 8am - 6pm friday: 8am - 3pm Saturday: Closed Sunday: 8am - 3pm Happy Easter & Happy Passover to all our friends & clients (we serve matzo) EARLY BIRD BREAKFAST SPECIALS FROM 5 A.M. 10. Smiles are always on our La Belle menu $ COUPON Dinner for two 2 hamburgers or 4 hotdogs, Coupon expires April 30, 2015 2 fries, two 16oz drinks Cheeseburger with Bacon Trio COUPON Hot Dog Trio $ 5. 49 99 $ Coupon expires April 30, 2015 5. 99 Coupon expires April 30, 2015 COUPON 6752 St. Jacques W. 514-481-8114 WOW! 11 inch Submarine 5. Choice of steak, pepperoni or vegetarian $ 99 COUPON GYROS Souvlaki Trio $ 5. 99 Coupon expires April 30, 2015 www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior TimeS 17 Youth receive GG’s Caring Canadian Award Adam Rozon, 14, a grade 9 student at Académie Lafontaine in St. Jérome, helped organize a solidarity march and collect funds for some 100 homeless in the city. He also set up a Fair Trade Sale at the school in cooperation with Oxfam. “I worked all last year to set this up and we’re selling coffee and chocolate this year, to help African farmers,” he said, with obvious pride. Simon Goyetche, 11, a grade 6 student at St. Jude Elementary in Two Mountains, was inspired by a YouTube pep talk and created Sock’tober, asking schoolmates for donations of socks for the homeless. “We donated just over 300 pairs of socks to Dans la Rue. There are people who are less fortunate than us, and in the harsh winters that we have here they need protection.” Isabel Szollosy, 13, in grade 7 at Beaconsfield High, and her sister Jane, 11, in grade 6 at Dorset Elementary in Baie d’Urfé, collected 30,000 aluminum cans over the past year, worth $1,500, and sold dishcloths for $4 each, raised over $10,000, and turned over the money to help feed impoverished Haitians in the Dominican Republic. “Our biggest project is to raise $75 for the most impoverished students attending Collège Amélioration Jeunesse (in Puerto Plata) to attend summer camp,” Isabel explained. “It’s not really a school, it’s a three-bedroom apartment during the day, for 184 students,” Isabel said. The family visited the camp last summer and spent two weeks with the children, teaching English and sharing in “fun activities – a life-changing and family-changing experience,” said their mom, Rhiannon Sparkes of Notre Dame de l’Île Perrot. Léa Simic-Lachapelle, 16, in grade 11 at Collège Mont Notre Dame, Sherbrooke, took part in various fund-raising efforts and helped organize support for the release of Raïf Badawy, whose wife lives in Sherbrooke, as part of the Amnesty International campaign. Badawy is the Saudi Arabian blogger who’s been sentenced to a decade in prison and 1,000 lashes for insulting Islam. Olivia Page, 17, also at Collège Mont NotreDame, worked with Amnesty International to support Badawy. She teaches Sunday School at St. Barnabas Anglican Church in North Hatley, and for over two years has helped collect 160 shoe boxes that donors fill with items that children need, in a project called Samaritan’s Purse. Craig Kielburger, co-founder of Free the Children 18 The Senior Times April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com Photos by Barbara Moser Quebec students who are changing the world Romy Suliteanu, 17, in grade 11 at St. George’s School, raised funds with others for scholarships to enable students to study at the Sheela Bal Bhavan girl’s school in Jaipur, India. Last year, she participated with the Costa Rican Humanitarian Foundation to help clean up a school, build a house for a poor family, and clean up beaches. She plans on studying to become a psychiatrist. “Everyone should have the right to education, and a lot of kids around the world don’t. Raising the money to build this school really touched me.” — Kayla Panacui Courtney Murdoch, 16, in grade 11 at Laurentian Regional High in Lachute, started her own campaign “to erase stigma regarding mental-health issues.” Diagnosed in grade 10 with acute anxiety, she “got labeled because people don’t understand what mental health is.” After attending Take Action Camp sponsored by Free the Children, Courtney decided to make people understand: “We aren’t weak, we’re so powerful we’ve overcome so much to still be around.” She collected money for a turkey dinner for the town’s women’s shelter, and organized a scavenger hunt for necessities to give to the shelter. She and her friends helped organize and participated in a 24-hour fast at school, which raised over $3,000 for a village in Kenya. The goal is to help the village become sustainable. Cassandra Gillen, 12, in grade 6 at St. John Fisher School in Pointe Claire, has been doing volunteer work for more than half her life, and at school raised enough money for surgery on two children needing to correct cleft palates. This year she’s working to raise $10,000 to build a school in rural Kenya. She’s already raised $1,020 by cashing in bottles and cans and from assorted donations. At the age of five, Cassandra gave her birthday money to help her cousin Tova, who needed surgery for cancer. If I was poor, other kids would take care of me, and that’s what I like to do for other kids.” — Jasmine Gadbois Wishing you a Happy Easter & a Happy Passover! 20140296-KingDavid-CanadianJewishNews-vF.pdf 1 2015-02-02 4:43 PM Wishing our residents, friends and families Happy Passover You’re home! 5555 Trent, Côte Saint-Luc, Montréal (QC) H4W 2V6 514.486.1157 www.lekingdavid.com www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior Times 19 Trafalgar School Fundraisers Mary Mawaj & friends at the 2014 Scotiabank Charity Challenge Our precious assets Spring / Summer 2015 Office hours: Monday - Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. We also offer: Photography, Microsoft Excel & Word, Painting, Spanish, Italian, Chinese, etc. For additional information and a complete list of our offerings, please visit our website or contact us. Languages: French, English Conversation courses Level 1 to 5 - 40 hours: $260 Regular or intensive format; evening or Saturdays Natalie Bercovici 10% discount for 60+ ATWATER www.dawsoncollege.qc.ca/ctd Registration online available Senior Discou ’s nt 10% off Comfortable, Beautiful and lasting dentistry *limited time offer Introductory New Patient Fees $105* ($195 value) Complete exam and digital x-rays HIGH-TECH GENERAL AND COSMETIC Convenient one-visit ceramic crowns and veneers Dental implants, partial and complete dentures Karim El-Samra D.M.D. General Dentist 3700 Sources Blvd., #210, D.D.O. Generations Foundation info@Ddentaloffice.com www.Ddentaloffice.com Call to make an appointment 514-900-DENT (3368) Tues.8am - 4pm Wed.8am - 4pm Thurs.11am - 8pm Fri.8am - 4pm Sat.10am - 3pm We accept emergencies