By Donald H. Harrison
LA JOLLA, Calif.—Like the rooster whose metaphoric qualities she
extolled, Rebbetzin Esther Jungreis set out to awaken attendees at Soille San
Diego Hebrew Day School's scholarship banquet last night. Her message was
not simply to wake up, but to wake up to a dire threat to the Jewish people.
Anti-Semitism is escalating all over the world, she declared. "I, a
survivor of Bergen-Belsen, smell a Holocaust."
The Hungarian-born Holocaust survivor cited increasing anti-Jewish acts
throughout Europe, many of them perpetrated by that continent's growing Muslim population. And
she cited the comments of Iranian President Ahmed Ahmadinejad that Israel should
be wiped off the map. Do not merely dismiss him as a mad man, she urged the
audience. "Madmen have to be taken seriously" because they are
mad enough to try to put their plans into action. "I lived it, I saw
it with Hitler," she said.
She told two stories, one offering some hope, the other an apparent prophesy of
an apocalyptic future for the Jewish people unless we hew more closely to
Torah commandments.
In the first story, she related how she had been honored by U.S. President
George W. Bush with an appointment to the official U.S. delegation attending
recent dedication ceremonies for a new wing of Yad Vashem, Israel's
Holocaust Museum and Memorial Center in Jerusalem.
Booksigning—Rebbetzin Esther Jungreis prepares
to autograph
a book purchased by Deborah & Maxwell Brookler as Rabbi
Simcha Weiser looks on at reception preceding Soille Hebrew
Day School's scholarship banquet.
On the return trip, another member of the delegation asked Jungreis if she knew
where she was. Yes, she replied, on a presidential plane flying home
from Israel. The other delegate pointed out that at that very moment,
Germany was below them. Imagine, he said, she, a survivor of a Nazi death
camp, now was flying from Jerusalem over Germany on a U.S. presidential
plane
"Who'd have believed I'd have survived," much less participated in
such an honor? Jungreis asked the attentive audience.
Ha Kotel—Rabbi Baruch Lederman inspects an art work
depicting the Western Wall at "silent auction" held to
benefit Soille San Diego Hebrew Day School.
But, she said, everything changes. She told of hearing a story two weeks ago about an
Israeli rabbi who had received a piece of Torah from a former Nazi officer who had torn
the parchment from a scroll in a destroyed synagogue for a souvenir. He
picked the parchment from the Torah at random, but now these many years later,
he wanted a rabbi to have it so it could be returned to the Jewish people.
The rabbi who received it recognized it immediately as being from Deuteronomy
28, "which describes the Holocaust that will befall the Jewish people if
they do not observe the Torah," the rebbetzin said.
The parchment from such an unlikely source was returned to Israel at a time when
it faces great threats from Iran. Was it an accident? Jungreis asked
rhetorically, answering her question with the declaration that it is "time
for every Jew to wake up."
"What you are doing, giving children Torah, is meaningful, but it is not
enough," she warned as
well."
An example of the great insight of Judaism may be found in a morning
prayer in which God is thanked for giving wisdom to the
rooster. A wise rooster? she asked. Isn't the rooster one of the vainest
of creatures?. What wisdom is meant? The rebbetzin, widow of Rabbi Meshulem HaLevi
Jungreis, said the rooster unerringly
Hors d'ouevres—Einat Grushkevich, left, and Hanna Camhi take appetizers
offered by Akberet Teklai at the La Jolla Marriott, and Betty and Herb
Shatoff
find some other delicacies at a side table.
differentiates the darkness of night from the
lightness of day. May it be that humanity can make similar differentiations on a
moral level between what is right and what is wrong.
In Washington D.C., said Jungreis, author of several inspirational books that were sold before and after her speech, there was a race at a school catering to
the special needs of children with Down's Syndrome. One of the children in
the race fell on his knee, and began to cry. Instead of continuing to run toward the
finish line, a girl stopped and said to her fallen friend, "let me kiss it for
you." Then she and the other competitors helped the boy up and together
they ran to
the finish line. How many of us would have stopped racing to help someone
in distress? she asked. How many of us have grasped the Torah lessons teaching
us to make proper decisions?
The rooster also has the quality of consistency. Rain or shine, in health
or in illness, it crows to announce the morning. Jews, too, must be
consistent; whether in Israel or in the Diaspora, they must stay Jews, said the
rebbetzin.
