A Catskills mystery unraveled
Transcription
A Catskills mystery unraveled
THE CHICAGO JEWISH NEWS August 29 - September 4, 2014/3 Elul 5774 www.chicagojewishnews.com One Dollar Finding the Goldbergs A Catskills mystery unraveled Israeli in Chicago biking to beat cancer Larry Layfer on creating a just society A controversial chief rabbi steps down Chicago makeup artist 2 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 THEMaven Chicago Jewish News U.S. HOLOCAUST MUSEUM TO HONOR STEINFELDS, HEAR KEARNS GOODWIN… of s e r c A 9 d e p a c s Land nds Grou Best Independent Living for Active Seniors! Y Gourmet Kosher Meals Prepared Daily Y Synagogue with Full-Time Rabbi Y 9 Acres of Landscaped Grounds Y Weekly Housekeeping Y 24/7 Wellness Center on Site Y In-House Therapy Department Y Beauty and Barber Shop Y Daily Exercise Classes Y Theater, Museums and Cultural Outings Y Round Trip Chauffeur Services Y Multiple Daily Social Events and Opportunities Y Daily Live Music, Movies and Lectures Y Free Parking Y 24-Hour Security Y Studios, 1 and 2 Bedrooms Y Furnished and Unfurnished Y Long and Short Term Apartment Rentals Call us to schedule your visit! Best value start ing a t $ ■ The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum will host Pulitzer Prize-winning author and presidential historian Doris Kearns Goodwin at its 2014 “What You Do Matters” Risa K. Lambert Chicago Luncheon to be held at noon on Tuesday, Sept. 9, at the Sheraton Chicago Hotel & Towers. She will be the featured speaker for the event. The Museum will honor Fern and Manny Steinfeld at the luncheon with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s National Leadership Award for their decades of dedication and support. After leaving Germany just before World War II, Manny Steinfeld enlisted in the U.S. Army and fought to free his home country from Nazi tyranny – learning later that his mother and sister died during the Holocaust. “The Museum slogan “Never Again is a call to action,” Manny Steinfeld says. “In light of what is happening in many parts of the globe now, it is difficult to believe that only 70 years after the end of the war, chants and protests today are identical to the Nazi chants. The Museum is the voice that will not be stilled and requires 1,750 Owned and operated by NWHA, Inc. (an Illinois not-for-profit Corporation) 6840 N. Sacramento Avenue, Chicago www.park-plaza.org Y 773.465.6700 (Yehuda) www. chicagojewishnews .com The Jewish News place in cyberspace Fern and Manny Steinfeld your support to continue in its vital mission to remember those that perished and to ensure that future generations will “Never Again face human degradation and the loss of freedoms that are the basic rights of all mankind.” “Service has always defined the Steinfelds,” said Jill Weinberg, Director of the Museum’s Midwest Regional Office. “Manny served the country that harbored him from Nazi persecution during World War II and in Korea. Since then, he and Fern have unwaveringly served the Chicago community and numerous other charitable organizations throughout the country and around the world. “The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum is pleased to honor them with the Museum’s National Leadership Award. Manny was one of the six original co-chairs of the campaign to build the Museum and for 25 years has exhibited extraordinary leadership and generosity to the Museum.” The event will be chaired by Karyn and Bill Silverstein. Honorary co-chairs are Governor Pat Quinn and Mayor Rahm Emanuel. The luncheon will support the Museum’s national campaign, “Never Again: What You Do Matters.” To purchase tickets or to learn about sponsorship opportunities, contact the Midwest Regional Office at (847) 433-8099 or [email protected]. 3 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 Prague’s longtime chief rabbi leaves colorful and controversial legacy of Czech dissident and future president Vaclav Havel, Sidon had lived in exile in Germany, where he studied at the College of Jewish Studies in Heidelberg. By 1990, Sidon’s fellow dissidents and intellectuals had re- By Jan Richter JTA PRAGUE – When the novel “Altschul’s Method” hit the shelves in Czech bookstores this March, it was hailed as a brilliant political and psychological thriller combining elements of science fiction, alternate history and Jewish mysticism. But it became a true literary sensation when it was revealed a week later that the book’s supposed author, Chaim Cigan, was a pseudonym for Karol Sidon, the longtime chief rabbi of Prague. Sidon had explained that he was writing under a pseudonym mainly to draw a distinction between his literary work and his duties for Prague’s Jewish community. “Such writing does not befit a rabbi,” he told a Czech news website. “Being a rabbi has its limits,” Sidon explained in the interview. “I won’t lie; I wanted to quit some time ago and it will happen sooner or later.” But it was more than a passion for literature that led Sidon to step down as chief rabbi in June, earlier than he had planned. His resignation came amid reports that he had separated from his third wife and become engaged to one of his former conversion students. Sidon’s departure marks the end of an era for the Prague Jewish community. The first postcommunist chief rabbi of Prague, Sidon, a former dissident, symbolized the revival of Czech Jewry following decades in which religion was suppressed. “His arrival at the post was crucial for the community,” said Charles Wiener, a former executive director of the Prague Jewish community who lives in Geneva, Switzerland. “All institutions in then-Czechoslovakia were in the shadow of communism and collaboration, and suddenly someone came who had not been collaborating but was in fact thrown out of the country by the communist authorities.” But Sidon leaves behind a divided community struggling to overcome a conflict in which he played a prominent role. The combination of a generational gap, religious disagreements, accusations of cronyism and personality conflicts contributed to intracommunal tensions during his tenure. A decade ago, Sidon was even removed from his post when a new communal leadership took charge, only to be reinstated when his allies regained control of the community. Jakub Roth, 41, who served as the Prague Jewish community’s deputy chair between 2005 placed discredited communistera officials at the Jewish community and asked him to take over the rabbinate. He agreed, going on to study at the Ariel Institute in Jerusalem and be ordained as an Orthodox rabbi be- fore finally returning to Prague. Sidon’s path to Judaism was not straightforward. The son of a Christian mother and a Jewish father who was murdered in the Terezin concentration camp in SEE PRAGUE ON Rabbi Karol Sidon and 2008 and has been a Sidon supporter, said the rabbi’s resignation had long been anticipated. But he would not comment on the circumstances surrounding Sidon’s decision. Prague Jewish leaders have chosen Rabbi David Peter, 38, to succeed Sidon. A native of Prague, Peter is an Orthodox rabbi who returned to the Czech capital in 2011 after 13 years of studies in Israel. Sidon also asked for an unpaid six-month leave from his duties in the largely ceremonial position as chief rabbi of the Czech Republic. The head of the country’s Federation of Jewish Communities, Petr Papousek, said that Sidon would return to the post after his hiatus. Sidon, who just turned 72, is known for his scholarly demeanor and biting sense of humor. An Orthodox Jew, he focused much of his energy on encouraging greater religious observance among Prague’s largely secular Jews, who are estimated to number some 6,000, though only about 1,800 are officially registered as community members. Sidon’s tenure has seen the growth of a small but active traditionally observant segment of the city’s Jewish community. But Sidon also has accumulated critics during his more than two decades in office. Sylvie Wittmann, the founder of a liberal Prague Jewish congregation, Bejt Simcha, who sits on the Prague Jewish community board, believes it would make sense if Sidon retired from his rabbinical duties altogether. “If he’s embarked on a new life, literary or private, he should pursue it,” she said. “We should thank him for his efforts. He did what he could. But a self-searching, three-times-divorced, egocentric man cannot really be considered a serious figure respected by his community or a good rabbi.” Sidon became the chief rabbi of both Prague and Czechoslovakia in 1992, less than three years after the fall of communism in what was then Czechoslovakia. A respected writer and ally 2014 RISA K. LAMBERT LUNCHEON Join us in honoring Fern and Manny Steinfeld with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s National Leadership Award for their decades of dedication and support. 11:15 a.m. Registration Noon Luncheon and Program Sheraton Chicago Hotel & Towers 301 East North Water Street TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 FEATURED SPEAKER DORIS KEARNS GOODWIN Presidential historian and Pulitzer Prize-winning author HONORARY CHAIRS Governor Pat Quinn Mayor Rahm Emanuel CHAIRS Karyn and Bill Silverstein MEDIA SPONSOR RSVP at ushmm.org/events/chicagoluncheon. For more information about event sponsorship, please contact the Midwest Regional OΩce at 847.433.8099 or [email protected]. Holocaust survivor Margit Meissner leads young visitors from Chicago on a tour of the Permanent Exhibition during the 2011 Grandparents Trip. US Holocaust Memorial Museum 100 Raoul Wallenberg Place, SW Washington, DC 20024-2126 ushmm.org/campaign PAG E 1 1 4 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 Contents Jewish News ■ Officials from the University of Illinois publicly defended their decision to revoke a job offer to a scholar who had harshly criticized Israel on Twitter. Chancellor Phyllis Wise issued a statement explaining why the university had decided not to move forward with the hiring of Steven Salaita. On the same day, the president and board combined on a separate statement. Wise wrote in an open letter to the university that the university would not tolerate “personal and disrespectful words or actions that demean and abuse either viewpoints themselves or those who express them.” The president and board in their statement backed Wise’s decision, echoing her arguments. Neither of the statements cited any specific behavior by Salaita. The website Inside Higher Education had reported that Salaita’s appointment was blocked over concerns about strongly worded tweets criticizing Israel and its officials. In a follow-up article, Inside Higher Education wrote that students, parents, alumni and even the university’s own fundraising officials lobbied Wise to block the appointment. Earlier this summer, the university indicated that Salaita would be joining the faculty of the American Indian studies program at the university’s Urbana-Champaign campus. It subsequently informed Salaita, however, that his appointment would not go to the board of trustees for approval, typically a pro forma step with university appointments. The university statements have been criticized on a number venues, including a blog for the American Association of University Professors by John Wilson, a member of the academic freedom committee of the Illinois AAUP. Wise’s letter, Wilson wrote, was “an appalling attack on academic freedom and a rejection of the basic values that a university must stand for.” ■ A government rabbinic court in Jerusalem issued an order prohibiting a woman from bringing her children to meet her female