Jewish Home LA Janurary 30 2013

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SEE BACK PAGE Hillel Hebrew Academy 64th Annual Scholarship Banquet A Banquet to Remember! - 7 B’lev Ari Block Program Expands to Los Angeles - 8 YULA Seniors Enjoy Action-Packed 10-Day Trip to Israel - 16 Anne Frank’s Step-Sister, Eva Schloss, Visits Chabad @ USC - 12 To the Edge of our Universe – Knowing when to Walk Away Rabbi Shlomo Einhorn Face Time Rabbi David Mahler Yisro — e Super-Mind Rabbi Reuven Wolf 18 19 20 ב”הA PUBLICATION OF THE LOS ANGELES COMMUNITY ג‘ אדר- כ‘ שבט. JAN. 31 - FEB. 13 . VOL 1, #3

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Jewish Home LA Janurary 30 2013

Transcript of Jewish Home LA Janurary 30 2013

see back page

Hillel Hebrew Academy 64th Annual Scholarship Banquet

A Banquet to Remember! - 7

B’lev Ari Block Program Expands to Los Angeles - 8

YULA Seniors Enjoy Action-Packed 10-Day Trip to Israel - 16

Anne Frank’s Step-Sister, Eva Schloss, Visits Chabad @ USC - 12

To the Edge of our Universe – Knowing when to Walk Away

Rabbi Shlomo EinhornFace Time

Rabbi David Mahler Yisro — The Super-Mind

Rabbi Reuven Wolf

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ב”ה

A PUBLICATION OF THE LOS ANGELES COMMUNITY Jan. 31 - feb. 13 . vol 1, #3 . כ‘ שבט - ג‘ אדר

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Contents

The Jewish Home is an independent bi-weekly newspaper. Opinions expressed by writers are not neces sarily the opinions of the publisher or editor. The Jewish Home is not responsible for typographical errors, or for the kashrus of any product or business advertised within. The Jewish Home contains words of Torah. Please treat accordingly.

ShabboS Z’manimFriday, February 1Parshas yisro

Candle lighting 5:06ShabboS endS 6:04Rabbeinu tam 6:37

Friday, February 8Parshas MishPatiMCandle lighting 5:13

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Dear Readers,

Thanks again to everyone for the positive and constructive feedback, including many suggestions for upcoming articles. It is greatly welcomed and appreciated!

There is so much to cover in LA that I barely know where to start... First off, this week we have articles relating to Holocaust Remembrance Day which took place this past Sunday, and we’re also including a piece on what’s new at the Wiesenthal Center - including their new Museum of Tolerance in Jerusalem and a discussion with their executive director. We did a quick chat with Reb Shlomo Yehudah Rechnitz, a renowned master of good deeds, about the recent Torah Umesorah midwinter conference he so graciously sponsored, aaaand last but not least we sat down with the world-famous - but lucky for us they’re local - 8th Day! I bet you won’t guess some of their answers...

Check out these exclusive interviews in addition to our weekly columns -including guest columnist Rabbi David Mahler discussing an issue very pertinent to our times... We’ve also got community events, news, stories, jokes, you name it.

Have an idea? Want to see a specific story or interview? Have a critique? Send ‘em all to [email protected].

Once again, from us at The Jewish Home of LA to you, our dear readers, thanks for the support and feedback as we continue creating LA’s very own religious Jewish community newspaper.

Have a wonderful Shabbos,

Shalom

PeoPleExclusive Interview with California’s Very Own

8th Day’s Shmuel and Bentzi Marcus . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

Forgotten Heroes - Uriah Levy

Saluting Principles and Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45

CommunityCommunity Happenings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Up to Date with the Wiesenthal Center . . . . . . . . . 14

Jewish thoughtTo the Edge of our Universe – Knowing when

to Walk Away - Rabbi Shlomo Einhorn . . . . . . . . . . 18

Face Time - Rabbi David Mahler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

ParshaYisro: The Super-Mind- Rabbi Reuven Wolf. . . . . . 20

Parenting & eDuCationHillel Parenting & Education Q&A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

Roadblocks on the Path of Learning . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

Can I Fall in Love Again? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44

humor & entertainmentCenterfold . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

Quotes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

newsGlobal News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32

National News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38

That’s Odd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

israelIsrael news . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34

lifestylesTravel: From Sea to Shining Sea : Louisiana . . . . . . 46

Super Bowl Fever – Great Recipes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25

Health & Fitness - Eating and Exercise . . . . . . . . . . . 43

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Jewish Home: How did you get start-ed as the great 8th Day? I’m sure that as brothers you’ve been singing together for years, so what’s the story behind your rise?

Shmuel: Many people discovered 8th Day after we released Ya’alili, however we have been writing and playing music for a while. For example, the song Manhattan 2.0 off our new album “All You Got,” is a remake of a song from our first album that most people don’t know about which was released in 2005.

Bentzi: Ya’alili definitely was a big hit and got us a lot of recognition, but the band started many years before that. We had a lot of releases before that and had a lot of fans, we were doing shows and traveling. Ya’alili took it to a whole new level globally - in Israel, Europe, Austra-lia, all over the world. (Their early al-bums, Tracht Gut and Brooklyn, are both available on iTunes, Amazon & Mostly-Music.com.)

Shmuel: I don’t know why [Ya’alili] was a hit. The song definitely took off before the music video (filmed at Pome-granate supermarket in Brooklyn), and the video took it to a new level, a new audi-ence. It just caught on. You never really know with hit songs, it’s just one of those things. It touched a nerve, it was exciting, catchy, it had a good beat.

Bentzi: It caught on with many differ-ent types of Jews: religious, non-religious, Israeli, Sephardic, Modern Orthodox, wherever we went, no matter what type of crowd or what type of school, Ya’alili was a big hit. There’s definitely no formula to that, or rhyme or reason to that.

Bentzi: We’ve been singing together as brothers since we were kids. Our fam-ily is very musical and music was always in the house. We started writing songs as we got older, and the band evolved natu-rally. We definitely didn’t plan it, it wasn’t a conscious thing.

JH: Give us a peek into your creative process. How do you come up with your songs?

Bentzi: There really is no ‘’process’’ per se, we just work together to come up with interesting and inspiring ideas musi-cally and lyrically. If you’re having fun and doing what you believe in, something good is bound to come of it.

There’s no timetable. A song could take five minutes or it could take five years. The best way to put it is a song is inspiration. It’s a feeling, a thought, a mood. It’s intangible, not like an essay or something you can just kind of think it through or just write it. There’s no real for-mula for that.

JH: What do you do to get inspiration?

Bentzi: Just by touring and playing live, by being in the studio. We just did a show in Edmonton, Canada, and by trav-eling to different parts of the world, the East Coast, Florida, seeing different au-diences…it’s hard to say. Life is inspir-ing! Thank G-d we get to do music every day. We grew up in a Chabad family, we were raised Orthodox, so we definitely have a lot of roots in Torah and that defi-nitely informs and infuses our songwriting and overall product.

JH: What do you both do outside of 8th Day?

Shmuel: I’m a Chabad rabbi, my dad is rabbi of the Chabad of Los Alamitos in Orange County, and I work with the youth and college students there.

Bentzi: I’m in music full time. I have a studio and a production company. 8th day is my main gig; everything else has slowed down as 8th day has gotten busier.

JH: How often are you away on tour? Shmuel: It’s seasonal. I would say a

few times a month. There’s no set sched-ule, whatever comes up. Sometimes we’ll go out and do a two-week tour, and some-times it’s just a day or two days.

JH: Do you get butterflies or nervous-ness before a show?

Bentzi: Of course, yes. It’s very natu-ral to get nervous, but the more prepared you are and the more you do it, that less-ens. Once you’re on stage and the crowd gets into it, it’s one of the easiest and fun-nest things to do. The band’s in the groove, you’re in the groove. That’s part of why you’re nervous, because everything has to fall into place.

Shmuel: It depends on where the show is. Our next show is in Los Alamitos, it’s a big Purim concert that we do every year, and our families will be there, our parents - our biggest critics will be there!

Bentzi - We’re very excited about that show. It’s a good example of when you have very good vibes, and the crowd gets into it. It gets going with the audience and the band together - it’s a joint effort.

JH: Describe your family – are you married? Kids? What do they think of you being in band?

Bentzi - We both have families, they are very supportive; always the first ones to call after a show to see how it went.

JH: What’s your favorite song (or two) that you’ve released? Which is a favorite of your kids?

Shmuel: It’s like kids, you can’t pick favorites.

Bentzi: The song you’re working on is usually the favorite. My kids love what-ever is new…and Ya’alili.

JH: What’s next for you? Do you have

plans in the near future for another CD? More concerts? Partnerships?

Shmuel: Yes, our new album will go into pre-production shortly. We just did an animated music video for “All You Got”, the title track off of our latest release. We partnered with a very talented artist from NY named Annita Soble and she did a great job animating the video. We also released a music video for “Cheery Bim,” both are available on YouTube. We are looking forward to our next show in Brooklyn, for the Soul II Soul Concert on February 10th, where we’ll be debuting our latest live show format G-d willing. We’ll also be performing in Chicago on March 3rd and many more cities after that. It’s very exciting!

The album that came out in June is still getting a lot of buzz, sales are still strong, thank G-d, on iTunes and in stores.

Bentzi: We have some new tunes we’re working on that we’ll test out at the Purim show (in Los Alamitos). We like to test out new songs. Between shows we’ll find the time to get the new album going.

JH: What’s an unexpected bonus or benefit from being in 8th Day?

Bentzi: We get asked to perform for special fans who are unfortunately bed-ridden or in a hospital. When we make them smile that’s the biggest bonus pos-sible. This is the biggest perk of doing this – you get the chance to touch people with your music, and to make them smile or put them in a good mood for the hour, it’s the greatest feeling. We try to do it as much as we can. It’s tough when you travel, but we try to make time - sometimes it’s through Chai Lifeline, sometimes it’s through a friend or maybe we know them.

Shmuel: We had a woman who after a show in Texas emailed us that she started lighting Shabbos candles, she was so in-spired. We went back there again, and she came up to us and said that a year later, she joined her local Chabad - now they’re fully observant. Another woman, the husband wasn’t religious and she was, she brought him to a show and after that he came Shab-bos observant. We have a lot of stories like that which are amazing.

JH: What’s your favorite city to per-form in? Where are your biggest fans?

Bentzi: Wherever you’re reading this is probably our favorite city. The Yerush-alayim concert was pretty special, but they’re all great and unique. We are very blessed to do what we do.

JH: How old are you both?Bentzi: We feel like we’re 22! (Edi-

tor’s note: I heard a 39 muttered in there somewhere.) Shmuel is older.

exclusive interview with California’s Very own 8th Day’s shmuel and Bentzi marcus

interView

The Marcus brothers  - founders of the hugely successful 8th Day band - dish on getting pre-concert butterflies, finding musical inspiration, and the story behind their rise to global Jewish stardom. 

By Rachel Wizenfeld

The Jewish hom

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On Sunday, January 13, Harkham Hil-lel Hebrew Academy hosted its 64th An-nual Scholarship Banquet at the downtown Westin Bonaventure Hotel. The theme of this year’s banquet was kochavim—stars—which aptly defines Hillel’s chil-dren, the most important stars. The Hillel family wants the best for their children. Supporters who contribute to Hillel value its educational process and the future of the children; they are keenly aware that the only way Jewish education exists is through financial support. In his keynote address, Rabbi Sufrin, Head of School, connected the theme of the evening to the brightest stars – the children who sang in the Harwitt Ensemble, a group of over 100 talented voices from grades 3-7 – to those who dedicate their lives to help others such as the Speaker of the CA Assembly John Perez and David Siegel, Consulate General of Israel, both of whom were in attendance.

The evening gave opportunity to high-light and honor several pillars of its school

community. Adom and Julie Ratner-Stau-ber, who support Hillel whenever the need arises, were Guests of Honor. Moshe Ye-huda Fritz and Shirley Friedman, sup-porters of Jewish education for over thirty years, were acknowledged as Grandpar-ents of the Year. Craig and Esti Levine were fittingly honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award for continuing sup-port of Jewish education. The Honorable California Speaker of the Assembly John A. Perez was recognized with the Commu-nity Service Award for valuable and con-stant support of quality education.

“I was touched to see that our chil-dren’s education means so much too so many. I came away from the night feel-ing proud that the future of Jewish educa-tion in our community is in good hands.” Adom Ratner Stauber Guest of Honor. Parents, grandparents, faculty, and friends enjoyed a program of song presented by Hillel’s 8th grade graduating class and the school choir of 3rd through 7th graders. The evening of comedy and music, which

featured the Moshav Band, was a memo-rable night as Hillel saluted the stalwarts of its community and thanked them for their unwavering support for education. The eighth graders were joined onstage by multi-platinum recording artist Matisyahu

for One Day and Sunshine, as a surprise to end the amazing evening. The stars cer-tainly shined bright for Hillel.

The entire Early Childhood of Harkham Hillel Hebrew Academy cel-ebrated Tu B’Shvat by learning about the importance of this holiday & how we must always thank Hashem for the food that He gives us. How do we do that? By saying a bracha before we eat. Hashem created the trees we are so thankful for, & He created the fruits & vegetables we enjoy eating so much!

We sang a song, Ma Yesh L’Etz, & compared what is on our bodies to the parts of a tree. Our legs are the roots, our stom-ach the trunk, our outstretched arms are the branches, & our fingers are the leaves. We started by planting a seed into the ground and then our legs become the roots. We’ve grown like the grass, flowers, and trees to the song How Does The Grass Grow?

After singing our Tu B’Shvat songs we shared how Hashem created trees, grass, fruits, vegetables, grains and wheat. We thanked Hashem and celebrated Tu B’Shvat with a Brachot Fair. The Early Childhood Department was turned into an exciting round robin. During our round robin, each grade went into a different classroom for a learning activity about that bracha.

The Pre-Nursery classrooms were responsible for of the brachot of Sheha-kol and Ha’ Adama. The children picked out the fruits that they liked and made deli-cious smoothies and a healthy salad.

The Nursery classrooms celebrated with their friends by learning the brachot for Ha’etz and Ha’Motzi. Their activi-ties included mixing different ingredients

(flour and water for matza, and flour, wa-ter and yeast for challah and bread) The children then sampled different types of bread- matza, bagels and challah in a taste testing contest. In the next classroom they enjoyed squishing grapes to make grape juice.

Traveling through the Kindergar-ten classes the children learned about the brachot of Mezonot , Ha’etz and Ha’Adama . They played a guessing game which foods are mezonot. They tasted yummy mezonot treats. The Morot asked: “Who can guess what is in the basket?-- Classifying skills were learned .מה בל סאלthrough sorting and by recognizing simi-larities and differences. The Morot read a story in Hebrew about a farmer and his carrot garden. The children enjoyed tasting

baby carrots. The 6th grader girls joined their Pre-

1st buddies as they planned their Brachot Fair activities. The girls facilitated the learning activities by giving the children shekels to purchase fruits and vegetables—hot corn on the cob, tomatoes, cucumbers, papaya, melons and made fruit kabobs and vegetable faces. The yeladim spoke in He-brew to each other to ask for the food they wanted to purchase and enjoy.

Everyone enjoyed the hands-on learn-ing experiences and left with a tummy full of food and smiles on their faces. The ye-ladim kept saying, “This is so much fun!” One yeled even asked, “Can we do this every week?”

happenings

hillel’s tu B’shvat Brachot fair

arnold schwarzenegger wants his name removed from turkish ‘hitler exhibit’

Former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger wants his name to be re-moved from a poster of historical figures and celebrities on display at a prominent mall in Istanbul, Turkey, because the post-er prominently displays Adolf Hitler.

The poster, titled “Who Would You Like to Meet if You Could?” can be seen at the Sapphire Mall, an upscale mall in Is-tanbul. It has a list of historical figures as Suleiman, Ataturk, and Lenin as well as ce-lebrities like Schwarzenegger, the Beatles and Michael Jackson. However, the most prominent name as well as the only figure depicted on the poster is Adolf Hitler.

Governor Schwarzenegger, in an e-mail this morning to Rabbi Marvin Hier,

Founder and Dean of the Wiesenthal Center, wrote:

Thank you for alert-ing me about the offen-sive exhibit at the Sap-phire Mall in Istanbul, Turkey. I understand that my name is includ-ed with others in an ex-hibit called “Who would you like to meet?” that features a large photo-graph of Adolph Hitler.

As someone who has had a long relationship with the Simon Wi-esenthal Center, and despises everything

that Hitler stood for, it is repugnant to me to have my name in any way as-sociated with history’s greatest criminal, re-sponsible for the murder of more than six million Jews, along with mil-lions of other victims.

I authorize you to contact whomever is re-sponsible for this exhibit and to take whatever steps necessary to im-mediately remove my

name from this display.Earlier this week, Wiesenthal Center

officials protested the Hitler display to the Turkish ambassador in Washington, D.C. as well as Turkish officials in Ankara, urg-ing that this offensive poster be removed.

For more information, please contact the Center’s Public Relations Department, 310-553-9036, join the Center on Facebook, www.face-book.com/simonwiesenthalcenter, or follow @simonwiesenthal for news updates sent direct to your Twitter page or mobile device.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center is one of the largest international Jewish human rights orga-nizations with over 400,000 member families in the United States. It is an NGO at international agencies including the United Nations, UNES-CO, the OSCE, the OAS, the Council of Europe and the Latin American Parliament (Parlatino).

hillel hebrew academy 64th annual scholarship Banquet A Banquet to Remember!

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While tuition payments may seem higher than ever, it certainly isn’t Jewish educators who are reaping the profits. Un-derpaid, underappreciated, working many extra (and unpaid hours) at home and dealing with gripes at every turn, being a Jewish educator certainly isn’t the most enviable job, though it is arguably one of the more important professions in our community.

Which is why it was such a generous

gesture for Shalom Yehuda Rechnitz to or-ganize and subsidize the first mid-winter Torah Umesorah conference in Los Ange-les, to give Jewish principals and teachers on the West Coast a chance to revitalize themselves and their teaching methods.

For years, Torah Umesorah held a mid-winter principal’s conference which drew only about 20-30 people, according to Mr. Rechnitz. So he decided to amp up last year’s program with a conference for

500 principals and teachers in New York– followed by this year’s in LA, “to give the opportunity to West Coast Rebbeim who never really get to go to conventions be-cause they’re so far away,” he said.

Held at the Hyatt Westlake Plaza at Thousand Oaks on January 17 and chaired by Rabbi Berish Goldenberg, principal of Toras Emes Academy, the conference drew nearly 600 people – equally men and women - from a range of schools in LA, including Toras Emes, Ohr Eliyahu, Bais Yaakov, Yeshiva Gedolah, MBY, Valley Torah and more. Half were from out of town, including educators from Phoenix, Denver, Seattle, Portland, Chicago, Detroit and a handful from the East Coast.

“Altogether, it’s a nice gesture for underpaid, underappreciated people who work hard the whole year, and final-ly they get to enjoy a nice Shabbos with their friends, so there’s an occasion part of it,” said Mr. Rechnitz. “But besides that, there’s a lot to gain from different experts out there in chinuch. If you just tell some-one to go to ten speeches upstairs in Bais Yehuda, most people wouldn’t do it. But in a Shabbos atmosphere and with other people together, it becomes a lot more in-viting.”

