- SA Jewish Report
Transcription
- SA Jewish Report
KAHN: GAZA IS A FOURLETTER WORD / 3 SHOCK ARTIST STEVEN COHEN’S WORK ON 9/11 / 8 SHATTERING GRIEF THROUGH THE EYES OF A YOUNG GIRL / 9 Subscribe FREE to Jewish Report’s weekly e-mail edition. Go to www.sajewishreport.co.za www.sajewishreport.co.za Friday, 15 January 2010 / 29 Tevet 5770 Volume 14 Number 1 West Bank’s economic boom - can it continue in 2010? PAGE 7 TWO DIFFERENT WORLD VIEWS A Haredi boy throws garbage at Jewish women coming to pray at the Western Wall in a monthly session organised by the Women of the Wall, on December 18 last year. (MIRIAM ALSTER / FLASH 90 / JTA) SEE STORY PAGE 11 Miep Gies who helped No apology from Masuku South Africans at PULLOUT SUPPLEMENT: hide Anne Frank, dies / 6 for ‘hate speech’ / 3 home in Oz / 13 Top exam results 2009 SPORTS / 16 LETTERS / 10 CROSSWORD & BRIDGE / 12 COMMUNITY BUZZ / 5 WHAT’S ON / 12 2 SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 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 Back to the future TOO OFTEN we make the mistake of reading the Torah in the past tense. This is particularly true of the portions we are currently going through, which deal with the narrative of the Exile in and Redemption from Egypt. We think of it as story that happened long ago, another chapter in a very interesting book of history. This week’s parsha presents us with a very exciting episode in the Exodus drama. Facing a very stubborn Pharaoh, Moshe Rabbenu displays miracle after miracle, showing him the greatness of the A-mighty. First he turns his staff into a snake and then the waters of Egypt into blood. This is followed by many other plagues that afflict the land. All in all the Egyptians and the Children of Israel are shown the PARSHAT VA’EIRA Rabbi Yossi Chaikin Oxford Synagogue might of G-d in full force. The name of the portion is therefore very appropriate: “Va’era”, which means: “I revealed Myself.” For the entire portion describes how Hashem appeared and divulged His strength to the world. But the word “Va’era” is very interesting in that, in the Hebrew, it can be understood both in the past tense, “I revealed Myself” and in the future, “I shall reveal Myself.” For the parsha is not speaking only of a revelation that happened long Minister: Minorities should be part of the solution EDITED BY MOIRA SCHNEIDER CAPE TOWN PHOTOGRAPH: SHANTI COETZER MINORITY GROUPS should not separate themselves from the broader community and sit on the sidelines and complain. Instead they should assume an active role and be part of the solution. This was the appeal made by Minister of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs Sicelo Shiceka at a meeting with 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) ago, but also of one that is ongoing, right now, in the present. As we read the portion “Va’era” we must not only think of the Ten Plagues that happened several thousand years ago. We also have to reflect on the revelations of G-dliness that are happening right before our eyes at the present time. It is obviously far easier to see the Hand of G-d with the benefit of hindsight. As the saying goes, with hindsight we always have 20-20 vision. So we can see a miracle clearly when we look back at history but find it more difficult to do so when we are actually part of it. The word “Va’era” is a reminder to us that Hashem’s revelation happened, is happening and will continue to happen. “Va’era” in the parsha refers to a process of Exile and Redemption. G-d first appeared to the forefathers, then to Moses and later to the entire Jewish nation. The end SAJBD (Cape) Vice-Chairman Lawrence Miller, Minister of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs Sicelo Shiceka, Li Boiskin, SAJBD (Cape) chairman and Rael Kaimowitz, vice-chairman. the South African Jewish Board of Deputies’ Cape Council late last year. The engagement, part of the Board’s ongoing efforts to meet with government leaders, was characterised by straight talk that saw several admissions from the minister, including: “When it comes to dealing with HIV/Aids, we are 10 years behind because of past denial.” He also said it was “no longer acceptable to employ people along party lines. Government must be administered by people with impeccable credentials.” The minister told the Board that he wanted to institute the employment of qualified accountants to manage the finances of all departments to minimise corruption, the extent of which he acknowledged. Minister Shiceka said he had always admired the Jewish community from a distance, in partic- SHABBAT TIMES January 15/29 Tevet January 16/1 Shvat Va’eira Starts 18:15 18:32 18:15 18:20 18:04 18:15 Ends 19:39 20:38 19:36 19:54 20:09 19:57 Johannesburg Cape Town Durban Bloemfontein Port Elizabeth East London of that process was the Revelation at Mount Sinai, when G-dliness was shown to the world in ways and in measures like it never had been before. The same is true of the current process. Though we are still in exile, as we approach its final moments, we are exposed to small doses of Divine revelation. Ultimately this will result in the Final Redemption, out of the Exile and into the MessianicEra. ular its ability to stick to its cultural values despite all the adversity it had experienced. He explained that the destruction of the family unit under apartheid had led to a loss of values within South African society and that the government was exploring ways to revive these. In this regard, it was looking to the religious communities for guidance. The meeting with the Cape Council was the first in this connection and the minister appealed to the Council to identify areas in which his department could co-operate with the Jewish community, asking: “What can we, as government, learn from you?” He praised the Jewish community for always being willing to engage with government and spoke of his admiration for the way in which it looked after its own, adding that infighting between groups had been the cause of serious problems in government. Minister Shiceka expressed an interest in the Cape Town Holocaust Centre and committed himself to bringing a delegation to visit in the near future. 1st day at school 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. KDVP welcomes new grade 8s. King David High School Victory Park welcomes new and excited grade 8 learners on the first day of school. (PHOTOGRAPH: YAEL GORDON) Tali Benjamin is put at ease by her mom Janice on Tali’s first day in primary school at Yeshiva College. (PHOTO: ILAN OSSENDRYVER) 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT Wendy Kahn speaking at the conference. (PHOTO SUPPLIED) The proverbial canary in the mineshaft DAVID SAKS “GAZA IS a four-letter word How Cast Lead was Used to Justify Anti-Semitism in South Africa” was how SAJBD National Director Wendy Kahn chose to title her presentation at the Third Global Forum for Combating Anti-Semitism, held in Jerusalem on December 16 17. The conference was held under the chairmanship of Israel’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, and the Minister of Public Diplomacy and Diaspora Affairs Yuli Edelstein. Over 500 senior delegates from more than 50 countries attended, among them SAJBD Cape Chairman Li Boiskin and Director David Jacobson. Speakers included an impressive array of academics, political leaders, journalists and human rights activists. The sense of urgency at the conference was encapsulated by long-serving director of the AntiDefamation League of B’nai B’rith, Abe Foxman, who said that 2009 had been “the worst year of anti-Semitism since the Second World War”, from which no continent, country or city had been immune. Both traditional forms of antiJewish prejudice and the socalled “New Anti-Semitism” revolving around on the State of Israel and Zionism, were on the increase. As if to confirm this trend, two well-publicised antiSemitics incidents, namely the desecration of a Chanukiah in Moldavia and the issuing of an arrest warrant by a British court against Israeli opposition leader Tzipi Livni for her role in Israel’s Gaza offensive. In common with other Diaspora communities, South Africa experienced a sharp rise in anti-Semitic activity as a result of the three-week long war in Gaza commencing in December the previous year. Kahn sketched some of the most serious incidents of antiSemitism directly resulting from the war, mainly occurring in the first two months of 2009. These included then Deputy Foreign Minister Fatima Hajaig saying that the US and most Western countries were controlled by Jewish money at a protest rally in Lenasia and numerous threatening statements against the local Jewish community made by Cosatu International Relations spokesman, Bongani Masuku. Also noted with concern were cases of clear incitement to violence against Jews on certain Islamic radio stations and attempts to launch a countrywide boycott of Jewish businesses. While noting that antiSemitism activity had indeed increased significantly in South Africa over the previous 12 months, Kahn was careful to put this in perspective by comparing this with the equivalent situations in other major Diaspora communities. Not only were anti-Semitism levels many times higher in countries such as Canada, Australia and the UK, but the nature of many of the incidents recorded there were of a much more serious nature than those occurring in South Africa. These included numerous instances of assault and desecration of synagogues and Jewish cemeteries. Minister Edelstein, a former Zionist prisoner of conscience in the old Soviet Union, noted how traditional anti-Semitic malice had successfully been repacked into a politically digestible form through the demonisation of Israel and Zionism. “It is no longer the individual Jew or a Council of Jewish Elders who has led the world into war and economic collapse - it is Israel, the state of the Jews, who have brought war and tragedy to the world,” he said. Former Canadian Justice Minister Irwin Cotler outlined how the delegitimisation of Israel, once a fringe phenomenon, was now increasingly evident in every facet of society. The United Nations played a key role in this process, adopting more resolutions against Israel than all other countries combined and depicting the world’s only Jewish State as an international outlaw. Yehuda Bauer, a worldrenowned expert on antiSemitism in both its contemporary and historical manifestations, distinguished between those who criticised Israel with a view to creating a better Israel and anti-Zionists who wanted there to be no Israel. If Jews had a persecution complex and were paranoid, he said, they had a very good reason for being that way. Several speakers stressed that while anti-Semitism might begin with targeting Jews, it did not end with them, ultimately infecting the entire society. Likening Jews to the proverbial canary in the mineshaft John Mann, who chairs Britain’s parliamentary committee against antiSemitism, commented that antiSemitism was being fought “not just for the Jews, but for our own country and our own communities.”. Masuku ignores SAHRC’s instruction to apologise ROBYN SASSEN LATE LAST year, the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) demanded that Bongani Masuku, International Relations spokesman for the Congress of SA Trade Unions (Cosatu), should tender an apology to the SA Board of Jewish Deputies and the community at large, for hate speech he uttered in the context of a Wits University rally in March last year. Masuku was instructed to tender his apology within 14 days, failing which, the matter would be referred to the Equality Court for final adjudication, without further notice. No such apology had been tendered by Masuku. The media relations officer for the SAHRC, Vincent Moaga said when asked by the Jewish Report about the matter, that Masuku had not apologised and had no intention of doing so. “There has been no movement in terms of the situation, but there is a likelihood that an appeal would be set in motion,” he said this week. Cosatu spokesman, Patrick Craven affirmed that there would be an appeal. “The SAHRC is not a court of law,” he posited. “We believe it is completely mistaken in its findings.” National Director of the SA Jewish Board of Deputies Wendy Kahn, commented that “Masuku hasn’t apologised. Nothing further has happened and there is no appeal process established with the HRC. We will be following up with the HRC. They must litigate further on this matter.” This is where matters stand at present. The SA Jewish Report will keep its readers up to date about any new developments. 3 4 SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 SOCIAL SCENE Rita Lewis jont@global.co.za Edna Freinkel with hostess Stella Beder and Dinah Berman. Highly talented Misha Favis (13) with Art Forum’s chairman, Lilithea (Lilie) Singer and accompanist Ilsa Myburgh, head of the music department at St John’s College. Neville Palette with Gwen Buddingh and Cathy Singer. Misha Favis who will be taking up a music scholarship in London this month. Professor Solly Levin with his wife Cynthia. Art Forum, a Jewish institution, calls it a day STORY AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY RITA LEWIS IT WAS fitting that the very last meeting of the Art Forum which was its swan song after a run of 57 years - should have as its guest artist, a young ‘cellist who would be performing for the group, and in South Africa for the last time, before leaving the country to take up a scholarship in London. It was not just his angelic face and endearing charm, but from the first sounds emanating from his ‘cello, 13-year-old Misha Favis had the audience of some 60 people absolutely eating out of his hands. Hearing him play, it was obvious why the talented youngster had been offered a scholarship at the Yehudi Menuhin School of Music in London. He left at the end of December, accompanied by his mother, Merle, for what is envisaged to be a two year period of study. To assist him with his transition to a new life - albeit tem- Maisie Stein with her daughter Jill Marks. porarily - Lilie Singer, chairman of the Art Forum, presented Misha with a bursary from the organisation. The Art Forum was founded by Singer in 1952, with its first meeting held in March of that year. Throughout the years it focussed on fulfilling the needs of those who wished to have interesting and intellectual speakers available, without having to travel far at night to hear them. Over the many years Singer has used her many connections to host a wide variety of interesting and well-known personalities in many diverse fields. These included Professors Arthur Blecksley, Philip Tobias and Friedel Sellschop, actors Phillip Berkenshaw, Moira Lister, Richard Haynes, Esmé Berman, Taubie Kushlik, Marcel Marceau and a host of other talented and renowned people. In the beginning there were around 50 people attending the events, but with its fast-growing popularity, new venues and facilities had to be found to accommo- date the increasing numbers of both young and old who wished to attend. Eventually, it became necessary to split the numbers and a younger group was formed to develop the artistic and intellectual interests of the 9 - 14 age group with a further one to cover the interests of the more mature teenagers, aged 14 - 18. Sunday night lectures covered topics on the development of arts and culture and outings were undertaken to take the youngsters to visit art galleries, art studios and sculptors, to promote and extend their interest and knowledge. Regrettably, with the increase of crime, emigration etc, the numbers of all three groups catered for by the Art Forum started dwindling, and alas continued to do so, until carrying on was no longer viable. Much to the regret of Singer, her committee and those who were still regularly attending, it was decided to close all three divisions with immediate effect. Lilie Singer with her daughter, Elaine Fienberg. 15 - 22 January 2010 COMMUNITY BUZZ LIONEL SLIER 082-444-9832, fax: 011-440-0448, lionel.slier@absamail.co.za THE STRAND From Raymond Cotton: “The Strand lies on False Bay, directly on the opposite side of the bay from Simonstown and Fish Hoek. Nearby is Somerset West, which lies in the Hottentots Holland basin, surrounded by the Hottentots Holland Mountains and is separated by the N2 highway. “If you walk along the coast in a westerly direction past the De Beers dynamite factory along the coast, you will eventually land up in Muizenberg. “I grew up in the Strand from the early fifties to the late sixties. Once, in my youth, accompanied by my Uncle Maurice, we did it on bicycle but coming back it was high tide and we had to return via the N2 highway. The police were looking for us because we returned home past midnight. “The Strand Jewish community comprised 20 to 30 families. The shul was built in the early ‘20s. The resident rabbi was Rabbi Karvan who lived in the house next to the shul, together with his wife and two children, Naomi and Michael. “I remember we used to go to cheder from Monday to Thursday in the afternoons for 30 minutes. All the barmitzvah boys had to do the first half of Friday night service and every Shabbos morning shul service which started at 07:00 and ended at 08:00 to enable SA JEWISH REPORT businesses to be opened. “The grand old lady of the Strand was Bobbe Friedman. For many years we lived in a semidetached house in De Ruyter Street next to her. (I remember one year there was a flood and being very close to the Laurence River that entered the sea about 200 metres away, we had to be rescued by Mr Swart who worked at the sewerage works). “What I can remember of Bobbe Friedman is the high standard of kashrut that she kept, the encouragement to go to shul and the moral support she gave to my parents. She always had penny chocolates on her. On Chanukah she handed out presents to the children in shul. “After my mother passed away I donated a siddur to the Beit Hamedrash Chofetz Chaim (Johannesburg) where I am a member and one of the congregants, Trevor Friedman pointed out to me that Bobbe Friedman was his grandmother. “I mentioned to him that when I lived in the Strand I used to play marbles with Barry and Benjamin Friedman, his cousins and now my son Eric is involved in the youth with his sons Ari, Eli and Danni at Chofetz Chaim. “ To be continued. MUIZENBERG From Stan Frankel (cont): “The one Squire brother became a brilliant cardiologist and righthand man to the famous Chris Barnard, whom I knew personally in later years in my particular peripatetic profession. “I might mention the excellent Muizenberg Secondary School up on the hillside, run by an outstanding principal, W A Andrews and the fine tuition all our Jewish youth received. I remember too, the notable ‘Hillel College’ run by an elderly Mr Levinsohn and how during Yomtov, the students all came trooping into shul resplendent in their brown and yellow uniforms. “The shul was led by Reverend Frank, a veteran of many years and Cantor Katzen who filled every seat with his magnificent services. He married a lovely local lass, Judy (I think). The shul still stands opposite the bowling greens. “I must quote Cecil Rhodes who lived and died in a cottage in Muizenberg (St James?), now a museum. ‘So much to do, so little done.’ Sic transit gloria mundi. (So passes the glory of the world). “Another quote from Cecil Rhodes (on his deathbed): ‘What is life? Two weeks at the seaside and then it is all over.’ He died in 1902 aged 49. WALVIS BAY From: Hyman Jocum: “One of the most important events to have taken place in Walvis Bay between the two wars was the opening in 1927 by the Earl and Countess of Athlone, of the first refrigeration plant at the dockside for the storage of frozen beef. “This refrigeration plant was established by Wolf Davids and it enabled cattle farmers to export their beef directly to European markets. “As so many of the inhabitants of Walvis Bay earned their livelihoods as whalemen or fishermen, there was never any shortage of licenced hotels. Herbert Pieters managed the Atlantic Hotel in 1967 and for several years thereafter. “Few Jews have distinguished themselves in politics in Namibia. One exception was Herbert Simonson who served several terms as mayor of nearby Swakopmund. “At a time when the United Party shrunk in membership numbers and held very few seats in the Legislative Assembly, Simonson was elected to represent the Swakopmund constituency in the SWA Legislative Assemble, but this constituency included Walvis Bay which supplied 60 per cent of the voters and had for many decades been able to retain its English-speaking character. Simonson won the seat for the United Party by five votes. “He and his wife are buried in the Jewish section of the Swakopmund Cemetery. What made him such a popular figure among the voters of Walvis Bay was the fact that he was truly trilingual and could switch from English to Afrikaans to German in a matter of seconds when addressing large audiences.” JANSENVILLE (Eastern Cape/Johannesburg) Born in Jansenville, Morris Zimerman began to make his mark as a rugby player while at the University of Cape Town. He went on to become a Springbok. He was a teammate of Danie Craven and Bennie Osler (covered in previous editions of The Jewish Report). 5 He became a labour lawyer and worked side-by-side with Solly Sachs of the Garment Workers’ Union (the father of former Constitutional Court Justice Albie Sachs) in the turbulent 1950s. When he left private practice to join the Legal Resources Centre soon after it was established in 1979, his particular concern was consumer law, dealing with commercial exploitation of the very poor. It is not a service that gets the attorney’s name lit bright in the legal firmament; it is messy and often peopled with sordid frauds, loan sharks and extortionists. It is frequently fought out of court or in the lower courts; the parties pitted against each other are grossly mismatched in their access to power and resources. After Zimmie passed away (in 1990) Issie Maisels paid this tribute: “If you were to ask me who was the man of undoubted integrity that I knew, I would put him first.” Retired Chief Justice of the Constitutional Court, Mr Justice Arthur Chaskalson, and onetime National Director of Legal Resources Centre, remembers Zimmie as “a man without subterfuge - direct and honest in his dealings with people and fearless in confronting those who acted unjustly”. Extracted from an article written by Jo-Anne Collinge. 1990. HOLLYWOOD Betty Joan Perske was a cousin of Israel’s president and Nobel Prize-winner, Shimon Peres. Betty Joan who? Actually she was better known as the actress Lauren Bacall. 