San Diego Jewish World

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 Vol. 1, No. 181

         Sunday evening,  October 28, 2007
 
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                               Today's Postings


Donald H. Harrison in San Diego: "And after it all, still there is music"

Natasha Josefowitz in La Jolla, California: 'Old age: A privilege denied to lots of people"

Joe Naiman in Lakeside, California: "Jewish trainer wins Arab-sponsored Breeders' Cup race"
 
Sheila Orysiek
in San Diego: "
Waiting for FEMA, DEMA, SCHEMA and EMA"
                                The week in Review
                            (
click on dates to see bac
k issues)



Saturday, October 27
Donald H. Harrison in San Diego: "Prayers amid the rubble and the ash."

Sandy Levin, Ph.D
in La Jolla, California: "Women, listen to your hearts"

F. Jay Winheld
in San Diego: "
A century of Jewish cooking—an anthology of the good and the bad"

Larry Zeiger in San Diego: "Jersey Boys: Flashback to an era when anything seemed possible."



Friday, October 26

Shoshana Bryen in Washington D.C.: "After withdrawals from Lebanon and Gaza, should Israel risk West Bank departure?"

Donald H. Harrison
in San Diego: "As evacuation center, Qualcomm Stadium hosted all-around team."

Rabbi Baruch Lederman
and Ron Cruger in San Diego: "Slipping the key out of the lock—for what may be the final time"

Rabbi Leonard Rosenthal in San Diego: "
God was not in the fires, but in the 'still small voices' of responders"

Thursday, October 25

Donald H. Harrison in San Diego: "100+ Jewish homes lost in San Diego County fires; donations mounting"

Joe Naiman in Lakeside, California: "Youkilis,
2-5, three runs, two doubles in World Series debut"

 Ira Sharkansky in Jerusalem: "Myths and the making of policy."


Wednesday, October 24

Shoshana Bryen in Washington, D.C.: "Turks, Kurds, and the PKK"

Garry Fabian
in Melbourne, Australia: "Neo-Nazi concert too close for comfort... Jewish pilot off to Antarctica .... Bipartisan support for security funding... Carl Bernstein to tour Australia for JNF"

Donald H. Harrison in San Diego: "Seacrest Village seniors return after camping out at Beth Israel"

Lynne Thrope
in San Diego: "Restaurant community pitches in for victims of wildfires"

Tuesday, October 23

Shoshana Bryen in Washington: "Gates sees U.S. consensus on Iraq"

Donald H. Harrison
in San Diego: "
Acts of kindness, large and small, characterize response to fires"

J. Zel Lurie in Delray Beach, Florida: "Watching the media and the media watchers"

Joe Naiman in Lakeside, California: "Youkilis sets two LCS records,
ties mark for most LCS hits"

Ira Sharkansky
in Jerusalem: "Jewish American success stories"


Monday, October 22

Shoshana Bryen in Washington DC "Gates underscores threat of Iran and the jihadists in speech to JINSA"


Donald H. Harrison
in San Diego: "
Jewish community rallies to help victims, as wildfires sweep San Diego County"

Ira Sharkansky
in Jerusalem: "
Abbas' response to plot on Olmert's life raises questions about Palestinian intentions"






Archive of Previous Issues
 


____________________
The Jewish Citizen
             
by Donald H. Harrison
 

And after it all, still there is music 

SAN DIEGO—Music is a large part of the lives of Bob and Susan Gilson, as was evidenced by the occasional musical keepsakes they found as they sifted today for a second day  through the rubble of their home, one of an estimated 1,600 destroyed by the recent San Diego County wildfires.

Bob is conductor of the Civic Youth Orchestra, and Susan is an Escondido-based dance teacher.  “We had a baby grand piano,” he said in a telephone interview.  “The frame is intact, and the soundboard too.  It’s 300 pounds of metal brass.  We had a couple of guys move it to the side, but we’re not sure what we’ll do with it.”

What was once a 3,100-square foot home on a Via Valle Vista lot overlooking Lake Hodges in suburban Escondido also yielded up some notes from a tour the orchestra took to New Zealand in 1996, and a few orchestral scores.   One was of Tchaikovsky’s 5th Symphony.  The music was readable, though charred, and the pages were burned three quarters of an inch around the edges, Gilson reported.  “I will have to throw it away,” he added.  “Anything paper that is burned is extremely unhealthy.”

The archaeological dig through the remnants of their lives also produced two chanukiyot, one of ceramic, one of metal; an Erte bronze sculpture, about a foot tall, charred but completely intact; an old typewriter, the motor of a sewing machine; pieces of metal mezuzot, though the wooden mezuzot were destroyed.  “My father had a coin collection that we kept in a downstairs closet; we recovered 35 of those.”