romantic partner. The order came during divorce proceedings between the woman and her husband, according to Israel’s Center for Women’s Justice. The center filed a petition with the Supreme Court of Israel on the wife’s behalf challenging the order. The couple agreed that the wife would have custody of the children, but the husband asked the court to issue an order prohibiting her partner from seeing the children. Without such an order, the husband said he would refuse to grant his wife a get, or a ritual divorce. The court agreed to his request. Israel does not allow civil divorce, so Jewish couples must divorce through the rabbinic court system. ■ A group of right-wing Israeli lawmakers is proposing a bill to make Hebrew the sole official language of the State of Israel. The bill has the support of Knesset members from the Likud, Yisrael Beiteinu and Jewish Home parties. Current law mandates that Arabic as well as Hebrew must be used in various official functions, including in the court system, government ministries, and official government forms and announcements, Haaretz reported. The law dates back to the period of the British Mandate. Under the proposed bill, highway signs would still have to include Arabic. ■ Three-quarters of Israeli Jews and nearly two-thirds of Israeli Arabs would not marry someone from a different religion, according to a poll. The poll found that opposition to interfaith relationships was highest among haredi Orthodox Jews, at 95 percent. But 88 percent of traditional and religious Jews, as well as 64 percent of secular Jews, also opposed interdating. Seventyone percent of Muslim Israeli Arabs opposed interfaith relationships, but only half of Christian Israeli Arabs were opposed. Across religious denominations, Israeli Jews would be much more opposed to their relatives marrying Arabs than they would be to relatives marrying non-Arab gentiles. Only a third of secular Jewish Israelis would be opposed to a relative marrying an American or European Christian, but a majority would oppose a relative marrying an Arab. Seventy-two percent of Israeli Jews overall would be opposed to a relative marrying an Arab. Opposition to intermarriage was lowest among immigrants from the former Soviet Union. More than half would avoid having a relationship with a non-Jew, but if they were to fall in love with a non-Jew, only 35 percent would insist their spouse convert. Two-thirds of Israeli Jews see intermarriage as a serious threat to Jews worldwide, and one-third see it as a serious threat to Jews in Israel. ■ Comedian Sarah Silverman broke out a Jewish joke as she took home a trophy at the 2014 Emmy Awards. Silverman won for Best Writing for a Variety Show for her HBO comedy special “Sarah Silverman: We are Miracles.” Upon being announced as the winner, she dashed onto the stage barefoot and thanked her agents, saying, “Thank you to my Jews at CAA.” JTA THE CHICAGO JEWISH NEWS Vol. 20 No. 47 Joseph Aaron Editor/Publisher 6 Torah Portion Golda Shira Senior Editor/ Israel Correspondent 7 High Holiday Synagogue Focus Pauline Dubkin Yearwood Managing Editor Joe Kus Staff Photographer 8 Cover Story 11 Senior Living Roberta Chanin and Associates Sara Belkov Steve Goodman Advertising Account Executives Denise Plessas Kus Production Director 12 Community Calendar Kristin Hanson Accounting Manager/ Webmaster Jacob Reiss 12 CJN Classified Subscriptions Manager/ Administrative Assistant Ann Yellon of blessed memory 14 By Joseph Aaron 15 Death Notices www. chicagojewishnews .com Some of what you’ll find in the ONLINE version of Chicago’s only weekly Jewish newspaper DAILY JEWISH NEWS For the latest news about Jews around the world, come by everyday and check out what’s making headlines. 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For Israel Advertising Information: IMP Group Ltd. 972-2-625-2933 Like Chicago Jewish News on Facebook. 5 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 Best face forward Helping women look and feel more beautiful By Pauline Dubkin Yearwood Managing Editor If you’ve ever wondered how someone decides to become a makeup artist, Elise Brill has a story for you – one she admits is “a little odd.” The Northbrook-based Jewish makeup artist studied film at Columbia College in Chicago, intending to become a casting director. She began working in film and TV after graduation but also found herself hanging out more and more often in the makeup trailer. “I have a love of faces,” she said in a recent phone interview. “I was just fascinated when actors would come on set preparing to be on camera. I started falling in love with makeup application.” But since that wasn’t a field she had studied or thought about as a career, she found herself somewhat lost when the TV show she was working on moved to Las Vegas and she decided not to follow. So she did what any sensible Jewish girl does when she finds herself at loose ends – she went to Israel and joined the IDF. Well, not exactly the IDF, but Volunteers for Israel, an organization that recruits non-soldiers to help do routine tasks that soldiers would ordinarily do. Brill spent three months on a tank base. “I had a very important job,” she says. “I made a lot of coffee.” When she returned to the United States, Brill says, her focus had become clear. “I was able to say, I know a lot about makeup,” she says. (Besides the film jobs, she had worked at a makeup counter in Marshall Field’s for a time. While there, she was constantly getting requests from clients to do the makeup for their weddings.) Feeling confident about her new direction, Brill launched Leesi B Cosmetics (the name is based on her nickname), which today is celebrating 15 years in business. Operating out of a studio in her Northbrook home, she develops and sells her own line of cosmetics, helps clients pick the best colors and makeup for their skin types and does makeup for weddings, Jdate pictures and other special occasions. Her line has kosher and gluten-free makeup available and none of it is tested on animals. Brill, who is married to an Israeli man and has two sons, ages 20 and 22, says clients like Elise Brill coming to her studio better than going to a department store makeup counter because there is no pressure to buy. “When someone calls me, they come here, I set aside an hour appointment,” she says. “I do the makeup application, I chart the colors I recommend for them and I keep a copy. Everything is computerized. They can leave here and buy nothing. I never charge for people coming to get educated and try new colors.” She adds new products to her line four times a year. “What makes makeup different is quality and pigment,” she says. “Is the makeup from the drugstore terrible? No, but it’s not the quality of the makeup you will get from me.” Being responsive to the needs of individual clients is also important, Brill says. “In the past seven years people have more allergies than I’ve ever seen,” she says. “You have to be sensitive to people’s allergies. I try to tune in to what my clients want. Gluten-free is very big right now, also paraben-free. People will call me for Passover, they need to get all new makeup, and I know exactly what I can sell to them.” As she launches her fall line, Brill says one noteworthy trend is “very bold lips. We’ve been away from that for a while. Makeup is very bold, with bur- gundies, hot pinks – nothing for the shy. But you can incorporate it to the level of your comfort, take it up or down a notch. “I like to help my clients wear the latest trends but I don’t take them too far from who they are,” she says. SEE MAKEUP ON We Buy Antiques! Collectibles, Paintings, Costume Jewelry Furniture, Lamps, Light Fixtures, Clocks, China, Etc. Estate Sales Professionally Conducted 36 Years Experience Free estimates ~ We Make House Calls Paying a Premium Over Scrap for Gold and Silver Call Linda Mark: 773-348-9647 www.miscellaniaantiques.com MAOT CHITIM OF GREATER CHICAGO purchases the food that volunteers deliver. This kosher holiday food will feed more than 12,000 people for Rosh Hashanah 2014. To accomplish this, we need your help! We rely on the entire Jewish community to make this happen! BE A VOLUNTEER! Help us continue the tradtion that was started in 1908. Give of your time so that we can continue to help those in need celebrate the holidays in a traditional and dignified manner. Delivery Day is Sunday, September 21st Join us to pack perishables beginning at 6:00 a.m. Food package delivery will start at 9:00 a.m. Warehouse Location 3411 Woodhead Drive, Northbrook, IL Visit our website for directions. Must wear closed shoes. No one under the age of 12 permitted in the warehouse. To volunteer to pack, email our group coordinator at [email protected]. For more information, call our office at 847-674-3224 or visit our website at www.maotchitim.org. MAOT CHITIM OF GREATER CHICAGO 7366 N. Lincoln Avenue • Suite 301, Dept. RHJN Lincolnwood, IL 60712 Joel H. Schneider, President Joellyn Oliff, Executive Director L’Shana Tovah PAG E 1 1 6 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 Torah Portion CANDLELIGHTING TIMES 7:10 Sept. 5 6:59 Landmarks and livelihood Torah shows how to create a just society KABA A Fine ITMediterranean Cuisine By Lawrence F. Layfer Torah Columnist B P 4 Aug. 29 LUNCH SPECIAL Torah Portion: Shoftim Deuteronomy 16:18-21:9 “You will not remove your neighbor’s border stone … in the land the Lord your G-d gave you.” (Deuteronomy 19:14) Monday to Friday 11:00 am - 3:00 pm (Except Holiday) $5.99 From 11am to 11pm Pulaski WE DELIVER $3.00 per delivery Howard OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Irving Park 8 items Combo for only Lake CATERING AVAILABLE 773.271.2771 5701 N. CALIFORNIA AVE. CHICAGO, IL 60659 FREE PARKING FREE DELIVERY FOR ONLINE ORDERS at WWW.PITAKABAB.NET L & L APPLIANCE MART Slightly Blemished NEW Appliances & Rebuilt Used Appliances in EXCELLENT CONDITION Refrigerators • Stoves • Heaters Bedding • Freezers • Washers Dryers • Air Conditioners Large Quantities Available For Developers & Rehabs Lowest Prices • 773-463-2050 FREE DELIVERY IN CHICAGO 3240 W. LAWRENCE Mon. - Sat. 10-7 Closed Sun. 4250 W. MONTROSE Mon. - Sat. 10-6 Closed Sun. 2553 W. NORTH AVE. Mon. - Sat. 9-5:30 Closed Sun. Not only in ancient Israel was the use of border stones common. The Encyclopedia Judaica notes that “many boundary stones engraved with invocations and curses against their removal have been found in ancient Babylonia.” The clear intent of the commandment to not move another’s stone, Rashi suggests, is simple robbery: “He relocates a marker of division of land into his fellow’s field in order to expand his own field,” and Deuteronomy (29:17) curses such a person “that moves his neighbor’s landmark.” So serious was the prohibition that land surveyors were instructed to make their recurrent measurements in the same season, as rope may lengthen or shrink when the weather changes from the cold of winter to the warmth of summer, adding unacceptable if small inaccuracies. There is even concern that planting a tree too close to the border of your neighbor’s field may violate the rule because your tree may spread its roots across your boundary into your neighbor’s field and steal some of the ground water from his trees. Proverbs suggests that the character of those who begin by moving border stones eventually leads them to steal from others less able to defend themselves: “Do not remove the old landmark, and do not enter the fields of the fatherless, for their Redeemer is mighty.” (Proverbs 23:10) Hosea compares the rulers of his generation to thieves by