Esserman wins Syracuse Press Club Award Federation to show
Transcription
Esserman wins Syracuse Press Club Award Federation to show
Published by the Jewish Federation of Greater Binghamton May 13-19, 2016 Volume XLV, Number 20 BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK Save the date Federation to show “Run Boy Run” on June 22 By Reporter staff The Jewish Federation of Greater Binghamton will show the film “Run Boy Run” on Wednesday, June 22, at 7 pm, at the Jewish Community Center, 500 Clubhouse Rd., Vestal. The award-winning film tells the true story of a Polish boy who seeks the kindness of others in his solitary struggle to outlast the Nazi occupation and keep alive his Jewish faith. The film was directed by Oscar winner Pepe Danquart and is based on the best-selling Holocaust novel by Israeli author Uri Orlev. “We had hoped to show ‘Run Boy Run’ during our film fest last fall, so we are pleased to be able to share it with the community this June,” said Sima Auerbach, executive director of the Federation. “Join us for this wonderful film, which has been called a ‘superlative saga of courage and compassion.’ All those who bought subscriptions to last fall’s film fest can join us as the Federation’s guests.” More information about the showing will appear in future issues of The Reporter. At right: Jurek, played by twin brothers Andrzej and Kamil Tkacz, in “Run Boy Run.” (Photo courtesy of Menemsha Films) “Talmud: Process and Performance” at Cornell U. The Cornell Jewish Studies Program has announced an upcoming conference, “Talmud: Process and Performance,” on Tuesday, May 17, and Wednesday, May 18, at Cornell University in Ithaca. The conference will be open to the public and there will be no registration fee. The keynote speaker, Christine Hayes, of Yale University, will speak on “‘The Play’s the Thing’: Performance and Performativity in Rabbinic Literature” on May 17, at 5:30 pm, in 165 McGraw Hall. A series of speakers and respondents will appear throughout the day on May 18, in 258 Goldwin Smith Hall, starting at 9:30 am with Moulie Vidas, of Princeton University, on “A Pompidou Center of Torah: The Genre of Talmud and the Performance of Process”; followed by Charlotte Fonrobert, of Stanford University, with her lecture, “Taking Talmud to Town: On Public Performance of Intimacy.” After a short lunch break, the conference will reconvene at 1:45 pm with Talya Fishman, of the University of Pennsylvania, on “‘HaTalmud Shelanu’: On the Riddle of the Bavli’s Role in Medieval Sepharad,” followed by Zvi Septimus, of Harvard Law School, with his lecture, “The Talmud as Musical Score.” Respondents to these talks will include Cornell University faculty: Eric Rebillard, classics; Kim Haines-Eitzen, Near Eastern studies; Ross Brann, Near Eastern studies; and Tracy McNulty, romance studies. The conference will conclude at 5:30 pm with a final response from Ishay Rosen-Zvi, of Princeton University, on “Current Trends in Talmud: A Look from Ithaca.” Co-sponsors for the conference include Cornell Departments of Near Eastern Studies, Anthropology and Classics, the Mediterranean Studies Ini- tiative, Society for the Humanities and the Second Avenue Kosher Delicatessen in New York City. For more information, visit http:// jewishstudies.cornell.edu/news-events/ events.cfm. Federation board meeting open to community The Jewish Federation will hold a full board meeting on Wednesday, May 18, at 7:30 pm. The community is invited to attend. Those interested in attending should make a reservation by calling the Federation at 724-2332 so that enough materials will be available. Esserman wins Syracuse Press Club Award By Reporter staff Rabbi Rachel Esserman, executive editor of The Reporter, received first place in the all print critique category of the Syracuse Press Club Awards for her book review “The difficult parts of life.” The review appeared in the November 13 issue of The Reporter and can be found online at www.thereportergroup.org/Article.aspx?aID=4120. The two books reviewed were “Stir: My Broken Brain and the Meals that Brought Me Home” by Jessica Fechtor and “Bobby Wonderful: An Imperfect Son Buries His Parents” by Bob Morris. “I’m grateful to win another Syracuse Press Club Award,” said Esserman. “Most of the awards I’ve won in the critique category were for fiction, so it’s a pleasure to be recognized for a review focusing on nonfiction.” Esserman noted that writing book reviews has made her a better reader. “Writing a review Rabbi Rachel Esserman forces me to analyze my feelings in a different way than I did as a casual reader,” she said. “I now look to see why I like or dislike something and what that says either about the book or me. One frequent word that appears in e-mails from publishers is that my reviews are ‘thoughtful.’ I take that as a great compliment because I try to be fair to the author. Just because I disagree with an author or have a different approach to life doesn’t mean the work won’t make an impact on readers.” Educating readers also plays a major role in her reviews. “I don’t think of myself as a critic,” Esserman added. “What I do is let readers know what is available – and there are now so many Jewish-themed books available, fiction and nonfiction. People have told me they like learning about a book, even if they aren’t interested in reading it.” Spotlight Israel geeks out: science, art, and tech event embodies Jewish state’s “DNA” By Maayan Jaffe-Hoffman JNS.org The entrance to Jerusalem’s Sacher Park was transformed from April 25-27 by a fire-breathing robotic dragon, which flailed its arms and attempted to take flight. The robot, a signature feature at Jerusalem’s first-ever “Geek Picnic,” was one of more than 150 scientific amusements available for the public to experience. This particular dragon was designed by students from Moscow’s Art Industrial Institute in conjunction with the Flacon design factory, said Anatasia Shaminer, a student who helped facilitate the display. Children attending the Geek Picnic – modeled after Eastern Europe’s open-air festival dedicated to popular science, modern technology, science and art – were able to board the robot dragon, stand beside a Russian Air Force pilot and learn to control the machine, whose pilot’s chair was made from a former Russian fighter jet. This year marked the first time that the Geek Picnic took place outside of the former Soviet Union. Carmi Wurtman – owner of 2BVibes Productions, the company that licensed At left: The robotic dragon at Jerusalem’s Geek Picnic. (Photo by Maayan JaffeHoffman) the rights for the festival and leveraged the talents of 30 staff members over the course of two years to bring the Geek Picnic to the Holy Land – said that for five years, he had been eyeing the event as one that would “work well with Israel’s DNA. “It’s a smart event,” Wurtman told JNS. org. “It’s for adults and children – it’s rare that kids and parents can be happy going somewhere together.” At Sacher Park, attendees were able to engage in science workshops and explore new technologies with their own hands. Science, technology and art tents (with narration mostly in English) took participants See “Geeks” on page 9 INSIDE THIS ISSUE Israel in space Israel’s accomplishments in space exploration were highlighted at a gala in Canada. ........................................ Page 7 Torah on Twitter Torah discussions through the lens of the disability experience are held weekly on Twitter. ........................................ Page 8 News in brief... U.S. to give Gaza aid; Women of the Wall perform priestly blessing; a mikvah in Nigeria; and more. .............................. Pages 9,11,12 Special Sections Legal Notices.................................... 4 Book Review..................................... 4 Small Business Profiles................. 6-8 Classifieds...................................... 12 May 13-19, 2016 Page 2 - The Reporter Opinion Jewish teenagers want to engage – Just ask them By David Bryfman (JTA) – Welcoming teens into Jewish life is both one of the most important and seemingly challenging endeavors of the Jewish community. The rapid decline in teen engagement in Jewish life post-b’nai mitzvah is well-documented and depressing. It’s also an entirely reversible trend, but only if the Jewish community approaches teen engagement in a new way – one that recognizes the whole teen and values her or him as an equal partner in creating experiences that add meaning to her or his life. In general, Jewish teens (like non-Jewish peers) today are deeply thoughtful, inquisitive and ambitious. Also like their peers, they can be narcissistic and attached to technology. Most of today’s teens are vastly different than a generation ago, and in many ways different than a decade ago. These changes are due in large part to the changing world in which we live, the central role of technology and the nearly endless opportunities for personal customization a click away. We know this because over the last two and a half years, The Jewish Education Project led major research to learn about Jewish teens from Jewish teens. We heard directly from them about their lives, their views on spirituality, their ambitions, their fears, their feelings toward friends and family, how they form their identities and more. We’ve compiled and analyzed the findings into a new report, “Generation Now: Understanding and Engaging Jewish Teens Today.” The report’s insights are a wake-up call to organizations or individuals who want to engage Jewish teens. Our community needs to work with teens to create experiences that address all aspects of their lives. Just a few insights from Generation Now show the depth of Jewish teens today: Jewish teens want programs of substance that add value to some facet of their life. Teens are most likely to find Jewish knowledge meaningful when they see the connections and relevance to the rest of their lives. Programs that blend this value with opportunities to have fun, socialize and be with friends are especially attractive. While many teens still see Judaism as a religion, many more relate to being Jewish in language commonly associated with ethnicity, culture, heritage or tribal affiliation. Being a minority group in the U.S. is something that many Jewish teens highly value and feel pride in, but they do not view themselves as being special for this reason. In fact, many Jewish teens enjoy involving non-Jewish friends in “Jewish activities.” Jewish teens often are both universalists and particularists. Their orientation is fluid and depends on their environment. As an example, “doing good” is an important value, but seldom seen as a Jewish value. During major holidays, teens appreciate time to bond with immediate family, visit extended family and enjoy family traditions, particularly around “traditional” foods. Most of today’s teens enjoy spending time with their parents. The challenge now is to take the report’s insights and have them inform our community’s approach to Jewish teen education and engagement. We must move beyond thinking about teens as passive recipients of Jewish learning experiences. Instead, we must begin designing initiatives and programs with Jewish teens, for Jewish teens. Many teens are ready to lead now and want to have skin in the game. They are the most effective people to engage their peers. At the recent Summit on Jewish Teens, held during the BBYO International Convention in February, teens welcomed the invitation to take a place on the stage and at the table with philanthropists, lay leaders, profesSee “Ask” on page 11 Holocaust survivors’ welfare is a public, private and community responsibility By Mark Wilf and Todd Morgan JTA – They survived unimaginable horrors, yet went on to live productive lives, despite the haunting memories, the profound loss and physical scars from years of deprivation. Now many Holocaust survivors need our assistance so they may live their twilight years with dignity in their homes and communities. Most Holocaust survivors are in their 80s and 90s, and an astounding 25 percent of them in the United States live in poverty, struggling to meet basic needs for food, housing, health care and transportation. Many live alone and have no extended family who survived the Holocaust. Spouses who used to provide support are no longer living. Each year, just as we lose many survivors, we also see others coming forward, identifying themselves as Holocaust survivors in desperate need of assistance. As survivors age, they face challenges different from other older adults. Some suffer from delayed-onset post-traumatic stress disorder, making it more difficult to live in assisted living or nursing homes, where institutional life, with its uniformed staff, regimented schedules and rules can lead to flashbacks of concentration camps or other periods of confinement. Unfamiliar showers can be a frightening reminder of gas chambers. Multiple studies have found that survivors are more likely than others to experience anxiety and nightmares. We cannot let this happen. For many survivors, social services are their lifeline. Home care, the most expensive of these vital services, costs an average of $20 per hour per survivor. With approximately 125,000 Holocaust survivors in the U.S., it will take extensive resources to serve even the neediest of survivors. The German government, through the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, provides the majority of the funding for social services, but survivor needs are exceeding available funding. Local communities have taken note, and we’re inspired by the philanthropic campaigns that are working to educate the community. Together, we’ve raised more than $30 million throughout the past couple years. Additionally, companies have stepped up to help. We’re grateful for the partnership between the Alpha Omega dental fraternity and Henry Schein Cares to offer Holocaust survivors pro bono dental care, and the generosity of the See “Survivors” on page 11 In My Own Words Shaming in the contemporary world RABBI RACHEL ESSERMAN, EXECUTIVE EDITOR I have a friend who regularly razzes me about the difference in our schedules. She’s a teacher and not only does she get the summer months off, but has far more three-day weekends than I do. The razz for those is, “Do you have to work this Monday?” Me: Yes, but I don’t have to work on [fill on the name of Jewish holiday].” We both laugh at these exchanges, including teasing that usually goes something like, “Gee, I forgot you have to work in the summer.” However, I learned to be very careful where we do this. She once mentioned something about summer vacation or teaching on her Facebook page. I answered her comment in our usual bantering tone. I don’t remember what either of us said, but I do remember the other comments that were posted. My friend didn’t take my remark seriously, but her teacher friends did. I had to explain that we were just teasing, but it taught me a lesson: Be very careful what you say on Facebook. I remembered this incident while reading “So You’ve Been Publically Shamed” by Jon Ronson. If I wanted to be facetious, I could say the lessons of his book are: 1) Don’t post