Children are our most precious assets. Little did we realize, before the days of broader knowledge, that we could mold a child’s future even in the womb. Tragic experiences, especially for those children who are denied food, love and caring, would likely hamper their survival and success, possibly perpetuating the cycle with their offspring. The majority of parents care about their children and there is help from friends and neighbors. Mary Maraj of our Board of Directors wears multiple hats in both her own family and in the Generations Foundation family. Now a grandmother, she is asking for your support on behalf of the Generations Foundation to help provide positive experiences and nourishment to some of our needy 8,000 schoolchildren in their formative years. Visit generationsfoundation.com to join Mary and friends at the 2015 Scotiabank Charity Challenge 25/5K at Parc Jean Drapeau April 26. Thanks to their tenacity, Mary and friends want to top the $15,000 raised last year. Kudos to Jaclyn, Julia, ChristianeMarie and Annabel of Trafalgar School for Girls (see photo top left) for their dedication in winning the Youth Philanthropy Initiative top prize in raising $5,000 for Generations Foundation school food programs. Help Generations help kids Lease returns, minor accidents and insurance work • Bodywork/Paint • Windshield Repair • Detailing • Bumper Repair • Window Tinting • Paint Protection Film before Located right across the University Mall after • Free parking • Close to Burlington airport • Close to downtown Burlington Call us today for a free estimate! 514-675-4525 www.automagik.ca 16625 20 The Senior Times April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com Pierrefonds Blvd. (Just East of St. Charles) sibling relationships change as parents lose capacity As a parent moves into a world of dementia with increasing care needs, children will often react differently. They don’t always perceive their parents’ disabilities, not wanting to face that their parents are no longer able to care for themselves. Denial is a very strong force that protects us from seeing a painful situation. But when a parent has dementia, denial could be dangerous because it leads to neglect and the inability to secure proper care. Having to adjust to changing family roles, where a child is parenting the parent, adult children may need professional assistance. The best-case scenario happens when open discussions have occurred with the parent when capacity was not in question, and the parent has assigned different responsibilities to each child. For example, the child with the financial skills may be the one to manage finances and make financial decisions based on the early requests of the parent. (Hopefully this is spelled out in the parent’s mandate in the event of incapacity.) The child with sensitivity to the parent’s philosophy to health care may be mandated to make decisions in that area. That child need not be the hands-on fulltime caregiver, but would manage home care or residential care. Some families work amazingly well. Siblings have close relationships and understand each other’s strengths and weaknesses. Through discussions prior to diagnosis, they are able to work in sync for the best interest of the parent. But this is not always the case. Families are Let’s Talk About It Bonnie Sandler, BS.W. complicated. Some siblings have a history of difficulty relating to each other, resulting in limited communication. Old wounds come to the surface that interfere with the parent’s care and drive siblings even further apart. Caring for a parent with increasing needs is hard work and can cause anxiety and depression in adult children. Bringing in loving family members and friends and having open discussions about responsibilities can help. Certain situations bring up damaged parentchild relationships. One child was seen as the favourite and another may have had a tumultuous relationship with the parent leading to resistance to helping care for the parent. Siblings may not agree regarding their parent’s care. It is not a case of one sibling caring more, but rather different views on what kind of care would be best. I worked with a family where the two children lived in different parts of the world, both caring and having the best interest of their father in Montreal, who was diagnosed with dementia. One child came to Montreal and worked hard to find the most suitable residence for her dad. She believed he would benefit from the social contact in the residence. Months later, the other daughter arrived and felt that her dad would be happier in his own home with 24/7 care. She removed her father from the residence without advising her sibling or the residence, and lined up full-time care giving. The parent was doing well in the residence; then again he seemed to be content at home, but clearly lacked social stimulation. Both children felt that their plan was in their father’s best interest. The siblings came to terms with their father staying at home with full-term care and eventually their relationship strengthened. There was no right or wrong. There are other complications. One sibling may be financially better off than the other. The concern for a healthy inheritance may interfere with choosing a care plan for the parent. There may only be one sibling living in the same city as the parent, who will often bear the burden of responsibilities, doctors’ appointments, overseeing the care, visits, food shopping, etc. One sibling may have a heavy work schedule, while the other is unemployed and thus doing more for the parent. Resentment often builds and sibling relationships become more strained. There is no easy answer. The best way to avoid difficult relationships is early discussions with parents and well-thought-out mandates. While siblings may come together for the most important decisions, it’s the day-to-day responsibilities that can cause the most stress. Again, open discussions among siblings can help prevent damaged relationships. MK DENTURE CLINIC 17 years of experience IMPLANT SERVICE Wan Su Kim d.d. • Sung Bae Park d.d. • Vay Vay Hao d.d. SENIORS 65+ 10% DISCOUNT OUR SERVICES INCLUDE from the denturist’s association price guide • COMPLETE AND PARTIAL DENTURES AND DENTURES ON IMPLANTS • FREE CONSULTATION WITH NO OBLIGATION Smile to the spring! • FAST AND EFFICIENT DENTURE REPAIRS • DENTAL LABORATORY ON SITE • SERVICE AT HOME OR AT RESIDENCES FOR PEOPLE WITH RESTRICTED MOBILITY 514-484-7078 MONDAY - FRIDAY : 10:00 - 5:00, SATURDAY : APPOINTMENT ONLY 5890 Monkland suite 205, Montreal www.mkdenture.com www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior TimeS 21 W h at ’ s BAZAARS & FAIRS St. Antonin Church • April 25 & 26 Fri. 9am-6pm. Polish Bazaar, hot and cold Polish dishes and desserts, amber and handmade jewelry, folk art, books, cosmetics. Proceeds to assist children, and seniors with disabilities. 