October 2014 - London Jewish Federation
Transcription
October 2014 - London Jewish Federation
October 2014 T i s h re i 5 7 7 5 S A V E T H E D AT E • S A V E T H E D AT E Melanie Phillips An Age of Tumult 7:30 PM Tuesday, October 28th at the JCC Children Rescued from the Nazis Sat., November 22nd, 6:30 PM at the Wolf Performance Hall Call the JCC for tickets 519-673-3310 w w w. j e w i s h l o n d o n . c a VOLUME 13 NO. 2 Pepa Livingstone, the nonagenarian Londoner who was rescued from the looming Nazi invasion via the 1939 Czech kindertransport will share her story at the Wolf Performance Hall on Saturday evening, November 22. Hana Gartner, the noted former CBC presenter who has interviewed prime ministers and is best known for her groundbreaking journalism for the programme Fifth Estate, will lead the discussion. The on-stage interview will be preceded by a reception where guests can meet Ms. Livingstone and Ms. Gartner and sign a petition nominating Sir Nicholas Winton, the English architect of the kindertransport, for the Nobel Peace Prize. Sir Nicholas, now 105 years old, was responsible for the rescue of nearly 700 Jewish children from Czechoslovakia; the Nobel Peace Prize is not awarded posthumously. Following the interview there will be a screening of the acclaimed documentary Nicky’s Family which tells the complex and moving story of the kindertransport’s organization and how those saved have gone on to do heroic, lifesaving endeavors themselves. The film was the winner of Best Documentary at the Pepa Livingstone, childhood photos. ▲ ▼ Pepa Livingstone to Reveal Kindertransport Story to Hana Gartner; Live Interview Followed by Screening of Nicky’s Family Montreal World Film Festival and numerous other awards. This event is sponsored by the Holocaust Education Committee of the London Jewish Federation and by the London Jewish Film Festival, in gratitude to the community for supporting the Festival. UJA Young Leadership Trivia Night Offers Great Fun For All By Monica King What was John Grisham’s first #1 Bestseller? Whose image is on the Canadian fifty dollar bill? What was Mahatma Gandhi’s profession? These were just a few of the many fascinating and intriguing questions posed at the UJA Young Leadership Trivia Challenge evening. Held on Tuesday September 9th, the Young Leadership Trivia Challenge was a truly enjoyable evening and a tremendous success. With many familiar faces and also many joining us for the first time, we were pleased to have a great turnout for this first young leadership event of the year. Federation Executive Member and Emcee Tammie Ashton warmly welcomed guests and spoke about the importance of the evening. “At Federation, we believe that the future of our community rests with the younger generation – all of us here tonight,” began Tammie. “As young leaders of today, you are our community’s leaders of tomorrow – and our future. That is why in the months to come, the London Jewish Federation will be focusing more efforts on you through our Young Leadership programs – organizing events to get you more involved…. keeping you informed about matters that are important to London Jewish people and working with you to build a solid future for our community.” “The London Jewish Federation is an umbrella organization which creates and delivers a vast variety of Jewish programming and services in London,” continued Tammie. “This includes programs at the JCC such as Purim celebrations, Yom Ha’atzmaut, Yom Hashoah programming and PJ Library for the little kids. The Federation provides outreach with our Holocaust Remembrance programs to thousands of students in London each year. Federation also gets involved when issues arise that are relevant to the London Jewish community, such as ensuring letters are written to the media when current events warrant our voice being heard and working with members of other faith communities to encourage tolerance and understanding. The Federation’s main fundraising platform is our annual United Jewish Appeal Campaign (UJA). The funds raised through UJA provide the foundation which allows Federation to support the many vital programs and services which keep our community strong.” Ian Stone, 2015 UJA Campaign Chair then shared a few words with the guests, thanking Trivia Challenge teams ponder questions. everyone for joining us, speaking briefly about the importance of UJA for the future of our community and encouraging young leaders to get more involved to help strengthen our London Jewish community. Following these formal remarks, and without further ado, it was time to let the games begin! After taking a few moments to randomly place guests into teams, the exciting Trivia Challenge was underway. With each round of difficult and often tricky questions, the room was filled with debates, discussions, excitement and laughter. While the lead changed hands among different teams many times throughout the night, in the end there could only be one winner. Congratulations to Team Rachel, with team members Sonia Halpern, Eric Robinson, Robert Stein, Alon Shatil and Darlene Zaifman-Guslits. A very deserving winner, each member of the team provided valuable contributions Function Facilitators Amanda Baggaley-Lacerte and Heather Levite. throughout the game to help land the team on top. A heartfelt thank you to Sondy and Stephen Taran for so graciously opening their home to host this important and fun event for young leaders in our community. Thank you to Tammie Ashton for doing a wonderful job as emcee of the evening. Thank you also to our Function Facilitators, Heather Levite and Amanda Baggaley-Lacerte for organizing and running the challenging and enjoyable event without a hitch. And thank you to everyone who joined us that evening, helping to make the night a fun and memorable one. If you are between the ages of 25 – 50 and would like to receive invitations to future Young Leadership events, please contact Monica King, Director, UJA Campaign at 519-673-3310 or at ujadir@ljf.on.ca Winning team deliberates some tricky questions. PA G E 2 THE LONDON JEWISH COMMUNITY NEWS OCTOBER 2014 2015 UJA Campaign Launch Amazing time had by all! By Monica King Astonishing. Amazing. Astounding. How DID he do that? These are just some of the many expressions heard at the 2015 UJA Campaign Launch, and every so often since then, with regard to the remarkable and thoroughly enjoyable Mind Power Show of Sidney Friedman. A true entertainer, Sidney’s combination of futurist, mentalist, musician, ‘mathemagician’ and mind power expertise provided an exciting experience for all. While everyone in the audience enjoyed his feats, no guests were more intrigued than the audience members who joined Sidney on stage to participate. The participants reactions revealed their true amazement after each of Sidney’s remarkable displays of telepathy and accurate predictions. The entertaining, intriguing and inspirational show truly proved to be fun for all. This was only one of the many facets of the evening which helped to make the 2015 UJA Campaign Launch a hugh success, providing a thoroughly enjoyable evening filled with heartwarming tributes, delicious treats and great fun! That evening, guests were particularly pleased to pay special tribute to one of our community’s truly exceptional and deserving volunteers, Terry Marcus, honouree of the David Rubinoff Family Leadership Award. Terry’s dear and long time friend Carmi Levy provided a heartwarming tribute to Terry outlining his numerous contributions and unwavering support to so many charitable causes in our community. In his thank you, Terry reiterated the importance of giving back, whether through time, talent and/or resources, to help ensure a strong a vibrant community for today and for the future. We are pleased to extend a very special thank you to Bob Rubinoff who joined us from Toronto to present the Rubinoff Award to Terry on behalf of their family. Following this tribute, 2015 UJA Campaign Chair Ian Stone addressed this year’s Campaign. “The Jewish community, and indeed the entire Jewish world, will face extraordinary challenges in the coming year,” began Ian. “The geo-politics of the Middle East, terror overseas, the world economic situation; the struggle for Jewish identity and meaning; and the building and nurturing of a vital and viable Jewish community right here at home as well as across the world are some of the many future challenges. As the modern day embodiment of the Jewish values of tzedakah