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  • Stoudemire feels Jewish connections at Maccabiah

    Hillel Kuttler, JTA|Aug 2, 2013

    JERUSALEM (JTA)—The two Israeli television cameramen awaiting the Canadian basketball team’s arrival at the opening ceremony of the Maccabiah Games didn’t hint at the chaos about to envelop Amar’e Stoudemire. The 6-foot-11 forward for the New York Knicks stepped from the chartered bus and the cameramen departed, duly satisfied they had captured their shots. But the party was just beginning. Seemingly every one of the 9,000 athletes waiting to parade through Teddy Stadium here for the opening cer... Full story

  • After career in Congress, Deutsch finds new life in Israel

    Uriel Heilman, JTA|Jul 26, 2013

    RAANANA, Israel (JTA)—When U.S. Rep. Peter Deutsch lost his campaign for the U.S. Senate in 2004, forcing him out of Congress for the first time in 12 years, he didn’t quite know what to do with himself. So he did something not entirely uncommon among American Jews who haven’t quite figured out their next step: He went to Israel. More than eight years later, Deutsch is still here, living with his family in Raanana, a Tel Aviv suburb. His 22-year-old son recently completed a stint as a combat sol... Full story

  • Dr. Oz and Rabbi Shmuley Boteach to visit Israel

    Jul 26, 2013

    Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, together with This World: The Jewish Values Network, will host Dr. Mehmet Oz, with wife, Lisa, on their first visit to Israel from July 28 through Aug. 4, where Oz is slated to meet with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The trip was initiated by Shmuley, who presented a Champions of Jewish Values award to Oz and his wife, together with Elie Wiesel and Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson, at the annual This World gala dinner held recently in New York. Through the g... Full story

  • Some summertime reading

    RAbbi Rachel Esserman, The Vestal N.Y. Reporter|Jul 26, 2013

    The summer heat can become so enervating that it’s too hot to move; fortunately, though, it’s never too hot to read. In fact, reading is a great way to escape the heat. “Jo Joe” When 13-year-old Judith Ormond moves to a small town in Pennsylvania to live with her white, Christian grandparents, she faces true prejudice for the first time. The problem? Not only is she Jewish, but biracial. After finishing high school, Judith promises never to return. However, she breaks that vow 17 years later when an anonymous message arrives saying her grandmo... Full story

  • 6 degrees (no Bacon): Jewish celebrity roundup

    6 degrees no Bacon staff|Jul 26, 2013

    Madonna’s bar mitzvah boy NEW YORK (6NoBacon.com)—Madonna reunited with her ex-husband and director Guy Ritchie to celebrate their son Rocco’s bar mitzvah on Saturday. The coming-of-age celebration took place at The Kabbalah Centre in New York and included a small gathering the previous night. Madonna has been known for her involvement in Kabbalah studies since the 1990s. The singer posted a photo on her Instagram of Rocco completing the writing of a Torah scroll with the caption, “ ‘We finish the last letter of the Torah for Rocco’s B... Full story

  • Scene Around

    Gloria Yousha, Scene Around|Jul 26, 2013

    It’s almost time… I recently found an old…very old column of mine dated Feb. 8, 2002. (You read right, 2002!) In it, I made some comments about my marriage to Irv, and since our 53rd wedding anniversary is almost upon us (Aug. 3, 1960), I decided to repeat the comments: “I’ve mentioned often that I am married a long time to the same man. We exchanged vows with the words ‘Till death do us part.’ “Back in ancient times that wasn’t such a binding commitment. People knew they weren’t going to... Full story

  • Israel leads the world in blindness prevention

    Abigail Klein Leichman, ISRAEL21c|Jul 26, 2013

    A new study published in the American Journal of Ophthalmology shows that rates of preventable blindness in Israel have been cut by more than half over the last decade, from 33.8 cases of blindness per 100,000 residents in 1999 to 14.8 in 2010. Israel’s success in preventing and treating all four main causes of avoidable blindness—age-related deterioration, glaucoma, diabetes and cataract—is unmatched anywhere else in the world, says the study’s lead author, Dr. Michael Belkin of the Goldsch... Full story

  • Katzenberg: Mogul on a mission

    Danielle Berrin, Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles|Jul 26, 2013

    First of a three-part series. My big mistake, upon arriving at Jeffrey Katzenberg’s office, is that I didn’t bring my ballet slippers. But no one really told me about the choreography of a visit here, in which Katzenberg’s vassals at DreamWorks Animation, the company he co-founded and oversees, welcomed me in, warmed me up and made me wait. It’s a very pretty dance, though, past the koi ponds and cobblestone drive, the sports cars and sprawling courtyards, and into the sleek reception area wh... Full story

