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  • JFS Orlando Rosh Hashanah Message

    Sep 19, 2014

    In a week, Jews around the world will celebrate Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. This is not the same type of celebration revelers enjoy on the eve of January 1 but a time when we review our deeds from the past year with the hope of improving ourselves and our actions in the year to come. Rosh Hashanah serves as an annual reminder that we must constantly work at becoming better people. The traditional Rosh Hashanah greeting, "L'shana Tova Tikatevu - May you be inscribed in the Book of Life,"... Full story

  • 2013/2014 Year in Review

    Sep 19, 2014

    September The Jewish Academy of Orlando celebrated its “Double Chai” anniversary. Rabbi Sharon Barr Skolnik was introduced as the new Hebrew/Judaic curriculum coordinator. The Holocaust Memorial Resource & Education Center opened its art exhibit “In Remembrance: 75 Years after Kristallnacht” with an art display with more than 25 pieces of artwork done by local artists. Accomplished artist and three-time winner of National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships Sarah Canright judged the artwork and awarded grand prize to Brian Demeter for his pai... Full story

  • Year in Review: The highs and the lows of 5774

    Sep 19, 2014

    By JTA Staff NEW YORK (JTA) - Read about the highs and lows of 5774 - and everything in between. September 2013 In his address to the U.N. General Assembly, President Obama says the U.S. focus in the Middle East will be keeping Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon and advancing Israeli-Palestinian peace. Ruth Bader Ginsburg becomes the first U.S. Supreme Court justice to preside over a same-sex marriage, the wedding ceremony of Michael Kaiser and John Roberts. October 2013 A landmark study of... Full story

  • Save the stress: Here's an easy and pleasing Rosh Hashanah menu

    Shannon Sarna|Sep 19, 2014

    (MyJewishLearning.com)-When the Jewish New Year comes around, many people stress for weeks leading up to the holiday and break out their most complicated recipes to impress guests. But when I entertain around the holidays, I prefer to rely on a few go-to dishes that are simple to prepare, pack a delicious punch and still impress my friends and family despite my lack of stressing. Forget the chicken soup and start the New Year on a sweet note with this Sweet and Spicy Sweet Potato Soup. It... Full story

  • Turner Classic Movies showcases the Jewish experience on film

    Michele Alperin, JNS.org|Sep 19, 2014

    Since 2006, the Turner Classic Movies (TCM) cable and satellite TV network has hosted “The Projected Image,” a month-long showcase examining how different cultural and ethnic groups have been portrayed on the big screen. At last, after previously covering African Americans, Asians, the LGBT community, Latinos, Native Americans, Arabs, and people with disabilities, the annual series is delving into Jewish film this month. “The Projected Image: The Jewish Experience on Film,” whose first segment aired Sept. 2, runs again Sept. 23 and 30, at 8 p.... Full story

  • Break-fast pickle? Try cucumber salad and your own cream cheese

    Shannon Sarna|Sep 19, 2014

    (MyJewishLearning.com)-Fasting on Yom Kippur is one of my least favorite parts of being Jewish. I recognize the value of reflective fasting, and I know some people even enjoy the fast day, but for me it is a torturous 25 hours until I can break into the bagels and kugel. The last thing anyone wants to do after fasting and sitting in synagogue is to start cooking and prepping a complicated or heavy meal. The dishes I like to serve for Yom Kippur can all be made in advance-in fact, they are... Full story

  • A film review that hits home-'The Internet's own son'

    Pamela Ruben|Sep 12, 2014
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    Recently, I viewed the compelling documentary "The Internet's Own Son," about the life and untimely death of Internet activist, Aaron Swartz, and it hit home in a couple of unexpected ways. Not only was Swartz raised in a Jewish family in my hometown of Highland Park, Illinois, but coincidentally, we both grew up in the same house, 15 years apart. Aaron's parents, Susan and Robert Swartz, currently reside in the house I consider my own childhood home from 1970-1986. According to Zillow, the... Full story

  • Jon Stewart on filming in, and talking about, the Middle East

    Talia Lavin|Sep 12, 2014

    NEW YORK (JTA)-Jon Stewart's directorial film debut, "Rosewater," is set to premiere at film festivals in the United States and Canada this September. So the Hollywood Reporter took the opportunity to grab some golden quotes (and glam shots) of the iconic "Daily Show" comedian about filming in the Middle East-and his own take on the region's politics. "Rosewater" tells a story that Stewart was drawn to because of his own real-life involvement: The film is adapted from the memoir of Maziar... Full story

