Aug - Jewish Federation of Tulsa
Transcription
Aug - Jewish Federation of Tulsa
JewishTulsa.org The Tulsa Jewish Review August 2010 • Av 5770 Volume 81, Number 8 Irwin Kula Speaks at Frank Memorial Lecture Jewish Campers Build Jewish Identity Jews On First? Garrett Wittles At Bat www.JewishTulsa.org JFT Helps Build Jewish Identity BARRY ABelS EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, JEWISH FEDERATION OF TULSA It feels like yesterday. I was having a conversation with Martha Kelley, our CSJCC Youth Programs Director, about preparations for Camp Shalom. Then I blinked and we are nearly at summer’s end. Camp Shalom has one more week and some folks are fitting in their last vacations before school starts. For many of our Jewish youth it was a very full summer. Campers at Camp Shalom enjoyed art, cooking, golf, soccer, drama and a wide variety of other activities. And with this summer’s heat they especially enjoyed swimming at our wonderful pool. Camp Shalom is also an opportunity for our young teens to experience their first jobs as counselors in training and as junior counselors. Every morning as I entered the building parents and children were signing in and connecting with CIT’s to get to their activities. It was loud and boisterous, with kids laughing and smiling — full of expectations of a fun day. When asking campers at the end of the day, “Did you have fun at camp today?” I always got back an enthusiastic “Yes!” Other pre-teen and teen Jewish Tulsans had great experiences attending Greene Family Camp, Camp Ramah, and Camp Sabra. These Jewish overnight camps have long been the summer destinations for Tulsa youth and this summer was no exception. Twenty-four of our kids attended these camps — with 19 attending Greene Family alone. Ten young Jewish Tulsans took trips to Israel, some on the five week Temple Israel’s confirmation trip and others on trips ranging from three weeks to one that will last through the fall school semester. Whether it is Camp Shalom, Greene, Ramah or Israel, our young people will come away with a Jewish experience. It might be Shabbat, saying a motzi before eating or experiencing an archeological dig. It might be being around more Jewish kids than usual. These summer programs allow our youth to experience things as Jewish kids — from a Jewish perspective. Even with the large number of kids from the general Tulsa community that attend Camp Shalom, they too experience learning Hebrew words, they are exposed to Israel’s history and culture, lighting Shabbat candles and more. I am sure you have heard this before, but to reiterate, trips to Israel and attending Jewish summer camps do more to ensure a child will chose to identify as Jewish, and practice Jewish faith and traditions than any other experience outside of home influence. We are fortunate that so many Tulsa parents promote and encourage these experiences and that the community, through the Federation’s various special funds, ensures that any child, regardless of means, can participate. It is without a doubt one of the most important functions that your Federation provides to our community and your children. Every year Federation budgets between $25,000 and $30,000 for Jewish Intensification that funds a portion of the children that attend the different overnight camps and some of the Israel trips. These funds are matched by the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation. Twenty-one of our overnight campers received some level of stipend and all of the students going to Israel on trips other than the Confirmands trip, received stipends. Confirmation students can take advantage of having one-third of their experience funded by the Brodsky/Robinowitz Confirmands Endowment, specifically established in the JFT Foundation to support those trips. And for some Camp Shalom campers, their experience is made possible by support from the Dave R. Sylvan Camp Scholarship Fund. I am positive that we are having an impact on these young people’s lives by sending them to Jewish camps and to Israel. Many of these kids write me when they return telling me of their experiences, what the summer meant to them, and to thank the Federation for the support. Together, we’re making a difference in their lives. Sites To See Looking for the latest Jewish & Israeli news and information? Try these sites! The Tulsa Jewish Review (ISSN # 2154-0209) is published monthly by the Jewish Federation of Tulsa 2021 E. 71st St., Tulsa, OK 74136. Periodicals Postage Paid at Tulsa, OK POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Jewish Federation of Tulsa, 2021 E. 71st St., Tulsa, OK 74136 Jason Brimer Editor editor@jewishtulsa.org 918-852-3838 Marcia Weinstein Advertising Representative metmama@sbcglobal.net 918-746-0478 Rick Cohn Advertising Representative rick.cohn@cox.net 918-407-7328 Jewish Federation of Tulsa Gloria Estlin President, Jewish Federation of Tulsa www.jewishpress.com www.tabletmag.com www.jta.org www.forward.com Founded in 1930 by Tulsa Section, National Council of Jewish Women • Published by the Jewish Federation of Tulsa Over $18,000 raised by the Jewish Federation of Tulsa’s emergency campaign, initiated shortly after last January’s earthquake in Haiti, is part of the $7.4 million raised by the Federations throughout the country. Our Federation-supported partners, JDC, along with ORT and VOAD, are working with many international NGOs to help Haiti rebuild. • JDC, together with ORT, has invested in training 900 Hatian construction workers. • JDC, together with Magen David Adom and Israel’s Tel HaShomer hospital, has launched a comprehensive rehabilitation center for amputees in Haiti’s largest hospital, Hospital Universite D’etat D’Haiti. • In partnership with the Israel Trauma Coalition, JDC is reaching out to hundreds of religious leaders, key community figures, and school principals to equip them with tools to identify and respond to those suffering from post traumatic stress disorder. • The JDC is building clean water towers, installing more than 80 so far that provide 440,000 gallons daily for hundreds of thousands of people. Paula Milsten Vice-Chair JewishTulsa: The Tulsa Jewish Review • JDC the NGO Prodev created