Professional Documents
Culture Documents
starts on 14
Joel MAgAlNick
The younger classes at Seattle Hebrew Academy follow along as Ben Gown, a member of the new childrens group The Sababas, sings to them during a concert at the school on Oct. 18. The duo of Gown and Josh Niehaus brought in a couple of friends Arieh the lion and an orca with an Israeli accent to sing along with the Jewish music and the occasional jam session that broke out to entertain and educate kids all over the Seattle area.
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Crafts Potpourri
Join us for a fun afternoon of arts and crafts with other Jewish single moms, dads and their kids. m Sunday, November 6 1:30 4:30 p.m. Contact Marjorie Schnyder, (206) 861-3146 or familylife@jfsseattle.org.
AA Meetings at JFS
Tuesdays at 7:00 p.m. Contact (206) 461-3240 or ata@jfsseattle.org
m
1,000 Mitzvahs: How Small Acts of Kindness Can Heal, Inspire, and Change Your Life
With Linda Cohen m Sunday, November 13 2:00 p.m. Contact Marjorie Schnyder, (206) 861-3146 or familylife@jfsseattle.org.
FOR PARENTS
Endless Opportunities
A community-wide program offered in partnership with Temple Bnai Torah & Temple De Hirsch Sinai. EO events are open to the public.
Learning, Language & Love: Connecting the Keys to a Strong Start in Life
Presented by Gina Lebedeva, PhD, SLP of the UW Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences m Thursday, December 1 7:00 9:00 p.m. Contact Marjorie Schnyder, (206) 861-3146 or familylife@jfsseattle.org.
JFS services and programs are made possible through generous community support of 1601 - 16th Avenue, Seattle (206) 461-3240 www.jfsseattle.org
To donate, please visit www.jfsseattle.org
opinion
We need to let the world know how we really feel about Israel
rabbi yOhanna Kinberg Temple Bnai Torah
The other morning I checked in with my 60-something-year-old mother. She seemed very tired. I was up all night, she told me. I did not sleep at all. When I asked her why, her response was simple: I could not sleep until I knew he was safe. I could not sleep until he was home. My mother, it turns out, was up all night watching the news, waiting to see the feet of Gilad Shalit touch Israeli soil once again. She waited up for him and worried for him as though he was her own son. And this worry, this sense of connection she and so many other Jews around the world felt for this one young Israeli man, reminded me that the world, the non-Jewish world, understands so little about our peoples relationship to eretz Yisrael, the land of Israel, and am Yisrael, the people of Israel. We do a disservice to ourselves and the future of the Jewish State when we neglect to speak of our cultural, artistic, agricultural, religious and spiritual connections to the land of Israel and our deep love for Israel. Too often when we defend the state of Israel, we speak in purely political terms. The world knows and accepts, for the most part, our modern history. They know about European anti-Semitism, the Holocaust, our refugee status and our immediate need for a safe homeland in the 1940s. They know about our continued struggle for safety in Israel today. But do they know about our ancient spiritual connection to the land of Israel that has kept hope alive in our hearts, even during the darkest moments of our peoples history? In my work combating the efforts of the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement in Olympia, I came to understand that many people who work toward the dismantling of the state of Israel have very little knowledge about our rich religious, cultural and spiritual connection. They think Zionism is merely a modern nationalist movement. They have no idea that we pray for the peace of Israel daily in our traditional liturgy and have done so for generations. They have little idea that so many of our holidays are based on the agricultural cycle of the land of Israel. We celebrate the new year of the trees, Tu BShevat, in February. Almond trees dont bloom in Seattle in February, but they do in the land of Israel. We smell the etrog and wave the lulav during Sukkot in Seattle, but the smells and textures of these sacred plants are those of Israel. Our symbols, like the pomegranate, the lion, and the olive tree are all connections back to our ancient and sacred homeland. Israel might have become a modern state in 1948, but our connection to the land and to each other goes beyond memory. Zionism is a modern manifestation of a very old, very deep and very special connection we have as a people to our home: eretz Yisrael. It is also the manifestation of a deep and special connection Jews throughout the world have to each other. When we chant our call-to-worship prayer, the Barchu, we all face east toward Jerusalem. I often imagine that in that moment, Jews all over the world are turning toward each other, facing each other, and coming together in holy assembly to honor God. We did this before we even knew there was such a diverse and widespread global Jewish community. We all prayed toward Jerusalem before Jews in Poland knew about Jews living in India or China or Morocco or Yemen. We faced each other, even when we could not imagine the face of our fellow Jew so far away, because we are family and our hearts are united through eretz Yisrael. We have faced each other, prayed for each other, and cared for each other across time and space for thousands of years. This is our spiritual legacy and it runs strong to this day. It is this strong spiritual connection to the land and our people that has kept us alive. It kept us alive and together in the mellah, in the ghetto, in the concentration camp, in good times and in times of horrific tragedy. The hope and dream of living peacefully and securely in our home, our land, has been a bright light and source of beauty and joy and hope for thousands of years. Israel Freelander writes that the love of eretz Yisrael: Kept the torch that illuminated the thorny path of our people. It was the anchor that kept our ship from drifting out into the boundless ocean. And when the eternal wanderer seemed to sink under the burden of his suffering he looked up into the sky and saw the light that shone from Zion and with the renewed courage he continued his journey. This is what the world needs to know: How we really feel about Israel. Yes, we are defensive, we are protective, we are scared, we are proud, and we are justified in our fight for self-determination and security.
Your front page article by Uriel Heilman (Shalit deal was best Israel was going to get, Oct. 14) was quite informative. The illegal kidnapping and hostage taking by Hamas terrorists of Shalit in a June 2006 raid along the Israel-Gaza border aroused enormous concern and support for his release around the world. Critics of the prisoner-exchange swaps warn that such a deal merely encourages Israels enemies to capture more Israelis. They consider this to be too steep a price to pay and a capitulation to terror. Ehud Barak, Israels Defense Minister, rightly stated that the Shalit deal strengthened solidarity but warned that its approach to future kidnappings must change. He also stated that a life-loving country cannot continue to release over 1,000 prisoners for a soldier. He considers that to be a slippery slope that has to stop. It appears that Arabs will stop murdering Jews, Christians and their own brethren, only when an Arab mother will shed her first tear at her sons heroic death. Golda Meir said it well. Israel will have peace only when Arab mothers love their children more than they hate us. Meanwhile, we are compelled to be our brothers keepers, all for one and one for all. Josh Basson seattle
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But most of all, we are in love. We love this land and the people Israel. We love the trees, the soil, the birds, the rains and the mountains. We love the babies, the elderly and the soldiers. We love Israel so much we are willing to give up parts of it so we can live in it peacefully. We love Israel so much we fight for it. We labor for it. We love Israel so much we support it no matter where on this planet we live. Our love crosses time zones, our love breaks down boundaries, and our love keeps us up at night. Each citizen is like our own close family. And this is why my own mother, who has not lived in Israel
for over 40 years, was up all night. Her love kept her up. She could not rest until she knew this young man was home. We must all work to support Israel in our own way. I am a fan of J Street. You might be a fan of AIPAC or some other political organization. I am a fan of Israeli food and film. You might love Israeli dance and poetry. Each of us must keep our connection strong and our love visible for the entire world to see. And our love should keep us up at night because we should not rest until all Jews are living in security and peace.
W SHAlIT PAGe 1
father left home early and took a side road to evade photographers on their way to a beach outing reportedly at Gilads request. But a photographer from Haaretz was camping on the beach with his family and snapped a photo of the soldier swimming near the shore as his father watched over him. In the last few years I have taken many photographs of the Shalit family surrounded by countless cameras, photographer Yaron Kaminsky told his newspaper. It was nice to just run into them like that, at the beach, during Gilads first Saturday since being freed from captivity. Kaminsky said he told Noam Shalit that he had taken the photo and received his tacit approval to publish it. Meanwhile, supporters and curiosity seekers continue to flock to Mitzpe Hila for a glimpse of Gilad or simply to have
their photo taken in front of the Shalit family home. Many are leaving flowers, drawings and packages containing candy and other gifts for the family. Noam has provided reporters with several updates since his son returned. On Oct. 20, he said he does not believe Hamas claims that Gilad was not tortured while in captivity. Gilad went through harsh things, at least in the first period. It is correct that after that, after that first period, the way he was treated improved, the elder Shalit said. During the same news conference in front of the family home, Noam Shalit also told reporters that Gilad had an appetite for food but that he was having trouble sleeping through the night. On the day of his release, Gilad appeared wan and pale. Noam added that his son had few requests and that he was going with the flow.
Quote of the Rivers be performing in I am in my 70s so I can do whatever I damn please. Joan Rivers. week. willQuoter name here Tacoma on Nov. 4. For the full interview, see page 19.