5361 Snowdon. 514-489-6010, 514-983-7353 Marie Claret Church • April 10 & May 8 9am-7pm; April 11 & May 9, 9am-3pm, 10,660 Larose, near Henri Bourassa. 450-978-4033 St. Gabriel’s Church • April 24, 25 Fri: 9am-6pm. Sa: 9am-3pm, 2157 Centre, Point St. Charles, 450-465-8047 ty used quality used okquality Sale used Sale Book day &Book SundaySale Saturday & Sunday quality used && Sunday 1 & Saturday 12April 10 am –Book 512pm 11 10 amSale – 5 pm 12 10atam pm eryoneApril atBooks very11 low prices. for & everyone very – low5prices. Saturday Sunday Books for everyone at very low prices. &new Proceeds go towards purchasing materials towards purchasing new materials Proceeds go towards purchasing new materials April 11 & 12 10 am – 5 pm for the Westmount Public Library. mountfor Public Library. the Westmount Public Library. Books for everyone at very low prices. h a p p e n i n g Ste. Cécile Church • April 25, 26 9am-5pm, Sat., 9am-4pm, 235 de Castelneau, near Henri Julien. 514-660-0649 St. Charles Church • May 1, 2 9am-6pm, Saturday, 9am-3pm, 2115 Centre, Pointe St. Charles. 514-932-5335 CLUBS Dance the Night Away hosts spring dance for ages 40+. April 4, 8pm-1am. LaSalle Legion 212 Branch, 7771 Bouvier corner Shevchenko. $12 including coffee, midnight snack, door prizes. meetup.com/ dancing-the-night-away-montreal Bon Appétit Friday Night Dinner Club gathers every Friday, 7pm at restaurants around town. 514-264-8951 Riverside Ramblers hosts a walking club for 50+ at Dawson Community Centre Tuesdays & Fridays. 10-11:30am. 666 Woodland Ave. Verdun. Free tryout! $15 annual DCC membership fee. riversideramblers@gmail.com 514-767-9967 X236 Royal Canadian Legion NDG Branch 106 hosts o every Friday 2pm, 5455 de Maisonneuve W. New players welcome. Proceeds go towards purchasing new materials Victoria Hall 4626 Sherbrooke W. Victoria Hall 4626 Sherbrooke W. 514-486-9883 Victoria Hallfor4626 Sherbrooke W. the Westmount Public Library. Info.: 514Sherbrooke 483-5604 Info.: Info.: 514514 483-5604 Victoria Hall483-5604 4626 W. Royal Canadian Legion Lachine Branch 85/90, April 10, holds a sugar shack/dinner/dance at 3015 Henri Info.: 514 483-5604 Loving Care Nursing Home For autonomous people • Loving & caring environment • Beautiful atmosphere • Personal attention • Well situated • Private & semi-private rooms • Activities • Nutritious meals • Safe & non-smoking environment Call Elaine 514-344-8496 Services Comptables L.B.G. Luc Garand • Accounting • Personal and corporate income tax returns 514-725-9747 Cell: 514-919-8647 luc.b.garand@videotron.ca Dunant, music by Greg Innes, meal at 6pm. $15. 514-637-8002 LECTURE & BOOKS Jewish Public Library • April 12 10am-noon. Jewish Geneological Society presents Sunday Morning Family Tree Workshop, 5151 Côte Ste. Catherine. 514-484-0969 Jewish Public Library 7:30pm. Jewish Geneological Society presents Jeffrey Gorney, discussing his book, Mysterious Places: Memoir, Journey, Quest. Inspired by family stories, Romania, ancestral lands, and Jewish identity. 5151 Côte Ste. Catherine. Council on Palliative Care • April 13, 20, 27 Three free workshops at Temple Emanu-El-Beth Sholom: April 13, What you wanted to know about hospitals and were too afraid to ask, with family physician Dr. Eugene Bereza; April 20, Screening of Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End, with discussion led by nurse Sue Britton and social worker Zelda Freitas; April 27, Advocating for Excellent Care, with nurse Joan Foster, 6-8pm, 395 Elm. fmpa202@aol.com St. James Literary Society • April 14 7pm. Photographer Linda Rutenberg Exotic Gardens from Around the World, Segal Centre, indoor parking available. 5170 Côte Ste. Catherine. stjamesliterarysociety.com. $40 for five lectures. 514-484-0146 Jewish Public Library • April 14 2pm. Author and broadcaster Elaine Kalman Naves reviews The Innocents by Francesca Segal, a story of love and temptation, part of library’s book review series. $12, members and students $7. Jewish Public Library • April 14 7pm. Screening of documentary Of Many, on how an Orthodox rabbi and an imam in New York City developed a relationship against a background of Middle East violence and tension between Jewish and Muslim college students. Imam Khalid Latif and Rabbi Yehuda Sarna will be present. Free but registration required. 514-345-6416 22 The Senior Times April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com Jewish Public Library • April 14 7:30pm. Award-winning Israeli author Eshkol Nevo, grandson of late Israeli prime minister Levi Eshkol, speaks about venturing beyond Israel’s literary borders, Zionism, leaving Israel following a personal tragedy, and his novel Neuland. Free but registration required. 514-345-6416 Helvetia Seniors Club • April 15 11am-2pm. Monkland Grill, 6151 Monkland. Celebrating the club’s 7th anniversary. 450-687-5226 Krishnamurti Information Centre of Mtl • April 18 2-4pm. What is A Responsible Human Being presented in English with French subtitles. Atwater Library, 2nd floor, 1200 Atwater. $5. 514-937-8869 St. James Literary Society • April 28 7:30pm. McGill Principal Suzanne Fortier speaks at University Faculty Club, 3450 McTavish. stjamesliterarysociety.com $40 for five lectures. 514-484-0146 Jewish Public Library • April 28 7:30pm. Jacques LaSalle discusses his new memoir, Life in Four Acts, based on his volunteering to serve Israel in 1967 and 1973, becoming a kibbutz member, and returning home to become chief of staff to Quebec Justice Minister Herbert Marx. He worked at Cowansville Prison, where he counseled FLQ convict Paul Rose. Members $15, students $10. Women’s Canadian Club • May 4 12:30pm. Democracy and the Rule of Law in Latin America, with Manual Balán, assistant professor, McGill University, preceded by winners of highschool public speaking contest, Unitarian Church, 5035 de Maisonneuve Blvd. $10, free for members. 514-932-4005 Sandra Goldberg Lecture • May 5 6pm, Public Choices, Private Lives: An End-of-Life Conversation, McGill University’s Leacock Building, Rm. 132, with oncologist Dr. Harvey Schipper, University of Toronto, MNA Véronique Hivon, initiator of Quebec’s Act Respecting End-of-Life Care, and moderator Daniel Jutras, Dean of Law at McGill. Leacock Building, Rm 132. EVENTS CDN Friends of Rabbis for Human Rights • April 8 6:30pm. Community Passover seder at Congregation Dorshei Emet. Adults $10, students $5. 514-489-5651 Unitarian Church of Montreal • April 10 6pm. Family-friendly Passover celebration on holiday’s last day. Please bring a dessert or Kosher for Passover wine. Volunteers needed. Suggested contribution $8 adults, $3 children, $20 families. 