- SA Jewish Report
Transcription
- SA Jewish Report
PERCY BANESHIK MEMORIAL CONCERT / 12 PHILIP MILLER PUTS HUMAN FACE ON KENTRIDGE / 13 BOOKS: SWEEPING UP GLASS / 13 Subscribe FREE to Jewish Report’s weekly e-mail edition Go to www.sajewishreport.co.za www.sajewishreport.co.za Friday, 13 November 2009 / 26 Cheshvan 5770 Volume 13 Number 43 Obama shifts into Israel’s corner, tries not to show it Budlender report vindicates Limmud actions at Wits / 3 Helena Glaser cometh the hour, cometh the woman / 4 Habib decries all fundamentalists at Interfaith lecture / 8 DAVIS: Let’s base argument on principle, fact / 11 SUSSER: Abbas threat to resign sparks fears / 10 Russian-Jewish Nobel laureate in physics, Vitaly Ginzburg dies / 2 RAHM EMANUEL: JEWISH SETTLEMENTS SHOULD NOT PREVENT NEGOTIATIONS YOUTH TALK / 18-19 SPORTS / 24 LETTERS / 14 White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel addresses delegates at the annual General Assembly of the Jewish Federations of North America in Washington, November 10. (Robert A Cumins / Jewish Federations of North America) SEE PAGE 11 CROSSWORD & BRIDGE / 20 Veteran swimmer Yach aims at 29,5km around Robben Island / 9 COMMUNITY BUZZ / 7 WHAT’S ON / 20 2 SA JEWISH REPORT 13 - 20 November 2009 SHABBAT TIMES PARSHA OF THE WEEK Published by S A Jewish Report (Pty) Ltd, Suite 175, Postnet X10039, Randburg, 2125 Tel: 011-886-0162 Fax: 011-886-4202 Printed by Caxton Ltd EDITOR - Geoff Sifrin geoffs@icon.co.za Sub-Editor - Paul Maree Senior Reporter - Rita Lewis jont@global.co.za Sports Editor - Jack Milner jackmilner@telkomsa.net Books Editor - Gwen Podbrey Arts Editor - Robyn Sassen info@frodo.co.za Youth Editor - Alison Goldberg jewishreport@yahoo.com Cape Town correspondent Moira Schneider: 021-794-4206 Pretoria correspondent Diane Wolfson: 082-707-9471 MANAGER: SALES AND DISTRIBUTION Britt Landsman: brittl@global.co.za Sales Executives - (011) 886-0162 Britt Landsman: 082-292-9520 Manuela Bernstein: 082-951-3838 Freelance Sales Executives Marlene Bilewitz & Assoc: 083-475-0288 Classified Sales jrclassified@global.co.za Design and layout Frankie Matthysen Nicole Matthysen Website www.sajewishreport.co.za Ilan Ossendryver IC-Creations ilan@ic-creations.com Subscription enquiries Avusa Publishing (Pty) Ltd Tel: 0860-13-2652 BOARD OF DIRECTORS Honourable Abe Abrahamson (Hon. Life President), Stan Kaplan (Chairman) Issie Kirsh (Deputy Chairman), Marlene Bethlehem, Russell Gaddin, Norman Lowenthal, Bertie Lubner, Benjy Porter, Herby Rosenberg, Howard Sackstein, Jason Valkin. Mr Justice Meyer Joffe (Chair, editorial comm) KASHRUT The following symbols will appear on advertisements and/or advertising features to indicate whether or not they are kosher. Where no Kashrut mark appears on an advert, the Jewish Report assumes no responsibility for the Kashrut status of that establishment or advertiser: NK Non-Kosher K Kosher Where no symbols appear, consult the Beth Din Kosher Guide or contact the advertiser. Advertisements and editorial copy from outside sources do not neccessarily reflect the views of the editors and staff. Light up the world THE GREENSTEINS were somewhat traditional Jews, certainly by suburban American standards, and wanted to give their five-year-old daughter a good education. They had heard glowing reports about the local Chabad pre-school and enrolled their daughter. Jessica loved her new school and especially enjoyed the mock Shabbat table each Friday morning. A few months into the school year, Jessica arrived home and announced to her mother that she wanted to start lighting Shabbat candles. Mom dismissed Jessica’s suggestion with a curt “we don’t do that”. Jessica broached the subject on the following Friday and persisted for the next few weeks. Mom’s response remained negative. Jessica was determined. One Friday while her mother was at work, she convinced the au pair to walk her to a nearby grocery store. There she asked the shop owner if she could buy a PARSHAT CHAYEI SARAH Rabbi Ari Shishler Chabad of Strathavon “Jewish” candle. Not knowing what to make of her request, the proprietor sold her a yahrtzeit candle. Mom, getting home at dusk, was taken aback to find a lit yahrtzeit candle on the mantelpiece. Walking in just behind her, Jessica proudly announced: “I lit it for you, Mommy!” Mrs Greenstein hasn’t missed lighting Shabbat candles since. Parshat Chayei Sarah describes the marriage of Isaac and Rebecca. Isaac had just lost his mother, the pious Sarah, whose home exuded spirituality and inspiration. He was not simply looking for a wife; he wanted a worthy successor to his illus- trious mother. The Torah details how Rebecca arrived in Israel to meet her husband-to-be. Isaac waited and watched to see if she would fill the void left by his mother’s death. “And Yitzchak brought her to the tent, Sarah his mother. He took Rivkah, she became his wife and he loved her.” Notice that the Torah does not tell us that he took her into his mother’s tent. Instead, it says that he took her to the tent and then simply adds “Sarah his mother”. Our Sages discern here that Isaac saw his righteous mother in his new wife. Sarah’s home was full of miracles: Her Challah remained fresh for days, the tent had a constant aura of holiness and her candles would miraculously burn from Friday to Friday. After Sarah’s death, these miracles ceased and when Rebecca moved in, they returned. The Torah emphasises that Isaac waited to observe whether Rebecca could rekindle these miraculous factors and only then married her. This indicates that November 13/26 Cheshvan November 14/27 Cheshvan Chayei Sarah Starts 18:15 17:59 18:10 18:15 18:00 18:15 the firing squad. The Soviet H-bomb project was ultimately a success through a series of fortuitous circumstances. In 1948, it was clear that the Soviet Union would acquire the atom bomb to compete with the United States. Some sources had indicated that America was also working on a hydrogen bomb, and the Soviets decided they should make a similar effort - although it was not initially considered a high priority. One of the original team members was physicist Igor Tamm, head of the theory department at the Lebedev Physical Institute in Moscow. Tamm proposed bringing in his deputy, Ginzburg, but was initially turned down. Eventually, however, Ginzburg’s scientific pedigree outweighed his Jewish background and his wife’s exile, and he was accepted. Physicist Andrei Sakharov was placed on the team because he and his wife had a young child and no place to live. Project members were given housing, in this case a single room in a communal flat Their inclusion was fortuitous because the team had little idea how to proceed. Sakharov suggested using alternating layers of uranium and fuel in the bomb. Ginzburg suggested using lithium-6 as fuel because, when hit by neutrons, it would release tritium and helium nuclei and significant amounts of energy. “I do not think that either of these ideas was terribly bright,” Ginzburg said in a recent interview with the American Institute of Physics, “but together they made it possible to create the H-bomb.” Once it was decided to use these two ideas, the work was moved from Moscow to what is now the city of Sarov. Ginzburg, who had been tarred as a “homeless, stateless cosmopoli- Johannesburg Cape Town Durban Bloemfontein Port Elizabeth East London Rebecca lit Shabbat candles while she was still single, implying that single women should do so too. In fact, Rebecca was all of three years old when she met Isaac, so it makes sense to train young girls to light Shabbat candles too. Shabbat candles are one of Judaism’s oldest traditions. Even when they don’t physically burn for a week as Sarah’s and Rebecca’s did, they leave an aura of tranquillity in your home for the week. And we could all do with more light and warmth in our frenetic lives. Shabbat Shalom. Nobel laureate Vitaly Ginzburg dies at age 93 VITALY GINZBURG, the Russian physicist who played a key role in the Soviet Union’s development of the hydrogen bomb and who later won a Nobel Prize for his work on the theoretical underpinnings of superconductivity, died in Moscow late Sunday of cardiac arrest. He was 93 and had been in ill health for some time. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2003 for his work on the theoretical underpinnings of superconductivity. A pioneering theoretical physicist who often deprecated his own abilities in mathematics, Ginzburg made seminal contributions in a number of areas of physics, including quantum theory, astrophysics and radioastronomy. A confirmed atheist despite his Jewish heritage, he was outspoken against anti-Semitism and firm in supporting the state of Israel. In his later years, he was highly vocal about what he and other scientists considered the “clericalisation” of the Russian state. In a telegram to Ginzburg’s family, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev called him “a remarkable and purpose-driven man who has left us, one of the greatest physicists of our times, whose discoveries had a huge impact on the development of science in our country and around the world, and whose professional career and personal life are examples of a citizen’s service to his homeland”. That statement seems somewhat ironic because Ginzburg was ostracised and refused high-level clearances throughout most of his career and was unable to travel abroad until late in his life because his wife had been erroneously accused of participating in a plot to assassinate Josef Stalin. He often said that it was only his participation in the H-bomb project that saved him from Ends 19:07 20:11 19:03 19:21 19:35 19:23 AROUND THE WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF ISRAELI ARMY CHIEF: IRAN RADICAL BUT NOT IRRATIONAL Nobel Prizewinner Vitaly Ginzburg has died, age 93. tan”, was not allowed to move to Sarov and stayed behind in Moscow to do thermonuclear calculations. Eventually, he lost clearance to do that as well. Ginzburg next turned his attention to superconductivity, the ability of some materials to carry electricity without any losses due to friction. Early work on superconductivity had yielded few practical results because even weak magnetic fields interfered with a material’s ability to conduct electricity. With another Russian physicist, Lev Landau, Ginzburg worked out a series of equations that correctly predicted a superconductor’s tolerance for a magnetic field and its conductive ability. Based on Ginzburg and Landau’s work, physicist Alexei A Abrikosov developed ways to achieve superconductivity despite the presence of high magnetic fields. That work paved the way for a wide variety of uses, such as in medical imaging. In recognition of their work, Ginzburg and Abrikosov shared the 2003 Nobel Prize in Physics with Anthony J Leggett, who explained why helium became a superfluid when placed in a magnetic field at low temperatures. Landau, who had received a Nobel for other work, did not share in the prize because he had died and Nobels are not given posthumously. JERUSALEM - Iran could change the direction of its nuclear programme, the Israeli army's chief of staff says. "Iran is very radical on one hand, but on the other hand you can't say that it is an irrational country," Gabi Ashkenazi told the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee on Tuesday. Ashkenazi also told the committee that Hezbollah was armed with thousands of missiles that had a range of about 320 kilometres and can reach to the southern city of Dimona. Ashkenazi also confirmed that the Israel Defence Forces was carrying out several investigations into the actions of its soldiers during the Gaza war and would look into any other complaints against its soldiers. "I invite all Palestinians to testify if they have complaints," he said. "As of now, 60 Palestinians have delivered their testimonies." (JTA) 13 - 20 November 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT 3 Budlender’s report vindicates Limmud’s actions at Wits campus conference “child killers”. However, following an approach from the SAJBD calling for the THE INVESTIGATION instituted by Wits inquiry to investigate all aspects of the conUniversity into the events that took place troversy, the inquiry’s terms of reference did on campus during the Limmud event on include a reference to alleged “inflammatory August 9 this year, has rejected allegations slurs”. While Budlender found that at least some that Limmud’s security marshals carried out “racial profiling” against students of colour differential treatment of the various people on campus took place, this was not due to the and academics in the course of their duties. In a report that overwhelmingly vindicated Limmud organisers having “a policy of treatLimmud, Advocate Geoff Budlender SC did, ing members of different racial groups in a however, say that Limmud marshals over- different manner”, but to other factors related stepped their authority and appeared “heavy- to the particular circumstances of the prehanded”. But he found no male fides on their vailing situation. While a number of the submissions made, part. His 13-page report found that Limmud par- sought to deny any untoward behaviour on ticipants were subjected to offensive slurs the part of protesters outside the university and intimidation by those protesting outside gates, he confirmed that these had indeed the university. The controversy centred “engaged in inflammatory and offensive slurs around the participation on the programme of people who were attending the conferof Lt-Colonel David Benjamin of the Israeli ence”. Budlender took cognisance of the point Defence Forces, labelled as a “war criminal” by pro-Palestinian factions on and off cam- made by Limmud in its written submission that the “vehemence” of the protest and the pus. Budlender based his conclusions on more charged nature of the atmosphere on the day, than 70 written submissions received from had given rise to legitimate concerns that the those who were present on the day and indi- Limmud conference might be disrupted. While rejecting the racial profiling accusavidual interviews with some of the latter whose testimony was regarded as particular- tion, Budlender nevertheless found that the ly significant. These included senior mem- Limmud marshals had gone beyond their bers of the Wits administration, Limmud, function solely of identifying Limmud particSAUJS, the SAJBD and the Palestinian ipants and taken on an enlarged “security” function. They were not trained to Solidarity Committee. carry out such a function in a situaThe SAJBD has welcomed tion so highly charged, and were by Budlender’s findings, saying that the their very nature too obviously partifindings had vindicated all the san to be able to effectively keep the essential points it had made in its peace between the disputing parties. own submission. SAJBD National In addition to over-reaching the Director Wendy Kahn, called the bounds of their authority, moreover, report balanced and thorough, and several marshals had come across as felt that Budlender had done “an heavy-handed in the way they dealt excellent job” in getting to the heart with the public. Budlender concludof what had happened, without Geoff ed that in general the marshals “do being swayed by people’s political Budlender not appear to have appreciated the agendas. consequences of the manner in “We were very disturbed that which they performed their functhose protesting against Limmud tions”. resorted to baseless charges of racial Late in the afternoon of Saturday, profiling in order to smear our comAugust 8, the Palestinian Solidarity munity. Fortunately, a thorough and Committee informed the administranon-partisan investigation has tion that it would be holding a protest revealed these to be false,” she said. demonstration on campus the followWhen the racial profiling allegaing day. Because of the late notice, tions were first made, Wits ViceActing Vice-Chancellor Professor Chancellor Professor Loyiso Wendy Kahn Belinda Bozzoli refused to grant perNongxa, reacted with outrage. In a mission for this, but the PSC went letter to the Wits Community (on ahead anyway. August 13), he hastened to apologise A large part of Budlender’s 13to those who felt so targeted even page report addressed the question before the investigation into what of what the university’s policy was had actually happened, had been regarding protest gatherings on caminstituted. pus. He concluded that there were His letter made no mention of the “grey areas” which were easily counter-allegations - subsequently exploited, or which resulted in conconfirmed - that Limmud particiflict because of different understandpants had been abused and insulted, David ings of what the rules were. including being called “Nazis” and Benjamin DAVID SAKS Participants in a Limmud session. (PHOTOGRAPH: JOE YUDELOWITZ) Protestors at the entrance to the Limmud conference. 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This dynamic woman has a wealth of experience and contribution to make on many fronts concerning women’s issues and WIZO’s work in Israel and abroad. Glaser was in South Africa to attend WIZO’s three-day conference on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday in Johannesburg (see article below). From her first words, it is obvious that Glaser loves, lives and breaths WIZO. She described the many and varied projects run by the organisation in Israel, a lot of which centred around children’s day care centres and places of refuge for abused women. Generally it would seem that WIZO Israel is a well-oiled machine and its prestige is such that it was awarded the tender to maintain the national hotline for domestic violence, battered women, single mothers and girls in distress. Glaser said the country was working on a new confidential project on adoption. This would be for babies, with another project for children aged four to eight, all of whom, for various reasons, will never be able to go back to their parental homes. Glaser said it was not just in Israel that WIZO was a strong entity. “It lobbies in the international arena as an NGO and we feel that all organisations should join together to give greater power to the lobby.” She related incidents and issues, quoting names of leaders, workers and projects undertaken in WIZO federations she had visited in such countries as Argentine, Australia, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, Columbia, the US as well as numerous cities in Europe - some of which she has visited twice. Travelling overseas so much is no easy task as her workload is enormous. In Israel alone there are some 800 projects/services running with over 5 000 fulltime employees. There are also 2 500 paid workers in a huge network of day care centres throughout the country - and these too need (and get) much of her attention. WIZO also enjoys “Status of Women” representation at Unicef. Romanian born Glaser started her political life with WIZO Israel in the mid-70s when she became the chairman of the fundraising department (a position she held for some seven years, taking the annual income from $600 000 to $1 500 000). In 1991 she was elected chairman of WIZO Israel. During her time as chairman (she was elected for a second term in 1995), she initiated and advanced pro- grammes, activities and newly proposed laws to the Knesset on the advancement of the “Status of Women” - incorporating her belief in gender equality, women’s human rights, etc. Discussing the growing antiIsrael and anti-Semitic feelings worldwide, Glaser said she was involved in a committee that “deals with anti-Semitism all over the world” and is also connected to the Foreign Office (in Israel) “and we get reports from communities all over the world. “Unfortunately things are not getting any better,” she said. “Some communities don’t like to talk about it and just try to pacify themselves by saying an incident is a local issue and not an antiSemitic attack, while others are afraid to wear kippot, etc. This was a sad time in Israeli and Jewish life, she remarked. Sadly the two components are always lumped together - “which they are”. Glaser said the threat of economic boycotts had become far more real since the Goldstone Report was published. “As a women’s Zionist movement we have to work very hard in different communities to present the other side of Israel,” she said. She gave one example of the work of the first Israeli Nobel Prize-winner, Ada Yonath, and another of Jewish women in Switzerland who have developed new ways of working with autistic children while the children are very young. President of World WIZO, Helena Glaser, with WIZO SA’s outgoing chairman, Lorraine Rosmarin and Rolene Marks (behind). Their methods are so successful that the Swiss health department has taken on the idea while the European Union is interested in instituting the same method in some of its member countries. Glaser spoke of other Israeli innovations and discoveries and described how the arts and film industry had taken off. There was, however, a long way to go, as being a very democratic country, “we do not just let things that happen, go by”. She said many people and organisations were working towards showing Israel as the beautiful, forward-looking country that it was. Glaser who is married and lives in Israel, firmly believes that WIZO should not only work “within itself ” but should get together with other women’s organisations to exchange ideas. Together they would have far more clout, especially on the subject of women’s issues, which concerned everyone. She felt they should also be in touch with women of other religions, as irrespective of one’s beliefs, backgrounds and religiosity, matters which concern women, concern all women. WIZO was first started in the late 1910s by Rebecca Sieff and came to South Africa some two years later, and is one of the most dynamic and successful organisations in Israel, the Diaspora and especially South Africa. A common theme ‘linked’ an exciting WIZO Conference invocation given by Rabbi Robert Jacobs of Bet David. The day included the “Communal Link” by Mina Sable, national chairman of the Co-ordinating Council of Women’s Organisations, The President’s report (by Rosmarin) and the Treasurer’s report by (Brenda Levin and Sandra Mindel, cotreasurers), followed. The “Business Link” also included the adoption of the various reports. Under the chairmanship of Marcia Parness, honorary life vice-president of WIZO SA, a discussion on “Constitution and Resolutions” was held, which included “Additional Resolutions”. Under the “Money Link” chaired by Barbara Flax, the chairman of Bnoth Zion, Rabbi Dovid Masinter spoke about “Fundraising and Imaging”. After lunch, under the “Info Link”, three sessions were held. Durban’s Lyn Foster chaired Hasbarah: “How the media deals with Israel”, facilitated by Bev Goldman. “Our Link to the Land” was chaired by Mushie Kirsh, honorary life president of WIZO SA, educational officer and fundraiser of the JNF, Laura Siegel, spoke on tree planting and promoting the work of the JNF. Ofer Dahan director of Programmes Marketing Division, Aliyah and Absorption Department at the Jewish Agency, spoke on aliyah. Cape Town gets its own Friendship Forum shared the story of his late mother’s experiences when she was deported from Rhode Island. In his address, the ambassador speaking both in his official capacity and as a child of survivors, commented on the poignancy of the occasion. As a child, his family had been reluctant to discuss their experiences and only in later years had they spoken more openly. Danielle Kowen, a third generation survivor, said the Holocaust had become part of her life from her teen years. Miriam Lichterman read out an inspiring letter she had written to the head of the Springfield Convent SRC after she had addressed learners at the school. The guests were entertained by the Herzlia Ensemble led by Cantor Ivor Joffe. Beautiful songs by four generations of one family Holocaust survivor Santa Pelham, her daughter, granddaughter and grandchildren - were a highlight of the event. The Friendship Forum in Cape Town will hold its first meeting on Sunday February 14 next year. RITA LEWIS The 33rd Triennial Conference held by WIZO was a well-attended three-day event and included Chief Rabbi Warren Goldstein as well as other rabbis, dignitaries and members of the public. It was a stimulating conference with enough substance to provide “nourishment for the soul”. The consensus among delegates was that it was time well spent. The theme of the event was “Linking the Past - Shaping the Future”. Interesting talks and discussions were given by guest speakers and others on the subject as well as on issues, changes and developments related to the work covered by WIZO and its dedicated ON SUNDAY November 8, more than 200 people attended the launch of the newly-established Friendship Forum in Cape Town. The Forum is based on AMCHA, an Israeli organisation catering for volunteers and staff on South Africa, Israel and around the world were covered. The opening session was held last Sunday, where the chairman of WIZO Johannesburg, Zee Bergman welcomed the gathering and introduced the guest speaker, Helena Glaser president of World WIZO. After her address, Ruth Lewis, chairman of Aviv Reshet spoke on “The Vital Link” and WIZO’s younger members from Bnoth Zion, WIZO Johannesburg and WIZO Durban, spoke of the beneficiaries in Israel of their projects, Ichpat, Beit Halochem, Neve Amiel, P2K, JNF, Day Care centres and Neve WIZO. Bergman then gave her report, the needs of the ageing Holocaust survivor and European refugee community, providing psychological support and a social network for their children and grandchildren (second and third generation). Miriam Lichterman, Israel’s Ambassador to South Africa Dov Segev-Steinberg and Tracey Farber who trained the psychologists and social workers to provide support for the Friendship Forum. “The Future Link”. After lunch Nava Gonen, vicechairman of WIZO Johannesburg introduced Maisie Rayman (WIZO Johannesburg) who had written a poem on “The Weakest Link” and inspirational speaker, writer and thinker on the “New Leadership”, Debbie Edelstein spoke on “Strengthening the Link”. A group of delegates then embarked on a tour of Constitution Hill under the guidance of Marlene Bethlehem, past deputy chairman of the CRL Commission, and introduced by Yvonne Jawitz. The following day the plenary session was held under the banner of “The Business Link” and was chaired by Lee Joffe, immediate past president of WIZO SA and the Sixteen social workers from the Cape Town community have volunteered their services in this regard, the Friendship Forum said in a media release. Guest speakers included Israel’s Ambassador to South Africa Dov Segev-Steinberg, Tracey Farber, psychologist and founder of the Friendship Forum in Johannesburg, and second generation survivor Isaac Habib who Naomi Jaff, Miriam Lichterman, Israel’s Ambassador to South Africa Dov Segev-Steinberg, Cantor Ivor Joffe, Ella Blumenthal and Richard Freedman, director: Cape Town Holocaust Centre. 