  • Scene Around

    Gloria Yousha, Scene Around|Sep 12, 2014

    Tired of Holocaust deniers... I read this recently in the World Jewish Congress Digest (WJC) and I found it to be very upsetting. (As I age, I seem to find everything upsetting... especially when I look in the mirror!) As the Jewish New Year is almost upon us, I feel this takes on even more meaning. I pass it along to you: "During a major national address for Persian New Year, Iran's Supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, took another opportunity to deny that the Holocaust ever took place and... Full story

  • Hold the ice bucket! Revolutionary stem-cell ALS treatment trials begin

    Abigail Klein Leichman|Sep 5, 2014

    (ISRAEL21c)-As the Ice Bucket Challenge raises millions for research into amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), an Israeli treatment to ease symptoms and slow the progression of ALS and other incurable neuromuscular diseases is going into Phase 2 clinical trials in three major US medical centers. Petah Tikva-based BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics' NurOwn platform is based on a technique developed by Profs. Daniel Offen and Eldad Melamed at Tel Aviv University for growing and enhancing stem cells... Full story

  • A visit with Rabbi Adler

    Sep 5, 2014

    Rabbi Rudolph Adler, retired spiritual leader of Congregation Ohev Shalom, receives regular visits from Kimberly Shader with her pet therapy dog, Shomer, at his Sutton Homes long-term care facility in Dr. Phillips. Shomer actually means "guardian" in Hebrew. These visits are all the more meaningful because Shader was bat mitzvah'd by the rabbi-she fondly recalls his helping her with her bat mitzvah speech. When the picture was taken, the rabbi asked, "Can you tell which one is me?" Shader... Full story

  • 10 ideas Judaism gave the world

    Yvette Alt Miller, Aish Hatorah Resources|Sep 5, 2014

    Many of the concepts espoused in the Torah and Jewish tradition seem quintessentially modern, yet go back thousands of years. Here’s a roundup of some ideas that we take for granted today that are an integral part of ancient Jewish wisdom. 1. Monotheism Judaism introduced the powerful notion that one God created and rules the universe. This was a profound break with the idolatrous models that came before, in which an angry or capricious god was seen to govern events at random, and had to be appeased—often in horrible ways, like child sac... Full story

  • Scene Around

    Gloria Yousha, Scene Around|Sep 5, 2014

    I often disagree with Mr. Miller... I'm referring to comedian, DENNIS MILLER, who has a show called Dennis Miller Live on HBO. Although he is not Jewish, he recently had the following (on this we agree) to say (in part) about the Middle East situation: "A brief overview of the situation is always valuable, so as a service to all Americans who still don't get it, I now offer you the story of the Middle East in just a few paragraphs, which is all you really need. The Palestinians want their own... Full story

  • Yiddish tango links time, space and musical styles

    Anthony Weiss, JTA|Sep 5, 2014

    LOS ANGELES (JTA) – The music that packs the Skirball Cultural Center's stately courtyard – Yiddish tango – is a musical hybrid twice over. On the tango side, it is a blend of African-born rhythms and a potpourri of European music styles. On the Yiddish side, it combines mournful liturgical melodies with folk songs. Tango, too, is famous for its sensual dance, while Yiddish music is rooted in the festive freylekhs of traditional wedding bands. In combination, the two prove irresistible, as th... Full story

  • Seeking kin: Unraveling the mystery of a watery headstone

    Hillel Kuttler|Sep 5, 2014

    The "Seeking Kin" column aims to help reunite long-lost relatives and friends. BALTIMORE (JTA) – Howard Schoenfeld and his teenage daughter Zahava set out for a stroll along a Long Island Beach in New York on a recent Sunday morning. Zahava likes to collect shells, so after parking at Oak Beach, a popular spot for vintage-car enthusiasts, they walked along the inlet. Eyes cast downward, they stumbled upon an unlikely find - a gravestone. It read: Our beloved daughter Hannah Schnur Died Nov. 3... Full story

  • Fifty years after Freedom Summer, civil rights volunteers reflect

    Dina Weinstein, JTA|Sep 5, 2014

    (JTA) - At the Freedom Summer anniversary conference in Jackson, Miss., the activists who registered black voters and taught in Freedom Schools under the threat of violence 50 years ago stood up to introduce themselves. It took three hours to hear what they did in the Magnolia State back in 1964 and have gone on to do in the half-century since. "Almost everyone had a social justice connection," said Heather Booth, who went to Mississippi as a college freshman from New York before moving on to a... Full story

  • Jewish association with Robin Williams

    Edmon J. Rodman|Aug 29, 2014

    After hearing of the apparent suicide of Robin Williams, I remembered laughing harder, and deeper than I ever had at a comedian when I first saw him perform at the Comedy Store in Los Angeles in 1977. During his set at the Sunset Boulevard club—where newcomer, Jay Leno, also performed that evening--there were no tedious joke set-ups, or tired shtickiness to his approach to stand-up, just a flinging out of a blend of Shakespearian references, observations, plays on words and thoughts that Williams had spun together in the mad juicer that was h... Full story