Precious few items were recovered from the two-story home, in which three bedrooms and a bath were upstairs—one of those bedrooms filled with records, tapes, filing cabinets, and books.  “I think we have recovered what we can recover,” Gilson said. 

Gone were family photos, prints by Marc Chagall, who like his own family had immigrated from Vitebsk, and keepsakes from a lifetime of traveling together and on tour.

Walking through the rubble was a surreal experience, said Gilson, a member of Temple Adat Shalom in Poway: “It was difficult to orient yourself where you were because the house was two stories. At one point we were standing on what was the ceiling of the house, and underneath that was my (now grown) daughter Tamara’s bedroom, and under that the kitchen.  We’re finding tile, some things from my daughter’s bedroom and some things from the kitchen” all within inches of each other.

Perhaps as unforgettable as digging through the debris was the kindness so many people extended to the Gilsons and their helpers.  “Some people who lived about a mile from the rancho had the back of their van loaded, and were going to every single house with a quart of low fat milk and chocolate chip cookies,” Gilson said.

Representatives of the Rincon Fire Department came by with water and Gatorade.  “We had representatives of Calvary Chapel come by with wire sieves.  The Mormon Church representatives came with two-gallon orange buckets packed with face masks, lip balm, gloves.  Interestingly enough, usually Mormons don’t drink alcohol; but there were two bottles of Corona (beer) in that plastic bucket.  And buckets were left at the base of every drive way of every house that was hit."

On Gilson’s street, all ten houses were destroyed.

The Gilson received a reverse 9-11 phone call at 4:30 a.m. Monday morning, October 22, telling them to get out, to get out immediately.  Bob and Susan got dressed, grabbed some extra pair of underwear,  some jackets, and some legal documents, and a few pieces of art work that were small enough to carry. They also took with them some mats to sleep on, and they were out of their house by 5 a.m.   They each drove a car, each gassed up, and rendezvoused at her  Georgia’s School of Dance in downtown Escondido.

“We tried to lie down and sleep,” but after an hour, they realized sleep would not come.  So they drove to the Coco’s Restaurant on Via Rancho Parkway, arriving just as it was opening for the morning.  Within a few minutes, they were joined by two families in similar circumstances: neighbors from across the street and the family of a board member of the Civic Youth Orchestra.

The three families ate together in shock, then the Gilsons returned to the dance studio. They decided to check into a motel in Escondido because it was close to both the studio and to the house. Although they could have gone to Los Angeles to stay with Tamara, “we decided we needed to stay here,” Gilson related. 

At 11 a.m. that Monday morning, Gilson returned to his house to fetch more belongings.  “This image will stay with me for a long time; the place was totally evacuated. There were no dogs, no bicycles, no people, no cars, nothing.  I never ever had seen it like that.  About 20 yards from my house, there was a fire marshal in his protective gear, and he yelled at me: ‘Where the hell are you going?’ and I said, ‘my house.’  And he said.  ‘You’ve got five minutes; you can’t stay here; the fire is behind that mountain.'”

Gilson said he retrieved a camera, and blankets, and “I remember running down to the living room, and as if I were a camera, I was looking at the art work, looking at the piano, none of which I could take.  I was there maybe 10 seconds, and then I ran down the hall way, into the garage, to my car, and screamed out of the driveway and back down the street...”

The next day, “Tuesday, was the day of hell, the day our house went up.  I couldn’t get anywhere near the place, so I had no idea.   But I decided on Wednesday that I had to go back.  They would have to arrest me if they didn’t let me.  There was a fire marshal there.  He asked ‘where is your house?’ (and after Gilson told him, the marshal asked) ‘do you want me to go with you?’  ‘What for?’ I asked. “It’s bad; it’s real bad,” he replied. My heart sank. I said, ‘I will be okay’ and I started toward the hill.”

Normally, about that time of the morning, Gilson’s two-story home would be silhouetted by the sun rising in the east.  “As I was driving up the street, I realized I could see the sun.”  There was no silhouette.   The first time he looked at the ruins, “I almost fainted; then I almost threw up.”

By the time of our interview today, about 6 p.m. this evening, Gilson had been back to the site about four or five times since the home was destroyed.  “It has become a little easier, but I wouldn’t wish what I felt when I saw it for the first time on anyone,” he said.

Besides digging through their property, the Gilsons visited the disaster recovery center in Rancho Bernardo today, where “they are unbelievably organized; in three hours, you can see everybody there that you need to.