6 SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 OPINION AND ANALYSIS FORUM FOR DIVERSE VIEWS Illusion and reality are poles apart A wish list for 2010 WITH THE year 2010 just beginning, it is a good time to ponder what we want from it. For one thing, it will hopefully be better than 2009, with its full-blown global recession and other nasty aspects. Here’s a wish list for South African Jewry, South Africa, Israel, global Jewry and the world at large. In the Jewish community, the issue of “leaving” continues to dominate many dinner tables as it does in other minorities. While the Jewish Report cannot prescribe to anyone where they should choose to live, we encourage Jews who can contribute to South Africa to do so wholeheartedly. However, it remains the right of every individual to freely pursue his personal dreams and ideals. And with modern communication technology - specifically the Internet - Jewish expatriates continue to be part of the broader South African community. Notwithstanding the above, a wish for this community is for it to feel it truly “belongs” in this country, and that the individual contribution will be appreciated, whether in business, the arts, the professions, academia, politics, etc. An indication of such a sense of belonging will be when the “doom-saying” around dinner tables turns to positive engagement, even while there may still be healthy criticism - instead of the current trend among many of “disengagement”, which becomes contagious, actually feeding off itself. A necessary condition for “belonging” is that Jews - and members of other minorities - should be made to feel welcome by the majority and not labelled “racists” when they comment on the country’s affairs, as happens frequently. For South Africa as a whole, we look forward to the Soccer World Cup, scheduled for June, being the best ever staged in the world - and for it to engender a much-needed sense of pride and capability in South Africans, and knock the perception of us being a country of crime and corruption. A corollary is that our government shows it is serious about getting on top of crime and corruption and finally providing desperately needed services to its people, especially to the poorest of the poor who have been crying out for so long. For Israel, we can only wish for peace - Israelis and Palestinians finally determining that there is no alternative to eventually reaching a peace agreement and that this requires painful compromise from both. The article on page 7 reports on the state of the peace process. The increasing demonisation of Israel around the world must cease. It is almost bizarre to have to state that neither Israel nor its neighbours are perfect and mistakes have been made by all in the conflict; but the extent of the condemnation of Israel, the ignoring of its positives and the virtual absence of criticism of its enemies is so out of proportion that there is clearly something else behind it other than objective analysis. This applies equally to attitudes towards Israel in South Africa. Hopefully here, too, the growing demonisation of Israel will stop and ways sought to play a positive role rather than simplistically defining one side as good and the other evil. A key issue for global Jewry is the growth of anti-Semitism in numerous countries in various guises - whether as anti-Zionism or something else. Attitudes towards Jews have historically been a bellwether for the general state of health of a society, and no less today. The article on page 3 reports on an aspect of this. For the world at large, action on global warming is vital, as is the need to emerge from the global recession and for normal trade relations to resume. Equally important, global terrorism and rogue states like Iran and North Korea - and fundamentalists worldwide - must be reined in. We are at a dangerous crossroads. We need cool heads and decisive action. Barack Obama, for one - leader of the world’s most powerful country and recent Nobel Peace Prize-winner who was elected with so much fanfare, will have to finally earn his spurs. INVOKING THE laughably termed “Middle East Peace Process”, especially in the context of yet another attempt by ambitious international do-gooders to get it moving, calls to mind an early “Madam and Eve” cartoon involving the maid, Eve, and Madam’s cantankerous mother, newly arrived from England. The two have been at loggerheads from the word go and Madam Gwen, in a naïvely optimistic attempt to get them to resolve their differences, forces them to confront one another over a table and talk things out. The strip concludes with three identical panels showing Eve and Mother Anderson glowering at one another without saying a word. Something rather similar actually happened during Nelson Mandela’s presidential inauguration 15 years ago, the respective players in this regard being Israeli President Ezer Weizman, Yasser Arafat and Mandela himself. As recalled by the then Israeli Ambassador Alon Liel, Mandela met with the two leaders and then told them: “Take the nearby office and use the opportunity to settle your differences - good luck!” One wonders what Peres and Arafat actually said to each other during the ensuing impromptu meeting. Mandela has since expressed deep disappointment over the ongoing failure of the Israelis and Palestinians to achieve a South Africa-style “miracle”. Like his Democratic predecessor Bill Clinton, Barack Obama has expended much effort in trying to resuscitate the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, with a view to achieving fairly soon a mutually satisfactory final status peace agreement. Clinton and then Israeli Premier Ehud Barak saw their efforts collapse into all-out violence as Arafat, confronted with a straightforward choice between peace and war, opted for the latter. This should stand as a dire warning of the dangers of forcing the pace when not all the parties are ready to make the necessary painful compromises. (Is there any significance, one wonders, in the fact that Obama and BARBARIC YAWP David Saks Ehud Barak, who similarly went hell for leather to bring the peace process to a successful conclusion in one dramatic package, being near namesakes?) September this year will mark the 10th anniversary of the start of the conflict that Arafat launched, one that in light of the continued unrest on the Gaza border, cannot be said to have ever truly ended. What in retrospect was so dangerous about the failed Camp David talks back in mid2000, was that they created a very real illusion that a peace deal was within everyone’s grasp. Neither Clinton nor Barak would seem to have understood the extent to which the issues were not just about such concrete nuts and bolts concerns as land, borders, security and the like, but about appearances. For the Palestinians, indoctrinated from an early age to regard the State of Israel as a criminal entity that must be fought as long as it existed, no agreement accepting the Zionist entity’s legitimacy could ever be swallowed no matter how many concessions by Israel accompanied it. Arafat’s dilemma at Camp David in this regard is at least understandable. Right up until those talks, when the CNN cameras were pointing elsewhere, he had assured his people (and these included the far-flung Palestinian Diaspora as well) that nothing less than the destruction of Israel and liberation of all of Palestine would be accepted. Now, he was being asked to tell them in effect that the war had been lost and that Israel was there to stay. Having failed to prepare the Palestinians for this, he found himself trapped in an irremediable quandary that he could only escape through reverting to the terrorist violence that had characterised his pre-Oslo career. It could further be argued that the US role in forcing the Palestinians into going to the polls at the beginning of 2006, was another example of well-intentioned foreign meddling that backfired. Exercising their democratic choice, the Palestinians put the totalitarian, explicitly anti-peace Hamas movement into office, and this led in short order to the emergence of an Islamist terrorist statelet in Gaza. Today, peace activists must wrestle with the reality of two distinct Palestinian territories, with one grudgingly adhering to a vision of peaceful co-existence with Israel while the other continues in word and deed to reject it. Given the region’s lamentable history, Barack Obama’s ambitious vision for getting the international community involved once more in the Middle East, can only be regarded with alarm. With the situation being so volatile, perhaps the whole concept of a final status peace agreement needs to be put on the backburner in favour of smaller, incremental achievements on the ground. There is no hope for Gaza so long as Hamas persists with its ruinous policies, but in the West Bank, greatly reduced levels of violence are resulting in a gradual normalisation in daily life there, evinced by scaled down Israeli security measures and surprisingly high levels of economic growth. Who knows whether it will ever be possible to sort out the fraught questions of settlements, settlers, Jerusalem and refugees, to name just four of the deal-breaking issues that continue to defy a resolution. However, if Israel and the West Bank can maintain this process of de facto non-violent co-existence, it may not matter as much in the long term as people seem to think. What is decidedly not needed is the involvement of outside parties, however well meaning, whose efforts only lead to unrealistically high expectations being raised. Miep Gies, who helped Anne Frank, dies at 100 AMSTERDAM - Miep Gies, the woman who helped hide Anne Frank and recovered her diary, has died at 100. Gies, who died on Monday in the Netherlands, was the last surviving member of the small group that hid Anne and her family from the Nazis for two years. Gies died from neck injuries after a fall shortly before Christmas at her home. She was the last of a handful of non-Jews providing food, books and encouragement to the secret annexe behind the warehouse where Anne, her sister, parents and four other Jews, stayed hidden from the Nazis. The Gestapo eventually in 1944 raided the hiding place and the Jews were deported to German death camps. Gies returned to the attic after the raid and found the now famous diary and loose papers of Anne. The diary Anne wrote at the age of 13 tells of her life in hiding, from June 12, 1942 to August 1, 1944. She died at the age of 15 of typhoid in the BergenBelsen concentration camp, a mere two weeks before the Allied troops were to liberate the camp. “Miep Gies was a beacon of light during the dark days of the Holocaust,” said Rabbi Marvin Hier, founder and dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre. “Without her, the world would never have known about Anne Frank and hundreds of millions of people would never have been inspired by her story.” (JTA) Miep Gies at home. 1999 (Gon Buurman © AFH/AFF) 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT 7 OPINION AND ANALYSIS FORUM FOR DIVERSE VIEWS Can West Bank improvements hold in 2010? LESLIE SUSSER JERUSALEM IN ISRAEL and the West Bank, 2009 was the year that ended without a bang - and people were grateful for it. For the first time in a decade, Israel experienced a year without a suicide bombing. According to official Israeli figures, five Israelis were killed in incidents in or with attackers originating from the West Bank (In all, 15 Israelis were killed in 2009 by terrorism, including nine during the Israel-Hamas war last January). By comparison, 17 Israelis were killed by West Bank terrorism in 2008 and 429 in 2002, at the height of the second Palestinian intifada. Shooting attacks were down to 22 in 2009 from 83 the previous year, while the use of explosive devices fell to 13 from 54. Of the 633 recorded terrorist incidents in 2009, more than 90 per cent were considered minor - including the throwing of stones or Molotov cocktails. The decline owes both to Israeli and Palestinian practices. The security fence Israel erected in the West Bank is proving to be a highly effective barrier against terror spilling over from the West Bank into Israel proper. Inside the West Bank, besides the deployment of roadblocks and checkpoints, Israeli troops have honed a successful modus operandi around Palestinian cities: During the day they usually stay out of sight, and at night, acting on real-time intelligence, they move in on would-be terrorist cells. More important than enhanced Israeli anti-terror capabilities, however, is the sharp decline in Palestinian efforts to wage terrorist attacks. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, in power since 2005, has consistently opposed the use of violence as a means of attaining Palestinian goals. He argues that when pitted against Israel’s military superiority, it is ineffectual and ultimately selfdefeating. Terrorism also does not sit well with PA Prime Minister Salam Fayyad’s two-year state-building project, which requires a modicum of stability and a great deal of international support. The West Bank also is in the midst of a major economic boom, which a new round of terrorist attacks would undermine. Underpinning the newfound calm is the successful training and deployment of local Palestinian forces, responsible for law and order in major West Bank cities. Since 2006, US Lt-Gen Keith Dayton has been building a Western-style gendarmerie intended to provide the security foundation for the would-be Palestinian state. The carefully vetted recruits are sent on intensive four-month training courses at a base near Amman, Jordan, run by US, Canadian, British and Turkish instructors, and return to the West Bank imbued with new Western standards of policing. The results on the streets have been dramatic: Armed gangs have disappeared and crime rates are down, and there is a new can-do social and economic atmosphere fuelled at least partly by the new sense of law and order. In the context of local Palestinian politics, the National Security Force, known derogatively as “Dayton’s Army” by its detractors, is very much an arm of Abbas’ Fatah Party. As such, it is helping to keep a lid on violence by its more radical Hamas rivals. This also helps explain the decline in terrorist acts against Israelis in 2009. The establishment of the new security force is an integral part of Fayyad’s state-building plan. Not only are Dayton’s men set to provide the security nucleus of the emerging Palestinian state, their uniformed presence on the streets is perhaps the most overt sign for Palestinians that their state indeed may be on the way, again reducing the incentive for Palestinian violence. The law and order imposed by the combined efforts of the Israeli Defence Forces and the Pales- Members of the Palestinian security forces marching through the West Bank city of Ramallah as part of a training session, on December 18, 2009. (PHOTOGRAPH: ISSAM RIMAWI / FLASH90 / JTA) tinian security force has enabled Israel to eliminate dozens of roadblocks and checkpoints, allowing more freedom of movement. This has helped accelerate the economic boom in the West Bank, itself one of the strongest brakes on Palestinian terrorism. By any standards, the boom in 2009 has been impressive. Economic growth in the West Bank reached 7 per cent - far higher than in Israel or the West. Tourism to Bethlehem, which doubled to 1 million in 2008, was up to nearly 1,5 million in 2009. New car imports increased by 44 per cent. Gleaming new shopping malls opened in Jenin and Nablus. Palestinian developers are planning to build the first modern Palestinian city, Rawabi. Law and order, the boom and the state building all augur well for peacemaking over violence. “One of the things holding back progress towards a permanent settlement is an Israeli concern that there is no one on the other side capable of cutting a lasting deal,” Shlomo Brom, director of the programme on IsraelPalestinian relations at the Tel Aviv-based Institute for National Strategic Studies, told JTA. “But the more you go forward on the state-building project, the more you will be able to overcome that lack of confidence.” Yet as encouraging as today’s trends are, it all could unravel very quickly. With Israeli-Palestinian peace deadlocked for more than year, Palestinian leaders have begun showing a degree of ambivalence toward terrorism. In late December, Abbas commemorated the 50th anniversary of the birth of female terrorist Dalal Mughrabi, and the governor of Ramallah named a square in her honour. Mughrabi was one of the leaders of a 1978 bus hijacking in which 38 Israelis, including 13 children, were killed. SUMMER SALE TO JONAS YOU SHOULD FLOCK To choose some of our wonderful stock WE’RE HAVING A GREAT SALE Garments will move with a gale IMPORTED & LOCAL WEAR REDUCED DRASTICALLY 335 Jan Smuts Avenue Craighall Park Tel: (011) 325-4986 OPEN - MONDAY - FRIDAY 9AM - 4:30PM 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). Also in late December, Abbas dubbed as “holy martyrs” three terrorists shot dead by IDF forces after killing a Jewish settler in a roadside shooting. Security experts estimate that potential Palestinian militants have about 120,000 weapons hidden underground in the West Bank, all of which could come out should the situation deteriorate. That’s aside from the possibility that in a crisis, Palestinian security forces could turn their guns on Israel; that happened when the second intifada broke out in 2000. Past experience shows that economic prosperity alone is no guarantee of peace and quiet. Both previous Palestinian intifadas, in 1987 and 2000, erupted at a time of economic growth. Whether the West Bank terrorism statistics rise or fall in 2010, could depend on whether or not serious peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians get off the ground. (JTA) 8 SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 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 Artisan Contemporary Gallery, Morningside, Durban: Collection 2009: an exhibition featuring ceramics, fabric art, turned wood and paintings, until January 20, (031) 312-4364. Brodie/Stevenson gallery, Craighall: “In the Red/In the Black”, an exhibition of new work by Sean Slemon, until February 13, (011) 326-0034. Catalina Theatre, Durban: The Annual Musho Festival, with a critically sharp package of theatre and performance ends January 17, (031) 305-6889. David Krut Projects, Rosebank, Johannesburg: “Journey”, work by Gail Behrmann, until January 30, (011) 447-0627. Steven Cohen’s ‘Golgotha’ is all about weight of loss ROBYN SASSEN “WHEN I first met Steven Cohen,” Austrian photographer Marianne Greber comments in Paris, “I recognised his baggage.” She’d lost a sister to cancer. Cohen carries the loss of his brother, Marc. Yes, this is the same Jewish South Africanborn Cohen, who pioneered performance art locally, simultaneously wowing, bewildering and angering audiences. He was headhunted by Ballet Atlantique’s Régine Chopinot in 2002; he’s alive and well and living in Paris. It was he who nakedly flick-flacked around Jewish culture, with a head of make-up and very high-heeled shoes. Side-stepping back troubles, Cohen debuted “Golgotha”, a new work, at the prestigious Fest d’Automne at Paris’ Pompidou Centre, last month. Billed by French critics as the definitive 9/11 artwork, “Golgotha” engages with loss. Cohen keeps fit running, cycling and swimming; “but everything’s in trepidation”, he says. His spinal fusion prognosis could end his performance career. Given that part of Golgotha sees him on a dollar-covered pogo stick; another, wearing a ‘30s Russian G-Force suit - with shoes weighing 30kg each, his need for robustness is clear. The work’s not only about physical prowess, but also hard emotional engagement. In it, he destroys Vallaurises - ‘50s French porcelain ornaments. “I destroy them because I love them. It is about obliterating the past; letting go.” Structured with the melding of seemingly disparate videography, music, photography, installation and performance, “Golgotha’s” premised on a bizarre shopping discovery Cohen made in New York: a shop called Evolution, in the Chanel strip. It sells décor for the obscenely wealthy and morally rotten: its stock includes human bones. “They’re oriental, far as I have been able to establish,” Cohen refers to two skulls he bought. “They were never buried, or broken. Their price is determined by their teeth. These poor people lost power over their own bones.” Hout Street Gallery, Paarl: Annual Summer Salon, including work by Na’ama Nothmann, on show until February 28, (021) 872-5030. Iziko, South African National Gallery, Cape Town: “Dada South?” curated by Kathryn Smith and Roger van Wyk, interrogating South African art after Dada, with work by Candice Breitz, Steven Cohen, Neil Goedhals, Kendall Geers and more, until February 28, (021) 481-3800. Joburg Theatre, Braamfontein: In the Mandela Theatre, “Hotel California - The Eagles Experience”, a tribute show, January 20 - 31, (011) 877-6800. Kim Sacks Gallery, Rosebank: “Made by Hand in Black and White”, with work by Carolyn Heydenrych, Kim Sacks, Lisa Firer, and more until January 22, (011) 4475804. Linder Auditorium and associated venues, Johannesburg: The Johannesburg International Mozart Festival, originally conceived by Richard Cock to correspond with Mozart’s 250th anniversary in 2006, January 23 February 9. www.join-mozartfestival.org Market Theatre, Newtown: In the Laager, by popular demand, Mpumelelo Paul Grootboom’s “Foreplay”, until March 14. In the Main Theatre, “Songs of Migration” compiled by Hugh Masekela and James Ngcobo; directed by Ngcobo, until February 21. In the Barney Simon, Monde Mayephu’s “The Pen”, January 18 - February 21, (011) 832-1641. Old Mutual Theatre on the Square, Sandton: “Tomfoolery”, a musical comedy by Tom Lehrer, starring Kate Normington, Malcolm Terrey and Matthew Stewardson; directed by Greg Homan, until February 14. (011) 883-8606. Rose Korber, Camps Bay: The 18th Annual Art Salon, curated by Rose Korber, until January 31, (021) 438-9152. Walking in New York, toward the Trinity church, butterflies on his head, skulls for shoes, Steven Cohen presents Golgotha. (PHOTOGRAPH © MARIANNE GREBER) FELDMAN ON FILM Peter Feldman Pick of the Week Brothers Cast: Tobey Maguire, Jake Gyllenhaal, Natalie Portman, Bailee Madison, Taylor Geare, Patrick Flueger, Sam Shepard, Mare Winningham, Clifton Collins Jr, Josh Berry Director: Jim Sheridan “Brothers” is a powerful indictment of war and Irish director Jim Sheridan draws the viewer in on a deeply spiritual and emotional level. His careful observation, his measured pace and that lived-in feeling is strongly reminiscent of one of those European productions. It is an engrossing work with first-rate performances from a cast who bring home the reality of Americans fighting on foreign soil. “Brothers” is the story of two siblings, thirtysomething Captain Sam Cahill (Toby Mcguire) and his younger brother Tommy (Jake Gyllenhaal), who are polar opposites. Shipped out to Afghanistan, Sam is presumed dead when his Black Hawk helicopter is shot down in the mountains. At home in suburbia, the Cahill family suddenly faces a shocking void, and Tommy tries to fill in for his brother by assuming newfound responsibility by taking care of Grace (Natalie Portman), his brother’s wife and their two daughters. When Sam returns home unexpectedly, a nervous mood settles over the family. Sam, uncharacteristically withdrawn and volatile, grows suspicious of his brother and Grace. Their familiar roles now nearly reversed, Sam and Tommy end up facing the ultimate physical and mental challenge when they confront each other. In the shifting family dynamics, the question is who will dominate? And how will the brothers come to terms with issues of love, loyalty, and manhood - and with an attractive woman in the middle? “Brothers” is a remake of Susanne Bier’s 2004 Cohen responds to assertions of immorality in his work enthusiastically. “It’s morally obscene,” he agrees. “Even death in our society is commodified.” Cohen employed a boatmaker to create a shoe using a human skull as its instep. But isn’t standing on the skulls corroborating this immorality? “Of course!” he spits. “Working with these objects, I feel foreboding. I was challenged, when I found them, to give them dignity in my work.” This understanding of dignity feels contradictory on paper. In the context of the work, backed by a characteristically diverse array of music rendering Judy Garland’s rendition of “Glory Glory Hallelujah”, a dirge to 9/11, its impact is devastating. “I tried not to get lost in the trauma of my brother’s suicide. All my life I have hidden in my costumes. In this piece I am utterly vulnerable.” In “Golgotha”, with the shoes, Cohen wears a conventional business suit, his head a perfect mask of make-up and butterfly wings. Using vanitas symbols as old as the Italian Renaissance, Cohen’s comments on life’s fragility are palpable. A pinnacle - or nadir - in “Golgotha” is an extract from a filmed US-government execution. “I found the video cassette in that shop too. “When ‘Golgotha’ performed in Brussels, a man in the audience fainted upon seeing this clip. Is this a cheap trick to get audiences talking? Cohen nods. “The immorality and trashy indecency of the work is key to its offensiveness.” He’s had plenty of fan mail from strangers recognising the weight of loss. Seven years out of South Africa, Cohen has artistic status everywhere else. “I’ve performed in 14 countries,” he adds, bewilderedly. “It costs a fortune: venues pay my agent thousands and thousands of Euros”. At “Golgotha’s” opening, artistic director of the Fest d’Automne, Marie Collin invited him back in 2011 for what will be his fifth appearance at this festival; the only South Africans he’s shared this status with are French-knighted Robyn Orlin and William Kentridge. He laughs: “Three old white Jews.” He’s bought a house in Lille, north of Paris, aided by the French government. “I love it! It mixes glamour with squalor. It has rudimentary bathroom facilities but a glass-ceilinged studio. Government support is standard for all artists, here. I feel I wasted years struggling in South Africa, seldom with critical support, more often with parochial mockery. “I still love South Africa, but most things I loved there are gone.” From December, Capetonians can see Cohen’s screenprints from the late ‘80s. He has work on a show at the SA National Gallery and a solo show at Michael Stevenson. “They’re works I can no longer look after. So much was stolen from my house in Troyeville. This is not for money. It is to find the pieces foster homes.” • “Dada South?”, curated by Kathryn Smith and Gary van Wyk is at Iziko, South African National Gallery, until February 28, (021) 481-3800. • “Steven Cohen” is at Michael Stevenson, January 21 - March 6, (021) 462-1500. Danish feature, “Brodre”, and it remains faithful to its essence. Screenwriter David Benioff and Sheridan retain the themes and psychological nuances of the original. Jake Gyllenhaal, as the black sheep of the family who is released from prison after a bank robbery and unable to find his centre, and Toby Macguire as the Marine captain who returns from being incarcerated by the Taliban and is a changed man, are potent forces. Their scenes together crackle with tension. Though Grace is overjoyed at the news of Sam’s return, she does not realise the man she loved and married, effectively died in Afghanistan. The core of the film lies in Sam’s shredded psyche and its nowhere more profound than when he is unable to reconnect with his children, Isabelle and Maggie, and is haunted by a belief that Grace and Tommy are having an affair. He is a broken, dangerous man - the kind of person who has been shaped into a weapon but no longer has a reason to use it. More than anything else, the film addresses the effects war has on man. Top Results 2009 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT National Senior Certificate & Independent Examination Board ard A supplement compiled by Britt Landsman and Alison Goldberg. Contact (011) 886-0162 or visit www.sajewishreport.co.za Jewish learners shine bright in 2009 matric exams OWN CORRESPONDENT WHAT A WELCOME refrain! The Jewish day