Atlanta Jewish Times, VOL. XCIX NO. 20, October 31, 2023

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VOL. XCIX NO. 20 | ATLANTA THEN & NOW AND HEALTH & WELLNESS OCTOBER 31, 2023 | 16 CHESHVAN 5784


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THIS WEEK PUBLISHER MICHAEL A. MORRIS michael@atljewishtimes.com

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EDITORIAL

Cover Photo: An Israeli army self-propelled howitzer fires rounds near the border with Gaza in southern Israel on Oct. 11

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CONTENTS

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CONTRIBUTORS THIS ISSUE BOB BAHR CHANA SHAPIRO DAVE SCHECHTER DAVID OSTROWSKY DEBBIE DIAMOND JAN JABEN-EILON MARCIA CALLER JAFFE ROBYN SPIZMAN GERSON

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We are grateful to the many countries around the world that have expressed solidarity with the State of Israel by illuminating landmarks in blue and white.

Atlanta Jewish Times Stands with Israel

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ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 5


ISRAEL Hamas – Israel War On Oct. 7, 2023, in an act of war, over a thousand terrorists infiltrated Israel by land, sea and air at several locations and advanced towards Israeli communities and population centers near the Gaza Strip. This was carried out in conjunction with indiscriminate rocket fire targeting Israel with the intent of maximizing harm to civilians. The terrorists penetrated southern settlements and began a killing spree - murdering families and individuals in their homes, on the streets and at a music festival that took place in the area, and abducting citizens to the Gaza Strip - with an emphasis on families, women, and children. In light of this, Israel is at war with the terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip. In a speech made by President Isaac Herzog, the president noted that instructions for the making of chemical weapons, provided by Al-Qaeda, were found on the bodies of the terrorists – providing evidence for preparation of a chemical terror attack, as well as for ties between Hamas and Al-Qaeda. Thus far, more than 1,400 people have been murdered in Israel and more than 5,240 wounded to varying degrees. It is also reported that over 222 people are classified as missing or captive after being kidnapped and taken to Gaza. Among the victims, approximately 246 of those murdered and 58 of the missing hold foreign citizenship (including dual citizenship). In addition, over 7,625 missiles and rockets have been fired at Israel. It should be noted that over 550 rockets have fallen within the territory of the Gaza Strip, often killing and injuring Gazan civilians.

Day 5

•taryHamas has been holding the residents of Gaza hostage - by locating milisites alongside the homes of residents, by perpetuating humanitarian

•savagely These photos from Kibbutz Be'eri, one of the communities which was attacked by the terrorists, show the extent of Hamas' brutality and

and whether it allows entry and exit of goods through its territory. Israel is in contact with various parties, including international organizations, to alleviate the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip.

•bases. The terrorists infiltrated more than 30 residential communities and 12 IDF distress, and by refusing to pursue any diplomatic avenue that would better the lives of the civilians of the Gaza Strip. •a manner The terrorists were masked, dressed in black, and riding pick-up trucks in •would Following Hamas’ massacre of Israeli civilians, Israel announced that it typical of ISIS. stop the supply of electricity, water, and goods to the Gaza Strip. It is now difficult to facilitate transfers because Hamas destroyed the Erez cross• This is the worst massacre of Israeli civilians in Israel’s history. ing – one of the main crossings into Israel, and because Hamas has been constantly attacking in the border area, endangering supply convoys. •abducted Hamas not only massacred civilians, but also desecrated corpses and innocents from their homes including children, women, and the •seawater. The Gaza Strip can manufacture its own electricity and desalinate its own elderly (some of them Holocaust survivors), violating all basic human morIsrael has the sovereign right to decide how it runs its crossings, als.

destruction.

•committing The Islamist terror organization Hamas showed the world its true colors, gruesome atrocities against civilians on an unprecedented

scale. Israel welcomes international condemnation of terrorism, and we are confident that our friends and allies from around the world will continue to support the IDF in protecting Israeli citizens.

•including A vast number of civilians were kidnapped and taken to the Gaza Strip, both Israelis and foreign citizens. Israel is operating meticulously

to return them to Israel and calls on the international community to apply as much pressure as possible regarding the hostage situation - the abduction of civilians is and inherent violation of international law and basic human morals.

Key Points

Northern Arena •byNoHamas. sovereign nation could disregard such a terror attack as was launched The IDF will respond with all necessary force to defend the citi•with 46 mortars were launched into Israel from Lebanon. The IDF responded zens of Israel against every threat, on every front. artillery shells and launched a drone strike targeting a tent that Hezbollah had previously set up in Israeli territory. •bring Unfortunately, but unavoidably, Israel’s actions in the Gaza Strip may harm to Palestinian non-combatants. Israel regrets any injury to in• Additional mortars were fired toward Israel. Terrorists infiltrated Israeli nocent people, and its purpose is only to preserve the safety of its citizens. 6 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

territory from Lebanon and were thwarted by IDF soldiers. The 300th


ISRAEL Brigade’s Deputy CO, LTC Alim Abdallah and two soldiers were killed in combat.

Iran's territory...One army is in Lebanon. It is called Hizbullah [Hezbollah]. Another army is in Palestine, and it is called Hamas and the Islamic Jihad... One army is in Syria. Another army is in Iraq, and is called the PMU, and another army is in Yemen and is called Ansar Allah [Houthis]."

Hezbollah but will act decisively to defend its citizens, wherever they are threatened.

Hamas' slaughter of Israelis was celebrated by the Ayatollah regime in Iran. As stated by Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khameni on Oct. 10: "We Kiss the hands of those who planned the attack on the Zionist regime. This destructive earthquake has destroyed some critical structures (in Israel) which will not be repaired easily..."

•from Israel holds Lebanon responsible for preventing rocket fire emanating its territory. Israel is not interested in escalating the conflict with Statistics as of Oct. 11, 6:30 AM Israel Time: 1. Over 1,200 dead 2. Over 3,200 wounded 3. Fallen soldiers: 169 4. More than 150 people were abducted. 5. Over 5,300 rockets fired from the Gaza Strip into Israel 6. Hundreds of terrorists killed inside of Israel. Dozens of terrorists detained. Hundreds of Hamas terrorists killed in the Gaza Strip

UK Defense Secretary Forced to Take Cover from Hamas Rocket Fire While on Solidarity Visit to Israel While on a visit to Israel to express his solidarity with the Israeli people, the United Kingdom's Defense Secretary, James Cleverly, and his team, were forced to take cover in a shelter in Ofakim in Southern Israel, as Hamas rockets were launched towards the area. This is a reality which Israelis are forced to live with every day.

7. Over 2,200 terror targets in Gaza struck by the IDF, including: attack tunnels and other underground assets, 35 terrorist infrastructure targets in multi-story buildings, rocket launch sites, command and control centers, and Intelligence assets. 8. ~ 300,000 reservists drafted, 60,000 more approved Thousands Participate in Atlanta Solidarity Rally for Israel Oct. 10, thousands of people from Atlanta's Jewish and Israeli communities, along with many allies, gathered at the City Springs Center in Sandy Springs, GA to express their solidarity with Israel. 33 organizations sponsored the event. Thank you to the many speakers, organizations, and individuals who made this event happen. We are deeply grateful for your strong support of Israel at this difficult time. Hamas: The Iranian Connection For years, Iran has been using proxy terror organizations to spread its malign influence throughout the Middle East, seeking to create "armies" to terrorize and destabilize the region. Hamas and the other terror organizations in the Gaza Strip make up one of these "armies", which are trained, Image Provided by Israeli Security Services funded, and directed by Iran's Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC). Iran's provision and direction are what allow Hamas and terror organizations like it to continue to terrorize the Middle East. Iran provides these terror organizations with training, technical know-how, weaponry, funds, and means to carry out terror attacks.

Day 6 Key Points

•aerial Following Hamas’ barbaric invasion on Saturday, the IDF continued land, and naval attacks on terrorist sites in the Gaza Strip, reaching over 2,600 targets.

•Hamas Sites affiliated with the Hamas Nukhba commando force, as well as senior leaders, were a focus of these strikes. •forces Defense of the Israeli home front remains paramount. Yesterday Israeli neutralized terrorists in a few incidents in southern Israel. At least two new infiltration attempts by terrorists were thwarted by IDF forces.

• The repair of breaches in the security fence is nearly completed. In parallel, defense is being augmented by aircraft and ground forces. • Following an anti-tank missile attack on forces along the Blue Line in Israel’s north, the IDF struck a Hezbollah outpost and fired artillery in response.

In the words of Major General Gholamali Rashid, former deputy commander of Iran's Armed Forces: "I have assembled for you six armies outside of ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 7


ISRAEL Updated Statistics:

Day 7 Key Points

•750ThesitesIDFwere continued to strike terrorist sites in the Gaza Strip. An additional attacked overnight. This included strikes against UAV launch sites, underground tunnels, terrorist outposts, and residences of senior Hamas operatives used for military purposes.

•Hamas’ The IDF remains prepared to increase its activity against Hamas. Given tactics of using Gaza’s civilians as human shields, the IDF instructed residents of Gaza City to evacuate to southern Gaza for their own safety ahead of the potential of a large increase of IDF operational strikes in that area, alongside ongoing strikes against Hamas targets throughout Gaza.

•toDefense of the Israeli home front remains a key focus. Rockets continued be fried by terrorists on southern and central Israel yesterday and today, including rockets that landed in Sderot, resulting in a few casualties. Five terrorists were neutralized in several isolated encounters over the past 24 hours, reaching as far as northern Israel.

To avoid harming civilians, the IDF has encouraged the civilian population of the Gaza Strip to evacuate by providing them with pre-strike warnings - when operational circumstances allow. Here is the full text of the warning: "The IDF calls for the evacuation of all civilians of Gaza City from their homes southwards for their own safety and proA copy of the IDF's pre-strike warning to tection and move to the civilians of the Gaza Strip. the area south of the Wadi Gaza, as shown on the map. The Hamas terrorist organization waged a war against the State of Israel and Gaza City is an area where military operations take place. This evacuation is for your own safety. You will be able to return to Gaza City only when another announcement permitting it is made. Do not approach the area of the security fence with the State of Israel. Hamas terrorists are hiding in Gaza City inside tunnels underneath houses and inside buildings populated with innocent Gazan civilians. Civilians of Gaza City, evacuate south for your own safety and the safety of your families and distance yourself from Hamas terrorists who are using you as human shields. In the following days, the IDF will continue to operate significantly in Gaza City and make extensive efforts to avoid harming civilians."

•border, While no active engagements took place over the last day on the northern The IDF warned the residents of the Gaza Strip and called upon them to the area of Metula was declared a closed military zone (CMZ) following a situational assessment.

move to the area south of Wadi Gaza. This advice was sent in Arabic through various media channels, including on social media outlets as well as via civil society and international organizations.

•arrested Overnight, 47 terrorist operatives - including 34 Hamas operatives - were in Judea and Samaria. It should be noted that in accordance with international law, advance warnings should be effective and given ahead of time, so that the residents of •ingOninOctober 10, several mortars were fired from Syria toward Israel, landGaza can understand them and have enough time to evacuate, seek shelter, open areas. Israel holds Syria responsible for anything in its territory. Updated Statistics:

and take all the other measures that will aid them in protecting themselves. The IDF warned the population of Gaza in accordance with these guidelines. While Israel continues to give notice ahead of strikes, Hamas calls upon civilians to ignore the IDF's explicit warnings, thus cynically using its own civilian population as human shields and setting the stage for its propaganda. The IDF is fully aware of the presence of foreign nationals working in the area and are doing their utmost to minimize the risks to their safety.

Day 8 Key Points

•edHamas, a terror organization that has barbarically massacred and abductmany Israelis and foreign nationals; women, children, and senior citizens, continues its heinous terrorist attacks including indiscriminate rocket fire toward Israeli towns, infiltration, and further kidnapping attempts. Hamas currently holds dozens of men, women, and children as hostages,

8 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES


ISRAEL raping and abusing them, and desecrating dead bodies in their custody.

The humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip:

ors, rapes and desecrates the bodies of women, children, and the elderly. Hamas uses minors to carry out these unspeakable atrocities.

to provide to the enemy resources and supplies from its sovereign territory, especially given the verified use of such supplies by the enemy against Israel and its citizens, as clearly seen in the case of electricity and fuel.

much as is possible in light of operational constraints. The IDF employs a variety of methods (evacuating population from the areas of fighting, evacuating civilians from a building before the strike, providing some warnings before activity).

ing goods to Gaza beyond what it is required by law during war. Requests for humanitarian aid for an area controlled by the same terrorist organization that abducted them suggests a clear double standard.

•terrorists. Israeli women, teenagers and children have been brutally raped by the •ofIsrael is closely monitoring humanitarian concerns in the Gaza Strip. As This claim is supported by credible video footage of the terrorists now, there is no humanitarian crisis. stating that they indeed fulfilled their intent to rape the women and chil•a battleground As the sole ruler of the Gaza Strip, Hamas has chosen to turn Gaza into dren they kidnapped. from which it launches ongoing terror attacks against •doubt Following the patterns of ISIS, Hamas’ war crimes have proven beyond Israeli civilians. A party to an armed conflict has no obligation to supply that it deliberately and systematically instills fear, murders, dishonservices and goods to the belligerent parties. Accordingly, Israel has ceased

•fronts. The State of Israel will act forcefully against any threat or enemy on all •tory, Israel is legally entitled to exercise its sovereignty in relation to its terriborders and crossings, taking into consideration its national security, •their The IDF is working tirelessly to defend Israel against Hamas-ISIS, destroy with respect to the entry and exit of persons and goods. military capabilities and removing the threat they pose to Israeli citizens once and for all: •trols Furthermore, since pulling out in 2005, the State of Israel no longer conthe Gaza Strip. In fact, before the war, Israel provided goods, petrol, •erately The IDF launched air strikes to deny Hamas’ capabilities designed to delib- water, and electricity beyond the minimum required despite not having any harm Israeli civilians. legal obligation to do so. •Israel While executing offensive military actions vis-à-vis Hamas, the IDF and •soldiers Since over 1,300 Israeli civilians were butchered and over 120 civilians and are constantly working to minimize harm to non-combatants – as were kidnapped, the State of Israel will not be ‘generous’ in provid•andIsrael’s enemies have been exploiting the war in the south to attack Israel •Ministry While Israel continues to give notice ahead of strikes, Hamas' Palestinian its citizens. Missiles have been fired at Israel from Syria and Lebanon, of Interior and National Security calls upon civilians to ignore the IDF’s explicit warnings, thus cynically using its own civilian population as human shields and setting the stage for its propaganda.

•framework Israel does not control the Gaza Strip and therefore the relevant legal is that of the laws of armed conflict. Population evacuation efforts:

in addition to infiltration attempts. The IDF has responded to these attacks and will firmly retaliate against any threat.

•against The IDF holds Hezbollah responsible for any terror attack launched Israel that originates from Lebanon. Hezbollah entering the war will draw both Lebanon and Hezbollah into a devastating conflict that diverges from Lebanese national interests.

•with The Islamist terrorist threat requires joint efforts and Israel is operating •ofThe residents of Gaza City have been requested to evacuate until the end full support of its allies. Senior world leaders have shown their supthe war, to limit the damage to civilians. This was communicated to them through several different forms of media in Arabic and with enough time to leave areas from which Hamas is operating, seek shelter, and take any other necessary steps. Israel is in communication with several bodies who can provide aid in this regard.

• For several years, the State of Israel has been warning about Hamas’

fighting methods. Hamas has been committing terror attacks against Israeli civilians from within the heart of the Palestinian civilian population – a double war crime. Hamas have implanted their terror infrastructure in a deliberate and cynical way in densely populated urban centers and thus use the Gazan people as a human shield. Their military activity was purposefully centered in civilian structures, including schools, hospitals, homes, and mosques. Our many warnings regarding this issue to the international community were not translated into action.

• While Israel encourages the

civilian population to flee, Hamas, which is responsible for it, is instructing civilians to ignore the IDF’s warning and not evacuate. Hamas is clearly willing to endanger the civilian population and non-combatants in its territory for its own criminal benefit. Below are pictures taken by IDF Aerial Reconaissance showing proof that Hamas is putting up roadblocks to prevent Palestinian civilians from evacuating from northern to southern Gaza:

•forHamas prides itself on putting civilians in harm’s way and is responsible every civilian casualty.

port by visiting Israel and the sites of the atrocities. A U.S aircraft carrier has reached Israeli shores to assist and support efforts against these vicious terror attacks and the growing threats voiced by Israel’s enemies (Iran, Hezbollah, Syria). These efforts are the foundation of a coalition to defeat Hamas-ISIS and its allies.

Day 9 Key Points Hamas, an internationally recognized terrorist organization, initiated a massive attack on the citizens of Israel by infiltrating terrorists into communities in the south of the country, as well as by launching extensive and indiscriminate missile and rocket fire that targeted Israeli civilians. The terrorists infiltrated southern communities and began a murder spree, killing families and individuals in their homes, in the streets, and at a music festival in the area, in addition to kidnapping to the Gaza Strip anyone – in particular defenseless families, women, and children - who crossed their path.

•operation This was a deadly and barbaric attack - evocative of ISIS's methods of - that was initiated by terrorist organizations led by Hamas and

launched with no legitimate pretext or provocative prior action on the part of Israel.

•thirsty The terrorist organizations have shown their true faces: they are bloodand uncontrollable groups with similar roots to those of ISIS, who

are devoid of any moral inhibitions, and are motivated by hatred, the desire ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 9


ISRAEL to hurt Israeli citizens in every way, and to bring about the destruction of the State of Israel. Hamas is not interested in the safety or well-being of civilians in the Gaza Strip, and views them as nothing more than pawns to be exploited in its efforts to harm the citizens of Israel.

streambed that is a continuation of the Besor Stream.] This advice was sent in Arabic through various media channels, including on social media outlets as well as via civil society and international organizations.

terrorism, the glorification of terrorists, and the compensation of assailants and their families.

announcement about the need to evacuate was fake and called upon the residents to "blend in with the resistance". Hamas did so because it wants to continue to exploit the residents of Gaza as human shields for its activities. Moreover, there is a growing number of testimonies that Hamas is interfering with, and even forcefully preventing, the movement of the civilian population to the southern part of the strip.

•asInmuch contrast to the IDF’s efforts to minimize harm to the civilian population •ment These terrorists were raised with constant exposure to incessant inciteas possible, Hamas addressed Gaza’s residents (October 13) and to murder Israelis, incitement that also includes the encouragement of told them to ignore the IDF’s advance warnings, claiming that the IDF’s •Hamas Israel is in a war against the terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip. started this war, and Israel is preparing for a prolonged military re-

sponse to remove the threat posed by the terror organization. Hamas is the ruler of the Gaza Strip, controlling all aspects of life there. It is behind this attack, and it will be held accountable for the results of these events. Hamas’ leadership bears full responsibility for the current deterioration and for the actions Israel must take in response. Israel will do everything necessary to protect its citizens and its territory.

•toIsrael will act to free the hostages that were kidnapped to the Gaza Strip, heavily damage the terrorist infrastructure, and to reach a situation in

which no terrorist group in Gaza will be able to harm Israeli citizens again.

•situation Hamas is holding at least 120 kidnapped persons, whose humanitarian is poor, and in addition, it holds the bodies of people murdered by

Hamas, who after being killed had their corpses hijacked into Gaza. Many of those who were kidnapped need medical assistance and medications. They are being held with their most basic rights denied, in absolute contradiction to international law, and in a manner that places their lives in extreme danger. Israel views Hamas as responsible for their well-being. The International Aspect:

•attack Israel expects the international community to condemn the terrorist •inThe terrorist organizations involved are branches of the Ayatollah regime on Israeli citizens and to express clear support for Israel's complete Iran, which proactively promote terrorist activity in Israel and against The Regional - Iranian Aspect:

Israeli and Jewish targets around the world. Hamas would not have been able to carry out this murderous attack without the financing, logistical support and weapons it received from Iran. Iran bears direct responsibility for Hamas' capabilities, and therefore bears responsibility also for the use Hamas makes of these capabilities.

right to defend itself. Israel will act resolutely against the terrorist organizations and will do all that is necessary to protect its citizens.

•theIsrael also expects the international community to support it throughout battle, and until its goals are achieved.

Updated Statistics •nian In addition, in recent days Hezbollah, which is a major proxy of the Iraregime based in Lebanon, took responsibility for more than ten attacks on Israel, including the firing of anti-tank missiles and mortars, as well as attempts to infiltrate terrorists into Israeli communities. This activity is a tangible expression of the increasing Iranian threats that say, "if Israel does not cease its fighting in Gaza… the conflict will expand to other areas" and that "Israel will suffer a severe earthquake."

•Syria, The international community should make it clear to the axis states (Iran, and Lebanon) and to the terrorist organizations in the area that they must refrain from taking part in Hamas’ war and stipulate that they should not promote, encourage, or enable the opening of another front against Israel. The expansion of the arena of fighting against Israel will be met with determined and lethal actions by Israel, a particularly harsh response.

The IDF reports:

• 1,300+ Israelis killed since Saturday morning (Oct. 7), among them 286 fallen soldiers. The Humanitarian Aspect: • 3,500+ Israelis wounded. •within The terrorist organizations operate knowingly and deliberately from civilian populated areas and adjacent to humanitarian buildings and • 126 Confirmed kidnapped Israelis, and even more missing. institutions, making cynical use of them. Israel is doing, and will continue • 6,000+ Rockets launched into Israel. to do, everything possible to prevent harm to non-involved persons. However, these terrorist organizations which intentionally operate from within • 30+ Israeli communities near the Gaza Strip were attacked by Hamas the civilian population are committing double war crimes: indiscriminately terrorists, who massacred and kidnapped civilians in these communities. targeting Israeli civilians while using the residents of the Gaza Strip as human shields. • 360,000+ Reservists drafted. •supply The passage of fuel and goods to the Gaza Strip has been halted, as has the of water and electricity originating in Israel. A country under attack cannot continue to support its attackers.

•measures In accordance with international law, the IDF has taken precautionary aimed at minimizing damage to the civilian population or harm-

ing non-involved persons. These measures include giving advance warning, when possible, about IDF actions against Hamas that could cause harm to non-involved persons. In accordance, the IDF warned the residents of the Gaza Strip and called on them to move to the area south of Wadi Gaza. [Wadi Gazi, which crosses Gaza from east to west in the area of central Gaza, is the 10 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Operational Updates Gaza and Southern Israel:

•andThecreated IDF called on residents of Gaza City to evacuate south of Wadi Gaza a new corridor for safe passage today for Gazans to go south between 10:00 am - 1:00 pm.

•safeHamas is trying to prevent civilians from evacuating by obstructing the passage of residents of the Gaza strip to the south through roadblocks.


ISRAEL

• The IDF is preparing for the next stages of operational offensive plans. Northern border:

•from The Israeli army is calling on the population of Gaza to evacuate toward northern to southern Gaza. Thus far, 600,000 Gazans have been evacuated.

•onThehighIDFalertis ready to act on all fronts against any threat – The IDF remains • Hamas is preventing Gazans from evacuating, and is hiding behind the for further provocations on our northern border. local population, embedding itself in residential neighborhoods and intentionally jeopardizing the lives of the Gazan population. •gingThetheState of Lebanon is responsible for preventing Hezbollah from dragwhole region into war. •24The IDF has struck dozens of Hamas targets in the Gaza Strip over the past hours. International: •itsThe military’s main mission remains to dismantle Hamas and is targeting •planes The USS Eisenhower is enroute to the Mediterranean. More US cargo chief political and militant operatives. are due to arrive with advanced armaments, so the IDF is fully equipped for any scenario •ernYesterday, the IDF struck about 250 military targets, primarily in NorthGaza. Overnight the Israeli Air Force struck dozens of targets overnight Day 10

Key Points

•District The IDF has eliminated Muetaz Eid, the Commander of Hamas' Southern of National Security. The IDF continues to target senior Hamas terrorists, as well as hundreds of other Hamas military and administrative targets.

including Hamas operatives, operational compounds, military infrastructure, military observation posts, rocket launch sites and more.

•theInIDF one strike, leveraging ISA (Israel Security Agency) and IDF intelligence, neutralized Muetaz Eid, the Commander of Hamas' Southern District of National Security.

•onIDFthreetroops neutralized terrorists in the area surrounding the Gaza Strip separate occasions. This included one encounter with two terrorists that had anti-tank weapons near Nahal Oz, one encounter with a

terrorist near Nir Am and a UAV strike on a terrorist cell of several terrorists •fence. IDF combat engineering forces finished repairing breaches in the security identified last night near Kissufim. •fence. IDF engineering work has been completed on breaches in the security •Over Infantry, ground forces and the Israel Air Force are also securing the area. the past day, three terrorist cells were neutralized in southern Israel. •andTheaerial defense of the region continues to be augmented by tanks, infantry •Over Hamas rocket fire continues to target civilian populations across Israel. support. 6,700 rockets have been fired at Israel by the terrorists. • The IDF continues to prepare for intensified operations in the Gaza Strip Abducted civilians and soldiers: •ones As of today, the IDF has updated the families of 199 Israelis that their loved •lastThenight IDF targeted a number of Hezbollah posts on Israel's northern border were abducted and are currently held hostage in the Gaza Strip. after a series of attacks which killed one Israeli civilian and one IDF officer. •es,Thecivilian military is supporting government efforts to return all Israeli hostagand military alike, to Israel, and considers it a chief priority. • The IDF is on high alert on Israel's northern border and has a zerotolerance policy towards any aggression. Israeli civilians within two kilo•civilians The IDF remains in constant contact with the families of soldiers and meters (1.2 miles) are being evacuated to preserve flexibility for a range of abducted and held in Gaza. The military is using both operational responses.

Updated Statistics The IDF reports:

• 1,400+ Israelis murdered. • 291 families of fallen soldiers notified. • 199 abducted Israelis whose families have been notified. • 6,700+ rockets fired at Israel Operational Updates

and intelligent means to gather more information about the hostages’ whereabouts and their condition. Northern Arena:

•theOver the last 24 hours, Hezbollah has been escalating the situation along northern border by targeting Israeli civilian communities and military positions. In one attack on Sunday, an anti-tank missile was fired at the Israeli community of Shtula, killing one civilian and injuring three. In another, an IDF officer was killed by anti-tank fire. In all cases, the IDF responded with both artillery fire towards the sources of fire as well as expanded strikes on Hezbollah positions.

•andHezbollah’s attacks on Israel are carried out and backed in coordination with the support and guidance of Iran. •Israeli The Defense Ministry and the Israeli military are operating to protect civilians in the area. The IDF continues to respond to attacks against

Gaza:

Israel and will assist in the evacuation of Israeli residents who live up to 2 kilometers from Israel's northern border with Lebanon.

reports on a potential cease-fire.

bollah’s attacks.

•reports, Israel continues striking Hamas targets in the Strip based on intelligence •the28Israeli Israeli communities on the northern border will be evacuated to allow and currently continues to press ahead with the fighting, denying military to strike and to continue defending Israel against HezATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 11


ISRAEL Day 11 Key Points

•byAbout two hundred Israeli citizens have been abducted and are being held Hamas, including young children, women, and the elderly. Many of the

abductees were injured by Hamas terrorists; many of them need medical treatment and medication, and the condition of many of the abductees is unknown. This is a serious humanitarian crisis and a very fundamental violation of international law, and Israel expects the international community to act in every possible way to protect the rights of the abductees, to ensure proper medical treatment and to provide humanitarian aid to the abductees and their families.

•communities The displacement of tens of thousands of Israelis from their homes in the around the Gaza Strip in the wake of the terrorist attack that

destroyed their homes, plus the ongoing rocket fire, emanating from Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah on the northern border, has caused a significant humanitarian crisis in Israel. This displacement has intensified the horrific situation in which the survivors of the Hamas massacre in the communities surrounding the Gaza Strip find themselves.

•escalate Hezbollah, the long arm of the Iranian regime in Lebanon, continues to its activities against Israel, raising the risk of a multi-front escalation, at the expense of the citizens of Lebanon and the entire region.

•ers,AsAymen part of the IDF's effort to prioritize strikes on Hamas’ senior leadNofal, the commander of Hamas’ central division in Gaza and

• Strikes on senior Hamas leaders

continued with the targeting of one of the group's most senior terrorist leaders, Aymen Nofal, the commander of Hamas’ central division in Gaza, and former head of military intelligence. Nofal had directed many attacks on the Israeli homefront, including heavy rocket fire towards civilian areas, and oversaw weapons manufacturing and development.

The IDF's Chief of the General Staff LTG. Herzi Halevi with IDF troops in southern Israel.

•theTheheadIDFofandtheISA (Israel Security Agency) also eliminated Osama Mazini, Hamas' Shura Council in the Gaza Strip. Mazini was responsible for Hamas prisoners and directed terrorist activities against Israel.

•launching Yesterday, dozens of enemy military command centers and mortar shell posts were destroyed by IDF fire, including the command center

of Ali Qadi, one of the commanders of Hamas' “Nukhba” commando forces who was targeted several days ago. Homefront and More:

•IDF199isfamilies have been updated about their abducted loved ones. The deploying all intelligence and operational measures to ensure their

return. Yesterday, as part of its ongoing psychological terrorism, the Hamas released a video of one of the abducted hostages in Gaza.

Osama Mazini, the head of Hamas’ Shura Council, were both neutralized in Gaza.

•being 299 families of fallen sodliers have been notified about their loved ones' killed in combat.

Updated Statistics

Defense of Southern Israel:

•pastNo24attacks have taken place against IDF forces or in Israeli towns over the hours. •sounding Hamas continues to fire barrages of rockets towards Israel, with sirens in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Rishon Le’Tzion, Be’er Sheva and southern Israel. Active missile defense, combined with passive missile defense measures like bomb shelters, are continuing to prove effective against Hamas' deliberate attacks on Israeli civilians in the homefront. Northern Arena:

•non. A number of incidents took place along the northern border with LebaIn each, the IDF immediately responded towards the sources of fire. •territory On Tuesday afternoon, two anti-tank missiles were fired toward Israeli near Kibbutz Yiftah. The IDF responded with tank and artillery fire toward Hezbollah terrorist targets.

•theEarlier in the day, anti-tank fire was carried out towards an IDF post near town of Metula. Additionally, an anti-tank missile was fired towards Operational Updates Gaza:

•tureIDFcontaining fighter jets struck operational command centers, military infrastructerrorist operatives and hideouts belonging to the Hamas

an IDF post along the Lebanon border. Light arms fire was also carried out toward a number of sites along the border fence. The IDF responded with artillery fire toward the source of fire.

•attempting Four terrorists were neutralized earlier this morning by IDF forces after to infiltrate Israel from Lebanon. Day 12

terrorist organization in Zaytun, northern Rafah, Jabalya, and Khan Yunis.

Over 200 Hamas and Islamic Jihad (PIJ) sites were targeted across the Gaza Strip including command posts, a bank used to fund terrorist activities, and a few underground attack tunnels. The Israeli navy backed these efforts with attacks on several sites including operational posts and weapons storage facilities.

Key Points

•visit, U.S. President Joe Biden arrived today (October 18) in Israel. During his President Biden expressed once more his strong support for Israel, and the U.S.' backing for Israel’s actions in its war against Hamas. Furthermore,

12 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES


ISRAEL President Biden confirmed that the facts indicate clearly that the strike against the Gaza hospital was made by the terror organizations, and not by Israel.

•propagated The Hamas claim regarding the damage to the hospital in Gaza that was by the international media without any scrutiny or criticism

must be countered forcefully. Repeating unchallenged and unverified claims of an ISIS-like terrorist organization as if they were true is a dangerous and irresponsible act that does not meet any minimum journalistic standards expected of the media. Moreover, this practice constitutes the media’s support of Hamas’ goals.

•preme Iran’s negative and dangerous role should be emphasized. Iranian suleader Ali Khamenei gave a speech in which he threatened: "If the

crimes of the Zionist regime continue, no one will be able to stop the Muslims of the world and the resistance forces." Khamenei's words are a threat not only to regional peace, but to the peace of the entire world, and may lead to acts of violence around the world.

forces continued to prepare to implement a wide range of offensive plans. Multiple reserve battalions were mobilized for defense missions in the communities in the area surrounding the Gaza Strip. One example is the 252nd Sinai Division, which is currently making preparations for wider combat operations. So far, the percentage of those reporting for duty among the reservists in the division is around 120%.

•warTheagainst IDF continues the difficult job of identifying casualties from Hamas' Israel. To date, 306 families have been notified of their kin falling in action.

Northern Israel:

•theAttacks from Lebanon along the border with Israel continued throughout day. This included a UAV attempting to enter Israeli airspace and antitank missiles being fired into Israel. The IDF responded to the attacks by firing at the source of the fire. U.S. President Biden Visits Israel; Meets with Israel's Leaders

•onHezbollah’s dangerous demand for a 'Day of Rage' in the wake of the strike Today, in an expression of the a hospital in Gaza (caused by a failed rocket launch by the Palestinian the scale of the monstrous actions has become clear beyond any doubt, Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas has yet to condemn the horrific acts. The lack of condemnation, in conjunction with the PA's powerlessness regarding the war on incitement, constitutes patronage and support of terrorism.

strong bilateral relations between Israel and the United States, U.S. President Joe Biden traveled to Israel and met with the country's top political and military leaders, including President Isaac Herzog and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. President Biden's visit is the first time an American president has visited Israel during wartime.

