THE CHICAGO Jeremy Wynes is heading up the new Chicago office
Transcription
THE CHICAGO Jeremy Wynes is heading up the new Chicago office
JEWISH NEWS THE CHICAGO January 23 - 29, 2015/3 Shevat 5775 www.chicagojewishnews.com One Dollar READY FOR 2016 Jeremy Wynes is heading up the new Chicago office of the Republican Jewish Coalition and hoping to get Jews here to vote for the GOP ‘Selma’ and its missing rabbi Who murdered Alberto Nisman? Rabbi Goldhamer on G-d and free will Midwest anti-Semitism 2014 2 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 Nisman mystery: Hezbollah, Argentine gov’t fingered in death of prosecutor By Uriel Heilman JTA The mysterious death of Argentine prosecutor Alberto Nisman seems ripped straight out of a crime thriller. Nisman – the indefatigable prosecutor collecting evidence of culpability in the 1994 bombing of the AMIA Jewish center in Buenos Aires, which killed 85 people – was found dead in his apartment just hours before he was to present evidence to Argentina’s congress that he said implicated his country’s president and foreign minister in a nefarious cover-up scheme. The charge? That the two agreed to whitewash Tehran’s role in the AMIA bombing in exchange for oil shipments to en- ergy-hungry Argentina. Nisman’s body was discovered in his 13th-floor apartment with a single gunshot wound to the head. Officials connected to the president, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, quickly said evidence pointed to suicide, noting that a .22-caliber pistol and spent cartridge were found near Nisman’s body. But the suicide theory was dismissed out of hand on the streets of Buenos Aires and among people around the world familiar with Nisman and his work investigating the AMIA attack. Instead, they said Nisman, 51, was the victim of foul play. The suicide theory lost more ground with the revelation by the prosecutor investigating Nisman’s death, Viviana Fein, that no traces of gunpowder were found on Nisman’s hand. There also was no suicide note. “The idea of suicide I think is nonsense,” Abraham Foxman, national director of the AntiDefamation League, said. The investigation of the 1994 bombing – the deadliest terrorist attack in Argentine history and one of the worst incidents of anti-Jewish violence in the Diaspora since World War II – was seen as hopelessly inept and corrupt until Nisman took over the case in 2005. There were no significant arrests for years after the AMIA bombing, which was preceded by the deadly 1992 bombing of the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires that killed 29. After 20 local men, including 19 police officers, were put on trial in 2001 on CHICAGO PREMIERE! Sunday, February 8, 2015 Tickets at spertus.edu or 312.322.1773 Spertus Institute is a partner in serving our community, supported by the Jewish United Fund/Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago. Demonstrators at the Plaza de Mayo in Buenos Aires protesting the death of federal prosecutor Alberto Nisman. The banner at left reads "I am Nisman. I am the republic.” (JTA) charges of involvement in the Jewish center attack, the investigating judge, Juan Jose Galeano, was caught on video offering one of the men a bribe in return for evidence. The case collapsed, the police were acquitted, and Galeano eventually was removed from the case and impeached. Appointed to take over the case by then-President Nestor Kirchner, the late husband of the current Argentine leader who had called the handling of the case a “national disgrace.” Nisman launched a more professional investigation. He traced the links from the Iranian leaders who ordered the attack to the Hezbollah operatives who planned its execution, formally charging Iran and Hezbollah in 2006. Interpol eventually issued arrest warrants for six Iranian officials in connection with the bombing, including Iran’s defense minister at the time, Ahmad Vahidi. The Islamic Republic denied any connection and refused to hand over the suspects. Nisman and his investigating team continued to press forward with their effort to bring those responsible to justice. He was slated to present his evidence to Argentina’s congress the day after his death. “I’m following the wishes of relatives and looking for a way to get them some closure,” Nisman said. “I cannot give up on ways of trying to get justice.” Among Argentina’s 200,000 Jews – the largest Jewish community in Latin America – Nisman, who also was Jewish, was seen as a crusading hero. So who could have wanted him dead? Many Argentines are pointing the finger at President Kirchner. Thousands had gathered outside the presidential palace to protest Nisman’s death, with some holding aloft signs reading “Cristina murderer.” The hashtag #CFKAsesina – Kirchner’s initials and the Spanish word assassin – was one of the top topics trending on Twitter in Argentina. In Jewish and Israeli circles, some analysts speculated that Nisman may have been killed by Hezbollah, whose operatives were fingered for carrying out the AMIA bombing on behalf of Iran. Just hours before Nisman’s death, several Hezbollah fighters were killed in an airstrike in southern Syria attributed to Israel. Among the dead were Mohammed Allahdadi, a general in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, and Jihad Mughniyeh, son of the late Hezbollah mastermind Imad Mughniyeh, who was killed in a February 2008 car bombing in Damascus. Mughniyeh was the one whom Nisman found had coordinated and oversaw preparations for the AMIA bombing. Hezbollah accused Israel of being behind the airstrike. Israeli officials, adhering to protocol in such cases, declined to comment. Could Hezbollah have pulled off Nisman’s killing so quickly after the airstrike in Syria? It would be uncharacteristic for the Lebanon-based group, which typically has carried out its well-planned reprisals months or years after Israeli attacks. But some analysts noted Iran and Hezbollah have sleeper cells that can carry out operations on short notice. Nisman had made several prescient references to the possibility of his untimely demise, saying, “I might get out of this dead.” Rabbi Sergio Bergman, a Jewish leader and member of Argentina’s congress, called Nisman, who is survived by two daughters, “victim 86 of the AMIA attack.” Argentine-Israeli journalist Roxana Levinson, whose uncle, Jaime Plaksin, was killed in the AMIA attack, said Nisman’s death was devastating. “This death is like another bomb,” she said. “It’s a death sentence for truth and justice in the AMIA case.” 3 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 2014 top ten worst anti-Semitic/anti-Israel incidents in the Midwest Since 2010, the Simon Wiesenthal Center has released an annual global “Top Ten Worst Anti-Semitic/ Anti-Israel Incidents” focusing on incidents in the mainstream of culture, politics, and religion. For the first time, the Wiesenthal Center is releasing a regional Top Ten for the Midwest. #1 “Wanted to make damn sure I killed some Jews before I died” Frazier Glenn Cross Jr. a former KKK Grand Dragon, pulled up outside the Jewish community center and Jewish Home for the Aging in suburban Kansas City, Kansas, just before Passover. Cross later told a reporter that he, “Wanted to make damned sure I killed some Jews… before I died.” Within minutes, three people – none of them Jews – lay dead in the parking lot. In December, Cross, 74, was found competent to stand trial. #2 Anti-Irsael rally in downtown Chicago threatens annailation of Israel Last summer’s war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza spawned international protest against the Jewish state in Europe and North America. Two rallies in downtown Chicago in July took on a violent and antiSemitic tinge. Protesters were holding signs with the words “Israel You Will Pay, Your Annihilation is On Its Way” and placards with Holocaust and anti-Semitic imagery. Protesters also demonized all supporters of Israel by distributing pamphlets declaring, “Zionism is the Enemy of Humanity.” Comparisons between Nazism and Israel were prevalent at both rallies. There was a display of an Israeli flag with bloodstained children’s handprints, calling the Israelis – ‘Nazis’ and equating the Star of David with the swastika. #3 Swastikas & anti-Jewish messages in West Rogers Park, Chicago The Far North Side neighborhood of West Rogers Park was vandalized with anti-Semitic messages and imagery at the end of 2014. Graffiti was spraypainted throughout this heavily Jewish neighborhood, including a synagogue and multiple garage doors of private residences. The messages included swastikas, the Star of David, and phrases such as “F*** Yall Jews”. #4 Chicago public school anti-Semitic bullying incident An eighth grade Jewish student at the Ogden International School, a part of the Chicago Public School system, suffered anti-Semitic bullying and taunting for weeks during the school year before teachers and officials finally intervened. The harassment escalated quickly from just a few students to a larger group who created a team in the online game Clash of Clans entitled “Jew Incinerator Clan.” The description of the team read, “Heil! Throw Jews into ovens for a cause. We are a friendly group of racists with one goal- put all Jews into an army camp until disposed of. Sieg! Heil!” The students used this game as a catalyst to spread hate and anti-Semitic sentiments, quickly gaining the support of other students. Despite requests from the targeted student’s parent, the harassment continued for weeks without intervention from the school. Not until the media picked up the story was some action taken. The bullies received only a brief suspension, while officials said they would use the incident as a ‘teaching moment.’ #5 Farrakhan delivers ‘Satanic Jews’ speeches across the Midwest Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan’s “Part 2” of his Sav- iours’ Day address in Chicago on March 5, included multiple blatantly anti-Semitic screeds. Among the highlights of the hateful address: “Satanic Jews… control everything and mostly S E E M I DW E S T ON PAG E 1 0 Ritz-Carlton Managed Residences, SARASOTA-FL 5 STAR RESORT condominium on the Beach. Sunset-City Lights-Sunrise Views. Epitome of casual elegance. Gourmet kitchen-wood and marble floorsdeep, 60 ft wrap-around terrace. 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()#$%'$!