opiNioN
For the children of Ghana, indignation, inspiration and perspiration are not enough
ing more or less unsupervised in a big empty lot where rains have gouged deep rabbi Will berKOvitz Special to undulating rivulets and fun includes the JTNews daily ritual of burning used toilet paper. Hope has feathers, that reason is a plank, Where the playground is an active conthat life is a loaded gun that looks right at struction site and rusted metal or a plastic you with a yellow eye. bottle is a plaything. That is not to say there Billy Collins isnt much joy and laughter. It is just that there is virtually no safety net. No safety. Disclaimer: There is nothing altruistic At Challenging Heights, words like in the following words. childhood, innocence and safety My time in Ghana felt like the spiritual are built on the unreliable foundation of equivalent of losing a bar fight. It was an words like rescue, survival and luck. utterly disruptive experience with the psyWithout the luxury of infrastructure, chilchic tables and chairs in my neatly ordered dren and adults alike improvise, innoworld trashed and me sitting in the road vate and pray. Water and power come and wondering what just happened and how go, sewage flows or it doesnt. Politicians to make it home. are corrupt or unreliable. Parents might be forced to sell a child to feed another. Teachers teach complexity amid instability. It was against this backdrop we spent our days working, waiting and occasionally complaining always reflecting on the concrete and theological meaning of privilege and poverty. I doubt the stones we moved, the Will BerkoviTz A child in the Challenging Heights school who was rescued from what cement we mixed, or the bricks we laid had would likely have been a life of slavery. much of an impact on the community at Challenging Heights I had gone to Ghana on an American we were there and we were gone, one more Jewish World Service service-learning group of Westerners passing through. It is program with a diverse group of rabbis to dubious at best. a school called Challenging Heights in the While it is true we helped build a buildcoastal fishing village of Winneba. And it ing, the real structure that was created was was against a backdrop of children playfar less tangible and far more nebulous ing in the dusty school grounds that we more of a scaffolding for our souls. A learned that many of these very children bridge not quite linking parallel universes. had been rescued from 17-hour days of Hearing the stories, briefly experiencforced labor. They had been rescued by ing the rough exposure of poverty and the James Kofi-Annan, an escaped child slave inescapable awareness that the diary of turned activist and savior to these chilviolence and this chronicle of scarcity is so dren. pervasive in the world set up an inescapWith false promises the children are able tension and a challenge. The chalpurchased from struggling families in lenge is to ensure that the agitation and the village and transported far from their disruption are not fleeting, and to bind homes to endure ongoing physical and them to our psychic and spiritual DNA. It sexual assault. Any concept of childhood must change how we make decisions, how is utterly annihilated. Lashings replace we encounter the face of poverty, and what allowances. Theirs is a world where a child we do with the privilege that results from is worth $40 and a fishing net $200; in the randomly being born in the West and not economy of slavery, it is cheaper to replace like the 1.4 billion people around the world a drowned child than a snagged fishing who live on less than $1.25 a day. net. The chasm that opened between the It is not enough to be appalled by the stories being told and the image of the chilfact that children are still sold into slavery. dren playing was staggering and unbridgeNor is it enough to be inspired by the dedable. ication of those who work to rescue and And to put this childrens oasis this teach them. Ive been wondering about the sanctuary, which it truly is in perspective, imagine a couple hundred children roughly between 4 and 12 years old playX Page 23
The King County Library System recognizes strength and value within our communities, and we encourage all interested and qualified service providers to review our public bid construction project opportunities. For additional information, contact Kelly L. Iverson, Facilities Management Services Department, King County Library System: kiverson@kcls.org 425-369-3308
7th Annual
Premiering a film, With My Own Eyes, created and produced by the Holocaust Center for classroom use.
Gather in the Green Room at 10:30 AM for coffee, exhibits and interactive displays. Green Room Luncheon Westin Seattle 10:30 - 11:30 AM 11:30 AM - 1:30 PM 1900 Fifth Ave
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YIDDIsH LEssON
by ruth Peizer
Former Knesset member and Shin Bet director Ami Ayalon has made his views well-known on the need for a two-state solution in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. This week he came to Seattle to drive the point home.
The Washington State Jewish Historical Society gears up to launch its long-awaited cookbook, Yesterdays Mavens, Todays Foodies: Traditions in Northwest Jewish Kitchens.
Springtime in England
Music of Remembrance premieres What a Life!, a World War II satiric, cabaret-style revue.
10 13 1418 19 Online
Were proud to honor Audrey Rostov, Pamela Lavitt, Debi Perluss, Morgan Currier and Keren Brown.
Remember when
From the Jewish Transcript, October 28, 1971. A Soviet Jewry freedom bus took several Soviet Jews who had recently arrived at Sea-Tac Airport and 13 local teens from Seattle to Portland to drum up awareness of the plight of Russias Jews. Moshe Ari, left, of the Jewish Community Center and Seymour Kaplan, right, director of the Anti-Defamation Leagues Seattle chapter were joined by recent migr Ilia Wolk, center.
Web exclusive: Jews and the occupation More M.O.T.: Vines and Blooms Whats Your JQ?: A Jewish response to bullying The Arts Community Calendar The Shouk Classifieds Lifecycles
Members of the Jewish community joined the Occupy Seattle movement in Westlake Park for Sukkot.
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meet the interests of our Jewish community through fair and accurate coverage of local, national and international news, opinion and information. We seek to expose our readers to diverse viewpoints and vibrant debate on many fronts, including the news and events in Israel. We strive to contribute to the continued growth of our local Jewish community as we carry out our mission. 2041 Third Avenue, Seattle, WA 98121 206-441-4553 editor@jtnews.net www.jtnews.net
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Ex-Officio
Jews on the ballot: Jesse Salomon wants safer roads for Shoreline
Janis siegel JTNews correspondent
Win or lose, 35-year-old Shoreline resident Jesse Salomon will be back at his job working as a public defender in dispute resolution courts in the Seattle Municipal Court. But the self-described progressive Democrat is feeling pretty good about his bid for the Shoreline City Council, Position 6 seat as endorsements and cash continue to flow his way. Running against former Shoreline planning commissioner Robin McClelland for the council seat being vacated by Terry Scott, his most recent endorsements include the Aerospace Machinists Local 751, the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 21, the Plumbers and Pipefitters Local 32, the Carpenters LocalLADS 1144, and Scott himself. Salomon sat down with JTNews to discuss his campaign and the issues. Im really optimistic, Salomon said. Weve done a ton of doorbelling and have been able to cover every neighborhood. Ive raised more money in this race than any of the candidates, not counting my contribution, but Im pretty much neckand-neck with my opponent, in terms of private fundraising. According to the Public Disclosure Commission, as of Oct. 17, Salomon reported raising $32,671.70 through his website, loans, and individual contributions, in addition to a personal campaign loan of $15,000. Hes spent $21,489.45 to date. During the same reporting cycle, McClellan reported a campaign total of $23,511.31 and spent $13,725.12. I will win by outworking, out fundraising and by being a better candidate, wrote Salomon in the 2011 King County Democrats general questionnaire. He told JTNews that his skills as a fair but tough negotiator may be the most valuable asset he brings to the job. In 2006, Salomon ran for state senator against then-Sen. Dale Brandland, but Salomon lost that race. I was running in a Republican district against a former sheriff of 11 years,
Shoreline City Council candidate Jesse Salomon, center, talks politics over coffee with his father Richard Salomon, left, his girlfriend Sarahs father Michael Goldenkranz, right, and Sarah Goldenkranz, front.
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recalled Salomon. On election night, we got 49 percent, but the vote total went the wrong way for me. Born and raised in Seattle, Salomon attended Seattle-area Jewish day schools, lived in India and Israel with his parents as a child, has visited Israel twice this year, and, these days, casually drops into Hillel at the University of Washington for community services. He attended Western Washington University and the University of Washington for his undergraduate work, and earned his law degree at the UW. He has advocated locally on behalf of homeless youth, supported anti-segregation public school policy, and protected victims of domestic violence and abused children. Salomon was also a prosecutor for the Lummi Tribe in Whatcom County. If he wins, Salomon will tackle several issues, including a contentious and growing conflict between the City of Shoreline and developers over a 3,100-unit condominium project permitted on its border with Snohomish County, parks and open space, increased population density, fiscal responsibility, and mixed use and commercial zoning and its effects on small businesses. But Salomon has a painful and personal connection to an issue that is also on the candidates priority list. In 2009, his mother, Carol Salomon, 60, a UW professor, researcher and expert in the Bengali language, was fatally struck by a vehicle while riding her bicycle in the Wallingford neighborhood of Seattle. Today, Salomon doesnt promote the coexistence of bikes and cars on city streets and said he would rather see local bike trails expanded and dedicated bike
EVENTS BLOGS NEWS
corridors built. If elected, he would be a fierce proponent of traffic safety, safe sidewalks, adequate street lighting, and pedestrian safety. Its not realistic to expect that there will never be danger with bicyclists along roads with cars, he said. Theres a strong need for more sidewalks and more street lighting. We need to focus on that as a priority in the budget. He added that cracked sidewalks, and often no sidewalks can make getting around a dangerous proposition for some senior citizens and small children who may be just playing in their front yards. Ive been hit by a car, and my girlfriend has had several near misses, said Salomon. Its just not safe. Shoreline incorporates 14 neighborhoods, and several of them would be exposed to the dramatic effects of increased traffic congestion from the proposed 61-acre Point Wells condominium development, say project opponents, including Salomon. A poll conducted by the 32nd District Democrats showed that over 95 percent of Shoreline residents oppose the size and scope of the proposed development, he said. Point Wells is located in an unincorporated portion of Snohomish County, however its southern border is shared with the City of Shoreline. Access to the development would run directly through the Shoreline border. Theres essentially one way in and the fear is that its going to be clogged with traffic, said Salomon. Theres also a lot of concern the pass-through side streets that are now peaceful and quiet can turn into de facto arterials. We need to stop that.
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commuNiTy News
JTNews: What makes you believe that two states is the only workable solution to this conflict? Ami Ayalon: The whole idea of Israel is to see Israel as a Jewish democracy. We will not be able to accomplish it unless we create a reality of two states. Because otherwise, if we are not a majority in our state, we do not have the right to dictate the language, the culture, the stories that we tell our children in school. I think that although it is very difficult and it didnt work for the last 20 years, we dont have the luxury to give up and to give up on hope. And I believe that by creating this reality the immediate result will be the [reduction] of instability and violence. Its a stormy area, but I think to
the people who live in the Middle East, probably even the United States, it is obvious that the main source of immediate instability in the Arab street is the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In a way, many groups are using it in order to create hatred. So I think that by doing it, we shall not only Joel MAgAlNick achieve our goal, Two-state proponent and former Shin Bet security service director which is to come Ami Ayalon. closer to see Israel as of all of what Im saying even in the a true democracy, but we shall create more middle of a storm, we cannot stop the stability, [and] we shall be able to create a wind and we cannot control and stop the more pragmatic atmosphere in which on storm. But we can decide on the course of a shared interest we will be able to bring our ship. together some players like Egypt, Turkey, The time for direct negotiations is over. and Jordan to face Iran, to face fundamenThe window of opportunity is closed. In a talism, radicalism. This is the whole idea. way, we were marching backward in the JT: What avenue must be taken for last two years. new peace or friendship to be reached? I dont think that Abu Mazen can give AA: First of all, peace is a term that I am us what he could give us three years ago not sure we understand in the region. We or two years ago. We lost the support of speak of political agreements and reducthe pragmatic leadership: Egypt, [Ehud] ing violence, stability, whatever you call Barak. On the other hand, I dont think it. Peace is still far away. I believe that we Israelis and in a way this is the center
that Bibi Netanyahu will offer what Ehud Olmert offered three years ago. It is too important for us to wait. Since all of us know what will be the parameters of the negotiated agreement, even if it will take five or 10 years, it will be based on Clinton parameters, or Ayalon-Nusseibeh its all the same. We should head independently in this direction. For example, tomorrow we should pass a resolution to stop every construction of settlements on the eastern side of the fence, but we should go on building in the major settlements on the western side of the fence that will be even with the exchange of territory. We should stop building in the Arab neighborhoods of Jerusalem, but we should go on building in the Jewish neighborhoods. We can and we should pass the law of bringing back the settlers who wish to return who are living on the east side of the fence. According to our polls, 20,000 of them would do it tomorrow. They are looking for legitimacy and compensation. Imagine for the first time since 67, Palestinians and the international community will see settlers coming back. So I believe it will create the missing part. It will create some confidence and trust. JT: Bibi stood up in front of the UN and said Were ready, lets start doing
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 13 NOON4:00 PM THE SUMMIT AT FIRST HILL 1200 UNIVERSITY STREET, SEATTLE Bring family and friends Free admission Come for refreshments and shopping This event supports Hadassah programs for hospitals and youth Co-sponsored by The Summit at First Hill
For vendor information, contact: Barbara Droker, 206-523-5014 bdroker@droker.net
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create, boil and bake those little holes with dough around them. When my great-grandson Sam wanted his great papa to let him help, I joyfully complied. Jerry Cone
1 pkg. active dry yeast 1-1/2 tsp. kosher salt
If you go:
Taste and Treats of Food and Theater will be held on sun., Nov. 6 from 24:30 p.m. at Herzl-Ner Tamid conservative congregation, 3700 E Mercer Way, Mercer Island. contact 206-774-2277 or assistant@ wsjhs.org to register. Tickets cost $36. RsVP required.
