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                                                                        Vol. 1, Number 101
 

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     San Diego Jewish World
             August 9, 2007

  (click on headline below to jump to the story)

Israel and Middle East
Livni and Levey consult on anti-Iran sanctions

Al-Salah Society designated as terrorist front group for Hamas

IDF will honor the bravest of the brave

Yad Vashem gains NGO observer status at the United Nations' Public Information Department

U.N. issues new appeal for openings of Gaza crossings

Lagging IDF enlistments worrisome to Peres

USA
ADL calls Tancredo's rhetoric 'unAmerican'

Forum
America's Immigration Debate—A New Proposal


Features

News Sleuths: U.S. 'cannot live with' Iran's policy calling for the destruction of Israel—President Bush


Jewish Grapevine



Greater San Diego

ADL to students: Schools may not pressure you to attend classes during the High Holidays

Sports
Clutch single increases Bet Shemesh IBL lead to 3.5 games

Lifestyle
In performance-based society, maybe sensitivity to rejection is logical, if unhealthy, reaction

Arts & Entertainment
Stand-up comic—playwright finds humor in death

Livni and Levey consult on anti-Iran sanctions

JERUSALEM (Press Release)—The US Treasury's top anti-terrorism official, Stuart Levey, is visiting Israel to discuss Iran's disputed nuclear program with the Israeli Foreign Minister, Tzipi Livni.  Levey, the US Undersecretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, and Livni will discuss a push for more international sanctions on Iran, according to Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Mark Regev.  

"Israel supports a hardening of sanctions already imposed" on the Islamic republic, Regev said. "Diplomacy must be firm and speak with one voice in order to succeed. The Tehran regime must understand that business as usual cannot continue while it is pursuing its nuclear program."

Meanwhile, the Iranian President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has repeated that Tehran will not negotiate with countries that refuse it the right to nuclear energy. During a state visit to Algeria he said "Iran cannot talk to countries which do not recognize its right to produce nuclear energy for peaceful means".

In a hard-hitting new attack on Israel, the Iranian leader also said that "the whole of humankind today has been bruised by crimes perpetrated by Zionists in Palestine, in Lebanon, and in the whole world. Our support for the Palestinian people is unconditional. As for the Israelis, let them go find somewhere else to live".

The preceding story was provided by the World Jewish Congress

 

 

 




 


 

               Israel and Middle East


____________________
The Jewish Citizen
             by Donald H. Harrison
 


Al-Salah Society designated as terrorist front group for Hamas


SAN DIEGO—So what image pops into your mind if someone were to say that so-and-so works for the United States government fighting terrorists?  Would it be that of a super-suave CIA or FBI agent?  A high-tech pilot flying a stealth aircraft?  An Army "black ops" guy dropped "in country" to assassinate some enemy operative?  Well, no doubt, all of these television- and movie-style prototypes have their roles to play, but so do the unassuming, faceless banker types who know that to run a crime syndicate or a big international terror organization, people need money, lots of it.  And that is where the U.S. Treasury Department's Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence comes in.

Today, as the story above reports, Stuart Levey, head of the Terrorism and Financial Intelligence operation, meets with Israel's Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni to discuss further sanctions against Iran.

On Tuesday, on the advice of Levey's office, which makes a credo of the old line from the Watergate scandal, "follow the money," the U.S. Treasury Department designated the Al-Salah Society as a terrorist front organization for Hamas.  It also named  the director of the so-called charity, Ahmad Al-Kurd, as a supporter of terrorism.

The action was similar to those taken July 24 by the Treasury Department against the Iran-based Martyr's Foundation, the Goodwill Charitable Organization (GCO) in Dearborn, Mich., Qasem Aliq of Hizbollah in Lebanon and Ahmad al-Shami, who allegedly served as a go-between for Hizbollah and the GCO.

According to the Treasury Department, here are some of the steps it takes in its fight against terror:

"When the United States designates a terrorist supporter, U.S. entities and persons—wherever located—must freeze the target's assets, block all transactions, and stop conducting business with the designated entity... These designations often make an impact beyond their legal reach, as many banks around the world screen their customers and transactions against the U.S. list of designated terrorists, even though they are not obligated to do so..."

The Treasury Department's information sheet adds that "through bilateral cooperation and multilateral action by the United Nations, more than 170 countries have implemented blocking orders to freeze the assets of terrorists."