13 - 20 November 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT Mendle retrospective fulfilment of a dream MOIRA SCHNEIDER CAPE TOWN PHOTOGRAPH: MIGUEL A RETROSPECTIVE exhibition of the work of the late Israeli sculptor Jossi Mendle is to be held in fulfilment of a dream that he was unable to realise during his lifetime. Consisting of 25 bronzes, it has been put together by his widow, Irene. Born in Germany in 1921, Mendle immigrated to Israel in 1934, graduating some 10 years later from the Bezalel School of Arts and Crafts in Jerusalem. He was a founder member of the Israeli artists’ village Ein Hod and it was there that he met his Dutch wife in the late 1970s. After marrying in 1980, they decided to come to South Africa, settling in Cape Town. The pair had been encouraged by a school friend of Jossi’s who had served here in the diplomatic corps. “He said ‘Oh, South Africa’s a beautiful country, it’s all going to be fine, they will need artists’,” Irene recalls. She says that once here, Jossi received many commissions for both private collections and public spaces, including several large outdoor works for social housing developments in Strandfontein Village and Summer Greens. His works feature in private collections around the world. The couple spent the years until he passed away in 2002 aged Israeli sculptor Jossi Mendle’s first commissioned work in Cape Town, Tender Relationship (1982), which is situated in a private garden in Bishopscourt. 80, commuting between South Africa and Israel. “He got such a lot of work here, but his heart was actually still in Israel,” she explains. According to his website (www.mendle.co.za), Mendle described his work as follows: “I am interested in environmental sculpture involving various media and bringing forth a har- monious interplay between environment and created object.” This is the first solo exhibition of his work. The sculptures will be on sale. • The exhibition runs from November 20 for three weeks at the third floor, The Spearhead Building (next to Investec), 42 Hans Strijdom Avenue, Foreshore, Cape Town. ORT SA showcases the Bidvest Alexandra project ORT SOUTH Africa and Bidvest last month celebrated the third year into their Numeracy Foundation Phase project with the Alexandra community. The aim of the afternoon of celebrations was to showcase the project in various ways. Over 2009, grade two teachers have been working with ORT SA in a series of workshops and classroom-based support with the provision of textbooks to enhance the teaching and learning of numeracy. In order to showcase the project, all grade two teachers from the 12 primary schools, produced colourful displays of numeracy lessons, ORT SA said in a media release. The event was attended by various Gauteng Department of Education representatives as well as the director of District 9, Babsy Matabane and representatives from Bidvest, the project sponsor. Matabane said this project addressed various issues, the first one being to ensure that Gauteng had effective schools and learning institutions, by giving classroombased support to teachers. The second one was to “strengthen partnerships with all stakeholders in the private and government sector, resulting in education becoming a priority”. Matabane said he was proud to be part of this ORT SA-Bidvest project and thanked them for making such positive changes to education in South Africa. He commended the teachers for their hard work and commitment and predicted that through their contribution, “Alexandra will produce the mathematicians, scientists and engineers of the future”. Sabelo Mahlalela, Bidvest’s group commercial executive, said Bidvest took this initiative very seriously. He added that it was not so much the imparting of mathematics and science knowledge to the educators, but the impact that the use of the system would have in the debate of the future education system in South Africa, that we should implement. “Our learners are our greatest assets and the foundation today lays the path to the future,” he said. He pledged Bidvest’s continued support and commitment to this project from 2010 through to 2014. The guests where treated to singing and dancing from four of the participating schools in the project. Fifty three grade two teachers who have completed the second year of the project, received certificates. Learners from the Dr Knak Primary school who entertained the guests with; Sabelo Mahlalela Bidvest, Babsy Matabane Gauteng Department of Education and Michael Sieff, national director of ORT SA. 5 6 SA JEWISH REPORT 13 - 20 November 2009 SOCIAL SCENE Rita Lewis jont@global.co.za Laughter coaching in action. Laugh and the whole world laughs with you... RITA LEWIS PHOTOGRAPHS BY QUENTIN QUEIT BELIEVING IN the adage that “laughter is the best medicine”, members of the Yocheved branch of the Union of Jewish Women recently hosted a special “laughter-filled fun event” at the Hebrew Order of David in Johannesburg, to raise money for Camp Kesher. Camp Kesher, which runs in December, is situated at Muizenberg in the Cape. It gives those Jewish children, who for various reasons cannot or will not attend the other summer camps, the opportunity to spend their summer holidays at the sea under special supervision. The camp provides everything they need. It also organises fun activities so that they are able to interact with others of their own ilk, instead of being left behind at home while their siblings and other children attend the “big” camps. Functions are held for a variety of reasons and many Jewish ones are organised specifically as fundraisers, with the proceeds given to various charities. This event, however, was different as not only were the proceeds donated to Camp Kesher, but they were done so in the name of Natanel Ben Shimon Feigenbaum and as an Sivan Admon and Dovi Lichtenstein dressing it up at the photo booth. aliyah for his neshomah. Feigenbaum zt”l was a young Johannesburg schoolboy from Yeshiva College who was tragically killed in a car accident recently. As there seems to be so much stress and sadness around, the six member committee decided to make the theme of the evening laughter. UJW Yocheved group’s chairman, Kelly Nathan said the goal of the function was to add simcha through laughter and those who attended the function were certainly spoilt for fun and laughter. The evening was basically held under the direction of “laughter coach” Shareen Richter, who feels that finding inner joy and stress-relief through laughter makes you do things you wouldn’t normally do. Part of her modus operandi is to get people to do ridiculous things together so that each could laugh at the other. This gets rid of inhibitions and lightens the atmosphere - for even more laughter. Added to the fun, a photo booth was supplied together with various costumes for everyone to dress up. Guests could have four different photographs in different costumes to take home for free Vocalist Ryan Peimer entertained the guests with some relaxing songs. Guests went home leaving their stresses and strains behind, knowing that a whole group of kids would be benefiting and might (hopefully) be making their own laughter during their time at the camp. The evening was an enormous success, with substantial proceeds being handed over to Camp Kesher. Members of the Yocheved branch of the Union of Jewish Women: Cheri Admon, Lezanne Gochin, Kelly Nathan, Taryn Milner, Leanne Duek, Thea Gafin (MC from Bikkur Cholim), Joy Gafin (Bikkur Cholim office ddministrator), with Sharon Froom. Absent: Lisa Jasve. Ayala Raichlin, Adi Kay, Dani Nerwich, Sarit Sifris, Dana Slasky and Nicole Landau. Practising shaking hands are Hugh Raichlin and Shaun Wingren. The Demby girls having a good laugh. Laughter coach, Shareen Richter. Cheri Admon, Taryn Davis, Kelly Nathan and Lezanne Gochin handing out the prizes. 13 - 20 November 2009 COMMUNITY BUZZ LIONEL SLIER 082-444-9832, fax: 011-440-0448, lionel.slier@absamail.co.za JOHANNESBURG ChaiFM101.9 has arrived Last week’s Jewish Report carried a quarter page advert about ChaiFM, the radio station that is making its mark among Jewish radio listeners, not only in Gauteng but also in many countries. According to the advert it offers news and schmooze, (which is about what is happening around the corner, in Johannesburg, in South Africa, in the Middle East and all over the world); there is a focus on Israel, sport, Gauteng traffic, social critics (the acerbic Menachem X), movie reviews, tech news, Ian Fife on property, many laughs, plenty of music, (the excellent) Alan Swerdlow and his Boker Tov Breakfast Team and much, much more throughout the day. Kathy Kaler, the founder, and guiding light, told the Jewish Report how the station began. “In April 2005 while driving with my mother, she related to me that she had a dream in which she heard me on the radio. There were three very significant things about this conversation. Firstly, my mother never recalls her dreams, secondly she explained that she “had” to tell me her dream with an unusual sense of urgency and lastly I knew (then) what my personal reason was for being born.” The station is now five years old and Kaler remarked: “People all over the world can listen to ChaiFM on our website (Chaifm.com) and in fact we have had e-mails and even phone calls from places as diverse as Mauritius, the Philippines, England, Chile and others and also, strangely enough, Israel.” Obviously it can be heard everywhere in South Africa too. Kathy Kaler is living her mother’s dream. To be continued. PRETORIA From Sylvia Shapshak: “Pretoria before and after the (Second World) War had a large Jewish community. “The main shul was the one in Paul Kruger Street - the cafe on the corner across the road did a thriving trade in soda water after Yom Kippur. The Reform Shul was in Proes Street. SA JEWISH REPORT “The rabbi (Rabbi Wolf Hirsch) had a house provided by the congregation, adjacent to the shul - it was an oldfashioned building and probably not very comfortable, as later he moved to a house in Beatrix Street, Arcadia, near the Memorial Hall. “The Memorial Hall and the nextdoor building, The Miriam Marks School, was the focal point for all occasions. The hall was used as a shul on Friday nights and also as an overflow on all the High Festivals. It was ‘the venue’ for weddings and barmitzvahs - my brother had his there in 1944. “During the war the ladies committees had afternoon tea parties for soldiers and as there were cigarettes on each table, we children collected the silver paper from the boxes for taking to school as part of the ‘war effort’. “Fetes for fundraising were held there and I remember that there was much competition for the best stall. All the ‘workers’ wore white aprons with a blue ribbon Magen Dovid and the stalls were filled with hand-made goods and baking. There was always a raffle. “The Miriam Marks School was for teaching cheder and the children who were not taught at school, went in the afternoons. I remember having lessons there. It was also the place where teenagers had socials and as I became older I went to many there - the Yom Kippur social was usually a super affair. “Some of the names of the youth committee that I remember were: Victor Lapidus, Ralph Lanesman, Percy Sher, Norman Skolnik, Phyllis Hack and me, Sylvia Siskind (that was). “About 1948 - 1949 a new synagogue was built in Arcadia; the architect was Oscar Hurwitz and it was much grander then the ‘old’ one in Paul Kruger Street. That shul was deconsecrated and was later used for the Treason Trial. The ‘old’ shul was a rectangular building with pillars holding up the ladies gallery. “The ‘new’ shul had a dome which had properties similar to the whispering gallery. “Rabbi Hirsch bought a house in Park Street, near the shul. It was an unusual house and had a fishpond in the hall. It was decorated with lots of Chinese hangings and art. “Rabbi Hirsch had been a rabbi in Shanghai. It was very different from the usual Jewish Pretoria house and his congregants didn’t understand or like it much.” KIMBERLEY From Ada Gamsu: The family of Maryasal Muler Thal are looking for the descendants of her brother Srol Berell Muler who was known in South Africa as Jacob Miller in Kimberley. His older brother Nosan-Velva or Nathan Miller, also came to South Africa and settled in Cape Town, but died in 1918 during the flu pandemic. Jacob Miller was married to Rose and they had four children between 1917 - 1921 in Kimberley: Sadie, Hettie, Willie Nathan and Issie Miller. It is these children or their descendants who the family are looking for. Please contact Ann Rabinowitz, annrab@bellsouth.net, if you have any information. WALVIS BAY Hyman Jocum continues: “To service the ship trading along the South West African coast, Aaron de Pass built the first patent slipway in Simonstown in 1860. “Daniel de Pass was responsible for persuading the Cape governor to annex the various islands off the South West African coast. In 1878 Walvis Bay was formally declared part of the Cape of Good Hope and until 1990 the islands were internationally recognised as part of the Republic of South Africa. “Daniel de Pass returned to England where he spent his last years in the seaside resort of Worthing. His son, Alfred, continued to live in Cape Town and passed away at a very ripe old age in 1952. He spent the last years of his life acquiring art treasures and antiques. “In his will he left most of these to the South African National Gallery and the antiques to the South African Museum. “After the settlement’s formal inclusion into the Cape of Good Hope, another British Jew, Joseph Harries opened offices as a shipping agent in the centre of the town and the firm of J Harries was still functioning as recently as 1973. For several decades John Harries was mayor of Walvis Bay.” NEW ZEALAND From Rabbi Benjamin Blech, (New York) 2004: “Yet with its inauspicious beginnings, New Zealand has been able to grow to a community of 5 000 Jews with six synagogues, two in Auckland, two in Wellington, one in Dunedin and one - would you believe it? - in Christchurch.” AROUND THE WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF REPORT: ABBAS TO RESIGN HIS PLO, FATAH POSTS JERUSALEM - Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas may resign as head of the PLO and the Fatah Party, a Palestinian news service reported on Tuesday. Abbas is considering resigning his posts on the Palestine Liberation Organisation executive committee and the Fatah Central Committee, Palestinian officials said on Tuesday, according to the Ma'an news agency. Abbas announced last week that he would not run for re-election as president of the Palestinian Authority. Palestinian elections are scheduled for January 24. The sources told Ma'an that Abbas would wait for the right moment to announce his resignations. In a speech last week, Abbas said he would make "the right decisions at the right moments". Facilities - Single rooms or suites with kitchenettes, all with own bathrooms. Highly qualified medical and nursing staff. Permanent or temporary frail-care section for post-operative or acute care. Entertainment to suit all - Discussion groups, video evenings, musical appreciation, cultural activities, bridge, rummy, scrabble and other card games, Other conveniences: Library, Small Shop, Banking Facilities, Beautician, Hairdresser, Manicurist, Podiatrist, all available on the premises. Healthcare: Social Worker, Occupational Therapist and Physiotherapist with daily programmes and classes. Transport available for outings to theatres, shopping malls and/or medical needs. Parking facilities available. Friday night - Orthodox Shul service on the premises. Progressive Congregation within walking distance. We look forward to meeting you and offering you a personal tour of Jaffa (DVD available on request) 7 8 SA JEWISH REPORT Habib stresses the commonality of the 3 monotheistic religions LIONEL SLIER FUNDAMENTALISM (in all forms) was not natural and had to be fought. It thrived under threat, Professor Adam Habib, Vice Chancellor for Research, Innovation and Advancement at the University of Johannesburg, said when he delivered the Sixth Annual Franz Auerbach Memorial Lecture this week. But a ray of light was that the world was becoming increasingly cosmopolitan. In this context he did not see a two-state solution for “Palestine” as viable in the long term. Speaking at Bet Emanuel in Habib: “What makes 19 men fly airplanes into Rosebank, Habib, a Muslim, told a packed-out audience he had spoken buildings and kill over 3 000 people, strangers?” in all kinds of forums, but never before in a synagogue. His lecture was entitled “Religion and the Fundamentalist Identities in the Post 9/11 World”. About conflict he said: “The 9/11 attacks were barbaric. My religion does not condone such attacks, but I think that the response was also barbaric. The right wing administration in the United States was advancing its own political agenda.” Adam Habib. Franz Auerbach. He pointed out what he saw as “dangers”. One was the assumption “You see Hindus burning a train, that Islam was against the JudeoAmerican soldiers in Iraq and Somalia Christian civilisation; secondly the laying bare houses; Israeli soldiers response (to 9/11) condoned torture, illethreatening children. From extreme gal prisons camps, the abandonment of polarity you get extreme threats. That is humanistic rules in conducting the war, the political aspect. etc. “You get it in economic situations “Thirdly, I believe that they wanted to where some earn millions that they can maintain their energy supplies and this never ever spend, while others nearby polarised the Middle East and the West struggle to put bread on the table. Then and it spawned more terrorism and there is a cultural element where you get greater fundamentalism.” secular arrogance against spirituality. A Habib spoke about the belief in a religious person is condemned as still liv“People Chosen” and everyone else as ing in the Middle Ages.” “unchosen”. Habib said globalisation created possiHe added: “Sometimes even within relibilities for a more cosmopolitan world. gious communities there are differences That was the way the world was moving. and they even take up arms, attack Europe would become more Muslim women and butcher others. while the Middle East would become “Is fundamentalism an Islamic probmore Europeanised. lem?” he asked. “How else can one “Therefore a two state solution is not describe the destruction of the Buddha viable in the long term for Palestine. The statues in Afghanistan? How else to disLatinos will be greater in the US and the cuss al-Qaida?” But then he took a broadAmericans will increase in South er view: “How else to describe Hindus America. We will have to address all comburning Christian churches in India? Or munities who feel isolated in large parts Jews arriving in the Holy Land and being of the world and our religion will be a struck down? Or Israeli settlers in the humanistic one. West Bank who claim the land is theirs? “We must stand up and say that ecoOr the Palestinians firing rockets on nomic and political persecution is not Israel and saying the Jews have no right acceptable and ethnic identity of the to be there? extreme kind is not acceptable. We must “The question is: How do we criticise object to people in our own social circle one side and remain silent about the othwho have racist opinions. ers? We should all start talking about fun“Our religions are meant to unite us. damentalism. Fundamentalism is not natThey are religions of humanity and that ural.” G-d is love. We are all parts of the same He referred to a book by Karen goal and that goal is spirituality.” Armstrong called The Battle for G-d. In it The eminent Franz Auerbach who died “she writes from a sympathetic perspecsome years ago, came to South Africa as tive. She said that a spiritual component a refugee from Nazi Germany and is crucial to human existence. Yet why is became a legendary educator and camit, she asks, that our religions can become paigner against discrimination and so ungodly and so driven by hate? How is injustice in the apartheid years and the it that three major religions, Judaism, memorial lectures in his name reflect his Islam and Christianity existed with each life’s work. other for centuries, then afterwards Adam Habib said of the theme of the began killing, raping and plundering? lecture: “I am a devout Muslim but my “How is it that a man can cradle his commonality is beyond race. For me relichild and then kill another child in the gion is not meant to divide; it is meant to name of G-d? engage with a spiritual existence. “ “In her book on Jerusalem, she asks Habib spoke about his early religious how the Muslims and Jews lived peacefullife, how until the age of 18 he had been ly together but then also destroyed each “very religious”, later “moving on” to other at another time? agnosticism and then after what he “Fundamentalism thrives when under thought was a heart attack - at the age of threat,” explained Habib, “ and in condi35 - he had made “a trade-off” with G-d. tions of extreme polarity. That is what “If you see me right, I said to Him, I you see now happening in the Middle will change my perspective. I then East. What makes 19 men fly airplanes returned to spirituality, but on my terms. into buildings and kill over 3 000 people, I came to the realisation that we all are strangers,” he asked about the World praying to the same Being but our instruTrade Centre suicide attacks. ments are different.” 