San Diego Jewish World
Volume 2, Number 30
 
Volume 2, Number 98
 
'There's a Jewish story everywhere'

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

 
 
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Today's Postings


Shoshana Bryen in Washington, D.C.: Hamas made a goat of Jimmy Carter

Garry Fabian in Melbourne, Australia
—Youth sought for Holocaust program
—Educators learn about Pesach
—Lips sealed on Jewish pre-summit talks
—ADC denounces dinner honoring Pavelic
—University students bake matzah on campus
—Power company relents on Pesach power cuts
—Pesach encompasses every Jew
—Matzah selling like hot cakes—literally
—A minyan near you?

Donald H. Harrison in San Diego: Book on Golda Meir trashes Shimon Peres

Rabbi Dow Marmur in Jerusalem: Israel's brightening diplomatic picture

Adventures in San Diego History: The Southwestern Jewish Press in July 1949 printed articles detailing the histories and purposes of various Jewish organizations in San Diego. We reprint some of them here.

Upcoming Events: Want to know about exciting upcoming events? San Diego Jewish World now stacks event advertisements in chronological order, below: May 18, 28, July 23.


The Week in Review
This week's stories from San Diego Jewish World





 

 






 



   




Sunday, May 18 Community Israel Independence Celebration






Wednesday, May 28 JFS~Ellen Saks lecture on mental illness





WEDNESDAY, JULY 23-MONDAY, AUGUST 4 Temple Solel trip to Israel






FROM THE SIDELINES

Israel's brightening diplomatic picture


By Dow Marmur

JERUSALEM—“All the nations surround me…. they blockade me.” We say these words when we recite the Hallel Psalms, as we do on Pesach. It feels like that sometimes in Israel. Perhaps that’s why so many Israelis go on vacation to faraway lands. But politically it isn’t like that. As we commemorate our Egyptian slavery it’s essential that we also celebrate our liberation. Here are some reasons for the latter:
           
The United States remains committed to Israel. Even if the (perhaps) less-than-enthusiastic Obama becomes President, Congress and the American people will make sure that the Jewish state isn’t harmed by American policies. Whatever reservations we may have about the evangelicals, their political backing of Israel is an important asset.
           
And whatever we may think of Berlusconi and his politics, he’s a staunch supporter of the State of Israel. Italy is an important voice in shaping European Union policies. He’s not alone. The recent visits in Israel by the Chancellor of Germany and the Prime Minister of Poland assured us of their countries’ support. The president of France has declared his support, too. Together with US President George W. Bush and many other political leaders in the world, he’s expected here soon to mark Israel’s 60th anniversary. Though several of the smaller countries – Norway, Sweden and others - remain a nuisance when it comes to Israel, it’s the big ones that really count.
           
With the United States and much of Europe on its side, Israel is in much better diplomatic shape than before. For there are also many other countries, including some Arab states, that are on Israel’s side. Foreign Minister Livni’s recent visit to Qatar strengthened existing discreet ties with the Gulf States, perhaps not because they love Israel, but because they have common enemies: Iran, Hezbollah, Hamas. That may be enough for cooperation, though not yet enough for open friendship.
           
Of course, we mustn’t ignore the enemies of the State of Israel and of the Jewish people. Nevertheless the progress that Israel has made in the six decades of its existence, even on the diplomatic front, is remarkable. Much of it is reflected in its robust economy greatly aided by foreign investment. Israel may even be better equipped than most to weather the expected economic storm currently on the horizon.
           
All this is obvious to the world, except, it appears, to a lot of Jews in the Diaspora. There most of us, especially outside the United States, still seem to need to present ourselves as victims. Many of our leaders may encourage it in the belief that the more isolated and vulnerable Jews feel, the more they’ll seek affiliation with and support for Jewish institutions. Presenting Israel as a victim is seen as good for fundraising.
           