514-775-2034 Summerlea United Church • April 11 7pm. One-man play They Came From Away, featuring Trevor McKinven, is a comedy about a reunion of six people who stayed at the home of an 80-year-old in Gander when aircraft were diverted from the 9-11 attacks. $15. 514-634-2651 or alectmck3@gmail.com. Unitarian Church of Montreal • April 12 12:30pm. Marking the centennial of the Armenian genocide in Turkey with documentary on the slaughter of one million by Ottoman Turks, introduced by a descendent of genocide survivors. 5035 de Maisonneuve Blvd. W. 514-485-9933 Westmount Historical Association • April 16 7pm. Sharon Azrieli discusses the preservation of a building on The Boulevard. The team used archival photographs, plans, and drawings to restore what is the third-oldest house in Westmoun. It has been designated a historic monument. Westmount Public Library, 4574 Sherbrooke W. 514-989-5510 t h i s Seniors Action Quebec • April 27 8:30am-5pm. Conference on Bill 52, bringing together citizens, health-care professionals, medical students, caregivers, and community organizations to examine religious perspectives, medical, ethical, and legal issues, and palliative care. Register by April 17. 450-218-3227 or ruthpelletier613@gmail.com Sun Youth Benefit Concert • April 18 7pm. Choral and orchestral music ensembles perform at Mountainside United Church, 4000 The Boulevard, corner Lansdowne Mountainside choir, junior chorale of the English Montreal School Board, Montreal Chinese s p R i n g Children’s Choir, Deutscher Choir Montreal, le Petit Choeur de Rosemère, Montreal Intercultural Choir, and Con Brio ensemble of FACE school. $15, students and seniors $12. 514-486-1165 research and to support Camp Cayuga at Scout Camp Tamaracouta for teens and young adults with cancer. Free. Staffed by 20 volunteers with onsite medical team. 514-695-2813 Lakeshore Artists and NOVA West Island • April 24-26 Exhibition of paintings by local artists at the Fritz Farm, 20,477 Lakeshore, Baie d’Urfé, 7-9pm April 24, and 10am-5pm April 25 & 26. 514-695-8335 X212 West End Quilters Guild • May 2, 3 Saturday, 10-5pm. Sunday, 10-3pm. St. Ignatius of Loyola Church, 4455 West Broadway. Free. wequilters@gmail.com Art by the Water • April 24-26 Exhibit and sale of paintings at Beaconsfield Yacht Club, 26 Lakeshore, April 25, 7-10pm, and April 25 & 26, 10am-5pm. Part of proceeds for cancer Ladies Musical Club • April 12 Dutch mezzo-soprano Christianne Stotijn in a return engagement, performing works by Tchaikovsky, Shostakovich, Korngold, and MUSIC Strauss, 3:30pm at Pollack Hall, 555 Sherbrooke W. $40, students 26 and under $20. 514-932-6796 St. Thomas More Women’s Club • April 15 12pm. Card Party, 978 Moffat, corner Bannantyne, Verdun. Refreshments. Bring your cards. Men welcome. Early bird prize. $5. 514-768-4741 St. Columba-by-the-Lake • April 18 7:30pm. Classical trio of flautists Claude Régimbald and Jean-Philippe Tanguay, and pianist Mariane Patenaude, playing the music of Bach, Kuhlau, Debussy, and Coppler. 11 Rodney, Pointe Claire. $12, free for children. 514-364-3027. DIMANCHE ARCAND 3 MAI 14h30 MAY 3, 2015 2:30 PM ET LA BELLE tre de cham hes b rc O BÊTE, DENYS DÉCOUVREZ LA PASSION SECRÈTE DE DENYS ARCAND ! DISCOVER DENYS ARCAND'S SECRET PASSION! 1939 a LA SOUS LA PRÉSIDENCE DE DANIELLE BLOUIN McGill C re er Orches tr CONFÉRENCE BÉNÉFICE AVEC MUSIQUE mb ha BEAUTY & THE BEAST Continued on p 24 2014 2015 75th SEASON McGILL CHAMBER ORCHESTRA Boris Brott, Artistic Director BENEFIT GALA CONCERT In collaboration with FIRST PRIZE VIOLIN AUDITORIUM GRANDE BIBLIOTHÈQUE ODE TO JOY Beethoven’s 9th Symphony SHARON AZRIELI PEREZ STÉPHANIE POTHIER ANTOINE BÉLANGER GORDON BINTNER 475 de Maisonneuve E., Montréal FLORIE VALIQUETTE, soprano In collaboration with the St-Lawrence Choir and the Musica Orbium Choir CONFERENCE-COCK TAIL VIP : 130 $, REGULIER : 30 $, ÉTUDIANTS : 20 $1 • 514-948-2520 • WWW.LASCENA.CA mimc_TheSeniorTimes_15.04_Layout 1 15-03-30 15:56 Page MARC BOUCHKOV, VIOLINIST BORIS BROTT, CONDUCTOR BE AMAZED! May 5th, 2015 - 7:30 pm IN AN INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION BOURGIE HALL 1339, Sherbrooke W, Montreal Pre-Concert Talk: 6:30 pm 24 CLASSICAL SINGERS Taras Kulish, Executive Director Tickets: $14 - $53 BORIS BROTT, CONDUCTOR June 9th, 2015 - 7:30 pm Pre-Concert Talk: 6:30 pm MAISON SYMPHONIQUE DE MONTRÉAL 1600 St-Urbain, Montreal Tickets: $23 - $65 514-842-2112 514-285-2000 #4 www.ocm-mco.org QUARTER FINALS May 25-26-27 SEMI-FINALS May 29-30 514 285-2000 option 4 FROM MAY 25 TO JUNE 5 CONCOURSMONTREAL.CA FINALS June 2-3 LAUREATES CONCERT June 5 Orchestre symphonique de Montréal 514 842-2112 TICKETS ON SALE NOW! www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior TimeS 23 CD ReviewS by Irwin Block dialectics (Cellar Live) curtis nowosad When five skilled and motivated musical friends who love music get together for a recording session, it can becoe something extraordinary. That is precisely what happened when Winnipeg drummer/composer Curtis Nowosad called in teachers and fellow musicians, connected with the University of Manitoba, to produce this sparkling, varied, and engaging album that recalls the finest days of the Blue Note label and its classic recordings of the late 1950s and early 1960s. They kick off with a bright reading of Wayne Shorter’s 1964 piece Speak no Evil, punctuated by Nowosad’s propulsive drumming and the harmonic pairing of trumpeter Derrick Gardner and Jimmy Greene on tenor sax. Pianist Will Bonness leads the development into Empirically Speaking, the resonant bass Steve Kirby making the ballad breathe. It’s one of six originals by Nowosad that gives the album its familiar yet original sound: We know the format, we’ve heard They’re on on two CDs – music from around the world, beautifully recorded, varied, and a source of continued pleasure. Call them folk, or roots; you don’t have to understand the words to grasp the languages, be they of love, or longing, celebration, an invitation to dance, or a call to heal. While this collection can serve as a primer for further exploration, it can be enjoyed simply for what it is. Disc 1 opens with vocalist Ana Alcaide singing El Pozo Amargo (bitter pit), the bittersweet lament about Sephardic Jews having to leave Toledo. Gorgeous. André Hazz and his Lebanese music ensemble with their Mah’Iqaa and Rossy’s polyrhythmic Madigaskara will provide an incredible lift. Nour Eddine fascinates with the call-andresponse Bania, inspired by Gnawa traditions. DISCOVER WORLD MUSIC (ARC Music) Finnish, Roma, Corsican, and Klezmer traditional music are among other