schools and also CrawfordSchools which cater for the majority of the country’s Jewish learners, again boast topdrawer 2009 matric results - be it IEB or National Certificate. The irony is that one has become so used to the excellent results posted by Jewish learners, that it is “taken as read” - not thinking about the 12 years’ hard work by the learners, the dedication of well-trained teachers who go way beyond the proverbial extra mile, and parents playing an active role in the education of their children. Just when you think: It can’t get any better, it in fact does! King David High School, Linksfield, the biggest of the Jewish day schools, this year, boast eceptional matric results, with four candidates (Gal Feller, Sean Hurwitz, Steven James and David Subel) in the IEB top achievers and with KDL’s candidate distinction list, the school is ranked as one of the very top achieving IEB schools in the country. Five candidates had nine distinctions each; 4 with 8; 5 with 7; 8 with 6; 6 with 5; 5 with 4; 15 with 3; 16 with 2 and 25 with 1. Staggeringly, 27 per cent of the matrics achieved at least three distinctions and 56 per cent of the group achieved at least one distinction. “As impressive as our distinction statistics, is the fact that the overall average for all candidates for all subjects is 70 per cent, which indicates the third consecutive year-on-year improvement across the board,” says headmaster Marc Falconer. He says it shows that not only are KDL’s top achievers making an outstanding effort, but that all pupils have shown commendable commitment. “It is obvious, but worth repeating, that no school is better than its teachers. These results are a testimony to the King David staff; engaging with a new curriculum, new demands and equipping pupils to excel in the increasingly demanding higher order thinking and problem solving that the IEB exams demand. “These achievements are not a result of mere exam coaching, but a real demonstrable and sustainable education that has ensured exam success but - perhaps more importantly - promises continued excellence at university and beyond.” King David High School Victory Park, KDL’s sister school, also excelled in the IEB exams. Eighty four learners sat the exam and they achieved 180 distinctions. Forty seven received at least one distinction. Gabriella Geffen was on the IEB “Outstanding Achievers” list and Jarren Lange and Daniel Katzew were on the “Commendable Achiever” list. Andrew Stead, executive head of KDVP says: “Over and above this we had several learners who ranked in the top one per cent in individual subjects. They were: Tamaryn Fox (Life Sciences), Michael Friedman (History), Gabriella Geffen (Dramatic Arts, English, Hebrew, Physical Sciences), Zara Kretzmer (Life Sciences), Jarren Lange (Information Technology, Maths), Ilan Price (English, Life Sciences, Maths, Physical Sciences) and Daniel Sive (English). Jarren Lange achieved 100 per cent for maths, an incredible feat, and the three learners who did Advanced Programme Mathematics, Tamaryn Fox, Jarren Lange and Michael Friedman, all achieved distinctions in the subject. “I would like to extend my congratulations to the students and staff for these outstanding results. Everyone’s hard work and dedication has certainly paid dividends.” Headmaster Marianne Marks, principal of Herzlia High School in Cape Town, said: “Today the Herzlia High School Class of 2009 did themselves proud when they achieved a 100 per cent pass rate in the National Senior Certificate (Matric) exams. In addition, 94 per cent of candidates achieved university entrance passes and we were therefore placed in the top 10 schools in the Western Cape. “These achievements are particularly noteworthy because our school is the only one of the 10 top schools that is fully academically inclusive! I would like to pay tribute to the pupils and their teachers for once again bringing such honour to United Herzlia Schools.” Alex Isaakidis, CEO of ADvTECH Schools Division, says of CrawfordSchools’ outstanding results: “We are very proud of the achievements of all our Jewish students that wrote matric in 2009. A total of 17 Jewish students achieved three or more A symbols, including Alex Levine and Danielle Sher who each achieved 9 A symbols, with Danielle achieving 93 per cent for Hebrew as well! “Jewish students attend all our schools in KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng and are an important part of our academic, cultural and sporting successes of the CrawfordSchools. Many of these students will be continuing their studies this year at South African universities as well as top overseas universities, including Oxford, Harvard, Yale and Browns and we wish them every success for the future.” Rabbi Dovid Hazdan, dean of the Torah Academy, said: “We are delighted that Torah Academy has yet again maintained its unbroken record of 100 per cent passes with university exemptions in the matric exams - as well as 44 per cent of all papers written, achieving a 70 per cent or higher aggregate from the class of 2009. “We are proud of our students and pay tribute to the teaching staff for concentrating on the individual needs of each learner - for to optimise the potential of each student is the real measure of success in education. “Our school has reiterated its commitment to excellence in secular and Jewish studies. But we also believe in the bigger picture of educating not only to make a living, but to ensure a quality in life,” Rabbi Hazdan said. Another “stalwart” in Johannesburg is Yeshiva College , regularly boxing above its weight. The school said: “We had a relatively small group of matriculants, 33, and be- tween them they accumulated 74 distinctions. This works out to an average of 2,24 distinctions per candidate, a truly amazing statistic.” Shira Solomon was the top performer with six distinctions. Five learners got five. A number of YC learners achieved one or more results in the top one per cent of Life Orientation; Eitan Dubb was in the top one per cent for Business Studies, Chava Goldberg for Business Studies and Computer Applications Technology, Dani Sher in English and Life Orientation and David Azaraf for Hebrew. At the small Theodor Herzl High School in Port Elizabeth, 32 matriculants passed their examinations and all except one got a university entrance. “We had three Jewish students who did exceptionally well and got level 7 (over 80 per cent plus in specific subjects) in 10 of the possible 21 subject results, “ says the school’s head of department in humanities, Adina Pieters. Yeshiva Toras Emes in Johannesburg was a dark horse, catching some big ones in the home straight. Rosh Yeshiva Rabbi Gedalia Sternstein and Principal Alan Karp, are justifiably proud of their school’s outstanding results. Eight learners got 33 distinctions between them, with an average of over four distinctions per learner. “We’re a Jewish religious school which participates in advanced Jewish studies for Yeshiva. The learners only begin secular studies at 13:30 because they do religious studies from 07:00. We’re the only school in South Africa that specialises in preparing high school boys to be able to fit into Israeli yeshivas that are made for Israelis. “All of our learners have gone to yeshivas in Israel, which are the equivalent of Oxford University. We are in a school that is very in focus with our learners,” says Rabbi Sternstein. I II SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 TOP RESULTS 2009 KD Schools Foundation KD schools maintain reputation of excellence IT IS FREQUENTLY remarked that history repeats itself and King David High School Linksfield and King David High School Victory Park have once again proved the truth of this adage in their magnificent matriculation results in the IEB system. Of course, it is important not to take such excellence for granted and to remember that such standards are not achieved simply because it is traditional. They are the result of the magnificent teamwork of teachers and learners over a number of years, and we pay tribute to the outstanding efforts of our dedicated teaching staff, to the hard work of our learners and to our loyal parents for endowing the right combination of genes. Such a tripartite combination of forces must inevitably produce excellence. The statistics of the results make staggering reading: 243 learners wrote the examinations, and a total of 487 distinctions were obtained with 94 per cent achieving university exemption. Four King David learners were placed among the IEB “Outstanding” Top 57 and three among the IEB “Commendable” Top 48; totalling 7 learners in the IEB Top 100 countrywide. Thirty two learners achieved the proverbial “full house”. Of equal importance is the fact that many of those originally assessed as learningdisadvantaged, proved the sceptics wrong by achieving matriculation passes. These magnificent matric results, the culmination of a 12-year learning process, might suggest that our learners are ruthlessly competitive and that academic achievement is the only measure of success. Our schools have recorded outstanding results in every facet of school life across a broad spectrum of sporting and cultural activities and are highly respected for their achievements in these areas. Not to be overlooked is the very commendable social awareness programmes of all the King David schools and their considerable efforts to assist their disadvantaged counterparts. We are justifiably proud of our achievements in 2009 and look forward to the challenges of 2010. We are sure that the tradition of excellence, the results of the remarkable spirit of co-operation between learners and teachers, will once again prove the wisdom of the verse in Tehillim: “From all my teachers I have gained understanding.” 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT III TOP RESULTS 2009 King David High School Victory Park 2009 National Senior Certificate results 84 candidates - 180 subject distinctions EIGHT DISTINCTIONS: EIGHT DISTINCTIONS: EIGHT DISTINCTIONS: EIGHT DISTINCTIONS: EIGHT DISTINCTIONS: SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: Gabriella Geffen: Afrikaans, Dramatic Arts, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Physical Sciences. Daniel Katzew: Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, History, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Physical Sciences. Jarren Lange: Accounting, Advanced Programme Maths, Afrikaans, English, IT, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Physical Sciences. Lindy Pincus: Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Physical Sciences. Ilan Price: Afrikaans, English, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Music, Physical Sciences. Michael Friedman: Advanced Programme Maths, English, History, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths, Maths Paper 3. Natasha Salant: English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Music, Physical Sciences. SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Daniel Sive: Afrikaans, English, History, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths, Physical Sciences. Marc Sacks: English, History, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Music, Physical Sciences. Daniel Arenstein: Afrikaans, English, French, Maths, Physical Sciences. Jade Courcol: Afrikaans, English, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths. Jonathan Hurwitz: IT, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths, Physical Sciences. Jess Morris: IT, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths, Maths Paper 3. Micael Zollmann: English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Lara Bloch: English, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths. Nerissa Bloch: English, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths. Adam Gray: English, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Visual Arts. Zara Kretzmer: English, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Yehuda Rabinowitz: English, Hebrew, History, Life Orientation. Adam Retter: English, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths. EIGHT DISTINCTIONS: Tamaryn Fox: Advanced Programme Maths, Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Physical Sciences. Isa Orlianski: English, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths Paper 3. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Dean Sevel: Geography, Life Orientation, Maths, Physical Sciences. Jillian Penaluna: Afrikaans, English, History, Life Orientation. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Lisa Shein: Dramatic Arts, English,, History, Life Sciences. 3 DISTINCTIONS - Joshua Brook: Dramatic Arts, English, Life Orientation. - Roxan Friedland: Life Orientation, Maths, Maths Paper 3. - Alissa Gritzman: English, Hebrew, Life Orientation. - Montana Levin: English, Life Orientation, Life Sciences. - Erin Maserow: English, Hebrew, Life Sciences. - Boaz Valkin: Hebrew, History, Life Orientation. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Diana Berkowitz: English, Life Orientation, Maths, Music. IV SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 TOP RESULTS 2009 King David Linksfield NINE DISTINCTIONS: NINE DISTINCTIONS: Gal Feller: Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths, Maths P3, Advanced Programme Maths, Physical Science. Steven James: Accounting, Afrikaans, English, Information Technology, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3, Advanced Programme Maths, Physical Science. NINE DISTINCTIONS: NINE DISTINCTIONS: Daniel Ross: Accounting, Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3, Advanced Programme Maths, Physical Science. Daniel Stoch: Accounting, Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3, Advanced Programme Maths, Physical Science. David Subel: Afrikaans, English, History, Information Technology, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3, Advanced Programme Maths, Physical Science. Saige Epstein: Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, History, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3, Physical Science. SIX DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: Dean Joffe: Business, Studies, Dramatic Arts, English, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3, Visual Arts. Daniella Malin: Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Maths, Physical Science. Joshua Victor: Accounting; English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3, Physical Science. Emma Berkenfeld: English, Hebrew, History, Life Orientation, Life Science, Maths. Jessica Cohen: English, Hebrew, History, Life Orientation, Life Science, Maths. Laurie Colman: Accounting, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths, Physical Science. FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Nicole Sakinofsky: Geography, Life Orientation, Life Science, Maths, Physical Science. Daniel Shalem: English, Hebrew, History, Life Orientation, Maths Kayli Tucker: Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3, Physical Science. Ronit Levy: English, History, Life Orientation, Life Science, Maths Lit. EIGHT DISTINCTIONS: NINE DISTINCTIONS: Courtney Fuhr: English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths. Kelly Goldstuck: English, Life Orientation, Life Science, Maths. Greg Epstein: Accounting, Business Studies, IT, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3. Kerri-Lee Fox: Accounting, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Life Science, Maths. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Saul Pincus: Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation. Kfir Rusin: Business Studies, Hebrew, History, Maths. 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT TOP RESULTS 2009 EIGHT DISTINCTIONS: Daniel Frichol: Accounting, Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3, Physical Science. SIX DISTINCTIONS: Josh Kaplan: Accounting, Business Studies, English, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Daniel Zar: English, Geography, Life Orientation, Maths. EIGHT DISTINCTIONS: EIGHT DISTINCTIONS: SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: Joshua Harris: Accounting, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3, Advanced Programme Maths, Physical Science. Sean Hurwitz: Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, Information Technology, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3, Visual Arts. Camille Bracher: Accounting, Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths, Physical Science. SIX DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Maya Tal: Business Studies, English, Hebrew, History, Life Orientation, Maths. Romy Genende: Consumer Studies, English, Life Orientation, Life Science, Maths Lit. Adam Kotzen: Geography, Life Orientation, Life Science, Maths, Maths P3, Physical Science. 3 DISTINCTIONS: - Tali Arbel: Accounting, Business Studies, English. - Liane Benjamin: Afrikaans, Life Orientation, Maths. - Hayley Brayton: Accounting, Life Orientation, Maths. - Casey Chelchinskey: English, Life Orientation, Art. - Jayde Courtney: English, History, Life Orientation. - Kaeli Epstein: History, Life Orientation, Visual Art. - Sarah Gore: Hebrew, Life Orientation, Life Science. - Danielle Graiser: English, Hebrew, Life Orientation. - Glen Immermann: Business Studies, Life Orientation, Maths. SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: Josh Glauber: Accounting, Business Studies, English, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths P3, Physical Science. FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Daniella Koszewski: Accounting, Afrikaans, Business Studies, Hebrew, Life Orientation. 3 DISTINCTIONS: - Jaydene Katz: Business Studies, Hebrew, Life Orientation. - Candice Kotzen: Afrikaans, Life Orientation, Maths Lit. - Gilad Mensky: Life Orientation, Maths, Physical Science. - Daniel Mirkin: Accounting, Business Studies, Maths. - Maxine Ohayon: English, Hebrew, Life Orientation. - Wayne Pincus: Afrikaans, Hebrew, Life Orientation. Design College - leading force in design education DESIGN IS THE art of conceiving, planning and shaping concepts that are made to serve people so as to answer to their individual and collective needs and desires. The Design School Southern Africa was founded by Lesley Sternberg in 1990 and has since been a leading force in design education. It began with a handful of students in Pretoria and has grown to become an institution with several hundred students at campuses in Pretoria and Johannesburg. The Design School Southern Africa is fully accredited by the CHE (Council for Higher Education) and registered with the Department of Education. It is an Adobe, Autodesk and Lectraaccredited training centre. DSSA offers the following threeyear fulltime courses: Bachelor of Arts Interior Design, Bachelor of Arts Graphic Design, Bachelor of Arts Fashion Design, Diploma Photography and Photoshop, Foundation Art and Design, as well as part-time courses: Interior Decorating, CAD, Photoshop, Lectra, Animation. By emphasising multifaceted design skills, side by side with new technology, business skills and a heightened awareness of socio-economic issues, the Design School Southern Africa is committed to furthering the design education process with the end-objective of turning out insightful highly skilled and wellformed graduates who will contribute positively to the economy. The DSSA strives to promote the education process by communicating knowledge through the provision of pioneering and challenging teaching techniques in an environment that supports an understanding and awareness of social values and differences. This process focuses on learning through application (with a unique balance of theory and practical skill) to develop an individual voice for students when confronted with having to solve visual challenges in a creative manner. At DSSA we aim to equip designers for a world that places high value on the quality of human interaction. Staff are highly qualified and technically experienced in their fields. A number of our students have achieved industry success, locally and internationally, after completion of their course. DSSA has proudly produced many winners and/or finalists in national design competitions, the likes of Plascon, P G Bison, Coin and Bank Note, Durban Fashion Week, among others. V VI SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 TOP RESULTS 2009 There are truly many positive aspects to outcomes-based education Marc Falconer, King David Linksfield. OWN CORRESPONDENT FOUR PRINCIPALS of Jewish day schools have cautioned against the rubbishing of outcomes-based education, because of poor implementation. Marc Falconer, headmaster of King David Linksfield in Johannesburg, maybe sums it up best when he says that “no school and no system can be better than the people implementing it - and when one is allowing teachers to enter the profession who are not most academically able, the system is always going to be terminally flawed”. Geoff Cohen, director of education, Herzlia Schools in Cape Town, says: “The philosophy of OBE is in my mind a very sound educational principle. It promotes thinking by equipping learners with the necessary tools to enable them to discern what is important and what is relevant. “What makes OBE successful is its transparency. It sets agendas for both the teachers and the learners and provides a framework to assist them in their planning, organisation and execution.” A task team set up by Minister of Basic Education Angie Motshekga last year to get rid of glitches in the implementation of outcomes-based education and to address teacher concerns about “drowning in paperwork”, came up with a set of recommendations which got a thumbs up all-round. Falconer is adamant: “What is certain is that what OBE stands for is not going to change - the implementation will.” Outcomes-based education is a tried and tested system implemented with huge success in countries such as the US, Australia, the UK, Canada, etc. But these are First World countries with the necessary strong infrastructures (such as well-trained teachers) to make such a system work. To transplant a sophisticated Andrew Stead, King David Victory Park. system such as OBE to a struggling township school, is a recipe to court disaster. Falconer said OBE suffered from a typically South African syndrome a label that made it easy to criticise and discard OBE. He said the system first proposed in a completely different First World setting by Bill Spady, was never going to work in South Africa. “The sensible thing to do would have been to call the system something like ‘revised democratic education’, or ‘education for life’, or something neutral that was not going to get in the way of the improved system itself.” Andrew Stead, executive head of King David Victory Park, welcomed the broad changes envisaged by the National Curriculum System (NCS) report. He pointed out that the teaching environment in South Africa had “certainly changed” since the early nineties. Whereas learners have holiday breaks, nowadays teachers work through those breaks. He cited last October’s break when many teachers and school managers at KDVP were hard at work developing curricula, marking, writing reports, doing training or preparing learners for their final exams. He stresses that the task team report does not propose “giving up on the vision and intention of the NCS, but aims to better align the current realities of the classroom with the vision” (as espoused in the policy bulletin of the Independent Schools Association of Southern Africa - or ISASA). He says the objective of the report is to create more time for teaching and learning, and to decrease an unnecessary administrative workload on teachers. “This I think is extremely important and will hopefully allow more focus on that which we are appointed to do, namely teach with excellence.” Denese Bloch, principal of the Yes- Geoff Cohen, Herzlia principal. hiva College High Schools in Johannesburg, went “back to basics” by first explaining what outcomes-based education meant and the philosophy behind the concept. “When one considers the changes in education since the introduction of the National Curriculum Statement (NCS) which ushered in outcomesbased education (OBE) in South Africa, it is important to define OBE. Internationally, educators have been focusing more and more attention on outcomes results, performance and skills.” She said OBE had been introduced in many countries before being introduced in South Africa. “The concept is that one starts by developing a clear idea of what it is that learners should know when they reach a certain point in their education and then base the curriculum on achieving those outcomes. “In South Africa OBE has been seen as one of the ways to address the need for social transformation in our country and to ensure that the potential of each learner is achieved. OBE has changed education in South Africa, in that the focus is far more on acquiring skills than learning facts which need to be repeated. “Learners are taught to apply their knowledge rather than to simply relay information that they have been taught and then learned by rote. “In addition, collaborative learning is encouraged with learners being set tasks to be completed in pairs or groups. Peer assessment is one of the assessment tools used in OBE, and by marking each other’s work as well as providing a rationale for their marking of the work, learners are given a greater degree of independence and are able to move away from total reliance on educators. This kind of assessment also leads to greater understanding of the educational process.” Bloch says another significant change is the fact that every piece of Denese Bloch, Yeshiva College. work has to be accompanied by a rubric which explains what is required, as well as the way in which the marks will be allocated to the task. This also ensures that learners have far more clarity as to how to approach their learning tasks and the way that these tasks will be assessed by the educator. A great deal more self-study and investigation are promoted by OBE and often educators become facilitators and consultants in the learning process, she says. She adds that one of the cornerstones of OBE is the focus on integration of knowledge and skills and the ability to apply skills across subject. She concludes: “It is clear that the changes brought about by the introduction of OBE, have resulted in greater learner independence and this educational model is far more learnercentred than the previous ‘chalk and talk’ system. Learners are far more involved in all aspects of the learning process rather than being forced to sit passively and absorb information being fed to them by educators.” Falconer sees OBE as “a democratic educational system, designed to stimulate critical thought and problem-solving and to allow pupils to think for themselves. Other things OBE encourages is responsible use of the environment, IT, to see the world as an interrelated set of systems and the entire premise of the system is that the pupil is at the centre of the educational process - not the teacher...” A major concern of some of OBE’s “baggage” has been the tremendous new administrative workload on teachers. The task team made some key recommendations in this regard. It acknowledged the need to lighten teachers’ administrative workload and also recommended the “discontinuation of learner portfolios”. It also recommended reducing the number of learning programmes (subjects) in the intermediate phase (grade 4 to 6) from eight to six. An important recommendation is to target curriculum training for teachers and lastly, “developing a coherent, clear and simple five-year plan to improve the understanding of the NCS in the system”. Stead says he is hopeful that these recommendations will go some way to relieving teaching workloads going forward. “I am, however, committed to a skills-based educational approach as the conditions that our students will face in the future will certainly require adaptive skills, resilience to change and a solid value system to ensure success.” Cohen says OBE was designed to provide learners with specific skills that will produce more competent and informed adults. It sets clear goals which are required in each learning area. “What seems to have worked with the OBE system that is different from the previous educational programme, is that it moves away from rote learning and from memory testing. Learners are assessed according to skills, as opposed to content retention. “OBE has had the added benefit of demanding solid preparation. It has brought about a new excitement for education and has certainly got teachers thinking about what they have to do in the classroom. “Creating rubrics in all subjects for most tasks has provided a structured framework for subject departments.” Cohen says a further benefit worth mentioning is the sharing of ideas which has occurred between teachers and between schools. “The greatest negative of the OBE system has been the tremendous number of administrative tasks that have gone hand in hand with it. This has had the effect of overburdening teachers as well as using valuable teaching time in the classroom. The recent announcements that these are to be reduced, is very welcome.” 