after-school activities at the tent cities for young people Barry A. Abels Executive Director David Bernstein Director, Community Relations To Submit Story Ideas, Letters and Opinions to the Editor: Jason Brimer 918.852.3838 editor@JewishTulsa.org Advertising Deadline Reservations, August 13th Material, August 20th Contribute Today to A JFT Fund! www.jpost.com Haiti Emergency Campaign Shirley Burger Chair JewishTulsa: The Tulsa Jewish Review Editorial Deadline August13th www.haaretz.com Your Gifts at work Charlotte Miller March of the Living Fund Scholarships for March of the Living trips to Auschwitz and Israel JFT Building Facility Endowment Fund Enables enhancements and capital improvements to Center Building Jewish Federation of Tulsa Officers and Board Gloria C. Estlin, President Alex Goldberg, Vice President and President Elect Klara Bode, Vice President Harvey Cohen, Treasurer Lori Frank, Secretary Philip Kaiser, Asst. Secretary Board Members Alice Blue Karen Blum Fred Benjamin Klara Bode Shirley Burger Sharon Cash Harvey Cohen Drew Diamond Gloria Estlin Lori Frank Alex Goldberg Cindy Guterman Philip Kaiser Edward Kaplan Ginny Katz Myron Katz Mark Lobo Andy Marcum Paula Milsten Shiela Mudd Leor Roubein John Sieler Fred Strauss Barbara Sylvan Eva Unterman Ryan Welner Jack Zanerhaft Corrected from the June issue - editor The Mission of the Jewish Federation of Tulsa is to preserve and enhance Jewish life and well-being in Eastern Oklahoma, Israel, and the entire world. Turn On. Tune In. Shvitz Out. Rabbi Irwin Kula to Deliver Frank Memorial Lecture Rabbi Irwin Kula, President of CLAL (The National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership), will deliver the second annual Irv and Sharna Frank Memorial Lecture in Judaism and Contemporary Issues. Kula’s lecture, Judaism in the 21st Century: Taking Jewish Wisdom Public, will take place at the Sylvan Auditorium of the Shusterman JCC at 7:00 pm on Sunday, August 22nd. The lecture will be followed by a reception. Rabbi Kula—who knew the Franks, and studied with their dear friend Irving “Yitz” Greenberg—is the author of several award-winning texts on religion and spirituality, including Yearnings: Embracing the Sacred Messiness of Life. He has appeared on numerous television programs (including the Today Show, The Oprah Winfrey Show, and Frontline), and has hosted two television specials, Simple Wisdom with Irwin Kula and The Hidden Wisdom of Our Yearnings. Kula received the 2008 Walter Cronkite Faith and Freedom Award, and has made Newsweek’s annual list of “Top 50 Rabbis in America” four years in a row. Rabbi Kula plays an important part in the 2002 PBS special Faith and Doubt at Ground Zero, in which he was filmed chanting cell phone calls and text messages sent by people trapped in the World Trade Center to their family members and friends. In the film, Kula answers the question “Where was God on 9/11?” by explaining that God was present in these messages, which are pure expressions of love between human beings. The day after Faith and Doubt at Ground Zero first aired, Kula received 3,000 emails from viewers across the religious spectrum. The Frank Lecture honors Irv and Sharna’s creative vision and foresight by providing a forum for the serious exploration of Judaism and contemporary issues. Last year’s lecturer was David A. Harris, Executive Director of the American Rabbi Irwin Kula will deliver the second annual Irv and Sharna Frank Memorial Lecture Sunday, August 22 at the CSJCC. Jewish Committee. For more information about the lecture, please call Mindy Prescott at 495-1100 x112, or email her at mprescott@jewishtulsa.org. JewishTulsa Web Extra For an interview with Rabbi Kula, go to our Web site, www.JewishTulsa.org. JCPA Works to Pass Child Nutrition Act (JTA) The Jewish Federation of Tulsa’s Community Relations Committee’s national organization, the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, encouraged the U.S. House of Representatives to pass a child nutrition funding act before its August recess. The House Committee on Education and Labor approved the act on July 15 in a 32-13 vote, and it will now be considered by the full body. The bill reauthorizes funding that would improve the quality of school-based food programs and make more students eligible to receive them. “It is incredibly important that Congress continues to take steps to ensure these programs are fully funded and our nation’s most vulnerable children have access to those programs that can most benefit them,” said JCPA Chair Conrad Giles and President Rabbi Steve Gutow in a statement. “Time is running out and Congress must act as 2 JewishTulsa soon as possible.” JCPA’s There Shall be no Needy Among You initiative aims to eliminate poverty in the U.S. It was launched in 2007 to help advance legislation and programs that provide food, shelter, work and education to those who need them. “Child nutrition is one of the things we’re most concerned about, both on a local and national level,” said the JFT’s Community Relations Committee Chairperson Alice Blue. Save The Date The Jewish Federation of Tulsa presents a comprehensive program on Jewish Genetic Diseases Sunday, October 10th • 2:00 - 4:30 p.m. Couch potato? Exercise nut? Why not the be best of both? The Fitness Center at the CSJCC features Personal Entertainment Player outfitted Precor cardiovascular equipment, letting you watch videos from your iPod or tune in shows on cable while you improve your health and shed some pounds. So get off of the couch and go watch some TV. Try A Week For Free! Feel like working out, or just catching up on your shows? Try a week on us. For a guest pass, contact Amy Underwood at 918-495-1111 or hwr@jewishtulsa.org. The Fitness Center at the CSJCC Personal Training • Strength Classes • Massage Therapy Since the days when Jewish kids started their letters with “Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah,” they’ve relayed how lifechanging Jewish camp is to everyone who attends. Below are a few notes we’ve received lately. We’d like to hear from everyone, young or old, about how Jewish camp (or a trip to Israel) changed your life. (We’re talking to you Greene Family