In "designating" the Al-Salah Society, the Treasury Department said the purported charity had "supported Hamas-affiliated combatants during the first intifada and recruited and indoctrinated youth to support Hamas' activities.  One of the most senior Gaza-based Hamas leaders and founders, Ismail Abu Shanab, openly identified the Al-Salah Society as 'one of the three Islamic charities that form Hamas' welfare arm.'"

According to the Treasury Department, "the Al-Salah Society has received substantial funding from Persian Gulf countries, including hundred of thousands of dollars from Kuwait donors."  Obviously, such a pointed statement puts Kuwait on notice that similar transactions in the future must be curbed.

The Treasury Department's news release said that Al-Kurd currently serves as mayor of Deir Al-Balah in Gaza, and has been affiliated with Hamas for over a decade.

"The Al-Salah Society has employed a number of Hamas military wing members," the release went on to say. "In late 2002, an official of the Al-Salah Society in Gaza was the principal leader of a Hamas military wing structure in the Al-Maghazi refugee camp in Gaza.  The founder and former director of the Al-Salah Society's Al-Maghazi branch reportedly also operated as a member of the Hamas military wing structure in Al-Maghazi, participated in weapons deals, and served as a liaison to the rest of the Hamas structure in Al-Maghazi.  At least four other Hamas military wing members in the Al-Maghazi refugee camp in Gaza were tied to the Al-Salah Society."

Matthew Levitt of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy has a thoughtful analysis of the role that "charities" like the Al-Salah Society play. "Recruiters use Hamas-sponsored community gatherings, such as charity committees, mosque classes, student unions, and sports clubs, to spot susceptible youth," he wrote.  "Charity committees are Hamas's most effective tool for building grassroots support, radicalizing and recruiting future activists, providing logistical support for terrorist operations and day jobs for operatives, and funding the group's various activities."

So let's hear it for those quiet number-crunchers working somewhere within the gray walls of the Treasury Department.  There's simply no accounting for all the good they may be doing!


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IDF will honor the bravest of the brave 
 

TEL AVIV (Press Release)—The Chief of General Staff, Lieutenant Colonel Gabi Ashkenazi, has recently accepted the recommendations made by the General Staff Committee for Medals and Citations following the Second Lebanon War. The Committee, headed by Major General Yishai Be'er, conducted numerous meetings in which it examined 42 potential recipients for the Chief of General Staff award.
 
After determining the criteria for receiving the awards, the Committee elected to grant 38 Medals and Citations of the Chief of General Staff. Among those to be awarded are a Deputy Battalion Commander who smothered an armed grenade with his own body to save the lives of his soldiers, and a military doctor who risked his life to conduct a medical operation under fire.
 
During the past 24 hours, IDF commanders visited the homes of the recipients of the honorary awards and their families, in order to inform them of the decision.
 
The medal presentation ceremony will take place at 7 pm on Sunday, September 2nd, 2007 at the Mann Auditorium in Tel Aviv, and will be conducted in the presence of the Chief of the General Staff and the members of the General Staff Forum. In addition to these awards, an additional 104 Medals and Citations will be granted by commanders of the different branches and units of the IDF.
 
Following the decision by the Committee, the Chief of General Staff stated that "the exemplary stories that were discovered in the wake of the war bear witness to the spirit of combat and camaraderie among IDF soldiers, and are a source of pride for the Israel Defense Forces."

Of the awards and citations given, 6 soldiers will receive the Medal of Valor, 12 soldiers will receive the Distinguished Service Medal, 17 soldiers will receive Citations, and 3 units will receive Citations.

The preceding story was provided by the Israel Defense Force

          

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Yad Vashem gains NGO observer status at the United Nations' Public Information Department

JERUSALEM (Press Release)—Continuing its relationship with the United Nations, Yad Vashem has received NGO status at the UN’s Department of Public Information (UN/DPI). Affiliation with the Department of Information at the United Nations will help enable Yad Vashem to continue its efforts to disseminate accurate and comprehensive information about the Holocaust around the world.

Over the past several years, Yad Vashem has been working with UN/DPI on Holocaust education and information projects, including building a website for UN centers around the world as part of last year’s International Holocaust Remembrance Day events, done in conjunction with the USC Shoah Foundation, and the CDJC in Paris. Electronic resources in Spanish are currently being developed in cooperation with the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.

A special forum for UN staff members from Europe and Asia is planned for October at Yad Vashem. The forum aims to deepen UN personnel’s knowledge of the Holocaust, as well as to provide material, ideas and information for preparing projects and activities that will enable implementation of the UN resolution to annually commemorate the memory of the victims of the Holocaust (on January 27). The resolution was passed by the UN General Assembly in November 2005.