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT VII TOP RESULTS 2009 Pretoria’s Jewish matriculants shine Edenvale High School Pretoria Boys High School FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Although only five Jewish learners wrote the matric exams in Pretoria this year, they all excelled, making their schools, family and community proud. Darryl Margolis: Maths, Information Technology, Economics, Accounting, Life Orientation. Jed Lazarus Alon Bernitz DIANE WOLFSON PRETORIA THE TOP JEWISH matriculant in Pretoria for 2009 was Jed Saul Lazarus, who obtained 6 distinctions in English, Maths, Afrikaans, Life Orientation, Accounting and Life Sciences, at Crawford College Pretoria where he was elected onto the executive body (prefect). He intends studying medicine. Jed took part in many sports during his school years, such as powerboat racing where he became junior world champion and in soccer he obtained senior and junior colours and was selected to represent the SA under-18 Maccabi team in 2009. Alon Bernitz obtained 5 distinctions at Pretoria Boys High School for English, Afrikaans, Maths, Information Technology, Computer Science and Life Orientation. He was awarded full academic colours, and was elected as a school prefect and served as hostel prefect as well (the only Jewish student in a matric group of 320). Alon intends studying engineering at UCT when he returns from the UK where he is spending a gap year. Romy Loren Yuter obtained 2 distinctions for Life Orientation and Dramatic Arts. Romy was also head girl at Crawford, Pretoria. Torah Academy FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Tamar Stein: English, Maths, History, Business Studies, Life Orientation. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Shaul Yachad (head boy): English, History, Business Studies, Life Orientation. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Chaya Mushka Kesselman: English, CAT, History, Life Orientation. 3 DISTINCTIONS: Rachel Dadon: History, Business Studies, Life Orientation. Alon Bernitz: English, Afrikaans, Maths, IT, Computer Science, Life Orienation. VIII SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 TOP RESULTS 2009 Yeshiva College FIVE DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: Yeshiva Toras Emes THREE DISTINCTIONS David Tobias: Maths, Maths 3, Accounting. Avraham Goldstuck: Maths, Computer Applications Technology, History. Shira Solomon: English, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Hebrew, Computer Applications Technology, Life Orientation. David Azaraf: English, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Hebrew, Business Studies. FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Eitan Dubb: English, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Hebrew, Business Studies. Raphael Volpo: Accounting, Life Orientation, Hebrew, Science, Maths, Maths 3, Afrikaans. Aharon Markovitz: English, Afrikaans, Maths, Physical Science, Hebrew, Life Orientation, History. SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: Raphael Chaskalson: AP Maths, English, French, History, Zulu, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Physical Sciences. FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Alter Volpo: Accounting, Maths, Maths 3, Hebrew, Life Orientation. Alexandra Appelbaum: Accounting, English, French, History, Life Orientation, Maths, Maths Paper 3. FIVE DISTINCTIONS: SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Shmuel Slasky: Maths, Accounting, Life Orientation, History. David Leibowitz: English, Afrikaans, Maths, Life Orientation, History, IT, Life Sciences. Joshua Meltz: English, Geography, Life Orientation, Maths, Visual Arts. FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Joshua Weiss: English, Maths, Life Orientation, Geography, Visual Arts. Emma Tollman: English, History, Maths Literacy, Visual Arts. Hirsch Lyons FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: Redhill School Greenside School NINE DISTINCTIONS: Chava Goldberg: English, Maths, Maths Paper 3, Business Studies, Computer Applications Technology. SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Grey College Secondary School Bloemfontein FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Yonatan Peretz: English, Maths, Business Studies, Computer Applications Technology, Life Orientation. Jonathan Sidney: English, Afrikaans, Hebrew, Information Technology, Life Orientation. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Photo not available Hadassa Goldfein: English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths, Visual Arts. Michael Glass: Accounting, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths. Theodor Herzl High School, Port Elizabeth Saul Glass: Accounting, English, Hebrew, Life Orientation, Maths. Akiva Berkow: English, Life Orientation, Maths, Science. Justin Shein: Accounting, Business Studies, Life Orientation, Maths, Physical Science. Eden College Durban EIGHT DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Chana-Leah Unterslak: English, History, Life Orientation, Visual Arts. Gary Ganz: English, Geography, History, Maths. SIX DISTINCTIONS: Yael Kersh: Maths, Hebrew, Maths Literacy, Life Orientation. Yaffit Swisa: English, Afrikaans, Hebrew, Maths. THREE DISTINCTIONS - Gabriel Perelman: English, Hebrew, Life Sciences. - Daniel Sher: English, Hebrew, Life Orientation. - Melanie Sher: English, Computer Application Technology, Life Orientation. Kirsty Fouche: English, Maths, Afrikaans, Life Orientation, Life Sciences, Accounting. Sarah Bryer: Afrikaans, Business Studies, Drama, English, Life Sciences, Life Orientation, Maths. Ian Bear: Drama, English, IT, Life Orientation, Maths. 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT IX TOP RESULTS 2009 Yeshiva College - the complete Jewish schools been enthusiastically received and attendance has been outstanding. We also always partticipate in the inter-schools public speaking competition where we have always achieved outstanding results. One of the areas in which our learners excel is that of chesed and outreach. They are continually involved in many projects aimed at improving the lives of all our fellow South Africans. They learn a great deal through their interacttion with those who are less privileged than they, DENESE BLOCH PRINCIPAL, YESHIVA COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOLS MOST PARENTS WILL testify to the fact that choosing where to have their child or children educated is one of the most important decisions that they will make. Many factors will influence this decision, including religious considerations, the past record of the school as regards academic results, location, cost etc. However, the main concern certainly has to be the kind of young adult that emerges from the school at the end of the educational process. At Yeshiva College we equip our learners with superb skills in both Torah studies and general studies. Our academic day is divided between these two disciplines and we always marvel at the fact that, despite having far less classroom teaching time in general studies than almost all other schools, our learners always produce results which are among the best in the country and among the best in the IEB system. Matriculation results are always awaited with a degree of anxiety, even if one is confident that our learners will “pull it off” in the end. The year 2009 was no exception for Yeshiva College and yet again our learners did us proud. However, as much as we applaud and celebrate our top achievers, we never lose sight of the achievements of all our learners and are proud of their success in all areas of endeavour. We wish all our learners from matric 2009 a hearty mazal tov and may they achieve all their goals in the future based on the very solid foundation provided for them at Yeshiva College. We believe that the focus on Torah learning enhances the ability to learn in all areas. It encourages discipline and intellectual curiosity as well as the ability to interpret and interrogate an issue or information. It demands understanding and the ability to apply knowledge, all of which are prerequisites of outcomes-based education. Most young adults who have spent time learning in a yeshiva or seminary after school before registering for a degree, agree that the skills that they acquire through Torah learning, equip them fully for their tertiary education and make success at university that much easier. The hours spent pouring over texts, which good Torah learning demands, provides an excellent training for all kinds of learning. We are also very conscious of the importance of the physical well-being of our learners and to this end encourage all to participate in sport. In this regard we have been led by the interests of our learners and in addition to the usual school sports we have recently introduced pilates and kick boxing for our girls. Both of these have as well as those who are resident at the old aged home and various other homes and institutions. Their involvement in the Fountain of Love home for abandoned children and Ma’Afrika Tikkun provides them with an awareness of the diversity of South African society and the needs of others. We believe that this knowledge and sensitivity are essential in order to create graduates who are aware of life outside of the narrow borders of school. It is all of these opportunities and facilities that ensure that the young men and women who emerge from our school have been provided with all the skills and knowledge one needs in order to take one’s place in any field of endeavour. Our past students have taken their place in society as leaders in many fields including the religious world, the business world and all the professions. We feel very confident that when we send our graduates out into the world, we have sent out young men and women of value who will contribute to society in a meaningful way. X SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 TOP RESULTS 2009 Attending university pays dividends later in life FANIE HEYNS AS THE WORLD emerges from the global economic crisis, demand for university education will be higher than ever, says Angel GurrÌa, secretary-general of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). “To the extent that institutions are able to respond, investments in human capital will contribute to recovery,” he adds. Growing advantages for the better educated and likely continuing high levels of unemployment as economies move out of the recession will provide more and more young people with strong incentives to continue educating themselves. Governments need to take account of this in planning education policies OECD analysis shows that attending university pays dividends in later life through higher salaries, better health and less vulnerability to unemployment. In most countries, the difference in pay levels between people who have degrees and people who do not, is continuing to grow The numbers involved in the jobs crisis that resulted from the international recession from the fourth quarter of 2008 to the third quarter of 2009, are staggering. From a 25-year low at 5,6 per cent in 2007, the OECD unemployment rate had risen to a post-war high of 8,5 per cent in July 2009, corresponding to an increase of more than 15 million unemployed. The OECD believes, however, that higher education could be a long-term answer. It also calculated the return on investment in education by balancing the costs of education and of foregone earning against prospects for increased future earnings as a result of higher education attainment. According to these calculations, said GurrÌa, a male student who completes a university degree can look forward to a gross earnings premium over his lifetime of more than $186 000 on average across OECD countries, compared with someone who only completes secondary school. For a woman, the figure is lower, reflecting the disparity in most countries between male and female earnings, but it still averages out at just over $134 000. The highest earnings advantagesareintheUnitedStates,whereamale graduate can expect to earn more than $367 000 extra over his lifetime, and a female graduate more than $229 000. Italy comes second for men, with an average lifetime earnings advantage of just over $322 000; and Portugal for women, with an average advantage of nearly $220 000. And the benefits do not stop there: Government budgets and the overall economy also reap an advantage from higher numbers of graduates, the OECD figures show. The average net public return across OECD countries from providing a male student with a university education, after factoring in all the direct and indirect costs, is almost $52 000, nearly twice the average amount of money originally invested. For female students, the average net public return is lower because of their lower subsequent earnings. But overall, the figures provide a powerful incentive to expand higher education in most countries through both public and private financing. GurrÌa also revealed that the number of people with university degrees or other tertiary qualifications has risen on average in OECD countries by 4,5 per cent each year between 1998 and 2006. In Ireland, Poland, Portugal, Spain and Turkey, the increase has been 7 per cent per year or more. In 2007, one in three people in OECD countries aged between 25 and 34 years had a tertiary level qualification. In Canada, Japan and Korea, the ratio was one in two. In most countries, the number of people who leave school at the minimum leaving age is falling, but in Germany, Japan, Mexico, Poland, Turkey and the US, their numbers continue to rise. of the Portfolio Committee on Finance, education expenditure as a percentage of GDP is well above the world average and has remained that way for a number of years. The problem, Moloto maintained, is not the amount of money spent but the outcomes of our education system. In all international tests of South African learners, such as the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study and Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study, South African learners come last. African countries that spend much less than South Africa, such as Botswana and Ghana, come ahead of South African learners. Moreover, when comparing the results of high school finishers across 19 emerging market economies, South Africa comes second last The question is, why? And what can South Africa do to change that? cal literacy of school-leavers are very low. The resolve by the Minister of Basic Education Angie Motshekga to return to the basics, is a good start on the way to recovery, said Prof Eloff. A lack of FET colleges Eloff told Achiever that whether the country invests enough energy to encourage young people to resume study after school, is debatable. The problem is that too many learners who do not qualify academically want to go to university, and too few want to go to Further Education and Training (FET) colleges Minister of Higher Education and Training Blade Nzimande resolved to increase the number of FET students to one million by 2012, from the current 400 000. International best practice is to have five times as many FET students as h higher education students With 800 000 higher education stud dents, South Africa should boast four m million FET students. But the current 5 50 FET colleges cannot carry this burd den, even if we had the numbers. That m means that serious investment in the F FET sector is necessary N Need to invest in human resources P Prof Eloff says it is clear that South Africa is in dire need of more young people in Early childhood education is growing fast, and nowhere more than in Sweden. On average in OECD countries, enrolments have risen from 40 per cent of three- to four-year olds in 1998 to 71 per cent in 2007; and in Turkey, Mexico, Korea, Poland, Sweden, Switzerland and Germany, enrolment in early childhood education more than doubled. Young people who leave school at the minimum leaving age without a job are likely to spend a long time out of work. In most countries, over half of low-qualified unemployed 25- to 34-year-olds are long-term unemployed. People who complete a high-school education tend to enjoy better health than those who quit at the minimum leaving age. And people with university degrees are more interested in politics and more trusting of other people. South Africa and the OECD Countries that form part of the OECD spent 6,1 per cent of their gross domestic product on education. South Africa is not one of the 30 member countries of the OECD, yet a level of co-operation exists between the OECD and South Africa. In 2007 South Africa spent R105,5 billion, or just more than 5 per cent of GDP, on education. That amount is currently R110bn per year. Where South Africa’s expenditure on education is just more than 5 per cent of its GDP, that of Poland is 5,6 per cent, and that of Brazil 4,1per cent. In spite of South Africa’s significant investment in education, it has not yielded the desired results. According to a paper delivered in February last year by Koena Moloto, then acting chairman Negative role of labour unions Professor Theuns Eloff, chairman of Higher Education South Africa (HESA), told Achiever website that the problem was not the amount of money South Africa invests in education. “My information is that we spend more than 20 per cent of GDP on education - that includes expenditure on basic education, further education and training and higher education. “Especially the expenditure on basic education is high, but does not yield the desired outcomes. Our average expenditure on higher education is slightly below that of other comparable countries, but it has increased in the last few years,” he said. “Our school system suffers from many ailments, among them the negative role played by the labour unions (especially SADTU), the loss of a teaching and learning culture in most of our schools, the preparedness of teachers to teach the outcomes-based education system, and lack of facilities (including the availability of books),” added Eloff. A study conducted by HESA showed that levels of language and mathemati- a post-secondary system. The reality is that neither universities nor FET colleges can absorb many more without substantial investment by the government. The problem is that even if South Africa possessed the investment in infrastructure, it does not have the human resources to run more and larger universities and/or FET colleges. Investment in human resources takes longer and is more difficult to show quick results. People get an education, and then leave for better paying jobs. This is a vicious cycle that South Africa has not been able to break, said Prof. Eloff in the interview with Achiever. Vicious cycle caused by poverty The matric pass rate of South Africa was 62,5 per cent in 2008 (it has since dropped even further), but it paints an incomplete picture. This is due to the high dropout rate from grade 11 to 12. Of the 920 716 learners who were in grade 11 in 2007, only 333 681 advanced to grade 12 in 2008 and passed their exams. This signifies that only 36 per cent, just over a third, of all learners who were in grade 11 in 2007, completed their matric in 2008. (Source: The Municipal Outreach Project, January 2009 The main reason learners give for not completing their matric is the inability to pay fees. Poverty remains a major factor in decisions to leave school, as children from poor families and communities are required to have an income in order to supplement the household income. With over 10 million South Africans living on less than R250 per month, poverty remains a hurdle in South Africa’s socio-economic development. (Source: The Municipal Outreach Project, January 2009) OECD message about tertiary education and pass rates In South Africa, the jobless rate increased to 24,5 per cent of the labour force in the third quarter of 2009, from 23,6 per cent in the second quarter. Labour Force Survey, Statistics South Africa said the total number of unemployed people stood at 4.192 million in the three months to September. Stats SA said the number of employed people fell by 484 000 to 12,885 million. Unemployment among young South Africans is hovering at 30 per cent, shooting up to over 60 per cent for youths in their late teens and early 20s. According to a 2008 report by the Centre for Development and Enterprise, a think tank that researches the effect of poverty and unemployment on South Africa’s economic growth rate, 65 per cent of the four million youths between 15 and 24 who were available for a job in 2005, were unemployed. Pre-recession figures by the stateowned Human Sciences Research Council furthermore show that about 30 per cent of youths between the ages of 25 and 34 years are jobless. Low education levels form part of the problem. Statistics by a Cape Town-based consumer research agency, Government Statistics show that 24 per cent of South Africans older than 25 are illiterate. “This crisis is growing, as many youngsters are not in school, drop out or do not have some sort of a degree,” said Mike Abrahams, programme coordinator at Change Moves, a development and training co-operative that offers training, capacity building and management services. (Source: Inter Press Services, 2009) Research by the Development Policy Research Unit in the University of Cape Town’s School of Economics found that unemployment among graduates grew from 6,6 per cent in 1995 to 9,7 per cent in 2005. Yet, a policy brief published in September 2005 added that graduate unemployment remained low relative to overall unemployment, with graduates comprising only 2,6 per cent of the jobless South Africans. GurrÌa said that lifelong training and education is more important than ever before and education policies should make provision for enough advanced educational systems for older adults who have to acquire new skills. According to GurrÌa, programmes for advanced training and education are often designed to compensate for shortages and initial education systems. 