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  • Hank Katzen central in building 'the hometeam' at Central Florida Hillel

    Shana Medel|Nov 13, 2015

    Most Jewish students attending the University of Central Florida don't know him by face or by name. But real estate developer and Jewish philanthropist Hank Katzen is one of the masterminds behind Central Florida Hillel-a place that many consider to be their home away from home. The CFH center, located in the $60 million NorthView apartment complex, comprises 20,000 square feet of the 600,000-square-foot facility. In an attempt to create America's first self-sustaining Hillel, Katzen... Full story

  • Scene Around

    Gloria Yousha, Scene Around|Nov 13, 2015

    “A museum like no other”... “The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum was established to remember the victims of the Holocaust and to educate the nation and the world about one of the darkest chapters in human history.” (I received this brochure in the mail recently and will pass it along to you word for word. Now, perhaps more then ever we must be vigilant. A few years ago, my spouse and I visited the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C. We were so very touched. Visit if you can... and support the museum if you are able.) It continu... Full story

  • Math in kindergarten: Let them build flashlights

    Nov 13, 2015

    How do you get a kindergartener excited about math? How about if he or she has to calculate voltage to determine battery strength for a light bulb? At the Orlando Jewish Day School (OJDS), an up-and-coming Jewish Day School in Dr. Phillips, kindergarten students build their own flashlights by soldering wires, connecting light bulbs, and adding batteries to create complete circuits. Some first graders have been drawing plans for an electric menorah in time for the Chanukah holiday, while other... Full story

  • Congregation Beth Am Simchat Torah honorees-the Mayers and Cohens

    Nov 13, 2015

    Simchat Torah is one of the most joyous days in the Jewish year. On this day, synagogues and Jewish communities throughout the world study the closing words of Deuteronomy and immediately recite the opening words of Genesis. Acknowledging that the study of Torah is endless the last aliya with its theme of the death of Moses is followed immediately by the first aliya with its theme of Creation. The highest congregational honor one can receive is to be called to the Torah for the "last" aliya or... Full story

  • Who was Haj Amin al-Husseini?

    Ben Sales, JTA|Nov 13, 2015

    TEL AVIV (JTA)-When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blamed Haj Amin al-Husseini, the mufti of Jerusalem prior to the establishment of Israel, for inspiring Hitler to exterminate the Jews of Europe, he meant to show the long history of Palestinian anti-Semitism. Regardless of his intent, Netanyahu was hit with a tsunami of backlash from historians and politicians who accused him of distorting history. Yad Vashem, the Anti-Defamation League and the German government have all criticized... Full story

  • Garden State and Jewish state share a table on food innovation

    Michele Alperin, JNS.org|Nov 13, 2015

    Food innovation is the next course in the storied U.S.-Israel partnership. Rutgers University's Food Innovation Center and Tel-Hai College in Israel's northern Galilee region recently announced the New Jersey-Israel Healthy, Functional, and Medical Food Alliance, a venture that will create synergies between start-ups and more established food businesses in America's so-called "Garden State" and the Jewish state. The key players are Member of Knesset Erel Margalit (Labor), founder of the Jerusale... Full story

  • A Taste in the Park first time a winner

    Nov 13, 2015

    The Jewish Pavilion's answer to this year's dilemma of what to do instead of A Walk in the Park since Crane's Roost Park is undergoing reconstruction was a huge success. There were 150 vendors set up in the Maitland Civic Center showing their products that included makeup, artwork, food, books, banking tips, healthcare, food, long-term care facilities, and did we say food? From lox and bagels to edamame to pumpkin cheesecake to various kinds of chocolate concoctions, the food was just divine.... Full story

  • Love of basketball makes for a great mitzvah project

    Nov 6, 2015

    WASHINGTON—In honor of the start of the NBA season, PeacePlayers International (PPI), a nonprofit that uses basketball to build peace in areas of conflict around the world, is launching a new “Mitzvah Campaign” that helps young Jewish people around the United States use basketball to create peace and fulfill their tikkun olam projects as part of their bar/bat mitzvah preparations. Throughout the 2015/16 NBA season, thousands of Jewish youth around the country will have the opportunity to participate in 3 on 3 charity basketball tourn... Full story

  • High Holidays with Chabad at UCF

    Moshe Erdfrocht, First person|Nov 6, 2015

    The University of Central Florida is the second largest university in the nation with the largest Jewish student population. So how is a clueless Jewish boy like myself supposed to find his way around the High Holidays? The answer is quite simple, and that is Chabad. Chabad is, as many students say, "a home away from home," and that stands to be very true during the Jewish holidays, where they offer accommodation for any student who wants to observe the holiday. Sure enough, Chabad saw approxima... Full story