Yad Vashem has also presented temporary exhibits at UN headquarters in New York. In January 2005, marking the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, Yad Vashem created a special traveling exhibit, “Auschwitz: The Depth of the Abyss”. In 2006, Yad Vashem’s “No Child’s Play” exhibit was displayed in the Visitor’s Lobby of the UN.

  The preceding story was provided by Yad Vashem

         Please click below to read more about San Diego Jewish Academy, the premier K-12 day school in Carmel Valley
        
 



U.N. issues new appeal for openings of Gaza crossings

UNITED NATIONS, N.Y (Press Release)—A senior United Nations official today appealed to the Palestinian authorities, Israel and all other parties to take immediate steps to re-open a major crossing between Israel and the Gaza Strip to reverse a rapidly worsening economic, humanitarian and political situation.

“Failure to do this will lead to disastrous consequences: an atmosphere of hopelessness and despair in which extremism is likely to take hold,” Filippo Grandi, Deputy Commissioner General of the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), which cares for millions of Palestinian refugees, told news briefing in Gaza City.

“This is not in the interests of anyone who sincerely seeks a lasting peace, in which the Palestinian people can live in dignity,” he said.

In appealing for the major Karni crossing to be reopened, he was reiterating recent calls from other senior UN officials, including Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, since Israel imposed the closures after Hamas, which does not recognize Israel’s right to exist, took control of the Strip in June.

Mr. Grandi stressed that because of the closures UNRWA had been forced to halt all its construction projects worth $93 million, as it had been unable to import building supplies in sufficient quantities. “We urgently need to get these into Gaza if we are to avoid a significant worsening of the living conditions of those who have waited months, and even years to have their own homes,” he said.

According to the latest figures from the Palestinian Association of Businessmen, the total accumulative loss to industry in Gaza has reached $23 million dollars since June and if the closures continue at least 120,000 workers in Gaza will lose their jobs, he noted. In the construction sector alone, about $160 million worth of projects have been halted.

Farmers, meanwhile, face a terrible uncertainty with no guarantees that they will be able to export their goods or import such essential materials as fertilizer. “If the agricultural sector is allowed to fail, Gaza will pay a high price,” Mr. Grandi said.

“Let me take this opportunity to issue a grave warning: Gaza risks becoming a virtually 100 per cent aid dependent, closed down and isolated community within a matter of months, or even weeks, if the present regime of closures continues. The window of opportunity in which we can address this most urgent situation is small and fast closing,” he added.

“The fragility and unpredictability of aid, in this highly complex and volatile political situation, is dangerous: particularly in view of the vulnerability of those we serve. And so I issue an appeal but also a warning to all actors involved in the conflict: both political and humanitarian.

“I appeal to the Palestinian authorities, to Israel and all other parties to take immediate steps to open up the Karni Crossing, to imports and exports, as well as humanitarian goods, in compliance with the demands of the United Nations Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon and of the Quartet. Only this will allow the little that remains of Gaza’s economy to survive.”

The Quartet, comprising the UN, European Union, Russia and United States, has called on Hamas to commit to non-violence, recognize Israel and accept agreements already signed between Israel and the Palestinians. It is sponsoring the so-called Road Map plan aimed at securing a two-State solution to the Middle East conflict, with Israel and Palestine living side by side in peace, originally slated for completion by the end of 2005.

The preceding story was provided by the United Nations


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The Peres Diary

(Editor's Note:  The following is a release from July 29 that either we missed at the time or which was posted well after the date.  In either event, in the interest of completeness and for its inherent interest, we post it here):

Lagging IDF enlistments worrisome to Peres

TEL HASHOMER, Israel (Press Release)—The President of Israel, Mr. Shimon Peres, this morning (Sunday, 29 July) conducted a working tour of the absorption and selection base at Tel Hashomer, accompanied by the Head of the Human Resources Branch, Major General Elazar Stern and the Chief Armored Corps Officer, Brigadier General Haluzi Rudoy.

The President toured the camp and met with tens of new recruits and their families who arrived for the large summer recruitment of the armored corps and who welcomed him with loud singing and drums.

At the outset of the tour the President received a extensive professional survey from Major General Stern and, at its completion, he said that the data presented to him is worrisome and that it is the duty of the leadership in Israel and the entire society to do everything possible to change the existing situation.

