- Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington
Transcription
- Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington
Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington L I L L I AN AND ALBERT SMA L L J EWI S H MUS EUM 2014 Major Achievements The Society . . . • Received the American Association for State and Local History’s Leadership in History Award of Merit for Voices of the Vigil exhibition. • Published a new exhibition catalog, Voices of the Vigil. • Saved original portions of Washington, D.C.’s only known synagogue mural. • Launched new website to rave reviews. • Discovered original Beatles signatures in a new archival collection. •Received major publicity via NPR, The Washington Post, The Forward, and television news. By the Numbers . . . • • • • • • 2 exhibitions displayed at 5 venues. 18 youth programs served 519 students. 65 adult programs served 3,185 participants at 33 venues. 32 organizations partnered on programs, tours, and exhibitions. 32 donors contributed more than 700 digital and print photographs, 8 scrapbooks, 10 books, 22 objects, and 10 boxes of papers and memorabilia to our archives. 76 research requests fielded from academics, students, media outlets, organizations, businesses, and genealogists. • 29,524 website visits, 3,117 views of YouTube videos, and 244 new Facebook fans. The publication of this Annual Report was made possible, in part, with support from the Rosalie Fonoroff Endowment Fund. Cover photograph of mural at 415 M Street, NW, by Patricia Fisher. 1 Leadership Message Thanks to your support, the Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington enjoyed another wonderful year in 2014. T he year began with the exciting discovery of Beatles’ signatures on the back of a photograph included in scrapbooks donated to us by John Lynn, whose father owned the Washington Coliseum, site of the Beatles’ first U.S. concert in 1964. The year ended with a sold-out New Year’s Eve Klezmer concert at our 1876 synagogue. In between, we offered programs covering such varied topics as Jews and Baseball, the status of Jews in Ukraine, Jews in the Civil War, the Sarajevo Haggadah, and Tevye’s daughters in America. We celebrated the 20th anniversary of Executive Director Laura Apelbaum with poetry and a special luncheon. Our education programs served over 500 students from 16 schools, including groups from New Jersey and North Carolina. Our Lillian & Albert Small Jewish Museum received visitors from as far afield as Brazil, Japan, and South Africa. Our staff and volunteer guides led Jewish-themed walking tours of downtown Washington, Old Town Alexandria, Arlington National Cemetery, and Union Terminal Market. We celebrated a bar mitzvah in our historic sanctuary and Hannukah with the mayor. We sold hamatanschen for Purim and challah for Jewish American Heritage Month, and presented at EntryPointDC’s Shavuot program for young professionals. Our award-winning Voices of the Vigil exhibition about Washington’s movement on behalf of Soviet Jewry travelled to D.C.’s Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library, the Jewish Community Center of Greater Washington, Adas Israel Congregation, and Washington Hebrew Congregation. Newsweek and author of Good Girls Revolt: How the Women of Newsweek Sued Their Bosses and Changed the Workplace, was the guest speaker at our best-attended annual Guardian Luncheon honoring our major supporters. And Washington Post columnist Ruth Marcus spoke at our annual meeting on the topic “Journalist as Mensch: The Ultimate Oxymoron?” Thanks to the generosity of our supporters, we rescued Washington’s only known synagogue mural at 415 M Street, NW. We proudly accepted the donation of Justice Louis D. Brandeis’ law school notebook from his grandson, Frank Gilbert. Our newly designed website, www.jhsgw.org, received nearly 30,000 page views from 130 countries. Our YouTube videos were viewed more than 3,100 times. We neared 1,000 Facebook fans and garnered many Twitter followers. Most importantly, we were thrilled to announce plans for a new museum as part of the $1.3-billion Capitol Crossing complex to be built during the coming years. Our new, expanded museum will include galleries, classrooms, archival storage, an oral-history studio, and offices. We began a new quarterly newsletter, Making a Museum, to update you on our museum project. We look forward to updating you on what will undoubtedly be another exciting year for JHSGW. Sincerely, Myrna and Senator Ben Cardin, Congressman Chris Van Hollen, and Montgomery County Executive Ike Leggett were among the VIPs who attended the exhibition opening in Rockville, where musician Robyn Helzner presented a multimedia concert, giving voice to the movement. We also taught educational programs in conjunction with the exhibition for students at Washington Hebrew Congregation and Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School. Our fall programming focused on American Jewish women in the media. Lynn Povich, the first female senior editor at Samuel Brylawski President Laura Cohen Apelbaum Executive Director 2 FACILITIES The Synagogue’s Story The historic synagogue, the oldest in the Washington area, is home to the Lillian & Albert Small Jewish Museum. Built by Adas Israel Congregation as its first synagogue, it was dedicated on June 9, 1876, with President Ulysses S. Grant in attendance – the first instance of a U.S. president attending a synagogue service. The congregation quickly outgrew the building and erected a new synagogue at Sixth & I Streets, NW, in 1908. Its first building was sold and used by a succession of churches, a bicycle shop, a barber, and even a pork BBQ eatery! It stood for more than 90 years before being slated for demolition to make space for Metro’s headquarters. Dedicated members of the Jewish Historical Society helped save the building from the wrecking ball. On December 18, 1969, the building was moved three blocks to its present site at Third and G Streets, NW. Community contributions and a gift from Lillian and Albert Small helped restore the synagogue. Today, the synagogue is open for educational tours, programs, and life-cycle events. Restoration Activities Last fall, the Society conducted a historic paint analysis in the historic sanctuary. The new study revealed existence of gold leaf on the original balcony supports. These results give a more complete picture of what the space looked like in the 19th century and provide a map for future restoration activities. The project was funded in part by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the MARPAT Foundation, and a generous gift in memory of Margot Heckman. The niche holding the original marble lunette on the historic 1876 synagogue was damaged in the 2011 earthquake. With support from the MARPAT Foundation and Nechama Masliansky, the Society contracted architectural conservation firm Worcester Eisenbrandt, Inc. to restore and clean it. It is now safely housed in a custom, protective crate. 3 The Future The 1876 historic synagogue will soon move again. A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, the Capitol Crossing project will enable the Jewish Historical Society to write the next chapter in its history. The new museum will be a welcoming place, showcasing the Washington region’s Jewish life and heritage and reinterpreting our historic synagogue in engaging ways. New spaces will include galleries, classrooms, an archives room, an oral-history studio, and offices. Planning for the new facility is underway with completion projected in 2020-22. To keep members current on the project, we are publishing a quarterly e-newsletter, Making a Museum. In addition to updates about the museum-planning process, the publication includes interviews with project leaders and neighborhood institutions as well as relevant highlights from the Society’s archives and history tidbits. Capital Campaign Donors We are grateful to the following generous donors who have made early contributions in support of our upcoming multi-million dollar fundraising campaign: Andrew Ammerman Laura & Perry Apelbaum Laura Loeb & Howard Morse Lois & Richard* England and the Lois and Richard England Family Foundation Gordon Foundation The Samuel Burtoff, M.D. Foundation Judy & Russell Smith Molly* & Henry* Brylawski * Of blessed memory Additionally, the Alper Family Foundation supported museum-planning activities. To learn more about the Capital Campaign, contact Laura Apelbaum at (202) 789-0900 or [email protected]. Courtesy Beyer Blinder Belle, LLP As part of Capitol Crossing, a $1.3-billion mixed-use, downtown development, the historic synagogue will be relocated one block south to the corner of Third and F Streets, NW. There, it will become the focal point of a state-of-the-art Jewish museum. 4 Program Attendees MARYLAND 28% VIRGINIA 10% DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 62% Programs and Activities 65 adult programs served 3,185 participants at 33 venues. Trip to Jewish Museum of Maryland Special tour of exhibition, Passages Through the Fire: Jews and the Civil War, and lecture by our own Executive Director Laura Apelbaum. Civil War in Maryland Through A Jewish Lens Marvin Pinkert, Executive Director of the Jewish Museum of Maryland, shared stories about the Jewish Civil War experience in Maryland. Jews and Baseball Opening Day program featured Sandy-Koufax biographer Jane Leavy, Washington-Senators announcer Phil Hochberg, and Hank-Greenberg documentarian Aviva Kempner. Sportswriter David Elfin introduced the speakers. Jewish American Heritage Month In partnership with the National Archives, a panel discussion featured Pulitzer Prize-winning author Nick Kotz and journalists Steven V. Roberts and Sanford J. Ungar reflecting on how immigrants shaped the United States. Co-sponsored by the Library of Congress’s Hebraic Section and the Jewish Genealogy Society, Dr. Sanford Sternlicht spoke about the Lower East Side at the Library. Status of Ukrainian Crisis Eric Rubin, Deputy Assistant Secretary, European and Eurasian Affairs at the State Department, and Mark Levin, Executive Director, National Coalition Supporting Eurasian Jewry (NCSEJ), discussed the current situation in Ukraine and impact on the Jewish community. 20th Anniversary Celebration Executive Director Laura Apelbaum celebrated her 20th anniversary with the Society at a special luncheon and program featuring poet Davi Walders and remarks by Dr. Jenna Weissman Joselit. A professional development fund was established in Laura’s honor. 5 Trip to National Museum of American Jewish History Group visited Philadelphia’s National Museum of American Jewish History to view the special exhibition, Chasing Dreams: Baseball and Becoming American. Courtesy of the Library of Congress. A Tale of Two Books: Sarajevo Haggadah and Washington Haggadah Dr. Peggy Pearlstein, Society past president and former Head of the Hebraic Section, Library of Congress, led this workshop in conjunction with the Washington DC JCC’s Jewish Literary Festival. From Synagogue to Church to Condo: D.C.’s Urban Evolution Professors Jenna Weissman Joselit and Suleiman Osman of The George Washington University explored the history of five former downtown synagogues and the various communities that repurposed these buildings. Funded in part by the D.C. Community Heritage Project, a joint effort of the D.C. Humanities Council and D.C. Historic Preservation Office. Driving Miss Daisy at Ford’s Theatre After a performance of this American classic dealing with racism and anti-Semitism, the Society organized a discussion with B’nai Israel’s Rabbi Michael Safra, an Atlanta native. Fiddler on the Roof at Arena Stage In celebration of Fiddler’s 50th anniversary, Society guests enjoyed the show and a post-performance talk. Annual Meeting Nearly 200 attendees were present at our 154th annual meeting at Congregation Beth El in Bethesda. Washington Post columnist Ruth Marcus, through a series of personal anecdotes, addressed the topic “Journalist as Mensch: The Ultimate Oxymoron?” Ruth spoke of the late Ben Bradlee, her former boss at the Post, as the ultimate mensch, even though he was not Jewish, because of his commitment to fair and accurate journalism. At the meeting, we also elected new board members and held a silent auction that raised $1,000 for our educational programs. First Night Concert On December 31, a sold-out crowd ushered in the new year with Klezmer band, Machaya. Attendees of all ages