Operational Updates

Addressing the Israeli people from Tel Aviv, President Biden stated, "I come to Israel with a single message...you are not alone."

Gaza:

During an expanded meeting held in Tel Aviv, Prime Minister Netanyahu thanked President Biden for spearheading the United States' effort to support Israel during this difficult time: " I know I speak for all the people of Israel when I say thank you, Mr. President. Thank you for standing with Israel today, tomorrow and always."

Islamic Jihad), may result in violence not only in the Middle East region but also in other parts of the world.

•massacre It should be emphasized that even now, about a week and a half after the of residents in the region surrounding the Gaza Strip and after

•strike Twelve days since Hamas’ horrific attack on Israel, the IDF continued to dozens of targets in the Gaza Strip, targeting Hamas' military and civil leadership. Over the past 24 hours, two senior Hamas terrorist operatives were killed: Muhammad Awdallah, Commander of Hamas’ anti-tank missile system in the Gaza City Brigade, and Akram Hijazi, a terrorist from the Hamas naval forces who was also an arms dealer and financier of terrorism.

•rorist Other targets included operational command centers, a number of terstaging grounds, anti-tank missile and rocket launch sites, military infrastructure, and Hamas tunnels.

Day 13 Key Points

•Biden U.S. President Joe Biden arrived Oct. 18 in Israel. During his visit, President expressed his strong support for Israel and backing for Israel’s actions

•Islamic Rocket fire from the Gaza Strip continued. In one notable case, Palestinian in its war against Hamas. Furthermore, President Biden confirmed that the Jihad (PIJ) terrorists in Gaza launched a rocket that misfired and hit a parking lot of the al-Ahli hospital in Gaza.

•iansSince Hamas’ initial attack on Israel, Hamas has continuously used civilin the Gaza Strip as human shields, regularly launching barrages of rockets and using civilian compounds for military purposes.

•Gaza The IDF continues to call on the residents of the northern Gaza Strip and City to evacuate towards the area of Al-Mawasi, south of Wadi Gaza. Hamas continues efforts to prevent civilian evacuation from the area, including roadblocks, confiscating car keys, and more.

facts indicate clearly that the damage inflicted on Palestinian civilians near the al-Ahli hospital in Gaza was caused by a Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) rocket misfire, and not by an Israeli strike.

•rocket Information proving that the attack on the hospital was caused by a failed launch of the PIJ must be distributed to the media, in order to correct the narrative accusing Israel of the attack.

•propagated The Hamas claim regarding the damage to the hospital in Gaza that was by many in the international media without any scrutiny or

Homefront:

criticism must be countered forcefully. Repeating unchallenged and unverified claims of an ISIS-like terrorist organization as if they were true is a dangerous and irresponsible act that does not meet any journalistic standards.

evacuation of residents in both southern Israel and those living in the area between 0-2 kilometers near the Lebanese border to state-funded guesthouses.

should be emphasized. Iran is not only threatening regional peace, but the stability of the entire world. Its attempts to fan the fire through funding terror proxies like Hamas, Hezbollah, PIJ, etc., could lead to acts of violence around the world.

•sounded Gazan terrorists continue to fire rockets at Israel. Over the past day, sirens • Iran’s negative and dangerous role in relation to terror attacks on Israel across the country. The IDF and Ministry of Defense continue the •sands After several days of combat and the mobilization of hundreds of thouof reservists with the support of an extensive logistical effort, IDF

• There is a growing danger of a northern front being opened, due to the

ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 13


ISRAEL continued attacks from Lebanon that have already taken the lives of civilians and soldiers. Israel has no wish to engage in combat in the north but is fully prepared to in such a scenario and will respond forcefully.

•ofThe U.S. Treasury Department's announcement regarding the imposition sanctions against ten key economic figures in the Hamas terror group should be replicated by other countries.

•massacre It should be emphasized that even now, about a week and a half after the of residents in the region surrounding the Gaza Strip, and after

the scale of the atrocities has become clear beyond any doubt, Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas has yet to condemn Hamas' horrific acts of genocidal violence. The lack of condemnation, in conjunction with the PA's powerlessness to prevent violent incitement against Israel, constitutes patronage and support of terrorism.

•pressed Oct. 19 the Prime Minister of the UK, Rishi Sunak, visited Israel and exhis strong support for Israel and its right to defend itself, as well as the need to defeat Hamas.

Updated Statistics

emerged that Hamas took responsibility for a salvo of rockets fired from Lebanon at northern Israel. Active missile defense systems, together with civilian compliance with Home Front Command instructions, have helped minimize - but not avoid - civilian casualties.

• Attempted Hamas attacks on

the Israeli home front continue, and southern Israel remains a potentially active combat zone. For example, on Wednesday an IDF tank force identified and neutralized three terrorists near Kissufim. In addition, a Hamas terrorist who had entered Israel during the incursion on Oct. 7 was apprehended while attempting to make his way back to Gaza. Homefront:

• The IDF and Ministry of Defense have evacuated the majority of the

residents in both southern Israel and those living in the area between 0-2 kilometers near the Lebanese border to state-funded guesthouses.

•ation The Minister of Defense has been given the authority to expand the evacuto include towns and cities 2-5 kilometers from the border. •tacks The IDF continues the difficult job of identifying casualties from the aton Israel. 306 families have been notified about their kin falling in action; 203 families have been notified of the kidnapping of a family member. Northern Israel:

• Hezbollah continues to

instigate hostilities on the Lebanese border to deflect attention from the IDF’s war with Hamas. This includes rocket fire, gunfire, and anti- tank missile fire at Israeli communities and IDF military outposts. IDF troops are stationed along the border with Lebanon in preparation for any escalation and are responding to attacks with air strikes.

Operational Updates Gaza:

• The IDF has continued efforts to dismantle Hamas’ administrative and

military capabilities through hundreds of intelligence-backed strikes across a broad range of targets over the past day.

• Over 100 terrorists have been targeted in Israel Air Force (IAF) strikes,

•kra,Anti-tank missiles were fired at the northern communities of Rosh HaNiKibbutz Manara and Dvorit. Gunfire toward Zar'it was also reported. •ward Approximately thirty rocket launches were identified from Lebanon toIsraeli territory although, as noted above, reports emerged that Hamas

had taken responsibility for at least some of those rockets. In one salvo of six rockets, five launches fell in open areas, and one was successfully intercepted by the IDF Aerial Defense Array. IDF artillery is responding toward the sources of the fire in Lebanon.

including many senior terrorist leaders. Yesterday, in a joint Israel Security Agency (ISA) and IDF strike, the head of the military branch of Hamas' "Popular Resistance Committees" in Rafah was neutralized as part of these efforts. In addition, more than 10 terrorists were targeted in a precision aerial strike, focusing on the Nukhba force, a unit of Hamas terrorist operatives that played a key role in the Oct. 7 massacre.

•lahInintelligence response to the ongoing missile fire, the IDF continued to strike Hezboland operational outposts along the Lebanon border. This

Gaza Strip. During the last day, the IDF struck hundreds of Hamas military sites, including dozens in Shuja'iyya, historically a terrorist hotbed. Targets included anti-tank missile launchers, terrorist tunnel shafts, intelligence infrastructure, mortar launchers, and additional command and control centers.

Key Points

•andWhile preparing for potential intensification of operations by air, land, sea, the IDF also continued to target terrorist infrastructure in the

• Israel remains under fire from Hamas. On Thursday afternoon, reports 14 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

included the observation point from which anti-tank missiles were fired at Rosh HaNikra, as well as artillery fire toward the source of the fire.

Day 14

•IranIran’s is playing a negative and dangerous role in the Middle East region. is not only threatening regional peace, but the stability of the entire

world—and its attempts to fan the fire could lead to acts of violence around the world.


ISRAEL

•lighted, The increasing danger of escalation on the northern front should be high• On Thursday night, in response to attacks along the border, the IDF struck considering the ongoing attacks from Lebanon, which have resulted several Hezbollah positions in southern Lebanon, focusing on operational in casualties. Israel is not interested in opening a northern front but is prepared for this scenario and will respond on its own.

•another The firing of missiles by the Houthis from Yemen, a step that constitutes Iranian attempt to expand the circles of combat and fan the fires in the region, should be noted.

•ofThe US Treasury Department's announcement regarding the imposition sanctions against ten key economic figures in the Hamas organization should be replicated by other countries.

and intelligence positions. In addition, an IDF UAV struck Hezbollah terrorists who attempted to launch an anti-tank missile at IDF forces. Homefront

• Israel continues to be attacked by rockets launched from Gaza. • The US Department of Defense also reported that its forces in the northern Red Sea had intercepted three land attack cruise missiles and several drones launched by Houthi forces in Yemen.

• Thus far, families of 306 IDF soldiers have been notified about their loved •massacre It should be emphasized that even now, over a week and a half after the of residents in the region surrounding the Gaza Strip and after the ones being killed in action and 203 families have been updated about their scale of the monstrous atrocities has become clear beyond any doubt, Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas has yet to condemn the horrific acts. Remarks made by PA officials, which falsify the facts and echo Hamas’ narrative of the events, raise tensions, and increase the potential of violent clashes. Instructions issued by the PA’s Ministry of Endowment and Religious Affairs for Friday’s speeches at mosques, included messages that promote incitement and may cause a further escalation in violence.

•butions The lack of condemnation of Hamas, in conjunction with the PA's contrito incitement, constitutes patronage and support of terrorism. Operational Updates Gaza

•maintains The IDF continues to prepare for the next stage of the war. The military its aim of destroying Hamas’ military and administrative capa-

bilities and restoring security to the people of Israel. Six Forward Logistics Centers were deployed to southern Israel in support of these efforts.

loved ones being abducted.

Two Hostages Released from Gaza Two of the 203 confirmed hostages kidnapped by Hamas during the Oct. 7 massacre, have been released by the terror group and have been transferred to the Israeli border via the Red Cross. The two hostages are mother and daughter Judith Tai Raanan and Natalie Shoshana Raanan. The Coordinator of the Captives and Missing, Brig. Gen. (Ret.) Gal Hirsch, together with the IDF and security forces, received them at the border of the Gaza Strip, and the two are now on their way to a meeting point in an army base in central Israel, where their families are waiting to be reunited with them.

•both Overnight, the IDF continued to strike Hamas targets while operating on sides of the security fence to gather intelligence and maintain the IDF’s The Government of Israel, the IDF, and the entire security apparatus will operational freedom of action.

•valOver 100 targets were hit overnight, including a terrorist from Hamas’ nacommando unit who took part in the barbaric massacre on Oct. 7. Other targets included an underground tunnel, weapons storage sites and dozens of operational command centers. Terror assets and weapons in a mosque in Jabaliya were destroyed as well.

continue to do all they can, using any means available, to locate all those missing and bring home the hostages.

Day 15

•with The IDF continues to see southern Israel as a potentially active battlezone, ongoing terrorist infiltration or attempted attacks along the border. Over the past few days, at least one terrorist was found alive in Israeli territory. Northern Arena

•been In addition to the 30,000 residents of the northern border cities that have evacuated, 22,000 residents of Kiryat Shmona were also evacuated in order to preserve operational flexibility while contending with the threat from Hezbollah.

• Rocket attacks and attempted infiltrations from southern Lebanon

continue. IDF forces responded to the sources of fire as well as other Hezbollah military sites.

• The IDF holds Lebanon responsible for all activity emanating from its borders. •with Today, three Hezbollah terrorists were identified in the area of the border Lebanon and were struck by the Israel Air Force (IAF). IDF snipers also targeted terrorists operating in the area of the border with Lebanon.

ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 15


ISRAEL Updates Statistics Operational Updates

nario and will respond on its own.

•strength The alliance between Israel and the US is strong and deep. The full of the alliance has recently been revealed in the interception of the missiles fired from Yemen by an American destroyer stationed in the Red Sea.

Southern Arena

•prepare The IDF continues to train and for the next stages of combat, including ground operations.

•destroy The IDF's goal continues to be to Hamas’ military and ad-

ministrative capabilities; its top operational priority is to dismantle Hamas’ chain of command by neutralizing the terrorist group’s senior operatives.

•zations The IDF continues to strike military targets belonging to terrorist organiin Gaza, including operational command centers, anti-tank missile launchers, strategic Hamas infrastructure, and observation posts.

•ready IDF forces deployed in the southern arena maintain high vigilance and are to face any threat and prevent attempted infiltrations. Northern Arena

•Hamas' Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas has yet to condemn horrific atrocities. Remarks made by PA officials, which falsify the facts and echo Hamas’ narrative of the events, raise tensions, and increase the potential of violent clashes.

Operational Updates Southern Arena

• Preparations to intensify

activities against Hamas in Gaza are ongoing. IDF strikes in Gaza continue with the same focus striking at Hamas leadership or terrorists who were involved in the October 7th attacks, targeting Hamas military or administrative sites, and targeting military sites to improve the IDF’s operational flexibility.

•evacuate Residents of the northern city of Kiryat Shmona have been instructed to •Muhamad As part of the efforts to target senior Hamas leadership, the IDF targeted to state-funded accommodations for their own safety. Some have Qatmash, the Deputy Head of Hamas' Artillery Unit who was decided to stay, which will be respected at this time in accordance with the security situational assessment.

•forces Terrorists in southern Lebanon continue to fire anti-tank missiles at IDF and attempt to infiltrate the State of Israel. The IDF is responding to every such attempt and attack by striking Hezbollah terrorist targets or opening fire toward the origins of the attacks.

also responsible for artillery operations in Hamas' Central Brigade. Several terrorist sites were targeted over the course of the night, including dozens of military tunnels, command centers, mosques used as operational war rooms, weapons storage sites and more.

•between Yesterday, the IDF eliminated two terror operatives near the security fence Israel and the Gaza Strip, one of whom was a Hamas "Nukhba"

operative. •killed Yesterday, SSGT (res.) Omer Balva, a reservist in the Artillery Corps, was by anti-tank missile fire adjacent to the northern border. The IDF will Northern Arena not stand by as its soldiers and civilians are attacked. •tank Hezbollah’s ongoing aggression against Israel has continued with antiHomefront missiles fired towards northern communities. In all cases, the IDF responded to the sources of fire. The IDF is carefully monitoring the region •other Israel continues to be targeted by rocket barrages fired by Hamas and and on at least two occasions, today and yesterday, Israeli forces identified terrorist organizations in Gaza and southern Lebanon, including Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah.

•bat.Since Hamas started this war, 307 IDF soldiers have been killed in com210 hostages are being held hostage by Hamas in Gaza, and 100 people are still missing. Approximately 7,000 rockets have been launched toward Israeli territory, with 550 rockets misfiring and falling within Gaza:

Day 16 Key Points

terrorist cells attempting to launch anti-tank missiles and neutralized the threats. A UAV launched from Lebanon was intercepted Sunday morning by the Israeli Aerial Defense Array.

•which The same system had also intercepted a rocket launched at an Israeli UAV was not damaged. On two occasions over the past day, mortars and rockets were fired at Israel.

•tank On Saturday, an IDF soldier was severely injured, he was hit by an antimissile in the Bar'am area and later succumbed to his wounds. Two

additional soldiers were slightly injured and received medical treatment at the scene.

Homefront •theTheviolent Ayatollah regime in Iran continues to play a negative role; it is behind actions of Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen and •nately Hamas and other terrorist organizations in Gaza continue to indiscrimiother militias in Iraq and Syria, and is striving to escalate the conflict, as target the Israeli home front. Over the past day, rockets were fired demonstrated by the firing of missiles by the Houthis from Yemen towards Israel.

•ofIran is not only a threat towards regional peace but threatens the stability the entire world; its attempts to fan the fire could lead to acts of violence around the world.

•theThere is an increasing danger of escalation on the northern front, due to ongoing attacks from Lebanon, which have resulted in casualties. Israel is not interested in opening a northern front but is prepared for this sce16 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

from Gaza towards central and southern Israel. The IDF also released data that some 550 rockets fired from Gaza have misfired since the start of the war, killing and wounding civilians in Gaza.

•andIn inlightorder of the ongoing threat to the Israeli home front from the north, to ensure operational flexibility, the Ministry of Defense has

expanded the evacuation of northern communities, adding another 14 communities to the list. To date, some 120,000 Israeli civilians have been asked to evacuate in southern and northern Israel.


ISRAEL

•307212families families have been notified that their loved ones were abducted, and were notified that their loved ones were killed in action.

•twoHamas efforts to target Israel continued as well. On Monday afternoon, UAVs were launched from Gaza and thwarted by the IDF. In addition, an

Judea and Samaria

•toThe IDF continues to operate on both sides of the security fence in order both gather intelligence and improve IDF operational flexibility for the

• In a joint IDF and Israeli Security Agency (ISA) operation, the IDF con-

ducted an aerial strike on an underground terror compound which was set up by terrorists inside the Al-Ansar Mosque in Jenin. The mosque contained a Hamas and Islamic Jihad terror cell that Israeli intelligence had identified as planning an imminent terror attack. The mosque was used by the terrorists as a command center to plan the attacks and as a base for their execution. See below for more details.

Day 17 Key Points

hours, focusing on both Hamas operatives and military targets, including weapons storage sites, underground terrorist tunnels, command centers, observation posts and more.

•others While carrying out these missions, one IDF soldier was killed, and three were injured near Kissufim after a tank and engineering vehicle were targeted by an anti-tank squad in the Gaza Strip on Sunday.

•recovered Over 800 bodies of terrorists who invaded Israel on October 7th have been in southern Israel, and some 200 terrorists are being detained. •October The IDF continues to carefully monitor southern Israel in the wake of 7th’s attack. As part of these efforts, a pink school bag with an •ommendations Despite Hamas’s attempts to stop residents from following the IDF’s recto temporarily move to southern Gaza, over 700,000 Gazan

residents have already done so. Israeli security forces checked the 14 truckloads of humanitarian aid containing food, water and medicine that crossed into Gaza through the Rafah crossing on Sunday. The IDF has reiterated that it will not allow any aid to reach Hamas terrorists.

•anti-tank An IDF soldier was killed by an missile fired from the •northern Attacks from Lebanon on Israel’s border continued, includ-

next stages of the war.

explosive device was in the area of Kissufim. This bag was carried by Hamas terrorists in the October 7th attack and contains a remotely activated explosive device, and explosives weighing about 7 kilograms. Click HERE for more information.

•targets The IDF struck hundreds of in Gaza over the last 24

Gaza Strip near Kissufim.

anti-tank missile cell was identified and targeted overnight by an IDF tank.

Northern Israel

Kibbutz Nir Oz was one of the Israeli communities whose residents were brutally attacked, massacred, and kidnapped by Hamas terrorists on Oct. 7

ing an attempted rocket launch, two UAVs that were launched, and the identification of an anti-tank missile cell. These attacks were prevented by swift IDF action.

Updated Statistics

•tank On the northern border, Hezbollah terrorist attacks continue with antimissiles fired at communities and military posts. The IDF continues to quickly identify and eliminate the abilities of terror cells preparing to launch attacks. Just on the last day, the IDF struck eight such cells, seven before they even launched rockets.

•geted. Since the beginning of the war, over twenty Hezbollah cells have been tarOn Monday afternoon, a UAV attempted to penetrate Israeli airspace from Lebanon via the sea, before being intercepted by the Israeli Aerial Defense Array.

• The IDF will continue to respond to every attempt or attack on its forces. The Israeli Homefront

•andHamas in the south and Hezbollah in the north continue to fire rockets launch UAVs at Israeli communities and military posts, with sirens sounding in southern Israel, Be’er Sheva, and in northern Israel.

Operational Updates: Gaza

•iansThehave National Emergency Management Authority said some 120,000 civilbeen relocated from southern and northern Israel. •hostage To date, 222 families have been notified that their loved ones were taken in the Gaza Strip and 308 families of soldiers were notified that their loved ones were killed in action. Reach Out to Us

•paring The IDF continues to strike Hamas military targets in the Gaza Strip, prefor the intensification of operations in order to dismantle the Hamas Consul General Sultan-Dadon and our team are available organization.

•were Over the last day, hundreds of targets were struck. Two of these targets located in the vicinity of a mosque, as Hamas continues to use civilian infrastructure for terrorist activity.

•October The IDF also continues to ensure that all those involved in the attacks on 7 are brought to justice.

to answer questions from the media. Please send an email to publicaffairs@atlanta.mfa.gov.il to request an interview/statement. If you would like to get in contact with Israelis on the ground who are available to give interviews, please contact us at jewishcommunity@atlanta.mfa.gov.il If you have any questions or inquiries, please feel free to reach out to our Consulate at jewishcommunity@atlanta.mfa.gov.il ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 17


ISRAEL

Israel Support Rally Draws Thousands By Dave Schechter A desire to demonstrate support for Israel drew an estimated 3,500 to 4,000 people the evening of Tuesday Oct.10 to the City Springs complex in Sandy Springs. They held signs that read, “Atlanta Stand with Israel,” waved small Israeli flags, and wore stickers proclaiming, “My Heart is with Israel.” The nearly 1,100seat Byers Theatre and 400-seat Studio Theatre were packed, and the city fire marshal’s office estimated that another 2,000 to 2,500 people watched the event on a screen on the lawn outside. Upwards of 1,000 watched the event online. “I hate that we have to gather like this, but I love that I have all of you to gather with,” Eric Robbins, president and CEO of the Jewish Federation of Atlanta, said as he welcomed those indoors and outdoors. The politicians in attendance, from the state, county, and municipal levels, gathered on stage to sing the United States national anthem. The Israeli national anthem, “Hatikvah,” was sung by the Jewish religious and communal leaders. A connection between the Jewish community of Atlanta and Israel was the theme of remarks by Rabbi Daniel Dorsch, senior rabbi of Congregation Etz Chaim. “We say tonight, as allies, you are not alone and from here, 6,000 miles away, we see your pain,” said Dorsch, who also is president of the Atlanta Rabbinical Association. “We share with you in your grief, and we stand shoulder to shoulder with you in your moment and time of need.” The loudest and most sustained applause of the evening came in response to Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul’s declaration that, in response to the Hamas attacks, “Israel must do what Israel must do.” Georgia’s Republican Gov. Brian Kemp and Democratic U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock each provided a video. “We condemned these attacks early on and will continue to stand with the people of Israel and the Jewish people here at home,” Kemp said. Warnock, who is also senior pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church, said, “Please know and do not doubt for a minute that I am with you in spirit and in solidarity. More importantly, G-d is with you.” His prayer for peace did not specifically condemn Hamas, which may have contributed to the lukewarm applause and the smattering of boos heard inside the theater. 18 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Thousands of community members gathered at City Springs to show their support for Israel

The community came together to show their solidarity with Israel // Photo Credit: Ellis Vener/Special for the Atlanta Jewish Times

The community showed its support for Israel at the rally at City Springs // Photo Credit: Ellis Vener/ Special for the Atlanta Jewish Times

Community members of all ages were in attendance at the Israel rally at City Springs // Photo Credit: Ellis Vener/Special for the Atlanta Jewish Times

Community members, young and old, showed their pride for Israel at the rally // Photo Credit: Ellis Vener/Special for the Atlanta Jewish Times

Georgia’s other Democratic U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff, who is Jewish, has been in China with a bi-partisan Senate delegation. Josh Altman, Ossoff’s national security

adviser, delivered a statement on his behalf that referred to the “unconscionable brutality” and “utter depravity” of the terror attacks. Altman said that the del-

egation would be returning earlier than scheduled from a trip that also was to include stops in South Korea and Japan. He urged anyone needing consular support


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A young boy watches his father put on tefillin at the community rally for Israel // Photo Credit: Ellis Vener/ Special for the Atlanta Jewish Times

to assist relatives and friends in Israel to contact Ossoff’s office. The most animated speaker was Rev. Gerald Durley, pastor emeritus at Providence Missionary Baptist Church and a veteran of both the civil rights movement and interfaith activity. From behind a lectern draped with an Israeli flag, the 81-year-old African American minister commanded, “If you love Israel, stand to your feet” and the audience in all three tiers of the Byers Theatre stood. “I’ve come this evening to personally express outrage . . . to unapologetically denounce the barbaric acts of Hamas. My friends here tonight, know that you are not alone in your sorrow. Collectively, we have a moral and ethic responsibility to come together,” receiving a standing ovation when he concluded. The next speaker, Rabbi Alexandria Shuval-Weiner, of Temple Beth Tikvah, smiled and said “And I get to follow that,” before she delivered Psalm 121, which begins: “A song for ascents. I shall raise my eyes to the mountains, from where will my help come?” and ends with “The Lord will guard your going out and your coming in from now and to eternity.” Rabbi Adam Starr, of Congregation Ohr HaTorah, paid tribute to Dekel Swissa, a 23-year-old Israeli solder, killed in combat with the terrorists. In 2018-2019, Dekel was one of the shinshnim, young

Israelis who come to Atlanta to live and work with schools and communal organizations. “He loved the Atlanta community, and he loved the institutions that he served, including my own synagogue,” Starr said, before reading reflections from three families with whom Dekel lived in Atlanta. Shaked Angel, regional director of the Israeli American Council in Atlanta, said that when he hears the names of friends and loved ones killed, “my throat chokes and my heart weeps.” Angel decried antisemitism on high school and college campuses, saying, “It is important that we stand for the state of Israel without compromise and hesitation.” Israel’s Consul General to the Southeast, based in Atlanta, Ambassador Anat Sultan-Dadon received a standing ovation when she introduced herself. “Saturday, October 7th, has changed Israel as we knew it,” she said. “We are at war, a war not of our choice but one that was forced on us,” Sultan-Dadon said, adding, “We will do everything necessary to protect our country and our citizens, as is the right and duty of any sovereign nation.” The diplomat also paid tribute to the speech in support of Israel delivered earlier in the day by President Joe Biden, calling it “a beautiful testament of true friendship and ally-ship and a clear moral compass.” Sultan-Dadon received a second standing ovation at the end of her remarks, when she declared, “Terror will not prevail. Israel will prevail. Am Yisrael Chai,” the last sentence Hebrew that translates to “The people of Israel live.” Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens recalled a 10-day trip he made to Israel some years ago, including a visit to Kibbutz Kfar Aza, where several dozen dead, including an estimated 40 babies, were found when Israeli troops arrived and subdued Hamas terrorists. “It is horrific. It is heartbreaking. too many lives have been lost. Too many people injured. Too many people suffering. The dignity of human life has been stripped away,” Dickens said. The attendance, inside and outside, was at least three times that of a rally against antisemitism held in the Byers Theatre in January 2020. Tuesday night’s rally was organized over a couple of days and backed by some 30 organizations as cosponsors and coordinated with the Sandy Springs city council, staff, and police. “And I hope we never have to do this again,” Robbins said at the end of the evening. ì

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ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 19


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Father of Local Israeli Killed in Hamas Attack By Jan Jaben-Eilon While many Atlanta Jews and Israelis have deep connections to Israel and are reeling from the repercussions of the disastrous attack on the country on Saturday morning, Oct. 7, probably none are as directly impacted as Avishay Ben Zvi. In Atlanta for more than a decade, Ben Zvi learned that day that his 80-yearold father, Amitai, was killed on Kibbutz Nir Oz during the massacre conducted by Hamas terrorists on more than 20 Israeli communities along the border with the Gaza strip that resulted in the deaths of at least 1,200 civilians. As of Oct. 17, Ben Zvi said his father’s name was not yet officially listed as dead. “It takes time as they have a lot of bodies to identify,” he said. “We had evidence on Saturday that my father was killed.” His father’s Filipino caregiver managed to call a friend and tell her that “my father was shot and that he [himself] had been kidnapped” and apparently taken hostage to Gaza along with about 200 others – mostly civilians – that included citizens

20 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Less than two miles from Gaza, this is how Kibbutz Nir Oz looked before Oct. 7.

from the U.S. as well as many other countries. Ben Zvi’s father had Parkinson’s disease. “The kibbutz took the body from the house into a central frozen storage location,” said Ben Zvi. “If he had died naturally on Oct. 6, it would have been easier,” said Ben Zvi, who grew up on the kibbutz which is less than two miles from the Gaza border. When he was growing up, he remem-

Kibbutz Nir Oz after the attack by Hamas terrorists.

bers going to the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of Gaza. Of the 400 residents who lived on the kibbutz on Oct. 6, 78 are missing or kidnapped and 160 have been evacuated to Eilat. “It’s unclear about the rest but some of them may have been killed,” said Ben Zvi, who had his 50th birthday on Oct.15. “We’re trying to help the residents because the government of Israel isn’t

helping the evacuated people very much,” according to Ben Zvi. “I grew up with 11 people my age and all have either parents, kids or spouses who have either been killed or kidnapped. These are my extended family,” said Ben Zvi. When he got married nearly 25 years ago, 250 from the kibbutz attended the wedding. “I’m mostly worried and not sleeping because I’m worried about my extended


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Magen David Adom has always been there for the Israeli people. Now we need you to be there for them.

Israeli-born Atlantan Dotan Harpak said the network of Atlanta Israeli protesters have now mobilized to help their families and friends in Israel.

Amitai Ben Zvi, shown along with his caregiver who is now a hostage in Gaza, was 80 when he was shot and killed Oct. 7.

Avishay and Shirley Ben Zvi and their twin 12-year-old daughters attended many of the Atlanta protests against the Israeli government.

family. We’re trying to raise donations to help them.” He added that they are also trying to help open a corridor into Gaza to get much-needed medication to the hostages. Ben Zvi’s uncle, his father’s youngest brother, lives in Pittsburgh. Ben Zvi’s sister lives in California and his two brothers live in Israel. After spending a day in a shelter, one brother and his family drove north out of the area. The other brother lives in the northern part of Israel. In addition to his four children, Ben Zvi’s father had 10 grandchildren. A former officer in the Israeli army, Ben Zvi has lived in Atlanta since 2012. He works in high tech. Both he, and his wife, Shirley, are now U.S. citizens. Along with their twin 12-year-old daughters, the couple have been among the Israelis who have protested in front of the Israeli consulate and at other metro locations, against the government’s moves to weaken Israel’s judicial system and place more power in the executive branch of government. Since the war started on Oct. 7, those who have for months protested in support of Israel’s democracy have now redirected their attention and energies to helping Israelis in any way they can. His wife, Shirley, is a couples and

family therapist with a specialty in grief and has experience with trauma and anxiety. She said that she has opened her therapy door, virtually and in person, to the Atlanta Israeli-Jewish community to help them, in either English or Hebrew, pro bono. “I can see individuals, couples and families,” she wrote on a WhatsApp group. Other Israelis in Atlanta have distributed fliers about the many hostages held captive in Gaza, among them many children and elderly and sick and injured. They are raising money to support whatever is needed by the hundreds of thousands of soldiers who have been called up into the army. Many of the Israelis have gathered in impromptu get-togethers to help support each other. “Over the past year, a network of Israelis and Jews organized in Atlanta, and elsewhere in the U.S. and around the world to show their concern” over the direction of the current Israeli government led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said Israeli-born Atlantan Dotan Harpak. “Following Oct. 7, this group quickly mobilized to support those impacted by the war, especially in light of the government not fully functioning as needed. Thousands have mobilized and are doing everything to support them.” ì

Even while rockets are falling around them or gunmen are at large, the men and women of Magen David Adom risk their lives to save the lives of others. Now, as Israel enters the next phase of the war and the possibility of a second front, MDA needs your help! More ambulances, protective equipment, and medical supplies are urgently needed. Support Magen David Adom today and help saves lives. Donate at afmda.org/give.

ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 21


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Former Atlantans that Live in Israel By Jan Jaben-Eilon Perhaps former Atlanta Rabbis Mario Karpuj and Analia Bortz said it best during a Zoom meeting with their former Congregation Or Hadash from their home in Jerusalem, “We’re safe, but we’re not okay.” They added that they have no regrets about making Aliyah four years ago. Former Atlantan Adam Frank, also a rabbi, told the AJT, “Life here is changed forever; still there is no place I would rather be.” Days after hundreds of Hamas terrorists penetrated the Israeli border and massacred their way into more than 20 Israeli communities, killing 1,000 soldiers and civilians – babies, Holocaust survivors, whole families – Israelis remained shocked by the deadly incursion, the worst the country has experienced in 50 years. But they are not shocked into paralysis. On the contrary, all are contributing to help the country move forward, however angry and depressed they are. “You see the worst and the best of people,” Bortz said to more than 120 people in

22 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Zach Rosenzweig with wife, Yoella, and son, Ariel.

“This isn’t going to be a repeat of the Six-Day War. It will be long and it’s hard to know what we’ll need,” predicted Rachel Broyde.