Campers!) Send your stories to editor@JewishTulsa.org. Send Akiva to Israel Shalom everyone! For those of you who do not know me, my name is Akiva Leonoff, and by the time you’ve read this I will be in Israel on a program called Ramah Seminar. This program is very important to me because it marks the conclusion to 8 years of Jewish summer camp experiences for me, as well as a new start in Israel. This program will have many aspects I have come to know and love from camp, as well as many things that will be fresh and exciting. I will hike, explore, study and pray throughout the country. I’ll receive a greater appreciation for our Jewish heritage as well as wonderful new experiences with old friends and new ones. I want to express my love for the state of Israel, my camp friends, and for the wonderful Ramah programs I’m blessed to be part of. I’m very grateful to the Jewish Federation and the Tulsa Jewish community for giving me all the opportunities though the years and always helping me become the better person (and better Jew) I am today. I could never repay this community for what it has given me, but I do everything I can — from working at the Synagogue on Sundays to volunteering for programs like Festival Israel. It’s not just me either. On behalf of all the Jewish teens here in Tulsa, thank you so much for everything. Simon’s Ramah Outdoor Adventure There really aren’t enough words to describe camp, but I’ll try my best. I did mountain biking, horseback riding, backpacking, rock climbing, wilderness survival and more. It was pretty cool being at the very first session of a brand new camp, and also the first and only Tulsan there even though I didn’t know anyone at the beginning. I made lots of friends, even with the counselors (who were awesome, by the way). It was a conservative/orthodox camp, which meant that everything was kosher, we laid tefillin, said birkat after every meal, strictly observed Shabbat, and more. It was really cool to be outside during everything, even services in the beautiful rocky mts. I highly recommend this Ramah camp to everyone eligible. It was definitely the highlight of my life so far, besides getting a little sister. Rachael goes to Ramah I was at Ramah Daron for a month. This was my fourth year. We prayed every morning and Saturday we prayed three times. At camp we follow the traditions, like no electricity on Shabbat. You should definitely go. It’s the time of your life! da na Gra p S ly/ . t i b / :/ p t t h 4 JewishTulsa am C d a rd boa e gam ial. com c mer Welcome to our NEW online shop! You are just a click away from all your Judaica. templetulsa.judaicabeautiful.com Mark Mietkiewicz Although it may shatter some stereotypes, there are plenty of Jews who take the opportunity to say goodbye to the city – and even the cottage – and venture into the wild. There they find the ideal setting to commune with friends and nature – and to also do some davening and Jewish learning. You don’t have to convince Stephen Altbaum and his buddies about the virtues of getting out. For over three decades, they have explored Ontario’s waterways and wilderness in “an excursion of faith, friendship and food.” “Wherever we are we make Kiddush and light candles on Shabbat,” organizer Altbaum said. “We also do Havdalah on Saturday nights.” As for the camaraderie, “There’s this amazing chemistry between us. Sure, we’ve had our small problems, someone will get on someone else’s nerves. But this group has kept a lot of psychiatrists out of work.” There is more to observing Shabbat than just refraining from lighting a fire. And that has probably frightened more than one observant lover of the outdoors from camping from Friday to Sunday. Aside from kindling, there are prohibitions regarding extinguishing, building, cooking, laundering and carrying in areas outside the boundaries of an eruv. You can get an idea of what Shabbat campers need to be aware of and some possible solutions at this site. [http:// bit.ly/jcamp7] The National Jewish Girl Scout Committee has recommendations about keeping kosher and enjoying Shabbat in the wild. [http://bit.ly/jcamp4] If you have the longing to get outdoors but don’t have the skills, equipment or nerve to do it by yourself, there are groups which will guide your body and nurture your soul. BurningBushAdventures.com offers New England-based hiking and canoe trips in the spring and dog sledding trips in the winter. The site quotes from the Midrash Rabbah, “Wilderness is a necessary condition for every revelation, for every true internalization of the Torah’s teaching: Whoever would wish to acquire Torah must make himself own- erless like the wilderness.” Rabbi Mike Comins’ TorahTrek.com has organized “Spiritual Wilderness Adventures” into Joshua Tree National Park, across Wyoming’s Wind River Range and by kayak in Yellowstone National Park. Meanwhile, AdventureRabbi. com leads groups around Boulder, Colorado while TevaAdventure.org has ventured as far afield as Alaska and the European Alps. [http://bit.ly/ jcamp5] North of the border, Toronto’s Village Shul organizes an annual threeday Canoe ‘n Learn in Ontario’s Frontenac Provincial Park. “We’re not offering a camping trip geared to super athletes,” explains organizer Richard Bassett. “We’re hoping for a group of about 24 men for frum-friendly leisure and learning in the great outdoors.” [http://bit.ly/jcamp6] And to prove that there really is a community of likeminded outdoor enthusiasts out there, visit the Facebook group, “Jews don’t go camping...?” There, you’ll read comments like: • I have met Jews that camp at the Ritz or go solo camping in the mountains. DNA does not preclude any of us from trying new things for sure. • As a Single Jewish Mom I took my boys camping many times pitched the tent and did the rest!!!!! • That’s nonsense. … Where is it written that Jews must fall into the stereotypes that were created for us? [http://bit.ly/jcamp8] Perhaps it shouldn’t be so surprising, this Jewish wanderlust, this urge to explore the great outdoors. After all it’s been in our blood for thousands of years. As it says in Exodus 19:2: “They entered the wilderness of Sinai and encamped in the wilderness.” If our ancestors