using the image of those who violate border markers, noting that Divine punishment will follow: “The princes of Judah are like those that remove the landmark stones, therefore I will pour out my wrath upon them.” (5:10) Job goes further, claiming that the cascade of evil that starts with the moving of a border Lawrence F. Layfer stone ends with ever increasing depths of evil: “Some remove the landmarks, they violently take away flocks and feed them, they drive away the donkey of the fatherless and take the widow’s ox for a pledge, they turn the needy out of the way, the poor of the earth.” (24:2-4) A question: The commandment not to steal has already been given to us twice in the Decalogue, so why is the ruling on moving the border stone, a subset of stealing, necessary to be stated? The Torah does not waste words, so if this ruling seems redundant, then we must look harder to uncover some novel concept that requires this particular example. Perhaps the core issue in moving the border stone is not the theft of land itself but rather the loss of income from the farmable land that lessens the owner’s ability to care for his family’s needs. Therefore Rabbi Elazar Rokeach of Worms (1165-1238), a German rabbinical scholar, can propose that “one who encroaches competitively on a neighbor’s livelihood is violating the commandment of moving his neighbor’s border stone.” The issue of Hasagat Gevul has then become a look at the marketplace behavior of direct competition, often good for consumers, but perhaps an unfair infringement on the livelihood of other merchants. The Rabbis of the Talmud straddle both sides of this issue. Some Sages consider that a seller who lowers his prices is unfair to his competitors, and yet other Sages say that such a merchant is remembered for good because he eases the market price for consumers (Baba Metziah 60A). And Rav Huna said (Baba Basra 21B) if a resident of an alley sets up a mill for commercial purposes and then a fellow resident comes and sets up a mill next to his, the law is that the first one can stop the second one, for he can say to him “you are cutting off my livelihood”; but the Rabbis challenged Rav Huna’s opinion, saying a person may open a rival store next to the store of his fellow, or a rival bathhouse next to the bathhouse of his fellow, and the established owner cannot prevent him from doing so, because the rival can say to the original owner “you do as you wish inside your property, and I do as I wish inside mine.” The arguments are not limited to shopkeepers; they also extend to issues such as fishing rights and intellectual property. In our own day, Chicago has seen such a discussion concerning a national grocery chain in its approach to the kosher-keeping community, threatening the survival of smaller local suppliers. In an article published some years ago, Rabbi Beryl Wein offers a concise summary of the Torah’s expectation of how we ensure that the Talmud’s conflict of approaches is balanced. He considers competition as the fuel for the engine that drives our society forward, without which we would be at the mercy of monopolists and cartels that stifle progress, efficiency and incentive. He reasons that “competition is an accepted condition in our society. In commerce, sports, government, the arts and sciences, competition is the fuel for the engine that drives our society forward. Nevertheless, like all seemingly positive attributes, competition should have its limits, as unrestrained, cutthroat, vicious competition is immoral, wrong, and eventually counterproductive to the society itself. Just as it is obviously wrong to move one’s border fence to gobble up a piece of ground of the neighboring lot, so too is it wrong to engage in unfair competitive practices in order to injure someone’s business in order to benefit one’s own business enterprise. The Torah is interested in creating a fair, just, harmonious and compassionate society. Unfair competitive practices, when practiced regularly, openly and without shame, prevent the achievement of such a society. Following this precept guarantees the sanctity of privacy, the holiness of confidentiality and the civility necessary for a fair, civil and trustworthy marketplace.” Lawrence F. Layfer M.D. is vice chairman of medicine at North Shore University Health System, Skokie Hospital. 7 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 H I G H H O L I D AY SYNAGOGUE FOCUS David Gregory’s Jewish book plans Kehillat Shalom By Anthony Weiss JTA David Gregory was just sacked as host of “Meet the Press” in public and humiliating fashion. And like so many before him, he will seek respite from the suffering of worldly scorn in the consolation of religion. This isn’t to say that Gregory will be retreating to a cave in the desert – on the contrary, according to Politico Playbook, Washington’s online political gossip sheet, Gregory is available, through the Leading Authorities speakers bureau, “to speak to associations and companies” about “the political landscape, the White House, Congress, the 2014 elections, and what’s ahead for 2016.” (In other words, what he used to speak about on “Meet the Press” before he was fired.) Rather, Politico Playbook brings us the news that Gregory is writing a book about “his Jewish faith.” That Jewish faith is an important part of his Beltway persona – Gregory studies Torah with David Brooks, Jeffrey Goldberg and Martin Indyk; he attends D.C.’s Temple Micah alongside Democratic Leadership Committee founder Al From; and his life as a Jew was even profiled in The Daily Beast, where he confided that his faith helps him “to work with more compassion and empathy” and “gives me a sense of perspective.” That sense of perspective will be useful as Gregory recovers from a rocky tenure on “Meet the Press,” which was characterized by plunging ratings, brutal reviews and a report that NBC had hired a “psychological consultant” to diagnose what ailed the show. (NBC argued that the conS E E G R E G O RY ON PAG E 1 1 Skokie Valley Agudath Jacob Synagogue A cornerstone of the Skokie Jewish community for more than 60 years, we invite you to our warm, welcoming and inclusive congregation for High Holiday Services. ¨©¦ Kehillat Shalom Community. Connection. Congregation. HIGH HOLIDAY SERVICES 2014/5775 Rosh Hashanah: Wednesday, 9/24 – Friday, 9/26 Kol Nidre: Friday, 10/3 Yom Kippur: Saturday, 10/4 An Egalitarian, Conservative Service led by Rabbi Ami Adler & Rich Moline Special Children’s Programming $125 per adult Introductory membership included with ticket purchase for families with children 12 and under. Email your reservation to [email protected] For complete information and service times visit www.kehillatshalom.org 8610 Niles Center Road, Skokie, IL • (847) 679-6513 Orthodox Services will be led by: Rabbi Samuel Biber & Chazzan Eytan Dallal Traditional Services will be led by: Rabbi Dr. Gerald Teller & Chazzan Baruch Shifman Join us year round for inspirational services and activities that will be enriching for you and your entire family. • Daily Minyanim • Prominent Scholars-in-Residence & Lectures • Adult Education Classes & Shiurim • Youth Programming • Chesed Projects Introductory membership plans and individual High Holiday seats are available. CONGREGATION BENE SHALOM “The Miracle on Oakton Street” Skokie Valley Agudath Jacob Synagogue 8825 East Prairie Road Skokie, IL 60076 847-674-3473 • www.svaj.org • [email protected] Ezra-Habonim, the Niles Township Jewish Congregation L’Shana Tova 5775 High Holidays start September 24th. vcuy vba Tickets are available. Join Rabbi Jeffrey Weill and Cantor Benjamin Warschawski as we celebrate the High Holidays. The public is welcome to attend our Selichot service on Saturday, Sept. 20th at 9:30 p.m. HIG H HO WE’L BON LIDAY L CR US FEE EDIT YO : S* TO U 2015 R TICKET DUES *Non-member ticket fee For schedule and information visit our website at www.ehnt.org or call 847-675-4141. Ezra-Habonim, the Niles Township Jewish Congregation 4500 Dempster Street, Skokie, IL 60076 • 847-675-4141 • www.ehnt.org • Where you have a personal connection with your God and your Rabbis • Where traditional Reform services are celebrated Friday night and Kabbalistic, mystical services are celebrated Saturday morning • Where children develop a warm relationship with our Rabbis and attend religious school in a nurturing environment Services are sign language interpreted. Non Jews are welcome to become members. We welcome people of any sexual orientation. Rosh Hashanah Erev service: Wed., September 24 at 8:15 p.m. 1st day: Thurs., September 25 at 10:30 a.m. Family service: open to the public, Thurs., September 25 at 3 p.m. Kabbalistic High Holiday Service: Sat., September 27 at 10:30 a.m. One year free religious school for new members plus special introductory membership rate ~ CONGREGATION BENE SHALOM 4435 Oakton, Skokie 60076 847.677.3330 • www.beneshalom.org Rabbi Dr. Douglas Goldhamer Assistant Rabbi Shari Chen President Rita Carroll Cantorial Soloist Charlene Brooks 8 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 Finding the Goldbergs A Catskills mystery unraveled By Uriel Heilman JTA MONTICELLO, N.Y. – The moment I kicked in the door of the abandoned house in the heart of the Catskills, I felt like I was in an episode of “The Twilight Zone: Borscht Belt edition.” In some corners it appeared as if the residents were just out for the afternoon. Pictures and tchotchkes adorned the walls. A mezuzah with the parchment still inside was affixed to a doorpost. A working upright piano sat in one corner. Ironing boards were open. Mattresses lay on beds; in one room the beds were still halfmade. But elsewhere, things were in a state of advanced decay. The roof over the kitchen had caved in. The sink was overflowing with rotting leaves. In a bedroom, vines poured in through the window and spread over much of the ceiling. Mold was having its way with the walls. I had come to the Catskills hoping to get one last look at Kutsher’s, the last of the great Borscht Belt resorts, after hearing the news that its demolition was imminent. For much of the 20th century, Kutsher’s and other Jewish hotels like it helped make the Catskills the summer destination of choice for New York Jews. But when I reached the mountains a few days later, I found the roads leading to Kutsher’s blocked by chains and sawhorses posted with warnings against trespassing into the hardhat zone. I tried to make my way on foot, wading through wet, overgrown grass, but three burly construction workers spotted me and I was forced to beat a hasty retreat. Which is how I found my way into a crumbling bungalow colony at the edge of Kutsher’s 1,500 acres. Aside from the main house with 10 bedrooms and side building with a dining room and kitchen that I had broken into, there were a handful of bungalows, a pool and a lake. The buildings all were vacant, in varying states of disrepair and overcome by nature. One room had half a dozen ovens and refrigerators. Opening one fridge, I half expected to find a cold can of Tab. No dice. In the corner of what appeared to be the living room, there was a public telephone. I picked it up. No dial tone. Most of the bedrooms were disheveled or empty, but in one I found toiletries and a shoeshine kit carefully arranged on the dresser, three drab but clean dresses hanging in the closet, and a shelf filled with unused legal pads and blank paper. Then I spotted the first clue to who may have lived here. Tucked into the mirror was a photograph of four happy-looking elderly couples posing in front of the lake out back now obscured by