  • Scene Around

    Gloria Yousha, Scene Around|Nov 6, 2015

    Haven't they suffered enough?... I read this in last month's World Jewish Congress (WJC) digest. It upset me but it is something we must be aware of. I pass it along to you: "World Jewish Congress Holocaust Memory Commissioner CHARLOTTE KNOBLOCH has called it 'intolerable' that so many Holocaust survivors today have to live in poverty and urged the world to take action. Speaking at the Wannsee Ville in Berlin, where in 1941 the Nazis decided to implement the 'final solution of the Jewish... Full story

  • Mega-Challah event unites community and the generations

    Nov 6, 2015

    "Tonight we are celebrating for so many reasons," shared Devorah Leah Dubov, co-director of Chabad of Greater Orlando, at the Chabad community's second annual Mega-Challah Bake, which took place on Oct. 22, and more than lived up to its prodigious name. "We are celebrating that tonight we made it to 400 women, between our two locations, over 200 here in Maitland at the Civic Center, and another 200 in South Orlando at the Rosen JCC. We are here, together, celebrating the power of women and we... Full story

  • The great Hebrew-Yiddish rivalry

    Norman Berdichevsky|Nov 6, 2015

    Dr. Norman Berdichevsky will be speaking on the topic of Hebrew vs. Yiddish on Wednesday, Nov. 18 at Southwest Orlando Jewish Congregation at 6:30 p.m., and at Temple Israel in Winter Springs on Sunday, Nov. 22 at 4 p.m. The community is invited to these events. Visitors to Israel can scarcely appreciate the enormous difficulties that were involved in the restoration of Hebrew as a living language. The Hebrew-Yiddish conflict in Palestine took three generations to resolve. One hundred and... Full story

  • No food is wasted in Israel, thanks to Leket Israel

    Oct 30, 2015

    RA'ANANA, Israel-Israel Minister of Agriculture Uri Ariel visited Leket Israel's new, state-of-the-art logistics center Oct. 15th. Ariel got a behind-the-scenes look at the inner workings of one of Israel's largest food collection and redistribution facilities and addressed the organization's staff on the importance of their work in food recovery. Leket Israel is a non-profit organization that leads the safe and effective collection and distribution of surplus nutritional food in Israel. In... Full story

  • For Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Hadassah fights BRCA with decorated bras

    Robert Gluck, JNS.org|Oct 30, 2015

    BRCA. It's the gene mutation that gives Ashkenazi Jews a higher risk of breast cancer than the general population. But the women's Zionist organization Hadassah is using three of BRCA's letters-b, r, a-as a platform to help American women lead healthier lives and become more educated about breast cancer. Through Hadassah's The Uplift Project, participants-among them breast cancer survivors and celebrities-decorate bras to draw attention to Breast Cancer Awareness Month, which is marked annually... Full story

  • Larry David is spot-on as Bernie Sanders on 'SNL'

    Ben Sales, JTA|Oct 30, 2015

    (JTA)-"What's the deal with emails, anyway?" Sounds like a line on a "Seinfeld" episode (or Modern Seinfeld, anyway). But last night we heard it on the "Saturday Night Live" spoof of the first Democratic debate. The speaker was Bernie Sanders' doppelganger, "Seinfeld" creator Larry David. David is a Jewish curmudgeon who also plays a Jewish curmudgeon on his HBO show, "Curb Your Enthusiasm." So when Sanders, another Jewish curmudgeon, decided to run for president, it was clearly the role David... Full story

  • Scene Around

    Gloria Yousha, Scene Around|Oct 30, 2015

    Three cheers for good sense... I read this in the current World Jewish Congress (WJC) digest. I was pleased and I am sure you will be too. I pass it along: "The World Jewish Congress hailed a recent decision by the General Convention of the Episcopal Church in the United States to reject a motion endorsing the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement. WJC thanked the Episcopal Church Convention for lending its support to Israel on this issue and for taking a moral stand, expressing the... Full story

  • Beyond the colored posters: A new trend in Jewish preschools

    Oct 30, 2015

    By Dini Druk Remember your own preschool days? Colored posters covering the walls, brightly painted classrooms and circle time with alphabet flashcards as part of the morning routine? If you plan on sending your preschooler to any of today's award winning preschools, you're highly unlikely to find any of that. The overall themes in today's progressive preschools are nature, open spaces, and child-directed learning experiences. Educational movements such as Montessori, Bank Street, Waldorf, and... Full story