camped out for 40 years, is it really so odd if some Jews want to do it for a few days? Mark Mietkiewicz is a Toronto-based Internet producer who writes, lectures and teaches about the Jewish Internet. Jews in Canoes The Tulsa Jewish Review 5 Support for Israel Near Record High DiMaggio. Koufax. Wittels — Jewish Batsman Eyes College Streak WASHINGTON (JTA) Support for Israel among Americans is at a near record high, a new poll showed. According to the Gallup Poll, 63 percent of Americans say their sympathies in the Middle East conflict are with Israel, while 15 percent side with the Palestinians. The rest favor both sides, neither side or have no opinion. Support for Israel was higher only in 1991, shortly after Israel was hit with Scud missiles during the Gulf War, when it was at 64 percent. The poll, conducted in early February, was part of Gallup’s annual World Affairs survey in which Americans were asked a series of questions about their opinions of 20 countries or entities, including Israel and the Palestinian Authority. Israel’s ranking, at 67 percent favorable, was among the highest of the countries surveyed. The Palestinian Authority, at 20 percent, was among the lowest. Support for Israel increased more among Republicans and independents than Democrats, the poll showed. Since 2001, there has been an increase of 25 points among Republicans and 18 points among independents. Support for Israel among Democrats has stayed about the same. Asked whether peace eventually will be reached in the Middle East, 67 percent of respondents answered “doubtful” and 30 percent said “there will come a time” when there will be peace. In a general trend over the past 10 years, Democrats were more optimistic than Republicans about the chances for peace. Thirty-nine percent of Democrats said it will come; 25 percent of Republicans agreed. NEW YORK (JTA) Joe DiMaggio, Yankee Clipper. Garrett While his slate of good luck rituals has been noted Wittels, Jewish Hitter. repeatedly in the mounting media coverage of the streak, The first is an icon, the other started the 2010 college the mainstream media has missed this one: Before each baseball season at Florida International University as a game, Wittels recites the Shema, the Jewish prayer declaring virtual unknown. Now both are inextricably linked to the the unity of God. number 56, and FIU is hoping to send Wittels’ popularWittels also carries a travel mezuzah, which contains the ity soaring with a grassroots campaign to win him the Shema prayer, and on road trips he brings a copy of the ESPY award as male college athlete of the year. Jewish Wayfarer’s Prayer, according to his mother, Lishka, a Wittels, a 20-year-old sophomore, finished this season sit- member of Miami’s “Jewban,” or Cuban-Jewish community. ting on a 56-game hitting “This is a very spiristreak, the second-lontual house,” his father, gest in college baseball Michael, told JTA. “My history. The total matchwife’s family were Turkes DiMaggio’s legendary ish Jews. We have that Major League record culture, plus all of the set in 1941, a mark that other meshugas” he said, most baseball observers referring to his son’s prewould say was even more game habits. impressive than his marAs a 20-year-old, Witriage to Marilyn Monroe tels has said that he does (after all, two other men not yet consider himself managed that feat). a role model, but his Of course Wittels, mother said, “the Jewishwho is Jewish, may have ness plays a very big part more in common with in his life.” another baseball Hall of “He has said he would Famer: Sandy Koufax, marry a Jewish girl and the Dodgers’ lefty who talks about how imporfamously refused to pitch tant it is to carry on the in the World Series on Judaism with his life,” his Yom Kippur. mother said. “My son is Wittels will attempt the most spiritual, nonto break the collegiate traditional young athlete record of 58 consecutive you will ever meet. He games held by ex-Major carries his religion in his Leaguer Robin Ventura heart.” FIU’s Garrett Wittels at bat. next spring. It’s an unlikely accomplishment considering that Wittels was a utility infielder Individual who barely managed a .250 batting average as a freshman at Miami’s Florida International. His streak started in February with a bloop bunt single against the University of Maryland -- and he never stopped hitting this season, propelling him into the national spotlight as both the poster boy for FIU and NCAA baseball. His success earned him an ESPY nomination, ESPN’s version of the Oscars. Like most high-level Jewish athletes, Wittels doesn’t wear his Judaism on his sleeve (or his head -- he’s not the second Pre-K through 5th grade enrollment now open. Classes begin August 12th. coming of one-time Orthodox basketball phenom Tamir Goodman, who wore a kipah while playing). But baseball is a game of superstitions, and it’s there that Wittels’ Jewish Zarrow Campus • 2021 E. 71st 918-494-0953 • MizelSchool.org background emerges. David Dopp See the fall VANELi collection of shoes and boots now at Brouse’s where we are always a step ahead in selection, Phebe in brown combo or black $132 service, sizes and quality. Brouse’s 1718 Utica Square | 742-3301 | Mon-Sat 10-6 Visa, MC, Amex, Discover 6 JewishTulsa Boulder at Fourteenth 585-1151 attention. Small Classes. Big Results. The Tulsa Jewish Review 7 Ted Hyman Freshman, Cornell University & Hillary Krisman Freshman, University of Oklahoma Jeanette Altman Frieden’s impressive persona has many faces. She is at once a fervent member of the Jewish community, an unassuming philanthropist and a model for Jewish women everywhere. Having never had the opportunity to attend college, she recognizes the role higher education plays in a successful life. Since 2004 Mrs. Frieden has annually awarded a generous scholarship to a college-bound member of BBYO who in her opinion best exemplifies the young adults that BBYO creates. After attending BBYO Presents, a fundraiser which includes performances from the organization’s members, Mrs. Frieden was moved by the talent and initiative of the young men and women of BBYO. She recalled how her children’s time in BBYO had brought them lifelong friendships and