From the survey that the President received from Major General Stern, the following difficult data emerged: that during the years 1998 – 2007 there was a general decrease of 7% in the number of recruits to the army and that in the present year of recruitment taking place now – only 52% of 18 year olds are enlisting into the IDF.

Likewise from the data it appears that 27% of the boys who do not enlist are defined under the section of’ ”religious learning and belief,” 5% because of a criminal record and low recruitment threshold, over 7% because of medical exemption and 4% who are abroad.

Major General Stern emphasized that there is a significant decrease in the recruitment of women to the IDF. The Major General noted that it is possible to point at a significant shortage of women instructors, combat fighters and in technological fields in the IDF.
In his words: “Concessions for exemption to the IDF are in the form of a true danger. It must not be permitted to be omitted from the public agenda.” The Major General added that the considerable rise in exemptions for women is a result of their declaring that they are orthodox.

Nevertheless, he noted that there is no decline in the motivation of soldiers to serve in special units and that requests exceed demand.

The President of Israel, Mr. Shimon Peres said during the tour that the State of Israel exists almost 60 years and that from its first day the nation loved the army deeply as expressed by its endless dedication, high percentage of recruitment and the true and sincere wish of youth to take an active part in building the defense system of the State of Israel.

“The youth who are here are filled with faith which is no less than that of those then. They wish to serve active combat service without real reward.” The President also added that the entire Israeli leadership and society must hug and salute this boys and girls and enable them to be proud of their mission.

“Only a strong and loved army will give Israel the secure and humane answer necessary to face the dangers confronting it”

“Leave the army out of the circle of cynicism and criticism and  attack us – the leaders and the politicians”

The President toured all the stations in the recruitment process, spoke with the new recruits who stood in line to receive inoculations, to be photographed and to receive uniforms and he warmly thanked the mothers and fathers who unhesitatingly sent their children to the army out of a feeling of a true mission on behalf of the country.

During the tour the President announced a new initiative: The establishment of a technological cadet corps for youth prior to recruitment with an emphasis on women and “hareidi” (ultra orthodox) youth who will receive professional training in the fields of technology and robotics and will be incorporated, on recruitment, in elite technological units in order to involve them in active and full service in the Israel Defense Forces.

It should be noted that the President concluded this initiative with the Chief of Staff and the Prime Minister in meetings he held with them last week.

The President will head this initiative and the recruitment of resources and the first working meetings on the subject with Brigadier Stern and other senior and relevant officers in the army have already been scheduled.

The President of Israel, Mr. Shimon Peres answered the questions of reporters on the issue of the kidnapped soldiers and said:

“The working assumption from the point of view of the State of Israel is that the two kidnapped soldiers are alive and that the state will not pay attention to information disseminators, “evil traders.”


The office of Israel's President Shimon from time to time releases accounts of his official activities. We have been publishing them as they are made available.

  (Return to top)

. .  

              United States of America

ADL calls Tancredo's rhetoric 'unAmerican'

DENVER (Press Release) – Responding to reports that Rep. Tom Tancredo (Republican, Colorado) repeated his 2005 threat to blow up Muslim Holy sites in the event of a nuclear attack on America by Islamic extremists, the Anti-Defamation League again criticized his comments, calling them "outrageous, inflammatory and un-American."

ADL Mountain States Regional Office issued the following statement:

"Representative Tom Tancredo's comments threatening to blow up Muslim holy sites in the event America suffers a nuclear attack by Muslim extremists are outrageous, inflammatory and un-American. Although the threat of Islamist extremist terrorism is real, Rep. Tancredo should know that extremists come in all faiths, and do not reflect the values and beliefs of the vast majority of the members of the religious groups to which they belong.  

"The Congressman's inflammatory comments do nothing to advance America's role in the world as the leading voice for religious freedom and should be soundly condemned. ADL will continue to speak out against anti-Muslim rhetoric, which has no place in our democratic country, especially by political leaders."

The preceding story was provided by the Anti-Defamation League


Dear Readers,

Along with my husband Don, I co-publish San Diego Jewish World. As a couple we have gone to many places.  Cruising ranks at the top of our list of favorite ways to travel.

Watch this ad for a different cruising photo each day. A similar adventure can be yours!

America's Vacation Center, with which I'm affiliated, is a multi-branched travel agency that is able to provide you both good prices and good service.  Before you book anywhere else, please ask me for a price comparison.