“We are registered with FEMA, the Red cross, the IRS, the California Franchise Tax Board; the County Registrar; the DMV for the one car we lost.  Every agency was there.  All the insurance companies had motor homes outside.  I think they learned their lessons from the Cedar fire four years ago… and from Katrina.”

After the previous disasters, the government agencies this time “seem to have gotten it right.  There has been tremendous monetary loss, and the emotional loss is just not measurable.

“We saw a young mother and a little girl, an African-American mother who was doing okay, but her daughter, about four just couldn’t handle it.  She was so sad because she lost whatever toys had been in her house.  There were a lot of elderly people there, who were having difficulty being mobile, and they didn’t hear so well, but especially the Red Cross and the Salvation Army, they have been very kind and nurturing and have taken it slow.”

Gilson, who recently retired as conductor of the Palomar College orchestra, although he continues to teach part-time at the college, philosophized that sometimes “it takes a horrific event to bring out the best in people.  There is a huge sign on the freeway, the I-15 south, and another at our area near Lake Hodges, that say ‘Thank you, Fire fighters.’  I have seen these signs all over the place, and that makes me feel good.  Neighbors do help neighbors, although unfortunately you only see it when lightning strikes.”

Ironically, after Gilson retired as the Palomar conductor this spring, “people were saying, ‘what are you going to do?  You are retired now!’ and then this happens.  "My wife and I looked at each other.  We weren’t planning to build another house, but that is a new challenge.

“We are trying to be positive, upbeat, stiff upper lip, keeping strong—all those clichés.  I will tell you: the days are okay when we have a lot of things to do.  But we are averaging only four hours of sleep at night.  I find myself awakening almost at exactly the same time each morning as we got the reverse 9-1-1 call, and I find I just can’t get back to sleep.”

Friends have been bringing gifts, both the essentials like food and clothes for the body, and, for the Gilsons, what is sustenance for their souls.  Music.  One friend, Ellen Weller, brought over some CDs and a boom box to play them on.

Commentary
Waiting for FEMA, DEMA, SCHEMA and EMA 

By Sheila Orysiek

SAN DIEGO—Our county didn’t. Ordinary people rescued other ordinary people. The government came later.  We didn’t buy into the social welfare template of waiting for FEMA, DEMA, SCHEMA or any other EMA.  The local citizenry, constabulary, and civil authorities, acted in a timely agile fashion.  The way they are supposed to do.  A remarkable life saving reverse 911 system had been instituted and promptly activated.  Weather patterns were monitored.  Equipment was pre-positioned; warnings heard, advice taken, communications and resources coordinated.  Were things perfect?  Of course, not - nothing is.  But lessons were learned from the fires of four years ago. 

San Diego is fortunate to have several office holders such as a mayor, a board of supervisors, a police chief, fire chief, and sheriff with decades of experience.  They didn’t play political games, didn’t spend their time blaming one another or damning an opposing political ideology, but instead cooperated to pool resources and coordinate efforts.  Was it perfect?  Of course not - but it was impressive.

I don’t recall any news conference in which a local official played politics, or placed blame, or whined about how the cavalry is late coming over the hill.  They saw themselves as the cavalry - as the means to help their own citizens.  Is it a coincidence that almost none of these local people in charge are advocates for a social welfare state in their daily politics?  I don’t think it was a coincidence at all.  Their immediate response was to do what was necessary now - not rely on a distant power.

On the federal level, our U.S. Representatives did well by us.  In contrast one of our U. S. Senators used her news conference to blame the president for global warming - (though wild fires were reported by the original Spanish colonists) and she threw in the war in Iraq for good measure.   I guess it’s hard to stop the political game when habits are so engrained.  No thank you, Senator Boxer.

As for the “common” citizenry, they didn’t buy into the major media’s ongoing debasement of our society and they didn’t wait for the cavalry either.  They didn’t see themselves as waiting to be rescued - they rescued one another.  And for those not threatened - that didn’t mean they were unaffected.  Thousands made a choice to go to a store, load up a car or truck with supplies and hurry it over to an evacuation center, or offer a home to someone in need.  Though many of the major stores and other corporate entities offered help in larger quantities, the local citizenry was not outdone in largeness of the heart.

Thousands more drove down to the 42 evacuation centers to help or drove horse trailers to save animals, or took an animal home, or helped a senior citizen to cope, or a child to feel safe.  There were even volunteers to clean up the evacuation centers when it was all over.  And now, many more will help those stricken to search through the rubble and help the victims save what little is left. 