invaluable experiences in their transition to college, and saw this new generation of members working to reap the same benefits. She worked with David Finer and the Tulsa BBYO to create her namesake scholarship. During the BBYO Spring Installation Ceremony in May, the scholarship presentation was scheduled as the final event of the evening. To no one was this fact more apparent than the six applicants hoping to receive the endowment, who tensely watched as Mrs. Frieden took the podium. “Will the following members please join me in front?”, she asked as the applicants looked around, confused, “Cailtin Cash, Julia Chasen, Ted Hyman, Hillary Krisman, Ari Prescott, and Josh Roubein.” One by one, the teens took to the stage, their hearts racing as if the deciding factor among our applications would be a public game of Russian roulette. Mrs. Frieden began with a familiar introduction, stating that the achievements of this senior class were impressive and unique, making this year’s decision especially difficult. All six seniors were visibly and unbearably anxious when Mrs. Frieden’s announcement finally broke the tension. Not one, but six scholarships would be given this year, one for each applicant. No generous contribution should go without its due credit, and Mrs. Frieden’s extraordinary endowment to the youth of the Jewish community is no exception. She has single-handedly done as much for Tulsa BBYO as anyone in the organization’s history, and deserves the gratitude of anyone who has good fortune enough to meet her. On behalf of the six recipients of this year’s award and all of Tulsa BBYO, we wish Mrs. Frieden many more years of vitality, enjoyment, and charity. 8 JewishTulsa Celebrations Jeanette Altman Frieden BBYO Scholarship(s) Rachael Brodsky’s Bat Mitzvah August 21st at CBE Randi and Paul Brodsky are pleased to announce that their daughter, Rachael Hannah, will formally celebrate her Bat Mitzvah on Saturday, August 21st, 2010. A graduate of Heritage Academy/Mizel JCDS, Rachael will be starting the seventh grade at Union Middle School in the fall. Rachael will also continue her Judaic studies through Midrasha. Rachael enjoys spending time swimming, playing games with her brother, or just spending quiet time at home with the family. Derrick Bryan’s Bar Mitzvah August 21st at TI Derrick Montgomery Bryan, son of Kelley and Vincent Bryan, is very proud, excited and happy to celebrate his Bar Mitzvah Saturday, August 21st, 2010. Derrick is entering his final year at Thoreau Demonstration Academy. He was recently inducted into the National Honor Society and is currently involved in his second summer internship with the Junior National Young Leaders Conference in Boston. Katz/Hayes Marriage Be Prepared Rabbi Charles P. Sherman TEMPLE ISRAEL I don’t want to intrude on your summer leisure. I do hope that you’ve been able to use the summer months as an opportunity to enjoy life at a slower pace. For rabbis it means that the Holydays will soon be upon us. Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are times of introspection and self-inventory and soul-searching. We want to greet the new year with anticipation and enthusiasm. I believe that means that we all should follow the Boy Scout motto: Be Prepared. The 40 days leading up to Yom Kippur are devised to help us let go of the past and look forward to the future with hope and confidence in ourselves. Judaism believes in change and teshuvah. We have control over our destiny and the path we travel. Yet change takes time to consider where we have been and to plan for where we want to go. The weeks prior to the High Holydays provide us this opportunity if we will take advantage of them. According to a rabbinic story, Moses descended Mount Sinai on Rosh Chodesh Elul – the beginning of the month prior to Rosh Hashanah (the eve of August 10th this year). He found the Israelites worshiping a golden calf. Enraged at their idolatrous behavior, Moses smashed the tablets he had carefully carried down the mountain. Once again he ascended Sinai to receive another set. Moses returned to the people a second time on the tenth of Tishri – the day we observe Yom Kippur. We learn from our rabbis that the people spent these 40 days during Moses’ absence praying and preparing themselves through teshuvah. When Moses returned, they wanted to be ready to receive God’s gift. May we too utilize the remaining summer days as a period of introspection and preparation for the Days of Awe. Kosher & Non-Kosher Meats and Provisions William Katz, son of Ginny Katz, married Michelle Heffner Hayes on June 17, 2010, in Lawrence, KS where the couple both work and reside. Michelle is a Professor at the University of Kansas and William is Regional Director of the Small Business Development Center in Lawrence. Temple Israel Featured In Film At National Museum of American Jewish History Temple Israel will be one of 13 synagogues featured in films exploring the post-World War II role of synagogues in the United States. The films were created for the new National Museum of American Jewish History, which will open in Philadelphia in November 2010. Located on the second floor of the Museum’s core exhibition covering 1945 to the present, the films will offer virtual tours of synagogues built following World War II in an effort to immerse visitors in inspirational and diverse examples of 20th century synagogue architecture. “We chose Temple Israel because it represents a key example of post-World War II architecture,” said Dr. Josh Perelman, the Museum’s historian and deputy director of programming. “These films aim to demonstrate the lively expansion of American Judaism in the latter half of the twentieth century,” continued Perelman. The films will appear in a section of the exhibition relating to the movement of American Jews into suburban neighborhoods in the years after World War II, when synagogues became focal points of American Jewish life. Jewish communities built, or rebuilt, well over one thousand synagogues between 1945 and 1965. These new synagogues often emerged as both the center for individual Jewish identity as well as an important education and social center for the community. Last November