and tikkun olam, the 2015 Annual Campaign is a fundamental component which ensures the future strength and vitality of our community.” “The annual UJA Campaign works tirelessly every day here in London, and around the world, providing emotional, economic and spiritual support to those who need it most, wherever and whenever they need it,” continued Ian. “That is why it is imperative that we, as a community, help to ensure the health of our Federation by supporting UJA, which in turn will ensure the continued strength, health and well-being of our London Jewish community.” The 2015 Campaign Launch could not have been the success it was without the support of so many. Special thanks to William Frydman who, as Emcee of the evening, did a wonderful job and ensured that the program flowed flawlessly. Thank you to our enthusiastic and energetic student volunteers – Maya Kelly, Josh King, Ben Levite, and Shuli Grosman Gray – you all helped to make the evening shine. Thank you to the family and friends of Terry Marcus who provided touching tributes in his honour. And thank you to everyone who joined us to share in this very important celebration and special evening – we hope you enjoyed it. We believe that helping people in need and nurturing the Jewish community is our privilege and our responsibility, but we cannot do it alone. It is your support that gives our community strength. If you have already made your gift to the 2015 UJA Campaign, thank you. If you have not yet made your donation, please call or drop by the JCC today to make your gift. Please join us in making a positive difference in our community – together we can build a brighter future for all. To volunteer, make a gift or for more information, please contact Monica King, Director UJA Campaign at 519-673-3310 or at ujadir@ljf.on.ca. Bob Rubinoff presents the David Rubinoff Family Leadership Award to Terry Marcus. Debbie Kapp is amazed by mentalist Sidney Friedman. Thank you to our Corporate Sponsors for their generous support BMO Nesbitt Burns Best Western Lamplighter Inn and Conference Centre Eastpark Logan Funeral Home NeuPhysio Rehabilitation Paramount Painting London Inc. Emcee William Frydman (centre) with Terry and Carol Marcus. Zagjo Holding Ltd. M.J. Stone and Campaign Chair Ian Stone with Sheldon and Betsy Aaron. BU I L D I N G A B R I G H T E R F U T U R E – U N I T E D J E W I S H A P P E A L J E W I S H OCTOBER 2014 LO N D O N • O RG A N I Z AT I O N S • S Y NAG O G U E S The first four sessions of the JEM year have attracted just over 200 attendees, and we’re just getting started! We are so excited to have brought so many people out, especially since we are seeing a diverse crowd. Sometimes when I welcome an attendee who isn’t one of the regulars, they say that they look over the flyer when it comes and mark on their calendars immediately the programs they want to attend. We know we cannot appeal to everyone all of E D U C AT I O N THE LONDON JEWISH COMMUNITY NEWS Two Hundred…and Counting By Gail Bass • the time, but we are pleased that with our broad range of Jewish programming, we catch the interest of many at least some of the time. Coming up for the rest of the fall and early (sorry I have to mention this word) winter, we will be offering 90 minute soundbites of Judaism through music, art, film, pirates(!), and Maimonides , to name a few topics. Once again these evenings will be presented by both local speakers, who generously donate their time and knowledge as well as imported lecturers. To help us pay an honorarium to the latter, we rely on our support from our regular sponsors as outlined on the flyer, along with periodic individual donations and some solicited individual sponsorships as spelled out in the publicity. Sponsorships for some sessions are still available for $200 (tax deductible). We hope you continue to avail yourselves of our exciting series. I’m confident you’ll be happy you came out. PA G E 3 PEOPLE By Susan Merskey ALAIN GOLDSCHLÄGER participated in the walk to Santiago di Compostela this past summer. The journey, a famous historical pilgrimage route (which was featured in the movie The Way) starts in south western France and continues through the Pyrenees range of mountains between France and Spain before finishing in Santiago di Compostela, the capital of Galicia, northern Spain. His daughter Arielle and sister-in-law Henny joined him for the last part of the walk. ROBYN ISRAEL continues to enjoy success with her writing. She is one of five featured playwrights in this year’s Lost Soul Stroll, an annual event which celebrates London’s macabre history. Death on Dundas describes the suicide of Edward Matthews, a prominent 19th century building contractor who committed suicide at the corner of Richmond and Dundas. Robyn’s play Forest City Dreaming, about a young woman who dreams of moving to London because Victor Garber was born here, will be one of 14 plays included in the 2015 Playwrights Cabaret in January. She will also be at St. Vincent de Paul School in Strathroy as one of the 2014-2015 London Artists in Residence, a programme funded by the Ontario Arts Council and run by the London Arts Council. A N N O U N C E M E N T S Mazel tov to the following community members and their families: BIRTHS • BORUCH ALTER JUDAY, parents Tamara and Air C O N D O L E N C E S Sincere condolences to the following community members: Faces of rapt JEM audience at Oct. 6 presentation by Orit Sarfaty of the New Israel Fund of Canada. OR SHALOM Or Shalom ushered in the New Year with beautiful music and spiritual davening led by the High Holy Day Choir and Junior Choir, and numerous service leaders who brought their unique and exceptional talents to our sanctuary. Since that time our foyer has filled with scores of bags of food to be donated to the London Food Bank, and our new, beautiful, and improved succah debuted in time for numerous Sukkot kiddushim and meals following minyanim. We also celebrated Simchat Torah with great joy and more than a few l'chaims. The children have enjoyed junior congregation, tot Shabbat, and back in September the teens stayed late on selichot combining a study session with opportunities for fun. Amid all of the past month's chagim Or Shalom also hosted the Opening of Courts on October 1. Mr. Justice Thomas A. Cromwell of the Supreme Court of Canada, as well as Rabbi Clark and other community leaders, addressed a full sanctuary after a procession of legal and law enforcement officials in dress uniform marched to the synagogue. By the time you have the opportunity to read this article the Or Shalom Film Society will have screened the first film of the new year, Above and Beyond, and their next screening will be announced shortly. On Friday evening October 24 Kabbalat Shabbat services will begin at 6pm, followed by a 7pm fundraising dinner for Or Shalom Youth Programs ($25 for adults, with great discounts available for children and families). The following Thursday, October 30, Jared Zaifman will lead a beer tasting event that promises to be both wonderful and educational, and the play Looking for Hayim, written and directed by Jim Stevens and featuring numerous familiar faces, will be performed on Thursday, November 13 and Saturday, Nov.15 at 8 pm and Sunday, Nov. 16, at 2 pm ($18 for adults, children half price). Please call the Or Shalom office at 519-438-3081 to register for any of these fun-filled events. • LORNA, MICHAEL and ANDREW BROOKE, on the death of their husband and father, Ralph • ROBERT BREUER, on the death of his mother, Elsa • KEITH SAMITT, on the death of his brother-in-law, Barry Cohen, in Toronto This autumn we also look forward to the b'nai mitzvah of Shalom Guslits and Sephena Mann, and to Rabbi Clark's Lunch & Learn series on November 1 and November 15 following Shabbat services. Please turn to this column in the next issue of the LJCN to find out about our upcoming Hanukkah celebrations now being planned. • BARRY TOBIN, on the death of his father, Sidney, in Toronto “A Niche Brokerage” Michael Shmukler Broker of Record Direct: 519-318-1622 Office: 519-434-3700 Fax: 226-663-6433 Email: Michael@ShmuklerRealty.com www.ShmuklerRealty.com T H E LO N D O N J E W I S H C O M M U N I T Y N E W S T H A N K S YO U F O R S U P P O RT I N G O U R A DV E RT I S E R S . J E W I S H LO N D O N PA G E 4 • O RG A N I Z AT I O N S • S Y NAG O G U E S • E D U C AT I O N THE LONDON JEWISH COMMUNITY NEWS OCTOBER 2014 TEMPLE ISRAEL Hand decorated envelopes with