13 - 20 November 2009 AROUND THE WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF OBAMA, BIBI MEET BEHIND CLOSED DOORS WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama and Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, on Monday met behind closed doors, discussing US-Israel ties, Iran and Mideast peace talks, according to a White House statement. Obama's meeting at the White House with Netanyahu was closed to reporters, even omitting the standard photo opportunity and handshake. The White House statement following the meeting was unusually terse: "The President and Prime Minister Netanyahu discussed a number of issues in the US-Israel bilateral relationship. "The President reaffirmed our strong commitment to Israel's security, and discussed security co-operation on a range of issues. The President and Prime Minister also discussed Iran and how to move forward on Middle East peace." White House officials have expressed frustration with the impasse in IsraeliPalestinian peace talks. Earlier on Monday, Netanyahu had called for an immediate resumption of talks, in a speech to the Jewish Federations of North America's General Assembly. Obama met with some of the Jewish leaders at a White House reception. He praised the federations umbrella for its charitable work and called for support for massive healthcare reform currently under consideration in Congress. (JTA) JEWISH FEDERATIONS LEADERS MEET WITH OBAMA WASHINGTON - Leaders of The Jewish Federations of North America met with President Barack Obama and other top administration officials at the White House. Monday afternoon's hour-long reception, scheduled after Obama had to cancel his Tuesday speech to the group's General Assembly because he was attending a memorial service for those killed at Fort Hood last week, featured short remarks from Obama. Mostly, though, attendees had a chance to talk one on one with the president and White House senior staff. Obama, who dropped by for about 30 minutes, said that The Jewish Federations of North America "perform every day of every week selfless acts of tzedakah", according to a person present at the meeting, and spoke about his experience with Chicago's Jewish federation. He also made a pitch for healthcare reform, talking about the importance of passing it and stating that he could "see the light at the end of the tunnel". White House staff at the meeting included Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, who spoke at the GA on Tuesday instead of Obama. "We were thankful to have an opportunity to directly discuss a number of our concerns with the administration's senior team and look forward to continuing to reach out to them in the future to ensure the voice of the Jewish community is heard loud and far in Washington," said Jerry Silverman, president and CEO of The Jewish Federations of North America, in a statement. (JTA) FRENCH FM: ISRAEL'S DESIRE FOR PEACE HAS 'VANISHED' JERUSALEM - Israel's desire for peace seems to have "completely vanished", France's foreign minister has said. "What really hurts me, and this shocks us, is that before there used to be a great peace movement in Israel," Bernard Kouchner told France Inter radio on Tuesday. "There was a left that made itself heard and a real desire for peace. "It seems to me, and I hope that I am completely wrong, that this desire has completely vanished, as though people no longer believe in it." Kouchner made his statements ahead of a scheduled meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and French President Nicolas Sarkozy which took place on Wednesday. The meeting came immediately after a sit-down between Netanyahu and President Barack Obama in Washington on Monday, at which no major breakthroughs were announced. Kouchner also said there was "a real difference of political opinion" between Sarkozy and Netanyahu, concerning whether or not to freeze settlement activity. "We still think that the settlement freeze, that is to say, no settling during (peace) talks, is absolutely essential," said Kouchner. France has continued to demand that Israel halt all construction in the West Bank, which the Palestinians say is a precondition to restarting peace talks. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton recently called Israel's restraint in settlement construction "unprecedented". Kouchner also said on Tuesday that he would visit the Middle East "in the coming days" and encourage Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to run for reelection in January. Abbas has said he will not run. (JTA) ALLEGED JEWISH TERRORIST TO BE CHARGED WITH MURDER JERUSALEM - An alleged Jewish terrorist will be charged for murdering two Palestinians. During a hearing on Tuesday, a Jerusalem district prosecutor said Yaakov Teitel would be indicted for the two murders later this week. He also will be charged with incitement to racism, unlawful possession of explosives and weapons and sabotage, according to reports. Teitel, 37, was arrested on October 7 in a joint police-Shin Bet operation. Along with allegedly killing the two Palestinians, he also allegedly assembled a package bomb that seriously injured the son of a messianist Jew and set up a pipe bomb near the home of prominent professor Ze'ev Sternhell. A Florida native, Teitel made aliyah in 2000 and is a resident of the Shvut Rachel outpost in the northern West Bank. He has four young children. Teitel is reported to have confessed to the two murders. A court-appointed psychiatrist has found him fit to stand trial, according to reports. During Tuesday's hearing, Teitel's attorney said his client was handcuffed to his bed 24 hours a day and not treated the same as other inmates, according to reports. (JTA) HEZBOLLAH LEADS NEW LEBANESE GOVT OPPOSITION BEIRUT - Lebanon has formed a new government in which Hezbollah leads the opposition. The new government was presented to President Michel Suleiman on Monday, five months after parliamentary elections were held in the country on Israel's northern border. The new Cabinet includes 15 seats for the American-backed majority led by Prime Minister Saad Hariri, 10 for the Hezbollah- led opposition and five for Suleiman. Israel last week seized a ship from Iran headed for Lebanon that was carrying more than 300 tons of concealed weapons which Israel said were on their way to Hezbollah. Hezbollah denies the charge. Israel and Hezbollah fought a war in 2006, and a recent increase in rocket attacks from Hezbollah-controlled southern Lebanon into northern Israel have led some to believe another war could erupt. (JTA) ISRAEL SIGNS $1,1 BILLION DEFENCE DEAL WITH INDIA JERUSALEM - Israel will supply an upgraded air defence system to India. Israel signed the $1,1 billion contract on Monday during a visit to Israel by the head of India's army, General Deepak Kapoor, Reuters reported. The state-owned Israel Aerospace Industries Ltd has promised to deliver the Barak-8 tactical air defence system to India by 2017. Israel is India's largest defence supplier. In August, the Indian cabinet approved a $1 billion deal with the Israeli governmentowned Rafael Advanced Defence System under which the company will provide 18 of its SPYDER air defence system, which can intercept missiles in a 40 km radius, by 2012. (JTA) 13 - 20 November 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT Yach to attempt grueling Three Anchor Bay, Robben Island swim MOIRA SCHNEIDER CAPE TOWN VETERAN LONG-DISTANCE, cold-water swimmer Theodore Yach, holds the record for the highest number of Robben Island crossings - 54. Now he’s preparing to set another record as the first individual to complete the gruelling day-long swim from Three Anchor Bay around the island and back - a distance of 29,5 km. I ask him what motivates him to undertake what could be a lifethreatening exercise; there is the danger of hypothermia from the icy water as well as the possibility of sharks. His body temperature needs to be constantly monitored: if it drops below 35 degrees, he could “drop to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean”, according to sports scientist Tim Noakes. “I think I’ve analysed the risk.” the 51-year-old begins. “I’ve done longer than this distance before (the English Channel) in a lot more difficult conditions. “The sharks are an issue, but I’ve got a fantastic boat crew who will hopefully look after that,” he says, stressing that its role is “absolutely crucial”, adding: “Without a crew who know what they’re doing, I wouldn’t get into the water - I depend on them 100 per cent.” Yach follows the English Channel rules, which state that swimmers are permitted to wear a swimming cap, goggles and a speedo-type costume, so any ideas of a wetsuit to protect against the cold, are out. The object of the exercise is to raise funds for the Cadiz Open Water Swimming Development Trust which promotes swimming in disadvantaged communities. Aside from training five days a week, other preparations include “a crash diet to try and keep my weight up” we should all have that problem!- “a lot” of stretching and spirulina supplement which he says stabilises his fatigue levels through the day. He maintains, though, that one’s mental attitude is “70 per cent” of the battle. And does he ever feel that he just can’t carry on while attempting one of his longdistance swims? “Often,” he shoots back. “You’ve just got to work through it.” Yach’s involvement in the Jewish community is extensive. “Our family has the largest private foundation in Long-distance swimmer Theodore Yach Cape Town (The Mauer- after completing his 50th Robben Island berger Foundation),” of crossing in 2007. (PHOTOGRAPH SUPPLIED) which he serves as a director and was also chairman of who was an international swimHighlands House home for the ming legend in terms of what he Jewish aged for many years. did at Springbok and Maccabi Something that saddens him, level,” he says referring to his though, is that his father, Solly, father’s participation in the 1952 did not receive due recognition for Olympics and the 1950 and 1953 his sporting achievements from Maccabi Games. the community. “This was a guy “There was very little recogni- tion when you compare it to (that received by) guys like (tennis player) Abe Segal and (weightlifter) Issy Bloomberg at the time. Maybe because Maccabi was dominated from Johannesburg and Cape Town was a bit of a backwater in their minds,” he suggests. Yach is a well-known businessman in the city and is chairman of the Central City Improvement District, having been one of its founders in the mid-1990s. Swimming is definitely “in the family”, he comments, with the tradition now extending to four generations. In addition to his father’s achievements, his younger son, Daniel (17), is carrying on the family tradition as a provincial waterpolo player. His older brother Derek was acknowledged as the best long-distance swimmer in the country in the 1980s. But that is not all. “Apparently my zaida, my father’s father, swam down the rivers in Russia. So there must be something in the genes. “Also,” he laughs, “when we were growing up it was almost taken for granted: Solly threw us in the pool and we swam, simple as that. It wasn’t as if we had a choice.” 9 AROUND THE WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF JEWISH GROUPS OPPOSE ABORTION AMENDMENT WASHINGTON - Two Jewish organisations are opposing an amendment to House healthcare legislation restricting federal funding of abortion. The National Council of Jewish Women and the Religious Action Centre of Reform Judaism, say the provision should be taken out of the bill. The amendment bans any government funds from going toward abortion except in the cases of rape, incest and when the mother's life is in danger. It prohibits anyone who receives a government subsidy to buy insurance, from purchasing a plan that includes abortion. NCJW said the bill "does not fully meet women's healthcare needs" because of the "draconian" provision, which it called an "egregious assault on the rights of women and an enormous step backward for those who believe in the separation of religion and state". The Religious Action Centre was much more praiseworthy of the healthcare bill as a whole, saying it is "a crucial step toward affordable, accessible and quality healthcare for all Americans," but said it could not ignore the abortion provisions. The group said it was "an attack on the rights enshrined in Roe vs Wade". (JTA) 10 SA JEWISH REPORT 13 - 20 November 2009 OPINION AND ANALYSIS FORUM FOR DIVERSE VIEWS When the walls come tumbling down THE CONSEQUENCES for South Africans and Israelis of the Berlin Wall’s fall in 1989 cannot compete in dramatic spectacle with the scenes of ecstatic crowds hacking away at the concrete and flooding across it to join East and West. But they were no less significant. Monday’s celebrations at the site of the Wall 20 years after East Germany’s communist rulers opened it - were moving, as younger Germans toppled 1 000 eight-foot-high dominoes laid on the line where the barrier had split their capital. German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who grew up in the communist East, was one of those who streamed across the Wall on November 9, 1989. The collapse of the Soviet Union’s communist empire made change in South Africa - the end of apartheid - more possible by removing the bogeyman of a “red under every bed”. Mandela’s release in 1990 and the 1994 democratic elections, swept the ANC into power as the first post-apartheid government. Thrown into a capitalist system demanding continuation of existing broad economic policy if the country was not to collapse, its flirtation with communism dissipated. The government realised it could not make a complete left turn. In a sense, it had to be “business as usual” - which is what saved the country. Even though the SACP still wields influence, the ANC’s economic policy today remains largely capitalistic and will likely continue in that vein. Communism’s collapse, however, catapulted the world towards the opposite extreme - to the Reagan and Thatcher visions, where the “market” was attributed with innate wisdom that would always produce the best results through checks and balances. In the last two years, this belief in unbridled free-market capitalism has been shaken to the core. In a sense, capitalism’s own “wall of invincibility” has fallen. The world will probably move closer to a form of social democracy - a hybrid of the extremes. Today, the biggest challenge to the capitalist system in South Africa is the gigantic, everwidening gap between the rich and poor, a result of apartheid. The gap is one of the worst in the world. If it is not remedied, it could threaten the country’s stability. In Israel, with the unmasking of communism as a flawed ideology, the socialist dream of many Israelis also took a knock. Some of those who built the kibbutzim, for example, had believed human nature could be changed through communism - that people would be happy and productive under the slogan: “From each according to his abilities; to each according to his needs.” But this took away the personal incentive - call it self-interest or even greed - that drives much of human development. It could not work in the long run. Indeed, most kibbutzim have now changed into capitalist enterprises. Israel has its own walls. An obvious physical one is the contentious “security barrier” built to combat terrorism. Called the “apartheid wall” by its critics and enemies, it is really a manifestation of a more sinister wall - the barrier of hatred and rejectionism against Israel maintained by the Arab bloc, much as the USSR sustained the Berlin Wall through its hatred of the West. Our dream must be that just as the Berlin Wall fell because people on both sides wanted that monstrosity to disappear, so the “wall” between Israel and the Arab world will eventually be torn down by people on both sides who want it to disappear. But serious changes in attitude and sentiment must happen for this to be possible. Once the Berlin Wall had fallen, the entire Soviet Union collapsed faster than anyone could have imagined. When the Middle East walls fall, hopefully positive things might fall rapidly into place there too. Perhaps Israelis and Palestinians might combine talents and energies to build something together, rather than squandering them on warfare. Abbas’ threat to resign sparks fears LESLIE SUSSER JERUSALEM JUST AS he hoped it would, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’ threat to resign has concentrated the minds. Both Israel’s prime minister and the US president are considering new ways to kick-start the stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace process in a bid to keep the two-state vision alive. Benjamin Netanyahu and President Barack Obama both fear that Abbas’ departure could lead to instability, chaos and even violence in the Palestinianpopulated territories. With the process deadlocked ever since Israel went into a new election cycle more than a year ago, an element of desperate brinkmanship is in the air. Abbas threatening to resign is aimed at pressuring the United States and Israel to come back with a serious offer. Abbas, 74, announced last week that he would not seek re-election in a ballot scheduled for January. One of the main reasons he gave was a profound sense of betrayal by the US administration after Obama dialled back the pressure on Israel for a full settlement freeze. “We had high hopes in President Obama – they had a very clear attitude on settlements -but it turned out that the American administration favoured Israel,” Abbas declared. Abbas had understood from Obama that he would force Israel to stop all settlement construction and then launch peace talks. The Palestinian leader believed the policy would push Netanyahu into a corner and possibly even topple his Likud-led government for one more likely to cut a deal with the Palestinians. Taking his cue from Obama, Abbas made a full freeze of settlement construction a precondition for talks. But when the Americans backed down several months later after Netanyahu offered a slowdown but not a freeze, Abbas was left high and dry. He held to a condition he could not abandon without losing face among his people, but he could not approach the negotiating table so long as he stuck to it. The last straw was US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s statement early last week aligning herself with the Israeli view of the settlement issue. Clinton backed Israel’s claim that the Palestinians had never before made a settlement freeze a condition for talks before, and she praised Netanyahu’s agreement to restrictions on settlement building in the West Bank as “unprecedented”. Clinton’s forthright language stunned the Palestinians. For Abbas it meant his gamble on a settlement freeze had failed. A few days later he announced his intention to step down. While insisting that his decision was not a tactical ploy, he raised the spectre of the two-state solution for which he had worked so hard slipping away. Abbas also finds himself in a no-win situation with regard to Hamas. If he backs down on settlements, the fundamentalists will accuse him of being an IsraeliAmerican lackey. If he resigns, they will say his resignation is proof of their thesis that negotiations with the Zionist enemy can only lead to grief. Abbas had hoped through Egyptian mediation to reach a national reconciliation deal with Hamas. That would have been the basis for truly representative national elections in the West Bank and Hamas-controlled Gaza. But now Hamas says it will not contest elections in the West Bank and will prevent balloting in Gaza. For Abbas, who had hoped to regain legitimacy as leader of all the Palestinian people through the ballot box, this is another source of deep frustration. A third source of frustration is Netanyahu’s refusal to recognise the progress Abbas made with the previous Israeli government under Ehud Olmert. Abbas says he was very close to an agreement with Olmert: On borders, he says, they were already reviewing detailed maps, and on the thorny question of the right of return to Israel for Palestinian refugees, Abbas says the differences were only over numbers. Abbas would like to continue negotiations from the point Olmert left off. But by insisting on “no preconditions”, Netanyahu seems to be indicating that he wants to start from scratch. To break the impasse, PA Prime Minister Salam Fayyad is considering declaring independence unilaterally if the United States agrees to back a self-declared Palestinian state along the 1967 borders. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, shown speaking in Ramallah on October 24, is insisting that his decision to resign is not a tactical ploy. (PHOTOGRAPH: ISSAM RIMAWI / FLASH 90 / JTA) But other voices in the Palestinian camp are talking about a return to armed struggle and a new intifada. What makes the situation even more volatile is the lack of an obvious successor to Abbas if he goes through with his threat to stand down. The front-runner is the jailed former leader of the young Fatah military cadres, Marwan Barghouti, who would likely take a more militant line toward Israel - if he’s even able to compete. Abbas’ move has forced early decision time on the main players: Obama must decide whether to work with Netanyahu to appease Abbas - by, for example, getting the Israelis to release Fatah prisoners and make a serious peace offer - to disengage altogether until both parties are ready to talk business, or to shake things up by putting a detailed American peace plan on the table. Netanyahu must decide whether to seize the moment to launch a major peace initiative or face the consequences of a resignation by Abbas that could spark chaos on the Palestinian side. If he really wants to convince Abbas to stay, he will have to make a far-reaching offer on settlements or on substance. Although there has been no hard evidence yet, confidants say he is ready to go much further than most people expect. The next few weeks could be crucial. (JTA) JNF aims to turn Israel diamonds from rough to ready RACHEL TEPPER JERUSALEM PEOPLE HISTORICALLY have associated the Jewish National Fund with planting trees in Israel. Now the century-old charity is also working to make sure that Israelis will have decent places to put good wood on the ball. The organisation’s latest venture, Project Baseball, aims to develop baseball facilities in Israel for the country’s nearly 2 300 amateur players. Baseball has seen a rise in popularity in Israel, but inadequate and unmaintained facilities have hampered its progress. “People really love it,” said JNF spokeswoman Jodi Bodner, who described baseball as “great team sport” and credited its recent spike in popularity to the fact that it offers Israelis “a different kind of recreation.” With funds raised by Project Baseball, JNF has helped refurbish several fields across the country. Work is under way on a state-of-the-art sports park in Kibbutz Gezer, not too far north of Jerusalem. JNF also recently completed work on Sportek Field just outside of Tel Aviv, which hosted the 2009 Maccabiah Games baseball competition. Baseball was introduced to Israel in 1927, when the governess of a Jerusalem orphanage tried to engage her children in a game. According to popular accounts, the sport was so alien to the children that they dropped the baseballs to the ground and kicked them like soccer balls. In 2005, the Israel Association of Baseball hosted a clinic for 80 Israeli-Arab and Jewish students, teaching them the game’s basics and then having a game on a Tel Aviv field. According to JNF’s website, “the setting of a baseball field gave them a rare opportunity to interact and work together”. Instances of cooperation and unity, JNF says, are what make baseball a unique fit for the land of Israel. Bodner says there is a need for the diamond game there. “We see a need,” she said of JNF, “and we try to go fill it.” (JTA) Israeli children play baseball, a game becoming increasingly popular in their country, on JNF fields. (PHOTOGRAPH: JNF) 13 - 20 November 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT 11 OPINION AND ANALYSIS FORUM FOR DIVERSE VIEWS Let’s base argument on Obama shifts into Israel’s corner, tries not to show it principle and fact THE PAST month has been a truly troubling period for South Africans who hold dear the principle of deliberation and debate. (Former Minister) Kader Asmal is told to go to a cemetery and die for comments he made about proposals of the Deputy Minister of Safety and Security to militarise the police force. (University