filmmakers from Local Projects, the museum’s interactive media partner, traveled from New York City to Tulsa for a full-day shoot of the Temple’s architectural features. They also conducted interviews with members of Temple Israel’s staff and congregation, including Rabbi Sherman, his wife, Nancy, librarian Susan Woitte, and congregation members Allan Avery and Sheldon Miller. The National Museum of American Jewish History is constructing a new 100,000–square-foot, five-story building, designed by Polshek Partnership Architects, on Independence Mall in Philadelphia. The new Museum stands directly across from the Liberty Bell, a block south of the National Constitution Center, and one block north of the birthplace of American liberty, Independence Hall. A beautiful smile makes a difference in your life. Specializing in Adult and Children’s Orthodontics • Offering the newest, fastest, most comfortable braces • Featuring Invisalign 918-749-6448 • TulsaBraces.com • 4543 S. Harvard Editor’s note: Sproutz does not keep a kosher kitchen, but is very delicious. The Tulsa Jewish Review 9 A Tulsa Meet Up... in Jerusalem George Leonard All paths lead to Jerusalem. At least that’s how it seemed on Tuesday night when Tulsans Lynn Schusterman and Rabbi Jack Zanerhaft reconnected in Jerusalem to celebrate, along with hundreds of others, the fifth anniversary of ROI, which is underwritten by the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation — and is Lynn’s signature program. Launched in 2006, ROI provides critical funding, training, and support for a host of Jewish entrepreneurial ventures Lynn Schusterman and Jack Zanerhaft in Jerusalem to celebrating the fifth anniversary of ROI. such as Challah for Hunger, Moishe House, PresenTense, and Jewcology. Its ultimate goal: to identify and nurture the Jewish leaders of tomorrow. More than 100 of them gathered with scores more friends, community leaders, investors, and local entrepreneurs in an open courtyard at Jerusalem’s JVP Media Quarter, where they greeted and thanked Schusterman for her support of a program that’s redefining the traditional notions of community leadership. “We are living in challenging times, and questions abound regarding how best to nurture our individual and collective connections to each other as Jews,” says Schusterman. “We have seen how the network, skill building and other resources we provide have led to collaborations that are helping to enhance and enrich Jewish communities all over the world.” These online and in-person collaborations reflect a shift in 10 JewishTulsa the center of gravity in the Jewish world to more of a global network that empowers local innovation and initiatives. In other words: Less talk from the top, and more ideas and action from the grassroots. As if to set an example, Schusterman — at an event to celebrate her project — let others do the talking. That sort of leadership is pure Lynn, says Rabbi Zanerhaft, who is in Jerusalem to study at the Shalom Hartman Institute. Back home in Tulsa, he’s a lawyer specializing in personal injury defense — and the first rabbi at Congregation Etz Chaim in Bentonville, Arkansas. “We know Lynn on a local level,” says Zanerhaft. “We see her at shul and at the JCC. We see her out shopping with her kids and grandkids. And while we’re cognizant of her role in world Jewry, we also feel like she’s one of us.” As Israeli musician Kobi Oz entertained the crowd with songs from his new album, Songs for the Perplexed, Schusterman mingled... then slipped out quietly into the night. ROI is all about Jewish vitality and making the world better for our children and their children that is part of our foundation’s logo, and it says, “As our parents planted for us, so will we plant for our children.” I think that’s a beautiful phrase, which highlights that we are engaged in a process – one that is bigger than each of us, and will last longer than each of us. Yet, we still have to be engaged in that effort to make the world better for our children and their children. That is a real motivator for me, and I get so much pleasure out of helping to make the world a little bit better. She left behind the seeds of a new Jewish future, a realization of her eponymous foundation’s motto: “As our parents planted for us, so will we plant for our children.” Thanks to Schusterman, these young leaders from all over the world are rediscovering an ancient Jewish truth: when the future is in your hands, it’s reassuring to have friends who share the same spiritual home. We Are Your Keys to Tulsa Real Estate Shirley & Willie Burger The Burger Team aT mcgraw realTors 231.6755 TheBurgerTeam.com sburger@mcgrawok.com facebook.com/TheBurgerTeam Exploring Jewish Ancestry Through Food By Linda Morel NEW YORK (JTA) Teiglach came along with Tina Wasserman when she moved to Dallas in the 1980s. Wasserman, a cooking teacher and the food columnist for Reform Judaism magazine, didn’t literally transport clumps of the sticky pastries whose dough is wrapped around nuts and simmered in honey syrup. But among her most cherished possessions, she packed her recipe for the traditional Rosh Hashanah sweet hailing from Lithuania. “No one had seen it down here,” said Wasserman, the author of Entree to Judaism: A Culinary Exploration of the Jewish Diaspora (URJ Press, 2010), until she served the dessert to her new friends. She then introduced the recipe in cooking classes. Before long, teiglach became part of the Jewish culinary scene in Dallas. The incident is typical of how Jewish foods have traveled around the world, says Wasserman, whose goal in writing her cookbook was to educate about Jewish culture while providing sensational recipes that tell the story of Jewish history. As Jews migrated from country to country, they carried their recipes and kiddush cups. Like Johnny Appleseed, they spread their favorite foods. But they also adapted to the cuisines they encountered wherever they went. “I wanted to create a link to our ancestry through food,” said Wasserman, who feels that such a connection will keep Judaism alive. She began assembling recipes for Entree to Judaism with a question: What makes a food Jewish from a historical viewpoint? Her