cash donations to the Food Bank. Taschlich at Stoney Creek Park. Religious School children learning how to blow the shofar. By Wally Zimmerman The High Holy Days 5775 have just concluded. We assembled as a congregation at the London Jewish Community Centre on Erev Rosh Hashanah to welcome the New Year and to begin our annual Cheshbon ha-Nefesh, accounting of the soul. Following the service, about fifty of our members, along with a few guests, enjoyed a catered holiday dinner and good fellowship back at our regular location on Windermere Road. The following day, we met again for morning services at the JCC and returned to the Temple building for a luncheon. On Sunday morning, in place of Religious School, families with young children assembled for a brief Rosh Hashanah childrens’ service where the children had the opportunity to try blowing the shofar, some with remarkably good results. Following this, we enjoyed snacks and then we walked en masse down Windermere Road to Stoney Creek Valley Park for our annual Tashlich observance. This was followed by families driving to Apple Land Station east of London where we enjoyed a corn maze, apple picking, feeding some farm animals, and playing on the gigantic (and that’s no exaggeration) sand pile. Friday, October 3rd was both Shabbat and Erev Yom Kippur. Kol Nidre was chanted movingly by the choir with Hersch Rosenberg and Lana Koslow as soloists. Many members and guests commented positively on the contribution of our choir to the beauty of the services. The next morning, we continued our Yom Kippur prayers and in the afternoon, Michael Bernstein led a lively and interesting discussion on the Book of Jonah. This was followed by a special service called From Creation to Redemption which retells the history of the world and of the Jewish people from Bereishit to the founding of the State of Israel using poetry, prayers, and song while at the same time, the teen service was led by Rabbi Dressler. Finally came Yizkor and Ne’ilah and a break the fast consisting of apples, apple juice, and honey cake, generously provided by Ailene Wittstein and Tom Casler. Yom Kippur also means our holding of our Fast Food Drive where we collect food for the London and Area Food Bank to help the less fortunate among us. This year, we also collected monetary donations in envelopes created artistically by our Religious School students to add to the donated food. While we collected less food than last year - 1293 pounds - we were also able to provide a donation of at least $400 to the food bank to allow them to purchase food in bulk and to fill in their missing food groups. Of course, this isn’t the end of our “busy season” as we met at the Temple the following Sunday for Sukkah building and a pancake breakfast. By the time you read this, the holidays of Sukkot and a week later, Atzeret/Simchat Torah, will have come and gone. On Simchat Torah, we held a Consecration service for our newly joined Religious School children and the children were given their own mini-Torah scrolls. This year, our school has grown by 5 new children to a total enrollment of 28 and we have had to shuffle classrooms around to fit the growing numbers. Speaking of our Religious School, many thanks are due to to Jeff Phillips and his staff have joined phone: 519.432.0632 x236 email: jphillips@cplaw.com www.cplaw.com Jeffrey M. Phillips 216 - 700 Richmond St. London, ON N6A 5C7 LL.B., A.C.C.I, F.C.C.I BU I L D I N G A Apple picking at Apple Land Station for a sweet New Year. Michael Bernstein leading a discussion on the Book of Jonah on Yom Kippur afternoon. Elizabeth Teevan, a high school math teacher in the Thames Valley District Board of Education and our VP-Education, and Rabbi Dressler for their hard work over the summer spent updating and modernizing our Religious School curriculum including the introduction of online syllabi and assignments and learning materials as well as the addition of high tech equipment — an iPad, Apple TV, and a large flat screen TV and, all generously donated by Elizabeth. Thank you, Elizabeth!!! On the weekend of November 21st and 22nd, Rabbi Larry Englander, recently retired as the rabbi of Solel Congregation, Mississauga, will be spending the weekend in London for our annual ARZA Canada Shabbat. Rabbi Englander is a Board Member of ARZA Canada and his wife, Cheryl, is a Vice-President of the Board. ARZA Canada (http://www.arzacanada.org/) is the Canadian affiliate of the Association of Reform Zionists of America and serves as a voice and support for progressive Judaism in the State of Israel in areas such as civil rights, education, the creation of synagogues and schools, etc. On Shabbat morning, Rabbi Englander will speak to our congregation during services. Following services, he will join us for Kiddush and this will give congregants a further opportunity to ask questions about progressive Judaism in Israel and the ways we B R I G H T E R F U T U R E – Social Action Committee members loading bags of food into the London & Area Food Bank truck following Yom Kippur. can support our Reform brothers and sisters in Eretz Yisrael. This weekend is always one of the highlights of the year at Temple Israel and all are welcome to come for the Saturday service and kiddush. This year 5775 is palindromic but it is important for three other reasons at Temple Israel. During this year, we will be celebrating our thirtieth anniversary as a member of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations (UAHC) which is now the Union for Reform Judaism (URJ.) It is also our Bar Mitzvah year (or is that our Bat Mitzvah year?) in our building at 605 Windermere Road and the fifth year with Rabbi Debra Dressler as our spiritual leader. With three good reasons to celebrate, we certainly plan to do so. Please watch this column and the Temple Israel web site (www.templeisraellondon.ca, or more easily, www.tilondon.ca) throughout the coming year for details as they develop. Gail Bass has just become our new Vice-President - Programming. In case you are wondering about the VP for Programming I U N I T E D J E W I S H Shake that Lulov and Etrog!!! announced in the previous issue, Jacob Megdell has stepped down due to the difficulty of holding that portfolio while living in Petrolia, a one hour drive each way. While Jacob will still remain very involved with Temple activities, the travel was becoming too much but he gave it the “old college try.” Thank you, Jacob, for all that you have done and that I know you and Heather will continue to do for our congregation. Your extraordinary volunteerism is very much appreciated. A P P E A L J E W I S H OCTOBER 2014 LO N D O N • O RG A N I Z AT I O N S • S Y NAG O G U E S • E D U C AT I O N THE LONDON JEWISH COMMUNITY NEWS PA G E 5 LONDON COMMUNITY HEBREW DAY SCHOOL Holidays at LCHDS! By Nechamie Silberberg It has been a busy month here at the London Community Hebrew Day School. Having the school year start at the same time we celebrate the new Jewish year has our students and classrooms alive with new information and lessons, the beautiful sounds of song and prayer floating through the hallways, and the feeling of a new year is truly palpable. It is always amazing to see how the children are so passionate about their Judaism and proud to learn about the customs and traditions of our people. Beginning with Rosh Hashana, the Grade 1-2 class, under the leadership of Morah Lana Etigon, led a beautiful and meaningful presentation. They called up each class to help explain the reason we eat the special foods designated for the Rosh Hashana meal. With songs, readings and blessings for a sweet new year the children were left feeling prepared to usher in the holiday. In preparation for Yom Kippur, the Grade 5-6 students led the school assembly. They discussed the Yom Kippur War of 1973 and how hard it must have been for the people of Israel to be called up for war on the holiest day of the year. The students came away with an understanding of the importance and seriousness of the day. For the holiday of Sukkot, the London Community Hebrew Day School joined up with the seniors of the Jewish Community Centre for lunch in the Sukkah. The students enjoyed pizza and treats and each other’s company. Seeing the children sitting together was a beautiful sight, and we are truly thankful to the staff at the JCC for organizing this wonderful event. The final holiday celebrated in the Hebrew month of Tishrei is Simchat Torah. It is the time that we