anything on Twitter, 2) Be very wary of the photos you post on Facebook and 3) Don’t let a stranger take your picture because you have no control over where it may appear. While these are good things to remember, what Ronson most wants us to understand is the role we – Dr. Arieh Ullmann, President Sima Auerbach, Executive Director www.jfgb.org The Reporter Editorial Board Robert Neuberger, chairman Aaron Alweis, Rachel Coker, Rebecca Goldstein Kahn, Ben Kasper, Richard Lewis, Dora Polachek HOW TO REACH US Mail ~ The Reporter, 500 Clubhouse Rd. Vestal, NY 13850 E-mail ~ [email protected] • Fax ~ 607-724-2311 Phone ~ 607-724-2360 or 800-779-7896 Extension#/Department ~ 1. Advertising 2. Business Office 3. Art Department 4. Circulation 6. Editorial/News and he means everyone who posts or comments on social media – play in publically shaming someone. What struck me most is the anger and nastiness that occurs when people disagree with something posted on the Internet. Members of both sexes were threatened with murder or torture; threats of rape were added when the person being shamed was a woman. What is interesting is that these threats were far worse than the original offense. None of the people interviewed in Ronson’s book were murderers. None were pedophiles. None of them assaulted anyone or embezzled money. Yes, some were caught cheating, for example, making up quotes in newspaper articles or books. Others made inappropriate jokes in a public setting or were goofing around in a serious spot (for example, a military cemetery) and posted a photo of it on Facebook. In each case, the level of shaming was far worse than the original action. I understand the importance of accurate information. I’ve written before about how it bothers me when someone posts a meme – a photo of a person that includes a statement they’ve said – when the person shown never made that statement. This is even more important for information that appears on TV news websites or in books and newspapers. However, we can question whether or not a fact is true without attacking or shaming the writer. If we Published by the Jewish Federation of Greater Binghamton BINGHAMTON, NY OPINIONS The views expressed in editorials and opinion pieces are those of each author and not necessarily the views of the Jewish Federation of Greater Binghamton. LETTERS The Reporter welcomes letters on subjects of interest to the Jewish community. All letters must be signed and include a phone number; names may be withheld upon request. ADS The Reporter does not necessarily endorse any advertised products and services. In addition, the paper is not responsible for the kashruth of any advertiser’s product or establishment. DEADLINE Regular weekly deadline is noon, Wednesday, for the following week’s newspaper. learn someone is untrustworthy, then we can discount or fact-check their future writings. This can – and should – be done in a professional, impersonal manner. The Talmud compares the act of embarrassing someone in public to murder. Spilled blood is red, as is the blush that people experience when they are embarrassed. I’ve disagreed in the past that the two are equal, but the public shaming Ronson talks about is so harmful – from people losing their jobs to some who take their own lives – that I’m rethinking the issue. Yes, we want to hold people responsible for their actions, but the Internet seems to release the worst in us. One horrific statement leads to another, as if each person is trying to top the punishment offered by the previous person commenting. We need to rethink our actions; we need to pause before we hit enter or send. When we shame people on the Internet, we forget that the person being shamed also has feelings. We see them as an object – as something other and different from ourselves. This behavior is unacceptable because it leads to punishments that far exceed the crime. We need to recognize everyone’s humanity, even when they do something that offends us. There are far better ways to create dialogue – to make people understand why an action might be offensive – than by threatening them with torture or death. Executive Editor Rabbi Rachel Esserman Layout Editor Diana Sochor Assistant Editor Michael Nassberg Advertising Bonnie Rozen Production Coordinator Jenn DePersis Bookkeeper Kathy Brown Proofreaders Barbara Bank, Eleanor Durfee, Fran Ferentinos, Leah Ferentinos, Rebecca Goldstein Kahn, Merri Pell-Preus, Ilene Pinsker, Heidi Thirer “The Reporter” (USPS 096-280) is published weekly for $36 per year by the Jewish Federation of Greater Binghamton, 500 Clubhouse Road, Vestal, NY 13850-3734. Periodicals Postage Paid at Vestal, NY and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Reporter, 500 Clubhouse Road, Vestal, NY 13850-3734 or reach us by e-mail at [email protected]. www.thereportergroup.org May 13-19, 2016 Page 3 - The Reporter Beth David to pay tribute to Adamits at annual dinner By Paula Rubin Beth David Synagogue will hold its annual dinner on Sunday, May 22, beginning with cocktails at 3 pm, and followed by dinner at 3:30 pm, at the synagogue, 39 Riverside Dr., Binghamton. The cost to attend will be $50 per person. Sponsorship opportunities are available: gold at $375, which includes two dinners; silver at $275, which includes two dinners; and bronze at $175, which includes one dinner. This year, the synagogue will pay tribute to longtime members Rabbi Aminadav and Sarah Lynn Adamit, who will be returning to Israel at the end of July. Aminadav and Sarah Lynn have been members of Beth David since they arrived in Binghamton from Canada 18 years ago when their youngest son was 5-years-old. They have been active in many areas of the synagogue, as well as the general community. For the past 10 years, he has been the co-rabbi at Beth David Synagogue. He began his teaching career in Binghamton at Hillel Academy. In addition, he was the principal at Temple Israel Hebrew School for 10 years. Aminadav has also been visible in the community, serving as the mashgiach at the Jewish Community Center and occasionally at Hillel at Binghamton University. He oversaw the local NCSY chapter from the day he arrived to the present, and has planned holiday and educational events at the synagogue for the entire community. He also taught adult education classes at the shul for all levels of interest in Jewish learning, and coordinated the weekly Shalosh seudas. By career, Sarah Lynn is a registered nurse and still practices at one of the local hospitals. She, along with her husband, open their home to members of the community and out-of-town guests who might be looking for a Shabbat meal. Working with her husband, she has worked on holiday hospitality and hosted NCSY Shabbatons, along with the numerous Friday night dinners. A self-proclaimed artist, her hobbies fill her home with original artwork, including many with a Judaica theme. Through painting, drawing or mosaic pieces, she expresses her creative side as well as her observant lifestyle. Their sons, daughters and grandchildren, as well as members of the community, will pay tribute to the Adamits before they leave. Temple Concord to participate in Sacred Sites Open House Weekend Jewish organization in the area. The original Jewish settlers in Binghamton organized the Hebrew Benevolent Society, founded in 1862. Subsequently, they created a number of Jewish organizations and religious societies. Temple Concord was incorporated in November 1950, and in February 1951 regular services were instituted in the Jonas M. Kilmer Mansion, a Romanesque Revival mansion designed in 1898 by Binghamton architect C. Edward Vosbury, noted for his mansion design, including the Roberson mansion on Front Street and the McKinnon House in Utica, which are all listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The three-story brick building contains turrets, terra-cotta roofing tile and an arcaded open porch. Dr. Jonas Kilmer was a member of Binghamton’s business community, whose patent medicine industry included the cure-all called “Swamp Root.” The historic mansion now houses Temple Concord’s Hebrew and Judaic schools, as well as a library. In 1964, a modern office, sanctuary and social hall were added to meet the growing needs of the congregation. The architects of the “new” wing were Benjamin Bloch and Walter Hesse, New York City architects active in synagogue design from the 1920s through the early 1960s, with Herbert Shalat as associate architect. The modern stained-glass artist Jean-Jaques Duval designed the stained glass windows in the sanctuary. For more information and a complete list of sites participating in the Landmarks Conservancy’s Open House Weekend, visit www.nylandmarks.org. The New York Landmarks Conservancy has led the effort to preserve and protect New York’s architectural legacy for more 40 years. The Conservancy’s work has saved more than 1,000 buildings across the city and state, protecting New York’s architectural heritage for residents and visitors, as well as for future generations. YO bon 72 co a UR nie 4-2 ntac dve To @ r AD the360, t Bo tise , n CO repo ext. nie UL rter 244 at D grou or BE p. o HE rg RE ! Temple Concord in Binghamton will be one of several of Central New York State’s historic churches and synagogues participating in the New York Landmarks Conservancy’s sixth annual Sacred Sites Open House Weekend on Saturday, May 21, and Sunday, May 22. Numerous organizations will open their doors to visitors who wish to explore their religious art and architecture. More than 40 sites in New York City and 120 statewide will participate in the weekend. Congregations will also showcase the cultural and social service programs they provide for the wider community, with special tours, concerts, food fairs and other events. “Many of New York’s magnificent houses of worship have served generations and continue to anchor communities, and all too often they are seen only by their members,” said Peg Breen, president of the New York Landmarks Conservancy. “The Sacred Sites Open House Weekend allows everyone to enjoy the architecture, art and history of these remarkable structures.” This year’s open house weekend celebrates the 30th anniversary of the Landmarks Conservancy’s Sacred Sites program, the only statewide program in the country providing financial and technical assistance for the restoration of culturally significant religious properties. Since 1986, the program has awarded 1,350 grants totaling more than $9.3 million to more than 750 congregations, regardless of denomination, throughout New York state. Temple Concord, located at 9 Riverside Dr., Binghamton, will be open on May 22 from noon-3 pm. Temple Concord’s roots reach back more than 100 years, to the first To recognize Glass’ activities in the general community and to welcome the community’s participation in the celebration, Temple Beth-El will host two events with Rabbi Jack Moline, the president of the Interfaith Alliance in Washington, DC. Moline is the rabbi emeritus of Congregation Agudas Achim in Northern Virginia, and former director of the National Jewish Democratic Council, as well as an advisor to many in politics. Moline’s topic on Monday, May 16, at 7:30 pm, will be “Adventures in the First Amendment,” an address about interfaith relations. His topic on Tuesday, May 17, at 7:30 pm, will be “A Guide to Political Values – from the Mishnah!” and will be about the 2016 presidential election. This will be Moline’s second visit to Ithaca. He came in May 2011 at the invitation of Temple Beth-El and First Congregational Church, in dialogue with Reverend Greg Mobley, as part of the church’s Foote lecture, “From Tolerance to Relationship.” “It is a bitter-sweet moment for Beth David,” organizers noted. “We will be saying good-bye to two Beth David members and their family, while wishing them well on the next stage of their lives.” For more information or to RSVP, call the synagogue at 722-1793. The Jewish Community wishes to express its sympathy to Marilyn Aigen on the death of her son, and Michael Aigen on the death of his brother, Rabbi Ron Aigen AFTON GOLF COURSE Open to the public Weekday Special • Monday - Friday Green Fee & Cart $28.00 18 holes with a cart & lunch $34.00 1-800-AFTON-18 (1-800-238-6618) or 639-2454 Published by the Jewish Federation of Greater Binghamton Temple Beth-El marking rabbi’s 40 years of service Beginning last October and running through next year, Temple Beth-El of Ithaca is marking the 40th anniversary of its rabbi’s service to the community with a series of lectures and classes in his honor. Rabbi Scott Glass arrived in Ithaca in August 1976 to serve a congregation of approximately 100 families. In the earliest years, he focused his attention on the religious school and the youth of the congregation. The “support and encouragement of an active laity” are credited with helping the congregation grow to almost 300 families and expanding the activities of the congregation. To celebrate Glass’ 40th year, local scholars have presented lectures on topics of Jewish interest, and the congregation hosted a scholar-in-residence weekend in March with rabbinic leader Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson, the dean of the Ziegler Rabbinical School at American Jewish University in Los Angeles. The series will continue through 2017. Rabbi Aminadav and Sarah Lynn Adamit ÊVisit us on the web at www.thereportergroup.org I-88 Exit 7 • AFTON, NY Call for tee times www.aftongolf.com May 13-19, 2016 Page 4 - The Reporter Off the Shelf God intoxication and God manipulation RABBI RACHEL ESSERMAN The headlines read “Religious children are meaner than their secular counterparts, study finds” (The Guardian) and “Study finds that children raised without religion show more empathy and kindness” (www.patheos.com/blogs/ danthropology). The results of this 2015 study would not have surprised Rabbi Donniel Hartman, the president of the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem. Although his new work “Putting God Second: How to Save Religion From Itself” (Beacon Press) doesn’t discuss this research, Hartman notes that religious individuals don’t always live up to the moral and spiritual aspirations of their faith. His powerful exploration of the reasons behind this makes for fascinating and challenging reading. Hartman carefully notes that he is not anti-religion, nor does he think that faith is a bad thing: “Rather it is my contention that a life of faith, while obligating moral sensitivity, also often activates a critical flaw that supports and encourages immoral impulses. These impulses, given free reign to flourish under the cloak of religious piety, undermine the ultimate moral agendas of religions and the types of communities and societies they aspire to build.” He sees the source of this moral failure coming from what he calls religion’s autoimmune disease, whose symptoms include “God intoxication” (or God-induced indifference) and “God manipulation” (or God-sanctioned indifference). Although he feels all monotheistic religions are subject to these problems, he focuses on Judaism because it’s his religious tradition. Notice of Formation of a Limited Liability Company (LLC): Name: South West of Belmont 6.6, LLC, Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/28/16. Office location: Broome County. SSNY designated LLC agent upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: LLC, Attn: John G. Dowd, PO Box 1905, Binghamton, NY 13902. Purpose: Any Lawful Pur pose. Date of dissolution: None. ______________________ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY: The name of the limited liability company is: ERNIE FARMS, LLC (the “Company”). The date of filing of the Articles of Organization of the Company with the Secretary of State was March 30, 2016. The county in which the principal place of business of the Company shall be located is Broome County. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the Company upon whom process against it may be served. The Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the Company, to Hinman, Howard & Kattell, LLP, Attn: Ronald L. Greene, 80 Exchange Street, Suite 700, Binghamton, NY 13901. The purpose of the business of the Company is any lawful business purpose. ______________________ Notice of Formation of 5F3D86, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 03/29/16. Office location: Broome County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 99 Hawley St., Ste. 200, Binghamton, NY 13901. Purpose: any lawful activities. ______________________ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY UNDER NEW YORK LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY LAW 1. The name of the limited liability company (“LLC”) is 402 AIRPORT RD HOLDINGS LLC. 2. The date of filing of the Articles of Organization with the Secretary of State is April 5, 2016. 3. 4. The County within the State of New York in which the principal office of the LLC is located is Broome. The Secretary of State of the State of New York is hereby designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The post office address to which the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC served upon him or her is: 501 Meeker Road, Vestal, NY 13850. Both symptoms affect how religious individuals treat others. For example, a person suffering from God intoxication is so obsessed with God that he loses “the ability to see the needs of other human beings.” The prime biblical example of this is the binding of Isaac: “The moment Abraham hears the voice of God, it is as if his capacity for critical thought shuts down. He does not consider his moral responsibility toward his son, nor does he debate whether to adhere to the divine commandment not to commit murder.... His intoxication with the divine eclipses all human concerns.” Hartman would rather we model our behavior on a different incident in Abraham’s life: when he argued with God about the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. There, Abraham demanded justice from God so that innocent humans would not be destroyed. What matters is not an abstract principle, but the assurance that God and humans live up to their moral responsibilities. God manipulation occurs when someone convinces themselves that their self-interest is a God-given right, what Hartman calls “using God in the service of our own interests, while simultaneously waving the banner of divine approval.” He notes that “self-interest under the pretense of piety” is difficult for the affected individual to detect. One example given focuses on holy wars – wars that people assume have been fully approved by God because God has chosen them and any decision they make must therefore be correct. Yet, Hartman believes that morality requires us to treat everyone as fully human – as if they are also created in the image of the divine – even if they practice a different religious tradition. Otherwise, “God is drafted into the service of a particular worldview, leaving all others devoid of access to God’s grace.” Is it possible to counter God intoxication and God manipulation? Hartman’s answer is yes, if people are willing to look at their religious practice objectively to see whether or not it’s based on self-interest. He sees self-interest as that which makes religion “a perpetual catalyst for moral mediocrity, corruption and, at times, downright evil.” Of course, Hartman doesn’t think this is inevitable, particularly if we’re willing to view morality as an independent good. That means going beyond the letter of the law; for example, placing morality above strict adherence when following it negatively affects others. Hartman also notes that our idea of morality has changed over time, making it “our responsibility to live in accordance with the best moral dictates to which we have access in our cultural and historical context.” The act of revelation serves only as a beginning when determining a code of appropriate behavior. Hartman gives examples from the Talmud that show how acting morally sanctifies God, while immoral behavior decreases God’s worth in the eyes of the world. See “God” on page 9 LEGAL NOTICE 5. The character or purpose of the business of the LLC is any purpose allowed by law. ______________________ Notice of Formation of All Phase Construction of the Southern Tier, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/04/16. Office location: Broome County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 33 Moeller St., Binghamton, NY 13904. Purpose: any lawful activities. ______________________ Notice of Formation of CAN AM WEST, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/04/16. Office location: Broome County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 320 N. Jensen Rd., Vestal, NY 13850. Purpose: any lawful activities. ______________________ Notice of Formation of Green Tree - Vestal, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 03/04/16. Office location: Broome County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 1550 Vestal Parkway East, Vestal, NY 13850. Purpose: any lawful activities. ______________________ Notice of Formation of Newman Development Group of Front Street, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/06/16. Office location: Broome County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 300 Plaza Dr., Vestal, NY 13850. Purpose: any lawful activities. ______________________ Notice of Formation of 50 Front Street Associates, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/06/16. Office location: Broome County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 300 Plaza Dr., Vestal, NY 13850. Purpose: any lawful activities. ______________________ Notice of Formation of a Limited Liability Company (LLC): Name: South West of Lititz 6.1, LLC, Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/28/16. Office location: Broome County. SSNY designated LLC agent upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: LLC, Attn: John G. Dowd, PO Box 1905, Binghamton, NY 13902. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose. Date of dissolution: None. ______________________ Notice of Formation of a Limited Liability Company (LLC): Name: CoreLife trademarks, LLC, Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/2/16. Office location: Broome County. SSNY designated LLC agent upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: LLC, Attn: John G. Dowd, PO Box 1905, Binghamton, NY 13902. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose. Date of dissolution: None. ______________________ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF A DOMESTICE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY Name of LLC: T2R Group, LLC Date of Formation: 03/01/2016 Office of T2R Group LLC: Broome County The NY Secretary of State has been designated as the agent upon whom process may be served. NYSS may mail a copy of any process to T2R Group, LLC at: T2R Group LLC 2520 Vestal Parkway East PMB#244 Vestal, NY 13850 Registered Agent: UNITED STATES CORPORATION AGENTS INC 7014 13TH AVENUE STE 202 BROOKLYN, NY 11228 Purpose: Any lawful act or activity ______________________ Notice of Formation of a Limited Liability Company (LLC): Name: Advocates For Autism, LLC, Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 03/18/2016. Office location: Broome County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: c/o ADVOCATES FOR AUTISM, LLC, 333 Birch Street, Vestal, 13850. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. Latest date upon which LLC is to dissolve: No specific date. ______________________ Notice of Formation of DG Technologies LLC. Arts. Of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/19/16. Office Location: Broome Co. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom service of process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Daniel J. Gregoris, 44 Schiller Street, Binghamton, NY 13905. Purpose: any lawful activities. ______________________ To place a legal notice, please contact Bonnie Rozen at 724-2360, ext. 244 or bonnie@ thereportergroup.org NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY: The name of the limited liability company is: JBK Holdings, LLC (the “Company”). The date of filing of the Articles of Organization of the Company with the Secretary of State was April 21, 2016. The county in which the principal place of business of the Company shall be located is Broome County. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the Company upon whom process against it may be served. The Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the Company, to Hinman, Howard & Kattell, LLP, Attn: Ryan M. Mead, 80 Exchange Street, Suite 700, Binghamton, NY 13901. The purpose of the business of the Company is any lawful business purpose. ______________________ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF TMZK Interprise LLC Articles of Organization filed with the New York State Dept of State (NYSDS) on feb 16 2016. Office location: Broome County. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent upon whom process against it may be served. The Post Office address to which the NYSDS shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC served upon him/her is: c/o United States Corporation Agents, Inc., 7014 13th Avenue, Suite 202, Brooklyn, NY 11228 The principal business address of the LLC is: PO BOX 3107, Binghamton, NY 13902 Purpose: any lawful act or activity ______________________ Notice is hereby given that a license, number “Pending” for Beer, Wine and Liquor has been applied for by Joey’s Italian Ice Co Inc. (DBA De Gennaro’s at En-Joie) to sell Beer, Wine and Liquor at retail in a restaurant under the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law at 722 West Main Street, Endicott NY 13760 for on premises consumption. Joseph De Gennaro Joey’s Italian Ice Co Inc. (DBA De Gennaro’s at En-Joie) ______________________ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY UNDER NEW YORK LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY LAW 1. The name of the limited liability company (“LLC”) is Wagner Farm & Forest, LLC. 2. The date of filing of the Articles of Organization with the Secretary of State is April 28, 2016. 3. The County within the State of New York in which the principal office of the LLC is located is Broome. 4. The Secretary of State of the State of New York is hereby designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The post office address to which the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC served upon him or her is: 4250 East Tremont Avenue, Bronx, New York 10465 5. The character or purpose of the business of the LLC is any purpose allowed by law. ______________________ Notice of Formation of At Your Service Transportation LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/08/16. Office location: Broome County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Shawn P Connelly, 22 Livingston St Apt 1L, Binghamton, NY 13903. Purpose: any lawful activities. ______________________ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY UNDER NEW YORK LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY LAW 1. The name of the limited liability company (“LLC”) is V&H Handling Systems, LLC. 2. The date of filing of the Articles of Organization with the Secretary of State is May 3, 2016. 3. The County within the State of New York in which the principal office of the LLC is located is Broome. 4. The Secretary of State of the State of New York is hereby designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The post office address to which the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC served upon him or her is: 4410 Linglestown Road, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17112. 5. The character or purpose of the business of the LLC is any purpose allowed by law. ______________________ Notice of Formation of Jablon Studios LLC Arts. Of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 06/18/15. Office location: Broome County. Princ. Office of LLC: 10 Alice Street Binghamton, NY 13904. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC at the addr. of its princ. office. Purpose: any lawful activity. Attention Attorneys Published by the Jewish Federation of Greater Binghamton fulfills the requirement of “newspapers of general circulation”. Very reasonable rates and a broad circulation makes The Reporter a great choice for legal advertising! Partnership Notices Surrogate’s Citations Changes of Name Bankruptcy Notices Trustee Sales Auction Sales Foundation Sales Mortgages Foreclosures Place Your Legal Advertising In Published by the Jewish Federation of Greater Binghamton To place your ad, contact Bonnie Rozen at 724-2360, ext. 244 or bonnie@ thereportergroup.org. www.thereportergroup.org May 13-19, 2016 Page 5 - The Reporter Johnny Only family dance party fund-raiser at the JCC for Camper Scholarship fund By Lynette Errante Camp JCC will hold a fund-raiser for its Camper Scholarship fund featuring Binghamton DJ Johnny Only on Sunday, May 22, from 1:30-3 pm, on the outdoor patio at the Jewish Community Center, 500 Clubhouse Rd., Vestal. The event will be for children of all ages and their families, and will be open to the entire community. In case of rain, all activities will be held in the JCC auditorium. Families will have the opportunity to participate in outdoor games, dance with Johnny Only, face painting and having a dessert. The cost for the event will be $5 per child or $1 per adult. Child admission includes a dessert and adults can purchase one for $2. Proceeds from the fund-raiser will directly benefit those in need of financial assistance to attend camp. A portion of the funds will go directly to the JCC Honor Campership Award, which was started in 2015. “At Camp JCC, we’re committed to making camp affordable to as many families as possible. Each summer we award approximately $30,000 in financial assistance to families who qualify. The need for aid, however, continues to increase at an exponential pace. In response, we have initiated an Honor Campership Fund, which will be geared toward helping campers in fifth-ninth grades,” explained Marcia Brownlow, JCC assistant director. “As the children continue to move through the Camp JCC experience, they are exposed to more external programs and leadership opportunities that increases the expense incurred. Ironically, as