Rabbi Adam Frank and his daughter, Tamar, from a few years ago. She told him, “Abba, I love Israel and I loved living here, but that was when I felt safe because of our army. I don’t feel safe anymore.”

the virtual meeting that was arranged just three days after the astonishing attack on Israel that included thousands of rockets targeting as far away as Jerusalem. The “worst” that she mentioned were the hundreds, if not thousands, of heavily armed Hamas terrorists that managed to destroy the lauded Israeli security and infiltrate

the country. Deemed a terrorist organization by Israel and the U.S., Hamas controls the Gaza Strip. The “best” were the Israelis who, under extraordinary circumstances, immediately lined up to give blood – including her and other family members – or accumulate all kinds of supplies to bring to survivors of the attacks along Gaza who were transported to hotels along the Dead Sea and in the south to Eilat, as well as supplies for the 300,000 reserve soldiers called up for duty. As Karpuj noted, the Israel Defense Forces normally can provide equipment and food for its soldiers but gathering everything necessary for 300,000 so quickly meant that citizens had to help as well. He offered to accept donations through Venmo or Zelle to help the soldiers. “Every penny goes straight to the soldiers,” he said, providing the link to do so. Israelis who were less threatened by the rocket attacks collected food and clothing to deliver to the survivors who were taken to safe hotels sometimes in their pajamas due to the early morning attack and without any money. There were so many cars delivering the supplies to the hotels that the parking lots quickly filled, said Bortz. “People are taking destiny in their own arms,” she said. The couple expressed a particular connection to residents of the kibbutzim along Gaza because, Karpuj said, many were settled by people from South America, birthplace for the two Conservative rabbis. While incredibly saddened by the evolving news from the historic attack on Israel, the couple noted some sense of normalcy in their lives, including going to the grocery store between sirens warning of incoming rockets. “It’s chaotic and breathtakingly sad.

There’s a new sense of vulnerability and fragility,” said Bortz, “but we see people coming together.” Some former Atlantans are more directly affected. Frank’s 19-year-old son, Nadav, had joined the paratroopers just two months earlier. According to Frank, son of Atlantans Lois and Larry Frank, “He was called back to his base on Saturday night. During the drive, Nadav broke down in tears for a moment – not out of fear, but out of pain. In that moment, my son grew 10-fold in my eyes. We are hoping that the IDF’s soldier situation is such that our son will not be needed in any kind of fighting capacity.” But, of course, in this apparently unforeseen disaster – which many say resulted from intelligence and operational failures -- no one can predict the length and severity of the war, especially with reportedly more than 150 Israelis taken forcibly into Gaza as hostages. And the longer-term emotional toll on the country is also unpredictable. Frank’s 15-year-old daughter, Tamar, said to him, “Abba, I love Israel and I loved living here, but that was when I felt safe because of our army. I don’t feel safe anymore.” The Frank family, along with many Atlanta families, are also distressed by the report that Hersh Goldberg-Polin was among those taken hostage after losing part of his arm to a grenade thrown by Hamas terrorists. The 23-year-old who had spent many Passovers at Ramah Darom was among those thousands of Israelis enjoying the music festival near Gaza when the Hamas infiltration started. Frank called him “one of our dear friends.” Zach Rosenzweig, an Atlanta native who attended The Epstein School and The Weber School and worked as an AJT intern as a high school senior, made Ali-


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Originally from South America, former Congregation Rabbi Mario Karpuj and his wife, Rabbi Analia Bortz, feel a special connection to residents of the kibbutzim along Gaza because many were settled by people from South America.

yah in 2012. He lives with his wife, Yoella, and son, Ariel, in Kfar Saba in the center of the country. He said this is a “painfully dark and horrific time to be an Israeli and Jew. When you see Israelis being killed, entire families erased and know it could have been you. I think of my wife and son.” But Rosenzweig, son of Michael Rosenzweig and Shelli Bank, said there’s “incredible resolve nationally. We have no choice but to fight this, despite the grievous divisions and mistakes that led to this attack.” When Rosenzweig served in the IDF, he was in the spokesperson unit. While there, he helped monitor social media. He is now the Israel-based representative for the U.S. organization Israel on Campus Coalition, doing the same kind of work, at the same time finishing up a PhD at Hebrew University. He said he hasn’t been called up for reserve duty yet, but he would like to be. “This is a type of service,” speaking of his day job. “It requires monitoring what’s happening closely. There’s a lot of work involved in exposing U.S. audiences to what is happening.” He added, that as a dual citizen, he felt very inspired by President Joe Biden’s statements the last few days. Former Atlantan Rachel Broyde, who lives in the Jerusalem neighborhood of Abu Tor, is the CEO of the Efrat Development Foundation. Efrat is a community of 3,000 families, or about 14,500 residents, of which at least 80 percent are religious. It is considered a suburb of Jerusalem although it sits outside the Green Line or in the territories referred to as either the West Bank or Judea. Her job since March is to raise funds to support the community known to be home to many immigrants from the U.S. According to Broyde, one in every

three families in Efrat has someone who has been called up to serve in the IDF. That means children are often missing a parent, or two, who are now working to protect the country. When the AJT spoke with Broyde, she had just submitted an urgent request for funding for emergency and medical supplies to a large foundation. “This one community in the U.S. needed me to send the request by the end of the day.” Known as Keren Efrat, the foundation is raising funds to cover urgent needs in light of the war. “We are working with the army, first responders and the home front command to make sure soldiers receive the assistance they need.” It is also asking for help to cover immediate social services and mental health services for children “and the families of reservists/ soldiers who are in dire need,” as well as hosting families from southern Israel. She said all donations are tax deductible in Israel and in the U.S. Besides her husband, Broyde has a sister living in Israel, and her father, Rabbi Michael Broyde, an Emory University School of Law professor, has been there visiting since just after Yom Kippur. “It’s been very hectic and scary,” said Rachel, especially citing the fact that no one knows what will come next. “This isn’t going to be a repeat of the Six-Day War. It will be long and it’s hard to know what we’ll need.” She said she falls asleep only when her “body at some point just passes out. People call and text me all the time.” She says she’s buoyed by the support she receives from friends in the Diaspora. Her father has used part of his time in Israel to write his thoughts for Cross Currents, urging America’s Jews to change their attitudes toward Israel, from seeing Israel as Disneyland to seeing it as Motherland. “There are so many good things about Israel,” he told the AJT, such as the food and experiences. “There are great reasons to come here, but that’s the Disneyland approach. You leave when it starts raining.” The Motherland approach is that “we come running in times of need. I will leave when I am ready to go. I do not want to be in the group that leaves the motherland when it starts to rain, and it is raining now. When the situation is stable, I will leave and then I will come back again as I cannot live without the motherland.” He noted that he isn’t teaching any classes this semester at Emory. On the day that Rabbi Broyde urged U.S. Jews to come to Israel and said, “they certainly shouldn’t cancel their planned trips,” the U.S. State Department raised its travel advisory to Level 3, asking citizens to reconsider travel to Israel. ì

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Israeli Psychologist Offers Advice on Children & War By Bob Bahr Sharona Mital, an Israeli psychologist and a crisis intervention specialist, is working with children in Israel who have survived the recent invasion by Hamas terrorists. Mital, who has a PhD from Temple University in Philadelphia, has years of experience that date back to Israel’s 1973 Yom Kippur conflict counseling youngsters living with vivid memories of war. In a recent presentation for the Jewish Grandparents Network, she shared some of her strategies about how she talks with young people about the tragedy. The psychotherapist, who has been a long-time resident of Israel, told the online audience of over a hundred participants that the best starting point for such a conversation is not with the children but with yourself. “The most important step one is self-awareness,” Mital said. “We need to think about how are we responding to what’s happening in Israel. Even before we think about talking with our grand-

24 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Children, says Dr. Mital, are extremely sensitive to how their parents may be feeling.

kids, what are we feeling? I know that’s my tendency is to immediately say, okay, what can I do? How can I do things? And to keep myself very, quite busy as a way

of coping. Are we able to take a deep, deep breath and relax ourselves?” Mital is working with a group of Israeli children, who are as young as four, who escaped from their kibbutz in southern Israel when it was attacked. While they are highly traumatized by what they experienced, there are many other children, especially in America, far from the scene of the tragedy, who see pictures on the Internet or on news broadcasts that can have a profound effect on them and on their parents as well. Talking with children, Mital believes, can often be made more difficult when we don’t acknowledge our own discomfort. “A child knows exactly how mom feels. And yeah, they see what we feel. They feel what we feel, and they respond in return. They also know if we are avoiding and don’t want to talk about things. We don’t have to tell them, ‘Don’t talk about that.’ They sense it. They know it. Their antenna are very, very, key. And that’s one of the things that we need to realize when we’re talking to children, to grandchildren, is that a key factor is how we’re feeling and how we are coping.” With a clearer sense of how we are coping with the day’s news, we can start to understand children’s feelings. We shouldn’t rush to tell young people what we want them to know without taking the time to understand where they are at any given moment. “We need to try to understand what they know and how they understand the situation. We need to see what they’re feeling, what they’re thinking. And one of

Dr. Sharona Mital has experience working with children affected by war dating back to the 1973 Yom Kippur conflict.

the difficulties especially with the older ones, they have a lot of ideas of their own and we need to ask them to tell us what they personally think.” Often, when she is working with children in Israel, she finds that her most important ally is a sense of patience. Children often take time to give us a better understanding of what they are experiencing. It may not always come out in conversations we may have with them, but in the way they interact with others and even the way they express themselves in non-verbal ways through art, for instance. What she has found in working with those who have been deeply affected by war is not to be too quick to impose our own experiences on them. “We need to talk with them, not at them. And we need to be able to share ideas that are different with honesty and without trying to debate and win them over, especially when they’re older.” In her own experience in working with children, she has found that one of the most important contributions that a parent can make to their children is to give them a sense of hope about the future. She mentions that the English translation of the title of Israel’s national anthem, “Hatikvah,” is, after all, hope. “Our focus,” Dr. Mital believes,” shouldn’t be on the terrible things people have seen and are feeling, but what can we do, both children and adults? What can we do now, in very concrete ways, to help change what is going on in the world. It’s simple, but it creates a sense of resilience, a great sense that, yes, we’re going to get beyond this.” ì


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Atlantans Had Harrowing Departure from Israel By Jan Jaben-Eilon When air raid sirens started blaring over Israel early Saturday morning, Oct. 7, thousands of American Jews -- business people, tourists, and high school students -- were suddenly trapped in a war zone. Flights were quickly canceled, and everyone scrambled to get information and find any wayå out of the country. One week later, the U.S. government finally engaged charter flights to start transporting more than 20,000 U.S. citizens who had contacted the U.S. embassy saying they wanted to leave. Flights were to head for Frankfurt and Athens. And on Monday, Oct. 16, an emergency evacuation ship was scheduled to depart from Haifa, bound for Cyprus and designated only for “U.S. nationals and their immediate family members with a valid travel document.” But many Atlanta-area residents who found themselves in a totally unforeseen, unfathomable situation didn’t wait for the U.S. government. Some of those departures may have been just one shade shy of a miracle. Seventeen-year-old Fayetteville resident Lyla Caplan said she was on a field trip in Jerusalem with her fellow students who were attending the Union for Reform Judaism Heller High based on the Alexander Muss High School in Israel campus in Hod Hasharon when she was awakened by sirens and banging on her hotel room door. “It was terrifying,” she told the AJT. The group returned to the Muss campus hours later and slept in the campus bomb shelter until a plane could be arranged for her fellow Heller students as well as dozens more high school students attending various Muss programs. On Thursday, Oct. 12, after an overnight in Rome, about 100 students landed in Boston, from where they traveled on to their home cities and eager parents’ arms. While Caplan and her friends were being told they would need to leave Israel long before the end of their programs, unbeknownst to them, an Atlanta-based CEO of an Israeli travel agency was frantically trying to orchestrate their safe escape. Cheri Scheff Levitan modestly told the AJT that she “didn’t do anything anyone wouldn’t do,” but as she narrated on Facebook her adventurous attempts to organize a flight for the students to anywhere from which they could return to the U.S., she was hailed by many parents as a hero. As one parent wrote, “What you did was a miracle to get these kids on a plane. The fear and guilt that these parents are

Cheri Scheff Levitan (center) was visiting her sisters, Randi (on the left), who lives near Yavneh and Wendy (on the right) who lives near Haifa.

experiencing knowing that they sent their beautiful children for an amazing life experience and instead it turned into a war zone!!! What a true mitzvah!!!” Describing her challenges after her own return to Atlanta, the day before the teenagers, Levitan at times broke down in tears. She had been on a business trip to Israel which also allowed her to see her two sisters who live there, and their families. (A nephew in the IDF tank corps was called up while she was in Israel.) Jewish National Fund-USA, which operates the Muss program is a client of her company, Kenes Tours. Two days after the war broke out, a JNF executive called her with a plea, “Cheri, can you get our kids out?” “I had been a parent of a Muss student,” she said. Along with her thoughts of parents of current students, she thought, “if anything happens to these kids, what are the liabilities of a major non-profit?” One of her sisters questioned how she could arrange the complex operation, but she decided, “I can do this.” El Al wanted $1 million to charter a flight to take the teens out of Israel. “No one can okay an expenditure like that,” said Levitan. After she arranged for IsrAir to transport the kids to Rome, she called JNF at 4:30 in the morning, saying “I need you to say yes. What I cared about was getting all the kids on one plane.” Levitan credits a team of people almost across the globe with the myriad details and arrangements, from getting the kids to the airport near Tel Aviv, upon landing in Rome, finding three buses to take them to their hotel rooms which needed to be reserved, getting them

Fayetteville resident Lyla Caplan, 17, (on left) with a friend before the war started in Israel on Oct. 7.

meals, and again getting buses to return them to the airport the next morning. “It was a major group effort in which everyone pulled together. I told my team not to take no for an answer. It really did take a village,” she said. While Levitan was focused on getting the students out, she was also searching for her own way to leave Israel, and running back and forth between her hotel room and the stairwell in her hotel which was considered the “safe space” when Hamas rockets were flying overhead. “My first experience with bomb shelters was when I was 12,” she recounted. She knew the drill: shoes by the door, bottled water, keys ready and phone charged. She slept in her clothes. When she eventually got on her El Al flight for London – after terrifying few moments delayed on the tarmac hearing rockets overhead – she said she felt sick. “I was very nervous,” she said. Once the plane cleared Israeli airspace, she had a good cry. And when Wi-Fi became available, she got to work. “I worked the entire flight.” Upon landing, an airplane employee announced that there would be “police and government officials” greeting the passengers to ask if they needed help dealing with their trauma or to document war crimes. “This was another first for me,” Levitan laughed. “There are friends overseas who care about us.” Levitan wasn’t the only one crying as she left Israel. After Caplan and her fellow students arrived at the Israeli airport, they were rushed into bomb shelters as sirens went off. “I broke down when I got

on the plane and we were safe,” she said. But she “100 percent” wants to return to Israel when she can. She had arrived on Aug. 23 and expected to stay there until Dec. 21. Coming from a small Jewish community, she had looked forward to meeting new people. She had traveled to Israel twice before, once with her family in 2019. Leaving Israel was “devastating and heart-breaking,” said Caplan. At first, the students didn’t want to leave until the war situation was explained to them. The students were told to pack only one bag, under 50 pounds, leaving the rest of their belongings to be shipped later. With the rest of their time, the students put together 1,600 care packages to send to hospitals in Israel, and, according to a JNF spokesperson, the students – on their own – raised more than $100,000. JNF has a goal to raise $10 million within the next 30 days as part of its resilience campaign. Meanwhile, the Muss campus is the new temporary home for Israelis displaced from their homes in Israel’s south because of the war. “The hundreds of beds there will be fully utilized,” the spokesperson said. Referring to the students, he added, “We talk about them [the students] as future leaders, but the truth is that future is today.” And, in an understatement about their airlift home: “People were working around the clock to find a solution. It was certainly a heavy lift.” At press time, Delta Air Lines had canceled all flights to Tel Aviv through Oct. 31. American Airlines canceled its flights through Dec. 4. ì ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 25


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Emory Holds Vigil for Israel

Rabbi Ilan Schwartz leads a prayer during the community vigil at Emory on Oct. 11.

The downpour couldn’t keep away the crowds as their gathered at Emory for a community vigil.

Hundreds gathered at the Emory University campus on Oct. 11 for a community vigil to support Israel.

To show its support for Israel, the students of Emory University hosted a vigil on the school campus on Oct. 11. The community gathered at the corner of Kilgo Circle and Canon Chapel bearing umbrellas as even the downpour couldn’t prevent them from standing in solidarity with Israel. The event drew people from all walks of life, not just Jews, as the community came out as a sign of unity in the face of international terrorism. One student, who wished to remain anonymous, commented, “I am not Jewish, but I am here to support my friends.” Her friend said, “I am Jewish, and I am here to support my extended family.” The Emory Hillel students helped organize the vigil within just a matter of days. They had just returned from fall break and utilized social media to help get the word out about the event. Several rabbis, including Rabbi Ilan Schwartz and Rabbi Zalman Lipskier, encouraged the crowds to stay prayerful,

26 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

peaceful, and supportive of each other. Pazit Kahlon Shelnutt, professor of Hebrew studies, stated, “I have family in Israel now. My family is from North Africa. All I can do is to pray. They are scared.” Additionally, Shelnutt commented that people go to volunteer in kibbutzim from all over the world and that “they are still recovering bodies from those kibbutzim, so people from many countries may be in the body counts.” Toward the end of the event, Rabbi Lipskier, along with the Emory Hillel students, began singing, which drew in more people, and the energy turned to dancing. For just a few moments, Atlanta Jews could find solace in each other, as the rest of the nation waited for more news updates and information to come out of the Middle East. Tiffany Parks contributed to this report ì Compiled by AJT Staff


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ISRAEL

Haddassah Demands for Hamas to Release Hostages Hadassah President Rhoda Smolow and CEO Naomi Adler issued this statement following a meeting of Jewish community leaders with members of Congress and the Administration: “Hadassah is appalled by the shocking videos documenting Hamas’ brutal abuse of the hostages it took from Israel in violation of international law and human decency – including women, children, elderly, and disabled people. We urgently call on leaders in the U.S. and around the globe to demand, in unequivocal terms, that Hamas immediately release all of the nearly 200 hostages. At the same time, we urge leaders to call on Hamas to stop using innocent Palestinian civilians as human shields and stop blocking and stealing humanitarian aid meant to help Palestinian civilians. “Hadassah stands with Israel and implores leaders in the U.S., around the world, and at the United Nations, to condemn the terror attacks by Hamas targeting civilians, provide Israel with the support it needs to defend the Jewish State from terrorism, and to work together to

A burnt house in Kibbutz Be’eri after the deadly assault by Hamas, Oct. 11, 2023 // Photo Credit: Lazar Berman/Times of Israel

heal the devastation in the region. “Hadassah is working around the clock to support the Hadassah Medical Organization, which is treating some of the most seriously wounded patients. As we continue our efforts, the need for emergency equipment is critical now and

in the coming weeks in anticipation of an influx of more patients with complex injuries. “Since our founding in 1912, Hadassah has stood side-by-side with Israel through tumultuous times, including the War of Independence, the Six-Day

War and the Yom Kippur War. Hadassah has also responded with Israel to world events that led to human suffering on a large scale, including the war in Ukraine and the devastating earthquake in Turkey earlier this year.” ì Compiled by AJT Staff

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We're in this together. "At the Solidarity Gathering the other night, I couldn’t believe the outpouring of support for Israel. To know that I am living in a community where so many people care so deeply, means a lot to me." -Matan, Atlanta Shinshin, age 18

Generous contributions from Atlanta-based donors have made an incredible impact this week by raising a record amount of emergency dollars for Israel. The needs are enormous, and we are in this together. Make a small or large commitment to support one of seven efforts of the Israel Emergency Campaign directly via your Donor-Advised Fund portal. Contact Ghila Sanders at gsanders@jewishatlanta.org to learn about how your money is getting put to use to help Israel in this hour.

Scan code to learn more about/log into your Donor-Advised Funds ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 29


ISRAEL

Standing, Alone, for Israel By Dave Schechter Standing alone requires the courage of your convictions, particularly when you are holding an Israeli flag across the street from a pro-Palestinian rally outside the Israeli consulate in midtown Atlanta. On Oct. 8, the day after the Hamas slaughter of Israelis in southern Israel, Talia Segal, a fourth-year biomedical engineering student at Georgia Tech, stood on the opposite sidewalk on Spring Street. In the days that followed, as she tried to make sense of the horrors, Segal penned an essay, a draft of which she shared with a reporter. “Life is spinning around me like nothing has changed, and I sit here watching through tear filled eyes with my heart thousands of miles away, feeling like my world is upside down,” she wrote. “I’m exhausted,” Segal, president of the Hillel chapter at Georgia Tech, continued. “I’m tired of trying to explain myself. I’m tired of seeing people justify, celebrate, and glorify the murder of my brothers and sisters. I’m tired of trying to convince people that they need to wake up. I’m tired of calling my grandma and hearing the phone ring, hoping she is still there to answer.” Segal’s grandmother, along with an aunt, uncle, and three cousins live in the Israeli city of Mod’in, located along a highway midway between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. The call by a Hamas leader for a global day of jihad on Oct. 13 against Jews scared Segal. “I thought for a minute that maybe if they killed me, maybe then, people would wake up. I even texted my mom to tell her that if something happened to me, I would be happy with the life I had lived. But then I realized that the people who don’t care about Jewish lives never will, and dying would only cause more pain to the people closest to me,” she wrote. Segal was feeling alone. “Silence and complacency in the face of evil are the problem. The world sat and watched as 6 million Jewish people were killed. And now, my own friends sit and watch as my people are raped, kidnapped, tortured, and slaughtered— silently,” she wrote. Standing alone, silently, holding the Israeli flag (its border including the colors of the LGBTQ flag) across the street from where a crowd was chanting, was Segal’s way of making a statement. 30 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Students and members from the community took part in a solidarity rally for Israel held on the Georgia Tech campus on Oct. 11 // Photo Courtesy of Talia Segal

Hundreds of students and community members gathered in the rain on the Georgia Tech campus on Oct. 11 to show their support for Israel // Photo Courtesy of Talia Segal

Speaking to the AJT, Segal said, “I spent Saturday [Oct. 7, the day of the Hamas attacks] just feeling helplessness, worried about my family in Israel, knowing that I wanted to do something but not knowing what that would be.” Segal’s grandmother, aunt, and uncle emigrated to Israel from South Africa 25 years ago. Modi’in “is like a second home to me,” a font of childhood memories, Segal said. She spent three months in Israel two summers ago and six weeks there this past summer. Segal has been calling her grandmother twice a day. “From her perspective, it feels like COVID again,” with people staying home more. Modi’in was subjected to a barrage of rockets fired from Gaza on Oct. 16. Two of her cousins have been called up for reserve duty in the military and her uncle organized the import from South Africa of 650 sleeping bags for soldiers. Georgia Tech was on fall break and many of the school’s relatively small number of Jewish students were away. Segal had heard about the pro-Palestinian rally and decided to go, even if alone. Segal said that a few people walking

Georgia Tech fourth-year biomedical student Talia Segal was the lone Israel supporter at a pro-Palestine rally held on Oct. 8 // Screenshot from Atlanta News First video

by offered words of support, among them an Israeli who told her that he had lost two friends before in the Hamas attacks. Early in the rally, Segal heard organizers tell protesters not to engage with counter-protesters, though later several came and stood behind her, some yelling for her to go home, she said. “Atlanta police were around, making sure that everything was kept peaceful.” Students at Georgia Tech generally are more focused on STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) and less politically engaged, Segal said. There has been a pro-Palestinian vigil on campus, and Oct. 11 upwards of 300 pro-Israel students and non-students gathered for rally, despite rain. Georgia Tech President Angel Cabrera spoke to the gathering, as did Royi Ende, the Consul for Consular Affairs and Chief Administration Officer from the Israeli consulate. In an Oct. 12 blog post, Cabrera wrote, “I was moved by the vigil organized by Israeli and Jewish students on campus last night to mourn the lives lost to the senseless attacks on Israel last weekend. Like many of our students and colleagues, I struggle to comprehend

these acts of unspeakable violence. Having grown up in a country traumatized by terrorism and the anguish it leaves in its wake, I fail to understand how anyone can justify inflicting so much pain onto others on any grounds. “Amid the pain, I don’t lose hope. I found hope last night in the student leaders who brought our community together and the many non-Jewish people who showed up to grieve with their Jewish friends and let them know they are not alone. That spirit of community will be our best tool to support all whose families and friends who are directly affected by this terrible conflict.” Segal called Tech’s Jewish student community, which numbers perhaps 500 under-graduates and graduate students, “small, but mighty.” That includes Chabad and the AEPi chapter (“Free Palestine” was scrawled on the outside of the AEPi house on Oct. 15). “I really cannot speak highly enough of how appreciative I am of Chabad working with us in Hillel, and the boys at AEPi and everything they’re doing. I’ve really been impressed with how our community has come together.” ì


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ISRAEL

National Day of Jewish Service Tackles Food Insecurity

Volunteers assisting The Sandwich Project are pictured after packaging more than 4,000 bagels for those struggling with hunger.

More than 5,500 people across the country served to support food access as part of the National Day of Jewish Ser-

32 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

vice on Oct. 22, organized by the Jewish Service Alliance and powered by Repair the World.

The Jewish Service Alliance, powered by Repair the World, organized series of events to elevate service in Jewish community.

The National Day of Jewish Service included 90 service projects organized by 30 partner organizations across the country. The programs leverage the expertise of local nonprofit partners to provide relief to some of the 34 million people in the U.S. who are hungry (feedingamerica.org). In Atlanta, 65 volunteers assembled sandwiches with The Sandwich Project and packaged unsold bagels with Bagel Rescue. The team packaged 4,100 bagels to be dispersed throughout the community to those in need and assembled over 750 peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. The National Day of Jewish Service kicks off Service Matters: Building a Jewish Movement to harness the power of service as a defining force in American Jewish life. Following the National Day of Jewish Service, Repair the World hosted a B Mitzvah event to mark its 13th anniversary. Then, on Oct. 24, the Jewish Service Summit brought together hundreds of leaders and funders from the Jewish service movement to share their knowledge, experience, and strategies to mobilize Jews and their communities to meet pressing needs. Keynote speakers at the Summit included educator, author, TV personality, and chef Grace Ramirez, Zach Banner, NFL tackle and founder of the B3 Foundation which focuses on mentorship and education to support greater access to higher education for students of color, and Raven Schwam-Curtis, a public intellectual and social media influencer, as

Community members are pictured preparing peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for The Sandwich Project.

Community members across the country volunteered as part of 90plus service projects for the National Day of Jewish Service on Oct. 22.

well as a Repair the World service corps alumni. The Service Matters events concluded Oct. 25 with a Yom Iyun day of learning for Jewish educators, inspired by the Jewish service movement featuring Rabbi David Jaffe and Rabba Yaffa Epstein. The Jewish Service Alliance, powered by Repair the World, is a coalition of 40-plus Jewish organizations dedicated to enhancing and expanding service opportunities for young adults. The JSA is powered by Repair the World, an organization that mobilizes Jews and their communities to take action to pursue a just world, igniting a lifelong commitment to service. ì Compiled by AJT Staff


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ISRAEL PRIDE

TODAY IN ISRAELI HISTORY

Israeli army vehicles seen during a military raid in the West Bank city of Tulkarm on Oct. 19, 2023 // Photo Credit: Nasser Ishtayeh/Flash90/Times of Israel The Chords Bridge, Gesher HaMeitarim, was lit up to honor President Joe Biden during his visit to Israel // Photo Credit: Arnon Bossani

Jerusalem Thanks President Biden The Municipality of Jerusalem illuminated the walls of the Old City and the Chords Bridge (Gesher HaMeitarim) on Oct. 18) with the flags of Israel and the United States, to mark the solidarity visit to Israel of U.S. President Joe Biden. The Mayor of Jerusalem, Moshe Lion, stated, “Our capital city, Jerusalem, and the entire State of Israel welcome and express gratitude to U.S. President Joe Biden for the warm embrace he gave us all during his visit. President Biden is a true

Today in Israeli History Oct. 31, 1917: Supported by three British divisions, the Australian 4th Light Horse Brigade surprises the Turkish defenders and captures Beersheba in a single day, breaking the Ottoman defensive line near Gaza. Nov. 1, 1945: The Jewish Resistance Movement bombs more than 150 sites along the railway system of Mandatory Palestine and blows up three British gunboats in the Jaffa and Haifa harbors in the Night of the Trains. Arthur Balfour’s letter conveys the news to Lord Rothschild that the British government supports the creation of a Jewish homeland in Palestine.

Nov. 2, 1917: A letter from Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour reveals the British government’s endorsement of “the establishment in Palestine of a Jewish national home.” The wording is included in the Articles of the Palestine Mandate in 1922. 34 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

The walls of the Old City were lit with the American and Israeli flags to recognize President Biden’s visit to Israel // Photo Credit: Arnon Bossani

friend of Israel, and the United States is our closest ally. From the beginning of the conflict, the President has stood with us firmly, assisting Israel and providing a powerful and meaningful voice against the terrible acts that have occurred in the South and against the threats from our enemies in the North. The residents of Jerusalem share in the grief of the victims’ families and continue to pray for the recovery of the wounded and the swift return of the captives. Thanks to the unique Jerusalem spirit – we will prevail!" Compiled by AJT Staff Nov. 3, 1878: Religious Jews determined to start an agricultural settlement leave Jerusalem and establish Petah Tikvah (“Gateway of Hope”). They purchase 3,400 dunams (756 acres) from a Greek owner near the Yarkon River. Nov. 4, 1995: Yigal Amir, a law student opposed to the Oslo peace process, fatally shoots Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin after a peace rally in Tel Aviv. Rabin, a native of pre-state Palestine, was the fifth prime minister. Nov. 5, 1990: Rabbi Meir Kahane, 58, is fatally shot by Egyptian-American El Sayyid Nosair in a Manhattan hotel. Kahane was elected to the Knesset in 1984 as the head of Kach, but the party was banned from future elections. Nov. 6, 1987: Zohar Argov, who as one of Israel’s first Mizrahi music stars is known as the “The King” but is haunted by drug addiction, hangs himself in jail at age 32 shortly after being accused of attempted rape. Nov. 7, 1944: Haganah paratrooper and poet Hannah Senesh is killed by a Hungarian firing squad in Budapest five months after being captured. Senesh was on a mission to free prisoners of war and organize Jewish resistance. Nov. 8, 1936: Maccabi Tel Aviv completes an 11-match soccer tour of the United States

Yad Sarah Enhances Emergency Wartime Campaign Yad Sarah, Israel’s leading volunteerstaffed organization and largest nongovernmental social and healthcare service provider, reports updates in the second week of its Emergency Relief Campaign to provide critical medical supplies and rehabilitation activities for the wounded, sick and evacuated in this time of crisis. The NGO has rapidly expanded massive operations by increasing branch and volunteer activities nationwide. Yad Sarah’s large-scale relief efforts are coordinated in collaboration with hospital administrations, the IDF, Israel Police, and population intake centers for evacuees. Overview of volunteer-led activity to date: with a 4-1 loss to an American all-star team in front of 20,000 people at Yankee Stadium. The tour raises money for Polish Jewry.

• Supplied emergency aid to thousands of individuals wounded in the war; • Provided medical and rehabilitation equipment for more than 1,000 soldiers; • Delivered around $62,000 worth of medicines free of cost to individuals in the South; • The wheelchair-accessible van (nechonit) unit evacuated nearly 100 residents of Southern Israel, including people with disabilities; • More than 300 volunteer drivers working around the clock to deliver medical equipment and medicines as well as to transport the sick and elderly. Yad Sarah has expanded branch operating hours and activity, especially at those located in hospitals, to meet heightened requests for equipment loans, particularly crutches and wheelchairs. It also opened three new forwardfacing branches (Dead Sea, Bat Yam and Bnei Zion Hospital, Haifa) within days of the initial attacks on Israel. Yad Sarah launched a large campaign to recruit reinforcement volunteers, including senior citizens throughout Israel to volunteer as operators in the NGO’s Emergency Call Center, expanding its ability to field crisis calls. Compiled by AJT Staff Nov. 12, 2000: Leah Rabin, a peace activist since the assassination of her husband, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, dies at 72 a few days after a mild heart attack. She was born in Konigsberg, Germany, and made aliyah as a child.

Avraham Tamir (right) joins (from left) Aharon Barak, Ezer Weizman, Menachem Begin, Ilan Tehila, Moshe Dayan and Elyakim Rubinstein in the Israeli delegation at Camp David in September 1978. // By Moshe Milner, Israeli Government Press Office

Nov. 9, 1924: Avraham Tamir, a military strategist who serves in the Haganah and the British army and rises to the rank of major general in Israel, is born. He is part of the Israeli delegation at Camp David in 1978. Nov. 10, 1975: The U.N. General Assembly passes Resolution 3379, defining Zionism as a form of racism and racial discrimination, in response to a Soviet propaganda effort supported by Arab, Muslim and Soviet bloc nations. Nov. 11, 1973: Gens. Mohamed el-Gamasy of Egypt and Aharon Yariv of Israel complete 12 days of talks after the Yom Kippur War and sign the Kilometer 101 Six-Point Agreement, which includes U.N. supervision and POW exchanges.