uplifting cuts. Various artists And there’s more on Disc 2, African, Tibetan, For weeks now, I have been listening to and been Chinese, Klezmer, Russian, Spanish, Portuguese – inspired by this extraordinary compilation of opening a few veins from what seems to be an endless 18 songs. storehouse of gems – a truly remarkable primer. the changes before, but the melodies are as fresh as the energy the musicians pour into the ensemble sound. Dialectics is a funky number, built over a sixtone scale and carried forward by the horn section, while 159 & St. Nick is the frenzy of New York City, with high-energy improv from the horns and the nimble pianism of pianist Bonness. There’s a blues, a waltz, and a lovely ballad called Reconciliation, its theme rendered by trumpeter Gardner; an afro-Cuban take on Monk’s Bye-Ya; and a respectful, hard- hitting if occasionally playful rendition of I Remember You. This is the sound, texture, and spirit of that golden era alive and kicking today. Highly recommended. Fortunate Shipwreck screening: Today’s debate on the place of religion and the wearing of clothing that has religious significance continues, even as the Liberal government considers a new version of the failed Quebec Values legislation introduced by the Parti Québécois government. The relationship of religion and society in Quebec is examined in the documentary L’Heureux Neufrage/Fortunate Shipwreck, which is being shown April 13, 6:30 pm at St. Columba House, 2365 Grand Trunk, in Pointe St. Charles. $5. Special guest is Prof. Norman Cornett, religious studies scholar. 514-932-6202, ext. 224. ELDER AIDE ASSOCIATES March Solutions A network of professionals providing services in social work, senior relocation, real estate, accounting, financial planning and legal matters at reasonable rates. Group information sessions 438-390-3705 24 The Senior Times April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com What’s happening from p. 23 Christ Church in Beaurepaire • April 21 7:30pm. Hato Piano duo with Zancao String Duo, 455 Church St. corner Fieldfare. $20, including aprèsconcert reception. 514-697-2204 Lakeshore Concert Band • April 25 8pm. Annual gala, Orchestra Classics – No Strings Attached at the Oscar Peterson Concert Hall, featuring pieces with orchestral theme – The Magic Flute, La Gazza Ladra, Overture from Candide, and Poet and Peasant Overture. 7141 Sherbrooke W. $18 or $13 in advance. 514-428-0292 Stewart Hall Singers • May 2 45-voice community choir performs Beethoven’s Mass in C, St. Joachim Church, 2 Ste. Anne’s, Pointe Claire. $20. 514-630-0331 Ladies Morning Musical Club • May 3 3:30pm. Borodin String Quartet performs works by Shostakovich and Beethoven at Pollack Hall, 555 Sherbrooke W. $40. 514-932-6796 He thinks he can win one for Harper in Lac-Saint-Louis As a senior manager at the National Bank for some 20 years, risk assessment and management have been at the heart of Éric Girard’s work. Trained in economics and finance at McGill and Université du Québec à Montréal, Girard says he looked at the numbers and figured the time was right to leap into politics. Girard has taken a nine-month leave from the bank, where for the past three years he has been its treasurer, to seek the Conservative nomination in Lac-Saint-Louis riding. “There is not one Conservative MP in the whole region of Montreal, and that is unacceptable. Montreal needs to be represented in the government,” he says. He rates Mount Royal and Lac-Saint-Louis as having the best chances for the Tories to stage an upset, and he opted for the latter because “good candidates” are already vying for the Mount Royal nomination. It is far from a slam dunk, however, since he’s competing with a well-entrenched local figure, Peter Fletcher – a financial consultant with expertise in risk management, the outgoing president of the Conservative riding association, and Baie d’Urfé town councilor. Lac-Saint-Louis – Beaconsfield, Pointe Claire, Baie-d’Urfé, Kirkland, Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Senneville and the western part of PierrefondsRoxboro borough – is considered a safe Liberal seat, but the Liberal share of the vote has diminished since ex-MP Clifford Lincoln won massive majorities there. We met Girard for the first time at a Monkland Ave. café and, careful manager that he is, Girard began by querying me on my journalistic background. We then turned to his biography, and his move to set aside a successful career to risk it in “retail” politics. Girard was raised in Ste. Foy, now part of Quebec City. His father, born to a large working class family in Lac St. Jean, is a corporate lawyer; his mother, born in St. Félicien, is a Special Ed professional. Knowing little English, Girard moved to Montreal to study in an honours program at McGill. He says his talent in mathematics earned Should Girard be nominated, he’ll face off against Scarpaleggia and NDP candidate Ryan Young, 43, a John Abbott College teacher in his second term as a Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue city councilor. The bank gave him a leave of absence until the end of the year and Girard has begun meeting people involved in community affairs to better understand their concerns. Living in Mount Royal with his wife, Sherbrookeborn Chantale Landry, an interior designer, daughter Félicité and son Louis-Charles, Girard said he chose Lac-Saint-Louis because “I think I can win there.” Apart from the fact his daughter plays hockey in the West Island – Girard coaches the team, and son plays baseball there, he sees broad affinities between his own lifestyle in Mount Royal, his outlook and the area’s culture: He’s a staunch federalist, an avid skier and tennis player. He says a robust economy is his main focus politically. In his first contacts, he noted West Island residents would like what he has in Mount Royal – a ten-minute walk to the Canora AMT station where, since 1999, he boards the morning train at 6:21 am and is downtown by 6:30. “People in the West Island are not happy with train service,” high marks and his English improved in debates he notes, stopping short of saying he can promise as a member of the student Liberal club. federal aid to improve the situation. He got his Honours B.Com. Degree but People also want government policies so that remembers disagreeing with major Liberal “when our kids graduate, they stay here. policies at the time: Girard supported Brian “I offer my experience, my competence as Mulroney’s push for free trade with the U.S. and a manager. I offer my stewardship – careful, the doomed Meech Lake Accord. responsible management of our country. “I always found myself on the Conservative “Canada has outperformed all the countries in