celebrate the completion of the Torah. Although we celebrate the completion of the Torah on Simchat Torah, we do not pause or break before returning to the beginning. The students were taken to Congregation Beth Tefilah for a hands-on learning experience. Rabbi Lazer showed the children the Torah and many other important parts of the synagogue. The students at LCHDS are a living testimony to a new generation of young Jewish children keeping the flame of Judaism burning. Seeing them thrive in both Secular and Judaic studies with the morals and values of a true “mensch” gives much nachas to the parents and teachers alike. Autumn & Holiday bulletin board. Shabbat preparations. TASHLICH ROSH HASHANA GRADE 1 & 2 leading assembly. ROSH HASHANA SK & GRADE 1 & 2 APPLES! YOM KIPPUR GRADE 5 & 6 leading assembly NOAH’S ARK PRESCHOOL By: Rachael Greenwald Noah’s Ark Preschool welcomed many new faces this September! We had a busy month and we are happy to be settling into our routines. Our fall theme is well underway and we read many fall stories and the children learned some new songs such as Acorn Brown. The craft table had many little hands making beautiful fall artwork. From painting egg shells to stamping and pasting on fall shapes, our little artists were busy creating their masterpieces! We look forward to making both apple and leaf prints over the next few weeks. Our first class field trip was to Apple Land! Everyone had a great morning apple picking, riding the train, learning about the farm and seeing some animals. The children look forward to show and tell every Monday. They love sharing their favourite toys, stuffed animals and much more. This activity promotes important skills such as turn taking and question development. With the mild temperatures, we have been fortunate to be able to get outside almost every day. The children have been enjoying the play structure and ride-on toys as well chasing the flying discs and soccer balls across the field. Sidewalk chalk has also been a favourite this month! While outdoors, we have been playing some new group games to further promote coordination and listening skills. Such games include Red Light, Green Light and What Time is it, Mr. Wolf. We look forward to getting to know each other’s families with our upcoming Families and Feelings theme. Our “Wall of Families” will display everyone’s family photographs. T H E LO N D O N J E W I S H C O M M U N I T Y N E W S T H A N K S YO U F O R S U P P O RT I N G O U R A DV E RT I S E R S . • JCC PROGRAMMING • 536 HURON STREET, LONDON, ONTARIO • 519-673-3310 • www.jewishlondon.ca Book Fair Returns, and will be Tastier Than Ever The London Jewish Book Fair returns to the Jewish Community Centre from December 5-7, 2014 with a great selection of Jewish books and an all new Food Festival component. Sue Estabrooks, proprietor of Mandala Books on Central Ave., is overseeing the book sales and has added a wide variety of recently released Judaica and has specifically sought out an amazing selection of Jewish cookbooks. Speaking of cookbooks, the event's keynote speaker on Saturday evening, December 6th, will be Leah Koenig, author of the Hadassah Everyday Cookbook: Daily Meals for the Contemporary Jewish Kitchen. The New York based writer, who contributes to the Jewish Daily Forward, the New York Times, Tablet Magazine and Epicurious, will present a cooking demonstration with suggestions just in time for Hanukkah. The event is co-sponsored by the London Council of Canadian Hadassah-WIZO and attendees will have the opportunity to have Ms. Koenig sign copies of her book following the event. Cookbook Author Leah Koenig The Book Fair and Food Festival continues on Sunday when cookbook author Leah Koenig leads a children's Hanukkah baking program and will be followed by an adult program led by dynamic presenter Risa Alyson Cooper. Ms. Cooper is the director of Shoresh Jewish Environmental Programs. Shoresh, along with Hazon in the U.S., has led North American Jewry in a wide-ranging conversation about our relationship with food, kashrut, and stewardship of the Earth. Cooper and Shoresh founded the Kavanah Garden, deemed one of most innovative projects in North America, and Ms. Cooper was awarded the 2013 Pomegranate Award for outstanding Jewish educator. We would love to hear from you! Please contact us with your ideas and suggestions! Also, volunteers are always needed. If you can spare a few hours every now and then in a very nice environment, or to achieve your high school volunteer hours, come volunteer at the JCC. For more information please call Eric Robinson at 519-673-3310 ext. 103 BU I L D I N G A B R I G H T E R Lunch will be available at the JCC on Sunday, December 7 and we hope you join us for all of the day's events and programs. A precise schedule for the Festival's events will be published in the next issue of the London Jewish Community News. F U T U R E – U N I T E D J E W I S H Shoresh CEO Risa Alyson Cooper A P P E A L J E W I S H OCTOBER 2014 LO N D O N • O RG A N I Z AT I O N S • S Y NAG O G U E S • E D U C AT I O N THE LONDON JEWISH COMMUNITY NEWS PA G E 7 JCC Garden Set to Spring Forward with TD FEF Grant Firstly, mazal tov to everyone who has volunteered to make the summer 2014 inaugural season of the Jewish Community Garden a success. In May and June the ground was broken and new soil was spread, and beans, potatoes, carrots, Swiss chard, peas, mesculin, herbs, tomatoes, spicy peppers, and more were all carefully planted and tended. During the height of summer campers from the JCC’s Camp Yeladim weeded, watered, and planted squash while other volunteers added a beautiful marigold border around the garden’s edge. The vegetables harvested provided food for campers, students the London Community Hebrew Day School (the tomatoes were the perfect addition to taco day!) and provided garnish for the burgers at the PJ Library picnic in September. With the help of the TD Canada Trust’s Friends of the Environment Fund the Jewish Community Garden is set to become more accessible to more members of the community than ever before. The funds include money designated for elevated garden beds that will improve access for seniors and those with disabilities. Removable covers designed to fit on the elevated beds will also allow for a more controlled environment and protection from some weather conditions. We’re grateful to the TD FEF selection committee for finding our garden worthy of its support and look forward to improving upon the 2014 season next year. Animals Join the Fun at PJ Picnic! The PJ Library barbecue event Happy ZOO Year! featured animal friends that included a bearded dragon, massive tortoises, hedgehogs, chameleons, geckos, a variety of unusual frogs, and much more, all to the delight and education of the children in attendance. Before the animal show began everyone enjoyed a barbecue thanks to the grillmeistering of Derek Mazer. Volunteers Charles Burnetts, Chaya Halberstam, and Lilia and Diana Golverk were also instrumental in ensuring the day’s success. The September event was made all the more pleasant with glorious weather and the opportunity to reconnect with community members as the school year gets underway. Seniors and Students Enjoy Sukkot Lunch Despite Touch of Weather Students from the London Community Hebrew Day School, seniors from the London Community Village Apartments, and others enjoyed a delightful lunch on Tuesday, October 14. At the last moment the planned sukkah lunch had to be moved indoors as the skies began to open, but the intergenerational ruach was sustainedwith delicious food and fun songs. Many thanks to Darlene Guslits and Harry and Robin Tugender for preparing the lunch, and to the staff and students of the London Community Hebrew Day School who created beautiful sukkah decorations. Thanks also to Erica Reshef for the wonderful art that now covers all three walls of the Jewish Community Centre sukkah. ~~~ D on’t miss this o pportunity! --T he London Jewish Community Foundation is pleased to be accepting applications for grants and scholarships for its fall allocation process. Funds may be allocated to a group, organization or individual where the need is for charitable, religious or educational purposes that will benefit our community. D eadline for Ap p plications f o r t he f all 2 01 1 4 a llocation i s T hursday,, N ovember 2 0,, 201 14 If you have any questions or to request an Application Form, please contact Monica King at (519) 673-3310 or