Suspecting that this kind of attitude may have the opposite effect on young Jews many Jewish organizations tend to pay special attention to keeping up the sense of victimhood in the next generation. The harassment of Jews by Muslim students and their left-wing sympathizers on the campuses of universities throughout the Western world provide some of the arguments for enlisting the young. All this is not illegitimate, but wouldn’t it be much healthier to concentrate on the positive reasons for being Jewish?
           
Without wishing to deny or minimize the reality of the perennial enmity to Jews in many circles, it’s nevertheless essential to be mindful of the many friends we’ve in the world. Vigilance is essential, but paranoia is a disease we must protect ourselves against.   

Dow Marmur is the Rabbi Emeritus of Holy Blossom Temple in Toronto, Canada. He divides his time between Toronto and Jerusalem. 



THE VIEW FROM JINSA


Hamas made a goat of Jimmy Carter

By Shoshana Bryen

WASHINGTON, D.C.—Generalissimo Franco is still dead. Excuse the old Saturday Night Live reference, but it is simply isn't news to find out that Hamas still doesn't plan to recognize Israel. For another throwback, remember then-Rep. Pete McCloskey coming out of a bunker in Beirut with what purported to be Arafat's signature under a line written in English saying Yasser accepted UN Resolution 242.

Like McCloskey, Jimmy Carter announced a "breakthrough" on behalf of one of Israel's enemies. He said they said "they would accept a Palestinian state on the 1967 borders" and he said they "would accept the right of Israel to live as a neighbor in peace" provided the Palestinians could vote on both in a referendum. Hamas leader Khalid Mashaal corrected him on al Jazeera. "We accept a (Palestinian) state on the (1967 lines) with Jerusalem as capital, real sovereignty and full right of return for refugees, but without recognizing Israel."

It is odd to cite the State Department without comment, but here is State Department Deputy Spokesman Tom Casey: (It is clear that) "nothing has changed in terms of Hamas' basic views about Israel and about peace in the region... I think if you look back at the history of the rhetoric from Hamas, you see... language about truces and other kinds of issues. But the bottom line is, Hamas still believes in the destruction of the state of Israel... it's pretty hard to see how Hamas becomes any kind of legitimate partner for Israel or for President Abbas, for that matter."

So it would seem clear that Carter, like McCloskey, should be the goat. But an astute reader in Texas (we have many astute readers in Texas) wrote in advance of this report: "When you properly vilify Carter, think of this. Is it more damaging to hug and kiss Hamas or supply it fuel and food to make war against you? (Israel is) the only country I know that supplies fuel and necessary supplies to people who are trying to kill them. Can we blame Carter alone?"

Probably not.

JINSA's view is that terrorist organizations really do believe what they say they believe and want what they say they want. It is patronizing to think Hamas - or Iran or al Qaeda or Hezbollah, or North Korea for that matter - can be talked or bribed out of positions around which they have coalesced their power.

One reason Hamas is rising in popularity in the West Bank as well as Gaza is Palestinians believe it means what it says, and they do not trust Fatah. We believe it too, and don't understand what appears to be the Israeli position that if Israel provides food, water, money (it is paying Fatah and Fatah is transferring money to Hamas to pay salaries in Gaza) to the Palestinians while Hamas is in control, running the propaganda machine and importing ever-more sophisticated weapons, Hamas will somehow stop being in control and Palestinians who do not desire the destruction of Israel will come to power.

Carter is the goat; he advanced the standing of Hamas and lied about it afterward. But Hamas is truly unacceptable and unlikely to be changed by bribery, cajolery or threat. Generalissimo Franco is still dead. So what good is it for Israel to absorb terrible blows (a four-year-old boy was injured yesterday near Sderot) while waiting for the news to change?







THE JEWISH CITIZEN

Book on Golda Meir trashes Shimon Peres

Golda by Elinor Burkett;HarperCollins, 2008, 443 pages including notes, bibliography and index.