$ $'*+,-/ " #'5%''55 242(,,' ()#'5%''5 www.danzigerkosher.com 4 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 Jewish News ■ Google Street View returned to Israel three years after it first photographed the nation’s streets. The Google cars and tricycles, fitted with 360-degree cameras to take panoramic images, will visit Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Haifa and other cities in order to update the online mapping tool. Google Street View provides a 3-D view of buildings, landmarks and streets around the world. The images from Israel were posted on the Internet in April 2012. Israel’s Justice Ministry set several conditions for its approval to photograph city streets, including the right for Israelis to request further blurring of residences and license plates. Israeli officials reportedly had been concerned that terrorists would use the service to plan attacks in Israel. ■ The family of a Jewish boy killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre is one of two families suing Newtown, Conn., and its school board for alleged lax security. The parents of Noah Pozner, as well as Jesse Lewis, filed the lawsuit. It reportedly is seeking more than $15,000 in damages, as is standard. According to the suit, the school board and the town were negligent in not having classroom doors that could be locked from the inside and because the school did not have a more secure entranceway, including bulletproof glass on the front windows. The lawsuit also alleges a lack of security in the parking lot. Noah Pozner, 6, was the youngest victim of the December 2012 massacre. Twenty children and six school employees were killed when Adam Lanza, 20, forced his way into the school building and opened fire. ■ Regular synagogue attendance may make you healthier, a new study indicates. A study of four large American Jewish urban communities by Baylor University’s Institute for Studies of Religion found that “adults who affiliate with a Jewish religious denomination and attend synagogue report significantly better health than secular or non-practicing Jews,” Jeff Levin, director of the institute’s Program on Religion and Population Health, said . “People with a strong sense of religious identity and who participate in their faith seem to do better, on average, than people without an active spiritual life,” added Levin. The results were consistent across denominations. Whether Orthodox, Conservative, Reconstructionist or Reform, affiliated Jews reported better health than secular, non-affiliated Jews. Likewise, Jews who attended synagogue, whether regularly or less frequently, reported better health than those who never went. ■ The Austrian government is looking into expropriating Adolf Hitler’s childhood home. Trying to ensure the house is not turned into a neo-Nazi shrine, the Interior Ministry may seize the home if its owner refuses to sell it to the government. The owner, who has not publicly been identified, reportedly has turned down past offers to sell. The ministry has rented the home in the German border town of Braunau for several years and sublet it to charitable organizations. The house, which draws neo-Nazi visitors, has stood empty for the past three years after the owner refused to authorize needed renovations. The building is listed as a historical landmark and cannot be razed. ■ Oxford University Press has banned references to pigs and pork in its publications in order to avoid offending Jews and Muslims. “Many of the educational materials we publish in the UK are sold in more than 150 countries, and as such they need to consider a range of cultural differences and sensitivities,” a spokesman for Oxford, the largest university press in the world, told the British media. Eating pork is forbidden in Islam and Judaism. Representatives of the Jewish and Muslim communities told the British media that the ban was unnecessary. ■ An Israeli couple welcomed the birth of their 100th greatgrandchild. Michael Mittwoch, 92, and his wife, Marion, 90, celebrated the bris of Dagan Raz . They called the new baby and their other great-grandchildren “our answer to Hitler,” Ynet reported. The Mittwochs were born in Germany and each fled to England after the Nazis came to power. After World War II they made their ways separately to Israel and met on Kibbutz Kvutzat Yavne. They then became two of the founders of Kibbutz Lavi in the Galilee, and they also were the first couple to be married there. Their five children live in Israel. The new baby was named after Maj. Dagan Wertman, 32, a Golani Brigade doctor who was at officers’ school with the baby’s father and was killed during Operation Cast Lead at the end of 2008. JTA Contents THE CHICAGO JEWISH NEWS Vol. 21 No. 16 Joseph Aaron Editor/Publisher 6 Celebrations Golda Shira Senior Editor/ Israel Correspondent 8 Cover Story Pauline Dubkin Yearwood Managing Editor Joe Kus Staff Photographer 10 Death Notices 11 Letters Roberta Chanin and Associates Sara Belkov Steve Goodman Advertising Account Executives Denise Plessas Kus Production Director 12 Community Calendar Kristin Hanson Accounting Manager/ Webmaster Jacob Reiss 12 CJN Classified Subscriptions Manager/ Administrative Assistant Ann Yellon of blessed memory 14 By Joseph Aaron 15 Arts and Entertainment On the cover: photo by Joe Kus. www. chicagojewishnews .com Some of what you’ll find in the ONLINE version of Chicago’s only weekly Jewish newspaper DAILY JEWISH NEWS For the latest news about Jews around the world, come by everyday and check out what’s making headlines. ARCHIVES Look back at articles from the past, including recipes, Torah portions, Joseph Aaron’s column and more. 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For Israel Advertising Information: IMP Group Ltd. 972-2-625-2933 Like Chicago Jewish News on Facebook. 5 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 Torah Portion CANDLELIGHTING TIMES G-d and free will There is more than one way to look at it By Rabbi Douglas Goldhamer Torah Columnist Torah Portion: Bo Exodus 10:1-13:16 Rabbi Levi Yitzhak, affectionately known as the Berditchever, an illuy (genius) since childhood, studied hasidut under the Maggid of Mezritch and served as a leading rabbi in many cities culminating with his service as the rabbi of Berditchev. He was born in 1740 and entered the next life in 1810. He has inspired me and continues to inspire me as well as countless others by constantly defending the people Israel in front of G-d. He had the courage of Moses and the insight of Abraham and was constantly defending our people before G-d. His leading work, “Kedushat Levi,” is an amazing compilation of Chasidic insights of the Scripture readings of the week. Last week, in our Sunday afternoon Torah class, I was reminded again of Rabbi Levi’s amazing insight into Scripture and his ability to inspire each of his readers to believe that the Scripture was written specifically for them. History teaches us that when the Baal Shem Tov preached, everyone who heard him thought that the Besht was speaking specifically to him; this was very similar to the Berditchever. When he wrote a commentary, you would think he was writing directly for you, clarifying a problem that has bothered you for some time. In our Torah class, a student challenged me vigorously when I espoused the thinking that every person has free will, and it is this free will that G-d has bestowed upon us that distinguishes us from the angels. He said to me, “If, on the one hand, you teach us that every person has a sacred purpose, how can this thinking square off with the free will that G-d has given us? Aren’t sacred free will and sacred purpose at loggerheads with one another? How can you claim that Judaism maintains free will when Judaism also boasts that each one of us has a purpose or several purposes to fulfill in our lifetime?” I responded by saying that there is no monolithic Judaism; there are many Judaisms. The Judaism of Maimonides borrows Rabbi Douglas Goldhamer the thinking of Aristotle, who teaches that G-d “is thought thinking itself.” G-d does not get involved in the mundane affairs of the world or this would disallow for the perfection of G-d. If G-d responds to prayer, and changes His mind, then G-d is not perfect any more. In order to keep the perfection of G-d consistent with his master’s (Aristotle’s) teaching, Maimonides resorts to his theory of angels, calling them sichlaim nivdalim, “separate intelligences.” The angels are considered intelligences or thought forms, separate from one another. He probes this thinking to reconcile free will, prayer and purpose. Another student asked, “If G-d created a built-in mechanism within Pharaoh, which forced him to say ‘no’ to Moses, and led to the 10 plagues, how could Pharaoh’s refusal to let the Israelites free be an expression of free will?” Levi Yitzhak resolves the problem of free will when he articulates two points of view that G-d embraces to underline and emphasize G-d’s free will and human free will in this week’s Torah portion, Parshat Bo. Our text this week focuses on the plagues, particularly the plague of the death of the first-born, and how these miracles did not move the heart of Pharaoh. “So miracles are not wondrous at all since G-d created everything, it is within the strength of G-d to do with them as He will.” In Parshat Bo, Levi Yitzhak offers an interpretation of the Scripture to teach that there are two ways from which we might come to our devotion to G-d. The text states, “And Moses said, ‘thus says the Lord, around midnight, I will go out into the midst of the Egyptians ….’” (Exodus 11:4) Levi Yitzhak comments, “Venireh ki yesh shenei bechinot … There are two perspectives from which we understand our devotion to the Creator. One comes from our seeing miracles and happenings where G-d changes the workings of nature constantly. When we see this power, we understand that G-d rules over all and all of G-d’s creatures, and we have an obligation to serve Him in great awe. “The second way is acceptance of what is true, “that G-d created everything by word of His mouth. Therefore G-d has the power to change everything as well. From this point of view, there is no significance to miracles, since it is no wonder that G-d can change nature at will. We understand clearly that the blessed Creator created all being and that ‘whatever YHVH desires He does in heaven and on earth.’ (Psalm 135:6) And with all that was created from them in every moment … and so miracles are not wondrous at all since G-d created everything, it is within the strength of G-d to do with them as He will.” This thinking is very much in line with the great medieval Islamic thinker Al-Ghazali, who teaches that G-d renews creation day and night, which is consistent with the liturgy in our traditional prayer book. G-d is not bound by determinism or beshertism. But He is moved by His own desire to recreate, working together with us. We are co-creators with G-d, and this wonderful commentary to our parsha this week by Levi Yitzhak greatly inspired my class, who teaches whatever it is that G-d intends in any given time is what happens in our world right now. Though our world, as Rabbi Abraham Heschel taught, is full of wonders, from moment to moment. Every instant teaches us and shows us the unfolding of G-d’s love for us, as He constantly and consistently blesses us with free will. Levi Yitzhak of Berditchev was truly an illuy. Rabbi Douglas Goldhamer is senior rabbi of Congregation Bene Shalom (Reform) in Skokie and president of Hebrew Seminary, Skokie. 4 Jan. 23 4:34 Jan. 30 4:42 Estate Conser vation Strategies, Financial Planning, Life Insurance Disability Income Insurance, Health Insurance Long-Term Care Insurance, Auto & Home Insurance Dr. Irving Birnbaum CFP, CLU, ChFC, RHU, LUTCF, CLTC, CASL Senior Financial Services Executive/Financial Planner Cell: 773-569-5186 [email protected] Visit our website: www.chicagometlife.com MetLife 6200 North Hiawatha, Suite 200 • Chicago, IL 60646 Office: 773-725-4167 • Fax: 773-725-4168 Some health insurance products offered by unaffiliated insurers through the Enterprise General Agency Inc (EGA)., Somerset, NJ 08873-4175. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (MLIC), New York, NY 10166. 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JEWISH FEDERATION ACADEMIC SCHOLARSHIPS Awarded to Jewish college and postgraduate students with financial need for study in: - Medicine - The Rabbinate - Education - Social Service - Law - Jewish Studies - Physical/Natural Sciences - Health Care - Jewish Communal Service - Fine/Performing Arts APPLICATION DEADLINE IS FEBRUARY 1, 2015 For eligibility information and application forms go to JVSChicago.org. For questions call the JVS Scholarship Administrator at 312.673.3444 or email: [email protected]. JVS Chicago is a partner in serving our community, supported by the Jewish United Fund/Jewish Federation. www. chicagojewishnews .com The Jewish News place in cyberspace 6 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 CELEBRATIONS Dear Minna Rae, With the recent season of holidays, I received several gifts that were terrific, but a few that duplicate what I have. They are items in perfect, new condition, but things I just already have or really can’t use. Is there a way I can pass them on? I know charitable places are OK, but some things I feel other people can use. Overloaded Dear Overloaded, What you want to do is “regift” some things you received. This can be done, but must be done VERY carefully. Be certain the item is in perfect condition. Double check that there is nothing attached in any way to indicate it was given to you – a signature, card, price, label, etc. Pick someone to pass it to that has ABSOLUTELY no connection or location in the vicin- Use the Band for ALL your music... In tandem with a DJ... Or for a Big Hora SPLASH! CONCERTS WEDDINGS BAR/BAT MITZVAHS CONTESTS & GAMES CONTEMPORARY ROCK BIG BAND STANDARDS DANCE-LEADING MAXWELL STREET KLEZMER BAND (847) 675-4800 [email protected] www.klezmerband.com Bar/Bat Mitzvahs • Special Occasions Wedding Receptions • Bridal Showers Corporate Events • Any Size Group bring me up to date. Maybe a mother-in-law ity of the person who gifted you. Be sure to wrap it beautifully in new and different gift wrap. Good luck. Dear Minna Rae, I am trying to start the new year by organizing my closets. One thing I am overloaded with is photographs. I don’t want to throw them away. Some are in albums, but I got away from doing that and am loaded with many since then. HELP! Pic’d-Over Minna Rae Friedman Dear Pic’d-Over, I know what you mean. I have some of that problem, also. One thing I did was, as each grandchild reached high school graduation, I gathered all the pics of them I had since their birth and made a booklet for them. I cut and collaged their pictures on notebook paper, even including some of the notes that they had sent, and made a construction paper cover and back. I just had it copied at Office Max with copies for them, their siblings, parents, grandparents and a few extra for friends or close relatives. Another person I spoke to said she had a box for each child and grandchild and kept their photos that way and can give them to them. A friend said she made photos each year into calendars for that year and sent them to family and friends. One even photographed her new baby V each month and used those for the next year’s calendar that she sent to the family. One problem to avoid, always date and list the subject’s name on the back of each photo. Don’t keep your photos in your camera or phone. Print them out and pass them on or organize to enjoy. Dear Minna Rae, My son seems to be getting serious with his girlfriend, which means a wedding may be in the future for our family. This is new to me and has not occurred in my close family since I have been a mother. Is it still traditional for the bride’s family to host the wedding and for the groom’s family to provide the rehearsal dinner? I want to hold up our end, but not encroach on anything the girl’s family might feel is their prerogative. Maybe you could E ILLAG GNS I HAIR DES 4642 W. 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But this is one area that changes all the time. When the time comes, some things will become apparent. You will find that nowadays many young couples are much older than when the marriage age was in the low twenties. Couples today may be older and in that case have been working a while and want to use their own ideas and plans and pay for their weddings themselves. Check with the couple how they want to work this out. Some want to include both sets of parents to help with their plans and costs while some adhere to the old-fashioned expectations. It’s all up for grabs how these events are handled these days. Dear Minna Rae, My daughter and her husband just recently celebrated a special anniversary and I can’t believe what she has told me about some of the presents she received. I think she hit every problem possible in gift-giving situations. A few have presented queries we hope you can help them address. Something very ugly arrived personally. It can’t be returned, it’s not from a store and they can’t bear to keep it. Another arrived broken and the packaging doesn’t give an insurance clue. A personal painting arrived that is from someone who visits, but they really don’t want to display it. Not to their taste. We’ll just ask about these items. Over-gifted Dear Over-gifted, About the “ugly” – have them thank the giver for their thoughtfulness and donate it to a suitable cause. They can at least get a tax write-off. If something is broken, thank the giver and ask if it was insured. If they tell your daughter no, she can tell them thanks anyway and she will take care of its repair (whether she does or not.) If the artist friend ever asks about the absence of the display of their gift, the couple can answer that they appreciate it, but haven’t decided yet where they want to hang it. Hopefully, the giver won’t ask again, but they can always say they are still working on it. Minna Rae Friedman was a wedding and event coordinator for over 20 years. Questions can be submitted to [email protected] or to Chicago Jewish News 5301 W. Dempster St., Skokie, IL 60077. 7 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 Mazel Tov! · Located on Chicago’s Beautiful North Shore · Accommodation for up 1000 guests · 245 Hotel Guest Rooms · Chicago’s famous Bar Louie onsite · Professional Event Planners · Complimentary Parking & Valet Options · On-site Catering · Ask about our Ethnic catering options · Private Bridal Rooms · Bar/Bat Mitzvahs 5300 W. Touhy Ave, Skokie, IL 60077 | P: 847-679-8900 | [email protected] | www.skokieconference.com 8 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 READY FOR 2016 Jeremy Wynes is heading up the new Chicago office of the Republican Jewish Coalition and hoping to get Jews here to vote for the GOP By Pauline Dubkin Yearwood Managing Editor Has the Republican Party made inroads of support among traditionally Democratic Jewish voters? Jeremy Wynes, for one, thinks so. It’s one reason the Republican Jewish Coalition, a national organization, decided to open a Chicago office, with Wynes as the Midwest regional director. “The organization has been on an upward trajectory in the last few years, growing in size and inclusiveness,” Wynes said during a recent telephone interview. “There was finally a recognition that by not having an office between New York and Florida and Los Angeles, we weren’t getting the kind of penetration we needed.” In addition to its national office in Washington, D.C. and the newly opened Chicago office, the RJC has regional offices in California, Florida, New York and Pennsylvania. For now, the Chicago office consists solely of Wynes, but he has big plans, especially with a presidential election coming up in less than two years. “We were in some ways giving short shrift to some of these important states (in the Midwest), presidential battleground states,” he says. “But they didn’t want to (open a Midwest office) if they didn’t have the right person in place. Everything kind of came together in the runup to the last election cycle, and they decided now was the time to make a move as we look toward 2016.” Wynes, national RJC leaders decided, was that person. He comes to the position with political experience acquired in his last job, where for seven years he served as the Midwest political director for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). A Midwest native, Wynes was born and raised in the QuadCities area of western Illinois. He graduated from Illinois State University and received a law degree from DePaul University. Married with two