Mr. Rechnitz added that many people came over to him saying that this was the first convention they were ever at. “It’s

possibly $1000 to go to a conference, in-cluding a ticket, so it’s a first-time expe-rience for them and something they really enjoyed.”

The Tolner Rebbe spoke several times over the weekend, focusing along with the other speakers on how today’s chinuch is different than years ago, how to keep boys and girls interested in what they’re doing, the crisis of kids going off the derech, dealing with different kinds of abuse, but “mainly how to keep children interested in today’s environment when there are so many things and forces pulling from all sides,” said Mr. Rechnitz. Mr. Jim Fay, co-founder of the Love and Logic Institute, presented a session for principals, and oth-er psychologists, educators and therapists gave a range of presentations as well.

Does Mr. Rechnitz plan on doing this again next year?

“We’re taking it one year at a time,” he said. “We probably would do it in NY or LA so at least some people wouldn’t have to travel; the feedback we’re getting is people really, really enjoyed it. They said it was the best convention - at least they told me it was the best convention they were ever at: good ruchnius and gashmius, the food and hotel were nice, people were taken care of.”

The B’Lev Ari Beis Medrash Program has officially expanded to the Los Angeles Area. On Sunday night, January 20th 2013, at Sharei Torah, there were over 15 spe-cial needs and developmentally disabled men that paired up with volunteer mem-bers of the community to learn all about Tu B’Shvat. The excitement was in the air. This is the sec-ond program in LA and we will continue to meet monthly. The purpose of this program is to ensure that everyone is giv-en an opportu-nity to learn ac-cording to each persons level and interest. The chavrusah style learning allows the men to learn in a warm and in-viting environment. It is lead by the fan-tastic Rabbi Dovi Block, whom we are so lucky to have recently moved to Los Ange-les as the new 7th grade rebbi at Yeshivath

Yavneh. Rabbi Block led the program to success in Yeshivath Shor Yoshuv in New York and now we hope to bring the same success to Sharei Torah in LA. The pro-gram began with a pizza dinner and end-ed with dancing and live music, thanks to Rabbi Chaim Friedman.

The program is in memory of Ari Block Z”L who was niftar over 5 yrs ago. Ari was a kollel member of Yeshiva Shor Yoshuv, while also on his way to receiving a masters degree in special education. Ari

dedicated much of his summers and spare time working with these special individ-uals, via organizations such as Ohel and Camp Simcha. Ari’s parents, Dr. Robert and Thea Block of Lawrence, NY, sought to combine Ari’s two passions and creat-ed the B’lev Ari Foundation. They started

the program in Shor Yoshuv four years ago and now it continues to grow. With the help of Ari’s cousin, Rabbi Dovi Block, and Ari’s sister and brother in law, Rachel and Josh Tomaszewski, the idea to spread

this beautiful program to LA has come to fruition.

The B’Lev Ari program meets month-ly at 6:30pm on a Sunday night in Beis Medrash Shaarei Torah. The next pro-gram is February 17th. Many of the men come from Etta Israel residences and are

also members of Yachad and Hamercaz. Al-though, it is not necessary to be-long to an orga-nization to par-ticipate in this program. All are welcome. The B’Lev Ari program also welcomes their new assistant p r o g r a m m e r, Chaim Yaakov Abbot, who will be helping develop each

program. All interested families are en-couraged to contact Rabbi Dovi Block at 917-575-4085 or Josh Tomaszewski 323-842-0445 for further information and par-ticipation.

happenings

first mid-winter torah umesorah Conference in la rewards, inspires educatorsBy Rachel Wizenfeld

B’lev ari Block Program expands to los angeles

The Jewish hom

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Rabbi Stulberger is in Israel this week visiting our alumni. Here are some pic-

tures of the Boys Division Alumni Dinner and Girls Division Alumni Dinner:

Vally torah high school alumni in israel

Last Shabbos, the YULA Boys 11th grade had a very special city Shabbaton.

On Friday, the juniors davened early, and then took a bus out to Paintball USA. They played paintball for three hours, and everybody had a great time and walked

away with many new bruises.

On Friday night, the students ate dinner at the homes of differ-ent rebbeim, including 9th grade rabbis and current junior rabbis. After the meal, all the students gathered for an inspiring Oneg at Rabbi Abramczik’s house, complete with singing, divrei Toray, and importantly:

Jeff’s wings! At a late hour, everyone final-ly retired to their homes and went to sleep. The next morning, the students davened at different teen minyans before meeting up for lunch at AISH. Here, the students sang, ate a delicious lunch, and heard Divrei To-

rah from many students as well as Rabbi Sch-reiber.

After lunch, the stu-dents had an hour of Shabbos menucha, be-fore meeting up again to conclude Shabbat with Seudah Shlishit at Rabbi Glass’s.

It was a busy, exciting, and memorable weekend!

yula Junior Paintballing and shabbaton

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anne frank’s stepsister speaks about holocaust at usC

Students at USC were able to wit-ness history last Tuesday evening as Eva Schloss—Anne Frank’s posthumous step-sister—related her Holocaust experience to the 1,000 students and community members who filled Bovard Auditorium.

Mrs. Schloss, 84, remembers her child-hood in Vienna as peaceful and happy. But Austria’s embrace of Hitler threw her fam-ily into turmoil. When the Austrian gov-ernment implemented in 1938 a vast array of anti-Semitic laws, Eva’s family fled to Belgium and, eventually, Holland, where she met Anne Frank.

Schloss said that she and Anne Frank had opposite personalities. Frank was very interested in fashion, while Schloss was interested in sports.

“She was a big, big chatterbox,” Schloss said. “At school she was called

‘Mrs. Quack Quack’ because she never could be quiet.”

The evening was moderated by Chabad of USC’s Rabbi Dov Wagner, but at times it seemed as if Mrs. Schloss was alone on stage, describing to a captivated audience her searing experiencein Nazi-occupied

Europe.Judah Joseph, a freshman at USC and

organizer of the event, said that with many Holocaust survivors passing away, events like these are particularly valuable.

“Holocaust education does and should not end in middle school,” Joseph said. “Events like these are an essential way to educate young people about the atrocities of the Holocaust.”

Schloss struck a particularly emotional tone when speaking of her brother, Heinz, who was murdered by the Nazis at the Mauthausen concentration camp just days before American forces arrived.

Alex Fullman, another USC student, expressed his gratitude at having access to a firsthand account of the Nazi genocide.

“I had never before heard directly from someone in hiding from the Nazi regime.”

Eva and her parents Fritzi and Erich Geiringer

13The Jew

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With a new Museum of Tolerance under-way in Jerusalem and a soon-to-be released documentary based on The Prime Ministers, an acclaimed nonfiction account of Israeli leadership by Yehuda Avner, the Wiesenthal Center is moving full force ahead on its vision: to confront anti-Semitism, hate and terrorism, promote human rights and dignity, stand with Israel, defend the safety of Jews worldwide, and teach the lessons of the Holocaust for fu-ture generations. The Jewish Home talks with Rabbi Meyer May, executive director of the Wiesenthal Center, for the latest.

Center for Human Dignity - Museum of Tolerance in Jerusalem

The Wiesenthal Center is finally making headway on its much-anticipated Museum of Tolerance of Jerusalem. After 10 years of navigating building permits, controversy that seems to surround any Jewish building project in Jerusalem and other roadblocks, the MOT in Jerusalem is now expected to be open for visi-tors in 2015.

According to Rabbi May, “It’s not focused specifically on the Holocaust, but rather 2,000 years of Jewish history: what we’ve contributed to the world, the trails of Jewish people, how we emerged with our own state, and the chal-lenge to prove that we can get along with each other.”

The museum will be unique in that it will deal with the broadest issues of tolerance and human dignity in the most critical area of the Middle East. It will address issues within the Jewish community, religious, nonreligious, Sephardim, Ashkenazim, and broader issues: people of different faiths, how can people of different faiths navigate the landscape so that they can successfully live together; and how to truly achieve peace.

“Yerushalayim means “City of Peace,” yet we are far from it,” said Rabbi May. “It has long been a place of political and religious strife, even psychological strife. [The museum] is going to help people understand the respon-sibilities for respect and human dignity, and a commitment to advance human dignity - for Jews and gentiles, Jews and Arabs, Muslims and Christians.”

When completed, The Center for Human Dignity - Museum of Tolerance is set to include a children’s museum of tolerance and an adult museum of tolerance, an international con-ference center, a theater for important motion pictures and documentaries, and an outdoor amphitheater which will be able to seat 1,000 people. The entire space is planned to cover 175,000 square feet, making this museum the largest of the three Museums of Tolerance.

There will be two main sections within: “A people’s journey,” which will ask: “How did the Jews survive for 3,500 years?’” and a social lab, which will confront Israel’s issues as they are today, including domestic and international issues, but not the Middle East peace process.

The museum is located at a meeting site of three main streets in modern day Jerusa-lem: Hillel street: a bustling commercial zone; Moshe Ben Israel street: a road crossing a near-by park; and Moshe Salomon street- Nachalat Shiva’s pedestrian mall, a tourist hub, full of restaurants and shops.

The Prime Ministers Documentary

The next documentary to come out of Mo-riah Films (Moriah Films is affiliated with the Wiesenthal Center) will be based on The Prime Ministers by Yehuda Avner – a critically ac-claimed account that gives readers an intimate look at contemporary Israeli history. The world premier is scheduled for April 24 in Los Ange-les, but the documentary is still unfinished with several pieces of narration still undone, accord-ing to Rabbi May.

A finalist for the 2011 National Jewish Book Award, The Prime Ministers sold more than 30,000 copies in the U.S., about 10,000 copies in Israel and thousands of digital ver-sions on Kindle.

Directed by Richard Trank, executive pro-ducer of Moriah Films, this will be the 13th full-length documentary created through the Wiesenthal Center’s film division. Since its inception they’ve won two Academy Awards - one for Genocide with Elizabeth Taylor (re-leased in 1982) and one for The Long Way Home, 1997.

“We get the greatest of Hollywood, and that’s why these films have reached more than a half a billion people around the world,” said Rabbi May. “We live in Hollywood, so to reach

more people and show our message of contem-porary Jewish history, the State of Israel, the Holocaust, we use our films to get the message across and it goes to places where people don’t know anything – China, Iran, East Berlin.”

Rabbi May discusses what the Wiesenthal Center is doing to com-bat rising global anti-Semitism

Rabbi May: There’s no question that an-ti-Semitism is increasing. It’s a virulent new strain of anti-Semitism. We have a very toxic environment, even in America. Canada is al-ready very toxic, and it’s going on in London, in France, there has been an explosion of anti-Se-mitic events in Denmark – Denmark - which was a safe haven for Jews in the Holocaust! - now people are saying don’t walk around there with a yarmulka. Now it’s dangerous for Jews.

It’s a very, very toxic situation as far as Jews worldwide go. There’s a terrible isolation for Israel - a country that is the most democrat-ic in the whole area. There’s a terrible double standard with regards to Israel. Everything Isra-el does is a big deal in the U.N. How dare they have a resolution on settlement building, E-1, when 60,000 people are being killed in Syria and the U.N. can’t muster any effort there? We have a feckless and corrupt UN which allows

countries like Syria to actually be on the human rights council and commission - it’s a farce.

We’re confronting issues around the world, anti-Semitism around the world, efforts to dele-gitimize the state of Israel, to use double standards in relation to Israel. We’re dealing with issues such as government intervention in ritual slaughter and brit milah around the world, in Germany and Sweden. We have an overall commitment to confronting an-ti-Semitism - an ever increasing global anti-Semitism.

We need to be speakers for Israel and defend Israel. It’s defi-nitely not a safe time and it’s a great cause for concern. It’s hard to imagine that we would have to say to survivors of the Holocaust that we see anti-Semitism com-ing back during their lifetime.

What is triggering this spread of anti-Semitism?

Rabbi May: I believe anti-Semitism is a fundamental reality of life for Jews, from the earliest times in history it doesn’t go away, but there are certain things that trigger it more. Ter-rible financial situations have triggered it, now the policies of the state of Israel are triggering it. It necessarily affects Jews, because even if you say you’re against Israel, not Jews, it’s real-ly a cover. Because the vehemency with which these people attack Israel is not with the same vehemency as other countries.

What are you most proud of in the work that you do for the Wiesen-thal Center?

Rabbi May: I’ve been there 35 years. What we’re proud of is that we’re helping to give Jews worldwide a sense of confidence, a sense of security that an organization that is cutting edge is helping them. It gives us satisfaction that we’re making a difference, that we’re a voice that reflects them, reflects their views, reflects their outrage and concerns. That’s im-portant to me.

We’re not just walking without a following. There are 400,000 families that are members of the Wiesenthal Center. 125,000 criminal jus-tice professionals have been trained through our Tools for Tolerance training, ranked second out of 300 diversity training courses nation-wide. There have been 5 million visitors to our museum in LA, 98% are not Jewish. So many of them say their life has changed through go-ing through the museum.

happenings

up to Date with the wiesenthal Center - a Discussion with rabbi meyer may, executive DirectorBy Rachel Wizenfeld

The Museum of Tolerance Jerusalem

An extraordinary 3-acre site in the heart of West Jerusalem•A 5-minute walk from the King David and David Citadel hotels•First week in June, 2010, three renowned Israeli Architects will submit conceptual plans and models for the new Museum of Tolerance Jerusalem•End of June, winning architect announced•Budget not to exceed $100 million – more than half already raised•

up to Date

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On January 27, 1945, Soviet troops liberated the Auschwitz Birkenau Death Camp. Actually “liberated” is the wrong word. Opened the gates of hell is more ap-propriate a term.

The numbers of murdered are stagger-ing. According to the Encyclopedia of the Holocaust nearly a quarter of the 6 mil-lion Jews killed in Holocaust were mass murdered there, most in gas chambers. Of the 400,000 political prisoners brought to Auschwitz, only 65,000 left alive; of the

16,000 Soviet POWs, 96 returned home.Stalin was reported to have said, “One

death is a tragedy, a million deaths a sta-tistic.”

But these statistics further illuminate the capacity of humankind to do evil:

Between Dec 1, 1944 and January 15th, 1945, 514,843 pieces of men, wom-en’s and children’s clothing were shipped to Germany from Auschwitz. In the ware-houses, Soviet troops found over a million men’s suits, women’s dresses and baby clothing, thousands of pairs of shoes and 7.7 tons of human hair.

So it was appropriate for the United Nations to designate January 27, 2013 In-ternational Memorial Day.

So how is humanity doing in the mem-ory department?

On the one hand, the number of Holo-caust memorials, museums, movies, web-sites and books continue to proliferate. The words of Anne Frank, one of the 1.5 mil-lion Jewish kids who perished in the Nazi Holocaust, continue to inspire new genera-tions of young people.

On the other hand, the Nazi genocid-al anti-Semitic and racist ideology is alive and well, even in democratic countries

on the continent where the Third Reich wrought such devastation 70 years ago.

In economically devastated Greece, the Golden Dawn Party invokes Nazi era anti-Semitic stereotypes as part of its ugly pop-ulist agenda to win more votes and clout.

In Hungary, whose fascists abetted the Nazis to deport 400,000 Jewish citizens to their death at Auschwitz in the clos-ing months of WWII, leaders of the Job-bik Party leverage their hatred of Gypsies (Roma) and Jews—two minorities who were experimented upon, shot and gassed at Auschwitz—to win headlines and more seats in Parliament.

A generation after Auschwitz, many European Jews still look over their shoul-ders.

Religious Jews in Malmo, Sweden can’t count on the police or courts to de-fend them from serial hate crimes.

In Copenhagen, Jews are told not wear a yarmulke, Star of David necklace or speak Hebrew on the streets.

In Germany, a respected member of the media likens ultra-Orthodox Jews to Islamist extremists who he says are moti-vated by the “law of revenge.”

In France, authorities and Jewish com-

munity leaders are grappling with deadly hate crimes, not so much from neo-Nazi thugs, than from radical Islamists who are at war with all Jews. They get their inspira-tion from Iran’s Holocaust-denying Mul-lahs and Egypt’s now powerful Muslim Brotherhood.

If we want to show that the world has learned its lessons from January 27, 1945, we need the European Union and UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon to join the Obama administration in condemning Egyptian President Morsi’s depicting Jews as the “sons of apes and pigs.”

We need to signal the governments in Hungary, Greece, and the Ukraine, that mainstreaming of Jew-hatred could cost them dearly when they coming knocking at Washington’s door for help.

So as the world pauses for a moment this week to bow our heads honoring dead Jews, we urge leaders to re-commit to pro-tect and respect the Jews who are alive and living among us.

Rabbi Abraham Cooper is associate Dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in L.A. Follow the Simon Wiesenthal Center on Facebook and on Twitter.

This article first appeared on foxnews.com.

happenings

Over January winter break, nine-teen YULA seniors participated in an exhilarating and action-packed 10-day trip to Israel. Led by Rabbi Abramczik and Rabbi Baalhaness, the students had the opportunity to visit 15 yeshivot and experience what day-to-day life is like in Israel. Highlights from the trip in-cluded adinner with Israeli soldiers and a Shabbat meal with dozens of YULA Boys School alumni. Here is a recap of the trip experience, as told through the eyes of YULA senior Joshua Morrow.

“Our experience in Israel was truly remarkable. Even the people who had been to the Holy Land before were entranced by the majesty and spiritu-ality of Eretz Yisrael, particularly af-ter having been shown a fresh side by Rabbis Baalhaness and Abramczik that no YULA student had seen before. The Kotel specifically was mesmerizing. The idea that our ancestors have touched these stones crying for our redemption and salvation has inspired all of us to be the next great people to have touched and been touched by these stones. The Rebbeim could not have been better at instilling in all of us a perspective regarding the enormity of the sacrifice and significance of our experiences.

Amongst the extensive catalogue of yeshivot that we visited, the list includ-ed Torat Shraga, Derech, Yesod, Ruach Chaim, Ohr Yerushalayim (OJ), Me-vasseret, Neveh Tzion, Yishrei Lev, and

Shaalvim. All of the Yeshivas and their Rabbis showed tremendous attention to detail; at every turn and at every yeshiva, we were treated as adults and equals. Our visits to the Yeshivot included many out-standing highlights. OJ’s seclusion from the chaotic big city life was a welcome re-spite to our overwhelmed senses. Yishrei’s fantastic modern accommodations and ex-ceptional quality of learning was most im-pressive. Neveh’s remarkable Shana Bet percentage wowed every member of the trip, Rabbi and student alike. The Rabbis’ ability to forge lasting bonds is a credit to their selflessness and dedication to their talmidim. Mevasseret provided a wel-coming home, littered with YULA alums, and every Rabbi and student, alum or not, made us feel at home in a very YULA way. YeshivatShaalavim was also impres-sive; with nothing besides the Yeshiva and the 400 family community around us for miles, Shaalvim is a hub of learning and Torah and my personal favorite stop of trip. Walking in to the Beit Midrash, the electricity is palpable and crackling.