Borekas de Aroz
From Victoria Almeleh Because my mother went through the Depression years, she became a recycler long before it was fashionable. As a result, she used the unprinted side of mail and cards and invitations to write her recipes on. I could determine the date she wrote down the recipes from the date of the event on the other side. Lucille Almeleh Spring
Filling: 4 cups water 2 cups raw, short-grain rice Pinch of salt 8 extra-large eggs 16 oz. Romano cheese, grated 16 oz. cottage cheese Dough: 6-1/2 cups flour Pinch of salt 1-1/4 cups vegetable oil 1 cup ice water For brushing and sprinkling: 1 egg, beaten 1/2 cup each Romano and parmesan cheese, blended 1. For the filling, bring the water to a boil. Add the rice and salt. Cook according to the package directions. When done, transfer the rice to a large bowl and cool. 2. When completely cooled, add the eggs, one at a time, then both the Romano and cottage cheeses, and mix well. Refrigerate. 3. For the dough, sift the flour into a large bowl. Whisk in the salt then stir in the oil and ice water. Mix the dough well and let sit for 1 hour. 4. Preheat the oven to 375. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. 5. Gather and roll the dough into balls about the size of a walnut. Temporarily place the balls in a well-oiled, shallow baking sheet with sides. Roll out one ball at a time into a circle ap(if desired, brush bagels with an egg white beaten with 1 Tbs. water. Sprinkle with poppy or sesame seeds). Bake for 10 minutes, then increase temperature to 400. Bake for an additional 10-15 minutes until golden brown. Yield: About 12 bagels.
Jerry Cone makes bagels with his grandson Sam. proximately 3 inches in diameter. Place a scant tablespoon of the filling in the middle of the circle and fold in half. Either flute the edges, or with the tines of a fork press the edges together. Repeat the process until all the balls are rolled out and filled. 6. Place the borekas on the baking sheet. Brush with the egg, then sprinkle with the cheeses. 7. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, 10 to 15 minutes on the bottom rack then 10 minutes or so on the top rack.
Bagels
From Jerry Cone Going to Brenners on Cherry Street for freshly baked bagels began for me when I was a kid and continued on into married life until Brenners Bakery disappeared. Thats when I started to
3 cups all-purpose unbleached flour 2/3 cup lukewarm water 2 Tbs. sugar 3 Tbs. vegetable oil 1 egg 1. In an electric mixer, combine yeast and salt with 1 cup of the flour. Stir in lukewarm water and sugar. Add oil and egg. Beat with an electric mixer until very smooth. 2. Add remaining flour, 1/2 cup at a time, to make a soft dough. Remove dough to a lightly floured surface. Knead a minute or two until dough is smooth and elastic. Place the ball of dough into an oiled mixing bowl. 3.Cover dough with a dishtowel. Let rise at room temperature about 1 hour or more until it doubles in bulk. Punch down, move to a lightly floured surface, and knead briefly. 4. Divide into 12 equal pieces. Roll each piece into a log about 6 inches long and 3/4 inch thick. Pinch the ends together to make a round. 5. Place on a lightly floured board and cover with a towel. Let rise for about 45 minutes. Preheat oven to 375. Bring 4 quarts of water to a gentle boil in a large pot. Slide each bagel into the water. After 30 seconds, flip them over and simmer for 3 minutes. Remove from water with a large slotted spoon or spatula and drain on paper towels. 6. Place on a lightly oiled cookie sheet
Whats in an aptronym?
Its just happenstance, I promise, but readers will see that our featured M.O.T.s have names that inadvertently, but suitably, fit their occupations. People sometimes assume Eric LeVine changed his name to match his work, but his greatgrandfather changed it a long time ago. Eric founded and operates the website Cellartracker.com, where wine enthusiasts track their collections and post wine reviews. It all started with a 1999 bike trip in Tuscany taken by Eric and his wife Suzi. They fell in love with wine and started collecting. The former Microsoft project manager, with a background in computer programming, says tracking that growing collection on a spreadsheet seemed
tribe
wrong, considering his abilities. In 2003, he wrote a program and shared it with a few friends who immediately wanted to use it. Eventually it became his full-time job. Originally intending only to create a community where people could see what other people were drinking, the site now has 1 million visitors every month with 170,000 registered users, and 90,000 more actively using the site around the world. Cellartracker lists 1.2 million wines and users post about 2,000 different wine reviews every day, Eric says. The site is free, with subscription options that give users higher levels of service. Eric arrived in the Seattle area in 1992 figuring, Id be here about three years. But then he met Suzi at a Microsoft conference.
The more weve lived here the more settled weve become, says Eric. When I go back to Boston [his hometown], I say, why are you people so stressed? A Jewish Family Service board member for eight years, he and Suzi have been involved with Hillels Grads Plus program (now known as Jconnect) and are founding members of the Kavana Cooperative.Everybody knows Suzi, says Eric, who prefers to volunteer behind the scenes. Cellartracker keeps him busy almost constantly: Its the curse of the entrepreneur, says Eric, who earlier this year was named by Seattle magazine as one of Nine Nerds of Note. He unwinds by cooking for his family, including son Sidney, 9, and daughter Talia, 6. Wine, of course, remains an active hobby and when the weathers good he likes to ride his mountain bike.
courTeSy eric leviNe
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What a Life!
one night only
Music behind barbed wire
Discover What a Life!a satiric cabaret-like revue by the Viennaborn composer Hans Gl, with ironic numbers like The Barbed Wire Song, The Ballad of the German Refugee, and The Song of the Double Bed. Gl created the revue for the entertainment of his fellow prisoners in the English detention camp where wartime authorities interned enemy aliens. ACT Theatres Kurt Beattie will read from Gls journal of those dark days. Also: Gls Huyton Suite, Marcel Tybergs romantic piano trio, Vilem Tauskys Coventry: A Meditation for String Quartet.
an impressive record of performances with some of the regions finest musicians (Seattle Times)
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Protest Injustice
by Mike Selinker
If you go:
On sun., Oct. 30 The Boys of Terezns world premiere screening will take place at seattle Art Museums Plestcheeff Auditorium, 1300 1st Ave., seattle. Tickets cost $18 advance, $25 at the door. Music of Remembrances cabaret-style satire What a Life! make its West coast premiere Mon., Nov. 7 at 7:30 p.m. at Benaroya Hall, 200 University st., seattle. Tickets cost $36. Tickets for both events may be purchased at www.musicofremembrance.org.
There may be times when we are powerless to prevent injustice, Elie Wiesel said, but there must never be a time when we fail to protest. Here are some places where people didnt fail to protest, often with serious consequences for themselves.
ACROSS 1 Country where election protestor Neda Agha-Soltan was killed on June 20, 2009 5 Very dry, as Champagne 9 Works on a Project Runway project 13 My bad! 14 Mozarts ___ kleine Nachtmusik 15 Country where Mahatma Gandhi led a 23-day march to protest the British salt tax starting on March 12, 1930 16 State where protests began on February 14, 2011, eventually leading to an occupation of the capital building 18 Posts 19 Redhook ___ Brewery 20 Result of a bases-loaded walk, for short 21 City where protests delayed the World Trade Organization meetings on November 30, 1999 23 Motown singer ___ Marie 25 Brief name for the home of the financial district that protestors occupied starting September 17, 2011 26 City where the Rabbis March on October 6, 1943, protested inaction against the Holocaust 30 Some PCs 33 Ticked off 34 ___ polloi 35 Fleur-de-___ 37 Site where one man stood against a column of tanks on June 5, 1989, a day after a massive protest was forcibly dispersed 42 Actors workplace 43 ...boy ___ girl? 44 Glee character played by Kevin McHale 45 Not quite as dry as 5-Across 47 City where the Childrens Crusade began on May 2, 1963, to protest Jim Crow laws 50 Partook 52 Sample 53 City where a bloody crackdown temporarily quelled protests on February 25, 2011, eventually leading to the violent overthrow of the Gaddafi government 57 Vardalos of My Big Fat Greek Wedding 58 Annual local game convention that draws over 60,000 attendees 61 Instant Messenger user 62 School where Vietnam War protesters were gunned down by Ohio National Guardsmen on May 4, 1970 65 City where tens of thousands of protestors gathered on January 25, 2011, in an effort that would ultimately topple the Mubarak government 66 Abbr. in many school names 67 Second word of many fairy tales 68 Laudatory poems 69 Helper 70 Region where protester Rachel Corrie was killed by an Israel Defense Forces bulldozer on March 16, 2003 DOWN 1 Early caucus state 2 Stir up 3 Church recess 4 Obamas foreign policy grp. 5 Actor Brian of Private Practice 6 On the ascent 7 Seahawks garb, informally 8 Change for a fifty 9 Brad Pitt film directed by Guy Ritchie 10 Make text better 11 Shortz of crosswords 12 Wedding invitation encl. 15 Wherever ___ Roam (Metallica song) 17 Tater Tots brand 22 Heaths Brokeback Mountain role 23 Not now? 24 Essentially 26 Cleverness 27 Anyone born on April Fools Day 28 Emulate the Rat City Rollergirls 29 Suffix with ball or bass 31 Poet Sylvia 32 Country where protests against Bashar al-Assads regime began on January 26, 2011 36 Appear 38 Dynamite inventor 39 X-ray alternative 40 Airline with a kangaroo logo 41 Craving 46 Diamond heists, perhaps 48 Like certain space probes 49 Dumpees query 51 Benicio del ___ (9-Down star) 53 Food in a shell 54 Wall Street, for example 55 Would ___ to you? 56 Where to buy an Ektorp sofa 58 Dad 59 Including everything 60 Gabrielles fighting partner 63 Priest who taught Samuel 64 Yank
Gl escaped from Austria to England, arriving in 1938, and established important musical connections in Edinburgh. In 1940 he was arrested and interned, says Miller, without any evidence of his committing any crime. Like the Roosevelt administrations roundup of JapaneseAmericans, Churchills England launched its own version of preventive detention of suspected enemy aliens. Gl was first sent to Huyton, a camp near Liverpool, where he wrote a suite for the only musical instruments he had to
geTTy iMAgeS
Answers on page 7
2011 Eltana Wood-Fired Bagel Cafe, 1538 12th Avenue, Seattle. All rights reserved. Puzzle created by Lone Shark Games, Inc. Edited by Mike Selinker and Mark L. Gottlieb.