at ujadir@ljf.on.ca. B uilding our community…together. T H E LO N D O N J E W I S H C O M M U N I T Y N E W S T H A N K S YO U F O R S U P P O RT I N G O U R A DV E RT I S E R S . J E W I S H LO N D O N PA G E 8 • O RG A N I Z AT I O N S • S Y NAG O G U E S • E D U C AT I O N THE LONDON JEWISH COMMUNITY NEWS OCTOBER 2014 C A N A D I A N M A G E N DAV I D A D O M N E W S By Hazel Friedman and Naomi Sheinbaum Thanks to donations from Londoners and from friends contributing to celebrations, almost $10,000 was raised for MDA during July and August. This enabled London to provide 2 Medumat CPR Ventilators which are voice-guided devices used to assist First Responders with emergency ventilation and CPR, ($3500 each), as well as other emergency equipment which needed to be replenished. THANK YOU LONDON. Leading up to and including the 50 days of Operation Protective Edge, MDA was on red high alert: all MDA ambulances, standard and Intensive care ambulances, Jeep ambulances, 4x4 vehicles and medicycles (three wheel scooters) were prepared and manned, while paramedics and volunteers were on alert in every region throughout the country. MDA Israel reported that during the 50 days of the conflict 842 casualties resulting from rockets fired at Israel were treated. They also treated 791 people who were injured by shattered glass, anxiety attacks, falls and road accidents which occurred when the sirens were heard.The Blood Services Laboratory teams worked In honour of her special birthday, friends honoured Eilene Gerofsky with donations to Magen David Adom for the purchase of emergency equipment during Operation Protective Edge. When friends celebrated Betty Valinsky’s special birthday recently, they contributed to Magen David Adom to purchase and replenish emergency supplies for Operation Protective Edge. in shelters and provided 59,000 units and blood components to the hospitals and the IDF. Among the units of blood collected, 15% came from new donors. When needed wounded soldiers were transported to hospitals by MDA Intensive care ambulances. MDA set up 4 emergency shelters in Beersheva, Dimona and Kiryat Ono; also 4 mobile showers for soldiers in the field and distributed First Aid kits in shelters in Dimona and Yeruham. MDA Youth visited wounded soldiers in hospitals and packaged gifts for them. Sadly, a stalwart of the MDA family, Ze’ev Atzion, was killed during a mortar attack on Kibbutz Nirim. Meanwhile MDA continued with its usual work: 154 victims of violence were treated, 114 people were treated for suspected heart attacks, there were 10 cases of drowning and 53 women gave birth in MDA ambulances en route to a hospital. MDA Director Eli Bin said: ”MDA teams have proved in the past 2 months that they are a considerable link in the chain protecting the citizens of Israel. This is the time to thank all the 15,000 workers and volunteers who, during the past 2 months have shown their strength, dedication and their values and have been the “Protective Edge” for the citizens of Israel all over the country”. ---------------------Report from Jonathan Brooke who volunteered with MDA in Israel this past summer: My experiences with MDA in Israel were absolutely amazing. The ten day training was extensive and gave me insight into the inner workings of the paramedic field. However, when I started the actual volunteering, riding alongside the driver inside the ambulance, things really started to take off. From helping to deliver babies, to assisting people in JEWISH NATIONAL FUND of CANADA 519-432-2139 IN MEMORY OF... • YEHUDA FARHI: Rabbi Tzvi & Linda Berman • FATHER OF BARRY TOBIN: The Dubitsky family, Frank Simkevitz, Steve & Trish Kaplan, Harold & Susan Merskey, Elaine & Aaron Richmond, Beryl & Noam Chernick, Eric Cartman, Tracy Shuster and family, Alan & Cathy Perlmutter, The Faulkner family • ORWELL HUGH BREEN: John & Natalie Gould • RED McCONVILLE: The Faulkner family • FATHER OF BIJAN GHALEHPARDAZ: Elaine & Aaron Richmond • FATHER OF JORDAN HERSHORAN: The Ublansky family • DOROTHY MYERS: The Kogon family • FATHER OF BETTY STEPHENS: Anonymous • DR. HERBERT COSMAN: Eric Cartman, Tracy Shuster and family • ELSA BREUER: Cathy & Alan Perlmutter, Beryl & Noam Chernick, The Faulkner family, Fern Kochberg & family, Naomi & John Stoffman, Randi & Bill Fisher, Michelle & Arnon Kaplansky • RALPH BROOKE: Dorothy & Allan Kroll, Elaine & Aaron Richmond, Manny & Hazel Friedman, Frank Simkevitz, Stan & Sheila Kogon, Syd & Sharon Newman, Adela Gorodzinsky, Randi & Bill Fisher, Rose Harris • DAVE EVANS: Sharon & Syd Newman • MARIA MAURANTONIO: Deb & Danny Rich • DONALD PERWIEN: Ellen Joy & Bernard Lazarus • BARRY COHEN: Jeff & Joyce Phillips, Frank Simkevitz • KEN DOW: Danny Rich • MADELINE GOLD: Sid & Sonny Steinberg IN HONOUR OF... • MICHAEL BERNSTEIN: Gerry & Donna Kleiman • RALPH BROOKE: Gloria & Joseph Gilbert, Rose Harris, Harold & Susan Merskey, Gerry & Donna Kleiman • GERRY & DONNA KLEIMAN: Helen & Ken Ashton, Terry & Carol Marcus, Beryl & Noam Chernick, Rose Harris, Frank & Elaine Simkevitz • MIRIAM RUTH ROBINSON: Dorothy & Allan Kroll • RICKY & JACK PASTERNAK: Dorothy & Allan Kroll, Gloria & Joseph Gilbert • ALANA PASTERNAK: Dorothy & Allan Kroll • MITCHELL & ANN MAX: Syd & Sharon Newman BU I L D I N G A physical and mental distress, my experiences were wide ranging and truly unforgettable. I particularly enjoyed being with my fellow volunteers and we shared some incredible memories during this highly charged summer. Thanks to MDA I have formed some great friendships and I plan on visiting some of my fellow volunteers in Europe next summer. ---------------------TODAH RABAH TO THE FOLLOWING FOR THEIR GENEROUS DONATIONS TO PURCHASE EQUIPMENT FOR OPERATION PROTECTIVE EDGE: ♥ In honour of Pepa Livingstone’s 90th birthday – David Livingstone purchased a First Responder Life-saving Kit equipped with life support equipment. ♥ In honour of Larry Scolnik’s 80th birthday - Family & Friends purchased a sphygmomanometer & stethoscope. ♥ In honour of Gerry & Donna Kleiman’s 50th wedding anniversary friends purchased an Emergency One Button Tourniquet Device. Larry Scolnik celebrated his 80th birthday. Friends purchased much needed emergency equipment to be used by MDA during Operation Protective Edge. ♥ Other emergency equipment was purchased by friends ♥ In honour of Betty Valinsky’s special birthday. ♥ In honour of Eilene Gerofsky’s special birthday. ♥ In honour of Michael Bernstein’s 65th birthday. ♥ In honour of Natalie Chipper’s Bat mitzvah – by Barb & Joel Glynn. ♥ Students at Or Shalom Afternoon School – emergency equipment. ---------------------On behalf of the London chapter of Canadian Magen David Adom, we want to thank all who so generously supported MDA thereby providing a lifeline for all citizens in Israel. The conflict with Gaza may be over, but MDA continues to provide blood, emergency care, deliver babies – often inside the ambulance – and so there is always the need to replenish supplies. Therefore we need your ongoing support which is greatly appreciated. To send a card or certificate please call Naomi Sheinbaum 519-455-5411. ou may also donate to MDA online (cmdai.org) or via Canada Helps. ~ a glorious selection of cards and certificates for an ✡ ANNIVERSARY ✡ BIRTH ✡ BIRTHDAY ✡ BUSINESS GIFT ✡ ✡ BAR OR BAT MITZVAH ✡ GET WELL ✡ GREETINGS ✡ ✡ CONDOLENCES ✡ IN MEMORY ✡ • LARRY SCOLNIK: Eva Freiman, Syd & Sharon Newman, Penny & Michael Lander, Anna Leich • JANICE GORODZINSKY: Eva Freiman • LARAINE HURWITZ: Eva Freiman • OLIVIA TOVA SPANGLET: Rose Harris • DAHRA GRANOVSKY: Anna Leich • JEANNE GREENBERG: Rose Harris • ALAN & CATHY PERLMUTTER: Frank & Elaine Simkevitz • ESTHER & MARTIN MARCUS: Frank & Elaine Simkevitz • VERA SCHWEITZER: Donna & Gerry Kleiman • BERYL & NOAM CHERNICK: Eva Freiman • HENRY & CLAIRE BENDHEIM: Paula Zaifman & family • BERNIE & BEV ZAIFMAN: Paula Zaifman & family • FANNIE GOOSE: Paula Zaifman & family • ROSE & BILL KLEIN: Irwin & Ann Zaifman & family, Stephanie Loomer & Steven Dain and families • STACEY & BRIAN UBLANSKY: Irwin & Ann Zaifman & family • SONDY & STEPHEN TARAN: Irwin & Ann Zaifman & family • BARRY & FERN TEPPERMAN: Stephanie Loomer & Steven Dain and families B R I G H T E R In honour of Michael Bernstein’s 65th birthday many friends contributed to Magen David Adom during Operation Protective Edge, in order to purchase much needed emergency supplies and equipment which needed to be replen- F U T U R E – • GOLDA & NED STEINMAN AND FAMILY: Stephanie