San Diego Jewish World

Tuesday
, May 15, 2007    

Vol. 1, Number 15

 

Today's top story

 
CANDIDATES—From left to right, Ron Paul drew fire from Rudy Giuliani and Tom Tancredo. In other
debate action, John McCain
said fighting radical Islamic extremism is the key issue of the presidential debate, and Mike Huckabee said respect for life separates Americans from radical Islamists, who have "a culture of death."  Photos taken from the candidates' websites.

Non-Intervention stand of Rep. Ron Paul is
angrily rebutted by Rudy Giuliani in debate

By Donald H. Harrison

As the other eight Republican candidates stood by and watched during a televised debate this evening, former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani demanded that U.S. Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) withdraw a comment that some took to mean that the U.S. had invited the 9-11 attacks by bombing Iraq.

The exchange started after Paul recited his well-known views against U.S intervening in the affairs of other countries—a position that in the past has often put him at odds with most of his House and Senate colleagues in their steadfast support of Israel.

Moderator Chris Wallace asked if Paul's non-interventionism policy applied even in the wake of the terrorist attacks against the United States on September 11, 2001.

5/15/07 SDJW Report
(click on headline below to jump to the story)

International and National
*Non-Intervention stand of Rep. Ron Paul is
angrily rebutted by Rudy Giuliani in debate


*Arabs call for another genocide and the world simply yawns

*
High-Tech Jewish education programming needed to catch up with Internet generation

Daily Features
Jews in the News

Jewish Grapevine

Regional and Local
*Congressman Filner Supports the Elder Justice Act

Arts, Entertainment & Dining
*Jackie Silver to demonstrate how composers are able to make music so memorable

For Your Reference
San Diego Jewish Community Calendar

San Diego Jewish Community Directory


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JFS Pete Earley luncheon
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"Have you ever read about the reasons they attacked us?" Paul responded during a highlight of the second Republican presidential debate, this one at the University of South Carolina in Columbia.  "They attacked us because we've been over there.  We have been bombing Iraq for 10 years. We have been in the Middle East.  I think (Ronald) Reagan was right: we don't understand the irrationality of Middle Eastern politics.  So, right now we are building an embassy in Iraq that is bigger than the Vatican.  We are building 14 permanent bases.  What would we say here if China were doing this in our country or in the Gulf of Mexico?  We  would be objecting. We need to look at what we do from the perspective of what would happen if somebody else did it to us?"

Wallace asked: "Are you suggesting that we invited the 9-11 attack sir?"

"No," responded Paul.  "I'm suggesting that if we listen to the people who attacked us, and the reasons they did it, and they are delighted we are over there because Osama bin-Laden has said, 'I am glad you are over on our sand' because we can target you so much easier.'  They have already, you know, since that time have killed 3,400 of our men and I don't think it was necessary."
 

 


 

 


 

At this point Giuliani asked "May I make a comment on that?  That is really an extraordinary statement. It is an extraordinary statement as someone who lived through the attack on September 11th that we invited the attack because we were attacking  Iraq.  I don't think I've ever heard that before and I've heard some pretty absurd explanations for September 11th."

Loud and sustained cheering broke forth from the audience, which before the debate had been admonished to stay silent.

Giuliani, following up, said:  "I would ask the congressman to withdraw that comment and tell us that he didn't really mean that."

Paul stood his ground however:  "I believe very sincerely that the CIA is correct when they teach and talk about 'blowback.'  When we went into Iran in 1953 and installed the shah, yes there was blowback.  The reaction to that was the taking of our hostages.  And that persists.  If we ignore that, we ignore that at our own risk.  If we think we can do what we want around the world and not incite hatred then we have a problem.  They don't come here to attack us because we're rich and we're free; they attack us because we're over there. I mean what would we think... if other foreign countries were doing that to us?"

Giuliani wanted another round, but he was cut off by panelists. 

