High Holidays - Jewish Federation of New Hampshire
Transcription
High Holidays - Jewish Federation of New Hampshire
Published by the Jewish Federation of New Hampshire Volume 33, Number 10 Interim Director Named by JFNH Board Manchester -- The board of directors of the Jewish Federation of New Hampshire has announced that Dan Levenson of Newtonville, MA, is the new interim executive director of the statewide organization. The board members voted on Levenson’s appointment at their June 19 meeting. Levenson has extensive experience working within the Jewish community. He has been employed at the Consulate of Israel to New England since December 2012, first as acting press officer and then as director of public affairs. He was previously an assistant regional director for the American Jewish Committee in Boston. In 2006-2007 he worked on the Jerusalem 2050 Project at MIT, and while at Harvard he was active with Harvard-Radcliffe Hillel as a member of the Graduate Student Steering Committee. He holds a Master of Liberal Arts degree from Harvard University and a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Board president Dan Cohen says, “We’re very excited to welcome Dan Levenson in his new role at JFNH. All of us on the board look forward to working with him in the months ahead.” July-August 2013 Tammuz-Elul 5773 Jewish Food Festival Floods the Senses July 14 Laconia -- Traditions old and new continue at the 15th annual Jewish Food Festival at Temple B’nai Israel in Laconia on Sunday, July 14. The festival is about the taste and smells from the kitchens of Jewish mothers and grandmothers through the ages. This is not one dish at a time, not a meal at a time, but a huge array of all the textures and tastes that flood your senses when you are confronted with an array of cheese blintzes; stuffed cabbage; sweet and sour meatballs; and matzo ball, cabbage, and borscht soups; Moroccan chicken; chopped herring; liver; apricot couscous and Israeli salads; sandwiches of brisket, corned beef, pastrami and tongue; kugels; latkes; hummus; strudels, rugelah, and more. The Jewish women who congregate in the temple kitchen cook these traditional foods while sharing family history and stories: “I always form Product of a morning’s cooking for the Jewish Food Festival my matzo balls with two spoons,” “no, you have to mold them by hand,” “should we use schmaltz (chicken fat)?” “Too much fat -- I use margarine,” “My bubbie didn’t use margarine,” “Add a touch of sugar to the blintz cheeses,” “Shape them oblong -- No, they should be square.” Master Chef Irene Gordon is the ultimate decision maker at the festival as the cooks fold, chop, mix, talk, laugh, Jewish Pride to Be on Display at Fisher Cats Game Calendar 4 Your Federation at Work 5 Israel 8 Hof Hacarmel Connection 12 From the Bimah 15 Film Buzz 17 Arts & Entertainmnet 19 Just for Fun 22 Recent Events 23 Book Review 24 Letters 24 Tributes 25 Business & Professional Services 26 jewishnh.org Manchester -- For those who have never attended the annual Jewish Pride Night at Northeast Delta Dental Stadium in Manchester, it is an opportunity to enjoy an unusual evening of family fun surrounded by animated baseball fans, young and old alike. This event occurs annually thanks to the generosity of Merchant Auto and the Singer family. On July 25, Jewish Pride Night will feature the hometown Fisher Cats taking on the Altoona Curve. At 7:05 PM the festivities will begin, starting with the singing of the “Star Spangled Banner” and “Hatikvah” by Cantor Michael McCloskey of Temple Emeth in Chestnut Hill, MA. Kosher hot dogs, hamburgers, and crispy, delectable french fries will be available at reasonable cost at the kosher concession stand installed just for Jewish Pride Night. The bonus will be the wonderful display of fireworks at the conclusion of the game. High Holidays S As in years past, the Jewish Federation of New Hampshire is offering van rides to the game from the JFNH parking lot. The Fisher Cats team is a double-A affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays, while the Altoona Curve is a double-A affiliate of the Philadelphia Phillies. Tickets are available starting at only $5. Contact Kyle Tonione for more information and tickets at 606-4112. For van service, RSVP to the Federation at 627-7679. hare YOUR HIGH HOLIDAY GREETINGS with the Jewish community across NH! Fill in the insert included in this issue of the Reporter and return it with payment by August 5 to be included in this year’s High Holiday greetings in a special section of the September issue. The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter Jewish Federation of New Hampshire 698 Beech Street Manchester, NH 03104 3 Food Festival continued on page 4 Change Service Requested Federation Voices and advise. And more than one husband or father has joined the cooking brigade, done the shopping, or helped with packaging. Foods can be pre-ordered at www. tbi.org or by calling 267-1935 for those who wish to avoid the rush and be sure their favorites are not sold out. The orders will be wrapped and ready for pick up on the day of the PERMIT NO. 1174 MANCHESTER, NH PA I D US POSTAGE ORGANIZATION NON-PROFIT CONGREGATIONS JRF: Jewish Reconstructionist Federation URJ: Union for Reform Judaism USCJ: United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism Volume 33, Number AMHERST DOVER MANCHESTER CONGREGATION BETENU Joel Baron (Student Rabbi) 5 Northern Blvd., Unit 1, Amherst Reform, Affiliated URJ (603) 886-1633 www.betenu.org Betenu@nii.net Services: Friday night Kabbalat Shabbat services at 7:30 PM Saturday morning twice a month, 9:30 AM TEMPLE ISRAEL Rabbi Samuel R. Seicol 36 Olive Meadow Lane, Dover Reform, Affiliated URJ (603) 742-3976 www.dovertemple.org templeoffice@dovertemple.org Services: Friday night services at 7:30 PM For monthly Saturday services and holiday worship, please check the website. CHABAD LUBAVITCH Rabbi Levi Krinsky 7 Camelot Place, Manchester Orthodox, Chabad (603) 647-0204 www.Lubavitchnh.com rabbi@lubavitchnh.com Services: Shabbat Services Saturday morning at 9:30 AM Sunday morning minyan at 9 AM BETHLEHEM HANOVER BETHLEHEM HEBREW CONGREGATION Hazzan Marlena Fuerstman 39 Strawberry Hill Road PO Box 395, Bethlehem Egalitarian-Conservative, Unaffiliated (603) 869-5465 www.bethlehemsynagogue.org davegoldstone1@gmail.com Services: Contact for Date/Time Info President Dave Goldstone (415) 587-0812 or Eileen Regen – (603) 823-7711 Weekly Services: July through Simchat Torah Friday: 7:30 PM; Saturday: 9:30 AM Shacharit: 9:30 AM, Tues.-Fri. Monthly Services: One Saturday morning per month – November through May CHABAD AT DARTMOUTH COLLEGE Rabbi Moshe Gray 22a School Street, Hanover Orthodox, Chabad (603) 643-9821 www.dartmouthchabad.com chabad@dartmouth.edu Services: Friday Evening Shabbat services and Dinner Shabbat morning services Call for times TEMPLE ADATH YESHURUN Rabbi Beth D. Davidson 152 Prospect Street, Manchester Reform, Affiliated URJ (603) 669-5650 www.taynh.org templeadathy@comcast.net Services: Shabbat services the first Friday of the month at 6 PM All other Friday nights at 7 PM with some exceptions. Alternating Shabbat services or Torah study Saturday mornings at 10 AM CLAREMONT TEMPLE MEYER DAVID 25 Putnam Street, Claremont Conservative (603) 542-6773 Services: Generally the second Friday of the month, 6:15 PM, April to November. CONCORD TEMPLE BETH JACOB Rabbi Robin Nafshi 67 Broadway, Concord Reform, Affiliated URJ (603) 228-8581 www.tbjconcord.org office@tbjconcord.org Services: Friday night - 7 PM Saturday morning - 9:30 AM DERRY ETZ HAYIM SYNAGOGUE Rabbi Bryna Milkow 1½ Hood Road, Derry Reform, Affiliated URJ (603) 432-0004 www.etzhayim.org office@etzhayim.org, rabbi@etzhayim.org Services: Erev Shabbat every Friday at 7:15 PM, Shabbat morning services 3 times a month PAGE 2 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter UPPER VALLEY JEWISH COMMUNITY Rabbi Edward S. Boraz Roth Center for Jewish Life 5 Occom Ridge, Hanover Nondenominational, Unaffiliated (603) 646-0460 www.uvjc.org uvjc@valley.net Services: Friday night Shabbat services at 6 PM, led by Dartmouth Hillel Saturday morning Shabbat services at 9:30 AM, led by Rabbi Boraz KEENE CONGREGATION AHAVAS ACHIM Rabbi Amy Loewenthal 84 Hastings Avenue, Keene Reconstructionist, Affiliated JRF (603) 352-6747 www.keene-synagogue.org rabbi.ahavas.achim@gmail.com Services: Fridays at 7:30 PM See calendar on website for early Fridays and for Saturdays TEMPLE ISRAEL Rabbi Eric Cohen 66 Salmon Street, Manchester Conservative (603) 622-6171 office@templeisraelmht.org Services: Friday night 7:15 PM Saturday 9:30 AM Mon. - Fri. 7 AM daily service/minyan NASHUA TEMPLE BETH ABRAHAM Rabbi Jon Spira-Savett 4 Raymond Street, Nashua Conservative, Affiliated USCJ (603) 883-8184 www.tbanashua.org rabbi@tbanashua.org office@tbanashua.org Services: Friday night services 8 PM 1st Friday family service 7 PM Saturday morning 9:30 AM Mon. - Thur. minyan 7:30 PM PORTSMOUTH LACONIA TEMPLE B’NAI ISRAEL Rabbi Hannah J. Orden 210 Court Street, Laconia Reform, Affiliated URJ (603) 524-7044 www.tbinh.org marshatbi@hotmail.com Services: Every other Friday night at 7:30 PM The New Hampshire TEMPLE ISRAEL Rabbi Samuel Barth (Visiting Rabbi) 200 State Street, Portsmouth Conservative, Affiliated USCJ (603) 436-5301 www.templeisraelnh.org office@templeisraelnh.org Services: Friday, 7:30 PM Saturday, 9:30 AM Tues. minyan 5:30 PM Temple Israel has a fully licensed M-W-F preschool. Jewish Reporter +6-:"6(645 2013 Tammuz-Elul 5773 4JWBO5BNNV[ 5773 Published by the Jewish Federation of New Hampshire with financial support of the Greater Seacoast UJA Campaign 698 Beech Street Manchester, NH 03104 Tel: (603) 627-7679 Fax: (603) 627-7963 Editor: Fran Berman Layout and Design: 5JN(SFHPSZ Advertising Sales: 603-627-7679 thereporter@jewishnh.org The objectives of The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter are to foster a sense of community among the Jewish people of New Hampshire by sharing ideas, information, experiences and opinions, and to promote the agencies, projects and mission of the Jewish Federation of New Hampshire. The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter is published monthly ten times per year, with a deadline for submissions of the 10th of the month before publication. There are no February or August issues. An “Upcoming Event” (Calendar) submission for those months should be submitted by December 10th or June 10th, respectively. Please send all materials to: thereporter@jewishnh.org 6HQGLWHPVIRUWKHSULQWDQGRQOLQH -)1+&DOHQGDUDQG(1HZVWR HYHQWV#MHZLVKQKRUJ Opinions presented in the paper do not necessarily represent the views of the Federation. Neither the publisher nor the editor can assume any responsibility for the kashrut of the services or merchandise advertised in this paper. If you have questions regarding kashrut please consult your rabbi. The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter is overseen by the JFNH Publications Committee, Merle Carrus, chairperson. All materials published in The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter are ©2013 Jewish Federation of New Hampshire, all rights reserved, unless noted otherwise. Shabbat Candle Lighting Times: (Manchester) July 5 8:10 PM July 12 8:07 PM July 19 8:02 PM July 26 7:55 PM Aug. 2 7:48 PM Aug. 9 7:39 PM Aug. 16 7:28 PM Aug. 23 7:17 PM Aug. 30 7:06 PM Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 Volunteers Make Federation Strong It is an honor to be serving as your incoming president of the board of the Jewish Federation of New Hampshire., The Federation has great financial resources, like its endowment, its strong campaign, and its real estate. Equally strong and just as essential to the future of the Federation are the people that are passionate about Federation. These people volunteer countless hours of their time helping to organize various programs or to help run the annual Campaign for Jewish Needs. Our community is strong and will only remain strong if we can count on people in our community to not only give money to support Federation, but to give their time. The Federation has a strong history in the state of New Hampshire. For many years it was an organization primarily serving the Greater Manchester area, but in the past decade it has become a state-wide organization. In the coming years we need to find ways to further our mission throughout the state. Our focus needs to be the programs that have the potential to reach Jews wherever they live in the New Hampshire. Dan Cohen president@jewishnh.org President’s Message For the past several months I have been leading a search committee to find an interim director to replace Jeff Fladen, our executive director for the past five years. We expect to have a decision soon, and we will make an announcement after the board of directors approves our recommendation. Because our campaign has declined over the past five years while our cost structure has remained very similar over this period, our plan is to conduct a strategic review of the organization before hiring a permanent director. We will look at all aspects of the Federation, including ways to enhance revenue as well as ways to reduce costs. We will consider a strategic partnership with a neighboring Federation and we will re-evaluate our real estate holdings in Manchester. The ultimate goal of our strategic planning is to strengthen the Jewish Federation to ensure that it will be here for our children and our grandchildren and for future Jews who arrive in New Hampshire. I welcome input from the community