mies. The Barbed Wire Song, songs of betrayal, absurdity, liberation Miller, always sleuthing for new angles on musical resistance to the Holocaust, found these treasures at the Austrian embassy in Washington, D.C. She found an extra irony in the shows production history. Gl had been begging for a release on medical grounds, but when it came, he asked to remain an enemy alien for one more day so he could see his much-revised show through its second performance. Miller obtained the score and the diary excerpts from the Gl family. This show is a window on a littleknown injustice, says Miller. What it reminds us of is that even decent societies are capable of mistreating people. Indeed.
work with, a flute and two violins. That Huyton Suite is also on MORs Nov. 7 program. Ballad of the German Refugee includes lyrics by fellow prisoner Otto Erich Deutsch, the celebrated music historian whose Deutsch listings catalogue the works of Franz Schubert. The usual array of MORs renowned musicians Seattle Symphony players Laura de Luca (clarinet), Zart Dombourian-Eby (flute), Mikhail Shmidt and Leonid Keylin (violins), Susan Gulkis Assadi (viola), and Mara Finkelstein (cello), plus Miller at the piano will join tenor Ross Hauck and baritone Eric Parce, who also directs the show.
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JQ
The Vaad HaRabbanim of Greater Seattle held its third annual Beit HaShoeva, a Sukkot celebration that symbolizes the drawing of water from the well to pour on the altar of the holy Temple, on Mon., Oct. 17. More than 200 people attended the event, which included a ceremony honoring John Gillespie, the former manager of the Mercer Island Albertsons store, for his work to build and maintain the extensive kosher selection throughout the supermarket. Presenting Gillespie, center, with a certificate were, from left to right, Rabbi Ron-Ami Meyers of Congregation ezra Bessaroth, Rabbi Simon Benzaquen of Sephardic Bikur Holim, Rabbi Moshe Kletenik of Bikur Cholim-Machzikay Hadath, and Rabbi Yechezkel Kornfeld of Congregation Shevet Achim.
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C-O-N-N-E-C-T-O-R
2031 THIRD AVENUE | SEAT TLE, WA | 98121-2412 | P: 206 443-5400 | INFO@JEWISHINSEAT TLE.ORG | WWW.JEWISHINSEAT TLE.ORG
Connections
January 29, 2012
Will you be a Table Captain? Register today as a Table Captain for Connections. Youll have priority table assignment and get to sit with your friends. Call Michelle Shriki at 206-774-2226 or email MichelleS@JewishInSeattle.org.
Help Support Your Jewish Community at Super Sunday (Sun., Nov. 13)
We need you! Its Super Sunday November 13 at the Stroum JCC on Mercer Island. Join with hundreds of other members of our Jewish community for the Federations annual community-wide Phone-a-thon. You bring your cell phonewell bring the food, fun, prizes and community. Help us reach out to the Jewish community to support the organizations and programs that truly make Seattle a great place to be Jewish. Well provide you with everything you need to share your enthusiasm for our Jewish community and the Jewish Federation. Sign up for your choice of calling shifts: 9:30am-noon; 11:30am-2pm; 1:30-4pm. Pick your time by calling 206-443-5400 or online at www.JewishInSeattle.org/ SuperSunday. Plan now to be where the action is on November 13.
Over 200 people joined together for a special Yom Kippur PJ Library Storytime at the Stroum Jewish Community Center. In conjunction with Herzl-Ner Tamid, parents and children together experienced a unique story walk and activities, led by PJ Library manager
Amy Hilzman-Paquette and Leslie Reibman. It was truly an amazing day, said Hilzman-Paquette. To share stories of our heritage on the holiest day of the year and bringing together multiple generations is the mission of the PJ Library program.
To register your young child for the PJ Library program, visit www.JewishInSeattle.org/PJLibrary
NOVEMBER 13
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If you go:
The seattle Jewish Theater company will perform What the Chelm? at the Washington state Jewish Historical societys gala event at Herzl-Ner Tamid conservative congregation, 3700 E Mercer Way, Mercer Island on sun., Nov. 6 at 2 p.m. Tickets cost $36. On sun., Nov. 20 at 7 p.m. they will be at Temple Bnai Torah, 15727 NE 4th st., Bellevue. Free.
The cast of the Seattle Jewish Theater Companys What the Chelm?, based on stories taken from The World of Sholem Aleichem.
well, its also a good way to get the different components of the community working together. He has found one surprise with the creation of the company: How receptive and welcoming audiences have been, he said. People are really ready for a Seattle Jewish theater company. I was hoping they would be.
We N
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SUNDAY A NOV. 13
! PRIZES
FUN!
Phone-a-Thon
9:30am 4pm
2012
COMMUNITY!
FOOD!
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women to watch
For our fall profile of women in our community doing great things, we found a diverse selection of women who love food, film, fixing others, and, in a couple of cases, a good fight. JTNews is always on the lookout for these doers in our community, so if you know someone making a difference, please let us know! Weve also got a bonus woman to watch, but in the more literal sense youll have to buy tickets to go see her.
Audrey Rostov
Diana breMent JTNews columnist
City: Seattle Age: 49 Occupation: Eye surgeon Whats on her mind these days: Curing corneal blindness and where my next cycling trip will take me. When eye surgeon Dr. Audrey Rostov became aware of SightLife 15 years ago, it was just our local eye bank, she says. Since then it has grown into an international organization with a global initiative project to eliminate worldwide corneal blindness. Audrey, a partner-owner at Northwest Eye Surgeons in Seattle, is a member of SightLifes medical advisory board and recently returned from a trip to India, the latest of three overseas training trips she has taken on behalf of the organization. Most of the corneal blind live in developing countries, she explains, with disease mainly caused by fungal and bacterial infections of the eye due to unsanitary conditions and lack of access to clean water and health care. India has a particularly high rate of corneal blindness, so SightLife has taken on the project to establish eye banks in India, Audrey says. The organization provides some seed money and surgeon and technician training. The goal is for these individual eye banks to become self sustaining in five years. The program is not like [medical] mission trips, which provide temporary medical services, she says. Its more like
the teaching someone to fish philosophy. In order to eliminate corneal blindness, you not only need surgeons and surgical skills, but you also need corneal tissue, so another important aspect of SightLifes
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Pamela Lavitt
JOel MagalnicK editor, JTNews
City: Seattle Age: 45 Occupation: Director, the AJC Seattle Jewish Film Festival Whats on her mind these days: Where the Arab spring may be... turning into an Arab fall. Jewish 10/2011 festivals more and more film are receiving subject matter that addresses those relationships and how you represent it in a real changing moment. Lucky for Seattle filmgoers, Pamela Lavitt caught the theater bug in college. I was a science kid, studying zoology and pre-med track. That was really my focus for most of my life, says the director of the American Jewish Committees Seattle Jewish Film Festival. I decided, when I graduated from college, to pursue the arts initially before I went to medical school. Pamela left her parents home in Westchester County, N.Y. for San Francisco and began acting semi-professionally with several theater troupes there. But she grew restless. I didnt want to be in the theater anymore, I wanted to study it from an aca-
R
2011
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www.ajcseattle.org www.seattlejewishfilmfestival.org
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Morgan Currier
eMily K. alhaDeff Assistant editor, JTNews
City: Seattle Age: 20 Occupation: Student Whats on her mind these days: From Agriprocessors to Gov. Scott Walkers attack on workers in Wisconsin to the continuous labor violations taking place in factories around the world, in recent years the power of corporate greed and its consequences on workers has only intensified. Because of this, I am currently very focused on the immediate need to build sustainable power for working people everywhere. Its rare to go to college knowing what to major in. Its more rare to go to college having already investigated national human rights abuses. Morgan Currier is a student at the University of Washington majoring in law, society and justice, and minoring in music. She is an organizer for United Students
women to watch
Tabatha Jensen
tolle totum holistic wellness center
Tolle Totum Holistic Wellness Center located in Greenlake, is a mindful, inspiring practice that is dedicated to the empowerment and education of their clients. Focused on providing customized massage treatment plans, owner and PWN native, Tabatha Jensen is most well known for her unique intuitive based deep tissue treatment sessions. Tabatha loves working with her clients, helping to not only facilitate a healing process but educate them about their bodies to make conscious lifestyle choices in order to maintain optimal health. First massage 75 min for $40 Insurance Accepted Convenient online booking Extended and weekend hours.
Shprintze Kavka
My family and I have been living in the North End of Seattle for the past 34 years. I joined John L. Scott Real Estate in 1997, and have been selling real estate in the greater Seattle area (and beyond) since then. My knowledge and passion for real estate can be seen by my customer testimonials. Check out my website at www.johnlscott.com/shprintzek. Lets talk...
360-402-9828 www.tolletotum.net
Opportunity
From festivals & concerts to education & worship, The Calendar lets you make choices that help your kids fly farther and leap higher.