U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Colo), answering a subsequent question about global warming, said the U.S. should reduce its dependence on petroleum products.  "If we do that we automatically reduce the carbon emissions that people claim are causing global warming. And I'm all for doing that, and I'll tell you why, it is a national security issue... for us to move away from the use of petroleum products when they are coming from countries that want to kill us. And although my dear friend Ron here, who I dearly love and really respect, but I'll tell you: I just have to disagree with you Ron about the issue of whether ...Israel existed  or didn't; whether we were in Iraq or not, they would be trying to kill us because it is a dictate of their religion—at least a part of it, and we have to defend ourselves."

There were other criticisms leveled against militant Islam earlier in the debate. 

U.S. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz) suggested what the presidential campaign really should be about is "Who's most prepared to lead in this challenge, this transcendental challenge that we face called radical Islamic extremism.  My life, my experience, my knowledge and work in national security qualifies me most to lead."

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, commenting on his pro-life stand in the abortion controversy, added: I believe we should do everything possible to protect that life because it is the centerpiece of what makes us unique as an American people.  We value the life of one as if it is the life of all ... and it is what separates us from the Islamic jihadists who are out to kill us.  They celebrate death. They have a culture of death.  Ours is a culture of life."

Other candidates who participated in the debate were U.S. Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas; former Gov. Jim Gilmore of Virginia; U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter of San Diego, California;  former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, and former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson.
 

National & International News & Opinion



  Jerusalem Diaries
        
Judy Lash Balint
___________________________________________________________________________


Jerusalem Day in the Old City

JERUSALEM —The amplified wail of the muezzin from the Al Aksa mosque on the Temple Mount couldn't drown out the celebrations ringing out over Jerusalem tonight.

From every corner of the Old City, youthful voices join in singing all the classic Six Day War songs as the city celebrates the 40th anniversary of reunification.

The sounds of prayer and thanksgiving at the Kotel rise up above the ancient
walls—no longer the 'wailing wall' of years when others ruled Jerusalem and
determined the Jewish fate here. Groups of teenagers clad in blue and white dance in front of the Kotel and clog downtown streets.

The opening parade that takes place in the center of town is billed by the PR department of the Jerusalem Municipality as “The Working Agricultural Settlement marches in Jerusalem.”

Foreign reporters could be forgiven for thinking they were going back in time to a Soviet-style parade. Spectators are treated to figures depicting various aspects of kibbutz and moshav life, and tractors driven by kibbutzniks dressed in those old Russian white collarless shirts, embroidered with red stitching around the neckline.

The parade features contingents from every regional council in Israel, various army bands, street performers and musicians who all wind their way through the center ofthe city as tens of thousands of Jerusalemites start dispersing amongst the myriad of events marking the opening of Jerusalem Day.

At the central event, a televised gala concert marking the opening of Israel Song Week, thousands of celebrants of all ages throng Sacher Park. Young couples with strollers; families with young kids; teenage girls and older couples all mingle comfortably and spread out together on the grassy slope overlooking the stage, while exuberant young boys pack themselves into the moshpit area to be closer to the action. The food stalls selling kosher hamburgers, hotdogs and French fries are mobbed and with barely any trash cans, the park soon becomes an environmentalist's nightmare.

The program features an array of well-known Israeli entertainers including Yoram Gaon, Shlomi Shabat, the Idan Reichel Project, Shlomo Gronich and Hadag Hanahash who deliver traditional as well as new songs about Jerusalem. Hadag Hanahash open their set by pronouncing a blessing on Jerusalem; Shlomi Shabat sings about Jerusalem of peace; Haim Yisrael sings about King David's harp and Shlomo Gronich delivers a haunting version of a verse from the Hallel prayer of thanksgiving. Who says Israelis have forgotten their roots?

The main challenge of the day is getting anywhere. With roads closed
throughout the city center, driving is out of the question. Many bus
routes suspend operations for a couple of hours during the parade, and
getting close to the Old City is virtually impossible except on foot,
so thousands take to the streets in a jovial mass of Jerusalem humanity.