they age, they lose their eligibility to receive support from organizations such as the Department of Social Services, so we created the campership fund to fill that void. By having assistance available, we are not only enabling the campers to continue to take part in the program, it ensures they will have the chance to fulfill the goal of the program, which is to help them realize their full potential as future leaders.” RSVPs have been encouraged. To make a reservation, contact Lynette Errante, JCC youth and camp director, at 724-2417, ext. 421, or at [email protected]. To make a donation to the Camp JCC Scholarship Fund or Honor Campership Award, contact the JCC main office at 724-2417, ext. 110. TC Sisterhood to hold donor event Temple Concord Sisterhood’s 2016 donor event will be a Victorian Tea Party on Sunday, May 15, at noon, at the temple, 9 Riverside Dr., Binghamton. Ailsa Donnelly, guest speaker, will share traditions for an English Tea. A traditional tea menu and additional lunch fare will be served. Recipes will come from United Kingdom cookbooks, which Donnelly will share with Donor Co-chairwomen Deb Daniels and Danielle Pratt. Reservations can be made by calling the temple office at 723-7355 by Thursday, May 12. Organizers have reminded the community that it is “never too late” to become a donor. Checks for $25, or $36 for those who wish to bring a guest, can be mailed to Terri Bennett, Sisterhood treasurer and financial secretary, at 253 Vivian Ln., Vestal, NY 13850, or they may be given at the door on May 15. Donnelly, who is Scottish, was raised in India until the age of 12. Her family moved back to Scotland, where she attended boarding school and went on to a finishing school near London. She emigrated to California in her early 20s, when she was sponsored by a cousin who was a professor at Cal Tech. There she met her husband, who was a graduate student at Cal Tech. They moved to Rice University in Texas and then to SUNY Binghamton. Since he retired, they have traveled throughout the world, including Ecuador, Venezuela, West Indies, Brazil, Argentina, Australia, Solomon Islands, Thailand and Vietnam. Donnelly said she enjoys discussing the many traditions of an afternoon tea, including the different types of “tea time.” For example, the English tea is served in late afternoon, as compared with “high tea,” which is served later as a supper meal. Donnelly will describe the many traditional foods served at tea. “She is a delightful story-teller,” said Daniels. Smuggled out of ghetto, newly discovered photo trove turns out to be family of American scholars By Uriel Heilman NEW YORK (JTA) – When documentary photographer Richard Schofield stumbled upon a trove of unidentified prewar photographs in September 2013 in the storage room of the Sugihara House museum in Kaunas, Lithuania, he knew he had found something special. The photos, dating from about 1910 through 1940, were from a Lithuanian Jewish family’s album that had been smuggled out of the city’s wartime Jewish ghetto and entrusted to a non-Jewish Lithuanian family for safekeeping. But nobody knew what had happened to the people in the pictures. Presumably they had not survived the war to reclaim their photos. Touched by the images and intrigued to learn what had happened to their subjects, Schofield set about trying to identify them. He scanned the 112 photos, set up a Facebook page to showcase them and commissioned a piece of music to accompany an exhibition of the photographs that would mark the 75th anniversary of the ghetto in Kaunas, then known as Kovno. “People started helping us with the translations of the writings on the photographs and some things started to become clear,” said Schofield, the founder of the International Centre of Litvak Photography. “We worked out that the woman in many of the photographs was called Anna (or Anushka). There were some strong musical connections in the family. We could see other things, too. I was really falling in love with these pictures.” Then, in late March, by a twist of serendipity, a non-Jewish archivist who worked at the Jewish museum in the Lithuanian capital city of Vilnius noticed something: After clicking through the photographs and doing a bit of sleuthing, Saule Valiunaite realized that one of the photos appeared in a Holocaust documentary film made in 1999. It turns out the photos weren’t of some obscure Jewish family, but that of two of America’s best-known Yiddish scholars: Ruth Wisse of Harvard and her brother David Roskies of the Jewish Theological Seminary. Roskies had written a memoir about his family, “Yiddishlands,” in 2008. A third sibling, Eva Roskies Raby, is a former director of the Montreal Jewish Public Library. The album Schofield had found belonged to Anushka Warshawski, the siblings’ aunt, who had perished during World War II, in October 1943, along with the rest of her family. “Saule got in touch with us and sure enough there is our aunt’s album,” said Wisse, who appears in one of the photos. “Many of these pictures are not only familiar to us, but are the same ones as those in our mother’s album that she brought over in 1940. We grew up with these photographs.” Of Anushka’s 10 siblings, only two survived the war. One had immigrated to America decades before the Holocaust. The other was Wisse and Roskies’ mother, Masha, who fled Czernowitz (then part of Romania) for Montreal in 1940. For her children, who grew up on their mother’s stories of life before the war, the album’s discovery offered some tantalizing new details about family members they had been hearing about their whole lives. “When I saw these pictures, it felt like a huge piece of the puzzle had fallen into place,” Roskies told JTA in an interview from Jerusalem, where he is spending a semester teaching at Hebrew University. Anushka Warshawski, center, smuggled her photo album out of the Kovno ghetto shortly before its liquidation and her death in 1943. (Photo courtesy of Richard Schofield) “It was a huge family and they all died,” Roskies said. “My mother dedicated the rest of her life to keeping the memory of that family alive. She told stories about them three times a day, at breakfast, lunch and dinner. My mother believed that history ended in 1940, that everything important ended the moment she left Europe. These stories were like her Bible, they were the reference point for her whole subsequent life. We were constantly reminded of these people we never met and would never meet. They became our surrogate family.” The newly discovered album confirms the special bond between his mother andAnushka, Roskies said. The two sisters (half-sisters, actually, since Masha was born to her mother’s second husband) corresponded and sent photos back and forth during the years after they married and lived apart – Anushka After a documentary photographer stumbled upon Anushka Warshawski’s photo album, it took some sleuthing to figure out who she was. (Photo courtesy of Richard Schofield) Nyonya, who died in the 1918 influenza epidemic, was a favorite brother of Anushka and her surviving sister, Masha. (Photo courtesy of Richard Schofield) in Kovno and Masha in Vilna and then Czernowitz. They reunited only once during those years, in Czernowitz in 1938. After that, they never saw each other again. “Just as my mother was religiously saving these pictures of Anushka and her other sisters and their children, Anushka was doing the exact same thing in Kovno,” said Roskies, the Sol and Evelyn Henkind Chair in Yiddish literature and culture at JTS. In one picture, there’s a young Ruth Wisse (then Roskies), probably age 4, bundled up against the snow and venturing forth on ice skates. Ruth was one of two children Masha See “Trove” on page 6 ÊVisit us on the web at www.thereportergroup.org May 13-19, 2016 Page 6 - The Reporter Trove had in Czernowitz before the war; she had two more in Montreal. David Roskies, now 68, is the youngest. Wisse, recently retired from Harvard as its Martin Peretz professor of Yiddish literature and professor of comparative literature, now lives in New York. In another photograph is Nyonya, Masha’s favorite brother, in his Red Army uniform from World War I. He died in the influenza epidemic of 1918. Some photographs feature Anushka with her second husband at a lumberyard, suggesting that may have been the source of his considerable Podcast on Jewish women Jewish Women’s Archives offers a monthly podcast called “Can We Talk?” It can be found at http://jwa.org/ podcasts/canwetalk. It offers stories and conversations about Jewish women and the issues that shape their public and private lives. Alternating between a documentary style and a roundtable format, it includes profiles of historical and contemporary Jewish women, discussions of culture, politics and current events, and little-known stories from the past and present. wealth, according to Roskies. There are also quite a few photos of Anushka’s first husband, with whom she had a child who later disappeared into the Soviet gulag, and shots of Anushka at an orphanage where she may have worked. Still fresh in the discovery stage, Masha’s three surviving children – Roskies in Jerusalem, Wisse in New York and Raby in Montreal – are trying to piece together many essential details about the photographs. Schofield, who is still recovering from the shock of the discovery, is raising money for a piece of music he’s calling the “Kaunas Requiem” that he hopes to stage at an installation in September to mark the 75th anniversary of the establishment of the Kaunas/Kovno ghetto. He’s not yet sure how he’ll incorporate the new information about the photographs. “When I found the photographs, I thought it would be nice to put names to faces. I never really thought about what I would do if that happened,” said Schofield, a non-Jewish native of Britain who has been living in Lithuania for the past 15 years and says he is “endlessly fascinated” by the vanished Jewish past of his adopted city. “It’s all pretty incredible, really. It’s been a bit of a roller coaster.” He credits Valiunaite, who works as a historian in the Department of Righteous Gentiles at the Vilna Gaon Jewish State Museum, with putting the pieces together. Valiunaite says she figured out the AUDIO CLASSICS Specialty: Location: Phone: Audio-Home Theater-Video-Guitars 3501 Vestal Rd. Vestal, NY 13850 607-766-3501 or 800-321-AUDIO (2834) Fax: 607-766-3501 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.AUDIOCLASSICS.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/pages/ Vestal-NY/Audio-ClassicsLtd/231680698962?ref=nf Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8 am-5:30 pm, Sat. 11 am-4 pm AUDIO CLASSICS, located at 3501 Vestal Rd., in Vestal, has grown to be one of the premiere providers of quality audio and home theater systems for a wide range of tastes, environments and budgets. Featuring products from McIntosh, Bowers & Wilkins, Marantz, Levinson, Klipsch, JBL, VPI, Magnepan, Denon and more. AUDIO CLASSICS is the dream come true for all music lovers. Now add custom design for your new home or commercial project, a vast array of quality pre-owned equipment and a liberal trade option. AUDIO CLASSICS offers more of the good for less than any other dealer. Want more? With pleasure! Visit its superb website at www.AUDIOCLASSICS.com. Call Sue Krause to buy or sell your house! Suzanne Krause Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker Direct: 607-760-3366 Office: 607-772-1177 4747 Vestal Parkway East E-mail: [email protected] Multi-Million Dollar Producer Hopler & Eschbach Chag Sameach from FuneralSuzanne Home “A new family tradition” Krause Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker Personal Service Multi-Million Dollar Producer Professionalism Direct: 607-760-3366 Experience You Can Trust Office: 607-772-1177 4747 Vestal Parkway East E-mail: [email protected] COMPARE OUR PRICES We charge far less than other area funeral Call Sue Krause to buy or sell your house!homes Kurt M. Eschbach, Funeral Director 483 Chenango Street Binghamton L’Shanah Tovah from 607-722-4023 www.HEfuneralhome.com Suzanne Krause Licensed Associate American Yiddish scholar Ruth Wisse, here probably age 4, appeared in her aunt Anushka’s photo album. (Photo courtesy of Richard Schofield) connection to Roskies by finding a match between a sanitorium resort that appeared in the photographs and Lithuanian records showing the resort was owned by the Warshawski family. She later discovered that Anushka had something of a musical career – a detail mentioned in Roskies’ book and in a 45-minute documentary film Continued from page 5 from 1999 called “Daughter of Vilna: The Life in Song of Masha Roskies.” The final proof was a photo in the film that matched one found in the trove. Valiunaite contacted Wisse and Roskies immediately, about four weeks ago. “They’re quite famous, so it’s easy to find them,” Valiunaite said. The fact that Anushka went to the trouble of smuggling the album out of the Kovno ghetto speaks volumes, Roskies said. By the time of the ghetto’s liquidation, in 1943, it must have been clear to the Jews who remained that they, too, soon would be headed to their deaths, Roskies surmises. “Why would Anushka care about a photo album if she was going to die?” Roskies asked. “She knew Masha had escaped to Canada and survived. What must have been going through Anushka’s head was: ‘We reached the end of the line. The ghettos are being depleted. I want Masha to have this album, so I have to find a way of getting it to her.’” Though Masha died in 1999 at 93, Roskies says the photos’ discovery is still a homecoming. “If we hadn’t been raised from childhood morning, noon and night on these stories, they would just be photographs, fading pictures,” Roskies said. “But it’s not like looking at artifacts. We know who these people were, their disappointments, their lives, their aspirations and the extremely complicated lives they all lived. And now this album is being reunited with the family Anushka wanted to have it.” Celebrations with DeRue Danel Bridal Salon Consumer protection generic Ernest H. Parsons Funeral Home Specialty: Disc jockey entertainment services Location: 317 Marion St. Vestal, NY 13850 Name: DeRue O’Loughlin Phone: 607-343-6269 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.CelebrationswithDeRue.com Facebook: Celebrations with DeRue Hours: By appointment Celebrations with DeRue DJ Entertainment offers a unique, personal DJ experience. “We will travel anywhere and have served upstate New York and northern Pennsylvania for over 20 years,” says DeRue. “The Celebration Nation respects your wants and needs. We work hard for you and with you to help create a perfect wedding reception day or corporate event. Any event that needs music and entertainment will be a positive, collaborative experience. We can also provide high quality lighting, gobo lighting and video service options. If you want a passionate, professional master of ceremonies, fun music entertainment and great customer service, then join the DeRue Crew! We can make your event, start to finish, an awesome experience for you and all your guests!” Recommendations and more information are on Facebook, Celebrations with DeRue, and www.celebrationswithderue.com. For a no-pressure consultation, call 607-343-6269. Specialty: Wedding wear, tuxedos, DJ services, wedding officiant services Location: 16 Washington Ave. Endicott, NY 13760 Owners: Rose and Mike Pinco Phone: 607-754-0023 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.DanelBridal.com Hours: Sun.