foliage. Their names were carefully inscribed on the back: Nat & Sylvia, Herman & Eleanor, Milton & Norma, Jack & Charlotte. There was also a date: August 2001. Who were these people and why did they leave? What purpose did this odd house serve? Were the people in the photo still alive? When was the house last occupied? This being the age of the Internet, it took less than an hour of sleuthing, a credit card and $3.95 to unravel the mystery of this strange Catskills time capsule. The simple part was figuring out who lived there. An address label affixed to some shelves in the bedroom with the shoeshine kit read Goldberg. That matched the name on a Jewish National Fund Tree-in-Israel certificate posted on the wall in another room. Along with the photograph I found, I had my target couple: Nat and Sylvia Goldberg. Combing through online directories and death notices, it didn’t take long to locate family members. Soon I had Nat and Sylvia’s daughter, Judy Viteli, on the line. She almost cried when I told her where I had been. “Ah, the kochelein,” she said wistfully. The what? “The kochelein,” she said. “It’s a Yiddish word.” Over the course of several conversations, including one in which we went through old pictures at her kitchen table, Judy and her sister, Paula Goldberg – now 60 and 63, respectively – told me the story of what had transpired half a century ago in that house, why it represented the best years of their lives and how it all came to an end. This is their story. The kochelein The kochelein – a term that literally means “cook alone” – represented a particular kind of bungalow colony: a place where several families shared a house but where everyone was responsible for their own food. That’s why there were half a dozen fridges and ovens in the kitchen: Each of the 10 families was allotted half a refrigerator and a shared oven to prepare meals. A pharmacist from the Bronx, Nat Goldberg began bringing his family to this kochelein, called Fairhill, in 1953, when Judy was still in diapers and her sister Paula was 5. The rest of the house was filled with cousins and close friends, all from the same working-class Bronx neighborhood. Everybody, of course, was Jewish. There was practically no privacy: Parents and their children slept in the same room, all the families shared only two bathrooms and everyone ate their meals in the shared dining room. From a kid’s perspective, the summers were idyllic. Days were spent hiking in the woods, swimming in the lake, picking wild blueberries, playing hide-andseek, trying to sneak into the resort at Kutsher’s and waging endless girls vs. boys wars. On rainy days they’d pack into the dining room with their parents to play mah-jongg or a variation of rummy, gambling for split peas. After the rain stopped, the kids would run outside to hunt sala- In the 1950s, during the heyday of this Catskills bungalow colony, 10 women shared the single kitchen. manders. Once the Goldberg kids turned 10, they were allowed to hitchhike into Monticello; their mother would wave goodbye as they climbed into strangers’ cars. On weekends they might catch rides with their father en route to the racetrack. On Saturday nights, when the adults went out, the kids left to their own devices smoked, played kissing games and did whatever else they could think of that their parents had forbidden. “Every one of us will tell you it was the best time of our lives,” Paula said of those summers. “Our mothers never knew where we were and didn’t care.” For the adults, the bungalow colony was both an extension of and a break from their lives in the crowded Jewish enclaves of the Bronx. It was mostly the same people, but there was cleaner air, less privacy and less testosterone: The men, who worked Monday to Friday, came up only on weekends; the women and children stayed all summer. “It was a total matriarchy,” Paula said. It was the 1950s, before three major factors destroyed the Jewish Catskills: air condition- ing, which made staying in the city more palatable; declining discrimination against Jews, which opened up previously unavailable summertime alternatives; and the rise of the working woman, which made moving away for the summer untenable. The bungalow colony was not for the wealthy. Accommodations were simple. Water came from a well. When it went dry one summer, the families went days without showering and walked around with divining rods. The swimming pool – now cracked, overgrown and shrouded by trees – wasn’t built until sometime in the late ‘50s. With the exception of Nat Goldberg, none of the men at the kochelein had gone to college, and they all worked blue-collar jobs. Jewish families with more money went to resorts like Kutsher’s, where meals, entertainment and a wide range of recreational facilities were included. At Kutsher’s, residents of bungalow colonies like the Fairhill kochelein were referred to derisively as “bungees.” Entertainment at the kochelein was mostly homemade: Someone would play the piano or the adults would hold silly parties 9 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 where everyone wore their clothes backward or husbands and wives swapped clothing or held mock weddings or soup-eating contests. The men were constantly pranking each other. In the mornings, the first thing everyone would do was get in line for the bathroom, toothbrush and soap in hand. With as many as 40 people sharing just two bathrooms, dillydallying was severely frowned upon – not least by your stern, socially conscious mother. “Everything happened in front of everybody else – all the babying, all the disciplining,” Judy recalled. “There was no private place to yell at anybody.” One morning when she was 11, Judy had to conceal a hickey she said a boy had forced on her neck the night before. “It was the summer, you couldn’t wear a scarf,” she said. “So I put on makeup before I came out from the top of my head down to my neck thinking nobody would notice.” To no avail. As soon as she walked into the dining room, a girl named Arlene spotted it and broke into peals of laughter. Judy was humiliated; her mother made her wear pancake makeup until the hickey subsided. The food was kosher – to some degree. At home in the Bronx, Sylvia would let her kids have milk after meat, but at the bungalow colony she was stricter because Aunt Faye was sitting at the next table. “We used to pretend to be kosher,” Judy said. “It was shameful if you weren’t kosher. But people were different degrees of kosher.” Because the ladies didn’t drive, the mothers would list the groceries they needed in a spiral notebook hanging from a hook in the dining room, and the Polish Catholic family that owned the property – Alex and Mary Chicko – would go to town every day to buy the provisions, adding a penny or two to each item as a delivery fee. The families all shared a single public telephone. If Milton should phone from the city to speak to his wife who was down by the lake, whoever answered would get on the P.A. system and make the announcement, summoning Norma to the receiver. If the kids misbehaved, the parents would punish them by dragging them along to Kutsher’s shows instead of leaving them behind with their boyfriends and girlfriends. For Paula, one kochelein relationship proved to have special staying power: with Mark Goldberg, a boy whose family had been coming to the Fairhill kochelein since the 1920s. She was 5 and he was 6 when they met, and they began “going together” in the summer of 1959. That was when 13-year-old Mark asked Paula to a movie theater in town to see “Journey to the Center of the Earth,” and the two kissed during the film – with their eyes open, Paula says. He was fresh; he was a bad boy,” Paula said with a mischievous smile. The two broke up at the end of every summer and then got back together the following July. Some summers Mark’s family didn’t go up to the mountains, but Mark always came – even if it was in the care of someone else’s parents. That is, until the summer of ‘66, when Mark’s father collapsed at the kochelein of a heart attack and died. Mark was 19. When Mark was 22 and Paula was 21, they married. The couple recently celebrated their 45th wedding anniversary. The later years By the 1960s, things had begun changing at the kochelein. A pool had been built. Two more bathrooms were added to the main house. There had been three or four bungalows onsite at least since the early ‘50s, but in the ‘60s the owners decided to build several more, enlisting the summertime kids to help. Most significantly, the owners cut a deal that traded the use of part of their land to Kutsher’s in exchange for nightly passes to the resort’s shows. Kutsher’s eventually bought the bungalow colony outright. “That changed our lives,” Paula recalled. “Our parents could get dressed up and go every night and see all the Borscht Belt comedians. They could go dancing on the stage. Our little bungalow colony had very special power based on the land.” Judy says she enjoyed the shows, except for one thing: “The comedians would tell their joke, and then the punchline would be in Yiddish. I’d ask Mom what he said and she’d say, I’ll tell you later.” When she was old enough, Judy began working summers at Kutsher’s as a camp counselor. It was hard work, she says: 12-hour days, six days a week, for just $15 per week. At the kochelein, the traditions continued. At summer’s end, when each family finished packing up the car to leave, the remaining families would assemble for a parting ceremony. They’d all bang pots and pans and sing a song to the tune of the “The Farmer in the Dell”: We hate to see you go We hate to see you go We hope to heck you never come back We hate to see you go The Goldbergs were usually the last to leave. “We left a day later than everyone else because God forbid we should get stuck in traffic,” Paula recalled. As they graduated high school and college, the number of kids at the bungalow colony dwindled. Some went up only for weekends, some not at all. Even as the Catskills fell into decline in the ‘70s and ‘80s, the adults kept going to the Fairhill kochelein – relishing the space without kids, according to Paula. They stopped only when they couldn’t physically do it, obstructed by illness, death or retirement to Florida. By the 1990s, most of the kochelein’s rooms were empty. But not the Goldbergs’; they were diehards. Even when Nat and Sylvia took a place in Florida for the winter, they would return to Monticello for the summers. Sylvia kept three separate bottles of moisturizer so she could travel lighter: at her bedside at the The kochelein was a matriarchy, with women running the show while their husbands mostly came up just for weekends. This photo was taken in August 1956. This Catskills house near Kutsher’s, in the old Borscht Belt, once was home to a vibrant communal summer home called a kochelein – Yiddish for “cook alone,” because while living and cooking space were shared, each family was responsible for its own meals. kochelein, in Florida and in Yonkers, where the couple moved when they left the Bronx. (Snooping around the abandoned property, I spotted Sylvia’s bottle of moisturizer.) With the surrounding area growing shabbier every year, the Goldberg kids tried to convince their parents to stop going to the kochelein – or at least get a room for the summer at Kutsher’s, which by now they could afford. But Nat and Sylvia wouldn’t budge. “To me it was depressing to go up in those later years,” Judy said. “My mother’s sister used to bring up all her money for the summer and hide it in her room. When she had a stroke in the middle of one