The trip also included a visit to the Blind Museum in Tel Aviv. Every museum-goer is subject to a complete indoor blackout where the hand in front of one’s face cannot be seen. By the end of the experience, every person had a newfound appreciation for, not only sight, but also all of our blessings. Our entire group said the bracha of Pokeiach Ivrim with the most intense meaning the next

morning. We also made our way through the crowded streets of Bnei Brak, the worldwide hub of Chasidim and Ultra-Or-thodoxy throughout the world. Our trip was entirely driven by the prospect of praying with and being blessed by the foremost Rabbis of our age, Rav Chaim Kaniefsky and Rav Aharon Leib Shtein-man. Despite their advanced age, the depth of their knowledge is clear by just looking in their eyes. Their bodies have long since worn out, but their minds are more active than we can begin to fathom.

We also visited one of the holiest cities in our storied religion: Chevron. After arriving, we were treated to a captivating presentation by Mr. Yigal Kutai, who has lived in Chevron for over 40 years, dedicating his life to keep

the Jewish settlement next to one of our holiest sites intact. The tour of the city was heart wrenching and reminded us how fortunate we are to be able to visit the graves of our forefathers, something that has not been possible for 700 years.

Everyone left the trip with a newfound appreciation for Medinat Yisrael and the sacrifices that have been made for our sake and the sake of the Jewish people, of which we are the future and the soon-to-be present. A special thank you to Rabbi Abramczik and Rabbi Baalhaness, who made the trip both meaningful and fun.”

68 years after the ‘liberation’ of auschwitz --lessons learned and unlearnedBy Rabbi Abraham Cooper

yula seniors enjoy action-Packed 10-Day trip to israel

The Jewish hom

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t was just after midnight as I stood at the bottom of a parking garage in Secaucus, New Jersey. I and over

1200 other people were getting ready to walk through fire. For over 13 hours we’ve been pumped with the message that any-thing is possible – and now we were going to prove it. Flash forward two hours. I’m driving alone in my car, totally lost some-where near the Meadowlands or is it East Brunswick? I keep telling myself “any-thing is possible” – and then I tell myself “yeah, so is getting lost.”

The modern self-help movement, or millionaire messenger troop, will tell you that we can do anything once we unleash the Kraken within. Tony Robbins quali-fies that statement with something a bit more inspiring “what we thought were our limitations, are not our limitations.” There is great truth to this paradigm. We all put up walls. These walls of limitation are synthetic, creations of our own need for self-sabotage and preservation. Neverthe-less, at some point – you can fire yourself up, you can dig deeper than you’ve ever have been able to dig and still find that you slip. You may find that affording the big-gest house on the block is still out of your reach. Maybe the message is one of a more Qui Jong nature, stop trying so hard. Con-quering the world is hubris. It’s a mistake. Maybe G-d gives us the illusion that we can achieve, succeed, and build – when in fact we are capable of nothing significant – only smoke and mirrors.

Can I conquer the world or am I con-fined to the realism of my space?

Success according to Judaism is living comfortably with the knowledge that I am capable of colossal achievement but G-d can at any moment tell us “that space is not for you to conquer.”

A statement of power emerges from the pen of ancient Jewish scholars (Avot D’Rebbe Natan) – “May you always be the captain of your ship.” In other words, as the American Novelist Louisa May Alcott put it - “I don’t worry about the storms, I am learning to sail my own ship.”

We are called upon to be bold and inno-

vative. We are asked to become partners in creation. G-d is not content with us stand-ing outside the fire. We are all captains. We are harbingers of change and difference.

Sometimes life seems to push back and tell us that we’re not capable of making a difference. To that narrative we have to be forceful enough to say “no”! The saintly Hassidic master – the Bobover Rebbe lost everything in the Holocaust- family, friends, followers, disciples, and students. The Rebbe arrived in America after the war with nothing but the clothes on his back. The average human, after witness-

ing such destruction, would give credence to the push back and live out their days in depression or apathy. The Bobover Rebbe was not willing to accept this fate. Piece by piece, brick by brick he rebuilt first himself, then his family, and then an entire dynasty.

But then when we are at our most pow-erful, when there is nothing that can get in our way – when we make decisions that seem to alter the course of destiny – G-d says “hold.”

Here is where the line in the sand is drawn. Here is where you must set up your station. Moses had grand dreams of entering the land. He was an unlikely con-queror, a leader of men. He was humble, he was valiant, he kept leading and chart-ing new course when the tide was against him – but Israel, as the poet says “that ever elusive dream”, was no longer in the cards for Moses.

There is plenty of area for us all to master. There is no shortage of impactful space. But at some point G-d lets us know that our domain, our world, ends right at this point. The Sages teach “Who is happy? He who is content with his portion.” Hap-piness comes from harnessing the powers availed to us within our orbit. Beyond that – is meaningless for our decisions. It’s not our portion of the world. This thought may at first seem inhibiting but on the contrary, it’s liberating. There is no room for jeal-ousy when you don’t have job x or house y because those positions and acquisitions are not even in your realm of existence.

Chart your course; be bold, be strong, be creative but know that at some point G-d can turn to you and say “ad kaan”,

those words in our tradition when a text is at completion, “until there.”

Here is one bit of advice that may take us in a different direction. Sometimes a problem or a challenge is just that – a problem or a challenge. Often they allow us to rise above and bring out the best that we have hidden within. Other times those challenges evolve and they ultimately become that wall where G-d says “until there.” Perhaps we are capable of extend-ing our reach if we make decisions before they become problems. In the book Flash Foresight by Daniel Burrus, he argues that

so many of our battles would cease to exist if we can learn to see the problem before it happens. If we can plan for success and see our hurdle before it gets there, we can better manage it. Turning a problem into an opportunity is almost overwhelming once the problem has hit and often it’s too late. Become proactive. Proactive change (before a problem forces you to change) is a very powerful tool to help ensure, as best as possible, that you still have room to maneuver.

The question you may ask, though, is how does one know when the proverbial wall in front of your charge is a wall that is synthetic and still can be traversed, or is a wall that G-d has placed there to tell you “until there”?

I would simply say that if the only way to scale that wall is by hurting others or by going against your moral compass then you know it’s the end of your space.

Kansas City Royals veteran Pitcher Gil Meche knew where his space ended. At 32 he walked away from a guaranteed 12.4 million dollars. Why? He felt that af-ter a series of injuries he wouldn’t be able to properly do the job. Taking that money would simply be wrong.

Another way to know if you have come to the limit of your particular orbit is if the job at hand is asking you to compromise your identity, values, and/or your loved ones. No real long term success can come about by being somebody that you are not. Adjusting is always necessary to find true success, but to adjust to the extent that you no longer recognize yourself or adjusting yourself to the point where those that care most about no longer recognize who you

are – is a shift that G-d does not ask of you.How do you know when it’s your time

to quit a particular job or a particular proj-ect? It is not an indicator when your job or investment hits a low point. The low point may in fact just be the great battle cry you need to make some shift that places you into the category of winners. Knowing when to quit is about recognizing what truly makes something a “low point”. Am I no longer reaping value from what I set out to do? If my low point comes because I’m doing the same things I’ve always done and it’s not working – that’s not a sign to quit, that’s a sign to try your job a little differently. But if your low point comes because you’re not feeling the same invigoration you’ve always felt – then it may be a sign.

Another indication that it’s time to stop pursuing the path you’re on is when your current venture is capitalizing on all your weaknesses and ignoring most of your strengths. According to numerous sources, the ancient Egyptians who enslaved the Israelites, had an insidious trick by which to weaken the spirit of the people. They would give the men the jobs normally given to the women, and they would give the women jobs normally given to the men. When we’re doing those things that go against our nature, or are just the things we are weakest at – it can literally tare you apart.

You also have to be careful about ir-rational behavior. Ori and Ron Brafman, in their book, Sway: The Irresistible Pull of Irrational Behavior, make this case pretty clearly. At the beginning of their work they talk about an airplane pilot who took off in fog without getting clearance from traffic control. His plane crashed and over 500 people were killed. The tragedy is ex-plained by irrational behavior. He went through all the negative consequences of leaving late or having to stay overnight and all those trivial consequences meant more to him than departing safely. We tend to fear the smaller more immediate loss even at the possible expense of disaster. If a situation is simply not working but the only reason you’re staying in it is because you’re afraid of a new job hunt, or may-be being behind in your bills for several months it’s simply not worth your dimin-ished quality of life, possible depression, and later regret of not seizing other oppor-tunities. Know when you’ve hit the edge of your universe and respond accordingly.

Rabbi Shlomo Einhorn is currently the Rav and Dean of Yeshivat Yavneh in Los Angeles. He is the creator of WINGS; a synagogue con-sulting group for the Orhodox Union. He is also the author of 3 sefarim. For any comments, thoughts, or observations email the Rabbi at [email protected]

Judaism alive

to the edge of our universe – Knowing when to walk away

Rabbi Shlomo Einhorn

i HOW DOES ONE KNOW WHEN THE PROVERBIAL WALL IN FRONT OF YOUR CHARGE IS A WALL THAT IS

SYNTHETIC & STILL CAN BE TRAVERSED?

The Jewish hom

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t’s amazing that over a dozen years and a dozen eighth grade graduation trips, some things

remain remarkably constant. The trips provide the class their final opportunity, their last few days together to gel one last time. Indeed, the camaraderie on the trips is something I cherish as an educator and I find the bus, not the monuments or land-marks, to be the highlight of each trip. All the students gabbing, joking and singing together, just passing the time, and inter-acting with each other without any care of upcoming exams or term papers. A recent trip though was a change. The boisterous din I was accustomed to has given way to a soft whisper, even a silence. There is an entire class on one bus, yet each student in their own world. Each student has a gadget, a phone, ipod, an e-reader or other multimedia device. One student is watch-ing a movie, another texts his parents or sends them a photo of the Washington monument, and others play video games, listen to music or read quietly. A world of isolation on a crowded bus.

A younger generation with substandard social abilities is being groomed. Our gen-eration of pre-teens and adolescents are immersed in a world of advanced technol-ogy, yet it is negatively influencing their social interactions. The ever-present “i” in this younger generation can stand for iso-lation. The preoccupation with technology results in being cut off from personal inter-actions and new experiences.

James Diamond, in The World Until Yesterday, reviewed last week in the New York Times’ Book Review, contrasts our Western society with other more tradi-tional ones around the globe. He observes “we live in codified, impersonal societies whereas they live in un-codified but more personal societies”. Almost exactly reflect-ing my time on the school bus, Diamond notes “we sit around subway cars lost in our thoughts and smartphones, but people in traditional societies converse constant-ly, learning from one another and sharing”.

Or, as Dr. David Pelcovitz of Yeshiva Uni-versity notes in the name of his father, Rab-bi Ralph Pelcovitz, we are living in a time of communication without connection. A person can receive hundreds of e-mails and text messages, update their Facebook page and send a myriad of tweets during the day yet personally interact with just a handful of people.

Is this really so wrong? Do we need to speak face to face with a friend, relative or colleague?

It turns out that it is.

Jewish tra-dition stresses the idea of the face to face en-counter. Shlo-mo HaMelech (Mishlei 27:19) writes just as “water re-flects a face back to a face so one’s heart is reflected back to him by another.” Accord-ing to Rav Shimshon Raphael Hirsch, this means kindred hearts find their sentiments, feelings and convictions reflected in one another.

One feels for another, forging a bond when they are panim el panim. Rabbi Chaim Shmuelivitz notes in his sefer, Si-chot Mussar, the Torah three times states Moshe “saw” the burdens of his people (Shemot 3:11-12), and that on Yaakov’s deathbed, unable to see Ephraim and Me-nashe, he makes sure to touch and hold them before blessing them (Bereishit 48:10). We need the visual cortex to really connect. We simply do not connect as well through media.

Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, in To Heal a Fractured World, develops this point beautifully. “Societies are only human and humanizing when they are a community of communities built on face to face encoun-ters. The Bible repeatedly emphasizes that we cannot see God face to face yet follows that we can only see God in the face of an-other”.

Neurological science has proven what we’ve known for so long. It has identified the presence of mirror neurons that fire both when an animal or person acts and when the animal or person observes the same action performed by another. The neuron mirrors the behavior of the other, as though the observers were themselves acting. Our brains are hard wired to em-pathize and connect with others we inter-act with visually. We are programmed to become sad when we see a person crying or happy when seeing even a total stranger laughing. Emotions are contagious.

I wish I could look myself in the mir-ror and say that I practice all that I preach but all too often I use a phone or a key-

board to avoid facing a friend or colleague. However, we all must be cognizant of the importance of conversations and interac-tions. They make us better people. This is a lesson we cannot only teach in schools. All of us must impart to the i-generation how vital and rewarding a society of real, live contact is.

This past summer I purchased my first Macbook computer and have converted from using a Skype to Apple’s Face Time. Connecting with friends and family on the

other side of the country and all over the globe has never been easier or as enjoy-able. Face Time. It’s an interesting name with respect to today’s technology, per-haps not as much a name but more of a reminder.

Rabbi Mahler came to Los Angeles after be-ing the Director of Student Activities at the Joseph Kushner Hebrew Academy in Livingston, NJ, and the Assistant Principal at the Westchester Day School in Mamaroneck, NY . Rabbi Mahler earned his semicha from Rav Zalman Nechemia Goldberg in Yerushalyim and is a graduate of Yeshiva Uni-versity where he earned his Master’s in Secondary Education and his Semicha. He is currently a Doc-toral Candidate at the Azrieli Graduate School.

Rabbi Mahler believes in creating a stu-dent-centered instructional environment which promotes participatory learning and independent thinking. Learning must be joyous and exciting

and offer growth oppor-tunities through hands-on and authentic learning experiences. It is of the utmost importance that students be inspired to embrace learning, moti-vating them to discover their strengths, and pro-vide them with the tools

to pursue their interests. Guided always by Torah values, it is Rabbi Mahler’s goal that students understand their responsibility to Am Yisrael and to Medinat Yisrael while broadening their knowl-edge base and acquiring new skills, and at the same time cultivating an appreciation for literacy and learning.

THE EVER-PRESENT “I” IN THIS YOUNGER GENERATION CAN STAND FOR ISOLATION.

Ari Markowitz424-256-7251 x103 [email protected]

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Jewish thought Rabbi David Mahler

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his week we learn about Matan Torah, the giving of the Torah. Of course, we are already about a third of the way

through the Torah, which we have been reading every week since we began again with Bereshis on Simchat Torah a few months ago. If we were to ask, what have we been studying all these months if the Torah hasn’t been given yet, we could say simply that the Torah records that which happened before the Torah was given. Looked at simply, this shouldn’t pose any problem.

Yet, on a spiritual level, there is a problem. In the cycle of reading the Torah through the year, we are supposed to re-live the events that are contained in each Parsha, and on the week we read that Par-sha. Yes, we’ll also celebrate the giving of the Torah on the sixth day of the month of Sivan a few months from now, but the annual reading of the Torah is something that has to be experienced. When we read a Parsha, we must experience that Parsha, learn from it and apply it in our own lives. But how can we experience a giving of the Torah during this Parsha, Parshas Yisro, if we have been learning Torah all these months?

A question that may be related, asked by many commentaries, is, “Why does the Torah start with the letter Bais?” Shouldn’t the Torah have started with the first letter, an Alef? Among the many answers given is the idea that the Torah wants to convey that the Creation of the world is of second-ary importance: It’s Bais, number two, to what is most important—the Torah itself. This is because the entire purpose of Cre-ation is the Torah; without Torah, there’d be no reason to create a world.

But the beginning of Bereishis is not simply an account of the Creation,. Ac-cording to Chassidic and Kabbalistic un-derstanding of the first words of the Torah, it is an utterance of G-d that set the entire

Creation into motion. So shouldn’t Bere-ishis still have started with an Alef?

Clearly, however, there is a higher quality of Torah with the giving of the Ten Commandments and the Revelation of the Almighty at Sinai. In spite of hav-ing learned and read the Torah all these weeks, we are now reading and learning a higher level of Torah, a Torah that starts with an Alef, which is how the Ten Com-mandments starts: Anochi Hashem Elo-ke-cha—“I [says Hashem] am the Lord your G-d…”

The Sages, in fact, tells us (in Tractate

Shabbat) that the Alef of “Anochi” indi-cates this because the four Hebrew letters of Anochi forms an acronym: Ana Nafshi Kesavis Yehavis—“I [G-d says] have My Soul Written [on the Tablets] and have Given them.” In this, G-d is saying that He has imbued Himself—His “Soul”—into the Torah itself. This great gift affects all of the Torah, including the parts of the Torah that came before. Bereishis is now at that same level of G-dly Holiness that was experienced at Sinai—and that also happens in this week’s Parsha. As the Zo-har says, O-raisa ve-Kidsha B’rich Kulo Chad—“The Torah and the Holy One, Blessed be He, is One.” This breakthrough begins this week in Parshas Yisro.

Now, one could still ask, didn’t we al-ready have the Torah? Haven’t we learned that Abraham studied the Torah and per-formed the Mitzvot? Isaac studied Torah, and Jacob spent 14 years in the Yeshiva of Shem and Ever, and then taught everything he knew to Joseph. When the Jews de-

scended to Egypt, we learn that Judah went ahead and founded a Yeshiva there (be-cause a Jew simply cannot live in a place where one can’t study Torah), and that all the Jews learned Torah until they were en-slaved by Pharaoh—but the Tribe of Levi continued studying Torah. So weren’t we receiving something we already had?

The answer is no: the Torah that the Patriarchs and the Hebrews of Egypt stud-ied was the Torah of Bereishis—a Torah that, however deeply these giants of Faith and understanding may have delved, they did so in the finite dimension of Creation.

They could not use Torah to experience and connect to the Mind and Soul of G-d—that did not become possible until the Rev-elation at Sinai.

The Ari-zal points out that, in Birkat HaMazon, Grace After Meals, in the sec-ond paragraph (Nodeh L’cha—“We thank Thee”), we offer a prayer of thanks to G-d for all he has given us to survive, and we thank Him “ve’al toras-cha she’li-ma-de-tanu”—“for Your Torah that You have taught us.” The Ari-zal focuses on the apparently unnecessary additional word, she’li-ma-de-tanu–“that You taught us.” The prayer would have been complete without that word. But with the addition of “that You Taught us,” says the Ari-zal, the prayer introduces a distinction. That distinction, in the Kabbalistic terms used by the Ari-zal, is between “Your Torah” on the one hand—a Torah that is G-dly, the Torah that comes from the world of Atzi-lus, the world of Emanation, the highest level of the Sefirot. But we also have the Torah “that You, G-d, taught us,” on the other hand: a Torah in the next level of re-ality, a Torah from the world of B’riah—a lower world of Emanations.

Before the Giving of the Torah at Sinai, when people came to understand Torah, they were deriving their understanding from their intellectual study of Creation. Since the Torah was the “blueprint” of that Creation, they could obtain an under-standing of the Torah from what they could deduce and derive from their observations of the world G-d created. This is described by the Sages as Leki-chat HaTorah—“Tak-ing the Torah.” They received only what they could take out of their analysis and insights of the Created world.

But after the Giving of the Torah at Sinai, the soul of those who experienced

the Revelation there were imbued with the power to go beyond that limit and delve into the Torah that is G-d’s Torah—the To-rah of the highest realms of Atzilut. That’s why we say in the Blessing over the To-rah—every morning and when we go up to the Torah for an Aliyah: V’nosan lonu es Toraso—we bless “He who gave us His Torah.” The soul of a young child at the beginning stages of learning Torah is, in fact, being imbued by the very experience of learning Torah even at the most elemen-tary level—imbued with the power and the potential to delve further into the Torah than the level that was available even to our Patriarchs.