By Donald H. Harrison

SAN DIEGO—First, out with my bias.  I’m a fan of Israel’s President Shimon Peres.  So when I see him being trashed, as he is in this biography of Golda Meir, I immediately refer to the endnotes.  Where did this stuff come from?  The answer is that the biography was drawn from third-party interviews, some archival material and for the most part the writings of other historians and journalists.   There is a lot of recycled material in other words.  Why no interview with Peres?  Did she request one?  Did he turn her down?

The picture one gets of Peres as a young man is that he was an over-achieving, reckless adventurer who somehow managed to win David Ben-Gurion’s admiration, and who cut numerous defense and security deals with foreign leaders without most Israeli officials, other than B-G , knowing about them.  Furthermore, she paints a picture of a man who jealously guarded his access to the prime minister, even to the point of trying to exclude Meir from high level decision making while she was foreign minister.

In Burkett’s account, Moshe Dayan was another member of Ben-Gurion’s boys club, yet Meir managed to make peace with Dayan.  In contrast, according to Burkett, Meir detested Peres all the way to her death.

It is within the realm of possibility that all this is accurate.  Another possibility is that Burkett’s conclusions are based on her secondary sources settling old scores.  Burkett not only is a journalist with wide experience, but also has a PhD in history, so I am certain she would understand why I would have preferred to see more primary documents and fewer secondary ones to substantiate her account.

Like the message one receives at the end of the line in the parlor game of “telephone,” what we read in Burkett’s biography about Meir and Peres may deviate considerably from what actually was said at the beginning of the chain.   

Having raised these cautionary notes, I still would recommend this book.  It flows well, brings some long-forgotten, or at least half-remembered, events back to life, and provides us with an interesting hypothesis about Meir’s character:  Pogroms and anti-Semitism of her childhood in Pinsk were imprinted on her consciousness.  The raging mobs who made her parents cower later morphed, in her mind, into Arabs.  Knowing that whatever she did was unlikely to please her mother, Meir developed stubbornness—a trait that often characterized her negotiations with party leaders.  She could take rejection, come back for more, and eventually prevail—whether it was on a kibbutz whose members initially ridiculed the new American, or in the Ben-Gurion-Peres-Dayan boys club.  Once nearly star-struck in her loyalty to Ben-Gurion, she helped engineer his political downfall, and eventually rose herself to the pinnacle of power in Israel.

If Burkett is hard on Meir at all, it is for the way she put the needs of her family—a husband, daughter and son—always second, so that her being home was a rare event, and being home and awake enough to enjoy her children even rarer.   In Israel, where the infighting of internal politics sometimes seemed tougher than the fighting with external enemies, ability to withstand long hours, endless argumentation, stress, and fatigue, was the coin of the realm.

We read that Meir—not unlike men in power—had extramarital affairs, although she apparently tried to be more discreet about it.  And though she fought, and triumphed, over the boys, she remained a woman, who knew well how to take advantage of her femininity and was impatient with “feminists.” 

Or so Burkett’s sources told her.

Harrison is editor and publisher of San Diego Jewish World


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THE JEWS DOWN UNDER


Youth sought for Holocaust program

By Garry Fabian

SYDNEY—The NSW Jewish Board of Deputies is seeking 100 young Jewish boys and girls who will be celebrating their Bar Mitzvah and Bat Mitzvah this year to participate in a ceremony to enrich their understanding of the Holocaust.

The unique program, Mitzvah of Memory, is aimed at introducing youngsters to the importance of the Shoah.

The program, which commenced in 2007, comprises a road for participants to walk down with various audio and visual displays dating from 1933 to the liberation of the death camps in World War II.

Chair of the Shoah Commemoration Committee Alan Gold said: "Last year, the dozens of students who participated found it to be one of the most moving and involving experiences. We gave every student a certificate of participation, and they later took part in the ceremony for the adult Jewish population."

The Mitzvah of Memory events in Sydney last year were held an hour before the main adult ceremonies, so that grandparents, parents and siblings could watch the B'nai Mitzvah students participate in the ceremony.

"Last year, many of the parents were overcome by emotion," Gold said.

"The Mitzvah of Memory has been specially designed to be part of the academic curriculum, so it has very real educative value, aside from its value to young people coming into Jewish adulthood," he added.