summer, her son asked us to find the money and we couldn’t. Eventually someone found it.” The last few summers the Goldbergs spent at the bungalow colony, they were the only couple there. “It was eerie,” Judy said. “You would go upstairs and all the other rooms were abandoned looking.” Nat and Sylvia would spend their days at Kutsher’s – Sylvia in pottery classes making tchotchkes that she’d take back to the kochelein and hang on the walls, Nat outside organizing shuffleboard games. At the end of the day they would go back to their big, empty house at the bungalow colony to eat and sleep. Though there were half a dozen refrigerators, they still confined themselves to the same half-fridge they always used. “It felt like the ‘Twilight Zone’ to me,” Paula said. “Dad was 92. We were scared already. They were living alone in that big house and crossing over to the dining room for meals. They were anachronisms.” Finally, in the summer of 2002, after 50 years of summers at Fairhill, the Goldberg kids managed to convince their parents to forego the kochelein for the following summer, and they booked rooms at Kutsher’s for 10 weeks starting in June 2003. But when Nat and Sylvia left the kochelein at the end of August 2002, Sylvia was complaining about feeling tired, and she spent that fall in and out of doctor’s offices. She was diagnosed with cancer. “After we booked them into 10 weeks at Kutsher’s, my mother felt like a very rich lady,” Paula said. “Even when she was in hospice, she thought she’d spend the summer at the hotel.” Sylvia never made it. She died in July 2003. Nat, 10 years her senior, held on for nearly another decade, living until the age of 100. He died in June 2010. Today, the Jewish Catskills is largely a relic. There are still a few bungalow colonies scattered about, and some haredi Orthodox camps have put down stakes, but all the great Jewish hotels have been sold off or abandoned to nature and decay. Kutsher’s, the last holdout, was sold in late 2013 for $8.2 million to Veria Lifestyle Inc., a company owned by Indian billionaire Subhash Chandra. He plans to build a new health and wellness resort at the site. Decades on, the kochelein still maintains a hold on the Goldberg sisters – and many of the others who spent their childhood summers there. In 1996, when the sisters held a 50th anniversary party for their parents at Paula’s Westchester home, many of the old kochelein kids showed up for the occasion. “They were like family,” Paula says. At Paula’s insistence, she and Mark used to drive to Monticello every year on Aug. 2, the anniversary of their first date. Then last year, for the first time, Paula decided she didn’t want to go anymore. It was just too sad and spooky. From what I saw on my foray there, it’s also dangerous. There’s no telling when a floor might collapse or the roof cave in. The property is a wreck. But it’s also full of artifacts – enough for an enterprising visitor to decode the mystery of the copious fridges, the half-full bottle of moisturizer, the piano in the corner of the dining room. Enough, that is, to tell the Goldbergs’ story. 10 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 THEMaven Chicago Jewish News RIDE ON FOR A CAUSE… ■ It’s not that Tom Peled, an Israeli reservist, doesn’t appreciate the blankets, cakes, food packages and all the rest of it that supporters send IDF soldiers from all over the world. But he would be willing to give up his share if those supporters donated to fund cancer research in Israel instead, he says. Peled, 26, is the creator of Bike for the Fight, a bicycle journey he and his team took to raise funds for Israel Cancer Research Fund. The trip and a subsequent one bore personal meaning for Peled but were also important for the future of the Jewish state and its research, he said during a recent stop in Chicago, where he was accompanied by two members of the ICRF’s Chicago office, development director Jennifer Flink and Sandy Rosen, head of individual gifts. Peled’s involvement in the organization grew out of a tragedy: His father, Rami, was diagnosed with a form of cancer so rare only five other Israelis had it. Doctors gave him just months to live; he battled the disease valiantly for eight years. “He had a passion for life,” Peled says. “The worse his physical condition got, the better his spiritual condition got. It was amazing to see.” While there was little incentive to develop a treatment for such a rare form of cancer, Israeli scientists are worldwide leaders in cancer research in general, Flink says. The Jewish state also had the highest rate of “brain drain” – top scientists leaving to work in countries where they would be better funded. ICRF was started in 1975 to stop that state of affairs. Today it gives grants primarily for career development so scientists can have the freedom to build labs and work long-term on cancer research. Three of the most recent “miracle drugs” – Doxil for breast cancer, Gleevac for leukemia and Velcade for multiple myeloma – came out of Israeli research, Flink says, and in 2004, a group of Israeli researchers at the Technion won a Nobel Prize for their part in the development of Velcade. Today the ICRF is the largest source for private funds for Israeli cancer research, Flink says. Peled, meanwhile, was try- A TALE OF TWO COUNTRIES… At an Israel Cancer Research Fund event in downtown Chicago with Tom Peled, were, at left, Jennifer Flink of ICRF; and, at right, event cochairs Ashley Silver, Gillian Kriezelman, and Sophia Berman. ing to cope with the death of his dad in 2011. “I went through a very difficult few months,” he says. “I lost all direction, all motivation. I was thinking, what do I do now?” Eventually he decided that biking, which he had always loved, would be his salvation, and he took a three-month bike trip throughout Europe. When he returned, “I felt this energy. I thought, you can’t stop now,” Peled, who grew up in a small village in Southern Israel but now lives in Herzliya, says. “I needed to find a way to take this energy and use it for something bigger – this time for a cause. The first thing that jumped into my mind was cancer research.” Now he needed to connect his energy to an established organization. He started asking around and found out about ICRF. “From the start I felt, this is it,” he says. “You’re not just giving to (research on) one type of cancer. This is the best of the best.” Flink adds that “among scientists, an ICRF grant is the grant you want to get. It has such prestige, other granters see it as a stamp of approval.” With ICRF support, Peled and his team set out to bike from Los Angeles to New York in the summer of 2012, stopping to tell their story in synagogues, schools, Chabad houses, JCCs and other venues where community members gathered. “We didn’t specifically ask for people to give us money, but people saw we were for real, and people connected to that,” Peled says. A lot of people also connect to cancer research, he adds, citing statistics showing that one in three individuals will be diagnosed with the disease. That effort raised more than $100,000 for ICRF. A second tour, Toronto to Washington, D.C., was shorter but raised the same amount of money. Israeli leaders including former President Shimon Peres, Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat and singer-songwriter David Broza supported his efforts. Eventually Peled returned to Israel, where he recently graduated from the Lauder School of Government, Diplomacy and Strategy at the IDC College in Herzliya. He envisions going into public service in the future, but for now is working for a company that builds machines for 3-D printing. He recently spent his IDF reserve duty in a combat unit locating and shooting down Hamas rocket launchers after the Iron Dome system had destroyed the rocket or missile. Peled was spending some in Chicago recently to help launch a Young Leadership division within the Chicago ICRF chapter, which he says is the fastestgrowing chapter in the United States. He’s planning another bike ride soon, but in the meantime he wants American supporters to know that the cookies and socks they send to soldiers are appreciated, but helping to fund cancer research will allow Israel to keep its scientists at home and benefit the Jewish state and the rest of the world just as much. “The battle against cancer is ongoing,” he says. “We need support as much as we need blankets and cakes and massages.” Pauline Dubkin Yearwood ■ Relations between Greece and Israel have fluctuated, but they’ve been warm over the past few years. Four years ago, Charles Mouratides, a Chicago journalist and pro-Israeli Greek native, decided to take advantage of that situation by founding the Circle for Hellas and Israel, a Chicago-based non-profit designed to strengthen the two countries’ alliance in educational, cultural and technological realms. “I created the organization out of a commitment to Jewish and Israeli causes. I want this organization to strengthen the alliance and to try to find specific ways to show that this alliance is going to practically benefit Greece and Israel,” Mouratides, a former reporter and editor who is now retired and devotes most of his time to the organization, said. An upcoming event should raise CHI’s profile in Chicago. It will feature a reception and musical program, with U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk (R.-Ill.) as the keynote speaker discussing the importance of the Greece-Israel alliance in the Eastern Mediterranean and what the U.S. role is in that alliance. In addition, Chazan Alberto Mizrahi, cantor at Chicago’s Anshe Emet Synagogue, accompanied by pianist Howard Levy, will sing Greek, Hebrew and Ladino songs. Mizrahi was born in Athens. Also at the event two scientists who participated in an exchange program between the two countries will receive the 2014 Miletus Tradition Awards, named after an ancient city that was the center of scientific knowledge. The celebration takes place from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 14 at Heller Auditorium, Francis W. Parker School, 330 W. Webster Ave., Chicago. (For tickets, $30, call 773-562-3534.) Mouratides was born in Thessaloniki, Greece, a city, he said in a recent phone conversation, whose population was three-quarters Jewish before the Holocaust. “The port (of Thessaloniki) was closed on the (Jewish) Sabbath because of all the Jewish people who worked there,” he said. “It was Charles Mouratides a heavily Jewish city intellectually, commercially, religiously, with all kinds of Jewish educational institutions and synagogues.” The Jewish community there was decimated during the Holocaust, he said, with more than 95 percent of the Jewish population sent to Auschwitz. Most perished there. A few survived and went back to Greece, but the population was effectively destroyed, he said. A happier chapter in the city’s history occurred in 2013 when CHI brought a number of Israeli scientists from Bar Ilan University to meet with Greek scientists at Thessaloniki University, the largest in the country. “We decided in a way to capitalize on the fact that this had been a Jewish city. About 20 Greek scientists met with seven Israeli scientists and began a process of acquaintance and hopefully collaboration,” Mouratides said. Meanwhile, another exchange between Greek and Israeli scientists is planned for December. The event “is becoming an important bridge between the two countries,” he said. He said that he devotes so much time to the organization “not only because I’m pro-Israel but because it is of vital importance to Greece and