Beit Orot, the hesder Yeshiva on the Mt of Olives celebrates Yom
Yerushalayim in their usual festive manner, with an all-night event. Traditionally known as THE happening Jerusalem Day party place for the national religious yeshiva crowd, this year's festivities uphold its reputation. The bands stop playing around 4:30 a.m. when the young crowd picks up their flags to retrace the footsteps of the paratroopers of 1967. They walk down the same road from the Mt of Olives, turning left at the Kidron Valley and following the Jericho Road as far as Lion's Gate where they climb the hill to enter the Old City, just like the soldiers in their tanks 40 years ago. The students generally makes it to the Kotel in time for the Vatikin early morning prayers. Forty years ago, it was midday as the IDF soldiers made their way down from their conquest of the Temple Mount to become the first Jews in 19 years to gain access to the Kotel.

For the Ethiopian community, Jerusalem Day has evolved into a memorial day. Thousands of Ethiopian Jews who trekked through Sudan and the Ethiopian countryside to take part in Operations Solomon (1991) and Moses (1984) died before they saw Jerusalem. Their relatives mark the day with prayer and ceremonies in the Holy City.

The festivities and commemorations continue all day tomorrow with the flag parade culminating in a swirl of dancing and celebrating at the Kotel; the official memorial ceremony at Ammunition Hill for the fallen soldiers who helped liberate Jerusalem; the Mayor's annual open house reception at the Tower of David and the Bereishit Children's Jerusalem Quiz. It'll all be topped off with a series of outdoor evening concerts and a final fireworks display.

For one day, at least, we ignore the security concerns and political realities (even though it's hard to swallow the fact that not a single country in the world maintains an embassy in Israel's capital and that EU and US officials are not planning on attending Jerusalem Day observances) and we focus on the miracle that restored the Jewish people to the city that King David declared as his capital so many thousands of years ago.

Chag Yerushalayim Sameach!
                                                ___________


Commentary

Arabs call for another genocide and the world simply yawns


By Morton A. Klein
National President, Zionist Organization of America

NEW YORK—A couple of weeks ago, the acting Speaker of the Palestinian
Legislative Council, Dr. Ahmad Bahar, called for the murder of every Jew and
American. In an address broadcast on Palestinian Authority (PA) television,
Bahar stated, "This is Islam, that was ahead of its time with regards to human
rights in the treatment of prisoners, but our people was afflicted by the
cancerous lump, that is the Jews, in the heart of the Arab nation... Be certain that
America is on its way to disappear, America is wallowing [in blood] today in
Iraq and Afghanistan, America is defeated and Israel is defeated, and was
defeated in Lebanon and Palestine... Make us victorious over the infidel people...
Allah, take hold of the Jews and their allies, Allah, take hold of the Americans
and their allies... Allah, count them and kill them to the last one and don't leave
even one" (PA TV, April 20, translation courtesy of Palestinian Media Watch,
April 30).

 

Why did Bahar's remarks go largely unreported in the Western media? Why does
the U.S. continue to deal with, support, fund and urge concessions to the PA
when its elected officials call for genocide of Jews and Americans? Why are
foreign governments not protesting or demanding a retraction from PA
president Mahmoud Abbas? Where are the protests from intellectual and
religious leaders around the world? Why are several countries, including the US,
intending to give more funds to the PA?

 

It cannot be because Bahar's comment is exceptional. To cite two other incidents
in recent weeks:

 

  • On 30 March 2007 Hamas spokesman Ismail Radwan ended his "prayers to
    Allah" in a sermon broadcast on the Palestinian Authority's TV saying, "The
    Hour [of Resurrection] will not take place until the Muslims fight the Jews
    and the Muslims kill them, and the rock and the tree will say: 'Oh, Muslim,
    servant of Allah, there is a Jew behind me, kill him!'" He also asked
    "Jihad-fighting worshippers" in " Palestine and everywhere" and Allah to
    take away the oppressor Jews and Americans and their supporters!"
     