children, he worked as an attorney in private practice before joining AIPAC. In his new duties, he’ll be Chicago based but will cover nine states, Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, Missouri, Kansas, Indiana, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa. Wynes is quick to note that the RJC isn’t an unknown factor to Chicago-area Republicans. A volunteer chapter has been active for many years under the leadership of a tireless volunteer, Dr. Michael Menis. “The groundwork was laid over many years” by Menis, Wynes says. As for Wynes, he wasn’t always a Republican. “I grew up in a Democratic home, and I can’t really point to one ‘aha’ moment when I became a Republican,” he says. “But to me, national security has always been a big issue ever since I really paid close attention to politics and public policy, and sometime in the last decade, I started to take a more open look at what was happening in this country.” After Sept. 11 and the policy debates that followed, “I eventually realized the Democratic Party was abandoning its moderate voters and leaders for the sake of so-called ‘progressive’ leadership,” he says. “Then once I crossed that bridge, I realized the Republican Party had more to say to me on more domestic matters as well.” He also felt the Republican Party did a better job of “standing up for a safe and secure Israel.” oday Wynes is feeling optimistic: Illinois has a Republican governor and the GOP has taken over Congress. “I’ll be covering nine or 10 states from Ohio and Kansas across the upper Midwest, but (Illinois) is a big focus, the largest Jewish community in the Midwest by far,” he says of the impact on his job of new Illinois governor, Republican Bruce Rauner. “He can hopefully steer our state in a new direction. He did well with Jewish voters and will give them more comfort with the Republican brand with his stewardship.” He admits that there are no statistics to prove his assertion (most polls don’t ask respondents about religion) but says, “My hunch is that he did well with T Jewish voters. Look at the areas of the state where our community lives – he did better than Republican candidates have in the past,” including, Wynes says, the Chicago suburbs and the heavily Jewish 10th District, where the RJC was involved in campaigning for Rep. Robert Dold (R.-Ill.), the former congressman who unseated former Rep. Brad Schneider. Schneider had beat Dold two years before. “Gov. Rauner can hopefully steer our state in a new direction,” Wynes says. “That can only be beneficial to the Republican Party and the Jewish community. I’m hopeful he will do a good job and turn things around. It’s emblematic of why I wanted to make the shift (to the RJC), what’s happening in the Midwest, the failure of what folks have called the blue state model of governance. Illinois is exhibit A in that failure. “In two years, we hope to give him some Republican state legislators,” he adds. Turning to national politics, Wynes says he believes the fact that Republicans now control Congress will “make a significant difference (to Jewish voters). We will see that very soon,” he says. “Mitch McConnell being majority leader changes everything.” He is speaking specifically about the so-called Kirk-Menendez bill that would impose deadline-triggered sanctions on Iran if that country doesn’t agree to a deal over its nuclear program. “The bill had 69 co-sponsors last year and had bipartisan support but was not allowed to come for a vote because (former Democratic Senate leader) Harry Reid and the Democratic Senate killed it out of deference to the president,” who said he would veto the legislation, Wynes says. “The fact that (Reid) is no longer majority leader means he can’t completely quash a bill like that, and that is a very direct result of the Republicans taking over the Senate,” Wynes says. “The administration is trying to conduct negotiations with Iran to get a deal, and supporters of the bill believe this would give the negotiations additional leverage. The sword of Damocles will hang over the negotiations and if the Iranians don’t come to Jeremy Wynes (photo by Joe Kus). a final deal, sanctions would kick in immediately.” In addition, Wynes says, “It’s going to be easier to move pro-Israel legislation out of Congress when Republicans are in control.” ynes, like other leaders of the RJC, believes that, in some quarters of the Jewish community, support for the Republican Party is growing. Recent Gallup polling backs up that assertion modestly. According to a recent Jewish Telegraphic Agency story, “twice as many Jewish-Americans identify as Democrats over Republicans, but the GOP has made strides …” According to the story, the polling showed 61 percent Jewish support for Democrats and 29 percent for Republicans, gains for the GOP over 2008, when Barack Obama was elected to his first term as W president and 71 percent of Jewish voters identified as Democratic, 22 percent Republican. “Jewish support for the Republican Party has climbed, and there has been a decline on the other side,” Wynes says. “There is a greater disparity than among Americans generally.” He says exit polls taken after the recent elections show that Republican candidates received 34 percent of the Jewish vote, a 10 percent increase over the last midterm election. “Basically the Republicans have joined market share in the Jewish community in seven of the last eight election cycles,” he says. “What is driving it? A failure of leadership of the current president. When the leadership is unpopular you see these kinds of shifts.” Jews have historically been Democrats “for a lot of reasons,” Wynes says. “Jewish voters care 9 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 about a lot of the same things Americans generally care about. We pay taxes too.” But he believes that today, “a number of factors have made it ripe for Jewish support for the Republican Party.” He lists support for Israel at the top of the list, which he sees as being stronger among Republicans. “In 2012, the Democrats had to reinsert a plank in their platform saying that Jerusalem was the capital of Israel,” he says. “The Democratic Party has been taken over by its progressive wing, and there is more openness in the Jewish community to take a fair look at our side. Israel is the one big consensus issue that has caused a lot of people to take a look at the party generally speaking.” Polling confirms the common wisdom that highly religious Jews tend to be more Republican than less religious ones. Wynes says he believes that’s true across the board among religious voters, not just Jewish ones. “If you break down where voters live, how religious they are, their educational level, how much they earn, if you remove the Jewish variable, I think Jewish voters tend to look like where they live,” he says. “Religious voters tend to be more Republican. That’s consistent across the board, whether Jewish or not. The Orthodox community tends to prioritize Israel to a great extent, and that’s a piece of it as well.” When it comes to the 2016 elections, though, Wynes declines to prognosticate as to who will be the GOP standard-bearer, even declining to speculate on whether former candidate Mitt Romney will run again, as he has hinted recently. “It’s too early,” Wynes says. “Prognosticating at this early stage of the game is a recipe for disaster. Our organization has a relationship with many of the candidates and we’re not endorsing anybody in the primary. The bench is deep as we look to 2016. Even in the Midwest, a number of governors are rumored to be (possible) candidates.” Most if not all of them, he says, “can make a very good case for why they should be the Republican standard- bearer, and most of these candidates are talking about, and share our concerns about some of the failures within the Obama administration in terms of national security and Israel. They will speak to Jewish voters on that level.” Many of these potential candidates, he believes, stand a good chance against the presumptive Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton. “Absolutely they do,” he says. “If she runs as Obama’s third term, the GOP has a very good chance. Her name identity is through the roof but I don’t see a Hillary Clinton candidacy as an inevitable victory. Whoever emerges is going to have a great chance running against Hillary Clinton.” The former first lady and secretary of state “is going to have to stake out specific positions,” he says. “She didn’t run a very good campaign in 2008. She didn’t have a lot of fresh things to say. I don’t see what is going to be so different eight years later. She has not improved substantially as a candidate. Her record as secretary of state is open to a lot of criticism in our community. I don’t see her as a particularly strong candidate past her name identification. There is no inevitability there.” The 2016 elections loom large in Wynes’ and the RJC’s plans for the future. “We’re the de facto Jewish outreach arm of the national Republican Party,” Wynes says. “In the 2012 elections, a lot of things went wrong on our side, but the RJC was something that went right. There was increased market share for the Republicans within the Jewish community.” The national Republican Party, he says, is aware of, and approves of, the RJC. “Because of the RJC, the impact and growth in the Jewish community is covered,” he says. “There is a lot of talk of the Republicans doing better with Latinos, with women. The national party is focusing on that. They don’t really have to worry about our community. We do the outreach for the national Republican Party, turning out more Republican Jewish voters. That’s money the national party doesn’t have to spend. We’ve helped the party change the competitive dynamic within the Jewish community.” Historically, he says, there was a sense that Republicans could write off the Jewish vote, “but that’s different now. The Democratic Party can no longer take the Jewish vote for granted.” That message plays into his task in the Midwest and what he’ll be doing at least until the 2016 elections, Wynes says. “My overall objective is to do that (be the voice of the Republican Party) in the Midwest,” he says. “Our organization wants to be at the table when the Republicans decide on their message. We want to be their representative within the Jewish community, to strengthen