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Hillel Yeshiva PTA’s 1st Annual Food Feud

The room was beautifully decorated

The room was beautifully decorated

The Hillel Yeshiva PTA recently hosted a Food Feud. The aim was to keep the night simple and keep the focus on the women’s dishes. Thank you to Sheila Bibi, who graciously donated floral centerpieces, and to Charlotte Cohen, who donated bar stools, tables and cloths that set the mood for the evening.

All of the participants submitted their recipes prior to the night, in order to be published in the first Food Feud cookbook, designed by Camille Saka, whose dedication to Hillel PTA is always steadfast. The recipes were placed in one of four categories: “Getting Started,” “The Main Squeeze,” “On the Side” and “Something Sweet.” The women were told to bring their dishes prepared on a platter to be judged on presentation and, of course, flavor.

MDY’s Sharsheret Fashion Show

ImageLights, camera and fashion were the main attractions on the runway, as Magen David Celia Esses High School held an exhilarating and meaningful fashion show to raise money for the Sharsheret organization.

A large crowd gathered in the auditorium to raise awareness of breast cancer while watching an inspiring and uplifting fashion show. This event was part of the Magen David Celia Esses High School’s 9th grade hesed program. The program’s sole purpose is to give the students the opportunity to use the lessons they learn in the classroom to help others. When a group of 9th grade girls were looking for a hesed project, they embraced the Sharsheret organization.

David Mizrahi Golf Classic

Jack Dushey, Morris Bibi, Danny Massry and Morris Gindi

Jack Dushey, Morris Bibi, Danny Massry and Morris Gindi

Back for its third year, the “David Mizrahi Golf Classic was a tremendous success. The event drew some of the community’s top players, such as Jack Hakim, Eli Gindi, David Braka and Morris Gindi, and was able to raise close to $70,000 on behalf of the David Mizrahi Scholarship fund. Players from our community had an opportunity to compete and enjoy the day at the Diplomat Country Club in Florida.

Eshel’s Learning Program for Girls

ImageEshel, the Sephardic Educational center in Jerusalem, announces the opening of the first learning program in Israel designed specifically for young women of the Sephardic community.

Miriam Tawil is the founder and director of Eshel. She received her Master’s of Jewish philosophy from Yeshiva University.

Eshel’s mission is to provide the students with the opportunity to build the foundation of their adult lives by dedicating time toward their personal, spiritual, intellectual and religious growth as they experience life in Israel. Courses include all areas of Tanakh, Jewish thought, Sephardic halacha and customs, Sephardi history with tiyulim (tours), psychology and modern Israeli history.

The Jews of Africa

Kezikia Bumba, 80-year-old President of the Abayudaya Men's Club

Kezikia Bumba, 80-year-old President of the Abayudaya Men’s Club

Western Jews do not always imagine that people of different skin colors, from distant cultures, could be Jewish. The truth is that there are currently indigenous communities observing traditional Jewish rituals all over the continent of Africa. True, most Jewish communities in Africa bear little resemblance to Jewish communities in Europe or North America—they look different, speak different languages, embrace music and culture with which many Western Jews are unfamiliar—yet these communities have religious practices that everyone who is Jewish would recognize.

Each community that practices Judaism in Africa has come to the religion in a different way. Some believe themselves to be descendents of the “Lost Tribes of Israel,” others are members of communities that have been Jewish for two millennia, while other groups have accepted Judaism in recent years because it is the religion that most resonates with their lives. The one factor that unifies these communities is that they are proud to call themselves Jewish, and would like the international Jewish community to accept them as Jews.

Tens of Millions in Funding for Yeshivahs

Governor Paterson (enter) with legeslative leaders Malcolm  Smith and Sheldon Silver

Governor Paterson (enter) with legeslative leaders Malcolm Smith and Sheldon Silver

After an intense and well-organized grassroots campaign spearheaded by TEACH NYS in coordination with the Sephardic Community Federation (SCF) and joined by Agudath Israel, the UJO of Williamsburg, the Orthodox Union and Yeshiva University, Governor Paterson and Democratic legislative leaders Malcolm Smith and Sheldon Silver have agreed to restore $30 million in funding to non-public schools through the Comprehensive Attendance Program (CAP) in this year’s budget.

CAP is a state mandated program for all schools. It is a security measure that requires that schools take attendance at the start of every period to ensure that students are attending their classes and not leaving the school during class time. While the governor proposed a 3.3% cut for public school funding in his proposed budget, he wanted to cut funding to yeshivahs by an astounding 44% primarily by eliminating CAP for private schools. Last year’s allocation for CAP funding was closer to $45 million. However, considering the difficult fiscal situation in Albany where the state faces a $16 billion budget shortfall, this 67% restoration in funding is a major victory for private schools and in particular for yeshivahs.

Yom Yerushalayim

ImageOn June 7,1967/Iyar 28, 5727, one day into The Six Day War, Israeli troops crashed through the defenses set up by Arab troops and recaptured those parts of the Holy City of Jerusalem which had previously been in Arab possession. Yom Yerushalayim commemorates this significant day.

Moshe Amirav, a paratrooper, describes his first minutes at the Wall, “We ran there, a group of panting soldiers, lost on the plaza of the Temple Mount, searching for a giant stone wall. We did not stop to look at the Mosque of Omar, even though this was the first time we had seen it close up. Forward! Forward! Hurriedly, we pushed our way through the Magreb Gate and suddenly we stopped, thunderstruck. There it was before our eyes! Gray and massive, silent and restrained. The Western Wall! Slowly, slowly I began to approach the Wall in fear and trembling like a pious cantor going to the lectern to lead the prayers. I approached it as the messenger of my father and my grandfather, of my great-grandfather and of all the generations in all the exiles who had never seen it—and so they had sent me to represent them. Somebody recited the festive blessing: ‘Blessed are You, O Lord our G-d, King of the Universe who has kept us alive, and maintained us and brought us to this time.’ But I could not answer Amen.”