of Free State rector) Jonathan Jansen is subjected to a similar attack for his decision to reinstate the Reitz 4 to the university. That there were strong disagreements about Asmal’s views and Jansen’s decision, is understandable but when public discourse descends to such violent denigration, the very possibility of freedom of speech is jeopardised. In turn, the democratic fabric of society is rendered even more fragile. The Jewish tradition is one of debate and dissent. The very principle of lashon harah is designed to preserve the dignity of all and to ensure that speech is exercised for the sake of principle and not to demean or destroy members of the community. For this reason alone, I have read with ever-increasing distress the bile to which Mr Justice Richard Goldstone has been subjected. Reading letters and columns in this newspaper alone, the resemblance between the treatment to which Jansen and Asmal have been subjected and the bitter and personal attacks against Goldstone, is striking. The former should die. Goldstone is considered to be a traitor to his people and has acted solely out of personal ambition or animus (as yet the motivation of his ambition remains unspecified in the accusations that I have read). It is probably necessary within this climate to again state the obvious: the Goldstone Report is deserving of searching criticism and should, as in any democratic society, be debated and, if justified, condemned by critics. However, save for a few exceptions (the best for me, ironically in that it was not written for popular publication, being a 26 page letter penned by a former South African lawyer, whose towering intellect has been lost to South Africa and gained by New York), almost all the criticism against the report engages in no analysis of the almost 600 pages that constitute the report. Almost all the feet of newspaper and internet space devoted to the report is particularly noteworthy for the striking absence of engagement with the specific reasoning of the report’s many findings. It is surely not good enough to do what almost all columnists and letter writers do, that is mount a criticism which almost invariably follows the same lines: the report was based on skewed evidence because Israel refused to participate, the report was commissioned by the notorious UN Human THE JURY IS OUT Dennis Davis Rights Council, it had as a member someone who had already condemned Israel, Goldstone was a “useful idiot” in the hands of those who have launched a total ideological onslaught against Israel, thus the report is complete rubbish and should be ignored. Even if some of these claims are true, the absence of engagement with a dense 600 page text trivialises the problem. Oddly, it was this kind of argument which was much used by the National Party during the 1980s under guise of the “total onslaught”. A careful analysis conducted by anyone prepared to read the Goldstone Report and acquaint themselves with basic principles of international law, would produce the kind of critique that can be justified both politically and intellectually. For example, the report deals at length with the leaflet and SMS campaign of the IDF prior to the operation in Gaza. The report finds this campaign did not pass muster in terms of international law obligations to protect civilians. But, whatever, the merits of this finding on technical legal grounds, the report fails to take account that this was probably the most determined campaign by any military operation to warn civilians. In turn this raises the question as to whether Israel was being held to a standard which is far higher than any other army faced with a similar problem. The point is simply that the report deserves a careful examination for its flaws and findings that require further attention. Whatever its flaws, it makes a number of findings which may constitute prima facie charges concerning killings that appear to be unjustified as well as the destruction of infrastructure. These conclusions should be subjected to an independent enquiry of a kind recommended by Goldstone and favoured by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Those who like the prime minister favour the benefit of an independent enquiry, should not be subjected to the condemnation that they are enemies of Israel. Xenophobic patriotism is not the only way to support Israel. We should respect the principle of dignity of difference by debating this vexed issue, vigorously, but based upon principle and fact. In this way, we may shine a light for deliberation as a key social principle for South Africa. URIEL HEILMAN WASHINGTON WHEN THE White House chief of staff took to the podium at the federations’ General Assembly to call for Israeli-Palestinian negotiations without preconditions, he sounded almost exactly like Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a day earlier. “All issues should be resolved through negotiations,” Rahm Emanuel said on Tuesday to delegates at the Jewish Federations of North America’s annual meeting. “No one should allow the issue of settlements to distract from the overarching goal of lasting peace.” On Monday, Netanyahu used the GA podium to appeal to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to return to the negotiating table. “Let us seize the moment to reach an historic agreement; let us begin talks immediately,” Netanyahu said. Palestinian Authority leaders say they will not negotiate unless Israel commits to a full settlement freeze. To some extent, the Obama administration is to blame for the intransigence; the Palestinians adopted that position only once the Obama administration insisted earlier this year that Israel commit to a full freeze. US administration officials have since tempered their position, praising the concessions Netanyahu is willing to make on Jewish settlement construction in the West Bank. “No Israeli government has been so willing to restrain settlement activity,” Emanuel said on Tuesday. The US position shift, which Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also expressed last week in Jerusalem, has angered many in the Arab world and left the Palestinian leadership in a difficult spot. If Palestinian leaders give up their insistence for a full settlement freeze before returning to negotiations, they will be seen as betraying the cause. If they hold firm, peace talks will remain stalled. The convergence of the Israeli and US positions on Israeli-Palestinian negotiations comes amid some concern about the ObamaNetanyahu relationship. Their meeting on Monday night was under unusual circumstances, taking place well past the time Netanyahu could exploit a handshake with Barack Obama for Israel’s evening news back home - and there wasn’t even a public handshake. In a rare move, the White House skipped both the standard quick photo op before the meeting and the post-meeting Q & A session with reporters. Few specifics emerged from the meeting. Obama and Netanyahu spoke alone for an hour of the 100-minute meeting, and afterward Netanyahu uncharacteristically cancelled his traditional briefing for the Israeli Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressing the GA. (PHOTOGRAPH: PHOTOGRAPH: ROBERT A CUMINS / JEWISH FEDERATIONS OF NORTH AMERICA press corps. Emanuel called the meeting “positive” but offered little elaboration. The unusual circumstances of the meeting reflect the predicament faced by both sides. It would have been unseemly for Netanyahu, who was going to be in Washington for the General Assembly, to swing through town without having an audience with the US president. But with the Obama administration trying to downplay its shift toward the Israeli position on IsraeliPalestinian peace talks - Clinton was forced to make an unscheduled trip to Cairo last week to allay Arab fears that Washington was easing the pressure on Israel - a highprofile meeting with the Israeli leader followed by a joint news conference could only do harm. Thus, in his GA speech, Emanuel at once tried to assure the Jewish audience that the bond between the US and Israeli administrations remained strong while still making clear that the United States is pressing Israel to make concessions to the Palestinians. “Unilateral actions should be avoided and cannot dictate the outcome,” Emanuel said. He added that “negotiations must address permanent-status issues: borders, refugees and Jerusalem.” Israeli officials do not want to negotiate over Jerusalem and the right of return to Israel of Palestinian refugees. The cancellation of Obama’s planned GA speech on Tuesday did not appear to be part of any calculated strategy; the president changed his plans to attend a memorial service on Tuesday in Texas for victims of the Fort Hood shooting rampage. Once the scheduling change was made, the White House put together a reception for Jewish leaders on Monday evening. Obama came but he did not talk foreign policy. Instead, he gave a 20-minute discursion on Jewish values of charity and the importance of healthcare reform. (JTA) Bureau chief Ron Kampeas and staff writer Eric Fingerhut contributed to this report from Washington. 12 SA JEWISH REPORT 13 - 20 November 2009 TAPESTRY ART, BOOKS, DANCE, FILM, THEATRE ARTS MATTERS COMPILED BY ROBYN SASSEN Call 084-319-7844 or info@frodo.co.za at least one week prior to publication Everard Read Gallery, Rosebank: “Penelope and the Cosmos”, by Karel Nel and Willem Boshoff, celebrating the opening of Circa, Everard Read’s new space, on Jan Smuts Avenue, until February 2010 (011) 788-4805. Joburg Theatre, Braamfontein: In the Nelson Mandela, “Pinocchio”, Janice Honeyman’s annual pantomime, until January 3. In the Fringe, “Happy Shabalala” with Harry Sideropoulos, until November 29, (011) 877-6800. In the People’s Theatre, “The Little Mermaid”, until December 24, (011) 403-1563. Linder Auditorium, Parktown: Johannesburg Musical Society hosts its Annual Percy Baneshik Memorial Concert, featuring Ben Schoeman performing Beethoven’s Sonata in D Major, Rachmaninov’s Variations on a Theme of Corelli and Brahms’ Sonata No 3, November 21, (011) 728-5492. Lyric Theatre, Gold Reef City, Ormonde: “Knights of Music”, co-produced by Richard Loring and Bryan Schimmel, extended until November 15, by popular demand, (011) 248-5168. Market Theatre, Newtown: In the Laager, “Brer Rabbit” directed by Gina Shmukler, until December 20, (011) 832-1641. Montecasino Theatre, Fourways: In the Pieter Toerien, Alan Swerdlow directs “G-d of Carnage”, until November 15; in the Studio, “It Takes 2”, with Rocco de Villiers and Robert Mitchley until November 22; in Teatro, “Cats”, until November 22 (011) 511-1988. National Children’s Theatre, Parktown: Joyce Levinsohn directs “Seussical Jr”, until December 24, (011) 4841584. Ninth Street, Parkhurst: On November 22, Stanley Peskin repeats his opera evening with Renée Fleming, 072-240-2997. Old Mutual Theatre on the Square, Sandton: “Beauty and the BEE”, until November 21. On November 13, Ginger Neff, Dorota Swart, Andrea Erasmus and Morne van Heerden perform Brahms’ Clarinet Quintet at lunchtime; on November 20, pianists Kristel Birkholtz and Michael Watt perform, (011) 883-8606. RCHCC, Oaklands: “Works by Men”, until November 15. On November 22, an exhibition of work by Jeff Kodesh opens, (011) 728-8088. Standard Bank Gallery, Johannesburg: “Alexis Preller: Africa, the sun and shadows”, curated by Karel Nel and Esmé Berman, until December 5, (011) 631-1889. Honeyman excels with Pinocchio pantomime Show: Pinocchio (Nelson Mandela Theatre, Joburg Theatre, Braamfontein, (011) 877-6800 Writer: Carlo Collodi (adapted for pantomime by Janice Honeyman) Director: Janice Honeyman Musical director: Heidi Edeling Cast: Terence Bridgett, Fiona Coyne, Tobie Cronjé and Sibu Radebe, with a 60-strong support cast and special guest stars: Idols star Jacques Terre’blanche and 30 dancers from The South African Ballet Theatre. Design: Timothy le Roux/Iain MacDonald (choreography) Until: January 3 REVIEWED BY CHRISTINA KENNEDY IT’S NEARING the end of the year, there’s an alluring whiff of the holidays in the air... and that means that it’s time for Janice Honeyman’s annual pantomime. And many captivated audience members are already declaring that Pinocchio is her best panto yet. Pinocchio is, quite simply, a blast from start to finish. It is so chock-a-block with entertainment that adults and children won’t be bored for a single second. Tongue-in-cheek Italian references abound from food to music - as we are introduced to an array of characters from the beloved fairytalecum-cautionary tale, complemented by exquisite sets and the usual gimmicks, novelties, gags and surprises. This year’s double Naledi Award-winner Sibu Radebe plays Pinocchio, a wooden marionette who is promised by Bella Bouboulina, the Blue Fairy (Fiona Ramsay, resplendent in a turquoise wig), that he can become a real boy if he is good. Of course, obstacles are placed in his way - by the cunning Il Fortunato the fox (Terence Bridgett) and Pussy Galore the cat (Fiona Coyne), a wonderfully villainous pairing if ever there was. The bitch in black from The Weakest Link and the morally conflicted ex-con from Isidingo are deliciously nasty, and their misanthropy is rewarded by a chorus of “boos” from the audience. Taking a break from damely duties, panto stalwart Tobie Cronjé plays Geppetto, the kindly but slightly deaf toymaker who crafts Pinocchio and sets out to track him down when he strays from the straight and narrow. Choreographer Timothy le Roux camps it up marvellously as Dame Arletti Spaghetti - his athleticism and wicked sense of humour shining through. Highlights abound in this fast-paced, chuckle-a-minute romp that scores full marks for sheer entertainment value. You’ll see a scooter on stage and even a Metro bus, not to mention a luminescent underwater scene with a neon green octopus, an inflatable whale, a flurry of bubbles and a foefie slide. As usual, Honeyman skilfully balances traditional elements with hip, modern references; naughty adult innuendo with child-friendly high jinks and pratfalls. Never mind the Candyland Express - there is eye candy galore in the form of performers such as Idols star Jacques Terre’blanche, who turns up the heat with miniskirt-clad lasses in one of the numbers. Then there’s the utterly electrifying and ingeniously conceived marionette dancing sequence to a Michael Jackson medley, not to mention a line dance, the usual daft but fun singalong and some seriously groovy township jiving. The dancing is rounded out by the accomplished dancers from the SA Ballet Theatre, who add a sprinkling of enchantment to the show. The performances by cast and company are great, with the nimble and likeable Radebe emphatically cementing his reputation as one of our hottest young stars. James van Helsdingen proves his versatility in a number of roles, Dolly Louw is a bona fide living doll as Pinocchio’s girlfriend, Matt Counihan does a great job as Jiminy Cricket and newcomer Jesse Christelis impresses as Lampwick. By giving the tried-and-trusted panto template a new lease on life, Janice Honeyman and her team have outdone themselves on Pinocchio, which - and one does not say this lightly - is a masterful production. You’d have to be made out of wood not to enjoy it... The no-goodniks who give spice to Pinocchio’s moral challenges: Il Fortunato the fox (Terence Bridgett) and Pussy Galore the cat (Fiona Coyne). (PHOTOGRAPH BY ROBERT HAMBLIN) Award-winning pianist Ben Schoeman for Baneshik Memorial Concert PAUL BOEKKOOI ONCE A year, during their final concert, the Johannesburg Musical Society presents the Percy Baneshik Memorial Concert in honour of one of the greatest and most versatile arts journalists of his time. He was a stalwart who initially worked in radio and later became the pre-eminent arts figure in the print media with his work for The Rand Daily Mail and The Star, among others. It is due to the sponsorship of the Percy Baneshik Trust that the JMS can for the eighth time present their year-end concert in honour of one of South Africa’s most knowledgeable, inspiring and original arts writers who had a deeply felt love for classical music. The concert will take place in the Linder Auditorium, Parktown, on Saturday evening, November 21, at 20:00. After memorable Baneshik Memorial Concerts given in recent years by violinists Philippe Quint and Benjamin Schmid (to name just two), one is FELDMAN ON FILM Peter Feldman Pick of the Week Julie and Julia Cast: Meryl Streep, Amy Adams, Stanley Tucci, Chris Messina, Linda Emond Director: Nora Ephron Meryl Streep and Amy Adams are gifted actresses who bring a special ingredient to the screen. Their recipe for success has been constantly good performances in various roles and they make a meal out of this sunny script. Nimbly directed by Nora Ephron, ‘Julie and Julia’ is based on two true stories which intertwine the lives of two women who, though separated by time and space, are both at loose ends - positive about the fact that Percy would have been proud to welcome the first ever South African winner of our Unisa International Piano Competitions, Ben Schoeman, on the JMS stage. He’ll perform three great keyboard works from the Classical, Romantic and Late-Romantic eras, opening with one of the most eloquent of Beethoven’s early sonatas - the Sonata no 7 in D major, Opus 10 no 3 - and continuing with Rachmaninov’s Variations on a Theme of Corelli, Opus 42, in which the composer does not transcribe, but transmutes his subject: The theme known as “La folia” which Corelli used in his Violin Sonata, Opus 5 no 12. In the second half the early, but already majestic five-movement Sonata no 3 for Piano in F minor, Opus 5 by Brahms will be heard, after which the entire audience is invited to an afterconcert party. • Bookings: Computicket, or at the Linder box office from 19:00 on the evening. Please note: There are no credit card facilities at the Linder. until they discover that with the right combination of passion, fearlessness and butter, anything is possible. Julia Child was a famous, larger-than-life American personality who was imbued with a self-deprecating wit, an infectious laugh and a genuine love for creating mouth-watering dishes. Her TV programmes were charming and informative and ensnared millions of viewers who hung onto her every word. Her off-screen life, though, was quite ordinary, and not the usual sort of thing that would merit screen treatment of this magnitude. That, perhaps, explains why writer/director Nora Ephron decided to merge Julia’s story with that of a 2002 blogger, Julie Powell, who spent her time cooking her way through all of Julia’s 524 recipes in her book Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Though the film suffers from some structural problems and lacks true dramatic thrust, the sublime acting of the two leads elevates the production to majestic heights. Meryl Streep’s visualisation of the iconic chef Percy Baneshik . (PHOTOGRAPH SUPPLIED) is creepy, but in a wonderful sort of way, because she nails the personality with a spot-on interpretation that, if you didn’t know any better, you would swear that the real Julia Child was on screen. There is no mimicry here. And that voice is something to hear. The adorable Amy Adams, given a shorter hairstyle than we have seen in a long time, shares the honours with Streep, carving her character with deft strokes. Adams, whose character is a self-confessed “bitch”, brings weight to her role of Julie Powell who sets about the testing task of making each one of Julia’s dishes over a period of one year. She then writes a blog each day about the success or failure of her culinary endeavours. Stanley Tucci and Chris Messina, as the respective husbands of Julia and Julie, provide strong support systems. Intercutting scenes detail the lives of both personalities, from Julia’s Paris sojourn in 1949 and the start of her torrid love affair with French cooking, to Julie’s own culinary challenges. It all makes for delicious viewing. 13 - 20 November 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT TAPESTRY ART, BOOKS, DANCE, FILM, THEATRE Good read - and then the plot fizzles out... Sweeping up Glass by Carolyn Wall (Serpent’s Tail, R194) REVIEWED BY GWEN PODBREY WELL, TARNATION. Here we are on the verge of 2010, almost nine decades after the Rosewood massacre, yet echoes of America’s foul, fetid segregationist era continue to haunt us - and warn that history has a habit of repeating itself. For South Africans, of course, such whispers have a special malevolence, and the literature exploring those years is uncomfortably close to home. In this novel, set among the impoverished Cracker community of Kentucky’s mountains during the Depression, Olivia Harker is being raised by her adored father, Tate, whose passion is healing animals. While the family runs a grocery store of sorts, it brings in very little; Harker makes ends meet by acting as a veterinarian for the community. While the girl’s life is both difficult and filled with privations, she is happy. Besides, she has close friends among the local black community. One, in particular, Love Alice - an illiterate, but warm-hearted young woman - has become an indispensable presence in Olivia’s life. Blessed with the gift of second sight, Love Alice is known for the accuracy of her predictions. Since Olivia’s mother, Ida, has long been incarcerated in a mental hospital in a neighbouring town, it is Love Alice who dispenses guidance and wisdom to Olivia in her stead, including a crash course in the facts of life. The girls’ friendship does little to endear either of them to their neighbours - and gains Olivia Harker a reputation as a trouble-maker. Disaster, however, strikes when Ida finally returns. The woman may have been pronounced fit to re-enter mainstream life; her essential meanness, vanity and selfishness remain. Added to these qualities is her intense dislike of her ungainly, tomboyish daughter. Disrupting the close bond between Olivia and her father, Ida brings intense misery and tension to the household. And a second tragedy then befalls Olivia, when she and Tate are involved in a road accident which leaves her so severely injured that she spends a year in hospital. Her father, she is told, was killed - and buried by Ida in the family yard. Thus begins a desperate and reckless adolescence for Olivia. Unable to bear Ida’s continual gibes, she seeks comfort in the company of Wing Harris - the son of a comparatively wealthy family - and falls deeply in love with him. The relationship, however, seems unlikely to last and Olivia embarks on a life of promiscuity, whoring at the local tavern. Soon she falls pregnant and bears a daughter. The girl, named Pauline, grows up rebellious and wilful. “There was no handling her,” Olivia tells us. “Without love, there is only a great empty space that we fill with whatever’s handy.” In due course - like her mother and grandmother before her - bears an illegitimate child: Will’m. Unwilling to look after him, she entrusts him to Olivia and sets off for Los Angeles with a gang of equally shiftless friends. Thus Olivia Harker is left to look after her despised mother, raise her daughter’s child and support the family as best she can. There is one consolation, though: her grandson, whom she comes to love deeply. And there are two orphaned wolf cubs, rescued by Will’m and being nurtured in the family kitchen. The animals’ mother has been shot by poachers on the Harker land; tracking them down will lead Olivia into a web of violence, vengeance and bitterness she never thought possible. Among the revelations she will have to confront is the existence of the “Red Cottoners” - a claque of racists so vicious and so bent on tormenting Negroes (and Jews) that even the Klan has ousted them from its midst. Having established secret headquarters in the town, they seek not only black victims, but also Olivia Miller puts a human face on William Kentridge ROBYN SASSEN “FROM KENTRIDGE I’ve learnt about trust, playfulness and craziness,” said composer Philip Miller recently in a talk at the Rabbi Cyril Harris Community Centre. It was a revealing focus on Kentridge in which Miller brought him from the pedestal on which the artworld has placed him, showing him as a generous collaborator and one capable of erring, laughing and eating with abandon. Miller, who began his adult life in law, shifted to music under the guidance of Jeanne Zaidel-Rudolph and created the music for runaway successes like “Yizo-Yizo” screened on SABC 2 a few years ago, and “Rewind: The TRC Cantata”. “I first met William in 1993. I lived in Helvetia Court, in bohemian Yeoville.” Kentridge wanted Miller to compose music for “Felix in Exile”, one of his first charcoal drawing films. “William told me he’d experimented with Dvorák’s String Quartet, as a guide that worked ‘pretty well’. My heart sank. I wrote the music on an old upright piano, with a pencil, an eraser and musical manuscript paper. It took four weeks. “With editor Catherine Meyburgh and mezzo-soprano Sibongile Khumalo, my work was torn to shreds and put together again. It was sacrilege! I was stunned! I thought I was a serious composer. As ‘Felix in Exile’ entered the public realm, I understood I’d succeeded. A dialogue had happened; its essential ingredient? Instability. “Kentridge is a clown: a regular Buster Keaton. Working with Deborah Bell and Robert Hodgins in 1999, we blended excellent food with conversation and created “Hot-El”, a hand-made film about anti-pasta and stream of consciousness. “We love to eat! But it’s not only about gluttony. Our meals provoke generous and creative intimacy. “To make its music, I went to the Mount Nelson Hotel in Cape Town and recorded the sounds of bed- Harker, firstly because of her close friendship with Love Alice, and secondly, in order to exact revenge for a grievance they hold against her father. Their harassment of her slowly escalates into outright violence, fuelled by the crazed vindictiveness of impotent poor whites. The closing chapters are disappointing, with the plot deterioriating into a weak (and predictable) thriller, and the narrative losing much of its initial vibrancy. This is doubly regrettable since until that point, it makes compulsive reading, filled with poignant insights and written in the authentic patois of the Cracker community. The book skilfully traces painful contrasts: three generations of women, all doomed to repeat - and reap - each other’s tragedies. Yet, within the cycles of abuse, ignorance and anger revolve and regenerate, there are human connections which transcend race and class. The character of Olivia Harker, battling the demons of poverty, loneliness and intractable prejudice, is not original: mutations of this archetype have often appeared in American literature from this period, and in frontier novels based on pioneering families. However, Carolyn Wall has given her an appeal which is hard to resist. Hardened and humiliated she may be, but coarsened she is not. Her honesty, courage and stubbornness, however, work as much against her as for her, hastening her downfall and incensing her enemies. Ultimately, the book exposes the cheap, sordid milieu of rural America at a time when economic instability had eroded moral fibre, reawakened supremacist hysteria and left the nation’s most indigent communities heartless, helpless and hopeless. It is an unlovely tale, but Carolyn Wall reminds us that even in that dark period, there were dazzling moments of redemption. Philip Miller. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY WWW.MIO.CO.ZA springs and lifts, the noises you hear in a hotel. I used a ‘prepared piano’ an idea made famous by American composer John Cage - using prestik, keys and coins in the piano’s hammers, messing with its sound. And the rest is Kentridgean history. Known to have coined art ideas at exactly the right moment for the industry, Kentridge’s work began skyrocketing in value from 1995. Miller spoke of the first time his work was in Venice, courtesy Kentridge. “The memory is very clear of being in the opera house and hearing my music swirling around me. I could not believe this was happening to me.” Miller is currently working on a collaborative project entitled “Where is Kovno?”, which aims to get today’s Lithuanian youth to consider their history, through art and music; and an opera on Sara Baartman’s life story for Massachusetts’ Museum of Modern Art. 13 14 SA JEWISH REPORT 13 - 20 November 2009 LETTERS The Editor, Suite 175, Postnet X10039, Randburg, 2125 email: carro@global.co.za Disclaimer The letters page is intended to provide opportunity for a range of views on any given topic to be expressed. Opinions articulated in the letters are those of the writers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the editor, staff or directors of the Jewish Report Guidelines for letters Letters up to 400 words will get preference. Please provide your full first name and surname, place of residence, and a daytime contact telephone or cell number. We do not publish letters under noms de plume. Letters should preferably be e-mailed. Letters may be edited or shortened. GERMANY SHOULD NEVER AGAIN BE ‘CENTRAL HUB OF JEWISH LIFE’ “THE REBIRTH of Jewish communities in Europe is cause for great celebration”. These words in last week’s editorial made me sick to my stomach. Literally. Especially when applied to Germany. Germany has no business being a central hub of Jewish life again. Germany (and Europe) had its chance to a Jewish hub for the past 1 900 years, and blew it big time. To strengthen Judaism in Germany by putting their trust in the Jewish future in Germany is a colossal error. (Chabad have erected a 100 sq. metre replica of the Kotel in Berlin, using 19 tons of Jerusalem stone at a cost of millions of dollars). There is no future for a Jewish Germany... that era is done! Those Jews who think that a Jewish community in Germany is sweet revenge against the Nazi era, are sadly mistaken. A Jewish community in Germany is Hitler’s revenge on us, because once again we choose exile over our real home, and thereby learn no lessons of the Holocaust. For the first time in nearly 2 000 years, Israel is getting the shot at being the Jewish hub, and we need to strengthen Eretz Yisrael, not Europe. It is Halachically forbidden for a Jew to derive any benefit from a place where the Jewish people were persecuted. Sanhedrin 45b,and Rambam, Hilchot Sanhedrin 15;9. Choni Davidowitz Golden Acres, Johannesburg LOOKING AT STATISTICS ON ANTI-SEMITISM IN PERSPECTIVE IN THE Jewish Report of November 6, on page 16 an article appears under the heading “Anti-Semitism at a low point”. It provides up-to-date statistics of the percentages of antiSemitism in the US in respect of various population groups. Twelve per cent of Americans are anti-Semites, that is one in eight. Twenty nine per cent of Americans believe that Jews are responsible for the death of Christ - that is almost one in every three. I am sure that if such a survey were conducted in Eastern Europe, let alone in Muslim countries, the figures would be much higher. These statistics ought not to surprise us. According to Jonathan Goldhagen in his book A Moral Reckoning, there are 450 anti-Semitic statements in the four gospels and the acts of the apostles alone. I have verified them, and so it is not surprising that Christians were, and many still are, imbued with hatred that manifested itself in auto-da-fés, pogroms and eventually in the Holocaust. Hitler may have been just the spark. This venom is spread from the pulpit and so from generation to generation. It may be difficult to change the ingredients of a mother’s milk and yet I believe that logically something can be done about this. If one out of three persons believes in the deicide, the killing of Jesus by Jews, then sooner or later a Jew will come across this accusation and it behoves him or her to know how to respond. Strangely enough, its refutation lies in the gospel of Matthew. Chapter 8 verse 1 speaks of “great multitudes following Jesus” to hear him preach. The same chapter describes how he healed the sick, cast out devils and that “great multitudes” surrounded him. Chapter 9 also describes “multitudes” seeing and “marvelling” at these miraculous healings. Chapter 13 mentions “multitudes” coming to hear Jesus preach. Now we come to the tachlis, the nub of the argument. According to chapter 14 Jesus performs a miracle and provides loaves and fishes for some “5 000 men besides women and children”. Fast forward to chapter 15 and now 4 000 men besides women and children have been fed. Add these figures and multitudes and one might well reach a sum well in excess of 10 000. One may assume that none of these inspired, well-fed Jews wanted Jesus dead, why should they? Now those of us familiar with the Old City of Jerusalem know that the streets there are narrow. And even if the city in Roman times may well lie many feet below what we see today, there is no reason to assume much difference in its layout. So when Pontius Pilate looks at the multitude of Jews outside his palace who are condemning Jesus, he is not looking at the Champs Elysées. How much is a multitude in those narrow streets? And how representative are they when compared to our aforementioned figure of at least 10 000 admirers? I don’t think that Jews have to say “Al Chet” as far as Jesus’ crucifixion is concerned. And in any case during the past 2 000 years, have we not been more sinned against than sinning? Don Krausz Killarney, Johannesburg Real estate in Israel is a sound investment LIONEL SLIER A MAJOR Israeli real estate company sounds a positive note that Israel will recover from the recent world economic meltdown much faster than the Western countries, with a turnaround date as soon as next year mooted. Shlomo Grofman, joint chairman of First American Israel Real Estate (Faire) Fund, was in South Africa recently promoting his company’s extensive property holdings to prospective South African buyers. He stressed the good returns South African buyers had consistently received on their Israeli property investments. South African associates of Faire Fund are equally upbeat about the property market in Israel. Alan Heyman of Landmark Capital, a local property company associated with Faire Fund, opening the presentation of the Israeli apartments available through Faire Fund for purchase, said: “There have been interesting developments in Israel and the expectation is that Israel will recover from the recession and the downturn in property sales much faster than the West and certainly by 2010. “There were currently 30 000 apartments being built annually in Israel, mostly in the medium price range,” he said. In the presentation apartment blocks were shown in Givat Tayim, Kiryat Ono, Petah Tikva, Ra’anana, Ramat Gan, Hod Hasharon, Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, among others. Said Grofman: “We are tightening our ties with South Africa even more. I have just returned from the United States and you can really feel the economic atmosphere there. “How does this climate affect Israel?” he asked rhetorically. “Well, all those who invested in real estate (there) have seen very real and attractive returns and this is in all sectors.” Grofman considered South Africa as a “second home. “I come four or five times a year to report to shareholders and every one is happy and most have made a fortune. “Those who invested know how much property in Israel has gone up. In 2009 in Tel Aviv, property appreciated by 24 per cent and in places like Hadera and central Israel the increase has been even greater. People from this country have wanted a ‘second home’ in Israel and their foothold has increased.” Menachem Liv of the Mizrachi Bank told those at the presentation that the bank was willing to give 60 per cent mortgages in any major currency at a fixed rate for 20 to 30 years. Furthermore it would be a floating loan and there was no penalty if the loan was settled earlier. “People are saying that prices will come down,” Heyman said. “I have been with Faire Fund for four years and people have always been saying that. But I can say that if you buy a Faire Fund home it would be the most reassuring thing that you can do.” Ra’anana centre Currently demand was exceeding supply due to the high rate of immigration and the natural growth of the population. He warned that property was not going to get cheaper and that consumer confidence continued to grow. Heyman talked about Ra’anana which is of particular interest to South Africans. It is the biggest English-speaking city in Israel (with 80 000 people) and known as ‘Ra’ananafontein because of the large South African expatriate population there. Denese Zaslansky of Firzt Realty Company, a South African associate of Faire Fund, detailed the buying process of property in Israel. Both the buyer and the seller pay commission to the real estate agents (usually two per cent each). There are also lawyers’ fees of between one and two per cent, as well as purchase tax of usually 3,5 to 4,5 per cent of the purchase price. Zaslansky pointed out that property prices in Israel were 5,5 per cent higher this year than in the corresponding quarter of last year. According to “Global Property Guide” Israel had the best performing housing market in the first three months of 2009 among the international markets surveyed. Israel’s real estate market was one of only five that expanded in this year’s first quarter, the others being Switzerland, Thailand, Austria and China. Petah Tikva seems to be the upand-coming city for property buyers. Proximity to Tel Aviv and many new property developments, have made Petah Tikva the fastest growing real estate market in Israel this year. The current price of a 4-room apartment there is 1,2 million shekels (up 30 per cent). Says an upbeat Zaslansky: “There is a wonderful opportunity for people to have an investment that will appreciate in dollar terms. If you can pay 40 per cent down, you can get a bond of 60 per cent for non-residents at an interest rate of 3 to 5 per cent. “If you buy and rent out, then the tenants pay the rates, taxes, lights and water and generally the rental received covers the bond repayments. In my opinion people who live in Israel, remain in Israel. They are not going anywhere. They have no fear about the future.” Herschel Jawitz of Jawitz Property Company said the Israeli property market did not seem to be as hard hit as other South African investments, but it was not as important as investments in the UK or the US. Also, the demand from here had been hit by the local economy. People here had less money now and they were hedging their bets. He added that Israel crossed a divide for investors. Many people invested there for emotional reasons but the appetite had diminished. Israel properties were not cheap by international standards and interest had tapered off, but it should change once global markets settled down. People would look again at investing there. Chris Immelman of Pam Golding Estates said from Cape Town that they had very few requests for property in Israel and in any case international business had virtually stopped. FOR THE RECORD Ehmke photographed the white lion cubs Gluckman’s husband also an active parent Mark Banks and not Mel Miller THE PHOTO on page 18 in the youth section of the issue of November 6 accompanying the article “Lots of oohs and aahs for Stevie and Passion” should be credited to Rod Ehmke. IN THE article “Gluckman a worthy ‘cancer ambassador’” that appeared in the edition of October 30, the description of Carla Gluckman as a “single parent” may have created the impression that she is raising her sons without her former husband’s help. This is not so. In fact, Gluckman points out that the two co-parent successfully and have a “very amicable set-up”. IN THE Social Page of last week’s paper (November 6) the photo labelled Dan Levin, Ros Basserabie and Mark Banks was incorrect. It should have read Dan Levin, Ros Basserabie and Mel Miller. 13 - 20 November 2009 COMMUNITY COLUMNS ABOVE BOARD Zev Krengel, National Chairman A column of the SA Jewish Board of Deputies Limmud and its marshals exonerated THIS WEEK saw the release of Advocate Geoff Budlender’s report on the events leading up to and taking place during the Limmud seminar on Wits University campus in August. In terms of his brief, Adv Budlender was tasked with investigating, inter alia, allegations of “racial profiling” on the part of the Limmud marshals, inflammatory slurs by those protesting against the participation of IDF Lt-Colonel David Benjamin and whether the university had denied the protesters their right to freedom of expression. Even before instituting the investigation, Wits Vice-Chancellor Loyiso Nongxa effectively endorsed the “racial profiling” charge when, in an open letter to the Wits community, he apologised to those who felt they had been targeted in this way. His letter made no mention of the abuse and intimidation directed at Limmud participants, despite the SAJBD having very clearly brought this to his attention. Our follow-up letter to him pointed out this discrepancy and called for the investigation he intended instituting to be a balanced one, encompassing all relevant aspects of the affair. Ultimately, the terms of reference of the enquiry were sufficiently broadened for this purpose. Our National Director Wendy Kahn was one of those who provided a detailed submission of what transpired to Adv Budlender, in the course of which she strenuously refuted the racial profiling charge, detailed the nature of the antiSemitic abuse she witnessed and personally experienced and described her close interaction prior to and during the event with the Wits administration. Another SAJBD staff member, Charisse Zeifert, also made a submission reiterating these points. We can confidently assert that the findings in the report have upheld our contentions on all relevant counts. It dismissed the racial profiling allegations and found that “inflammatory and offensive slurs” were indeed made by certain protesters. It further noted that a protest gathering on the campus itself by the Palestinian Solidarity Committee had gone ahead in defiance of permission having been explicitly denied by the university authorities. We are naturally pleased that a thorough and impartial investigation has now vindicated our stance. Hopefully, the university itself will draw the appropriate lessons from these carefully considered findings and recommendations. This would include recognising that allegations of racism cannot always be taken at face value but may be a politically motivated strategy to discredit those who hold opposing points of view. A further lesson is that all too often, antiIsrael protests exceed the boundaries of acceptable behaviour, resulting in Jewish rights to dignity and freedom of opinion being violated. From our point of view, there are also appropriate lessons we should take to heart. While the Limmud marshals were not guilty of racial profiling, an awareness of the sensitivities of the circumstances in which they found themselves was clearly lacking. This in turn resulted in perceptions - real or imagined - of heavy-handedness on their part that left a number of people feeling genuinely offended. In light of Adv Budlender’s measured observations in this regard, we will be addressing the issue so as to avoid such misunderstandings in the future This column is paid for by the SAJBD SA JEWISH REPORT 15 Horror of Kristallnacht is relived in faraway Johannesburg LIONEL SLIER FOR JEWS November 9 is a day of mourning, a trigger for the brutality and murder of Germany’s Jews. By 1938 the marginalised and vilified Jewish population had almost halved since the rise of the Nazis in 1933. In October 1938 the Germans expelled 18 000 Jews living in the border region between Poland and Germany. These Jews had been living in Germany since 1918. One of the Polish Jews expelled was Zindel Grynzpan. Burning synagogue of Siegen during Kristallnacht of He wrote to his son, Hirsch, November 9, 1938. who was studying in Paris, Survivors, organised by Sandra Goldberg about the terrible conditions under which and Tali Nates of the Holocaust Centre. they were now living in “pigsties”. A witness to the events of November 9 Hirsch, in Paris, was so enraged that, 1938, Hans Lowenberg (born in Bremen in on November 7 he went into the German 1920) told of his experiences. “The SS and Embassy and shot dead Ernst von Rath, the Gestapo organised everything,” he the first German officer he encountered said. “Fire brigades were ordered not to there. save the burning synagogues, but in fact When news of Von Rath’s death they poured petrol onto the flames. reached Germany, under Hitler’s orders a “The Jewish men who were rounded terrible vengeance was unleashed on the up, were transported in cattle trains to 300 000 Jews still living in Germany. Jews the camps. My father had died when I was were attacked in the streets and in their a year old but my uncle was taken away. homes, synagogues were set alight, shops An aunt in America saved us and we robbed and trashed, Jewish homes pilreached there in April 1939. My mom and laged and destroyed, women attacked and I eventually got to Cape Town. We had a men arrested. lucky escape.” The next day after the night of terror Attiah Lieberman, then a little girl, told and death, the streets of German cities how she remembered that night in her and towns were covered with broken home in Lithuania. “My mother was cryglass, thus the name, “The Night of the ing and my father was extremely worried Broken Glass”, but known in Germany as and tense. My father’s shop windows Kristallnacht. Some 30 000 Jewish men were smashed and rocks were thrown at were rounded up and sent to concentraour house by Lithuanian hooligans, one tion camps. nearly hitting my sister who was asleep. This was a brutal wake-up call to the “We were all very frightened but we did Jewish community. Despite the antinot know then of the terrible time that Jewish Nuremberg Laws and the was still to come.” encroaching loss of civil rights and liberDon Krausz, a regular speaker at ties that Jews were subjected to after Holocaust remembrance events, said he 1933, some still clung to the hope that was a boy living in Holland at that time “that little man with the funny mousand he only found out about the terror of tache” was a passing, if unpleasant, November 1938 after the war. He himself, phase in Germany and that it (soon) had spent time in a German concentrawould be back to the old, pleasant comtion camp. fortable lifestyle. But, alas, Kristallnacht Krausz, giving a historical overview of changed all that. the events of that period, quoted from In Johannesburg Kristallnacht was Never Again by the English historian, Sir remembered with a gathering at Martin Gilbert. “Goering, speaking about Sandringham Gardens home for the aged Kristallnacht, had said that he would not by the Friendship Forum for Holocaust Don Krausz. Tali Nates. have liked to have been a Jew in Germany at that time.” About the conference held in Evian in France in 1938, called to discuss the plight of European Jewry, Krausz said no European country had been willing to take in Jewish refugees and this had led Hitler to comment: “You do not want Jews and neither do we, so stop criticising us.” Dr Jonathon Salitan gave a recital of Yiddish songs, accompanied on the piano by Jonathon Rees. In the evening another Kristallnacht remembrance ceremony was held, attended by Austria’s deputy ambassador, Aloisis Woergetter. Katerina von Ruckteschell of the Goethe-Institut said she was very happy to be a partner in this Holocaust presentation. “It was a horrible day in Germany, with synagogues on fire, Jews fleeing; we should never forget and never let this happen again.” Nates gave a brief summary of the events of the time and the casualties, which were much higher than the official figures. “This was the first time that men were arrested, not for opposing the regime but simply because they were Jewish.” A film, “And G-d Does Not Believe”, the first part of a Holocaust trilogy by the Austrian filmmaker, Axel Conti, was screened. This was about the start of the Second World War, seen through the eyes of a Jewish boy, Ferry Toubin. It starts in November 1938 and continues through to the German occupation of France. 