  • Showbiz meets shtetl: Helping Hollywood get Hasidim right

    Miriam Moster, JTA|Aug 29, 2014

    NEW YORK (JTA)-When it comes to Hasidic characters in movies, film consultant Elli Meyer believes that the real deal trumps a random actor in costume. But that approach isn't without its challenges. Meyer, a New York-based Lubavitcher Hasid, recounted one occasion when he was hired to cast extras for a film but refused upon learning that shooting would take place on Yom Kippur. "Who told you to hire Jews?" one of the producers said, according to Meyer, though ultimately the shooting was... Full story

  • Scene Around

    Glorida Yousha, Scene Around|Aug 29, 2014

    Shades of ISIS... How hard it is to comprehend... fighting an enemy that prefers death to life. What can you do to threaten them? They feel that death means getting together with 72 virgins, etc. (Well, we could threaten that for every terrorist that hits the dust, we kill his mother-in-law as well. Or we make the terrorists believe there are not 72 virgins, rather one 72-year-old virgin... or we can tell them that upon death, they will be united with 72 nuns holding rifles. This is all sick... Full story

  • Finding the Goldbergs: A Catskills mystery unraveled

    Uriel Heilman, JTA|Aug 29, 2014

    MONTICELLO, N.Y. (JTA)-The moment I kicked in the door of the abandoned house in the heart of the Catskills, I felt like I was in an episode of "The Twilight Zone: Borscht Belt edition." In some corners it appeared as if the residents were just out for the afternoon. Pictures and tchotchkes adorned the walls. A mezuzah with the parchment still inside was affixed to a doorpost. A working upright piano sat in one corner. Ironing boards were open. Mattresses lay on beds; in one room the beds were s... Full story

  • 'Rockets red glare/bombs bursting in air' didn't hamper teen's trip to Israel

    Christine DeSouza, Assistant Editor|Aug 22, 2014

    Oviedo resident and member of Congregation Ohev Shalom Elana Goldstein was all excited when she found out last May that she would be going to Israel through the Taglit-Birthright program. She'd wanted to go ever since her dad, David, told her about the trip when she was a little girl. "He went to Israel when he was 18 and lived on a kibbutz for 6 months," she told Heritage. Taglit-Birthright, partially funded by the Israeli government, provides free 10-day trips to Israel for any Jewish adult be... Full story

  • 10-year-old publishes first book

    Aug 22, 2014

    From the time she was very young, Kara Finkelstein, 10, liked to write stories. Her teachers at the Roth JCC Early Childhood Learning Center-where she attended the 3s, 4s and pre-k classes-taught their students to be creative. After graduating from pre-k in 2009, Kara started first grade at John Evans Elementary School in Oviedo. In fourth grade, her teacher, Stephanie Anderson, who was named 2014 Elementary School Rookie Teacher of the Year for Seminole County, also taught her students to be... Full story

  • Will Larry David's Broadway show add to his Jewish file?

    Ami Eden, JTA|Aug 22, 2014
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    NEW YORK (JTA)-In Larry David's fake real-life world on the HBO sitcom "Curb Your Enthusiasm," he is tapped by Mel Brooks to take over the Zero Mostel-Nathan Lane role of Max Bialystock in the megahit Broadway adaptation of "The Producers." Just as Max and accountant Leo Bloom set out to make money by producing a surefire bomb, Brooks picks Larry with the (secret) goal of killing the Tony Award-winning musical and getting his life back. But in an art-imitates-art twist, Larry (like "Springtime... Full story

  • A Bissel Yiddish

    Aug 22, 2014

    While mensch is the ideal term to describe Joan Pohl, you could also use words like baleboste, Maven or forsher. Pohl has been teaching a monthly Yiddish class for the Jewish Pavilion for several years. The class meets monthly at Chambrel in Longwood. While some of the participants are Chambrel residents, many others come from the general community. They grew up in a household where Yiddish was spoken by parents or grandparents. Many students understand the language but do not speak it fluently. Pohl is a speech therapist with dramatic flair... Full story

  • Scene Around

    Gloria Yousha, Scene Around|Aug 22, 2014

    ELIEZER "ELIE" WIESEL, is a Romanian born Jewish American professor and political activist. He is the author of 57 books, including "Night," a work based on his experiences as a prisoner in the Auschwitz, Buna, and Buchenwald concentration camps. A Nobel Peace Laureate, Wiesel has accused the militant Palestinian movement Hamas of child sacrifice for its practice of launching rockets against Israel from within heavily populated parts of Gaza during the recent conflict. In a full page, paid... Full story

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