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT XI TOP RESULTS 2009 SIX DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: CRAWFORD SANDTON CrawfordSchools Sandton, Lonehill and Pretoria NINE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Alexander Levin: Maths, English, Life Orientation, Afrikaans, Business Studies, Geography, History, Maths Paper 3, Advanced Maths. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: NINE DISTINCTIONS: SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: Danielle Sher: Maths, English, Afrikaans, Life Orientation, Science, History, Hebrew, Advanced Maths, Music. Tslil Clingman: English, Afrikaans, Maths, Life Orientation, IT, Advanced Maths, Maths Paper 3. Claire Niselow: English, Maths, History, Life Orientation, Maths Paper 3, Advanced Maths. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Photo not available Darryl Franks: English, Maths, Afrikaans, Life Orientation, Life Science, History. Joshua Greenberg: Life Orientation, Drama, Business Studies, History. EIGHT DISTINCTIONS: CRAWFORD LONEHILL FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Romy Jankelowitz: English, Life Orientation, Biology, History, Art, Drama. Roxanne Abbott: English, Afrikaans, Maths, Life Orientation, IT, Physical Science, Dramatic Arts, Maths Paper 3. David Brauer: Maths, Life Orientation, English, IT, History. FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Diane Moalem: History, Drama, Art, Life Orientation. FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Photo not available Photo not available Jordan Avraham Sweke: Design, Visual Arts, English, Life Orientation, History. Michael Jaffee Moss: Music, Life Orientation, Geography, History, Design. Adi Steiner: Life Orientation, Business Studies, Dramatic Arts, History. SIX DISTINCTIONS: CRAWFORD PRETORIA Callandra Youngleson: Life Orientation, English, Maths, Afrikaans, Dramatic Arts, Business Studies. Jed Saul Lazarus: English, Maths, Afrikaans, Life Orientation, Accounting, Life Sciences. Takara Lubner: English, History, Life Orientation, Business Studies. Georgina Katz: Drama, Business Economics, Visual Art, History. THREE DISTINCTIONS CRAWFORD SANDTON Jami Selikow: Maths Literacy, Business Studies, Life Orientation. Nikki Solomon: Business Studies, Geography, Life Orientation. Jade Soal: Life Orientation, Maths Literacy, Visual Arts. Claude Merdjan: Life Orientation, Design, History. XII SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 TOP RESULTS 2009 No-holds barred look at our ailing education system OWN CORRESPONDENT SOUTH AFRICAN SCHOOLS are in a disaster zone, Graeme Bloch, an education policy analyst at the Development Bank of Southern Africa, wrote in an article on education in South Africa. Bloch points out that “instead of being a place of academic achievement and excellence, where pupils can develop their talents and shoot for the stars, our schools have become zones of exclusion, where many pupils feel unsafe because of bullying or violence, and where the skills, attitudes and behaviours for employment and a democratic future are not being nurtured”. Bloch is blunt and critical, calling our outcomes “poor”. He adds: “Worse, these poor outcomes take a racial dimension in a society where all children rightfully expect the best. Ineqaulities are reproduced in ways that are neither fair nor sustainable.” Bloch says there are plenty of facts to show that we are just not getting value for our spend, despite vast resources and a high budget for education. “In Europe, 75 per cent of children can do what only our top 10 per cent can, yet we have to compete in a globalised, cut-throat globalised world. More than half of our children sue where our teachers are neither prepared nor disciplined. Nor have they the content knowledge to teach effectively. “Unions have become locked in confrontational labour re- Graeme Bloch. drop out before matric.” He says “historical legacies” have been compounded by serious policy mistakes in post-apartheid South Africa - “from inexplicable teacher retrenchments to closure of teacher colleges to the over-optimistic ideals and regressive impacts of outcomesbased education”. Three levels that interact to hold us back are firstly, the “in-class” is- lations mode, at war with education departments”. He says there are limited management skills among the 27 000 principals and inadequate support from the government and education districts. On a societal level, “whether because of infrastructure backlogs, gangs, hunger, low parent involvement or a society that fails to value educational aspiration and achievement, educa- Fewer Jewish medical students: Is it fact or perception? ALISON GOLDBERG SOUTH AFRICAN JEWISH students are applying in smaller numbers to study medicine than in previous years. Marianne Marx, headmistress of Herzlia High School in Cape Town says the numbers have definitely declined over the 17 years that she has been at Herzlia. The emphasis, she says, is now on business science which is the most popular choice of career every year. “We still have a good few who are applying, but that is four to five at most. The vast majority of Herzlia learners apply to the University of Cape Town - that is 80 per cent of them - but we may get one or two applying to Stellenbosch or Rhodes. “Increasingly,” she adds, “more and more pupils are applying for Varsity College which is a Unisa degree but where there are actual lectures and tutorials in specific areas.” The reason for the declining number of medicine applicants, she believes, is because it has got so difficult and though she says it is a “thumb suck”, Aids she thinks has tion has not found its accepted place as the tried and tested route out of poverty”. Instead of a learning nation going forward, he says, “a deep mix of his- been one cause. “In addition to that, the marks required are so high now that if you are white you have to be a super A plus student to enter medicine,” she says. She doubts that the two years community service is a deterrent to medical students. Mark Falconer, headmaster of King David Linksfield in Johannesburg, has also witnessed these numbers declining, but stresses that his reasons are “perceptions”. He adds: “There has been a noticeable shift. Commerce, ac- countancy and actuarial science are now fields of choice. We have a fair number of pupils applying for medicine but over the past five years out of 160 matriculants the numbers are now 10 - 15 whereas five years previously they would have been 25.” He believes community service is problematic and that the social s standing of doctors is not what it u used to be. He thinks the choice to e enter the business world is a cause o a society such as ours, which enof c courages entrepreneurship. Andrew Stead, headmaster at King D David High School Victory Park, says n numbers are fluctuating. In 2009 the sschool had more applicants for medic cine than the previous year. He confirmed the long-term trend, b but was reluctant to be drawn on dettails or reasons for the decline. What h he has noticed, however, is that m more and more students are taking a gap year to reflects on what they want to study the following year. The Wits Faculty of Health Sciences Development Office and the Health Graduates Association could shed no light on the subject, saying they did not distinguish between Jewish and other students. tory and sociology, of bad choices and unsatisfactory delivery, of institutional failure and social deficit, holds back our country and stops schools from doing what they should”. But all is not doom and gloom. “There is much to give hope. Yet without a massive change in mindset, an agreed vision and a clear plan with priorities and targets, unless our society mobilises around education as the priority, we will continue to fail generation after generation of young people.” • In a recent book, “The Toxic Mix”, with its subtitle: “What’s wrong with South African schools and how to fix it”, Bloch warns that “if we don’t get education right, we won’t be able to get anything right”. He points out that the Section 21 schools or “former Model CF schools” have heavy community involvement. But at the same time there is “a racial dimension in that the bulk of the children in the schools continue to be largely white suburban residents”. He adds that it follows that when schooling inequalities are cited, these schools become “a soft target”. “The bottom line is that the dynamic in these schools is little understood and subject to much prejudice and assumption.” Teaching, he says, continues to be held in low regard. Where it was once an occupation of choice for aspirational blacks, this is no longer the case. The teaching staff of the Section 21 schools remains predominantly white. IAWBs: Is it a teaching panacea or a gimmick? IS THE INTERACTIVE white board (IAWB) the panacea to many learning ills in our schools? Michael Carvalho of Johannesburg thinks so. In a letter to a newspaper he sings the praise of this teaching aid. He says “a teaching revolution has taken place over the past 10 years in schools around the world” as the IAWB and associated technology is replacing the traditional “chalk and talk” method “That has been used since the Greeks first formalised education”. He posits that where this new technology is in place, implemented by trained and competent teachers, “results are being achieved that previously were only educational dreams, especially with slower pupils”. Carvalho says today in schools all over the world - from pre-primary to final senior exams - pupils are being taught this way. China is already using over 2,7 million of these boards while in the UK the government has installed IAWBs in every classroom. He says research has shown that by the age of 10, pupils are on average 5,7 months ahead of those taught by the traditional “chalk and talk” teaching methods. “The teaching of mathematics, sciences, languages and biology using IAWB iis iimproving i results lt and d enaIAWBs bling pupils to pass exams that they would previously not have passed.” In South Africa, he says, “the majority of independent and elite schools are now fully equipped with teachers well trained in the use of IAWBs...” Furthermore an advantage is the low cost of a board in the classroom with a computer and a data projector. 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT XIII TOP RESULTS 2009 Herzlia High School SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: SEVEN DISTINCTIONS: Samuel Besser: Dramatic Art, English, History, Information Technology, Life Sciences, Maths, Physical Science. Oren Katzeff: Accounting, Afrikaans, Hebrew, Information Technology, Life Orientation, Maths, Physical Science. Rafael Lubner: Afrikaans, Economics, English, French, Information Technology, Life Orientation, Maths. FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Benjamin Katz: Dramatic Art, English, History, Life Orientation, Maths. David Platt: Dramatic Arts, English, Hebrew, History, Life Orientation. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Abigail Gotlieb: Hebrew, History, Life Orientation, Maths. Jessica Kempen: Accounting, English, Life Orientation, Maths. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Joshua Lutzno: Accounting, Economics, History, Maths. Ryan McCormack: Accounting, Information Technology, Life Orientation, Maths. Seth Musker: English, Life Sciences, Life Orientation, Maths. Talia Shaban: Dramatic Arts, Economics, History, Life Orientation. Cheyam Shaked: Economics, Information Technology, Life Orientation, Maths. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Alexandra Singer: Design, English, Life Sciences, Life Orientation. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Witney Tucker: Dramatic Arts, Economics, Life Orientation, Maths. Keren Setton: Dramatic Arts, English, History, Life Orientation, Visual Art. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Joshua Kurland: Economics, Information Technology, Life Orientation, Maths. SIX DISTINCTIONS: Francesca Annenberg: Business Studies, Design, English, Life Sciences, Life Orientation, Maths. FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Jacob Woolf: Economics, English, History, Life Orientation, Maths. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Yael Lapiner: Consumer Studies, Dramatic Arts, Life Orientation, Maths Literacy. SIX DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: SIX DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: FIVE DISTINCTIONS: Daniella Boyd: Afrikaans, Economics, English, Life Sciences, Life Orientation, Maths. Sonya Cotton: English, History, Life Sciences, Life Orientation, Maths, Visual Arts. Daniel Tadmor: Afrikaans, English, Hebrew, Life Sciences, Life Orientation, Maths. Michael Urson: Accounting, English, History, Information Technology, Life Orientation, Maths. Sharonese Birch: Business Studies, Computer Applications Technology, English, History, Life Orientation. Bronwyn Frymer: Accounting, Economics, History, Life Orientation, Maths. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Jonathan Barr: English, History, Life Orientation, Maths. Jason Blacher: Economics, Information Technology, Life Orientation, Maths. Francesca Favero: Afrikaans, Economics, English, Life Orientation. Joshua Friedman: Business Studies, English, History, Life Orientation. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Simone Abrahamson: Business Studies, Life Science, Life Orientation, Maths. FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Kara Levy: Business Studies, Design, English, Life Orientation. THREE DISTINCTIONS - Nadav Aharanov: Information Technology, Life Orientation, Maths. - Claudia Albeldas: Life Sciences, Life Orientation, Maths. - Gregory Bryer: Business Studies, Economics, Life Orientation - Joshua Coleman: Computer Applications Technology, Life Orientation, Maths Literacy. - Lori Feldman: Accounting, Consumer Studies, Life Orientation. - Sharon Geva: Economics, Life Orientation, Maths. - Samantha Goldstein: Accounting, Life Orientation, Maths. - Megan Korber: English, History, Life Orientation. - Dylan Oblowitz: Accounting, Dramatic Arts, Life Orientation. - Ariella Rink: English, Life Sciences, Life Orientation. - Gina Schalit: Dramatic Arts, English, Life Orientation. - Samuel Surdut: Life Sciences, Life Orientation, Maths. - Emma Trappler: History, Life Orientation, Maths. - Robyn waters: English, Life Sciences, Life Orientation: FOUR DISTINCTIONS: Keren Futeran: English, History, Life Sciences, Life Orientation. XIV SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 TOP RESULTS 2009 OBE - not just a costly educational experiment The controversial outcomes-based education (OBE) has died an expected quiet death, although Minister of Basic Education Angie Motshekga later tried to convince Parliament that it’s business as usual and that OBE was still in place and was merely being fine-tuned. PAUL MAREE AT THE END of October last year the minister announced less paperwork for teachers to improve learning and that from this year pupils across the country would do fewer projects. She insisted that only the “unworkable parts” of OBE would be scrapped. The minister had accepted recommendations made by a task team which in effect amounts to doing things to quite a degree “the old way”. The “death” of OBE was widely hailed - but not because it is bad concept, only that you should have the wherewithal to implement it properly. Announcing the National Senior Certificate results - written mainly by state schools - on January 7, Minister Motshekga again undertook to lighten the workload of teachers and to strengthen what she called “poor management” at schools. The NSC 2009 matric pass rate results show a drop from 62,6 per cent in 2008 to 60,7 per cent. Some 230 000 matriculants failed the exam. The generally poor showing has been widely condemned, especially the poor performance in maths, science and accounting. Many educationists insist there’s noth nothing wrong with the concept of OBE - in a First World country with well-trained teachers who understand the ethos of the concept and learners capable of working on their own with the necessary aids such as a proper library, internet access and the necessary back-up, also from parents - but in a developing country such as ours, it has always been problematic. Now it’s back to basics: reading, writing and arithmetic. The irony is that when well-meaning educationists and people of the stature of Dr Mamphele Ramphele, former vice-chancellor of UCT and Prof Jonathan Jansen, now rector of Free State University, expressed their misgivings about the implementation of OBE in a developing country such as South Africa, they were vilified. Rathan Garrib, an educationist who has lectured at universities, in a letter in a newspaper, congratulated Minister Motshekga “for her moves towards some sanity to what has been a chaotic situation created by introducing OBE. “For innovation in education, it is critical that the ground is well prepared and the situation ripe for change. In the case of OBE this has not been fol- llowed, hence lack of resource materrial, under-prepared teachers and officials and confusion even among the h hierarchy.” Lebusa Monyooe, director: Strateg gic Knowledge Grants at the National R Research Foundation, in reaction to M Minister Motshekga’s “funeral rites” ffor OBE, wrote at the time, of prevventing “a further denigration” of our basic education system. He cites lack of visionary school leadership and “a complex curriculum marred by ineffective implementation, assessment and teacher-learner preparedness to intelligently address the classroom challenges.” Alas, it was again the poorest of the poor, schools in formerly disadvantaged areas, failing miserably. And it is not the decision-makers sitting in the proverbial ivory towers who bear the brunt of this costly experiment, but those kids who already are shackled by a host of disadvantages. Former Model C schools - (now Section 21 schools) and private schools - which include the Jewish day schools, with a strong infrastructure and well-trained teachers - took to the new OBE system like a duck to water, although many teachers complained about drowning in paper work. Many of these schools - including the King David Schools - write the IEB (Independent Examinations Board) exams. Umalusi, the council for quality assurance in general and further education and training, approved the IEB, the adult basic education and training (Abet) and the new National Cer- tificate Vocational final exams. Yeshiva College also wrote the IEB exam while Torah Academy, Herzlia and CrawfordSchools wrote the National Certificate which all the state schools wrote. The more than 8 000 matrics who wrote the IEB exams this year, achieved a 97,42 per cent pass rate, slightly higher than the previous year’s 97 per cent. There had been an increase of 10 per cent in the number of pupils writing maths 3 paper - a subject universities have recommended in order to cope with first-year studies. If one looks at the top achievers of the 2009 matric exams - with distinctions raining down like confetti - the Jewish day schools, as has been the case in past years, are prominent, the result of excellent team work between teachers and learners and strong parental support. We salute them for 12 years of dedication and hard slog. But a matric certificate in these days of rampant unemployment and jockeying for good jobs, is at best a stepping stone on the road to further education; it just makes it so much easier to get access to a place at one of our universities or other tertiary institutions, especially in fields like medicine with limited places available and literally hundreds of hopefuls, with transformation criteria to correct the wrongs of the past, making it imperative that a good pass is achieved. But for the thousands of school leavers who are not accepted at one of the institutions of higher learning, all is not lost. There are at least 100 fully registered private institutions providing post-matric training, says Dr Paul Steyn, a member of the higher ed education committee of the Associatio tion of Private Providers of Education, Tr Training and Development. Some 65 of them offer higher education progr grammes, some even offering degree co courses where doctorates can be obta tained. A recent report by the Centre for Higher Education Transformation, “Responding to the educational needs of post-school youth”, warns that South Africa is sitting on a social time bomb with its more than three million people between the ages of 18 and 24 unemployed and not receiving any further training. It also warns that South Africa will have to drastically extend and improve its post-school training opportunities if something is to be done to the “hopelessness of thousands of young people”. The study mentions that those with matric earn between 40 per cent and 70 per cent more than those with a lower level of education, while those with a diploma or certificate earn between 170 per cent and 220 per cent more, and those with degrees between 250 per cent and 400 per cent more than those who did not finish matric. The trade union, Solidarity, in a report on future prospects for the 2009 matriculants, says about 23 per cent of the approximately 363 000 matriculants of 2009 will be unemployed this year. This figure does not include the approximately 218 000 candidates who have failed the exam. The union says about 8,9 per cent of people with a tertiary education won’t find work, against some 25,7 per cent of those with matric looking for employment. Dirk Hermann of Solidarity says another reason why matriculants will battle to find work, is because the present school curriculum does not prepare them for entry into the job market. He urges matriculants to achieve a tertiary education where possible. Even in a recessionary period like the one we have experienced, there is a demand for skills in field such as accounting, information technology, teaching, social work, nursing, for chemists, in engineering and other technical fields. 