danced and toasted with sparkling cider in our historic synagogue! This event was made possible by a grant from the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities. Washington Haggadah 6 VOICES OF THE VIGIL In 2014, the Society offered a wide array of programs in conjunction with our latest exhibition, Voices of the Vigil. The exhibition focuses on the 20-year effort to help Soviet Jews secure their human rights – most notably through a 1970-1991 daily vigil at the Soviet Embassy as well as protests and rallies on the National Mall. Washington Hebrew Congregation, Washington, DC Lecture: Remembering the Soviet Jewry Movement Renowned civil-liberties attorney Nathan Lewin recalled his experiences during the Soviet Jewry movement including activities as president of the Jewish Community Council in the early 1980s. Curator-led Tours A public tour was followed by a discussion with former Soviet Jewry activists Joan Dodek and Marcia Weinberg. Private tours: • Congregation Beth El havurah, Bethesda, MD • Luther Place Memorial Church, Washington, DC Jewish Community Center of Greater Washington, Rockville, MD Exhibition Opening and Concert Program and ribbon-cutting featured remarks by Ambassador Richard Schifter and multimedia concert by musician Robyn Helzner. VIP guests included Myrna and Senator Ben Cardin, Congressman Chris Van Hollen, and Montgomery County Executive Ike Leggett. “Designing a Movement” Talk Activist and graphic designer Avy Ashery discussed designing posters, buttons, and other imagery for the Soviet Jewry movement. Docent-led tours: • Ring House, Rockville, MD • Russian ESOL class, Shalom Education Center, Rockville, MD • Three Jewish Community Center seniors groups Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, Washington, DC In honor of Jewish American Heritage Month, the exhibition was displayed at D.C. Library’s central library. Curator Wendy Turman led a public tour. 7 Walking Tours 12 walking tours served 314 visitors In 2014, research by Professors Jenna Weissman Joselit and Suleiman Osman of The George Washington University became the basis for a newly re-interpreted Downtown Walking Tour that includes Mount Vernon Square and the former Hebrew Home at 415 M Street, NW (former site of D.C.’s only known synagogue mural, parts of which the Society saved in 2014). Current walking tour offerings: • Downtown Washington • Old Town Alexandria • Arlington National Cemetery Funded in part by the D.C. Community Heritage Project, a joint effort of the D.C. Humanities Council and D.C. Historic Preservation Office. Maryland • Adat Shalom Reconstructionist Congregation Board • B’nai Tzedek Havurah Virginia • Tikvat Israel Congregation • Women of Rodef Shalom Coming soon: • Union Terminal Market • H Street, NE Washington, D.C. • Georgetown University Law Center students • Sixth & I Historic Synagogue • EntryPoint DC young professionals • AIPAC professionals In addition to public tours, the Society led private tours for the following groups: NEW! • For Women’s History Month (March) or Sisterhood Shabbat Candlesticks, Charm Bracelets, and Protest Signs Material culture speaks about Jewish women’s changing identities • “Help Make a Museum” workshop Learn about plans for our new museum, help us determine which themes and objects to include the core exhibition, and get a sneak peek inside our collection. Also... • Jewish Washington: Scrapbook of an American Community An illustrated history of Jewish life from 1795 to today • Voices of the Vigil: DC’s Soviet Jewry Movement • Jewish Life in Washington and Alexandria during the Civil War • Preserving Your Family Heirlooms • Presidential Stories: Presidential artifacts and documents in our collection Speakers Bureau JHSGW lecturers are available to speak about several topics: Contact JHSGW at [email protected] or (202) 789-0900 to book a speaker for your synagogue, havurah, or organization today! Staff and board members lectured for groups throughout the region. Washington, D.C. • Ohev Sholom • Temple Micah • Temple Sinai Sisterhood Maryland • Beth Chai, Bethesda • Congregation Har Tzeon-Agudath Achim Havurah, Silver Spring • Live and Learn Bethesda • National Council of Jewish Women – Montgomery County, Rockville • Jewish Federation of Howard County Virginia • Agudas Achim Congregation, Alexandria • B’nai B’rith Levy Lodge, Fairfax • Congregation Beth Emeth, Herndon • Leisure World, Landsdowne • Temple Rodef Shalom, Falls Church 8 Special Activities 2014 PROGRAM PARTNERS: The Society worked with the following organizations on program development: Throughout the community: • Conducted core exhibition audience-evaluation workshops throughout the region as part of planning our new museum project. – ROUTES: A Day of Jewish Learning – Nonprofit neighbors in Penn Quarter – EntryPoint DC’s young professionals • Sold hamantaschen for Purim and challah for Jewish American Heritage Month to benefit our educational programs and D.C. Central Kitchen • Presented at EntryPoint DC’s Shavuot “After Dark” program for young professionals • Participated in the D.C. Historical Studies Conference’s History Network • Led Yom Kippur walking tour for young professionals at Sixth & I Historic Synagogue. • Participated in Hanukkah menorah lighting at John A. Wilson Building (D.C. City Hall), sponsored by the Jewish Community Relations Council • Spoke on the involvement of Jews during the Civil War at the Smithsonian’s Anacostia Community Museum • Presentation on Collections Management, Museum Studies graduate class, The George Washington University, Washington, DC • Lecture on Eruv (ritual geographic boundary), Jewish Cultural Arts graduate class, The George Washington University, Washington, DC Adas Israel Congregation Arena Stage Chinese Community Church Ford’s Theatre Goethe Institut Hill Havurah Historical Society of Washington Holy Rosary Church Jewish Community Center of Greater Washington Jewish Community Center of Northern Virginia Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Washington Jewish Genealogy Society of Greater Washington Jewish Museum of Maryland Library of Congress Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library National Archives National Building Museum Ring House Sixth & I Historic Synagogue Shalom Education Center The George Washington University The Jewish Federation of Greater Washington Jewish Food Experience Partnership for Jewish Life and Learning PJ Library Washington DC Jewish Community Center EntryPoint DC Literary Programs Theater J Washington Jewish Film Festival Washington Hebrew Congregation At the 1876 synagogue: • Drop-in visitors from as far away as Argentina, Germany, Japan, and South Africa • Annual reception for Shomrim Society’s Jewish law enforcement officers during National Police Week • Graduate students from The George Washington University’s Experiential Education and Jewish Cultural Arts program • Zeta Beta Tau fraternity alumni event honoring Albert H. Small • Undergraduate students from the University of Miami (OH) Washington Semester Program at American University • Bar mitzvah service in historic sanctuary EntryPoint DC’s Shavuot “After Dark” Society leadership with Mayor Vincent Gray (second from left) 9 Youth Programs AREAS SERVED 18 youth programs served 519 students Educational programs are designed and tailored for grades 1-12. 1876 Synagogue Field Trips • Building Detective: Unlock the mysteries of our historic building by comparing it to other familiar sites. • A Synagogue Story: Build your own synagogueshaped tzedakah box and learn about the history and preservation of our 1876 synagogue. • An Immigrant Story: Analyze primary sources to learn about the Jewish immigrant experience in Washington, D.C. in the late 19th century. Walking Tours Step back in time by exploring Jewish sites in downtown Washington, Old Town Alexandria, or Arlington National Cemetery. Voices of the Vigil Programs In the Exhibition: • Station Rotation: Students learn key terms such as “refusenik,” “vigil,” and “twinning” in a mock protest activity. Maps of the former USSR/ Russia are compared. Students visit 3-4 stops in the exhibition and answer thought-provoking questions. In the Classroom: • Highlights of the Vigil: JHSGW curator offers insights into D.C.’s Soviet Jewry movement with an illustrated talk. Focuses on how everyday people make a difference through protest. • A Clandestine Mission: Former activist Marcia Weinberg shares her experiences as a participant in the daily vigil, traveler secretly bringing supplies to Jews in the USSR, KGB detainee, and friend to new Soviet émigrés in the Washington area. • Plan a Secret Lesson and Twinning: Guided questions ask students to write letters to Soviet Jewry youths and to think about what they might send to Soviet Jews to teach them about their Jewish identity. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 61% MARYLAND 65% OTHER 5% VIRGINIA 7% YOUTH PROGRAMS FIELD TRIPS TO MUSEUM 27% WALKING TOURS 33% VOICES OF THE VIGIL EXHIBITION LESSONS 40% Groups Served Washington, D.C Adas Israel Congregation John Burroughs Education Campus Operation Understanding DC Washington Hebrew Congregation Virginia: Northern Virginia Hebrew Congregation, Reston Temple Beth Torah, Centreville Maryland: Beth Chai, Bethesda Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School, Rockville Congregation Beth El, Bethesda Congregation B’nai Israel, Rockville Shaare Tefila Congregation, Olney Shalom Education Center, Rockville Temple Emanu-El, Kensington Temple Shalom, Chevy Chase Other: Yeshivat Netivot Montessori, New Jersey To learn more about these programs: •Visit http://www.jhsgw.org/education •Contact us at 202-789-0900 or [email protected]. 10 Exhibitions 2 exhibitions traveled to 5 venues. Voices of the Vigil details the local Soviet Jewry movement of the 1960s-1990s, highlighting the 20-year daily vigil outside the Soviet Embassy. Travelled to: Rockville, MD: • Jewish Community Center of Greater Washington Washington, D.C.: • Washington Hebrew Congregation • Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library • Adas Israel Congregation Through the Lens: Jeremy Goldberg’s Washington traces Washington’s Jewish community from a tight cluster of late 19th-century synagogues downtown to new neighborhoods uptown and into the suburbs. Ongoing at Ohev Sholom Congregation, Washington, D.C. Read about our accompanying programs on pages 6 and 9. 11 ARCHIVES Rabbi Leonard Cahan Protest button from 1987 Freedom Sunday rally for Soviet Jewry. Frank Gilbert Law school notebook of Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis, 1877; three booklets of Brandeis’s speeches and written opinions, 1920s-1930s. Rita Glazer Papers and ID cards documenting Samuel Alpher, Russian immigrant and master carpenter in Washington, D.C., 1905-1919 and 1955-1961. New Acquisitions Rabbi Marvin Bash Scrapbooks kept by Rabbi Bash, Arlington-Fairfax Jewish Congregation (now Etz Hayim), 1973-2002. Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA) Documentation created by local writer Martin Miller related to accuracy of maps of the Middle East, 1975-2004. Faye & Sheldon S. Cohen Lyndon B. Johnson souvenir pen used by Sheldon S. Cohen as IRS Commissioner, 1960s; Adas Israel Congregation yizkor books, 1960s-1970s. Neil Glick Documentation of Glick’s service as Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner and Glick’s advocacy to name street in front of the Bulgarian Embassy after Dimitar Peshev, 2001-2013. Margaret Guthrie Gavel from Young People’s Synagogue, 1950s. Hebrew Home of Greater Washington Annual reports, 2003-2012; Women’s Auxiliary directories, 1975-2007; interior photos of Hebrew Home, 1950s. Patricia Karp Photos and family papers of Mazo family and Mazo Brothers’ wholesale business. Protest against treatment of Jews in Syria, October 1974. L to R: Reverend John Steinbruck; William C. Levy, Jewish Community Council; unidentified passerby; Elias Silverstein; Monsignor Ralph E. Kuehner; Rabbi Bash; Ernest Shalowitz, Jewish Community Council. Steve Blacher Photos of Blacher, Hais, and Vigderhouse families; documents related to the military service and death of Norman Vigderhouse, killed in action in World War II. Technician 5th Class Norman Vigderhouse, 1943. Ruth & Joseph Mazo with son Sylvan, ca. 1917. Mark Kelner Prisoner of Conscience bracelets and the 1987 Freedom Hagaddah for Soviet Jewry Black Rock Holdings, LLC Portions of interior wall mural from Shomrei Shabbos Congregation at 415 M Street, NW, 1930s. Paula Pascal Levine Jewelry and mementos from Upsilon Lambda Phi, Central High School, Eastern Star DC, Rebekah Lodge, and Charles Ernest Jewelers. Sarah Cohen Advertising artwork for Tabard Farm Yukon Gold Potato Chips, early 1980s. Joan Dodek Cookbook, Leavened with Love, published by Washington Hebrew Congregation Sisterhood, 1972. Rabbi Sheldon & Dr. Shulamith Elster Photos documenting Rabbi Elster’s chaplaincy at Fort Lee, Virginia, 1960s. Learn more on p. 17. Ronald Levine Photos of Friendship Grocery, 1940s-1950s. 12 John Lynn Harry Lynn’s scrapbooks documenting events held at the Washington Coliseum, 1960s-1970s. Max Sterne Confirmation Bible presented to Shirley Pearlman by Washington Hebrew, 1933; Hebrew primers, early 1920s; booklet with speech by Rabbi Abram Simon, 1922. The Jewish Federation of Greater Washington Administrative papers, published materials, and photos documenting Federation activities, 1970-1990s. Research Requests The Society’s archivists responded to 76 research requests for information and material about individuals, businesses, synagogues, organizations, and neighborhoods. We assisted the following academic institutions, organizations, businesses, and media outlets: Washington, D.C.: The Vienna Lipizzaner White Stallions, Washington Coliseum,1964. Linda Marshall Protest button from Temple Rodef Shalom, “TRS for Soviet Jewry” Sheldon “Skip” Monsein 10 gold medals won by Monsein for swimming at the Maccabi World Union Games, 1993. United Jewish Appeal Federation gathering, ca. 1977. L to R: Jack Kay, Rabbi Isadore Breslau, Israeli Ambassador Simcha Dinitz, Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan, Hymen Goldman, Herschel Blumberg. Mary Ann Winter Photos and papers documenting Greater Washington Council of Pioneer Women, 1973-1974. Lloyd Wolf Wolf’s digital photographs depicting Purim festivities and Operation Understanding DC, 2014. National Jewish Democratic Council Documentation of founding and activities of the NJDC, 1989-2008. Brenda & Paul Pascal Booklet, Washington, D.C. Retail Grocery Guide, 1961. Peggy Pearlstein Three Judaica books David Bruce Smith DVD: Papa Charlie: The Life of Charles E. Smith, 1991. Temple Micah Photos depicting congregational events, 1970s-1990s. First Temple Micah trip to Israel, 1970. Rabbi Bernard Mehlman, center front. Temple Sinai Cookbook, Celebrations from Our Kitchen, 1993. Malvy Solomon Haim Solomon’s Soviet Jewry materials, 1980s. •AARP • Adas Israel Congregation • American Humanist Association • American University • Historical Society of Washington, DC • Prologue DC • Smithsonian’s Anacostia Community Museum • The Washington Post • WAMU 88.5 American University Radio • WUSA Channel 9 Maryland: • H & R Retail, Inc • Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Washington • Jewish Genealogy Society of Greater Washington • Jewish Social Service Agency • Maryland Office of Tourism • The Jewish Federation of Greater Washington • Washington Jewish Week • Yeshiva of Greater Washington New York: • Forward • Hadassah magazine • Jewish Federations of North America • New-York Historical Society Other: • Agudas Achim Congregation, Alexandria, VA • Boston University, Boston, MA • Michiana Jewish Historical Society, South Bend, IN • Open University of Israel • San Bernadino Valley College, San Bernadino, CA • Shapell Manuscript Foundation • Time Out, London, United Kingdom • Yale Law School, New Haven, CT 13 Object of the Month Highlights of monthly emails and blog posts showcase treasures from our archival collections. Some articles also appeared on the Jewish Food Experience website. Scrapbooks from Washington Coliseum, 1960-1971 Autographed photo of The Beatles in scrapbooks compiled by Harry Lynn, owner of the Uline Arena/Washington Coliseum,1959-1970. Read related story on p. 16. Smith’s Pharmacy before and after the 1968 riots Larry Rosen’s 14th-Street business was destroyed in the civil disturbances following Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination. Photograph of Seder for Military, Mayflower Hotel, 1946 Thousands of Jewish service members attended local holiday events. Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis’s law school notebook, 1877 Photograph of Simon Sherman’s Williams Frozen Custard Store, c.1946 Justice Brandeis used this notebook during his final semester at Harvard Law School. Sherman later helped build Wheaton Plaza, the region’s first shopping mall. Walter Tobriner taking oath of office to chair D.C. Board of Commissioners, 1961 Photographs of Friendship Deli, Friendship Heights 1940s-1950s Documenting the grocery-turned-deli. Over the next decade, Tobriner helped to end discrimination in many parts of daily life in D.C. Note from Albert Einstein to Washington, D.C. lawyer, 1938 Einstein thanks H. Max Ammerman for assisting an acquaintance in Nazi Germany. All photos by Freed Photography Membership 2014 members and donors enjoyed special programs and exclusive benefits. Event Co-chairs Pat & Robert Silverman and Linda & Jerry Herman with Honorary Chairs Nancy & Ed Colodny and guests Margery & Morris Topf. Memberships provide critical operating funds. Each year, we must raise our entire operating budget and are dependent on our members’ generosity. Our members and donors enable us to expand our exhibitions, archival outreach, oral history collection, adult and school programs, and publications. Guardian-Benefactor Program Guardian-Benefactor members provide the funds necessary to preserve community history and offer dynamic exhibitions and educational programs. Upper-level memberships include: Benefactor $10,000 Legacy $5,000 Heritage $2,500 Historian $1,800 Guardian $1,000 Guardian-Benefactor Member Luncheon Beginning in 1996 with 29 inaugural Guardian members, the Guardian-Benefactor event honors our most dedicated supporters through unique and educational experiences. Featured speakers have included former Ambassador to Denmark the Honorable Stuart Bernstein, Pulitzer-Prize winner David A. Vise, famed Watergate reporter Carl Bernstein, and many other scholars, diplomats, and authors. 14 Featured speaker Lynn Povich This year’s luncheon, attended by 200 contributors and guests at the Ritz-Carlton West End, featured Lynn Povich, the first female senior editor at Newsweek and author of Good Girls Revolt: How the Women of Newsweek Sued Their Bosses and Changed the Workplace. Lynn spoke about growing up in Washington as the daughter of famed sportswriter Shirley Povich and her fascinating career as a journalist. Dr. Pamela Nadell (center) with Society Executive Director Laura Apelbaum and President Samuel Brylawski. Benefactor Event Since 2008, this exclusive event for contributors at the $5,000 level and above has offered access to unique venues, experts, and special opportunities. Previous Legacy/Benefactor events have included a luncheon on the former presidential yacht USS Sequoia, a tour of Albert H. Small’s rare map collection, and viewing Carolyn Alper’s diverse and playful art collection. This year, Legacy/Benefactor-level donors were invited to a special luncheon at the Cosmos Club in appreciation for their generous support. Featured speaker Dr. Pamela Nadell of American University explored the lives of Jewish women who emmigrated to the United States at the turn of the 20th century. Her talk coincided with the 50th anniversary of Fiddler on the Roof. Society supporters, sisters Constance (left) and Barbara (right) Burtoff 15 MEMBERSHIP BENEFITS Want to help preserve local Jewish heritage and participate in Society events? Join the Society today! Individual ($36) and Family/Dual ($54) • Invitations and discounts to select events including book talks, lectures, panel discussions, and walking tours • Calendar of events • Priority on archival research requests Donors ($100) receive all of the benefits above, plus: • A North American Reciprocal Museum Card which provides membership benefits to more than 700 museums across the continent Patrons ($150) and Sponsors ($300 level) receive all of the benefits above, plus: • Special Society publications and discounts Trustees ($500 level) receive all of the benefits above, plus: • Seating for two at annual gala event Guardians ($1,000) receive all the benefits above, plus: • Seating for two at annual gala event • “Behind the Scenes” tour or program Historians ($1,800) receive all of the benefits above, plus: • Seating for four at annual gala event Heritage ($2,500) receive all of the benefits above, plus: • Priority seating for six at annual gala event • 5% discount on the sanctuary rental fee Legacy ($5,000) and Benefactor ($10,000) members receive all of the benefits above, plus: • At the annual gala, premium seating for eight for Legacy / ten for Benefactor • Invitation to an additional exclusive member event For more information: • Call (202) 789-0900 • Email [email protected] • Visit www.jhsgw.org/join WELCOME NEW MEMBERS Washington, D.C.: Maryland: Barbara Bahny Dava Berkman Fred Block Cantor Arianne Brown Stacey Downey & Michael Svetlik Emanuel J. Friedman Sherry Gillespie Neil Glick Rachel Hartig Carole & John Hirschmann Janet Kandel Ricki & Joel Kanter Patricia P. Karp Amelia Lawrence & Steve Leinwand Gail Lelyveld Jo-Ann Neuhaus Karen Nozik Edna & Larry Povich Diana Seasonwein Sam Shipkovitz Lorraine & Steve Tracton Liliane Willens Philip Aronson Linda Arret Naomi & David A. Balto Vivian G. Bass Howard Berger Keith Brooks Diane Curran & Ferdinand Hoefner Lisa Drazin Fritz Edelstein Rona & Stuart T. Eisen Michael J. Fanaroff Eve & David Farber Mindy & Steve Feirman Betty & Clifford Fishman Michael Freiman Bonnie Friedman Debra Friedman & Stephen Cohen Judy Furash Carole & Ron Garfinkle Amy & Gene Goott Barbara & Michael Gordon Geoffrey Green Lily & Saadia Greenberg Phyllis & Michael Greene Shelby & Arthur Herman Robin Hettleman & Matthew Weinberg Joyce Isaacson Laura & Jerold L. Jacobs Wendy & Dan Jarcho Holly Joseph Sherry & Ronald Kabran Kay Klass & Mark Levitt Lynn Koiner Marjorie & Robert E. Litman Shirley Markowitz Zena & Paul Mason Phyllis & Frederick Meyers Carol Oshinsky Sandra Perlstein & Rabbi Sidney Schwarz Barbara & Mark Rabin Patricia & James Ritzenberg Marti & Greg Rosenbaum Carolyn & David Ruben Shirley & Jack Serber Karen & Jon Simon Joyce Sperling Joel Sugarman Ellen Sweet Ellen Tillman Debra Vodenos & Samuel B. Boxerman Ellen & David Waghelstein David Weinstein Helene R. Weisz & Richard Lieberman Janyse & Bernard M. Weisz Steven J. Wollins Julie Wugalter & Ronald S. Rubbin Susan & Alan Zuckerman Virginia: Debra Berke Carol Laikin Carpenter Kenneth Cliffer Lori Cooper Harry D. Forman William Froelich Stephen Gell Rita Glazer Candace Gray Burt Greenstein Joanne Levine Paul Levit Ellen Bessman Miller Nancy & Saul Pilchen Jeffrey Rock Linda Rosenweig & John Lynn Victoria Roth Sheryl & Barry Schwartz Rick Snowden Bob Weinberg Daniel S. Zevitz Other states: Gail & Brian Burlant (New York) Ellen Miller (Washington) 16 In the News Links to full pieces can be found at www.jhsgw.org/newsroom/2014 Remembering a Movement • Voices of the Vigil was featured on WAMU 88.5’s “Art Beat” and reviewed on the Forward’s arts & culture blog, “The Arty Semite.” • Washington Jewish Week published a piece by Exhibition Community Advisory Committee Chair Norman Goldstein. Invisible Ink? On the eve of the 50th anniversary of the Beatles’ first U.S. concert, we acquired scrapbooks belonging to Harry Lynn, owner of the concert venue – the Washington Coliseum. A publicity photo of the Beatles (see p. 13) with a thick board glued to the back was in one of the scrapbooks. When we held the photo up to the light, we could see a pen’s impression coming up from the back of the photo – there was handwriting hidden on the back of the photo! Could we have original Beatles’ autographs?? John Kelly photographs then-Curator Zachary Paul Levine with the Beatles photo. • WUSA9 included our mystery in a television story about Beatles’ memorabilia from the 1964 show. • Colleagues at the Smithsonian Institution Archives and its Museum Conservation Institute used imaging technology to reveal this hidden note: To Harry Lynn with fond memories from the BEATLES Ringo Starr George Harrison Paul McCartney John Lennon Smithsonian staff then wrote a post for their blog The Bigger Picture that included a video describing the imaging process. • The Washington Post’s John Kelly wrote columns both before we could read the message and also following the Smithsonian’s finding. 