Rabbi Shimon Gershon Rosenberg published at least 18 books.

Nov. 13, 1949: Shimon Gershon Rosenberg, the Orthodox rabbi and Zionist philosopher known as Shagar, is born in Jerusalem. Before being ordained in 1976, he serves in the IDF as a paratrooper and a tank crewman. Nov. 14, 2012: Ahmed Jabbari, the Hamas military chief, is killed in an IDF airstrike on Gaza that marks the start of Operation Pillar of Defense, which aims to destroy rocket launchers persistently firing on southern Israel. Items are provided by the Center for Israel Education (israeled.org), where you can find more details.


Israel’s Economy on Shaky Ground

ISRAEL NEWS

By Jan Jaben-Eilon In March, Fitch, the third largest credit rating company in the world, warned that the controversial judicial overhaul legislation pushed by the Israeli government could threaten Israel’s credit rating in the future. In July, Standard & Poor’s, the second largest international credit rating company cautioned that the political turbulence around the judicial overhaul threatened Israel’s economic growth. On Oct. 19, Moody’s, the world’s largest credit rating company, stated that the “unexpected and violent conflict between Israel and Hamas raises the possibility of longer lasting and material credit impact.” Moody’s announcement said it will review a number of the Israeli government’s credit ratings for a downgrade, including its long-term foreign-currency and local-currency ratings, because of the war. “Israel’s credit profile has proven resilient to terrorist attacks and military conflict in the past,” Moody’s stated. “However, the severity of the current military conflict raises the possibility of longer lasting and material credit impact.” Earlier this year, Israeli newspapers pointed out that credit ratings change only when the data points to exceptional worsening in the ability of a country to service its debt. And, they noted, it would take a disaster to harm Israel’s ability to do so. That disaster was unleashed Oct. 7 when as many as 2,000 Hamas terrorists crossed Israel’s border from Gaza and attacked concert goers nearby, killing 260 young people, as well as some 20 commu-

The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, Dec. 25, 2018 // Photo Credit: Adam Shuldman/Times of Israel

nities and a couple of military bases, killing more than 1,000 additional people. Two hundred others were taken hostage inside Gaza. As the country deals with its shock, while burying its dead and desperately seeking the return of the captives, Israel’s economy has fallen into a major recession, according to Israeli economists. Two weeks after the Hamas attack, economists estimated the country lost $3 billion in damages on the first day of the war alone, worse than during the 2006 war with Hezbollah in Lebanon. Continuing rocket fire from Hamas in Gaza,

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as well as Israelis focused more on volunteering to assist survivors of the Oct. 7 attack, have nearly halted the country’s economy. It has been further crippled by the fact that approximately 260,000 Israel Defense Force reservists have been called up for service, leaving behind their jobs. Many of the reservists called up by the IDF are tech entrepreneurs. And no one knows how long they will be required to serve the country instead of their companies. According to Fitch, “such large-scale escalation, in addition to human loss, could result in significant additional

military spending, destruction of infrastructure, sustained change in consumer and investment sentiment and, thus, lead to a large deterioration of Israel’s credit metrics.” A Bloomberg News report stated that the Israeli shekel is among the world’s worst-performing currencies in October despite several measures taken by the Bank of Israel to prop it up. Credit downgrades can make future trade more difficult for the Israeli economy which had already been stumbling this year due to the political uncertainty created by the right-wing government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. This summer, the Israel Innovation Authority released a survey showing that 80 percent of start-ups so far this year were opened outside Israel, and that companies intended to register their intellectual property abroad, resulting in a blow to Israel’s tax funds. Private funding of start-ups was also at a five-year low. Israel’s-high tech industry, the economy’s main growth engine, had been generating about 17 percent of the country’s gross domestic product. It accounts for more than 50 percent of its exports and 25 percent of its payroll taxes. In the first quarter of the year, Israeli high-tech companies raised $1.7 billion, down from $5.8 billion in the first quarter last year, according to IVC Research Center and LeumiTech. The more than two-week-old war, which is expected to heat up with a likely IDF ground incursion into Gaza, is not only impacting the Israeli domestic economic infrastructure. Tourism is also at a standstill with many international airline carriers and cruise lines canceling Israeli destinations. ì

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We condemn the brutal terrorist attack by Hamas against thousands of Israelis.

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We call for the immediate release of all hostages held in Gaza. We thank all of those who stand alongside us in solidarity with Israel and the Jewish people.

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NEWS Thousands Gather for Atlanta Kosher BBQ Festival By Sasha Heller Last year, the annual Atlanta Kosher BBQ Festival enjoyed nearly record-level attendance numbers, as community members were eager to reconvene in-person after the lengthy COVID pandemic. This year, with Israel engaged in a devastating conflict with Hamas, the festival attracted an even larger number of attendees, as many were drawn to the tasty delicacies, but even more likely came to take comfort in their Jewishness in large numbers and in relative safety. The event, now in its 11th year and presented by the Hebrew Order of David, featured 21 cooking teams, competing in four categories: Beef Ribs, Brisket, Chili, and Chicken. The winners for each category were as follows: Grand Champion – Burnt Offerings; Beef Ribs – Burnt Offerings; Brisket – 8th Day BBQ; Chicken – Carolina Chopped; Chili – Carolina Chopped. Members of the Atlanta Kashruth Commission oversaw the preparation standards and provided kosher certifications for all the competing cooking teams. To keep the minds of attendees at ease, event organizers provided enhanced security detail at the festival. This year, as many as 10 security officers patrolled the event grounds, more than twice the number of security personnel as last year. In the spirit of the Barbie-Q theme and team name, Atlanta Jewish Times held a community raffle to give away four pink and blue electric ATV vehicles. The winners were: Sandra Glassman, Heather Barnes, Deborah Hatherley, and Nathan Katz. Also won in the raffle were a pair of toy grills, won by Elana Horawitz and Avi Tohar. The festival also featured a Kids Zone with bounce houses, community expo, silent auction, and live music.

8th Day BBQ, representing Congregation Kesher Torah, took home first place in the Beef Brisket category // Photo Credit: Kesher Torah Atlanta

The Atlanta Jewish Times won Best Decorated Booth at this year's Kosher BBQ Festival.

38 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Grillin' Barbie-Qs, a.k.a. the Atlanta Jewish Times staff, are pictured at the festival as winners of the Best Decorated Booth

Creative director Lilli Jennison poses in the AJT Barbie box with sister, Micah Staley.

AJT Owner and Publisher Michael Morris and Dr. Jeri Breiner


NEWS

Sandra Glassman won one of the ATVs through the AJT’s community raffle.

Avi Tohar won one of the toy grills raffled off by the Atlanta Jewish Times.

Bradley Rudy poses by the Ken poster.

Team prepares their samples Saturday before the BBQ festival.

The Kosher BBQ is all about grilling the tasty food.

Heather Barnes, pictured with her family, won one of the ATV giveaways as part of the Atlanta Jewish Times community raffle.

Team prepares their samples Saturday before the BBQ festival.

Doug and Daniel Weinstein pictured in the Ken box.

Team prepares their samples Saturday before the BBQ festival.

AJT Associate Editor and Web Editor Sasha Heller

BBQ Winners Grand Champion - BURNT OFFERINGS

Brisket

1st - 8th Day BBQ 2nd - Feederation rd 3 - The Wandering Ques

Beef Ribs

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Chili

AJT Editor and Managing Publisher Kaylene Ladinsky and Lou Ladinsky

Risa Jennison and AJT Creative Director Lilli Jennison

1st - Carolina Chopped 2nd - CMCH Flames rd 3 - Masterful Menches of Meat

Chicken

1st - Carolina Chopped nd 2 - Pirates of the Cow-Rib-Bean 3rd - Moshe Ribino

Celebrity Judged Categories: Best Decorated Booth The Grilling Barbie-Qs Most Jewish Themed Booth Moshe Ribino Fan Favorite Carolina Chopped ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 39


NEWS

Black Jewish, Singing Spy Speaks at AA Synagogue By Marcia Caller Jaffe Darrell Blocker may be one of the most unique men to speak from the bimah at Ahavath Achim Synagogue. On Thursday, Oct. 12, the 28-year veteran of the CIA’s clandestine Intelligence Office serving at the Counter Terrorism Center, shared his personal journey of growing up in Augusta in an African American Baptist family, before converting to Judaism. This recipient of the George W. Bush Award for Excellence in Terrorism is now vice chair of MOSAIC, a boutique crisis management and security firm. Blocker, as that night’s featured speaker, was interviewed by Cheryl Dorchinsky, founder and executive director for the Atlanta Israel Coalition. Blocker was introduced by long time friend Rachel Elovitz, as a row of Blocker’s University of Georgia college friends and AEPi frat brothers came to show support. Elovitz began by explaining her background in an all-white Birmingham

Rachel Elovitz, longtime friend, introduced Blocker.

public school, all-white Jewish sorority, and meeting Blocker with a chai on his chest in 1984 in Athens…then reconnecting with him in Texas with his military uniform, and again 35 years later on

Hollywood consultant and CIA careerman Darrell Blocker is a sought-after terrorist subject matter expert // Photo Credit: Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Facebook. She explained, “He is one of the nicest human beings, and note that he was on the short list for CIA Director. He was CIA Chief of Africa, and later, Hollywood

movie consultant, expert on human trafficking, terrorism, and mensch. Imagine him sending me a UGA red bulldog shirt in Hebrew.” Blocker explained that he learned

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NEWS

UGA colleagues came to show support. Gary Lind, Hillary Saban, Darnell Blocker, and Jerry Peljovich (far right).

tikkun olam from his parents as a basis for his interest in Judaism. He said, “I feel that I was born Jewish. I am asked ‘Isn’t being Black difficult enough, why do you need to add being Jewish?’ He replies, “Judaism is one of the best things that has ever happened to me.” The tougher questions came and turned to terrorism: “The world turned a blind eye to ISIS in 2013-2016. Hamas is like ISIS, who thought Bin Laden was too soft. This recruitment for terrorists, some are from Syria, Iraq…it’s possible that in the end, some captured terrorists will be sources of information. Bad people doing the right thing, kids who got trapped maybe looking for redemption.” Blocker ended that segment by saying that he himself has learned to compartmentalize this cruelty to humanity, and privately cries in the shower. He warned, “Stop watching the news nonstop. Save yourself the angst. Find a wind of time to stay current and don’t seek out more news.” Another tough question, “Are Jews here at risk?” Blocker doesn’t think that Hamas has pull outside the region, except for lone wolves. “The U.S. can flatten the entire world in minutes. No one wants a wide scale war…of course, Iran has been interfering by proxy since 1979 dating back to the Ayatollahs; 70 to 80 percent of Iranians do not like their government.” Dorchinsky followed by asking, “How did we not know anything [about

the attacks]? Blocker, who is also a terrorism subject matter expert on Iran and North Korea for ABC News, relayed, “At the end of the day, there may have been signs, like Pearl Harbor and 9/11. Intelligence is not a panacea…alerts pour in from all over every hour and most don’t materialize.” As far as the potential for the hostages to still be alive, Blocker stated that “certainly not all of them, but they have value for trading. Just think, Israel traded 1,000 Palestinians for one Israeli soldier. It’s about doing ‘moral algebra’…150 hostages are hard to move around, if we do this…then they might do [that]. Remember, it took us 10 years to catch Osama bin Laden.” Dorchinsky made clear that politics were not part of the discussion. Blocker stated that he, like most CIA members, are “middle of the road independents.” He has served under six presidents, four Republicans and two Democrats. He concluded. “We bring no baggage; we gather information for others to decide.” Blocker, who is also an accomplished singer, joined others in singing, “Am Yisroel Chai,” and announced that he would soon be appearing in San Diego and Malibu for fundraising events. He said, “This is life, up and down, crying and laughing. Let’s keep the House of David undivided…this is just six days after the Invasion, we are still in shock and processing.” ì

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ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 41


NEWS

Shalom Bayit Celebrates 30 Years By Debbie Diamond Shalom Bayit recognized four honorees and Wendy Lipshutz, its longtime program director, at a recent 30th anniversary event, “Empowering Survivors: Celebrating 30 Years of Shalom Bayit.” Held at the Terrace Room of Sandy Springs City Hall, the event was a celebration for those who are free from abuse, said JF&CS Chief Executive Officer Terri Bonoff. Shalom Bayit began in 1993 following the 1992 publication of a shocking article in the Atlanta Jewish Times. JacLynn Morris, a past JF&CS board member and one of the night’s honorees, published her personal story of abuse. Morris’s account marked the first time anyone in the Atlanta Jewish community publicly acknowledged that family violence indeed occurs among Jewish people in Atlanta. To mark the occasion, Morris contributed one of her own paintings, which was bid on during the night and went for a “generous donation,” according to JF&CS spokesperson Rebecca Cochran. Lipshutz received a special recog-

JF&CS staff, honorees, and event chair during a lighter moment (from left): Gus Kaufman, Robin Feldman, Patty Maziar, Wendy Lipshutz, Barbara Hillman Levitas, JacLynn Morris, and Terri Bonoff.

nition award marking her work and dedication to Shalom Bayit since its inception. Under her 30 years of leadership, the organization has empowered

thousands of survivors. In speaking to the large group of supporters, Lipshutz thanked the community for embracing the mission of Shalom Bayit -- to foster

the social change and community response necessary to eradicate domestic violence in the Jewish community. The honorees recognized at the

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NEWS

JacLynn Morris created the painting specifically for Shalom Bayit anniversary.

Shalom Bayit Program Director Wendy Lipshutz with Patty Maziar, event honoree.

NEED HELP FOR MOM OR DAD? A geriatric care manager offers expert and compassionate care for aging adults and their families, and can help to: Manage Residential Living Transitions JF&CS cast members (from left): Tzipporah Gerson-Miller, Shalom Bayit clinical social worker; Devyn Crawley, executive assistant; and Rebecca Brown, BeWellATL manager, during “Not So Happily Ever After.”

event were Gus Kaufman, Barbara Hillman Levitas, Patty Maziar, and JacLynn Morris. Kaufman, a psychotherapist, activist, and advocate for social change, played a key role in the launch of Shalom Bayit and in shaping its work. Levitas was a board member of the Children’s Trust Fund of Georgia and brought the idea of the program to JF&CS, despite being told by many that “abuse is not an issue in the Jewish community.” Maziar has been a longtime leader and advocate for the cause, including work in legislative advocacy and communications. Morris, known as the mother of the Shalom Bayit program in Atlanta, continues to give a voice to the silence about abuse in the Jewish community and to inspire others to come forward. During the event, attendees were treated to an updated performance of “Not So Happily After,” written by Mira Hirsch and performed by the talented staff members of JF&CS. During the show, a narrator relays picture-perfect

childhood stories while the onstage actors demonstrate a completely different reality, capturing the trauma of family violence, rape, and abuse. The audience was demonstrably moved by the performance, directed by Simony Levy, a wellknown and respected director in Atlanta. In closing the program, Robin Feldman, the event chair, spoke about how much Shalom Bayit has meant to her and other survivors of abuse. “I want to ensure all survivors get the support they need as they navigate this difficult path. Shalom Bayit is there for them,” she said. Throughout the event, the imagery of a tree with blossoming leaves stood out among the crowd. The tree is representative of a tree that stands tall in the Shalom Bayit Garden at JF&CS. With seeds planted in 1998 by Lipshutz, the tree is a testament to vitality, resilience, and renewal for all affected by trauma and abuse. With October as Domestic Violence Awareness Month, its purple leaves represent the month’s official color. ì

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Copyright © 2023 Jewish Family & Career Services of Atlanta, Inc. ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 43


NEWS

Israel Bonds and Pomegranate Margaritas By Marcia Caller Jaffe On a perfect eve of Oct. 5, the Temple Sinai sukkah was alive with Israel Bonds supporters eager to pay tribute to Rabbis Sam and Natan Trief, and to learn and dine with one of the world’s most talked about chefs, Adeena Sussman, ready to autograph her new book, “Shabbat Recipes and Rituals from My Table to Yours.” Honoree Trief said, “Israel Bonds is our go-to institution for marking simchas as well as aligning our dollars with our values. Supporting Israel Bonds transcends governments and fleeting coalitions; it is an enduring investment in the Jewish people and our eternal homeland.” Bradley Young, Executive Director of the Southeast for Israel Bonds, told the AJT, “Buying bonds helps Israel and allows us to have events like this.” Event co-chair Debbie Lieberman, who had a personal connection to Sussman, interviewed her both in the cocktail hour and later at the main event dinner. Before leaving the sukkah, Sussman did a live demo preparing sparkling burgundy pomegranate sumac margaritas. She said, “Pomegranates are at their peak now in Israel, and they have significance around the Jewish holidays. Drink with your eyes. Always rim the salt before the ice goes in, and zest before the juice.” The bill of fare for the more than 220 guests was prepared from recipes for the Shabbat cookbook -- slow roasted tomato tarts, feta artichoke pea dip, grape and labneh toast with spicy thyme honey. The family-style dinner was roasted vegetable barley salad, butternut squash pasta, sweet potatoes with miso tahini, seared broccoli, roasted salmon with tomato jam. Dessert was cardamom berry crisp. Event co-chairs Debbie and Ryan Lieberman, Talia and Jeremy Schube, and Gabby and Mark Spatt welcomed the crowd and also closed the event. Temple Sinai Senior Rabbi Ron Segal said, “Israel Bonds confirms our ties to Israel and unquestionable sense of community to demonstrate our unflagging support in a timely way and one that is meaningful to the Triefs.” After a video touting Israeli technology and successes, Chuck Berk, former chair of National Israel Bonds Campaign Council, explained that he started investing in Israel Bonds 25 years ago. He reminded, “Bonds are safe and pay a great rate -- 6.24 percent (depending on category) -- keep us connected to Israel, and

44 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Rabbi Sam’s mother (left) came in from New York to honor the couple, Sam and Natan.

Brad Young, Israel Bonds executive director, chatted with Chuck Berk outside the Temple Sinai sukkah.

Co-chair Debbie Lieberman chatted with guest author Adeena Sussman and local restaurateurs Melanie and Michael Shemtov.

easy to give as gifts.” Young noted that bonds were not political, but a simple expression of our democratic values and solidifying our future. “No one has ever lost money in an Israel Bond, and it makes us a direct partner and stakeholder.”

Debbie Lieberman was seated on the stage across from Sussman, with whom she has a personal connection. The prolific Sussman channeled her heartfelt Shabbat family experiences, growing up in Palo Alto, Calif., imagining her father singing “Shalom Alechem” as “Shabbat

Asha Gomez had just returned from Israel on a culinary tour as the only American. Shown here with son, Ethan.

was our North Star of life. We pulled out all the stops.” She explained the leveling field of Shabbat not having to live up to anyone else’s expectations. “It can be in driveways or going out. At times, we slow down and listen, and


NEWS

Event co-chair Mark Spatt, posed with Bret and Alyssa Chaness.

The pink highlighted room setup was with parallel estate tables.

Debbie Lieberman conducted an in-depth and convivial interview with Adeena Sussman.

show gratitude.” At her home one Shabbat, she hosted the chief rabbi of France as spontaneous guests just showed up.” Sussman shared that she married late (now living in Israel) and went from “single to safta (to stepchildren)”, adding, “I moved to Israel for love, but stayed because of the Carmel Market and all its differing cultures and produce stalls.” Sussman will appear at a lunch event for the Book Festival of the MJCCA on Friday, Nov. 17.

Local treasure Asha Gomez, chef and author best known for her mix of cooking traditions from the American South with her native Kerala in Southern India, chatted with the AJT about her return from Israel on a culinary tour where she was the only American. Young, concluded, “We sold over $850,000 in Israel Bonds that evening and are encouraging those who didn’t invest to consider doing so now that we have launched an international campaign to raise funds for Israel at war.” ì

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NEWS

The Breman Partners with Tara Theatre By Bob Bahr The Breman Jewish Heritage Museum linked up with the recently re-opened Tara Theatre to present a three-film retrospective of Dennis Hopper, the film star best known for his 1969 film, “Easy Rider.” It was a rare venture away from the museum building on Spring Street, where it shares exhibit space and an auditorium with the offices of the Jewish Federation of Greater Atlanta. The series, which ran on Oct. 14-15, was done in conjunction with the recent photographic exhibit by Los Angeles photographer Robert Weingarten, entitled “Icons - Selections from the Portrait Unbound,” which included 14 large photographic compositions, mostly of wellknown celebrities whose fame Weingarten felt would stand the test of time. The film series was curated and introduced by Eddy Von Mueller, a local film scholar and historian. He believes Hopper, who co-wrote the script with his co-star Peter Fonda, helped change the direction of Hollywood in the late 1960s, when the film first appeared. The surprising success of the movie, a low budget production made on the road with young talent and few frills, essentially ended the “old” Hollywood, according to Von Mueller, with its lavish studio system overseen by Jewish moguls from a by-gone era. In part, because in 1969 when the film was released the America that had provided the audience for the moguls was disintegrating. “Hollywood changed because the country had changed. Tastes had changed and ‘Easy Rider’ drove a stake through the heart of old film industry. Under the pressure of television, the business was transformed, new stars were appearing, Hollywood was getting younger. ‘Easy Rider’ was in many ways a climax that all that Hollywood was going through in this new era.” Dominating Weingarten’s composition is Hopper’s “chopper” motorcycle from the movie, with its painted American flag. There are also other elements from Hopper’s life in the biographical composition. Opposite the chopper is a portrait of Chairman Mao painted by Andy Warhol, an artist Hopper admired, that, if you look closely, has a couple of bullet holes in it. Hopper put them in this painting he had recently bought during a night of drugs and disorientation. There’s also an old Olympus E-1 camera that Hopper acquired in the early 1960s when he was an avid photographer. A picture entitled, “Double Stan46 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

The program about Hopper was curated by Eddy Von Mueller (far left) pictured at the re-dedication this year of the Tara Theatre. Also pictured (from left in the front row) Jack Halpern, Chris Escobar, and Kenny Blank.

Dennis Hopper is the subject of a biographical photographic composition dominated by the motorcycle from the film, “Easy Rider.”

dard,” that that he took is also included in the composition. Hopper took the 1961 snapshot of two Standard Oil service stations, which he accidentally found sitting side by side in California. But like all the other prints in the exhibit, Hopper is absent from the composition because Weingarten wanted to portray his celebrities not through another image of them but through photographs taken from what was important about them. In a sense, he edited out Hopper from his own life, although he worked very closely with him when he was preparing the artwork in 2006, four years before the actor’s death. The program, built around Hopper, was the last in a series of presentations at The Breman that included discussions of baseball great Hank Aaron, Broadway

The Breman Museum presents a mini festival of three films starring Dennis Hopper (left), including “Easy Rider.”

composer Stephen Sondheim, ballet star Mikhail Baryshnikov, and one with the artist himself who was interviewed by a photography curator from the Smithsonian Institution. The program by the museum at the Tara was yet another indication that the theatre is becoming a valuable addition to the city’s arts scene. Two of the four theatres in the complex are named after important figures in Atlanta’s Jewish film community. The “Kenny” is named for Kenny Blank, the artistic and executive director of the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival, who helped broker the arrangements to save the Tara earlier this year. The “George” is named for the late George LaFont, the one-time owner of the theatre and a strong supporter of the AJFF, and the “Jack” for Jack Halpern, whose family

business owns the Tara and the shopping center where it’s located. He stepped in at the last moment to facilitate the lease that saved the theatre. The newly remodeled Tara is being run by Chris Escobar, under a non-profit organization that has been put together to encourage the use of the theatres for programs just like the Breman’s. He first worked with the executive director of the Jewish museum, Leslie Gordon, a decade ago, when she managed the programs at the Rialto Theater that was owned by Georgia State University. “I’ve known Leslie for a long time, ever since she was at the Rialto, and I’ve been on an advisory board there with her. And now that she is at The Breman we’ll be looking for new ways to collaborate.” ì


NEWS

New Initiative for Jewish Neurodiverse Students By Marcia Caller Jaffe Recent academic studies show that one in every five children has a learning and attention related disorder. It’s forecasted in the coming decade that the number will magnify to one in three. Sometimes this population is stigmatized as the “kid who can’t sit still,” or “who can’t follow directions,” and/or are directed to vocational programs and away from the mainstream. Many families who prize Jewish education face a difficult choice: send their child to a Jewish day school that may not offer the needed support and resources or enroll them in a school that can meet and manage their learning needs, but in a secular environment. Enter Noach Pawliger, who has initiated Niflaot: The Jewish Exceptional Learners Initiative, which seeks to fill the void. Its vision is to serve as an “action tank,” a borderless community to support families, educators, schools, students, and change makers dedicated to educating the whole Jewish child, regardless of learning challenges. Its goal is to be a clearinghouse of information, resources, and solutions to understand and nurture neurodiverse learners. Pawliger, founder and chief impact officer, has “walked the walk.” He grew up in East Cobb and Sandy Springs and didn’t have the opportunity to attend a Jewish day school. Rather, his parents opted for non-Jewish institutions that focused on resources to support his neurodiversity. He stated, “This project is very personal. Growing up with my own neurodiversity and working hard to make an impact for others like me was never simple. I had parents who did their best to provide support. The academic world was always a struggle.” Pawliger and his team found that by and large, outside of Israel, the Tri-state Northeast region, and Baltimore, there really aren’t solid opportunities for neurodiverse learners to access effective Jewish education. Within Atlanta, two programs folded because “it was not a community priority.” He continued, “So, either teachers learn to shift from teaching a task to educating learners, or we will see lots of broken learners. And, these are not the assembly line kids, on the contrary, they are innovators, R&D, and creative geniuses whose potential has been caged for too long. It’s time to uncage their potential, and teach them, and at that point everyone benefits!” Niflaot has the specific goal of being a scalable model for a flexible, powerful educational system that will allow those who learn differently to flourish in mainstream environments. It aims to overcome challenges including: • A lack of coordination among school hierarchy, educators, and parents. • Insufficient resources meaningful to the neurodiverse learner. • An absence of solid research identifying obstacles to the achievement of healthy models of inclusion. Its staff is a loose confederation of highly motivated parents, educators, and community members from across the U.S all embarking on initial research that will lead to creation of two pilot programs: (1) an in-school educational model, and (2) a training program for edu-

Pawliger encourages others to see him out for conversation and help.

cators to include Jewish neurodiverse students in their program of study. They are also assembling a library of resources, including an experts’ bureau of knowledgeable individuals available for support and consultation. Pawliger concluded, “Judaism’s ‘brand’ has always been linked to a love of learning, and a laser-focus on education. Unfortunately, the story of Am HaSefer, the People of the Book, does not include a chapter on those who learn differently. Our arms are spread wide as we focus on helping all Jewish families achieve their highest potential for educational inclusion, innovation, and impact. “ For more information, contact Pawliger at (404) 358-5098 or noach@wondersabound.org. ì

Noach Pawliger, founder and chief impact officer for Niflaot, seeks to support Jewish students who are neurodiverse learners.

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SPORTS Braves Wrap Disappointing End to Historic Season This year was supposed to be different. T h e Braves had a whopping eight All-Stars. Their lineup was historically great, drawDavid Ostrowsky ing comparisons league wide to that of the Ruth and Gehrig-led 1927 Yankees. They had the likely National League MVP candidate in Ronald Acuna, Jr., who posted baseball’s first-ever 40 homer/70 stolen base season. And, perhaps most importantly going into this postseason, Max Fried was considerably healthier than he was last October when the 2022 Cy Young runner-up was borderline emaciated, having dropped 15 pounds following a viral infection that morphed into a bacterial infection. But ultimately, none of that mattered as the Braves, coming off one of their most exciting and impressive regular seasons (104-58) in franchise history, were upset by their NL East rivals, the Philadelphia Phillies, in the NLDS for the second consecutive October. “We got beat and didn’t play good enough to win the series,” said Atlanta manager Brian Snitker following Philly’s 3-1 Game 4 clincher at Citizens Bank Park. “It’s as simple as that. We got beat by a really good club that has a penchant for this time of year. What happened this year was phenomenal, a phenomenal year for our club. Didn’t end the way we wanted it to, but it doesn’t always do that in this game. It takes a while to get over something like this after the year we had, the expectation we have here.” Over the past two years, Atlanta has won 205 regular-season games, but only two in the playoffs. Both seasons, they have finished 14 games ahead of the Phils, but the regular-season dominance hasn’t carried over to the postseason – a growing trend around baseball that is sparking debate over whether the current playoff format is sustainable. While the Braves had nearly a week’s layoff between the end of the regular season and Game 1 of the NLDS at sunny Truist Park on Oct. 7, during which the club tried to stay sharp with simulated games, Fried had an even longer hiatus between real game action as he last pitched against the Washington Nation48 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

After a stellar regular season in which he went 8-1 with a 2.55 ERA, Braves’ ace lefty Max Fried battled a recurring blister issue in this year’s NLDS, only lasting four innings in his Game 2 start // Photo Credit: Atlanta Braves

als on Sept. 21 due to a recurring blister issue on his left index finger before taking the hill for Game 2. He may have been rusty going into this year’s NLDS, but at least he wasn’t violently ill like he was during his NLDS start last year when he yielded six runs (four earned) on eight hits without making it out of the fourth inning. “Yeah. I mean, obviously not the most ideal situations coming in, not all the way healthy, missing some time going into the playoffs, but physically, my body and the way that I’m feeling this year versus last year is night and day different,” Fried said several hours before Game 1 of the NLDS. “So, I’m feeling really good. I feel strong. Obviously don’t have too many innings on my arm this year. So, I’m just getting excited to get back out there and kind of just leave it all out there and kind of just go to battle with my guys.” After pitching six shutout innings in the clinching game of the World Series in 2021, Fried went 22-8 with a 2.58 ERA and 250 strikeouts over the last two regular seasons. When he’s healthy – and he was limited to 14 starts this summer – Fried’s devastating curveball is one of the most effective pitches in baseball. With Fried slated as the No. 2 starter behind flame throwing 20-game winner Spencer Strider, Atlanta was feeling pretty good about its chances of winning a second World Series title in three years. “Max is one of the best starters in the

Big Leagues, one of the most consistent, in my opinion, a guy who doesn’t just go out there and rely on one pitch or anything,” said All-Star first baseman Matt Olson during his pre-Game 1 press conference. “He’s able to read the game, read the flow, read the swings, and adjust his stuff and his process based off that. So, he’s a pro on the mound, and a guy we love having the ball.” The Braves did win Fried’s Game 2 start, 5-4, behind a pair of late-game, tworun homers from veteran catcher Travis d’Arnaud and third baseman Austin Riley and a magical double play started by reigning NL Rookie of the Year Michael Harris II. But Fried factored very little into Atlanta’s sole win of the series, only lasting four innings (three earned runs). Perhaps not as sharp because of the exceptionally long layoff, Fried was uncharacteristically wild, often falling behind in counts, walking four, needing 76 pitches to get through three frames. After the Braves’ stunning Game 2 win, Snitker downplayed the notion that the blister was the true culprit behind the lefty’s underwhelming performance. “His fingers are fine,” assured Atlanta’s skipper. “His fingers came out fine. And I think with Max, the biggest thing is he hasn’t pitched in 18 days. So, I think that’s more than anything. But he felt good, and I think it was just, you know, Max is a feel guy, and he hadn’t been out there other than one day last week.” Meanwhile, during his postgame re-

marks, Fried, when asked if he felt snakebit given the timing of the latest blister episode a year after his virus, responded, “At the end of the day, it’s playoff baseball. Everybody is either battling something or not as sharp as they want to be. You just have to perform.” As a team, the Braves did not perform up to expectations in this NLDS rematch against the reigning National League pennant winners. Bryce Elder, an All-Star in his first full season in the majors, got roughed up in Game 3. After phenomenal regular seasons, Acuna Jr. and Olson combined to go 6 for 30. A remarkably deep lineup for the past six months did not live up to its billing (reserve outfielder Kevin Pillar, Atlanta’s other Jewish player, got a pair of starts in Games 1 and 4 but went hitless in five at-bats). “We are not a group that makes excuses. I’m not a person that makes excuses,” Strider said following Game 4. “I’m sure there’s a lot of Braves fans out there that aren’t happy. And they have every right to be that way. We’ve got nobody to blame but ourselves, and me personally, I wasn’t good enough. I can tell you this, though, that we’re going to give everything we have over the next year to getting back to this position and making sure that we don’t have it happen this way again.” In just over 100 days, Strider, Fried (who’s a free agent after the 2024 season) and the rest of the Braves pitching staff report to Spring Training. ì