Israel. All other countries except for Greece and Cypress in the Eastern Mediterranean are Muslim countries that are not on good terms with Israel,” he said. “This is not just an idea. It’s very practical for both countries,” he said. “I want to expand and create alliances with a lot of other groups to bring our message across and show people there is a practical benefit.” Pauline Dubkin Yearwood 11 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 Makeup CONTINUED F RO M PAG E 5 That wisdom applies to weddings too. “A bride will come in for a consultation and say, I never wear makeup but for my wedding day I want the Kim Kardashian look. I’ll say, five years from now are you going to feel it is a good representation of you? I want people to feel beautiful but still feel like themselves.” Her general rule is, “We all want to put our best face forward, but we don’t want the makeup to walk in the room before us.” Her personal favorite makeup product from her line, she says, is the Leesi B Invisible Blotting Powder. “It eliminates Gregory CONTINUED F RO M PAG E 7 sultant was a “brand consultant.”) Of course, one part of that perspective might be that Gregory helmed the show as ratings have faded for Sunday shows generally, and as they have become less culturally relevant amid the decline of the major networks and the rise of alternative news sources (as well as persistent that the Sunday shows are more hospitable to conservatives and Republicans than liberals and Democrats). Another might be that Gregory was dealt a losing hand by Prague CONTINUED F RO M PAG E 3 1944, Sidon formally converted to Judaism in 1978. At that time he found himself under immense pressure from the secret police after signing the Czechoslovakian human rights manifesto Charter 77. “What made me want to convert was my experience with the Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia and with Charter 77,” Sidon told the Terezin Initiative Newsletter in 2005. “To put it short, I realized that I had a soul, and my commitment to God emerged from that.” Although Sidon only adopted Orthodox Judaism during his rabbinical studies in Israel, his strategy for reviving the Prague Jewish community after four decades of communism consisted of focusing on observance of halachah, or Jewish religious law, and building up religious life. In the eyes of the public, Sidon soon became the symbol of a new chapter in the life of Czech Jews and of their opposition to communism. But his ap- shine and perspiration instantly. The application is invisible and leaves no residue,” she says. She also has some advice for women 45 and over. “When I was 20 I could walk out the door with no makeup on,” she says. “Now – not. The most important thing is for your skin to look finished and have a healthy glow. As we age skin tends to look dull.” Today’s trend of women wearing tinted moisturizer “is OK when you’re 20, but there’s still nothing like a good foundation. It’s so easy for skin to have a glow with the right foundation and the right application.” Another message she wants to send to women: “Don’t be afraid to wear a lip color as you get older, something with a sense of brightness. It doesn’t have to be flaming, but color gives you life. A nice blush, a beautiful lipstick, a little mascara and you’re ready to go.” Looking back on her 15 years in the business, Brill says she belong to the “it takes a village” school of thought. “The best part of my job is helping women and building relationships,” she says. “I have learned more from my clients than I have ever done for them. We have so much to share with each other besides makeup.” stepping in after the sudden death of Tim Russert, master of the hardball interview. Gregory’s perspective may be aided as well by the reported $4 million severance that NBC is said to be shelling out for canning him before the end of his contract. His book on Judaism may perhaps draw critics from those traditionalists who will argue that he is not technically Jewish, given that he was born to a Jewish father and a non-Jewish mother. Those same critics will also likely argue that his three children are likewise not Jewish, given that Gregory’s wife, Beth Wilkinson, is not of the Tribe. (He will probably not encounter any such quibblers at his shul, however, which is Reform and therefore recognizes Jewish lineage through the maternal line and/or paternal line.) Given what he has been through for the last six years on “Meet the Press,” any such quibbles would likely be the least of Gregory’s problems. As for “Meet the Press,” it will not lack for yiddishkeit: Gregory’s replacement, Chuck Todd, also is a Reform Jew, the son of a Jewish mother and non-Jewish father. Interestingly, Todd had succeeded Gregory as NBC’s White House correspondent when Gregory was promoted to the “Meet the Press” gig. Does this mean that in a few short years, Todd also will be penning a book on his Jewish faith? Stay tuned. proach met with opposition from some community members. “He pushed us into an Orthodox box, which drove many people away,” Michaela Vidlakova, a Holocaust survivor and a longtime community member, told JTA in an email. Sidon clashed with more religiously liberal Prague Jews who wanted communal recognition of non-Orthodox congregations and of those who had Jewish fathers and non-Jewish mothers. Eventually the community offered those who traced their Jewish identities only from their fathers what was called “extraordinary” membership in 2003, without the possibility of running for leadership positions. By that time, however, controversies over control of the real estaterich community’s finances and other issues had raised tensions between Sidon and supporters of Tomas Jelinek who was elected community chairman in 2001. In 2004, Jelinek moved to oust Sidon as Prague chief rabbi, alleging that he had failed to carry out his duties. “He wasn’t able to groom a successor, there were always problems with kosher food at the community and scores of other things,” Jelinek said. Jelinek appointed Rabbi Manis Barash, a representative of the U.S.-based Chabad Hasidic movement, to take over Prague’s famed Altneu Synagogue. But in November of that year, Jelinek suffered a staggering defeat in a communal vote that eventually resulted in him being removed as leader. Emotions continued to run high for several months. In April 2005, members of the Sidon and Barash minyans had a fistfight during Shabbat prayers at the Altneu Synagogue. A year-and-a-half after his initial ouster, Sidon was reinstated as Prague’s chief rabbi. Since then, the community has become more pluralistic, with several liberal leaders having been elected to the board. Sidon had been planning to retire in the fall, but on June 23 the Prague Jewish community suddenly announced he would be stepping down, citing his age. The announcement came a day after a Czech Jewish blog run by Jelinek reported that Sidon had separated from his wife and was in a new relationship. Brill is offering Chicago Jewish News readers a free mini sample of Leesi B Grande Mascara-Lash Boosting Formula with any purchase of $50 or more. Visit leesib.com to place an order or make an appointment. Senior Living Preventing elder financial abuse The Independent Community Bankers of America, the Senior Housing Crime Prevention Foundation and Chicago’s Devon Bank have some tips for preventing the disturbing trend of elder financial abuse • Secure all of your valuables in a bank safety deposit box. These valuables can include your Social Security card, passports, credit card account numbers, will and other legal documents, financial statements and medical records. • Do not give financial information to callers that contact you and claim to be from established organizations such as your bank or credit card companies, especially if they ask you to wire funds or send them private information. If you are concerned about your bank account, contact us directly. • Check your bank accounts and bill statements carefully. You can check them online so you can zoom in easily in case you need to make the statement larger for easier reading. If you notice unauthorized charges, alert Devon Bank and your other banks immediately. • Do not give your personal information, such as bank account numbers or PINs, to anyone in a phone call, letter, email, fax or in a text message. • Have enough money set aside to support yourself and your immediate family for at least six months in case of an emergency. Your local community banker can help create a financial roadmap for you and your family. “Elder financial abuse is a rapidly growing problem in our country, so we produced the Preventing Elder Financial Abuse Video Toolkit because we are dedicated to providing educational resources to help our nation’s seniors and their family members on ways to protect themselves against financial exploitation,” said Peter Gwaltney, chairman, president and CEO of the Senior Housing Crime Prevention Foundation. For more information about the Senior Housing Crime Prevention Foundation, visit www.SHCPFoundation.org. To order the Preventing Elder Financial Abuse Video Toolkit, visit SHCPF’s website. PROVIDING Compassionate & Reliable HOMECARE From live-in or an hourly basis, temporary or long term care, CSA tailors services to each clients needs: ■ Personal care assistance bathing, showering, grooming, housekeeping, etc.) ■ Toileting/Incontinence assistance ■ Diet monitoring ■ Meal preparation ■ Medication reminders ■ Companionship ■ Ambulation and exercise ■ Alzheimer’s/Dementia care ■ Transportation, errands and escort services ■ Post hospital/Surgery rehabilitation care & more... ,haht vrzg • jyucnu varun • juekv ,hcc sughx h,ura ///sugu ohrushx • ,ugxv • ,uke ,hc ,usucg • oueha Licensed, Insured And Bonded For A FREE Consultation, Call Jamie Shapiro: Tel: (847) 948-0860 Fax: (847) 948-9819 420 Lake Cook Road, Suite 112 Deerfield, IL 60015 www.companionserve.com 12 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 Camp Manitowa to host ‘Unleavened Dead’ A product of the 1960s San Francisco counterculture, the Grateful Dead inspired a fanatical loyalty from fans drawn as much by their music as the traveling carnival of seekers and misfits that followed them from venue to venue; yet there has always been a deep connection to the music from Jews. This is where Unleavened Dead comes in. The three-night event highlights the best in community and features a wide variety of workshops, concerts, jam sessions, campfires, and other leisurely happenings. During daytime hours, attendees will leave the indoors behind as workshops and numerous outdoor activities including water sports, ropes course, yoga and much more will keep patrons busy, entertained and active across Camp Manitowa’s sprawling, updated campus. And on Saturday, a Grateful Dead themed concert. It will be held at Camp Manitowa, the Midwest’s newest residential summer camp and retreat center located at Rend Lake, IL. It goes from Sept 12-14. Camp will open at 3 p.m. on Friday and close at 3 p.m. on Sunday. Cost is $165 which includes t-shirt, housing, six meals, concert, all programming; $125 which does not include housing. Includes t-shirt, six meals, concert, all programming (There are many hotels nearby) or $40 for Saturday entry beginning at 4 p.m. Includes dinner, Sunday breakfast, concert, campfire and camping. Visit www.CampManitowa. com to register for the retreat or to buy individual tickets for the concert and more information or contact Beth Koritz at bethkoritz@gmail. com. CJN Classified CEMETERY LOTS CEMETERY LOTS Westlawn Cemetery 3 plots available $3000 each or best offer Call Batya (847) 433-5991 MEMORIAL PARK CEMETERY 12 PLOTS FOR SALE in Makom Shalom Annex Section. Currently selling for $4,500 each, asking $2,500 + transfer fees Felix Dayan (847) 877-3485 [email protected] 4 NEVER USED GRAVES @ Shalom Shalom/ Hebron XI Best & Final Offer $3200.00 each Inclusive of deed & endowments 1 Grave @ Memorial Park, Gan M’Nucha $3900.00 Larry – 847-778-6736 [email protected] 4 Cemetery Plots Available Shalom Memorial Park Prime Location: Garden Of Eden Vl Listed For $6800 ea. Asking $4000 ea. Contact Dan Snyder 847-564-1220 Memorial Park Gan M’Nucha FOR SALE 12 Prime Lots available together or will divide Caroline 847 651-2636 BAMBOO SUKKAH MATS New (Unused). To advertise call 847-966-0606. One 8’x10', $100, and One 8'X12', $120. Contact Rick Friedman at [email protected] REAL ESTATE ROGERS PARK 2646 W. COYLE AVE West Ridge restored beauty! Full master bath & skylights! 