side,” he recalled. the G7 group since 2007, when it comes to growth His first job was with Trizec Corp, the real estate and employment. That is an undeniable sign of holding company, but with the real estate crisis positive management.” of 1989, his bosses enabled him to study three He likes the fact that Canada receives about days a week for a master’s degree at Université du 250,000 immigrants a year and that free trade Québec à Montréal. deals are expanding beyond the Americas. After a year at the Bank of Canada, he joined the Girard looked at the results of the last election National Bank and rose to its highest executive and noted that Liberal Scarpaleggia won his fourth level. He’s been responsible for the bank’s term with 34 per cent of the vote, 2,000 more than structural interest-rate risk and liquidity funding. the NDP candidate and 3,000 votes more than the Last year he told his employers he was eager for a third-placed Conservative, Larry Smith. stab at politics. “My kids are older, 14 and 13. I’ve “On the level of statistics, a margin of less made some money, I have more independence, than 5,000 votes can be reversed, in any riding and I am ready.” in Canada.” At the bank, he has never heard any bank economists complain when the Harper government scrapped the compulsory long-form census. It has been much criticized by statisticians because most consider data from voluntary Emard, Les cuisines collective du Grand Plateau, responses less valid. As for the Harper government scrapping the and Bread Basket Lac St. Louis for St. Columba long-gun registry and refusing to turn over By The Lake Church. Places and times data to Quebec, Girard says, “it seems it was an Congregation Dorshei Emet, 18 Cleve Rd, exceptional waste of public funds. That’s why it Hampstead, Sunday, April 19, 11am-2pm was cancelled.” He had no opinion on its refusal Unitarian Church of Montreal, 5035 de to turn over the data to Quebec. Maisonneuve W. (metro Vendome), Saturday, When it comes to the Conservative “tough-onMay 3, 11am-2pm crime” policies at a time when violent crime St. Columba By The Lake Church, 11 Rodney is decreasing steadily in Canada, Girard says, Ave, Pointe-Claire. Saturday, April 18, 11:30am- “The Conservative government has promised to 1:30pm and 5pm-7pm. An evening concert for improve the security of Canadians and I believe $12 at 7:30pm will be held and all funds collected sincerely this is what Canadians, and voters in will be donated to Action Réfugiés. Contact Joan Lac-Saint-Louis, want.” Simand at jsimand@otstcfq.org and to volunteer, No date has been set for the nomination meeting. lehrman3@gmail.com irblock@hotmail.com www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior Times 25 Filling empty bowls to fight hunger Empty bowls will be filled at three locations this year: Congregation Dorshei Emet, Unitarian Church of Montreal, and a new location, St. Columba By The Lake Church. The event aims to fight hunger and to address issues related to food insecurity and food justice. Quebec artisans generously donate their ceramic bowls for the cause. Tickets are $25 for a hand-made ceramic bowl donated by a potter, along with one serving of soup and bread. Tickets for children are $5 (under age 12 for the meal only). The beneficiaries for 2015 are Hanukah Baskets program for Congregation Dorshei Emet, the NDG Food Co-op for Unitarian Church of Montreal and La Maison d‘Entraide St. Paul/ Photo: Irwin Block IRWIN BLOCK what do low oil prices mean for investors? Financial Fitness Deborah Leahy Happy Passover & Easter Greetings to our clientele. Providing affordable apartments in a vibrant community and safe environment for autonomous individuals 55+ 3 ½ for $850 Included: heat, electricity, fridge/stove and spacious lockers Call for a personal tour or visit our website to view our video www.spsquare.ca 6767 Cote St. Luc Rd. ST. PATRICK SQUARE As you’ve no doubt noticed, your trips to the gas station have been a lot more pleasant these past several months. There’s not much doubt that lower oil prices have been welcome to you as a driver. But when oil is less expensive, is that good for you as an investor? There’s no clear-cut answer. But consider the following effects of low oil prices: Positive impact on economy — When you spend less at the gas pump, relative to recent years, what will you do with your savings? Like most people, you’ll probably spend most of it on goods and services. If you multiply the amount of your increased spending by the millions of others who 514-481-9609 514-481-9609 514-489-6879 WOW! Personal trainers available to help you stay fit & healthy. Mon-Fri 6:30am - 10pm, Sat-Sun 8am - 8pm Happy holidays to all our faithful clients and friends! Day Pass for 2 *For new members only Exp: April 30, 2015 Senior Discounts Available 26 The Senior TimeS April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com Illustration not covered by medicare are also saving money on gas, you can see that you and your fellow consumers are likely adding billions of dollars to the economy. Typically, a strong economy is also good for the financial markets — and for the people who invest in them. Different results for different sectors — Different sectors within the financial markets may respond in different ways to low oil prices, even if the overall effect is generally positive. For example, businesses such as consumer goods companies and auto manufacturers may respond favourably to cheaper oil and gas. But the picture might be quite a bit different for energy companies. You could spend a lot of time and effort trying to adjust your investment portfolio in response to low oil prices. In fact, you may well want to consult with your financial professional to determine which moves might make sense for your individual situation. Yet there’s actually a bigger lesson to be learned here. Don’t overreact to temporary developments. The recent decline in oil prices has certainly had an economic impact, but no one can predict how long these prices will stay low or what other factors may arise that would affect the financial markets. That’s why you can’t reconfigure your portfolio based on particular events, whatever they may be — oil price drops, interest-rate fluctuations, political squabbles at home, natural disasters in faraway lands, and so on. If you can keep from being overly influenced by specific events, you may be able to gain at least two key benefits: First, by not making trades constantly in reaction to the headlines of the day, you can avoid piling up fees and commissions, which are costs that can reduce the return rate on your investments. Second, you’ll find that if you aren’t always thinking about what’s going on in the world today, you can focus your investment efforts more intensely on where you want to be tomorrow. The most successful investors set long-term goals and don’t focus on factors they cannot control such as oil prices, interest-rate changes or other economic events. Instead, these investors make adjustments, as necessary, to accommodate changes in their goals as well as other changes, such as revisions in tax laws — but they basically stick to their same approach for the long-term. So be aware of low oil prices, but don’t get so “pumped” about them that you disrupt your consistent investment strategy — because that strategy has the energy to keep you moving toward your important objectives. 