16 SA JEWISH REPORT 13 - 20 November 2009 A Super-gran waiting to wing her way to Oz STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY RITA LEWIS WITH BOBBAS and zaidas being very much in the spotlight recently, it is not surprising that another organisation should have held a competition for bobbas and zaidas. In this case it was the Union of Jewish Women’s contest and their search for the most deserving South African bobba or zaida. The prize for the chosen person would be a paid ticket to visit their children and/or family oversees. This year the lucky winner was Ruth Super who cried tears of joy when her name was announced at a recent function entitled “Divas” held by the UJW at the Sandton Shul hall. Super, who has not seen her children and grandchildren for some eight and a half years, said she was “over the moon with excitement and shock”. She said she just could not believe it and had to be helped onto the stage when the announcement was made. She was also speechless when told that not only had she won a ticket to go to see her family, but the prize also included luggage, R10 000 spending money, a pair of Slickers shoes, a hairdo and a basket of flowers. The family that she has not seen are her son Kevin, his wife Cheryl and their two children Ricky (21) and Samantha (17). They have lived in Perth, Australia for some 12 years. Super who lives at Sandringham Gardens, planned to leave South Africa on December 3 for a sixweek stay with her family in Australia, travelling there via Singapore. However, her passport had expired some time ago and she had not bothered to renew it as she had had no immediate plans to travel abroad. After hearing of her win, things suddenly changed. Together with the Union of Jewish Women’s chairman, Elaine Katz, Super went to collect her ticket and then it was on to Home Affairs to renew her passport. Things, however, are not always as simple as they sound. Super said: “They took my fingerprints, looked at my ID, told me it generally takes between 10 days and two weeks to get the passport renewed, but then told me the dreadful news that they had discovered that I ‘was not on the system’. I was shattered.” Super who attended Observatory Girls and Athlone Girls High, had completed a commercial matric at Harvard College, specialising in shorthand and typing. She had worked most of her life for different firms - so she should definitely have “been on the system”. She married Emanuel Berman in 1956 but he died in 1984 leaving her with three children to support. Shortly afterwards, she married Boris Glassman. She said she had, and still has, a wonder relationship with her stepchildren Michael and Leslie Glassman. Super now has two children as she regrettably lost a son, Julian Ruth Super, winner of this year’s UJW’s Bobba/Zaida of the Year Competition hugs Chairman Elaine Katz. Berman, many years ago. Her daughter, Marlene Heller was let into the secret some weeks prior to the announcement that her mother had won the contest. She relayed the information to her brother Kevin in Australia but the two were sworn to secrecy - and Jewish women always a mainstay STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY JULIA COOK OFTEN PEOPLE hold the belief that Judaism and the Torah are unequal in the way in which they portray the roles of men and women, often feeling that the Torah is neutral towards the role of women at best and fairly negative and sexist at worst. Disproving such beliefs is what distinguished the talk entitled “Being a Jewish Leader” recently given by renowned author, Lori Palatnik who is also an international speaker and rebbetzen of the Aish Hatorah branch in Washington DC. Palatnik was recently hosted by Aish Hatorah South Africa at a ladies only breakfast. Palatnik explained: “In the Torah, the Jewish people were enslaved in Egypt hundreds of years and it was in the merit of the Jewish women that the Jewish people were redeemed. Initially, thanks to stargazers, Pharaoh was aware that there would one day be a baby boy born to the Jewish people who would eventually lead the Jews out of Egypt in an Exodus. the continuity of the “The Jews, however, Jewish people. The men are not allowed to believe had given up at this in such things, nor are we point, but the women allowed to seek out somenever did. Soon after the one who can see the Jews left Egypt, Pharaoh future. Based on this realised that they were prophecy, Pharaoh denot coming back and clared that all boys born sent his men to bring to the Jewish people them back. By this time should be killed. This led the Jews had reached the to the Jewish men choos- Rebbetzen Lori Dead Sea and there were ing to leave their wives, as Palatnik. four actions decided they did not wish for their upon by different groups children to be killed. of men, namely either i) commit“Miriam, sister of Moses, ting suicide by jumping into the sea, realised, however, that by doing so ii) going back to Egypt, iii) praying, the men were making a worse or iv) fighting back. proclamation, as it was not only the None of these options found male babies that were being prefavour with Hashem; then Nashom vented from living by this separaben Minadav had shown faith in tion, but the female babies as well. Hashem and waded into the sea. Therefore, she and the rest of the While we are not usually permitwomen beautified themselves and ted to rely on miracles and put our went out into the fields to entice lives at risk, when the entire Jewish their husbands home.” nation is at risk, miracles will This act found such favour with occur. After the Jews had crossed Hashem, that when the Jews were the Dead Sea, Miriam took out her in the desert later, He decided that tambourine, and she and the other the basin for the tabernacle should women made music and danced to be made from the copper mirrors thank Hashem. that the women had used to ensure Posing the question as to where the women got these instruments from, Palatnik said it had to be Egypt, which meant that the women, who were so rushed that they did not even have time for the bread to rise, had enough faith in G-d to know that they would need instruments at some point to sing to him in gratitude. Later at Har Sinai, the woman once again proved their strength and faith, when the men miscounted the amount of time when Moses was to return. The men built an idol; they had to forcefully take the jewellery from the women. While some would argue that the women simply did not want to part with their jewellery, this was disproved when the women later willingly gave their jewellery to be used in the Mishkan. When it is for a holy purpose, the Jewish women are the first to give, but when it is not, the men had to rip their jewellery from their necks. We learn in the Torah, that Moses was told to first teach the Torah to “Beis Yaacov”, which refers to the women. This is not only because the women merited this, but also because Hashem Aish Hatorah raises money at a gala dinner STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY JULIA COOK IN LIGHT of the drastic increases in assimilation and intermarriage among Jews across the world, it is becoming imperative to reconnect Jews to their roots. One such organisation whose objective this is, is Aish Hatorah, which has 35 branches all over the world, including South Africa. The South African branch recently held its annual gala dinner to raise funds for the annual December Aish Israel Fellowship Trips that take a number of people to Israel to enable them to establish a deeper connection with the Holy Land. This dinner, therefore, provided an opportunity for everyone to participate in the mitzvah of contributing towards bringing Jewish youth back to Judaism. The night also honoured two philanthropists whose generous donations towards the various kiruv (bringing Jews back to Judaism) organisations over the years have helped to realise this objective. They are the twins Abe and Solly Krok, responsible for the introduc- Guest of honour Solly Krok (middle), with niece Elana Pincus (left) and grandson Devon Krok (right). tion of Aish Hatorah to South Africa. After Rabbi Chaim Willis, the executive director of Aish Hatorah South Africa, originally came to the country to start the Israel Fellowships programme in 1994, he soon realised the necessity to start a branch in South Africa if the Fellowships were to succeed. During his visit, Rabbi Willis met Solly Krok who was going to Israel and who agreed to meet with the late Rabbi Noah Weinberg, founder and dean of Aish Hatorah, to discuss ways of making this idea come true. Solly and Abe donated the funds needed to lay the foundation for this project; this resulted in Rabbi Yaacov Couzens and Rabbi Yitzhak Sandler immigrating to South Africa in 1996 to be rabbis of the Cyrildene Shul in Johannesburg. After two years, Rabbi Couzens returned to Philadelphia, and Rabbi Willis, who was at the time living in Israel, moved to South Africa to become the executive director of Aish Hatorah. Since then, thanks to the efforts of the Krok brothers as well as many others, the organisation has grown to include five rabbis and their families, and has affected the lives of thousands of Jewish youth between the ages of 18 - 29, who have been involved with Aish either through the Israel Fellowship programmes or through the Earn and Learn programmes. The twins have not only helped Aish Hatorah, but have also supported Ohr Somayach and Chabad, also involved in kiruv. The Aish Gala dinner was held at the Sandton Shul Hall and was attended by some 400 guests. The room was lit by a multitude of candelabras on each table. Rabbi Willis then detailed the necessity of organisations such as Aish, as well as highlighting the role that the Krok brothers have played in the organisation’s growing success in South Africa. Special guest speaker, Rebbetzen Lori Palatnik, a renowned Jewish educator and author, then shared her personal experience as she told of how she gave a part of herself to a complete stranger, namely one of her kidneys. Rebbetzen Palatnik is also heavily involved in outreach kept their knowledge to themselves. Apart from having the two grandchildren in Australia, Super has one in South Africa, Marlene’s daughter Loren, and Carly, the daughter of Julian zt”l who lives in Israel with her grandparents. She said she was still so excited but she was worried that things would not go according to plan. It would seem that the date of the ticket itself is not exchangeable or refundable and at the time of our going to press Super had heard nothing yet about the passport renewal and still has to apply for a visa. Without the passport she can neither get a visa nor leave the country. Super is planning to give a variety concert at Sandringham Gardens the day before she is due to leave. She, with pianist Jeff Klein, have for some time, made it their business to go around to Johannesburg’s different residential homes entertaining the old folks there. knew that the only way that the Torah could have any hope of succeeding among the Jewish people, was if the women accepted it first. “There are exceptions, but generally in my work with Aish Hatorah, we see that there is usually one member of the couple who are more into Judaism than the other. If we find that the man is more into it, then we worry, but if it is the woman, then we know it is okay. This is because women are better at social interactions and at introducing new ideas.” Time and again, the only thing that saved the Jewish people was their faith in G-d - something the women have always had. “This trust is based on our knowledge of G-d, as we have seen Him come through for us on numerous occasions.” She added: “Our mothers, grandmothers, great-grandmothers and so on, lived, and sometimes died to be Jewish. We are part of an incredible chain of tradition. While this chain has decreased, we are here to attest that we are going on the right path, and we are only as strong as our weakest link. “We need to remember that time and again, the Jews were saved on the merit of the women, and so too, the ultimate redemption will also come through their merit.” programmes and is married to the executive director of Aish’s Washington branch, Rabbi Yaacov Palatnik. Rabbi Yisrael Ziskin, Aish’s educational director, then introduced a raffle aimed at raising more money to send youth to Israel, with prizes ranging from two El Al tickets to Israel, to product hampers and a mystery gift, with Martin Laurence winning first prize. Rabbi Ziskin expressed the importance of outreach organisations in terms of a parable which likened the excitement of the secular world to that of a fish that is thrashing about when it is taken out of the water. While there is much movement, this wildness is that of death convulsions. However, the tranquillity that can be witnessed when looking at fish in a tank can be likened to Torah study that sooths and gives life to the soul. The Kroks were presented with awards to commemorate their 80th year, as well as all of their generous contributions that they have made over the years to the community. Unfortunately, Abe was in hospital on the evening and so his daughter, Elana Pincus accepted the award on his behalf. 13 - 20 November 2009 Focusing on your pet SA JEWISH REPORT 17 Compiled by Manuela Bernstein. Contact (011) 886-0162, Cell 082-951-3838 or e-mail: manuela@global.co.za The pros of animal sterilisation spelt out THE SPCA MOVEMENT is governed by statute: Act 169 of 1993. In terms of this national law, all animals adopted from SPCAs must be sterilised. There are good reasons for this, all in the interest of the welfare of animals. It is imperative that pet owners prevent the birth of more puppies and kittens. Spaying and neutering are low-risk surgeries performed by a veterinarian under general anaesthetic. The primary reason for sterilisation is, of course, reducing the pet overpopulation but there are other very good reasons why you should ensure that all your pets are sterilised: • Spaying or neutering makes animals better, more affectionate pets. It has no effect on a dog’s alertness or natural protective instincts. • Unneutered males try to control and expand their territories, which leads to roaming and fighting - habits that can get your pet injured, lost or killed. • Unneutered males also spray and mark. But, having them neutered reduces or eliminates these types of unsociable habits. • Unneutered males are prone to prostate problems and testicular cancer. Having them neutered reduces the risk of these health prob- lems which mean a longer life for the animal and fewer and lower veterinary bills for you. • Spaying a female before her first heat cycle reduces the risk of mammary gland tumours by 99 per cent. i eliminates li i t h l and d th i k off •S Spaying heatt cycles the risk ovarian and uterine cancer. A quick few words on the subject: With improved technology and a greater understanding of animal biology, veterinary experts endorse “early age sterilisation” - as does the SPCA movement in South Africa. This involves sterilising an animal as young as eight weeks. Most vets are willing and able to sterilise an animal from the age of eight weeks, or at least before the onset of the first heat cycle for females and the spraying/marking behaviour in males. Both of these can occur around the age of four months. A veterinary hospital with all mod-cons THE ORANGE GROVE Veterinary Hospital was established in 1947. The three partners have many years’ veterinary experience between them. The hospital complies with the strict standards for veterinary hospitals, as determined by the South African Veterinary Council, and has been awarded hospital accreditation status by the South African Veterinary Association. The hospital utilises the most modern equipment and technology and is an officially approved teaching facility for veterinary students. The hospital is equipped to perform many types of surgical and diagnostic procedures, including routine laboratory diagnostic services, X-ray and ECG examinations. Our clients can expect to receive help and information on any topic concerning their pets’ health. Preventative medicine is the cornerstone of modern veterinary medicine and our practice caters for routine annual health checks, vaccinations, heart and kidney assessment, dental and oral health evaluations and special treatments with the needs of the older pet particularly in mind. The professional healthcare team as well as the lay staff, are all committed to satisfying the needs and requests of both owners and their pets. Visit our website for further information, monthly newsletters, interesting articles and specials. www.orangegrovevet.co.za Pampered Pets Grooming Parlour The Pampered Pets Grooming Parlour is situated at the Orange Grove Vet Hospital. All breeds are groomed by professionally trained groomers. Apart from the standard bathing; specialised cuts, teeth brushing and medicated baths are also offered. A collection and delivery service, is also available for clients’ convenience. For further information or to make an appointment, please speak to Michelle or Nicola who will gladly assist you. Vets Pantry Vet Shops for all pets’ needs The Vets Pantry Vet Shops boast friendly staff who are trained to answer any food and overthe-counter related questions. We stock all premium pet foods, pet accessories, specialised bird food and kennels. We also deliver. The four shops are situated in the Bedford Centre, Norwood Mall, The Mall of Rosebank, and Greenstone Shopping Centre in Edenvale. 18 SA JEWISH REPORT 13 - 20 November 2009 YOUTH TALK Alison Goldberg youthsajr@global.co.za Teaching gemillut chesed at KD with a hands-on approach RENE POZNIAK PHOTOGRAPHS BY: JODI STARKOWITZ TA grade 3s celebrate Ellie Joffe’s birthday OWN CORRESPONDENT PHOTOGRAPH: HARRY JOFFE GRADE 3 boys from Torah Academy Primary School had a special treat to celebrate the birthday of their classmate Ellie Joffe (second row, second from right) - a visit to the Wanderers Stadium. They were accompanied by their coach Tim Moyo and conducted a tour of the facilities at the Wanderers - an exciting dream for these youngsters to experience close-up this hallowed cricket ground. Power of the ‘beautiful game’ for change next year ALISON GOLDBERG PHOTOGRAPH: COURTESY OF STREETFOOTBALLWORLD A JOINT Israeli Palestinian football team called the Peace Team will participate in a Football for Hope Festival in 2010 during the final week of the Fifa World Cup where 32 teams from around the world will represent the power of the game for social change. In a specially constructed stadium in the heart of Alexandra Township in Johannesburg, the mixed teams of boys and girls aged 15 to 18, will compete on July 10 in a fast-paced tournament to be crowned Football for Hope World Champions. Festival 2010 is much more than just a football tournament. Each delegation is selected not for their skills on the pitch, but for their contribution to social change in disadvantaged communities around the world. According to Fifa President Sepp Blatter, “the Football for Hope Festival will be a unique opportunity for organisations using football as a tool for social development in every part of the world, to interact with each other and showcase their programmes on football’s biggest stage - the 2010 Fifa World Cup. We look forward to welcoming them to South Africa.” The two-week festival will also include a programme of cultural celebration between the international delegations and their South African hosts, the City of Johannesburg, which will organise the festival along with Fifa, streetfootballworld and the 2010 World Cup Organising Committee. The all-important dates are June 27, the expected date of arrival: June 28 - July 3, the participants’ programme, co-ordinators’ workshops and cultural activities; July 4 - 10, Fifa President Sepp Blatter announcing the Football For Hope Festival. official opening ceremony, Fair Play Football tournament, closing ceremony: July 11, final of the 2010 Fifa World Cup: July 12, expected date of departure. The goals of Festival 2010 are to stage an internationally renowned, enjoyable and fully participatory event; to celebrate the power of football in creating positive social change; showcase and promote best practice in the field of development through football; promote exchange and dialogue between participating delegations and create longterm benefits for the host community, participating organizations and individuals. Teams include Dads Against Drugs (England); Sport Against Racism Ireland (Republic of Ireland, Northern Ireland); and Football Friends (Bosnia and Herzegovina/Serbia/Montenegro). South Africans will be represented in four teams: Grassroot Soccer (Zimbabwe, Zambia, South Africa); Altus Sport Vuma/WhizzKids United (South Africa); Special Olympics (Botswana, Mauritius, Namibia, South Africa) and Alexandra Hope Team (South Africa). There is also a team from Rwanda called Esperance. Gan Aviv alive and well and living in CT STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY JOS HORWITZ GAN AVIV Herzlia Pre-Primary is growing and expanding due to a huge demand for children from ages three to six in the City Bowl for 2010. We are most grateful to our partners, Highlands House and the Jewish community who have made the building of the two new classrooms possible to be ready for January next year. Our children laid their own bricks as an investment into their schooling. It was a special time as Martin the builder, patiently assisted 55 five-year-old kids who cemented and placed bricks to build their own classroom. Martin the builder with Omer Amin-Zada, Ben Norval and Francis Bruwer. THE CHALLENGE to any educational process lies not only in teaching our learners to read and write exam results are only a small part of a learner’s education. Creating an awareness of the society around them and then encouraging them to be socially and morally responsible human beings, is equally important. Being a mensch is a non-negotiable demand of Judaism performing acts of kindness towards your fellowman, no matter who they are or where they come from. The challenge for us in the Jewish studies department (at King David Dani Rachman and Meira Friedland presenting Linksfield) is to make what we teach their account of their time at the Bees Aftercare. in the classroom relevant to the lives of our pupils, to make the connecyou to say that what is going on around is tion between theory and practice. not your concern. Judaism demands action. In the area of ethics and morality, this is If you are only for yourself, you will never particularly difficult as these values are not feel fulfilled. In reaching out to others, you always seen as “cool”, so we isolated one of will discover who you are. Helping others these values, that of gemillut chesed and feels good! teach it with a hands-on approach. United Nations and World Bank statistics The late Chief Rabbi Cyril Harris z”l once reveal that South Africa is one of the countold this community that Jewish South tries with the biggest discrepancies between Africans had a “great historical mission - to the “haves” and the “have-nots”. We are all make a meaningful contribution to alleviatfaced with the awesome responsibility of ing deprivation in the country”. how to tackle this problem. This is a challenge that is posed by our We don’t live in a Jewish world only; we sacred literature. The famous saying of should not seal ourselves off from society. Hillel applies: “If I am for myself alone, then That is not Judaism. Our function is to build what am I?” bridges with our non-Jewish neighbours. If you are only for yourself, then you The Talmud prioritised the giving of become a bystander. Judaism does not allow charity to “our own family and the poor of our own city first”. But this was not exclusive, because to give to the Jewish poor only, is un-Jewish. Charity begins at home but does not end there! The grade 10s have shown that they understand this challenge. They have been involved with the elderly and the mentally disabled. They have helped at day care centres where both parents work till late; they have given great pleasure to severely ill children by fulfilling their dreams; they have interacted with children in orphanages. They have done this with tremendous enthusiasm and goodwill, and we commend them on the way they have conducted themselves. They have brought credit to both the A grade 10 pupil hands a child her dream school and themselves, and it has been a privilege to work with them. of a doll, a doll’s pram and more. KDL’s Pre-Primary has a new entrance STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY MIRIAM SCHIFF KING DAVID Pre Primary School, Linksfield has undergone an extensive make-over in their entrance. Photographer Nicky Kaplan visited the school for two days and took hundreds of photographs of the children at work and play. With the help of Nicole Cimring, they chose appropriate photographs, illustrating the key words from the SA Board of Jewish Education’s Nicky Kaplan with the mounted posters in the entrance hall. “Purpose Statement”. These words and photos were digitally put together and printand welcoming. The walls have special ed out into huge posters that have been frames for the children’s’ works of art mounted on the walls behind protective which are changed periodically. sheets of Perspex. The entrance hall now has lingering New furniture has also been acquired groups of parents and children, admiring and the entrance is user-friendly, bright and discussing the photos. 