3 full bathrooms! Enjoy your side driveway! ! ED C DU RE $449,900 60645 SFH NAPLES CONDO FOR SALE IMMACULATE 2BED/2BATH, FULLY DECORATED, FURNISHED, GOLF VIEW ON LAKE, ELEVATOR BUILDING, 3RD FLOOR W/ VAULTED CEILING, ALL APPLIANCES, 2-CLUB HOUSES CALL: MIKE 215-530-5449 Zerillo Realty 847-292-4700 Recycle this paper ANNOUNCEMENT לאה רחל ! ##$ !$ !" " ! ! ! # ! $ $ ! $! # ""#$ #$!& $# # & ! $! %$ ! !$ # $ $!# #! $! " $%$ !!"" !"# ! % #! "! ! $# & "$! !$ $! $ $!$ !! "! !$! "#$! !! $! )דוד חנן Community Calendar Sunday August 31 Chabad Community Center of Rockford presents “Learning from the Past; Living the Present; Looking to the Future,” first Midwest appearance of Anne Frank’s childhood friend and stepsister Eva Schloss of London. 4-5:30 p.m., UIC College of Medicine Auditorium, 1601 Parkview Ave., Rockford. $15 adults, $5 students. Tickets, ChabadRockford. com/events or (815) 9858594. Thursday September 4 Sweet Singers of Congregation Ezras Israel perform program of Yiddish, Hebrew, Israeli and English songs for seniors. 1 p.m. Council for Jewish Elderly, 1015 W. Howard, Evanston. (773) 764-8320. Friday September 5 Congregation Beth Judea holds Shabbat Under the Stars and barbecue dinner. Bring own chair. 5:45 p.m., Route 83 and Hilltop Road, Long Grove. Members $10 adult, $5 under age 12, $30 family; free for non-members. Preregistration required, [email protected] or (847) 634-0777. Saturday September 6 JCC Chicago presents Olympic Gold Medalist Lenny Krayzelburg providing free swim evaluations. Noon-3 p.m., University of Chicago Lab School, 1362 E. 59th St., Chicago. Also 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 7, Bernard Horwich JCC, 3003 W. Touhy, Chicago. [email protected] or (773) 516-5855. Sunday September 7 Ezra-Habonim, the Niles Township Jewish Congregation holds Recycling Sunday for metals, appliances, computers, sports equipment and other hardware. 9 a.m.-1 p.m., 4500 W. Dempster, Skokie. (847) 675-4141. Ezra-Habonim, the Niles Township Jewish Congregation’s Men’s Club presents musical duo Jeff & Janis at brunch for men and women. 10 a.m., 4500 W. Dempster, Skokie. $12 advance, $15 door. (847) 675-4141. Beth Hillel Congregation Bnai Emunah and Temple Jeremiah present A Gourmet Honey Tasting with dipping apples, children’s activities and raffles. 11 a.m.-2 p.m., Mariano’s, Produce Dept., 1822 Willow Road, Northfield. (847) 2563137 or (847) 441-5760. Tamar-Modin Hadassah hosts Puzzle Challenge fund-raiser with dinner and prizes. 2 p.m., 60 Revere Drive, Northbrook. $32. (847) 205-1900. Tuesday September 9 United States Holocaust Memorial Museum hosts “What You Do Matters,” Risa K. Lambert Chicago Luncheon featuring Pulitzer Prize-winning author and presidential historian Doris Kearns Goodwin. Noon (registration at 11:15 a.m.), Sheraton Chicago Hotel & Towers, 301 E. North Water St., Chicago. $250. [email protected] or (847) 433-8099. SPOTLIGHT Lincolnwood Jewish Congregation A.G. Beth Israel presents the 2014 Diane and Simon Zunamon Memorial Fine Arts Music Series, featuring “Music of the Opera-Songs of Broadway,” Tuesday, Sept. 9; Duo Sonidas, Tuesday, Oct. 21; and Chicago Harp Quartet with Marguerite Lynn Williams, principal harpist of the Lyric Opera of Chicago, Tuesday, Nov. 11. 7117 N. Crawford, Lincolnwood. For prices and times call (847) 676-0491. 13 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 By Joseph Aaron CONTINUED F RO M PAG E 14 least five rockets fired from Syria landed in areas across the Golan Heights. A rocket fired from Lebanon injured two children in the upper Galilee region of northern Israel. So, all in all, a tough couple of months to be making the case that anti-Semitism is no more and that Israel must give peace a chance. And yet even after all we’ve seen, the truth is those two things remain true. Look, I never said anti-Semitism had disappeared. What I have always said and continue to say is that as a factor in the lives of almost all of us, it is no longer something that personally affects us. No longer does it keep us from living in certain neighborhoods, attending certain universities, acquiring certain jobs. That is true and remains true. It is also true that our traditions and ways are much better known to the people of this country than that of most other religions. Our TV stations wish us a happy Rosh Hashanah, our food stories fill aisles with Passover food products, our malls make sure to include a menorah near the Christmas tree. It is also true and remains true that it is not acceptable in our politically correct world to say mean things about the Jews. If you do, you are called on it and pay the price for doing so. No one of any prominence would dare publicly utter a nasty word about the Jews. And it is true and remains true that no one blames all of us when Bernie Madoff or Alan Greenspan screw up; that the government does much to protect us, from enforcing hate crime laws to provide funding for security for Jewish institutions to having an official at the State Department whose very job is to combat anti-Semitism. And it is true and remains true that this time in countries around the world where there has been anti-Semitism, governments have been quick to condemn it and do all they can to combat it. My point is not that we shouldn’t be concerned about the antiSemitism we have seen, but that we must be very careful not to be too concerned, not to let it so frighten us that we become convinced nothing has changed for us, all is as it has always been for us. It’s been a bad couple of weeks, but part of the shock of what’s happened is that it is the exception that proves the rule that antiSemitism in not anything nowhere close to what it was. And so what I worry about most is that Jews will overreact, will draw the wrong conclusions, will once again not trust the world, will once again devote too much energy and too many resources to fighting anti-Semitism when the real job of this generation of Jews is to build Jewish life. And the same is true for the peace process. Yes right now considering how Hamas has behaved, it is tough to make the case for sitting down and making a deal with the Palestinians. But in fact what it shows is that a deal is essential. We are fated to share the same very small piece of land with millions of Palestinians. Hamas is about making them hate us, telling them how bad we are, that we must go. But that is not what the majority of Palestinians believe or want. Shame on them for not doing more to get rid of Hamas, but it is on us to not throw the baby out with the bathwater. What this war showed is that we can build a security wall, but they will build tunnels under it and fire missiles over it. For the missiles to stop, we have to learn to live together and Bibi has given the Palestinians no hope that a fair deal is what he is willing to conclude. Yes I blame the Palestinians for failing time after time to grab the outstretched hand of Israeli leaders trying to make peace, but that does not absolve us from continuing to reach out. Not for their sake, but for ours. The psychological toll this war has taken on Israelis, especially on kids, will be felt for years. It is beyond traumatic to wonder if a missile is heading your way for 50 days. This was the third time in five years we’ve gone through this and no doubt it will happen again in a year or two if some serious peace effort is not made. No, Israel can’t do it on its own and yes, it is past time for the Saudis and other Arab countries to show they are willing to make peace with the Jews. But my fear is that this Gaza war will just make us stop working for peace. Hell, Bibi already said one of the lessons of the war is that Israel can’t give back any of the West Bank. He is wrong. The lesson is that we have to find a way out of this endless cycle of violence and horror. No, the Palestinians have not done enough and yes, they are to blame for this war. But that does not mean we stop doing the right thing. As someone once said, even if you are justified, still act dignified. Jews are a people of peace and the citizens of Israel deserve to really feel at home, to live in peace and quiet. It may seem right now that that is an impossible dream, but so was it an impossible dream in 1898 when Herzl said there would be a Jewish state within 50 years. There was, and there can be a Jewish state living in peace side by side with its Palestinian neighbors. I know it’s hard to imagine that now, but we must never ever stop believing. Did you have a Yahrtzeit Plaque at Shaare Tikvah Bnai Zion? When Shaare Tikvah Bnai Zion closed the Yahrtzeit Plaques were removed and are now in storage If you are interested in retrieving your plaques send an email with the subject: Plaques to: [email protected] We will have two Sunday mornings a month available to meet at the facility in Morton Grove, IL to locate and retrieve your plaques OR for a nominal charge we have arranged for a service that will travel to the facility, locate, and mail your plaques to you. The Chicago Jewish News gratefully acknowledges the generous support of RABBI MORRIS AND DELECIA ESFORMES 14 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 By Joseph Aaron The right lessons www. chicagojewishnews .com The Jewish News place in cyberspace Well, I’ve had a rough couple of weeks. Not only is August the month I celebrate my birthday, which I always thought was weird because August is incredibly hot and I have absolutely no tolerance for hot, but the number I marked this year was a pretty high one, which kind of shocked me in that it literally seems like yesterday that I was patting myself on the back for having accomplished what I had before the age of 25. Now I have shirts that are older than 25. But what’s made it so tough for me is that it hasn’t been a good couple of months for two of my most cherished beliefs. One that antiSemitism as a real factor in our everyday lives is no more; and second that it is very much in Israel’s interest to conclude a peace agreement with the Palestinians and the sooner the better. Obviously what we saw during the almost two months of the Gaza War has not, shall we say, exactly buttressed my arguments. The anti-Semitic crazies took the opportunity of the Gaza War to go, well, crazy. All over Europe and in a good many places in the United States, very ugly words about Jews were said, very ugly things to Jews were done. It was, indeed, like a festival of anti-Semitism, with the Jew haters come up with all kinds of ways to express their feelings. A look back just at the last week brought us news of a Jewish married couple who were verbally and physically attacked in New York City by assailants