This year's ceremonies will be held at Moriah College on April 30 and at Masada on May 1, prior to the main adult Yom Hashoah commemorations.


Educators learn about Pesach

SYDNEY - About 150 NSW educators came together last week at an unprecedented Passover dinner in the presence of NSW Education Minister John Della Bosca.

Organised by the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies Education Committee, the event was held at Sydney Girls High School and afforded attendees the opportunity of learning about the educational focus of Pesach.

Associate Professor Mark Baker, director of Monash University’s Centre for Jewish Civilisation, led the evening and spoke extensively on the themes of slavery and freedom, local and global responsibility, leadership, pedagogy and tikkun olam (healing the world) as they relate to the Pesach story and seder.

Guests were entertained by Hylton Chilchik, Joel Scheftz and a choir of Moriah College students.

NSW Jewish Board of Deputies CEO Vic Alhadeff said: “The aim of the function was to educate the educators about Judaism and the Jewish experience, including Israel and the Shoah, and to develop professional networks in the education sector.

“It’s the first time such an event has been held in the history of our community.”

The function was made possible by the JCA LotBen Fund in loving memory of Lotka and Bernard Ferster.

In previous years, the Board of Deputies has held a Unions Passover Dinner and an Interfaith Passover Dinner.


Lips sealed on Jewish pre-summit talks

CANBERRA - Jewish leaders who contributed their ideas to the Prime Minister's 2020 Summit  last week were left with the impression that they had been gagged by the Government from talking publicly about their recommendations.

A special symposium was held in Sydney a few days ago for leading Jewish identities, in a bid by the Prime Minister to make amends for scheduling the summit during Pesach.

But summit organisers said the recommendations would not be made public, unlike those from  other community, school and youth summits in recent weeks. The ideas would be fed into the main summit that took place last weekend but not published as coming from the Jewish event, they said.

Executive Council of Australian Jewry (ECAJ) president Robert Goot said he was not at liberty to release any recommendations or ideas from the talks. "The suggestions ultimately may be public, but my understanding is that they are not going to be attributed to individuals or groups (such as the Jewish summit). That's why the process from our meeting was closed and why the process in Canberra will be closed. The process was not ours - the process was the Government's" Goot said.

Most of the main summit held in Canberra will be open to scrutiny, except three hours and 20 minutes of the two-day event by small groups.

Leading Melbourne business and arts identity Albert Danon has also been asked to keep discussions confidential. A spokeswoman from the summit said "at no stage did anyone involved in the organising give a directive to participants that they were not to talk to the media on the outcome of the summit.


ADC denounces dinner honoring Pavelic

MELBOURNE -B’nai B’rith Anti Defamation Chairman John Searle today expressed his concern and dismay at a recent dinner to honour World War II Croatian leader Ante Pavelic. The dinner was held at the restaurant attached to Footscray’s Croatian club last Thursday.

Mr Searle said he was amazed and disappointed that people in Melbourne in 2008 would find it appropriate to honour the leader of the Ustashi movement who cooperated with the Nazis during World War II and who was responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of Jews and many others in a number of concentration camps.

The ADC has no objection to Croatian Australians celebrating their common identity but Mr Searle said any show of support for Nazism or perpetrators of genocide was totally inappropriate and unacceptable.

“It is time that members of the Croatian community in Melbourne distanced themselves from those within their community who cling to the memories of Croatia’s wartime fascist past,” said Mr Searle.

Footscray Croatian Club president, Tony Juric not only confirmed the dinner but was reported to have said that Pavelic had nothing to do with the Nazis and that he had never received one letter of complaint from a Jewish organization.

This is incorrect. The ADC has long-standing objections to honoring Pavelic. Mr Searle said the ADC first wrote to the club in 2005 requesting the club remove Pavelic’s name from their building. The sight of a building bearing Pavelic’s name is a painful affront to many who had personal or family experience of the brutality of the Ustashi regime.