SPORTS

Rovak Helps Lead Falcons’ Gameday Experience By David Ostrowsky Summer 2007 was a crucible moment for the Falcons organization. A couple years removed from reaching the NFC championship game and coming off a ho-hum 7-9 season, a horrific development rocked the franchise when electrifying star quarterback Michael Vick was indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of sponsoring an insidious dogfighting operation. As the gruesome details spilled out to the masses in the ensuing weeks, Atlanta’s front office was bracing for a precipitous downturn in season ticket renewals. But the Falcons, despite ultimately losing thousands of season ticket memberships following a 4-12 season in the wake of the Vick imbroglio, had a long-term recovery plan in the works by creating a new position of Director of Ticket Sales and subsequently recruiting Don Rovak for the post. Just like the selection of future Pro Bowl quarterback Matt Ryan in the following spring’s NFL Draft, the late 2007 hiring of Rovak proved instrumental in setting the franchise up for success both on and off the field in the 2010s – as well as, rather unexpectedly, even earlier. In 2008, during Ryan’s (and Rovak’s) rookie season in Atlanta, fans started trickling back into the Georgia Dome as the Falcons reeled off an 11-5 record while the franchise further distanced itself from its erstwhile superstar, who was serving his sentence in federal prison. With the Falcons establishing themselves as a perennial contender in the NFC, there was an opportunity to recapture citywide interest in attending games – something Rovak, a St. Louis native who cut his teeth in sports with the now-defunct minor league franchise, the Memphis Redbirds, was largely responsible for. Nearly a decade later, as the franchise transitioned from the Georgia Dome to the aesthetically stunning Mercedes-Benz Stadium, opportunities for enhancing fans’ gameday experience grew in abundance. “Last year, we were rated as the top experience in the NFL in terms of gameday. And we did that with a 7-10 record,” said Rovak, whose wife, Corrie, and two sons, Jared (17) and Dustin (16), are active members of a local synagogue. “One thing that makes this organization great is the competitiveness and we’re trying to take that to a new level. I think we’re scared to lose, which is a great place to be. We’re living afraid and trying to make

sure every part of gameday can be better.” Currently in his 16th season with AMB Sports and Entertainment, Rovak, now senior vice president of sales and service, (which includes ticket sales, service, and ticket operations functions for the Falcons and Atlanta United), has spearheaded a department offering unique season ticket benefit packages, including complimentary tickets to away games and the ability to relocate seats annually, and contributed to the development of state-of-the-art premium seating options at MBS. As has been the case for every NFL franchise since the early 2000s, the drastic enhancements to the television viewing experience have forced executives such as Rovak to implement such profound in-stadium changes. Meanwhile, from a local perspective, there’s heightened competition in the Atlanta sports market with the Braves renaissance in full force and the utter dominance of Georgia Bulldog football. “At the end of the day, we’re trying to get people off the couch,” noted Rovak. “We’re trying to get people to leave their house, trying to get people to spend time with friends, family. If that’s the Braves, if that’s the Hawks, if that’s the United, if that’s the Falcons, that is all good for us. To me, the more people that are going to sporting events reminds them to go to sporting events, reminds them to get out and do things, and that is only good for all of us. “City pride is a real thing here in Atlanta for sure. The more that we have winning cultures, whether that’s in the NBA side, MLS side, Major League Baseball side, or football side, it’s all great for the city.” Rovak’s been great for the city, too. In addition to being a longtime volunteer at Westside Works, the non-profit organization that provides members of the Westside community and greater Metro Atlanta with easier access to job training, education services, and employment opportunities, Rovak has made a concerted effort to mentor high school and college students who aspire to work in sports. Though the sports landscape has changed quite a bit since Rovak landed his first internship at the Liberty Bowl a quarter century ago, he can still impart knowledge about common pitfalls that bedevil those trying to break into the industry. “In the last two decades, I have spent a lot of time trying to teach and train

and make sure that people better understand that when they’re in an interview process, it’s not just about ‘I’ll do whatever it takes to work in sports,’” he explained. “I’ll challenge them a little bit and learn what sports, does it have to be team sports, does geography matter? We try to get to a better understanding of what drives the person.” So, what drives him to continue devoting his professional life to pro sports? “I love that every season has a definitive ending and a beginning,” added Rovak, whose typical gameday entails arriving at MBS by 7 a.m. before tackling a slate of activities that includes making at least a half-dozen strolls around As the senior vice president of sales and the stadium. service for AMB Sports and Entertainment, Don Rovak has been instrumental in helping “I love that you can ask me about to execute Arthur Blank’s vision of providing 2008 and I will remember who I was fans with a best-in-class stadium experience // working with. I can tell you the team. Photo Credit: AMB Sports + Entertainment I can tell you the highs. I can tell you the lows. I can do the same thing for it keeps me young because it’s a separa2013, 2015, 2018, whatever it is. I feel like tion of years that I really enjoy.” ì

ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 49


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This is a lousy way to add leaves to the branches on your family tree, combing through articles about murdered and missing Israelis, looking for information about their par-

ents, spouses, and children. In the past couple of weeks, I have added about three dozen names to my tree, tracing them back to my great-grandfather’s twin brother, who emigrated in 1882 from Romania to what then was part of the Ottoman Empire and today is the Israeli town of Zichron Yaakov. In the aftermath of the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks in southern Israel, a dozen people on or connected to this tree were missing and feared kidnapped into Gaza. Hamas released a mother and daughter, residents of a Chicago suburb, who were kidnapped while visiting family at Kibbutz Nachol Oz. Ten others were at Kibbutz Be'eri. The bodies of two men were recovered several days ago and, as this was being written, the body of the wife of one of those men was found. Still missing is the wife of the other slain man; her daughter, son-in-law, and two grandchildren, and the sister and niece of her slain husband. I may be on a different branch of the family tree, but as an Israeli cousin messaged: “We’re Ashkenaz, so every person up to the third or fourth branch is considered a closely related cousin.” My wife has pointed out something that I had not considered, that my work provides me with an outlet through which to process these events. Where others may feel distraught and struggle to reconcile conflicted feelings, a lifetime in journalism has given me — for good or ill — the ability to collate and compartmentalize information. The barbarism displayed by Hamas on Oct. 7 and the Israeli retaliation in Gaza have given many Jewish Americans pause to consider the Venn diagram of their personal relationships to Judaism the religion and Israel the nation. Some seek solace in religion, which compels me to ask: During the Days of Awe, between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, were the babies butchered and burned by terrorists not inscribed in the Book of Life? The otherwise celebratory holiday of Simchat Torah now becomes the yahrzeit for 1,400 men, women, and children — the largest number of Jews killed in one day since the Holocaust. I know politically liberal Jewish Ameri-

cans who support the two-state solution, who oppose Israeli expansion in the West Bank, and who abhor Islamophobia — but who are absolutely seething at the atrocities committed by Hamas. These are not people who want to see Gaza reduced to rubble, or thousands of Palestinians killed, or Israel to reoccupy the Gaza strip. These are people resisting a desire for vengeance. At the Oct. 10 Israel support rally in Sandy Springs, the most sustained cheering came when Mayor Rusty Paul, who is not Jewish, said, “Israel is going to do what Israel is going to do.” The reaction of 1,100 inside the Byers Theatre and more than twice that number watching on the lawn outside suggested that many had no problem with something more than an eye for an eye. Other Jewish Americans say that they grieve no less for the victims of Hamas, but oppose the scale, if not the action itself, of Israel's military response and the tactics employed by the government, such as halting its provision of electricity and water to Gaza. Young Jewish American adults, who have grown up with a multi-cultural, multiethnic, multi-racial, and multi-religious circle of friends, have found themselves marginalized by those for whom Jewish = Israel, and if Israel is the problem, then so are Jews. There are Jewish Americans who have invested their time, energy, and money in support of liberal and progressive causes that align with their personal values as Jews. But this has not spared them a cold shoulder from people they thought were friends or allies, whom they thought shared a similar perspective on the world. Some Jewish Americans are mystified by non-Jewish friends — who reached out after a gunman killed 11 Jews worshipping on a Shabbat morning at a Pittsburgh synagogue — but were silent when more than 100 times that number of Israeli Jews are slaughtered. Those who question my use of that word — slaughter — can view the available video and photographs, or listen to interviews with ZAKA volunteers, who retrieve bodies and body parts for burial according to Jewish law, or the doctors conducting forensic autopsies. It is revulsion with the savagery of these killings that has many Jewish Americans struggling with the better angels of their nature. Meanwhile, the size and tone of anti-Israel protests in American cities — including in Atlanta — have prompted reappraisals of security measures at Jewish communal institutions, including synagogues, schools, and community centers. These are challenging days for Jewish Americans — and for those updating their family trees. ì


OPINION

Setting the Record Straight on Hamas and Israel I realize that I am preaching to the choir today, but I think this bears repeating until the rest of the world begins to understand Michael A. Morris and accept the Publisher's Note truth. Unfortunately, the lies have become so repetitious and pervasive, they are more accepted as fact than the truth. There is no justification for what Hamas did on this planet. Civilized humans do not torture family members in front of themselves for fun or spite. Normal people do not burn infants and elderly people alive for any reason including revenge. Society does not condone targeting civilians and the very act is not called “war,” it’s called “terror and murder.” There is no doubt that the people of Gaza have been oppressed for the past two decades. It is clear to anyone with intimate knowledge of the situation that the majority of the oppression has come from Hamas, the Gazan’s own leadership they elected; and the majority (not all) of the Gazans recognize this. If you do not have intimate knowledge and you just listen to propaganda, spin and lies, you do not know what the truth is no matter how loud you yell. Yes, from time to time Israel has exacted a toll on the civilians in Gaza. In every single instance, the only time a civilian is killed is in an attempt to root out Hamas, stop Hamas and protect Israeli citizens. The point of any Israeli incursion is never to purposefully inflict harm on a civilian, and while civilian casualties do occur from time to time, I

reiterate, it is never the intent. On the other hand, Hamas ensures its own civilian deaths by using Gazans as human shields. They store their munitions under hospitals, mosques, and schools. When Israel warns the population to leave before a strike, Hamas not only demands that the civilians stay, they shoot their own citizens when they try to leave. This is documented and this has occurred consistently through the decades. To make it more humiliating, when Hamas kills their citizens by accident, they blame it on Israel. What never gets any press is when Israel provides (free) water, electricity, roads, and buildings to Gaza. And in fact, Hamas often destroys these structures or turns off these utilities for the sole purpose of antagonizing its citizens and again blames Israel. Israel has killed Palestinian civilians in an attempt to destroy the murderous, terrorist group called Hamas. Hamas kills Israeli civilians and its own population to prove a point, to pretend it’s Israel, to protect themselves, and to antagonize Israel. To paraphrase a rabbi I read recently, butchering children does not lead to liberation. Massacring young people at a concert is not justice. This is simply evil and vile, and it furthers no cause. America, Europe and all the democracies of the world can never sit by and allow the murder of children, the burning of people alive, the torture of children and the elderly on social media, the use of innocent civilians as human shields to become an acceptable practice, to show grievance, exact revenge or further a cause, ever. Every citizen on the planet should take note that only dictatorships, tyrants, and terrorists use this tactic. ì

POSTPONED

NIGHT AT THE BREMAN MUSEUM Originally scheduled for November 5, 2023

With heavy hearts for Israel, we pause our musical celebration until a more appropriate time.

Michael Morris is the owner and publisher of the Atlanta Jewish Times.

ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 51


OPINION

Letters to the Editor The AJT welcomes your letters. If you would like your letter to be published, please write 200 words or less, include your name, phone number and email, and send it to kaylene@atljewishtimes.com.

Letter to the editor,

Georgia House Democrats unequivocally condemn the attacks carried out by Hamas and the ongoing violence in the region. We hope for the protection of Palestinian civilians along with Israeli and American hostages in Gaza. We express our deep condolences and sympathies to all those impacted by the ongoing violence in Israel and Gaza. The impact of escalating violence in Israel and Gaza is reverberating through our state. Our communities in Georgia are scared and hurting. For those who have loved ones in Israel or Gaza, this has not been an easy time as they worry and mourn for their loved ones. We stand united with Israelis and Palestinians and their right to safety, self-determination, and peaceful coexistence. We denounce efforts that fan the flames of antisemitism and Islamophobia. Jewish and Muslim community members now feel targeted and rampant mis- and disinformation is further dividing our communities. As state legislators who serve Jewish and Muslim constituencies, we stand together against hatred and violence targeted against any of our diverse communities who have made Georgia their home. We are here for anyone impacted in this difficult time. Additionally, we will continue to work with our federal counterparts to identify and leverage helpful resources for our communities. For those who need it, and have loved ones in the area, below are some resources from our federal counterparts. ● Americans looking to contact the U.S. Embassy in the region can call 1-833-890-9595 or 1-606-641-0131 or fill out the form cacms.state.gov/s/crisis-intake. ● U.S. citizens in the region should also enroll their contact info in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP) step.state.gov/step/ ● If you need help getting in touch with anyone on the federal or state level, please use our offices as a resource. Our prayers go out to all the families who have lost loved ones in this war. We share your pain and grief, and we pray that you may be comforted. In service and solidarity, Georgia House Democratic Caucus What an outrage! The caucus letter writes: “We hope for the protection of Palestinian civilians along with Israeli and American hostages in Gaza”? What about the innocent Israeli civilians who were butchered, tortured, burned, decapitated, and raped? As rockets continue to fall on Tel Aviv and other civilian areas, this letter with its moral equivalent is shocking and wrong! These heinous and barbaric acts committed by Hamas are worse than ISIS. Words cannot describe how disappointed we are in those who signed this letter. Either they signed out of ignorance, haste, or pure hate. It is time for them to renounce this letter and remove their names!!! Mitchell Kaye, Marietta

Letter to the editor,

No Más Hamas! Much has and will be written about the atrocious and barbaric attack by the terrorist Hamas on defenseless and innocent Israeli and other civilians on October 7, 2023. The articles and opinions expressed were erudite and informative for the most part, far beyond my capabilities. From a more simplistic perspective I submit the following summary: 1. Hamas is a terrorist organization whose goal is the total annihilation not only of Israel but also all Jews. 2. The past conflicts between Israel and Hamas have resulted in victories for Israel, but unfortunately allowed Hamas to continue to exist. 3. Following the October 7 massacre, Israel has only one option; the total eradication of Hamas as an established existential threat. 4. As Jews we are committed to saving lives. Yet, the reality is that the ongoing campaign will result in loss of lives, but many more will be saved in the long run. 5. As my healthcare colleagues often acknowledge: “Sometimes it is necessary to amputate in order to save a life”. As a Sephardic Jew I have grown hearing the Ladino refrain “Ya Basta Bré” (Enough is Enough). While this “dicho” is appropriate currently, I propose that an additional and perhaps more effective one is “No Más Hamas”! (No more Hamas) Albert Barrocas, MD, FACS, FASPEN, Atlanta 52 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Disclamer to our readers: This section of the newspaper is a forum for our community to share thoughts, concerns and opinions as open letters to the community or directly to the newspaper. As a letter to the editor, we proof for spelling and grammatical errors only. We do not edit nor vet the information the letter contains. The individual signing the letter is accountable for what they share.

Letter to the editor,

Gobble Gobble: The “current” crisis. The deliberate slaughter of Israeli infants is but an all too familiar page out of the recent and ancient books of Jew hatred, the fundamental desire of which is to rid the world of our people. Indeed, by any other name, “from the river to the sea” underlies the attacks on Jews and our institutions around the world. To associate this barbarism and Jew hatred in any way with the legitimate grievances of Palestinians is to befoul their cry for a place in the sun. Asserting Zionism is colonialism is yet another manifestation of Jew hatred because it implies that Israel is not entitled to exist as a Jewish state. Even if the assertion were true, which it is not, how else explain the indifference and passivity of “bleeding hearts” and “political mobsters” in the face of egregious colonialism perpetrated by Russia and China, whose occupation of other peoples and their homelands has deliberately erased historic cultures and has premeditatedly imprisoned, tortured, and killed ordinary citizens? We may aspire to be a “light unto the nations” and, when we fail, we ought to admit our shortcomings and mend our ways, and we ought to be humble enough to accept constructive criticism. Nevertheless, anti-Zionism, as well as antisemitism, always reveals its vitriol in the application of double standards and moral obfuscation. And yes, Zionism is NOT colonialism. To the contrary, Zionism is an age-old yearning for national self-determination on a small parcel of global real estate on which Jews have continuously resided for millennia. In modern times, resurgent Zionism was an Anti-colonialism movement directed against all those who held sway over this parcel, including the British. Indeed, Zionists of every stripe were averse to exploitation by foreign powers of our people and our resources, both human and material. In the era between World War I and World War II, Zionism paralleled Arab national movements astir in Bagdad, Damascus, Beirut and Cairo. Have there been Zionists whose aim mimicked the “from the river to the sea” mentality of the Hamasniks and their fellow travelers? Have there been Zionists who have wanted the whole “divinely promised” enchilada? Yes. Some of them are among most Israeli citizens who were pushed out of their birthplaces in Islamic lands. But from the outset, these maximalists were held in check by pragmatists and, among them humanists, who opted for territorial compromise — a compromise summarily and violently rejected across the Arab world, a rejection which lies at the very root of Palestinian suffering. As we approach our American season of Thanksgiving, we have much to relish about our society’s accomplishments and our aspirations — especially the clear thinking and unflinching support of the Biden Administration. At its core, Zionism is our determination no longer to ask permission to breathe, in this season and in every season no longer to be someone else’s turkey. Rabbi Dr. Scott B. Saulson, Atlanta


BUSINESS Kleber Named Chairman of Ian’s Friends Foundation Global Opportunities Board Gala set for Nov. 11

All proceeds raised from Ian’s Friends Foundation’s annual gala will benefit pediatric brain tumor research.

Steve Kleber (left), recently named Chairman of the NAHB Global Opportunities Board, is pictured with National Association of Home Builders COO Deb Malone.

Steve Kleber, founder of Kleber & Associates and president of the National Remodeling Foundation, has been appointed chairman for the 2023 -2024 National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) Global Opportunities Board. As chairman, Kleber will lead efforts for global membership by providing international networking forums as well as increasing education and opportunities for brands seeking recognition in the North American home building marketplace. “We are pleased to have Steve Kleber join the team as a seasoned industry professional. His experience will help further lead us globally and we are honored to welcome him as chair,” said Deb Malone, NAHB chief operating officer. Kleber, an active member of the

NAHB, formerly served as the chairman of the Global Innovations Award, where he helped to grow the awards program, including soliciting participation, leveraging international opportunities as well as increasing overall entries, sponsorships, and memberships. “It is a unique honor to lead the NAHB Global Opportunities Board and help grow international membership and opportunities for this highly relevant and critically important organization,” Kleber noted. For more information on the Global Opportunities Board, visit www.nahb. org. To learn more about Kleber & Associates, visit www.kleberandassociates.com. Compiled by AJT Staff

In the heart of Atlanta, a city known for its vibrant community spirit, there exists a beacon of hope for families facing pediatric illnesses—the Ian’s Friend Foundation. Founded by Atlanta locals Phil and Cheryl Yagoda, this remarkable charity has become a testament to the power of compassion, resilience, and the unwavering support that can emerge from the grassroots of a caring community. Starting at 6:30 p.m., Nov. 11, at the Intercontinental Buckhead will be one of the most philanthropic and heartfelt events in Buckhead – Ian’s Friends Foundation’s annual gala. The “Evening of Inspiration” is not just an event; it’s a celebration of resilience, kindness, and the power of collective goodwill. This gala will bring together Atlanta’s most compassionate individuals, philanthropists, and community leaders for a night dedicated to raising funds and awareness for children facing medical challenges. The event will feature the foundation’s

East Coast chairs Jenny Reiner and Jaime Spizman with all funds raised benefiting pediatric brain tumor research. Over the past decade, Ian’s Friend Foundation has grown exponentially, touching the lives of countless families in the Atlanta area. The foundation’s commitment to kindness, resilience, and community engagement has garnered widespread support and recognition. Ian’s Friends Foundation was founded by Cheryl and Phil Yagoda following their then two-year-old son Ian’s inoperable brain tumor diagnosis. The heartbreaking diagnosis led the family to seek out the best treatments for their son but quickly realized that the research behind pediatric brain tumors was lacking. IFF was created soon after to bridge the gap between research institutions and lack of federal funding dedicated to that research. Compiled by AJT Staff ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 53


ATLANTA THEN & NOW Longstanding Couples Share Secrets to the Marriage Flame By Marcia Caller Jaffe As an Atlanta Jewish Times tradition, we spotlight some of the city’s most illustrative, fun loving and influential couples who still hold hands, talk about how they met and their secrets to decades of marriage. For context, the average here is 62 years with Sephardic “key man” Albert and Isabelle Maslia marking 71 years of coupling; not far behind at 68 years are Elaine and Miles Alexander, who stick together in politics. Find out how Roz Haber learned to French kiss, Lowell Fine’s rent was $56 a month, what 91-year-old Tiktocker Paul Muldawer says he “takes a lot of,” and why shopping with Louie Shemaria is a good strategy. For centuries, the greatest minds have pontificated about what constitutes a good marriage. From Socrates, who said, “If you get a good wife, you’ll become happy. If you get a bad one, you’ll become a philosopher,” to Dr. Joyce Brothers, who noted, “Marriage is not just a spiritual communion, it’s also remembering to take out the trash." The questions posed to our subjects were: years married, how you met, place of wedding, what the initial attraction was, and ultimately, their secrets to a happy marriage.

Elaine and Miles Alexander Years Married: 68 years Date of wedding: May 29, 1955 Boston, Mass.

How They Met Elaine: In 1949, at the train station. I was 14. My brother was at Emory and had some frat brothers meet me. There was no real attraction at that point, but we met years later at a New Hampshire summer camp. Miles showed up with late U.S. Congressman Elliot Levitas. Miles: I was 17 then. Later at camp, it got complicated. Elaine was dating someone else. Lots of jockeying with Elaine’s brother and this other fella backfiring. Elaine: I had to flutter my eyelashes, the whole nine yards, to get his attention. Secret to Happy Marriage Elaine: We continue to have our own lives. Miles: We were a match intellectually and politically. Elaine: We both supported the same mayoral candidates.

54 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Carol and Paul Muldawer Years Married: 67 years Date of wedding: Aug. 12, 1956 Progressive Club

How They Met Carol: He was home from University of Florida where he was on a swim scholarship. He was practicing his dives in the Progressive Club pool. For six years, I was his admirer. Paul: I thought she was refreshing, pretty, sarcastic, independent. She was the only Jewish girl to swim in the pool. Carol: He had a good sense of humor. He never really proposed. In the Army, he asked me to go with him to Germany. We married at 19, after dating for a year. Secret to Happy Marriage Carol: We both like to travel to new places and have curiosity about meeting new people. Paul: You have to take a lot of sh-t. Carol: It’s a wonder we don’t get a divorce when UGA Plays UF.


ATLANTA THEN & NOW

Rosalind and Phil Haber

Albert and Isabelle Maslia

How They Met Roz: My daddy got a job in Jacksonville. Phil was the best looking guy just like he is now. I was only 14, I had to chase him. Phil: Relatives fixed us up. They told me she was rich. They told her I was rich. Both were lying.

How They Met Albert: Isabelle had a Sweet 16 party. Francis Ruben Lefkoff invited me as her date to the party. A few months later I called Isabelle to invite her to attend an AEPi function at Georgia Tech.

Years Married: 59 years Date of wedding: June 28, 1964

Secret to Happy Marriage Phil: Every morning I say, “I’m sorry.” Roz: I cater to him. Always try to make him happy. At his 65th birthday, I gave him a mankini. Phil: At 70, I got her pearls that actually look better around my neck.

Years Married: 71 years Date of wedding: June 25, 1952 Progressive Club in Atlanta

Attraction Isabelle: He was tall, slim, good looking and a good swimmer. Albert: Her good looks at the party and at the Progressive Club swimming pool. Secret to Long Marriage Isabelle: Providing Albert with good meals every day. Albert: Arguing and making up - but not too soon.

Iris and Louie Shemaria

Years Married: 61 years Date of wedding: April 8, 1962 St. Petersburg, Fla.

How They Met Iris: I had just moved to Atlanta, and we double dated with a friend from Tampa and with Louie and his date. I was attracted to him by his personality and good humor. He was then and still is the nicest and kindest person I have ever known. Louie: I was attracted to Iris by her beautiful legs which she still has. A beautiful face that I still find beautiful. Also, she was nice to talk to. Knew all about sports - my kind of girl. The next morning, I called my buddy and asked if he minded if I asked her out. Secret to Happy Marriage Louie: A lot of patience and a sense of humor. We enjoy each other’s company, have a lot of fun together. Iris has always been my strongest supporter and “right arm.” She encouraged me in business. She listens over and over to all my stories. Iris: We like a lot of the same things. Although Louie doesn’t like to shop, he will sit out and say, “Buy what you want, and let’s go.” How could I not love him? Louie always has time for all of our children and grands. Many years ago, my mother called to wish us a happy anniversary and asked, “which one of you deserves the medal?’’ I answered, “Depends on the day.” ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 55


ATLANTA THEN & NOW

Marilynn and Ron Winston

Years Married: 56 years Date of wedding: July 20, 1967 Ahavath Achim Synagogue, Atlanta How They Met Ronny: I met Marilynn at Camp Blue Star the summer after I graduated UVA law school and Marilynn had just graduated from high school. For me, it was “love at first sight,” so I “robbed the cradle” and we dated. After camp, I was in the Coast Guard Reserve, and Marilynn started her first year of college. A year later, we married, I began practicing law and she transferred to Emory. Marilynn: Ronny “swept me off my feet!” He was handsome, smart, and mature. I was so naïve, he had to teach me how to French kiss! Our first years of marriage, Ronny would drop me at Emory on his way to the office and 12 hours later pick me up. Studying so much enabled me to finish college in three years. Ronny always encouraged me to advance my education and supported me in getting graduate degrees.

Secret to Happy Marriage Ronny: Marilynn is my best friend. We both try to compromise on major issues. She was and remains the love of my life. Marilynn: Try hard not to go to bed angry. Try to really listen and not just talk. Take joy in the joyful moments life gives you. Ronny is my greatest joy!

Barbara and Dick Planer

Years Married: 65 years Date of wedding: Nov. 30, 1958 Norfolk, Va. at Beth El Synagogue

How They Met Dick: Barbara, who was a student at Woman’s College UNC in Greensboro, N.C., was invited by her roommate, who was from Durham, to join her for Yom Kippur. On Kol Nidre, Barbara’s roommate was saving a seat for my fraternity brother from UNC Chapel Hill. Barbara was saving a seat for a boy from Duke. My fraternity brother and I showed up, and the Duke boy never came, so we met for the first time. I was lucky that night. Attraction Dick: I found Barbara very pretty, attractive, and easy to talk with. Barbara: He was cute with a good sense of humor. Secret to Happy Marriage Barbara: We both a have a sense of humor though Dick’s is more wry. It’s entertaining to watch him yelling at the TV when his sports teams mess up. He takes over as coach. You’d think the stadium was in the backyard.

56 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES


ATLANTA THEN & NOW

Rita and Michael Levine

Years Married: 54 Years Date of wedding: July 27, 1969 Ahavath Achim Synagogue

How They Met Michael: In 1968, Rita and I were set up on a blind date. I was an intern at Emory (later a gastroenterologist), and Rita was a speech pathology major at UGA. My long time Ohio friends in Atlanta were diligent in introducing me to eligible young gals…most helpful as Match, Tinder, or JDate had not arrived on the scene.

Larraine and Lowell Fine Years Married: 56 years Date of wedding: Sept. 3, 1967 Ahavath Achim Synagogue

How They Met Larraine: At a party where the girls invited dates. We all dressed up and had a great time. I met Lowell for the first time. We both attended Grady High School and were in BBG and AZA but had never met. I can’t say it was love at first sight at 16, but he was cute, funny, and made me feel special. He invited me to a dance, and we started dating and dating and dating…Lowell went to UGA Law School, and we were married before his last year. In May of 1968 we both received our degrees in the same ceremony - Lowell had his law degree and had passed the Georgia Bar, and I had my BS degree in elementary education. We lived in married housing on campus for $56 a month. Lowell: Although Larraine and I spent many Sundays at the AJCC, we did not know each other. When I got to that Sweet 16 party, I saw a beautiful girl in a pretty red dress. I didn’t know what love was then, but I knew I wanted to know her. Over time, I found she was the perfect person for me: charming, talented, cute, kind and who had a great personality. I later learned that she is a terrific cook and baker.

Attraction Michael: Our instant connection was that we had both previously studied at OSU. Rita says a game changer that made her accept my initial date was when I mentioned my sister, Jackie. Rita recalled how Jackie stood out at OSU as an extremely funny, gregarious gal who attracted a crowd of listeners. Rita: On our first date, we attended a pool party hosted by Carol & Larry Cooper…and to this day our families are generationally intertwined. I recall, vividly, looking over at Michael driving his “yellow Malibu convertible” and shocked myself by thinking, “I believe we are going to marry.” Six months later, we were engaged! Secret to Happy Marriage Michael: We feel and live the value system and example of our families who guided us along the way. Our children and grandchildren enrich us daily. Rita: We work hard to respect each other’s opinions and stay positive. Enjoying one another’s company; and cherishing the life we’ve created propels us. Also, free colonoscopies is a nice perk.

Secret to Happy Marriage Lowell: Good communication; compromise because everything is not 50-50. Larraine: Marriage is not always fair. Laughter and saying, “I’m sorry,” can get you through some difficult moments. My grandparents told us to never go to bed mad, and they were married 60 years!

ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 57


ATLANTA THEN & NOW

Atlanta’s Sephardic Community Was Built on Shoes When the first Sephardic Jews came to America around the beginning of the 20th century, they took whatever jobs they could find. Bob Bahr Many of them spoke only Ladino, a dialect of Spanish that is written with Hebrew characters, and had a limited education. But some of those who came to Atlanta in those early years had worked as shoemakers, one of the trades Jews were permitted on the island of Rhodes which was a part of the Ottoman Empire of Turkey, where many of the immigrants were born. While some started out as bootblacks, shining shoes for a few pennies, others worked to repair the heavy leather shoes that were worn then. They had a strong work ethic and as their English improved and they prospered, they opened their own small stores. By the early 1930s, two-thirds of the shoe stores in Atlanta, by one estimate, were owned by Sephardic Jews. One of them was owned by Dan Maslia’s father, David, who was struggling in his shop to make a living during the height of the Great Depression in 1933 when Dan was born. Dan Maslia says he literally grew up in the shop, shining shoes when he got older in what his father called, “The Shoe Hospital - making sick shoes well,” on Auburn Avenue. It was just one of the many Sephardic shoe shops, Maslia says, that crowded the city’s shopping district. Most of them were simple shops crowded with merchandise and machinery. They were often no more than 15 to 20 feet wide and 30 to 40 feet deep. And, as Maslia recalled, they seemed to be everywhere. “You could go downtown during the 1930s and 1940s and practically every block there was a shoe shop. Almost all of them run by Sephardic Jews. My dad was on Auburn Avenue and Lucky Street. But they were on Broad Street, all up and down Whitehall Street, Trinity Street, Mitchell Street. I don’t know how they all stayed in business.” Most of them were just a short walk from where the Sephardic community lived just south of downtown Atlanta, near what is now the former Turner Field complex. In the days before air conditioning,

58 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

During the 1930s, more than two-thirds of the shoe repairmen in Atlanta were Sephardic Jews.

Behor Habib on a bicycle at his shop on Houston Street with Solomon Levy.

on a hot summer night, the streets where they lived would come alive with conversations outside the closely spaced homes and apartments in the neighborhood. “We would sit on our porches at night,” Maslia says. “The houses are so close together that you would talk to your neighbors, your Sephardic neighbors. Some lived across the street, others lived next door. And we’d go to each other’s houses. Maybe

60 percent of the houses on Pryor Street and on Central Ave were Sephardic. It was like it was a ghetto. It really was a ghetto. But everybody knew everybody.” At the center of the community was the Orthodox Sephardic synagogue, Congregation Or Ve Shalom, which was founded in 1914. It was the hub of a closely knit community that rarely needed a formal invitation to a bar mitzvah or

other important event. Everyone, says Maslia, just showed up at the synagogue. But, by the 1950s, the synagogue, like most of the community, had moved on. Today the synagogue, located on North Druid Hills in Brookhaven, still has a number of congregants from the original families, but it’s adding new members, including many who are not Sephardic from the neighborhood off I-85.