about what you like about Federation and what you don’t like about Federation. Contact me by phone or e-mail. My door is always open. I thank our outgoing president, Lou Schwartz for his two years of service, and I thank Jeff Fladen, our departing executive director, for his five years of service. Campaign in a Year of Transition By Roberta H. Brayer, Campaign Chair 2013-2014 This year of transition and change promises to be one of the most challenging for the Jewish Federation of New Hampshire. As your incoming Vice-President of Financial Resources and Development, I have been charged with the task of growing the 2013-2014 Campaign for Jewish Needs. This is an awesome task, but I can assure you that I have accepted with enthusiasm and with a commitment to reverse the tide of decreased revenues. While many in our New Hampshire Jewish community are disappointed that certain programs were reduced or suspended, the budget committee brought forward a fiscally responsible balanced budget. I challenge each and every member of our state’s Jewish community to support the campaign, regardless of your temple affiliation or the time you have for community events. New Hampshire needs these programs back, and the Federation needs your help in sustaining them. Be prepared: My team of dedicated volunteers will be contacting you to personally ask for your support. I hope you will give generously and that together we can celebrate our success! New Hampshire Community Event Tuesday, July 23, 2013 7:30 PM Temple Beth Abraham 4 Raymond Street, Nashua, NH Featuring Dr. Jonathan Adelman, Defense & Foreign Policy Expert The Jewish state is under constant threat and relies on support from America in order to confront the challenges it faces. The best way to guarantee that the U.S. stands with Israel is through bipartisan support in Congress. AIPAC is focused exclusively on strengthening the U.S.Israel relationship and works with both political parties to ensure that Democrats and Republicans come together to keep Israel safe. ————————————————————————— Hors d’oeuvres and dessert will be served. ————————————————————————— No cost to attend. RSVP required to Jacob Baime, AIPAC Area Director, at 617-399-2552 — or — jbaime@aipac.org. This off-the-record event is closed to the press. Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 The New Hampshire SOCIAL SERVICE PROGRAM Free and confidential Emergency financial assistance 603-627-7679 Aging and eldercare issues Lifeline devices Linkage and Referral Jewish Reporter PAGE 3 Friday, July 5 Thursday, July 18 Sunday, August 4 Wednesday, August 21 Early Shabbat Services and Dinner Summer Hebrew Enrichment Program From China to Manchester, NH Jewish Professional Network Temple Israel, Dover 6 PM Tot Shabbat program, 6:20 PM potluck dinner, 7 PM service. The dinner and service are open to all members and non-members at no charge. More information: 7423976 or www.dovertemple.org. 4 and 5 PM, Temple Israel, Dover See July 11 listing for details. 8:30 AM – 5 PM, Jewish Federation of NH, Manchester This special day sponsored by Oriental Healing Arts, Assoc. features two renowned teachers from Shanghai China. Come for a full day or just the session(s) that interest you. Costs and registration online at www.wusu.com. More information: 3823771 or elg@wusu.com. 5:30-7 PM, location to be announced Come to JPN’s Summer Social -- a chance to meet and greet Jewish professionals from all over New Hampshire. More information: 742-7697 or info@ jewishnh.org. Thursday, July 11 Summer Hebrew Enrichment Program 4 and 5 PM Temple Israel, Dover Each Thursday the temple will host a Hebrew Prayer reading enrichment program. This is a dropin series and no RSVP is necessary. The 4 PM session will focus on the blessing of the Torah and Haftarah, and the 5 PM session will enhance fluency in the basic prayers of the Saturday morning service. All sessions will be held outside (weather permitting) and will include games and contests. Open to all with a basic reading ability in Hebrew at no charge. More information: 742-3976 or www.dovertemple.org. Hadassah Book Club Meeting 7 PM, Jewish Federation of NH, Manchester Discuss Jodi Picoult’s The Storyteller. More information: Michele Bank at Michele.bank@gmail. com or 488-5657. Cultural Series @ The Colonial Film Cabaret Berlin Friday, July 19 Kabbalat Shabbat by the Pond 7 PM, Temple Israel, Dover Our third Friday of the month service includes music, reflections, and meditations for welcoming Shabbat. The service also includes a learner element focusing each month on a different prayer or reading of the Kabbalat Shabbat worship. During the summer, the service is held in our outdoor reflection area by the pond (weather permitting). Temple members and non-members of all ages are welcome at no charge. More information: 742-3976 or www.dovertemple.org. Tuesday, July 23 AIPAC Information Meeting 7:30 PM, Temple Beth Abraham, Nashua Dr. Jonathan Adelman, defense and foreign policy expert, will talk about AIPAC’s work in strengthening the U.S.-Israel relationship and ensuring bipartisan support for Israel in Congress. RSVP required to Jacob Baime, AIPAC Area Director, 617-399-2552 or jbaime@aipac.org. Thursday, July 25 Summer Hebrew Enrichment Program 7:30 PM, The Colonial Theatre, Bethlehem Tickets may be purchased at the door or online at www.bethlehemcolonial.org. 4 and 5 PM, Temple Israel, Dover See July 11 listing for details. Sunday, July 14 7:05 PM, Northeast Delta Dental Stadium, Manchester Enjoy Fisher Cats baseball with singing of “Hatikvah,” kosher food, fireworks after the game. Jewish Food Festival 11AM - 2 PM, Temple B’nai Israel, Laconia Admission free, food costs listed on menu. The 15th annual festival of succulent traditional Jewish dishes, including blintzes, kugels, latkes, matzo ball soup, brisket, tongue, pastrami and corned beef sandwiches, chopped liver, strudels, rugelah, and everything else you can imagine. Preorder at www. tbi.org or call 267-1935; credit cards accepted. Don’t be late. There are never any leftovers! More information: www.templebnaiisraellaconianh.org or 524-7044. Film Anita and post film discussion 4 - 6 PM, Newbury Veterans Hall, 937 Route 103, Newbury Roger Feldman, film reviewer for the Institute for Lifelong Education at Dartmouth, will present the Argentinean film Anita at the Sunapee-Kearsarge Jewish Community’s summer meeting. The film, developed out of the terrorist destruction of the Jewish Community Center in Buenos Aires, describes the effect of the explosion on one young person and those around her. It is an award-winning film being shown for the first time in the area. Roger will lead a discussion following the showing of the film. The event is free and open to the public. More information: Maureen and Art Rosen at 763-4089 or ponderosen@myfairpoint.net. Jewish Pride Night with the Fisher Cats Boston Park Plaza Hotel, Boston, MA. More information: www.iajgs2013.org. Monday, August 5 IAJGS International Conference on Jewish Genealogy Boston Park Plaza Hotel, Boston, MA. More information: www.iajgs2013.org. Tuesday, August 6 IAJGS International Conference on Jewish Genealogy Havdalah on the Lake 8 PM (promptly) - 10 PM, Weirs Beach docks, Laconia Cruise on Lake Winnipesaukee until the first three stars are sighted. Havdalah service and singing led by cantorial soloist Melody Funk. This is a soulsatisfying experience. Advance tickets: $20 for adults, $10 for children under 13; $20 for all dockside ticket purchases. Place ticket orders at Temple B’nai Israel, 210 Court Street Laconia, NH 03246. Thursday, August 1 Summer Hebrew Enrichment Program 4 and 5 PM, Temple Israel, Dover See July 11 listing for details. Temple Israel, Dover Friday, August 2 Early Shabbat Services and Dinner Monday, July 15 Tisha B’Av Service and Study Session Saturday, August 3 7 PM, Temple Adath Yeshurun, Manchester RSVP to 669-5650. More information: 669-5650, templeadathy@comcast.net, or www.taynh.org. New Member Dinner Temple Adath Yeshurun, Manchester More information: 669-5650, templeadathy@ comcast.net, or www.taynh.org. The New Hampshire Summer Hebrew Enrichment Program 4 and 5 PM, Temple Israel, Dover See July 11 listing for details. Sunday, August 25 Religious School Open House 10 AM, Temple Adath Yeshurun, Manchester More information: 669-5650, templeadathy@ comcast.net, or www.taynh.org. Open House at Congregation Betenu 10:30 AM - 2 PM, Congregation Betenu, Amherst Rabbinic intern and spiritual leader Nathan DeGroot will be welcomed at brunch, followed by an open house featuring food, fellowship, and children’s activities. More information: 886-1633. Wednesday, August 29 Boston Park Plaza Hotel, Boston, MA. More information: www.iajgs2013.org. Cultural Series @ The Colonial Film My Sweet Canary Wednesday, August 7 IAJGS International Conference on Jewish Genealogy 7:30 PM, The Colonial Theatre, Bethlehem Tickets may be purchased at the door or online at www.bethlehemcolonial.org. Boston Park Plaza Hotel, Boston, MA. More information: www.iajgs2013.org. Food Festival continued from page 1 Thursday, August 8 Summer Hebrew Enrichment Program 4 and 5 PM, Temple Israel, Dover See July 11 listing for details. IAJGS International Conference on Jewish Genealogy Saturday, July 27 Temple Israel, Dover 6 PM Tot Shabbat program, 6:20 PM pot-luck dinner, 7 PM service. The dinner and service are open to all members and non-members at no charge. More information: 7423976 or www.dovertemple.org. PAGE 4 IAJGS International Conference on Jewish Genealogy Thurday, August 22 Boston Park Plaza Hotel, Boston, MA. More information: www.iajgs2013.org. Annual Golf Tournament Temple Beth Abraham, Nashua More information: www.tbanashua.org, 883-8184 or office@tbanashua.org. Friday, August 9 Hartheim Castle: A Holocaust Journey 6 PM, Bethlehem Hebrew Congregation, Bethlehem Geoffrey Brahmer will be the presenter. This event is free and open to the public. More information: www. bethlehemsynagogue.org. IAJGS International Conference on Jewish Genealogy Boston Park Plaza Hotel, Boston, MA. More information: www.iajgs2013.org. Thursday, August 15 Summer Hebrew Enrichment Program 4 and 5 PM, Temple Israel, Dover See July 11 listing for details. Friday, August 16 Early Shabbat Services and Dinner Temple Israel, Dover 6 PM Tot Shabbat program, 6:20 PM pot-luck dinner, 7 PM service. The dinner and service are open to all members and non-members at no charge. More information: 7423976 or www.dovertemple.org. Jewish Reporter festival. Some may be surprised to find that orders over $60 include a copy of Temple B’nai Israel’s cookbook. This Festival is about more than food. Attendees will find treasures at the Nearly New Boutique on the front lawn, and the lemonade stand run by the children of the congregation traditionally donates all profits to St. Vincent de Paul’s food pantry. The gift shop is full of new items, many for use for the High Holidays in early September, and many will meet old and new friends from congregations all over New Hampshire as well as friends from the community at large. As for the traditional raffle, it has been streamlined to a 50-50 event with the drawing at 2 PM. Raffle tickets are available at $5 for one, $10 for three, and $18 for six. The organizers in Laconia say, “We wish we could run a Festival Express to the Federation and all the Temples to bring our goodies to you. However, YOU can organize your own group and we promise to deliver the tastes and smells that you remember from your mother’s kitchen.” The Temple driveway, at 210 Court Street in Laconia will be tented for customers’ dining comfort, and credit cards are accepted. The Festival takes place from 11 AM to 2 PM on Sunday, July 14. The festival’s organizers warn, “Don’t be late! No matter how much we cook, there are never any leftovers!” Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 Workshop Offered for Newsletter Editors Manchester -- How to maximize publicity for your organization’s events and how to make a temple newsletter as interesting as it can be will be two of the topics at the Federation’s fall workshop for newsletter editors and others interested in writing effective news releases and engaging articles. The workshop will take place at the Jewish Federation of New Hampshire, 698 Beech St., Manchester, on Tuesday, October 8, from 11 AM to 1 PM. Lunch will be served. Carole Appel, a member of the advisory board of the NH Jewish Reporter, will talk about the many ways to effectively publicize events at temples and other organizations, whether they are monthly meetings, fundraising events, festivals, theatrical performances, or topical forums. She’ll be joined by oth- ers on the advisory board. Carole was an editor and the journals manager of the University of Illinois Press for many years before moving to New Hampshire. Earlier in her career she was a newspaper reporter. The Reporter invites editors of temple newsletters to send samples of their publications to the Federation for a discussion of special features in some papers that others may want to try. A similar workshop offered a few years ago was much appreciated by the participants, reports advisory board chair and Reporter book review editor Merle Carrus. Those interested in attending the workshop should register at 627-7679 or office@jewishnh.org. A contribution of $10 per participant is requested to cover the cost of lunch and materials. Campaign Matching Grants Available A matching grant, donated by JFNH supporters, has been established to help the Annual Campaign for Jewish Needs raise funds for the coming year. If you have already pledged to this year’s campaign, additional gifts will be matched dollar for dollar. If you have not yet pledged, increases above last year’s pledge are also eligible for this match. Contact the Federation at 603-627-7679 or office@jewishnh.org to learn more. The place that inspires a love for Judaism and Learning. Twenty-five years of Educating Children in Manchester Preschool Kindergarten NOW ENROLLING A major focus of the Jewish Federation Preschool is the development of the child socially, emotionally, mentally, physically and spiritually. We maintain a very low student to staff ratio, thus guaranteeing that every child receives consistent individual attention. We recognize the uniqueness of each child, the importance of responsibility and commitment for each child, the need to develop creative and inquiring minds, and the importance of a warm, loving positive and accepting classroom. Developmentally appropriate classes for ages 2 years to Pre-K and Kindergarten Early morning drop off and extended day available All Lead teachers ECE certified All staff CPR and First Aid Certified 603-821-3802 e-mail: preschool@jewishnh.org NOTICE OF NON-DISCRIMINATORY POLICY: The JFNH Preschool admits students of any race, national or ethnic origin to all rights, privileges, programs and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter PAGE 5 JFNH Annual Meeting Draws a Crowd The Jewish Federation of New Hampshire Annual Meeting brought together about 200 people on Sunday, June 9, to bid on silent and live auction items, honor volunteers from throughout the state, PAGE 6 and hear a talk by author Anita Diament. The morning’s events also included installation of the new board of directors and farewells to departing executive director Jeff Fladen. The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter PAGE 7 Two Days in the Remarkable Negev By Joe Diament May 10 and 11 of 2013 were truly revelatory for this Israeli expatriate and my American wife. We spent those two days in a 4WD Land Rover traversing parts of the Negev desert never seen by the vast majority of tourists and rarely seen by most Israelis. A bit of context: I lived in Israel until the age of 11 and have visited it several times since my family immigrated to the United States over 50 years ago. This was my wife, Patti’s, second trip to Israel. On the previous trip, 30 years ago, she only saw Jerusalem and a bit of Tel Aviv. I’d seen much of the Israel and even some of the West Bank and Sinai Peninsula. During this visit we traversed the whole country, but the two days off road in the desert were truly unique. After breakfast we set out with my cousins Shmulik and Rivka from coastal Arsuf (just north of Herzliya) and headed to the Dead Sea via Jerusalem. We took this route so that Patti could get a sense of rising from sea level to Jerusalem, then descending to the lowest point on the earth’s surface, and passing by Masada. Shortly after passing the southern tip of the Dead Sea, we left the paved road and we entered a very narrow wadi. The walls of the wadi were less than one foot from the side of our vehicle but Shmulik’s excellent driving skills and knowledge of the terrain gave us complete confidence. (Some more context: Shmulik was a guide for Israel’s Society for the Preservation of Nature in his youth and spent a part of his military service in the Negev, so he knows it almost like the back of his hand.) Patti quickly realized that Middle Eastern deserts don’t necessarily resemble the sand dunes seen in “Lawrence of Arabia” and other movies. In fact, one could easily film some American Westerns in the canyons’ ridge tops that we traversed. Joe and Patti Diament in the 2000-year-old “inn” on the Spice Trail. Since we’d been on the road for a few hours by this time, Shmulik stopped in the shade created by a canyon wall for a coffee break. Coffee was not served from a thermos that had been packed at home. He and Rivka unbundled a small propane burner and proceeded to make Turkish/Bedouin coffee in a finjan. This is a small urn into which water; very finely ground coffee, and sugar are poured and allowed to come to a boil several times. It was served in paper demitasses and provided the energy needed to get us to lunch. After the break, we literally rocked and rolled for many kilometers over very rough terrain through narrow wadis and slightly wider river beds. Lunch -- fresh vegetables, fruit, a few sausages, hummus, and pita -- was served on a mat spread out under a rock canopy created by water that had rushed through the area, eroding the lower rocks. After lunch, we lay staring up at the magnificent semicircular rock outcropping that was our shelter and watching the birds that flew around in it. The rest of day one consisted of a few more kilometers on rough trails without seeing another person or car. We eventually arrived at a small agricultural settlement/village where we spent the night in very pleasant cabins. The next day was even more adventurous because we traversed rougher terrain and visited a 2000+ year-old remnant of a caravan stop on a ridge top that was part of the Spice Trail. The trail was used to deliver spices from India and its environs via caravans across the Arabian Peninsula to the ancient ports of Jaffa and Ashdod, from which the spices were sent by boat to Europe. The stops were essen- tially inns that were created one caravan day apart. These were not necessarily classic oases, but water was usually available in rocky cisterns or wells in close proximity to the stops. At one point we had to exit the Land Rover and move rocks to create a stair step for the vehicle to climb onto the trail’s continuation. During the second day we were also fortunate enough to observe a significant amount of wild life: ibexes, wild burros, foxes, rock rabbits, and a few that we didn’t get close enough to to identify. We returned to paved roads just south of Mitzpe Ramon (which is actually the middle of the Negev triangle) and looked back at the massive moon-like crater we had just driven through for a couple of hours. It was not created by a meteor, but rather by water rushing from the Judaean hills eroding the subsurface leading to an eventual collapse of the surface rocks (sort of like puncturing an egg on both ends, flushing water through it, and the upper shell eventually caving in). A long, restful drive home returned us to the beautiful Mediterranean coast. The next day Shmulik hosted us at a performance of La Traviata presented by the Israeli & Latvian Opera Companies in Tel Aviv, providing a clear example of the extraordinary diversity that is inherent in the physical and social aspects of Israel. Joe Diament lived in Israel until age 11 and has gone back several times to visit his large extended family there. He has spent his professional life leading human service organizations in the governmental and private sectors. He and his wife live in Newfields, NH. A rocky outcropping provided some shade for a relaxed lunch in the Negev. PAGE 8 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 Israel Talks Focus on JNF and VFI By Ken Kowalchek With the exception of holiday conflicts, NH4Israel hosts biweekly talks with refreshments at Manchester’s Temple Israel (TIM) at 6:30 PM on alternate Wednesdays. NH4Israel guest speakers at TIM generally address current issues surrounding the state of Israel. Jewish National Fund On June 5, audience members heard from and said their own goodbyes to Inbar Keren, who, unless funding materializes in the future, might be the last Israeli emissary (shlicha) to the Granite State. Inbar gave her audience a history of the Jewish National Fund (JNF) from its founding in 1901 to the near present, spoke of the year she volunteered with the JNF after secondary school graduation, and commented on her service in the IDF. Created in 1901 as an organization to collect funds from around the world to buy land in what was to become Israel, JNF began purchasing land in 1904 for Jews settling in what was then Palestine. JNF used three primary means to collect funds. The single most effective was the blue box, ubiquitous in the American Jewish Diaspora; it was a sort of piggy bank into which Jews young and old put their coins. And put in their coins they did! The successful notion of collecting a small amount from millions was adopted by other causes such as the March of Dimes, with its campaign to eradicate polio with 10¢ donations in special paper coin holders at checkout counters throughout America. Replicas of the blue boxes are still available and can be seen in many synagogue primary classrooms. They provide educators with a visual aid for telling the story of how JNF bought, parcel by parcel, land that in 1948 defined much of the nascent State of Israel. From 1902 until the late 1940s, the JNF also sold JNF stamps throughout the world for the smallest coin in circulation in a particular country. In the United States, it was a penny. The stamps showed Zion’s founders and scenes of the Holy Land. Again, the campaign strategy was adopted by the American Lung Association’s Christmas Seals effort in 1908 and later by Easter Seals to assist America’s crippled children. The last fundraising method, still used today, is recognition of very large donors by providing certificates for framing and by recording their names in JNF’s Golden Book. Once the state of Israel was born, the mission of JNF changed from buying land to land reclamation and management. That is why JNF is best known today for creating forests by planting 240 million trees in Israel’s deserted areas and making Israel the only nation on earth that has more trees today than a century ago. JNF also has created over 200 dams and water catchments to nourish the arid land. Volunteers for Israel In mid-May, Howard Passman, the New England Regional Manager for Volunteers for Israel (VFI) talked about how to go about volunteering for one or two weeks or longer as a volunteer with the IDF. Sitting in the audience was fourtime volunteer Ellen McCloskey, a greatgrandmother whose son-in-law is Ed Carnahan, Assistant Pastor at Concord’s Word of Life Church. In addition to testifying to the church’s support for Israel with rallies, she exemplifies the Granite State Christian community’s support for Israel with her actions. At the end of this article is a poem McCloskey composed and dedicated to VFI. VFI takes in volunteers from age 17 to over 80, usually for one- or two-week periods, but volunteers can arrange far longer commitments. VFI also used to place volunteers in homes for the aged. Now VFI has placements uniquely with the IDF. The placements are in noncombat support roles such as maintenance and preparation of food and medical kits. The work week is Sunday noon to Thursday noon, with the balance as free time. Volunteers don uniforms and live in barracks while with VFI. VFI offers a chance to serve Israel and interact with young IDF soldiers and other volunteers from 35 countries, although the majority of volunteers are from the United States, France, and Canada. Since VFI is a 501c(3) organization, part or all travel costs to volunteer in Israel may qualify as charitable contributions. For clarification and more information on VFI, visit www.vfi-usa.org or contact Howard Passman at 866-5123255 or new-england@vfi-usa.org. Volunteers for Israel, by Ellen McCloskey A Volunteer for Israel… Now what does that mean? To be in their Army, a part of their team. Israel has a need; no one can doubt it. Will you use your two hands, and do something about it? It’s a 3-week commitment, so little to ask. But you’ll encourage the soldiers as you help with each task. So if you’ll pack your bags, and some humor, too, there’s adventure in Israel, waiting for you. The need is urgent. The task is tall. You’ve heard the challenge. Will you answer the call? Keeping you connected eNEWS jewishnh.org Betenu Congregation Betenu Religious School now accepting students for 2013-2014 ■ A warm, welcoming community with experienced caring staff. ■ Weekly Sunday Classes for Grades K-7 with low student-teacher ratio. ■ Jewish Studies, Hebrew, Music, Art, Dance. ■ Full Rabbi supervised Bar/Bat Mitzvah Preparation. Located in Amherst, NH on 101A (603) 886-1633 Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter PAGE 9 ! "#$ %&' $"%(*' $"#()' $"+(,)' !-../ . 