Furthermore, she taught, the rooster has foresight. He knows the morning will
come—even as Moses' sister, Miriam, knew that for the Jews enslaved in Egypt there
would be a spiritual morning. Jungreis recounted that at the Red Sea, Miriam played
her tambourine in celebration of the Exodus. Wasn't it amazing that she had a
tambourine? Fleeing the Egyptians, why, of all things, would she have
packed that? "She brought it out of the Auschwitz of Egypt because she
understood some day the sun will shine and the darkness will fall," the
rebbetzin said.
So it was with Rebbetzin Jungreis' father, who did not take with him jewelry or other objects of
material comfort when he was deported to a concentration camp. Instead he
snuggled into the camp some tefillin
Challah covers—Dr. Karl Jacobs studies challah covers
made by Soille students for the silent auction.
and a manuscript of Torah scholarship
written by Jungreis' great-grandfather. What was her father
thinking? Jungreis asked. In the camp, she answered, she saw people standing in line to touch her father's
tefillin. And the manuscript somehow survived the war and today is read
and studied by scholars.
Likewise, she said, there was a rabbi who kept preaching and writing in the
concentration camps, right up to the end. "As long as I live I have to
write and to speak," he explained. "The rest is up to God."
Although he perished, some of his writings survived the war. A Polish lad found the
manuscript and traded it to an American soldier for a bar of chocolate. The
soldier, a Gentile, gave it to a Jewish chaplain. Those writings too are
studied today in yeshivot, she said.
"When you give a Torah education to your children, you are preserving
the manuscript of our people," she declared.
Honorees—Rabbi Simcha Weiser, right, congratulates Soille
San Diego Hebrew Day School honorees who, from right, are, Sarah Rubinstein,
Lionel & Kim Kahn, Michael & Etty Sohmer, and Sean & Loretta
Levi. Standing by to present them awards are Audrey Jacobs, Barbara
Perlitch and Emily Einhorn.
Four sets of people who, indeed, have been instrumental in giving Torah
education to the children were honored during brief ceremonies at the dinner
which was held at the Marriott Hotel in the La Jolla neighborhood of San Diego.
These included Sean and Loretta Levi, who were honored in the chozim category
for their philanthropy. "Since coming to Hebrew Day School three
years ago, Sean and Loretta Levi have grown to love and appreciate the Torah
education their children are receiving," said a citation contained in the
printed program for the banquet. "Each year they not only generously
support our scholarship fund, they are also visionary givers who want to help
realize the school's potential for future growth."
Lionel and Kim Kahn were cited for leadership: "For the past twelve years,
both Lionel and Kim Kahn have demonstrated great leadership in supporting the
school at all levels. For the past four years Lionel has served as President of
the Board of Governors and Kim has chaired many fundraising and school
events. The Kahns' commitment has raised the bar of parent involvement and
has inspired others to follow their lead."
Micheal and Etty Sohmer were honored for volunteerism. "As soon as
Michael and Etty arrived at Soille, they immediately began devoting countless
hours to many daily 'nuts and bolts' tasks at the school, including the hot
lunch program and improving our school's safety. With their love, attention, and
hard work, they make Soille a more safe and nurturing environment.
Preschool teacher Sarah Rubinstein was recognized as an outstanding faculty
member: "For the past ten years, Morah Sarah has lovingly taught our
four year olds and skillfully prepared them for Kindergarten. No matter
what challenges life has brought, Morah Sarah has shown extraordinary
dedication to our school and our children. She is also the grandmother of six
students in our school."
There were some special moments bespeaking Torah education. Charlene Seidle, a
Soille San Diego Hebrew Day School alumna, who today serves as the associate
director of the Jewish Community Foundation of San Diego County announced that
an anonymous donor had left a bequest creating a scholarship fund named for
Soille's headmaster, Rabbi Simcha
Weiser. Seidle, 28, said she recently decided to take out a life insurance policy, the benefits of
which will be paid to help other students.
In addition to the many items donated and sold at a "silent auction,"
Philip Silverman, one of the honorees from the previous year, auctioned
Announces bequest—Charlene Seidle of Jewish Community
Foundation, as her JCF colleague Gail Littman looks on, tells
of bequest by anonymous donor establishing scholarships
in
honor of Soille's headmaster, Rabbi Simcha Weiser, standing
in the background.
in traditional fashion a sky box that will accommodate 20 persons at the
Padres game on Tuesday, Aug. 15. Eventually, a $1,500 bid took the prize,
worth well over $2,000. The successful bidders, Sean & Loretta
Levi, promptly re-donated the sky
box back to the school, with the wish that Rabbi Weiser and other members
of the staff be taken "out to the ballgame."
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