  • In an article published on April 23, 2007 in the Hamas paper Al-Risalah, its
    author Kan'an Ubayd stated: "... the extermination of Jews is good for the
    inhabitants of the worlds on a land, to which Allah gave his blessing for
    the sake of the inhabitants of the worlds."

 

How is it possible that there is no outcry, that such calls for genocide are not
deemed newsworthy, significant or relevant to current policy? To better
appreciate this question, imagine if the Speaker of the Knesset, Dalia Itzik,
delivered a speech in which she called for the genocide of all Arabs and
Muslims. Imagine if the Israeli Chief Rabbi or some other senior rabbinical
figure, speaking from a synagogue pulpit during a religious service broadcast
on Israel State Television, cited Jewish religious texts calling for the murder
of all Muslims as a religious duty. Imagine if a major Israeli daily newspaper
like Haaretz or Maariv contained an article by an Israeli intellectual arguing that
the utter extermination of all Muslims would be a blessing for humanity.
Imagine these sorts of things happening, not once, but repeatedly.

 

Such things, of course, have never happened in Israel. But if they ever did, there
would – quite rightly – be an international outcry. Newspapers around the world
would carry detailed reports on their front pages; parliaments around the world
would vote to condemn the words of a fellow parliamentary speaker and the
parliament that tolerated her words; human rights organizations would organize
petitions and rallies condemning Israel; international leaders would issue
statements of condemnation and the United Nations would probably be called
into a special session to consider the implications and cast votes condemning
Israel in the harshest terms. In fact, Israel is regularly condemned in the
harshest terms even though such things have never occurred in Israel.

 

It is clear that when it comes to Israel and the Palestinian Arabs, a blatant double
standard and bias is operating all the time. No matter what Palestinian Arabs say
about and do to Israelis, they and especially their leadership are rarely held
accountable or pay a price for fostering hatred and murder of Jews and others.
Conversely, Israel is regularly pressured, condemned and even the subject of
boycotts, no matter the attacks and dangers to which it is subjected and no matter
how many concessions it makes. International criticism has not eased even after
Israel relinquished half of Judea and Samaria, all of Gaza and handed over
money, assets and even arms to the PA, all of which have assisted the terrorist
campaign it continues to sponsor against Israel. In fact, international hostility to
Israel has grown in tandem with past Israeli concessions and efforts to be ever
more accommodating to the advice of foreign governments. Weakness and
seeking to be popular has invited more hostility and pressure.

 

Clearly, the world is engaged in a mad rush to a Palestinian state, believing
against all evidence that it will be a civilized polity. They cling to the delusion
that Palestinian statehood is the full answer to Palestinian Arab radicalism and
see Israeli concessions of historic Jewish land as the key to obtaining it. This is
nothing but full-scale appeasement like that of Neville Chamberlain, who
believed that giving a chunk of Czechoslovakia, the Sudentenland, to the Nazis
would cause Nazi Germany to become peaceful. This ignored the key fact that
the Nazis sought to conquer Europe, not merely the Sudetenland – just as the
Palestinian Arabs do not seek merely Judea and Samaria, but all of Israel.
Pursuing this policy with the Palestinian Arabs will not bring peace, only more
bloodshed, as it did with the Nazis.

                                                
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High-Tech Jewish education programming needed to catch up with Internet generation

NEW YORK (Publicity Release)—Adding time to the Hebrew school or day
school week may be easier than you ever dreamed. And the solution won’t
increase salaries or incur the wrath of parents and or students.

It’s as simple as giving children computer learning games, albeit ones that are
interactive and fun, creatively combined with real content relating to Jewish
concepts, bible study or Hebrew language.  Replacing the games they already
play or the TV they watch over the weekend with educational software would
add hours of learning. The current crop of Jewish learning games isn’t doing
the trick, claim the experts, because they’re badly designed.

 

In-class learning techniques need to change, too. Increasing scientific evidence
tells us that children who have spent tens of thousands of hours playing video |
games, IMing, e-mailing, and watching TV really do “learn differently.” They
have what one educator termed “hypertext minds,” so that the linear
thought processes in current educational systems actually retard their learning. 
We’ve also learned that the fabled “short attention span” of this generation’s
children applies only to the old ways of learning. 