Loomer & Steven Dain and families • JULIA ABELSON & JONATHAN SUSSMAN: Rebecca Abelson and Stephanie Loomer • HOWARD GRANVILLE: Penny & Michael Lander • MURIEL FENWICK: Penny & Michael Lander • DIANE GOLDSTEIN: Penny Lander • DR. DAVID KOGON: Stan & Sheila Kogon and family • JACK BENJAMIN BERENS: Bev & Bernie Zaifman and family • POLLY SOLOWAY: Elaine & Aaron Richmond • STUART & AVRIL HAMBURG: Susan & Harold Merskey and family • BARBARA LENT & ROBERT SOLOMON: Rene Silberman & Ted Medzon • LORNA BROOKE: Rose Harris YISKOR CAMPAIGN: Jan Lesser: in memory of husband, JACK LESSER…Ms. Stephanie Goble: in memory of ALEC RICHMOND …Miriam & George Lazarovits: in memory of parents NICHALA & SAM GREENBAUM and MIKSHA LAZAROVITS…Beryl & Noam U N I T E D J E W I S H Chernick…Lisa Klinger: in memory of husband TOM KLINGER and parents SIMON THEEBOOM, AUREL & LENKE KLINGER…, Eva & Jacob Ryten…Pepa Livingstone: in memory of husband KEN, and parents MARIE & BERNHARD RETTIG…Stephanie Loomer: in memory of parents RICKIE & JOE LOOMER…Vera Schweitzer: in memory of husband WOLF and his parents, her parents LEON & RENE ROSNER and sister PUICA ROSNER…Deb Laskin-Rich and Danny Rich: in memory of parents ADELE & SAUL LASKIN and FLORENCE & SOL UROVITCH(RICH) …David & Naomi Sheinbaum…Lisa Pearlman & Lyle Goorvich: in memory of KERRY PEARLMAN SOL & RAE and MEYER (SPIKE) PEARLMAN, SARA and SHANA GOORVICH… Manny & Hazel Friedman: in memory of parents ABE & CHERRY FELDMAN and SOL & RAE FRIEDMAN…Neil Gelman: in memory of BESS & MEYER GELMAN …David & Liya Vayner…Joseph & Gloria Gilbert: in memory of ROSE & HY ANCHEL, SYLVIA & MORRIS GILBERT and JACK, EVELYN and MINDA OPAL…Bill & Rachelle Chodirker: in memory of parents GITEL & WILLIAM RAIZEN, GOLDIE & LOU CHODIRKER and EVELYN & JOSEPH RAIZEN A P P E A L J E W I S H OCTOBER 2014 LO N D O N • O RG A N I Z AT I O N S • S Y NAG O G U E S • E D U C AT I O N THE LONDON JEWISH COMMUNITY NEWS J E W I S H NAT I O NA L F U N D THE ISRAEL WE DON’T GET TO SEE By Frank Simkevitz On August 27th, I accompanied a group of YOUNG LEADERS from Quebec and Ontario and headed off to Israel on a JNF Solidarity Mission. It was a short but intense mission which ended back in Toronto FIVE days later. We were there to show support for Israel and to talk to people, to better understand what was going on. No one wanted to tour but rather to meet people, to volunteer and to help in any way we could. The ceasefire went into effect two days before we arrived and the first impression that I got was one of resilience. As an example, in the park behind our hotel, there was a BEER FESTIVAL complete with rock music and lots of people. Even among the people we met, the feeling seemed to be the same … ‘let’s get on with our lives!’ Our final itinerary only became clear once the ceasefire was in effect since there was no way we were going to travel into areas where rockets were falling. After landing in Israel, we were transported down to Sederot, where rockets had been landing just a few days before. We met with the chief of operations there who explained how the community prepares itself for attacks. We then went off to a protected PLAYGROUND (with built-in bomb shelters) which JNF built a few years ago to provide the children of Sederot a safe place to play when the community is under siege. What an amazing place … even several days AFTER the threat of attack had ended, there were more than 75 children there, most with their parents … playing games and having a wonderful time. Life goes on! The space doubles as a community centre and the people who use it truly appreciate having this kind of a facility especially in times of crisis. We met the former mayor of Sederot, David Buskila whose message really focused on how resilient the people of Sderot are and that despite the almost constant rocket fire over the last number of years, the population base has remained stable. The residents don’t want to show weakness and if they leave, Hamas will see it as a sign of weakness. We also visited B’nai Netzarim on the Egypt and Gaza border. It is part of Halutza, a small group of communities that were relocated from Gush Katif. Standing about 200m from where rockets fell a couple of weeks earlier, brought home the message about how vulnerable these families are and how important those bomb shelters that our donations have helped pay for, really are. Probably one of the most poignant and emotional experiences for the group was when we met Racheli Frenkel, mother of Naftali Frenkel who was murdered by Hamas along with two other teens. Racheli is truly an amazing woman … and she is surrounded by a community that has been wonderfully supportive. One comment that really stuck with me was that she hoped something good would come of this tragedy. We met Racheli, accompanied by three of her young children at Givat Oz ve’Gaon, which has become a memorial site for the three fallen boys and eventually it will become a campground and tourist site. She too is moving on too – speaking to people everywhere and anywhere. Because we had offered to volunteer, they put us to work, clearing a place for a security shelter … clearing rocks and prickly shrubs. It was much easier to relate to what our JNF pioneers had to go through to prepare the land for cultivation … not easy work. On one of our other volunteering programs, we picked vegetables for poor families – through Leket Israel … and when I say poor, I don’t mean only Jewish poor … Bedouin, Druze, Arab, Muslim, Christian … they don’t ask you … if you are in need you get food. And, who are the regular volunteers? People on tours, school children and SOLDIERS!! Where else would you find this? We also had the opportunity to visit Bachad Eser – a training facility for IDF medical staff. We learned a lot about how they teach medics and paramedics who have to deal with trauma in the field. In the end, the most important message I got was that Israelis CARE … not just for each other but for their fellow human beings. The medics are all taught to deal with the most seriously wounded first, regardless of whether they are civilians, soldiers, Arabs, Jews or even Hamas terrorists. We also visited the orthopedic rehab unit of the Sheba Medical Centre in Tel Hashomer. There, we met soldiers who were injured in Gaza and their positive attitude, despite what they experienced was amazing. One of the soldiers we met, by the name of Idan wrote on Facebook, “Thanks to people like, you it was worth every minute to stay in the army. It is heartwarming that Jews who don’t live in Israel care about what is happening here. I just want to say thank you from me, my friends and from all the IDF soldiers. You make us proud.” I can tell you that we were ALL proud of these soldiers. We met several people from the media, including paying a visit to the latest news channel, i24 NEWS. We were very fortunate to meet an Israeli reporter (Aviram Zino), a freelancer for the Jerusalem Post and Maariv who was one of 10 Israeli reporters that was imbedded with the IDF and got to go into Gaza on 3 different occasions, each for 24 hours. He had to wear a protective vest and helmet. He was with a unit where there was an attack on the soldiers, and one soldier he was with died. He said it was the most emotional story he ever had to write. He sees his role as “bearing witness”, which is why he's willing to risk his life for it. He knows it's a dangerous business, being a war correspondent; he has had close friends killed - one two years ago in Syria, but he believes it is so important. There were other stories as well, including hearing from Lieutenant Colonel Hezi Oushia, a former military attaché in Washington, D.C. Rather than talk about his military history, he shared what it’s like to be a parent of a soldier, like his son who was in Gaza. I described how they felt when they could not talk to their son for days when he went into Gaza since soldiers are not allowed to bring their phones with them. All these experiences taught us a great deal about Israelis. They are resilient. They care about one another and about human life. Despite all the challenges facing Israeli society and living life in Israel, it is an awesome country and everyone of us has a vested interest in its welfare. Anything we can do as Jews living in the Diaspora to support them is more relevant today than it ever has been. I am proud to consider myself a Zionist and a supporter of Israel – I hope you all are as well. T H E LO N D O N J E W I