01 223 2 -43 56 78 29 7:; 8./ <!66-9 46= >.3 $?;%'++%(@+A9 PAGE 10 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 Support for Israel: A Historical View by Brian Grodman In recent years, I have found an interesting phenomenon among some Jews residing in the United States -- especially within New Hampshire. The survival and support of the Jewish State of Israel (Zionism) is disconnected from the practice of Judaism. This is very different from Jews across the globe. How can this be? The Five Books of Moses mention Israel over 500 times. How have we strayed so far from this path? The support of Israel was critical soon after the birth of the Jewish State. The Holocaust was indelibly etched in the Jewish psyche, as almost 70% of our European population was exterminated. In 1929, the American Jewish Committee published the following statistics: • There were approximately 14.5 million Jews worldwide. • Europe housed over 9 million, and the United States accounted for 4 million (New Hampshire boasted 2,800). • Africa and Asia had over 1 million, with Palestine fortunate to have 160,000. (The report lists “Palestine,” not “Israel”) Palestine, now called the State of Israel, survived an onslaught from five Arab countries immediately after the approval of UN Resolution 181 (the partition plan) on November 29, 1947. The 1956 Suez Crisis (war) saw the smaller Israeli force defeat the Egyptians. The Six Day War of 1967 and the Yom Kippur War of 1973 also proved to be decisive victories for the Israeli army (David) over the Arabs (Goliath). The Arabs (Palestinians) promoted a strategic public relations campaign during the 1980s. Instead of tiny Israel facing great odds against the vastly larger neighboring Arab countries, the focus was narrowed to the militarily stronger Israel against a poorly armed population of Palestinian refugees occupying small chunks of land. While pre-Holocaust approximately 1% of Jews were living in Palestine, the percentage is now over 40% of our entire population. There are approximately 1 million fewer Jews worldwide today than there were in 1929. This fundamental geographic shift occurred due to Jews being victimized and without a home. Our future -- the future of Israel -- was spread among the 99% of Jews living in the Diaspora in 1929; only 58% of Jews currently represent the Diaspora. As a consequence, we must double down on our support of the Jewish State. With Israel being a consistent theme in our Bible, we must educate ourselves regarding her current situation, and assist in maintaining her survival. Brian is an active member of Temple Israel and NH4Israel. Building Bridges in Israel With a Lacrosse Stick (Article courtesy of The Jewish Agency for Israel) For centuries, members of Native American tribes played lacrosse with one another as a means of forging common bonds. So it makes sense that a group of young American Jewish volunteers in Israel used the sport this past year to reach out to 24 Arab-Israeli teenagers, who last week played their first full game. The lacrosse match, held in the port city of Jaffa, was the culmination of the Lacrosse Arab-Jewish Cooperation Project. The Project was created by Ian Cohen, a recent graduate of Monmouth University who is volunteering in Israel with Tikkun Olam, a Jewish service learning program jointly supported by The Jewish Agency for Israel and the Israeli government’s Masa Israel Journey partnership. Masa enables more than 10,000 young Jews each year to spend up to 10 months volunteering, interning and taking academic courses in Israel as they learn about Jewish history, build friendships with Jews from around the world and experience Israeli culture on a daily basis. The idea for the lacrosse project came to Cohen after he joined Tel Aviv’s lacrosse team last September and sought to combine his passion for the sport with his volunteer focus on Jewish-Arab coexistence. “The program is intended to dispel bigotry through real contact between Arabs and Jews,” Cohen said. Through the Peres Center for Peace, Cohen connected with the Ajyal School in Jaffa, which expressed interest in working with him. He then recruited fellow Masa volunteers and members of Israel’s national lacrosse association (Israel Lacrosse) to help teach the sport to the Arab high schoolers during weekly clinics. “The Jewish volunteers developed a fantastic relationship with the kids,” Cohen shared. “Primarily, we are teachers and role models. The sport is secondary.” The Arab teens are not the only ones who have benefited from Cohen’s passion for lacrosse. Last fall, as the rocket attacks from Gaza intensified, Cohen helped organized a lacrosse clinic in Netanya to provide kids from southern border towns a few days of fun and respite from the daily barrage of rocket fire. “We set up in an open field near where some local kids were playing on a playground,” Cohen recalled. “Within minutes, some students came over and snatched up the sticks, trying to figure out how to use this foreign device. I showed some of them some basics but they were really just interested in throwing the ball and shooting on the net. While this was happening, students in the classroom got wind of what was going on outside, and began pressing their faces up to the windows and even hanging out the windows trying to get the kids with the sticks to throw the balls into the classroom.” Lacrosse is the fastest growing sport in North America. As long as young volunteers like Cohen bring their enthusiasm for the sport with them to Israel, it might soon be the “next big thing” in Israel -for Jews and Arabs. GROLEN COMMUNICATIONS &MN4USFFUt.BODIFTUFS/) 603.645.0101 In business since 1994 www.jewishnh.org Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 Services: The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Computer Repair Transfer Data Optimization Hardware Replacement Hardware Upgrades Wired And Wireless Networks Virus Removal Custom Built Desktops/Laptops Virtualization All Makes And Models Call In Or Stop By and Ask Us Anything! PAGE 11 My Springtime Visit in Hof Hacarmel By Brenda Johnston Spring has returned to Israel and our beautiful Hof Hacarmel region, with the legendary show of wild flowers and the regenerating olive trees on the Carmel hills. On my most recent visit to Israel, I was thrilled to again stay with Yankele and Zahava Shalev, sharing a real Israeli Shavuot on the moshav (cooperative agricultural community), with singing and dancing by the children, who wore traditional wreaths of white flowers on their heads. Inbal Shahaf-Gilad, who has helped arrange connections in Hof Hacarmel for so many visitors from New Hampshire, graciously invited me to the wedding of her daughter, Doran. Israeli weddings with hundreds of guests are something to behold. That night we were fortunate to see enormous thunder and lightning storms all around us but not a drop on the lovely wedding. Inbal also took me to a very special place, the old train station for Zikhron Ya’akov, featuring a lovely historic building and gardens now operating as a cafe, definitely worth a visit. Always ready to help connect people, Inbal introduced me to an amazing artist, Anat Beger, who in her funky and delightful studio in Dor displayed a variety and scope of work that was impressive. One piece, which she had just brought back from an exhibit in Tel Aviv and which was still disassembled, really captivated me. Almost every Israeli home seems to have a folding drying rack, usually made of plastic. This art piece, created by Anat, the mother of three sons serving in the IDF, was constructed of old oars, giving it a boat-like appearance, and the drying lines were hung with large paper bags held by wooden clothes pegs, each decorated with mixed art and prayers. These, Anat said, represented the bags of laundry brought home each weekend by soldiers. Her heart-stopping explanation was, “If they are coming home with their laundry, they are coming home alive,” and she added, “I will not complain ever again about the laundry.” Brenda Johnston with Anat Beger and her home and studio at Dor Village in Hof Hacarmel. Having just one week before been waiting for my godson, Daniel, to come home from his base on the Syrian border, where the bombs had landed 70 meters from his bunk, this work and explanation hit me deeply, and I realized how families all over Israel wait for their soldiers to arrive home, safe, with their laundry, Congregation Ahavas Achim Religious School 84 Hastings Avenue, Keene, NH We invite you to learn about our outstanding Religious School for students six to thirteen years old. We emphasize small class sizes with experienced adult teachers. Non-members are welcome for a one-year trial. Please call 603-352-6747 to speak with our Rabbi, Amy Loewenthal or 603-242-3521 to speak with our President, Paul Bieber. PAGE 12 The New Hampshire mos.org/dead-sea Premier Partner: Jewish Reporter Media Partner: Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 !" ##$% &' $$()")"! *$+"+#$+$#$ ,"+"!-#$! "" $" "" )")"!$" #$$, -./0 #$1" 2 "3$./!#$)"! !"#$% 4!$,"-$#$! "+ ("!5"++"*"#$' $ 6 """ ( "+ "$$"+$" "$7 ((8$"$""#$$. (8+""'9")#$6"6$5 ."$") :.+$ 336;<=>>>>: $$?+?&#$"#$+"$$ $ $+#$ "++ , Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter PAGE 13 PAGE 14 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 I Spent a Summer Going Out of My Head Is intellectual integrity compatible with spirituality? It’s a question I’ve struggled with for years. Although my perspective continues to evolve, I took a huge leap forward in my first summer as a rabbinical student. That summer, I served as a student chaplain in a Philadelphia hospital, one with a mostly non-Jewish patient population. I wondered what it would be like to pray across lines of faith. Would patients and their families want me to make intercessory prayers -- to ask G-d to heal them? How could I pray for their healing when I didn’t believe in petitionary prayer? How could I, in good conscience, ask G-d to intervene in their lives, when I didn’t believe in a G-d who intervenes and much of the time I wasn’t even sure that G-d existed? I worried that my intellectual integrity was at stake. On the other hand, wasn’t I going to the hospital to serve? If a patient asked me to tug on G-d’s sleeve, was it my place to say that I didn’t think that G-d has sleeves? Rabbi in the House Rabbi Amy Loewenthal Congregation Ahavas Achim As I began seeing patients and their families, I found a way to be pastoral and supportive, to offer the prayers and reassurances that were requested, but I was still haunted by a feeling of crossing my fingers behind my back. Once I was called to visit a patient with severe corneal ulcers. She was very depressed about her condition, which was not improving. I sat next to her on the bed, patted and stroked her shoulder, as she told me that she had lost her faith. She had once been an evangelist. “I thought that G-d was testing me,” she said, “but now I just don’t know. I have prayed and I have repented but still I am being tried.” She sighed and shook her Havdalah on Lake Winnipesaukee Tradition Continues Laconia -- There is nothing quite like cruising gently on Lake Winnipesaukee with members of the Jewish community from all over New Hampshire. Everyone is watching the sky, hoping to be the first to sight the three stars that signify it is time to close the Sabbath with a very special Havdalah service. The Israeli flag will fly over the Doris E. on the evening of this event. Looking up at the sky and the flag while motoring over the waters has given some past participants the tiniest inkling of what it must have felt like in the boats off the coast of Israel in 1948. Temple B’nai Israel Cantor Melody Funk will lead the service on Saturday, July 27, onboard the M/V Doris E., leaving the docks at Weirs Beach promptly at 8 PM and returning at 10 PM. She invites cantors statewide to join her in this warm tradition of lighting the Havdalah candle, smelling the spices, and singing traditional Havdalah songs after extinguishing the candle. Temple B’nai Israel will host a dessert and soft drink table below deck for all to share after the service. The Doris E is a 78-foot-long cruiser with a capacity of 125 people. Seventy people can be under cover if they desire. Tickets are $20 for adults, $10 for chil- Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 The Israeli flag flies from the M/V Doris E. at sunset. dren under 13 if purchased in advance ($20 for all if purchased at dockside). Tickets may be ordered by sending the request and check to Temple B’nai Israel, 210 Court Street, Laconia, NH 03246. For more information, call 524-5792. The evening, presented by Temple B’nai Israel, is funded in part by a grant from the Jewish Federation Foundation. All are invited to share this evening of spirituality and friendship in keeping with Jewish traditions. The New Hampshire head. “I can’t find Jesus. He’s left me. It’s too much.” I stroked her shoulder, and said “Yes, this is so hard.” She began to cry softly. “Why is He hiding from me?” she asked. “I need him now, but where is He?” What could I say? I didn’t share her theology, and even if I thought it would help, I didn’t have a different theology to offer her. As the visit came to a close, I asked if she and her teen children wanted to pray. Since she had been an evangelist, I asked her if she would lead us in prayer. We all joined hands. “Lord,” she said, “Even though this is a hard time, I want you to know that I’m still grateful for my blessings. I give thanks to You for my family and friends, for all that I have. And I give thanks to You for sending this missionary [indicating me]. Lord, I am struggling. But now I know this is a test. I remember now the trials of Jesus, there were not just temptations to him, but even animals, even wild beasts that came to afflict him. And He kept his faith.” “And now Lord, I’m beginning to find some pleasure in this prayer. Lord, I see now, that what’s against me is the Devil. And I will throw that Devil down, I will put my foot on him, and Lord, I will grind him under my heel!” The room was vibrating with her energy as she concluded with shouted praise and “Amen!” Her children echoed the “Amen” and so did this Reconstructionist chaplain, still confused about her own theology, but grateful for this woman’s faith. It has stayed with me alongside all my intellectualizing. And all I can say is “Hallelujah!” Rabbi Amy Loewenthal graduated from the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College in 2012 where she enjoyed many interfaith educational opportunities and earned a Specialization in the Congregational Rabbinate. She serves the Congregation Ahavas Achim community, a warm Reconstructionist synagogue in Keene, NH. Betenu Open House to Welcome Rabbinic Intern Amherst -- Congregation Betenu