No satisfactory response was received to those concerns.

“It is hurtful and harmful that there are still people in Melbourne today who want to honour the shameful memory of a war criminal such as Pavelic,” Mr Searle said.


University students bake matzah on campus

SYDNEY - The aroma of freshly baked matzah wafted through the air at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) last week as university students baked matzah in preparation for Pesach.

The event, a joint effort among the Australian Union of Jewish Students (AUJS), Young Adult Chabad and the Yeshiva Gedolah Rabbinical College, was held in the university's commerce courtyard during lunch break.

Leading the dough-rolling was AUJS National President Jessica Roth and Hillel Director Gary Samowitz.

"The [Model] Matzah bakery is a great opportunity to present Pesach to students in a cool and informal way," said Rabbi Eli Feldman, the director of Young Adult Chabad.

"It was really well received by the students, with people commenting how excited they were to see the bakery and that they haven't done this since they were back in primary school," Feldman added.

The staff of the Model Matzah bakery livened up the event by singing popular Pesach songs, accompanied by Shmully Davidoff on the guitar.

"Special thanks go to the AUJS UNSW executive and in particular [the] religious officer Nathan Landis for their efforts in making the event possible," said Feldman.

Young Adult Chabad works with AUJS on a range of Jewish programs on university campuses.


Power Company relents on Pesach power cuts

MELBOURNE- One major power company has bowed to pressure from residents in St Kilda East, a southeastern suburb with a large Jewish population opting to postpone disruptions to the supply of electricity.

The disruptions were originally due to begin on Friday -– one day before Pesach.

Residents of a number of streets were up in arms after receiving letter box notifications earlier this week threatening cuts during last-minute preparations for Shabbat and Pesach.

A company spokesperson said the company had no prior knowledge of the eight-day festival, but moved quickly to re-schedule once it became aware of the clash.

“Work is cancelled for Friday. It’s a four-day job and they’ll complete what they can by Thursday evening and ensure that the network remains stable in that area and work will resume in another four to six weeks,” he said.

With Shabbat preceding Pesach this year, Friday is a critical day for preparing food for Saturday night and Sunday night seders.

The re-scheduling comes just one day after an announcement from the company that it would investigate the impact of the proposed power disruptions and look for a way to suspend the works over the yom tov Pesach period.

The development, described as “a major four-day project involving the replacement of poles and wires”, will now be completed in May.

But the move hasn’t pleased everyone. Angry callers to radio station 3AW talkback host Neil Mitchell complained about Alinta’s decision to delay the project.

One caller said the needs of minorities should not be considered, and added: “we’re not in Israel yet”. Mitchell strongly rejected the views.  

However, according to the spokesperson, the opposite is true.

He said his company needed to better understand the needs of minorities and that they should be aware of community events and related cultural activities.

“This [Pesach] is another one that goes on that list,” he said.

He said he became aware of the clash on Tuesday, when a 3AW producer phoned him for comment.

Several angry residents had also phoned a call centre, which has been set up to deal with issues relating to the power company.

Rabbi Meir Shlomo Kluwgant, president of the Rabbinical Council of Victoria (RCV), said he contacted the company as soon as he received reports of the disruption notices in neighbourhood letter boxes on Tuesday.

“I expressed concern on behalf of the Jewish community and explained how disruptive and difficult it would make it for families who are observant in that area and that there are many.”

Rabbi Kluwgant said he understood that electricity maintenance was a necessary thing, but questioned the timing.

“It’s a matter of gross inconvenience and a question of whether people can cook food on a Thursday that’s going to have to last them for Friday, Shabbat, Sunday and Monday.”


Pesach encompasses every Jew

MELBOURNE—If the story of Pesach tells us anything, it’s that the Jewish community is not immune from hardship and suffering.

For most, the eight-day festival is a time to give thanks for liberation from hardship by recounting the stories of the Exodus. But for some, hardship is still a harsh reality.