My mail box was crowded with e-mails from every Jewish philanthropic group and synagogue organizing, setting up funding, collecting, and contributing - as I am sure the church community did also.

And what didn’t happen?  So far as I’ve heard no one shot at a helicopter, or a policeman, fireman or anyone else.  No uniformed officer abandoned his/her post though surely some of them had families and homes which were threatened.  There were only a couple of instances of looting - nothing like the wholesale - open - “let’s have fun” orgies of crime we’ve seen in other places.  None of our communities refused to take in evacuees.  The stadium wasn’t trashed and will be ready to host a football game today. The “normal” day to day crime rate actually went down. Was it perfect? No, of course, not - but it was a reassuring restatement of how citizens should behave in a dire situation as well as toward one another.

It would be unfair and this commentary in no way should be read as a comparison between various calamities that occur to a community; a flood, hurricane, tornado, earthquake or fire.  No one particular event is truly comparable to another.  What can be compared is the response to the event; the response of the local authorities and the response of the citizenry.  One can understand a desperate person in a calamitous situation breaking into a store seeking food and water - but not the wholesale looting of televisions and other non-essential items.  It is impossible to understand a besieged community shooting at those trying to help such as firefighters, helicopters, police or other citizens.  Those are freewill choices.  San Diego’s citizens also made choices and chose to bend their energies in a positive supportive direction.

The authorities here also had choices.  They could have spent their time making cell phone calls to Washington D.C. and holding news conferences bemoaning the lack of instant response.  Instead San Diego’s authorities made their cell calls to activate whatever local resources were available - many put in place beforehand - to prevent the loss of as much life and property as possible. 

So after this brief interlude of watching the best of which we as fallible beings are capable, the major media will quickly return to the steady drumbeat of which “starlet” is losing his/her custody of children because of drugs, plotting the course of some ancient pseudo-hero football player’s most recent trip through the courts, who won a television game show, or showcasing whichever politician is now blaming the president for every ill known to the planet.

As the media moves on, San Diego is left with the debris.  However, it is not the debris of its own making; it is the debris of a natural disaster over which it had little control.  But what could be controlled - how we all responded to the catastrophe - and to one another - is something in which we can take comfort.  Was it perfect?  No - but it was something of which we can take pride - and do it even better when (heaven forefend) it happens again.

I also write for a British site and reported on this event day by day.  One comment I got from a thoughtful British citizen in return was: 

“We only hear bad stories from America.  We do not always get very accurate reporting from the USA and do not realise how collaborative and supportive Americans can be.”

We can be, indeed. Especially in San Diego.

 

 



    Joe Naiman:
  Honorable Menschen
in Sports

         


Jewish trainer wins Arab-sponsored Breeders' Cup race

By Joe Naiman

LAKESIDE, California—I wasn't able to watch the Breeders' Cup races yesterday,since I was in Los Angeles for my grandmother's birthday dinner (she'll be 97 on Halloween), so I had to find out the results on the Internet.  It was a pleasure to learnnot only that one of the Jewish trainers won a race, but
that he won a race sponsored by an Arab company.

I began my sports column for San Diego Jewish World
during the Del Mar racing season, and after Peter Miller's
brother made a comment about being Jewish, I had a brief
conversation with him and learned that Bobby Frankel was
also Jewish.  That gave me a few trainers to follow, and
while Barry Abrams didn't have any entries in the Breeders'
Cup the first thing I did after turning on the computer
this morning was to see how Peter Miller and Bobby
Frankel did.

Miller trained Set Play, who finished 11th among the 13
horses in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies race.
That was a bit disappointing, but considering that
Set Play was the race's longshot at 41.2:1 I can consider
that finish to be above expectations, especially since
the restaurant in Los Angeles didn't have an off-track
wagering facility and my own money wasn't at risk in the
race.

Frankel had three horses who didn't win, but since he had
four horses in the Breeders' Cup that meant my readers
wouldn't be faced with a third consecutive column about
Kevin Youkilis.  It's the owners of Emirates Airlines
who are dealing with a potential problem now that Frankel
won one of the races they sponsored.

The Breeders' Cup took place at Monmouth Park, and
a four-year-old filly named Ginger Punch won the Emirates
Airlines Breeders' Cup Distaff race.  Ginger Punch
is owned Stronach Stables and was ridden by jockey
Rafael Bejarano in the 1 1/8-mile dirt race for
fillies and mares three years old and upward.

The Breeders' Cup Distaff was the ninth of eleven races
at Monmouth Park that day.  Rain fell on the New Jersey
track for that race as well as for five of the previous
eight races, and when the starting gate was opened at
4:07 p.m. Eastern Time the track was sloppy.  Ginger Punch
still came within 3 1/2 seconds of the track record set
by Spend A Buck in August 1985.