conclusion: Kosher laws and Sabbath observance were the reasons for the invention and evolution of Jewish recipes. For instance, Wasserman says that Caponata, the popular Italian appetizer of simmered eggplants, tomatoes and peppers, is a 500-year-old Sabbath dish. During the Spanish Inquisition when Spain occupied Sicily, 40,000 Jews fled to mainland Italy to escape persecution, bringing with them this make-ahead recipe that can be served cold or at room temperature. Each recipe in her cookbook includes the story of its origins, when and why it was eaten, and who cherished it enough to bring the preparation method to a new part of the world. Ever wondered why some Ashkenazim eat kreplach at Rosh Hashanah? During the Middle Ages, Jews from Central and Eastern Europe sealed their dishes in pouches of dough and wore them as amulets. Because they didn’t want to waste this precious food, they put it into soup. While Ashkenazim dip apples in honey to connote sweetness in the New Year, Turkish Jews convey the same wishes by partaking in Dulce de Manzana, sweet apple preserves infused with rose water, the signature flavor of many Sephardic pastries. One of Wasserman’s favorite recipes is Syrian Eggplant with Pomegranate Molasses, which is similar in consistency to babagonoush. Pomegranates are traditionally eaten at Rosh Hashanah because their seeds symbolize prosperity in the New Year. The recipe is great as an appetizer, hors d’oeuvres, first course salad or part of a meze assortment, an array of appetizers typical of Sephardic cuisine. “I’m all about connecting to the Jewish community at large,” said Wasserman, whose website cookingandmore. com creates a community around food. “We’re a shrinking population who used to live everywhere in the world.” Try Wasserman’s Dulce De Manzana recipe and find her recipes for Syrian Eggplant with Pomegranate Molasses, Lubiya and Sweet Potato & Pumpkin Cazuela at JewishTulsa.org. - editor DULCE DE MANZANA This Rosh Hashanah, try dipping challah into this sweet treat that Turkish Sephardic Jews eat to wish each other a sweet New Year. Ingredients 3 cups granulated sugar 1 1/2 cups water 2 pounds apples, Jonagold, Gala, or Delicious Juice of 1/2 lemon 1 tablespoon rose water or 1 teaspoon vanilla 1/4 cup slivered almonds Preparation •Place the sugar and water in a 3-quart saucepan and bring to a boil over medium heat. •While the mixture is heating, peel the apples and grate them by hand with a coarse grater. Immediately add the apples to the hot sugar syrup. •Reduce the temperature to medium and cook for 30-45 minutes, or until most of the liquid has evaporated and the mixture is quite thick. Stir the mixture occasionally to prevent sticking. •While the mixture is cooking, toast the almonds in a 350-degree oven for 4 minutes, or until lightly golden. Set aside. •When the mixture is thickened (it will get thicker when it cools), add the rose water or vanilla. Place in an open container until cool. The toasted almonds may be added to the mixture at this time or sprinkled on top as a garnish just before serving. Refrigerate until serving. Yields 3-4 cups The Tulsa Jewish Review 11 Butterflies “Light to Life” Tribute Fund Helping to Keep the Light Burning IN LOVING MEMORY Lillian Koffler Dr. E. N. Lubin Ida & Max Ontman Rae Roberts Beulah “Kay” Wolitarsky ANNIVERSARY Stephen & Phyllis Zeligson’s 50th IRVING CORETZ MUSIC FUND In honor of Stan & Irene Burnstein’s 50th Wedding Anniversary HONORING Martin Brody for his 70th birthday SPEEDY RECOVERY Janis Finer Rita Newman Martha Strauss HAPPY BIRTHDAY! Barry Davis Rosalee Minsky Rose Schlanger Tamara Wagman Dr. William Johnston Wiseman, July 13, 2010 Pastor emeritus of Tulsa’s First Presbyterian Church, in the 1980s he became involved in the National Conference of Christians and Jews, serving on its local board and as a national trustee. CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED FROM Mr. & Mrs. Melvyn Abels Joy & Julius Bankoff Gerry & David Bernstein Gail & Robert Burns Iris Chandler Mollie Coretz Frieda & Marty Grossbard Sherry & Jerry Heller Myrna Lubin Patricia & David Ressequie Mary Sanditen Schwartz Anne & Stan Shapiro Martha & Fred Strauss Patty & Bryan Watt Nancy & Andy Wolov Herman Feldman, July 16, 2010 Born July 26, 1918, in Tulsa, OK, Herman Feldman was the second of three children of Robert and Gussie Feldman. Herman had been married to Tillie Feldman for 64 years when she passed in 2005. Herman and Tillie retired to Tulsa in 1996, to be close to family, and Herman quickly became involved in the Tulsa community, volunteering and auditing college courses. He enjoyed being an active member of Temple Israel and attending cultural events. Herman is survived by his son Ron Feldman and wife Gloria Leitner, of Arlington, MA; his daughter and her husband Barbara and Bill Geffen, of Tulsa, OK and their children; and his daughter and her husband Janet and Ken Werker, of Vancouver, BC, Canada and their children. Herman is also survived by his very close brother and sister-in-law, Raymond and Nancy Feldman, of Tulsa. Honoring Donors to the Tulsa Jewish Retirement & Health Care Center 'Call Charles' 'Call Charles' 'Call Charles' TM Terry and Madelyn Rosenthal (918) 584-3323 Fax - 918 584-7378 Charlespestco@aol.com sbovasso@mcgrawok.com 918.605.2995 4105 S Rockford Ave Tulsa, OK 74105 (918)592-6000 fax (918)398-5396 Personal & Business Services Maximize your day 7647 East 46th Place Bobbi and Bob Warshaw Office 918.747.3807; Cell 918.852.5302 www.errands-to-go.com Dee Ann Beal dbeal@mcgrawok.com 918.688.5467 McGraw R e A l T O R S ® B o va s s o & B e a l T e a m 12 JewishTulsa Marcelino Rosas, July 17, 2010 Marcelino Rosas, age 33, husband of Lori Lieb Rosas. He was born June 18, 1977, in Hidalgo, Mexico. He was a manager of a local Mexican restaurant. He is survived by his wife, his son Jordan Rosas and stepson Bradley Hemphil of Tulsa, mother Sophia Rosas, brother Nicholas Rosas and sister Adelina Rosas, all of Mexico. P.O. Box 471100 Tulsa, OK 74147-1100 BovassoandBeal.com Sharna B0vasso Of Blessed Memory FUN & FITNESS at the Charles Schusterman JCC ABS class is designed to strengthen and tone your core with various exercises for the upper lower and oblique abdominal. 