invites the community to join them as they welcome their new Rabbinic intern and spiritual leader, Nathan DeGroot, at a brunch on August 25. The meet and greet open house will extend from 10:30 AM to 2:00 PM at Congregation Betenu and will feature food, fellowship, and children’s activities. Nate is a fourth-year student at the Rabbinical School of Hebrew College in Newton, Massachusetts. He is a magna cum laude graduate of Vanderbilt University in Nashville, TN, where he studied leadership and organizational effectiveness while deeply involved with Jewish life and community building on campus. Nate has served as a Rabbinic Intern at the University of Rhode Island Hillel, leading services and acting as chaplain for students. He is also an experienced religious school teacher. The Betenu Board chose Nate from a field of eight applicants, impressed by his warmth, enthusiasm, and energy. Beginning in September, his role at Betenu Rabbinic intern will include Nathan De Groot leading High Holy Day Services as well as other services throughout the year. He will work with students in Betenu’s religious school and officiate at B’Nei Mitzvot scheduled during the year. Congregation Betenu is located at 5 Northern Blvd. in Amherst, NH. For more information about this event, call 886-1633. SUPPORT OUR ADVERTISERS Tell Them You Saw Their Ad in The Reporter! Jewish Reporter PAGE 15 National Havurah Summer Institute Beckons Rindge -- There is still time to register for the National Havurah Summer Institute being held once again at the Franklin Pierce University Campus in Rindge, NH. The summer event will begin on Monday, August 5, and close on Sunday, August 11. The theme of this year’s program is “Limnot Yameinu / Count our Days,” focusing on the idea that our days are precious and finite. Registration for the full week will be accepted until July 29, and registration for Shabbat will be accepted until August 6 at 1 PM. Registration is available online at www.havurah.org/register. Local resident Joe Smiga says: “My wife, Linda [Feinberg], and I have been attending for a number of years, and we have shared wonderful experiences during the weeks we attended. There are 13 morning classes and 13 afternoon classes you can choose from if you do the weeklong program. The courses are only a fraction of the activities you can participate in. There is also a $75 discount if you are a newcomer to the program.” Usually, well over 300 people attend the National Havurah Summer Institute from around the country, creating an atmosphere where participants share and learn from many different sources. To add some flavor to your Jewish life experience, sign up now to attend the institute in Rindge this year. But be warned: According to Joe, this type of Jewish experience can be habit forming. Lights! Action! Torah! Rabbi Milkow and Rev. Bonin join hands in front of the sign. By Steve Short Derry Interfaith Campus Sign Is Dedicated Derry -- On Sunday, June 2, Etz Hayim Synagogue and the Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration dedicated a beautiful new granite sign that welcomes the public to the Derry Interfaith Campus and symbolizes the enduring partnership between the church and the synagogue. The sign is located on the corner of East Broadway Street and Hood Road in Derry. Officiating at the dedication were the spiritual leaders of the two organizations, Rabbi Bryna F. Milkow and Reverend and Priest-in-Charge Ray Bonin. Rabbi Milkow led the two congregations in a recitation of the Shehecheyanu; Reverend Bonin led the congregations in a recitation of Psalm 111. The prayers were followed by a resounding chorus of the Beatles’ song, “With a Little Help from My Friends.” Also speaking were Sarah A. Finne-Sandler, the president of Etz Hayim Synagogue’s Board of Directors, and Robert C. Brown, a member of the church’s leadership; both worked tirelessly to turn the idea of the sign into reality. The dedication was followed by a delicious picnic. The relationship between the church and synagogue began in 1992 when the synagogue’s budding congregation held services in the church’s building. When the synagogue’s congregation had so grown that it needed a building of its own, the church sold a piece of its land to it so that the two organizations could continue their close relationship even after the synagogue had its own building. The synagogue building opened in 2009, and the church and synagogue now stand side by side on Hood Road in Derry. The campus is affectionately referred to as “the churchagogue.” It is one of the very few interfaith campuses in the United States. The two organizations maintain a warm spiritual and working relationship. They host a joint Thanksgiving service every year, and members attend each other’s social and fundraising events. Significantly, the two organizations jointly sponsor “Elijah’s Table,” which provides free dinners to the community twice a month -- one at the church and one at the synagogue. For more information about the Etz Hayim Synagogue, please go to www. etzhayim.org. For more information about the Church of the Transfiguration, go to www.dcoft.org. For more information about Elijah’s Table, go to http:// freemealsinderry.blogspot.com. KOSHER CATERING A SPECIALTY Sally Cobb, Owner & Chef cszecobb@comcast.net 603-742-4969 (H) CATERING EVENTS IN NH, ME & MA PAGE 16 603-953-3679 (C) MEZZANINECATERING.COM The New Hampshire (Adapted from a d’var Torah presented at the Temple Adath Yeshurun Brotherhood-Sisterhood Service on May 24) In the Torah portion Beha Alotecha, taken from the book of Numbers, Aaron prepares the lamps of the menorah as God has commanded Moses. The parshah goes on to describe the presence of God hovering over the Tabernacle as a cloud by day and a fire by night, and commanding Moses to have silver trumpets made to summon the people of Israel. They are also to be blown at times of war, joyous occasions, and festivals…as a reminder of God and his acts of deliverance. As is my wont, I read LIGHTS and SOUND, and thought THEATER. Wait for the MCTP plug at the end of these remarks. According to Cantor Jonathan L. Friedmann, there are only a dozen musical occurrences in the Torah. But if we take these sparse references as indicators of cultural norms, we find that the Israelites used music to celebrate, express devotion, announce special events, deliver messages, accompany labor, give moral instruction, and transmit historical knowledge. From this summary alone, it is clear that music was not merely an afterthought or embellishment, but a tool for achieving specific aims. I might be making a great leap here, but musical theater seems to do the same. While I am in no way attempting to equate theater and Torah in terms of their importance to the Jewish people, one can readily see the influence of the sound of music and the neon lights of Broadway in American culture. Who among us does not wax sentimental over the sound of a Jewish Reporter clarinet, a reminder of the klezmer of old? It is not a great stretch of time from the humor and music of Mickey Katz (“How much is that pickle in the window”) to his son Joel Gray performing in Cabaret. Was Steven Spielberg influenced by his cultural background when including light and sound communication in Close Encounters of the Third Kind? And what is our Purim schpiel if not musical theater? At TAY, we were fortunate to see Winni Players’ presentation of Irina’s Vow. Stephen Lewy’s story, “Surviving Evil,” has been performed throughout the area. The lights and sound of theater enhance and, perhaps more importantly, explain our culture and heritage. A wise man once said that it is important to identify the presentation of performance art culture as part of the value Jewish institutions bring to the city. Well, actually that was part of an email I received recently from Alan Kaplan, artistic director of Manchester Community Theatre Players (MCTP). But the salient part is that the light and sound referred to in the parshah comes down to bringing joy, entertainment, and education from a certain little theater company to the greater community. MCTP’s productions of Children of Eden, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, Golda’s Balcony, Crossing Delancey, and of course, Fiddler on the Roof, have brought the lights and sound of Jewish history and Jewish culture to a broad audience. I like to think that this broad audience came away with a better understanding of who we, as a people, are. MCTP’s auditions for Annie, who may or may not have been Jewish, are in mid July, with performances set for October 12, 13, 19, and 20. There’s the plug…all the rest is commentary. Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 Celebrating New Hampshire’s Anti-Terrorist Hero Yoni Netanyahu went from Camp Young Judaea counselor to Israeli commando By Darren Garnick In terms of good guys and bad guys, you couldn’t make up more perfect characters for a Hollywood action adventure movie. Yoni was a Harvard-educated warrior-poet, an elite soldier who often signed letters to his parents with “Kisses.” Idi was a brutal dictator who fed some of his own ministers to crocodiles and was widely accused of being a cannibal. The two men’s lives intersected on July 3, 1976, at the Entebbe Airport in Uganda. Dictator Idi Amin, who had given himself the title “Conqueror of the British Empire,” was sheltering (with armed support) Palestinian terrorists who hijacked an Air France plane and were holding 103 hostages, most of them Israeli or Jewish citizens from other countries. Israeli commando Yonatan “Yoni” Netanyahu was in charge of the rescue mission. The 2012 documentary, Follow Me, examines how “Operation Thunderbolt” succeeded against all odds and includes original battlefield audio and eyewitness accounts. All but four hostages were brought home alive. All the terrorists and numerous Ugandan guards were killed, while the Israelis lost one soldier: Yoni. In military lore, the story remains as jawdropping as U.S. Navy SEAL Team Six’s covert mission to kill Osama bin Laden. Follow Me, which screened at the New Hampshire Jewish Film Festival in April, also explores why Israel mourned Yoni on the same scale as John F. Kennedy’s assassination in the United States. Paralleling the Kennedy family story, Yoni’s younger brother, Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu, later went into politics and is now the Prime Minister of Israel. To New Hampshire audiences, however, the Yoni Netanyahu story contains an additional layer of nostalgia. Fifty years ago, the future military hero was a summer camp counselor lounging on the shores of Amherst’s Baboosic Lake. Working at Camp Young Judaea (CYJ) for eight weeks in 1963, the 17-year-old Yoni was an Israeli Boy Scout sent to teach outdoors skills, lead hikes, and teach Hebrew. After his death at age 30, a collection of Yoni’s letters to his family and friends became a best-selling book in Israel. Several of the letters were written from CYJ. “The rest of this letter will be scrawled because I am now riding in a pickup Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 Yoni Netanyahu in his last photo before the Entebbe raid, 1976. truck, which is taking me and my campers to dine at a restaurant as a prize for being selected the ‘honor bunk,’” Yoni wrote from Amherst to his brother Bibi. “I’m not the only one who thinks that this is the bunk. Everyone else thinks so, too.” “To tell you that I enjoy being here would be superfluous, since you’ve read about it in every letter I’ve written so far. The truth is I’m longing to see you all,” he added. “To say he was the leader of the camp would be an exaggeration, but he was certainly someone the campers looked up to. Everyone listened to him when he spoke, he was very warm and well liked. He had the whole package.” One of Yoni’s co-counselors in Bunk 5 was Michael Sherman, who now is a real estate executive in Manhattan. “Yoni enjoyed being the center of attention,” Sherman recalls. “To say he was the leader of the camp would be an exaggeration, but he was certainly someone the campers looked up to. Everyone listened to him when he spoke, he was very warm and well liked. He had the whole package.” Another fellow counselor was Elliot Entis, who became a lifelong friend and kept in touch with Netanyahu until his death. Now the founder of a Massachusetts biotech company, Entis strengthened the friendship when he was an exchange student at Hebrew University in Jerusalem and while he was a kibbutz volunteer in Israel during the 1967 Six Day War. The New Hampshire Yoni Netanyahu (back row center) with his bunk and co-counselor Michael Sherman (back left). “The day after the Entebbe raid, I was living in Washington and picked up the Washington Post. Yoni’s name jumped out at me. It was an unbelievable shock. I still have that newspaper,” he says. “People remember his heroics, of course, but he was a lot of fun to be around. He had an infectious personality bubbling over with spirit.” “I remember him at camp looking ridiculous while swinging a baseball bat -it wasn’t a game Israelis played -- but he’d laugh at himself. He had such a positive outlook on life.” There’s a small plaque honoring Netanyahu hanging in the CYJ administration office, but his story is kept alive with each summer’s new influx of campers. The Jewish culture/education cabin is named “Beit Yonatan” (Yonatan’s House), and the kids watch Raid on Entebbe, a 1977 movie starring Charles Bronson as Israeli commando Dan Shomron, Yaphet Kotto (the James Bond villain in Live and Let Die) as Idi Amin, and Stephen Macht