That’s how the Ari-zal answers that classic question of why the Torah begins with a Bais: Before the Sinai experience, the Torah that was available was the sec-ondary Torah—the Torah of Bais: the Bais of Beraishis, Bais for B’riah. When the To-rah was given at Sinai and the Revelation imprinted on the Jewish souls who stood there, the Torah that became available was the Torah of Alef: the Alef of Anochi, Alef for Atzilut. Is it any wonder, then, that we read this portion of the Torah with grati-tude, excitement and great joy.

That is why the Sages say that when a person comes to the Gan Eden, the world of the afterlife, Ashrei mi she’bo lekan vetoroso beyodo—“Praised is the one who comes here [to Gan Eden] with his Torah [the Torah he acquired during his or her lifetime on Earth] intact and at hand.” We may well wonder why, since so much of the Torah that we study has no application to the next world of Gan Eden. What good is that Torah knowledge there?

But all of Torah contains, beneath out-ward material “shells,” deeper meanings that open up greater understanding of the world. As we probe beneath these outer shells of the mundane details, we uncov-er profound truths until, at some point, we reach a higher realm of existence. We can enter the realm of the Divine spiritual Em-anations—the world of Atzilut.

hasidic thoughtRabbi Reuven Wolf

t

THE BEGINNING OF BEREISHIS IS NOT SIMPLY AN ACCOUNT OF THE CREATION

yisro: the super-mind

Rabbi Reuven Wolf is a world renowned educa-tor and lecturer who has devoted his life to reaching out and rekindling the spirit of Judaism in his fellow Jews. He was raised in the Ropshetz Chassidic dy-nasty, educated in the Belz and Bluzhev Yeshivos, and later, in the famous Lithuanian schools of Slabodkea and Mir. He is profoundly influenced by Jewish Mys-ticism and Kabbalah, and particularly Chabad Chas-sidic philosophy.

Since 1995, Rabbi Wolf has been teaching stu-dents of all ages, from elementary school children to adults, and has lectured across North America. Maayon Yisroel was founded in 2006 by Rabbi Wolf and Haki Abhesera, as a center to fulfill the vision of spreading the profound mystical teachings of Chas-sidic Judaism.

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Q: My kids are inundated with technology and gadgets. I am so afraid that this can distract them from their studies and be such a challenge to their Jewish values. How can families and schools make use of technology in a way that allows it to fit into our values?

-A mom of four iPad/pod/phone ob-sessed kids

Dear mom of 4 iPad/pod/phone ob-sessed kids:

Always remember the following when addressing these challenges:

a) The mitzvah to educate our chil-dren is like any other one. It needs effort and focus. Of all the commandments G-d blessed us with, this actually is one of the more difficult ones. It takes a lot of thought and subsequent planning to how to best educate our children to grow up as Torah Jews with a strong set of values. Technol-ogy is not the first challenge to this goal in the history of humankind. Every genera-tion has its challenges, and technology is one of ours.

b) Prohibition as an approach to solv-ing outside challenges has failed in most instances. We strongly believe that every-thing G-d has allowed man to discover can have positive attributes as well as negative ones. Our job is to discover how to syner-gize these gifts and allow them to enhance our value systems through a seamless in-tegration, but at the same time, filter that which can lead to negative outcomes.

c) As parents and schools, we must al-ways remember that we have the responsi-bility to act as the adults in the relationship with our children and students. We cannot simply allow them to have everything and do with technology all that they wish. We have to filter their actions and guide them

to make good choices. We view technology, not as a hin-

drance or a distraction, but as a tool to en-hance learning, life and our service of G-d. Our Sages tell us that even Torah can be an “elixir for life,” or if used improperly, an “elixir for the opposite.” Every tool, when used correctly, leads to blessing and pro-ductivity, and when used improperly, leads to tragedy.

Set boundaries with your children when using this great gift of technology. As your children get older, discuss with them the potential dangers associated with inap-propriate use, and advise them what steps you have taken as parents to help guide them to make the right decisions when using their tech tools. At Harkham Hillel Hebrew Academy we model appropriate use of iPads by utilizing iPad technology to teach topics such as the creation of the western calendar, integrating it with both the teaching of the Jewish calendar and the solar system. For Tu B’shevat—New Year for Trees—the Hillel students experienced a unit on photosynthesis and leaf identifi-cation, as well as learning to identify the appropriate blessings for fruits and vege-tables, all using the technology advance-ments of the iPad. You can also use this, for example, when praying at home. Have your children take a virtual tour of the Ko-tel and the Cave of Machpelah so they can appreciate the parts of tefillah that refer to these landmarks in our lives. When read-ing a section of prayer that praises G-d for His creation, have them look at a natural wonder of the world using the iPad. Open the world for them using technology. The more they see how these tools can be used for positive, the more they will be inspired to seek ways to show how they can ac-complish these goals by themselves using technology.

However, all is guided by the princi-ple that you, as mom, and the schools must

build the fence to protect our children as they use these amazing tools. Filters are a must. Always know what your children are looking at. There are many programs available to help you be the parent and the school be the monitor of our children’s ac-cess to this world.

In addition to addressing the “whats” and the “hows” of its use, discuss what is considered an appropriate amount of time to devote to these devices. Do not aban-don the need for physical exercise. Do not abandon the need for inter-personal col-laboration and talking beyond the world of text. Encourage them to benefit from the tactile use of the textbook, especially as Shabbat is a time when we naturally break from technology to enjoy the world in its fine raw state.

These are just starting points. Remem-ber, invest with your children and they will benefit and grow from these amazing tools. They will love you more for your guidance and limits.

Q: My daughter has high-anxi-ety and settles for nothing less than top grades. She participates in ev-ery conceivable extracurricular activity, and everything has to turn out perfectly. How can we help her balance her drive for excellence with the need to be human?

-A caring mother

Dear Caring Mother,Children often believe, consciously or

unconsciously, that their personal worth is attached only to what they achieve. As a result they are often self-critical when comparing themselves to others, and they often feel little satisfaction, even after ex-pending prodigious effort.

Spend time with your child to reinforce the value of “self.” Show your child how each person has something to add to the world. Give her examples of ways she can value herself and how to take the time she needs to balance her daily challenges in and out of school.

Provide unconditional love and atten-tion to your daughter. Give her time when it’s just “you and her.” Let her feel she is special and let her see how “down-time” is not “wasted time.” Show her how people function better when less stressed. Rein-force that you appreciate the value of hard work, but success comes through balance.

Do not preach to your daughter. Advise her and find the right moments to help her see the value of her “neshama”— soul—and her gift to this world. You may want to discuss with her the implications of the mishna in Ethics of our Fathers (end of Chapter Two): “ . . . it is not for you to be the one to complete the work (on this world) but you are not free from attempt-ing to complete it.” Discuss the value of perfection while understanding that, as hu-mans, we have to balance our dreams.

Always remember that we all appreci-ate being valued. Praise her for efforts and accomplishments and remind her that she has a beautiful life ahead in which she can reach many more goals, as long as she con-tinues to strive with balance.

To continue the dialogue and share other ideas on this topic, email [email protected]. We want to hear your thoughts.

This article was compiled by the Edu-cational Administrative Team of Harkham Hillel Hebrew Academy and edited by the English Language Department.

Parenting

eDuCation: Question & answer

Education is at the fore of every parent’s mind. Parents and Educators have many questions, concerns and worries. If you wish to have your question or issue considered by a team of Educators feel free to email [email protected]

and your topic may be discussed in this column in future weeks. All names will be held confidential.

Send in your questions to [email protected]

A PUBLICATION OF THE LOS ANGELES COMMUNITY

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Hey there, El Senor Kosher Gastronome aqui, with an excellent way to clog your arteries on Super Bowl day. The Super Bowl has really become synonymous with 1) commercials 2) over-eating, and possibly in 3rd place – football, which is fine, because yet once again my beloved Jets have eluded to heed my advice to hire me as their quarterback, and lo and behold they missed the playoffs. So now I have to hang my head whilst surrounded by a whole bunch of Ravens fans?? Uh-uh, not happening…So the alternative option—food induced coma! Let’s get cooking!

When I was looking for what to make for a Super Bowl party, someone sug-gested onion rings, and I’m not gonna lie, I love me some onion rings. So out came my trusty Dutch oven, and I put many a glug of oil into the pot (about 2-3 cups…enough to cover the onions, and have enough volume to maintain its heat…we’re deep frying, not pan frying), and put the spurs to it, cooking over high heat. (We’re looking for 350 degrees on a thermometer; if you don’t have one, you can test that with a popcorn kernel…whenever it pops, you’re ready to fry.)

One of the biggest problems with frying onions is that onions are chockfull of moisture, so in order to fry them to the state of super deliciousness you need to first drive out all of the moisture. This will ensure the eventual crust will stick better to the onion, and the onion won’t be undercooked and too mushy. One way to do this is by soaking the onions first to soften them, and you can use buttermilk,

or salt water, but to infuse more beer flavor, we soaked it in beer.While the onions were soaking, and the oil was heating, I made the batter. The

batter is an important part, because you don’t want it too “cakey” nor too thin. So we needed some lift, but we also needed crunch. For the lift part, the recipe calls for baking powder to supply the airiness, and to counteract that for crispness, it calls for flour and cornstarch (cornstarch being pure starch will gelatinize faster, and absorb more water). So I combined all of the dry ingredients, and slowly started whisking in the beer, until it was the consistency of a thick paste that left a trail as it’s dragged over the batter; know what I’m saying?

When the oil was ready, one at a time (I know, it is a little annoying, but seri-ously we’re talking the best onion rings you’ve had in a long time…can you put a price on that??) dip them in the batter to fully coat, and using tongs, transfer to the hot oil. Fry until browned, about 6-7 minutes, flipping over once.

Transfer to wire rack, and sprinkle a little kosher salt over still hot onion rings, and allow to cool for at least 10 minutes.

If you’re planning on making these ahead of time, pre-heat the oven to 200°, and place the wire rack in the oven. The onions will crisp up some more, and keep warm.

And don’t forget to head on over and check out my blog, I’m even funnier over there.

In the KitchenNossi Fogel

Super Bowl Fever

Ingredients2 sweet onions, peeled and sliced into 1/2-inch-thick rounds3 cups beer2 teaspoons cider vinegarSalt and pepper2-3 cups vegetable oil3/4 cup all-purpose flour3/4 cups cornstarch1 teaspoon baking powder

DirectionsPlace onion rounds, 2 cups of the beer, cider vinegar, ½ teaspoon salt, and ½

teaspoon pepper in zipper-lock bag; refrigerate 20 minutes or up to 2 hours. Heat oil in a large Dutch oven over medium-high heat to 350°.

While oil is heating, combine flour, cornstarch, baking powder, ½ teaspoon salt, and ¼ teaspoon pepper in large bowl. Slowly whisk in ¾ cup beer until just com-bined (some lumps will remain). Whisk in remaining beer as needed, 1 tablespoon

at a time, until batter is thick enough that it falls from the whisk in a steady stream and leaves a faint trail across the surface of the batter.

Pour off liquid from onions. Pat onion rounds dry with paper towels and sepa-rate into rings. Transfer one-third portion of rings to batter. One at a time, carefully transfer battered rings to the oil. Fry until rings are golden brown and crisp, about 6-7 minutes, flipping halfway through frying. Drain rings on wire rack set on bak-ing sheet, and season with salt and pepper. Return oil to 350° and repeat with re-maining onion rings and batter. (If planning on keeping for a period of time, preheat oven to 200°, and hold rings in there until needed.)

These amazing onion rings are adapted from America’s Test Kitchen.

Nossi Fogel lives in Baltimore, Maryland, where he’s a dental resident, and enjoys anything about food, including cooking, taking weird pictures of food, writing obsessively about food, and taking long walks with food as well. He currently writes the blog The Kosher Gastro-nome.

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Greek Chicken KabobsRed wine vinegar, lemon zest, and oregano are a delicious Greek-inspired de-

parture from the typical Italian or teriyaki-flavored versions.

Ingredients2 boneless skinless chicken breasts cut into ½-inch chunks1 tablespoon olive oil1 tablespoon red wine vinegarZest of 1 lemon1 teaspoon dried oregano1/2 teaspoon garlic powder10 grape or cherry tomatoes1 small red onion, cut into 10 1/2-inch chunks1/2 teaspoon kosher saltFreshly ground black pepper

DirectionsIn a medium bowl, combine chicken with olive oil, vinegar, lemon zest, oreg-

ano, and garlic powder and toss to combine. Let marinate at room temperature for 20 minutes.

Preheat oven to 400° F. Take one small 5-inch skewer and thread each with 3 pieces of marinated chicken, one tomato and one onion wedge. Repeat with remain-ing ingredients to make 10 kabobs. Transfer to a greased sheet pan and season with salt and pepper. Bake 12 to 15 minutes or until cooked through. Broil on high for a few minutes to brown if desired. Serve warm.

MAKE IT A MEAL: Instead of skewering the chicken, simply bake it in the oven. Fill 2 pitas with cooked chicken and some chopped romaine lettuce. Top with halved tomatoes and thinly sliced red onion. Drizzle with tahini to serve.

As seen in Joy of Kosher with Jamie Geller Magazine – Jan/Feb 2012.

Beer Braised SausagesThese beer braised bites have deep layers of flavor and get a nice balanced kick

from the spicy mustard.

Ingredients4 tablespoons mayonnaise2 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce1 tablespoon Dijon mustard, such as Gold’s Dijon Mustard1/2 to 1 teaspoon prepared horseradish, such as Gold’s White Horseradish1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper1 tablespoon olive oil6 turkey sausage links (about 1 pound)1 cup beer

DirectionsPrepare dipping sauce: In a small bowl, combine mayonnaise, soy

sauce, mustard, horseradish, and pepper. Stir until smooth and set aside. Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add sausage links and brown on all sides, cooking about 12 minutes total. Carefully add beer and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to a simmer, cover, and cook until sausages are cooked all the way through, about 10 to 15 minutes. Remove from pan and cut into bite-size pieces. Serve with Spicy Mustard Dipping Sauce.

MAKE IT A MEAL: Instead of cutting sausages into bite-size pieces, place 2 or

3 links on a dinner plate with a dollop of Spicy Mustard Dipping Sauce. Serve with your favorite boxed couscous. Stir 2 chopped scallions and ¼ cup chopped olives into the couscous just before serving.

In the KitchenJamie Geller

Super Bowl Fever

Jamie Geller is the only cookbook author who wants to get you out of the kitchen – not be-cause she doesn’t love food – but because she has tons to do. As “The Bride Who Knew Noth-ing” Jamie found her niche as everybody’s favorite cook next-door. Specializing in scrump-tious meals that are a snap to prepare, she authored the Quick & Kosher Cookbook series and is co- founder of the Kosher Media Network, which recently launched the Joy of Kosher with Jamie Geller magazine and companion website JoyofKosher.com, a social network for foodies. Jamie hosts the popular Quick & Kosher cooking show online at youtube.com/joyofkosher and on-air on JLTV. Jamie and her “hubby” live in Israel. Their five children give her plenty of reasons to get out of the kitchen — fast.

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You Gotta be Kidding! Riddle

Submitted by Clara Harnow

Johnny’s mother had three children. The first child was born on April 14th and named April. The second child was born two years later on April 16th and named May. The third child was born on May 16th. What was his name?

Answer on next page

Submitted by Gavriel Weinberg

Over breakfast one morning, a woman says to her husband, “I’ll bet you don’t know what day this is.”

“Of course I do,” he answered, as if he was offended, and left for the office.At 10:00 a.m., the doorbell rang and when the woman opened the door; she

was handed a box of a dozen long stemmed red roses. At 1:00 p.m., a foil-wrapped, two-pound box of her favorite chocolates was delivered. Later, a boutique deliv-ered a designer dress.

The woman couldn’t wait for her husband to come home.“First the flowers, then the chocolates and then the dress!” she exclaimed.

“I’ve never had a more wonderful Groundhog Day in my life!

Amnesia: What did you just ask me?

Apathy: I don’t care.

Bigotry: I’m not going to tell someone like you.

Egotistical: I’m the best person to answer that question.

Evasive: Go do your homework.

Hostility: If you ask me just one more question, you are not going to know what hit you!

Ignorance: I don’t know.

Indifference: It doesn’t matter.

Influenza: You’ve got to be sick to ask me that question.

Insomnia: I stayed awake all last night thinking of the answer.

Narcissism: Before I answer, tell me, don’t I look great?

Over-Protective: I don’t know if you’re ready for the answer.

Paranoid: You probably think I don’t know the answer, do you?

Procrastination: I’ll tell you tomorrow.

Repetitive: I’ll tell you the answer. I’ll tell you the answer.

Self-Centered: Well, I know the answer, that’s all that matters.

Snobby: Uh, excuse me!

Suspicious: Why are you asking me all these questions?

Each of the following clues refers to a word that begins with “ten.” For example if the clue is “a game played with rackets,” the answer would be “TENnis.”So, can you score a perfect TEN (I bet if you play close atTENtion, you can)?

1. Unsubstantial 2. Delicate or gentle 3. A sinew4. Persistence and determination5. Capable of being stretched6. Between the bass and alto7. Stretched tight (or stuck in traffic and late

for a meeting)8. Temporary dwelling9. An opinion held to be true. 10. Inclination

A PERFECT TEN

Answers1. Tenuous 2. Tender3. Tendon4. Tenacity5. Tensile6. Tenor7. Tense 8. Tent9. Tenet10. Tendency

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Answer to riddle:Johnny (duh!) GOt fuNNy? Let the Commissioner decide.

Send your stuff to [email protected]

ANSWERS1. Wow! Starting off with a trick question. The

game will be played in Met Life Stadium which is in New Jersey. So “B” is the right answer. But many of the events surrounding the games will be held in New York City (how’s that for living in our shadow, Jersey?), so if you answered “A,” don’t beat yourself up over it.

2. B- Two sets of brothers have played in the same Super Bowl but were on the same team. The Blackwoods with the Dolphins in ‘82and ‘84, and the Griffins with the Bengals in 82.

3. D-Jerry Rice had 215 yards on 11 catches for San Francisco in 1989.

4. B-Joe Namath famously guaranteed his Jets would beat the heavily favored Colts one week be-fore the big game.

5. D-Miami has played host to ten Super Bowls.6. C-Don Shula has been to the Super Bowl six

times as a head coach, once with the Baltimore Colts and five times with the Miami Dolphins.

7. D- The Pittsburgh Steelers have won 6 Su-per Bowls. The Dallas Cowboys and the San Fran-cisco 49ers have each won 5.

8. D-In 1970, the championship trophy was re-named the Vince Lombardi Trophy, in memory of legendary Green Bay Packers head coach Vince Lombardi. It is created by Tiffany & Co. and is val-ued at $50,000—a purely silver trophy.

Answer Key:5-7 correct: Congratulations!! You win tickets

to the big game. Just go to the Superdome in New Orleans and wait outside Gate 83. We will meet you there.

3-5 correct: Congratulations!! You win tickets to the big game. Just go to MetLife Stadium and wait outside Gate 83. We will meet you there.

0-2 correct: See question #7 answer C. It sums you up to a tee.