Please call me at (619) 265-0808 for information about booking a cruise from San Diego or anywhere. Or email me at
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Thank you!  
Nancy Harrison

        

Adventures in Cruising—Royal Caribbean's Monarch of the Seas




Shore Excursion: Spray from La Bufadora creates a rainbow effect in Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico

Thanks to the Ford family of Agoura, California, for sharing their photos of their family reunion weekend cruise


 

             Forum

America's Immigration Debate—A New Proposal

SAN DIEGO—Forum Question #4:  U.S. Senator Arlen Specter (Republican, Pennsylvania) in an article for The Washington Post has called on Congress when it returns from recess to reconsider the shelved omnibus immigration bill, but this time to make the estimated 12 million undocumented workers in this country eligible for a green card, but not for citizenship.   Here is a link to his article

Our question is what should be the response in the Jewish community—a community of immigrants to this country?  Here is a link to the response string, which starts today.

Additionally, the first three Forum Questions remain open for your comments, each having a separate string. 

Those questions were: |


#1 A protest and the letter; did NJDC help or harm?

#2 Removal of Jewish residents from Hebron

#3  Holocaust history and the Bergson group

To share your thoughts, please send an email to us at sdheritage@cox.net.  Be sure to include at the bottom of your letter your full name and the city and state (province) in which you reside.

                                            ___________________________


 



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 News Sleuths: Iran

Watching the media gathering
and reporting the news
of Jewish interest


U.S. 'cannot live with' Iran's policy calling for the destruction of Israel—President Bush

(Editor's Note: U.S. President George W. Bush had a news conference at the White House today, during which there was a discussion of Iran's foreign policy.  The President reiterated U.S. support for Israel in the face of threats from Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. An excerpt from the White House transcript follows):

                                                                          

                              

                                             
White House photo by Chris Greenberg 

Q Thank you, Mr. President. I'd like to pivot off of what you were talking about earlier, with Prime Minister Maliki's visit to Iran. Reports out of Iran today, out of Iran, say that Prime Minister Maliki told President Ahmadinejad that he appreciated Iran's positive and constructive stance. The pictures from the visit are very warm. I'm wondering, do you and your Iraqi counterparts see eye-to-eye on Iran, and what kind of message do those images send to your allies in the region and Americans who are skeptical about the Prime Minister's role?

THE PRESIDENT: Jim, I haven't seen the reports. Before I would like to comment upon how their meetings went, I would like to get a readout from our embassy, who of course will be in touch with the Prime Minister, and get his readout. And so it's a -- you're asking me to be a little speculative on the subject. I haven't seen the picture.

Look, generally the way these things work is you try to be cordial to the person you're with, and so you don't want the picture to be kind of, you know, ducking it out. Okay, put up your dukes. That's an old boxing expression. (Laughter.)

Q Once more, please?

THE PRESIDENT: And so, I don't know, Jim. You've obviously followed this a lot -- you've seen the reports. I'm sure you're confident that what you've asked me is verifiable. I'm not surprised that there's a picture showing people smiling.

Q However --

THE PRESIDENT: Let me finish, please. And so it's a -- anyway, let me get the facts on what happened. Now if the signal is that Iran is constructive, I will have to have a heart-to-heart with my friend, the Prime Minister, because I don't believe they are constructive. I don't think he, in his heart of heart, thinks they're constructive, either. Now maybe he's hopeful in trying to get them to be constructive by laying out a positive picture. You're asking me to speculate.

Should I be concerned of a picture -- should the American people be concerned about Iran? Yes, we ought to be very concerned about Iran. They're a destabilizing influence. They are a government that has -- its declared policy is very troubling, obviously, when they announce -- when Ahmadinejad has announced that the destruction of Israel is part of its foreign policy.

That's something, obviously, we cannot live with. They have expressed their desire to be able to enrich uranium, which we believe is a step toward having a nuclear weapons program. That, in itself, coupled with their stated foreign policy, is very dangerous for world stability. They are funders of Hezbollah. Hezbollah is intent upon battling forces of moderation. It's a very troubling nation right now.

Iran can do better. The government is isolating its people. The government has caused America and other nations, rational nations, to say, we will work together to do everything we can to deny you economic opportunity because of the decisions you are making. My message to the Iranian people is, you can do better than this current government; you don't have to be isolated; you don't have to be in a position where you can't realize your full economic potential. And the United States of America will continue to work with our friends and allies in the Security Council and elsewhere to put you in a position to deny you your rightful place in the world, not because of our intention, because of your government's intention.