Introducing the New and Improved Deal Tennis Club

ImageDeal Tennis Club welcomes the community back to Deal this summer and is very excited to present a new and improved, full-service tennis club that will meet all of your family’s needs. Under the direction of Colon Nunez, Turnberry Isle Resort Tennis Director, a comprehensive and dynamic tennis program has been designed for all ages and levels. Children’s programs at Deal Tennis Club are operated in affiliation with David Dweck, Director of Camp Allsport. Colon’s reputation is outstanding and unbeatable. From training top pros with smashing successes to teaching kids with innovative standards and fun tactics, Colon brings a standard of excellence to Deal Tennis Club.

For summer 2009 the club will be offering a variety of programs for men, women and children. We will also offer private instruction and tournaments.

Shavuot: The Giving of the Torah

Rabbi David Laine

Rabbi David Laine

The holiday of Shavuot marks the giving of the Torah by G-d to the entire Jewish people.  This occurred on Mount Sinai over 3,300 years ago. The imparting of the Torah and biblical commandments was more than just a historical date; it was a far-reaching spiritual event that touched the essence of all Jewish souls for all time. 

On Shavuot, the Jewish people agreed to adhere to the commandments of the Torah. Every year, Shavuot is the special time for us to strengthen our unique relationship with G-d.

Yankee Stadium Goes Glatt

ImageThe new $1.5 billion Yankee Stadium has been the premier building project to take place in the Bronx in more than 50 years. It has taken the hard work of a team of engineers, architects and construction professionals to design the most impressive and fan-friendly park in Major League Baseball. The New Yankee Stadium offers bigger seats with more leg room, 56 luxury suites and 410 party suites. The new stadium is truly impressive and Jewish baseball fans will be thrilled to know that delicious glatt kosher food from hot dogs and hamburgers to full hot buffets will now be available for their convenience.

Ouri’s Sports Kosher Catering has been chosen to be the exclusive provider of glatt kosher food for Yankee Stadium. Evidently his reputation of excellence in the glatt kosher field has become renowned. Ouri’s is the sole caterer at the new magnificient Ahava ve Ahva Congregation on Ocean Parkway and has provided his many satisified customers with elegant and exclusive parties of all types and sizes at other synagogues, hotels, restaurants and in private homes.

Yom HaShoah: How to Remember the Holocaust

ImageShoah is the Hebrew word for whirlwind. It is the term used to described the conflagration that swept up six million Jewish souls between 1938 and 1945. A war was waged against the Jews in which unspeakable atrocities were perpetrated against a defenseless people. Men and women, young and old alike, were butchered at the hands of the accursed Nazis. Every year, on Yom HaShoah, we remember the martyrs who sanctified the name of G-d in the camps, the ghettos, and in the gas chambers.

A story is told of a unique Hanukah in Aushwitz, where a group of Jews desired greatly to have a candle lit on the upcoming holiday. Obviously, there was no way the Germans would allow this to happen, and candles were impossible to come by in the camp. However, this did not deter these Jews. They saved small portions of fatty butter every day until they had enough to make a small candle. On the eve of Hanukah, they gathered in secret, a group of emaciated bodies who had given up their sole sustenance, around one rabbi. The rabbi then made the three blessings that one recites on the candles the first night of Hanukah. After the blessings were made and the candle was lit, one of the assembled approached the rabbi and asked, “How could you make the third blessing? In the third blessing, we thank Hashem for bringing us to this day! How can we thank G-d for bringing us to this day while we are standing amidst horrors, death and torture! Aren’t the dead better off than those alive?”

Yom Hazikaron and Yom Ha’atzmaut

ImageFor an American Jew, one of the real pleasures of living in Israel for an extended time is the opportunity to experience a society where the rhythms of the week and the year are Jewish. The first time you plan a trip around your Sukkot vacation, or rush to finish your Friday grocery shopping before the store closes for Shabbat, you sense how the rhythms of Jewish life, so challenging to maintain here, are simply taken for granted in Israel.

One of the most memorable periods in Israeli life is the two-day sequence of Yom Hazikaron, the nation’s Memorial Day for Fallen Soldiers, and Yom Ha’atzmaut, Israel’s Independence Day. The power of these two days, and the transition between them, is extraordinary.

Yemenite Heritage House

ImageThe address could not be more appropriate—the intersection of Shlomo HaMelech and Shalom Shabazi Streets in Rosh Ha’Ayin, Israel. That is the location of the Yemenite Jewish Heritage House, a museum opened in 2006 to document the history and culture of the Jews at the southern end of the Arabian Peninsula.

The reference to Shlomo HaMelech recalls the Yemenite belief that their community dates back to that Biblical period.

Rebecca Harary Meets with Top Officials

Rebecca Harary, US Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, Assemblywoman Rhoda Jacob and Chancellor Joel Klein

Rebecca Harary, US Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, Assemblywoman Rhoda Jacob and Chancellor Joel Klein

Rebecca Harary, Vice President and a founder of Imagine Academy for Autism, was invited by New York State Assemblywoman Rhoda S. Jacobs to join her recently, as US Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Schools Chancellor Joel I. Klein announced details about the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, and how it will help NYC schools.

Based on its preliminary analysis, NYC estimates that it will receive approximately $950 million, including $525 million in State and Fiscal Stabilization Grants in each of the next two years. The schools are also entitled to receive over $300 million from an expansion of Title I funds for high-needs students and approximately $100 million from the expansion of Individuals with Disabilities Education Act funding and more than $25 million in education technology funds. The Mayor was confident that this aid would make a difficult budget situation tolerable for all schools.