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Jordan 438-880-6976 jordies13@gmail.com www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior TimeS 27 What’s in store for the children of Cuba? Barbara Moser opinion, excellent diagnosticians. This is probably because they don’t have a lot of fancy equipment for testing, nor do they have the variety of drugs available to us. This is in good part the result of the American economic boycott imposed in 1960 and extended in 1962. So what does the future hold for the children of Cuba? I worry, not that the return of capitalism will bring back private business to Cuba, but that this will have little benefit for most Cubans because they simply do not have the means to open businesses themselves. And the government has no plans to subsidize private enterprise, but does impose stiff taxes. Any Cuban with a relative in the US or who works with tourists is far better off than one who has no such connections. I have seen people lining up outside ATMs to withdraw money sent monthly from abroad. As for those without connections: The average monthly salary for a university graduate is about 20CUC a month. (One CUC is equal to 25 Cuban pesos. Although everyone is paid in Cuban pesos, I have provided the figures in CUC to simplify matters. One CUC is approximately equal to $1 US. This is the currency used by tourists.) A 22-year-old who has no university education and works as a bookkeeper earns $12 a month. A lawyer earns $20 a month. A doctor earns $40 - $60 a month, depending on the particular clinic or hospital he or she is associated with. An architect? $20. These figures are based solely on conversations with these professionals. So what do people live on? The government supplies a small monthly ration of oil, milk, and chicken, but meat, fish, and vegetables are very expensive for the Now that Cuba and the United States are engaged in talks aimed at normalizing relations, what changes are in store for the socialist experience there? In particular, how will possible changes affect Cuba’s children? This March, I visited Havana for the first time in three years and looked for some answers. I have been visiting Havana and nearby Santa Clara and Cienfiegos for the past 15 years, sometimes twice a year. I have gone to visit friends I met on my trips, some through the synagogues, neighbours of friends, and doctors I met because of knee problems. I was curious to see if anything had changed, especially for the children. The quick answer is “Not much!” What concerns me is that the expected return of American cultural and economic forces will lead to an erosion of the social safety net. I fear the American influence will grind down the two great benefits socialist Cuba bestows on its children: free health and dental care and free education, including university for those who meet academic standards. Every Cuban child is entitled to attend school, and they receive a uniform and pair of shoes. They are served one meal at school, albeit rice and beans, and not of the best quality as I have heard from my young friends. Infant mortality in Cuba – the number of deaths of infants under one year old per 1,000 live births – at 4.83 is marginally lower than Canada’s 4.85 score, according to the CIA World Factbook of January, 2012. This figure is frequently cited to indicate the effectiveness of a country’s healthcare system. There are excellent facilities for mothersto-be and post-natal care. Cuban doctors are, in my 28 The Senior Times April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com Top: Boy at Centro Sephardi Purim party; Bottom: Lionel and Lianna strut their stuff; Right: He won Best Costume at the Purim party. average Cuban, usually out of reach. Retirees receive a pension of $8 a month and, from what I am told, do not eat well. A Cuban child can expect to grow up with a roof over her head, often in crowded apartments, with enough food, but not always of the best quality and From left: Kids nighbourhood party at Luyana, Havana; Paola, Emily and Carolina enjoying the day at the Riviera pool; Sisters, Sara Ana and Sofia Laura, on a Sunday pony ride; Patricia (left) and Rebecca at Purim party. commanding influence, sugar cane became the main export for Cuba, and all other crops suffered. Fertile fields that used to grow a variety of crops were planted with sugar cane, and Cuba’s oncevaried agriculture became a monoculture. Speaking of culture, Cuban children are exposed to the arts from an early age and lessons of every type are encouraged and inexpensive. Little girls in ballet tutus are seen everywhere in Havana, and piano music can be heard on the street wafting out of the studios. I have not seen children’s art classes but I know they exist and there are thousands of paintings for sale in the artisan markets in Old Havana and near the Parque Central, the central square. Are the children of Cuba happy? My opinion is that they are happier than children elsewhere. Families are very close, partly because they live in close quarters. You will often find children sharing a bedroom with their parents. Even though toys are expensive, imported from China and of the worst quality, children there are not hooked on electronic devices. They play outdoors in the pleasant weather. Since they have little to covet from their peers, bullying doesn’t seem to exist. This is not to say that children don’t need better quality food, toys, clothes, etc. This is why I encourage all visitors to Cuba to bring small new and used toys, dolls, new underwear to give out to variety. Meat and fish are expensive —chicken is people in Havana. $2.50 a kilo, which for most Cubans is a luxury, and I recommend my favourite community, Centro vegetables at outdoor markets are also expensive Sephardi, at E and 17th streets in Vedado (central for Cubans. Havana) – one of the three synagogues in Havana, Most children depend on a meager diet based led by Dr. Mayra Levy, who makes sure the children on rice, beans, some eggs, and