  • The Holocaust messenger who confronted FDR

    Rafael Medoff, JNS.org|Jul 26, 2013
    1

    Seventy years ago this month, on July 28, an eyewitness to the Nazi atrocities against Europe’s Jews brought the horrifying news directly to the most powerful man on earth. It was the moment that President Franklin D. Roosevelt came face to face with the Holocaust. By the time he was 26, Polish underground member Jan Karski had been imprisoned by the Soviets, tortured by the Gestapo, and nearly drowned while escaping from a hospital in German-occupied Slovakia. After all he suffered, it would h... Full story

  • FoodTrip in Jerusalem offers kosher-hallal delicacies

    Linda Gradstein|Jul 26, 2013

    JERUSALEM—Several dozen Israelis – families, singles, religious, secular—sit on small rattan stools on Prophet’s Street in Jerusalem scooping up gado-gado with chopsticks. Gado-gado, for the uninitiated, is a vegetable-noodle dish with a curry-and-coconut milk sauce. So what does an Indonesian dish have to do with summer nights and culture in the capital? The delicacy is being offered by Foodtrip, served out of a food truck as part of the Jerusalem Season of Culture – a month-long festival of art, music and food in the city. The answer ca... Full story

  • With big plans, Beersheva is hoping to bloom in the Negev

    Ben Sales, JTA|Jul 26, 2013

    BEERSHEVA, Israel (JTA)—In four years, it’s slated to be bigger than New York’s Central Park and consist of open fields, a sports complex, and a lake and a river filled with recycled water. Now, though, Beersheva River Park looks like much of the area surrounding the desert city of Beersheva: a panorama of sand and dirt, with a bit of trash and, on a good day, some dirty water trickling through a gorge. In one patch of empty space, workers in hard hats walk up and down rows of stadium seats... Full story

  • Heritage Human Service Award goes to Nina Oppenheim

    Mike Etzkin, Associate Editor|Jul 19, 2013
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    There are some people who just can’t say no to a challenge. Nina Oppenheim, the Heritage Human Service Award winner for 2013, is one of them. The Heritage Human Service Award, says Jeff Gaeser, editor and publisher of the Heritage Florida Jewish News, is awarded to those in Central Florida’s Jewish community who perform acts of tikun olam—making the world a better place—selflessly and without thought of reward or recognition. Gaeser will present her with the award at 7 p.m. Aug. 21 at the Jew... Full story

  • 9/11 memorial designer comes of age as urban architect

    Jul 19, 2013

    By Abigail Klein ISRAEL21c The New York Times recently went shopping with the Israeli-American architect Michael Arad, revealing how this designer of the National September 11 Memorial scours Manhattan toy stores for unusual building-block sets to construct miniature villages with his three young children. The devoted dad last fall completed a “green roof” on his oldest child’s school building. In May, he was back in Israel to speak about his main area of expertise—urban archite... Full story

  • Holy work or troublemaking? Laying groundwork for Third Temple

    Ben Sales, JTA|Jul 19, 2013

    JERUSALEM (JTA)—No praying. No kneeling. No bowing. No prostrating. No dancing. No singing. No ripping clothes. These are the rules that Jews must abide by when visiting the Temple Mount, the site where the First and Second Holy Temples once stood, located above and behind the Western Wall in the heart of Jerusalem’s Old City. Although the area is under Israeli sovereignty, the mount—known to Muslims as Haram al-Sharif—is controlled by the Islamic Wakf, a joint Palestinian-Jordanian religio... Full story

  • Boy finds way to bar mitzvah with help of Simms Taback graphic books

    Debra Rubin, JTA|Jul 19, 2013

    (JTA)—As his mother read to him, Levi Davishoff puckered and moved his lips in the universal sign indicating that something is sour. He then pointed to the lemon pictured in the library book. His mother, Marla, was thrilled. It was the first time that Levi, then 18 months old, had communicated with the baby sign language he had been learning. He had been in therapy for developmental and cognitive delays since was 2 months old. Davishoff rushed out to buy the book, “Joseph Had a Little Overcoat,... Full story

  • From Star Trek to Jewish-themed photography

    Robert Gluck, JNS.org|Jul 19, 2013

    Leonard Nimoy says there is a “strong strain of Judaism” in everything he does—including his famous on-screen hand gestures. Best known for his character Mr. Spock in the “Star Trek” television show and movies, most recently in his cameo as Spock Prime in this year’s blockbuster “Star Trek Into Darkness,” Nimoy’s Vulcan hand gesture comes from an experience he had at synagogue when he was 8 years old. Nimoy’s father told him not to look as worshippers averted their eyes during blessings recited... Full story

  • Regulating kosher food

    Rabbi Rachel Esserman, The Vestal N.Y. Reporter|Jul 19, 2013

    Recent outbreaks of salmonella and other instances of food contamination and poisoning have left people questioning the safety of our food supply. Critics of the food industry are also concerned about misleading labels, particularly the use of such words as “natural” or “healthy” to describe processed food. Could these problems be solved by stricter governmental regulation? Can private certification prevent fraud or increase food safety? In order to answer these questions, Timothy D. Lytton, the Albert and Angela Farone Distinguished Profess... Full story