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT XV TOP RESULTS 2009 Interdisciplinary Centre - networking your future Jonathan Davis. THE INTERDISCIPLINARY CENTRE (IDC) in Herzliya, Israel, incorporating the Raphael Recanati International School (RRIS), is a family-style academic institution where the programmes and general campus life are streamlined towards the needs of the student. Vice-president of external relations and head of the RRIS, Jonathan Davis, said: “At just 14 years old, this university is a vibrant campus of learning - both in and out of the classroom - with students able to take part in a variety of extracurricular activities, including debate, choir, sports, dance, diplomacy, entrepreneurship and more.” Along with this, students are able to volunteer within the many institutes on campus and to work at the various symposiums and international conferences that are hosted by the university and serve to strengthen relations with global personalities; c countries and institutions, as well as tto set government policy within Israel a and beyond. The networking opportunities are a another huge plus for any student; w with lecturers and fellow students a always on the lookout for staff and ffuture business partners and visiting llecturers always happy to offer advice a and sometimes, job offers. Davis emphasised: “These opporttunities are unique to a higher acad demic institution and can only serve tto strengthen CVs and ensure that all tthe theoretical tools that are gained in tthe classroom are practised in real-life ssituations - a powerful combination by a any standard.” The university also operates a placement centre for students, providing guidance towards integration in the real (business) world. Last year, for the first time in Israel, the Council for Higher Education conducted a comparative study of all Israel’s universities and colleges. The study focused on 20 categories that were designed to evaluate: student satisfaction in their degree studies; the level of instruction; the level of the courses; the relationship of faculty to students; library facilities; student services and more. In 16 out of the 20 categories, IDC was ranked in first place. The study also dealt with the salaries received by IDC graduates, showing that, in total, our graduates receive the highest salaries in the fields taught at IDC - government, diplomacy & strategy; communications; psychology; business administration; law (taught only in Hebrew) and computer science (taught only in Hebrew). “Importantly, the lecturers on campus are not just academics, but they are experts in their field who continue to work in key positions within the fields that they lecture in,” Davis added. For South Africans, IDC, through the RRIS, provides them with a unique opportunity to attend an international university with little fuss as they are accepted according to their matric certificates - no other entrance exam is necessary. In addition, looking ahead, all degrees at the IDC are approved by the Israeli Council for Higher Education, thereby ensuring that IDC graduates stand a good chance of being accepted for further degrees at leading Ivy League and other top international universities, along with other top universities in Israel. IDC also enables its international students not only to mingle with one another and thereby build strong global networks, but also to mix with the Israelis who study with them and in the sister Israeli tracks. “Many a marriage and many a business has begun on this campus,” laughed Davis. As a former aliyah shaliach in Cape Town, Davis always dreamed of a programme in Israel where some of South Africa’s finest students could obtain academic degrees on a very high level. “The main problem for most students always seemed to be that there were too many bureaucratic prereq- uisites uisites, such as psychometric exams and many other hurdles which made it impossible”, he added. “Another major problem was that most South Africans did not have a high enough level of Hebrew, and even intense ulpan in Israel would have made it difficult to obtain academic achievements in the same fashion, had they been studying in their mother tongue.” IDC also offers its students bur- saries socio economic saries, all based on socio-economic need. Said Davis: “We are very proud that next year (this year 2010) more than 70 South African students will be enrolled at IDC. This is by far the largest number of South African students in any university in Israel.” • For more information contact Stephanie Miller. Her e-mail address is: smiller@idc.ac.il or phone her at +972-9-960-2841. Education: Most powerful asset you can offer your child TESSA FORMAN OF the Morningside and Glenhazel Kumon centres has been nurturing children for the past 15 years in areas of maths numeracy skills, English reading and comprehension skills. The Kumon method, developed by educator Toru Kumon, is the largest mathematics and language educational system in the world. As of 2009, over 4 million pupils were studying under the Kumon Method at more than 26 000 Kumon centres in 46 countries. Tessa is rated as one of the top franchises in Europe and Africa. Typically a child who is finding maths or English difficult or who wants to excel further, will be referred by educationalists, teachers or parents whose own children have prospered under her guidance, to her centre. The most common question asked by the parent is how much time it will take from their child’s already hectic schedule. The Kumon Method is an individualised learning method and each pupil needs to spend 10 to 15 minutes a day completing the programme at home and attending the centre twice a week. Tessa’s main object is to get her pupils to their grade level; however once the children are on the programme and motivated, they start working above their grade level. Forty eight per cent of her pupils are working above their grade level. Some are working 3 to 5 years ahead of their grade. Kumon recognises their diligence through award ceremonies. However, the school re- ports are normally proof of how effective the programme is. Learners range from 2 years old to matric. The individualised and interactive nature of Kumon gives pupils a head start to becoming avid learn- ers and successful students The starting point for each Kumon learner is determined individually. They start with the level where they can attain a perfect score. The worksheets have been designed in such a way that it allows them to figure out how to solve problems on their own. • To find out more about the benefits that Kumon can offer your child, please call Tessa on (011) 884-9022 or 082-900-3379. XVI SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 TOP RESULTS 2009 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT 9 TAPESTRY ART, BOOKS, DANCE, FILM, THEATRE Shattering grief through the eyes of a young girl Goldengrove by Francine Prose (Atlantic Books, R234) REVIEWED BY GWEN PODBREY OF ALL human traumas, few can be as difficult to explore as grief - not because of its complexity, but precisely because of its terrible simplicity: a human being is here, and is loved, relied upon and inextricably bound up into the realities, needs and emotions of others. Then, quite suddenly, he or she is not. How to make sense of - much less, peace with - an empty space at a dinner table, a missing voice in a household or the hideous realisation that the front door will never again open to admit a beloved presence? For youngsters attempting to forge an identity, the ordeal is often doubly devastating. Which is why Francine Prose’s novel is remarkable. Not only does it elegantly - and heartbreakingly - convey the enormity of adolescent grief, but also its isolation. When 13-year-old Nico and her adored elder sister, Margaret, take the family rowing boat out onto Mirror Lake, from where they have a clear, tranquil view of their family home on its shore, it is a sleepy Sunday afternoon like many others. The girls, as usual, are exchanging confidences in the endless, feverish barter of teenage daughters. Margaret - sexy, self-assured, musically gifted and remarkably forbearing with her gawkish, worshipful sibling - patiently answers Nico’s questions on a range of subjects: clothing, dealing with their parents’ anxieties, and - above all - “what it feels like” to sleep with her boyfriend, Aaron. Dazzled by her sophistication, Nico begs Margaret to sing her star number, the 1930s ballad which shows off to perfection her sultry voice: “My Funny Valentine”. When she has finished her song, the older girl smiles at her little sister, stubs out her illicit cigarette, waves, dives off the boat to cool off - and dies underwater, after suffering cardiac arrest due to a congenital heart defect. For Nico, the tragedy marks the end of life as she has always known it, and the beginning of life as she cannot hope to know it: an existence as a suddenly single child, without her adored role model, in the company of two grief-stricken parents and a house whose rooms, associations and objects can never again evoke anything but dread and despair. Dealing with the agony of everyday routines is bad enough: but trying to redefine herself and come to terms with what has happened is so immense a task, and so debilitating, that she quickly retreats into a private, angry, frozen space where she can gaze upon the world. Unsurprisingly, her relationship with her parents quickly deteriorates. Conversations become tense, loaded exchanges. Her mother - relying more and more on antidepressants and frenetic activities to numb her own grief - tries unsuccessfully to prod her surviving child into normal life. They go on outings, preferably in the morning, “when Mom was still clear. It was easier to talk in the car, with no eye contact required and the changing scenery constantly wiping away the gummy residue of whatever we’d just said”. Noting his daughter’s recession into despair, Nico’s father - working in his bookshop in the town and attempting to write a history of eschatological cults around the globe, particularly those who forfeited their homes and families to follow leaders in the futile hope of rapture offers her a summer job in the store while he researches his topic. This, however, drives her even further into herself. It is only when Aaron, Margaret’s former boyfriend, suddenly makes contact with Nico that she is startled out of her depression. He, too, is unable to get over the calamity, he tells her. Will she come out with him? Perhaps they can work their way out of their shared grief together. It is a tempting proposition. Not only can Nico connect to this contemporary of her dead sister, but there is also the element of flattery. Aaron is a good-looking, creative youngster. Can he seriously be interested in her? When Aaron begins asking her to wear the perfume her sister liked, accompany him to the places he used to frequent with her - and even dress in Margaret’s favourite clothes - she is unsettled, but acquiescent. Gradually, however, her uneasiness mounts. It is obvious that the boy is bent on recreating his deceased girlfriend in her surviving little sister. Out of her depth psychologically, but unintelligent enough to sense that she has ventured into seriously dangerous territory, Nico is finally forced to draw boundaries between the dead, the living, the past and the present. Francine Prose’s deft and delicate handling of her subject is splendid, using the voice of a family’s youngest member to relate their collective experience of shattering, separating and, finally, reuniting - never as they were before, but sufficiently to surrender their precarious grip on a grave and grasp each other instead. Far more than the coming-of-age story of an adolescent whose sexual and intellectual emergence is hijacked by bereavement, it traces the wayward trajectory of a family dynamic in the face of tragedy. The theme of desperation and redemption, subtly interposed throughout the narrative by Nico’s father, is complemented by the greater theme: the endless mourning process of human beings for their younger, invincible, innocent selves, before the impact of pain, decay, time and exhaustion. As Gerard Manley Hopkins reminds us in his great lament, whose title the novel borrows: “Margaret, are you grieving / Over Goldengrove unleaving?... It is the blight man was born for, / It is Margaret you mourn for.” This vessel contains some beautiful songs DVD: In the Fiddler’s House - Itzhak Perlman Artists: Itzhak Perlman, Red Buttons, Fyvush Finkel, Leopold Kozlowski, Kapelye, The Klezmatics, and others Musical director: Michael Alpert Film directors: Don Lenzer and Glenn DuBose. Catalogue number: EMI Classics 3 68609 9 REVIEWED BY PAUL BOEKKOOI KLEZMER IS far removed from any singular activity. The word derives from Hebrew “kley-zemer”, literally meaning “vessels of song” implying that singers and performers on musical instruments are involved. Klezmer music is in its core celebratory, but over time it encompassed a great variety of traditions which were held up by East European Jews. My personal introduction to it came through a family member and clarinet fanatic. In the early 1990s I was introduced to a recording of Giora Feidman, known as the “King of Klezmer”. Sometimes music marketing becomes more important than music itself. Not in this case. While listening, one immediately registers that the distinctive klezmer clarinet becomes a voice. It broods, it muses, laments, cries, but also bursts out in intensive laughter. Shivers down my back couldn’t be controlled. Feidman, born in Buenos Aires in 1936, had a direct family line to klezmer musicians in Eastern European ghettos. Later I read that Benny Goodman praised his original sound, Leonard Bernstein celebrated his perfect artistry, while the author Isaac Bashevis Singer noted that Feidman’s clarinet called up “... all the emotions of the banished soul”. Watching and listening to “In the Fiddler’s House”, one realises that tradition is the big survivor here. Violinist Itzhak Perlman, son of Polish Jews who grew up in Israel, longs for first-hand involvement with musicians who were home-bred in this style. Any intelligent musician like he is, rapidly assimilates the challenges, feelings and techniques one needs to perform in a klezmer ensemble, be it a conservative one like Brave Old World, or the more experimental Klezmatics. Nearly incidentally, this unrestrained film gives viewers a deep insight into the history, uses, emotional value, structure and contemporary standing of this music. After many sequences of wedding festivities and its rousing music, we are removed to a dilapidated synagogue in the heart of present-day Cracow where violence was an everyday occasion during the Second World War. In a sombre elegy performed by Perlman, we are subtly reminded of the appalling atrocities committed against Jews during the European pogroms. Far more hope-giving is that this really is a celebration of the continued renaissance klezmer is experiencing internationally. CONTACT Trevor Stamelman Cell: 082-608-0168 trevor@stamelmanproperties.co.za www.stamelmanproperties.co.za VIEW BY APPOINTMENT GLENHAZEL GLENHAZEL/LYNDHURST BORDER GLENHAZEL/SUNNINGDALE BORDER Family home, 3 receptions, 4/5 beds, 2 baths, stunning gardens, large secluded stand and more, walk to all shuls. Early 2 Millions. Stunning, 4 beds, 3 receptions, 3 baths, pool, gardens, cottage, secure secluded, large NF stand, parking and more. EARLY 1 MILLIONS 2/3 receptions, 4 beds, 2 baths, huge stand, lovely pool, parking/staff accom/cottage and more EARLY 1 MILLIONS GLENHAZEL/SILVAMONTE SYDENHAM SYDENHAM BARGAIN DUNHURST ESTATE: 2 bed, 2 bath, duplex, pvt garden from R950 000 TROON VILLAGE: 2 bed, 2 bath, garden unit, facing golf course from R1.1 mil HIGHWOODS: 2 bed, 2 bath, garden unit from R850 000 SAVOY: 2 bed, duplex, garden and more R550 000 SAVOY: 3 bed, duplex, 2 bath, garden and more from R800 000 FAIRMOUNT: 4 beds, 2 baths, pool, garden and more from R1.4 mil FAIRMOUNT: 3-4 beds, 2 baths, garden and more from R1.2 mil HIGHLANDS NORTH: 4 beds, 2 baths, pool, garden and more from R1 4 mil HIGHLANDS NORTH: 3 beds, 3 rec, 1 bath, cottage, garden and pool from R950 000 GRESWOLD: 2 bed, 2 bath, new unit from R850 000 TO RENT Brand new and waiting 3 receptions, Brand new and empty for you. 3 recep3 beds, 2 1/2 baths, stunning kitchen, tions, 4 beds, 3 baths, cutting-edge lovely stand, secure quiet street and kitchen, staff accom, security and more. Early 2 millions rambling garden. Mid to late 2 Millions 2 large receptions, 3-4 beds, 2 baths, eat-in kitchen, large stand, pool, staff accom & secure inside parking. R800 000 • For pictures of these and other properties go to www.stamelmanproperties.co.za FAIRMOUNT: 2 bed, duplex, garden and more R7 500 SYDENHAM: 4 bed 3 bath 3 receptions staff accom loads of parking pool and gardens R 12000 SYDENHAM: 3 bed, 2 bath, 3 rec from R7 500 10 SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 LETTERS The Editor, Suite 175, Postnet X10039, Randburg, 2125 email: carro@global.co.za Disclaimer Guidelines for letters 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 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. A TIMELY TRIBUTE TO REVISIONIST VLADIMIR JABOTINSKY doing justice to the memory of such a giant multi-faceted figure within the format of a library booklet, perhaps the author might have erred in not emphasising sufficiently the horrific background of pending catastrophe against which the drama of Jabotinsky’s actions were played out. Accused by opponents of promoting “militarism” (the forerunner of the Israel Defence Forces?) he fought against the official policies of keeping a low profile and self-restraint in the face of the oppression and mortal danger which characterised Jewish life in Europe. After all, he was hero worshipped by millions of facing potential genocide as he tried to change the mindset of mainstream Jewish leadership - instilling urgency with his famous declaration: “Liquidate the Diaspora, otherwise the Diaspora will liquidate you!”. Only by reading his dramatic speeches, can the serious student appreciate the grandeur of his vision, the nobility of his spirit and the impact he made in the upliftment of his fellow Jews in their darkest hour. He died heartbroken in New York in 1940 and was buried on Mount Herzl, Israel in 1964. When he died, the editor of the London Jewish Chronicle, Ivan Greenberg wrote: “The first violin in the Jewish orchestra has been stilled.” G-d Bless his memory. AS A Zionist Revisionist activist for just on 60 years, I am grateful to Abraham Buchman, former Revisionist chairman of Bulawayo Jewry, for commissioning John Simon of Cape Town to tell the Jabotinsky story and the Gitlin Library for publishing a 26 page booklet titled Vladimir Ze’ev Jabotinsky - Fighter, Visionary, Zionist. As Simon concludes: “For many, even in this generation, the spirit of Zion rested upon Herzl, Bialik and Jabotinsky. For better or worse, he was a great man.” After Jabotinsky worked hard to form the first modern Jewish military units the famous Zion Mule Core and later the Jewish Legion as battalions in the British Army - against the wishes of Jewish anti-Zionists and the more hesitant sections of mainstream Zionism, the author notes that thereafter he was “a changed man - whether for the better or worse is still an open question debated in the Jewish world, but alas with ever reducing frequency as his memory fades and other issues prevail”. Remarkably, 70 years after his death his name still evokes a strongly negative emotional response from many veteran “far-leftists”, while loyal adherents of his Zionist political philosophy still celebrate his majestic personality and courageous activism. Indeed, John Simon set out to “explore whether he was, as he has been described, the most charismatic fascinating and controversial figure in the history of Zionism”. While appreciating the limitations of David Abel George VEGANISM IS ‘MANDATED BY JEWISH LAW’ I WOULD like to thank Sue Randall for her recent letter (SAJR December 4) in support of compassionate eating. I certainly agree with her that the eating of eggs and milk products need not, in principle, be unethical, and I also agree that for many people, becoming vegan may require “small but significant steps”. However, given that the conditions under which eggs and milk products would be kosher are rarely if ever found in current methods of factory farming, veganism is not only not extreme, but it is, I argue, mandated by Jewish law. The poultry and dairy industries are in reality extensions of the meat industry, with their own inherent cruelties. As there are currently no legal requirements regarding “free range” chickens, many such hens are scarcely better off than their battery equivalents. Male chicks are considered “byproducts” of egg production, and are killed, often in the most horren- dous ways (sometimes crushed alive or thrown into plastic bags to suffocate). All egg-laying hens end their short lives in the abattoir, as do milk-producing cows. The milk industry is no better: Baby calves are also considered “byproducts” and are taken from their mothers very soon after birth, and slaughtered for their meat or soft skins. Since the horrors of factory farming clearly violate the injunction of the Torah not to cause cruelty to animals, how can such products be kosher? I would very much like to hear the response of the Beth Din regarding why, for instance, they feel that even batteryproduced eggs deserve the kosher stamp. For more information on factory farming, see www.animal-voice.org and for delicious vegan recipes, see www.vegansa.com/index.php Elisa Galgut Department of Philosophy, University of Cape Town LOOKING FOR... LOOKING FOR INFORMATION ON SYLVIA HERMAN ORNSTEIN SYLVIA HERMAN (late of Benoni), married an Abram Ornstein. They were divorced on December 27 1917. They had a daughter called Grayce (now 93 years old), who grew up under her father’s (Abram’s) care. Merle Kermont of Sydney Australia, daughter of Grayce and grand-daugther of Abram and Sylvia, is trying to find out what happened to her grandmother, Sylvia Herman Ornstein. She may well have remarried and had a family, and so, if anyone knew Sylvia, or anything about her, and has any information, please contact Anne Lapedus Brest on (011) 783-2237, or 082-452-7166 or e-mail her at digitalphoto@icon.co.za. LOOKING FOR... WHO CAN HELP RODNEY FRANKLIN LOCATE HIS FAMILY? RODNEY FRANKLIN, son of the late Bram and Esther (nee Berman) Franklin, is seeking information on his grandfather’s and grandmother’s families. His grandfather, Solomon Berman, was born in Pokroi, Lithuania, in 1878 and came to South Africa in 1897. He died in Johannesburg in 1941. Either father or brothers’ names were Nathan and Mozes Berman. Between 1897-1906 Solomon Berman lived in the Port Beaufort-Bathurst area. His wife was Sophie Berman (nee Levitas) originally from Yoniskis and they lived many years in Klerksdorp. Rodney’s grandmother was Sarah Franklin. Sarah (nee Rosen, originally Rossiansky), was the daughter of Lazarus and Mila Rossiansky and wife of Morris Franklin. She originally came from London, and the couple lived for many years in Port Elizabeth. Sarah had one or two brothers, Rosen, (Abe Rosen?) who were possibly connected to the antique business in Johannesburg in the 1950s. Rodney Franklin can be contacted at e-mail rodneyf@netvision.net.il WE CAN’T IGNORE THE WARNINGS FROM THE GREAT SAGES MORDECHAI Zlotnick makes a strong case for himself and thousands of Jews to remain in exile (the severest punishment) in South Africa - until Mashiach comes. One of his reasons is that the Lubavitcher Rebbe zt’l gave South African Jews a blessing to remain here (again, until Mashiach comes.) This was 18 years ago, and it really made almost the entire community feel comfortable living in exile. (May I remind readers that the frierdeker (6th Lubavitcher Rebbe) and most Hassidic leaders, encouraged their communities to remain in Europe, even three months before the outbreak of the Second World War. Tragically we all know the horrific results of their misjudgment. For those who maintain that we should only leave when Mashiach comes, let them recall the words of the Rambam: “Those who seduce themselves, and say they will stay in their places (in exile) until the King Mashiach comes to the Lands of the West, and then they will depart, and go forth to Jerusalem - I do not know how the decree of destruction will be stayed from them. “Rather they are transgressors, and they cause others to sin... For there is no set time for the coming of the Mashiach on which to depend. The obligation of the commandments (including Yishuv Eretz Yisrael) is not dependent on the coming of the Mashiach. “Rather, we are to busy ourselves with the Torah and its precepts, and strive to fulfil everything we can. However, if a man will stay in his place, and he says: ‘I will stay here until Mashiach comes and survive where I am’, this is nothing but an evil heart, and a great loss, and a sickness of reasoning and this is my opinion, and Hashem knows the truth” (Rambam Iggeret Teiman). Harsh words from a great sage? Nevertheless very prophetic and true. Also let us heed the words of the Yaavetz (Rabbi Yaacov Emdin) written more recently - 18th century: “A great tragedy results when we make Jewish life in the exile the goal of our Jewish existence. When it seems to us in our present peaceful existence, outside of the Land of Israel, that we have found another Eretz Yisrael and Jerusalem, this to me is the greatest, deepest most obvious, and direct cause of all the awesome, frightening, monstrous, unimaginable destructions that we have experienced in the Diaspora.” Who can deny the prophetic truth of these words written 250 years before the Holocaust, and subsequent tragedy of day-to-day assimilation. Mordechai, after reading the above words of the Rambam and Yaavetz, how can one justify carrying on a “normal” Jewish existence in exilic lands. One can easily brush aside the abrasive advice of Mr (John) Rustee, but we dare not ignore the “warnings” of the great sages. After nearly 2 000 years of exile, it certainly is time to return to our only real home, especially when Hashem has restored sovereignty of Israel to His people. The longer we tarry in comfortable exile, the longer we prolong the final redemption. Choni Davidowitz Golden Acres Johannesburg IT’S POSSIBLE TO SUPPORT ISRAEL - WARTS AND ALL THE ARTICLE by Daniel Mackintosh (Jewish Report, December 4) deserves a reply, even if only to put to rest the implicit claim that Jewish youth are spontaneously questioning the morality of Israel’s existence without the systematic prompting of a small group of activists who have set up shop as the moral voice of South African Jewry. Rather than an imaginative engagement with the realities of history, the activist resorts to simplified partisan rhetoric and propagandistic distortion, as so evident in Mackintosh’s article. He starts with the false apartheid analogy in order to frame, from the outset, Israel as the guilty party. He then goes on to reinforce this propagandistic device with the unqualified use of the word “occupation”. Thus, in one fell swoop, Mackintosh tars Israel and all those who support her, as apartheid apologists and implicit racists in a state of denial regarding their complicity in the oppression and brutalisation of the designated victims in this narrative, the Palestinians. I have news for Mackintosh and his associates: there are many Jews who were ardent opponents of apartheid who are equally ardent supporters of Israel. The reason is not because of a sudden failure of intellect or moral cowardice, but because the two situations are essentially different and each needs to be treated on its own merits. This clearly would not suit the agenda of openshehudastreet. To condense, the real historical narrative lies between the vulgar reductionism of both Mackintosh and his friends and those ardent Zionists who need a pristine myth of moral absolutism to buttress their loyalties. I have news for them too. It is quite possible to strongly support Israel in the current political context while fully aware of moral ambi- guities and failures. Many indeed do just that - including myself. This is not the place for an extended look at the justifications for the Zionist enterprise except to note the following. Where openshehudastreet feel only shame, I feel pride and admiration; where they see only greed and exploitation, I also see the painful choices of necessity and acts of remarkable magnanimity; where they see only Palestinian victimhood, I also see a debilitating sense of grievance coupled to apocalyptic visions of total victory. One wonders whether the recent economic growth and stability of the West Bank has not stirred openshehudastreet into renewed ideological activity. For if they were truly interested in the welfare of all the peoples of the region, they would be supporting the pragmatic realists of both sides rather than feeding into precisely those attitudes which have condemned the region to stalemate for so many decades. From the abyss of genocide, Jews in general and the Israelis in particular, have shown a heroic, almost miraculous, creative pragmatism which make them the vanguard of much of what is hopeful and admirable in the modern world. The occasional sins and excesses of individuals do not negate that claim. In the context of the Middle East, Israel could indeed play the role of a catalyst for democracy and prosperity if allowed to do so. The Jewish community and its leaders must unambiguously and with imagination and the utmost vigour oppose the insidious agenda of openshehudastreet, which, under the guise of a higher morality, eagerly encourages the demonisation of their fellow Jews. Mike Berger Cape Town Savyon Lodge home for aged says thank you SO MANY take for granted everyday items, which you can buy readily, at a reasonable price, from your local pharmacy or supermarket. What delight and joy we all experienced when the gift of medical supplies and adult diapers arrived at our home, Lanis McLarnon, administrator of Savyon Lodge home for the aged in Bulawayo in Zimbabwe, writes. “Through the kindness and generosity of the Hebrew Order of David and the Dischem Foundation, as well as the use of Mr Myles Hodes’ vehicle from Sterling Furnishers to transport all these goods to Zimbabwe, our residents have been assured of another year of comfort and dignity.” She adds: “With difficult and challenging times still befalling Zimbabwe, it is so heartening to know there are people ‘out there’ who care about our senior citizens and their well-being.” 