the Republican Party and represent the Republican position on these issues within the Jewish community.” The important issues, he says, include national security, Middle East affairs, Israel and the economy. “We want to be the organization representing the party,” he says. In the Midwest, that means “identification, recruiting, getting people involved at the local and national level. We want to leverage our collective advocacy efforts in building relationships with Republican elected officials, and in raising money, allowing Republican candidates to get their message out through our national PAC and our members. Elected officials know RJC members are involved in campaigns.” In a later email, Wynes expanded on and clarified what he sees as the role of the new RJC office, writing that “across the country, the RJC is the singular, representative voice of the Jewish community to the Republican Party at all levels, and at the same time the voice of the Republican Party within the Jewish community. My overall objective is two-fold: to strengthen the Republican Party through increased Jewish community participation in Republican politics, and to make sure that the Republican position on issues like national security, Middle East affairs, and the economy is represented in the Jewish community.” His formula, he wrote, will first include “identifying and recruiting Jewish Republicans to get involved with the RJC at the local and national level so that we can leverage our collective advocacy efforts and educate policy-makers within the GOP.” For the second part of the plan, he hopes to “build relationships with Republican elected officials and candidates across the Midwest and in critical races across the country so that they value our community’s support and in turn help advance the issues and policies we care most about (among them a strong national security, support for our ally, Israel, and a limited government highlighting pro-growth economic policies). “Our members will be involved in political campaigns in a number of ways beyond the voting booth – including raising millions of dollars to help support election campaigns and through critical grassroots engagement efforts helping get-outthe-vote for Republican candidates.” “One reason I wanted to make the switch” from AIPAC to the RJC, Wynes says, “is that we are major players at the presidential level. We are building relationships with members of Congress.” The effort is especially important, he says, since the Midwest includes so many so-called battleground states. “We have a very focused, targeted battleground state effort in the election with Jewish voters,” he says. “Jewish voters who are advocates in battleground states are out there, and we want them to get their friends and neighbors to vote for the Republican Party. We play significantly at the presidential level.” In this effort, “we are going to speak openly about Israel. You hope for bipartisanship around issues you care aboutm but political pressure is often a way to get With a Republican as Illinois governor in Bruce Rauner, top photo, and with the Republicans in charge of Congress and Mitch McConnell as Senate majority leader, Jeremy Wynes believes Jewish voters are more likely to vote GOP in 2016. there too. We are going to hold the other side to account. If the president does things we think are detrimental to the U.S.-Israel relationship, we are going to hold him and Congress to account.” he focus is on elections because, he says, “elections have consequences. The bill on Iran can move now, and one of the most pro-Israel things to T happen was when the Republicans took control of the Senate.” He still has hopes for bipartisanship, though. At AIPAC, he says, “for seven years I worked in a bipartisan environment, building relationships on both sides of the aisle. I do believe in and hope we get back to that point where I can say support for Israel is the same on both sides of the aisle.” 10 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 Midwest Death Notices CONTINUED Sherry Lynn Bloom, age 70. Devoted daughter of the late Hyman and Suzanne. Dear sister of Robert (Christine) Bloom and the late Frederick (survived by Lois) Bloom and the late Marla Katzman. Fond aunt of Adrienne Cinnamon, Debra (Andy) Merges, Lori Bloom (John Vyzies), Steven Bloom, Michael Bloom and David Katzman and many great-nieces and nephews. Arrangements by Mitzvah Memorial Funerals. Ilene Cole, nee Sattenstein, beloved wife of the late Jerome Cole. Loving mother of Julie (Marvin) Crone and Jennifer Cole. Proud grand- mother of Sophie Crone. In lieu of flowers remembrances to Woman’s American ORT 3701 Commercial Avenue, Suite 13 North- brook, IL 60062 would be appreciated. Arrangements by Mitzvah Memorial Funerals. Jeffrey A. Eicoff, age 59, died Jan. 14. Devoted son of Helene and the late Alvin Eicoff; dear brother of the late Larry L. (Charmaine) Eicoff; cherished father of Vanessa (Angelo Maragkakis) and Joshua Eicoff; loving grandfather of Adrian Eicoff; devoted friend and cousin of David Huey; uncle of Leanne and Amber Eicoff. A Guardian of the American Technion Society. A kind and loving man, Jeffrey will be missed by his loving family and many friends. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Jeffrey’s memory to the Make-A-Wish Foundation of America. Arrangements by Lakeshore Jewish Funerals, (773) 6258621. Janice R. Gale, nee Rosenthal, age 83. Beloved wife of the late Rudolf “Rudy” Getreuer. Cherished mother of Andrea (Nathan) Gordon. Sister of the late Richard (survived by Enid) Rosenthal. Dear friend of many at Manor Care of Hinsdale. Contributions in Janice’s name to ALS or the charity of your choice would be appreciated. Arrangements by Mitzvah Memorial Funerals. Laura L. Weil, nee Nueske, beloved wife of Rick Weil. Loving mother of Chris (Nimi Patel-Weil) Weil, Jorie (Mike) McCombe, Zack Weil, and Gabby Weil. Cherished grandmother of Bamber Weil and James McCombe. Fond sister of Bobby Nueske. Devoted daughter of the late Robert and Barbara Nueske. In lieu of flowers remem- brances to the Animal Rescue charity of your choice would be appreciated. Arrangements by Mitzvah Memorial Funerals. Still Directing! Mitzvah Memorial Funerals 630-MITZVAH (630-648-9824) Names you have trusted for decades... Still here to serve you when needed Lloyd Mandel I.Ian “Izzy” Dick Seymour Mandel In December of 2014 Izzy and Seymour celebrated their 91st and 80th birthdays respectively. This make them the two oldest practicing and most experienced licensed Jewish funeral directors in the state of Illinois. Izzy and Seymour serve the families that call them through Mitzvah Memorial Funerals. Combined with Lloyd Mandel, Bill Goodman and Larry Mandel, Mitzvah Memorial Funeral has the most experienced staff of Jewish funeral directors in Chicago with over 200 years of combined experience. Mitzvah Memorial Funerals also provides the lowest price! In most cases we save families $2000-$5000 versus what Chicago Jewish funeral homes with chapels charge for the same or similar services and casket. If your Synagogue has a discounted funeral plan that we are not currently a provider of you can still choose us. We guarantee to be at least 25% less!* Founder, 4th generation Jewish Funeral Director, also licensed in Florida (no longer with Levayah Funerals) Seymour Mandel 3rd generation Jewish Funeral Director, Past President of the Jewish Funeral Directors of America (J.F.D.A.) (Formerly with Piser) 3 everybody.” Referring to Jews: “If they are your enemy, then you must be somebody.” #6 University of Illinois professor – spreading hate in academia Steven Salaita, an Arab American professor was hired by the University of Illinois at Champaign. Salaita has blamed Jews for anti-Semitism and has called for the destruction of Israel as well as the “de-colonization of America.” Originally hired to teach American Indian Studies, the school cancelled his contract after reading Salaita’s rants like these he made on social media. “At this point if Netanyahu appeared with a necklace made from the teeth of Palestinian children, would anybody be surprised?” About American Jewish Youth, Salaita declared, “Every little Jewish boy and girl can grow up to be the leader of a murderous colonial regime.” #7 Annual American Muslims for Palestine conference: “State of Israel… Is an Illegitimate Creation Born from Colonialism and Racism The seventh annual American Muslims for Palestine (AMP) conference was held in Chicago over Thanksgiving weekend. The conference is host to many antiIsrael activists and is a leader in providing anti-Zionist training and education to the Muslim community. At this year’s conference, Taher Herzallah, AMP’s national Campus Coordinator claimed, “The State of Israel is a lie… Israelis have to be bombed, they are a threat to the legitimacy of Palestine, and it is wrong to maintain the State of Israel. It is an illegitimate creation born from colonialism and racism.” #8 Chicagoland antiMideast peace campaigns During a student involvement fair at Chicago’s Loyola University, the Students for Jus- William Goodman Funeral Director, Homesteaders Insurance Agent (no longer with Goodman Family Funerals) Ian “Izzy” Dick Oldest licensed Jewish Funeral Director in the State of Illinois Lawrence “Larry” Mandel If you have already made pre-arrangements elsewhere you can switch to us. In most cases we will refund your family thousands of dollars. 4th generation Jewish Funeral Director, Homesteaders Insurance Agent (Formerly with Piser) 847-778-6736 We also offer pre-arrangements and fund through Homesteaders Life. Find out why Mitzvah Memorial Funerals was entrusted to direct more than 800 funerals since opening. www.comparemitzvah.com *Guarantee is on base price of funeral plan including services, casket and miscellaneous items. Not included in this are the cemetery charges, vault and cash advance items. F RO M PAG E tice in Palestine (SJP) protested a booth set up by the Jewish student organization Hillel advertising Birthright trips to Israel. SJP was suspended after violating six campus community standards including interfering with the rights of others to demonstrate, harassing other student organizations, and threatening university members. At the conclusion of the 2014 spring semester at DePaul University, there was an increase in anti-Israel sentiment with the launch of the campaign “DePaul Divest,” spearheaded by SJP. The campaign created an atmosphere of intimidation and hate towards students who identify with Israel. The campaign to delegitimize the Jewish State via referendum eventually passed with 54% of votes. #9 Ohio University student creates ‘blood bucket challenge’ In the wake of the international popularity of the ALS ‘Ice Bucket Challenge’ in the summer of 2014, Megan Marzec, the Student Body President of Ohio University, created a video when she dumped a bucket of simulated blood over her head in protest of the Hamas war in Gaza. The video calls for the divestment of the university from relations with Israel and an end to the ‘Israeli Occupation of Palestine.’ She is shown in the video wearing a shirt that reads “Ohio U Divest From Israel” and says, “This bucket of blood symbolizes the thousands of displaced and murdered Palestinians, atrocities which OU is directly complacent in through cultural and economic support of the Israeli state.” #10 National Alliance leader runs for U.S. Senate in northern Kentucky A racist, anti-Semitic candidate for U.S. Senate placed signs around northern Kentucky declaring, “With Jews We Lose.” Robert Ransdell, a write-in candidate for the U.S. Senate, has a long history of involvement with anti-Semitic and racist rhetoric in the political arena and holds an open hatred of gays, African Americans, immigrants, in addition to Jewish people. 500 Lake Cook Road, Suite 350, Deerfield, IL • 8850 Skokie Blvd., Skokie, IL 630-MITZVAH (648-9824) • www.mitzvahfunerals.com Frazier Glenn Cross Jr., a former KKK Grand Dragon, killed three people outside the Jewish community center in suburban Kansas City, Kansas, just before Passover. 11 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 Letters War and peace Judging by the epithets – delusional, unrealistic, loony, twisting things, wacko, insane – Joseph Aaron used in his column of Jan. 9, he was addressing people like me. Throughout my life – first dedicated to the destruction of the Soviet totalitarian state and after its demise, to the service of the Jewish people – more people called me such names than I can remember. Aaron says that “rightwingers” like me should “get on the right side of history” – funny expression he borrowed from the Marxist lexicon – and accept the idea of Israel withdrawing to 1967 borders with Jerusalem becoming a capital of the so-called Palestinian state. The situation, Aaron says, will be forced on us whether we like it or not. He says that because there are just too many Arabs between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean. You see, Joseph, unlike you, I believe that our world is ultimately governed by G-d and just like it was with the Soviet Union, the Arabs, who are currently occupying and desecrating the holy land of Israel, will one day be gone as well. Aaron tells us that we should accept the creation of the 23rd Arab state. Why? So it joins Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic State, Iran, and others in their glorious pursuit of our destruction? Unlike the so-called rightwingers like me, it is Aaron and people like him who wallow constantly in self-delusion. People like Aaron like to promise acceptance of Jews and peace, but are good only on delivery of war. Just two examples: “The minute we leave South Lebanon we will have to erase the word Hezbollah from our vocabulary, because the whole idea of the State of Israel versus Hezbollah was sheer folly from the outset. It will most certainly no longer be relevant when Israel returns to its internationally recognized northern border.” – Amos Oz, “Try a Little Tenderness,” Haaretz, March 17, 2000. “The nightmare stories of the Likud are well known. After all, they promised Katyusha rockets from Gaza as well. For a year, Gaza has been largely under the rule of the Palestinian Authority. There has not been a single Katyusha rocket. Nor will there be any Katyushas.” – Yitzhak Rabin, radio interview, July 24, 1995. Alexander Gendler Skokie words,” I totally agree that Judaism has nothing to fear from other religions. I think Judaism is closer to G-d and more complete than any other religion, so I believe we can learn from them, and even adopt some of their compatible ideas, without losing anything from our essence or core. Doing so would just make us stronger and more compelling and would help us keep some of our “wandering Jews” who go to other religions because they think Judaism is too stagnant or stale or old-fashioned. However, I disagree with Aaron about his subsequent disparaging of the decision of the United Synagogue Youth to allow board members to date non-Jews, which I find inconsistent with the earlier part of his column. While intermarriage among Conservatives is 40 percent, among non-Orthodox Jews in general it is 80 percent. To paraphrase a recent quote by a prominent rabbi (the new head of the Reform movement I think), the intermarriage horse is long out of the barn. Rather, we should focus on making Judaism so attractive, that our intermarried Jews will want to stay Jewish and raise their kids Jewish, and that their non-Jewish spouse will be more likely to join us as well. This can be partly achieved by following my three-step program for tripling the number of Jews in the years to come: accepting the children of Jewish men as Jewish, making conversion faster and easier, and having rabbis officiate at wedding of in- termarrieds. Martin Vesole Author, “The Book of Emet and Sleeping Truth” Jewish enemy France’s recent violence reminds us that anti-Semitism has been rife throughout history. Myriad excuses have been proffered. Regardless, if the Jews leave France, France loses and will never regain its former status. There has never been a country in which Jews have lived and worked peacefully together with others, and have left for any reason, where that country did not immediately go into decline, never again regaining its former status. Furthermore, the Jews are the only group in the world that can claim the following: If one visits or stays in a Jewish neighborhood, one will never hear, “You’re in a Jewish neighborhood. Be careful when you go out tonight; watch your women, your wallet, your car.” People of conscience are reminded that this is a crucial time for Jews to act cohesively to defeat a common enemy, antiSemitism. Such committed, unified action is paramount if Judaism as we have known it is to survive, thrive, and perhaps even to prevail. Leon H. Hoffman, Ph.D. Clinical psychologist Chicago Park Plaza is expanding and renovating to accommodate the needs of our growing number of residents: New synagogue, multi-use room, new spa-like bathrooms, state-of-the-art physical therapy facility, and a stunning new lobby! If you are looking for an active, vibrant retirement community call Yehuda at 773.465.6700. Park Plaza. Best Independent Living for Active Seniors! Best value start ing a t $1 ,750 Nothing to fear Regarding Joseph Aaron’s column “The pope’s Jewish 6840 N. Sacramento Avenue, Chicago Y www.park-plaza.org Y 773.465.6700 12 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 Community Calendar Saturday January 24 Beth Hillel Congregation Bnai Emunah holds Camp Shabbat service led by teens celebrating Jewish campers, followed by campthemed Kiddush. Wear your camp t-shirt. 9:30 a.m., 3220 Big Tree Lane, Wilmette. (847) 256-1213. Beth Hillel Congregation Bnai Emunah presents Film Festival Evening featuring television episode hosted by Bill Kurtis on notorious Jewish gangsters in America followed by discussion. 7:30 p.m., 3220 Big Tree Lane, Wilmette. $10. (847) 256-1213. Sunday January 25 Beth Hillel Congregation Bnai Emunah Sisterhood hosts Rummage and Book Sale. 9 a.m.-1 p.m., also 911 a.m. Monday, Jan. 26. 3220 Big Tree Lane, Wilmette. (847) 256-1213. Jewish Child and Family Services holds program on “Helping our Girls Feel SPOTLIGHT SPOTLIGHT The Sidney & Frances Avner Torah Learning Center of Northbrook and Keshet present a panel discussion with local experts and Q&A on “Special Needs in the Jewish Community: Helping Each Other Grow and Learn” followed by a Resource Fair for families with all types of special needs. 1 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 8, Northbrook Community Synagogue, 2548 Jasper Court, Northbrook. Reservations suggested, tlcnb.com or (847) 272-7255. Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership shows new documentary film, “Theodore Bikel: In the Shoes of Sholom Aleichem” followed by discussion with music critic Andrew Patner. 2 p.m., Sunday, February 8. 610 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago. Tickets are $18, $10 Spertus members, $8 students. Spertus.edu or (312) 322-1773. Good about Being Female.” Grades 3-5, 9:15-10 a.m. Grades 6-8, 10:15-11 a.m. Temple Beth Israel, 3601 Dempster, Skokie. $15, free for TBI members. [email protected] or (847) 745-5411. JCC Chicago’s Theater presents “King Artie and the Knights of the Rad Table.” Noon and 2:30 p.m., also 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 29 and noon and 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 1. Mayer Kaplan JCC, 5050 Church, Skokie. $16 adults, $11 ages 7-12, $6 ages 6 and under. gojcc.org/ theater or (847) 763-3514. Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center hosts moderated discussion with Holocaust survivors of Auschwitz. 