ATLANTA THEN & NOW

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Few of the children of the initial wave of immigrants had any interest in shoes or shoe repairing. After the Second World War, when many of the younger generation finished their military service, they went to college on the GI Bill. After graduation, they had a professional career or were in business, where they prospered; Maslia worked for 40 years at Associated Credit Union, where he was the CEO when he retired. Five years ago, he published Or Ve Shalom’s Founders Map project, a detailed description of his old neighborhood, which listed each home and each business, including the old shoe stores. He spent two years on the painstaking project, which has made a major contri-

bution to the history of the Sephardic community in Atlanta. One of the last links to that era, Bennies Shoes, which had its origins over a hundred years ago, just closed its doors on Piedmont Road at the end of September. Three generations of the Shemaria family had kept it going in a number of locations around the city. Today, athletic footwear is what many people wear and they are rarely repaired. When they wear out, they are trashed. Today, Nike, the big footwear company, is building out a 16,000 squarefoot product innovation center in the Star Metal Offices building on the West Side of Atlanta to sell even more of their popular shoes. ì

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ATLANTA THEN & NOW

For 44 Years, Reitzes Has Been the Voice of WABE By Bob Bahr In 1979, when Lois Reitzes first came to WABE, the National Public Radio station in Atlanta, most of the programming during the day was broadcast for Atlanta’s public schools. The station, which was owned by the Atlanta school board, was less interested in what its adult listeners wanted to hear than in how the station could be used to provide supplementary instruction for children in such subjects as mathematics or reading. Reitzes would wake up early and sign the station on in the morning for NPR’s “Morning Edition," a national news program, which had just debuted. “I would arrive at 5:30 a.m. and get us on the air. ‘Morning Edition’ was on from 7 a.m. until 9 a.m. In those early days at 9 a.m., we would monitor the instructional programs that were going out of the air, and that’s when I would go to work on music programing.” In the afternoon, at 3 p.m., there would be a couple of hours of classical

Henry Winkler, who was a guest on WABE’s “City Lights,” with Lois Reitzes.

music, then the station broadcast another hour and a half of news from NPR, and it was back to more classical music until midnight, when the station went off

the air. The programming schedule, in those first years was simple, predictable, and not very challenging, but that began to

For 44 years, Lois Reitzes’ distinctive voice has been heard on WABE.

change in 1982 when the educational programming was moved to a sub-carrier on the FM dial that freed up the station for programming throughout the day.

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ATLANTA THEN & NOW

A Multifaith Concert to Benefit the Community Assistance Center Lois Reitzes spent long hours in the files of WABE’s record collection programming classical music.

That’s when Reitzes’ trips to the station’s record library, with its large files of long-playing recordings, became more important. Before moving to Atlanta in 1978, she did graduate study in music history at Indiana University. Her only radio experience was a short stint at the university’s radio station, but she knew music. Newly married to a husband who had just received a PhD in sociology and was starting a career at Georgia State University, she put her degree to good use at the station. Starting in 1982, she did the intermission programs during the broadcasts of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra from the Woodward Arts Center. Ten years later, she began hosting the regular broadcast herself. She is still doing it, 44 years after sitting down for the first time in front of a WABE microphone. Today, she’s director of arts and cultural programming at the station and has been on the air longer than anyone in the city. Over the years, her distinctive voice and her broad knowledge of the classic repertoire endeared her to a loyal audience of music fans. They followed her to Europe for trips the station offered each year to music venues on the continent. Occasionally, in the days when you could call directly into the studio, she got to know them personally while the music was playing. “I had people calling, asking for me to give them suggestions for music to listen to in labor and delivery. I programmed wedding music. All of this, of course, not as a consultant or paid, but as a favor. And this was somewhat shocking

for me. I have people come to ask me for music suggestions for their own funerals.” Occasionally, she would get calls from Carroll O’Connor, the noted television star who was an avid classical music buff. He lived in the city for nine months each year in the 1990s, when doing his hit television series, “In The Heat of The Night.” “Eventually, we became telephone pals and we met eventually in person,” Reitzes recalls. “My husband was part of a civic organization called Resurgence. It was, I believe, among the first multi-racial civic organizations in the city. Because his series, ‘In The Heat Of The Night,’ had a strong racial storyline, I asked Carroll if he would be willing to speak to the group, and to my astonishment, he did.” Today, aside from the symphony broadcasts, classical music is mostly just a memory on the station. But Reitzes’ daily hour-long program, “City Lights,” about the arts in Atlanta, is a popular feature on WABE and is available as a podcast. She and her husband, Don, who is a retired dean at GSU, have been active members of the community. She is a frequent host at the opening or closing nights of the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival and, for almost 40 years, they have been active members of The Temple. “Rabbi Peter Berg and the rest of The Temple clergy do such a gorgeous job of carrying on the traditions, carrying on the best of Jewish values. It’s a privilege to be able to share this pride that I have in our heritage, both in my broadcasts and within the community.” ì

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HEALTH & WELLNESS Practice ‘Blue Zone’ Style to Live to 100 By Marcia Caller Jaffe The old Yiddish proverb, “May you live to 120,” is not that far from reality. Ask centenarian Henry Kissinger, who is well on the media circuit in his gravelly voice pontificating on world events, or the 103-year-old woman in Nicoya Peninsula, Costa Rica, who still chops her own wood. Riding the gray wave, Netflix’s new four-part docuseries, “Live to 100: Secrets of the Blue Zones,” embarks on a worldwide tour of five communities whose residents have lifestyle choices that mimic gulping from the “fountain of youth.” The “Blue Zone” theory is not a new one, yet the way this series is organized congeals and educates. Netflix moderator/author Dan Buettner, gliding on his bicycle, has grasped the attention of longevity seekers with predictable choices like diet and exercise along with some surprises and oddities. One may never look at a blue sweet potato in the same way. Buettner set out 20 years ago with a team from “National Geographic” to seek the commonalities and distill wisdom as a “how to” manual to improve life quality and quantity. Buettner tours Okinawa, Sardinia, Costa Rica, Greece, and the only U.S. Blue Zone, Loma Linda, Calif. He concludes that it’s not all about winning the genetic lottery. He argues that “it’s 20 percent genes, 10 percent personal choices, 10 percent health care system, and the remaining 60 percent is environment.” Some of the latter are eschewing the car to walk or bike, proximity to plantbased foods, not overeating (especially non-processed foods) and sharing meals with family and friends. Some things are in contradiction. In Loma Linda, alcohol is prohibited, yet in Greece and Sardinia, it is part of everyday meals. Loma Linda was especially interesting as it incorporates many of the best points in an insular way: faith based Seventh Day Adventist (which, like Judaism, has Saturday Sabbath), vegetarian diet based, good weather for activities, built in community of friends, a huge medical center. Less common references are spending time on the floor (getting up and down to maintain balance), playing pickleball, and eating dairy products from goats and sheep (not cows). One thing many of these older folks do not have is good dental work -- toothlessly playing

62 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Dan Buettner invested two decades of work to visit the five blue zones. He also mentions Singapore as an ideal environment // Photo Credit: Netflix

The Blue Zones were first noted by scientists with blue dots on a map locating communities of a high proportion of centenarians // Photo Credit: Netflix

The new Netflix docuseries, “Live to 100: Secrets of the Blue Zones,” explores the habits of successful seniors around the globe // Photo Credit: Netflix

the screechy viola and rolling pasta at 102, smiling along the way. What they do have in common is family care and even reverence -- as opposed to the more common American way of checking into a $10,000-plus a month senior care facility, which may not be all that bad considering the food and camaraderie element may co-exist. Then there’s the contrasting female to male variable. A New England Centenarian Study showed that of the approximately 90,000 centenarians, or .027 percent of overall population, in the U.S. today, 85 percent are female, and of the super centenarians, 110 or older, 90 percent are female. In the U.S., the average life expectancy recently dropped to 76, the lowest it has been in the past two decades and may have some relationship to COVID. In some villages, there are simple variables: the men have low-stress jobs like watching the sheep and laying about, some of the poorer villages live longer because they are not close to town and have to walk uphill to get home. Speaking of females, local treasure

Nanette Wenger, 93, Emory legend and pioneer cardiologist, added these words of wisdom, “Cherish the added years given you for the opportunity to give back and mentor and sponsor others. Enjoy each day and value the camaraderie of family and friends. Make the world a bet-

ter place by your thoughts and deeds.” A black belt marital arts octogenarian physician also told the AJT, “Think about how lazy we have become. In my previous car, I had to open and close the trunk with some vigor, now we push a button.” ì

Nuggets from Blue Zone lifestyles: • Stress management: napping, praying, happy hour with friends • 80 percent rule: avoid overeating; stop when 80 percent full; Hara Hachi Bu in Japanese • Plant-centric meals also shown to lower risk of depression and cognitive decline • Social connectedness with friends who have healthy habits • Spirituality as little as once a month has health benefits • Family first: contribute to household responsibilities and childcare; live near adult children who care • Stay open minded and continue to learn • Don’t leave any years on the table and mash those blue yams


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HEALTH & WELLNESS

Pioneering Physicians Open Atlanta Ketamine Center Two native Atlantan Jewish doctors are making waves in the field of medicine by collaborating on a groundbreaking approach Robyn Spizman to treating Gerson mental health and chronic pain. Dr. Josh Rothstein, a board-certified emergency physician, and Dr. Zachary Lazarus, a board-certified anesthesiologist, both born and raised in Atlanta, have embarked on this journey by opening Atlanta Ketamine Center, a clinic that combines cuttingedge medical science with compassion to provide a novel treatment to help patients. Ketamine, historically used as an anesthetic, has shown incredible results when used in lower doses to treat depression, anxiety, PTSD, and some types of chronic pain.

Drs. Lazarus and Rothstein have a combined 25-plus years using ketamine routinely in the hospital setting for anesthesia and pain management and have seen its use expand greatly, both in the inpatient and outpatient setting, as more and more studies confirm its benefit for mental health and chronic pain. They are excited to bring their expertise and experience to the outpatient setting to help patients. At Atlanta Ketamine Center, patients receive ketamine through an IV while they relax in zero gravity chairs, play music of their choice, adjust the lighting to their preference, and enjoy relaxing channels on the large flat screen TVs in each room. Drs. Lazarus and Rothstein monitor the patients’ vital signs closely and adjust the dosing of their medication frequently throughout their treatment to ensure the patient has the best experience possible. According to Drs. Rothstein and Lazarus, recent years have produced numerous studies on ketamine’s benefits

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Drs. Josh Rothstein and Zachary Lazarus, both Atlanta natives, use ketamine to treat depression, anxiety, PTSD, and chronic pain.

for patients struggling with depression, anxiety, PTSD, and other mental health conditions, as well as certain chronic pain conditions. Often, patients do not respond well to traditional therapies, have negative side effects, or may simply hit a wall with their treatments. When given appropriately and monitored by qualified physicians, the evidence shows that ketamine can make many patients feel better faster, sometimes within a few days of their first treatment, and then provide longer term relief when given as a series of IV infusions over two to three weeks. Dr. Rothstein adds, “Since opening, it has been extremely gratifying to see our patients improve. It is an incredible

experience to get to know our patients over the course of their treatment and see their depression, anxiety, pain, and other symptoms improve drastically in a relatively short period of time.” Dr. Lazarus and Dr. Rothstein’s journey from growing up in Atlanta to pioneers in medicine is an inspiring business story that involves compassion, innovation, and community engagement. Atlanta Ketamine Center not only helps those struggling with various mental health challenges and chronic pain, but also sets an example of how dedication to healing can create positive change within the community and the city as a whole. For more information www.atlantaketaminecenter.com or call 404-709-2103. ì


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HEALTH & WELLNESS

Purple Hatz and Robotic Cats Mean Senior Fun By Marcia Caller Jaffe Packing in the positive for today’s aging population, Brian Shulman is about as creative in offering solutions as his company’s name. Purple Hatz (yes, with a ‘Z’), his consulting business, so named for his proclivity to wear purple hats. Shulman explains, “Purple is often associated with independence, dignity, wisdom, and devotion, all things that have ties to aging/longevity.” Shulman also consults for AgeTech companies in strategy, sales, business development, and marketing. Brian describes his role as “I now have the honor of working alongside the team at Ageless Innovation to create meaningful moments and combat social isolation and loneliness through the power of play.” Ageless Innovation is a solutionsbased company committed to impacting the lives of older adults and their care partners through traditional “playing.” Their innovative products can help ameliorate geriatric issues like social isolation, loneliness, and cognitive decline by delivering joy. Ageless recognized that there was a void of products that bring fun and play to the older adult market, and it was this insight that inspired the team to develop solutions for older adults by introducing a collection of cost-effective products that create meaningful interactions and experiences for aging loved ones and their families. Joy for All Companion Pets are lifelike, animatronic, interactive “animals” that are uniquely designed to look, sound, and feel like real pets, without the responsibility and cost of pet ownership. Consider a pet that doesn’t have to be fed or walked -- a robot! Shulman’s line of Joy for All Companion Pets includes Pups (available in Golden and Freckled), Cats (orange tabby, silver, and tuxedo), and Walker Squawkers (cardinal and blue birds) are sold at major retailers including Amazon, Best Buy, and on JoyForAll.com. He recalls the delight of a senior after he installed a robotic bird which sang the sweetest tunes on a woman’s walker handle. Recently, the company launched “Games,” joining forces with Hasbro as their first-ever licensee dedicated to enhancing fun for older adults through play experiences. Some of the games Shulman has reimagined are Trivial Pursuit Generations, The Game of Life Generations, and Scrabble Bingo. Shulman explains, “The new games 66 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Shulman is known for wearing a purple hat “just about anywhere.”

Brian and one of his sons play generational board games with his in-laws. A robotic pet looks on.

Brian Shulman poses with a variety of robotic pets designed for low maintenance and company for seniors.

Brian and Rachel have fun at a Michigan beach with Rory and Hayes.

are designed to be played together in-person, like their classic counterparts. There is no technology. Just good old-fashioned fun!” Ageless Innovations partners with AARP to assure that game events are free. Shulman is anxious to partner with the sales/marketing and life enrichment teams at senior facilities to produce a Reach Out and Play event. He recalled, “We have multiple generations come together to participate, ranging in age from 3-93. It is such a powerful event. The goal is to bring people together to create meaningful social connections through play, and I think we achieve that.” To help seniors locally, Shulman has appeared at the Renaissance on Peachtree (this past September) for a fun

game day with the residents and families. And soon, he will visit Somerby in Sandy Springs for a free game event and hopes to do 20-plus a year. He is working with other Atlanta organizations like Age Well Atlanta, Jewish Home Life, and JF&CS to similarly host. Raised in the Detroit suburbs, Shulman received a degree from the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan and an MBA from Emory (Goizueta). In his early career, he struggled within the confines of “cubicle working” jobs in commercial banking and specialty insurance wholesaling. Escaping those doldrums, he entered the exciting world of start-ups and emerging technology working on projects like beer festivals and the humanoid robot “Pepper.” His sentimental reason for enter-

ing the senior space came after watching his mother struggle as a long-distance caregiver for parents who were suffering from Alzheimer’s. He then became interested in technology at the intersection of aging and health. Shulman and his Sandy Spring native wife, Rachel, a maternal fetal physician, are raising two sons. Brian and Rachel met at the University of Michigan; and he says they “bleed maize and blue” (Michigan colors) and named their son, Wolverine (middle name). Now that is a serious fan! To attend a Reach Out and Play event, or plan one, visit: www.agelessinnovation.com/home/reachoutandplay/ or email ReachOutAndPlay@AgelessInnovation.com. Or to host Companion Pets, visit www.joyforall.com. ì


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workout, all with simple movements and without heavy weights or any strain on tendons, ligaments, and joints. As such, a single 20-minute strength session replaces multiple sessions and hours of traditional training in the gym. In addition to giving you back substantial amounts of precious time each week, BODY20 workouts help correct muscular imbalances, boost metabolism and accelerate weight loss, and provide a number of other health benefits. While the typical BODY20 member is in their upper 30s to late 50s, we have members as young as 18 and several in their 70s. In fact, not only is BODY20 safe for seniors, but it is also one of the few exercise programs that can help seniors maintain muscle mass, gain strength, and increase bone density, mitigating the substantial risks of osteoporosis and injuries from falls. It’s also ideal for those recovering from injuries and graduating from Stim or other rehabilitation protocols and is often the only exercise routine safe for such people during their recovery. We realize that all this may sound too good to be true. Don’t take our word for it, just talk to our members whose lives have been dramatically improved in just a few months. Jake Guyette says, “The results have been nothing short of amazing. I’ve improved my endurance, strength, and overall cardiovascular fitness. I’m achieving similar results in just two 20-minute sessions per week that used to take me five days a week at the gym.” Kayla Chaney says, “I can’t believe how much my post-partum body has changed since June. I’ve lost 20+lbs and feel 100X more energetic, stronger, and confident.” And Jen Polic, a personal trainer with over

25 years of experience says, “This has been a game- changer for my husband and me. I decided to try it because I was recovering from a hamstring tear, and it’s a great way to load the muscles without overloading the joints. It is one of the most effective and efficient strength workouts and in just two months I’ve seen significant strength and muscle definition improvements.” BODY20 EMS strength and advanced cardio training have disrupted and democratized the US market for personal training services – offering a better, faster, and cheaper alternative to traditional personal training. Additionally, a key component of the program is weekly comprehensive body composition analysis. Using the InBody scan, we measure more than just body weight and body fat percentage. We measure visceral fat surrounding your major organs, muscular imbalances, intra and extracellular water, resting metabolism rate and more. Our coaches then review progress with our members every 6 weeks so they know exactly how they are tracking against their personal goals. BODY20 studios provide a premium, boutique fitness experience, and EMS-certified coaches deliver personalized training programs that are tailored for each member’s goals and designed to achieve optimal results. Given the incredible benefits and value of BODY20, the company is now the fastest growing fitness franchise in the US and has reached #292 in Inc. Magazine’s Inc. 5000 2023 List of fastest growing private companies in the US. BODY20 now has 35 studios opened across 16 states in the US and expects to grow to 100 studios opened and in process of opening by early 2024. And Metro Atlanta is BODY20 country! As of October 2023, there are three studios open in

Buckhead, Brookhaven, and Decatur, one opening in East Cobb in November, and ATL BODY20 franchisees have plans to develop a total of 18 across the Atlanta metropolitan area over the next three years, making Atlanta one of the Top 3 metro areas for BODY20 in the US. To really understand the potential of BODY20, you have to experience the workout for yourself. Everyone receives their first workout for free, so you have nothing to lose…come try us!

For more information, visit body20.com and contact the BODY20 Franchisees listed below: Jason and Leslie Cohen: 678 455 4628 (Brookhaven, Sandy Springs, Alpharetta, and Cumming) Heidi Underwood: 770 209 3523 (Buckhead, South Buckhead, Midtown)

Tim Vanderham and Marci Nessing: 678 786 1094 (Decatur, Druid Hills, Inman Park, Peachtree City)

Gene Chayevsky: 770 450 6127 (East Cobb, Roswell, Western Buckhead/Vinings, Dunwoody, Johns Creek, Suwanee, Peachtree Corners)

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ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 67


HEALTH & WELLNESS

The Verve of Quality Oil and Vinegar By Marcia Caller Jaffe Foodies and advocates of a healthy Mediterranean diet alike have long fawned over the benefits and vibrant tastes of quality oils and vinegars. Enter entrepreneur Ellen Softness’ Strippaggio Artisan Oils, Vinegars and Gifts with its fusions, aromas, and most intense flavors. Softness, who left a career as a government bond trader on Wall Street, with an MBA from Columbia University, and previous owner of seven Gymboree franchises, and a mother of three, was “post-COVID ready” for a new adventure. She said, “I had no background or training in the food arena, but knew the products were special. Olive oil and balsamic vinegar have been staples in many cuisines for hundreds of years, but the premium category with enhanced flavors is an emerging and fast-growing category, so I bought Strippaggio Artisan.” Back to basics, vinegars today are well beyond traditional uses, and some bottles can sell for $100. Versatile to the point of being syrupy, or drizzling on ice cream or strawberries, gourmands will pay extra for complexity, distinction, re-defining acidity and tartness. There are three types of vinegars -- traditional, condiment, and salad -- all meant to elevate food. EVOO (extra virgin olive oil) is at the top of its quality category and is prepared according to strict standards: no solvents or heat, no fruit other than olives, no storage above 80 degrees F, etc. Strippaggio purchases olive oils primarily from small batch growers in Northern California, as well as Chile and Southern Europe, depending upon harvest, weather, and climatic changes. Their balsamic vinegars are all sourced from Modena, Italy, where the finest vinegars in the world are made. They sell only 100 percent Pure Certified Extra Virgin Olive Oil (EVOO), whose production is regulated by the government to produce the purest and most flavorful oil. Softness continued, “Our flavored oils are all ‘fused,’ which means that the flavor, like fresh basil, and the justharvested olives, are crushed together at the beginning of the process before being bottled. This results in a deeper, richer taste and aroma. Our balsamic vinegars are made in Modena using the traditional method of fermenting grapes and cooked grapes in oaken casks for multiple years.” Their bestselling EVOO’s are basil, garlic, lemon, and blood orange while their bestselling balsamic vinegars are 68 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Ellen Softness with her arms around a bevy of Strippaggio bottles.

Softness has different price points for gift boxes/bags. Shown here are the most popular.

traditional dark, traditional white, lemongrass, and peach. They have boxed gift sets at various price points that can ship to more than 45 states. Gifts range from $15.95 to $109.95. Legions of medical studies confirm the heart-healthy benefits of extra virgin olive oil which is high in monounsaturated fatty acids and contains antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. As promoted in the Mediterranean diet, quality EVOO can be used in every meal. Softness added, “At Thanksgiving, rosemary EVOO is appropriate for basting a turkey, Italian herb EVOO adds flavor to stuffing and dressing, and peach

A charcuterie board display with Basil EVOO and Traditional Dark Balsamic Vinegar makes for fun entertaining.

Strippaggio displays these oils and vinegars at one of their wholesale clients - Stripplings in Bogart, Ga. They are in four of their six stores with plans to expand to the last two.

balsamic vinegar is delicious in cranberry sauce. Peach, blueberry, strawberry, and fig balsamic vinegars can be drizzled over ice cream and fresh fruit. Basil EVOO is yummy in scrambled eggs and traditional dark BV heightens the flavor of grilled meat. Lemon and blood orange EVOO are best in baking, even brownies.” Softness sure has a long list of ideas. In making salad dressing, Softness said, “It’s hard to choose one ‘best,’ as there are literally dozens of delicious combinations. Two of my favorites are Basil EVOO with Lemongrass BV and Lemon EVOO with Cranberry Pear BV.” Strippaggio’s products range from

$14.95 to $26.95 per bottle. Like great wine, most balsamic vinegars get better with age. Most of their vinegars are aged at least five years, while Cask 10 Premium Balsamic is aged for 10 years. Strippagio is marketed via their website, www. strippaggio.com, farmers markets, and through social media and email marketing. It’s also sold through retail partners – butchers, bakeries, and specialty grocery stores. Softness, who’s also an evaluator in the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival, laughed, “Strippaggio means ‘to slurp’ in Italian! There is a certain way to slurp in order to properly taste good olive oil.” ì


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ARTS & CULTURE MJCCA Book Festival Continues with All-Star Lineup The 32nd annual edition of the Book Festival of the MJCCA is here! This year’s lineup of authors and guests will be sure to have the seats filled and arms ready to raise for post-program Q&A sessions. Some of the more notable authors and presenters at this year’s festival include actors Millie Bobby Brown, John Stamos, Henry Winkler, and comedienne Judy Gold; Sheila Johnson, the first Black female billionaire and co-founder of BET; politicians like former Georgia Congresswoman Stacy Abrams and former U.S. Rep. Adam Kinzinger, and many more. One of this year’s highlights will be on Nov. 4 when bestselling author Walter Isaacson presents his newest work, “Elon Musk,” a biography that delves deep into the controversial tech titan, and head of Twitter, SpaceX, and Neuralink. The book fesitval's presenting sponsors are Greenberg Traurig, Barbara and Ed Mendel, and Fifth Third Bank. The festival will run from Oct. 28 to Nov. 19 and will be held at the MJCCA, 5342 Tilly Mill Road, Dunwoody. Tickets are available and range price depending on the speaking engagement. Copies of the books are typically included with the cost of admission and some events may feature refreshments, a book signing, and photo line. For more information, please visit www.atlantajcc.org/bookfestival.

Event Previews “Being Henry: The Fonz and Beyond” Henry Winkler

“Being Henry,” the new novel by Emmy Award-winning actor, author, comedian, producer and director Henry Winkler is filled with profound heart, charm, and self-deprecating humor. The book is a memoir about life in Hollywood, the curse of stardom, and more. Event is at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 5. Tickets are $38 and include a copy of the book. There will not be a book signing; all book copies will be pre-signed. A photo line will be available.

“By the Grace of the Game” Dan Grunfield

In a conversation with IJ Rosenberg, author Dan Grunfield will discuss his new book, “By the Grace of the Game: The Holocaust, A Basketball Legacy, and an Unprecedented American Dream.” This complex tale traverses the spectrum of human experience to detail how perseverance, love, and legacy can survive through the generations. Event is at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 7. Tickets are $18 for MJCCA members and $22 for the community.

“Honest Aging: An Insider’s Guide to the Second Half of Life” Rosanne Leipzig

“The House is on Fire” Rachel Beanland

In a conversation with Zoe Fishman, author Rachel Beanland will discuss her work, “The House is on Fire.” The story is a reimagining of one of America’s earliest tragedies, the Richmond Theater Fire of 1811. Event is at 12 p.m., Nov. 6. Tickets are $13 for MJCCA members and $16 for the community.

In a conversation with Holly Firfer, author Rosanne Leipzig will discuss her new book, “Honest Aging: An Insider’s Guide to the Second Half of Life.” The book provides guidance for common health concerns, including problems with memory, mood, sleep, weight, and more. Event is at 12 p.m., Nov. 8. Tickets are $10 for MJCCA members and $15 for the community.

“Why We Love Baseball: A His“Invited to Life: Finding Hope tory in 50 Moments” After the Holocaust” Joe Posnanski In a conversation with Chris DiB.A. Van Sise In a conversation with Rabbi Brian Glusman, author B.A. Van Sise will discuss his new book, “Invited to Life: Finding Hope After the Holocaust.” The emotional work focuses on survivors of the Holocaust and the aftermath. Event is at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 6. Tickets are $18 for MJCCA members and $22 for the community.

70 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

mino, author Joe Posnanski will discuss his new book, “Why We Love Baseball: A History in 50 Moments.” This masterful ode to the classic game will make you fall in love with America’s pastime all over again. Event is at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 8. Tickets are $18 for MJCCA members and $22 for the community.


ARTS & CULTURE “The World: A Family History of Humanity” Simon Sebag Montefiore

“Signal Fires: A Novel” Dani Shapiro

In a conversation with Jessica Handler, author Dani Shapiro will discuss her new book, “Signal Fires: A Novel.” Urgent and compassionate, this novel is a magical story for our times and a literary tour de force. Event is at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 9. Tickets are $18 for MJCCA members and $22 for the community.

In a conversation with Dov Wilker, author Simon Sebag Montefiore will discuss his new book, “The World: A Family History of Humanity.” In this epic, eversurprising book, Montefiore chronicles the world’s greatest dynasties across human history. Event is at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 13. Tickets are $18 for MJCCA members and $22 for the community. Compiled by AJT Staff

“Yes, I Can Say That” Judy Gold

This event will feature a standup comedy set from comedienne Judy Gold, who will share about her life and experiences and new book, “Yes I Can Say That.” Event is at 8 p.m., Nov. 11. Tickets are $25 for MJCCA members and $30 for the community. Event is recommended for adults age 18-plus.

Local Literati Showcase: Andy Lipman, Scott Zucker and Daniel Quigley

In a conversation with Jessica Handler, these three authors – Andy Lipman, Scott Zucker, and Daniel Quigley – will discuss their works. Lipman wrote, “The CF Warrior Project Volume 2: Celebrating Our Cystic Fibrosis Community”; Zucker wrote, “A Battle for Life: A Novel”; and Quigly wrote, “Thunderstruck: A Novel.” Event is at 1 p.m., Nov. 12. Admission is free.

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“The Best Strangers in the World” Ari Shapiro

In a conversation with Michael Seiden, author Ari Shapiro will discuss his new work, “The Best Strangers in the World: Stories from a Life Spent Listening.” Shapiro reveals heartwarming narratives about his time spent covering the globe for NPR. Event is at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 12. Tickets are $20 for MJCCA members and $25 for the community.

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ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 71


ARTS & CULTURE

Elon Musk - Walter Isaacson

Comedienne Judy Gold Will Light Up the MJCCA

By Bob Bahr Perhaps it would have been enough if Elon Musk had created six companies that are well on their way to reshaping the way we live our lives each day and for years to come. Dayanu. Perhaps it would have been enough that Elon Musk had spent $44 billion to acquire Twitter and now has over 140 million followers, more than any else one else on the social media program. Dayenu. Perhaps it would have been enough if, with Elon Musk’s $255 billion fortune, you would have more money than any single individual on the planet. Dayanu. But it isn’t enough because now you have a 688-page volume by Walter Isaacson immortalizing all of Musk’s accomplishments in a fascinating, first-person trip through the world that the universe’s most successful entrepreneur has created. Isaacson, who has had best sellers based on subjects long dead, like Leonardo DaVinci and Benjamin Franklin, as well as those who have passed more recently, like Steve Jobs, has dived right in to Musk’s frenetic world in which the subject is very much alive. For two years, Isaacson trailed after Musk, sitting in on corporate meetings, having long late-night conversations with the man himself, and interviewing a couple hundred of Musk’s closest friends, family members, and confidants, as well as a few detractors. The impression one gets from a reading of the new biography is that he is hardly the reflective, choir boy who gazes out at us from the cover of this book across a pair of hands in prayerful repose. If anything, the 52-year-old Musk is described as a creature of his emotions, with little control over what he says to business associates, subordinates, and assorted romantic partners. He is seemingly powerless to subdue what one of his lovers has called his “demon mode,” which causes him to mercilessly abuse and belittle anyone and everything in his immediate view. He can also assume a more modest form of self-deprecation, as when he appeared as the guest host on NBC’s “Saturday Night Live,” and opened with this bit from his monologue: “I reinvented electric cars, and I’m sending people to Mars in a rocket ship, did you think I was also going to be a chill, normal dude?” Isaacson, who has an appointment as a history professor at Tulane University, also 72 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

knows a thing or two about the corporate environment he writes about. He was, for a while, the chair and CEO of CNN, editor of Time Magazine, and the President and CEO of the Aspen Institute in Colorado. He seemingly has no trouble chatting up the assorted Captain of Industry that support the numerous conclusions he’s reached about Musk's many accomplishments. His subject has, after all, created companies that have a valuation in excess of a trillion dollars, is in the process of perfecting an electronic aid for the human brain, produced a string of reusable rocket ships, and seemingly had a major influence on reversing our love affair with the internal combustion engine. It is not surprising that the prime minister of Israel has described him as the real president of the United States. Still, for all his accomplishments, Isaacson cannot help but to characterize Musk as someone not quite ready for adulthood. After a lengthy analysis of the roots of Musk’s erratic and abusive behavior he lets off his subject more gently than you would have expected. “Sometimes great innovators are riskseeking man-children who resist potty training,” Isaacson concludes. “They can be reckless, cringeworthy, sometimes even toxic. They can also be crazy. Crazy enough to think they can change the world.” Walter Isaacson appears at 8 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 4 at the MJCCA. The Musk book is included in the $38 ticket.

By Marcia Caller Jaffe Countless comedians channel their edginess from a base of pain and their own life experiences with or without a grievous or even well-meaning Jewish mother. On Nov. 11, stand-up comic Judy Gold will appear at the Book Festival of the Marcus Jewish Community Center of Atlanta in the unusual format of a live stand-up show, “An Evening with Judy Gold,” with the backdrop of her book, “Yes I Can Say That…When They Come for the Comedians, We Are All in Trouble.” Interwoven with the book’s foul language, Gold unfurls her troubled childhood as a 6’ 2” tall girl whose New Jersey mother asked the pediatrician, “When will it stop?” (her growing that is). With a size 12 shoe, Gold suffered “Big Bird” nicknames and the like until, later in life, she found her niche in comedy and how to insult people back. Now 60 and the mother of two young adult children, Gold’s resume includes winning two daytime Emmy Awards (writing and producing the “Rosie O’Donnell Show”), and her long running Off Broadway show, other books, and podcasts. The book is relevant and timely

because Gold hits head on with today’s “over sensitivities” in a too far reaching/ offending cancel culture -- people needing to be coddled in order not to be triggered. From her book, “It would behoove people to stop labeling things as ‘triggers’ on someone else’s behalf. Who the hell are you? You haven’t lived my life. There are certain words [and jokes] I can say because I’m part of the communities. I call my agent ‘gay-gent.’ She laments about finally getting on the “Jay Leno Show,” then having to follow a down beat serious segment with John McCain. Gold’s upcoming Atlanta (adult) experience is bound to be side splitting and relatable. Just don’t come wearing your “prude hat.” Remember Gold is part of a lot of “communities” and Judaism is certainly a prominent one. Known for blazing the trail for free speech, Gold mixes that with being gay and outrageous. Come expecting a lot of “contemporary borscht beltish” language, tales, and jokes with maybe the Holocaust thrown in that would make George Carlin and Lenny Bruce appear reserved. Mark Twain said, “Comedy is tragedy plus time.” No tellin’ what Judy Gold is going to say on the Dunwoody stage.