as Netanyahu. CYJ has enjoyed a long relationship with Israel over the years, hosting visits from historic leaders such as Prime Minister David Ben Gurion, Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, and Foreign Affairs Minister Abba Eban. Campers participate in a five-week Gadna leadership program in Israel when they reach age 16. The program also serves as a feeder system for recruiting new CYJ counselors. “I’m thrilled to see there’s a new docu- Jewish Reporter Yoni talks to CYJ campers in 1963. mentary out celebrating Yoni’s life,” says CYJ co-director Marcy Kornreich. “Here in the U.S., he’s kind of a forgotten hero. That’s why we dedicated a cabin to him and that’s why we talk about him with our campers.” Boys who stay in Bunk 5 each season are sleeping in that same “honor bunk” that Yoni led in 1963. The original cabin is still in great condition. “I’m very proud that Yoni was part of the Young Judaea family,” adds his former bunkmate Michael Sherman. “But we would have been fortunate to know him even if the Entebbe story had never happened.” DVD copies of Follow Me: The Yoni Netanyahu Story are available at FollowMeTheMovie.com. PAGE 17 Ready… Set…Apply! Coaching for the College Application Process and Essay Writing x Create Organization, Tracking, and Calendar Systems to Manage Materials and Submission Deadlines x Build Academic and Activity Resumes x Identify Quality Essay Topics and Angles x Learn and Apply Essay Writing Strategies x Edit and Polish the Essay Debby Fedder, Ed.M. dfedder2001@gmail.com Bedford, NH (C) 484-576-6199 Keeping you connected eNEWS Judeophobia Showing Attracts Interfaith Audience Nashua -- On Wednesday, May 8, the documentary Judeophobia was screened at Grace Fellowship Church in Nashua. Pastor Berube and his congregation graciously welcomed friends of NH4Israel and the film’s producer, Gloria Greenfield, after a last minute venue change from Temple Beth Abraham. Judeophobia posits the right of Israel to exist and investigates the public commitment of the Muslim Brotherhood and proxies to dismantle the Jewish state. The conflict has nothing to do with territories and swaps; it has to do with a Jewish state existing on what was once Muslim land. Ms. Greenfield also documented the resurgence of European Judeophobia, aka anti-Semitism. After a Muslim terrorist killed schoolchildren in Toulouse last year, Jew-hating jewishnh.org incidents in France increased 45%. After showing the film, Ms. Greenfield answered question about continuing interfaith dialogue with a goal of peaceful coexistence. She said that we always have to know with whom we are in dialogue. She also advised that Judeophobia is a far better term than antiSemitism to have in common parlance, in both spoken and written English. Anti-Semitism has become banal since it first came into use some 60 years before the Shoah. It also begs the question, “Who is pro-Semitic?” Ms. Greenfield reminded the audience that whenever the expression pro-Israel is used, there exists a presumption of valid arguments for a case against Israel. Thus, she prefers the word “Zionist” to describe a supporter of the State of Israel. www.jewishnh.org A GIFT FROM THE JEWISH FEDERATION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE JEWISH BEDTIME STORIES & SONGS FOR FAMILIES Help your children’s sense of Jewish identity grow strong during [OLPYÄYZ[`LHYZ :PNU\WMVY;OL713PIYHY`HUK `V\»SSYLJLP]LHMYLLOPNOX\HSP[` JOPSKYLU»ZIVVRVY*+LHJOTVU[O [OH[^PSSLUYPJO`V\Y1L^PZOMHTPS` YLSH[PVUZOPWZ ;OL713PIYHY`PZMYLLMVY[OLÄYZ[ `LHY^P[OHTPUPTHSKVUH[PVU YLX\PYLKLHJO`LHY[OLYLHM[LY -\UKLKI`[OL1L^PZO-LKLYH[PVU VM5L^/HTWZOPYLP[»ZHNPM[ [OH[^PSSUV\YPZOH1L^PZOSPML MYVT[OLZ[HY[ Visit us today www.jewishnh.org Sign up today at The PJ Library JV1L^PZO-LKLYH[PVUVM5L^/HTZWOPYL 698 Beech Street 4HUJOLZ[LY5/ www.jewishnh.org PAGE 18 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 BHC’s 93rd Season Offers Variety of Events By Eileen Regen Bethlehem -- Bethlehem Hebrew Congregation’s 93rd season promises something for everyone: religious services, films of Jewish interest, education for all ages, guest presenters, and more. The Cultural Series @ The Colonial continues with exceptional films. In the Thursday series are Cabaret-Berlin (7:30 PM, July 11) and My Sweet Canary” (7:30 PM, Aug. 29). The final film in the series, Mahjong and Chicken Feet, begins at 5 PM, Friday, Sept. 27. A live performance by the acclaimed Orchid Ensemble at 8 PM on Saturday, Sept. 28, at the Colonial, is included in this year’s cultural series. Cultural Series @ The Colonial Cabaret Berlin offers an inside view of Berlin’s artistic kabarett scene, a famous part of the Weimar Republic’s history. Composed of visual and audio archives, German narratives, operettas, news clippings, documentary footage, musical shorts, home movies, photographs, paintings, and drawings, the film shows how Berlin cabarets reflected the events, politics, and culture of the times of the Weimar Republic -- the era of inflation, Golden Years, the Great Depression, and the surge of Nazism. Structured as a cabaret show, the film is led by master of ceremonies Ulrich Tukur, who narrates background information and connects each song and sketch to its historical, political, and social context. In the early twentieth century, Roza Eskenazi, the Sweet Canary, sang the way she lived: with passion, fire, and love. In My Sweet Canary, three young musicians from Greece, Turkey, and Israel embark on an exciting musical journey to tell the story of Greece’s best-known and bestloved rebetiko singer for the first time on film. This journey takes them from Istanbul to Thessaloniki and on to Athens as they follow Eskenazi’s musical trail. Though Eskenazi’s world has almost completely vanished, sounds of this music continue to echo throughout the Mediterranean basin. This film with archive footage of Eskenazi was produced in Israel and presented at the Thessaloniki Film Festival International. Mahjong and Chicken Feet, created by filmmaker Jacqueline Levitin, a professor of Film and Women’s Studies at Simon Fraser University, takes viewers on her journey to China as she seeks her family’s past. Out of the reach of the tsar’s pogroms, her ancestors’ Russian-Jewish community thrived in Manchuria; however, her cultured, European-leaning Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 twentieth century Jewish ancestors were unaware of another Chinese-Jewish community that long preceded them: the 1,000-year-old community of Kaifeng in the heart of ancient imperial China. This documentary takes viewers on an unforgettable adventure. The unique Orchid Ensemble performs live at the Colonial at 8 PM, Saturday, Sept. 28. Established in 1997, the ensemble presents Lan Tung on the erhu/Chinese violin, Yu-Chen on the zheng/Chinese zither, and Jonathan Bernard on percussion. As the musicians blend ancient musical instrument sounds and traditions from China and beyond, they create beautiful new sounds in a variety of musical styles. Their repertoire includes traditional and contemporary music of China, world music, new music, jazz, and creative improvisation. The Colonial Theatre is located at 2050 Main Street, Bethlehem, NH. Tickets may be purchased at the door or ahead of time at www.bethlehemcolonial.org/. Hartheim Castle in Austria Geoffrey Brahmer Ellen Fisch, who brings a new exhibit of her art history photography to Bethlehem in August. Photography Exhibit Ellen Fisch, a longtime Bethlehem summer resident, returns August 3 to present a new photography exhibit featuring architectural details of both the BHC Synagogue and Bethlehem’s Durrell Methodist Church. Fisch reports that she has developed a new art form for this exhibit by subtly enhancing the photographs with traditional fine art media: pencil, pastel, and 24K gold leaf. Time and place details will be announced on the BHC website: www.bethlehemsynagogue.org. Hartheim Castle Geoffrey Brahmer returns to BHC on Friday, Aug. 9 to present findings of his latest Holocaust research: “Hartheim Castle: A Holocaust Journey.” Brahmer’s presentation includes images, history, The New Hampshire and narratives of events in Austria’s Hartheim Castle, one of the Nazi euthanasia centers for the mentally and physically disabled. This presentation is open to the community. Admission is free. Summer Services and Religious School at BHC In July and August, Shabbat services are held Friday evenings (7:30) and Saturday mornings (usually 9:30). The first Shabbat service, July 6, is a family Shab- bat service and begins at 10 AM. On July 13, Hazzan Marlena Fuerstman will lead a coffee cake discussion following a shortened service. Hazzan Fuerstman will also offer classes in Hebrew and on the prophets. Days and times will be set when participants sign up. BHC also plans a complete schedule of High Holy Day services from Selichot (Saturday, Aug. 31) through Simchat Torah (Friday, Sept. 27). Visitors to North Country are always welcome to participate in any or all of BHC’s religious services, programs, and events at our historic synagogue, 39 Strawberry Hill, Bethlehem, NH. For further and updated information, please visit the BHC website: www.bethlehemsynagogue.org. Guests are also invited to contact President David Goldstone at davegoldstone1@gmail. com or Hazzan Marlena Fuerstman at marlena1st@gmail.com. The Beit Sefer for students from age five to teen reconvenes in August to welcome students for another six-week learning series. Bar/bat mitzvah training is offered upon request. Film on Argentinean Terrorist Attack on View July 14 Newbury -- On July 14, Roger Feldman, film reviewer for the Institute for Lifelong Education at Dartmouth, will present the Argentinean film, Anita, at the Sunapee-Kearsarge Jewish Community’s summer meeting. The film developed out of the terrorist destruction of the Jewish Community Center in Buenos Aires. It describes the effect of the explosion on one young person and Jewish Reporter those around her. This award-winning film is being shown for the first time in this area. Roger will lead a discussion following the showing of the film. The event is free and open to the public. It is scheduled for 4 to 6 PM. on Sunday, July 14, at the Newbury Veterans Hall across the road from the Town Offices at 937 Route 103 in Newbury. PAGE 19 Reflections on a Return to Auschwitz By Rabbi Edward S. Boraz, Dartmouth College Hillel The bus to Auschwitz/Oswieicim was unusually quiet. There was hardly a sound other than the motor and traffic. Inside the Mercedes-Benz transport, however, there was an unusual silence. I looked at the faces of two students whose ancestors perished in the Holocaust, some actually at Auschwitz, others simply lost forever, as so many were. Within this same group, others had experienced ancestral degradations and hardships unknown to many of us in terms of our experience, some of them quite current. And yet, without any personal relationships to Jewish suffering, they too were on this journey. May G-d bless them all. I looked outside the bus and began to think about truth, and the phrase “sleight of hand” entered my consciousness. I was always impressed with the magician’s trick of the coin, appearing in one hand and then somehow appearing in the other (I fool rather easily, as you can see). I thought of this truth, whenever someone tries to articulate just what is true, what is just, what is right in much the same way. I am currently reading a biography of Louis Brandeis, and thought of the observation of his biographer that for the first Jewish Supreme Court Justice and early Zionist leader, the most important aspect of the lawyer’s work was to master the facts as much as is possible. To understand the client and the law, most important was to understand the set of circumstances, whether business, personal, or whatever the subject, that brought her or him to the office. This was no simple task. For example when it came to understanding situations involving large railroad companies and appropriate rate setting to serve the public good and the shareholders at the same time, Brandeis took his time in understand as much as he could to how the company went about its business. So the lawyer, after immersion into all of this, arrives at those laws that she or he believes best represent his client (for Brandeis, serving the public good and what was best for his or her client were not mutually exclusive enterprises). As I reflected on this, I thought, well, that is all well and good. But isn’t the lawyer on the other side doing the very same thing? Taking all the facts, marshaling them, and presenting the case in light of the law, hoping for an entirely opposite result? Who is ultimately right? Of course, one could say that a judge has the final say, but as we all know, the judge may be right in the sense of the exercise of power to decide, but he or she could be wrong on an entirely different level. This leads me back to Auschwitz. PAGE 20 Judgment at Nuremburg presents the ambiguity of truth and justice. In serving one’s country, in the course of one’s duty, people sometimes do acts that are morally repugnant on an entirely different scale. So, if that is what I am saying, then we are saying that truth and justice are relative. These thoughts all took place on the road to Auschwitz. My thoughts then turned to the story of a German officer who fell in love with a beautiful young Jewish woman at Auschwitz II Birkenau. This was no ordinary attraction. He grew to love her deeply. He expressed this love for her in two ways. The first was to make her life as comfortable as possible. I