1. Where will the 2014 Super Bowl be held?a. New Yorkb. New Jerseyc. Miamid. Dallas

2. Call it what you want, the “Harbaugh Bowl,” or the “Bro Bowl”—is this the first time two brothers are in the same Super Bowl? (Just in case you haven’t heard a thousand times already—the head coaches of the 49ers and the Ravens are brothers...go ahead, it’s okay to weep.)

a. Yesb. No

3. Who holds the Super Bowl record for the most yards receiving in one game?

a. Michael Irvinb. Rickey Sandersc. Lynn Swannd. Jerry Rice

4. Which NFL player guaranteed his team would win Super Bowl III the week before the big game?

a. Don Shulab. Joe Namathc. Johnny Unitasd. Earl Morrall

5. Which city has hosted the most Super Bowls?a. Los Angelesb. San Diego

c. New Orleansd. Miami

6. Which head coach has taken his team to the

Super Bowl the most times?

a. Bud Grant

b. Marv Levy

c. Don Shulad. Tom Landry

7. Which team won the most Super Bowls?

a. Patriotsb. Jets (“We are going to win next

year guaranteed...trust me…we are go-ing to be scary.” Settle down, Rex.)

c. Cowboysd. Steelers

8. The winning Super Bowl team gets the following trophy:

a. NFL Championship Trophyb. John Madden Trophyc. Uhavenoclueaboutfootball Trophyd. Vince Lombardi Trophy

SUPER BOWLtrivia

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Compiled by Nate Davis

Notable Quotes

“Say What?”“Uh...it’s your world, man.”

- President Obama to LeBron James this week when the Miami Heat were at the White House

to celebrate their 2012 Championship victory and LeBron asked the President

whether he should say a few words

“The Pentagon has allowed women to serve in combat. Yeah, the hope is that we can now finally defeat the Taliban by giving them the silent treatment.”

- Conan O’Brien

“Those crazy crackers on the right, like if they start with their very hateful language, that is going to kill them.”

- MSNBC Contributor Karen Finney discussing the “negative tone” of the Republican Party

“In a big meeting of the Republican National Committee, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal told the GOP to ‘stop being the stupid party.’ Then Texas Governor Rick Perry gave the re-buttal.”

- Jay Leno

“I think the President understands the Consti-tution enough to know that he would prefer a different type of constitution. [Supreme Court Justice] Ginsberg said she admired the South African Constitution. So, I think that’s more of where the President is coming from. They would rather have positive rights, enumerat-ed, that everyone has the right to water, hous-ing, haircuts, you name it.”

- Rand Paul

“The problem won’t be solved unless you let them hurry up and die.”

- Japan’s finance minister discussing what to do about old people whose medical care

places financial burdens on the country

“Joe Biden made another one of his famous gaffes on camera Monday, saying he was proud to be president of the United States. I guess he forgot he wasn’t at home standing in front of the bathroom mirror.”

- Jay Leno

“The truth is that most of the big issues that are going to make a difference in the life of this country for the next thirty or forty years are complicated and require tough decisions, but

are not rocket science.... So the question is not, do we have policies that might work? It is, can we mobilize the political will to act?...If a Re-publican member of Congress is not punished on Fox News or by Rush Limbaugh for working with a Democrat on a bill of common interest, then you’ll see more of them doing it.”

- Barack Obama in an interview with The New Republic

“It’s dead, dead, dead.”- Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia explaining

that judges should judicially legislate changes to the Constitution as it must be maintained

in its original form

“I’ve got a simple idea: Let’s give up on the Constitution. I know, it sounds radical, but it’s really not. Constitutional disobedience is as American as apple pie. For example, most of our greatest Presidents – Jefferson, Lincoln, Wilson, and both Roosevelts – had doubts about the Constitution, and many of them dis-obeyed it when it got in their way. To be clear, I don’t think we should give up on everything in the Constitution. The Constitution has many important and inspiring provisions, but we should obey these because they are important and inspiring, not because a bunch of people who are now long-dead favored them two cen-turies ago.”

- Georgetown law professor Louis Michael Seidman in a CBS News segment titled,

“Let’s Give Up on the Constitution.”

“The CEO of Whole Foods is criticizing Obam-acare, once again calling it fascism. He did this before when he called it socialism. And he said the problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people’s money. As opposed to shopping at Whole Foods, where you even-tually run out of your own money.”

- Jay Leno

“I need you in the game. With officers laid off and furloughed, simply calling 911 and wait-ing is no longer your best option. You can beg for mercy from a violent criminal, hide under the bed, or you can fight back. Consider taking a certified safety course in handling a firearm so you can defend yourself until we get there.”

- Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke Jr. in a 30 second ad

“I’m a big football fan, but I have to tell you if I had a son, I’d have to think long and hard be-fore I let him play football. I think that those of us who love the sport are going to have to wrestle with the fact that it will probably change gradually to try to reduce some of the violence.”

- President Obama weighing on the prevalent discussion of the dangers of professional football

“Well, I have a four-month, almost five-month-old son, Jack Harbaugh, and if Presi-dent Obama feels that way, then there will be a little bit less competition for Jack Harbaugh when he gets old.”

- Jim Harbaugh, head coach of the 49ers

“(Obama) knows that we’re not going to play ‘gotcha’ with him, that we’re not going to go out of our way to make him look bad or stu-pid.”

- Steve Kroft explaining why President Obama likes to appear on 60 Minutes

“Don’t Honk.” - Signs in NY City that the Department of

Transportation is removing from all locations

“Yesterday House Speaker John Boehner said that President Obama’s focus is to annihilate the Republican Party. Do the Republicans look like they need help from President Obama?”

- Jay Leno

“We will look forward to interrogating him at his hearing…mercilessly. We will bring back—for the only time—waterboarding to get the truth out him.”

- Senator John McCain joking about John Kerry’s Senate confirmation hearings

to be Secretary of State

“Video game-maker Atari has filed for bank-ruptcy. Atari fans are so upset they’re organiz-ing a massive letter-writing campaign to Presi-dent Reagan.”

- Conan O’Brien

“Women serving in the United States military will now be serving in combat. Finally there will be somebody in the tank who will stop and ask for directions.”

- David Letterman

31The Jew

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Global233 Dead in Tragic Fire at Nightclub in BrazilExcitement turned to tragedy after a

fire raced through a packed nightclub in Southern Brazil; at least 233 people were declared dead. The cause of the fire is un-der investigation, but officials believe it was started by a flare lit by a band member which then quickly spread. Patrons raced to leave the club but one of the exits was closed and some patrons did not know where the exits were located. Initially, bouncers at the bar thought that patrons were rushing to leave to skip out on their tabs and tried to thwart their efforts at es-caping death.

According to a security guard, the club was filled to capacity with 1,000-2,000 club-goers early Sunday morning. Police estimated that the crowd was made up of at least 900 patrons. At least 100 of those patrons were injured and hospitalized after the fire.

A survivor of the fire, Aline Santos Sil-va, described the chaos. ““It was really fast. There was a lot of smoke, really dark smoke. We were only able to get out quick-ly because we were in a VIP area close to the door.”

Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff cut short a visit to Chile and visited families of the victims and met with relatives of the injured at the hospital. She declared a national three-day mourning period for victims of the tragic fire.

North Korean Leaders Are Capable of

“Immortal Feats”According to the latest headline com-

ing out of North Korea, the dictatorship’s leaders are “peerlessly great” and capable of “immortal feats.” Meanwhile the media in North Korea publishes reports on how the Americans are “imperialists” who use “brigand’s logic” and critics are just “rats” scurrying about in a ditch.

The state-controlled media has long been known for its flowery exaggerations,

but since the death of Kim Jong Il, the press being released there makes it almost impossible not to laugh.

The KCNA’s latest statement hailed its recent satellite launch as a demonstra-tion of its “space science and technolo-gy and its overall national power.” This “stark fact” was “favored by the world.” No matter that the United Nations Security Council had agreed to a resolution to sanc-tion North Korea over the launch, which is feared was actually a test of long-range missile technology.

This claim was simply the “brigandish logic” of the U.S., and the Security Coun-cil was nothing more than “a marionette.” But, again, there is really no need for North Koreans to worry; their country is “a political, ideological and military giant” run by “peerlessly great persons of [the sa-cred] Mt. Paektu.”

Other statistics being reported by the media in North Korea about their deceased fearless leader Kim Jong Il are even more “impressive.” They include him scoring eleven holes-in-one in his first ever round of golf, directing action movies, writing operas and piloting jet fighters.

I don’t know how he did it all… and still had time to oppress an entire country.

Thousands Expected to Flee to UK In 2014 for Job Opportunities Although we just started 2013, some

are already looking at 2014 for better jobs and it looks like England is the place to go. The UK has plans to relax the employment restrictions on December 31, 2013 which will likely result in an influx of Romanians and Bulgarians into Britain in search of better job opportunities.

The Department of Work and Pensions confirmed that visitors from the European Economic Area who demonstrate that they “have or retain worker status may be able to claim income-based jobseekers’ allow-ance, income support, housing benefit, council tax benefit, income-related em-ployment and support allowance, and state

pension credit. We are obliged under EU law to pay some income-related benefits to EEA workers, self-employed people and jobseekers,” said a spokesman.

The new law will be effective January 1, 2014. Some predict that for the next five years there may be as many as 70,000 peo-ple immigrating to the UK.

Once immigrants get hired and become an employee of the country, they become eligible for a host of other income-related benefits far more generous than anything their home countries offer. Access to wel-fare payments in Britain is easier than in either Germany or France, which will be relaxing work restrictions at the same time. Job agencies are reporting that they have an overwhelming number of applicants for 2014. Some agencies have stopped accept-ing applications since their waiting lists are too long.

Minimum wage in the UK is £6.19 ($9.72) per hour. Meanwhile, the aver-age weekly wage in Bulgaria is £63.50 ($99.67) and £86 ($134.99) in Romania.

More than 40% of France’s Population Believe

Jews Have “Too Much Power in Business”

January 27th was the International Day for Countering Anti-Semitism. Prior to that day, the World Zionist Organization produced a survey in France on anti-Sem-itism and the public’s perception on Jews and Israel. According to Jewish Agency Chairman Natan Sharansky, “2012 saw an increase in anti-Semitic expressions due to anti-Semitic parties’ rise to power in different countries and the growth in acts of violence motivated by anti-Semitism. However, the past year saw a decline in the battle against the State of Israel’s le-gitimacy.”

In fact, more than 40% of France’s population believes that Jews have “too much power in the business world.” 47% think that French Jews are “more loyal to Israel than to the country they live in.” 19% of young men up to the age of 24 have negative sentiments towards the Jews of France, while 43% of people with high-er education expressed positive feelings towards them.

The survey further reveals that 54% of France’s residents, mainly academics with a high income, believe that acts of violence stem mainly from anti-Jewish sentiments rather than from an anti-Israel stance.

According to Yaakov Haguel, head of the WZO’s Department for Countering Anti-Semitism, “There has recently been a sharp rise by dozens of percentage points in anti-Semitic expressions and incidents

in France. The entire world must wake up and fight the expressions of hatred and an-ti-Semitism which cause hundreds of thou-sands of Jews to live in fear.”

Thai Activist Sentenced to Prison

As American citizens, we take our freedom of expression rights for granted. Around the world, people have been jailed or even killed for saying what is consid-ered to be the wrong things. In Thailand, for example, the lese majeste laws speak about the crime against violating the mon-archy. One of the aspects of the law states, “Whoever defames, insults or threatens the King, Queen, the Heir-apparent or the Re-gent, shall be punished with imprisonment of three to fifteen years.” The law, though, does not define what exactly defamation or an insult to the monarchy is. Recently, rights groups have tried their hardest to procure freedom for Somyot Pruksakasem-suk. The Thai labor rights activist has been jailed since 2011. Much of the case against the crusader was overshadowed by the harsh nature of Thailand’s lese majeste laws, which have been criticized for vio-lating the freedom of speech.

The articles in question that Somyot was under investigation for were published under pseudonyms in Somyot’s now-de-funct Voice of Taksin magazine, which he launched in 2009 to compile political news and anti-establishment articles from writ-ers and contributors. Judges determined that both articles in question contained content that defamed the royal family and since Somyot, as a veteran editor, knew the articles and chose to print the stories any-way, he deserved ten years in prison.

Somyot said he plans to appeal the ver-dict but has no intention of seeking a royal pardon. He was arrested a year after his articles were published in 2010.

Egypt Football Verdict Sparks Violence

Although Egyptian judges handed down harsh sentences to those involved in last year’s deadly riots, very recently it

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seems like the public still hasn’t learned… Judge Sobhi Abdel Meguid read

out his verdict convicting 21 of 74 de-fendants to death in a 2012 Port Said football stadium riot that killed 74 peo-ple on Saturday. Family members of those killed in the stampede interrupt-ed sentencing to applaud the verdict.

But that did not end the violence. Clashes erupted on Saturday between rel-atives of those sentenced to death and po-lice guarding the prison where those con-victed are being held. The violence spread with reports of rival groups of football fans firing live rounds at each other and police. Reinforcements from Egypt’s Second Army were ordered into the city to prevent

further clashes and help restore order in the region. A curfew was being imposed to calm the situation. There were rumors that a group of fans were attempting to block the city’s main railway station.

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi was forced to cancel a pre-planned trip to Ethiopia and held an emergency meeting with his security cabinet to discuss the vio-lence popping up across the country.

France’s Richest Man Moves to Belgium

Bernard Arnault has officially moved to Belgium and his multi-billion dollar for-tune moved along with him. His problem is solved. He will not be required to pay the new socialist super-tax of his native country, France.

Socialist President Francois Hollande has imposed a 75% income tax rate on the mega-rich and this has not made the wealthy too happy.

Arnault insists that he only moved his cash and assets for “family inheritance rea-sons.” Mr. Arnault applied for a Belgian passport last year, just after the Socialists won elections in France. The billionaire made his fortune off luxury brands like Louis Vuitton, Christian Dior, Guerlain, Moet & Chandon champagne, and Hen-nessy cognac. He owns several homes around the world.

Belgium’s tax laws are more lax than France. Recently, their inheritance tax was raised three percent, compared to11 percent in France. There is no wealth tax in Belgium either.

Arnault is still awaiting official word on his citizenship. The Belgian Office of Foreigners has suggested it might deny Mr. Arnault’s request for a passport, but the fi-nal decision will be taken by the Brussels

parliament.

Google Earth Exposes North Korea’s Secret

Prison Camps

Human rights activists are turning to Google Earth to identify the vast network of prison camps that garnish the North Korean countryside. It is believed that ap-proximately 200,000 people are being held hostile in the camps. Rights groups are pressuring the United Nation’s high com-missioner for human rights to open an in-ternational investigation into Pyongyang’s

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“deplorable” record on its citizens’ rights.North Korea insists that the camps do

not exist and are merely foreign propagan-da, but thanks to the brilliance of high-res-olution images from outer space that claim has been almost entirely disproved. On January 18, the North Korean Economy Watch website announced that a new camp had been identified alongside an exist-ing detention facility in Kaechon, South Pyongan Province. Using newly provided Google Earth images, analyst Curtis Mel-vin was able to see that in fact there is a new camp site alongside Camp 14 and has a perimeter fence that stretches nearly 13 miles. The camp has maximum security with two checkpoints along the fence and six guard posts. The facility had to have been built since December 2006 which is the last time the images of the region were released.

It is extremely unusual for prisoners to escape successfully from prison camps. From the mere few who manage to escape, it is almost unheard of that they reach free-dom outside the country’s borders. A failed attempt to escape results in execution.

The few who have made that incredi-ble escape tell stories of unsettling torture and horrifying suffering. Inmates can be imprisoned for life, along with three gen-erations of their families, for anything

deemed to be critical of the regime. They are forced to survive by eating rats and picking corn kernels out of animal waste.

A new report by the National Human Rights Commission suggests some in-mates were imprisoned for attempting to flee the country in search of food or work. Others were detained after being over-heard praising South Korea.

Men, women, and children are re-quired to work for up to 16 hours a day in dangerous conditions, often in mines or logging camps. Shin Dong-hyuk is a North Korean man who managed to escape from Camp 14 and leave the country. His story of struggle is told in the book, Escape from Camp 14. As people living in the United States, it is hard to empathize with the pain, suffering and madness of living in North Korea. The fear, slave mentali-ty and selfishness that North Koreans feel are part and parcel of the regime. The fear of execution is constant; parents will tell authorities about their children’s “crimes” in order to procure better entitlements for themselves. There is no such thing as love between parent and child in these camps—the children live in bunkers and barely know their parents.

Activists say that as many as 40 per-cent of inmates die of malnutrition, while others succumb to disease, violence, tor-

ture, abuse by the guards, or are worked to death.

Dubai to Build World’s Largest Underwater Hotel

Dubai is renowned for taking on elab-orate and extravagant projects. It is home to the world’s largest mall and the world’s tallest building and will soon be home to the world’s largest underwater hotel.

Polish company Deep Ocean Technol-ogy (DOT) designed The Water Discus Hotel with the help of Swiss firm BIG InvestConsult AG. The hotel will be con-structed with two discs: one suspended above water and the other extending un-derwater. The discs will be connected by five legs, and a vertical shaft in the cen-ter will house stairs and an elevator. The underwater portion will be around 32 feet beneath sea surface. It will have 21 double occupancy rooms, a dive center, and a bar. The décor of each room has been designed to ‘integrate with the underwater world as closely as possible.’

The modular design of the hotel has been designed in a unique way so that if need be, it can be transferred to a different location in case of environmental or eco-nomic concerns. The surface discs are de-tachable from the main structure and have been designed to be buoyant should any natural disaster strike.

Bogdan Gutkowski, President of BIG, believes that the project will benefit the tourism industry in Dubai. “Water Discus Hotel project opens many new fields of de-velopment for the hotel and tourism sector, housing and city sector in the coastal off-shore areas, as well as new opportunities for ecology support by creation of new un-derwater ecosystems and activities on un-derwater world protection,” he told World Architecture News.

“Additionally we would like to create here in the UAE the International Environ-mental Program and Center of the Under-water World Protection – with Water Dis-cus Hotel as a laboratory tool for oceans and seas environment protection and re-search.”

Now when you go on vacation you can say you were sleeping with the fishes…and lived to talk about it!

Scanning the Sidewalks in Rio

De JaneiroRio de Janeiro, Brazil is a city that

receives throngs of tourists each year—about 2 million. Their new plan to embed bar codes into sidewalks mixes technolo-gy with tradition to provide information to tourists.

The first two-dimensional bar code was installed on Friday into the mosaic sidewalks at Arpoador, a massive boul-der that rises at the end of Ipanema beach. The image was implanted into the side-walk with the same black and white stones that decorate sidewalks around the city. Tourists need to download an app to their smartphones and snap a photo of the QR code. The app will read the code and direct tourists to a website that will give them a map of the area along with all the informa-tion of the landmark in three languages—Portuguese, Spanish or English.

At Arpoador, a tourist will learn that the spot gets big waves, making it a hot spot for surfing and giving the 500-meter beach nearby the name of “Praia do Dia-bo,” or Devil’s Beach. They could also find out that the rock is called Arpoador because fishermen once harpooned whales off the shore.

The city’s plan is to install 30 of these nifty barcodes at beaches, vistas, and his-toric sites throughout.