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Deborah Perluss
Diana breMent JTNews columnist
City: Seattle Age: 58 Occupation: Attorney Whats on her mind these days: The future of our country and the lack of empathy or political will to ensure that the country lives up to its ideals as a just society for all without regard to race, sex, national origin, age, religion, but especially without regard to wealth. The current economic downturn has created a huge demand for legal aid and other public benefits, because unemployment is so great, says Deborah Perluss, director of advocacy and general counsel to the Northwest Justice Project. Perluss has worked at NJP since 1996, representing the level of her commitment to providing civil legal assistance to lowincome citizens of our state. People living in poverty in Washington are lucky to have Debi championing their cause, wrote Andrea Axel, grants manager at the Legal Foundation of Washington and a legal aid colleague, in an email. Debis powerful intellect unwinds the thorniest legal problems. She is fierce when overcoming obstacles and passionate about ensuring justice for vulnerable people. She is nothing short of a marvel, she added. Among other things, NJP helps clients obtain disability and Medicaid benefits and represents those facing eviction or
Joel MAgAlNick
after her 18th birthday to start college. Perlusss day-to-day job functions include working with all the lawyers in the field, ensuring the accountability and integrity of the program, and functioning as an ethics guru, she says. NJP and similar organizations, she adds, make sure that low-income people have access to the justice system and a way to redress their legal rights and to adhere to their legal obligations in a way that both respects the judicial system and their own dignity. NJP is partly supported by funds raised by the non-profit Alliance for Equal Justice, an association of organizations that support civil legal aid across our state. More information is on their website, www.nwjustice.org.
women to watch
Morgan, Your commitment to social justice is remarkable. You inspire our community to action on behalf of others.
Left to right, 2011 five star employee Benefit Professionals trisha Cacabelos and Linda Kosin
Your tireless work truly repairs the world. Thank you, Hillel UW
50 116th Avenue Southeast, Suite 201 Bellevue, WA 98004 Office: 425-454-9373 Toll-free: 888-554-9373 tcacabelos@uib.com lkosin@uib.com
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Keren Brown
eMily K. alhaDeff Assistant editor, JTNews
City: Seattle Age: 32 Occupation: Food Entrepeneur Whats on her mind these days: Juggling three kids under 3, discovering all the great places to eat in this city, connecting people and making things happen. Keren Brown is the real Food Network. A blogger, author, foodie, socialite and entrepreneur, she has perhaps single-handedly united the Seattle food community. If I have an idea, Ill just go for it, says the 32-year-old mother of three and creator of FranticFoodie.com and a networking organization, Foodportunity. When Keren moved to Seattle about five years ago for her husbands job, she knew no one and had no connections. Reminiscent of Julia Childs rise to food fame while she wiled the days away in Paris, Keren just started to cook. She
the foodportunist
signed up for cooking classes across the city and started writing about food on her original blog for the Seattle PI, Confessions of a Wannabe Chef. My goal was to discover food and everything about Seattle, says Keren of her early days. It turned into something totally different. Meanwhile, she started throwing events for people in her building. I wanted to meet people because I was lonely, she says. Soon enough, though, Kerens writing and networking took on lives of their own. Within a few weeks of blogging for the PI, Keren knew she wanted to blaze her own trails. Frantic Foodie was born, the go-to site for Seattle food events, food gossip, food recommendations, recipes and everything else about the food world. But writing about local food wasnt enough. Why, she wondered, were all these bloggers writing about Seattle local food without really knowing one another? So one night, she got everyone together for Gradually, restaurateurs, journalists, PR companies and even farmers wanted to join the party. Celebrity guests have made appearances, such as Ruth Reichl, former editor-in-chief of Gourmet magazine, and Amy Pennington, the Seattleite locavore and author of Urban Pantry: Tips and Recipes for a Thrifty, Sustainable and Seasonal Kitchen. Its become this one-stop event where everyone networks, says Keren. No longer just for local writers, Foodportunity welcomes and connects everyone in the food industry, even the casual foodie. On top of running a booming food networking business, blogging and raising a family, she also has a book under her belt. Food Lovers Guide to Seattle is part of the Food Lovers series and acts as a complete guide to all things culinary in Seattle, from food festivals to farmers markets. No wonder she was named Doer of the Week by Martha Stewart in 2010.
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dinner on Capitol Hill. What started out as a gathering of local bloggers morphed into a full-scale networking event called Foodportunity.
women to watch
specializing in real estate on mercer island and the eastside
Sandra Levin
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Jody Epstein
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Real estate is my passion. Buying, selling, renting or managing, I am ready to exceed your expectations. Keeping it simple. Making it fun. Getting it done.
Life-long resident of Mercer Island and the Eastside Active community leader and volunteer Understands the needs of home buyers and real estate investors Award winner for Client Satisfaction and Sales Volume Committed to providing the highest level of customer service and satisfaction
Mary Frimer
john l. scott real estate
Mary has been with John L.Scott since 1996 achieving every year the Presidents Gold and Presidents Elite categories. She specializes in Mercer Island, the Eastside and Seattle. Born in Guatemala (and fluent in Spanish), she moved to Mercer Island in 1969 and has lived there ever since. Full service real estate. First class serviceFirst class results
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erate side Seriously, one of [the] big charities [I raise money for] is the Wounded Warrior Project. Unbelievable the way [service members] come back and people just forget about them. And theyre all 19 years old. I hope the country is worthy. JT: Maybe some service members will come to the show. JR: That would be wonderful . At least the gays in the military will probably come. JT: Fans of Joan & Melissa: Joan Knows Best? are delighted WE TV has renewed the show for another season. Can you give us a preview? JR: The new season starts in January. One of our friends, a 28-year-old WASP, found out his grandmother on his mothers side was Jewish. So we gave him a Bar Mitzvah. JT: People seem to enjoy seeing you relate to your grandson Cooper on Joan & Melissa, and on your other TV show, Fashion Police on E!, you are a fashion critic. Do you remember your grandmothers and what their styles were like? JR: They were opposites. The one who had style people tell me she was so chic died when I was young. The one I remember had no style. She had a black dress and a cane and a diamond brooch. And that brooch did not go to my side of the family. JT: Any advice on how to stay well admits, especially with the need to balance the mission of the festivals parent organization, the AJC. One way she has done that has been to open up the selection process to a wider array of community members. It would be nave for me to think that I
If you go:
Joan Rivers will perform Fri., Nov. 4 at the Pantages Theater, 901 Broadway, Tacoma. Tickets available at www.broadwaycenter. org or 253-591-5894. Tickets also available for a Meet & greet with Joan Rivers and comic Brad Upton, who will open for Joan. Proceeds will benefit the new Tacoma branch of gildas club, a charity serving cancer patients and their families.
dressed, sexy, and full of energy into your 70s and beyond? JR: Number one, dont think about your age. Most of my friends are younger. I dont discuss doctors and operationsI buy things that I like wear a feather in your hair! I am in my 70s so I can do whatever I damn please. You can wear the styles but with more discretion. You may not want to show your arms, so buy a dress with sleeves. could just stay at home in my office casual known as pajamas and watch 300 films and program the festival, she says. But theres no question she loves her work. Despite her frantic schedule and acknowledging that shes lucky to actually be working in such a tough climate,
You can wear a short skirt if youve still got good legs, just not as short. People are living so much longer today. I remember when my mothers friends hit 50, they were half dead. Nowbeing Grandma has a different look. As I am getting closer to 80, I think that. Then again, Im sure Cooper and his friends think Im resurrected from King Tut.
Heather Robinson is a New York-based journalist and assistant editor of the New Jersey Jewish Standard. She blogs for The Huffington Post and at www.heatherrobinson.net.
Its funny to think my Jewish learning is beginning at 40-something, she says. As for the film festival, directing an arts nonprofit in difficult economic times is something of a double-edged sword, she
Pamela always comes back to this: Most peoples reaction when I tell them what I do is, Oh my gosh, thats so cool! Wow, you get to do that? I have to just hold onto that and be grateful, she says. I could be an academic somewhere in Idaho right now.
Congratulations to
The WSJHS Annual Fundraiser Taste and Treats of Food and Theater
Sunday, November 6th at 2:004:30pm
Herzl-Ner Tamid 3700 East Mercer Way, Mercer Island
Celebrate the launch of the Washington State Jewish Historical Societys very own cookbook, Yesterdays Mavens, Todays Foodies: Traditions in Northwest Jewish Kitchens, Enjoy a Seattle Jewish Theater Company performance of Tales of Chelm from The World of Sholom Aleichem, the classic Broadway hit The New York Times called wholly delightful. Fun for the whole family. Sample recipes and peruse storyboards from our recent exhibit Whos Minding the Store?
Dr. Audrey Talley-Rostov for being a Woman to Watch With Love and Admiration Moss Patashnik and Dr. Margaret Hall
dition co
py
RSVP by November 1st. Questions? Please call Lori Ceyhun at 206-774-2277 or assistant@wsjhs.org
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November 3 at 7 p.m. David guterson Author talk Oedipal complexes, illicit sex, mental illness no, Philip Roth is not in town, but David Guterson is. Bainbridge Island resident Guterson, the author of Snow Falling on Cedars, will be talking about his new novel, Ed King (Oed Rex...get it?), a story of the abandoned love child between a married man and a seriously disturbed au pair. Ed Aaron King is adopted by a liberal Jewish couple living in Seattles Northend who decide to withhold from him the truth of his adoption. The details are in the chorus, and theyve been described by the Kansas City Star as transcendently dark and dazzling. At the University Book Store, 4326 University Way NE, Seattle. For more information visit www.bookstore.washington.edu/events.
November 10 at 7:30 David grossman Author Talk Israeli author David Grossman will talk about his life and his latest novel, To the End of the Land, the tale of love, loss, destruction and the complexity of Israeli society. Grossman, who lost his son in the Lebanon War in 2006, writes fiction prolifically on the matzav that is, the security situation in Israel. Grossmans talk is part of the Seattle Arts and Lectures 2011-2012 Border Crossing series, which features writers, poets and historians from around the world who explore physical, emotional and metaphorical borders in their works. At Town Hall, Great Hall (enter on 8th). For more information and to purchase tickets visit www.lectures.org. Tickets run from $5 to $30.
November 13 at 2 p.m. 1,000 Mitzvahs: How Small Acts of Kindness Can Heal, Inspire, and Change Your Life Author talk A month after her father passed away, Portland resident Linda Cohen took it upon herself to perform 1,000 good deeds to honor his memory. The process was transformative for Cohen, and with her book about the 2-1/2-year process of healing she hopes to inspire others. At Elliott Bay Books, 1521 Tenth Ave., Seattle. For more information contact Marjorie Schnyder at 206-861-3146 or familylife@jfsseattle.org.
Through November 12 selma Waldman: gesture and Empathy Art Exhibit Selma Waldman (19312008), who spent her adult life in Seattle and whose early works hung alongside OKeeffes and Hoppers, grew to see her art as a vehicle for social concerns. The drawings selected for the exhibition exemplify her fervent passion for justice. At Gage Academy of Art, 1501 10th Ave. E, Seattle. For more information visit www.gageacademy.org.