1:30-3 p.m., 9603 Woods Drive, Skokie. CJN Classified CEMETERY LOTS CHOICE GRAVES – PRIVATE SALE Shalom Hebron - 3 Graves Best & Final Offer $3200 each Inclusive of deed & endowments Nebo – 4 Graves, $2600 each Carmel – 2 Graves. $2500 each Memorial Park Gan M’Nucha, 1 Grave $4000.00 Maple – 3 Graves $3000 each Larry – 847-778-6736 [email protected] WESTLAWN CEMETERY 2 LOTS FOR SALE Section: Evergreen Block 11, Lot 9, Graves 1 and 9 Head to Toe $7,900.00, Transfer Cost Included Contact Bari [email protected] SHALOM MEMORIAL PARK 2 Family Plots Section III Ramah Space 3 & 4 Both Plots for $6,525.00 Please call Diane (480) 510-4807 For only $40, you can place your classified ad in this space! To take advantage of CJN Classified page call 847-966-0606. SERVICES OFFERED Richard’s Body Shop & Mechanical now has 5 convenient locations. We guarantee our prices and our work. Certified to work on your car. Free pickup, delivery. Roadside and towing service. Free estimates and diagnostic with mention of this ad. My promise to you is to fix your car the right way while making your repairs affordable! Call me directly at 773-569-6438 • David Free with museum admission. Reservations required, [email protected]. Temple Beth Israel presents Pasta Dinner and Dessert Auction, fund-raiser for TBI Youth Israel Scholarship Fund. 5 p.m., 3601 W. Dempster, Skokie. $8, $25 household. tbiskokie.org or (847) 675-0951. Monday January 26 Fiedler Hillel at Northwestern University presents Israeli journalist and author Ari Shavit speaking on “21st Century Zion: America, Israel and the Challenges of a New Era.” 7:30 p.m., Technological Institute, Ryan Family Auditorium, 2145 Sheridan Road, Evanston. RSVP [email protected] or (847) 491-5717. Tuesday January 27 The Renfrew Center, the nation’s first eating disorder facility and largest treatment network, is hosting an open house at 5 Revere Drive, Suite 100, Northbrook, from 3–7 p.m. Guests can meet Renfrew’s founder and president Sam Menaged, as well as the staff of The Renfrew Center of Chicago. Tours of the new site will be provided, along with information on Renfrew’s programs. Ketura Hadassah holds general meeting featuring author and design consultant Sallie Posniak. 12:30 p.m., Mayer Kaplan JCC, 5050 Church, Skokie. $3. [email protected] or (847) 675-5873. Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership shows 1953 television episode of “This Is Your Life” featuring Holocaust survivor Hanna Bloch Kohner. 7 p.m., 610 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago. $18, $10 Spertus members, $8 students. spertus.edu or (312) 322-1773. Wednesday January 28 North Shore Congregation Israel and Aitz Hayim Center for Jewish Living present “Election Review” by Alan Solow, Democratic advocate and former chairman of Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations, and Fred Zeidman, former chairman of U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and leader of Republican Jewish Coalition. 7 p.m., 1185 Sheridan Road, Glencoe. (847) 835-0724. Theodore Bikel Lubavitch Chabad of Skokie hosts Friday Night Dinner with Rabbi Shmuel Klatzkin discussing his spiritual journey from Reform Seminary to Chabad Emissary, after services. 4:50 p.m., 4059 Dempster, Skokie. $24 adult, $14 child. skokiechabad.org or (847) 677-1770. North Suburban Synagogue Beth El presents Musical Shabbat Celebration followed by Italian dinner and featuring singing group Friends of Zamir. 6:15 p.m., 1175 N. Sheridan Road, Highland Park. $28 adults, $17 ages 4-12. Reservations, [email protected] or (847) 432-8900 Ext. 222. Saturday January 31 Thursday January 29 Belmont Village presents “The Medicare Maze: Navigating the Twists and Turns of the Medicare System” featuring speakers Jim Sullivan, president of MedicareAware and Mary Kay Furiasse, A/Z Health, Trust & Elder Law, LLC. Noon, 1035 Madison Street, Oak Park. RSVP (708) 848-7200. Friday January 30 Temple Judea Mizpah hosts Shabbat service featuring the Kol Simcha Choir followed by potluck dinner. 6 p.m. at 8610 Niles Center Road, Skokie. (847) 6761566. Congregation Beth Judea holds Havdalah Game Night for families with pizza, snacks, ice cream following service. 5:45 p.m., Route 83 and Hilltop Road, Long Grove. $5. RSVP [email protected] or (847) 634-0777. Sunday February 1 Jewish Child and Family Services holds program, “Helping our Girls Feel Good about Being Female” for grades 3-8. Temple Sholom of Chicago, 3480 N. Lake Shore Drive, Chicago. Time and more information, [email protected] or (847) 745-5420. SPOTLIGHT The Abington of Glenview kicks off its yearlong 25th anniversary celebration with an Open House, including hors d’oeuvres and drinks, from 2-4 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 11, 3901 Glenview Road, Glenview. RSVP, (847) 729-0000 Ext. 120. 13 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 By Joseph Aaron CONTINUED F RO M PAG E Worried about their 14 One of the Jewish leaders at the meeting described Netanyahu’s call for French Jews to leave their country as “extremely smug” and “patronizing.” “Imagine if following a terror attack in Netanya, the French president would arrive in Israel and call on Jews to leave for France,” he said. Look, I actually think it would be great if all Jews lived in Israel. But the real question is why does Israel always have to scare people into making aliyah? And why basically are the only Jews in the world making aliyah these days those who feel themselves under threat in their own countries? As former Israeli president Shimon Peres so wisely put it in reacting to what Bibi did in France, immigration to Israel should be encouraged for positive reasons, not only as a response to persecution abroad. “I think Zionism is a movement of rebirth, not protest. Why should I have a negative reason? I have a positive reason,” said Peres. But Bibi doesn’t do positive, only negative. Which is why he shamelessly used the deaths of those four French Jews to tell French Jews they have no choice but to leave France now and move to Israel. Aliyah by coercion, aliyah driven by panic, aliyah based on fear. Bibi told French Jews to immigrate to Israel to avoid anti-Semitism and “live secure and peaceful lives.” As Alon Ben-Meir noted in the Huffington Post, “Netanyahu conveniently forgets that 80 times more Israelis were killed in Israel by suicide bombers and random acts of violence in the past 20 years than all Jews killed in Europe by terrorists in the same time period.” And as Jonathan Zausmer wrote in the Times of Israel, “My message to the Jews of France is this: Jerusalem is no safer than Paris… Do we wish to see you here in Israel as citizens of the Jewish state? Yes we do, as we wish to see an ingathering of Diaspora Jews from around the world. But know this: you need to do the math. The outrages of terror and war in the last two decades in Israel and the threat of Islamic fundamentalist violence are as present here as in Paris…So, if you are fleeing France under the threat of an Islamic tsunami, urged by the rhetoric of Netanyahu, save yourself the trouble. You are merely replacing one set of threats with another.” Their point is that fear is not the reason to make aliyah. Israel is the reason to make aliyah. Their point is that to approach people in their moment of trauma to scare them into moving to Israel is beyond shameful. But as shameful as that was, it is nothing compared to how Bibi’s government dealt with those four Jews killed in the kosher supermarket. For starters, Bibi, knowing it would be politically beneficial to him to bring those bodies to Israel where he could preside over their funeral, actually pressured the families of two of the victims to agree to have their loved ones buried in Israel. They did not want that, they wanted them laid to rest in France near their families. But Israel put heavy pressure on them to have the burial be in Israel. At the funeral, while the families delivered heartfelt eulogies for their loved ones, Bibi gave a political speech, denouncing Islamic extremism and urging the world to confront the violence. Now get ready for what happened next. After the funeral, the families of the four dead Jews were presented with a bill for 50,000 shekels, about $12,500, for each burial. That happened after this happened. As the families themselves reported, the Yemenite burial society on the Mount of Olives offered them plots in the ancient cemetery for $17,715 apiece. A member of the burial society denied the price was that high, saying that, “There was a price but not that; we gave them a fair offer.” Problem is that the plots were in a distant and unsafe portion of the cemetery. After more confusion involving not one, not two, but three other cemeteries, finally the grieving families were told that another burial society agreed to give them plots at Har Hamenuchot cemetery – for 50,000 shekels each, 40,000 for the plot and 10,000 for the burial. $12,500 for each family. Instead of being embarrassed, one burial society official was very proud of their behavior, noting “in the meantime we buried them without first getting the money; they deserve it, they were murdered because they are Jews.” Take that in for a moment. Four Jews massacred while shopping for food for Shabbat, just because they were Jews, and their families are first coerced into bringing the bodies to Israel, and then, after Israeli politicians use the funeral to make political speeches, the families are presented with a bill. May you be comforted among the mourners of Zion and Jerusalem. Now pay up. After a public outcry at the insensitivity of it all, the Religious Affairs Ministry announced it would pick up the tab for the families. But if this is how Jews behave at a time like this, it is every Jew in the world who pays the price. safety? We know that you want your loved ones to remain in their homes, but you might worry about their needs as they age. Homewatch CareGivers can help you manage your loved one’s care and ensure their safety. Mitch Abrams Managing Director ; Free home safety assessment and fall risk evaluation Call us to learn how we can help. ; Remote Care Technology: Personal Emergency Response services (847) 480-5700 ; Transportation to and from medical appointments, and report back to family www.TheHomeCareSpot.com The Chicago Jewish News gratefully acknowledges the generous support of RABBI MORRIS AND DELECIA ESFORMES 14 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 By Joseph Aaron Jewish tragedy www. chicagojewishnews .com The Jewish News place in cyberspace Sometimes, you really got to wonder about Jews. As you know, two days after the massacre at the Charlie Hebdo newspaper in Paris, where some Muslims thought it was their sacred religious duty to be so offended by cartoons of Mohammed that the appropriate response was to murder 12 people, another Muslim took over a kosher supermarket and proceeded to kill four Jews, the only reason being that they were Jews. Definitively proving that Islam is the most vile religion on the face of the earth. I know I started out this column intending to talk about Jews, and I do plan to do so since that’s kind of my thing, but I do need to take a minute to say that my fellow liberals need to stop making excuses for Islam, to end, in the rare wise words of George W. Bush, engaging in the “soft bigotry of low