 

How these students – and their teachers – gather information also has undergone
a transformation though the use of wikis, blogs, listservs, virtual communities, |
and the like. 

 

The new technologies and techniques to engage not only younger learners, but
also Boomers looking to fill in the gaps in their Jewish knowledge and toddlers
who have been exposed to educational software from the earliest ages are some
of the hot topics being presented at the CAJE 32 Conference.  This year’s annual
conference sponsored by Coalition for the Advancement of Jewish Education
takes place in August at Washington University in St. Louis, MO.  

 

From August 5 – 9, CAJE 32 will offer more than 300 sessions exploring 21st
Century Jewish learning and learners, as well as pedagogy, music, art, history,
and text within the Jewish educational context. Additionally, there are featured
forums on Hebrew language, Israel, experiential education and anti-Semitism
scheduled.  Also on the agenda is a grant writing seminar offered by the
Foundation Center and sponsored by the Covenant Foundation. In-depth,
collaborative programs also are being offered in family education, diversity
training, adult education, Jewish service learning, and other areas of interest.

 

With an increased awareness of the importance of early childhood Jewish
education in creating a stronger Jewish identity, growing the number of children
continuing in Jewish education, and increasing families’ involvement in the
Jewish community, CAJE will hold its annual Early Childhood Conference
concurrently with CAJE 32. The Early Childhood Conference, with a theme
of “Our Families, Our Children, Our Future, 21st Century Early Childhood
Jewish Education,” will explore both theory and practical applications.  An early
childhood Pre-Conference program will focus on “Defining Excellence in Early
Childhood Jewish Education.”

 

In addition to being one of the foci of the conference, members of the next
generation also are active participants.  The CAJE college program, funded by
the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation, allows students to
explore future opportunities in Jewish education, as professionals and lay
leaders.  The Teen Leadership Kallah exposes teenagers to the best in Jewish
teaching and learning, as well as to Jewish ideas and values; it is partially
underwritten by a generous grant from the Myra Reinhard Family Foundation.

Shabbat program with scholars-in-residence and Pre-Conference sessions
offering 10 -12 hours intensives in a number of areas will precede the main
Conference. 

 

The CAJE 32 EXPO, one of the largest Jewish malls outside of Israel, will
feature Judaic textbook and trade book publishers, software and computer
applications developers, educational institutions, Jewish organizations
and programs, and ritual and fine art craftspeople and displays.

 

The Conference is co-sponsored by the Jewish Federation of St. Louis;
ARMDI, American Red Magen David for Israel; and the Jewish National Fund,
with local assistance from the Central Agency for Jewish Education in St. Louis
and the St. Louis Hillel at Washington University. The Early Childhood
Conference @ CAJE 32 is partially underwritten by a generous grant the Harold
Grinspoon Foundation.

 

Registration, as well as further information about the Conference, is now
available online at www.caje.org. For questions, please contact
CAJE at cajeny@caje.org or (212) 268-4210.

The foregoing story was provided by the Coalition for the Advancement of Jewish Education.


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Your specialist in
cruises and tours  
     
 

Upcoming 2007 San Diego  sailings
:

May 27-December 29: Carnival: Elation: multiple 4-and 5-day sailings, round trip to Mexico.

Sept 23-Dec 30: Princess Cruises: Dawn Princess: 7-day round trip to Mexico

Sept. 28: Celebrity Cruises: Summit: 14-day Hawaii

Sept. 29: Holland America: Oosterdam, 7-day Mexico.