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OngOing events
Event names, locations, and times are provided here for ongoing weekly events. Please visit calendar. jtnews.net for descriptions and contact information.
friDays
9:3010:30 a.m. SJcc Tot Shabbat Stroum JCC 11 a.m.12 p.m. Tots Welcoming Shabbat Temple Bnai Torah 12:303:30 p.m. Bridge group Stroum JCC 12:303:30 p.m. drop-in Mah Jongg Stroum JCC
saturDays
910:30 a.m. Temple Bnai Torah Adult Torah Study Temple Bnai Torah 9:45 a.m. BcMH youth Services BCMH 10 a.m. Morning youth program Congregation Ezra Bessaroth 1:152:15 p.m. Middot and Mitzvot Congregation Beth Shalom 5 p.m. The ramchals derech Hashem, portal from the Ari to Modernity Congregation Beth HaAri
9:3011 a.m. pathways Through the oral Torah: An introduction to the Talmud and Midrash Temple De Hirsch Sinai 9:3011:30 a.m. reflective parenting: disciplining from the Heart Temple Bnai Torah 1011 a.m. Hebrew class: Advanced Beginner Congregation Herzl-Ner Tamid 10:15 a.m. Sunday Torah Study Congregation Beth Shalom 11 a.m. 12 p.m. Hebrew class: Beginner Congregation Herzl Ner-Tamid 11:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m. Hebrew reading class Back to Basics Congregation Beth Shalom 7:3010:30 p.m. HeAri israeli dancing Danceland Ballroom (call to confirm)
7:458:45 p.m. For Women only Congregation Shaarei Tefilah Lubavitch 8:30 p.m. Talmud in Hebrew Eastside Torah Center 810 p.m. Womens israeli dance class The Seattle Kollel 8:30 p.m. Talmud, yeshiva-Style Eastside Torah Center
7:159:15 p.m. engaging israel: Foundations for a New relationship Stroum JCC 7:30 p.m. Weekly round Table kabbalah class Eastside Torah Center 7:30 p.m. The Tanya Chabad of Central Cascades
tuesDays
11 a.m.12 p.m. Mommy and Me program Chabad of the Central Cascades 12 p.m. Torah for Women Eastside Torah Center 7 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous Meetings Jewish Family Service 7 p.m. Teen center BCMH 7 p.m. Hebrew (Alef Bet) level 1 Congregation Beth Shalom 7 p.m. Hebrew (Biblical) level 2 Congregation Beth Shalom 7 p.m. Siddur Hebrew: Amidah Congregation Beth Shalom 7 p.m. intermediate Hebrew Congregation Herzl-Ner Tamid 79 p.m. The Jewish Journey Seattle Kollel 79:15 p.m. living Judaism: The Basics Congregation Beth Shalom
WeDnesDays
7 p.m. Beginning israeli dancing for Adults with rhona Feldman Congregation Beth Shalom 79 p.m. Teen lounge for Middle Schoolers BCMH 7:30 p.m. parshas Hashavuah Eastside Torah Center
MOnDays
10 a.m.2 p.m. Jcc Seniors group Stroum JCC 12:30 p.m. caffeine for the Soul Chabad of the Central Cascades 6:158:30 p.m. Bringing Baby Home Jewish Family Service 7 p.m. cSA Monday Night classes Congregation Shevet Achim 78 p.m. crash course in Hebrew Seattle Kollel 78 p.m. ein yaakov in english Congregation Shaarei Tefilah Lubavitch
thursDays
10 a.m.2 p.m. Jcc Seniors group Stroum JCC 6:50 p.m.7:50 p.m. introduction to Hebrew Herzl-Ner Tamid Conservative Congregation 7 p.m. Junior Teen center BCMH 810 p.m. Teen lounge for High Schoolers BCMH 7:30-9 p.m. Beth Shalom Beit Midrash Congregation Beth Shalom
sunDays
9:1510:15 a.m. Advanced Talmud for Men Congregation Beth HaAri
Have you visited the new online Jewish community calendar? Find it at calendar.jtnews.net!
candlelighting times october 28 .......................5:41 p.m. November 4 .................... 5:30 p.m. November 11 .................. 4:20 p.m. November 18 ...................4:12 p.m. saturDay
that killed their parents, Joshua and Robin Berry of Houston. At Temple Bnai Torah, 15727 NE 4th Street, Bellevue. 2 p.m. SJcc Jewish Touch lecture: How george gershwin Became an American composer
Kim Lawson at klawson@sjcc.org or 206-388-0829 or www.sjcc.org University of Washington music history professor Larry Starr will investigate how George Gershwin became a celebrated and truly American composer. SJCC members and seniors $5; general admission $10. At the Stroum JCC, 3801 E Mercer Way, Mercer Island. Stroum JCC, 3801 E Mercer Way, Mercer Island. 79 p.m. The Jewish Journey
Rabbi Avrohom David at info@seattlekollel.org or 206-722-8289 or seattlekollel.org Delve into the timeless wisdom of the sages. Learn about Judaism from birth to death, from spiritual to physical, from alef to tav, from mystical to mundane. Visit the Kollel course description website for a full list of courses. $180 per year. At the Seattle Kollel, 5305 52nd Ave. S, Seattle.
friDay
1:152:15 p.m. Middot and Mitzvot with Shirah Bell and Joel goldstein
Carol Benedick at carolbenedick@bethshalomseattle.org or 206-524-0075 or www.bethshalomseattle.org Using principles of Mussar, Talmud, Torah and halachah and Alan Morinis book, Everyday Holiness, this free Shabbat discussion explores the relationship of middot (character traits) and mitzvot. At Congregation Beth Shalom, 6800 35th Ave. NE, Seattle. 510 p.m. parents Night out
Josh Johnson at JoshJ@sjcc.org or 206-388-0839 or www.sjcc.org Parents can hit the town while the kids spend a fun evening at the SJCC. Open swim time, dinner, dessert, and an evening movie. $25$45. At the Stroum Jewish Community Center, 3801 E Mercer Way, Mercer Island.
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something. Wasnt that movement? AA: I do not believe the words anymore, or the promises. I want to see action on the ground. If somebody is ready to move forward he should not oppose to bring back those settlers who are living in a territory that everybody understands will not be under sovereignty of Israel. I think that morally we do not have the right to send troops to fight there. Anybody who tells me, Look, I want to move forward but I dont have a part-
ner, this is the dictionary of blame. We are doing it during the last 20 years, 60 years, 100 years. We are killing each other and we feel great because we blame them, and they are doing the same for us. JT: So how do you move forward when the right players are not in place? AA: I believe that in a time of confusion, and when the storm reaches us, the people are looking for new ideas. And this is why it is very important to create these ideas. I used to hope that we should understand before we reach the storm. Probably we can avoid the storm. But I have
to admit that sometimes people do not understand before we face the storm itself. JT: If the UN body votes for an independent Palestine, how does that change this equation? If this will be the decision, I think we should say, Okay, we accept it, now lets negotiate the borders. I think that if we shall not do it, Im afraid that when 80 percent or 85 percent of the states in the world accept Palestine along the lines of 67, if we shall not join this process I believe that Israel will be more isolated and the idea of two states will be more difficult to achieve.
Id prefer to negotiate with a state than with an organization. With a state, for example, the right of return, the state cannot demand sending people to Israel. If you are a state, it is your duty to bring back your people exactly the same that Israel [has done] since 48. I believe that the first law they will pass will be the law of return for Palestinian refugees to Palestine. Its okay. Its great. I just want to see it happening.
Seattle teens say going to Alexander Muss High School in Israel was the best thing theyve ever done
Despite the fact that she had been to Israel before, Rachel Greene said the time she spent at Alexander Muss High School in Israel (AMHSI) this past summer was the most amazing experience she has ever had. Greene, a junior at Interlake High School, said the AMHSI program was so much more meaningful than when she visited Israel for two weeks in 8th grade because this time she was living the experience, staying in a dorm on campus, not just visiting as a tourist. We learned both in the classroom and at the actual sites where history took place, often reenacting historical events where they occurred, which was a great way to learn. I understand so much more about the Middle East now and why it is important to support Israel, Greene said. Lauren Schechter, now a senior at Garfield High School, who returned with the same intense emotional attachment to Israel also reflected on the connections she had made to her classmates. When you go through such an amazing experience with a group of people, it bonds you in a way nothing else can, Schechter said. Nick Alkan, a 17 year old from Bellevue who attended the program during the spring semester in 2010, reflected on how AMHSI affected him. I really wasnt that social before and now I have a ton of friends because the AMHSI staff encouraged me to reach out to people in a way I had never done before. This past summer, I even got a job as a camp counselor at a Jewish camp in West Virginia with a group of kids I went to Israel with, said Alkan. According to Kathy Yeyni, Director of Admissions, what sets the program apart is that AMHSI is a pluralistic high school academic experience, which means there is a mix of reform, conservative and orthodox teens that enroll. Students receive high school credits and may be eligible to earn college credits as well. Sessions are offered throughout the school year and in the summer. Yeyni said those who attend during the school year continue with their secular studies on the Hod Hasharon campus in Israel, keeping them up to date academically upon their return to the states.
Temple De Hirsch Sinai is the leading and oldest Reform congregation in the Pacic Northwest. With warmth and caring, we embrace all who 206.323.8486 enter through our doors. www.tdhs-nw.org We invite you to share our past, and help 1511 East Pike St. Seattle, WA 98122 shape our future. 3850 156th Ave. SE, Bellevue, WA 98006
The Anti-Defamation League is a leader in fighting prejudice and protecting civil rights for all. Contact us to connect your passion for social justice with your Jewish roots! Email: seattle@adl.org Phone: (206) 448-5349 Website: www.adl.org/pacific-northwest
206-447-1967 www.campschechter.org
PNW Region Hadassah and Seattle Chapter Hadassah 425.467.9099 pacificnwhadassah@gmail.com seattle@hadassah.org
Kol Haneshamah is an intimate congregation, open to people of different backgrounds and traditions. We meet twice a month at Alki UCC in West Seattle. 6115 SW Hinds St., Seattle 98116 E-mail: info@khnseattle.org Telephone: 206-935-1590 www.khnseattle.org
Interested in finding out more about AMHSI? Meet renowned AMHSI educator Elhanan Brown when he visits Seattle in November. Brown will be the guest speaker at two informational meetings held Thursday, Nov. 3rd at 7 p.m. in Bellevue and Monday, Nov. 7th at 6:30 p.m. at the SJCC on Mercer Island. To RSVP or for more information, please contact Director of Admissions, Kathy Yeyni at kyeyni@ amhsi.org or 206-948-2030.