ARTS & CULTURE

A ‘Shabbat’ to Remember with Sussman NEURO CARE

By Marcia Caller Jaffe Queue up for the Book Festival of the MJCCA’s most delicious event where bestselling cookbook author Adeena Sussman will share her bounty with a luncheon at 12 p.m., Friday, Nov. 17. “Shabbat Recipes and Rituals from My Table to Yours” is a 384-page, mouthwateringly illustrated guidepost with considerable heft in many dimensions. Sussman magnifies and elevates Shabbat descriptions and recipes with “Kodachrome” sharp color images (by Dan Perez) that hop off the plate and onto the fork, spoon, or Challah knife. Sussman tells of her California family’s observance and “specialness” in celebrating the seventh day of the week for rest, welcoming others, reflection, gratitude, and food, glorious food. All about organization, tips, and sentiment, Sussman’s contents range from breakfast and brunch, apps and dips, vegetables and side salads, kugels, pastas and grains, soups, main course salads, fish, chicken, and meat “mains,” stews, cocktails, and desserts. Kugels, for example, are in standard fare like Bubbe’s Extra Crispy Potatoes to “a twist” to Caramel Apple Noodles in a ring. More exotic recipes are anything

but de rigueur. Dushpara (Uzbeki dumpling soup), Cacciucco Livornese (Italian fish stew), Algerian meatballs, Baghdadi chicken curry, Jachnun rolled Yeminite bread, and Tbecha Belsalk with Swiss chard (meat stew) are just a few of the tastes to prepare stateside in one’s own kitchen. Sussman herself is as much of a treat as are her recipes. Research, trial and error, and vast experience salted with emotion make this book something you value as a house, shower, or cocktail table book. Don’t expect it to remain unsoiled for long, begging for open kitchen counter dripping and folded corners as the most favored resource and promised joy to come. Sussman, who was born on Shabbat, married later in life, and moved to Israel about a decade ago. In the book, she states, “I cook for Shabbat because it feeds my soul…the recipes paint a picture of Oneg (delight) Shabbat one plate at a time, and they await your attention, interpretation and embrace.” Don’t leave without dessert. Anyone for Pistachio Frangipane and blood orange galette? Or apricot Tahini shortbread bars? For a fitting conclusion, the book ends with a four-page tribute to Havdalah. Finishing touches indeed.

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ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 73


ARTS & CULTURE

The Einstein Effect

By Chana Shapiro Atlanta “home-town boy,” Benyamin Cohen, the founding editor of Jewsweek and American Jewish Life magazine, is the news editor of America’s oldest Jewish newspaper, The Forward. In his second book, “The Einstein Effect: How the World’s Favorite Genius Got into Our Cars, Our Bathrooms, and Our Minds,” Cohen demonstrates how Albert Einstein’s theories directly affect our lives today. While paying homage to (and explaining for the layman) Einstein’s seminal discoveries, Cohen writes with detail and humor about Time magazine’s Dec. 31, 1999, “Person of the Century.” No matter how much you already know about Einstein, Cohen’s book is full of surprises, chapter after chapter, often page after page. “Genius” describes a person of superior intellect and creativity, and Cohen goes wide and deep into the life and legacy of the world’s most famous genius. In his witty, light-hearted style, Cohen shows the idiosyncrasies as well as the brilliance of his subject, making Einstein accessible to the non-scientist reader. Seeking stories about Einstein, Cohen relates his own dogged investigative odyssey, in which he interacted with interesting people connected to his subject. We also learn why Einstein was not only admired, but also adored, and the chapter about Einstein’s contemporary social media popularity—Cohen manages Einstein’s social media accounts— humorously addresses the adoration. It’s fun to read about the continuum of nutty, driven, brilliant, and quixotic characters who play a part in Einstein’s legacy: for example, Cohen delivers a play-by-play description of the crazy, lab74 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

yrinthine journey of Einstein’s brain—or slices of it—starting with its theft by the man who performed Einstein’s autopsy. Cohen’s lively writing style and his crawls through one journalistic rabbit-hole after another make the book a page-turner, not to mention a goldmine for trivia fans. Einstein died in 1955, long before inventions derived from his theories became ubiquitous, including remote controls, motion detectors, automatic doors, checkout scanners, driverless cars, burglar alarms, lasers, solar panels, the iPhone camera, medical devices, and even GPS. These modern inventions resulted from Einstein’s explanation of the photoelectric effect, for which he received the Nobel Prize in physics in 1921. (Einstein did not receive the Nobel Prize for his theory of relativity. Cohen explains why). Learn Einstein’s beliefs about time travel, alien civilizations, pacifism, and his leadership in Jewish causes; in response to the Holocaust, he created the International Rescue Committee, the humanitarian organization that aids refugees around the world today. Einstein, an ardent Zionist, was a founder and fundraiser for Hebrew University in Israel, which houses the largest collection of Einstein-related materials in the world, but he declined an invitation to be the university’s first president. Israel’s Prime Minister, David Ben Gurion, even offered him the presidency of Israel, which he also declined, preferring to be a Princeton physicist rather than an Israeli politician. Benyamin Cohen will speak about his book, “The Einstein Effect: How the World’s Favorite Genius Got into Our Cars, Our Bathrooms, and Our Minds,” at 1 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 29.

Dani Shapiro - Signal Fires

By Bob Bahr Dani Shapiro’s plaything is time and how it takes its toll on us. Over the last 30 years or so, she has written 11 books and given us three books of memoirs. She occasionally helped pay the bills by teaching others how to write about memory and the spaces it creates in our lives. She taught writing classes and workshops at various universities and in more informal settings including an annual writer’s workshop that takes place on the beautiful Amalfi Coast of Italy. The success of her 2019 memoir, “Inheritance,” chronicles the search for the truth about how she was conceived during the early 1960s, when fertility clinics were relatively new and ethical considerations were lax. It was a secret her parents kept from her until she discovered it herself, after she mailed in a do-ityourself genetics test and discovered she wasn’t exactly the Ashkenazic Jew she had always imagined herself to be. It debuted at No. 11 on the New York Times best-seller list and took off. It won a National Jewish book award and was on many of the best book lists for the year. She even showed up in Temple Sinai in Sandy Springs where it was standing room only in the main sanctuary. It helped launch a successful podcast about family secrets that has had millions of downloads. In “Signal Fires,” her novel that came out two years ago this month, she combines her penchant for the role that memory plays in our lives with the secrets that we keep from the world and even our own families. Like “Inheritance,” it has received rapturous critical reception and won another National Jew-

ish Book Award. It was on my AJT list of best book bets for 2022 that didn’t make it into that year’s festival in Dunwoody. Not surprisingly she’s currently working on a screenplay based on the book for television. But unlike her own family memoir, which adopts a strong, focused, narrative timeline, “Signal Fires” gives Shapiro an opportunity to play with her conception of time that she has found so appealing. It first takes us back to 1970 to describe how a fatal automobile accident has impacted the lives of two families in Westchester County, N.Y. Over the course of the novel, Shapiro leads us back and forth over the years, 1970, 1999, 2014, 2020, before bringing us back to 1985 to awaken in us the power that our thoughts and our secrets have over our lives, sometimes in ways we scarcely understand. One reviewer called “Signal Fires,” “the intersections of time and memory, the reality of the human soul and the unexpected bonds between strangers.” Shapiro, who speaks almost as beautifully as she writes, has had plenty of time to polish her thoughts during the past two years. She should have a number of profound insights about the subject she has chosen to write about. Her interviewer, Jessica Handler, who like Shapiro is a novelist and educator, should have little difficulty leading the author at the MJCCA Book Festival through her journey over time and memory, and the impact it has on human connections. But get there early. The event is free and good seats go fast. Dani Shapiro is at the MJCCA Book Festival at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 9.


ARTS & CULTURE

Neranenah Unveils Program for the Coming Season By Bob Bahr Neranenah, the Atlanta Jewish music festival, launches its fifth season next month with executive director Joe Alterman. Under his leadership, the festival has built a diverse audience base, grown its financial support both with individual donors and philanthropic grants, and provided Atlanta audiences with a broad survey of contemporary arts programming, with a strongly Jewish flavor. For Alterman, the last five years has been about putting Neranenah on America’s cultural map. “I’m very proud of what we’ve been able to present in town. I think it’s filling a gap that I think Atlanta once had. There’s always been great art in Atlanta, but we needed a place for that great art to live. And I think that’s what Neranenah has been able to do.” The new season, which was just announced, will open not with music, but with comedy. On Saturday evening, Nov. 11, Neranenah -- in partnership with the Book Festival of the MJCCA -- will present an evening with Judy Gold, the Emmy Award-winning comedian, playwright, and author who will also be signing her new book, “Yes I Can Say That, When They Come For The Comedian, Then We’re All In Trouble,” which is a humorous and at the same time serious jab at attempts to silence or censor comedians who are critical of today’s political landscape. The book, inspired Gold’s Off-Broadway production and written with Eddie Sarfaty, debuted last spring. It alternated Gold’s abbreviated history of American comedy, including her place in it, with her defense of the importance of poking fun at many of the national issues that have preoccupied us. “They are taking away women’s rights, they are banning books, we have mass shootings,” she was quoted as saying in the production, “and people are furious if you mistakenly use the wrong pronoun?” Neranenah’s co-sponsorship of the event is another example of how the festival has diversified both its programs and its audience with Alterman at the helm. According to Alterman, who has combined his leadership of Neranenah with a busy schedule of performances as one of America’s most talented young jazz pianists, there is only one thing that dominates all his work, both artistically and organizationally -- the search for quality. “I’m an artist. So, for me, the most

The Afro-Semitic Experience is a January 2024 offering from Neranenah.

Joe Alterman has a strong record of accomplishment in his five years at Neranenah.

An Evening with Judy Gold on Nov. 11 is co-sponsored by Neranenah and the Book Festival of the MJCCA.

Montreal Cantor Gideon Zelermyer, who helped Leonard Cohen create his final CD, is Neranenah’’s Chanukah concert.

important thing is the quality of the art that we’re bringing in. And what we’re bringing in is great. The quality of what we’re presenting has meaning behind it. So, it’s good and meaningful. And I think that’s really adding something to our city.” In December, the series features two programs that bookend the celebration of Chanukah. The first, on Dec. 10, is “An Evening of Light,” with Cantor Gideon Zelermyer, who, for the last 19 years, has been with Montreal’s Congregation Shaar Hashomayim. The congregation was the spiritual home of Leonard Cohen, the great poet and songwriter. Cohen’s father and great- grandfather were presidents of the congregation. Zelermyer and the synagogue choir worked with Cohen on his last project, “You Want It Darker,” before the singer

died in 2016. The recording, which won an Emmy in 2017, has echoes of the Mourner’s Kaddish and the words of Hineni, which speaks of service to G-d. Zelermyer officiated at Cohen’s funeral in Montreal. Alterman is hoping to include several of Atlanta’s cantors in the performance. And on Dec. 17, shortly after the end of Chanukah, Alterman will team up with Dara Starr Tucker for an exploration of the synthesis of the African American and the Jewish experiences in popular music. On Jan. 13, Neranenah will welcome the Afro-Semitic Experience, a jazz group founded by Black and Jewish musicians in New Haven, Conn., who during the last 25 years have explored the connections between the two religious cultures. Then on March 17, An Evening With

the Bill Charlap Trio is scheduled at the Atlanta History Center. It was five years ago that Charlap was Alterman’s first concert as head of the festival. Like many arts organizations, Neranenah has weathered the challenges of the pandemic and bounced back stronger than ever during the past year. Among the highlights was s one-man show by Hershey Felder about George Gershwin. It brought the large audience at the City Springs Theatre to their feet for a long-standing ovation. For Alterman, the thrill was one he felt he could share with Felder. “Watching one of our successful concerts is an emotional experience for me as well as an opportunity to learn something new. I hope it’s the same for everyone who attends one of our performances. Neranenah makes me so proud.” ì ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 75


ARTS & CULTURE

Israel Books to Understand the Middle East Today By Bob Bahr The tragic events of the Hamas attacks in Israel only heighten the sense that 2023 is becoming an extraordinary year in the history of the Jewish state. One has to look hard and long to find a year in Israel’s past that offered so many challenges, almost simultaneously. For those searching for some guidance out of their individual bewilderment, part of the solution may be as close as the shelves of your nearest bookseller or the checkout window of your preferred online bookstore. Only time will tell whether all of these choices will be dated by the rapidly developing crises that Israel now faces. Here, however, is a sampling of a halfdozen of the most promising titles that have mostly appeared about Israel during this tumultuous year.

Several books are available to help readers understand the current political and social climate in the Middle East.

“Israel: A Concise History of a Nation,” published to critical acclaim in 2017.

Target Tehran: How Israel Is Using Sabotage, Cyberwarfare, Assassination – and Secret Diplomacy – to Stop a Nuclear Iran and Create a New Middle East -- Yonah Jeremy Bob Ilan Evyatar An account of the extraordinary success that Israel’s Mossad has accomplished in its secret war against Iran’s nuclear weapons program. If, indeed, Iran has played an important role in the success of Hamas in its invasion of southern Israel, then the role of the Mossad in its war against Iran can only be expected to increase.

"Trump’s Peace: The Abraham Accords and the Reshaping of the Middle East,” by Barak Ravid “Impossible Takes Longer - 75 Years After its Creation, Has Israel Fulfilled its Founders’ Dreams?” by Daniel Gordis

Impossible Takes Longer - 75 Years After its Creation, Has Israel Fulfilled its Founders’ Dreams? -- Daniel Gordis This distinguished American-born Israeli writer attempts to measure Israel’s successes and its shortcomings using the words the founding fathers wrote in the country’s Declaration of Independence. Using the document as his guide, Gordis, a National Jewish Book award winner who has made several appearances in Atlanta, takes on a wide range of issues. They are all framed by his well-informed understanding of contemporary life in Israel and his optimistic assessment of the future. It’s a welcome companion to Gordis’ 76 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

and some of its neighbors.

Trump’s Peace: The Abrahamic Accords and the Reshaping of the Middle East -- Barak Ravid A bestseller when it first appeared in Hebrew at the end of 2021 and now available this year in an English translation, Ravid who is a busy journalist and frequent TV news, interview purports to give a behind-the-scenes look at the events leading up to the Abraham Accords. They initially promised so much in the quest for a more peaceful and productive relationship with the Arab world. The author had two interviews with the former president, along with several dozen well-placed sources in Europe, America, and the Middle East in an effort to assess how the Accords came about. There’s no doubt he’s scrambling these days to make sense of what happens next in the cooling romance between Israel

Eighteen Days In October - The Yom Kippur War and How It Created the Modern Middle East -- Uri Kaufman This summer’s feature film about Golda Meir and the crisis she faced during the Yom Kippur War could make an interesting companion piece to this history of the 1973 conflict. Kaufman argues in this comprehensive account of the war, that far from being a demoralizing military campaign, the conflict was a turning point in Israel’s relationship with the Arab world. Because it demonstrated that Israel could not be destroyed by military means alone, the war helped lay the groundwork for the agreements between Israel and Egypt during the Carter Administration and other successes that reshaped the region for years to come. The Only Woman In The Room: Golda Meir and her Path To Power -- Pnina Lehav Golda Meir: Israel's Matriarch -Deborah Lipstadt A reconsideration of Golda Meir’s career as a woman in the largely man’s world of Israeli politics in the 20th cen-

"Golda Meir: Israel's Matriarch,” by Deborah Lipstadt

tury. Lehav, a retired, Israeli-born professor of Jewish studies at Boston University, argues that Meir, while not calling herself a feminist, helped to refine the role of women in the political life of Israel, when she became its first and only woman prime minister. Her accomplishment didn’t end there, however, as she was a savvy decision maker, an accomplished diplomat and political leader whom the author believes doesn’t deserve the lack of respect she received after she retired from politics in 1974. Lipstadt, the noted Jewish historian who took a leave of absence from Emory University to serve in the Biden administration, has given us a quick, but balanced, read about the Israeli leader in the Yale University Press’ series of Jewish Lives. Meir is neither is a devil nor an angel in Lipstadt’s balanced estimation, but she believes she doesn’t always get a fair shake because she was a woman, and a tough one at that. ì


ORT Atlanta Invites you to

A Sweet Celebration Honoring

Lesley Berman & Terry Schwartz In appreciation of decades of leadership and love poured into

ORT Atlanta’s Honey From the Heart®

Wednesday, November 29, 2023 at 6:00 pm Sandy Springs Location shared upon RSVP For tickets, sponsorships, and donations to ORT America in honor of Lesley, Terry, or ORT Atlanta’s Honey from the Heart leadership, go to ORTAmerica.org/ATLCelebration

ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 77 ortamerica.org/atlanta


SIMCHA Simcha Announcements Have something to celebrate? Births, B’nai Mitzvah, Engagements, Weddings, Anniversaries, Special Birthdays and more ... Share it with your community with free AJT simcha announcements. Send info to submissions@atljewishtimes.com.

Bar Mitzvah Announcement Everett Louis Feldman

Allison and Joel Feldman announce with pride, the bar mitzvah of their son, Everett Louis Feldman, on Oct. 28, 2023, at Ahavath Achim Synagogue. Everett is an eighth grader at Dickerson Middle School and spends his time camping with his Boy Scout troop, playing the trombone, and building and/or fixing everything in sight. Everett read from Ahavath Achim’s 1800s-era Czech Torah which was restored with the help of the community earlier this year. Everett celebrated his bar mitzvah at Margaritaville Atlanta with his grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, friends, and Cobblestone gang. He’s still looking for his lost shaker of salt.

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Visit BridgeSeniorLiving.com/SomerbySandySprings to learn more or call 770-802-8478 to schedule a tour. 25 Glenlake Pkwy, NE Sandy Springs, GA 30328 78 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES


The Mediterranean stucco Glezer home was built in 1924 and will soon undergo a major renovation.

Chai Style Art

Maggie Glezer enjoys her backyard while displaying her James Beard Award-winning books // All photos by Howard Mendel

The ‘Blessing’ of a Dual Artisan If Julia Child came back as a young Wisconsonite, Atlanta’s own Maggie Glezer would steal the show. Different from Marcia today’s pop Caller Jaffe culture TV celebs with 15 minutes of oven time, Glezer is the consummate professional honing her awardwinning craft, adding soul to the Jewish baking traditions that we hold so dearly -- stemming from family recipes, exotic cultures, and travels. In addition to winning two James Beard Awards for her baking books, Glezer is an artisan jeweler who selects just the right brilliance, shapes, and hues for her creations. She elaborated, “My jewelry is casual, comfortable, and functional, yet born of great passion and tenaciousness. I want to create talismans and keepsakes for everyday wear.” Then changing to her author/baker hat, she relayed, “It would be the work

of a lifetime to fill the entire panorama of Jewish breads in my book, ‘A Blessing of Bread: Recipes and Rituals, Memories and Mitzvahs.’ Instead, I spoke to and baked with people from every background I could source and listened to their life stories…many bake by eye and feel; thus, I was inspired to document them as recipes to do at home…after all, how divine and unifying is our Hamotzi and what fragrances and meaning might follow?” One of the recipients of Glezer’s bounty is husband, and Georgia Tech professor, Ari Glezer, Chair of the George W. Woodruff School of Engineering and specializing in thermal systems. Rise with Maggie as she blesses tables across the world with her recipes and stories. Jaffe: Explain the history of your house. Glezer: Built in a classic Mediterranean style in 1924, we are soon going into a major renovation. We enjoy the green space out back, and I use the lower level for my jewelry design/ workshop. Some of the original touches, like the harlequin black and white tile floor and the fountain in the solarium,

keep the character of the house intact. Jaffe: How would you describe the art here you have collected? Glezer: I’m not too fussy about what is precious. My favorite piece is my daughter Leia’s painting in the dining room, “Lily Pads,” and all go with my grandmother’s vermeil clock, a compelling Israeli AP “Dove,” fertility African art…and for fun, Leia’s hamburger creation and an original Victorian phonograph. We think the scarlet Chinese embroidery in the dining room adds drama alongside Ben Smith’s sketches. The dining table is distressed wood. The velum storage unit, by designer Margie Kelly, is quite unique. Jaffe: From where does your baking passion stem? Glezer: As a child I knew I would be some kind of artisan. My first food interview was with my Russian great-grandmother, famous for her gefilte fish, sour cherry apple strudel, and black walnut cake. I wanted to document and make usable recipes, adopting Jewish journeys and love of foreign foods into our legacy. Jaffe: Explain the concepts of your

books. How does one win a James Beard Award? Glezer: My second book, “A Blessing of Bread,” has 60 tested recipes -- both old and new -- worldwide for Shabbat and other rituals: bagels, honey cake, babka, deli rye, to Ethiopian bereketei and sesame-studded Moroccan Purim bread. The back story and oral histories are woven in. So much symbolism. One does not “enter” the James Beard Award. Somehow, they found me. Twice. My first book is, “Artisan Baking,” about preparing corn bread, baguettes, pizza, sourdough, and more with clear instructions on how get that perfect crust in all things bread. Jaffe: What a fascinating jewelry platform you have! Glezer: I spend about 20-30 hours a week creating mostly “one-offs.” I start with the right equipment: a jeweler’s bench, galley table, files, wires, vises, a microscope, about 35 pliers (laughing), antique saws, mandrels, to name a few. I have an insane amount of tools. The main table is from Craig’s List, a high school shop class work bench, with graffiti intact. And a vintage bench from an auto repair shop. I’m obsessed with old

ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 79


CHAI STYLE tools. Think about piercing, milling, soldering, sawing, filing, polishing, and engraving. I answer to ‘tool freak.’ Jaffe: What are the end results? Glezer: I’m all about finding just the right gem or stone. I work in gold, silver, and platinum, preferring mostly the latter. I work out my initial designs on Adobe Illustrator. I am into detail like this unique clasp that mimics a lock and key. I go to the Gem Show in Tucson to source a lot of my stones. I work with tourmaline, rhodolite, spinel, pearls -- in odd shapes and colors, coral and oxidized silver to make linkable strands, pendants, earrings, bracelets, rings and chains. I do not set the stones here, however. I prefer 18- and 22-karat for gold. My incredible teacher was Hans Hoestebrock, a German master goldsmith. I also attended classes at San Francisco’s Revere Academy, and locally at Chastain and Spruill. I just crafted my

Above: The Glezer dining room has a distressed wood table that contrasts the framed Chinese embroidered silk. Leia Glezer’s, “Lily Pad,” painting is in the background. Right: Maggie shines in her jewelry workshop where she admits to being a “tool freak”. Bottom: A sampling of Glezer’s one-ofa-kind gemstone creations. Left: Ari Glezer collected this AP “Dove” painting from Israel

80 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES


CHAI STYLE daughter’s engagement ring. Imagine that! Jaffe: Leave us with some tips for baking at home. Glezer: I don’t use a bread making machine. It doesn’t do anything you can’t do easily by hand which is quicker and cleaner. Kneading is overrated. The best thing for beginning home bakers is a scale. Use the refrigerator as a tool. Refrigerate the dough at almost any point in the process. The extra fermentation improves flavor. No need to bring dough back to room temperature. Record successes and failures. You learn nothing from success, and everyone will still love your failures. Worst case, the house will smell divine! ì

Above: The black and white tile in the solarium is part of the original house. Above: This fountain in the solarium is part of the 1924 design.

Below: The Glezer kitchen in gold and terra cotta tones produces bounties of bread.

Below: Maggie’s presentation of challah.

ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 81


CALENDAR

NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 14 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5

Nov 2 - Nov 12 Once on This Island - Various times .This Tony Award-winning musical is the sweeping, universal tale of Ti Moune, a fearless peasant girl in search of her place in the world, and ready to risk it all for love. Guided by the mighty island gods, Ti Moune sets out on a remarkable journey to reunite with the man who has captured her heart. Purchase tickets at https://bit.ly/46x2egs.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2 Alison Greenberg, Maybe Once, Maybe Twice: A Novel - 7:30 p.m. Filled with the romance and angst that defines the years you come to know yourself, and told over the span of two decades, "Maybe Once, Maybe Twice" is a novel of second chances and finding your own way. Get tickets at https://bit. ly/48StYxB.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1 Jake Cohen, I Could Nosh - 7:30 p.m. For New York Times bestselling author/ food world darling Jake Cohen, noshing isn’t just a habit, it’s a lifestyle. Noshing is about hospitality, after all, whether that means keeping your fridge stocked with turkey club ingredients for the perfect midnight snack or stashing a Big A** Lasagna or Braised Brisket in the freezer in case friends show up hungry and unannounced. In the follow-up to his beloved bestseller "Jew-ish," "I Could Nosh" brings Jake’s signature modern flair to traditional Jewish recipes that are soon to become everyday favorites and new holiday traditions. With this cookbook, readers can nosh morning, noon, and night, with creative, must-cook recipes. Purchase tickets at https://bit.ly/46TAXEA.

82 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

Kabbalat Panim and Kabbalat Shalom Shabbat Service - 5:45 to 8 p.m. Once a month at Congregation Dor Tamid will gather for a Kabbalat Panim, an Oneg Shabbat before services at 5:45 p.m. We will then move to the sanctuary to welcome in Shabbat together at 6:15 p.m. Learn more at https://bit. ly/3QgXaHw.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3 Shabbat, Me, & Rabbi G - 5 to 5:30 p.m. Bring your children to the JCC for a fun Shabbat celebration with Rabbi G! All are invited to this monthly Shabbat sing-along featuring activities, Shabbat songs, and more! Learn more at https://bit.ly/486n3jM.

Tot Shabbat at Etz Chaim - 5 to 6:30 p.m. Etz Chaim Preschool invites you to our monthly Tot Shabbat on Fridays. Bring your own dairy or pareve dinner, and join us for songs, dances, crafts, and fun! Find out more at https://bit.ly/3sQ5nsK.

Puppet Palooza Saturday - 10:30 to 11:15 a.m. Piccadilly Puppets and Stage Door Theatre have teamed up to bring five individual puppet shows to the stage. The shows are recommended for ages 3-8. Purchase tickets at https:// bit.ly/3qN5ODB. Walter Isaacson, Elon Musk - 8 p.m. From the author of Steve Jobs and other bestselling biographies comes the astonishingly intimate story of the most fascinating and controversial innovator of our era—Elon Musk, a rulebreaking visionary who helped to lead the world into the era of electric vehicles, private space exploration, and artificial intelligence. Oh, and took over Twitter. Find Tickets at https://bit. ly/3ZWk49Y.

Mazal Tots: Baby and Me - 9:10 a.m. to 12:10 p.m. Welcoming a new addition to your family is a joyous occasion, and finding a supportive community to share the journey makes it even more special. Introducing Mazal Tots, a unique gathering designed to foster connections, provide resources, and celebrate the beautiful journey of parenthood. With dedicated age-specific sections, we cater to the needs of families with infants (0-5 months), movers and groovers (6-17 months), and toddlers (18 months-3 yrs), creating an inclusive space for all. Sessions are guided by Jackie Perilman, a professional with over 15 years of experience with early intervention and preschoolaged children specializing in language and communication skills. RSVP at https://bit.ly/44FlrL9.

Hadassah Health Professionals Marijuana & CBD - 1 to 2:30 p.m. Please join Hadassah Greater Atlanta’s Health Professionals as they explore the health benefits and uses of Marijuana and CBD and dispel myths surrounding them both. Register at https://bit. ly/3rZpjsX. Bat Mitzvah Club @ Chabad Intown - 5:30 to 6:45 p.m. Your daughter's approaching Bat Mitzvah marks a significant milestone for her as a Jewish woman. While the celebration is essential, its true importance lies in shaping her identity as a Jew for the long term. We emphasize that it’s not a graduation from Judaism, but rather the beginning of a vibrant Jewish life. To ensure this, we’ve established the successful Bat Mitzvah Club. We provide a space for girls aged 11-13 to learn, enjoy, and connect with other Bat Mitzvah girls. The club meetings are open to all, regardless of where they plan to celebrate their Bat Mitzvah. Register at https://bit.ly/44VT1ND.


CANDLE-LIGHTING TIMES Torah Reading: Vayeira Friday, November 3, Cheshvan 19, Light Candles at 6:24 PM Saturday, November 4, Cheshvan 20, Shabbat Ends 7:20 PM

Israel ParaSport Center Teaming With Laughter - 6 to 9 p.m. Teaming With Laughter highlights our athletes from Israel while we are entertained with a comedy night. Enjoy a fun evening of food, drink, and entertainment, and learn about what is going on at the Israel ParaSport Center in Ramat Gan. Register at https://bit.ly/3ZZJO5j.

Torah Study with the Rabbi - 2 to 3 p.m. Congregation Etz Chaim hosts a weekly Torah study with the rabbi on Tuesday mornings at Huntcliff Summit I - Independent Living. Learn more at https://bit.ly/45QdNie.

Daylight Saving Time: Not in effect. Times have been adjusted accordingly. Torah Reading: Chayei Sarah Friday, November 10, Cheshvan 26, Light Candles at 5:18 PM Saturday, November 11, Cheshvan 27, Shabbat Ends 6:15 PM

Night at The Breman Museum - 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Join the Breman Museum for a night of festivity with a special appearance by Joe Alterman and a captivating musical performance featuring Jenny Levison and Friends. Delicious catering will be prepared by A Kosher Touch. This event will provide support for The Breman’s music program through the newly established Sandra S. Adair Endowment Fund. Net proceeds from this fundraiser will honor Sandra’s love of music and ensure The Breman continues to present exceptional musical performances for years to come. Purchase tickets at https:// bit.ly/3S16FLS.

Henry Winkler, Being Henry: The Fonz...and Beyond - 7:30 p.m. Join MJCCA for this very special evening with Emmy-award winning actor, author, comedian, producer, and director Henry Winkler, as he discusses his deeply thoughtful memoir of the lifelong effects of stardom and the struggle to become whole. Purchase Tickets at https://bit.ly/3PWsJER.

Giving Old Judaica A New Life through – L’dor v’dor – 1 to 3 p.m. Just in time for Hanukkah! Rather than unwanted Judaica ending up forgotten in an attic or basement, let these items go to those who want them and will use them, by rehoming. Looking for Shabbat candlesticks, Kiddush cups, Menorahs, Seder Plates, Tzedakah boxes, Tefillin, Benchers, Mezuzahs and Tallit. Looking for Donors and Recipients. Organized by Congregation Shaarei Shamayim. More info at www. atlantajewishconnector.com/events/ giving-old-judaica-a-new-life-throughldor-vdor/

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6 Rachel Beanland and Julie Gerstenblatt - 12 p.m. Join the MJCCA Book Festival Presents Rachel Beanland, "The House is on Fire: A Novel," and "Julie Gerstenblatt, Daughters of Nantucket: A Novel." Find Tickets at https://bit. ly/46yNvS2.

Kid Fun Yoga - 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Each Kid Fun Yoga class with Jennifer Gruher at MJCCA will focus on proper breathing practices and guided meditations through affirmations and mantras. Little yogis will learn sequences and poses that focus on building strength, flexibility, and balance, all while having a ton of FUN! Classes will include yoga games, music, and mindfulness activities that build confidence. Kid Fun Yoga will leave the kids feeling a renewed sense of well-being, balance, peace, and calm. Register at https://bit. ly/3rJa6M9.

Eric Jenkins, Piano - 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Join Bailey School of Music faculty artist Eric Jenkins for an evening of piano music by American composers from the late-20th and 21st centuries. Purchase tickets at https://bit.ly/3Fi3Rmf. B.A. Van Sise, Invited to Life - 7:30 p.m. “No mat­ter how it might seem,” writes B. A. Van Sise, ​“this is not a book about the Holo­caust.” Rather, it is about a num­ ber of sur­ vivors who emerged from the deep­est depths of the Shoah and accept­ed their invi­ta­tion to life. In 90 hand­some and sen­si­tive por­traits, all set against a black back­ground, Van Sise, an award-win­ning pho­to­jour­nal­ ist, cap­tures the glow in his sub­jects’ faces. They are vibrant women and men whose ambi­tion and grat­i­tude take cen­ ter stage in the inter­ views that accom­ pa­ ny each photograph. Find Tickets at https://bit.ly/46QTqld.

J Street End of Year Event Honoring Judith Taylor - 6:15 to 8:30 p.m. J Street Georgia invites you to our Fifth Annual End of Year Event honoring J Street Georgia member Judith Taylor for her tireless efforts on behalf of peace and diplomacy. A mainstay of the Atlanta Jewish community, Judith has devoted her life to Jewish and progressive causes. RSVP at https://bit. ly/46uGTUT. Dan Grunfeld, By the Grace of the Game -7:30 p.m. In By the Grace of the Game, Dan Grunfeld, once a basketball standout himself at Stanford University, shares the remarkable story of his family, a delicately interwoven narrative that doesn’t lack in heartbreak yet remains as deeply nourishing as his grandmother’s Hungarian cooking, so lovingly described. The true improbability of the saga lies in the discovery of a game that unknowingly held the power to heal wounds, build bridges, and tie together a fractured Jewish family. If the magnitude of an American dream is measured by the intensity of the nightmare that came before and the heights of the triumph achieved after, then "By the Grace of the Game" recounts an American dream story of unprecedented scale. Get Tickets at https://bit.ly/3rJqQDG.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7 Preschool’s Out Playdate! – 9:30 to 11 a.m. Preschools are closed, but Nurture has you covered for a morning of music and play! Join us for music, art and fun! Families with children ages 6 months - 5 years old are invited to this free program. RSVP at https://bit. ly/3tB1sjW.

