Louis Rose Society Newsletter No. 4
Monday, April 2, 2007
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In this issue:
Rabbi Michael Berk to lead CBI
Jewish Community Calendar
Jewish Grapevine (News, Views Jews)
Jewish internet humor
Jewish history video link
How you can help
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Since
last September when Rabbi Paul Citrin served
notice that he planned to retire as senior rabbi of Congregation Beth
Israel, a process has been in place to choose his successor—with the final
step expected Thursday, April 12, when Rabbi Michael Berk's selection
Rabbi Berk
goes before the congregational membership for approval.
According to Tidings, the newsletter of Congregation Beth Israel, 19
candidates were interviewed by telephone with five invited to visit Beth
Israel to meet with the search committee, teach a class, lead a worship
service and deliver a sermon or d'var Torah.
Sanford Feldman, MD, who co-chaired the search committee with
Barbara Haworth, said the process took hundred of hours of volunteer
work by committee members Bob Fiderman, Nadine Finkel, Cynthia Fram, Dr.
Russ Gold, Gladie Jaffe, Emily Jennewein, Dr. Jerry Levy, Dr. Barbara
Lounsbury, Steve Ritter and Cynthia Wexler.
Rabbi Berk, 54, "is, in a word, a mensch," Feldman said. He
had served Temple Beth Torah in Ventura, Calif., for six years before
accepting an appointment as the regional director of the Pacific Central
West Council of the Union of Reform Judaism.
"Rabbi Berk is described as a man of integrity and high moral and religious
standards," Feldman reported. "Those who have been served by him or have
worked with him say he is kind to and respectful of others. He
listens. He is approachable. He addresses conflict with patience and
not with anger. He is described as a team builder who makes everyone
feel at ease. We are told that he is quick to give credit to others for
their work and humble about taking anycredit for his own."
Berk's wife is Rabbi Aliza Berk, who was ordained the same day as he
was in June 1890. She now serves as a rabbi at the Bay Area Jewish
Healing Center. Their daughter, Jenna Moxon, 22, is married to
Andy, now serving in Iraq. The rabbis' son, Jonathan, is
a student at City College of Santa Barbara. A brother, Rabbi
William Berk, is the emeritus rabbi of Temple Chai of Phoenix, Az.
Conductor Nuvi Mehta to lead discussion
about film on music in the death camps
SAN DIEGO (Publicity Release)—Christopher
Nupen’s award-winning film
We Want the Light
(DVD version) about freedom, survival and the extraordinary place of
music in the Nazi concentration camps kicks off the 8th
Annual San Diego Jewish Music Festival, sponsored by the Private Bank of
Bank of America and presented by the San Diego Center for Jewish
Culture. We Want the Light,
in two parts, will run April 18 (Part
I) and April 19 (Part II),
at 7:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Family Jewish Community Center,
JACOBS FAMILY CAMPUS. Tickets are
free, but reservations are
required. A post film discussion with conductor Nuvi Mehta follows the
screenings.
This powerful
documentary features stunning musical contributions from Pinchas
Zuckerman, Itzhak Perlman, Evgeny Kissin, Daniel Barenboim, and Zubin
Mehta, with The Gürzenich Orchestra of Cologne, The Cologne Opera
Chorus, and The Cologne Cathedral Children’s Choir conducted by Vladimir
Ashkenazy, playing music by Mahler, Bach, Schoenberg, Bruch, Schumann,
Mendelssohn, Wagner, Schubert, Bloch, Brahms, and Waxman.
The
title of the film, We Want the Light,
is taken from a poem by a 12-year-old girl written in the Theresienstadt
concentration camp. Her words provide both the title and the climax of
the film – in a setting for two choruses and orchestra by the American
composer Franz Waxman, in his work,
The Song of Terezin.
The
documentary is about many things. It is about freedom and captivity,
about emancipation, acculturation and assimilation; it is about the
roles played by Moses and Felix Mendelssohn in the dream of fruitful,
unproblematic integration of the Jews into German society after their
liberation from the ghettos; it is about Richard Wagner, his ferociously
anti-Semitic essay Das
Judenthum in der Musik (The
Jews in Music) and his influence on the thinking of the Third
Reich; but, most of all, it is a film about how much music can mean to
people, even in the direst of circumstances. Three inspiring Holocaust
survivors, Anita Lasker-Wallfisch, Jacques Stroumsa, and Alice Sommer
Herz share their quiet dignity and courage in the face of appalling
suffering.
A
discussion led by Nuvi Mehta will follow the screenings. Mehta is
Artistic Director of the Ventura Music Festival, Music Director of the
Marquette Symphony, and Music Director of the Nova Vista Symphony
(Sunnyvale, CA). Mehta is also the Director for Outreach Programs for
the San Diego Chamber Orchestra and a regular guest of the San Diego
Symphony outreach program.