So it is a very -- it's a difficult issue, Jim. And the American people should be concerned about Iran. They should be concerned about Iran's activity in Iraq, and they ought to be concerned about Iran's activity around the world.

Q In your previous conversations with Prime Minister Maliki, have you been confident that he shares your view on Iraq [sic]?

THE PRESIDENT: On Iran?

Q Yes.

THE PRESIDENT: Yes. He knows that weaponry being smuggled into Iraq from Iran and placed in the hands of extremists over which the government has no control, all aimed at killing innocent life, is a destabilizing factor. He absolutely understands that.

I don't know if you saw yesterday, there was a -- we talked to General Petraeus, or I talked to General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker yesterday. I noticed in the papers today there was a description of a military operation that took place in Sadr City. The military operation in Sadr City was going after extremist elements, Shia extremist elements. And it was a very robust operation. Obviously, it -- well, I shouldn't say "obviously" -- it was done with the full understanding of the Maliki government.

Now, I don't know whether this extremist element had been fueled by Iran, but I do know that Maliki is committed against extremist elements who are trying to create enough chaos and confusion that this young government and young democracy is not able to progress. So the first thing I looked for was commitment against the extremists. The second thing is does he understand with some extremist groups there is connections with Iran, and he does. And I'm confident.

Now, is he trying to get Iran to play a more constructive role? I presume he is. But that doesn't -- what my question is -- well, what my message to him is, is that when we catch you playing a non-constructive role there will be a price to pay.

 

The Jewish Grapevine                                                  
                 


CELEBRITIES—There's some doubt over whether Elvis Presley really had some Jewish lineage, but there's no doubt whatsoever that U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen (Democrat, Tennessee) is Jewish.  Elvis Radio announced that the congressman will be a guest DJ on August 18, but like Elvis himself, his appearance will not be live.  It will be a repeat of a July 1 broadcast when Cohen was on hand to celebrate the radio station's third anniversary. 

CYBER-REFERRALS— Israel's Consulate General in Los Angeles points out a story in today's JPost that tells of the Vatican scrambling to assure the worldwide Jewish community that a private meeting between Pope Benedict XVI and firebrand priest Tadeusz Rydzyk
"did not imply any change in the Holy See's well-known position regarding relations between Catholics and Jews." Here is the link... Ed Samiljan, the father of Camp Mountain Chai, noticed an article about the value and financial costs of Jewish camping that appeared in the New York Jewish Week,  Here is a link.

                                                        

             Greater San Diego Area


ADL to students: Schools may not pressure you

to attend classes during the High Holidays

SAN DIEGO (Press Release)—Rosh Hashanah begins at sundown on Wednesday, September 12 and Erev Yom Kippur falls on Friday, September 21. In observance of these holidays, many parents may elect to keep their children out of school.  Students should not be penalized for taking this time out of school for religious observance.

“…penalties to scholastic records may not be imposed upon people who are absent for religious holidays, and students should never feel pressured to choose between school attendance and religious observance”  (Church of God vs. Amarillo Independent School District).

Please remind your teachers to plan around the High Holidays. The ADL is committed to assisting Jewish children observe the holidays. If you need assistance with teachers or school administrations, contact Tali Silberstein, Assistant Director for Civil Rights at (619) 293-3770. We also offer a variety of resources which may be of help including:

Religion in the Public Schools.  A comprehensive look at the law of religion in the public schools in an easy to understand and use format.

ABCs of Religion in the Public Schools:  A poster-format guide to religion in the public schools.

Religious Issues in your Child's Public School: A Guide For Jewish Parents

Copies of these publications are available by calling the ADL office or by visiting the ADL web site at www.adl.org/church-state

The preceding article was provided by the San Diego regional office of the Anti-Defamation League 

 

 
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               Sports

                     
        News from the    
  Israel Baseball League

TODAY'S ACTION—At left, Tel Aviv pitcher Adam Crabb hurls a pitch.  At upper right, Bet Shemesh catcher Scott Jamakowicz waits for the ball as Tel Aviv rightfielder Jeff Hastings scores a run.  Backing up the action behind the catcher is Bet Shemesh pitcher Juan Feliciano.  Bottom right: Tel Aviv first baseman Aaron Pribble dives for a ball.
IBL photos by Yehuda Boltshauser


Clutch single increases Bet Shemesh IBL lead to 3.5 games

By Nathaniel Edelstein

KIBBUTZ GEZER, Israel (Press Release)— The Bet Shemesh Blue Sox and the Tel Aviv Lightning were tied at one through 6.5 innings before Bet Shemesh centerfielder Sean Slaughter hit a bases-loaded single to win the game on this kibbutz's ballfield.
       