expectations.” No, not all of the world’s 1.4 billion Muslims are terrorists. But a too high percentage are. And a much bigger, unbelievably obscene percentage of Muslims either quietly endorse what the terrorists do, or just as bad, say nothing publicly to condemn it. I truly don’t understand how Muslims do not feel sickened when their fellow Muslims do things like they did in Paris, when at this moment, Saudi Arabia sentenced a blogger to 1,000 lashes and jailed a man for filming the public beheading of a woman. There are no excuses, no justifications, no explanations for what happened in that Paris kosher supermarket, no excuses for why we heard virtually none of the world’s 1.4 billion Muslims publicly condemn what happened in that Paris kosher supermarket. And yes, I still think making peace with the Palestinians makes sense and that a two-state solution is what is best for Israel, but we’ll leave that for another time. Now let me get to the Jews. So there were four Jews murdered in that Paris kosher supermarket. Something that all Jews all over the world should mourn, treat respectfully, with dignity. Which is precisely not what was done. From the minute they were killed, it was one truly nauseating thing after another, things that really make you wonder about Jews sometimes. For starters, we had the disgraceful behavior of Prime Minister Bibi who immediately tried to make political hay out of it, traveling to Paris and telling French Jews to flee their homes before it is too late. France is no insignificant Jewish community. There are more than 500,000 French Jews, more than 700 Jewish schools in France, synagogues and organizations and shops and a long and impressive history. And in comes Bibi basically telling French Jews to forget all that and move to Israel because their lives are in “existential danger.” Before I go on, I should note I know that I am treading on touchy territory here. Aliyah is one of those things it is politically incorrect not to be totally and strongly for. Any Jew who dares to say that not every Jew should make aliyah is asking for trouble. When Muslims see a cartoon of Mohammed, they are ready to cut your head off, literally. When a Jew hears that you dare say anything not totally in support of aliyah, they are ready to rip your head off, verbally. Especially all those ardent aliyah lovers living in the United States who self-servingly have decided they can “do more to help Israel” by staying here. But think all other Jews should make aliyah. They’ll be Zionists living in Skokie and Highland Park. Anyway, Bibi told French Jews they had to make aliyah. Which didn’t go over so great with some French Jews. “The Israeli government must stop this Pavlovian response every time there is an attack against Jews in Europe,” said Rabbi Menachem Margolin, the director of the European Jewish Association. “I regret that after every anti-Semitic attack in Europe, the Israeli government dispenses the same statements about the importance of aliyah rather than take all measures ... at its disposal in order to increase the safety of Jewish life in Europe. Every such Israeli campaign severely weakens and damages the Jewish communities that have the right to live securely wherever they are,” the rabbi said. Then there was the meeting with the heads of France’s Jewish organizations that Bibi held in which, according to the Times of Israel, he “likened the complacency of French Jewry to the state of Jews in Spain prior to the Spanish Inquisition of 1492…His meeting with the Jewish leaders was described by participants as “harsh” and “deeply insulting.” SEE BY JOSEPH AARON ON PAG E 1 3 15 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 Arts & Entertainment Movie ‘Selma’ and its missing rabbi By Susannah Heschel JTA The 50th anniversary of the 1965 march at Selma is being commemorated this year with the release of the film “Selma.” The film has triggered controversy for its portrayal of President Lyndon Johnson as a reluctant ally of the civil rights movement. That debate is over a contentious sin of commission. But critics could also fault the film for a glaring sin of omission – the absence of identifiable Jews and Jewish clergy, particularly my father, Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel. Regrettably, the film represents the march as many see it today, only as an act of political protest. But for my father and for many participants, the march was both an act of political protest and a profoundly religious moment: an extraordinary gathering of nuns, priests, rabbis, black and white, a range of political views, from all over the United States. Perhaps more an act of celebration of the success of the civil rights movement than of political protest, Selma affirmed that the movement had won the conscience of America. President Lyndon Johnson had just declared, “We Shall Overcome,” and congressional passage of the Voting Rights Act would come quickly. Thanks to the religious beliefs and political convictions of the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., coalitions had been built, religious differences overcome and visions articulated that meshed religious and political goals. My father felt that the prophetic tradition of Judaism had come alive at Selma. He said that King told him it was the greatest day in his life, and my father said that he was reminded at Selma of walking with Hasidic rebbes in Europe. Such was the spiritual atmosphere of the day. When he returned, he famously said, “For many of us the march from Selma to Montgomery was about protest and prayer. Legs are not lips and walking is not kneeling. And yet our legs uttered songs. Even without words, our march was worship. I felt my legs were praying.” Imagine: My father arrived in 1940 as a refugee from Nazi Europe, where all too many Christian theologians were declaring Jesus an Aryan, not a Jew, and throwing the Old Testament out of the Christian Bible be- cause it was a Jewish book. It seemed miraculous for him to discover Martin Luther King, Jr., placing the Exodus and the prophets of Israel at the center of the civil rights movement. Marching out of Selma felt like a reenactment of the Exodus, but in a new way. Not only were the Israelites leaving Egypt, the place of enslavement, but also the Egyptians, because there was a hope at Selma that white America was repudiating its racism. My father had written, “The tragedy of Pharaoh was the failure to realize that the exodus from slavery could have spelled redemption for both Israel and Egypt. Would that Pharaoh and the Egyptians had joined the Israelites in the desert and together stood at the foot of Sinai.” Of course, the dream that Pharaoh might join the Israelites was not realized. Racism in America remains tenacious, and its slipperiness means that while the Voting Rights Act was passed by Congress and signed by the president following the Selma march, the disenfranchisement of black America continues with insidious new forms of legislation. The religious inspiration that led us to Selma continues, and the photograph of my father marching in the front row there – with King, Ralph Bunche, John Lewis, Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth and Rev. C.T. Vivian – has become iconic. What a pity that my father’s presence is not included in “Selma.” More than a historical error, the film erases one of the central accomplishments of the civil rights movement, its inclusiveness, and one of King’s great joys: his close friendship with my father. The photograph reminds us that religious coalitions can transcend and overcome political conflicts, and it also reminds us that our Jewish prophetic tradition came alive in the civil rights movement. Judaism seemed to be at the very heart of being American. Yet Selma was also a crossroad for Jews as it was for blacks. Would we follow the model of King and my father, of nonviolent liberation from oppression? Or would we follow calls to violent action, symbolized by the Black Panthers and the Jewish Defense League,whose leader, Meir Kahane, urged Jews to copy the Panthers and militarize themselves against anti-Semitism? Both blacks and Jews had to choose between a path of resentment, rage and violence, or a path of peace, nonviolence, persuasion and coalition. The Marching from Selma: John Lewis of SNCC, an unidentified nun, Rev. Ralph Abernathy, Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., Ralph Bunche (former U.S. Ambassador to the UN), Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, and Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth. consequences of that choice remain with us to this day. Few events in history of the United States are as inspiring as the march from Selma. Walking across the Edmund Pettus Bridge (named for a Confederate general) opened a door, inviting all Americans to join in unity against segregation and racism. Yes, the Selma march was a protest against forces of destruction and oppression, against legislation and institutions of bigotry and cruelty. But its mood was filled with a biblical sense of optimism that justice would ultimately prevail in the United States. Today, Selma represents a hope for redemption, a hope expressed by the prophets of Israel, of an era in which bigotry will finally come to an end. For the Bible, my father taught, the ultimate expression of G-d is not wisdom, magnificence, land, glory, nor even love – but rather justice. Justice is the tool of G-d, the manifestation of G-d, the means of our redemption and the redemption of G-d from human mendacity. Would you kill for love? She did. TO B I A S PICKER THERESE RAOUIN FROM THE NOVEL BY ÉMILE ZOLA FEB 20 7:30P FEB 22 3:00P FEB 25 7:30P FEB 28 7:30P 205 E. Randolph St. Chicago, IL 60601 SAVE 20% WITH CODE NEWS20 $IJDBHP0QFSB5IFBUFSPSHt 16 Chicago Jewish News - January 23 - 29, 2015 THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK BY FRANCES GOODRICH AND ALBERT HACKETT | NEWLY ADAPTED BY WENDY KESSELMAN DIRECTED BY KIMBERLY SENIOR BEGINS FEBRUARY 24 TICKETS ON SALE NOW Performed at 664 Vernon Ave, Glencoe Minutes from Chicago on the Edens or Metra FOR TICKETS: WRITERSTHEATRE.ORG | 847-242-6000 2014/15 SEASON SPONSOR CORPORATE SPONSOR CORPORATE SPONSOR OFFICIAL LIGHTING SPONSOR P ICTURE D: SO PHI E THATCHE R. PHO TO BY SAVER IO TR UG LIA. Rediscover this moving classic in a strikingly intimate production.