S H C O M M U N I T Y N E W S T H A N K S YO U F O R S U P P O RT I N G O U R A DV E RT I S E R S . PA G E 9 J E W I S H LO N D O N • PA G E 1 0 O RG A N I Z AT I O N S • S Y NAG O G U E S • E D U C AT I O N THE LONDON JEWISH COMMUNITY NEWS OCTOBER 2014 CHW LONDON CENTRE As always Fall is a busy time and the women of London CHW have been very busy with both new and old fundraisers and events. Kol Hashalom Chapter kicked off the New Year with a new and very successful fundraiser called "Hadassah's Holiday Honey". Community members could order honey to be delivered to friends and family to wish them a sweet new year and each recipient received one large, beautifully wrapped jar of honey with an attached gift card listing the sender(s) and a lovely wooden honey stick delivered to their home in time for Rosh Hashanah. This fabulous project was made possible through a generous donation of 100 jars of honey from Norine and Tommy Faulkner as well as honey sticks donated by Bev Zaifman-Todah Rabah! And special thanks also to Stacey Ublansky and all of the Kol Hashalom "worker bees" who donated their time and energy to organize, wrap and deliver the honey. A sweet, sucessful project which we hope to see continued in years to come! Still to come, our annual major Fall event, Hadassah Bazaar! This year marks our 54th Annual London Hadassah Bazaar which makes it our triple chai year! Please come out to support ths event which has truly become a community event, bringing people together from the Jewish and larger London community whether as an organizer, volunteer or shopper! As they say, "It's a tradition in London"! We remain the only Canadian centre which still holds an annual Bazaar, something we are proud of and hope to continue for many more years. We do need help and support however, so everyone is encouraged to send donations of saleable goods, and to donate time and energy to help out if possible. All are welcome! Finally, to wrap up our Fall line-up of events, London CHW looks forward to co-sponsoring the 2014 London Jewish Book Fair and Food Festival taking place Dec 5-7 at the JCC. This promises to be a wonderful weekend event and the Hadassah women are especially excited to participate in a cooking demonstration by renowned cookbook author Leah Koenig on Saturday night. Please watch for more details and plan to attend! WESTERN HILLEL By Stacey Weltman Our executive. &ORALLYOURDECORATINGNEEDS s#ARPETs2ESILIENTs s#ERAMICs,AMINATEs(ARDWOODs 0LEASECALLONOURFRIENDLYFLOORINGPROS 4HE#ARPET$EPARTMENT "ESSEMER#RT,ONDON/..%+ 7ELLINGTON2D3,ONDON/..%. ss&AXs INFO CARPETDEPARTMENTCOM WWWCARPETDEPARTMENTCOM BU I L D I N G A Western Hillel provides a centre for Jewish life on campus, and the student executives administer decisions that make Hillel such a strong community. The 2014-2015 committee is made up of very diverse individuals, who together see a bright future for Hillel. President Michelle Tsesler manages and organizes the work of Vice Presidents Orli Bogler (Jewish Life), Daniel Brener (Social), Ilan Levy (Outreach), Nicole Sender (Tzedeck), Valerie Torjman (Admin), and Stacey Weltman (Communications). Students on the executive team are a group consisting of second and third year undergrads, who have all had previous commitment and involvement within the Hillel community. Although the year has just begun, the executive team has already seen some great achievements from their events. Hillel’s Welcome Back BBQ kicked off the year as students came together for an evening of socializing with old friends and new. Despite the rain, the First Year BBQ was a successful turn out. Many first year students gathered at the Hillel House to educate themselves on how to get involved. The Second Annual Flag-Football Tournament saw a tremendous improvement in numbers from last year when 65 people signed up to play. This great accomplishment in such a short period of time hopefully predicts even more successful events. Hillel’s upcoming year is set to be an incredible one for Jewish students at Western University. With a variety of events such as Shabbat Across London, Mitzvah Missions, Manicure For a Cure, and the first ever annual Bar-Mitzvah Bash, there is sure to be something for everyone. By Adam Gurza When I tell people that I go on Taglit Birthright Israel, often times they believe that it is just a free trip and you are only there to party. This is the understanding that many North American Jews have as well as what many Israeli people think the trip is. After leading more than one trip, I can honestly tell you that very few people actually come back with the same mindset, and the Israelis that join the group have their mindset changed as well. For me, I know what the trip was all about and what the participants thought it would be all about. Now I had been to Israel in the past and seen most of the sites we were going to in a group setting. However, being able to give the experience to fourty Canadians who most likely otherwise would not have the same opportunity to is truly life changing. One of the greatest challenges with these trips is that you go to Israel for ten days and have an incredible time, but you always wonder what kind of impact the trip will have when everyone returns home to their normal daily lives. My experiences on the trips have taught me ways to get involved back in the Jewish community and I believe that I have allowed and encouraged my participants to become involved. They have held reunions, Shabbat dinners, and also started chapters of charities, which give money to the state of Israel. I would not be where I am today as a person without Taglit Birthright Israel so I truly encourage everyone to take advantage of this truly amazing gift. B R I G H T E R F U T U R E – U N I T E D J E W I S H A P P E A L OCTOBER 2014 THE LONDON JEWISH COMMUNITY NEWS Melanie Phillips: Recognising Palestine won’t promote peace Times of London, October 13, 2014 British MPs should reject this dangerous proposal – just as the Arabs have so often done With all the terrifying security issues now facing Britain, just what urgent topic is parliament debating today? Support for an independent Kurdistan, perhaps? Britain’s ties with Islamic State’s backers, Qatar? Whether Turkey should be expelled from Nato for refusing to help to fight Islamic State? No. This afternoon a motion proposed by a group of backbench MPs wants the government to “recognise the state of Palestine alongside the state of Israel”. On so many levels this is just nutty. The idea that IsraelPalestine lies at the core of global danger has been exploded (literally) in Syria, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Yemen and other Muslim states. According to the motion’s main proposer, the Labour MP Grahame Morris, the international community has “cruelly refused” the Palestinians their right to a state and thus hindered peace and security in the region. Totally untrue. The sole reason no Palestine state exists alongside Israel is that the Arabs have consistently refused to accept one. Such a state was proposed in 1937, 1948, 2000 and 2008. The Jews agreed to or promoted every such proposal. The Arab answer has always been rejection, war and terrorist campaigns. DIRECTORY OF ADVERTISERS Jeff Phillips www.cplaw.com JNF 519-432-2139 Logan Funeral Home www.loganfh.ca Michael Shmukler www.ShmuklerRealty.com Neuphysio Rehabilitation www.neuphysio.com The reason the peace process has now stalled is that even the supposedly moderate Mahmoud Abbas remains committed to exterminating Israel. He has repeatedly said the Palestinians will never accept the existence of Israel as a Jewish state. His Palestinian Authority glorifies those who murder Israelis and teaches children to hate and kill Jews. In 2012, its TV service broadcast Palestinian leaders applauding children singing: “Oh my pure land, I shall saturate you with my blood, redeem you with my life.” Now Abbas is trying to turn diplomacy into a weapon of war by building international support to isolate Israel. Recognising Palestine, however, makes no sense as such a state has no agreed boundaries. Negotiations with Israel are supposed to hammer out the borders. Unilaterally declaring a state tears up the Oslo treaty that committed both sides to a negotiated settlement. Imposing Palestinian demands upon Israel in this way would destroy the peace process altogether. Since Abbas has now embraced Hamas as a partner in the Palestinian Authority, MPs may also be about to