Slaughter's heroic walk-off single came after Dominican Juan Feliciano and Australian Adam Crabb battled in a pitcher's duel that eventually saw Feliciano come out on top.  Feliciano tossed seven innings and allowed just one run on four hits with 11 strikeouts and two walks to improve to 7-1.
       
Bet Shemesh's first run came in the first inning when rightfielder Jason Rees slugged his league-leading 16th homer of the season as the first-place Sox pull 3.5 games ahead of the second-place Lightning.

After winning one game of a doubleheader on Wednesday, the Petach Tikva Pioneers won for the second day in a row with a 6-5 victory over the Ra'anana Express at Tel Aviv's Sportek.

Down 5-3 in the top of the sixth, centerfielder Ben Dashefsky of New York knocked in two runs on his second single of the day to tie the game at five runs apiece.  Later in the inning third baseman Willis Bumphus of San Diego who went 2-for-3, drove in his second RBI with a sacrifice fly that scored the go-ahead run. Express leftfielder Ben Field raised his average to .330 by going 3-for-4 with a homerun and two RBI, but it wasn't enough as Ra'anana fell 11.5 games out of first.

In the night's late game the Netanya Tigers scored four runs in the sixth inning to break a 1-1 tie and beat the Modi'in Miracle 5-1 at Yarkon Field at the Baptist Village near Petach Tikva.  Israeli Shlomo Lipetz picked up his third win with seven innings of work, giving up just one run on four hits with six strikeouts and a walk.

Lipetz's only mistake came in the fourth inning when Dominican Eladio
Rodriguez launched his 15th homerun over the centerfield wall.  But the Netanya offense did enough as all but two starting position players collected a hit and manager Ami Baran's club won for the second consecutive game.


Summaries:
                            1   2   3   4   5   6   7   R   H   E
Tel Aviv              0   0   0   0   0   1   0   1    4   1
Bet Shemesh        1   0   0   0   0   0   1   2    6   0
W: Juan Feliciano (7-1); L: Adam Crabb (4-4); HR: Jason Rees (16)

                          1   2   3   4   5   6   7   R   H   E
Petach Tikva      1   0   2   0   0   3   0    6    9   3
Ra'anana            0   1   3   1   0   0   0    5    8   1
W: Ryan Butkowsky (1-2); L: Nat Ballenberg (1-1); SV: Alper Ulutas
(1); HR: Ben Field (5)

                       1   2   3   4   5   6   7   R   H   E
Modi'in            0   0   0   1   0   0   0    1   4   2
Netanya           0   0   0   1   0   4   x   5    7   0
W: Shlomo Lipetz (3-1); L: Ian Okorofsky (0-2); HR: Eladio Rodriguez (15)

Standings:

Team                               W    L     %     GB
Bet Shemesh Blue Sox     26    9    .743     -
Tel Aviv Lightning           23   13   .639   3.5
Modi'in Miracle                20   15   .571   6.0
Netanya Tigers                 15   20   .429   11.0
Ra'anana Express              15   21   .417   11.5
Petach Tikva Pioneers       7    28   .200   19.0
 




{Marc Kligman, who combines being a sports agent with his life as an observant Jew, invites you to listen. Click on the ad above for more information}


 

             Life Styles

Doing It Better
         
Natasha Josefowitz, Ph.D

 


In performance-based society, maybe sensitivity to rejection is logical, if unhealthy, reaction

LA JOLLA, California—Do you sometimes wonder if people really like you? Do you worry when a friend seems curt with you? Do you fret over your not being included in a group? Do you ruminate over a possible slight?

Well, you’re not the only one! Our DNA has made us prone to be sensitive to slights as a possible indication of a potential rejection. In our dim past, when being part of a small group was survival and ostracism meant death because being left alone to fend for ourselves and fighting predators was certain demise.

Our anxieties about acceptance and rejection are rising, according to New York psychologist Robert Leahy. We have become a performance-based culture, to wit, all the TV shows that emphasize being in the spotlight, whether singing, dancing, telling jokes, touting inventions, winning a race, or being the last survivor in the jungle.