13 - 20 November 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT 19 YOUTH TALK Alison Goldberg youthsajr@global.co.za Grandparents take kids down memory lane RUTH ISAACSON PHOTOGRAPHS: SHARON FAIT KING DAVID Junior Linksfield celebrated “Grandparents’ Day” on Wednesday October 28. Grandparents were treated to tea and a concert directed by Helen Heldenmuth, which included Yiddish, Afrikaans, Shakespearean English and Zulu. A guest speaker, therapist Julienne Sackstein, discussed how to use that relationship to enrich relationships in the family. After tea, the grandparents were invited into the grandchild’s classroom where a project tracing the family roots was displayed. Part of the preparation of this project was to interview the grandparent/s to find out what life was when they were children - the games they played, memories of school, Shabbat, Yomtov etc. It was a morning of nachas and brought joy to both grandchildren and their grandparents. TA boys get awarded with a trip for their diligence STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY RABBI MOTTI HADAR Above: Ethan Benjamin, Adam Harth, Daniel Martin and Johnathan Wohlman. Left: Alan Dave, Gabriella Dave and Abe Fait - the two grandfathers in Gabi’s class. Young dancers gladden old hearts STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY MARLENE MILLER THE GRADE 3 and 4 Israeli dancers from King David Sandton Primary had the residents of Sandringham Gardens up on their feet and joining them for a dance session during their recent performance of Israeli folk dancing. THE MESIVTA Shiur Beis class of Torah Academy Boys’ High School, went on a Shabbaton to the North-West Province recently - a reward for relearning an entire chapter of Gemorra (Masechta Megilla, Perek Beis) and being tested on this. Rabbi Dovid Wineberg and the shluchim from the school were the driving forces behind this initiative. Pictured are, back: Yaakov Blecher, Darren Gien and Moshe Wilshansky. Middle row: Shloimie Kesselman, Yisroel Abraham, Mendy Wineberg, Levi Deutsch, Yitzchok Bacher, Mendel Bacher, Eliyohu Elyavics and Danny Gniwisch, with Boruch Liberow in the front. At Yiddish Folk they’re ‘forever blowing bubbles...’ STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY PRINCIPAL SHEVA MESSIAS. HAVING FUN and experimenting with bubbles is just one of the lovely water activities that children are enjoying at Yiddish Folk as the weather warms up. Keryn Mansur and Jake Milner. These kids are deft hands with a needle STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY STACY FLEISHMAN EVERY WEEK at King David Victory Park Primary School, pupils stay after school to attend needlework. Pictured are the grade 2 needlework class proudly showing off their challah covers. Back: Dana Tabak, Chad Rayd, Tamar Moross, Abigail Klug and Michaela Klug. Seated: Nadia Bartal, Tzippy Damelin, Nicole Kantor. Front: Tanna Rock, Megan Kantor and Alexis van Eeghem. 20 SA JEWISH REPORT 13 - 20 November 2009 WHAT’S ON NOTE: Deadline for all entries is 12:00 on the Friday prior to publication. Key to organisations, venues, contact details and cost: • Beyachad Resource Centre/Library, 2 Elray St, Raedene, 2192. Norma Shulman (011) 645-2567. email:library@beyachad.co.za • Bikkur Cholim - Jewish Society for Visiting the Sick, 7A Chester Road, Greenside East, Johannesburg. Joy Gafin (011) 447-6689. • CAJE - College of Adult Jewish Education, Sydenham Highlands North Shul (011)640-5021. • CSO - Emergency phone number 086 18 000 18. • FFHS - Friendship Forum for Holocaust Survivors, Second Generation and Members of the Community Affected by the Holocaust. Presentations held at the Gerald Horwitz Lounge, Golden Acres, 85 George Ave, Sandringham • HOD - Hebrew Order of David International. HOD Centre Oaklands Road, Orchards. Office (011) 640 3017 - info@hodavid.org • JAFFA - Jewish Accomodation for Fellow Aged. (012) 346-2007/8. • KDSF - King David Schools’ Foundation. King David Alumni info@kdsf.org (011) 480-4723. • Nechama Bereavement Counselling Centre - Room A304, 3rd Floor, Hospital Wing, Sandringham Gardens, 85 George Avenue, Sandringham, 2192. Contact (011) 640-1322. • New Friendship Ladies’ Group - A group for single women - contact Lucille (011) 791-5226 or 082-9275786. • ORT and ORTJET South Africa - 44 Central Street, Cnr 10th Ave, Houghton. Contact (011) 728-7154. • Preview Theatre - 9 Valerie Crescent, Bagleyston, (011) 640-1061. • Rabbi Cyril Harris Community Centre (RCHCC) and Great Park Shul, Johannesburg. Contact Hazel, (011) 728-8088 or Rene Sidley (011) 728-8378. Cost usually R50, including refreshments. • SAIJE - Sandton Adult Institute of Jewish Education, Sandton Shul. E-mail: saije@sandtonshul.co.za. (011) 883-4210. • Second Innings, Johannesburg - Jewish Community Services - Donald Gordon Centre, 85 George Avenue Sandringham. Their group meets at the Gerald Horwitz Lounge, Golden Acres, 85 George Avenue Sandringham every Sunday morning for tea at 10h00 followed by the meeting at 10h30. Contact Grecia Gabriel (011) 532-9718 for information. • Society of Israel Philately (SIP) - daniels@wbx.co.za. Contact Maurice (011) 485-2293. • South African Jewish Board of Deputies (Johannesburg) - Beyachad, 2 Elray Street, Raedene. Contact (011) 645-2500 or (011) 645-2523. • South African Zionist Federation (SAZF), Johannesburg - Beyachad, 2 Elray Street, Raedene. Contact Froma, (011) 645-2505. • The Israel Centre. Contact Debbie (011) 645-2560. • The Jewish National Fund (JNF) Choir, Beyachad, 2 Elray St, Raedene. Contact Crystal Kaplan. 083-3765999. • The Jewish Outlook Team. Contact Ryan Cane. Support line: 27 76 215 8600; e-mail info@jewishoutlook.org.za; website www.jewishoutlook.org.za • The Jewish Women’s Benevolent Society (JWBS) Sandringham Gardens, 85 George Avenue Sandringham 2192. Contact Carolyn Sabbagh. (011) 485-5232. • The Simcha Friendship and Cultural Circle (SFCC), Johannesburg - Sandton Shul. Contact Sylvia Shull, (011) 783-5600. • The United Sisterhood, 38 Oxford Road Parktown. Contact Marian (011) 646-2409. website: www.unitedsisterhood.co.za • Tiyulim (Jewish Outdoor Club) - Contact Martin 082965-7419 or Greg 082-959-9026 • Union of Jewish Women (UJW), Johannesburg - 1 Oak Street Houghton. Contact (011) 648-1053. Cost R15 for the Friendship Luncheon Club and a R20 donation for lectures unless otherwise stated. • Union of Jewish Women (UJW), Cape Town - (021) 434-9555, e-mail: info@ujwcape.co.za. • UJW Cape Town AED Programme - Venue: Stonehaven. Time: 10:00 for 10:30. Entrance: R15.00 (incl refreshments). • United Zionist Luncheon Club (UZLC), Johannesburg Our Parents Home. Contact Gloria, (011) 485-4851 or 072-127-9421. • UOS- Union of Orthodox Synagogues (011) 485-4865. E-mail: info@uos.co.za. Fax 086-610-3442 • WIZO Johannesburg - Beyachad, 2 Elray Street Raedene. Contact Joyce Chodos (011) 645-2548 or Sandy Kramer (011) 645-2515. wizopublicrelations @beyachad.co.za South 1H 4H North 1D 4C All pass Opening lead: SJ North's 4C was a splinter, showing the values for a 4H bid, but with a shortage in clubs, usually a singleton. South had no slam interest and signed off in 4H. On a hand like, you would hope to make 11 tricks if the trumps split 3-2. Two high spades, two trumps, five diamonds, one club, and either a spade ruff in hand or a club ruff in dummy. • SFCC presents Barbara Holtmann on “Breaking the Cycle of Violence for a Safe South Africa” at Sandton Shul at 10:00. • UZLC presents Ian Scher, head of SA Search and Rescue Unit, on “Rescue SA, Earthquakes and Responses”. Sunday (November 15) • Beyachad Libraries and The Yiddish Academy present “150 Years of Sholem Aleichem”. Cedric Ginsberg will give insights into his life. R30 per session includes refreshments. Phone Norma (011) 645-2567 to reserve a place. • RCHCC is screening “Turn Left at the End of the World” at 19:30. Monday (November 16) • UJW Johannesburg presents DA Councillor Marcelle Ravid who will speak on the trials and tribulations of being a ward councillor. Time: 09:30. • UJW Johannesburg House & Garden Circle at 1, 5th Street Orange Grove. Time: 09:45. Visitors welcome. Phone: (011) 648-1053. Wednesday (November 18) Owl Sanctuary. Meet the bus at 09:00 at Oxford Shul parking. Cost: R140 per person, incl. entry to park, tour, bus, lunch and a drink. Enquiries: Joy Lipman (011) 608-4216. • RCHCC is screening “Waltz with Bashir” at 19:30. • RCHCC End-of-Year bridge party. Tournament will be run by Jeff Sapire followed by lunch. Time: 09:45. Cost: R150. RSVP Hazel or René (011) 728-8088/8378 for • SAZF is screening “The Miracle of Israel - 1945 to catering purposes. 1948” with an address by Rabbi Berel Wein at 19:30. Cost R100. Contact Miriam Garb on (011) • UJW Johannesburg presents Dr Lorraine Chaskalson on “Modern Poetry”. Time: 09:30. Donation: R20. 654-2505. Thursday (November 19) • YAD - (Young Adults Division) presents Mark Banks • JWBS is having a book sale at the Pick ’n Pay in an evening of comedy. Time: 19:30 for 20:00. Cost: Hypermarket, Norwood Mall from 09:30. R180 includes eats and shooters. Venue: Simon Kuper Hall. RSVP Paula on (011) 645-2525 or e-mail • UJW Cape Town presents Phillipa Cheifitz who will discuss the story behind her latest book South Africa paula@beyachad.co.za Eats. Sunday (November 22) • Second Innings presents “Celebrating Haydn”. Estelle Thursday (November 26) Sher on • RCHCC presents Hugh Raichlin on “The Jews of India” at 19:30. • Our Parents Home is holding a mini-market from Friday (November 29) 10:00 to 13:00. Articles from our own workshop, books and second hand clothes will be on sale - as • UZLC presents Bev Goldman from the Media Centre at will delicious tea and cake. Beyachad on “Dissecting Goldstone”. • RCHCC is hosting an art exhibition with works by Jeff Sunday (November 29) Kodesh at 18:00. • Second Innings presents Sue Brandon on “Alzheimer’s - Past, Present and Future”. • RCHCC is screening “Shiva” at 19:30. Today Friday (November 13) Monday (November 23) • UJW Johannesburg presents Dr Dora Whychank on “Ritual or Shackle? Obsessive Behaviour among Observant Jews”. Donation: R20. • RCHCC is screening a documentary on Philip Glass at 19:30. Monday (November 30) • UJW Johannesburg presents “Voices that Care” featuring Selwyn Klass and the Klass Act Ensemble at 09:30. Donation: R65 includes a tea. Book on (011) 648-1053. Tuesday (November 24) • “What are the Trends for 2010?” Internationally acclaimed interior decorator, Stephen Falcke, fashion Tuesday (December 1) designer, Shirley Lab and Nicky Breger of Nicci Boutique, will be presenting a fashion workshop for • Chazzonis Club presents a feast of food and song to everyone. Venue: Simon Kuper Hall at 09:30. Cost: celebrate their 10th anniversary. Venue: Gerald Horwitz R150. Booking essential. Call Sandy on (011) Lounge, Golden Acres. Time: 19:00 for 19:30. Cost 545-2515. R190. Phone: 078-633-9323 or (011) 485-2631. • UJW Johannesburg hosts Estelle Sher on “From Wednesday (December 2) Sarasate to Stravinsky”. Venue: 301 Eton Place. Time: 09:45 for 10:00. Donation: R30. • SFCC year-end party at the home of Sylvia Shull, 4a Harris Road, Morningside at 10:30. Entertainment • The IUA-UCF will be launching the Women’s UCF at by The Russell Singers. the TAC, 10:00. R180 per person will include a mentalist, and fabulous entertainment. Guest speaker on • WIZO Etgar and Tzabar branches present “Rocking all “Hereditary Disease”. To book contact Bev (011) over the World!” at the Barnyard in Cresta. Doors open at 18:30. Cost: R150. Bookings - Marion 083645-2554. 326-3791. Wednesday (November 25) • UJW Cape Town presents Alan Swerdlow on “Directions on the Stage”. THE BRIDGE LOUNGE by Jeff Sapire Trump control is something that one just has to understand and appreciate in order to be a good dummy player. Take a look at today's hand and see if you would know how to deal with it. North dealer, both vul NORTH AK3 A432 AK987 5 WEST EAST J1092 Q876 KQJ10 9 43 652 876 KQJ109 SOUTH 54 8765 QJ10 A432 Barry Bilewitz carro@global.co.za But if you don't pay careful attention to the hand, you could easily go down. One declarer took the spade lead and played ace and another club, ruffing in dummy. Then he played ace and another heart, and the roof fell in. West draw all the trumps and the defence ran the club suit, for three down! Note that if you start trumps first, playing ace and another heart, before ruffing a club, it will still be one down. And if you elect to ruff a spade in hand first, it will be the same result if you then release control of the trumps by playing ace and another heart. As you always have to lose two trump tricks even if they divide favourably, all you must do to keep control is lose a trump early, before releasing the ace of hearts. At trick two duck a trump and win the spade or club return. Now cash the ace of hearts and when you see the bad break, you can run the diamonds and still ruff a black loser in either hand. West can ruff in whenever he wants, making only his three trump tricks. Every Tuesday (players of 3 or so years' experience) and Wednesday (intermediate to advanced) at 10:00, I run bridge workshops at the Great Park Shul, off Glenhove Road. For more information, call me on 082-551-2526 or e-mail me at jeffshirl@telkomsa.net • Second Innings outing to the Lory Park Animal and • JWBS is having a book sale at the Benmore Shopping Centre from 09:30. CROSSWORD NO 142 BY LEAH SIMON ACROSS: 1. The degree, by the way, yields breadrolls (4) 3. Ed and mud about to get something extra (8) 8. A hundred in an argument over the bird (4) 9. Motivates in steeple-tops (8) 11. These Germans are on a roll! (12) 13. Price in the east for cooking instructions (6) 14. Carpet rollers conceal fuel (6) 17. At which the high-minded get a ringside seat? (6, 6) 20. One last drink for the big match! (3, 5) 21. You French exist in a cylinder! (4) 22. Make Mandy tie up the explosive 1 2 (8) 23. Got an eye infection in last year (4) DOWN: 8 1. Support the shooting - but it could rebound (4, 4) 2. Crop is a bit confused - and unimaginative (7) 11 4. Seed in kumquats hides the genuine Australian (6) 5. I return, and am pitiful - but able 13 to feel others’ distress (10) 6. Somehow rude, but has the right to the painter (5) 7. Mother makes two points about Catholic service (4) 10. Miss pickets, upset by lack of 19 faith (10) 12. An unnatural spectacle? It’d have 20 to be, or you couldn’t see through it! (5, 3) 15. Add up again - and tell about it (7) 16. The hag has temerity, and con- 22 ceals feeling horrified (6) 18. Student above, in flower species (5) 19. Any way the dice rolls, it’s chilly (4) SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD NO 141 ACROSS: 1. Pest; 3. High rise; 8. Dead; 9. Idealist; 11. Confidential; 13. Renege; 14. Scrawl; 17. Indiscretion; 20. Brothers; 21. Dodi; 22. Theories; 23. Berg. DOWN: 1. Pedicure; 2. Shannon; 4. In fact; 5. Heart aches; 6. Irina; 7. Eats; 10. Kingfisher; 12. Glancing; 15. Adipose; 16. Scarce; 18. Noose; 19. Abet. 3 4 6 5 7 9 10 12 14 15 16 17 18 21 23 13 - 20 November 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT Solar technologies from Israel that could change our planet KARIN KLOOSTERMAN PHOTOGRAPH: CHEN LEOPOLD/FLASH90 SOLAR TECHNOLOGIES create a cleaner environment and break our dependence on oil. Israel21c takes a look at the top seven solar technologies being developed in Israel. They’re on investors’ hit lists and the green tech media is keen to monitor their progress. Environmentalists and key policy makers from the United States urge them on. Israeli solar technology innovators are channelling and shaping the sun’s energy and breaking America’s dependence on oil. With organisations like the Cleantech Forum, an international business development company that’s listing Israel in a league of its own, world rankings show that Israel is no small player in solar energy innovation. A recent survey released by the Guardian newspaper in the UK and the Cleantech Forum, chose five Israeli-based and two Israeli-developed companies among a global listing of 100. That’s a significant number, considering that Israel is about the size of a small American state. Over the years Israel21c has brought you many reports about home-grown Israeli solar energy technologies that are making our world a better place. We’d like to present you with a summary of seven of our favourites: BrightSource Energy BrightSource Energy (formerly Luz) is building solar power plants for utility and industrial companies around the world. Combining decades of experience in designing, building and operating some of the world’s largest solar power plants, BrightSource is contracted to generate 2,6 gigawatts of power using its solar thermal technology. BrightSource and Southern California Edison signed the world’s largest solar energy deal in February this year. Founded by Arnold J Goldman, the company’s mission is to minimise its impact on the environment and to help customers reduce their dependence on fossil fuels. With more than $160 million in financing, key investors and clients include Google, PG&E, Chevron, Morgan Stanley and Vantage Point Venture Partners. ZenithSolar Zenith Solar develops solar energy power plants based on the technology of Prof David Faimon of Ben-Gurion University in the Negev. The core technology is a large optical dish upon which multiple flat mirrors are mounted. The company says that the system will harvest more than 70 per cent of incoming solar energy (compared to industry averages of 10 per cent to 40 per cent). ZenithSolar already has a solar farm on Kibbutz Yavne that is supplying energy and hot water to 250 families. Investors include private business people from the US and Israel. AORA AORA (formerly EDIG) has based its tech- nology on the shape of a flower. Alarmingly beautiful, the company focuses heliostats into the “petals” of its massive solar collector, which was revealed recently at the pilot plant in Israel’s Negev Desert. The world’s first solar thermal gas-turbine power station is based on the research of Prof Jacob Karni, director of the Centre for Energy Research at the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot, Israel, and has been funded by EZKlein. 21 AORA’s “flowers”. Spain, and a 553-megawatt project, the Mojave Solar Park 1, in California’s Mojave Desert. Major investors and clients include PG&E, Ecofin and private Belgian investors. Tigo Energy Tigo Energy aims to take a stab at squeezing more power from existing power plants. The company has developed a box that renders these plants more efficient. Tigo Energy’s technology includes a real-time, always on monitoring system that it has devised so that power plant operators can receive constant updates on the performance of individual photovoltaic panels. Investors include Matrix Partners, OVP Venture Partners, and the IDB Group. Sales of the Maximizer technology are expected to begin within the next few months. DiSP Distributed Solar Power holds promise for industrial rooftops. Based on the technology of Prof Avi Kribus from Tel Aviv University, the DiSP solar collectors are small, but pack a lot of punch. According to their estimates, they will be able to collect up to 75 per cent of the sun’s power and convert it to electricity. The technology is novel because it combines both a micro-sized solar concentrator and a heat transfer system, meaning that the sunlight can be used to heat water thermally, while also providing electricity to turn on your air-con. In 2006, Israel21c featured DiSP as the first in a series of articles about alternative energy solutions from Israel. Solel Solar Solel is one of Israel’s most talked about solar energy companies, up there with BrightSource and ZenithSolar. Building solar thermal power plants in Spain and the US, Solel has invested 14 years’ worth of R&D to improve the annual electrical output of solar fields. German electronics giant Siemens has just purchased Solel for $418 million. Solel is currently building plants in Enstorage Based on the research of Prof Emanuel Peled at Tel Aviv University, Enstorage develops low-cost energy storage systems for solar and wind-powered plants. While the way the sun shines throughout the day is variable, Enstorage’s technology helps generate an even flow transmission back to the grid. Current investors include Siemens, Wellington Partners, Canaan Partners and Greylock Partners. (Israel21c) Can Jewish tenets be a model for an eco-friendly world? that the Jewish tradition of shmita is inherently green, as it helps prevent overuse of arable land, which may HAVE JEWS been “green” for millenlead to erosion and poorer harvests. nia without knowing it? The conference, hosted by Prince A Jewish delegation made the case Philip, took place a month ahead of this week to a climate-change conferthe UN Climate Change Conference in ence in Britain, arguing for eco-friendCopenhagen and was aimed at ly measures based on the Jewish tenets increasing pressure on world leaders of Shabbat, kashrut and shmita, the to reach an agreement on greenhouse injunction to let land lie fallow every gas emissions when they meet in the seventh year. Danish capital. Titled “Many Heavens, One Earth”, “The challenges that the world UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, far right, and Prince the conference at Windsor Palace in faces today are considerable, and this Britain invited representatives of nine Philip of Britain, second from right, meet with two repreconference gave a renewed sense of religions from around the world to offer sentatives of the Jewish delegation to the “Many Heavens, hope for what is possible,” said Nigel their perspectives on climate change One Earth” environmental conference at Windsor Palace, Savage, founder of the Jewish enviand the environment. ronmental group Hazon and one of on November 4. (PHOTOGRAPH: ARC/RICHARD STONEHOUSE) The proposal of the Jewish delegathe Jewish delegates to the conferresident in a major city chose one day of the tion, which included members from Israel, ence. week to refrain from driving, there would be North America and Europe, stressed the “It is clear that a significant point has immediate improvement to the city’s conenvironmental benefits of Shabbat, arguing been reached in the commitment of the comgestion, air quality and carbon emissions.” that non-Jewish communities can adopt the munities to make a difference on climate The proposal also included ways that Jews principle of a day of rest to help cut down on change in the next seven years.” can be more environmentally conscious. For pollution. On November 19, Hazon plans to launch a instance, the document urged observant “For the broader global community, the coast-to-coast, “topsy-turvy” tour of a bus Jews to consider ways of consuming more model of Shabbat is useful in demonstrating powered by vegetable oil. Starting in New locally produced kosher food instead of how to live, if only for one day a week, withYork, the tour aims to spread Hazon’s mesproducts transported from afar. It also noted out consuming,” the proposal said. “If every sage of environmentalism across the United GIL SHEFLER NEW YORK States. Savage said the gathering at Windsor represented a unique occasion for religious leaders and activists to come together peacefully to address a burning environmental issue. Other attendees included UN SecretaryGeneral Ban Ki-Moon and Egypt’s grand mufti, Ali Gomaa. Among the Jewish delegates were Rabbi Zalman SchachterShalomi, former Israeli minister Rabbi Michael Melchior and Jerusalem Deputy Mayor Naomi Tsur. Perhaps the most ambitious goal included in the Jewish proposal was to “turn Israel into the first nation predominantly powered by renewable energy sources”. “The state is presently 70 per cent powered by coal,” said Yosef Abramowitz, president of the Arava Power Company, which is building Israel’s first commercial solar field in the Negev desert. “Our recommendation is to go from 10 per cent to 30 per cent use of solar power, and we have a very specific way to get there. “Everybody has not just to green their churches, synagogues and mosques, but to seal the deal at Copenhagen,” he said. “Otherwise we’re all complicit morally.” (JTA) 13 - 20 November 2009 22 SA JEWISH REPORT NOTICES THE JEWISH REPORT RUNS ADVERTS IN THE CLASSIFIED SECTION IN GOOD FAITH, HOWEVER WE WOULD LIKE OUR READERS TO KNOW WE CANNOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE QUALITY OF SERVICES OFFERED AND CLAIMS MADE. CONSECRATIONS CAPE TOWN MONUMENTAL ART Est. 1949 TOMBSTONES REPAIRS QUALITY SERVICE ALL CEMETERY REQUIREMENTS Contact: Cantor Ian Camissar Tel: (021) 434-5664 Cell: 072-679-5533 camissar@mweb.co.za COMMUNITY NOTICES IF YOU ARE A GOLFER AND WILL BE IN PLETT IN DECEMBER PLEASE JOIN IN THE PLETT SHUL FUNDRAISING GOLF TOURNAMENT To book your classified notice contact: Tel (011) 886-0162 Fax (011) 886-4202 email: brittl@global.co.za PERSONAL SOULMATES (Countrywide) WHY DONT YOU MEET YOUR SOULMATE? BEAUTIFUL/HANDSOME SINGLES SEEK MATCHES Beautiful blonde attorney 25yr; handsome CA 29yr; advocates 31, 45, 58yrs; pretty blonde receptionist 57; good looking plumber (own business) 46 yr; handsome attorney 66; pretty blonde architect 28yr; charismatic goodlooking CA (own business) 40yr; beautiful pharmacist 32yr; elegant petite hairdresser 38yr; good looking engineer 45yr; beautiful architect 45yr; handsome exec 46yr; pretty financial consultant 48yr; handsome CA (SA) masters 31yr; good looking grad BSc (phar) 53yr; pretty jewellery mnfg 50yr; pretty grad 29yr; charismastic handsome prof man 68yr; stunnning doctors 28, 36, 43, 49, 58 62yr; handsome attorneys 29, 38, 46, 56yr etc, etc. MANY OTHER PRETTY/HANDSOME PROF/EXEC/BUSINESS SINGLES ARE WAITING TO MEET YOU! SANDY (011) 485-4034/ 082-357-3616 DERECH CHESED Visitors wanted for old Jewish Russian man in jail. A big Chesed & great Mitzvah to visit him. Details: Asher: Cell: 072-270-0460 magnets@office.co.za SERVICES AIRPORT SHUTTLE JHB Reliable, Reasonable Rates! Contact Arnold, 082-447-0185 011-454-1193 LIFTS LIFTS PROFESSIONAL & BUSINESS EX ISRAELI SERVICEMAN offers safe and secure lifts. 