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT 11 COMMUNITY COLUMNS Let’s make most of our 2010 year ABOVE BOARD Zev Krengel, National Chairman A column of the SA Jewish Board of Deputies Conservative Jewish women wear prayer shawls and carry Torah scrolls at the Western Wall, on December 18, 2009. (PHOTOGRAPH: YOSSI ZAMIR / FLASH 90 / JTA) Questioning of the ‘Women of the Wall’ leader sparks protests BEN HARRIS JERUSALEM THE CONSERVATIVE synagogue movement is launching a campaign to protest the recent questioning and possible prosecution of a leader of the group, Women of the Wall. For more than two decades, the group has been organising regular women’s prayer services at the Western Wall and pressing for expanded worship rights at Judaism’s holiest pilgrimage site. Last week its chairwoman, Anat Hoffman, was summoned to a Jerusalem police station for questioning. According to Hoffman, also director of the Reform movement’s Israel Religious Action Centre and a former member of the Jerusalem City Council, she was questioned by police about her role in Women of the Wall, fingerprinted and told that her case was being referred to the attorney general for prosecution. “I think it was a meeting of intimidation,” Hoffman told JTA. Micky Rosenfeld, a spokesman for the Israel Police, confirmed the basics of Hoffman’s account. But Shmulik Ben-Ruby, a spokesman for the Jerusalem police, denied that the matter has been referred to prosecutors. He said that Hoffman and her group are suspected of having acted to “hurt the feelings” of worshippers at the wall. “We are still checking and will see what will be the end in the investigation,” Ben-Ruby added. Hoffman’s questioning threatens to further exacerbate tensions between American Jewish groups and more conservative elements within the Israel’s Orthodox-controlled religious establishment. She told JTA that she hoped to “wake the American Jewish giant” in an effort to prevent the attorney general from moving ahead with prosecution. If convicted, Hoffman said, she faced prison time or a fine of about $3 000. The United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, the movement’s congregational arm, issued a statement declaring that Hoffman’s arrest and fingerprinting, “opens a new and ominous chapter in intraJewish relations in Israel.” AROUND THE WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF The group urged members to send a letter to Israel’s ambassador in Washington, Michael Oren, to inform him of “the gravity of this issue” and press his government to “take immediate steps to end the harassment of women seeking to pray with dignity at the Western Wall, Judaism’s most holy place.” Hoffman’s questioning comes nearly two months after another Women of the Wall member, Nofrat Frenkel, was arrested after she and other women began reading from a Torah scroll in the course of the group’s regular prayer session at the wall, timed to coincide with the start of the new Hebrew month. Frenkel and Hoffman were informed that they were in violation of an Israeli Supreme Court ruling that, citing concerns about public safety, denied women the right to read from the Torah in the regular women’s section of the wall. The ruling resulted in the designation of a nearby site, known as Robinson’s Arch, as the place for women to pray as a group with a Torah scroll. Hoffman scoffs at the solution, calling it “separate, but it’s not equal”. A Torah scroll the group uses was damaged by rain at the site, which lacks a covered space like the men’s section at the wall. “It is not a place of prayer,” she said. “It is a place where we are praying, and a tour guide is walking with a tour, showing them the different archaeological artefacts. And most important, we can’t read Torah there in safety because it rains on our head.” Rabbi Avi Shafran, a spokesman for the fervently Orthodox group Agudath Israel of America, defended the limitations on women’s prayer groups. “People of all faiths, after all, are welcome at the Kotel - as they should be,” he wrote in an opinion essay distributed via email. “Out of respect, though, for the Jewish historical and spiritual connection to the place, public services there should respect a single standard of decorum. And that standard should be, as it has been, millennia-old Jewish religious tradition.” Promoting a “particular view of feminism,” Shafran added, “should not compel them to act in ways that they know will offend others, to seek to turn a holy place into a political arena.” (JTA) EVER SINCE South Africa was chosen to host the 2010 Fifa World Cup, the date “2010” has assumed talismanic status for all South Africans. While we have successfully hosted a number of major international sports tournaments in the past, none were of the kind of scale and prestige that distinguishes football’s premier event. It promises to be a most exciting six months as the countdown continues, and I hope that our Jewish community will join their fellow citizens in making the most of it. We are looking forward to welcoming the many Jewish visitors expected to be here for the event. To this end have set up a special website - www.jewish2010.com - a comprehensive information resource that will enable them to make use of our Jewish communal facilities during their stay. The site lists everything a Jewish visitor from abroad might want to know, including historical, religious and cultural information, practical guidelines on such day-to-day requirements as transport to and from airports and details of kosher facilities, accommodation and shul times. As stressed in previous columns, the site, while it is being facilitated by the SAJBD, very much belongs to the Jewish community as a whole. We invite you to consult and use it as much as possible. * * * A second major event that the Board is involved in is the forthcoming visit by the leadership of both the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organisations (CPMAJO) and of the Euro- WIZO Asian Jewish Congress (EJC). These will be arriving in February for a packed week-long programme, including meetings with government members at the highest levels. The Board is intrinsically involved in planning and co-ordinating the visit, the details of which will be dealt with in future columns. * * * Fortunately, we have not been faced with the kind of pressing challenges that characterised the start of the last calendar year, when anger over the war in Gaza spilled over into open anti-Semitism on our streets. That being said, the potential for the Middle East conflict to once again negatively impact on our community, remains ongoing. Last December our national director, Wendy Kahn, participated in the Third Global Forum for Combating Anti-Semitism, held in Jerusalem. The sobering message that came through loud and clear was that global antiSemitism is very much on the rise, and that is continually being fuelled - often even justified - by hostility towards Israel. * * * We hope and pray that this year will see genuine progress made towards bringing about a lasting peace between Israel and its neighbours, but at the same time we must be prepared to deal with the fallout should this not happen. As in years gone past, the Board will do everything necessary to ensure that Jewish civil rights and freedoms are upheld, while simultaneously striving to lead our community in being a proud, productive and identifying part of the greater South African nation. Shalom chaveroth South Africa Benefitting: WIZO; Youth Aliyah; Keren Hayesod; Friends of the IDF; Beit Halochem; JNF A column of WIZO South Africa YVONNE JAWITZ I AM enormously proud to assume the role of president of WIZO South Africa and as I take the helm I am aware of the many challenges facing women today. Sadly, women’s rights have not always been prioritised but a new year heralds with it new opportunities for change. A lot has been said about the power of women and the bonds of sisterhood that cross cultural boundaries and borders of countries. WIZO South Africa prides itself in being part of an international women’s movement that has and continues to break barriers in the pursuit of women’s rights and equality the world over. With over 52 federations all over the world (some in countries where we barely hear an inkling of a Jewish community) WIZO is a celebration of the diversity, complexities and spirit of women. We realise the power and potential that we have as a non-governmental organisation that has the rare privilege of consultative status on United Nations bodies, UNICEF and ECOSOC at a time of increased hostilities against Israel. Part of this is ensuring that we are persistent in our lobbying efforts for the rights of women and children. Women share a unique perspective on the issues confronting us both in our communities and those that are gender driven. It is with this special understanding that WIZO South Africa seeks to strengthen our bonds with our sisters from various women’s organisations as we link together in commemoration of days that highlight various issues surrounding women today. Domestic violence, rape, the plight of breast cancer, HIV/Aids in South Africa, the right to education and employment and equal rights are global issues for women and WIZO South Africa proudly takes its place in the pantheon of sister organisations who are dedicated to improving the status and lives of women in our country as well as globally. The year 2010 brings with it not only great opportunities for South Africa as we steadily approach hosting the World Cup Soccer tournament, but renewed enthusiasm and vigour for our members whose dedication and commitment sets a shining example. We extend an invitation to you to join us in making 2010 a year of exceptional achievement. L’chaim! The above columns are paid for by the SAJBD and WIZO South Africa ADL CLAIMS ISLAMIC CONFERENCE WAS ANTI-SEMITIC NEW YORK - The Anti-Defamation League has accused two Muslim groups of using an Islamic summit as a platform for anti-Semitic rhetoric. After reviewing transcripts of a convocation for a conference in Chicago in late December, the ADL said the Muslim American Society and the Islamic Circle of North America "served as a forum for religious scholars and political activists to rail against Jews, call for the eradication of the state of Israel and accuse the United States government as waging a war against Muslims at home and abroad," the Washington Times report- ed. The ADL said the conference, which was billed as promoting positive solutions to hate, included several radical Muslim clerics, including Anwar al-Awlaki, who has encouraged jihad against the United States and was tied to Fort Hood shooting suspect Maj Nidal Hasan. Awlaki also had ties to Nigerian Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who was accused of trying to blow up a Detroit-bound plane on Christmas Day. Conference officials called the ADL's claims "totally inaccurate" and said they had disinvited two radical Islamic speakers. "We brought in 700 youth from across the country to refute the views held by al-Awlaki," said Mahdi Bray, executive director of MAS Freedom. "The ADL didn't mention our interfaith programme either. "As for the books and materials, we had a bazaar with 300 vendors. There was no way we could police everything that was published there just as the ADL would not be able to stop groups at one of their conferences from posting Islamophobic materials." (JTA) 12 SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 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 082927-5786. • 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@jewishout look.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 other wise 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 Friday (January 22) • UZLC presents David Batzofin, well-known radio personality, on “Goodbye ‘09, Hello 2010”. Sunday (January 24) • Second Innings presents klezmer music by the Yochi Ress Band, with singer Len Kay. Cost: R40 per person. Monday (January 25) • UJW House & Garden Circle meeting. Peter Goodwin from Colourful Splendour will talk on “What to plant in your garden in January”. Time: 09:30 for 10:00. • UJW - Current Affairs. Gavin Lewis, Member of the Provincial Legislature in Gauteng, will talk on “President Jacob Zuma - How Are We Doing So Far?” Time: 09:30. Donation: R20. Tuesday (January 26) • Second Innings Film Club presents “High Society” with some Movietone news reels and an introduction by Selwyn Klass. Time: 18:30 at the Gerald Horwitz Lounge, Golden Acres. Cost R15. Wednesday (January 27) • WIZO Meir Szold branch invites mature beauties to THE BRIDGE LOUNGE by Jeff Sapire The hold-up play is pretty standard stuff for most players, but to execute it properly, one has to have a look at the situation in the context of the entire hand. West dealer, both vul NORTH K965 Q5 J974 A53 WEST EAST QJ84 103 K10643 J972 K6 8 J9 KQ8742 SOUTH A72 A8 AQ10532 106 East South Pass 1NT Dbl 3D All pass West Pass Pass Pass North Pass 2C 3NT Opening lead: CJ South decided to upgrade his excellent fourteen count with a six card suit and opened a 15-17 NT. Over North’s Stayman response, East grabbed the opportunity to make a lead-directing double. The idea is that whenever opponents make an artificial bid, a double shows that suit. South tried an innovative 3D, denying a major and showing good, long diamonds, over which North settled for 3NT. On the jack of clubs lead declarer had to decide when to take the ace. The danger on this hand is what will happen if the diamond finesse loses - because if the king is onside there are never any problems. Clearly it was correct to duck the first trick, because a losing diamond finesse would have allowed West to return a club, but when the latter continued with the nine it was time to think again, because another danger had presented itself. A second duck would allow East to win with the queen, and with his hand devoid of entries, to switch to a heart. Now, whichever heart declarer played, presumably low, the defence would continue hearts, establishing the suit for West while he still had the king of diamonds as an entry. The defenders would then come to seven tricks, for three down. Declarer, however, got it right and put up the ace of clubs at trick two. When the diamond finesse lost, West was out of clubs and there were nine tricks. Declarer’s key decision was based on West’s lead of the jack followed by the nine, surely showing a doubleton. With say, J94, the correct lead would have been low from an honour. Note, however, that East could have had his name in lights for a sparkling defence. It’s not easy, but if he had overtaken the jack of clubs’ lead at trick one with the queen, declarer would have been in an impossible position - winning the first club would lead to disaster, but ducking would allow East to switch to a heart, also leading to defeat. Every Tuesday (semi-beginners) and Wednesday (intermediate) 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 Barry Bilewitz carro@global.co.za attend a skincare demonstration by one of South Africa’s best-known beauty providers. Time 10:00 for 10:30. R50 donation includes a scrumptious tea. For more information, contact Cecily on (011) 882-9996. for the bus. Time: 13:30 at the bus, 15:00 at Pieter Toerien’s Theatre at Montecasino. Meet the bus at the Oxford Shul parking. Tuesday (March 9) Sunday (January 31) • WIZO Fortnightly Forum presents The Story of Two Presidents: Anna Trapido - Hunger for Freedom - a story on Nelson Mandela and journalist Jeremy Gordin - Zuma, a biography. Time: 09:30 at Beyachad. Cost: Monday (February 1) R30. To book, contact Joyce/Sandy on (011) 645• UJW presents Lael Bethlehem, CEO Johannesburg 2515. Development Agency, on “New Public Art Works And Sunday (March 21) Spaces In The Inner City”. Time: 09:30. Donation: • Second Innings presents Mandy Wiener on “Life as a R20. News Reporter - Behind the Political & Judicial • Registration at 18:30 for the Morris Rutstein/SAZF Scenes”. Hebrew ulpan course. The weekly course runs from Wednesday (March 24) February 2 until June 8 on Tuesday evenings from 19:00 to 21:15. Venue: Yeshiva College, Glenhazel. • Second Innings has an outing to the Sammy Marks • Second Innings presents Reeva Forman on “Overcoming Adversity and Learning to Dream Again”. Museum. Meet the bus at 08:30 at Oxford Shul parking. Cost: R160 per person, includes entrance, guided tour, lunch and the bus. Tuesday (February 2) • UJW presents Estelle Sher on “Music on Jewish themes: Shostakovich and others.” Time: 09:45 12:00. Venue: 301 Eton Place, Kernick Avenue, Mel- • Second Innings presents Ann Cluver Weinberg on “Looking For Goodness”. rose North. Donation: R30 per session. Sunday (February 7) • Stellenbosch Hebrew Congregation has a Friday evening service every week in shul, starting at 18:45. • Second Innings presents Michael Judin on “Jewish Contact (021) 886-5257. Giving After the Madoff Scandal”. • UJW urgently needs donations of good quality warm Tuesday (February 9) clothing, blankets and basic foodstuffs for our Kosher • Second Innings Men’s Group presents Colin Datnow Mobile Meals recipients and for our outreach projects on “History of the Chevrah Kadisha” at 14:15 for in Soweto, Tembisa and Alexandra. Deliver if possible 14:30. Venue: Our Parents Home, Orchards. to UJW offices, 1 Oak Street, Houghton or phone (011) 648-1053. Sunday (February 14) • Second Innings presents Scully Levine on “A Day In • The Yiddish Academy offers weekly basic, intermediate and advanced classes on Monday evenings at The Life Of An Airline Pilot”. 19:30, Tuesday mornings at 10:30 and Thursday Tuesday (February 23) evenings at 19:30 at the RCHCC, Glenhove Road, • WIZO Fortnightly Forum presents “Jozi 2010 - What Houghton. Conversational groups. For details: e-mail is Happening”, with Lael Bethlehem and Nechama yiddishacademy@gmail.com or call Hazel Cohen on Brodie at 09:30 at Beyachad. Cost: R30. To book con- (011) 728-8088. tact Joyce/Snadyon (011) 645-2515. • Supervised bridge with Jeff Sapire Tuesday morning 10:00 - 12:00 (intermediate) and Wednesday Wednesday (February 24) morning 10:00 - 12:00 (advanced). At the Clive M • Second Innings has an outing to Bush Babies MonBeck Auditorium. Booking: Hazel or Renée (011) key Sanctuary near Hartebeespoort Dam. Meet the 728-8088/8378. E-mail: hazelc@greatpark.co.za or bus promptly at 08:30 at the Oxford Shul parking. renes@greatpark.co.za Cost: R250 per person includes entrance to the park, the guided tour, lunch and the bus. • Beis Midrash Chofetz Chaim is offering a second Ma’ariv minyan every weekday evening (Monday Sunday (February 28) Friday) at 21:00, cnr Elray and Michel • Second Innings presents Nick Hulett on saxophone. Streets, Raedene. Open to broader community. Don’t fret if you need a later minyan. Secure parkSunday (March 7) ing provided. • Second Innings presents Naomi Schutte on “Living • Sunday Scrabble Club meets every Sunday at Naturally”. 10:00 at Zahava’s, Grant Avenue, Norwood, off 9th Street. Cost R5. Players of all strengths welcome. • Second Innings outing to see “Fully Committied” Larry 082-888-5355. with Alan Committie. Cost: R90 for the theatre, R50 CROSSWORD NO 146 BY LEAH SIMON ACROSS: 1. A stable company (4) 3. Set about avail to drool (8) 8. Country for yours truly - ditto! (4) 9. Kit was as upset by Nazi emblem (8) 11. Not a very realistic choice of dwelling (7, 5) 13. Nothing for a selection of fruit (6) 14. Yearn for hesitation is continued (6) 17. Being me worst chaos - there’s bad weather coming (5, 7) 20. The end of the execution - and the result of a binge the night before (8) 21. Breeding horse kicks up the dust (4) 22. Penetrate hairstyle which Easterner consumed (8) 23. We French are upset by 1 2 the burden (4) DOWN: 1. Not a leisurely meal, by any means (4, 4) 2. Old city returns to madness in the country (7) 4. Sal is upset and conceals the route - constantly (6) 5. ...Until the fat lady sings, they say (3, 3, 4) 6. How far I elaborated, hiding a Shakespearean character (5) 7. Use flair to ruin lane (4) 10. None grazed around high-risk area (6, 4) 12. New wives hide Georgia - and army units (8) 15. Gang leader to hearken - and shine (7) 16. Complain about the item (6) 18. Haste normally surrounds male singer (5) 19. Find vessel in the southern joint (4) SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD NO 145 ACROSS: 1. Sara; 3. Tomorrow; 8. Viva; 9. Educated; 11. Frosted glass; 13. Climbs; 14. Aghast; 17. The last straw; 20. Ravished; 21. Dior; 22. Validate; 23. Lets. DOWN: 1. Save face; 2. Ravioli; 4. Old Eds; 5. Oncologist; 6. Rites; 7. Weds; 10. Stabilised; 12. Stewards; 15. Airline; 16. Ascent; 18. Hovel; 19. Erev. 3 8 6 5 4 7 9 10 11 12 14 13 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT 13 S Africans have seamlessly become part of Oz ROBYN SASSEN “I’M PROUD of my South African connections,” Robert Schneider, an Australian environmentalist who left South Africa in 1998, says. He draws an analogy between himself and a tree: “Like most Jews, my roots are in Israel. My trunk is my formative South African years; my branches have taken me to Australia.” The exhibition “It’s not all Black and White: The South African Jewish Story” at the Sydney Jewish Museum, focuses on the 60-year-old history of South African Jews in Australia. It’s curated by Roslyn Sugarman, former curator of Johannesburg’s Standard Bank Gallery, who holds SJM’s John Saunders curatorial chair. A fine art graduate from Wits University in the ‘80s, Sugarman became a flight attendant. By chance, she one day noticed Professor Alan Crump, at that time chairman of the National Arts Festival, which fell under the Standard Bank’s sponsorship portfolio, travelling on a flight she was attending. She plucked up the courage to ask him to put in a good employment word for her... one thing led to another, she was appointed the first curator of the Standard Bank Gallery, which was then being built. Sugarman filled this role for a decade. “He held my hand metaphorically throughout,” Sugarman recalled, remembering Crump at the time of his death, in May last year. Sugarman left for Australia with her family in 2000; the curatorial lessons she learnt with the bank and under Crump’s mentorship were unforgettable. Curating the show with Barbara Linz (who The Slender family ride in a rickshaw on their trip to Durban 2003. (PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY DANA SLENDER) left South Africa in 1981), Sugarman acknowledges the exhibiting space as “small and bland”; their challenge became to create a mood incorporating “the beauty and cruelty of life in apartheid South Africa”. They wanted to make the exhibition appeal to more than the Jewish community, more than former South Africans, and aimed to show that despite being a cohesive community, Jewish immigrants aren’t monolithic. “Offering a glimpse into South African Jewish life from its beginnings around the 1840s through its development and onto the cataclysmic events that led to waves of migration, this exhibition is punctuated by voices of former South Africans, now living in Sydney, giving expression to a range of views and experiences. “Jewish life in South Africa was characterised by a strong sense of community and an enduring connection with Israel. Jewish responses to apartheid are revealed as multifaceted; motivations for emigration are similarly diverse,” Sugarman writes. Cherry Shneider, who left in 1979, comments: “It was very difficult to make Australian friends. When the South Africans kept to one another - we shared the same difficulties and were able to help one another we were accused of having a ghetto-like mentality, and sticking to our own. Emotionally and psychologically it affected many of us and took many years for us to settle.” “South Africans have been migrating to Australia since 1948, when the National Party came to power,” Sugarman observes. “Subsequent migration occurred in waves triggered by the Sharpeville Massacre of 1960 and the 1976 Soweto Uprising. “For some, the fear of living under a black government following the first democratic elections in 1994, precipitated migration. More recently, many emigrated to escape increasing crime and violence, witnessed by many first hand, not abstractly. “Between the ‘70s and 2006, almost a million whites left South Africa: 47 000 were Jews. The 2006 census showed that 104 000 Three young South African Jews with their nannies, ca 1936. (PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY JOY BLOCH) persons born in South Africa now live in Australia; about 15 000 are Jews. For South Africans, the similar lifestyle, climate and language make Australia a destination of choice. The impact of emigration, loss of identity, massive internal adjustment, psychological and financial hardships for many, is negated or not taken seriously: South African Jews are perceived as privileged and educated. The voices, photographs and memorabilia of former South Africans, now living in Sydney give expression to a wide range of views and experiences of assimilation Down Under. The curators endeavoured to represent the seductive power of South African sights, sounds and smells different from that of Australia. Then they added the next layer: that of fear, discrimination and ugliness. “This exhibition is their story,” Sugarman, presents an understanding of the project that aimed to be neither too contentious nor too light; not too prosaic nor too romantic. The exhibition has been extremely popular. “We’ve estimated that around 3 500 new visitors - who have never before visited the museum - have been,” Sugarman added, tolling up close to 1 000 names in the visitors’ book. “Overwhelmingly, the comments are full of praise from local and international visitors, including David and Linda Shapiro from South Africa who reminded readers that Linda’s mother, Esther Barsel was in prison in South Africa for her anti-apartheid beliefs.” Another, whose signature was illegible, commented that the exhibition brought a “lump to the throat of a Boere Jood”; Robyn Garrun (Johannesburg) added: “Enjoyed the Nathan and Miriam Shur and their daughters, Vivian (left) and Rachel on a Europeans only bench, Durban 1958. (PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY VIVIAN WOLFF) history, but overwhelmingly Afro-pessimistic!” “I guess this is to be expected,” Sugarman concludes, “since the exhibition is based on the experiences and perspectives of Jews who have left South Africa. “It’s probably unlikely that we would host another South African exhibition unless it had a completely different angle,” Sugarman adds. “I’d imagine that we would more likely curate an exhibition about another minority group, such as the Russian or Egyptian Jewish in Australia.” The museum has hosted exhibitions about the Hungarian Jews and Jews of Shanghai in the past. • “It’s Not All Black and White” had been scheduled to close on December 12 but due to popular demand, it has been extended until the end of January. 