recognise and thus legitimise a state partgoverned by a terrorist outfit. And given current realities, if Israel withdrew from the West Bank it would instantly fall to Hamas (and maybe other Islamists, including Islamic State), thus enabling rocket attacks and terror tunnels just down the road from Jerusalem. In addition, Palestinian leaders have repeatedly said (in Arabic) that Jews would not be allowed to live in Palestine. “When a Palestinian state is established it will be empty of any Israeli presence,” said Abbas in 2010. So how can British MPs support such racist ethnic cleansing? Palestine has become the progressive cause of causes through an effective, decades-long campaign to twist western minds. It was Yassir Arafat who, in the 1970s, started to reframe the 5775 T I S H R E I Palestinian Arabs as freedom fighters on the historically illiterate claim that they were the original inhabitants of the land. Yet the Jews are the only people for whom Israel was ever their national kingdom, centuries before Islam invaded. Contrary to general assumption, the occupation and the settlements are legal, upheld both by the international law of defence against persistent belligerents and the unabrogated treaty obligations of the British Mandate for Palestine. That will surprise many. For no other conflict has ever been so misreported and misrepresented; no other victims of a century of annihilatory aggression have been so demonised and delegitimised. Last summer’s media coverage of the Gaza war, which caused a huge outbreak of anti-Jewish hatred, uncritically transmitted the Hamas falsehood that the vast majority of casualties were civilians. Analysis by Israel’s Meir Amit Intelligence and Terrorism Information Centre shows that 49 per cent of fatalities were terrorists and 51 per cent civilians, a far lower civilian toll than in other wars. Israel is the West’s one ally in the Middle East and is essential to British intelligence and military security. Passing today’s motion won’t itself change anything. But as a propaganda stunt, its capacity to do harm is immense. It will turn parliament into a human shield for Palestinian rejectionism, help to weaken and endanger Israel and incentivise yet more Palestinian hatred, mass murder and war. In security terms, passing this motion would be an act of national self-harm. It would also be a moral stain on parliament and place Britain on the wrong side in the great battle for civilisation. Melanie Phillips will be speaking at the London Jewish Community Centre on Tuesday, October 28, at 7:30 pm. The event is free. OCTOBER 2014 Stephen Kleiman 519-697-3000 Editor in Chief, In House Art/Technical Director, Lisa Flesher Susan Truppe www.SusanTruppeMP.ca For deadlines, advertising rates and to place an ad, please call 519-673-3310 Contributors: Susan Merskey The Carpet Department www.carpetdepartment.com Published by The London Jewish Federation 536 Huron St., London, ON N5Y 4J5 The London Jewish Community News reserves the right to edit or reject material. London Jewish Federation Executive President, Bernie Zaifman Past President, Ron Wolf Treasurer, Terry Marcus Members: Tammie Aston, Stephen Taran, Brian Ublansky PA G E 11 Mead: The Next Generation New Producers Offer Dry, Nuanced Honey Wines By Leah Koenig Jewish Daily Forward, September 26, 2014 [edited for tense] On Rosh Hashanah, Ben Alexander and his family toast[ed] the new year with apples and honey — literally. Instead of just dipping slices of the autumnal fruit into honey, they sip[ped] apple cyser, a fragrant mixture of apple cider and mead. It’s only fitting, since Alexander is the co-founder of Maine Mead Works, a Portlandbased company that’s offering the ancient honey wine to a new generation. Mead tends to conjure up images of Renaissance fairs and syrupy-sweet liquid served in gilded chalices, but Alexander is among a growing crop of mead makers across the country who are producing delicate, dry-style honey wines. “People believe that mead is the earliest fermented beverage, before wine or beer,” he said. “My inspiration was to make a high-quality mead that people would enjoy drinking today.” His meads, which range from pure honey to versions flavored with hops, lavender and elderberry, among other botanicals, are crisp — and every bit as nuanced as a glass of white wine. They’re also certified kosher. Alexander is not Jewish, but his wife, Carly Cope, is. Early on, Cope’s grandfather Gerald Cope, a co-founder of Maine Mead Works, suggested that the company seek out certification. “I thought, ‘Gee, this is just honey, water, herbs and berries — so why not make it a kosher product?” he said. Family Business: Ben Alexander and Carly Cope started Maine Mead Works with Cope’s grandfather. The fourth generation seems poised to jump in. According to Gil Marks’ Encyclopedia of Jewish Food, mead was “probably created accidentally when some wild yeasts settled into a container of diluted honey and fermented.” Over time, people figured out how to harness that natural process to create a drink that, throughout its storied history, has played an important role in cultures across Europe, Asia and Africa. In Jewish tradition, grapes, not honey, have historically been the primary winemaking medium. And yet there are connections to be made. In Ethiopia, for example, where honey wine is common, Jews traditionally blessed and drank a honey wine called tej on the Sabbath and on holidays. “It was difficult to find grapes, but honey was available,” explained Beejhy Barhany, founder of the Beta Israel of North America Cultural Foundation. In Israel, where the vast majority of Ethiopian Jews live today, the tradition of making tej, which is typically fermented at home using honey and a native African plant called gesho, continues. “Ashkenazi Jews make cholent; Ethiopian Jews brew tej. Every family has their own special recipe for it,” said Allan Farago, co-founder of Lost Tribes Beverage, a New York-based brewing company that works to resurrect ancient brewing cultures. This past March, Lost Tribes released a bottled tej — a nuanced, complexly flavored drink brewed using recipes the company gathered from Ethiopian families in Israel. “Our goal is to help bring the drink to a larger audience,” Farago said. To that end, Lost Tribes’ website includes recipes for a variety of tej-based cocktails, among them a gold fashioned, made with the honey wine and with plum brandy and orange juice, and a marigold margarita, which mixes tej with tequila and fresh citrus juices. Mead once held some significance for American Jews. Ricky Klein, who founded Groennfell Meadery in Colchester, Vermont, in 2013, came across a surprising link while researching the drink’s cultural importance. In The Complete American-Jewish Cookbook, a mid-20th-century book written by Anne London and Bertha Kahn Bishov, he found a homemade honey wine recipe that included the following headnote: “The amber liquid used to be a tradition during Passover. In the past two decades it has gradually disappeared so that the present generation is almost completely unaware of its existence.” As someone who regularly brews special, small-batch meads for his family’s holiday celebrations — including a vanilla-infused apple cyser for Rosh Hashanah, and a grape and honey mead for Passover that he jokingly named The ManlySchewitz — Klein was intrigued by the discovery. Despite a fair amount of follow-up research, he’s been unable to pinpoint exactly why homemade honey wine came to hold a prominent spot at the Passover table in early 20th-century America, or why it had so thoroughly faded by the 1950s when London and Kahn Bishov were writing their book. “The only real proof we have of it is this cookbook,” he said. And yet he wholeheartedly supports the notion of bringing back the practice. Alexander and Carly Cope do, too. “We are working on getting Passover certification for our meads right now,” Alexander said. Meanwhile, ever since obtaining kosher certification, the family has been exploring the possibility of explicitly marketing its apple cyser as a Rosh Hashanah-friendly drink. “We like to have a lot of wine with our holiday feasts,” Cope said. “And mead is the perfect fit.” Cookbook author Leah Koenig will be offering a cooking demonstration at the London Jewish Book Fair & Food Festival on Saturday evening, December 6. T H E LO N D O N J E W I S H C O M M U N I T Y N E W S T H A N K S YO U F O R S U P P O RT I N G O U R A DV E RT I S E R S .