lots of sugar, which in her community and others in the neighbourhood is in everything. Pastries are cheap. Cubans love receive gifts from the missions that arrive from their sugar. Of course, when the Russians were a Canada and the US. Pens are always much appreciated. (The cost of one pen is equal to 1/20th of their salary.) Stickers are adored by children of all ages. School supplies are always welcome, especially if you can make contact with a teacher or a principal. Notebooks are in very short supply and expensive. Coloured pencils make a wonderful gift. How has Cuba changed? Many small businesses have opened up outside people’s homes. Cubans are selling whatever they can get their hands on –from second-hand pots and pans to Cuban jewelry. Some have opened small coffee shops. The government demands its share in taxes, but in the new, emerging Cuba, small private enterprise is tolerated. We can always hope that as the Americans move in and bilateral relations improve, the average Cuban will benefit. But until the Cuban government raises the salaries of its citizens across the board, little will change for the people of Cuba. barbarasmoser@gmail.com www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior Times 29 Bathing body and soul in Baños For the first time on our many and varied travels, I was crying because I didn’t want to leave. We were in Baños de Aqua Santa, Ecuador, this January, at the El Pedron, a peaceful, lush, well-run Barbara Moser hotel. Our corner room had two windows with a view of the Virgin’s Falls, one of many waterfalls that pour down from the green mountains that surround this town. The last morning we took Luca, a golden retriever, one of the six rescue dogs belonging to our hostel lady, on a walk around the town, ending at Virgin’s Falls. Baños has more hostels than any town we’ve ever visited and no shortage of restaurants with quirky names such as Blah Blah, Café Hood, Casa Hood, and Eruption, the hostel and restaurant where we spent our first three days. Robert Frost wrote: “Something there is that doesn’t love a wall,” and he was right, at least about Baños! There are no walls here: people are more than neighbours, more than acquaintances, more than friends. They share, they mentor, and they are generous with their time and talents. The centre of the ex-pat and local community is Libreria Vieira, Arte Illusiones, an art supply shop, new and used bookstore for students and travellers, excellent café featuring delicious espresso concoctions, and a jewellery shop. Nynne Noe Vivanco Vieira, who is Danish, runs the establishment with her husband Juan Diego Vivanco Vieira who creates the jewellery in an open workshop in one corner. Their children, Luca Her husband, a welder, returns to Canada now and and Nova Luna, return from school to the café to then to work. Robin is a supremely talented portrait play and do their homework behind the counter artist who works in coloured pencils! Her portraits featuring school and art supplies. On the way home are so powerful that they inspired me to purchase a from school at about 1pm, children enter and buy set of quality pencils and paper and begin exploring a homemade chocolate for 30 – 50 cents or ask for their artistic possibilities. Coloured pencils are a glass of fresh water. much more portable than the acrylic paints I have The community gathers to hear talks and partake used for more than 50 years. in activities such as the Saturday afternoon Art It was a Dominican priest who encouraged the Attack, all of which are central to the spirit of this development of a spa culture here, a centre for place. The theme for Art Attack on Saturday was therapeutic mineral baths fed by the many mineral New Beginnings and speaking of new beginnings… sources coming from the once active volcanoes. One morning while lounging on the couch and Every second shop offers massages, facials, sipping our macchiatos, we met Robin, an ex-pat pedicures, and laundry services. from BC who has been living here for seven years. On the third day, we took a $1.50 taxi to Salados 30 The Senior Times April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com Times and Places pools, and for $3 each we bathed in a series of thermal pools: hot, warm, lukewarm, and cold. It was a first for both of us and we thoroughly enjoyed the stimulation. They say if you go from the hot to the cold, it adds ten years to your life. We’re eager to see whether this is true. This whole town is rejuvenating, from the friendly locals and ex-pats who share their life stories to the 360 degree vista of mountains covered with lush vegetation, to the cool, sometimes rainy weather that envelops your body and soul with well-being. More? There’s the fruit lady who makes fresh fruit salads for $2 and serves you on tables and benches made of logs and slices of huge trees. There’s the French retiree from Aix-La-Chapelle, who rents an apartment for $300 a month, finds everything affordable, the people friendly, and she’s not afraid of the 20-minute walk home from downtown at night. There’s the cyclist, who spoke for two hours at Illusiones one evening. He’s cycling from Vancouver to Patagonia and is about halfway there. He’s promoting alternative tourism. We, however, see the need for all forms and levels of tourism because without tourism, this town would be a poor shell of itself. Now it’s a vibrant, happy place where almost everyone seems to be living harmoniously and eking out a living. The locals need us for our money, and we are happy spending it here, knowing that it goes a long way in every sense. If you’re planning on visiting, the only place to stay that we’ve discovered is our hotel, El Pedron, so silent you can almost hear the waterfall. Clockwise from top: Horses waiti for tourists below the volcano; The scenery is majestic in every directoion. Barbara with Luca at the waterfall; “Art Attack” at Ilusions Café; Ilusions serves as a community centre for ex-pats; Christmas tree in the main square; Coloured pencil print by Robin (fish inset); Nynne serves excellent latte while selling books and art supplies and hosting speakers; “This is the life!” says Irwin at the thermal baths. Exceptional condo corner unit with panoramic views of St. Lawrence River, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 2 garages, totally renovated with superb private garden 20 Des Brises du Fleuve, Verdun Elizabeth Dion Real Estate Broker groupe sutton immobilia Cell. MTL: 514-928-2451 Cell. QC: 418-948-2451 www.elizabethdion.com edion@sutton.com $728,000 www.theseniortimes.com April 2015 The Senior Times 31 32 The Senior TimeS April 2015 www.theseniortimes.com
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