17 Building Our Future WAMU 88.5’s Metro Connection and the Washington Jewish Week interviewed Society staff about the upcoming move of the 1876 synagogue and the plan for our new museum complex. Director of Collections Wendy Turman showing a document from the archives to WAMU reporter Rebecca Sheir. The Mural in the Media In the Spring, the Society learned a former synagogue was going to be converted to condos, and the city would lose its only known synagogue mural. Staff and donors leapt into action. Our successful campaign to save original portions of the mural was covered in a wide variety of media including: •Newspapers: The InTowner and Washington Jewish Week • Radio: WAMU 88.5 American University Radio • National blogs: Forward’s “Forward Thinking”, National Trust for Historic Preservation’s “PreservationNation”, and Jenna Weissman Joselit’s Under the Fig Tree • Local blogs: PoPville, WETA’s Boundary Stones, and District Source For the Forward’s Arts & Culture Section, GWU Professor Jenna Weissman Joselit explored the cultural phenomenon of charm bracelets in the lives of American Jewish women and featured two bracelets from our collection. Ruth Marcus, Washington Post columnist, was the featured speaker at our annual meeting. Her remarks on being a mensch while working as a journalist were covered in the Washington Jewish Week’s article, “Marcus on menschlikeit.” Israel Bonds bracelet donated by Perla Fox 18 Publications Jewish Washington: Scrapbook of an American Community Companion to our award-winning exhibition, this coffee-table book is the comprehensive source on Jewish life in the Washington area from 1795 to the present. Jewish Life in Mr. Lincoln’s City Stories of Jewish Washington and Alexandria during the Civil War introduced by leading historian Dr. Jonathan Sarna and accompanied by essays from prominent scholars. Pocket Guide to Jewish Sites in Arlington National Cemetery A joint project with the Jewish Genealogy Society of Greater Washington, this 40-page booklet highlights memorials and individual burials of Jewish interest at Arlington National Cemetery. The guide is also available for purchase through the National Park Service at Arlington National Cemetery’s Welcome Center. Voices of the Vigil Catalog This 100-page catalog features more than 90 images with accompanying text from our award-winning exhibition about the local Soviet Jewry movement. It also includes: • Memoir by Natan Sharansky, Chair of the Jewish Agency for Israel, relating his experiences in a Soviet prison camp and the impact of the Soviet Jewry movement. • Recollections of Ambassador Richard Schifter on his diplomatic activities on behalf of Soviet Jewry. Purchase a case of books for confirmation or bar/bat mitzvah gifts or to present to special guests and speakers at your organization. Please inquire for details on discounts on bulk purchases! To order these publications: www.jhsgw.org/store | (202) 789-0900 | [email protected] 19 The Virtual Society Get Connected! Go behind the scenes of recent events, exhibitions, and our archival collection. Learn about special programs, media spotlights, and local and national Jewish history announcements. • Join our email list by emailing: [email protected] 61 emails reached more than 2,400 subscribers • Visit our website: http://www.jhsgw.org 29,524 visits, 79% new visitors Top visiting countries: U.S., Canada, UK, Israel, Brazil • Peruse our blog: http://www.jhsgw.org/blog Visitors from 56 countries • “Like” our Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/jhsgw More than 200 new fans, totaling 873 fans • Follow our Twitter feed: http://www.twitter.com/jhsgw Tweets viewed average of 132 times per day • Watch our Youtube videos: http://www.youtube.com/jhsgw 3,117 video views • Browse our Pinterest boards: http://www.pinterest.com/jhsgw Ended year with 443 followers and 32 virtual pinboards Professional Development Society staff attended the following: Conferences: • American Association for State and Local History • Association of European Jewish Museums • Council of American Jewish Museums • D.C. Historical Studies • Society of American Archivists At the American Association for State and Local History conference, Director of Collections Wendy Turman (center) accepts the Leadership in History Award of Merit for our Voices of the Vigil exhibition. Professional development: • Beyond the Campaign: Engagement Marketing for Non-Profit Organizations At the Council of American Jewish Museums conference: then-Curator Zachary Paul Levine (conference co-chair), Executive Director Laura Apelbaum, Program Coordinator Samantha Bass, and Intern Phoebe Coleman 20 Grants and Contributions Competitive Grants • $40,000 National Endowment for the Humanities to plan the core exhibition in the new museum • $8,000 Marinus and Minna B. Koster Foundation to document the history of the organization Yiddish of Greater Washington • $3,000 National Trust for Historic Preservation for the pre-campaign study for the new museum • $3,000 DC Preservation League for “Last Call” programs in the historic 1876 synagogue • $2,500 Humanities Council of Washington, DC for new research on five former synagogue buildings and urban evolution • $2,500 Humanities Council of Washington, DC and $1,500 from the Southern Jewish Historical Society to create a walking tour of Jewish H Street, NE • $1,140 D.C. Commission on the Arts & Humanities for First Night Klezmer concert In Appreciation Naomi & Nehemiah Cohen Foundation Marshall B. Coyne Foundation Cora and John H. Davis Foundation Kovler Fund of the Community Foundation for the National Capital Region • George Wasserman Family Foundation • Alper Family Foundation • Combined Federal Campaign of the National Capital Area • The Friedman Family Charitable Trust • Wayne Goldstein Memorial Foundation • Sulica Fund • Carol Yates Planning for the new museum is underway. We are grateful to the following generous donors who have made contributions to support our upcoming multi-million dollar fundraising campaign: • Andrew Ammerman • Laura & Perry Apelbaum • Laura Loeb & Howard Morse • Lois & Richard* England and the Lois and Richard England Family Foundation • Gordon Foundation • The Samuel Burtoff, M.D. Foundation • Judy & Russell Smith • Molly* & Henry* Brylawski • • • • Albert & Lillian Small Foundation Shirley & Albert H. Small Leslie Goldberg Theda & Sholom Shefferman The Jewish Federation of Greater Washington Capital Campaign for the New Museum • • • • • Special thanks to our major supporters Additionally, the Alper Family Foundation supported museum-planning activities. To learn more about the Capital Campaign, contact Laura Apelbaum at (202) 789-0900 or [email protected]. * O f blessed memory Every effort is made to verify donor information. Please let us know if you have a correction for our records. We are grateful to the following supporters for their gifts in 2014 and 2015: BENEFACTORS Andrew Ammerman Susan Bales & Dr. Michael L. Goldstein Frances & Leonard* Burka Melvin and Estelle Gelman Family Foundation Sonia Herson Rhonda & Robert Zahler LEGACY MEMBERS Josephine Ammerman* Dorothy & Dr. Jerry Canter Faye & Sheldon S. Cohen Ryna Cohen Grace Robinowitz Dody Paul Greenberg & Richard Billingsley Margot Heckman* Kate Herrod & Richard S. Alper Marky & Martin “Bo” Kirsch Robert P. and Arlene R. Kogod Family Foundation Laura Loeb & Howard Morse Brenda & Paul Pascal Burton Reiner & Family Margaret A. & Sidney J. Silver Pat & Dr. Robert Silverman Shirley & Albert H. Small Tina & Albert Small, Jr. & Family John Tolleris Diane Abelman Wattenberg Ellen & Bernard Young HERITAGE MEMBERS Abramson Family Foundation Carolyn Alper Patricia Alper-Cohn & David I. Cohn Laura & Perry Apelbaum Bender Foundation Diane & Norman Bernstein Martha & Stuart Bindeman Steve Blacher Florence Brody The Hon. Alfred Burka* Linda & James Cafritz Nina Cohen Nancy & Edwin Colodny Margie & Mickey Elsberg Lois England Meg & Sam Flax Ann & Frank Gilbert Catherine Joyce Deena & Jerry Kaplan Irene & Edward H. Kaplan Paula Pascal Levine Alfred Munzer & Joel Wind Jack Olender Lynn Povich & Stephen Shepard Jeanne & Lloyd Raport Charlotte & Hubert (Hank) Schlosberg Robert H. Smith Family Foundation Jane & Daniel Solomon 21 HISTORIANS Anonymous in memory of Margot Heckman Samuel Brylawski & Gail Sonnemann Karen & Edward Burka Linda & James Cafritz Central Wholesalers, Inc. The Jonathan & Patricia England Family Foundation Carla Freeman Tracey & Patrick Gallagher Nancy & Carl Gewirz Marilyn & Lou Glickfield Paula Siegle Goldman Sylvia Greenberg Dan Grossman Marilyn & Murray Hammerman Judith & Michael Herman Linda & Jerry Herman Jane & Philip Hochberg Gwen Zuares GUARDIANS Adas Israel Congregation Sandra* & Dr. Clement Alpert Joy Ammerman Lucy & Rudolph Arkin Ann & Gerald Bass Phyllis Baylin Jane & Les Bergen Sally Berk & Sanders H. Berk, M.D. Leo M. Bernstein Family Foundation Wilma & The Hon. Stuart Bernstein Linda & Richard Blumenreich The Hon. Ann & Donald Brown Alvin I. and Peggy S. Brown Charitable Foundation Henry H. Brylawski* Nancy & Alan Bubes Sharon Burka Gail & Brian Burlant The Samuel Burtoff, M.D. Foundation Helene & Brian Bushwick Joan & Anthony* Churchill Joanne & Gerald Cohen Shirley Cohen Joan & Dr. Oscar Dodek Ginny & Irwin Edlavitch Margery & Mel Elfin Suellen Estrin Michelle Freeman Maryann Friedman Sarah & Bernard Gewirz Alma & Joseph Gildenhorn Kathy & Michael Gildenhorn Carolyn Goldman & Sydney Polakoff Janet & Michael Goldman Louis C. & Celia K. Grossberg Foundation Tamara & Dr. Harry Handelsman Alexandra & Michael Horowitz Sherry & Ronald Kabran Madeleine & Marvin Kalb S. Kann Sons Company Foundation Susan & Steven Kaufman Kay Klass & Mark Levitt Sally Kline Renny & John Kossow Mary Lynn & Nathan Kotz Dr. Sandy Kronsberg & Gerald Skalka Edward J. Lenkin Wilma Probst Levy & Louis Levy Lichtenberg Family Foundation Lilyan Margolius* Phyllis* & Philip N. Margolius Elaine Minkoff The Morningstar Foundation The Murphy Family Foundation Melanie & Larry Nussdorf Doris Oshinsky Amy & Bruce Pascal Craig Pascal & Victor Shargai Dr. Peggy K. Pearlstein Constance & David Povich Stacy Reines Sandra & David* Reznick Deborah & Michael Salzberg The Hon. Richard Schifter Dr. Molly Schuchat Shannon & Luchs Insurance Agency, Inc. Jacqueline & Neal Shear Myrna Sislen & Bill Rice David Bruce Smith Judy & Russell Smith Ed Snider Diane Solomon & Stuart Brown Marlem & Alex Stein Hadassah Thursz Norma Kline Tiefel Foundation Annie Totah Michael Towbes Ira Wagner Washington Hebrew Congregation Natalie Wexler & James Feldman Alexandra Witchel & Frank Rich Christopher Wolf & James Beller Carole & Joseph Wolinsky Mendelle T. Woodley Jon Yarowsky Marlene Zakai Cathleen S. Zepelin TRUSTEES Helen & Leonard I. Abel Sherry Bindeman & David Kahn Carol Brody Maria & Robert Burka Rebecca & David Burka Rose Burka Sharon Chard-Yaron Joy & S. Robert Cohen Melinda A. Cohen & Alberto Goetzl Kathleen & Joseph Dreyfuss Thomas Fay Elaine Feidelman & Irwin Shuman Sarajane Foster Michelle Freeman Carol & David Gichner Christine & James Goldberg Abby Greensfelder & Franklin Foer Marilyn & Dr. Murray Hammerman Hany Hassan Shirley Jacobs Robin Jeweler & Laurence Wiseman Andrea & Martin Kalin Ricki Kanter Ron Kaplan Patricia P. Karp Lisa & Barry Kopit Nancy E. Kronheim Stuart Kurlander & David Martin Kimberly & Bruce Levin Sara-Mae & Jerry Lewis Patrick G. Loughney Madalyn & Ernest Marcus Helen Marshall Phyllis Meyers Phyllis & Sumner Myers Jean P. Soman Carole & John Nannes National Coalition Supporting Eurasian Jewry Ohev Sholom – The National Synagogue Glenna & David Osnos Elizabeth Paull Mark Plotkin Dennis Ratner Martha & Greg Rosenbaum Ruotolo Associates Inc Marion & Robert Rosenthal Jean & Charles Samuels The Hon. Miriam Sapiro & Stephen Labaton Susan Small Savitsky Phyllis & Raymond Scalettar Joan Schaffer Mary Beth Schiffman Estelle Schwalb Rita & Bernard Segerman Ana & James Small Matt Sokolowski Frank Spigel Sam Stern Philip Sternberg Abigail Svetlik Helen D. Tsintolas Marilyn & Stefan Tucker Isador and Bessie Turover Philanthropic Fund United Bank Susan Burka Walsh Marcia Weinberg Liliane Willens Paul Wright DONORS, PATRONS, SPONSORS Supporters at the $100 level and above receive a North American Reciprocal Museums card that gives them membership benefits at more than 780 museums. Dr. Joseph M. Aein Marc Albert Nancy Alper & Ralph Kozlow Daniel J. Alpert Louis Altarescu & Alan Friedman Hilde & Colin