Outreach worker Henri Ser interacts with members of the community who have fallen on hard times every day and was inspired to put on a seder at the St Kilda drop-in centre for people who might not otherwise have the opportunity.

“We’re going to have around 10 people and I’ve got a few volunteers that will make the soup and food and help me serve,” Ser said prior to the event.

“I’ve been trying to get some smaller haggadot so I can do an abridged version of the haggadah for them as well,” he said.

Down the road at the St Kilda Hebrew Congregation, more than 500 travellers from all corners of the globe were expected to attend a seder.

Rabbi Dudu Lider from Chabad House for Israeli Travellers will be providing a “home away from home” for the mostly Israeli tourists on Saturday night.

Numerous donations have been received, particularly from St Kilda shul, and many people volunteered to help with cooking in preparation for one of Australia’s biggest seders.

Rabbi Lider said that for many of the travellers, it was the first time they would celebrate a real Pesach seder with all the trimmings. 

Beit Chabad Yotsei Russia will conduct first-night seders in the community halls of two Department of Housing apartment blocks in St Kilda and Prahran.

Rabbi Boruch Shapiro, who will be leading one of the seders, said more than 120 participants, including Russian-born Jews and Israeli visitors, were expected participate in the Russian-language seders. Rabbi Elozor Gorelik led the other seder.

The first communal seder in central Victoria -– perhaps for decades -– was conducted by Kehillah S’dot Zahav (Congregation of the Goldfields), with 26 people breaking matzah.

Held at the home of one of the Progressive congregation’s members in Sutton Grange, near Castlemaine, some 200 kilometers from Melbourne, the country-style seder was special because each participant brought a favourite dish, said shul co-founder and Castlemaine resident Sarah Austin.

Several people from Melbourne joined the central Victorians for the seder.

“The biggest challenge for organising this seder has been distance. We’ve lost count of all the trips various people have made down to Melbourne to buy matzot and other essentials,” she said.

Temple Beth Israel held a second-night seder, and Progressive congregation Kedem organised for members and newcomers without an opportunity to celebrate a seder to join one of its families for first-night Pesach festivities.



Matzah selling like hot cakes - literally

CANBERRA- With no kosher outlets in Canberra, the local Jewish community orders its Pesach supplies from interstate every year.

Last week Canberra's Jewish residents flocked to the annual Pesach sale day at the National Jewish Memorial Centre. It was a very busy day for those organising the sale, with community members and Israeli embassy staff buying up big on matzah and other kosher Pesach food.

The community also prepared to hold its annual communal seder with about 100 people expected to attend.



A minyan near you

MELBOURNE —Chasan David Havin recently published a pocket guide to finding a convenient local minyan. His son's impending bar mitzvah prompted him to produce the "minyan finder"
The handy fold-up card carries a comprehensive list of weekday minyanim that Orthodox Jews can attend across Melbourne.

The guide, now in its third edition, is a non-profit initiative that lists in chronological order the times for Schacharit, Mincha and Ma'ariv at every Orthodox shule.

When asked whether he saw the similarity between his minyan finder and a football fixture card, Havin quipped that both were esential for this time of the year.

Fabian, district chairman of B'nai B'rith in Victoria state, is Australia bureau chief for San Diego Jewish World

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ADVENTURES IN SAN DIEGO JEWISH HISTORY Historical Stories Index

Editor's Note: We are reprinting a series of articles that the Southwestern Jewish Press ran in July 1949 providing the history and purpose of numerous Jewish organizations in San Diego. If you have historical topics about the San Diego Jewish community you would like us to explore, please e-mail your suggestions to editor Don Harrison at sdheritage@cox.net


Tifereth Israel Men’s Club

By H(enry) Bowman, publicity chairman
From Southwestern Jewish Press, July 1949, pages 1, 7

The Tifereth Israel Mens Club (Tifisra) formed earlier this year has been attracting new members because of its outstanding programs which have been both cultural and entertaining.