believe (this is all from my memory of a book) that he set her up to work in Canada, a place so-called at Auschwitz because it was believed that Canada was very wealthy. This was the place where all the wealth and belongings of the Jews, all valuables, were taken for sorting, cataloging, and ultimately for use by the Germans. If you could imagine 1,200,000 Jewish men, women, and children who will die there, with each of them bringing their belongings, the task of sorting out the valuables was quite extensive. Those assigned there had it easier than the others, as the labor was not crushing, and they were better fed. This German officer, I believe his name was Franz, made sure that she was taken care of. Here is the most remarkable part of the story. One day, a transport arrived from the town of this young woman, and on it were members of her family, including I believe her mother. Franz personally went into the gas chamber and pulled members of her family out before they were gassed. It is a beautiful story on one level, and yet troubling on another. What do we make of anyone who participates in genocide or for that matter deliberately hurts another person, for whatever reason? Should Franz have been tried for war crimes, crimes against humanity, or are truth and justice more ambiguous? Who can make these judgments? Who is entitled to make them -- can I, can the victims, or our ancestors who fought the battle, won the war, yet failed to bomb the railroad tracks to stop the genocide when they had all the proof necessary? (Were you aware that one-third of that 1.2 million perished during the last three to six months of the war -- the Jews from Hungary, where over 400,000 Jews lost their lives?) Truth and justice, I feel, become almost crushed under such a weight of souls lost in the gas chambers and crematoria. As I write this, I find myself asking, and perhaps someone knows this, who were the manufacturers of Zykon B, the gas used in those chambers? Does anyone remember the name of the company or its officers? Should they have been prosecuted and sentenced to death as was Rudolf Hess, the commandant at Auschwitz? I don’t know the answers to these questions. I do know this. We, as human beings, must believe in something higher than the relative truth and justice that we must always strive to achieve, yet we never achieve it. Truth and justice are complex, often ambiguous at best, at our meager level of understanding. I have a “crutch” whenever I am faced with such decisions, and that is to ask, would I have a satisfactory response to G-d were I to be so asked by the Divine? I know, or at least I believe, that G-d does not “act” on this level, yet for me it is helpful. I know that participating in this journey with these young men and women is good for me and that there is some purpose, some meaning, in this as we continue to struggle with the unimaginable suffering that occurred as our transport of choice now, 68 years later after the liberation of Auschwitz, heads to this place Reflections continued on page 22 BBQ-Annual Meeting Honors Jay Hodes, Man of the Year Manchester -- Over 70 people enjoyed the Temple Adath Yeshurun Brotherhood BBQ-Annual Meeting on Tuesday night June 11. To paraphrase Rabbi Beth Davidson, it was rainy and cloudy outside but warm and sunny inside. The coveted Man of the Year Award went to Jay Hodes. The plaque read:” To a man who so well combines enthusiasm with graciousness; to a man who is always ready to be counted on to help his Brothers, his congregation and his community; whose counsel is sought out by both his family and his friends; a judicious oenophile, whose calm demeanor allows for good taste, good sense, and good ideas.” According to Sol Rockenmacher, the award was well deserved and long overdue. Joshua Dolman was awarded the Samuel Sugerman Scholarship for his essay entitled “Striving to Become a Mensch.” He won the cash prize of $500. There were a total of five entrants this year, and all the submissions were excellent, making for a difficult selection process, according to the selection committee. Special thanks were offered to poultry purchaser, poet laureate (wonderful “Ode to Jay”), and cook Phil Gelman The New Hampshire TAY Brotherhood Man of the Year Jay Hodes with son (and soon-to-be medical intern) Adam, wife Margie, and daughters-in-law to be Raqwell Gawron (David’s fiancée) and Lauren Gottlieb (Adam’s fiancée) for his hard (and successful) work; to David Penchansky for food purchasing and superb MC’ing; to David Rosenzweig for his all-around help and photo prowess; to grillmeisters Steve Short and Jewish Reporter Steve Goldberg; to Mr. Coffee Bob Katchen; to helpers Al Popovsky, Norm White, and Sol Rockenmacher; to Rabbi Beth for delivering the motzi; and to Kristine Gelinas for her assistance. Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 Hadassah Members Meet, Discuss, and Plan Manchester -- On June 6, the Manchester Chapter of Hadassah held its Strawberry Festival at the home of Linda Abels, with 11 women attending. The group discussed the connection between Hadassah, the Jewish National Fund, and strawberries while enjoying fresh strawberry shortcake and other desserts. It was a fun and informative afternoon, according to participants. At press time, the annual Hadassah brunch had not yet been held at the newly renovated Manchester Country Club. There will be more information about this event in the next issue of the Reporter. On Thursday evening, July 11, Hadassah’s book group will discuss Jodi Picoult’s newest book, The Storyteller. All are invited to join the conversation at the Federation at 7 PM. The Manchester chapter has prepared an interesting, informative, and fun calendar with some new events for the next fiscal year. Chapter president Michele Bank says, “We hope that more of you will attend a meeting or event and reconnect with friends. While doing so, you will feel good that you are part of Hadassah, an organization that continues healing, growing and reaching out to people all over the world and right here in America.” For more information about these events or Hadassah, please contact Michele Bank, chapter president, at 4885657 or michele.bank@gmail.com. ...local, but prized elsewhere. - quoted from W.H. Auden Attending the Hadassah Strawberry Festival were (front row, left to right): Roslyn Levitt, Rene Brenner, Fran Gordon, Helen Arnold. Second row: Frances Shapiro, Isadora Zlotowicz, Carol Sternberg, Gail Ellis, Linda Abels, Michele Bank. judaica · contemporary crafts unique gifts & jewelry · cards & accents home accessories · artsy wearables NH-made items NH-Made Onesies 221 main street · nashua · 603.882.9500 · www.beckonings.com Temple Beth Jacob A warm and welcoming community of over 200 families URJ Affiliated Religious School Kindergarten - Grade 7 Hebrew and Judaica Confirmation/Post-Confirmation – Grades 8-12 Al Galgalim – Preschool Program More For Your Dollar Food Shopping Sisterhood Caring Community Adult Education Classes Social Action Programs Shabbat Services – Friday at 7pm, Saturday at 9:30am Rabbi Robin Nafshi Cantor Shira Nafshi Alan Gaby, President Arlene Taranow, Religious School Principal 67 Broadway Concord, NH 603.228.8581 www.tbjconcord.org Manchester: 460 Elm Street 626-1070 Bedford: 539 Donald Street 222-1471 Hooksett: 30 Market Drive 624-8126 www.jewishnh.org Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter PAGE 21 Reflections continued from page 20 that represents the ultimate injustice that I am yet to encounter in my lifetime. Perhaps it is why I go back there yet again. It is to acknowledge the lives of those who preceded, who gave so much to those (their immediate descendants, who made it out or survived the war) who taught me, who have given me such a beautiful life. It is perhaps to say thank you, time and time again, to a people who gave so much and died. It is to tell them their death was nothing compared to what they gave to us, to the world, and that it lives on for those of us who are there to acknowledge that they are remembered and loved. I believe in my heart that there is truth in this and perhaps some justice that they are elevated and that the perpetrators are despised and will be forever by good and decent people. This is a truth and this is a justice. Temple Adath Yeshurun Religious School Register Now New Religious School Schedule Now Offering Sundays & Tuesdays Grades K-2 Sunday only 10am-12:00pm 9 7 2 8 3 4 7 4 2 3 1 5 9 8 1 7 2 8 3 4 6 6 9 7 8 1 2 8 9 7 5 2 4 6 1 9 5 2 6 7 7 Grades 3-7 Tuesdays 3:45pm-5:45pm & Sunday 10:00am-12:00pm Hebrew High Grades 8-10 meets 2 Sundays a month Grades K-1 FREE to TAY Members Chai Curriculum Rabbi Beth D. Davidson Principal Jessica Gallant Contact Jessica Gallant jessicagallant28@yahoo.com or (603) 669-5650 Planning a party or event ? Rent the JFNH gym Call 627-7679 for more information. PAGE 22 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 Want to see your organization’s photos here? Send them to thereporter@jewishnh.org. Students at Congregation Betenu gather to celebrate their last day of Sunday school and a Teacher Appreciation Brunch A farewell event for shlicha Inbar Keren at Temple Israel Portsmouth organized by Greater Seacoast UJA included (clockwise from top left): Richard Grossman, Inbar Keren, Meryl Wein, Fran Berman, Ken Kowalchek, Mel Prostkoff, Edward Finkel (Northeast Region Director, Network of Independent Communities, Jewish Federations of North America), Auggie Collier, Al Spaien, Marjorie Goldberg, and Helen Hannan. Children from Etz Hayim Congregation and the Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration read prayers at the dedication of their congregations’ interfaith campus sign in Derry. Have I got a hot dog for you! Mary Singer serves Rabbi Beth at the TAY Brotherhood BBQ-Annual Meeting. Students at Congregation Betenu studying the Torah with Rabbi Joel Students at Temple Adath Yeshurun’s religious school enjoyed a range of games at an end-of-year celebration. Submit Your Special Event! Email events@jewishnh.org Grillmeisters of the Kitchen Krew at Temple Adath Yeshurun: Steve Goldberg, Steve Short, Kristine Gelinas, Al Popovsky, David Penchansky, Phil Gelman, Bob Katchen, Norm White. IMPORTANT: Deadline is the 10th of the month prior to publication, Jan/Feb and July/Aug are combined issues, events scheduled before the 10th of any month may also be listed in the previous issue. Events emailed after the deadline will not be listed in the Reporter. For more info go to our website, www.jewishnh.org. Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 Jewish Reporter The New Hampshire PAGE 23 Book Review Reviewed by Merle Carrus The Storyteller, by Jodi Picoult Okay, I will admit that I had decided I would not read any more Jodi Picoult books. But I could not resist The Storyteller (Doubleday, 2013) when it came out, and now I am glad I didn’t. I have read many of her novels, and they seem to have a set formula: Find a topic that raises public concerns, write a novel that pulls readers in and makes them feel attached to the characters, and then, when the reader thinks she knows exactly which character has the right opinion and viewpoint, throw in a twist that makes the reader question her position on the subject. The Holocaust is a topic that has been written about for decades. I thought there probably wasn’t any new angle that Picoult could pull out that hasn’t been written about already. Picoult wrote The Storyteller about the issue of justice and forgiveness. Does a Jewish person alive today have the ability to forgive a Nazi SS officer who has lived to a ripe old age and is asking for forgiveness? This topic has been presented by some of the great authors of our time. My favorite, Just Revenge by Alan Dershowitz, asks, “What if you came face to face with the very man who slaughtered your family before your eyes? But what if killing that man is not enough, that instead of killing the perpetrator you decide to kill his family, his children and grandchildren and make the killer watch them die?” Is that a just revenge? I also read The Sunflower, by Simon Wiesenthal. This is a true story in which Wiesenthal was brought to the bedside of a dying SS officer. The officer is haunted by his crimes and is looking to confess and receive absolution from a Jew. Wiesenthal wrote the book years after the event because he still wondered Local Author Publishes Last Book in Trilogy Local author Joe Smiga recently published One Came Back, a stand-alone novel that completes his trilogy about Iranian terror cells operating in the United States. Joe and his wife, Linda Feinberg, have been active members of the Manchester Jewish community for many years. This final installment in the trilogy brings the reader face to face with the domestic life of a terrorist as he contemplates returning for one final attack. According to reviewer Bruce Birnberg, “The twists and turns in this novel will amaze you. Joe Smiga’s wordsmith skills are on full display as we are taken full steam ahead into a budding romance and eventually into the bedroom of our Iranian killer. Why does it matter that an Iranian terrorist is a sensitive lover? You’ll have to read this gem to find out.” For more of the review, visit http://brucesmideastsoundbites.blogspot.com. One Came Back is available online through several retailers. The other books in the trilogy are Behind the Lies (2009) and Gateway to Terror (2011). PEOPLE WHO KNOW YOU, PEOPLE YOU CAN RELY ON… TODAY AND TOMORROW. GOODWIN FUNERAL HOME 607 Chestnut Street, Manchester 625-5703 160 PAGE 24 whether