That’s bringing tourism to a whole new level!v

IsraelKever Yosef

Desecrated Again

A group of Israelis visiting the kever of Yosef in the Palestinian-controlled town of Nablus (Shechem) on Wednesday were shocked to find the holy landmark severe-ly desecrated. Sefarim were burned, furni-ture smashed, the smell of urine was over-whelming, and there was obvious evidence of an attempt to burn down the structure.

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Tu B'Shvat Eve TripsTu B'Shvat Eve Trips ...wiTh EvE harow...wiTh EvE harow

Yesodot-Netzer Hazani; the indomitable Anita Tucker, winner of Moskowitz Prize for Zionism. Netiv Ha'asara; a Gush Katif farmer's new hothouse and a northern Gaza view. Cafe Cafe in Sderot for a mehadrin dairy lunch. The Black Arrow Memorial, symbol of the region's 'battle heritage'. The 5th century synagogue mosaic at Hurvat Maon. South to Yamit's Steel Memorial Tower alongside Holot Halutza's Gush Katif replants; the farms, homes and people of Nave and Bnai Netzarim. Tomatoes in the sand—again; inspiration and personal sacrifice in the air—still.

rEplanTEd

wEd January 23/12 Shvat ThurS January 24/13 Shvat

inThE

wESTErn nEgEv

Tapuach; where 4 legged defenders of the Land are bred and trained. Itamar; to Zimmerman's organic farm for jams and cheeses in Gav HaHar. Yitzhar; HaCohen's Flour Mill and a luscious lunch at Savta Chana's warm home. Tel Aufer; the Ofra of Gideon the Judge? Shilo; Meshek Achiya, because olive oil is only part of the story.Ending our day with Amichai Luria at his award winning Shilo Winery.

ThE Shomron iS grEEn again

Now, more than ever, it’s time to join us.

Enrich your Tu B'Shvat Seder - and your Spirit.

Winter Break 2013

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We leave from the Liberty Bell Parking lot Jan 23: promptly at 8:15am, return approximately 7pm.Jan 24: promptly at 8:30am, return approximately 6pm.

Cost per day including lunch: $65/adult $55/student in Israel or child under 12.

For reservatIons & Further InFormatIon vIsIt www.oneisraelfund.org/daytrips

or send email to [email protected]: Zahava englard 052.484.6034 In US: ruthie Kohn 516.239.9202 x10

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“Only barbarians would do horrible things like this to such a holy site,” local Jewish leader Gershon Mesika said. “Isra-el can no longer allow its holy places to be freely desecrated.”

Kever Yosef is located on the out-skirts of Nablus, a large Arab-dominated town that occupies the location of biblical Shechem. Until the outbreak of the Sec-ond Intifada in 2000, Israel maintained an IDF-protected enclave around the tomb, allowing Israelis to freely visit.

In late 2000, the tomb was besieged by Palestinian mobs and an IDF soldier was

killed defending the site. Israel then agreed to surrender control to the Palestinian Au-thority with guarantees that the holy place be protected. Just a couple hours after Is-rael evacuated, a Palestinian mob was per-mitted to storm and raze the site.

Jewish groups periodically visit the site under army protection, and have re-stored much of the damage, but the tomb is regularly desecrated by local Palestinians.

British Lawmaker Says Jews Inflict

Daily Atrocities on Arabs in Gaza

A British lawmaker, David Ward, ac-cused “the Jews” of “inflicting atrocities on Palestinians on a daily basis.” And yet, in a post on his website on Friday, Liberal Democrat David Ward said he had signed a book in Britain’s House of Commons “honoring those who died during the Ho-locaust.” He also used the blog to criticize Israel’s treatment of Palestinian Authority

Arabs, drawing parallels with the mass murder of Jews in World War II. “Having visited Auschwitz twice... I am saddened that the Jews, who suffered unbelievable levels of persecution during the Holocaust, could within a few years of liberation from the death camps be inflicting atrocities on Palestinians in the new State of Isra-el and continue to do so on a daily basis in the West Bank and Gaza,” he wrote.

The comments came ahead of Sunday’s Holocaust Memorial Day, which marks the 68th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz by Soviet troops. The remarks were con-demned by the Liberal Democrats who said the politician’s use of language was “unacceptable.”

Obviously, this false and anti-Semitic comment generated an uproar of disap-proval so Ward made a feeble attempt at an apology. Ward, who represents Bradford East, in northern England, defended the comments at the time, saying he had been to Gaza and witnessed “what is, in effect, apartheid.”

On Saturday, he published a statement on his website saying: “My criticisms of actions since 1948 in the Palestinian ter-ritories in the name of the State of Israel remain as strong as ever.” He continued, “In my comments this week I was trying to make clear that everybody needs to learn the lessons of the Holocaust. I never for a moment intended to criticize or offend the Jewish people as a whole, either as a race or as a people of faith, and apologize sincerely for the unintended offense which my words caused.”

Karen Pollock, chief executive of the Holocaust Educational Trust, said the com-ments were “sickening and unacceptable.”

“I am deeply saddened that at this som-ber time, when we remember those who were murdered by the Nazis, Mr. Ward has deliberately abused the memory of the Holocaust causing deep pain and offence,” she said.

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Hezbollah Uses Israeli Elections to Inspire Resistance

Israel’s close elections have inspired Hezbollah. The chief of the terrorist orga-nization, Hassan Nasrallah, claims that the results of the election prove that Netanya-hu is not providing strong leadership since the country was so divided in its vote. He is urging Palestinians to take advantage of this weakness and to increase their resistance.

He said that Israel is facing a “crisis of leadership.” “Israel doesn’t have a strong ruling party, the way [Prime Minister Bin-yamin] Netanyahu aspired for when he said Israel needs a strong party to lead it,” Nasrallah said. “The elections did not pro-duce a strong party to lead this entity and now it is without a strong central leader-ship,” he added. Nasrallah referred to for-mer prime minister Ariel Sharon as “the last king of Israel.”

Nasrallah’s rhetoric echoed comments made by his deputy, Naim Qassem, on Thursday. “Israel held polls and some waited to see who would win ... but in Hezbollah we did not wait for results be-cause we believe Israel has entered the stage of defeats and the results today show the defects [that emerged] after the July 2006 war ... and the Gaza war,” The Leba-nese Daily Star quoted Qassem as saying. “This means that the Israeli project is grad-ually descending into the abyss, and here we have to stay steadfast to face the rem-nants of this project,” he added.

Our enemies are always ready to pounce.

U.S. Pressures Israel to Resume Peace Talks

The U.S. is still hoping and demand-ing that Israel cooperate in talks about the two-state solution. They understand the agreement must wait until Israel forms a

coalition. But that doesn’t mean they will stop sending memos.

U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland stressed on Friday that the U.S. intended to work on bringing the Israelis and the Palestinians back to the ne-gotiating table. “We are at the stage now… where we’re going to have to wait and see what the makeup of the Israeli government is going to be and how it approaches the longstanding critical issues that we share,” Nuland said. “We know where we want to go and we know where we believe they also want to go. If we can be helpful, we will continue to try.”

Nuland stated, “Israel continues to be a democratic beacon out there in the world and to have a very vibrant system and pro-cess for ensuring that the people’s voices are heard in the political process. But how that’s going to translate in terms of either government formation or government pol-icy,” she added, “is to be determined.”

Future U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry chimed in, saying, “My hope is that perhaps this can be a moment where we can renew some kind of effort to get the parties into a discussion to have a different track than we have been on over the last couple of years.” Kerry insists that Presi-dent Barack Obama is determined to help resolve the conflict and grant Israel the se-curity it deserves and the Palestinians the independence they deserve.

Jordan’s King Abdullah reflected U.S. sentiments on Friday, saying “If we’re not too late ... the two-state solution will only last as long as Obama’s term; if it doesn’t happen by then, I don’t think it will hap-pen.” Speaking in front of the World Eco-nomic Forum in Davos, Abdullah said that in order to achieve security in the Middle East, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict must end and that regardless of Israel’s election results, peace and security must be a top priority for Israelis.

Hey America! Ever heard of the ex-pression, “Easier said than done?”

Christian Pastor: “Israel is the Safest Place on Earth”

Apostolate Renê Terra Nova, the head of the International Restoration Ministries in Manaus, Brazil, has brought thousands of Christians to Israel. He has been com-ing to Israel since 1991 and says that his followers “leave this country in love and become ambassadors of Israel.”

Terra Nova, who is the leader of one of the largest Evangelical communities in South America, sat down with The Jerusa-lem Post to explain his love with the Holy Land. The pastor explained that after hear-ing a lecture many years ago on the theo-logical importance of the Jews and Israel he

became convinced that the Jewish commu-nity has “a fundamental role on this planet.”

After his first visit to Israel, Terra Nova began bringing groups of pilgrims to the country. “First of all, I became a Joshua, like in the biblical account. I came to know the land and I came through the land and I discovered that the fruits of the land were very good,” he said. “Israel is the safest place on earth.”

By 2008, he said, he was leading as many as 2,500 people on pilgrimages. The other pastors in his extensive network also began leading groups. “It is difficult to measure how many people I have brought here,” he said. “All of the pastors and apostles under me also bring thousands of

people to Israel. My followers talk about Israel with a lot of love and they have a passion for the Holy Land and the Jewish people.”

The Evangelical community, he con-tinued, is “willing to be an army to fight for Israel.”

Like many Christian Zionist leaders around the globe, Terra Nova is hawkish on issues related to the peace process and territorial concessions. Israel has enemies, he ventured, in order to give the Jewish people an opportunity to control more land. “Every war is a seed for a new ter-ritory,” he believes. He has believes that most Brazilians are supporters of Israel.

Israel’s Human Rights Record “Concerns” UK Britain has included Israel, the only

true democracy in the Middle East, on a list of 28 countries whose human rights re-cord is of “concern.”

In a quarterly report published on Thursday, Israel sits in the company of Afghanistan, Belarus, Iran and Zimbabwe – countries the foreign office considers to

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have a human rights record “of particular concern.” The Palestinian Authority is also included on the list although it is noted that Israel’s refusal to deliver Palestinian customs revenue has undermined the Pal-estinian leadership’s ability to enforce law and order.

According to the report, the four-page entry on Israel focuses on November’s Op-eration Pillar of Defense in Gaza and re-cently announced plans to expand Israel’s settler presence in the West Bank.

About a month ago, Human Rights Watch published a report saying Palestin-ian armed groups had violated the laws of war during the November conflict by launching hundreds of rockets toward population centers in Israel. According to the IDF, some 1,500 rockets were fired at Israel during Operation Pillar of Defense. At least 800 struck Israel, including 60 that hit populated areas.

NationalMillions Say “Aloha

Hawaii!”

2012 was a record year for Hawaii. The land of hula dancing and volcanoes received more visitors than ever before. Tourism officials suspect that the record high number is accredited to an increase in flights and a weaker dollar.

Almost 8 million people visited the Aloha State last year, more than a third of a million more than the previous record set in 2006 and a rise of 9.6 percent on 2011, the Hawaii Tourism Authority said. The surge in visitors collectively spent a record $14.3 billion, according to preliminary sta-tistics.

The tropical island is a vacation des-tination for many Americans (including the First Family) and Japanese tourists. Japanese tourists account for nearly 17% percent of the rise, about 1.5 million of the state’s visitors.

The state’s New Year’s resolution for 2013 is to attract 8.2 million visitors, Mike McCartney, president & CEO Hawaii Tourism Authority, said in a statement.

Aloha! Count me in! I’ll start packing my grass skirt and practice the hula.

Could the New Beverage

Law Be Racist?

Opponents of the city’s limit on the size of sugary drinks are raising questions of racial fairness alongside other com-plaints as the novel restriction faces a court test. The NAACP’s New York State branch and the Hispanic Federation have joined forced with beverage makers and sellers in trying to stop the new law that will limit the size of sugary drinks. The law is set to take effect March 12.

Critics are calling the law an incon-sistent and undemocratic regulation. City officials and health experts defend it as an effective and direct attempt to fight obesi-ty. With a hearing set for Wednesday, the issue is complicated for the minority ad-vocates. Obesity rates among blacks and Hispanics are higher than the national av-erage, according to the Federal Centers for Disease Control. The group says in court papers that they’re concerned about the discrepancy, but the soda rule will unduly harm minority businesses and “freedom of choice in low-income communities.”

The law was proposed by Mayor Mi-chael Bloomberg’s administration as the latest healthy-eating initiative. The bever-age rule bans sellers from selling high-sug-ar drinks in cups or containers bigger than 16 ounces. Violations of the law can bring $200 in fines. Sellers will have a short grace period and the city will not impose the fines until June.

The American Beverage Association and other groups, including movie theater owners and Korean grocers, sued. They argue that the first-of-its-kind restriction should have gone before the elected City Council instead of being approved by the Bloomberg-appointed health board.

Five City Council members reverber-ate that view in a court filing, saying the Council is “the proper forum for balanc-ing the city’s myriad interests in matters of public health.” The Bloomberg admin-istration counters that the health board, made up of doctors and other health pro-fessionals, has the “specialized expertise” needed to make the call on limiting cola sizes.

The suit also argues the rule is unfair since alcohol, unsweetened juice, and milk-based drinks are excluded, as are su-permarkets and many convenience stores

including 7-Eleven, home of the Big Gulp. The NAACP and the Hispanic Federation, a network of 100 northeastern groups, say minority-owned delis and corner stores will end up at a disadvantage compared to grocery chains. “This sweeping regulation will no doubt burden and disproportional-ly impact minority-owned businesses at a time when these businesses can least af-ford it,” they said in court papers. Instead, they maintain that the city should focus instead on increasing physical education in schools.

It seems that this new soda law is not really black and white.

Moving on UpAmericans are on the move. And it

seems like the hot spots are the places to be.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, more than 36 million people relocated in 2012, an increase from 2011’s record low mover rate of 35.1 million. And while many of those stayed within the same county, plenty of them packed their bags and moved to a different state.

Data from Penske Truck Rental, a glob-al transportation services provider, showed that warmer climates were the biggest im-petus to move last year. Check out where Americans moved in 2012.

Number ten on the list is Sarasota, Florida. Here Americans can buy a home for just $165K and enjoy white sand and calm blue waters. Charlotte, North Caroli-na, took the ninth spot. It’s a major finan-cial center and is home to NASCAR and great golf courses. Seattle, although not warm and sunny, has gorgeous mountain views and the famous fish market at Pike Place Market. Homes are a little more ex-pensive—around $363K—but it is a great place to find a job and enjoy life.

Denver, Colorado, came in at the sev-enth spot. If you’re a skier, it’s the dream place for you. Houston, Texas, has beau-tiful winters and amazing employment opportunities, although I will caution you not to move here if you don’t like the

heat. Chicago came in fifth on the list. The Windy City offers low-cost housing, great opportunities and a wonderful “big-town feel.” Mickey Mouse’s hometown, Orlando, Florida, is the fourth on the list. Homes are inexpensive here and it is home to more pro golfers than any other city in the world.

Phoenix, Arizona, is the perfect spot to revel in the sunny weather. Dallas, Texas came in at number two on the list and is home to great shopping, entertainment and good, ol’ Texas-style fun! Atlanta, Georgia is the number one place Americans moved to this year. The city has earned this honor for the third year in a row. Residents love the perks of being in a big city with warm, sunny weather. Homes are affordable and the people are fun-loving and kind.

Time to start packing.

Obesity Increases Risk of Death During Car Crash It seems that individuals suffering from

obesity are not only at greater risk for heart disease and other health-related problems but they also have an increased risk of death during car crashes, a new study sug-gests.

In the study, obese drivers (classified

as a person with a body mass index (BMI) between 30 and 35) were 20 percent more likely to die during a car crash compared to individuals that weigh within normal range. Morbidly obese individuals (those with a BMI of 40 and above) were 80 per-cent more likely to die in a car crash.

Researchers maintained their thesis af-ter accounting for other factors that could influence the risk of death in a car crash such as age, alcohol use, seat belt use, and whether or not the air bag deployed. A study published in 2010 found an in-creased risk of death during car crashes for people with a BMI over 35 and this study reaffirmed the findings of the previous study.

The new study analyzed information from 3,400 pairs of drivers (one from each vehicle) involved in a car crash between 1996 and 2008. To be included in the

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study, the drivers in the pair had to be driv-ing similarly sized cars. Because the study involved pairs of drivers, characteristics of the crash, such as the severity of the crash and how long it took for medical services to arrive on the scene, would be the same for each person in the pair. About 18 per-cent of those in the study were considered obese.

Since obese people are more likely to have medical conditions, such as car-diovascular disease, it increases their risk of dying during a car crash. Research-ers suggest changes in car design may be necessary to better protect obese drivers. One study found obese drivers traveled farther in their seats before their seat belts engaged during a crash compared to nor-mal-weight drivers. The delay in seat-belt activation was due to more soft tissue in the abdomen that prevents the belt from fitting close to the body.

Interestingly, being underweight also increased the risk of death, but this effect was only seen in men.

Living Long in North Dakota

Life expectancy is increasing nation-wide but some states are seeing a partic-ularly high number of people living to the age of 100.

Nationwide, the centenarian popula-tion (individuals who live until 100 or old-er) has grown 65.8 percent over the past three decades. In 1980, there were 32,194 people who were age 100 or older, and in 2010, that number jumped to 53,364, according to new Census Bureau data.

Here are certain common living con-ditions that centenarians share. For one, a large majority of the oldest U.S. citizens live in urban areas. “As age increases, the percentage living in urban areas also in-creases,” says Amy Symens Smith, chief of the age and special populations branch at the Census Bureau. About 85.7 percent of centenarians lived in urban areas in 2010.

“Living in the city, you have a lot more mental stimulation and the symphony and better doctors and hospitals and more so-cial networking,” says Gary Small, a pro-fessor on aging and director of the UCLA Longevity Center in Los Angeles. “There

are more resources, and there is better transportation.”

The national average of living to the ripe, old age of 100 is 1.73 per 10,000 people, while the West and South have be-low-average proportions of centenarians; the Northeast and Midwest have the high-est proportions of centenarians. “There’s a lot of stuff going on in local areas, includ-ing access to medical care, diet, exercise, the culture, risk-taking, and more smok-ing,” says Linda Waite, a sociology profes-sor and director of the Center on Aging at the University of Chicago. “People in the Northeast tend to be more highly educated, and education is associated with a longer life expectancy.”

The proportion of centenarians in the United States is smaller than that of many other developed countries. For example, in Sweden for every 10,000 people there are 1.92 centenarians, in the United Kingdom there are 1.95, and in France there are 2.70. Japan has 3.43 centenarians per 10,000 people, beating even our longest-lived state, North Dakota, which has 3.2 cente-narians per 10,000 people.

North Dakota is home to 221 cente-narians which make up 0.032 percent of the population. South Dakota had 240 centenarians in 2010, 0.03 percent of the population. Iowa has 0.028 percent of res-idents reaching the age of 100. Nebraska had 501 centenarians, which accounts for about 0.027 percent of the state’s popula-tion. Connecticut had 930, 0.026 percent of the population. While New York State has 4,605 centenarians, it is only 0.024 percent of the population. New York was followed by Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Minnesota, and Hawaii.

An Army Fit to Fight

It’s all been heard before. Women don’t have enough upper-body strength…they can’t run as fast…All the arguments against letting women serve in the mili-tary are being made once again as Defense Secretary Leon Panetta lifted restrictions

on women serving in direct combat roles.Experts on fitness and women in the

military say the past two decades have shown that being female is not the biggest barrier to serving on the front lines. But being fat is.