 

Daily Features


Jews in the News          
 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Like you, we're pleased when members of our community are praiseworthy, and are disappointed when they are blameworthy.
Whether it's good news or bad news, we'll try to keep track of what's being said in general media about our fellow Jews. Our news spotters are Dan Brin in Los Angeles, Donald H. Harrison in San Diego, and you. Wherever you are,  if you see a story of interest, please send a summary and link to us at sdheritage@cox.net.  To see a source story click on the link within the respective paragraph.
_______________________________________________________________________

*Joel Bellman, an aide to Los Angeles County Supervisor Zev Yaraslovsky, said the Board of Supervisors will meet in closed session today to discuss the case of a woman who died after officials at Martin Luther King Jr.—Harbor Hospital ignored her as she writhed in pain on the floor in the hospital's admitting area. The story by Charles Ornstein is in today's Los Angeles Times.

*From his prison cell in Israel where he is serving 35 life sentences, Mohammed Irman smuggled out a book, Engineers of Death, about his bomb-planting Hamas cell that set off the explosions at the Cafe Moment and at Hebrew University, killing 35 persons, including Marla Bennett of San Diego. 
 
*The state Senate has approved a bill by Sen. Carole Migden (D-San Francisco) which would award California's electoral college votes to whatever candidate wins the most popular votes in the election for president.  The bill, intended to prevent a candidate who didn't win the popular vote from becoming president, now heads to the Assembly.  The story by Steve Lawrence of the Associated Press is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*
Israel's Prime Minister Ehud Olmert planned to meet today in Jordan with King Abdullah II to discuss the Arab peace initiative. The meeting will take place against a backdrop of increasing violence in the Palestinian territories between Hamas and Fatah factions. The Associated Press story is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*
Israel's Vice Prime Minister Shimon Peres was interviewed today on the general Middle East situation by David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.  Here is a link.

*U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) was nonplussed by the resignation of Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty in the aftermath of the controversial firing of eight United States Attorneys.  He said it was "ironic" that McNulty, who tried to level with a Senate committee investigating the firings, was let go, while Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, who "stonewalled" the committee, remains in power.  A story by David Johnston of the New York Times News Service is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*
Prosecution witness Kathy Sullivan testified in the murder trial of record producer Phil Spector that he once displayed a gun in her presence, but didn't threaten her.  She said the gun was so big, and Spector so small, that he "looked like Elmer Fudd."  Matt Krasnowski of Copley News Service has the story in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*
Assemblyman Todd Spitzer (R-Orange County), who has sharply criticized Assembly Speaker Fabian Nu
ñez has been reassigned to the smallest legislative office in the State Capitol Building, an office some have nicknamed the "doghouse."  The Associated Press story by Samantha Young is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*
The board of the World Bank will decide the fate of its president, Paul Wolfowitz, at a meeting today.  Prospects for Wolfowitz's continued tenure dimmed when a special panel issued a report saying he had broken the rules in arranging a hefty raise for his girlfriend, Shaha Riza. The Associated Press story by Jeannine Aversa is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.


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______________________________________________
The Jewish Grapevine
                                                   
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AUTHOR, AUTHOR—Journalist Dan Bloom, who lives in Taiwan, relies on the Internet to keep abreast of Jewish news and we're delighted that San Diego Jewish World is one of his regular stops.  He passes on this information about an old friend of his: "
Massachusetts author Daniel Klein and writing partner Tom Cathcart have recently published Plato and a Platypus Walk Into a Bar: Understanding Philosophy Through Jokes, and the book has climbed to Number 3 in the Amazon.com sales stats. Klein is also the author, with his Dutch wife, Freke Vuijst, of The Half-Jewish Book: A Celebration, published in 2000."

BATTLE IN THE WILD—Hillel Mazansky, a member of San Diego's large South African Jewish community, forwards some amazing video of  a herd of buffalo at Kruger National Park rescuing a calf from a pride of lions.  Even a crocodile got into the action. 


EDUCATION BEAT—The most recent issue of Adelante, the publication of the Congress of History of San Diego and Imperial Counties, listed the winners of various local history awards.  Among them was Professor Abraham Schragge, director of Dimensions of Cultural Programs at Thurgood Marshall College, UCSD.  Schragge teaches a course on the history of San Diego, and currently is working on a book about the post-World War II history of San Diego.  Additionally, Schragge serves as the curator of the Veterans Museum and Memorial Center in Balboa Park, and is at work on an oral history project with ex-Prisoners of War.  The award conferred upon him was the John Montgomery Education Award for an individual or group contributing significantly to further the actual teaching of local history by a professional teacher in the classroom.