he did the right thing and what others would do in his place. After he tells the story, he has many distinguished men and women respond with their opinions. In an interview with CNN and in the author’s note at the back of her novel, Picoult refers to The Sunflower as the inspiration for her novel. In The Storyteller, we meet Sage Singer, a young woman with many personal demons. She has backed away from Judaism and is a self-professed atheist. Her grandmother is a Holocaust survivor. We meet Sage in a grief support group, as she is coming to terms with her mother’s recent death. There she meets a sweet older man who has been a pillar in the community for 30 years. As they form a friendship, he confesses his shameful secret and asks Sage for an incredible favor. Picoult makes the reader think about where the line is drawn between punishment and justice, forgiveness and mercy. Sage works in a bakery for a former nun, named Mary. As Sage is trying to work through her feelings about this aging SS officer, she goes to Mary for advice. Mary explains that when someone hurts you, the forgiveness you show is not for the perpetrator but for yourself, “because otherwise he will grow like a weed in your heart until it’s choked and overrun. The only person who suffers, when you squirrel away all that hate, is you.... It’s something you do for your- self. It’s saying, You’re not important enough to have a stranglehold on me. It’s saying, You don’t get to trap me in the past. I am worthy of a future.” Jodi Picoult takes this idea from the eminent Rabbi Harold Kushner as he responds to Simon Wiesenthal in the The Sunflower. As an example of forgiveness, he tells a woman congregant who is angry at her ex-husband: “I am not asking you to forgive him because what he did is acceptable. It wasn’t; it was mean and selfish. I am asking you to forgive because he doesn’t deserve the power to live in your head and turn you into a bitter, angry woman. I’d like to see him out of your life emotionally as completely as he is out of it physically, but you keep holding onto him. You are not hurting him by holding on to that resentment, but you are hurting yourself.” The reader is left with some very important ideas to think about. What you would do in a similar situation? What do you believe is the point when a moral choice becomes a moral imperative? This is a story that will leave you thinking long after you put down the book. In a radio interview with CNN, Picoult said she is an agnostic, but she was raised by Jewish parents and so she feels she is in the odd position of being a spokesperson for a religious group she does not personally affiliate with anymore. Some stories, she says, need to be told, and this is one of them. Jodi Picoult is the author of 21 novels. She lives in New Hampshire with her husband and three children. Letters to the Editor No Peace for Israel I take exception to the two-state solution proposed for Israel and Palestine. Some people, including world leaders, are proposing setting borders for a Palestinian state in the West Bank, a conditional Israeli settlement building freeze, a Jerusalem agreement, and a Palestinian relinquishment of the claim for the right of return for millions of Arabs. All these proposals sound like wonderful ideas when sitting around a table negotiating so-called peace for Israel and the Palestinians, but there is a major fallacy associated with a peace agreement. The Palestinians, like other Arabs and the Persians, cannot be trusted to honor any documents they might agree to sign with Israel. They hate the Israeli Jews and will tear up a peace treaty and attack Israel when the opportunity arises. Israel can negotiate with the Palestinians and others in the Middle East, but must realize peace is not possible with its neighbors. War might not come next week or next year, but it is inevitable, and Israel has to prepare for it. Peace in the Middle East is an interlude for Israel to prepare for the next war ad infinitum. Israel’s wars might be preludes to future warfare around the globe. Donald A. Moskowitz, Londonderry Letters to the Editor may be sent to thereporter@jewishnh.org. Letters must be signed with full name and address. Member by Invitation National Selected Morticians The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 JFNH Tributes Campaign for Jewish Needs Dan and Linda Gerson wishing Judith Jolton a speedy and complete recovery Doris and Milt Marks wishing Judith Jolton a good recovery Friend of the Reporter Anonymous Jake and Anna Berry Alan and Helaine Kanegsberg Marc S. Rubenson, MD Supporter of the Reporter Linda and Sol Rockenmacher Jack Saunders Received as of June 10, 2013 JFNH Tribute Cards: A Double Mitzvah Sending a Tribute Card from the Jewish Federation of New Hampshire is one of the best ways to honor someone for any simcha, e.g. birthday, anniversary, bar/bat mitzvah, It is also the perfect way to say Thank You or to send your condolences. Your JFNH Tribute Card serves double duty by helping to support the vital programs serving the New Hampshire Jewish Community. All tributes will be listed in The Reporter. Amount of Contribution: Angel of the Reporter Shane and Jennifer Citron ❏ $10 Paul and Fran Gordon Family Fund Fran Gordon in honor of Liz and Larry Eckman’s daughter Jessica’s engagement Fran Gordon in honor George and Gwen Eckman’s granddaughter Jessica’s engagement Kushner-Tumen Family Fund for Children Norm and Andy Kushner in honor of Fran and Steve Short’s daughter Sarah’s engagement Norm and Andy Kushner to Michael Sydney for a continuing speedy recovery Norm and Andy Kushner in memory of Wendy Crosdale’s mother Norm and Andy Kushner in memory of Ellen Finkelstein’s mother Norm and Andy Kushner in memory of Mark Kass’s mother, Shirley Social Services Fund Sarah Denmark and Adam Solender in memory of Cheryl Boyarsky’s father, Spencer “Spike” Forman ❏ $18 ❏ $36 ❏ Other $________ You may designate one of the following funds for your contribution: ❏ Campaign for Jewish Needs ❏ Camp Scholarships ❏ Friends of the Reporter ❏ Irving and Bernice Singer Israel Experience Program ❏ Israel Emissary (Shlicha) ❏ JFNH Preschool ❏ NH Jewish Film Festival ❏ NH Jewish Library ❏ PJ Library ❏ Senior Programs ❏ Social Services Name of Tribute Card recipient: Reach 10,000 readers in New Hampshire Take advantage of the most cost-effective way to advertise and reach a loyal, repeat audience! Address of Tribute Card recipient: Contribution: ❏ in honor ❏ in memory of ❏ on the occasion of Advertise in the Jewish Reporter Name of Sender: 627-7679 or thereporter@jewishnh.org Address of Sender: Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter PAGE 25 ARCHITECT Katz Architect Malcom R. Katz, Architect 55 Wilder Street, Keene, NH 03431 (603) 357-0127 katz@webryders.net AUTOBODY REPAIR Prestige Auto Body, Inc. 200 Frontage Rd., Manchester (603) 669-0015 BILL PAYMENT New England Accountability, LLC Security / Simplicity Managing Everyday Transactions adria@newenglandaccountability.com 378 Village St., Penacook, NH 03303 603-753-6328 x 616 COMPUTER SERVICES Grolen Communications 814 Elm St., Manchester, NH 03101 (603) 645-0101 www.grolen.com DENTAL SERVICES ENDODONTICS Douglas J. Katz, DMD, PC Katz Endodontics 1310 Hooksett Rd., Hookset Dougrct@comcast.net (603) 628-2891 GENERAL DENTISTRY Henniker Family Dentistry John S. Echternach, DDS 144 Hall Ave. Henniker, NH 03242 (603) 428-3419 Sarah K. Katz, DMD Bow Family Dentistry 514 South St., Bow (603) 224-3151 Richard Kudler, DMD 97 West Merrimack St., Manchester (603) 669-8678 Rochelle H. Lindner, DMD Lindner Dental Assoc., PC 72 So. River Rd., Bedford (603) 624-3900 Craig Rothenberg, DMD 4 Manchester Ave., Derry (603) 434-1586 Stephen M. Rosenberg DMD PA 410 South Main St., Concord, NH 03301 (603) 224-1851 www.rosenberg-dental.com Elizabeth Sandler Spindel, DMD 862 Union St., Manchester (603) 669-9049 www.elizabethspindel.com ORTHODONTICS Gary S. Lindner, DMD, DMSc. Lindner Dental Assoc., PC 72 So. River Rd., Bedford (603) 624-3900 PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY Andrew T. Cheifetz, DMD, MEd Children’s Dental Center of NH 7 Rt. 101A , Amherst, NH 03031 (603) 673-1000 www.childrensdentalnh.com Luis S. Englander, DMD Lindner Dental Assoc., PC 72 So. River Rd., Bedford (603) 624-3900 James B Haas, DDS 4 Manchester Avenue, Derry (603) 434-1586 Gary S. Lindner, DMD, DMSc. Lindner Dental Assoc., PC 72 So. River Rd., Bedford (603) 624-3900 PERIODONTICS FINANCIAL SERVICES PLASTIC SURGERY CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNERS Robert Feins, MD 144 Tarrytown Road, Manchester (603) 647-4430, www.drfeins.net Daniel Cohen, CFP, Vice President- Investments UBS Financial Services, Inc. 1155 Elm Street, 5th Floor, Manchester daniel.m.cohen@ubs.com (603) 626-2923 Mark B. Severs, CFP Family Wealth Director Morgan Stanley Wealth Management 203 Heater Road, Lebanon, NH 03766, (603) 442-7900 mark.b.severs@morganstanley.com www.morganstanleyfa.com/hanovergroup CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS Penchansky & Co., PLLC David Penchansky, CPA Certified Public Accountants 70 Stark Street, Manchester davidp@penchansky.com (603) 647-2400 FLOORING Four Star Flooring, Inc. 52 Dow St. Manchester, NH 03101 Quality ceramic tile, laminates, prefinished hardwood, vinyl flooring Authorized Mohawk Carpet Dealer (603) 624-7827, 4starflooring.com JUDAICA BOOKS AND GIFTS Israel Book Shop, Inc. “New England’s Judaica superstore” 1 day shipping to N.H. 410 Harvard St. Brookline, MA 02446 617-566-7113, Toll Free 800-323-7723 www.israelbookshop.com Jeffrey S. Forgosh, DMD 280 Pleasant Street, Concord (603) 228-1191 LEGAL SERVICES Place your ad here (603-627-7679 Devine, Millimet & Branch, P.A. Steven Cohen, Esq., CPA, LLM 111 Amherst St., Manchester scohen@devinemillimet.com (603) 695-8504 DOWNSIZING/REAL ESTATE Lifetime Estate Liquidations/Transitions Keller Williams Realty One Hardy Rd., Suite 222, Bedford, NH Estate liquidation, move mgmt., real estate www.lifetimeliquidations.com Kathy Baldridge, (603) 493-4472 EDUCATIONAL SERVICES Debby Fedder, Ed.M., Tutor College App Process & Essay Writing 28 Years in Independent Education Master of Education, Harvard University dfedder2001@gmail.com (484) 576-6199 ATTORNEYS PERSONAL INJURY LAW Jay L. Hodes, Esq. 1855 Elm St., Manchester jhodes@hagehodes.com (603) 668-2222 Stephen E. Borofsky, Esq. Borofsky, Amodeo-Vickery & Bandazian, P.A. 708 Pine Street, Manchester sborofsky@e-atty.net (603) 625-6441 (MEDICAL SERVICES PHYSICAL THERAPY Family Physical Therapy Services Cathy Leer, PT, MBA 165 S. River Rd, Bedford, 644-8334 126 Dover Rd, Chichester, 961-0039 www.familyptservices.com PAGE 26 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter UROGYNECOLOGY/UROLOGY Welcome Dr. Darlene Gaynor Female Urology Pelvic Medicine and Reconstruction Manchester Urology Assoc. 669-9200 Dover 742-1444 (MONUMENT SERVICES Sibson-Hall Monument Co. 1950 Lafayette Rd., Portsmouth Hall Monument Co. 333 First NH Turnpike, Northwood Serving all of New Hampshire (603) 436-3377 - (800) 550-3377 ORIENTAL RUGS Menashe Cohen Epic Oriental Rugs 597 Lafayette Rd., Hampton, NH (603) 601-6811 www.epicorientalrugs.com Handwashing - repairs - appraisals PAYROLL & TAX FILING SERVICES Ryan S. Andrews, LL.M. ADP Broker–Dealer, Inc. Member FINRA Direct Dep., Bkgrnd Chks, Handbooks, DOL Compliance, HR, Timekeeping, 401K/SIMPLE IRA, Benefits, Health Ins. Ryan.andrews@adp.com, 401-644-8157 PHOTOGRAPHY Peter Powell Photography, LLC Peterborough, NH peter@peterpowellphotography.com (603) 397-0378 PRINTING NH Print & Mail Service Cheryl & Kevin Boyarsky 30 Terrell Park Drive, Concord e-mail: info@printingnh.com www.nhprintmail.com, (603) 224-6606 SKIN CARE Candi Lavoie, Licensed Esthetician Chloe A. Jeanjean, Licensed Esthetician Robert Feins, MD 144 Tarrytown Rd., Manchester (603) 647-4430 WEBSITE DESIGN Pink Skunk Web Design Jennifer O’Keefe, Creative Director Londonderry, NH Jennifer@PinkSkunk.us (603) 943-6480 www.PinkSkunkWebDesign.com Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 Advertise in our Business & Professional Services Directory. Call JFNH office at 603-627-7679 or contact one of our sales reps. Derry/Londonderry area: Michelle Harrison, (603) 437-0167 RunFree94@yahoo.com Delivering Hassle-Free IT Services Eric M. LaFleur Jonathan E. Baron 143 Essex Street, Suite 709 Haverhill, MA 01832 Phone: 978.373.1010 www.NECompServices.com Manchester area: Susan Oxman, (603) 878-2964 SusanOxman@comcast.net Manchester/Hooksett/Bedford: Rachel Spierer, (603) 682-3845 rachel3rdlife@gmail.com y a id r F ya d n o M es h nc u L $5 100 Hanover Street Manchester, NH (603) 644-0064 110 Hanover Street Manchester, NH (603) 606-1189 Enjoy our Authentic Italian Cuisine Ristorante Italiano Open for lunch & dinner Ask About Our Daily Specials Hours: Mon. 4:30 PM - 10 PM Tue.-Thu. 11 AM - 10 PM Fri. 11 AM - 11 PM Sat. NOON - 11 PM Sun. NOON - 9 PM IN COFFEE E 677 Hooksett Road, Manchester, NH C MU M RePUBLiC 60 66 6. 37 f e. 3. co m NIT Y FOOD 603-627-2424 O W We provide catering for parties to go 23 republic ca European Hospitality Locally Sourced Menu Master Lic# 2408C “Service is our Business” Inspired by the Mediterranean 603-668-5468 800-439-8797 Fax 603-623-8591 257 Bridge Street Manchester, NH 03104 info@tromblyplumbing.com www.tromblyplumbing.com Specializing in Seafood from the Atlantic Coast Breakfast Lunch Dinner 7 Days 9 am - 10 pm 1069 Elm St. Manchester, NH SUPPORT OUR ADVERTISERS Tell Them You Saw Their Ad in The Reporter! Tammuz-Elul 5773 • July-August 2013 The New Hampshire Jewish Reporter PAGE 27