The club has held election of officers and Board of directors who are as follows:

Al Newman, President.
Moe Berlin, First Vice-Pres.
Arthur Gardner, Second V.P.
Moe Hershey, rec. Secy.
Ben Levenson, Financial Secy
Sam Druskin, Treasurer

Board of directors elected for a term of two years are:

Henry Bowman and Sidney Newman.

Elected for a term of one year are:

Moss Addleson, Max Brody, William Gordon, Ben Mash, Paul Nestor and Its Penter.

The club was formed with the following objectives:

To bring about a closer relationship among its members through social activities and mutual interest.  This has been partially accomplished by brining the members together at our monthly meetings, by entertaining programs and the social activities which follow each meeting.

To perpetuate the doctrines and precepts of our Jewish Law.

To aid in the future development and welfare of the synagogue. It is hoped that this will be accomplished in the future by fund raising projects and the assistance of our members in the many problems arising in the operation of the synagogue.  It is also hoped to assist financially in the proposed new center building and Hebrew school. To encourage activities for Jewish you .  In this connection, they have already sponsored a baseball club for Jewish Youth.  In this connection, Youth League which meets at least once a month, where boys and girls of the community can meet together and have a good time under the supervision of a qualified chaperone.

To participate in non-sectarian, philanthropic, and communal affairs.
To cooperate with all organizations working for better relations among various groups. It is proposed to hold joint meetings with other organizations in the city to improve relations among these groups and to give our assistance in all communal affairs.

Membership is open and is not confined to members of the synagogue.  Future programs which are proposed include a moonlight boat ride, Father and Son Dinner, various speakers, a Forum and other such entertainment events for social purposes.

The club meets the first Tuesday of each month. The next meeting of the Men’s Club will be held on Tuesday, July 5, at 8:30 p.m. at the Tifereth Israel Synagogue. There will be  a very short business session followed by Judge A.F. Molina, Municipal Court Judge, who will be the guest speaker of the evening.  Judge Molina will speak of the humorous side of his experiences on the Bench. A social hour will follow the guest speaker. Refreshments will be served.

The Men’s Club extends a cordial invitation to all its members, all members of the Congregation together with their wives and friends.


J.C.R.A. (Jewish Consumptive Relief Association)

By Ann B. Brooks
From Southwestern Jewish Press, July 1949, pages 1, 2

The annual picnic and package party will be held on Sunday, August 7.  A complete special picnic plate lunch, including beverage an dessert will be served from 12 noon until late afternoon at a low charge.  Guests who do not desire a plate lunch may select luncheon dishes from the buffet table.

Committees will report in full at the next meeting, which will be held at Temple Center the third Tuesday in July.  The July 19 meeting will feature a non-profit luncheon and cards.
In recognition of the City of Hope’s tradition of free non-sectarian care for needy tuberculars, the Hotel and Restaurant Employees and Bartenders International Union has indorsed a two year campaign to establish a wing at the Medical Center in the name of the union.  Other unions that have sponsored buildings are the Bakery and Confectionary Workers, the international Ladies Garment Workers and the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America. 


Yo-Ma-Co (Young Married Couples)

The Yo-Ma-Co Club is now celebrating its thirteenth anniversary.  Little did the four couples who founded the club back in 1936, dream that their fledgling would grow into the lusty, well established organization it has become today.  We now number 36 couples, and have behind us a solid tradition of community social activity and community service.

The club was founded for the purpose of providing a congenial atmosphere for young couples to become acquainted with one another and to provide a means for newcomers to enter into Jewish communal life. These aims have been accomplished with great success. A roster of our members past and present would include names from every segment of the San Diego Jewish community.

The club is open to membership to any Jewish couple whose average age does not exceed 37 years.  We meet the 2n and 4th Wednesday of each month at Landis Street Recreation Hall, Highland and Landis Sts. At 9 o’clock.  Visitors are welcome.

Newly elected officers are: Ray Lowitz, president; Frank Black, treasurer; Charlotte Frelander, recording secretary; Florence Pearl, corresponding secretary; Dave Cohen, membership secretary; Jim Holmes, Sgt. At Arms.