Just 200 years ago, most of us lived in a stable society, living in the same town all our lives. We now have become a mobile society, living in a variety of neighborhoods, states, and even countries. This means we have to learn the ways of the new strangers, looking for cues of acceptable behaviors and weary of possible misinterpretations and thus rejection. Not only do we move more, but our families as frequently either not intact or blended, which leads to insecurity. Insecurity leads to uncertainty which makes us more vulnerable to depression. And all of the above increases the chance that we become more anxious about possible rejections.

According to Leahy, major depression which is linked to rejection sensitivity is on the rise among all age groups except for the elderly, for we were born before the disrupted families and fragmented societies began to take root.

Some people are so sensitive to any possible slight that those around them have learned to tip toe in their presence increasing the potential of picking up negative cues where none were meant.

The only way around getting over being rejection sensitive is to form the kind of friendships that can withstand the constant demand for reassurance. There is a genetic component to being overly sensitive to perceived rejection but also an environmental one. Overly critical, abusive, or neglectful parents or being bullied at school can set the stage for a child and then an adult being always on the look out for the next rebuff.

Today’s parents have been taught to enhance their children’s self-esteem—and in their attempt to do so, they have exaggerated the amount of praise heaped upon their children. Generalized praise does not feel good for it is not behavior specific. Telling a child how smart he or she is does not help as it is not clear what it is exactly that is praise-worthy, so it makes children anxious. Instead, being specific—you did well on your test because you studied hard for it is a replicable behavior.

All children wear an invisible sign around their necks that says, “Please admire me”—but it is for specific things that they do or say—they are loved for who they are: our children.

It is interesting to wonder what signs, we as adults secretly. My sign says, “I’m not OK, you’re not OK, and that’s OK!”

This column also ran in the La Jolla Light

             Arts & Entertainment

 

Cynthia Citron's L.A. Beat


Stand-up comic—playwright finds humor in death

LOS ANGELES—My friend Ted Seifman invited me and 98 other people to the 99-seat Pico Playhouse to listen to a reading of a new play that he will be producing on Broadway later this year.  So hang onto this early review, because after Broadway, can L.A. be far behind?

The play is called Rest, In Pieces and it was written by Steve Bluestein who, in another life, is a hilarious stand-up comedian.  Which explains why Rest, In Pieces is laugh-out-loud funny.  Even though it’s a play in which everybody dies.  (Or as the old joke goes: “In a Russian tragedy everybody dies.  In a Russian comedy everybody dies.  But they die happy!”)

This play, like my favorite Broadway play from last year, Faith Healer, tells its simple story from three different points of view.  In each segment one member of a close-knit family dies and the two survivors have to adjust and cope with the loss. And their anger, their unspoken emotions, and all the unfinished business.   And right from the beginning, it’s a family you care about.

In this presentation the family is Jewish.  The mother and father are played by Lainie Kazan and Stuart Pankin and their son is played by Richard Israel.  Since it was a reading, there was also a narrator, John Sala, who provided all the stage directions.

In the first scene, it's the father who has died and Kazan, who is otherwise the Compleat Yenta, is rendered helpless as she tries to imagine a life without him.  He has been the total focus of her existence, and even though she has nagged him and bossed him for decades, she reveals her love for him in the depth of her bereavement.

In the next segment, it is she who has died, and her grieving husband tells their son of the women who have flocked to his side to "comfort" him.  The son is shocked, but his father explains that when a man is young he speaks of love; at this age, however, the word is "companionship."

And finally, it is the son who has died, and both parents bewail the culture that has inhibited them from acknowledging the love they felt but never fully expressed.

It’s Bluestein’s intention to have a revolving cast—different actors who would each do the parts for a limited period of time, like the very successful Love Letters of a few years back.  And, since families are families no matter what their ethnicity, he plans to have versions of the play in which the protagonists are Italian, or African American, or Asian.  With a change of jokes, it would certainly work.  After all, every family has its own recognizable mishigass.

In this version, the action takes place in an apartment on New York’s Upper East Side.  And as in so many other comedies, (see any Neil Simon play) the venue has its own quirky personality.  As does Lainie Kazan, who is nothing short of terrific.  She is a drama queen, a tragic and poignant wife and mother, and a superb comic who brings the lead character to vibrant life.  I hope Steve Bluestein and my friend Ted will keep her for the Broadway production.  The role belongs to her!

But no matter who’s in it when it gets to L.A., you’ll want to see it.  It’s very nearly a completely perfect play.

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