yelling anti-Jewish statements. A gang pulled up in two cars and several motorcycles and surrounded the couple on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. The wife was hit with a water bottle and her husband was punched in the side of his head. Police believe the couple was singled out because the husband was wearing a yarmulke. Anti-Semitic fliers were dropped in the mailboxes of private homes in Jewish suburbs of Sydney. Residents of Bondi Beach and Double Bay, which contain large numbers of Sydney’s 40,000-plus Jewish community, found the flier in their mailboxes. “Wake up Australia,” the flier reads. “Jews have been kicked out of countries 109 times through history. ... Could it be that having them in a European country is harmful to the host?” The flier also reads, “The Jews own all Hollywood studios & 97% of US newspapers and media. Any movie or tv show you watch may well be coming straight from Israel.” An employee at a South Florida gas station told a customer that she was no longer welcome because she is an Israeli. The customer, a woman originally from Tel Aviv and a resident of Coral Springs for the past 15 years, said the employee said “You guys are killers and your money is not welcome here.” The woman said she believed the employee knew she was Israeli because she would speak in Hebrew on her cellphone. A Jewish school in Denmark’s capital city had its windows broken and anti-Semitic graffiti spray-painted on the building. “No peace in Gaza” and “No peace to you Zionist pigs” were scrawled on the walls of the historic Caroline school in Copenhagen. A Jewish student at Temple University was punched in the face by someone at an informational booth for Students for Justice in Palestine. Vessal approached the booth during a campus fair and was punched following a verbal exchange that included anti-Semitic slurs. The number of calls to an anti-Semitism hotline in the United Kingdom jumped nearly fivefold since the beginning of Israel’s conflict with Gaza, reported a British Jewish organization. A branch of the British supermarket chain Sainsbury’s removed kosher food from its shelves during an anti-Israel protest. And this was a much quieter week than others in the last month or so. Meanwhile, on the peace front, a rocket fired from Gaza struck a home in Ashkelon and injured 28 while damaging about 50 neighboring apartments. Israeli security forces said later that the warhead was exceptionally large and could be a new type of rocket, perhaps intended to travel longer distances. A rocket from Gaza landed on the playground of a kindergarten in Ashdod. Hundreds attended the funeral for Daniel Tragerman, the 4year-old who was killed in a mortar attack outside his home near the Gaza border. “We were the happiest family in the world, and I just cannot come to grips with it,” Daniel’s mother, Gila Tragerman, said between sobs at the funeral. “We wanted to protect you but even the Code Red siren failed to save you. You would always run first and call your little brother [to the shelter], and then in a second it ended.” Rockets fired from Syria and Lebanon struck northern Israel. At SEE BY JOSEPH AARON ON PAG E 1 3 15 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 Death Notices Remembering Leonard ‘Leibel’ Fein, ‘a great man in Israel’ By David Ellenson JTA In II Samuel, Chapter 1, when David learns of the death of Abner, he proclaims to his soldiers and all of Israel, “You well know that a prince, a great man in Israel, has died this day.” When I learned of the death of my friend Leonard “Leibel” Fein at the age of 80, I thought immediately of that line – Leibel truly was “a great man in Israel.” Leibel Fein has been described as a journalist, a writer, an academic and an activist, and he surely was all of these things. However, he was above all, for me, an “echte yid,” a learned and feeling Jew steeped in the values and teachings of the tradition. The first time I met him in person was in 1978, although I had already read a number of his writings and certainly knew who he was. Leibel addressed an informal conference I attended, and I was fortunate to sit at his table at dinner. He reminded me immediately of both Arthur Hertzberg and Arnold Jacob Wolf: He shared their politics and their intellect, and I felt with him, as I did with them, that I was in the Alice Brown, nee Lepunsky, an elegant and spirited 105 years old. Beloved wife of the late Harry Brown. Dearly devoted mother of Angie (the late Marvin) Astrin and Dr. Anthony (Francine) Brown. Loving grandmother “MOOMOO” of 5, great-grandmother of 11. The last child of ten chil- presence of someone truly extraordinary. He laughed easily and was extremely easygoing and pleasant, speaking in an unaffected manner that belied but did not subvert the important lessons and messages – the challenges – he was sharing. I found Leibel to be like this not only during that first meeting but on every occasion I was fortunate enough to be in his presence. He provided a model of what it meant to be a mensch – a Jewish human being. He made me want to do more, to be a better person. Raised as a Labor Zionist in the home of a Baltimore Hebrew College professor, Leibel had Yiddishkeit emblazoned in his soul. His love for the Jewish people and the State of Israel was unending even as it was often critical. His commitment to a progressive Zionism was a touchstone of his life, leading him in the 1970s to raise his prophetic voice in defense of the group Breira and its left-liberal viewpoints on Israel, and later to become a founding member of Americans for Peace Now. In his hundreds and hundreds of columns, in his academic books and in both public and private talks, Leibel prodded and provoked Jews to do more. dren born to Jacob and Anna Lepunsky. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions in Alice’s name to: Chicagoland Greater Food Depository, 4100 W. Ann Lurie Place, Chicago, IL 60632, Attn: A. Varchese. Arrangements by Mitzvah Memorial Funerals. Melvyn Joel Goldfarb, age 70. Beloved husband of 49 years to Gail Deborah Goldfarb, nee Bogomol. Cherished father of Jeffery Goldfarb and Denise Cyndi Goldfarb. Devoted son to the late Belle May and Samuel Goldfarb. Fond Uncle of many. Dear Nephew of Maxine Hyman. Longtime friend to Godmother Nancy Llewellyn and his late godfather Sandy Alexander Llewellyn Loved dogs, cats and ferrets. Melvyn was a talented chef and he loved to travel. Arrangements by Mitzvah Memorial Funerals. Robert Joseph Kohl (19242014). Beloved and devoted husband for the past 63 years of Goldie, nee Ross. Cherished father of David (Dawn) Kohl. Dear brother of Richard (the late Helga) and the late Donald (survived by Diane) Kohl. Robert was a Chicago native and was a Sullivan High School graduate. He was a proud WWII veteran who became commander of the local CBI Group. His love of cars reflected in his 30+ years in the auto industry, also working at Road America for 38 years (timing & scoring). Former President of Volkswagen Club of Chicago. He lived through every Chicago Bears championship and all but the first of their 93 wins over the Packers. Arrangements by Mitzvah Memorial Funerals. Leonard Fein He taught that we could never be satisfied with either the state of the world or the condition of the Jewish people, and he goaded us constantly with his brilliance, his fearlessness, his directness, his ethics and his passion. He took seriously the biblical command to offer rebuke to our people when reproof was needed – which he always felt it was. He taught that tikkun olam, the repair of the world, was always possible and demanded we strive for repair and improvement of ourselves, the Jewish people and the world. Leibel expressed his talents in so many ways. He was a major intellectual whose books on Israel and Zionism, American Jews and Judaism, American politics and institutions earned him fame and academic posts at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Brandeis University. He helped shape both scholarly and popular discourse and policy directions on these topics throughout his lifetime. The policies of outreach and inclusion that Rabbi Alexander Schindler advanced during his years as president of the Reform movement’s Union of American Hebrew Congregations, as well as the significant expansion of the work of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism – an expansion that continues unto this day – were stimulated in no small measure by the aspirational and challenging vision of a dynamic Reform Judaism that Leibel put forth in 1970 in his brilliant book “Reform Is a Verb.” His activism expressed itself in his service as chairman of the Commission on Social Action of the Reform movement and his founding of Moment Magazine, Mazon: A Jewish Response to Hunger and the National Coalition for Jewish Literacy. In a world where divisions and binary thinking abound, when people all too often think in “either-or” categories, Leibel demonstrated that it was possible to be “both-and.” He was a scholar and intellectual, but he also was a man of action who created some of the most vital and humane organizations and projects in modern Jewish life. Mitzvah Memorial Funerals Lloyd Mandel Founder, 4th generation Jewish Funeral Director, also licensed in Florida (no longer with Levayah Funerals) Seymour Mandel 3rd Generation Jewish Funeral Director www.comparemitzvah.com Why was Mitzvah Memorial Funerals entrusted to direct more than 700 funerals in our first 4 years in business? We provide compassionate professional service and significant savings – usually $2,000-$5,000 less than Chicago Jewish funeral homes with chapels charge for the same or similar services and casket. If your synagogue has a discounted funeral plan with one of our competitors you can still use us. We guarantee a minimum 25% savings. William Goodman Funeral Director, Homesteaders Insurance Agent (no longer with Goodman Family Funerals) Ian “Izzy” Dick Oldest licensed Jewish Funeral Director in the State of Illinois Jerry Sadoff Director of Shmira • Graveside Services • Synagogue Services (yours or several that are available to non-affiliated families) • Cemetery Chapel Services If you have prepaid funeral services with one of our competitors you can switch to us. In most cases we will refund you or your family $2,000-$5,000. • Alternative Locations & Services We pre-arrange funerals and fund these through Homesteaders Life. 500 Lake Cook Road, Suite 350, Deerfield, IL • 8850 Skokie Blvd., Skokie, IL 630-MITZVAH (648-9824) • www.mitzvahfunerals.com 16 Chicago Jewish News - Aug. 29 - Sept. 4, 2014 Vitality Encouraging an active and fulfilling lifestyle. Every day at the Selfhelp Home brings a new opportunity to energize your senses. From fresh, homemade meals to regular exercise classes and social events, there are many ways to become engaged in our community and remain involved with everything you’re passionate about. With a little help from our staff, you can develop your talents in our art studio, listen to lectures and enjoy performances by a variety of Chicago-area entertainers. Live a vibrant lifestyle while receiving the care and assistance you need from people you have come to know and trust. As rated by the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Great care, right at home… the Selfhelp Home. For more information, visit our website at www.SelfhelpHome.org or schedule a tour by calling 773.271.0300. 908 W. Argyle Street, Chicago The Selfhelp Home is a non-profit senior living community offering independent living, assisted living, intermediate and skilled nursing care.