“I don’t think gender is a factor at all,” says retired Navy rear admiral Jamie Bar-nett, who is now at the Potomac Institute for Policy Studies. “I do think there are physical requirements and not all men or women will be able to meet those physi-cal requirements. Those physical require-ments should be tied specifically to mak-ing sure the job gets done.”

Each branch of the army—Air Force, Navy, Army and Marines—have specific requirements for physical fitness. All have a minimum standard, calculated using three exercises that include running, either pull-ups or push-ups, and sit-ups. In some cases, women’s requirements are lower but not in the Marines.

Barnett, a member of a group called “Mission: Readiness,” signed a report on the dangers posed by obesity to U.S. secu-rity. “Once you establish objective criteria for what the requirements are for a mili-tary job, then I say let women compete for those and let the best man or woman get

the position,” says Barnett, who served in Iraq and who was deputy commander of the Navy Expeditionary Combat Com-mand, with sailors serving in Iraq and Af-ghanistan. “I think what we’ll find is there will be a lot of women who will be able to meet even the hardest positions.”

Edward Archer, an exercise physiolo-gist at the University of South Carolina ex-plains that yes indeed, the average woman is weaker by nature and has less heart, lung and blood oxygen capacity than the aver-age man. “But an elite female athlete can outperform the average male soldier easily in many ways,” he adds. “We are too unfit to fight, is the term. We are definitely an unfit society,” Archer said. “They need ba-sic training to get ready for basic training. This is true of both males and females.”

“Already we see only one in four Americans between ages of 17 and 24 who can join the military,” Barnett said. “The single biggest reason is that they are over-weight.”

“My view is you can get the job done better if you can draw on the best talents that America has to offer, regardless of gender,” Barnett said. “If you have to be able to swim 3 miles in a certain amount of time, then it doesn’t matter what gender

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you are.”

Revenge for the Founder of Reddit

The hacker-activist group Anony-mous took responsibility for hijacking the US Sentencing Commission’s website to avenge the death of Aaron Swartz, an In-ternet activist who took his own life earlier this month.

The website of the commission, an in-dependent agency of the judicial branch, was taken over early Saturday and replaced with a message warning that when Swartz killed himself two weeks ago “a line was crossed.” The FBI is currently investigat-ing the incident. Hackers are threatening to publicize secret information that they ob-tained when infiltrating government com-puter systems.

Swartz helped create Reddit and RSS, which posted millions of court documents for free online. Officials say he helped ille-gally downloaded millions of academic ar-ticles from an online clearinghouse. Fami-ly and friends claim he killed himself after he was hounded by federal prosecutors.

The FBI’s Richard McFeely, executive assistant director of the Criminal, Cyber, Response, and Services Branch, said in a statement that “we were aware as soon as it happened and are handling it as a crim-inal investigation. We are always con-cerned when someone illegally accesses another person’s or government agency’s network.”

Trump Eyes The New York Times

It’s safe to assume that Donald Trump loves the spotlight. Over the years, he has made many attempts to get his name in the headlines of the very newspaper he wishes to buy.

Trump latest thrill is to find a way to create the news, literally. According to reliable sources, Trump has engaged in more than one meeting to discuss the pos-sibility of buying New York’s prestigious publication, The New York Times. The ex-act details still remain a mystery.

Experts say it is highly unlikely a deal will be reached since the Sulzberger fam-

ily, which controls the company’s voting shares will most probably not accept his offer. A spokesperson for Trump declined to comment as did a spokesman for the Times.

I love The Donald—he just loves to make news!

That’s OddOne Burger for the

Road…the Dusty Road

David Kime was one great guy. He loved Burger King so much that he treated all of his friends to Whopper Jr. burgers...at his own funeral.

To give him a fitting send-off at his fu-neral last weekend, David Kime’s funeral procession stopped at a Burger King where each vehicle in the funeral procession went through the drive thru for burgers. Kime’s daughter said the stop at the drive thru wasn’t a joke, rather it was a joyful way of honoring her father and the things that delighted him. “He lived a wonderful life and on his own terms,” she said.

According to his daughter, Kime con-sidered his kids to be health freaks because “we ate things that were green, like broc-coli.” Despite being a borderline diabetic and having a pacemaker fitted, her father had refused to change his diet, telling her: “I won’t live longer, it will just seem like it because I’ll be more miserable faster.”

Kime’s eating habits brought on his de-mise at the young age of 88 years old. He was a decorated World War II veteran.

Kime got one last burger, too, the York Daily Record reported. It was placed atop his coffin in the cemetery. Margaret Hess, who manages the Burger King frequented by Kime, stated, “It’s nice to know he was a loyal customer up until the end – the very end.”

Drunk and Dumb—a Crazy Combination

Early Saturday morning, Bryan Wend-ler, 30, was arrested for drunk driving after he was found passed out at the wheel of a Chevrolet Cavalier. The car was parked but its engine was still running in the middle of a Wisconsin road. He failed a

series of field sobriety tests and appeared “dazed and confused,” according to a Mar-athon County Sheriff’s Department report, which noted that a deputy spotted an un-opened six-pack of beer on the vehicle’s passenger seat.

This is not the first time Wendler has been caught driving drunk—he has run into law enforcement at least five times before while he was intoxicated, which makes his choice of wardrobe all the more strange.

When he was arrested, Wendler was wearing a shirt referencing drinking and a “free Breathalyzer test.” Apparently, he

did not take the shirt’s words too seriously or maybe he just can’t read after imbibing so much booze?!

Squatters Take Over $2.5M Boca Mansion

Andre Barbosa has been living in a lav-ish $2.5-million Boca Raton mansion for months. But it’s not his or maybe it is, de-pending on how you view the law.

A filing in Palm Beach County court on Friday names the 23-year-old Brazilian national and eight other unknown people as defendants for their attempt to stake a claim on the waterside property at 580 Golden Harbour Drive in Boca Raton.

Bank of America is currently claim-ing rightful ownership of the home. Bar-bosa’s soliciting a vague Florida real es-tate law and states that he legally owns a portion of the foreclosed property, a 7,522-square-foot, 5-bedroom home that features canal views and whose interi-or includes pillars, a curved staircase and marbled bath. The bank, though, claims that Barbosa is liable for more than $15,000 for breaking into the house.

Neighbors are not pleased with the presence of these squatters. “We’d be thrilled to get our street back the way it was,” said Yvonne Boice, who lives on the opposite side of the street from the fore-closed home.

The home had stood empty of own-ers for 18 months. Bank of America fore-closed on $2.5 million owed on the house and took possession of it in July, accord-ing to county records. Soon after that, Barbosa claimed “adverse possession” of the house. Adverse possession is a state law which allows someone to move into a property and claim the title, if they live there for a certain period of time.

Barbosa has remained elusive, howev-er. But someone posting under his name on Facebook shows a picture of two friends posing next to expensive sports cars. When police arrived at the house on De-cember 26, Barbosa presented them with the “adverse possession” paperwork.

Authorities suspect that it will take a few weeks of legal proceedings to actually eject the squatters from the property.

Hey, if you’re gonna take over some-one’s house, you might as well choose one with great showers and an amazing view.

Rare Silver Coin Sells for $10M

A 1794 silver dollar was auctioned off for a record $10 million at an auction last Thursday. Experts suspect that it was the

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first such coin struck by the U.S. Mint. The Flowing Hair Silver Dollar more than doubled the previous $4.1 million auction record for a coin set in 1999, auction house Stack’s Bowers Galleries said.

Legend Numismatics, a rare-coin firm based in New Jersey, bought the coin, which was the highlight of the evening sale in New York that fetched a total of $17.2 million.

“We felt in our heart that this would be the very first coin to exceed the $10 mil-lion barrier in auction and were in fact pre-pared to bid much high in order to acquire this unique piece of history,” the company said in a statement. The company said they have no plans of reselling the coin in the near future.

David Bowers, chairman emeritus of Stack’s Bowers Galleries, said, “It is the first American metal dollar struck and the finest known. You have these combina-tions coming together. No museum has an equal piece.”

The coin was part of the Cardinal Col-lection, amassed by the collector Martin Logies. Bowers described the collection as the “Old Masters” of coins struck during the earliest years of the U.S. Mint.

“I think it is extraordinary and I am very pleased that the first silver dollar is the first to top the $10 million threshold,” said Logies, who purchased the coin three years ago.

“We’re continually surprised by sur-prises,” Bowers said, adding there are several million coin collectors around the globe. “They want to collect coins for ap-preciation, art, rarity and beauty.”

The record-setting coin shows a profile of Miss Liberty facing right surrounded by stars representing each state in the union. The design was only used in 1794 and briefly the following year.

Tide Thieves on the LooseWe are told to lock our doors at night,

keep our jewelry in safe deposit boxes and store valuables in a safe. But we were nev-er told to hide our laundry detergent from thieves.

Retailers in Colorado are starting to keep their Tide laundry detergents under lock and key and are hiring undercover se-curity guards to patrol their aisles.

Recently, there has been an alarming increase in laundry detergent thieves. The Colorado Retail Council hopes to control future shoplifting of laundry detergent with these new measures. “It’s a very large problem that we have to spend a lot on and, unfortunately, that cost gets passed on to the costumer,” Chris Howes, presi-dent of the Colorado Retail Council, said.

Police in Colorado are searching for a man they believe has stolen more than $8,000 worth of Tide laundry detergent in the Ft. Lupton area in Weld County. Po-lice said the male suspect has been caught on surveillance videos from six different stores, stealing Tide and expensive face lotions.

Tide has become gold to shoplift-ers since it is easily recognized with its bright-orange container, easy to resell, and a necessary product in every home.

Could this be considered a case of money laundering?

Floor of Pennies Ryan Lange and Emily Belden want-

ed to revamp their bedroom but they couldn’t decide on the décor. Finally in-spiration struck. “We’d been looking up options and were thinking about being green when I said we should just tile the floor in pennies,” Lange, an entrepreneur explained.

Belden wasn’t as excited by the idea at first. “I came home one day and found a small corner was done, so I thought ‘I guess we’re doing it,’” she recalled.

That was the beginning of a four-month long project. The couple laid down a special glue to act as the grout and in-dividually placed down 59,670 pennies heads up across their 380 square foot bed-room.

They dubbed their nightly activity “pennying.” “Once we were halfway done, we were kind of over it, but I knew it was something that one day we could look back and laugh at it,” Lange said.

Once the floor was complete they sanded it down to a shiny copper sheen and cemented it with a clear coat as smooth as a sheet of glass. They spent close to $1,000 on the project, which made for a lot of trips back and forth to

the bank for more pennies. The bank tellers got involved. “Af-

ter we told them what we were up to they started tracking the project them-selves, and I was always passing my iPhone through the glass window to show them pictures,” Lange said. The couple created a blog called The-PennyFloor.com about the project.

Luckily, their flooring plan makes “cents”; they own their place and don’t rent it and so will be using their pennies for a while. Kind of makes me wonder why I put my money in a bank when I can just put it on the floor…

Crybaby CrookGenerally when there’s a holdup the man being held up gets emotional. In this story, the crook was the one who actually started crying. A man attempting to rob a Papa John’s pizza restaurant in Montana’s capital tried to get a little sympathy from the cashier he handed a note to. Reportedly, the man entered the restaurant just after midnight Monday and gave the cashier a note demanding money. As the employ-ee started to hand it over, the man dressed in a black hoodie with a red bandana covering his face broke into tears. He confessed he was doing the deed for his wife and child.“The clerk talked to him for a while,” Helena Police Chief Troy McGee said and eventually conclud-ed that some pizza, wings, and soda on the house was enough. When his order was ready he simply took the food and left. “The clerk handled it well,” McGee said. “You have to put yourself in his shoes in this situation. No one was hurt.”Police are still looking for the man so they can discuss the episode. He is described as 5-foot-9 with a slender build. It is unclear whether he will be charged with a crime. Perhaps the police just want to buy him supper.

Students Hand Over the Crown

Three Tennessee homecoming king nominees made a unanimous decision that no matter who won the coveted title, they would give the crown to a beloved student with a genetic condition.

Students Jesse Cooper, Drew Gibbs and Zeke Grissom were all nominated for homecoming king at Community High School’s basketball homecoming ceremo-ny. They collaborated and decided that whoever the winner was, they would turn over the honor to junior Scotty Maloney, who has Williams Syndrome, a neuro-logical disorder that inhibits learning and speech.

“I’ve been blessed with so many things,” Cooper told said. “I just wanted Scotty to experience something great in his high school days.” “He’s always hap-py, so he deserves some recognition for who he is,” Gibbs said.

In the end, Cooper actually won the popular vote for king, but when the offi-cial announcement was made at a Friday ceremony, the principal told the crowd what the nominees had decided to do.

“When they called [Scotty’s] name, his eyes got really big and I don’t know that he registered exactly what was hap-pening. He knew something was,” Malo-ney’s teacher Liz Hestle Gassaway said. “It was very, very emotional.”

The crowd erupted with cheers and Maloney got a long standing ovation as he was awarded his “King” medal. “It was just a ton of emotion from everybody,” Grissom said. “I think I saw Scotty shed a few tears. I know Jesse was pretty emo-tional. We were all emotional out there on the court.”

“Scotty is fabulous. He is a superstar. He knows everybody. There’s not one person that Scotty does not know,” his teacher said. “To know him and meet him is to love him.”

Gassaway believes that the nearly 500-student school in Unionville, Tenn., is “one of the best schools in the world when it comes to dealing with special needs children.”

“We want people to have more empa-thy towards people, not be scared of peo-ple with disabilities,” she said. “We want them to embrace them, more like the boys did.”

It seems that these three boys truly are deserving of “king” status—to be able to make someone else happy is the most re-gal thing of all.

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If you peek into most third grade classrooms, you’ll see most children staring attentively at the teacher, a

few gazing into space, still some more searching around inside their desks, and a handful furtively eliciting attention from their surrounding classmates.

Just last week, when I observed a classroom, I saw Sara continually knocking her pencil off of her desk, Raizy squinting at the blackboard try-ing to make sense of what seemed like gibberish to her, Devora mumbling the words under her breath in an attempt to memorize them, Malkie and Naomi passing notes, and Basya hunched over in her seat trying to attract as little atten-tion as possible.

Of course, their teacher was aware of much of what was going on and con-tinually tried to get the girls back to the lesson at hand. She told me later that she was baffled by some of her students’ failing grades. After all, Raizy and Basya have the highest IQs in the class. “What am I doing wrong?” she asked me. “Sometimes, there is nothing more that a teacher can do other than recog-nize the issues at hand,” I told her. Of-ten, it is more complicated than simply getting smart children to pay attention in order to excel.

This started me thinking about all of the different issues that arise within education today. Why is it that some children, regardless of their intelligence are excellent students, while others fail? Aside from IQ scores, what are some obstacles to productive education?

Visual Processing DisorderA visual processing (or perceptual)

disorder refers to an inability to make sense of information absorbed through the eyes. This does not mean that the child has trouble with sight and needs glasses, rather it involves difficulties processing the visual information in the brain. Some indications of visual pro-cessing disorders are:

• Spatial Relation: Spatial rela-tion is distinguishing the positions of objects in space. For reading and math, it is very important to understand spa-tial relationships. The ability to identify words and numbers as separate entities is essential for reading skills. In addi-tion, confusion of similarly shaped let-ters such as “b” and “d“ or “p” and “q” can be attributed to a problem with spa-tial relation.

• Visual Discrimination: Visual

discrimination involves differentiating objects based on their individual char-acteristics such as color, form, shape, pattern, and size. When dealing with reading and math, difficulties with vi-sual discrimination can lead to trouble with charts, graphs, or recognizing let-ters on the chalkboard.

• Visual-Motor Integration: Visual-motor integration requires the combination of visual cues to guide movements. Children who have deficits with visual-motor integration are often seen as clumsy or awkward because they have a hard time figuring out where their body is in re-lation to other objects. This lack of integra-tion can lead to problems with writing and organization. In addition to these academic impacts, a lack of visual-motor integration can cause problems in children’s lives both socially and athletically.

Auditory Processing DisorderLike visual processing disorder,

auditory processing disorder can inter-fere with children’s ability to learn, re-gardless of their intellect. An auditory processing disorder interferes with a person’s ability to make sense of infor-mation taken in through the ears. This does not mean that the person cannot hear or is deaf. Rather, the sounds en-ter the ear and the brain, but the person cannot decode them to understand what they mean. Some indications of audi-tory processing disorder are:

• Auditory Discrimination: Au-ditory discrimination is the ability to recognize differences in phonemes (sounds that relate to certain letters). Recognizing phonemes in the founda-tion for phonics – the way most children learn how to read.

• Auditory Memory: Auditory memory involves storing and recalling information which was given verbally. People who lack auditory memory will have a lot of trouble following direc-tions or remembering details of stories that are read aloud in the classroom.

• Auditory Sequencing: Auditory sequencing is the ability to remember

the order of items in a list or the order of sounds in a word. One example of a problem with auditory sequencing is saying, “comtuper” instead of “com-puter.”

FocusAnother roadblock to achievement

in school that has nothing to do with a child’s intelligence is Attention Defi-cit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). ADHD is a common behavioral disorder that affects between 8-10% of school

age children. Dr. Richard Kingsley of KidsHealth ex-plains, “Kids with ADHD act without thinking, are hyperact ive, and have trouble focus-ing. They may u n d e r s t a n d what’s expect-

ed of them but have trouble following through because they can’t sit still, pay attention, or attend to details.” Because children with ADHD have troubling focusing on one thing at a time, if un-noticed, ADHD can learn to devastating learning deficits.

Up until 1994, ADHD was known as Attentive Deficit Disorder or ADD. In 1994, it was renamed ADHD and broken down into three separate sub-types with specific characteristics.

• Inattentive Type, with signs that include:

• Difficulty with sustained tasks• Noticeable listening problems• Difficulty following directions• Tendency to lose things such as

toys, notebooks, or homework• Distracted easily

Hyperactive-Impulsive Type, with signs that include:

• Fidgeting or squirming• Difficulty remaining seated• Always “on the go”• Difficulty waiting for a turn in

line• Excessive talking• Problems with interrupting and

intruding

The third type of ADHD is a com-bination of inattentive type and hyper-

active-impulsive type and is the most common form of ADHD.

Self EsteemSelf-esteem, or believing in oneself,

is another extremely important ele-ment required for successful learning. Children who are not confident in their abilities will simply give up without trying. Often, children with low self-esteem will encounter problems with bullying as other children will notice their lack of confidence and single them out. In turn, the children with low self-esteem will choose to remain silent in class in order to avoid their classmates’ criticism, leading to further academic problems.

According to Dr. Richard Besser, author of Your Family’s Health: Kids and Height, indicates that signs of low self esteem include:

• Reluctance to try new things be-cause of a fear of failure

• Negative comments about one-self such as, “I’m stupid” or “I’ll never get this right.”

• Giving up quickly and stat-ing that is it because of “boredom” or “tiredness.”

• Lack of friends in and out of school.

Surmounting the RoadblocksThe first step towards helping your

child succeed in school is recognizing if there is an underlying reason for their failure. Depending on the “roadblock” tripping up your child, there are differ-ent methods to overcoming it. You can work towards success with the school, the teacher, and an educational special-ist. As I always say, “If he can’t learn the way we teach, we had better teach the way he can learn.”