The new officers will be formally ushered into office at our regular semi-annual installation in the Don Room of the El Cortez Hotel. This promises to be a gay affair in the spirit of 1849.

Our "Adventures in San Diego Jewish History" series will be a daily feature until we run out of history.

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SAN DIEGO JEWISH WORLD THE WEEK IN REVIEW

Monday, April 21, 2008 (Vol. 2, No. 96)

Donald H. Harrison in Escondido, California: 'Fifth son' at our seders—the captive soldier
Sheila Orysiek in San Diego: Matzo sandwich: is the Earl laughing?
Fred Reiss in Winchester, California: Evangelicals: good or bad for the Jews?
Adventures in San Diego History: The Southwestern Jewish Press in July 1949 printed articles detailing the histories and purposes of various Jewish organizations in San Diego. Today we reprint the stories about Hadassah and the Junior Section of Senior Hadassah.

Sunday, April 20, 2008 (Vol. 2, No. 95)

Carol Davis in La Jolla, California: 33 Variations probes Beethoven's obsession
Ulla Hadar in Kibbutz Ruhama, Israel: Battle to bring, keep water in the Negev
Donald H. Harrison in Jamul, California: On the land-use warpath in rural Jamul
Rabbi Baruch Lederman in San Diego: Rav Henoch Leibowitz dies at 92 in Queens
Dov Burt Levy in Peabody, Massachusetts: A miraculous report from Sderot
Rabbi Leonard Rosenthal in San Diego: Do free people have to attend a seder?
Adventures in San Diego History: The Southwestern Jewish Press in July 1949 printed articles detailing the histories and purposes of various Jewish organizations in San Diego. Today we reprint the stories about Hadassah and the Junior Section of Senior Hadassah.

Friday-Saturday, April 18-19, 2008 (Vol. 2, No. 94)

Carol Davis in San Diego: Speaking of Pharaoh's Egypt: Aida is back
Eran Lerman in Jerusalem: Israel has domestic political chametz which
it would be well to sweep out before Pesach
Rabbi Dow Marmur in Jerusalem: In Israel, water is an issue that is of both technological and theological concern
Sheila Orysiek in San Diego: Chapter Four in the serialization of her novel, Reluctant Martyr
William Propp in La Jolla: David Noel Freedman: an appreciation
Adventures in San Diego History:We begin a series of stories from the 1949 Southwestern Jewish Press in which each Jewish organization was asked to tell its history and activities.

Thursday, April 17, 2007 (Vol. 2, No. 93)

Carol Davis in Coronado, California: If your family made its fortune by theft, would you willingly return the money?
Dow Marmur in Jerusalem: Jimmy Carter's unwelcome benevolence
Ira Sharkansky in Jerusalem: Notes from ever-changing Haggadot
Adventures in San Diego History:  San Diego's Jewish community focused in 1949 on the resettlement of refugees in Israel and on aid to needy Jews in San Diego and abroad

Wednesday, April 16, 2008 (Vol. 2, No. 92)

Shoshana Bryen in Washington, D.C.: Welcome back, welcome back Berlusconi
Garry Fabian in Melbourne, Australia:
—JNF partners with Greening Australia
—'Courage to Care' at Newington College
—Facebook caution urged
—Clubs to fix sullied reputations
—Sydney shuls likely to merge
—Salah brothers sentenced for 2006 killing
—Geelong admits Vorchheimer was a victim
—Dismay at conditions at new cemetery
—Anti-Defamation Commission supports new proposal
Larry Gorfine in San Diego:Jews play prominent roles in S.D. politics
Gary Rotto in Angelus Oaks, California: Debating a professional at a 'big boy' retreat for Jewish leaders at Camp Mountain Chai
Adventures in San Diego History: In 1947, the Jewish community in San Diego was alive with fresh beginnings: A new softball leage, a CARE office, groundbreaking in North Park for Tifereth Israel; a new sefer Torah in Tijuana, and the installation of a Hillel unit at San Diego State



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