Seattleites
Yossi Mentz, Regional Director 5535 Balboa Blvd., Suite 114 Encino, CA 91316 Tel: 818-905-5099 Toll Free: 800-323-2371 western@afmda.org
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Keren does not consider herself in any way religious, but she explains that she loves Jewish culture and traditions, and she tries to imbue this love in her children. She and her family often dig into a Macrina challah on Friday nights and spend time together. And of course, theres the food. I love finding my friends mothers and asking them to teach me how to make things, she says. Thats what I like about Jewish food: Its not just bagels and lox and cream cheese.
Despite all of her activities, Keren says her kids are her number one priority. And she has a new job: Her two-weekold twins. Its important for me to have a job I can do and involve my kids. My 3-year-old comes to events with me. My sons really social too, she says. I like to have a job where I can make my own schedule. Although Keren loves food that surprises her in terms of spices, herbs and preparation, its the simple things she likes best. Im just happy having a family and a job I love, she says.
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shelf life of our experience at Challenging Heights, and how long before global injustice gives way to a more personal injustice some inane narcissistic wound. On the last day we were asked to construct a small brick garden along a wall of the building project. I found it totally absurd to imagine a time when dainty begonias or delicate pink tulips might blossom among marauding goats, rummaging chickens and playing children. But maybe there is something to it. Perhaps the act of building a space for a garden is a
way of creating a picture of a future not yet realized. A compass pointing to what may be and not what is. A seed planted to challenge the meaning our work begun, but not complete. A final disruptive memory upending one more table as we boarded the bus and drove away.
Rabbi Will Berkovitz is the Seattle-based rabbi-in-residence and vice president for partnerships for the Repair the World social justice organization. This piece originally ran at Huffington Post.
professional directory
Care Givers
HomeCare Associates A program of Jewish Family Service 206-861-3193 www.homecareassoc.org Provides personal care, assistance with daily activities, medication reminders, light housekeeping, meal preparation and companionship to older adults living at home or in assisted-living facilities.
to jewish washington
Insurance
Abolofia Insurance Agency Bob Abolofia, Agent 425-641-7682 F 425-988-0280 babolofia@yahoo.com Independent agent representing Pemco since 1979
10/28 2011
Photographers
Dani Weiss Photography 206-760-3336 www.daniweissphotography.com Photographer Specializing in People. Children, Bnai Mitzvahs, Families, Parties, Promotions & Weddings. v
Counselors/Therapists
Jewish Family Service Individual, couple, child and family therapy 206-861-3152 contactus@jfsseattle.org www.jfsseattle.org Expertise with life transitions, addiction and recovery, relationships and personal challenges all in a cultural context. Licensed therapists; flexible day or evening appointments; sliding fee scale; most insurance plans.
Financial Services
Hamrick Investment Counsel, LLC Roy A. Hamrick, CFA 206-441-9911 rahamrick@hamrickinvestment.com www.hamrickinvestment.com Professional portfolio management services for individuals, foundations and nonprofit organizations.
Senior Services
Hyatt Home Care Services Live-in and Hourly Care 206-851-5277 www.hyatthomecare.com Providing adults with personal care, medication reminders, meal preparation, errands, household chores, pet care and companionship.
Catering
Matzoh Momma Catering Catering with a personal touch 206-324-MAMA Serving the community for over 25 years. Full service catering and event planning for all your Life Cycle events. Miriam and Pip Meyerson
Mass Mutual Financial Group Albert Israel, CFP 206-346-3327 aisrael@finsvcs.com Retirement planning for those nearing retirement Estate planning for those subject to estate taxes General investment management Life, disability, long-term care & health insurance Complimentary one hour sessions available
Eastside Insurance Services Chuck Rubin, agent 425-271-3101 F 425-277-3711 4508 NE 4th, #B, Renton Tom Brody, agent 425-646-3932 F 425-646-8750 www.e-z-insurance.com 2227 112th Ave. NE, Bellevue We represent Pemco, Safeco, Hartford & Progressive
Solomon M. Karmel, Ph.D First Allied Securities 425-454-2285 x 1080 www.hedgingstrategist.com Retirement, stocks, bonds, college, annuities, business 401Ks.
Newman Dierst Hales, PLLC Nolan A. Newman, CPA 206-284-1383 nnewman@ndhaccountants.com www.ndhaccountants.com Tax Accounting Healthcare Consulting
www.jtnews.net www.jew-ish.com
Funeral/Burial Services
Hills of Eternity Cemetery Owned and operated by Temple De Hirsch Sinai 206-323-8486 Serving the greater Seattle Jewish community. Jewish cemetery open to all pre-need and at-need services. Affordable rates Planning assistance. Queen Anne, Seattle
United Insurance Brokers, Inc. Linda Kosin 425-454-9373 lkosin@uib.com F 425-453-5313 Your insurance source since 1968 Employee benefits Commercial business and Personal insurance 50 116th Ave SE #201, Bellevue 98004
Jewish Family Service 206-461-3240 www.jfsseattle.org Comprehensive geriatric care management and support services for seniors and their families. Expertise with in-home assessments, residential placement, family dynamics and on-going case management. Jewish knowledge and sensitivity.
College Placement
College Placement Consultants 425-453-1730 preiter@qwest.net www.collegeplacementconsultants.com Pauline B. Reiter, Ph.D. Expert help with undergraduate and graduate college selection, applications and essays. 40 Lake Bellevue, #100, Bellevue 98005
Warren J. Libman, D.D.S., M.S.D. 425-453-1308 www.libmandds.com Certified Specialist in Prosthodontics: Restorative Reconstructive Cosmetic Dentistry 14595 Bel Red Rd. #100, Bellevue
Legal Services
Efrem R. Krisher, Attorney at Law 206-622-1100 x 120 ekrisher@buckleylaw.net www.buckleyandassociates.net 675 S Lane St., Suite 300, Seattle 98104 Auto Injury claims Wrongful death Product liability No recovery, no fee
The Summit at First Hill 206-652-4444 www.klinegallandcenter.org The only Jewish retirement community in the state of Washington offers transition assessment and planning for individuals looking to downsize or be part of an active community of peers. Multi-disciplinary professionals with depth of experience available for consultation.
Michael Spektor, D.D.S. 425-643-3746 info@spektordental.com www.spektordental.com Specializing in periodontics, dental implants, and cosmetic gum therapy. Bellevue
Graphic Design
Spear Studios, Graphic Design Sandra Spear 206-898-4685 sspear@spearstudios.com Newsletters Brochures Logos Letterheads Custom invitations Photo Editing for Genealogy Projects
Linda Jacobs & Associates College Placement Services 206-323-8902 linjacobs@aol.com Successfully matching student and school. Seattle.
Wendy Shultz Spektor, D.D.S. 425-454-1322 info@spektordental.com www.spektordental.com Emphasis: Cosmetic and Preventive Dentistry Convenient location in Bellevue
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to read Ellas Trip to Israel. At Kol HaNeshamah, 6115 SW Hinds St., Seattle. 1111:30 a.m. Tot Shabbat
Irit Eliav at iriteliav@bethshalomseattle.org or 206-524-0075, ext. 2503 or bethshalomseattle.org Children ages 03 (and their parents) are invited to a fun Shabbat morning tot-friendly service. Service meets on the first Shabbat of the month. Free. At Congregation Beth Shalom, 6800 35th Ave. NE, Seattle.
sunDay
6 nOveMber
Taste dishes, enjoy a performance by the Seattle Jewish Theater Company, and more. Cost: $36; $18/ 30 and under. At Herzl-Ner Tamid Conservative Congregation, 3700 E Mercer Way, Mercer Island. 59 p.m. 2011 AipAc Washington State Membership event
AIPAC at seattle_office@aipac.org or 206-624-5152 or www.aipac.org Be part of the largest pro-Israel political event in Washington. Join other community leaders, elected officials, political activists, and students for a chance to show support for the U.S.Israel relationship. At the Westin Seattle, 1900 Fifth Ave., Seattle.
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teaches how to manage the challenging transition into parenthood. Couples of all backgrounds welcome. Advance registration required. Scholarships available. Insurance/EAP may cover this class. At Jewish Family Service, 1601 16th Ave., Seattle. 6:459:30 p.m. What a life! kristallnacht commemoration concert
Micah Shelton at info@musicofremembrance.org or 206-365-7770 or www.musicofremembrance.org The Music of Remembrance fall concert commemorates Kristallnacht. Pre-concert interview/ lecture at 6:45 p.m., concert at 7:30 p.m. $36. At Benaroya Hall, 200 University St., Seattle.
$15 per session, $36 for all 3 evenings. At Herzl-Ner Tamid Conservative Congregation, 3700 E Mercer Way, Mercer Island.
friDay
tuesDay
8 nOveMber
10:30 a.m.12 p.m. pJ library Song and Storytime at the Seattle Jewish community School
Amy Hilzman-Paquette at amyhp@jewishinseattle.org or www.facebook.com/pjlibraryseattle Music, singing and storytelling with the PJ Library and Jeff Stombaugh. Come for the songs and story and stay for activities and playgroup fun. Free. At Seattle Jewish Community School, 12351 Eighth Ave. NE, Seattle. 4:307:30 p.m. congregation Shevet Achims Scholar in residence: rabbi Moshe gruenstein
Randy Kessler at events@shevetachim.com or 206-275-1539 or www.shevetachim.com/events.php Rabbi Moshe Gruenstein will give a talk on Kabbalistic Secrets for Wealth and Health. For more information visit the website. Free. At Congregation Shevet Achim, 5017 90th Ave. SE, Mercer Island.