Rosanne Leipzig, MD & Fayne Frey, MD - 12 p.m. The Skin­care Hoax is an exposé on the marketing tactics used that get us all to buy over the counter skin­care. It will make you rethink every­thing you know about skin­care. You’ll learn about the well-kept secrets of the skin­care industry, how media ads influence our buying decisions and get recommendations for effective products and simple skin­ care regimens that are easy and affordable. Get Tickets at https://bit.ly/3Q1KnqX.

ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 83


Joe Posnanski and Adam Lazarus - 7:30 p.m. Why We Love Base­ball is a love let­ter to base­ball, a fresh and heart­felt look at the game’s great­est moments and how they con­tin­ue to grab at our hearts. Whether it’s Willie Mays’ overthe-shoul­der catch, Babe Ruth’s called shot, Shohei Ohtani’s exploits as both a pitch­er and a hit­ter, or Josh Gib­son or Sandy Koufax’s per­fect game, these time­less and mag­ic­al moments take us to the heart of why we love base­ball after almost 150 years. Find Tickets at https://bit.ly/3FgymZM.

Dani Shapiro, Signal Fires: A Novel - 7:30 p.m. Two families. One night. A constellation of lives changed forever. An ancient majestic oak stands beneath the stars on Division Street. And under the tree sits Ben Wilf, a retired doctor, and ten-year-old Waldo Shenkman, a brilliant, lonely boy who is pointing out his favorite constellations. Waldo doesn’t realize it but he and Ben have met before. And they will again, and again. Across time and space, and shared destiny. Purchase Tickets at https://bit.ly/3rYn7Sw.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10 Let’s Make Shabbat! - 5:45 to 7:30 p.m. Join MJCCA for a family-friendly Shabbat experience! The adults will join Chef Lisa in the kitchen to prepare a meal and kids will join our Director of Experiential Jewish Education, Kelly Cohen, to make a variety of crafts to adorn the table for a memorable Shabbat family dinner to be shared with all! Register at https://bit.ly/3OfT4ge.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9 KSU Jazz Combos - 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. and 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Enjoy an evening of performances by Bailey School of Music student jazz combos. Find Tickets at https://bit.ly/3M5eD2O. Virtual Artist Lecture: Polly Apfelbaum: NIRVANA - 7 to 9 p.m. Apfelbaum will speak about her artistic practice and artworks on view at the ZMA in a virtual lecture. NIRVANA features largescale installations of ceramics, prints, and textiles by artist Polly Apfelbaum. Get the link at https://bit.ly/3QjVKM7.

Gan Katan -10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Congregation Or Hadash is thrilled to introduce a monthly drop-off preschool program at Machon Hadash this year! The program is designed for 3-5-yearolds and is taught by a wonderful, warm, experienced Jewish preschool teacher. After the children finish up each week, we invite parents and kids to stay for child-friendly snacks and schmooze, and for kiddush lunch, too. All are welcome - you do not need to be a member of Or Hadash. Register at https://bit.ly/3KtkKxb. Sage - 8 to 9 p.m. This concert features four works by faculty and guest choreographers, performed by our awardwinning KSU Dance Company. The program will include both classical and contemporary dance that echoes the traditions in both genres while simultaneously reflecting our quest for innovation and creative exploration. Purchase Tickets at https://bit. ly/3ZWBQtQ.

Sage - 8 to 9 p.m. This concert features four works by faculty and guest choreographers, performed by our awardwinning KSU Dance Company. The program will include both classical and contemporary dance that echoes the traditions in both genres while simultaneously reflecting our quest for innovation and creative exploration. Purchase Tickets at https://bit. ly/3ZWBQtQ.

Find more events and submit items for our online and print calendars at:

www.atlantajewishconnector.com

Calendar sponsored by the Atlanta Jewish Connector, an initiative of the AJT. In order to be considered for the print edition, please submit events three to four weeks in advance. Contact Diana Cole for more information at Diana@atljewishtimes.com. 84 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

KSU Wind Ensemble - 8 to 10 p.m. Friday Night Spotlight Series, Bands & Percussion Series. Enjoy a performance by the KSU Wind Ensemble under the direction of Bailey School of Music Director of Bands David T. Kehler. Virtual RSVP at https://bit. ly/3QhnBg4.

An Evening with Judy Gold - 8 p.m. Join us for an evening with one of the funniest women on the planet, the one and only Judy Gold. Judy was last seen on the MJCCA stage for her off-Broadway hit show, 25 Questions for a Jewish Mother. In addition to her work in comedy, Judy is also an actress, television writer, and noted producer. Find Tickets at https://bit.ly/3FktAu5.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12 Mazal Tots: Baby and Me - 9:10 a.m. to 12:10 p.m. Welcoming a new addition to your family is a joyous occasion, and finding a supportive community to share the journey makes it even more special. Introducing Mazal Tots, a unique gathering designed to foster connections, provide resources, and celebrate the beautiful journey of parenthood. With dedicated age-specific sections, we cater to the needs of families with infants (0-5 months), movers and groovers (6-17 months), and toddlers (18 months-3 yrs), creating an inclusive space for all. Sessions are guided by Jackie Perilman, a professional with over 15 years of experience with early intervention and preschoolaged children specializing in language and communication skills. RSVP at https://bit.ly/44FlrL9. Play Tamid - 9:15 to 11 a.m. Play Tamid is led by Rabbi Jordan of Congregation Dor Tamid. Enjoy crafts, songs, fun activities, and more. Play Tamid is for kids under 4 years old with their parents/guardians. Register at https://bit. ly/44Dl0BF.

Poppy Sales - 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Join the Atlanta Jewish War Veterans for the Sale of Poppies for Veterans Day. Get more information at https://bit. ly/45thXMh.

Block Party Gala Kiddush - 11:30 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. Celebrate Shabbat Project with Jews around the World! In honor of this special Shabbat, dozens of local organizations have gathered to host the outdoor kiddush of a lifetime - with a hot cholent competition, curated cuisines from around the world (European, Israeli, Asian, South American, and more!), and a record-breaking number of attendees, this event is not to be missed! Find out more at https://bit.ly/3tFOLnO.


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13 Fall Teen Israel Leadership Institute 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. The CIE Teen Israel Leadership Institute will enhance Israel knowledge among Jewish teens in grades 10 to 12. This experience will provide participants with valuable skills for sharing that knowledge with others. Upon completion of this program, participants will receive a CIE Teen Israel Leadership Institute Certificate in Israel Education. Register at https://bit.ly/46R9dAB.

Lipman, D. Quigley, S. Zucker - 1 p.m. Join the MJCCA Welcome Andy Lipman, The CF Warrior Project Vol 2: Celebrating Our Cystic Fibrosis Community, Daniel Quigley, Thunderstruck: A Novel, and Scott Zucker, Battle For Life: A Novel for their annual book festival. Learn more at https:// bit.ly/3tr2I95.

Becoming Dr. Ruth by Mark St Germain - 2 to 3:30 p.m. Join us for an unforgettable in-person event at The Breman Museum! Experience the inspiring story of Dr. Ruth Westheimer, a remarkable woman who overcame adversity to become a renowned sex therapist. Through captivating storytelling and engaging visuals, this event will take you on a journey through her life, from her escape from the Holocaust to her groundbreaking work in the field of human sexuality. Don’t miss this opportunity to learn about the incredible Dr. Ruth and gain valuable insights into relationships and intimacy. Purchase tickets at https://bit. ly/3FhOJVS.

3GATL and The Daffodil Project: Third Gen Planting - 3 p.m. Join 3GATL and The Daffodil Project in planting beautiful daffodils in in memory of the children who perished during the Holocaust. Help the grandchildren of Holocaust survivors build a living Holocaust memorial. Meet at Blackburn Park at 3pm on Sunday, November 12. Exact location to be shared as we get closer. Register at https://bit.ly/3tClafe. Bat Mitzvah Club @ Chabad Intown - 5:30 to 6:45 p.m. Your daughter's approaching Bat Mitzvah marks a significant milestone for her as a Jewish woman. While the celebration is essential, its true importance lies in shaping her identity as a Jew for the long term. We emphasize that it’s not a graduation from Judaism, but rather the beginning of a vibrant Jewish life. To ensure this, we’ve established the successful Bat Mitzvah Club. We provide a space for girls aged 11-13 to learn, enjoy, and connect with other Bat Mitzvah girls. The club meetings are open to all, regardless of where they plan to celebrate their Bat Mitzvah. Register at https://bit.ly/44VT1ND.

Ari Shapiro, The Best Strangers in the World - 7:30 p.m. From the beloved host of NPR’s All Things Considered, comes a stirring memoir-in-essays that is also a lover letter to journalism. Purchase Tickets at https://bit. ly/3Qk1Ko8.

Kid Fun Yoga - 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Each Kid Fun Yoga class with Jennifer Gruher at MJCCA will focus on proper breathing practices and guided meditations through affirmations and mantras. Little yogis will learn sequences and poses that focus on building strength, flexibility, and balance, all while having a ton of FUN! Classes will include yoga games, music, and mindfulness activities that build confidence. Kid Fun Yoga will leave the kids feeling a renewed sense of well-being, balance, peace, and calm. Register at https://bit. ly/3rJa6M9.

KSU Jazz Ensembles - 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Enjoy an evening of student jazz ensemble performances led by Bailey School of Music Director of Jazz Studies Sam Skelton and faculty artist Wes Funderburk. Find Tickets at https:// bit.ly/34utuu. Simon Sebag Montefiore, The World - 7:30 p.m. This is a magisterial world history unlike any other that tells the story of humanity through the one thing we all have in common: families. Around 950,000 years ago, a family of five walked along the beach and left behind the oldest family footprints ever discovered. For award-winning historian Simon Sebag Montefiore, these poignant, familiar fossils serve as an inspiration for a new kind of world history, one that is genuinely global, spans all eras and all continents, and focuses on the family ties that connect every one of us. Find Tickets at https://bit.ly/3Q0eO0r.

Pam Jenoff and Kristina McMorris 12 p.m. The 32nd Edition of the Book Festival of the MJCCA Presents Pam Jenoff, "Code Name Sapphire: A Novel" and Kristina McMorris, "The Ways We Hide: A Novel." Purchase tickets at https://bit.ly/46vkRRH.

KSU Mixed Chamber Ensembles - 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. and 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Enjoy an evening of performances by Bailey School of Music student instrumental chamber ensembles. Find Tickets for the shows at https://bit.ly/48YijNG.

Kibbitz & Konnect Young Professionals Happy Hour - 6 to 9 p.m. Join Kibbitz & Konnect for a Young Professionals happy hour at Hudson Grille Sandy Springs. We’ll provide the appetizers and there will be a cash bar. Invite the new friends you made at Mitzvah Day to join you! Learn more at https://bit. ly/48Vsp1J.

Dan Senor, The Genius of Israel -7:30 p.m. Dan Senor, co-author of the international bestseller, Start-Up Nation, has long been a student of the global innovation race. But as he and his co-author, Saul Singer, spent time with Israel’s entrepreneurs and political leaders, soldiers and students, scientists and activists, ultra-Orthodox Jews, Tel Aviv techies, and Israeli Arabs, they realized that they had missed what really sets Israel apart. Locate Tickets at https://bit.ly/3tr33IT. ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 85


KEEPING IT KOSHER

JEWISH JOKE

Roasted Sweet Potato and Apple Soup Ingredients 6 sweet potatoes, peeled and cut into 1-inch pieces 3 apples, peeled and cut into 1-inch pieces 5 tablespoons Bartenura Extra-Virgin Olive Oil, divided 2 and 1/2 teaspoons salt, divided 1 and 1/4 teaspoon pepper, divided 2 leeks, halved, thinly sliced 8 cups no-chicken stock in a box (or water, or a mix of the two) 2 cups Gefen Almond Milk

Directions Roast Sweet Potato and Apple Cubes 1. Preheat oven to 180 degrees Celsius (350 degrees Fahrenheit). 2. Lay Gefen Parchment on two baking sheets and spread potato and apple cubes on pans. Drizzle two tablespoons of extra-virgin olive oil over and sprinkle one teaspoon salt and half a teaspoon pepper over each sheet tray. 3. Place in the oven and roast for 45 minutes.

Prepare the Soup 1. Meanwhile, place a large pot over medium heat. 2. Add remaining tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil, leeks, remaining half teaspoon salt and quarter teaspoon pepper. Cover pot with lid and allow leeks to sweat for 15 minutes, stirring every five. 3. Remove cover, reduce heat to low, and cook for another half hour, stirring every so often so that leeks don’t brown. 4. Add roasted sweet potatoes and apples to cooked leeks. Pour in stock. 5. Bring soup up to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer for 30 minutes. 6. Add almond milk and blend soup until smooth and silky. Taste to adjust seasoning and serve hot! Recipe by Danielle Renov Recipe From Kosher.com 86 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

The Shmuck Sadie tells Maurice, “You’re a shmuck! You always were a shmuck and you always will be a shmuck! You look, act and dress like a shmuck! You’ll be a shmuck until the day you die! And if they ran a world-wide competition for shmucks, you would be the world’s second biggest shmuck!” “Why only second place?” Maurice asked. “Because you’re a shmuck!” Sadie screamed.

YIDDISH WORD Hiskhayves-not n. People who are resistant to making a commitment in a relationship. “Sure, I’m a hiskhayves-not, but I don’t fear commitment, I just fear wasting my time.” This has always been a problem, but what has changed recently is that hiskhayves-nots now seem to be equally distributed between men and women. From the Yiddish hiskhayves, meaning “commitment.”


BRAIN FOOD

Jewish Pride

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ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 87


OBITUARIES Caroline Anne Blumenthal 94, Atlanta

It is with heavy hearts that we announce the passing of beloved Caroline Blumenthal, who left this world on Oct. 23, 2023, at the age of 94.5 years old. She passed peacefully in her sleep. She will be deeply missed by all who know her. Caroline was born in Detroit, Mich., the youngest of three children to Samuel and Sadye Smerling, of blessed memory. Caroline often raced her brother, Morty, and her sister, Lillian, to claim precious time in the one bathroom they all shared in her childhood home. They enjoyed regular trips to the family dairy farm in the countryside of Michigan, in the rural manner of the shtetl her parents knew in Belarus. On the farm Caroline, in pigtails, enjoyed riding a horse called “Blackie.” Caroline was fond of curling up with a bag of apples and a good book as a child – in the century before the internet made an appearance. Caroline loved to learn and was well educated, obtaining her undergraduate and master’s degrees at Wayne State University and later another master’s degree at Emory University. She taught English at University of West Georgia. She also taught English as a Second Language at Georgia State University, where she later became a reference librarian. Caroline married Warner Blumenthal, a Holocaust survivor, after her cousin, Bea, of blessed memory introduced her to him. Caroline and Warner married in Michigan and moved to New Haven, Conn. They had two daughters (Deborah and Emily). Warner was a language professor who spoke many languages. They moved to Carrollton, Ga., in 1970, where they became one of three Jewish families in town. Caroline worked at the University of West Georgia as an English professor, and Warner was head of the language department. They regularly commuted 60 miles each way to Atlanta for religious purposes, as there was/is no synagogue in Carrollton, Ga. Caroline enjoyed certain unrestricted aspects of country living on an acre outside the city of Carrollton, with two cats named Pirate and Cocoa, Weimaraner dogs Gretchen and Gretel (bred at home), as well as a stray Shetland pony who turned up at the door on Easter Sunday and was named Peter Cottontail. After Warner passed in 1978 Caroline did her best to raise two strong and accomplished daughters, a doctor and a lawyer, with some help from her village, including support from Hadassah, of which her mother was an avid supporter, as well as Hadassah youth groups Young Judaea and Camp Judaea. Tired of grading papers, Caroline got another master’s degree in library science while teaching English as a second language at Georgia State University. She went on to work in the university library. She commuted for over a decade from Carrollton to Atlanta and back each day, narrowly surviving a near fatal run-in with an 18-wheeler on one trip home. She retired after she had a bad fall carrying a heavy bag of books and broke her back (later enduring 8 kyphoplasty procedures from repeated falls and back fractures). With help from Emily, her nephew Morey, and his son, Aaron, Caroline packed up her home of about three decades in Carrollton and moved to Athens, Ga., where she set out to audit college classes at the University of Georgia to further her passion for learning. There she got a labradoodle puppy she named “Georgia,” arguably her favorite child, and enjoyed long walks with Georgia and her neighbors until she had a stroke in 2011, after her fourth grandchild was born. Caroline then moved to Atlanta to live closer to her daughter, Emily, in independent and then assisted living. Caroline suffered from Alzheimers, osteoporosis, and heart disease. Her health declined in recent years. She was blessed to have kind and devoted caregivers, including one of her former students. Caroline was a devoted wife to Warner, a loving mother to Deborah and Emily, and a cherished grandmother to Gabriel, Shani, Etai, and Bennie. She was grateful to attend her youngest grandson’s bar mitzvah in July, just after another hospitalization. Her family was at the center of her life, and her love and care for them knew no bounds. Caroline admired the grace of long-necked giraffes and had a sizeable giraffe collection. Caroline was fixated on healthy habits including yoga and yogurt, which served her well into her ninth decade. Caroline was a very sweet and thoughtful person, generally more concerned with the welfare of others than herself. Caroline was a lifetime member of Hadassah, following in the footsteps of her moth88 | OCTOBER 31, 2023 ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES

er, Sadye, and continued by her daughter, Emily. She is survived by her daughters, Deborah T. Blumenthal, and Emily S. Borna (Ramin Borna) and her four grandchildren, Gabriel Meshulam, Shani Meshulam, Etai Meshulam, and Benjamin Borna, who will carry on her legacy with love and fond memories. Caroline was predeceased by her husband, Warner Blumenthal, her sister, Lillian Smerling, her brother, Morton Smerling, and their parents, Sadye and Samuel Smerling. A funeral was held to commemorate Caroline on Wednesday, Oct. 25, graveside at Arlington Cemetery at 10 a.m. with Rabbi Lauren Henderson officiating. There will be a zoom link for those unable to attend in person to participate. Shiva was observed at the home of Emily and Ramin and Bennie Borna at 205 Windsor Cove, Sandy Springs, GA 30328 on Wednesday, Oct. 25 and Thursday, Oct. 26 at 6:15 p.m. In lieu of flowers, the family would be honored if donations are made in Caroline’s memory to a nonprofit of your choice or to one of the following: • Friends of Israeli Defense Forces: www.fidf.org/ where three of her four grandchildren have proudly served. • Hadassah Hospital: hadassah.gospringboard.com/secure/donate-hadassah, which Caroline and her family have supported as life members; and/or • Chabad of Cobb, www.chabadofcobb.com/templates/donate_cdo/aid/4970020/ jewish/Donate.htm, where compassionate members went out of their way to visit with Caroline regularly. We are grateful for the time we had with Caroline and the lasting impact she had on our lives. She will forever be in our hearts. She will be fondly remembered for her bright, kind, and thoughtful presence. Her memory is a blessing.

Dr. Norman Field 76, Atlanta

Dr. Norman (Norm) Field, 76, passed away on Friday, Oct. 13, after a valiant battle with lymphoma. Norm grew up in New York City, alongside his many cousins, who were like siblings. As a youth, Norm spent time working at his parents’ clothing store, playing stickball, and singing barbershop style on Ditmas Avenue. He is a graduate of Stuyvesant High School, Jacksonville University and what is now the Temple University School of Podiatric Medicine. After his medical training, Dr. Field moved to Georgia and went on to found The Field Foot and Ankle Clinic in Griffin, which still exists today. Since the early 1990s, his outpatient surgical theater has been used by podiatrists across the region as an alternative to hospital surgery. After private practice, Dr. Field enjoyed a decade-long career in the Veterans Administration, where he rose to the Chief of Podiatry position at the Atlanta VA Medical Center, training dozens of residents in the process. Dr. Field is a past President of the Georgia Podiatric Medical Association. But perhaps Norm’s most enjoyable occupation was that of sports dad, coach, fan, and chauffeur for the athletic endeavors of his children and grandchildren. There is nowhere Norm would rather be than on the bleachers, making sure that even the officials felt his presence. In retirement, Norm transitioned from a sports fan to a voracious tennis player, hitting the court nearly every day, keeping meticulous notes on how to perfect his swing, taking lessons, and practicing with his ball machine. Norm loved to mention that despite his age, his hand-eye coordination and quick reflexes never left him. He loved his bucolic existence on Lake Oconee, although his sunbathing and boating skills left something to be desired. Norm helped establish a permanent home for Congregation B’nai Israel, the only synagogue on the southside of Atlanta, where he sang baritone during High Holidays, amongst other responsibilities. Norm could strike up a conversation with just about anyone and find joy connecting those who might benefit mutually. He is survived by his wife, Sarah, sons, Ben (Mary Lou) and Jason, stepson, Ayal Latz (Kara), and beloved grandchildren, Theo, Lila, Dawn, Justin, and Ronen, who knew him as Pops. He leaves behind many loving relatives, friends, colleagues, and tennis partners. Norm is predeceased by his Holocaust-surviving parents David and Irene Field, who immigrated through Ellis Island after the war. A memorial service was held in the chapel at Arlington Memorial Gardens, 201 Mount Vernon Hwy, Sandy Springs, GA 30328, at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday, Oct. 22, 2023. In lieu of flowers or a donation, please tell someone important something you’ve been meaning to tell them. Dressler’s, 770-451-4999.


OBITUARIES

Sally Felt

95, Brevard, N.C.

Sally Travis Felt passed away peacefully on Oct. 13, 2023, in Brevard, N.C., surrounded by family and friends. She moved to Brevard in 2022, to be with her daughter, having previously spent a few summers there. She decided to remain after being diagnosed with lung cancer. She was 95 years old. She was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., a fact she tried to keep secret from others outside the family for most of her life because she was the quintessential Southern Belle. Sally grew up in Atlanta, Ga., raising her children in North Miami Beach, Fla., and then moving to Memphis, Tenn., to marry Bill, the love of her life. She originally met Bill while attending Vanderbilt University where she earned her undergraduate degree and was elected the Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity’s Sweetheart. Sally lived in Memphis for almost 45 years. Sally was smart, glamorous, beautiful, witty, and fun-loving, with a spicy sense of humor. Known to those closest to her by her nickname, Scarlet, she was devoted to her family, organizing, or supporting family gatherings during the holidays, always ensuring everyone could be together. She loved to entertain and eagerly threw parties for any festive occasion. Sally was a lifetime member of Hadassah and a member of Ahavath Achim Synagogue while living in Atlanta. She later became a member of Temple Israel in Memphis, where she was active volunteering with the elderly. She was also a docent at the Brooks Museum and enjoyed sharing her love of art with others. She enjoyed playing card games and excelled at bridge and mah jongg, eager to teach younger women how to play. She even played gin into her final months, still winning a few hands with her younger opponents. Sally also loved to travel. Throughout her lifetime, she visited dozens of countries on every continent except Antarctica. She most enjoyed traveling with friends and family, and in her later years, she particularly loved taking her children and grandchildren on cruises. She was predeceased by her parents, Bertha and Robert Travis, and her husband, William “Bill” Felt. She is survived by her children: Josh Zwerner, Janna Zwerner and Jolie (Michael) Kisber; her grandchildren, Cody and Jarron Zwerner, Olya “Cookie” Zwerner, Zachary (Gabby) Kisber, Jordanna (Brandon) Denson, and Gabriel Kisber; and three great-grandchildren, and a host of loving cousins and friends. A graveside service was held at 2:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2023, at Greenwood Cemetery in Atlanta, Georgia. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made online at CampJudaea.org or mailed to: Camp Judaea, 1440 Spring Street, NW, Atlanta, GA, 30309, or a charity of your choice. Arrangements by Dressler’s Jewish Funeral Care, 770-4514999.

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ATLANTA JEWISH TIMES OCTOBER 31 2023 | 89


OBITUARIES

Lillian Rubin Reingold

Susan Sachs Schlansky

Lillian Rubin Reingold, 92, passed away peacefully Saturday, Oct. 14 in Atlanta, Ga. surrounded by her family. She was born on Feb. 21, 1931, in Petah Tikva, Israel. As a young girl her family immigrated from Israel to Toledo, Ohio, where she had to learn a new language and culture. After marrying Arvin, she moved to Chattanooga, Tenn., to begin her new life, where she lived until 2016. Lillian loved her life in Chattanooga, surrounded by family and friends. Her passions included volunteering at the local hospitals, being an active member of B’nai Zion Congregation, exercising at the YMCA, walking with Arvin, playing Mahjong with her friends, and enjoying halftime at UT football games. Most of all, she loved seeing and spending time with her grand and great grandchildren. In addition to working as a bookkeeper before she had her family, Lil managed the family-owned Park Plaza office building on Market Street. Lillian was predeceased by her beloved and best friend, Arvin of 69 years and brother Harry Rubin. She is survived by her two children, Gayle Steinberg, (Toby), Arthur Reingold, (Susan), sister Bernice Rubin, grandchildren Lauren Steinberg, Eric Steinberg, (Jessica), Melissa Ginsberg, (Adam), Chad Sunstein, (Eva), Joey Reingold, and Ellie Reingold. In addition, she had five great-grandchildren; Cole and Blake Ginsberg, Isabella and Anabelle Steinberg, Lilah Sunstein, and many nieces and nephews whom she loved dearly. Funeral services were be held at B’nai Zion cemetery, 605 Lullwater Road, Chattanooga, TN on Monday, Oct. 16. In lieu of flowers donations can be made to B’nai Zion Congregation, 923 McCallie Avenue, Chattanooga, TN, 37403 or the Jewish Federation of Greater Chattanooga, 5461 North Terrace, Chattanooga, TN, 37411. Dressler’s Jewish Funeral Care, 770-451-4999.

Susan Sachs Schlansky, 79, passed away on Sept. 5, 2023. She is survived by Stuart, her loving husband of 53 years, her daughters, Debra Siegel (Philip) and Rachel Katz (Benjamin), and grandchildren, Zoe Siegel, Zack Siegel, and Jacob Katz. Susan possessed a deep and abiding love of her Jewish faith. Her passion for Judaism influenced and informed her lifelong career as an educator, her commitment to the Atlanta Jewish community, and most of all to loving and caring for her family. Susan was born in Braddock, Penn. A first generation American, and the only daughter of B. Louis (Z”L) and Ethel Sachs (Z”L), Susan’s parents fled Lithuania in the 1930s with her older brothers, Hillel (Z”L) and Murray Sachs (Z”L). Surrounded by many cousins, aunts, and uncles, Susan was raised in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Penn., where she was embraced by and flourished in that thriving Jewish community. Susan graduated from Taylor Allderdice High School and attended the Ohio State University. Returning to Pittsburgh following college, she obtained a master’s degree in education from the University of Pittsburgh and embarked on her career as a teacher. Susan first taught in the Pittsburgh public schools. As opportunities brought Susan’s family to Detroit, she then taught in the public schools there. But it was in Atlanta where Susan and Stuart ultimately settled. There, Susan would spend the rest of her career as an educator, serving as a kindergarten teacher at the Atlanta JCC, an elementary education teacher at The Davis Academy, and a religious school instructor at Congregation Etz Chaim. Throughout, Susan found a calling in shaping the minds of generations of young Atlantans and inspiring them in their Jewish faith and identity. Susan also found great purpose in dedicating her time to volunteer in support of causes on behalf of the Atlanta Jewish Community. An active congregant of Ahavath Achim Synagogue, Susan took much pleasure from attending services and served for many years as the head of the synagogue’s usher committee. In addition, Susan was a lifetime member of Hadassah Atlanta, serving a term as that organization’s president. Moreover, Susan was a survivor of breast cancer. Believing strongly in the preventive value of education, Susan frequently spoke to groups of young Jewish women regarding the importance of early detection and her own personal experience in combating and overcoming cancer. Susan’s love of learning extended not only to teaching others; she embraced a lifelong desire to add to her own knowledge. Susan possessed an insatiable curiosity about the world around her, and greatly enjoyed traveling to new countries, exposing herself to the history, culture, and sights of exotic locales. She and Stuart shared this passion for travel, and together they devoted their retirement years to exploring the world. Of all her accomplishments and pursuits, nothing gave Susan greater pleasure than loving and being loved by her family. Susan reveled in being, “Bubbe” to Zoe, Zack, and Jacob. Every Friday, Susan would greet the entire family with wishes of “Shabbat Shalom.” Susan cherished moments of catching up with every family member, speaking by telephone, inquiring about their comings and goings, and supporting everyone with words of love and encouragement through all of life’s trials. Susan, a true matriarch of her family, will be sorely missed, but there is great comfort in knowing that she lives on through the lives she touched and through the loving example she set for her daughters and grandchildren. A graveside service was held Sept. 8 at Arlington Memorial Park. Arrangements were made by Dressler’s Jewish Funeral Care, 770-451-4999. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to organizations and causes that were close to Susan’s heart: Ahavath Achim Synagogue; The Davis Academy; The Epstein School; Hadassah Atlanta; Atlanta Hope Lodge; and Chemoflage.

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CLOSING THOUGHTS The Grand Purge Our granddaughter, Miriam, took a class this summer, and when the class ended, she had another few weeks before college. She searched high Chana Shapiro and low for employment in Atlanta to earn money before she left town. It’s not surprising that none of the applications she filled out resulted in a fulltime job. It made sense that no store owner would train her for only one month’s work. Miriam and I discussed the situation, and I offered to pay her to help me tackle the onerous task of cleaning out and organizing the contents of my basement, frequently referred to by my family as The Maze. The aforementioned space is a large “finished” basement room that the previous owner’s teenage son occupied as his own private fiefdom. Our daughters used to suggest that we get a tenant to occupy the space (yes,

there is a bathroom down there); however, my husband and I have taken advantage of the big room by using it as a repository of things from which we cannot bear to be parted, as well as relics from our daughters’ and grandchildren’s childhood years. Miriam said she’d help me clean and clear The Maze, but she refused to let me pay her. I cleverly convinced her to accompany me downstairs for a reconnaissance mission to see for herself the cluttered room which she hadn’t visited since she and I brought her mother’s old Barbie collection upstairs. In other words, our granddaughter had not descended into The Maze for at least 12 years. A lot has happened down there since then. Miriam, who had magnanimously— but foolishly—refused to let me pay her before she saw the state of The Maze, initially recoiled, then decided, “I’ll do it.” The severity of disarray, and the realization that neither I nor my husband was likely to ever discard anything, convinced her to accept the job. (I’m a collector; he’s a saver. There’s a difference.) “How much shall I pay you?” I asked, enormously relieved that help was on the

way. “Whatever,” Miriam answered, teenager-ly. “Twenty bucks for starters,” I declared, believing that twenty bucks is great pay for my estimation that she’d work for less than an hour before collapsing. I decided to insert a bit of business into the transaction, so I grabbed her hand and shook it to seal the deal. Miriam benignly accepted that bit of ceremony, probably due to the belief that old people do that sort of thing, then we quickly donned the work gloves and aprons I brought downstairs. We worked together for a while until my granddaughter stated that she’d do a better job of purging and rearranging if I assumed a spectator role, took a seat on one of the mismatched chairs, and let her do the hands-on work. She said my frequent exclamations of “Miriam, look at this!” and “I haven’t seen this for ten years!” when I reconnected with boxes of favorite books and pottery distracted her from the salaried task at hand. For Miriam, it was a no-brainer to push the lopsided chest of drawers and stained lampshades into the corner with other discards. She questioned my stash of

old washboards, handmade baskets, and midcentury tablecloths, but after negotiations in which I explained their present sentimental worth and future value as antiques, Miriam benevolently let me keep all three groups of treasures. Then it happened. I have been gathering crystal-centered geodes from Israel for years, and Miriam spotted them. She loves geodes, and when I insisted, she accepted the entire group. A few minutes later, under a crate of toy dinosaurs, Miriam found a bulging bag of stuffed animals. Miriam, owner of two beloved live tabbies, Leo and Wyatt, is a “cat person,” and there must have been at least two dozen fuzzy felines in there. “Bubbie, I used to play with these!” she cried. “May I keep them?” Instead of the trunk of bellbottoms, madras curtains, and vintage T-shirts, or the cache of vinyl records I had assumed my grandchildren would covet one day, Miriam asked for the bag of stuffed cats. Nevertheless, my heart gladdened because of the geodes and cats. My granddaughter, the purger, had revealed the nascent soul of a collector, after all. ì

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