  • Rick Moranis, going from 'Ghostbusters' to mom's brisket, draws on Jewish roots in new album

    Matt Robinson, JNS.org|Jul 19, 2013

    When fans picture Rick Moranis, the first things that probably come to mind are comedy and scenes from science fiction movies such as “Honey, I Shrunk the Kids,” “Ghostbusters,” “Little Shop of Horrors,” or “Spaceballs.” But Moranis’s latest project conjures up an image much closer to home. Moranis recalls that the smell of his Jewish mother’s home “would get you from five blocks away.” “The whole place smelled like Friday at 6 p.m., and that was 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days of... Full story

  • Scene Around

    Gloria Yousha, Scene Around|Jul 19, 2013

    In Memoriam… This tribute comes directly from the World Jewish Congress Digest: “The World lost a lovely lady… and a wonderful leader of the Jewish Community Council of Cairo, Egypt.” (With Egypt in the news every night, I thought it would be appropriate to write about her.) “Carmen Weinstein, 82, president of the Jewish Community Council of Cairo, passed away this past April. “In the face of a dwindling population of Jews…from over 80,000 60 years ago to a few dozen senior citizens toda... Full story

  • 6 degrees (no Bacon): Jewish celebrity roundup

    6 degrees no Bacon staff|Jul 19, 2013

    ‘Princesses’ rile 9/11 families NEW YORK—So remember that thing in our most recent “Princesses: Long Island” recap about Amanda Bertoncini’s ridiculous Drink Hanky photo shoot? You know, the one in which a model, toting a beer bottle clad in one of Amanda’s high-fashion signature Drink Hankies, poses with a statue of a firefighter? Well, it turns out we missed something. This wasn’t just any statue of a firefighter but a memorial statue of a fallen 9/11 firefighter from Great Neck named Jonathon... Full story

  • Seeking Kin: Israeli reconnects with American cousin, searches for another

    Hillel Kuttler, JTA|Jul 19, 2013

    BALTIMORE (JTA)—In May, Tel Aviv resident Baruch Axelrod sent a letter to his first cousin, who lives in New Jersey. The letter returned unopened to Axelrod’s home because the cousin, Gary Hyman, had moved, his new address unknown. The branches of their families had not been in contact for more than 20 years, when Axelrod’s sister Chana Pavlowitz visited the United States. Axelrod had never even met Hyman, but he well remembered Hyman’s parents, Aaron and Bela. Aaron was the sister of Axelrod... Full story

  • 'Hannah Arendt' movie captures intensity of intellectual combat

    Tom Tugend, JTA|Jul 19, 2013

    LOS ANGELES (JTA)—Movie mavens may have to come up with a new genre to classify “Hannah Arendt,” the biopic of the German-Jewish philosopher. New York Times critic A.O. Scott suggests it is an action film—albeit one in which the weapons are ideas and theories are volleyed on a battlefield where a questionable hypothesis can turn lifelong friends into bitter enemies. Director Margarethe von Trotta, who has dealt previously with complex Jewish women (“Rosa Luxemburg”) and the Nazi era (“Rosenstra... Full story

  • Israeli travel photographer has front-row seat in history

    Abigail Klein Leichman, Israel21c|Jul 19, 2013

    Snapping pictures of people practicing centuries-old faith traditions in her native Jerusalem makes award-winning Israeli photojournalist Gali Tibbon feel like a time traveler. “Every stone you step on has so much history, and if you have imagination your brain can fly,” Tibbon tells ISRAEL21c after returning from London with the title of Sony World Photography Awards Travel Photographer of the Year. Her winning series, “Journey to Jerusalem of Africa—Lalibela, Ethiopia,” resulted from conv... Full story

  • BioHug offers hug therapy in an automatic vest

    Abigail Klein|Jul 19, 2013

    Most of us have moments when we could really use a hug—when we’re sad, lonely, scared or stressed. The therapeutic value of a good squeeze for emotional wellbeing is well documented. For people affected by autism, post-traumatic stress and anxiety or attention disorders, research has shown that hugging is an especially effective soother. That is the scientific fact behind the development of the BioHug Vest by Haifa-based BioHug Technologies. Already in use and soon to roll out to a wider mar... Full story

  • Teen Heroes: Ben Hirschfeld- A (safe) light unto students in Africa

    Suzanne Kurtz, JTA|Jul 19, 2013

    This is the first installment of Teen Heroes, JTA’s biweekly column profiling teens involved in interesting and important social action. See below for information about our sponsor and how to nominate someone for coverage. (JTA)—When Ben Hirschfeld first heard that students in developing African countries lacked electricity and must endure noxious fumes from smoky kerosene lamps while reading and doing their schoolwork, the teenager from Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y., knew he had to find a way to hel... Full story

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