-Mon. closed for pvt. appts.; Tues.-Wed. 12-6 pm; Thurs. 12-7:30 pm; Fri. 12-5 pm; Sat. 10 am-4 pm Danel Bridal Salon has been in existence since 1959 and is quickly becoming a leader in bridal wear not only serving the Binghamton area, but the Binghamton region and beyond. All Occasion Music Inc., Danel Bridal Salon, and New York Prom and Formal Wear core products and services serving the Binghamton region include bridal gowns, bridal jewelry, bridal veils and accessories, bridal shoes, mother dresses/gowns, bridesmaid dresses/gowns, flower girl dresses/gowns, wedding gown preservation, tuxedo rentals, wedding officiant services, wedding and event planning, DJ/ MC services, special effects club lighting, up lighting and monogrammed lighting. All Occasion Music Inc. has “A Long Wedding History with a New Beginning” and continues to grow in the Binghamton area to serve the community with the highest level of quality customer service! Specialty: Funeral Location: 71 Main St. Binghamton, NY 13905 Name: Joseph Fritsch Phone: 607-724-1336 Fax: 607-724-1337 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.parsonsfuneral.com Hours: 24/7/365 Happy Chanukah from The Ernest H. Parsons Funeral Home, located at 71 Main St., Binghamton, has been a landmark since 1928 and is located in the J. Stewart Wells Mansion, built by renowned architect Isaac Perry, who completed construction in 1867. Ernest H. Parsons owned and operated the funeral home from 1928 until his death in 1976. Charles Mills purchased “A new family tradition”the funeral home after Ernest’s death and continued the Personal Service tradition until his retirement in 2012. The current owners – J. Fritsch, R. Fynboe, S. Pitkorchemny and K. Vakiener Professionalism to uphold the original motto of the founder: “Let Experience You Can Trust –Usstrive Serve You with Understanding.” Parsons Funeral Home COMPARE OUR PRICES offers distinctive service with respectful attentiveness to the We charge far less than other area funeral homes rites and the utmost consideration of families’ ceremonial desires to accord a last tribute of affection and esteem to Kurt M. Eschbach, Funeral Director their departed loved ones. (NA PSA) – Deciding what’s important to you before you buy online can help you avoid buyer’s remorse. That’s the word from the Federal Trade Commission, the nation’s consumer protection agency. To learn more, visit w w w.ftc.gov or call 877-FTC-HELP (1-877382-4357) toll-free. Hopler & Eschbach Funeral Home 483 Chenango Street Binghamton 607-722-4023 Happy Chanukah from www.HEfuneralhome.com Suzanne Krause Licensed Associate www.thereportergroup.org May 13-19, 2016 Page 7 - The Reporter Canadian institute places Israel’s space program at the center of its universe By Bradley Martin JNS.org “Do you remember when Leonard Nimoy said, ‘Live long and prosper’?” Dr. Frederick Krantz asked an audience at the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue of Montreal. Listeners chuckled in approval of his “Star Trek” reference, indicating that a large percentage were familiar with the iconic TV series and had fond memories of the late Canadian-Jewish actor. Krantz continued, “Well, that is very true. Israel is not only a power in the Middle East, but will be a power in space.” The Canadian Institute for Jewish Research on April 14 held its 28th anniversary gala, an event titled “Israel in Space.” It was North America’s largest-ever gathering dedicated to Israel’s space exploration achievements, with an estimated 200 attendees, according to Krantz. “My hope is that knowledge of Israel’s space program will show what a benefit the Jewish state is for mankind,” said Krantz, the director of CIJR. The conference not only showcased Israel’s growing contributions to space exploration, but it was also a night dedicated in memory of the late Israeli astronaut Ilan Ramon, who died in 2003 on the fatal mission of the Columbia by its neighbors,” said Inbar, outlining space shuttle. “I can’t quite see it right the barriers to Israeli space ventures. “So, now, but there is a relationship between we are the only nation in the world that human space flight and peace in the Middle launches its satellites in the wrong direcEast,” Ramon once told his friend, former Canadian Space Agency President Steve tion! While everyone else launches their MacLean. “When I get back, I am going rockets eastwards, with the Earth’s rotation, to focus on that.” we have to launch west in order to avoid The keynote address was given by Tal our rockets being shot down. So, we lose Inbar, head of Space and UAV Studies at the about one-third of the lifting capability of Fisher Institute for Air and Space Strategic our launched vehicles. Studies, which was founded by the Israel “Israel is home to the only launch Air Force Association. Inbar recounted facility that is next to an active nuclear how Israel embarked on a national space research center, two major cities and a port program in order to monitor Egyptian mili- The late Israeli astronaut Ilan with large deposits of oil. It is also within range of rockets from Gaza,” Inbar added tary movements via satellite. This was done Ramon. (Photo by NASA) in reference to Palmachim, an Israeli milafter the Israeli withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula, in order to ensure that Egypt was honoring its itary base and spaceport located near the Mediterranean. commitments as outlined in the 1979 Israel-Egypt peace Despite these geopolitical obstacles, Israel’s contributreaty. Inbar said that this technological edge is even more tions to space exploration technology have been noted important now, in order to monitor the activity of Iran, throughout the world. It was announced in February that and that Israel needs to maintain its superiority in ballistic the Israel Space Agency would become an official member missile technology. of the United Nations Committee on Space Affairs. In “Israel is, to put it politely, geographically challenged See “Space” on page 11 Hopler & Eschbach Funeral Home Photo Images Specialty: Funeral services, burials and cremation Location: 483 Chenango St. Binghamton, NY 13901 Name: Kurt M. 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When it comes to communicating what your brand is and what your business is about, keep your statements, both verbal and written, simple and consistent, and make sure they reflect your key messages. Make sure your name, logo and graphics – including signage – communicate your brand. That means you need a logo and color scheme that complement your verbal message and create a cohesive presentation for all your materials and website. This can help to create savings by cutting back on printing excess materials that don’t reflect the brand. 5. Savvy small businesses know how to save by knowing where and when to spend. Many small businesses see money spent on marketing and promotions for the holidays as an investment, whether it’s to attract new customers or to reward existing customers for their loyalty. ERNEST H. 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Jewish day of mourning for the destruction of the ancient December 31, 2015 Bartmess explains that Twitter can also be an A5 It’s often easier to raise concerns that aptemples, Ruti Regan turned to Twitter and began posting especially useful discussion tool for people with about the fast day using the hashtag “parshachat.” Today, ply to everyone than ones that only exist because disabilities because the open-ended nature of #parshachat has morphed into a weekly Twitter conversation you’re disabled. #parshachat – Ruti Regan (@ the chats – people chime in whenever they like about the week’s Torah portion conducted through the lens RutiRegan) December 31, 2015 with comments marked with a hashtag – erases A5 I think that maybe God didn’t know if it of what it’s like to live with a disability. Since last May, Regan, a rabbinical student at the Jewish would be good or not. God had no experience Ruti Regan is an some of the stress of real-time conversation for Theological Seminary, and her friend Elizabeth Bartmess, with intentional creation before. #parshachat autistic rabbinic people like her with auditory processing issues. “It a fiction writer, have led the open Twitter discussion. Both – Ruti Regan (@RutiRegan) October 4, 2015 s t u d e n t a t t h e gives you time to think because you don’t have to “Some people might be having struggles Jewish Theological respond immediately,” Bartmess said. “You can women have forms of the neurodevelopmental disorder autism. Here’s how the “disability-informed Torah” discussion and might not be able to go to shul, but we can Seminary. (Photo really think the question over, you’re not on the works: Regan and Bartmess generate four or five questions talk about things and it can make a difference,” courtesy of Ruti spot and don’t have to say something right away.” Regan added that the platform’s character related to the weekly Torah portion, or parasha, and tweet Regan said. “[It’s about] having space outside Regan) www.CelebrationsWithDeRue.com limit – 140 for now – prevents people from each one throughout the hour-long discussion. Participants the pressure to be positive.” Regan says there is a “rich tradition” of Twitter discus- unleashing wordy and unwieldy “monologues” like they 607-343-6269 respond to the questions with the same Parshachat hashtag and a marker to indicate which question they are With commenting on. sions, including some about Jewish liturgy, but #parshachat do on other platforms such as Facebook. Further, while The result is a loose mix of personal testimony and appears to be the first ongoing one at the intersection of people often become friends on Facebook based on geophilosophical thoughts on lessons to be taken from the Torah study and disability. graphical proximity or after an in-person meeting, those current Torah portion or holiday – #Parshachat generates Social media brings the geographically dispersed #par- who chat on Twitter often cluster around shared interests. dozens of tweets per discussion. shachat community together in ways unavailable before See “Twitter” on page 9 Celebrations • Interactive DJ Entertainment • Lighting & Video Options • Weddings & Special Events • High Quality Equipment • Karaoke • All Types of Parties • High Standard of Service The Homesteads, LLC Specialty: Location: Names: Assisted living alternative 6 Main St. Apalachin, NY 13732 Connie Barton, Lynette VanDriesen and Michelle Bell Phone: 607-625-3658 www.CelebrationsWithDeRue.com E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.thehomesteadsllc.com 607-343-6269 Hours: 27/7 With The Homesteads are owned and operated by a family of professional women. 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TL Interiors Specialty: Custom design, personal and professional service Owner/Interior Designer/Event Planner: Terry Ludwig Location: PO Box 863 Vestal, NY 13850 Phone: 607-761-0601 Fax: 607-785-2872 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.TLInteriors.com Hours: By appointment “I love creating environments that inspire my clients,” says Terry Ludwig, owner of TL Interiors. “Understanding their individual desires and aspirations, and creating the ideal space or individual piece to help manifest and sustain their dreams and objectives is my motivation.” Terry has been serving residential and commercial interior design needs for 30 years. She provides comprehensive design and project supervision for homes and businesses. She provides floor plans, designs and elevations for construction and fabrication requirements, reflected ceiling plans, specifications and procurement of materials, fixtures, appliances and accessories needed to complete your project. She also creates beautiful custom window treatments. In addition to design, Terry is also an inspirational speaker and columnist, and volunteers her design expertise to create healing environments for A Room to Heal and Make a Wish Foundation. Did you know? (NAPSA) – Recent changes to the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Social Securit y program known as Ticket to Work may mean more opportunities and a better life for people with disabilities and their families. Learn more at 866-968-7842, or 866-833-2967 (TTY), and www.ssa. gov/work. May 13-19, 2016 Page 9 - The Reporter NEWS IN BRIEF From JTA Israeli soldier who shot downed Palestinian should get plea deal, judges say at trial start The panel of judges in the military trial of the Israeli soldier captured on video shooting an already downed Palestinian assailant in the head urged the two sides to reach a plea agreement, saying the evidence was weak. The manslaughter charges against Sgt. Elor Azaria, 19, of Ramle, were read on May 9 as the trial got under way in Jaffa Military Court. Azaria also is accused of violating the rules of conduct and inappropriate conduct. The three-judge panel denied the soldier’s request to be furloughed for Independence Day. Azaria was granted a release for Passover in April. Azaria is being held in open detention God While this may make it sound as if Hartman sees religion only as a force for evil, the opposite is true. For him, belief in God can also function “as the ultimate antidote to human arrogance.” Much of the evil in the 20th century occurred because of human self-interest that placed itself above religion or morality; for example, political theories that belittled individual human worth. Hartman sees a need to strive for holiness – with an emphasis on striving – since he recognizes that humans will never be perfect. We must Geeks into innovators’ worlds, exploring topics ranging from bionics to performing arts to quantum physics. Tamar Greenberg of Rishon LeZion, a central Israeli city, displayed her work using sewable electronic pieces in traditional women’s handcrafts. The sewable electronic modules – including a small programmable computer called a Lilypad Arduino – can be stitched together with conductive thread to create interactive garments and accessories. “My mission in life is to promote science and technology for girls, combined with traditional women’s handcrafts,” Greenberg said. “Girls like to make something useful. Through sewing and handcrafts, they can learn math, science, chemistry and even how to code.” Greenberg’s colorful snake squirmed across the table for children to touch and feel. It was made through a simple computer code and from colorful, recycled plastic grocery bags as well as Lilypad computer pieces. The Israeli Google Lunar X Prize team had a tent at the Geek Picnic to display their work toward landing the first Israeli spacecraft on the moon. At another booth, Mor Yahav explained the art of 3D printing. “You pour the mixture into a cup that is positioned above the printer,” he said while an edible