14 SA JEWISH REPORT SAZF slams govt’s stance on terror attacks THE SOUTH African Zionist Federation has expressed its disappointment at the most recent statement by the South African government following the rocket attacks into Israel by Hamas and Israel’s retaliation in order to safeguard Israeli citizens. An SAZF media release on behalf of Avrom Krengel, chairman of the organisation, states: “Once again the government has failed to comment on the reason for Israel’s attack, choosing instead to imply that it was carried out without provocation, and that the Palestinians had no role to play in it. “The South African government cannot claim to play any meaningful role in peace negotiations in the Middle East when it so blatantly expresses its bias towards the Palestinians and against Israel, and fails to acknowledge the very hostile actions of the Palestinians which are aimed at destroying any chance of a peaceful resolution to this ongoing conflict.” AROUND THE WORLD 15 - 22 January 2010 Concourt is in good hands, says Justice Albie Sachs STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY MOIRA SCHNEIDER CAPE TOWN MR JUSTICE Albie Sachs has described his 15 years on the Constitutional Court as “amazing and wonderful. It’s absolutely thrilling work, the most intellectual work you can get in the modern world. “I tell you, I’m suffering withdrawal symptoms,” said the recently-retired judge, addressing a session of The Living Newspaper. He pronounced himself “so amazed and proud of what we’ve achieved in South Africa - so many things are not good at all, some things are spectacularly wonderful.” Justice Sachs described his neighbour at the Court, newly-appointed Chief Justice Sandile Ngcobo, as having “an absolutely brilliant legal mind” and Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke as a “great warm person, deeply thoughtful, very modern and progressive. “I think the Court’s in good hands,” he said, referring to the “alarm some people had some months ago that the character of the Court was going to be disturbed.” Asked at question time whether the practice of affirmative action was not “somewhat hypocritical” in a democratic society, Justice Sachs said he felt the state and private sector were obliged to take specific measures to overcome the disadvantages of the past. The key issue, he stressed, was whether discrimination was fair or unfair. “So, if you’re simply giving jobs to people because they are women or black, irrespective of their capacity or potential, that is unfair. If you completely exclude those from an advantaged background, that is unfair. “The question is not if you’re going to have affirmative action, but how you’re going to have it in a fair way.” While humour was essential for a democracy, the right to satire did not trump everything else, he continued. In the case of Holocaust denial, Justice Sachs said he’d be inclined to say that freedom of speech gave way to an individual’s right to dignity, adding that it was the Court’s role to balance out competing claims. NEWS IN BRIEF POPE CALLS FOR A TWO-STATE SOLUTION AJWS LAUNCHES FUND TO BACK UGANDAN GAYS WASHINGTON - A major US Jewish relief service has launched a fund to support opposition to a proposed Ugandan law that targets gays. The American Jewish World Service, already active in relief activities in the east African nation, announced last Friday the Urgent LGBT Uganda Fund, using the acronym for LesbianGay-Transgender-Bisexual. Uganda's Anti-Homosexuality Bill would expand penalties for gay activity up to the death penalty. "The passage of this bill would severely impede human rights and development groups' efforts to ensure the safety and security of the Ugandan LGBT community," an AJWS statement said. "It would also make it extremely difficult for groups to implement effective prevention and treatment of HIV/Aids. Moreover, the bill violates the freedom of every person to live a safe and dignified life - a core value that unifies all of AJWS's work and is central to the Jewish experience." AJWS has circulated letters among lawmakers in Congress and elsewhere calling on President Barack Obama and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni to push back against the legislation. (JTA) Mr Justice Albie Sachs, former justice of the Constitutional Court (left) talks to a member of the audience after addressing a session of The Living Newspaper. New spider species discovered in Israel HAIFA - A new and previously unknown species of spider has been discovered in the dune of the Sands of Samar in the southern Arava region by a team of scientists from the Department of Biology in the University of Haifa-Oranim. Unfortunately, however, its habitat is endangered. “The discovery of this new spider illustrates our obligation to preserve the dune,” says Dr Uri Shanas of the University of Haifa, who headed the team of scientists. The Sands of Samar are the last remaining sand dune in Israeli territory in the southern Arava region. In the past, the sands stretched across some seven square kilometres, but due to the rezoning of areas for agriculture and sand quarries, the sands have been reduced to fewer than three square kilometres. During a course of studies that Dr Shanas’ research team has carried out in the region, they discovered this new spider, a member of the Cerbalus genus. Since it has been found in the Arava, it has been given the name Cerbalus aravensis. The researchers say that this spider’s leg-span can reach up to 14 cm, which makes it the largest spider of its type in the Middle East. Even though details are still lacking to enable a full analysis of its biology and of its population in the sands, the scientists know that this is a nocturnal spider, mostly active in the hottest months of the year, and that PHOTO: YAEL OLEK ROME - Pope Benedict XVI has called for "universal recognition" of both Israel's right to exist and the rights of Palestinians to an independent state. In his traditional New Year's address on Monday, to world diplomats accredited to the Vatican, the pope recalled that during his trip to Israel, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority last May, he had "urgently appealed" for dialogue and respect between Israelis and the Palestinians. "Once again I call for a universal recognition of the right of the State of Israel to exist and to enjoy peace and security within internationally recognised borders," he said. "Likewise, the right of the Palestinian people to a sovereign and independent homeland, to live in dignity and to enjoy freedom of movement, ought to be recognised." The pope also called for "the protection of the identity and sacred character of Jerusalem, and of its cultural and religious heritage, which is of universal value". In another development, the Vatican issued a statement over the weekend saying that the latest meeting of representatives of Israel and the Vatican had been "useful" in moving toward an agreement on unresolved financial issues clouding relations between the two states. Members of the Bilateral Permanent Working Commission between the Holy See and Israel met last week in Jerusalem. (JTA) Commenting on the “bickering” that characterises the public discourse, Justice Sachs said we were “in a way all responsible because we read the newspapers with these headlines. There are people who love to hate - the newspapers promote this because it is exciting; they follow politician X around and he becomes a big, prominent personality. “The way it trivialises politics, is my concern. The big issues get lost and I think that’s very sad.” Justice Sachs stressed that civility was an important element of a democratic society, with rules of discourse being necessary. “The exchange of insults and the way this gets carried, introduces levels of incivility that can be quite threatening to democracy when it’s backed up by force,” he said, adding, however, that we were “nowhere near there”. Earlier he remarked that, although there had been “very authoritarian” groupings inside the ANC in exile, “anything to do with (ANC President) Oliver Tambo was as democratic as you can get. There’s no justification for any authoritarianism today by people who claim to be carrying forward the struggle,” he maintained. Reminiscing on his time in detention in the 1960s, Justice Sachs treated the audience to a rendition of what he termed his theme song, “Always”, complete with substituted lyrics appropriate to his situation. “I’ll be living here always...” He had vowed then that “if ever I’m in a position of authority, I will never allow this to be done to another human being”. Then “suddenly that day arrived”, he said, referring to his influence on the Constitution and its express inclusion of the words “No detention without trial”. Professor Robert Schrire, chairman of the department of political studies at the University of Cape Town, noted that “30 or 40 years ago, a lot of you would have regarded Albie and Joe Slovo as the worst sort of Jewish life, an embarrassment to the community. When we look back, we should get on our knees and thank them that we have so little racism in public life”. At the start of the meeting, Justice Sachs called for a minute’s silence in honour of the late Mendel Kaplan. it constructs an underground den which is closed with a “lifting door” made of sand particles that are glued together to camouflage the den. The scientists’ excitement is indeed mixed with apprehension. According to Dr Shanas, the Israel Land Administration intends to renew mining projects in the Sands of Samar in the near future, which will endanger the existence of the newly discovered spider. He adds that it is possible that there are additional unknown animal species living in the sands, and therefore efforts should be made to preserve this unique region in the Arava. “The new discovery shows how much we still have to investigate, and that there are likely to be many more species that are unknown to us. If we do not preserve the few habitats that remain for these species, they will become extinct before we can even discover them,” Dr Shanas concludes. 15 - 22 January 2010 SA JEWISH REPORT 15 AROUND THE WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF SACRAMENTO SYNAGOGUE HIT WITH ANTI-SEMITIC VANDALISM To book your classified notice contact: Tel (011) 886-0162, Fax (011) 886-4202, email: brittl@global.co.za 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 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. SERVICES HOME SERVICES TIMESHARE FOR SALE HEALTH & BEAUTY GENERAL MABALINGWE NATURE RESERVE & HOLIDAY RESORT 1 wk – early May for sale, a most peaceful period when the animals are seen in abundance. 6-sleeper chalet. Self-catering & serviced. 26 km from Bela Bela. 20 min to Warm Baths Spa. R20 500 neg (onco). Call (011) 640-5350 HANDY GRAMPS Household, general repairs and maintenance. 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MANY OTHER PRETTY/HANDSOME PROF/EXEC/BUSINESS/ TRADE SINGLES ARE WAITING TO MEET YOU! SANDY (011) 4854034/082-357-3616 PLUMBER BRIAN K Will schlep and carry mom, dad & kids 24/7 anywhere in comfort at competitive rates. Call 073 438 0563 CAPE TOWN SHUTTLE COMING TO CAPE TOWN? AFFORDABLE RATES. AIRPORT TRANSFERS FROM R160 NEW COMFORTABLE VEHICLE PHONE ANDY 082-336-9780 EX ISRAELI SERVICEMAN offers safe and secure lifts. 24 hrs. Airport lifts from R180 also schools, malls, courier etc from R50. Call Neil 072-050-9927 TUITION & EDUCATION SUPERVISED HOMEWORK Qualified teacher offering homework supervision after school. All primary school grades, all subjects. Call 082-795-3284 AVAILABLE PART/FULL-TIME DOMESTIC WORKER WANTED Domestic worker with good references, knowledge of kashrut & experience with young children. Required for part or fulltime position in Sandhurst. Please call Michelle on (011) 507-0011 LIVE-IN DOMESTIC WORKER REQ. FOR KOSHER HOME. MORNINGSIDE Must be able to cook & understand Kashrut. SA citizen - contactable ref’s. Btw 35 – 45 yrs only. Good with kids. 083-443-9503 LIFTS AIRPORT SHUTTLE ----- R150 ---From Glenhazel / Senderwood / Lyndhurst areas. Reasonable rates from all other areas. SAM (011) 728-5219 083-627-8516 VACANCIES PROPERTY TO LET ACCOMMODATION TO LET/SHARE SAVOY North-facing, 3 bedroom duplex in small complex, in quiet road, near Chabad Savoy. Call Monica (011) 481-3400 ACCOMMODATION WANTED First year male university student, seeking accom in Jhb from Jan/Feb 2010. Kindly contact Debbie (after 12pm daily) Cell: 082-294-2508 PROPERTY FOR SALE COMPLEX, CLUSTERS, DUPLEXES, SIMPLEXES & TOWNHOUSES COMPANION/HOUSE MANAGER RQD For elderly, retired professional couple living in a wellsecured retirement complex in Highlands North, Jhb. Wife is suffering dementia. Suitable for a recently retired teacher, nurse, social worker or other graduate, male or female. Hrs 9.301.30, 3-5 days p/week neg. Duties include: ordering and managing medication, managing carers/domestic staff and overall housekeeping, weekly shopping, overseeing lunch, driving to doctors' appointments and shops (a car is available), helping to occupy the elderly gentleman e.g. reading the newspaper and walking in the grounds. Must be energetic, patient, honest and reliable. Valid driver's licence and recent references rqd. Salary neg. dependent on experience. Please email CV and any queries to Debbie dstbidoli@ webafrica.org.za by 21 January 2010. VEHICLES WANTED ARE YOU IMMIGRATING OVERSEAS AND WANT TO SELL YOUR VEHICLE? “ON SHOW” SUNDAY 17th JANUARY. UNIT 52 ROYAL LINKSFIELD 22, Edward Avenue, Sandringham – follow boards from George Avenue Please Contact Solly Kramer 082-922-3597 anytime SACRAMENTO - A Sacramento synagogue has been the target of anti-Semitic vandalism. Members of the Orthodox synagogue Kenesset Israel Torah Centre in the California capital, discovered spraypainted swastikas and other graffiti, including demonic symbols and hate rhetoric, on the morning of January 1, Jweekly reported. It is the second act of vandalism on a Sacramento-area synagogue in two months. Four cars parked near the synagogue also were vandalised. The spray-painted epithets were removed by the end of the day by a member of a neighbouring church who specialises in removing graffiti. (JTA) MEXICAN TYCOON KILLED IN COPTER CRASH MEXICO CITY - Mexican Jewish tycoon Moises Saba Masri was killed early Monday morning in a helicopter crash near Mexico City. Masri, 47, died when one of the rotors of the helicopter in which he was riding struck a building due to heavy fog, according to reports. Five others, including Masri's wife, son and daughter-in-law, and the pilot, were killed in the crash. Masri owned real estate and medical companies, and had extensive holdings in the Mexican telecom company Unefon and broadcaster TV Azteca. He also owned two hotels in Acapulco. Israel's Zaka rescue organisation sent a delegation to Mexico on Monday afternoon to assist in identifying the dead. (JTA) 16 SA JEWISH REPORT 15 - 22 January 2010 Israeli tennis player Harel Levy will be in action at the SA Tennis Open to be played at Montecasino from February 1 to 7. Harel Levy set to contest SA Open JACK MILNER ONE OF the heroes of the Israeli Davis Cup team, Harel Levy, will be in action at the South African Open Tennis tournament to be played at Montecasino in Sandton from February 1 to 7. Levy made his first trip to South Africa in April last year when he played in the Soweto Open, which was a Challenger event. He obviously had a good time and has decided to return this year for the big one, which carries prize money of R3,5-million. The Israeli, who is currently ranked 119, will face some stiff competition at Montecasino. Heading the list of entries is world No 13, Gael Monfils of France, as well as Spain’s David Ferrer, who reached the semifinals last year. It was Ferrer who put out Israel’s Dudi Sela in the first round last year. Sela led 2-0 in the opening set but failed to win another game. While Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga will not be here to defend his title, runner-up Jeremy Chardy will be back, hoping to go one better. He put out Ferrer in the semifinals and in this last year has seen his world ranking climb to No 32. Two highly regarded left-handers will be making their first appearance at the SA Open in Spaniard Feliciano Lopez and Finland’s Jarkko Nieminen. Also on the list are Germany’s Nicolas Kiefer and former Wimbledon semifinalist, Xavier Malisse of Belgium. Lopez is currently ranked 47 but he has been ranked in the top 20. Nieminen has been as high as 13 in 2006 but this year missed out on three months due to a wrist injury and dropped to No 88. Malisse has had his ups and downs over the year but had his huge breakthrough at Wimbledon in 2002 when beating both Greg Rusedski and Richard Krajicek in five sets and then going down in a rain-delayed semifinal to David Nalbandian, also in five sets. He reached his career-high ranking of 19 after that, but is currently at 94. Kiefer was the hero of the German Davis Cup team when they played South Africa in Johannesburg. He and Wesley Moodie were involved in a tough five-setter, and a victory to Moodie would have given South Africa the tie. Unfortunately Moodie had also been in a five-set thriller in which he beat Tommy Haas and played the doubles rubber and tired at the end of his match against Kiefer. A brilliant player in his day, Kiefer has been ranked as high as No 4 in the world. But injury has taken its toll over the years. However, the conditions in Johannesburg will be ideal for a player who still serves and volleys with great effectiveness. Last year proved to be the most outstanding year ever in Israeli tennis history when against all odds they reached the semifinals of the Davis Cup World Group. They went down to eventual winners Spain, who had home ground advantage, but on the way they beat Sweden in a tie that was played behind closed doors in Malmö after protests against the Israeli presence in Sweden. Levy himself won the final tie in five sets against Andreas Vinciguerra to hand Israel the victory. “That has to be the greatest moment of my tennis career. My win over (Pete) Sampras and reaching the final of the Tennis Masters in Toronto were also great, but this was a fantastic moment,’’ Levy said. But the win against Russia was even more spectacular as Levy and Sela took the first two rubbers against Igor Andreev and Mikael Youzhny respectively at the Nokia Sports Palace in Tel Aviv and then Jonathan Erlich and Andy Ram closed out the tie with a fiveset victory in the doubles over Igor Kuznitsyn and Marat Safin. Compatriot Noam Okun has also entered the SA Open but he will need to qualify if he is to make the main draw. In other tennis news, Israel’s Shahar Peer had to shrug off a protest at her presence and a security scare that forced the evacuation of the venue in order to advance to the second round of the Auckland Classic last week. . A small group of people carrying placards and chanting against Israel’s treatment of Palestinians mingled outside the Auckland Tennis Centre before Peer took to Court Four for her first round match against Slovenia’s Polona Hercog. Prior to play starting, however, an unattended bag by a spectator provoked a fullblown security scare forcing the evacuation of the venue before police and security staff discovered there was no threat. Police later said there was no link between the protest and the security scare. Peer, who faced similar protests at last year’s tournament, wasted little time in advancing to the second round with a 7-5 6-3 victory over Hercog and said while she had seen the protest when she arrived, would not Maccabi SA plan Oz trip MACCABI SOUTH Africa would like to select a squad of sportsmen for a possible self-funding overseas tour in December of this year. The tour will be to participate in the Maccabi Australia International Games (MAIGS) in Sydney from December 16 until January 2, 2011. For more details regarding the sports, travel, accommodation and costs, contact Maccabi on maccabisa@beyachad.co.za or Desmond Hyman on macgames@sisgroup.co.za Pacquiao rejects Foreman fight ISRAELI BOXING sensation Yuri height. We’ll go through the entire Foreman’s chance of fighting welterweight and junior welterworld pound for pound champion weight categories and see what we Manny Pacquiao was ended last can come up with.” week Thursday after Pacquiao’s However, the Israeli, who lived camp rejected Foreman as a potenin Haifa from the ages of 10 to 19 tial opponent to replace Floyd and now resides in New York, was Mayweather Jr. still proud to have been turned Foreman, the 29-year-old who down. won the WBA super welterweight “It’s a real honour the greatest title in November, is represented pound-for-pound fighter in the by Pacquiao’s promoter Bob Arum world doesn’t want to fight me,” and had been considered a poten- Israeli boxing Foreman said. “Aside from winning tial opponent for the March 13 slot, sensation, Yuri the world title, this is the greatest vacated when negotiations Foreman. compliment I’ve got in boxing.” between Pacquiao and May“We would have liked Pacquiao weather broke down last week Wednesday. but it didn’t work out,” Foreman spokesman The LA Times reported that Pacquiao’s Dovid Efune told The Jerusalem Post. “But US business manager Michael Koncz said: we know that everything that G-d does has a “Manny’s concerned about Foreman’s purpose.” be dissuaded. “As you can see, I’ve come back again. I really like this tournament,” she told reporters. “It’s a shame that somebody thinks it’s my fault that there are problems in the world. “For me, the most important thing was that even though I was hearing those things, which were not nice, I still won.” Peer won through to the quarter-finals where she lost 6-4 7-5 to Yanina Wickmayer of Belgium.