Alter Diana & Richard Altman Elaine Amir Elaine Ammerman Susan & Alan Apter Linda Arret Samuel Asen Ellen & Simon Atlas Martin Auerbach Barbara Bahny Beverly Baker Arlene Balkansky & Mark Stein Naomi & David A. Balto Cheryl & Dr. Herbert Baraf Samuel Barr Kathryn & Ira Bartfield Marilee & Eugene Bass Susan & Brian Bayly Arlene & Robert Bein Meredith Ann Belkov Susan & Robert C. Berk Arnold Berke Norma & Rabbi Donald Berlin Harold Berman Michele & Allan Berman Judy & Dr. David Bernanke Carol & George Bernstein Roberta & Raymond Bialek Shirley* & William Binder Marlene & Joseph Bishow Anna & Jerome K. Blask Diane Blumenthal & Craig H. Winslow Marla Bobowick & Mort Rolleston Tanya & Stephen Bodzin Paola & Sheldon Bolasny Carolyn & Joseph Bonnett Leslie Borak Bernice & Joel Breslau Amy & Scott Brody Fani Brown-Miller & Dan S. Brandenburg Bruce Brumberg Don Budowsky Jo Anne & Barrett Burka Constance Burtoff Gillie Campbell & Michael L. Seltz Karen & David Cantor Debbie Carpel Carol Laikin Carpenter Susan L. Catler & Keith E. Secular Aleen K. & The Hon. Herbert L. Chabot Olga & Carl Chapman Gary A. Chelec Arlene & Harvey Cherner Elisabeth & Harold Closter Phyllis & David Coburn Sharon Cohany & Glen Richardson Barry Cohen David Cohen Dorothy & Dr. Morris Cohen Jacqueline & Edward Cohen Judith & Richard Cohen Dr. Lois K. Cohen Sharon Cohen & Michael C. Liebman Stanley A. Cohen Zivan Cohen Denise & Steven M. Cohn Prof. Sherman Cohn Lori Cooper Carolyn Crouch Laura & Michael Cutler William H. Davis Natalie & Laurence Dickter Yvonne & Jeffrey Distenfeld Laurie & Sheldon Dosik Stacey Downey & Michael Svetlik Lisa Drazin Phyllis S. Dreyfuss Sue & Rabbi George Driesen Alison Drucker & Tom Holzman Maurice Dunie Carole Early Naomi Edelson & Martin Shore Barbara & The Hon. Andrew Effron Norma & Henry Eigles Dr. Shulamith & Rabbi Sheldon Elster Arlene & David Epstein Diane & Burton Epstein Ellen & David Epstein Ruth Ernst Sandra & Andrew Eskin Barbara & Gary Faigen Eve & David Farber Suzanne & Enrique Fefer Suzanne & Michael Feinstein Mindy & Steve Feirman Diane & Charles Feldman Marylin J. & Irwin Stuart Feldman Harry Felsher Renee M. & Roger P. Fendrich Dr. Theodore M. Fields Harry D. Forman Janice & Alan Frankle Linda & Jay Freedman Debra Friedman & Stephen Cohen Noreen & Michael Friedman Suzan & Barry Friedman Debra & Peter Friedmann Sharon Gang Dene & Mel Garbow Caryn & Martin I. Garfinkle Marjorie & Stanley Gertzman Sonya M. & Joseph M. Gichner Dr. Jeffrey Gimble Dr. Edward Gingold Nancy & Dalbert Ginsberg The Hon. Ruth Bader Ginsburg Neil Glick Bobbi & Walter Gold Leonard Goldberg Robert Goldberg Janice F. Goldblum Lotte Goldman Donna & Martin Goldman Robert K. Goldman Susan Sachs Goldman Bruce Goldstein Irene Saunders Goldstein & Dr. Jerome Hantman Jinny & Michael Goldstein Joanne & Norman Goldstein David Good Amy & Gene Goott Dan Gordon Dr. Lori Gordon Helene Gordon & Alan Houser Nancy M. Gordon & Robert Parker Sherry & Robert Gratz Candace Gray Aviva Green & Prof. Shlomo Sternberg Lily & Saadia Greenberg Molly & Judah Greenzaid Jonathan Groner Carol & Dr. Richard Gross Martha Gross & Robert Tracy Joan S. & Norman M. Gurevich Maxine R. & Rabbi Joshua O. Haberman Reena M. & Michael D. Hais Lorraine & Leo Halpert Terry Harmon Nancy & John Harris Susan & Laurence Harris Shelby & Arthur Herman Sally M. & Stephen A. Herman Rabbi Joui Hessel Robin Hettleman & Matthew Weinberg Carole & John Hirschmann Bette & Arnold Hoffman Linda & Dr. I. Robert Horowitz Elinor Horwitz Joyce Isaacson Susan & Dudley Ives Cynthia Jachles Wendy & Dan Jarcho Roz & Gary Jonas Sherri & Jim Lieberman Andrea & Martin Kalin Gail & Michael Kaltman Ruth & Herschel Kanter The Sally B. Kaplan Revocable Trust Leslie & Sam Kaplan Sherry & Mark Kaswell Gail Kaufmann Judith & Thomas Klein Naomi & Steven Kline Joan Kleinman & Samuel Witten Ruth & Steve Kleinrock Catherine B. Klion & Thomas J. Plotz Emily & Dexter Kohn Sherryl K. & Howard A. Kohr Carole Kolker Tolbert H. Konigsberg Lisa & Barry Kopit Francie & Josh Kranzberg Marion Kraskin & Dr. Jeffrey Kraskin Robin Kaplan & Abram Kronsberg Dr. Shirley Kullen Shirley Landwirth Delia & Marvin Lang Merrill E. Lavine & Dr. Howard Boltansky Amelia Lawrence & Steve Leinwand Gerald Leach Michelle S. Leavy Sandra S. & Paul H. Lebowitz Jane & Bob Levey Judith & Jonathan Levin Barbara & Henry Levine Nanette S. & Peter J. Levinson Katie & Paul Levit Rosalind & Ronald Levy Lewis Family Charitable Foundation Justine Lisser & Steve Klitzman Marjorie & Robert E. Litman Jane & Robert Loeffler Karen & Dr. John Lowe Marylin Lowen Alison Luchs & Richard A. Best Jr. Susan & Ken Luchs Carol & Bob Luskin Linda B. Lyons Sarah & Frank Macchiarola Marian & Alan Malasky Elaine* & Daniel* Mann Julie & Andrew Mannes Karen & The Hon. Paul Mannes Maeva & Daniel Marcus Michelle & Glenn Marcus Rita & Sol Margolis Dr. Elizabeth Margosches & Don Melman Inger & Maurice Margulies Leslie Marks & Louis Solomon Dobra & Bennett R. Marshall Susan Kline Massey Johanna & Tim McDonough Micaela & Jack Mendelsohn Irene & Dr. Sander Mendelson Joy Midman Kathleen & David Miller Ellen Bessman Miller Joy & Mark Miller Ruthanne & Robert E. Miller Susan & Dr. Joseph Milzman Johanna & Dr. Jack Minker Annette & Adrian L. Morchower Dr. Pamela Nadell Rochelle & Barry Naft Ruth & David Naftaly Carole & John Nannes Honey & Alvin Nashman Denise Oken & Scott Feldstein Carol Oshinsky Doris Oshinsky Elissa & William Oshinsky Stanley Oshinsky Ellen & Grant Ottenstein Lynn Palmer & Robert Peck Molly & Alfred Pasternak David Paulson Jackie & Franklin Paulson Sandra Pearlman & Eugene Meyer Ruth & David Perlstein Toba Penny Rabbi Amy R. Perlin Sandra Perlstein & Rabbi Sidney Schwarz Carol & Girard Perone Geraldine Fogel Pilzer Susan & James Pittleman Libby & Louis Pohoryles Janet & David Polak Sandy & Dr. Richard Pollen Vivian Pollack Zelda Porte Posner Wallace Foundation Larry & Edna Povich Barbara & Mark Rabin Deborah Rachlin & Barry D. Nussbaum Lauren & Sam Racoosin Shirley Radack Barbara & Bert Rein Rabbi Fred Reiner Rabbi Arnold Resnicoff Michael Rice Michael Richman Patricia & James Ritzenberg Mary Jo Robinson & Gordon Glaser June & Marvin Rogul Beverly & Bob R. Rosen Joan & Marvin Rosenberg Bonnie & Bruce Rosenthal Dorene C. & Joseph A. Rosenthal Miriam Rosenthal & Michael Phillips Susan & John H. Rosenthal Linda Rosenweig & John Lynn Linda Rosenzweig & Sander Bieber Rod Ross Lori & Steve Ross Joan Roth Victoria Roth Lorraine & Dr. Irving Rothstein Carolyn & David Ruben Sharon & Rabbi Michael Safra Eileen & Stephen Samuels Joseph Sanderson Elias Savada May & Norton Savage Carol & Norton Schaengold Geraldine & Alan Schechter Anne R. & Barry R. Schenof Lois J. Schiffer Susan Schiffer Aylin & Neil Schlussel Beverley & Rabbi Jonathan Schnitzer Rabbi Sunny Schnitzer Sondra & Edwin Schonfeld Marlene & Stuart Schooler Howard Schreier Sheryl & Barry Schwartz Margaret Schwarz Diana & Robert Seasonwein Sharon Kay Segal Judith & Joseph Semo Leslie Shampaine & Dr. Ori Z. Soltes Judith & Hershel Shanks Elise & Robert A. Shapiro Leslie Shapiro Marilyn & Leonard Shapiro Gail & Yashar Shirazi Jean & Steven E. Shulman Lisa & Andrew Shulman Paulette & Dr. Stan Shulman Roberta & Lawrence Shulman Anne & Joseph Shuman Charlotte & Douglas Siegler Dr. Eugenia Siegler & David Hochman Gerry Siegler Stephanie & Sam Silverstein Barbara & David Silversmith Leslie J. Silverstone Karen & Jon Simon Rabbi Matthew Simon Michael Singer Carol Lee Skinner Mitchell Slavitt Elaine Snider Lafe Solomon Roberta Sonneborn Arlene Spund Dr. Rebekah Sobel Janet Solinger John Squire Vivienne & William Stark Sherry Stein Joann & Hugh Steinberger Rabbi Gil Steinlauf Eve & Andrew Stern Margaret & Stephen R. Stern Philip Sternberg Lauren & Fred Sternburg Mindy Strelitz & Andy Cornblatt Lisa Stuart & Adam Hoffberg Fran & Dr. Mark Sugar Steven Sumberg Sherry Sundick Monica & Richard Sussman Susan Tersoff & David A. Margolies Susan & Rey Tejada Dr. Grace C. Tiffany Ellen Tillman John Tinpe Ina Smith-Tornberg Francine & Stephen Joel Trachtenberg Lorianne & Steve Tracton Carl Tuvin Susan & Richard Ugelow Lori & Leslie Ulanow Lori & David Vise Debra Vodenos & Samuel B. Boxerman Ellen & David Waghelstein Sheila & Chuck Wagner Davi & Larry Walders Gerald Waldman Robert Weinberg Rabbi Stuart Weinblatt Marjorie & Allan Weingold Dorothy & Jay Weinstein Pauline & Milton Weinstein Roslyn & The Hon. Paul Weinstein Susan Weinstein & Adam J. Rubinson Janyse & Bernard M. Weisz Helene R. Weisz & Richard Lieberman Rabbi Harold S. White* Rosa Wiener Robert J. Wilensky Sondra & Dr. Jon Willen Ellen & James Wilner Esther & Elliot Wilner Beth Blacher Wilson Judi & Joshua Wind Phyllis & Robert Wolff Elana Wolin & Fred Rednor Deborah & David Yaffe Shirley & Gerson Yalowitz Stella & Samy Ymar Carol & Irving Yoskowitz Ann & Richard Young Karen Zacharia & Raymond Paretzky Pat & Stuart Zuckerman Susan & Alan Zuckerman Stanley R. Zupnik INDIVIDUAL AND DUAL/ FAMILY MEMBERS Fern Abrams Louis Allahut Allen County Public Library Louise & Elliott Allentuck Philip Aronson Cherie & William Artz Sylvia & Albert Bass Vivian G. Bass Howard Berger Roberta & Rabbi Murray Berger Elsbeth Bergman Debra Berke Dava Berkman Cynthia & Herb Berkowitz Estelle R. & David Berley Toby & Philip Berman Marc Bernstein & Jeffrey Burka Toni & David Bickart Arthur Bildman Ruth & Leonard Binn Sandy & Phil Blank 22 Fred Block Anita & Harold J. Bobys Hope & Philip Borish Janet & Donald Brady Elizabeth Brenner Carole & Nick Brand Ravelle Brickman Patricia Britz Keith Brooks Linda & Warren S. Brooks Cantor Arianne Brown Patricia & William Brown Barbara & E. Fulton Brylawski Glenda C. & Gary M. Buff Sheila Burdoff Robert Canterman Rachel & Robert Chasnow Bonnie & Robert Chernikoff Vivien Clair Kenneth Cliffer Ruth & Edward Cogen Arthur A. Cohen Jordan Cohen Lenore & George Cohen Marla & Victor Cohen Janis & Robert Colton Tony & Daniel Cooper Diane Curran & Ferdinand Hoefner Sheila & Jerome A. Danoff Arnold Danziger Ruth & Joel Darmstadter Vera & Ralph Deckelbaum Rosalyn P. Doggett Beth Doughty & Donald Weinstein Claire Dratch Hermine Dreyfuss Betty Edelson* Fritz Edelstein Susan & Charles L. Edson Suzanne & Rabbi Jonathan Eichhorn Rona & Stuart T. Eisen Joan Eisenstodt David Elfin Harriet Epstein Heitzi D. Epstein & Geoffrey Green Marsha & Rob Epstein Judith & Eric Erdheim Michael J. Fanaroff Harriette & Dr. Daniel Farber Amy & Joseph Federman Ruth B. & Rashi Fein Frances & Edmond Feldman Helene Feldman Harry Felsher Debra & Marvin Feuer Betty & Clifford Fishman Ruth & Barry Fishman Linda Mae & Irving Fleishman Juanita J. Fogelman Lewis Franke Annette Freeman Michael Freiman Arlene & Steve Friedlander Bonnie Friedman William Froelich Sharyn & Arthur Fuchs Judy Furash Carole Garfinkle Stephen N. Gell Ricki S. Gerger Rosalie* & Joseph Gilbert Sherry Gillespie Robin Glantz & Anthony Ciccone Rita Glazer Danielle Glosser & Howard Riker Marcia Goldberg Margaret & Steven Goldberg Cheryl & Bruce Goldhirsch Doris B. & Balfour Goldman Elaine & David Goodman Cynthia C. & Larry P. Goodman Barbara & Michael Gordon Rita & Paul Gordon Charlotte Gottlieb Melinda Gray-Roth & Mark Roth Claudette Greenblat Phyllis & Michael Greene Burt Greenstein Ellen & George Hacker Jimmy M. Harris Sheldon Harris Dr. Rachel Hartig Rachel R. Hecht Marcia & David Hoexter Ruth Holtzman Kathryn M. & Gary N. Horlick Lisa & Murray Horwitz Curry Rose & George Hoskey Selma & Harold Hurwitz Laura & Jerold L. Jacobs Selma & Harry Jacobs Annabelle & Barry Jaffe Beverly I. Jaffe Rena & Hal Jaffe Anne Jarrett Andrea & Leonard Jewler Annette Jolles Ann Joseloff Holly Joseph Gwen & Al Kaltman Sharon & David Kamerling Janet Kandel Ayren & Theodore R. Kanter Helene B. Karpa Barbara Katz Barbara J. Katz Sharon L. & John M. King Lynn & Morris Kletzkin Elsie & James Klumpner Lynn Koiner Maryla Korn Dorothy & Louis Kornhauser Marlene & Martin Kossoff Jay D. Krasnow Marilyn & Fred Kraus Diane K. & Allan J. Kullen Doris Lane Neil Larks Marcia & Michael Lawson Brian Lebowitz Radine Legum Sandra & Arnold Leibowitz Gail Lelyveld Wilma E. & Ronald L. Lenkin Judith Leonard Susan H. & Michael Lerner Bill Levenson Jeanne Levin Ruth & Ephraim Levin Joanne Levine Micheline S. Levy Audrey Liebross & Jay Jarvis Benita & Robert Bennett Lubic Adrienne & Emanuel Mandel Barbara K. & David B. Marblestone Shirley Markowitz Zena & Paul Mason Janice & David Mehler Barbara & Dr. Marvin Menick Diane & Hal Mesirow Karen & Rabbi James Michaels Charles Frederick Miller