  • The Jewish Bernie Sanders who only Vermonters know

    Ron Kampeas, JTA|Oct 30, 2015

    MANCHESTER CENTER, Vt. (JTA)-Bernie Sanders reads from the Passover Haggadah in Hebrew and jokes with his seder hosts about finding hametz, traces of leavening, after they have thoroughly cleaned the house in preparation for the holiday. The presidential candidate, a socialist competing for the Democratic nomination, also follows Israeli politics close enough to understand the influence of the haredi Orthodox parties in government. And like many Jews of his generation, Sanders, 74, chafes at... Full story

  • What the Klinghoffers taught me-and the world

    Gabrielle Birkner, First person|Oct 30, 2015

    NEW YORK (JTA)-I first met Leon Klinghoffer's daughters in 2004, shortly after my father and stepmother were murdered in a robbery. Back then I was a TMI (too much information) machine, telling my story not only to friends but also to anyone in my line of vision. One Shabbat, after going to the Village Temple in New York to say Kaddish, I approached the rabbi, Chava Koster, and told her, too. Unlike the sales clerk at Staples or the dinnertime telemarketer I had forced off script, Koster... Full story

  • New breast cancer stats: What's an Ashkenazi woman to do?

    Erica Brody|Oct 23, 2015

    (JTA)-It's been a busy couple of weeks for breast cancer. Of course, breast cancer is always busy, exerting its sneaky destruction through abnormal cell growth. But now it's October and Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and the scary fact is everywhere again: One in eight women will be diagnosed with breast cancer during her lifetime. This time around, the talk about breast cancer feels more urgent, more ubiquitous and definitely more confusing. Recent headlines have screamed "What If Everything... Full story

  • Buzz Aldrin comes to Israel

    Ben Sales, JTA|Oct 23, 2015

    JERUSALEM (JTA)—Israelis seeking an escape from last week’s daily terror attacks couldn’t fly to the moon, but they had a chance to hear from someone who did—Buzz Aldrin. In Israel’s terror-riven capital, the Israel Space Agency—the country’s version of NASA—is hosting this year’s International Astronautical Conference, the premier confab for all things space. An exhibition hall shows off a range of gadgets and robotics, and talks fill the schedule this week with titles like “The State of Space Situational Awareness, Conjunction Warning... Full story

  • Scene Around

    Gloria Yousha, Scene Around|Oct 23, 2015

    It's about time... I read this recently in the October issue of the World Jewish Congress digest under the heading "New Amnesty International Report Details Hamas Crimes Against Palestinians In Gaza." I pass it along to you: "Amnesty International, not known for its pro-Israel views, recently released a report in which the human rights group turned its attention to the abuses of Hamas. This report found that under the cover of the Israeli military action during Operation Protective Edge last... Full story

  • Seven Jewish Playboy playmates from 62 years of nudity

    Gabe Friedman, JTA|Oct 23, 2015

    (JTA)-This post is safe for work. All those who claim to read Playboy "for the articles" might now actually mean it. Last Tuesday, Playboy announced that starting in March, its magazine will no longer feature nude models. It will, however, still have "sexy, seductive pictorials of the world's most beautiful women," according to a news release. But for the publication that changed the way sexuality was viewed in America, it certainly is the end of an era. In reporting on the shift, The New York... Full story

  • 'Look at Us Now, Mother!'

    Oct 16, 2015

    NEW YORK-Emmy award-winning filmmaker Gayle Kirschenbaum was driven to make her deeply personal documentary, "Look at Us Now, Mother!" (that premieres in downtown Orlando October 22nd at the Cobb Plaza Cinema Cafe as a part of the Orlando Film Festival) due to the overwhelming response and rave reviews of her humorous short "My Nose". The film chronicles her own highly charged relationship with her mother and asks: what happens to a girl when she is born into a family that was expecting a boy?... Full story

  • COS teens bring joy to seniors at Rosh Hashanah service

    Oct 16, 2015

    Thanks to the young teens of Congregation Ohev Shalom, the residents at Brookdale Island Lake community enjoyed a joyous and meaningful Rosh Hashanah service. For many seniors with limited transportation or patience to sit (and stand) for a traditional Yom Tov service, the prayers, singing and readings with the young teens was just perfect. For one of the residents who was once a USY adviser himself 'back in the day,' the presence and enthusiasm of the children brought him pure joy and... Full story

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