Ginger Punch, who had the fourth post position, broke sixth
among the 12 horses.  A quarter of a mile into the race
she was fifth, although only 2 1/2 lengths behind leader
Bear Now and a head behind fourth-place Lady Joanne.
Despite the sloppy surface, Bear Now reached that pole
22.68 seconds into the race.

Bear Now still led at half a mile and at that point was
two lengths ahead of Ginger Punch, who was in third place
a length behind Hystericalady and a head in front of
Lady Joanne.  Ginger Punch moved along the rail to
challenge for the lead on the far turn, and with
three-quarters of a mile elapsed she had taken the lead,
a head in front of Bear Now.  Ginger Punch reached the
3/4-mile pole at 1:11.11.

Although Bear Now fell back, Ginger Punch had to contend
with two other horses closing as the leaders approached
the stretch.  As the horses entered the stretch,
Hystericalady was in front of Ginger Punch by a head.
Ginger Punch was a head in front of third-place Octave.

Hystericalady and Ginger Punch bumped in the stretch,
although a stewards' inquiry ruled that there was no
interference which would have altered the result of the
race.  As three horses battled for the victory,
Ginger Punch crossed the finish line a neck in front of
Hystericalady, who finished a neck ahead of Octave.

Ginger Punch had a winning time of 1:50.11.  The track
record for that distance set 22 years ago by Spend A Buck
is 1:46.80.

Ginger Punch was foaled in Florida on April 23, 2003.  She
added $1,220,400 to her lifetime earnings with the
Breeders' Cup win.

Emirates Airlines also sponsored the Breeders' Cup
Filly and Mare Turf race where the Frankel-trained
Precious Kitten finished eighth among the ten horses who
finished (11 horses started the race) and Frankel's
Argentina, who was actually foaled in Ireland,
finished ninth.

In the NetJets Breeders' Cup Mile Frankel's Silent Name
finished 12th among the 13 horses - immediately behind
a horse named Purim.




 

 

Doing It Better
 
Natasha Josefowitz, Ph.D

 


Old age: A privilege denied to lots of people

LA JOLLA, California—George Bernard Shaw deplored that youth was wasted on the young. Unless we appreciate each stage of our lives, it is wasted. Middle age can be wasted as can old age if the people in their 50s or 80s don’t savor what these years bring to them.

I, for one, would not want to be young again. I was 80 this year and am definitely less silly than in my youth, less concerned with my looks, with the way I come across, less scattered, more focused. Yes, I’m really wiser, and I like myself that way—not as hassled by small things, more attuned to others, more compassionate.

Katherine Hepburn once said that “old age is not for sissies.” She was right, of course, because we’re dealing with wrinkles, gray hair, a slower step  and a few extra pounds in all the wrong places. We’re pushing ourselves out of arm chairs, forgetting everything that isn’t written down and then losing the list.

Suddenly everyone has started to mumble. We must deal with falling asleep during meetings, misplacing our eyeglasses—which we need in order to find them—and generally feeling out of step with the people who listen to rap music and go bungee jumping.

I have found myself being the only one not laughing at a comedian’s routine, or the only one crying at a romantic scene. But now I can enjoy more a quiet evening at home, dinner with friends, a walk on the beach, a good book, music.

I do the things I had postponed—like taking piano lessons when I have no talent, or attending a class on cartooning when I can’t draw.

Smiling instead of frowning helps to get over small insults—our brains think there is something to smile about and send that message to our bodies, and humor is the best antidote to everything. Norman Cousins cured his illness with laughter; we can help our growing aches and pains with the same.

Laughter is indeed the best medicine and laughing at ourselves and with each other will make our foibles funny and our lapses amusing. From child-proof medicine bottles that no one can open, to thinking we have Alzheimer’s because we can’t remember someone’s name, growing older can indeed be an adventure not to be missed. Considering the alternative, we have little choice.

 

Too Wise to Want to Be Young Again
This is the time of my life
that I don’t want to miss—
old age is a privilege
denied to a lot of people
and the best way to avoid
becoming an old dog
is to keep learning
new tricks

I always say that age
is only important
if you happen to be
wine or cheese
Yet when I get out of the shower
I am relieved that the mirror
is all fogged up
I have also noticed that
I’m beginning to decline a lot of offers—
preferring to stay home
which is probably why they
call these the “declining years”

After middle-age spread
I look forward to old-age shrinkage
and I’m much too wise
to ever want to be young again

                —Natasha Josefowitz