MEDIA WATCH—There is a new magazine, Impact!, hitting Chabad houses and schools as well as other Jewish places throughout Southern California.  Its editor is Rabbi Yeruchem Eilfort of Chabad of La Costa.  The first issue focuses on Jewish camping with articles written by Eilfort's fellow Chabad rabbis, congregants and even his wife Nechama and daughter Rivka, 13. In an introductory essay, Eilfort reflected that before accepting the editorship, he asked himself what readers really wanted. "The answer [drum roll please] is meaning," he wrote. "People with meaning in their lives tend to be happier.  The full spectrum of life's experiences takes on a completely different texture for someone who has purpose..."  We at San Diego Jewish World would like to express the wish that Impact! will fulfill the purpose for which it was named.  Mazal tov on a good beginning.

IN MEMORY—Evelyn Gabai, a former school teacher in the Bronx, who lived in retirement with husband Hyman in Encinitas, died May 4 at age 79.  A brief obituary is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune. 

 

Regional and Local News & Features

Congressman Filner Supports the Elder Justice Act

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Publicity release)-- U.S. Rep. Bob Filner (D-San Diego)  today announced his support of The Elder Justice Act, (H.R. 1783), legislation that establishes an Elder Justice Coordinating Council and an Advisory Board to fight elder abuse, neglect and exploitation.  "The passage of this bill will bring a focus to this issue at the national level and will provide a comprehensive, coordinated effort led by the federal government to preventing and fighting elder abuse," said Congressman Filner.

This comprehensive bill will require the Attorney General to develop policies and a long-term plan for elder justice programs, focusing on prevention, detection, training, treatment, evaluation, intervention, research and improvement of the elder justice system. Examples of its provisions include:

 

·       aiding in the development of forensic expertise pertaining to elder abuse

·       providing incentives to train for employment in long-term care facilities

·       assisting Adult Protective Services in providing leadership to state programs

·       improving ombudsman capacity and the retention of qualified staff

·       requiring immediate reporting to law enforcement of crimes in a long-term care facility.

 Filner had co-sponsored this bill in the last session of Congress.  "It is past time to enact this bill," he said.  "The worth of a society can be measured by the manner in which it treats and respects its elderly citizens." 

The foregoing was provided by the office of Congressman Bob Filner 

 

Arts, Entertainment, Dining




Jackie Silver to demonstrate how
composers are able to make music so memorable


SAN DIEGO (Publicity Release)—Pianist Jacquelyne Silver, with Silver Pathways to Music, Inc. will lead the JFS College Avenue Senior Center on a musical journey through “The Incredible Power of Music” at 1 p.m., Thursday, June 14. 

This program explores why music is so incredibly powerful and what are the tools that composers use to create that power. Music that was written hundreds of years ago still retains its magic and extraordinary power throughout the ages.  What is that mysterious influence and how is it achieved?

Silver received her degree from Juliard School of Music in New York City.  She has toured extensively throughout the United States, appearing on both radio and television.  She has collaborated with such luminaries as Leonard Bernstein, Marilyn Horne, and Luciano Pavaroti.

She created the original series, Listen to the Art for the San Diego Museum of Art.  She has also presented series at the Athenaeum in La Jolla and was awarded outstanding Instructor of the Year from UCSD.  Today she serves as

director of Silver Pathways to Music Inc., a new non-profit corporation that provides music and dramatic arts to both children and adults throughout San Diego and around the United States.

The cost for the show is $3 for College Avenue Senior Center members $5 for non-members. At noon before the concert a kosher lunch will be served at the Center, with the suggested donation for seniors $3 and for all others, $5.

The Center is located inside Beth Jacob Synagogue. 4855 College Avenue. For information and reservations, call (619) 583-3300.

The foregoing story was provided by the JFS College Avenue Senior Center

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