printed pancake slowly appeared. “An internal pump flows the mixture down from the cup into the syringe and the syringe draws the design. It is being made in a pan. The pan is hot, so the pancake cooks while it is being made.” Does it work for anything? Anything that can be made out of batter, Yahav responded with a sheepish grin. Nearby, a similar booth manned by distributors from 3D Printing Center Israel had staffers creating 3D-printed plastic prototypes. Keter, a market leader in plastic home and outdoor storage solutions, purchased one of the machines, according to booth personnel. Keter uses the machine to create prototypes before mass production. Whereas in the past it would take days or months and significant funds to make a prototype, with plastic printing materials cost around 100 NIS ($26.75) per kilogram Continued from page 4 therefore be wary of seeing either our ideas or behavior as examples of perfection. Hartman believes it is God who “give[s] us the strength to build a life of meaning in the midst of the valley of the shadow of death. God can inspire us to embark on an unending journey of spiritual and moral improvement. A life with God can enhance and deepen the time we are allotted on earth.” Want to achieve this type of life? Reading Hartman’s thought-provoking work is an excellent way to start. Continued from page 1 on his military base until the end of the case. He has freedom of movement on the base, but cannot carry a firearm or be in contact with witnesses. In March, Azaria shot Abdel Fattah al-Sharif in Hebron, a West Bank city that was a focal point in a seven-month wave of Palestinian violence against Israelis. He arrived on the scene after al-Sharif and an accomplice had stabbed Israeli soldiers and the accomplice had been killed. The soldier has said that when he shot al-Sharif, who was lying on his back unarmed, he feared the Palestinian man might be about to detonate an explosive. Al-Sharif was wearing a bulky coat. The autopsy showed that the soldier’s shot to the head was what killed the assailant. According to the indictment, Azaria did not believe the assailant was an immediate danger to those around him when he shot the Palestinian. The case marks the first time in more than 10 years that an Israeli soldier has been charged with manslaughter for a killing that took place during field operations. The case has generated “considerable controversy” among Israelis, with some outraged that Azaria violated the military’s rules of engagement by shooting someone who was supine and unarmed, and others that he is being disciplined at all. Women of the Wall perform priestly blessing at Kotel Women of the Wall held a priestly blessing as part of its monthly service at the Western Wall, despite a ruling by Israel’s attorney general forbidding the practice. The group also brought a Torah scroll to the May 9 morning Rosh Chodesh prayer service, which also has been prohibited. Some 120 women participated in the service. Both actions violate traditional customs of the site and thus are not allowed. Attorney General Avichai Mendelblit in April said he would prohibit a women’s priestly blessing ceremony during the intermediate days of Passover. In announcing the ceremony, to be held at the Western Wall’s women’s section, Women of the Wall had declared it “the first of its kind.” Tens of thousands of Jews flock to the Western Wall to receive the blessing from kohanim, or descendants of ancient Israel’s priestly caste, during the intermediate days of Passover. After threatening to hold the ceremony on Passover despite the ruling, the women eschewed the blessing during their holiday service at the Western Wall. On May 9 during prayers for the new month of Iyar, the women brought a 250-year-old Torah scroll brought from Holy Blossom Temple in Toronto to be used for a Torah reading at the holy site. Police officers attempted to confiscate the scroll, but retreated when the women closed ranks, according to the Women of the Wall. State Dept.: P.A. envoy likening Israeli soldiers to Nazis “deeply concerning” Tamar Greenberg displayed her mechanical snake at Jerusalem’s Geek Picnic. (Photo by Maayan Jaffe-Hoffman) and the machine costs about 60 NIS ($13.40) per hour to work. It takes only about five hours from the time the design is inputted until the prototype is complete. For Rivky Braun and her children, who were visiting Israel from Brooklyn, the highlight exhibit was the “Hand of Man” machine, which allowed selected onlookers to crush cars like soda cans. The Hand of Man is an interactive sculpture comprised of a 26-foot-long hydraulically actuated human hand and forearm, which is capable of picking up and crushing cars, and a “glove” device that controls it. Any movement by the person controlling the glove is reproduced by the large robotic hand. Other child attendees of the Geek Picnic found favor in the non-Newtonian fluid display, where they could walk across a shallow pond made of corn starch and water. The mixture became more viscous (thicker) when force was applied – meaning that when children ran, their feet stayed on top of the mixture. When they simply put their hands inside the fluid, they could slide them through as easily as if it were pure water. The Geek Picnic also included drone racing, a gaming zone with some unavailable-to-the-public activities, science experiments and car-style missiles. “The whole idea is to do and touch and feel and participate,” said 2BVibes Productions’s Wurtman, whose spokesman noted that about 40,000 people attended the three-day event. “We took the licensing for 10 years. I am hoping this will become a landmark event in Israel.” The Palestinian Authority U.N. envoy’s likening of Israeli soldiers confronting stone throwers to Nazis putting down the Warsaw uprising was “deeply concerning,” the State Department spokesman said. Mark Toner responded on May 5 to a JTA query about an April 27 news conference by Riyadh Mansour. “Obviously we would condemn any antisemitic remarks very forcefully,” Toner said, noting that he had not yet examined Mansour’s comments and was basing his assessment on remarks read to him by a JTA reporter. “It’s deeply concerning.” Mansour, who called the news conference to discuss U.N. actions on Israel and the Palestinians, attacked Israeli diplomats for their terming stone throwers “terrorists.” “All colonizers, all occupiers, including those who suppressed the Warsaw uprising, labeled those who were resisting them as terrorists,” he said. Twitter For Regan, finding people on Twitter with similar interests reminds her of the days when she used AOL’s Instant Messenger service, which offered countless chat rooms for people based on specific topics. “I had so much trouble finding people who wanted to talk to me and who weren’t annoyed by my intense interests,” Regan said. “As an autistic kid, that was totally game-changing for me.” Savannah Breakstone, 28, who lives in rural Pennsylvania more than an hour away from the nearest synagogue, has regularly participated in the #parshachat since it started. Most of her family does not identify as Jewish, but she discovered that she is descended from Jews forced to convert to Catholicism during the Spanish Inquisition and she now identifies as an anusah, or a returner to the Jewish faith. Since Breakstone also is autistic and has other chronic health issues, she calls #parshachat a “huge relief.” “Beyond just learning about other people’s thoughts on different parashas, I’ve more importantly learned some confidence as a Jew and [developed] more confidence in participating in Jewish life,” Breakstone said. Regan and Bartmess met online early last year through the Twitter discussion Continued from page 7 #autchat – which Bartmess founded and still runs – and became friends quickly. “There are a lot of autistic Jews and a lot of them participate in [#autchat],” Regan said. “We were like, ‘Let’s talk Torah, too.’” Regan now balances co-running #parshachat with the other initiatives of her independent Jewish disability inclusion organization, Anachnu, such as an online class on “Disability as a Jewish feminist issue” and a new haggadah “informed by disability perspectives.” Breakstone, who works as a social media contractor for disability rights organizations, including the Autistic Self Advocacy Network, says Twitter can be a great help, but isn’t necessarily the optimal platform for everyone living with a disability. “I find that it’s important to take a multiple platforms approach,” Breakstone said. “I’ve actually had requests to maintain content on Pinterest because someone found that most accessible for them. Twitter can be easy for some people and nearly impossible to use for others. Some people love Facebook, but don’t get Tumblr or vice versa. In order to bring disability rights and acceptance to as many people as possible, it’s so important to be building our communities and learning opportunities across all these platforms.” To our readers... ow our advertisers kn t le to u yo d in m I want to re TER! It is here in THE REPOR ad r ei th w sa u that yo t your when you go to ge r be em m re to t so importan e or use hing at their stor et m so y bu or ne hair do THE I SAW YOUR AD IN y sa u yo at th es their servic want to know. REPORTER! They At Jerusalem’s Geek Picnic, children experienced the closest thing to walking on water – walking across this shallow pond made of corn starch and water. (Photo by Maayan Jaffe-Hoffman) At Jerusalem’s Geek Picnic, 3D printing was on display.(Photo by Maayan JaffeHoffman) Thank you, Bonnie Rozen ive Advertising Execut ÊVisit us on the web at www.thereportergroup.org Page 10 - The Reporter Weekly Parasha May 13-19, 2016 Leading a sanctified life Kedoshim, Leviticus 19:1-20:27 We all want to be good, do what’s right, pursue justice and generally leave this world a better place than we found it. If this were not enough, the Torah demands that we be holy. Parashat Kedoshim begins with God’s message to the Jewish nation: “You shall be holy, for I, God, your God, am holy.” (19:2) A daunting charge indeed. How does man respond? Where do we begin? What does it really mean to be holy? The Torah does not leave us to second guess God’s intention. In a veritable digest of commandments criss- RABBI AARON SLONIM, CHABAD CENTER crossing every area of life, there is instruction on how to achieve sanctity. The parasha includes every “type” of mitzvah: bein adam l’makom, those that effect our relationship with God, and bein adam l’chaveiro, those that impact our human relationships; mishpatim, torts and other logical rules for a civil society; aidot, those rituals that pay specific testimony to important tenets of Jewish belief and/ or pivotal junctions in our national history; and, finally, the chukim, the transcendent, wholly incomprehensible tenets. Included in the parasha are “heavy weights,” a number of injunctions featured in the Ten Commandments, as well as what appear to be unremarkable, simple details. Featured prominently are commandments that seek to protect the weaker, more vulnerable segments of society, as well as a comprehensive list of prohibited sexual relationships designed to protect us from our baser selves. By way of example, this parasha includes laws concerning sacrifices and the commandment to keep Shabbat, as well as prohibitions against theft and deceit. An example of a See “Life” on page 11 Congregational Notes Temple Concord Union for Reform Judaism Rabbi: Barbara Goldman-Wartell Address: 9 Riverside Dr., Binghamton, NY 13905 Office hours: Tues.-Thurs., 10 am-5 pm; Fri., 10 am-1 pm. Phone: 723-7355, Fax: 723-0785 Office e-mail: [email protected] Website: www.templeconcord.com Regular service times: Friday, 8:15 pm; Saturday, 10:35 am, when religious school is in session. On Friday, May 13, at 8:15 pm, there will be Shabbat evening services led by Daniel Bubnis and Max Rydqvist. On Saturday, May 14, at 9:15 am, there will be Torah study. On Sunday, May 15, at noon, there will be the Temple Concord Sisterhood donor event. On Wednesday, May 18, at 7 pm, there will be an adult b’nai mitzvah class. On Thursday, May 19, from 5-7 pm, there will be CHOW. At 7 pm, there will be a Ritual Committee meeting. On Friday, May 20, at 6 pm, there will be a potluck Shabbat dinner. At 7:30 pm, there will be Shabbat evening services led by Rabbi Barbara Goldman-Wartell and Max Rydqvist. On Saturday, May 21, at 9:15 am, there will be Torah study. On Sunday, May 22, from noon-3 pm, there will be a Sacred Sites Open House. (See article on page 3.) Temple Brith Sholom Affiliation: Unaffiliated Address: P.O. Box 572, 117 Madison St., Cortland, NY 13045 Phone: 607-756-7181 President: Glen Goldwyn, [email protected] Service leaders: Lay leadership Shabbat services: Either Friday evening at 7:30 pm or Saturday at 10 am from Rosh Hashanah to Shavuot. Holiday services are also held. Check the weekly e-mail for upcoming services. Contact the president to get on the e-mail list. Religious School: Students are educated on an individual basis. Temple Brith Sholom is a small equalitarian congregation serving the greater Cortland community. Congregants span the gamut of observance and services are largely dependent on the service leader. The Friday night siddur is “Likrat Shabbat,” while the Saturday morning siddur is “Gates of Prayer.” The community extends a warm welcome to the Jewish student population of SUNY Cortland, as well as the residents of local adult residences. Congregation Tikkun v’Or Affiliation: Union for Reform Judaism Address: PO Box 3981, Ithaca, NY 14852; 2550 Triphammer Rd. (corner of Triphammer and Burdick Hill), Lansing, NY Phone: 607-256-1471 Website: www.tikkunvor.org E-mail: [email protected] Presidents: Dorothy Debbie and Nina Cummings Rabbi: Brian Walt Religious School Director/Admin. Coordinator: Naomi Wilensky Services: Fridays at 7:30 pm unless otherwise noted. Family services and Tot Shabbat once a month at 6:30 pm. Call for weekly schedules. Religious School: Preschool through seventh grade classes meet on Sunday mornings. Sixth grade Hebrew and seventh grade b’nai mitzvah classes meet on Wednesday afternoons. Adult Ed.: Special classes and discussion groups held regularly. Essential Judaism classes offered in the fall and spring. Call the office for details. Kol Haverim Affiliation: Society for Humanistic Judaism Address: P.O. Box 4972, Ithaca, NY 14852-4972 Phone: 607-277-3345 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.kolhaverim.net Chairman: Jonathan Joseph Kol Haverim: The Finger Lakes Community for Humanistic Judaism, is an Ithaca-based organization that brings people together to explore and celebrate Jewish identity, history, culture and ethics within a secular, humanistic framework. KH is part of an international movement for Secular Humanistic Judaism and is affiliated with the Society for Humanistic Judaism, a national association with over 30 member communities and congregations around the country. Established in the spring of 1999, it offers celebrations of Jewish holidays, monthly Shabbat pot-lucks, adult education, a twice-monthly Cultural School for children, and a bar and bat mitzvah program. KH welcomes all individuals and families, including those from mixed religious backgrounds, who wish to strengthen the Jewish experience in their lives and provide their children with a Jewish identity and experience. Beth David Synagogue Affiliation: Orthodox Union Rabbis: Aminadav Adamit and Zev Silber Address: 39 Riverside Dr., Binghamton, NY 13905 Phone: 607-722-1793 Rabbi’s Office: 607-722-7514 Fax: 607-722-7121 Office hours: Mon. closed; Tues. 9 am-3 pm; Wed. 9:30 am-noon; Thurs. 