The Jewish Grapevine (or News, Views, Jews!)
The Samuel and Rebecca Astor Judaica Library at the Lawrence
Family Jewish Community Center has received "advanced accreditation" for
three years in recognition of its special exhibits and projects.
Zev and Shoshana Bar-Lev is kvelling over the birth of a
grandson. The family will reveal his name at the brit milah to
be conducted at 8:30 a.m. Thursday at Tifereth Israel Synagogue. ...
Jeremy Ehrlich, 21, a senior majoring in
International Security & Conflict Resolution and minoring in Spanish, has
been elected Associated Students Vice President of External Affairs at San
Diego State University. He is a former president of the Sigma Alpha Mu
fraternity. In the recently concluded campaign for student offices, Ehrlich
called for a program to help students find affordable housing, and to expand
the campus Community Service Center. He intends to attend law school.
Rabbi Yeruchem Eilfort of Chabad of La Costa has
been named editor of a startup quarterly news magazine, Impact, to
serve all 143 Chabad institutions on the West Coast. The rabbi also
has his own radio show, "To Life, LeChaim." on
KCBQ
1170am
Sundays evenings from 8 – 9
p.m.
Cantor Sheldon Merel, emeritus cantor of Congregation Beth Israel, will
be back on the bima Friday, May 18, to celebrate his second
bar mitzvah, a tradition on a person's 83rd birthday. This
is because "three score and ten" or 70 years was considered a normal life
span, so at 83, Merel is 13 years into his second life. And we all know what
a Jew does on the 13th birthday!
Arlette
Smith's visit to Israel, where her daughter Julie (now Lilit Smeet)
serves as a lone soldier, recently was featured in Tidings, the
newsletter of Congregation Beth Israel. Arlette's husband and Julie's dad is
Greg Smith, the tax assessor, recorder and clerk of San Diego County.
Her brother Harrison Smith is a student a San Diego Jewish Academy.
Among Arlette's numerous community activities, she serves as the secretary
of the Louis Rose Society for the Preservation of Jewish History.
Click here or on the photo
for an enlarged version of the article.
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Jewish History Video Link
Hillel Mazansky
forwards to us from Bernardo Romanowsky a short video detailing some
of the history of our Jewish people, with a focus on Jerusalem.
Click here to see it.
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How you can help assure a daily Jewish community news voice...
Our online San Diego newsletter for
the Jewish community is gaining steam with various writers signing up to
share their columns with you. You can help this volunteer effort in many
ways such as sending your stories or ideas to us at
sdheritage@cox.net. If you
would like to be one of our volunteer writers, webmasters, editors,
advertising sales persons, or help us in any other capacity as we try to
restore an ongoing Jewish voice to San Diego, please call Donald H. Harrison
at (619) 265-0808. Your contributions will be welcomed.
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:-) Jewish Internet Humor :-)
Thanks to Herb Braverman for passing on this imagined scenario
(authorship unknown) of Hillary Clinton addressing a Hadassah meeting:
"Ladies of Hadassah: Let me start by saying how nice it is to be among
mishpoche. I'm reminded of a Sunday morning a few weeks back when I was
sitting with my husband, the former President, and our beautiful and
talented daughter, Chelsea. (An investment banker now, by the way, with a
very good company. I know I don't have to tell you what a mechiah it
is, having a child like this. Anyway, I was sitting having my usual
bagel with some good novy and a schmear, and I said to my
husband, 'Bill-eleh. How fortunate we all are to be living in this great
country of ours. I mean, sure, we've still got that momzer in the
White House. Not to mention Cheney, that chazzer. Or that
farshimulte meeskite running the State Department. And don't even
get me started on Gonzales, that little toochis lecker! A cholyera
on all of them, I say!' But this is my point. Where but in this beautiful
country of ours would you find a boy named Grossman playing quarterback in
the Super Bowl? (Okay, he lost the game, but gay g'zind.) And
where but in America would I be sitting down with Mrs. Feinstein and Mrs.
Boxer not to drink a glassella tea and play mah jongg, but to
decide the important domestic and foreign issues of the day? And so, ladies,
today as I reach out the hand of friendship to you, my shvesters, my
landsmen, I come to ask that you join me in my quest. And to assure
you that behind this goyishe punim is a yiddisher kop. I hope
to meet each of you personally at the lovely dairy brunch following this
event. And I hope you'll forgive me if I pass on the whitefish; it's a
little salty and I'm retaining. G-d bless America! We should all live and be
well."
Chag Sameach! Happy
Passover!
From four generations of our family to
yours: a happy, meaningful Passover! (L-R): David Harrison, Hui-Wen
Harrison, Sam Zeiden, Shor Masori, Don Harrison, Nancy Harrison, Sky Masori,
and Sandi Masori. Missing: Shahar Masori, on assignment in Atlanta, Ga.
{Photo by Eric Sands} |