24-hrs. Airport lifts from R170 also appointments, malls, courier etc from R60. Call Neil 072-050-9927 OFFICE ADMINISTRATION SERVICE OFFERED FROM HOME Incl: bookkeeping, typing, invoicing, banking, etc. MBA degree. Let me look after your office admin while you concentrate on growing & developing your business. Reasonable rates. Freda (011) 882-8204 Experienced, reliable driver available to lift you anywhere/anytime. 24 hrs. Call Paul 083-542-6480 LIFTS PERSONAL FRIDAY, 25TH DECEMBER FOR ENTRY DETAILS PLEASE CONTACT DESIREE COHEN desjack@telkomsa.net Phone: (044) 533-0120 Cell: 082-923-7626 COMPUTERS HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED ADVERT: 1. Only adverts sent via email to brittl@global.co.za will be accepted. 2. You will be advised on cost & payment details. 3. Payment is prior to the advert appearing. 4. DEADLINE for BOOKING and PAYMENT is Tuesday 12pm. If deadline is missed the advert will appear (when payment is received) in the next edition. Our banking details: SA Jewish Report, Nedbank Randburg, Account Number: 1984 514 865, Branch Code: 198405 A-TAXI SERVICE Let Warren Pogorelsky chauffeur you to your destination in Jo’burg and back only R100 round trip. Tel: 082-399-6187 AIRPORT SHUTTLE HOLIDAY SPECIAL ----- R150 ---From N/E Suburbs. (Until December 31st) Reasonable prices from all other areas. SAM (011) 728-5219 083-627-8516 AL’S LIFT SERVICE Safe, Reliable, Reasonable ANYWHERE – ANYTIME To: Schools, Shops, Doctors, Appointments, Airports etc. Alan 082-879-8111 or (011) 442-6404 CAPE TOWN HOWIE'S SHUTTLE Airport transfers General lifting Scenic drives Day trips Driver for hire. Full passenger liability cover. Phone Howard 082-711-4616 CAPE TOWN SHUTTLE COMING TO CAPE TOWN? AFFORDABLE RATES. AIRPORT TRANSFERS FROM R160 NEW COMFORTABLE VEHICLE PHONE ANDY 082-336-9780 IRENE'S SCHLEP SERVICE I will take you anywhere: School, Shops, Doctor, Friends and Airport. Honest and trustworthy. Schlepped by Irene 072-356-0282 Not on Shabbat GENERAL GLENHAZEL Close to Ohr Somayach, large n/f one bed flats with balcony. Avail. Dec & Jan from R4000 pm. Call Debbie 082-300-5656 HOME SERVICES GLENHAZEL AREA New cottage to rent 1st December. Call 084-9111-855. GENERAL HANDY GRAMPS Household, general repairs and maintenance. MITCH 072-196-1939 LIFTS AVAILABLE For all age groups and to all areas in JHB, Sandton and Airport. Contact Johnny 082-328-3070 or 082-876-9042 ACCOMMODATION TO LET/SHARE HAZELWOOD Sunny 2-bed GARDEN unit, R6 500pm. Avail: Dec ‘09/Jan 2010 (011) 640-4287 072-225-5576 SECURITY HOLIDAY ACCOMMODATION Holiday Home to Rent - Dover Heights, Sydney. ABSOLUTELY ALL Home repairs, General maintenance and electrical, 24 hours Call Mendel 084 559 7923 (011) 640-1429 Pensioners 10% discount PROPERTY Avail Dec ‘09 - Jan ‘10 Modern, spacious, sun-filled, 4 bed - 1 king w ensuite. 1 Queen, 2 King singles Swimming pool, close to public transport, Walking distance to Bondi Beach $6500/w or $1000/d sheri@ctce.com.au RAYMOND K'S LIFTS A reliable lift service. Specialising in lifts to & from airports, shops, appointments, companion. Call Raymond 076-481-1495 SMILE-LEE'S LIFTS A reliable lift service. Specialising in lifts to and from airports, shops, appointments, casinos and courier. Call Charna 083-391-6612 SEA POINT BEACHFRONT Apartment in secure central block with best views of coastline. Main bed suite with spa bath & dresing room. Second bed with own bath. Seafront views from every room. Avail now - Dec 27th. Rent neg depending on length of stay. Phone 083-411-1010 /or (011) 726-7934 for more details & a picture portfolio of apartment. 13 - 20 November 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT 23 HOLIDAY ACCOMMODATION VACANCIES ZIMBALI LUXURY ACCOMODATION Dec/Jan. 3 bedrooms all ensuite. 2 Lounges. Ducted airconditioning. On golf course with own golf cart. Beautifully furnished. R3 800.00 per day. Phone 083-254-4820 AVAILABLE TIMESHARE KWA MARITANE TIMESHARE 14-21 Dec and or 21-28/12/2009 Rental 8 sleeper Private Heated Pool Overlooks Pilanesberg Reserve Hailey 083-273-7950 PROPERTY FOR SALE MUIZENBERG CINNABAR Stunning views – 3 beds, 2 baths. Also one bed – breathtaking views! ARLINGTON COURT Lake and sea views. 4 spacious rooms & maid’s room. THE TIDES 3 beds, 2 baths. Sea views. EMPIRE 3 beds 2 baths, guest cloak, spacious. Lounge/d.room, open-plan kitchen. Superior finishes! Wooden deck with sea views. Call Jean Tockar 072-342-0510 DOMESTIC WORKER WANTED In Edenvale. Must be honest, reliable, able to cook and have contactable references. Sleep in/out and preferably older. Contact Colin/Caron 083-469-4876 ATHOLL AREA Maid required, live out, good cook and excellent child minder. Min 5 year experience. Good refs required. Tel: 083-601-2237 EARN EXTRA MONEY DURING SCHOOL HOLIDAYS (SUMMER, WINTER, PESACH, ETC) by working as a Beth Din mashgiach! We regularly need persons to fill in for our mashgichim who take annual leave. For more information and to receive an application, please contact Gila Jacobson at (011) 485-4865, ext 220. AVAILABLE TEACHING STAFF REQUIRED We are looking for the following Grade 8 teachers: Maths – 3.5 hrs p/ week English – 3 hrs p/week Afrikaans – 2 hrs p/week Natural Science – 3.5 hrs p/week Technology – 1hr p/week All positions are for between 1 and 4pm, Monday to Friday Salary is negotiable. Please contact David on 083-415-4849 during office hours The Green and Sea Point Hebrew Congregation Are looking for an Administration Manager who has at least 3-5 years of office administration and management experience. Please forward all CV’s to admin@maraisroadshul.com GRADE 6 SECULAR TEACHING POST Contact Karen (011) 532-9612 RETIRED CA Qualified CA with experience in manufacturing, service industries and retail environments. Proficient in Word, Excel, Accpac, Pastel and Cispro. Open to a part time or general bookkeeping position. Ref 4912 SALES (BRIAN KOZINSKY) Well presented, capable male with 20 years experience in sales industry. Has dealt with marketing, sourcing new clients and servicing key accounts. Ref 905 MANAGER Gent with specific experience in the restaurant and corporate toner and stationery supply fields. Hard working and not a “clock watcher”. Commended for his ability run a business. Ref 5444 A vacancy exists at Torah Academy Primary School for a Grade 6 secular teacher. To commence on January 2010. Please e-mail CV to Pam Yachad at yachad@ torahacademy.co.za Only short-listed candidates will be contacted. VEHICLES WANTED ARE YOU IMMIGRATING OVERSEAS AND WANT TO SELL YOUR VEHICLE? Please Contact Solly Kramer 082-922-3597 anytime Can German Jewry sustain boost from Russian immigrants? STORY AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY TOBY AXELROD BERLIN ONE OF the most remarkable transformations in Europe since the fall of communism, is the return of Jewish life in the country that generated the Holocaust. Until the fall of the Berlin Wall 20 years ago last week, postwar Jewish life in Germany was “more a museum piece than something living”, said Kuf Kaufmann, who emigrated here from Russia in 1990 and now heads the Jewish community in Leipzig. “Today it is very lively socially, religiously and culturally.” In 1989, Germany had only about 30 000 Jews. Then the doors to the east opened and about 220 000 people of Jewish lineage from the former Soviet republics, poured in, about half of whom were Jewish by matrilineal descent, according to a new report by the Central Council of Jews in Germany. The immigrants sought economic opportunities and an escape from anti-Semitism, and they chose Germany over Israel. In all, about 90 000 of the immigrants registered as members of Germany’s Jewish communities, quadrupling the country’s pre-1989 Jewish population. Lala Suesskind, president of Berlin’s Jewish community, sees in the immigrants parallels to her parents’ experience as refugees from the Soviet interior in 1947. “At first they did not feel great because they did not speak the language. And then they got jobs, and then they joined the Jewish community, and then their children decided: ‘This is my town’,” Suesskind said. “It is the same with our people arriving today,” she said. The older generations may have trouble adjusting, but their children and grandchildren “are all part of our Jewish life in Berlin”. The influx of immigrants ended in 2005, when Germany adopted new rules on immigration that made it more difficult for would-be immigrants. The move came in part due to pressure from Israel, which saw Germany as a competitor for immigrants from the former Soviet Union. While the immigration has transformed Germany’s Jewish community, it also has brought with it the need for more rabbis, outreach to Kuf Kaufmann, head of the Leipzig Jewish community, centre, at a Torah dedication ceremony there in 2005. unaffiliated Jews and questions about how to deal with Russian immigrants who are not Jewish according to halachah, but want to be part of the Jewish community. In Germany, as in most of Europe, even Reform congregations adhere to Orthodox halachah when it comes to the question of who is a Jew. “We have to learn from them, to better understand them,” Rabbi Joel Berger, the former chief rabbi of Wurttemberg, said in the report issued by Germany’s Jewish umbrella group. “We have to work together actively to preserve our traditions. There’s no room for passivity and pessimism.” Some worry that Germany’s Jewish institutions are failing to ensure that the numeric boost to the Jewish community will be enough to ensure a future threatened by assimilation. “Cultural identity cannot last more than one generation,” said Julia Itin, 24, who came to Dortmund from Odessa, Ukraine in 2000, after first going to Israel. “They have to add in a bit of religion, in any form,” she says, otherwise many “will be lost to the Jewish people.” Itin, now a university researcher and teacher, has become involved with Jewish causes, volunteering for the Limmud Jewish educational festival in Germany. Similarly, Renat Fischbach, 28, who arrived from Czernowitz, Ukraine in 1990, discovered a Jewish youth centre and later founded a debating club for Jewish youth called Jewbating. Fischbach said he “always felt more aligned with the smart Renat Fischbach, outside the Jewish community centre in West Berlin. Russian kids than with the established German families. And in 10 years, these are going to be the minds who lead the community.” Sipping black currant tea at the Baku cafe in Berlin, Svetlana Agronik, who co-ordinates Russian social and educational programmes for Berlin’s Jewish community, recalls how she came here in 1991. “Life had been good in Russia, but suddenly there was no bread,” she said. “We took a vacation to visit friends and I did not return to Russia for 12 years.” Once here, Agronick said she asked herself: “Am I really lucky? These Germans killed so many Jews. But for my daughter Marina, I had to do it.” Nevertheless, Agronick admits some disappointment. Marina, has little connection to Judaism, and Marina’s boyfriend, who is the father of her child, is a German nonJew. When he belatedly learned that Marina was Jewish, he told her he was glad because he had heard that all Jews are rich. Boris Vainrub also has mixed feelings about Germany. His first preference was to live in Israel, where he landed a good job after emigrating from Russia in 1990. But then the Gulf War broke out and Iraqi Scud missiles were raining down on Ramat Gan. Vainrib said his family fled to Germany, where they were among 300 Israelis given refugee status in Germany at the time. Vainrib, now the owner of an electronics store, said he felt “morally better in Israel. But Germany is calmer.” (JTA) Connection between depression and osteoporosis detailed JERUSALEM - Research carried out among thousands of people, has shown a clear connection between depression and a loss of bone mass, leading to osteoporosis and fractures. This was revealed by Hebrew University of Jerusalem researchers, Prof Raz Yirmiya, head of the Brain and Behaviour Laboratory, and Prof Itai Bab, head of the Bone Laboratory. They further revealed that the relationship between depression and bone loss is particularly strong among young women. Osteoporosis is the most widespread degenerative disease in the developed world, afflicting one in three women and one in five over 50. Sufferers experience decrease in bone density, which often leads to bone fractures. In many cases, these fractures cause severe disability and even death. Despite the accumulating evidence for a connection between depression and decreased bone density, official authorities, such as the US National Institutes of Health and the World Health Organisation, have not yet bone (osteoclasts). acknowledged depression Yirmiya and Bab found as a risk factor for osteothat the association porosis, due to the lack of between depression and studies in large samples. bone loss was stronger in To remedy this, the women than men, espeHebrew University recially young women searchers assembled the before the end of their data from all studies on monthly period. This the subject conducted to connection was especialdate, and analysed them ly strong in women with using a special statistical clinical depression diagapproach called meta- Professor Raz nosed by a psychiatrist, analysis. but not in community Yirmiya. The results were recentstudies, in which women ly reported in the journal subjectively identified themselves Biological Psychiatry. In the article, as being depressed, using self-ratthe Hebrew University scientists ing questionnaires. assessed data from 23 research Based on the present findings, projects conducted in eight coun- Yirmiya and Bab propose that “all tries, comparing bone density individuals psychiatrically diagamong 2 327 people suffering from nosed with major depression are at depression against 21 141 non- risk for developing osteoporosis, depressed individuals. with depressed young women The results, say the researchers, showing the highest risk. show clearly that depressed indi“These patients should be periodviduals have a substantially lower ically evaluated for progression of bone density than non-depressed bone loss and signs of osteoporosis, people and that depression is asso- allowing the use of anti-osteoporotciated with a markedly elevated ic prophylactic and therapeutic activity of cells that break down treatments.” 24 SA JEWISH REPORT 13 - 20 November 2009 Singular honour for Redman tops boards SA’s Jody Scheckter in rain-hit Q-School JACK MILNER JACK MILNER FORMER FORMULA 1 world champion Jody Schekter has been named as one of the 10 all-time great Jewish sportsmen on a website called Great Jews.net. The son of a Renault dealer, Scheckter grew up in the Eastern Cape and dreamt of becoming a racing star at an early age. He raced for Europe at 20, eventually joining Enzo Ferrari’s Grand Prix team. “As a driver, Scheckter was known as difficult and distant,” says The Washington Post. Anything that did not directly relate to his goal of winning races was shut out. “He didn’t win popularity, but he did win races.” In all, Scheckter drove 112 times in the Grand Prix, ending in the world championship in 1979. Soon after, he retired. Following a successful business career, Scheckter became a “gentleman farmer” in the UK. It is interesting to note the full Top 10 Jewish sportsmen and women. Of course, this is an American site so there is not much about cricket and rugby. But other than Scheckter, here are the other nine. Benny Leonard (Benjamin Leiner) (born 1896, New York, NY, USA; died 1947, New York, NY, USA) He was one of the greatest lightweight boxers of all time and world titleholder from 1917 until he retired, undefeated, in 1925. After losing all his money in the 1929 stock market crash, he made a brief comeback as a welterweight at the age of 35. He served as a lieutenant commander in the US Maritime Service in the Second World War and in 1943 returned to boxing as a referee. He was made a member of the Boxing Hall of Fame and the Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. Harold (Maurice) Abrahams (born 1889, Bedford, England, UK; died 1978, London, England, UK) This athlete won gold in the 100m dash at the 1924 Paris Olympics. Born into an athletic family, he started racing as a boy and continued as a student at Cambridge, where he became president of the university’s Athletics Club. The film “Chariots of Fire” (1981) portrayed his rivalry with the Scottish sprinter Eric Liddell. In later life he became president of the Amateur Athletics Association as well as a respected writer and broadcaster. Mark Spitz (born 1950, Modesto, California, USA) This swimming phenomenon won bronze and silver medals and two team gold medals at the 1968 Mexico City Olympic Games. He went on to compete at the 1972 Munich Olympics, where he became the first athlete to win seven gold medals at one Games, including four for individual events. He set 23 swimming world records in his five year career. Daniel Mendoza (born 1764, London, England, died 1836) This bareknuckle pugilist became the first Jewish champion fighter. Billed as “Mendoza the Jew”, his boxing success and popularity gained him social acceptance and helped to ease the position of the Jewish community in England. He introduced a style using footwork and defence rather than brute force and is considered the father of scientific boxing. He was inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 1981. Jody Scheckter has been named as one of the top 10 Jewish sportsman of all time. Hank Greenberg (Henry Benjamin Greenberg) (born 1911, New York, NY, USA; died 1986, Beverly Hills, California, USA) He was an all-round athlete at school, who became a major league baseball player and was one of the dominant players in the game in the 1930s and ‘40s. In 1938 he challenged Babe Ruth’s 60 home run record but fell short at 58. He was the first Jewish ballplayer to be elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame and in 2006 was included in a set of US postage stamps featuring baseball hitters. Eva Szekely (Gyarmati) (born 1927, Budapest, Hungary) This champion swimmer competed in three Olympic Games, winning a gold medal in the 200-metre breaststroke in Helsinki in 1952 and silver in Melbourne in 1956. During her career she broke 10 world records and five Olympic records. In 2004 she was elected Sportswoman of the Nation in Hungary and in 2006 was awarded the Jean Borotra Trophy by the World Olympians Association. Fanny “Bobbie” Rosenfeld (born 1904, Katrinaslov, Russia; died 1969, Toronto, Canada) This talented Canadian track and field athlete set national records in the long jump, shot put, javelin and discus. She also played basketball, hockey, softball, and tennis. In 1925 she equalled the world record in the 100-yard dash, and at the 1928 Olympics in Amsterdam she won a gold medal as lead-off leg of the 100-metre relay team that set a world record of 48,4 seconds. In 1950 the Canadian Press named her as Canada’s Female Athlete of the Half-Century. Benjamin “Benny” Friedman (born 1905, Cleveland, Ohio, USA; died 1982, New York, NY, USA) He was a collegiate and professional footballer, and considered the game’s first great passer. Between 1927 and 1931 he quarterbacked the Cleveland, Detroit and New York Giants football teams. He ended his professional career with the Brooklyn Dodgers, retiring in 1934 to take up coaching. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2005. Viktor Barna (born 1911 in Budapest, Hungary; died 1972, Lima, Peru) He was a brilliant table tennis player who was five times World Singles Champion between 1930 and 1935. In all he won 22 world championship gold medals and was a member of the Hungarian National Team that won seven Swaythling Cups. He served in the British army during the Second World War and afterwards settled in London. In 1993 he was elected a charter member of the International Table Tennis Hall of Fame, and in his native Hungary he was honoured as “the most successful Hungarian sportsman of the twentieth century”. JAKE REDMAN is fast turning out to be one of South Africa’s most promising golfers and he showed his prowess this past week by winning the Sunshine Tour 2010 Qualifying School on the Vaal De Grace course near Parys on the Vaal River. The 22-year-old amateur not only won the event, he pulverised the opposition by an amazing five shots. Jake’s four magnificent rounds of 65, 69, 69, 69 saw him finish on 16under-par 272, to give him a five-stroke margin over second-placed Andrew Georgiou, and a further three clear of Grant Veenstra and Justin Harding. It was his opening 65 which set the Fancourt-based player on his way, and he was never headed during a week of waiting because of frequent weather disruptions. There were better scores than his three consecutive 69s, but that kind of consistency is exactly what is needed in a tough tournament like a qualifying school. The Qualifying School is normally played over five rounds but owing to the extreme weather conditions experienced at this year’s event, only four rounds of golf were played. Interestingly Jake still played as an amateur but he has now laid the foundation for turning professional. Currently ranked seven in South Africa and 80 on the world amateur ranking list, Jake also played at the Maccabiah this year. He also was a member of the South African team that participated in the Africa Golf Team Championship at the Dreamland Golf and Tennis Resort in Cairo from September 29 to October 2. Jake was the senior player in the team. Having had some experience overseas this year, including playing the Barrett Amateur Championship, the Fancourt and Southern Cape player was expected to play an important role in the team. Ironically the South African team won but Jake did not do that well. But it may not have been entirely to blame as his luggage had failed to arrive. Golfer Jake Redman earned his Sunshine Tour card for 2010 after winning the Tour School by five shots.