9 am-1 pm; Fri. 9:30 am-noon Beth David e-mail address: [email protected] Rabbis’ e-mail: [email protected]; [email protected] Website: www.bethdavid.org Shabbat Services: Friday, May 13........................................................... 7:15 pm Shabbat, May 14............................................................ 9 am ..........................................................Mincha/Maariv 7:45 pm Weekday Services: Mornings: Sun., May 15............................................................. 8:30 am Mon.-Fri., May 16-20................................................. 6:40 am Evenings: Sun.-Thurs., May 15-19............................................. 8:05 pm Classes: Rabbi Aminadav Adamit will teach “Tractate Kiddushin” on Shabbat afternoons 45 minutes before Mincha. Rabbi Zev Silber will hold his weekly Talmud class every Tuesday evening after services. On Sunday, May 22, there will be this year’s Beth David annual dinner. The event will begin with cocktails at 3 pm, followed by the dinner at 3:30 pm. The cost to attend will be $50 per person. The event will pay tribute to Rabbi Aminadav and Sara Lynn Adamit, who will be returning to Israel at the end of July. (See article on page 3.) A rummage sale previously planned for May has been postponed. It is now tentatively planned for Sunday-Tuesday, June 26-28. More information about the sale will be announced in the future. Temple Beth-El of Ithaca Affiliation: United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism Rabbi: Scott L. Glass Address: 402 North Tioga St. (the corner of Court and Tioga streets), Ithaca, NY 14850-4292 Phone: 273-5775 E-mail: [email protected] and [email protected] Website: www.tbeithaca.org Co-presidents: Jerry Dietz and Richard Wallace Sisterhood Co-presidents: Elizabeth Hess and Esther Racoosin Director of Education: Rabbi Suzanne Brody Administrative Assistant: Jane Griffith Services: Fri. 8 pm; Sat. 10 am, unless otherwise announced. Religious School/Education: September-May: Classes meet on Sunday, 9 am-12:30 pm and Wednesday afternoons, 3:45-5:45 pm. The Midrashah (eighth grade and high school) classes will meet at times designated by their respective teachers. Adult Ed.: Numerous weekly courses, several semester-long courses and a variety of mini-courses and lectures are offered throughout the year. Call the temple office for more details. On Monday-Tuesday, May 16-17, Rabbi Jack Moline, executive director of Interfaith Alliance formerly director of the National Jewish Democratic Council and director of Public Policy for the Rabbinical Assembly, will speak at Temple Beth-El as part of the 2016 Adult Education Series honoring Rabbi Scott Glass for his 40 years of service to Temple Beth-El. On May 16, he will discuss “Adventures in the First Amendment” on interfaith relations. On May 17, he will present “A Guide to Political Values – from the Mishnah!” on the 2016 presidential election. Temple Beth El of Oneonta Affiliation: United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism Rabbi: Molly Karp Address: 83 Chestnut St., Oneonta, NY 13820 Mailing address: P.O. Box 383, Oneonta, NY 13820 Phone: 607-432-5522 Website: www.templebetheloneonta.org E-mail: [email protected] Regular service times: visit the temple website for days of services and times Religious School/Education: Religious School, for grades kindergarten through bar/bat mitzvah, meets Sunday mornings. Rabbi Karp conducts services and holds classes in Torah, beginning Hebrew and Maimonides. For a schedule of services, classes and events, see the website. Friday, May 13, light candles.............................. 7:58 pm Shabbat ends Saturday, May 14.......................... 8:59 pm Friday, May 20, light candles.............................. 8:05 pm Shabbat ends Saturday, May 21.......................... 9:06 pm Temple Israel Rabbi: TBA Address: 4737 Deerfield Pl., Vestal, NY 13850 Phone: 723-7461 and 231-3746 Office hours: Mon.-Thurs. 8:30 am-4 pm; Fri. 8 am-3:30 pm. E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected] Website: www.templeisraelvestal.org Service Schedule: Friday, 5:30 pm; Saturday, 9:30 am. Regular Tuesday services and Friday Kabbalat Shabbat services will be held at 5:30 pm in the library of the Jewish Community Center, 500 Clubhouse Rd., Vestal. On Saturday, May 14, at 9:30 am, there will be Shabbat services in the meeting room at the Jewish Community Center, 500 Clubhouse Rd., Vestal. Services will be led by Howard Schwartz and Steve Gilbert. The Torah portion will be Leviticus 19:1-20:27. The haftarah will be Amos 9:7-15. Bima guest will be Phyllis Heller. On Friday, May 20, at 7 pm, at Vestal Park Nursing and Rehab on Sheedy Road, there will be May’s Shabbat on the Road. This will replace the 5:30 pm service at the Jewish Community Center. For any questions, contact Barbara Gilbert at [email protected]. On Saturday, May 28, at 9:30 am, at the JCC, there will be the bar mitzvah of Isaac Green. On Monday, May 30, the temple office will be closed for Memorial Day. Those who wish to recite Mourner’s Kaddish during a weekday service can contact Howard Schwartz at [email protected] or call the temple office. Those interested in having a Mourner’s Kaddish are asked to contact Schwartz or the office one-and-a-half weeks or more before the date to provide enough time to send out a notice. Temple Israel holds weekday minyan services on Tuesdays and Fridays at 5:30 pm in the JCC library. For those who prefer a different day to coincide with a Yahrzeit date, contact the temple to work on making arrangements. Penn-York Jewish Community President and Treasurer-Secretary: Harvey Chernosky, 570-265-3869 B’nai B’rith: William H. Seigel Lodge Purpose: To promote Jewish identity through religious, cultural, educational and social activities in the Southern Tier of New York and the Northern Tier of Pennsylvania, including Waverly, NY; Sayre, Athens and Towanda, PA, and surrounding communities. Norwich Jewish Center Orientation: Inclusive Rabbi: Rafael Goldstein Address: 72 South Broad St., Norwich, NY 13815 Contact: Linda Horovitz, 336-7236 Contact: Guilia Greenberg, 373-5087 Purpose: To maintain a Jewish identity and meet the needs of the Jewish community in the area. Services: Held twice each month on certain Fridays at 7 pm except in December, January and February. Call for dates or more information. Adult Ed.: Saturday morning study is held at 10 am. Call for more information and to confirm. On Friday, May 13, at 7 pm, Shabbat services will be held. On Saturday, May 14, at 10 am, there will be a study class. Rohr Chabad Center Affiliation: Chabad-Lubavitch Rabbi: Aaron Slonim, E-mail: [email protected] Address: 420 Murray Hill Rd., Vestal, NY 13850 Phone: 797-0015, Fax: 797-0095 Website: www.Chabadofbinghamton.com Chabad on the West Side Rabbi: Zalman Chein, E-mail: [email protected] Address: 27 Bennet Ave., Binghamton, NY 13905 Phone: 722-3252 Regular service times: Daily 7:30 am, Friday evening 6 pm, Shabbat morning 9:30 am, Maariv and Havdalah one hour after candle-lighting time, Sundays 9:30 am. Linking Hearts for youngsters with special needs: This program connects Jewish special-needs children and teenagers, ages 5-14, who have mental, physical and/or functional disabilities, with student volunteers who will visit participating youngsters weekly in their homes. To join the mailing list, for up-to-date information on adult education offerings or to arrange for a private tutorial, for details concerning the Judaica shop and resource center, or for assistance through the Piaker Free Loan Society or Raff Maasim Tovim Foundation, call Chabad’s office at 797-0015. May 13-19, 2016 NEWS IN BRIEF Page 11 - The Reporter Jewish Community Center From JNS.org JCC Friendship Club The United States has announced a $50 million humanitarian aid program for the Gaza Strip. According to U.S. officials, the aid – which will be distributed by the U.S. Agency for International Development in conjunction with Catholic Relief Services – will be dispersed over five years to provide basic humanitarian assistance and create jobs. U.S. Consul General in Jerusalem Donald A. Blume said the effort is meant to address “the dire needs that are obvious in Gaza,” the Associated Press reported. The announcement of U.S. aid comes as a recent World Bank report said that many leading Arab and Muslim states – such as Qatar, Turkey and Saudi Arabia – have fallen well short of their promised aid to help reconstruct Gaza following the 2014 summer war there between Israel and the Palestinian terror group Hamas. According to the report, Qatar, which promised $1 billion in aid, has so far only donated $152 million, while Saudi Arabia has only delivered 10 percent of its $500 million pledge and Turkey has only delivered one-third of the $200 million it promised. The JCC Friendship Club met on May 4. The program presented by Morty Hofstein, coordinator of the JCC Friendship Club, was in memory of those lost in the Holocaust. He introduced the observance of Holocaust Day by reading from a book written by Rabbi Lance Sussman and Mary Rose. “In Our Midst” is about survivors of the Holocaust living in this area. Sussman was the spiritual leader of Temple Concord in Binghamton at the time. Morty selected to read about a past member of the JCC Friendship Club, Doris Zolty, who was born in Poland. She was an elegant senior citizen who lived in Binghamton near MacArthur Elementary School. She was a marvelous baker and baked cakes for local restaurants and others. She U.S. announces $50 million in aid to the Gaza Strip Israel’s population tops 8.5 million at 68th anniversary Israel’s population has reached 8,522,000 people on the eve of the country’s 68th anniversary, the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics reported on May 9. According to the CBS, there are 6,377,000 Jews living in Israel (74.8 percent of the population), 1,771,000 Arabs (20.8 percent) and 374,000 people describing themselves as “other” – including non-Arab Christians and members of other religions – who comprise 4.4 percent of the population. During the past year, 195,000 people were born in Israel and 47,000 died, while 36,000 immigrated to the Jewish state. Today there are 13 cities in Israel with more than 100,000 people, with eight of them having more than 200,000 residents, including Jerusalem, Tel Aviv-Jaffa, Haifa, Rishon Lezion, Petach Tikvah, Ashdod, Netanya and Be’er Sheva. When Israel was founded in 1948, the country only had 806,000 residents; the CBS estimates that by 2035 there will be 11.3 million people living in Israel. Additionally, the CBS said that among the roughly 14.3 million Jews worldwide, about 43 percent now reside in Israel. When Israel was founded in 1948, there were 11.5 million Jews in the world and only 6 percent lived in Israel. Canada’s Fort McMurray fire victims aided by Jewish and Israeli groups Jewish groups in Canada are helping evacuate as many as 90,000 people from the Fort McMurray fire area in Alberta, Canada, where the large blaze has ravaged an area of about 400,000 acres – half the size of Rhode Island – and destroyed at least 1,600 homes and buildings, according to the latest reports. The Calgary Jewish Federation is donating $25,000 from its emergency relief fund to help those who have been evacuated from their homes, while the Jewish Federation of Edmonton has set up a PayPal account to collect donations to help those who are displaced. Ve’ahavta, a Toronto-based social service organization, has also launched a fire relief fund. “It seemed pretty clear to us that there should be a Jewish communal response to this crisis,” Ve’ahavta CEO Avrum Rosensweig told the Canadian Jewish News. The Israeli humanitarian organization IsraAID, meanwhile, on May 9 had one relief volunteer in the affected area and planned to send additional volunteers to Canada. Islamic State reportedly planning to attack Israel from Sinai The Israeli military is concerned that the Islamic State terror group is planning a large-scale attack against Israel from Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, Germany’s Bild newspaper reported on May 8, citing an Israel Defense Forces officer. The Sinai has become an Islamic State stronghold in recent years. According to the Bild report, there could be hundreds of Islamic State operatives currently training in the Sinai and awaiting an order to strike Israel. The IDF officer quoted by Bild said that while it is not clear what a future Islamic State attack against Israel would look like, it could include the use of tanks and artillery by the terrorist group. China’s Hainan Airlines begins operating Beijing to Tel Aviv route China’s Hainan Airlines started operating a direct Beijing-Tel Aviv route the week of May 8, joining the Israeli airline El Al as one of the only two airlines operating an Israel-China route. “We want to be ready with the best aircrews for our flights to Israel, said Li Liang, the general manager of the Hainan offices in Israel, Yediot Achronot reported. “Today Israel is a very important destination for us.” Currently, Hainan will only operate the route three times per week, but eventually the airline expects to include a flight route from Shanghai and Hong Kong through its sister airline Hong Kong Airlines. During the ceremony celebrating the first flight, Israeli Tourism Minister Yariv Levin said his office will increase Israel’s annual marketing budget for China from 1 million to 15 million shekels. Survivors Starkey Hearing Foundation to provide hearing aids free of charge to survivors in need. Finally, government leaders are recognizing the specialized assistance that aging Holocaust survivors require. Vice President Joe Biden announced the White House’s initiative to help Holocaust survivors in 2013. This resulted in numerous avenues for assistance. On International Holocaust Remembrance Day earlier this year, President Barack Obama declared, “Governments have an obligation to care for the survivors of the Shoah because no one who endured that horror should have to scrape by in their golden years.” In March, Jewish Federations distributed $2.8 million in federal grants to assist programs for Holocaust survivors. Coupled with the required matching funds, the disbursement results in $4.5 million for survivor services. For the first time, the federal government will soon issue guidance to states on serving Holocaust survivors, as required by the Older Americans Act Reauthorization that cleared Congress in April. A few states and local governments are providing Life Continued from page 10 mishpat is the prohibition against withholding a day laborers wages; an example of an aid is the commandment to keep the Sabbath