Caroline Mindel Charles Miller Burt J. Morse Debra Moser & Mitchell P. Berliner Rosalie S. & Ben Mulitz Jo-Ann Neuhaus Linda & Alvin Neuman Barry Newman Karen Nozik Margy Nurik Ilene & John Pachter David Pelmoter Cynthia & Jeffrey Peterman Nancy & Saul Pilchen Louise Piver Harriet & Ira Platt Arlene Polangin Enid Portnoy Elizabeth Prelinger & Stephen Messner Deborah L. Prigal Judith & Joel Rabinowitz Rabbi Adam Raskin Laurel Radow Jacqueline R. & Alfred C. Raphelson Nancy Raskin Susan & Howard Reichbart Beverly & Daniel Rezneck Nelson F. Rimensnyder Dr. Douglas N. Robins Eve & Richard Robins Jeffery Rock Shelley Rood Joan Kurcias Rosenbach Elisabeth Ross Lynne & Douglas Ross Helene & Stephen Sacks Froma & Jerome L. Sandler Debbie & Ronald Sann Mary & Carl Saperstein Rise & Ronald Schlesinger Michelle & Carl I. Schoenberger Gary Schorr Gail & David* Schwartz Judy Schwartz Lila M. & Dr. Jack P. Segal Sharon Seidel Scott D. Seligman Shirley & Jack Serber Barbara & Jerome Shapiro Stephen M. Shapiro Sofiya & Yefim Shatsman Bonnie & Neil Sherman Rennie Sherman Sam Shipkovitz Rabbi David Shneyer Norman Shore Nancy & Bert Silver Samuel Silverman Nicole Simmons & Eric Rubin Nina Simon & Robert Rosenthal Ruth Snyder Carole Sonneborn Pamela & John Spears Joyce Sperling Kathleen & Daniel Spiro Nessa R. Spitzer Judith H. Spungen Hollis G. & Howard G. Stein Jerry Stein Susan & Dale Stein Phyllis & Marvin Stirman Joel Sugarman Audrey & Barry A. Suskind Christine H. Swan & Elliot Chabot Ellen Sweet Jeanne & Dr. Stanley Talpers Dr. Herbert L. Tanenbaum Jordan E. Tannenbaum Miriam & Sheldon Tommer Margery & Morris Topf Harriet & Randy Tritell Anita & Samuel Turk Sarah Elpern & Bruce Waxman Robert Weinberg David Weinstein Leslie Weisman Lotte & Dr. Martin S. Wolfe Steven J. Wollins Evelyn & Will Wolstein Sandra Wool Julie Wugalter & Ronald S. Rubbin Frances Adler Zamcheck & Norman Zamcheck Marjorie Zapruder Daniel S. Zevitz 23 Special Designated Gifts 415 M Street Synagogue Mural Funds allowed us to rescue 90-year-old portions of Washington’s only known synagogue mural before the building was redeveloped. John Tolleris Dorothy & Jerry Canter Laurie England* in honor of her grandmother, “Aunt Minnie” Goldsmith Albert H. Small Jane & Daniel Solomon Ira Wagner Marlene Zakai Laura & Perry Apelbaum Rachel Applestein Susan Barocas Sally Berk & Sanders H. Berk, M.D. Beth Chai Jewish Humanist Congregation of Greater Washington Marlene & Joseph Bishow Steve Blacher Marla Bobowick & Mort Rolleston Hope & Philip Borish Nancy & Alan Bubes Don Budowsky Rebecca & David Burka Ellen & Lee Burstyn James Cassedy Sherman Cohn William DeCosta Roslyn Diamond Jeffery Doranz Stacey Downey Naomi Edelson & Martin Shore Norma & Herman Eigles Vanessa Eisemann Harvey Eisen Joan Eisenstodt Harriet Epstein Anita Finkelstein Brian Fish Becca Freedman Philip & Lenore Garon Eli Glazier Leonard Goldberg Paula Siegle Goldman Jeff Goldstein Peter Goodman Paul Greenberg Thomas Holzman Polly Janz Paul Kagan Jeffery Katz Carla & Michael Kieval Joseph Kleinman Sara Klompus Barry Kreiswirth Jacob Kurtzer Lydia Laskin Gerald Leach Gail Lelyveld Paula Pascal Levine Susan & Ira Levine Wilma Probst Levy & Louis Levy Linda & Jonathan Lyons Joel Martin Sandra & Eugene Meyer Phyllis Meyers Leslie Montroll Ginger Moss Alfred Munzer & Joel Wind Brenda & Paul Pascal Rhonda Pruss Shirley Radack Douglas Robins Brett Rodgers Louise Rothschild May Savage Susan Schiffer Beth Schoenbach Howard Schreier Michael Schultz Ryan Shepard Mary Ann Simpson in memory of Aloysius Simpson, Jr. Myrna Sislen & Bill Rice Daniel Steinhauer Thomas Stiyer in memory of Sophie & Joseph Dresbold, Lilian R. Levin, and Roselyn & Seymour Silverman Temple Beth Ami Hadassah Thursz Roz Timberg Steven Warner Rosa Wiener Mendelle Tourover Woodley Marjorie Zapruder Voices of the Vigil Gifts to create an exhibition, accompanying programs, and catalog about the local Soviet Jewry movement: Major Benefactors Wayne Goldstein Memorial Foundation Rhonda & Robert Zahler Benefactors Susan Bales & Dr. Michael L. Goldstein Eugenia & Dr. Michael Brin Dede & Kenneth Feinberg Israel Family Foundation Washington Hebrew Congregation Sponsors Jane & Herbert Beller Jerold L. Jacobs and Ira Bartfield on behalf of B’nai B’rith Chesapeake Bay Region The Samuel Burtoff, M.D. Foundation Dorothy & Jerry Canter Ryna & Melvin Cohen Foundation Faye F. Cohen Joan & Oscar Dodek Tamara & Boris Feldblyum Catherine Joyce Shirley Landwirth Elaine* & Daniel* Mann June & Marvin Rogul Ambassador Richard Schifter Sulica Fund Diane Abelman Wattenberg Marcia Weinberg Liliane Willens Humanities Council of Washington, DC Jewish Community Relations Council Luther Place Memorial Church National Coalition Supporting Eurasian Jewry Adas Israel Congregation Agudas Achim Congregation B’nai Israel Congregation Congregation Beth El Ohr Kodesh Congregation Temple Beth Ami Temple Rodef Shalom Tifereth Israel Congregation Donors Sally & Sanders H. Berk, M.D. Steve Blacher Adam Elster Meg & Sam Flax Joanne & Norman Goldstein Laura Loeb & Howard Morse Phyllis* & Philip Margolius Linda Schwartz & Alvin Dodek Rabbi Sid Schwarz Nancy & Bert Silver Merna Wagshal Stern & Mel Stern Supporters Neale Ainsfield Laura & Perry Apelbaum Tracey & Patrick Gallagher Dene & Mel Garbow Stephen N. Gell Inna & Lev Goldfarb Paula S. Goldman Ella Kagan & Pavel Ilyin Maryla Korn and Family Johanna & Jack Minker Brenda & Paul Pascal Sheri & Richard Pascal Rabbi Mindy Portnoy Riderwood Jewish Community Shirley & Jack Serber Peggy & Sidney J. Silver Hadassah N. Thursz Mary Ann Winter & Josef Osterweil Friends Ameinu Washington-Baltimore Chapter, Bet Mishpachah, Sharon Burka, Linda Causey, Congregation Har Shalom, Trenice Goldstein, Nathan Lewin, NA’AMAT Greater Washington Council, Judy & Russell Smith, Donna & Stan Stoller, Stephen Joel Trachtenberg, Jennifer & Jonathan Weinberg And other supporters: Elaine Amir, Elaine Amir, Les Bergen, Betty Miller, Jonathan Skolnik, John Tolleris, Geraldyne & Jeffrey Weiser, Mendelle T. Woodley, Paul Wright Professional Development Fund This new fund honors Executive Director Laura Cohen Apelbaum’s 20th anniversary serving the Society. Linda & Richard Blumenreich Rebecca & David Burka Sean Cahill, Property Group Partners George Cohen Myra & Richard Cohen Faye F. Cohen Joan & Oscar Dodek Luis Dodero, Somerset Systems Scott Engle, HBP Inc. Sandra & Andrew Eskin Michael Feinstein, Jewish Community Center of Greater Washington Tracey & Patrick Gallagher Dene & Mel Garbow Ann & Frank Gilbert Janice Goldblum Karen Green Paul Greenberg Addison Hall, Addison Hall Design Jim Hamerski, Shannon and Luchs Insurance Agency Tamara & Harry Handelsman Hany Hassan, Beyer Blinder Belle Architects Linda & Jerry Herman Sonia & Joseph* Herson Catherine Joyce, Morgan Stanley Tracy Kamis, Kamis Accounting Naomi & Steven Kline Merrill Lavine Wilma Probst Levy & Louis Levy Amy & Rabbi Bruce Lustig Madalyn & Ernest Marcus Melissa J. Martens, Museum of Jewish Heritage Phyllis Meyers Johanna & Jack Minker Jack Olender Joel Puckett, Tri-Star Heating and Cooling May Savage Rita & Bernard Segerman Nancy & Bert Silver Myrna Sislen & Bill Rice Albert H. Small Tina & Albert Small, Jr. Frank Spigel Robert Walker, Brooks and Brooks Cleaning Services Diane Abelman Wattenberg Marcia Weinberg Marlene Zakai * O f blessed memory 24 Honorific and Memorial Gifts Roz & Jerry Udwin Shelley & Charles Wasserman HONORIFIC GIFTS In honor of Abigail Svetlik’s bat mitzvah Mary Vallance Hagen Suzanne & Michael Oliwa In honor of Carolyn Alper’s birthday Vivienne Lassman In honor of Benjy Apelbaum’s graduation Diane Abelman Wattenberg In honor of Laura Apelbaum Susan & Brian Bayly Susan & Robert Berk Ruth Brinn Dr. Shulamith & Rabbi Sheldon Elster In honor of Laura & Perry Apelbaum Krayna & Rabbi Charles Feinberg In honor of Samantha Bass Rabbi Micah D. Greenstein Kay & Haskell M. Pitluck In honor of Ann Belkov Paula Siegle Goldman In honor of Ann Belkov & Jerry Lewis Laura & Perry Apelbaum In honor of Les Bergen Wendy Turman In honor of Dr. Sanders Berk’s 70th birthday Evelyn & Martin Auerbach In honor of Faye Brodie’s birthday Paula Siegle Goldman In honor of Frances & Leonard* Burka’s 80th birthdays Dorothy & Jerry Canter Phyllis Meyers In honor of Rose Burka’s 100th birthday Rosa Burka In honor of Diane Epstein Judith & Michael S. Herman In honor of Morton Funger’s birthday Steve Blacher In honor of Jim Goldberg’s 75th birthday Pat & Dr. Robert Silverman In honor of Ruth Graze’s 100th birthday Rose Mary & Terry Jackson In honor of Alan Gross’s release Paula Siegle Goldman In honor of 2014 Guardian Co-chairs, Linda & Jerry Herman and Pat & Dr. Robert Silverman Emily Bartos In honor of Rhonda Herman Judith & Michael S. Herman In honor of Sonia & Joseph* Herson Curry Rose Hoskey In honor of Esther Isralow’s birthday Steve Blacher In honor of Barbara & Dr. Richard Kaufman’s 60th anniversary Ina Smith-Tornberg In honor of Arlene Kogod Steve Blacher In honor of Ciss Kolker Steve Blacher In honor of Howard Morse Donna & Mitchell Morris In honor of Brenda Pascal’s birthday Gwen Zuares In honor of Pat & Dr. Robert Silverman Rabbi Amy Schwartzman In honor of Sidney J. Silver’s 80th birthday Drs. Sandi & Gary Ceska Jean & Harvey Greller Carolyn Goldman & Sydney Polakoff Julie & Brian Silver Tina & Albert H. Small, Jr. In honor of Sam Stern’s birthday Paula Siegle Goldman In honor of Annie Totah Dr. Shulamith & Rabbi Sheldon Elster In honor of Wendy Turman’s 15th and Claire Uziel’s 10th JHSGW anniversaries Stephanie & Sam Silverstein MEMORIAL GIFTS In memory of Jane Abraham Laura & Perry Apelbaum Stephanie & Sam Silverstein In memory of Josephine Ammerman Laura & Perry Apelbaum Peggy & Sidney J. Silver Rabbi Harold S. White In memory of Henry Brylawski Carolyn Alper Laura & Perry Apelbaum Susan Bales & Dr. Michael L. Goldstein Martha & Stuart L. Bindeman John Bolig Louise Brown Amelie & Bernei Burgunder Lois Gardiner Clark & Mark Eden Horowitz Barbara Drazin & David Heller Ellen & David Epstein Carol B. Fischer Karen Fishman Paula Siegle Goldman Dr. Michael Grunberger Sonia Herson Kate Herrod & Richard Alper Gail Kaufmann Alice & Robert Lachin Katie & Paul Levit Wilma Probst Levy & Louis Levy Laura Loeb & Howard Morse Patrick G. Loughney Charles A. Lowenhaupt Alison Luchs & Richard A. Best Jr. Anne E. McLean & Melih Kutluer Alfred Munzer & Joel Wind Richard Neugass Jane Pack Jackie & Franklin Paulson Dr. Peggy K. Pearlstein Elsie M. Petty Nancy Seeger Sidney Seidenman, Jr. Pat & Robert A. Silverman Mary Sue & Sylvan Stein Sherry Stein Hadassah Thursz John Tolleris Wendy Turman Diane Abelman Wattenberg Ellen & Bernard Young Marlene Zakai In memory of Leonard Burka Linda & Marshall Ackerman Laura & Perry Apelbaum Barbara & Arnold Berlin John M. Bille Steve Blacher Bernice & Joel Breslau Christine Burka Dorothy & Jerry Canter Sue Delsack & Alan White Diane & Burton Epstein Tracey & Patrick Gallagher Judith & Michael Herman Tom Henteleff Deena & Jerry Kaplan Gail Kaufmann Marky & Martin Kirsch Ann & Bruce Lane Phyllis E. Levine Geraldine Lewis Karen & Paul Mannes Diane Mesirow Phyllis Meyers Sandra & Norman Mitchell Alfred Munzer & Joel Wind Susan & James Pittleman Bonnie & Gil Schwartz Phyllis & Raymond Scalettar Peggy & Sidney J. Silver Carol & Steve Starley Sherry Stein Lauren & Fred K. Sternberg Diane Abelman Wattenberg Carole & Joseph Wolinsky Ellen & Bernard Young Gwen Zuares In memory of Harold Cladny Carol Yates In memory of Laurie England Laura & Perry Apelbaum In memory of Melvyn Estrin Steve Blacher In memory of Mary Flax Laura & Perry Apelbaum Jamie & Michael Bernstein Steve Blacher Helen & Earl M. Colson Anne & Robert Couch Elissa & Richard Garr Diane Heiman Sherry Bindeman Kahn & David Kahn Todd Monti In memory of Al Friedman Laura & Perry Apelbaum Janice Goldblum In memory of Beverly Friedman Alfred Munzer & Joel Wind In memory of Joshua Goldblum Beth & Roy Alvarez Laura & Perry Apelbaum Steve Blacher Lea Susan Chartrock James Dye Karen & Seth Eaton Tamar Small Greif Carol Grove & Anne Turkos Elizabeth Paulson Marilyn & Raymond Shaffer Mark Slitt Davi & Larry Walders In memory of Charles Goldsmith Lenore England In memory of Jessica Goldstein Dr. Peggy K. Pearlstein In memory of Marian Kressin Gordon Carol & Richard Barron Patricia & Donald Best Joan & Oscar Dodek Karen & Charles Dunton Lynn & Glen Forrest Stephen Friend Cindi Gertz Harvey Goodman Judith & Michael Herman Emily & Neil Kishter Gary Kramer Kathleen & James McGeehan Alison McWilliams Doris Oshinsky Lynn & Stanley Oshinsky Arnold Pincus Cathy & Marc Scheineson Harriet & Phillip Schulman Leslie & Joel Silver Joan Smith Jeanne & Marvin Spivak Mary Agnes & Stephen Voss Evelyn & Sam Zweig In memory of Margot Heckman Laura & Perry Apelbaum Nancy & Alan Bubes Ellen & Lee Burstyn Janice Goldblum Jackie & Alexander Heckman Marky & Martin Kirsch Wilma Probsy Levy & Louis Levy Alfred Munzer & Joel Wind Stephanie & Sam Silverstein Gail J. Sonnemann & Samuel Brylawski John Tolleris Diane Abelman Wattenberg Helen & Nate Watzman In memory of Joseph Herson Laura & Perry Apelbaum Martha & Mike Ayres Shelly & Leonard Blondes Anita Bobys Henry Brylawski* Nancy & Alan Bubes Cindy & Glenn Easton Marky & Martin Kirsch Marion & Jeffrey Kraskin Alfred Munzer & Joel Wind The Murphy Family Foundation Dr. Peggy K. Pearlstein Susan & John H. Rosenthal Barbara & Joseph Schaeffer Gail Sonnemann & Sam Brylawski Judy & Russell Smith John Tolleris Diane Abelman Wattenberg In memory of Ida Jervis Erin Fulham David Hirsch Marsha E. Jackson Allison Redisch Joanne Stefanick In memory of Marvin Kay Janet & Donald Brady In memory of Gil Lewis Judith & Michael Herman In memory of Harold Lichtenstein Laura & Perry Apelbaum In memory of Daniel Mann Laura & Perry Apelbaum Alfred Munzer & Joel Wind In memory of Lilyan Margolius Paula Siegle Goldman Diane Abelman Wattenberg In memory of Phyllis Margolius Laura & Perry Apelbaum In memory of Shirley Markowitz Sylvia Bass In memory of Lovell Olender Brenda & Paul Pascal In memory of Frank H. Rich, Sr. Laura & Perry Apelbaum In memory of Coralie Richards Sue Delsack & Alan White In memory of Edward Isaac Salkovitz Lisa Kohn In memory of Sherry Zvares Sanabria Judith & Michael Herman In memory of Frances & Jack Schooler Lynn Jacobs In memory of Paul Sprenger Laura & Perry Apelbaum In memory of Ruth Wind Laura & Perry Apelbaum Steve Blacher Dr. Shulamith & Rabbi Sheldon Elster Paula Siegle Goldman Paula Pascal Levine Brenda & Paul Pascal Dr. Peggy K. Pearlstein Diane Abelman Wattenberg Gwen Zuares In memory of Renee Wolf Santa Ottens 25 Planned Giving Benefits include: • Recognition in Society publications and at events • Invitations to exhibition openings and select events • Priority on archival research requests and “Behind the Scenes” tours • Knowing that you have helped ensure that the community’s stories will be told If you have included the Society in your estate plans or are interested in learning about The 1876 Society, contact Executive Director Laura Apelbaum at [email protected] or (202) 789-0900. Bequests and other planned gifts are important ways to secure the Society’s financial future. These gifts are received with immense gratitude and provide crucial support for the Society to preserve, chronicle, and tell the story of our local Jewish community for future generations. To recognize those who have designated the Society as a beneficiary of a planned gift, the Society has established The 1876 Society, which commemorates the year that the Society’s historic synagogue, now the Lillian & Albert Small Jewish Museum, was dedicated. It honors those who have pledged to include the Society in their estate plans. Your planned gift is a legacy—a way for you to provide the Society with resources to continue serving as the nation’s premier resource for our communal history and sharing our stories through original exhibitions, publications, and educational programs, including those specifically for youth. Including the Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington in your estate plans ensures that the Society will transmit our community’s unique history to future generations. What will be your legacy for our community? How will you assure that your history and story of our community’s heritage are handed down from generation to generation—L’dor v’dor? For more than 55 years The Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington has collected, preserved, and told our stories to keep our history alive. From the arrival of the first Jewish resident in 1795 to the German-speaking Jews who formed the first congregation before the Civil War. From the Eastern European immigrants in the late 19th century to the influx of Jewish New Dealers and those serving during World War II. Today, our Jewish community numbers more than 200,000—the seventh-largest in the country, living in Washington and its suburbs of Maryland and Northern Virginia. Their stories are the rich and vibrant content of our archives, our exhibits, and our programs. 1876 SOCIETY 1876 SOCIETY HISTORY: teaches us, enriches us, defines us. HISTORY: tells stories of dreams dashed and hopes fulfilled. HISTORY: grounds us in the past with a vision for the future. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • MEMBERS Richard Alper Anonymous (2) Laura Apelbaum Sandra* & Dr. Clement Alpert Flora & Maury* Atkin Hannah Aurbach Ann Belkov Henry Brylawski* Stanley Cohen Tillie Laskin Fenichel* Isabelle Gichner* Aaron Goldman* Paula Goldman Rocxey Kurlen Hais* Sidney Hais* Margot Heckman* Elaine* & Daniel* Mann David Margolies Brenda Pascal Wilma Probst Levy Stacy Reines Albert H. Small John Tolleris Hadassah Thursz Irvin Wolloch* New Members • Judy & Russell Smith * O f blessed memory 26 Gift Spotlight Judy and Russell Smith first became involved with the Society in 2005 when Russell attended our Guardian luncheon as Adas Israel’s president. Russell has since become a Society leader, currently serving as treasurer on the Executive Committee. Judy and Russell have a true passion for the Society’s plans to build a new museum in the heart of downtown Washington. They explained, “The new museum is going to be transformational… we believe that the Society can continue to touch people on a ‘local’ and ‘personal’ level while operating a museum that will be a noteworthy addition to Washington attractions.” In 2014, the Smiths informed the Society of their plans to leave a planned gift in their wills to establish a future endowment in their names. They explained, “We made a cash pledge to build the new museum, but we also want to assure that there is a morethan-simply-sufficient amount of support for all of the Society’s activities in the future. A planned gift is our way of contributing to this goal. The gift is an invitation to others to help assure the Society’s work for the long term. We are hopeful that many, many years from now when that gift arrives, people will know how much we appreciated the Society.” The Jewish Historical Society participates in a planned giving initiative spearheaded by the United Jewish Endowment Fund of The Jewish Federation of Greater Washington. This program, called Create a Jewish Legacy, brings together local agencies and synagogues in a community-wide effort to raise planned giving awareness. The goal: to build a strong, vibrant community for generations to come Charitable Bequests Contributing a charitable bequest to the Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington is a wonderful way to leave a lasting legacy without affecting your finances during your lifetime Bequests may take many forms: a specific dollar amount, a portion of one’s remaining assets after all obligations are met, specific assets, remaining retirement account assets, or benefits from an individual retirement account or a life insurance policy. 1.Gifts in your will Please consider leaving the Society a charitable gift when writing your will. If you have already written a will, your attorney can help you arrange a charitable bequest with a simple amendment or codicil. Your estate may receive a tax deduction in the amount of your charitable bequest. Sample Bequest Wording: I give and bequeath to the Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington, Inc., 701 Fourth Street, NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC 20001, • the sum of $ , or/and • the following described securities , or/and • the following described real estate , or/and • the rest and residue or % of my estate after payment of the foregoing bequests Endowment Naming Opportunities You may designate that gifts of $10,000 or more become named endowment funds to perpetuate your support of JHSGW programs and activities. In this way, your name or that of a loved one becomes synonymous with annual Society activities. Sample wording: I give and bequeath to the Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington, Inc., 701 Fourth Street, NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC 20001, the sum of $ to establish an Endowment to be named and to be used for the designated purpose(s) of , general operations, or programs. 27 Sample Endowment Opportunities include: • Named Endowment for Exhibitions • Named Endowments for components of the Archival Collections (for example, Business Archives, Family Archives or Oral History Collection) • Named Endowment for Various Programs including youth field trips, walking tours, or Jewish American Heritage Month programs. New Endowment Contact the office for a full list of Endowment Naming Opportunities. 2. Gifts of Retirement Plan Assets Gifts from your IRA or other retirement plans are among the easiest to arrange. These gifts do not require changing your will. Gifts of IRA or other retirement plan proceeds may be made by simply naming the Society a beneficiary on a Designation of Beneficiary form. 3. Life Insurance Naming the Society the beneficiary of an existing life insurance policy that is no longer needed offers a simple way to create a permanent source of support for the Society. We are happy to assist you and/or your advisors as you consider giving a gift of life insurance. 4. Gifts in Conjunction with The Jewish Federation The Jewish Historical Society’s partnership with The Jewish Federation enables our donors to establish endowments and funds to benefit the Society through The United Jewish Endowment Fund. Margot Heckman, a truly dedicated supporter of our work, passed away in 2014. In addition to the financial support that she generously provided over the years, Margot was also a member of The 1876 Society. As she intended, her testamentary gift has set up an endowment for a lecture or lecture series. This is a wonderful legacy and way to recognize Margot’s keen interest in programs. Charitable Gift Annuities (CGAs) Charitable Gift Annuities may be contributed to the Society through an arrangement with the United Jewish Endowment Fund of The Jewish Federation of Greater Washington. In exchange for your gift of transferred cash, appreciated securities or other assets naming the Society as the beneficiary, you will receive a fixed income for life, beginning at a minimum age of 55. If you choose to use appreciated assets to fund a gift annuity, no capital gains taxed are due when the securities are contributed. A portion of your income from the annuity will instead be subject to capital gains tax to be paid over your life expectancy. A CGA may be established with a contribution of $10,000 or more. This information is not intended as legal advice. For legal advice, please consult your attorney or financial planner. For more information regarding planned giving or establishing gifts through The Jewish Federation, please contact: Executive Director Laura Cohen Apelbaum at [email protected] or (202) 789-0900. The JHSGW staff and Board of Directors appreciate your unwavering support in preserving local Jewish history and creating a legacy for the future. 