An acclaimed educator and education con-sultant, Mrs. Rifka Schonfeld has served the Jewish community for close to thirty years. She founded and directs the widely ac-claimed educational program, SOS, servic-ing all grade levels in secular as well as He-brew studies. A kriah and reading specialist, she has given dynamic workshops and has set up reading labs in many schools. In ad-dition, she offers evaluations G.E.D. prepa-ration,, social skills training and shidduch coaching, focusing on building self-esteem and self-awareness. She can be reached at 718-382-5437 or at rifkaschonfeld@ verizon.net. . You can view her on the web at rifkaschonfeldsos.com.

A Clearer PerspectiveRifka Schonfeld

Roadblocks on the Path of Learning

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Knowing when and what to eat be-fore, during, and after workouts can impact the

way you feel and the effectiveness of the exercise. Whether your goal is weight loss or muscle gain, follow these guide-lines for the best nu-trition to maximize your exercise regi-men:

1. Eat a Healthy Breakfast. If you exercise in the morn-ing try to eat your breakfast one to two hours prior to work-ing out. Some good breakfast options are whole grain bread with peanut butter, whole grain cereal with milk and ber-ries, or yogurt with cereal and berries.

2. Size Matters. Eating too much before you exercise will leave you feeling sluggish, or you might have stomach cramps. Eating too little may not give you the energy needed for the workout. In general, don’t exercise for 3 – 4 hours after a large meal.

3. Drink. You need adequate fluids before, during, and after exercise to help prevent dehydration. Drink about 2 – 3 cups of water during the 2 – 3 hours before your workout. Drink ½ to 1 cup of water every 15 – 20 min-utes during the work-out. Drink about 2 – 3 cups of water after the workout for every pound of weight you lose during the workout. Water is the ideal bever-age, but if you are working out for over an hour, drink a sport drink to replace lost electrolytes.

4. Foods to Avoid. Foods with a lot of fat can be difficult and slow to digest, and may remain in the stomach a long time. Avoid meats, doughnuts, fries, potato chips, and candy bars in the pre-

exercise meal (or at most meals for that matter!).

5. Working Out After Work. Eat a healthy snack consisting of a carb and protein in order to have enough en-ergy for the workout. Best bets: cheese and crackers, cottage cheese and veggies, or fruit and whole grain muffin.

6. After the Workout. Eat a well-balanced meal with whole grain carbs, protein, and fat to help you recover.

Exercise should become an integral part of our lives. Our bodies were designed to horde food so, in essence, we are what we eat. This is why we need exercise to

lose the excess and unneeded fat, and also to build up muscle to make our bod-ies powerful. The main goal of fitness

activities is to build up the maximum amount of muscle with the loss of the maximum amount of fat. However, your results may remain enigmatically hidden behind layers of pure fat. Therefore, it is imperative that you eat properly around the duration of your planned workout. Food and muscle have a unique anti-thetical relationship so make sure to fol-low these guidelines

and you’ll be able to see robust abs!

Aliza Beer is a registered dietician with a Master’s degree in nutrition. She has a private practice in Cedarhurst, NY. Patients’ success has been featured on the Dr. Oz Show. Aliza’s new line of pre-pared, healthy meals-to-go are available at Gourmet Glatt. Aliza can be reached at [email protected].

Health & Fitness

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Eating and Exercise

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Chavi looked out the window, wondering if some magic would fall from the sky. It didn’t, but

she thought that’s what she needed. She was so, so tired of the endless arguments with Sammy. He was so irrational, that was the worst of it. If she had the nerve to disagree with his take on things – whoa – that was a capital crime. He would explode, tell her she was “attacking” him, and stop talking to her. She was a fun-loving person; she didn’t like being stuck in this bad place. She wanted o-u-t and she wanted it now.

That’s not all: It wasn’t enough to no longer fight. She wanted a husband to confide in and do fun things with; she wanted a friend. And Chavi wanted love.

Dr. Deb said you can go from hate to falling in love all over again – with your husband. Really? How in the world is that possible?

What’s “falling in love” anyway?Let’s look at this giddy feeling

called “falling in love.” It’s all about how the other person makes you feel and how you feel about him (or her). In fact, the real truth is that how you feel about him follows from how he makes you feel. Here’s why:

The “falling in love” kind of love, is about receiving. The other kind of love—the tender feelings for children, or the compassionate love that you have when you’ve been married 50 years—is about giving.

So, if that’s true, what is it you’re

receiving when you fall in love? What you receive is tremendous.

You get a clear, bright, and shiny mes-sage of validation of yourself as a per-son. Many people can try to give you this message but it doesn’t work with all those other people. The one person with whom it works proves to you in the course of being together that he (or “she”) really gets who you are. Only someone who has plunged the depths of your selfhood and finds you amaz-ing, special, and wonderful can validate

you. There may be many people that you

date who feel as though they love you, but in your opinion, they don’t know you. Therefore, it’s impossible for them to validate you. You see, knowing the other person, genuinely knowing, is the cornerstone of intimacy. So you have opened your heart to one person and you felt understood. This person, in return, continues to be intrigued by that process of knowing you, and wants more.

What could be a better experience than that?

You’re exhilarated because after carefully letting down your guard to someone, this person has appreciated having been given the tremendous gift of yourself. As you let him into the pri-vate domain of your soul, he did the same. And what did you find inside his heart and soul? – a self that is very simi-lar to yours!

So what’s “falling out of love”? The answer is betrayal. You have opened up your soul; you’ve been vulnerable, and

what did you get for it? You got hurt and betrayed. Even ignoring a spouse when she’s talking is betrayal. She is sharing herself and this gift, once precious in your eyes, means nothing; you’re not listening any more. When this contin-ues, the commonalities aren’t so appar-ent. Your spouse might be hurt too. He, too, feels betrayed. Whatever it was he expected from you doesn’t seem to be forthcoming.

Chavi feels betrayed. Yet, she really doesn’t want a divorce. Who wants to start looking for someone else when you have a family? And she knows very well it’s not so likely she will meet the right person. Sammy was the right per-son once. Maybe he can be again….

Here are the steps Chavi and Sam-my will want to take:

1. Sammy has to work on being dan l’chaf zchus to Chavi. He has to stop blaming her. He has to allow her to have different opinions and be all right with that.

2. Sammy must prove to her that he has changed. He must be patient and not expect Chavi to fall into his arms the minute he insists he is now differ-ent. He has to understand that he needs to be the giver for Chavi to fall in love with him again.

3. Chavi must be patient, too—with him and with herself. Sammy will slow-

ly realize that Chavi has been deeply wounded in the relationship and healing takes time.

4. This is the wonderful step. It is akin to noticing how your child is im-proving in math or picking up a lan-guage. Chavi will start to see that Sam-my is growing. New behaviors replace the old, ugly ones: consideration, gen-tleness, sensitivity, generosity of time and effort. From this, respect and trust begin to grow.

5. Respect and trust will allow Cha-vi’s heart to open up, little by little.

6. In turn, Sammy will be able to talk about his dawning awareness of his past selfishness and hurtfulness and his regrets for that. In these admissions, he too, will be vulnerable, and this will open the door wider to falling in love again.

How can Chavi help Sammy get this process started? How can they do the first step? I would suggest they sign a happiness pledge which would read something like this:

“We, Chavi and Sammy, want to be happy. We want to be happy together. Therefore we commit to work hard on being dan l’chaf zchus. If something bothers one of us, we will assume it was meant differently than we took it. We will not blame or attack. We will practice saying nice things to each other many times a day.”

Is this process easy? No. Retraining your entire way of thinking is difficult. But, what’s the upside of this difficult process? It’s more than falling in love and even more than preserving a fam-ily. It’s something rich and mature that you can’t feel the first time around: It’s a rock-solid knowledge of who this other person really is, leading to a much deeper bond, greater respect, and stron-ger trust than you could ever have with a new person.

Dr. Deb Hirschhorn has had over 35 years clinical experience. She has been in nu-merous publications, both professional and for the public, and has appeared on TV and has been featured on radio. She prac-tices Marriage-Friendly Therapy. She has a local practice in Woodmere, N.Y. See her website, http://drdeb.com, or call her at

TJH StaffDrDeb

Deb Hirschhorn, Ph.D.

Can I Fall in Love Again?

onlY SomEonE Who hAS PlUnGED ThE DEPThS of YoUr SElfhooD AnD fInDS YoU AmAzInG, SPECIAl,

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The military history of the United States is filled with heroes and people who deserved to be remem-

bered. Most of the heroics took place on the battlefield where lives were on the line. Sometimes mili-tary heroes are people who may have or have not served on the front line but were service-men and women who left a legacy for genera-tions to come. Prior to the Mexican American War (1846-1848), flog-ging was an acceptable form of punishment in the American Navy. Uriah Levy was the man who changed that policy and was kicked out of the navy (later he was reinstated) for standing up for the right thing.

Uriah Phillips Levy was born on April 22, 1792 into a religious Jewish family in Philadelphia. His grandfa-ther, Jonas Phillips, came to the United States from Germany and fought for the patriots in the Revolutionary War. Uriah’s nephew became a Congressman from New York. His family was thor-oughly dedicated into giving back to the country that gave so much to them in particular with religious freedom. His great-great grandfather was one of the few Jews to escape the Spanish Inqui-sition to make his way to America via England.

As well as being loyal patriots, the Levy family was drawn to the sea, and Uriah continued the tradition. He ran away when he was ten to sail as a cabin boy but returned to Philadelphia to cel-ebrate his Bar Mitzvah with his family. In 1806, Uriah gained valuable skills as an apprentice on a family friend’s ship and a few years later graduated from navigation school.

Levy was twenty when the War of 1812 against Great Britain broke out, and he volunteered for military service. The captain of his ship quickly recog-nized his skills, and he was appointed as a sailing master on the USS Argus. After dropping off an American min-ister in France, the Argus sailed to the English Channel and captured at least

twenty-one ships. Levy was placed in charge of one of these captures, the Betty, but on August 12, 1813, the Betty was captured. Two days later, the Argus was captured by the British ship, the Pelican, and the entire crew, including

Uriah, was interred in England for the rest of the war.

After returning to the United States, he was assigned to the USS Franklin as a second master. Anti-Semitism shown by other sailors was a problem for Levy, and when a drunken officer provoked him, Levy retaliated. The officer challenged him to a duel. In those days, a man could not back away from a duel (where the two combat-

ants shoot at each from a predetermined distance) without shaming his name for a very long time, so Levy accepted and killed the officer. He was indicted but was found not guilty as dueling was an acceptable way of settling arguments.

Despite this black mark on his re-cord, Levy was commissioned as a lieu-tenant. Aboard the USS United States, Levy got into another fight (not a duel this time around) and after a court mar-tial, was dismissed from the navy. The only person that could make this rul-ing official was the President and two years later, follow-ing the advice of the secretary of the navy, President James Monroe reversed the court’s ruling. Levy was subsequently given his first com-mand on a gunboat appropriately named the USS Revenge.

In 1925, Levy was the second lieutenant aboard the USS Cyane. He was instrumental in aiding an American forced into the Brazilian Navy and whose life was in danger. The Brazilian Emperor, Dom

Pedro, was so impressed with Levy that he offered him the rank of captain (the highest rank in the navy at the time) in his navy. He refused the offer and rode a wave of popularity back home in the States.

Since he was offered a shore job and not another command, Levy decided to become a private citizen and went into real estate in New York (Jewish real estate agents have a long history in the United States) and became very wealthy. He was still in navy, though, and in 1938, he was given another com-mand. Levy developed his own system of discipline, substituting mild reforms for corporal punishment. Because of his refusal to in-flict corporal p u n i sh men t on a young seaman, he was court-martialed and d i s m i s s e d from the ser-vice; however, President Ty-ler overturned the decision. In 1850, a member of Congress took up the case for anti-flogging, and in 1862, it was passed as a law.

Right after the last of the six court-martials against Levy was over-

turned and he was reinstated, Levy took command of the warship, Mace-donian, and became commander of the entire Mediterra-nean Fleet. In 1960, Congress created the rank of Commodore and appointed Levy to the highest rank in the country.

Levy was an admirer of Thomas Jefferson because he was a major ad-vocate among the Founding Fathers for the freedom of reli-

gion. When Levy heard that Monticello, Jefferson’s plantation in Virginia, had come upon hard times and was up for

sale, he bought it. Even though his navy duties required that he be in New York for much of the time, Levy used Mon-ticello as a vacation home and his fam-ily moved there permanently. He fixed up the rundown property and showed it off to visitors, and when he died in 1862, the U.S. government didn’t want it because it was in the South and had no way to look after it. It was confis-cated by the Confederacy but after the war, it was returned to Levy’s heirs. His nephew, Congressman Jefferson Levy, bought it out from the other heirs and spent a lot of his own money for the restoration and preservation efforts. He sold in 1923 to the Thomas Jefferson

Foundation that eventually made into a museum. The foundation had anti-Semitic members on its board and until the 1980’s gave very little credit to the two Levy men who had done so much for the property. Finally, in 1985,

the two were honored in a ceremony and there are memorials and informa-tion on-site about Uriah and Jefferson Levy.

Uriah married his niece in 1853 af-ter both of her parents died. She was 18 while he was 61 (talk about the shid-duch crisis and they were a frum couple, too!). He died in 1862, and was buried in a Jewish cemetery in New York, with both military honors and Jewish tradi-tions. His legacy lives on, as the USS Levy, a WWII destroyer escort, was named after him as well as the Jewish chapel in the Norfolk Naval Base. Uriah P. Levy is best remembered for his role in banning corporal punishment in the navy and his dedication for the men that served under him, making him a hero behind the lines.

Avi Heiligman is a weekly contributor to The Jewish Home. He welcomes your com-ments and suggestions.for future columns and can be reached at [email protected].

Forgotten HeroesAvi Heiligman

Uriah LevySaluting Principles and Values

Levy's tombstone in Beth Olom Cemetary in Queens

Monticello as it looks today

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A trip to Louisiana will be filled with fun, food and lots of music. The state is known for its music and

the lively Mardi Gras events that take place there. Looking to be truly patriot-ic? Head down to Winnsboro, the “Stars and Stripes Capital of Louisiana.” On special occasions and certain legal holi-days your eyes will blur from the 350 American flags proudly swaying in the wind on highway 15. Rayne, the Frog Capital of the World, will delight your enthusiastic kids with its annual Frog Festival held every November. Murals featuring Kermit and his friends dot the city and your car will be filled with the sounds of ribbit as you drive along. Speaking of animal sounds, “quack” is the sound heard most often in Gueydan, the Duck Capital of America. Watch out for their yellow feathers as you drive down the roads.

The state of Louisiana is always on the move. In fact, it is home to one of the only mobile national monuments—the Saint Charles streetcar in New Or-leans makes headlines as it moves along. (The only other one in the whole country is San Francisco’s cable cars.) Are your teens itching for adventure while on va-cation? The town of Jean Lafitte was once a hideaway for pirates—“Yo ho ho and a bottle of rum!” But don’t worry

about having too

much fun when visiting Louisiana—there’s plenty of places to relax, rest and enjoy one of America’s beautiful states with your family.

Things You Won’t Want to MissAt Home with Nature

A visit to the state’s first state-sup-ported arboretum in the United States will make one feel at one with nature. The Louisiana State Arboretum is large and is home to more than 300 acres of natural growth. If one walks slowly with a discerning eye, one can see almost every type of vegetation in Louisiana. Sycamores, maples, beeches, ferns and magnolias grow majestically from the ground. Wildlife call the arboretum their home as well. You may catch a glimpse of a fox, wild turkey or white-tail deer when strolling along. Because picnick-ing is not allowed in the arboretum, make sure to stop by Chicot State Park nearby. The park covers 6,000 acres of rolling hills including a 2,000-acre reser-voir with myriad fish swimming along. There are over 200 campsites, pools, bicycling, hiking and backpacking trails for visitors’ use—the kids will have fun, the adults will relax, and everyone will leave with a closer connection to nature.

The Heart of the Mardi GrasNew Orleans was hard-hit by Hur-

ricane Katrina and is still working on standing on its own.

Even so, the city, famous for the annual Mardi Gras, is host to fun parties, joy-ful music, and colorful costumes. In fact, visitors can tour Mardi Gras World, where one can see how the floats of the annual parade are made. Preserva-tion Hall is where New Orleans Jazz is honored and protected. Live jazz per-formances can be heard on the evenings on the weekend. And of course, the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festi-val features musical genres from across the board. When visiting New Orleans, make sure to sleep a lot beforehand—there is too much excitement there and you don’t want to miss a thing!

Swimming with the Fishes…or the Turtles

The word swamp doesn’t conjure up thoughts of something you’d want to do on vacation, but when you’re in Baton Rouge, make sure to take an Alligator Bayou Swamp Tour. Visitors ride on a boat and get to meet and greet animals from the swamp including alligators, snapping turtles, and nutria, a rodent that’s common in Louisiana that’s a cross between a beaver and a rat—watch out for its large teeth! Speaking of in-teresting animals, the Global Wildlife Center is home to thousands of animals from all over the globe. Want to go camelback riding? This is the place to go! The Louisiana Renaissance Fes-

tival is the go-to place for en-

tertainment for families on weekends in November. The festival takes one back in time to the European Renaissance but this trip in time is not in the least boring. The “mini-theme park” is replete with over fifty shows daily, lots of shopping, and tons of people in costume. Joust-ing is a favorite among festival goers; knights in shining armor—who can beat that? Make sure to leave a day just for this—it’ll be hard to fit it all in.

Frogmore PlantationA trip to Frogmore Plantation is a

blend of old and new. Visitors will get to see how a working cotton planta-tion operated in the 1800’s and evolved into a modern cotton plantation and gin of today. Slavery was prevalent in the South; that’s how cotton was produced back in the 19th century. Visitors can walk through authentically furnished slave quarters and hear the echoes of the slaves’ voices of the past. You’ll hear their music and learn about their cus-toms—it’s certainly a walk through time.

Susan Schwamm

Leisure & Travel

From Sea to Shining Sea : Louisiana

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From the White House to Helen Thomas, to the world media, to the Lubavitcher Rebbe, to Israel...Filled with humor, danger, spirituality and the hand of Hashem.A personal story of setting goals to change the world and actually doing it… in one minute.

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Deli

$12.99 $9.99lb.

Natural & Kosher 2lb shredded

cheeses

DAIRY

$4.99 $2.99lb.

Sterns 1lb Egg Challah

GROCERY

$4.99lb.

Chuck Eye Roast

meat

.........................................................

WINES

Bartenura Rosso

Toscano

Teal Lake Moscatod’Aussie

$7.99 $6.49

$7.99 $6.49

roastedChickenspecial

$19.991 Whole chicken

Chicken special

roastedfamily

&

$23.99regular

• Choice of potato

or noodle kugel

• 1lb potato salad

or coLE slaw

• Choice of potato

or noodle kugel

• 1lb potato salad

• 1lb coLE slaw

$29.992 Whole chickens

&

$39.99regular

dovid’s kitchen

EXPIRES febrUARY 17th 2013 • Not responsible for typographic errors

• Western Kosher Specials are for in-store shopping only and may be subject to limited quantities depending on available stock