holy. One of the best known chukim appears here as well: shatnez, the prohibition against wearing a garment made of wool and linen. The parasha includes the prohibition against idol worship, but it also concerns itself with rising in the presence of the elderly. We are taught of an elaborate social welfare system in which land owners had to designate a portion of their fields available to the needy for gleaning. And we have the prohibition against incest in its many permutations. We can, after reading this portion, no longer claim ignorance about what it means to lead a sanctified life. We cannot but be impressed by the all pervasiveness of a code that demands sanctity in our personal lives, our relationships, our business dealings and our interaction with the environment and animals. The overarching message of this Torah portion is that there is no need to divorce and divest ourselves of the material world to find sanctity, no need to climb mountains and seclude ourselves to find holiness. On the contrary, Torah is about synergy; about unlocking the holiness inherent in every facet of creation, in every aspect of our physical lives, in each one of our relationships. The world entire awaits elevation; it is poised in readiness for the sanctity only we can confer upon it by acting on God’s call and challenge to humankind: Don’t just be; be holy! Space Continued from page 7 October 2015, the U.N. accepted Israel into its Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space, an accord that is expected to allow Israeli experts to influence global projects, such as using satellites in real-time to aid rescue teams during disasters. Israel currently has 15 civilian satellites orbiting the Earth, two-thirds of which are communication devices, with the remainder being communication platforms. Israel is reportedly the smallest country in the world to launch its own satellites. It is also one of only 11 nations with the ability to independently launch unmanned missions into space. Israeli advancements in space technology have also played a role in the ongoing exploration of Mars. Developed by Siemens in Israel, the Product Lifestyle Management software that enabled NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratories to accurately model the performance of the Curiosity rover has been considered integral in determining whether life ever arose on Mars, as well as preparing the “red planet” for future human exploration. Bradley Martin is a fellow at the Haym Salomon Center for American Jewish Thought and a research assistant for the Canadian Institute for Jewish Research. survived Auschwitz, Bergen-Belsen and other concentration camps. She was 19 in 1939, and lost her parents and sister while in the camps. Doris met her future husband during this time. She said he was beaten in the camps. When they were separated, she thought he had been killed. After she was liberated, she was told that he was looking for her. They were married on October 6, 1945, in Poland. Come join us on Wednesdays at the JCC at 1:30 pm. There will be a birthday party on May 25 to celebrate the birthdays of Ruth Soltanoff, who will be 94, and Ada Brummer, who will be 95. Sylvia Diamond President Continued from page 2 assistance as well. In Florida, for example, local Jewish Federations worked together to obtain a special state appropriation for Holocaust survivor services, while in New York City last year, Mayor Bill de Blasio and City Council approved a budget including $1.5 million to assist Holocaust survivors living in poverty. More states and local governments should follow these leads in pursuing special appropriations. Perhaps more impactful is that we encourage Germany to continue to fulfill its moral responsibility by providing additional financial resources for social services for Holocaust survivors, as recently called for in bipartisan resolutions in the U.S. House and Senate. Both of our families managed to overcome great odds and survive the Holocaust, fortunate to be able to re-establish their lives in America and prosper. Not every Holocaust survivor was so lucky. They are the survivors who need our help. We must volunteer our time, visit Holocaust survivors and engage them in their Jewish communities. These survivors are our heroes, our teachers and our mentors. One day they will no longer be with us. Until that day comes, we are obligated to ensure that they live their remaining days and years in dignity. When future generations ask if the Jewish community took care of its Holocaust survivors, let that answer be a resounding “yes.” Mark Wilf is president and co-owner of the Minnesota Vikings and a board member of JTA’s parent organization, 70 Faces Media. Todd Morgan is the founder and chairman of Bel Air Investment Advisors. Together, they co-chair the Jewish Federations’ Fund for Holocaust Survivors. Ask Continued from page 2 sionals and others – to network with these individuals, to learn from one another, and to share and hear about the latest developments in Jewish teen engagement. Every community is different, with differences within each community itself. A “cookie cutter” approach to programming would inevitably fail. Yet “Generation Now” offers recommendations for all communities to bear in mind. Effective initiatives will engage teens intellectually, physically and socially; will offer something that teens want to share with friends; will be demonstrably applicable to teens’ lives; will help to develop skills; will help teens feel proud of being Jewish; will help teens be better citizens of the world; and/or will help teens make the world a better place. Changes in teen engagement will come from existing organizations that can adapt and do things differently, and from the creation of new organizations ready to engage 21st century Jewish teens. Together with teens, we can make Jewish experiences a meaningful and central part of their lives. David Bryfman, Ph.D., is the chief innovation officer at The Jewish Education Project, which is a beneficiary agency of UJA Federation of New York. Generation Now was commissioned by the Jim Joseph Foundation, Lippman Kanfer Foundation for Living Torah, the Charles and Lynn Schus- Advertisers! There’s plenty of time to place your ad in our Dads and Grads Special ad section Issue Date: June 10 • Ad Deadline: June 2 For information, contact Bonnie Rozen at 724-2360, ext. 244 or bonnie@ thereportergroup.org ÊVisit us on the web at www.thereportergroup.org Published by the Jewish Federation of Greater Binghamton May 13-19, 2016 Page 12 - The Reporter NEWS IN BRIEF From JTA Iran’s defense minister denies reports of testing missile that could hit Israel Iran’s defense minister denied reports that the country successfully test-fired a high-precision ballistic missile that can reach Israel. “We haven’t test-fired a missile with the range the media is reporting,” Hossein Dehghan was quoted as saying by the state news agency IRNA, Reuters reported on May 9. He reportedly also said that Iran is continuing to increase its defensive capabilities, including its ballistic missile program. Earlier on May 9, the state-run Tasnim News Agency reported that the deputy chief of staff of Iran’s military, Brig. Gen. Ali Abdollahi, announced the test at a scientific conference in Tehran of a missile with a range of 2,000 kilometers, or more than 1,200 miles, and a high degree of accuracy. He said the test took place two weeks ago, but provided no further details. The White House press secretary, Josh Earnest, said on May 9 that the administration is aware of statements by Iranian officials indicating the missile test did not take place. “We’re still trying to get to the bottom of what exactly transpired,” Earnest said, according to The Wall Street Journal. The United States has criticized recent missiles tests by Iran. In March, its Revolutionary Guard conducted tests of short- and medium-range ballistic missiles, which it said were not capable of carrying a nuclear warhead. In October, Iran tested a new guided long-range ballistic missile, which may have violated the nuclear deal agreed upon in July with the world powers, as well as a United Nations Security Council resolution that bars Iran from developing missiles “designed to carry nuclear warheads.” Moroccan Jews reportedly protest U.N. view on “occupied” Sahara Several hundred Moroccan Jews protested against U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s characterization of Western Sahara as occupied by the North African kingdom. The April 30 protest in Mazagan, 120 mile southwest of Rabat, was part of Mimouna, a traditional North African Jewish celebration held the day after Passover, and it featured group singing of “Laayouna Ainiya,” a Moroccan patriotic song from the 1970s about the contested area, the Assabah daily reported the week of May 6. In April, Ban angered Moroccan authorities when he said they were “occupying” the Western Sahara after they ordered the expulsion of 80 staffers from the United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara. The U.N. General Assembly endorsed that view in 1979, declaring Morocco an occupying force in the former Spanish colony and affirming the “inalienable right of the people of Western Sahara” to independence. But Morocco, which in recent years has come under increasing pressure to allow self-rule in the area, claims it as part of its territory. Sam Ben Chetrit, president of the World Federation of Moroccan Jewry, told JTA on May 6 that while he is not familiar with the details of the gathering at Mazagan, “it is true that Moroccan Jewry in the kingdom and outside stand united in defense of Morocco’s claim on Sahara, and against those who try to portray Morocco as a foreign occupier in its own land.” Ben Chetrit, who lives in Israel but travels to Morocco frequently, said this support is part “of the Jewish people’s gratitude to Morocco’s royal house, government and people, who have done more than any other nation in the Middle East and many nations elsewhere to preserve Jewish heritage and protect Jewish citizens.” He said he recently penned a letter to Ban to express “the utter indignation” of Moroccan Jews at the U.N.’s approach to Western Sahara. Morocco is one of the Arab world’s friendliest nations toward Israel, and its government has spent millions of dollars on restoring and preserving Jewish heritage sites. The Jewish state’s establishment triggered the departure of 250,000 Moroccan Jews – the vast majority of Moroccan Jewry – amid at least three deadly pogroms perpetrated against them between 1938 and 1954, according to Shmuel Trigano, a lecturer of political sociology at Paris X University Nanterre. Zionism was outlawed in Morocco in 1959 and defined a “serious crime,” but the country ended that official animosity in the late 1980s. London’s Muslim mayor reaffirms plan for Israel trip Sadiq Khan, who was sworn in as London’s first Muslim mayor on May 7, reiterated plans to lead a trade delegation to Israel. In an interview with London’s Jewish News published on May 9, Khan, the first Muslim mayor of any Western capital city and London’s first Labour Party mayor in eight years, also said he believes it is important to improve Jewish-Muslim relations in the U.K. capital. During his campaign, Khan criticized Labour for not doing enough to confront antisemitism among some of its members. Accusations of antisemitism have roiled his party in recent months, with dozens of members suspended in the past few weeks allegedly for making antisemitic remarks. London’s former Labour mayor, Ken Livingstone, was suspended for antisemitic remarks in late April following a series of interviews in which he claimed that Adolf Hitler had supported Zionism. A self-described moderate Muslim, Khan took office on May 7. He attended a Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony with British Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis the following day in his first official appearance as mayor. “We’ve got to accept there are some people who say they’re Muslim, some people of the Jewish faith who don’t like the fact I’m here, that I’m sitting next to the chief rabbi,” he told the Jewish News. “My message to those people is we live in the greatest city in the world and have to go get along. I’m the mayor of London, the most diverse city in the world, and I’ll be everyone’s mayor. No preferential treatment, but I have a role to build bridges. My signing-in ceremony was deliberately designed to show the sort of a mayor I’ll be and I started as I mean to go on.” Asked when he will fulfill a campaign promise to visit Israel, Khan said, “I’ve not even had my first Monday at work to be fair, I’ve had six hours sleep since Wednesday. But I’m keen to make sure I’m the most pro-business mayor we’ve ever had and that means going on trade missions, including to Tel Aviv.” Chabad rabbi building “first mikvah in West Africa” in Nigeria An Israeli firm and a Chabad rabbi working in Nigeria are preparing to open the first known Jewish ritual bath, or mikvah, in West Africa. Yisroel Ozen, an Chabad emissary based in Nigeria, is supervising the construction of a mikvah for women in the Nigerian capital of Abuja on land purchased for him by an Israeli firm operating in the country, the Israeli daily Maariv reported recently. Ozen said the mikvah is the only known one in West Africa, a claim that is also stated on a Hebrew- and English-language sign announcing the project in front of the construction site. Ozen said Nigeria has “a thriving Israeli community that nonetheless lacks basic amenities.” Some 1,200 Israelis live in Nigeria, according to the Maariv article. HANDYMAN 4 SENIORS, INC. PLUMBING & HEATING We Also Do Natural Gas Conversions & All Plumbing Work Free Estimates • Fully Insured • Residential & Commercial We Install, Service & Repair... Furnaces • Air Conditioners Water Heaters • Gas Fireplaces All your home maintenance and repairs, along with in-home care services. These care services include but are not limited to: • Bath Assistance • Meal Prep • Cleaning • Shopping, etc. John Jacoby M.C. Valerie Jacoby C.N.A. (Licensed & Insured) 888-540-0320 www.handyman4seniors.com I’ll drive you or I’ll deliver your vehicle near or far, pets welcome! References Available 607-760-0530 [email protected] Johnson City Senior Center 30 Brocton Street Johnson City New York 13790 Text/Voice: 607.427.0186 Meets the 1st Wednesday of the Month 7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. [email protected] www.hearinglossofbinghamton.org SERVING BROOME & TIOGA COUNTIES [email protected] Gary Riley 754-6376 Education • Advocacy • Support COOK’S TREE SERVICE RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL Fully Insured Free Estimates Our 48th Year For information on advertising, please contact Bonnie Rozen at 724-2360, ext. 244 or bonnie@ thereportergroup.org NEW YORK CHAPTER CERTIFIED ARBORIST ISA Professionals In All Phases Of: · Tree Care · Tree Stump Removal · Trimming Trees Shrubs & Tall Hedges · Tree Insect & Disease Identification & Treatment WWW.COOKSTREESERVICE.NET 607-748-2347 Published by the Jewish Federation of Greater Binghamton 4 Pumphouse Rd Vestal, N.Y.