28 Annual Giving Year-End Giving Opportunities Year end gifts are received with immense gratitude and provide crucial support for the Society’s community-wide programs and activities. We were grateful for Richard z’l and Lois England’s major gift of $250,000. Cash Cash gifts are tax-deductible, if you itemize your deductions in the year of the contribution. Your gift may be: • made to provide general support for programs and/or operations • in memory of a loved one • in honor of a loved one for a birthday, anniversary, or other special event • designated for a special project or program (see Current Giving Opportunities at right) Checks may be mailed to the Jewish Historical Society at P.O. Box 791104, Baltimore, MD 212791104. You can also donate by calling our office at (202) 789-0900 to charge your contribution on any major credit card. To donate online, visit http://jhsgw.org/join/contribute. Matching Gifts Many employers match charitable gifts, enabling you to double or even triple your donation. Speak to your personnel office about its matching gift program or encourage it to implement one. Many companies have made matching gifts to the Society at the request of their employees who are our members/donors. Stocks or Securities Stocks and publicly traded securities are easy to contribute and offer great tax advantages. By contributing stock directly to the Society, you avoid capital gains tax. Your income tax deduction is based on current market value (the appreciated value of the stock at the time of transfer) instead of your cost basis, giving you an additional tax benefit. Please advise us when you donate stock so we can track and acknowledge your gift! Contact Mary Ann Dawedeit at 202-789-0900 or [email protected] to notify us of your gift or to answer your questions about gifts of stock. Stock Transfer Instructions: Molly E. Bray, Morgan Stanley Smith Barney 1775 Eye Street, NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC 20006 DTC Number: 0015 Account Name: Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington Account Number: 642-095153-606 Israel Bonds The Society also accepts Israel Bonds as contributions. To transfer an Israel Bond, donors should contact Israel Bond’s Washington, D.C. office at 301-654-6575 or [email protected]. Mary Ann Dawedeit is also available to assist you with your gift at 202-789-0900 or [email protected]. Combined Federal Campaign (CFC #97800) Federal employees, including military personnel, may designate JHSGW as a recipient of contributions made through the annual CFC program. JHSGW is listed under headings for “Arts, Culture and Humanities” as well as “Educational Institutions and Related Activities” in the CFC Booklet. 29 In Memoriam We note with sadness the deaths of Henry Brylawski, Leonard Burka, and Laurie England. Henry Brylawski (1913-2015) Henry served as president of the Society from 1969 to 1971 and was instrumental in our work to save and move the 1876 synagogue in 1969. After the move, he continued to advocate for the building by working to secure historic preservation grants. Henry was a dedicated supporter of the Society’s work and generously shared his extensive knowledge, his vivid memories and stories, his endless good humor and enthusiasm, and his deep and abiding love of history. We are greatly indebted to Henry for his years of service, and we remember him each time we enter the doors of the historic building he worked so hard to save. Leonard grew up in Southwest D.C. where his parents owned DGS grocery store. He made sure the store was included in our online database of “mom and pop” groceries. Leonard had a keen sense of history and place, and was a staunch supporter and booster of the Society. Always generous with their time and support, Leonard and his wife, Frances, were among the first donors when we purchased our office building in 2008. They also served as Honorary Chairs of the 2011 Guardian luncheon alongside their daughter, Sharon, who chaired the event. JHSGW COLLECTION Leonard Burka (1933-2014) Henry Brylawski (left) and former Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg in the sanctuary at the synagogue’s rededication ceremony, 1975 Twins Leonard and Edward A. Burka with their mother Fay in front of the family store, early 1930s Leonard and Frances Burka, 2013 Guardian luncheon Laurie England (1949-2015) We were honored to have gotten to know Laurie in the last several years. She was creative and caring and had a strong sense of history and community. Passionate about her D.C. roots, Laurie never passed up an opportunity to express pride in the work of her grandmother, “Aunt Minnie” Lansburgh Goldberg. She also recommended her father for inclusion in our Arlington National Cemetery guide. We enjoyed learning from her and sharing ideas together. Laurie England, 1965. Courtesy of the England Family. 30 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS SUMMARY STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES for the year ended December 31, 2014 Revenue and Support Fiscal Year 2014 Net investment income In-kind Contributions Educational and program fees Rental Income Membership dues and contributions (Fourth Street building) Grants and matching funds Expenditures Fiscal Year 2014 Revenue and Support: Grants and matching funds $ 401,117 Membership dues and contributions 492,108 Net investment income 132,085 In-kind contributions 70,691 Educational and program fees 33,430 Rental Income (4th Street building) 117,944 TOTAL REVENUE AND SUPPORT $ 1,247,375 Expenses: Administrative $ 189,155 Fundraising54,379 Museum60,163 Exhibits, Archival, and Education 625,209 TOTAL EXPENSES $ 928,906 Administrative Exhibits Archival Education Fundraising Museum ENDOWMENTS The Lillian and Albert Small Museum Endowment Fund The Lois and Richard England Perpetual Endowment Fund The Doris and Robert I. Silverman Endowment Fund The Edith and Charles Pascal Endowment Fund The Aaron and Paula Goldman Endowment Fund The Morris and Helen Cladny Endowment Fund The Behrend-Nordlinger-Goldstein Endowment Fund The Alper Education Endowment The Fonoroff Endowment The Herman-Silverman Family Endowment Fund Sidney (Vigderhouse) & Rocxey Kurlen Hais Endowment Fund PRINCIPAL TOTAL $ 783,743 31 SUMMARY STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION December 31, 2014 ASSETS Cash and equivalents $ 595,140 Investments 2,152,879 Accounts and pledges receivable, net 329,619 Property and equipment, net 2,318,596 Prepaid expenses 12,927 TOTAL ASSETS $ 5,409,161 LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS Liabilities: Accounts payable and accrued expenses $ 48,000 Deferred revenue and tenant deposits 3,400 Loan Payable (Mortgage on 4th Street building) 1,552,287 TOTAL LIABILITIES $ 1,603,687 Net Assets: Unrestricted $ 1,483,546 Temporarily restricted 1,538,185 Permanently restricted 783,743 TOTAL NET ASSETS TOTAL LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS $ 3,805,474 $ 5,409,161 The complete financial statements, including the audit report of our independent accountants, Squire, Lemkin + Company, LLP are available by contacting the Society’s office at (202) 789-0900 or at [email protected]. Copies of our complete audit are also available. 32 Volunteers Special thanks to our volunteers: Interns Rebecca Brenner Mount Holyoke College, History and Philosophy B.A. candidate Phoebe Coleman The George Washington University, Jewish Cultural Arts M.A. candidate Archival Support Rebecca processing a recently acquired archival collection. Steve Blacher Margaret Ershler Leonard Goldberg Janice Goldblum Elsie Klumpner Merrill Lavine Gail Lelyveld Samuel Sislen Office Support Don Budowsky Sandra Schneider Frank Spigel John Tolleris Joel Wind Volunteer Spotlight Longtime Society member Leonard Goldberg volunteered weekly for the past three years. After retiring from the Federal Highway Administration, Lenny decided to put his existing knowledge of D.C. Jewish history to use by volunteering in our archives. Most of his time was spent organizing Rabbi Tzvi Porath’s papers—a collection of more than 120 boxes documenting the rabbi’s work and Ohr Kodesh Congregation. Of volunteering at our office, Lenny says, “Since the professional staff is small, you get to know the people very well. And you learn a lot.“ Speakers’ Bureau, Walking Tours, and Event Volunteers Les Bergen Joan Dodek Amy Federman Elissa Frankle Norman Goldstein Steven Kline Michael Morris Denise Oken Judy Schwartz Diane Abelman Wattenberg Marcia Weinberg Joel Wind Tami Wolf Marlene Zakai Don Budowsky met Executive Director Laura Apelbaum at a program and asked about volunteering. Since 2012 when he retired after 38 years with the federal government, he has been a dedicated volunteer. He helps in the office every week, often with mailings or record-keeping, and provides an extra hand at programs. Don told us, “Volunteering at JHSGW has been an educational and enriching experience. Even though most tasks are administrative in nature, I have absorbed a lot of knowledge of local Jewish history.” 2014 Board of Directors Officers Samuel Brylawski, President Ernie Marcus, Vice President Russell Smith, Treasurer Howard Morse, Secretary Dorothy Canter, At-Large Adam Rubinson, At-Large Board Members Andrew Ammerman Steve Blacher Sharon Burka Margery Elsberg Tracey Gallagher Paul Greenberg Linda Herman Wilma Probst Levy Mark Livingston Bill Rice Pat Silverman Albert Small, Jr. Alex Stein John Tolleris Diane Wattenberg Joel Wind Laurence Wiseman Gwen Zuares Chair of the Honorary Directors Albert H. Small Honorary President Aaron Goldman* Honorary Directors Carolyn Alper Flora Atkin Stuart Bindeman Florence Brody Ryna Cohen S. Robert Cohen Sheldon S. Cohen Nancy Colodny Lois England Maryann Friedman Margot Heckman* Joseph Herson* Daniel Mann* Brenda Pascal Barbara Rein Hubert Schlosberg Sholom Shefferman Rabbi Matthew Simon Hadassah Thursz Stephen Joel Trachtenberg Diane Abelman Wattenberg Mendelle T. Woodley Society of Fellows Lillian Small* Academic Advisory Council Dr. Pamela Nadell, American University Dr. Jenna Weissman Joselit, The George Washington University Past Presidents Robert Shosteck* Hyman J. Cohen* Bernard I. Nordlinger* Hon. Milton S. Kronheim, Jr.* Henry Brylawski* William B. Wolf, Jr.* C. Haskell Small* Nathan I. Silberberg* Bernard S. Glassman Donald Wolpe Dr. Jonathan Grossman* Dr. Jonathan P. Siegel* Robert I. Silverman* Leonard Abel Dr. Michael L. Goldstein James Goldberg David Burka Samuel Flax Paula Goldman Richard S. Alper Frank Gilbert Dr. Peggy K. Pearlstein Stuart Zuckerman Sidney J. Silver Gail Burlant, a resident of Manhattan, is the Society’s first out-of-town board member. She is the Chief Human Resources Officer at Commonfund, where she’s also a member of the Senior Executive Group. Gail previously held positions at HDG Mansur Capital Group and spent 12 years with HSBC Securities (USA) Inc. Gail earned a BA/BS degree in English and Political Science from Boston College and a law degree from The George Washington University Paul Wright has served on the Society’s Program/ Membership Committee since 2011. Professionally, he has evaluated disability programs and related matters for the federal government for 35 years. He has also worked part-time for the past 15 years as a social worker at MedStar Montgomery Medical Center in Olney, MD. Paul has a BA in Government from Brigham Young University, an MPA in Public Administration/Urban Studies from the University of MarylandCollege Park, and an MA in Social Work from the University of MarylandBaltimore. He lives in Rockville, MD. *Of blessed memory Meet the New Board Members JHSGW Staff Committees Building Ernie Marcus, Chair Adam Rubinson Sidney J. Silver Albert Small, Jr. Stuart Zuckerman Budget/Finance Russell Smith, Chair Gerald Bass Les Bergen Stuart Bindeman Sheldon S. Cohen Bernard Glassman Joe Herson* Catherine Joyce Sidney J. Silver Stuart Zuckerman Capital Campaign Howard Morse, Chair Pat Silverman Russell Smith Joel Wind Collections Janice Goldblum, Chair Sam Brylawski Les Bergen Lois England Maryann Friedman Elsie Klumpner Merrill Lavine Brenda Pascal Laura Burd Schiavo Endowment Trustees Les Bergen Stuart Elsberg Russell Smith Governance Michael Goldstein, Chair Paula Goldman Alex Stein Laurence Wiseman Government Relations Paul Greenberg Paul Pascal Bill Rice Adam Rubinson Program/Membership Wilma Probst Levy, Co-Chair Paul Wright, Co-Chair Carolyn Alper Sharon Burka Tracey Gallagher Dene Garbow Margot Heckman* Alex Horowitz Dorothy & Lou Kornhauser Phyllis Myers Denise Oken Bill Rice Frank Spigel Alex Stein John Tolleris Diane Abelman Wattenberg Tami Wolf Marlene Zakai Gwen Zuares Laura Cohen Apelbaum Executive Director Samantha Abramson Program Coordinator Mary Ann Dawedeit Office Manager Wendy Turman Director of Collections Claire Uziel Special Projects Manager Special thanks to Zachary Paul Levine who worked with us as Curator. 701 Fourth Street, NW, Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 20001 Business Office 701 Fourth Street, NW, Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 20001 Phone: (202) 789-0900 Fax: (202) 789-0485 Email: [email protected] 1876 Historic Synagogue Site 701 Third Street, NW (corner of G St.) Judiciary Square Metro (F Street exit) Museum Hours: By appointment, Tuesday-Friday. For more information, please call (202) 789-0900 or email [email protected]. Online Website:www.jhsgw.org Blog:www.jhsgw.org/blog /jhsgw ©2015 Jewish Historical Society