12:00 Noon – Tues/Thurs Intermediate to advance. g Farewell n i y a S r Israeli Friend u o s to AQUA AEROBICS is an invigorating fitness activity. Exercising in water provides a safe, enjoyable challenge for people of all ages, fitness levels and abilities. 10:30 a.m. – Tues/Thurs All fitness levels. and end of camp pool party BOOT CAMP is approximately 45 minutes of high intensity exercises that will keep the heart rate up and challenge your muscles. 12:00 Noon – Wed Intermediate to Advance. Saturday, August 7 • 7 p.m. Sharna and Irvin Frank Aquatics Center BRING IT ON YOGA is an invigorating, non-impact, complete body workout that builds strength, balance and flexibility. 6:00 p.m. – Mon Beginners welcome but geared toward intermediate. CSJCC Members: Free • Non-members: $10 per family Call 495.1111 to RSVP by Wednesday, August 4 CARDIO MOTION is a fusion of low impact cardio and bodyshaping exercises designed to maximize effectiveness and kick your metabolism into high gear. 9:30 a.m. – Tues/Fri All fitness levels. CIRCUIT TRAINING is an efficient and effective way to get a full body workout at your own intensity level. A fun-filled hour of muscular conditioning and cardiovascular conditioning. This class is unique in that no one in the room will be doing the same exercise at the same time. 9:00 a.m. – Tues/Thurs All fitness levels. MUSCULAR ENDURANCE is the ability to resist fatigue and to continue to exercise over a prolonged period of time. The class begins with a quick stretch session, moves into continual free weight exercise designed to work all muscle groups used in day to day activities. The class has some lower body work at the ballet bars and finishes with a stretching session. 9:00 a.m. – Mon All fitness levels. SPINNING is an indoor bike ride that is proven to achieve faster weight loss than any other indoor exercise. The spinning instructor plans a terrain, and sets the ride to music. This class lasts for about 45 minutes. 9:00 a.m. – Fri All fitness levels. STRETCHING & AEROBICS is a challenging workout that will prove to increase ease of movement throughout the rest of the day. This class begins with a warm-up/stretch then moves into a low-impact aerobic segment to make sure all muscles are warmed up and the body is totally prepared for what's ahead. 9:00 a.m. – Wed All fitness levels. REMEMBER - all the classes listed above are FREE with your current, paid CSJCC membership! Yoga is an excellent means of stress reduction. Individualized instruction makes this class suitable for the participant at any level. This yoga class features stretching, increased flexibility, relaxation, and stress reduction. NEW SESSIONS BEGINNING SOON! NOTE: There is an extra charge for this class. AVAILABLE WHILE YOU WORK OUT Monday, Wednesday, and Friday 8:30 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. (6 months – 5 years; 2 hour max) For more information on any of the above programs, call 918.495.1111 or visit csjcc.org. Keren Náama Questions? Contact Martha Kelley, 495.1111 or e-mail mkelley@jewishtulsa.org extend yourself sunday, aug 22 Jewish Community Blood Drive 9:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Temple Israel ~ 2004 E 22nd Pl, Tulsa Give the "Gift of Life". Call Mindy at 935.3662 to register. Photo is copyright of Arthur Leipzig t r S e e k t r Games o Y w e N SUNDAY, AUGUST 8 ~ DINNER & A MOVIE With hosts, Anne and Stan Shapiro Narrated by Hector Elizondo, New York Street Games discusses the origins of the street games that were played and shared by city children across the nation. The film profiles all of the games we played and loved as kids. We revisit Stickball, Boxball, Skully, Punchball, Ring-o-Levio, Johnny on a Pony, Stoopball, Over the Line, Chinese Handball and many more. Visit newyorkstreetgames.com to find out more about this film that captures a special time in American history. Charles Schusterman JCC 6:00 p.m. $12.50 CSJCC Members $20 Non-members A social club for singles or couples 55+ YOUR CHECK IS YOUR RESERVATION! PLEASE NOTE “YOUNG AT HEART DINNER” ON YOUR CHECK. ALL CHECKS MUST BE RECEIVED BY WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4. For more information, contact Mindy Prescott 918.935.3662 or e-mail mprescott@jewishtulsa.org Photo by Ed Vill Something Rotten Coming to Tel Aviv John Lydon at the Hammersmith Odean in London in 2008. S 1 8 15 22 29 M 2 9 16 23 30 AUGUST T W T 3 4 5 10 11 12 17 18 19 24 25 26 31 F 6 13 20 27 S 7 14 21 28 (JTA) Johnny “Rotten” Lydon, the former Sex Pistols front man, will not cancel his August 31st show in Tel Aviv despite receiving hate mail. In his announcement on BBC 6 Music News, Lydon said he would not let “the political powers-that-be” dictate his audience. Other performers, including Carlos Santana, Elvis Costello, The Pixies, The Klaxons, The Gorillaz, Dvendra Banhart and Gil Scott-Heron, have canceled performances in Israel. Lydon said he would ignore the hate mail and stir up trouble musically. “I’m anti-government ... and I shall be making that loud and clearly proud once I’m in Israel,” Lydon told the BBC. Pro-Palestinian activists picketed Lydon’s July 11 show in Bristol, England, to protest his Tel Aviv show. CHARLES SCHUSTERMAN JCC C ALENDAR OF EVENTS AUGUST 2010 5 yiddish buddies Yiddish with Isrella. Everyone welcome. CSJCC 11 a.m. – 12 Noon 6 Camp shalom ends Last day for Camp Shalom 2010 CSJCC 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. 7 Goodbye party End of camp pool party for summer Shilchim. AQUATICS CENTER 7 p.m. 8 younG at heart Dinner and the movie, NEW YORK STREET GAMES. CSJCC 6 p.m. 11 retired men's Club Guest speakers and luncheon. CSJCC 12 Noon 21 haVdalah and diVe-in moVie Enjoy a family movie at the Sharna and Irvin Frank Aquatics Center. AQUATICS CENTER Dusk 22 blood driVe Jewish Community Blood Drive at Temple Israel. CSJCC 9:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. 29 pool party Celebrate the end of the summer season with a great, AQUATICS family pool party. Everyone welcome! CENTER 6 – 8 p.m. For more information, call 918.495.1111 or visit csjcc.org!
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