11 nOveMber
WeDnesDay
Parents
78:30 p.m. Modern Hebrew literature with Joel Altus and lisa orlick
Carol Benedick at carolbenedick@ bethshalomseattle.org or 206-524-0075 or www.bethshalomseattle.org Study the themes and aesthetics of modern Hebrew and Israeli literature. Second Wednesday of the month. Free. At Congregation Beth Shalom, 6800 35th Ave. NE, Seattle. 11 a.m.12 p.m. pJ library Storytime at Mockingbird Books
Amy Hilzman-Paquette at amyhp@jewishinseattle.org or www.facebook.com/pjlibraryseattle Join the PJ Library for music, storytelling and learning Hebrew through ASL with Betsy Dischel from Musikal Magik, a certified Signing Time Academy. Free. At Mockingbird Books, 7220 Woodlawn Ave. NE, Seattle. 79:30 p.m. Torahthon
Andi Neuwirth at andi@h-nt.org or 206-232-8555, ext. 219
9 nOveMber
saturDay
9 a.m.1 p.m. and 4:25 p.m. congregation Shevet Achims Scholar in residence: rabbi Moshe gruenstein
Randy Kessler at events@shevetachim.com or 206-275-1539 or www.shevetachim.com/events.php Rabbi Moshe Gruenstein will give a talk on Whats the Greatest Mitzvah in the Torah? At 4:25 p.m.: The Secret to Having Perfect Children. More information online. Free. At Congregation Shevet Achim, 5017 90th Ave. SE, Mercer Island. 10:3011:15 a.m. learners Minyan with ron Schneeweiss
Carol Benedick at carolbenedick@ bethshalomseattle.org or 206-524-0075 or www.bethshalomseattle.org Learn a different part of the Saturday morning service each month. Check the CBS website for updates on topics. Free. At Congregation Beth Shalom, 6800 35th Ave. NE, Seattle. X PAGe 28
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Marvin Meyers
206-448-6940
JDS Grad & Past Board of Trustees Member Mercer Island High School Grad University of Washington Grad
Serving your real estate needs in the greater Seattle area Call 206-769-7140
Cynthia Williams
Managing Broker, Realtor QuorumLaurelhurst, Inc. cwilliams@quorumlaurelhurst.com www.seattlehomesforsale.net Office 206-522-7003
shouk @jtnews
help wanted caregiving college placement
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Part-time, four mornings a week in Issaquah area. Experience with infant care. Excellent salary, references required. Need by November 15th.
Call 425-577-2746.
caregiver needed
Live-in companion to help active senior and assist with meals, light household tasks, bathing & dressing. Shopping if companion has car. View Ridge lovely home, with pool. Monthly salary. Need November 1st. Call 206-525-8695.
206/323-8902
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funeral/burial services teMple beth oR CeMeteRy
Beautiful location near Snohomish. Serving the burial needs of Reform Jews and their families. For information, please call (425) 259-7125.
homecare services
traditional Jewish funeral services provided by the Seattle Jewish Chapel. For further information, please call 206-725-3067. burial plots are available for purchase at bikur Cholim and Machzikay Hadath cemeteries. For further information, please call 206-721-0970.
cleaning services
Gift Certificate Available!
Landscaping
Maintenance, design, fencing, masonry, sprinkler systems
Handyman
Home repairs, remodels, kitchens and baths
206-459-9228
Nisan Pollack
www.greenthumbsolutions.co licensed, Bonded & Insured #GreeNts902Qc
206-527-1411
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will be as hot as [Erwin] Schulhoff. This is a prodigious opening week for Music of Remembrances 14th season: Sun., A friendship between the late Seattle Oct. 30 is the world premiere screening of the physician Alex Fefer and a fellow cancer documentary The Boys of Terezn. The film researcher in Buffalo brought to MORs traces the journey of an underground conattention a piano trio by Marcel Tyberg, centration camp literary magazine, Vedem: which will also receive its West Coast preOf its creation by a brave miere at the November 7 group of teenage boys, concert. Tyberg was one-sixof the tiny handful of teenth Jewish, says Miller, in those boys who surone of those strange remindvived the death camps, ers of the bizarre calculations of the near-miraculous of Nazi persecution. Born in preservation of their Austria, Tyberg was murdered work, and of the transin Auschwitz, but not before formation of their lithe had passed along his musierary resistance into an cal manuscripts, including this oratorio commissioned trio, to a personal friend. That and premiered by Music friends son, Enrico Mihich, of Remembrance with who wound up in Buffalo, is a the Seattle Boychoir. cancer research physician who The screening, at Seattle never forgot his fathers comArt Museum, includes mitment. courTeSy Mor a conversation with the Mihichs efforts have led, A playbill from 1940 at the Huyton filmmakers. Later this so far, to performances of internment camp of Hans Gls fall, the film will screen Tybergs music in Buffalo, What a life! at Jewish film festivals and now in Seattle, where the in Australia (Sydney and Melbourne) and in Fefers have been regulars at MOR conPalm Beach, Fla. certs; Thea Fefer is a member of MORs Free tickets for the Oct. 30 screenboard. Citing another Holocaust-era coming of The Boys from Terezn are available poser whose reputation has soared thanks to the first 100 high school students to efforts such as MORs, Miller says she to claim them, online only, at expects a resurrection of Tybergs voice: www.musicofremembrance.org. Im sure five to 10 years from now, Tyberg
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The issue became more about student voices being heard. For this rabble-rousing, Morgan was arrested twice. How does she handle the inevitable cynicism and apathy about her cause? A lot of students are very skeptical, she says. The truth is that the companies make so much money. They come in, they take over the community...and because the workers are in this vulnerable position they have no choice but to work. Sodexo made a billion dollars in profit last year, she continues, asserting that they can afford to pay their workers. As to her own choices, Morgan admits its not easy to live her values. When people prod her to account for where her clothes come from, the answer is, yes, it probably [was made in a sweatshop], she says. I do try to be as conscious as possible. One way of being conscious means buying products from Alta Gracia, a factory in the Dominican Republic that committed to fair treatment and fair wages. Morgan visited it and made another short film last February. Rather than trying to change the system through daily choices, Morgan sees a bigger picture of human rights work. What Im waiting for and working for are those options, she says.
As for how Judaism overlaps with her activism, she says, Seeing how my heritage is part of this current struggle helped it all click. For now, Morgans Jewish involvement revolves around the UW Hillel, where she finds a supportive network of friends. She imagines raising her children in the Conservative movement, but stops herself. Wow, thats thinking ahead, she laughs. Robert Beiser, the campus/Jconnect Repair the World director at the UW who supervised Morgans fellowship last year, gave the young activist glowing reviews. If anyone wonders what it will take to build an inspiring, passionate Jewish community for the future, Morgan Currier is the model of young leadership that all others should follow, Beiser said via email. Last year alone, he continued, Morgan helped literally hundreds of students connect with meaningful Jewish service through the Kick Out Sodexo campaign. Despite her driven path, Morgan admits that when it comes to deciding on a career, I have no idea. After a moment, she clarifies: Ill definitely do something in support of unions, she said. I believe strongly that unions are important and the only way for workers to have a voice in the workplace.
To see Morgans short documentary films, check out Bloggish on jew-ish.com.
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It was a bit of controlled chaos when I visited the greenhouse at Seattles Montlake Elementary School this past June. The gardening programs director, Cheri Singer Bloom, had invited me to the schools annual Spring Harvest Lunch, a scaled-up version of Free Salad Friday the weekly salad lunch at which studentgrown produce is served, supplemented by greens from Full Circle Farm. Fifth graders zoomed around putting out food and organizing younger kids into lines, while Cheri doled out aprons and jobs.
would jog by, noting the unused greenhouse. It was haunting her, she says. She also wanted to be part of the school gardens movement started in the Bay Area by Alice Waters of restaurant Chez Panisse, and to be more involved in the community. The greenhouse program dovetailed with a growing interest in eating locally grown food. Starting as part of the 2nd and 3rd grade science curriculum, she says, within a year we were attracting grant money. Cheri credits Michelle Obamas healthy eating campaign with amplifying awareness and the support of the project within our community. The weekly lunches are
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In 2001 some parents approached Cheri about utilizing the greenhouse for education, rather than for storage. With degrees in horticulture from Michigan State, and special education from the University of Washington, Cheri welcomed this goldmine of opportunity. The Detroit native has extensive educational experience. She started her career teaching vocational horticulture to mentally ill adults first in New York, and then in Seattle. She had recently closed her backyard business, the states smallest organic farm. Her kids were at another school, but she lives in the neighborhood and
supported by Les Dames dEscoffier, a philanthropic organization of women in the food industry, but parent support really makes the difference. The project is also linked to the schools green team, part of the Washington Green Schools movement. An avid swimmer who regularly dons her wetsuit to swim a mile in Lake Washington, Cheri, her husband Marc, and kids Sabina and Sam, are members of Temple Beth Am in Seattle.
Columnists note: check out the entertaining list of aptronyms, or aptonyms, at the Wikipedia page of that name.
kAreN covAl/JdS
On Sunday and Monday, Oct. 16 and 17, students, parents and faculty from the Jewish Day School in Bellevue cooked and served meals for the homeless people living Tent City 4, the traveling encampment that is currently stationed at Temple Bnai Torah, next door to JDS. On the left, JDSs head of school Maria erlitz joins assistant head of school Rabbi Stuart light and JDS parent Jen Steiner on the right as they get ready to serve.
communitypowerworks.org 206.449.1170
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world News
ing judge in the original case, Linda Reade of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Iowa, did not have to recuse herself because she was involved in planning the May 2008 federal immigration raid on the Agriprocessors plant, which led to the companys bankruptcy later that year. Rubashkin was convicted of financial fraud and sentenced to 27 years in prison. Several dozen members of Congress
www.JewishInSeattle.org/SuperSunday All members of the Jewish community are invited to help make calls during the annual community-wide phone-a-thon to benefit the Jewish Federations Community Campaign. Please RSVP. Free. At the Stroum JCC, 3801 E Mercer Way, Mercer Island. 124 p.m. Hadassah Holiday Boutique
Barbara Droker at bdroker@droker.net or 206-523-5014 Tzafona group of Seattle Chapter Hadassah is hosting a holiday boutique. Browse and buy jewelry,
and a few U.S. attorneys general had written in favor of leniency in Rubashkins sentencing. In the federal raid on the plant, 389 illegal immigrants were arrested, including 31 minors. The petition calls on Obama to To take prompt and effective steps to correct the gross injustice that has been perpetrated with the federal prosecution of Sholom Rubashkin.
crafts, Judaica and gifts suitable for holiday gift giving. Proceeds support Hadassah programs for hospitals and youth. Free. At the Summit at First Hill, 1200 University St., Seattle. 7:30 p.m. Baron Herzog Wine and dine event
Rena Berger at RenaB@tdsseattle.org or 206-722-1200 or tdsseattle.org An elegant evening of wine tasting and education paired with tasty treats. At Torah Day School of Seattle, 3528 S Ferdinand St., Seattle.
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