Listening Post
FEATURED IN THE WASHINGTON POST — Our own Jerusalem correspondent Sybil Kaplan was featured in an article on Dec. 27 in the Washington Post by William Booth. It’s about the Mahane Yehuda outdoor market, where Kaplan regularly leads shuk walks, and she calls it “a window into Jerusalem’s hungry soul.” Kaplan returned to Israel and her husband Barry made aliyah in 2008. She has been leading her walks, which she calls “Getting to Know the Shuk,” for four years. In an email, she said she couldn’t believe how many people she knows actually saw the article. Booth met her when he took the walk and then decided to write about it. Even though he describes her as pint-sized, she says at 5-feet-5 ½-inches tall she’s not. She’s also not technically a bubbe, since neither of her daughters have children, but she is a step-grandmother to Barry’s grandchildren. Booth did get it right when he described her as a woman with a “journalist’s street-level knowledge of the market. She knows her shuk.” You can read the entire article at http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/at-mahane-yehuda-outdoor-market-a-window-into-jerusalems-hungry-soul/2013/12/26/0d772b72-6b38-11e3-b405-7e360f7e9fd2_story.html.
NO BABY YET — As of late afternoon Tuesday, Jan. 7, as The Chronicle prepared to go to press, there was no word of the birth of a first Jewish baby. If you think you are the proud parent of the first Jewish baby of 2014, call 913-951-8425 or email . The official rules were published in the Dec. 26, 2013, edition.
BLAKE EPHRAIM UPDATE AND FUNDRAISER — Blake has had an amazing recovery according to her mother Lisa Wilcox. She had the surgery to replace the piece of her skull doctors had to remove following her stoke in mid-December and while the road to recovery following that surgery wasn’t as smooth as the family would have liked, she was able to go home on Dec. 27 and ring in the New Year with her family there. They are counting on 2014 being a healthier year for all!
As life continues to get more normal for the Ephraim-Wilcox family, Blake’s friends are still helping out in any way they can. Next up is “Blake’s Benefit,” hosted by the Olathe South High School cheer team on Saturday, Jan. 11, at the high school. The evening begins at 6 p.m. with a soup/chili dinner followed by performances from area junior and senior cheer and dance teams. Tickets can be purchased at the door. For more information contact Rachel Carroll at .
KC KOSHER MEALS ON WHEELS SEEKS VOLUNTEERS — KC Kosher Meals on Wheels is growing and due to an increase in the number of clients the program is serving, the organization needs more volunteer cooks and drivers/visitors. Cooking takes place during the day at the kitchen at Torah Learning Center and meal deliveries take place on Friday and Sunday mornings between 10 and 11 a.m. No cooking experience is needed, just the desire to help others. Its drivers/visitors must undergo training, but no experience is required for these opportunities either. Being a volunteer with KC Kosher Meals on Wheels is a great way to make new riends as many volunteers have formed close bonds with other volunteers and clients alike.
To date, KC Kosher Meals on Wheels has provided more than 2,400 kosher meals to elderly or disabled members of the Jewish community. If you are interested in volunteering, email Esther Friedman at . KC Kosher Meals on Wheels is also accepting donations. Tax deductible gifts can be mailed to KC Kosher Meals on Wheels, 8800 W. 103rd St., Overland Park, KS 66212.
THE GREAT BRA EXCHANGE IS BACK — clair de lune, a lingerie boutique and its customers are demonstrating their support for victims of domestic abuse through The Great Bra Exchange today, Jan. 9, through Jan. 26.
The event, kicking off its 10th year, has a very simple premise: Trade in your gently used bras during the Great Bra Exchange. Each used bra is worth $15 toward the purchase of a new bra at clair de lune. In turn, those gently used bras will be donated to Hope House, a Kansas City metro area shelter for women escaping domestic abuse.
Within the last few weeks, three prominent staff members at Congregation Beth Torah have announced their intentions to leave the Reform congregation. This is in addition to Rabbi Mark Levin’s plan — communicated to the congregation in November 2012 — to step down as the pulpit rabbi and restructure his duties at the end of June.
Sweenie has accepted the position of music director at Temple B’nai Israel in Oklahoma City where she will launch a new music program. She will be reunited with Rabbi Vered Harris, who left Beth Torah in the summer of 2012 to become B’nai Israel’s spiritual leader. As Beth Torah’s music director since May 2004, Sweenie serves as the congregation’s primary cantorial soloist and accompanist for worship, coordinates all volunteers in the Adult and Youth choirs and Intergenerational Ensemble, coordinates the B’nai Mitzvah program, and teaches music and Hebrew in the Weiner Religious School. She has shared her musical talents with a variety of Jewish organizations in the community, including singing at JFS’s quarterly healing service with Rabbi Jonathan Rudnick. In addition her musical group Shir Balev, which also features her husband Glenn Philips and Randy Deutch, provides music at the Reform congregation twice a month and around town. Sweenie’s last day at Beth Torah will also be Friday, March 21.
“I’m not going anywhere, you’ll just see me in a different role,” she said. “For example we have Hebrew read-ins and my job up until now is to make sure things run smoothly. Now I’ll be sitting in a chair listening to students read while someone else does that. There’s things as a full-time staff member that I haven’t felt comfortable volunteering in and now I’ll be able to do that. And of course my husband Larry and I will still be there every Friday night.”
The Temple, Congregation B’nai Jehudah has sent a letter to its membership announcing an enhancement of congregational life on two fronts: chesed/pastoral care and music.
Congregation Beth Torah has selected Rabbi Rick Shapiro to begin serving as its interim rabbi. He will join the congregation July 1. Rabbi Mark H. Levin, who has been Beth Torah’s sole pulpit rabbi since its inception and is now being called founding rabbi, will step down from that role and assume new responsibilities, which have not yet been announced, this summer.
Women for the Wall is a grassroots organization in Israel that is concerned with preserving Jewish tradition at the Western Wall. Its founder, Ronit Peskin, will be in town Monday, Jan. 13, and will present her views on this topic at 7:30 p.m. in the Social Hall at the Jewish Community Campus. Her visit is sponsored by BIAV, the Jewish Community Center and Jewish Federation of Greater Kansas City.
Can you define a religious Jew? It’s quite possible your definition is different than that of Rabbi Aaron L. Alexander, the featured speaker for Congregation Beth Shalom’s Sisterhood Shabbat/Kaplan Scholar-in-Residence weekend Jan. 17-18. (For complete information regarding the weekend, see below.)
Renowned storyteller Rabbi Hanoch Teller will be here next week, Jan. 9 and 10, as BIAV’s scholar in residence. Having been dubbed a “globe-trotting modern-day maggid,” Rabbi Teller has enthralled audiences on five continents, in more than 40 American states and 24 other countries. He is known to deliver a precious message imbued with joy and drama, laughter and pathos. Even Dr. Mehmet Oz has praised him as “The greatest, and certainly the most entertaining, storyteller.”
SPICE UP THEIR LIVES, FEED THE HUNGRY — If you read this column on a regular basis you know I support our local food pantries, especially the JFS Food Pantry and Yachad-The Kosher Food Pantry sponsored by Chabad. Regular readers probably also know that I often learn things about people, places and things in our community from Facebook.
Ask Erwin Stern and he’ll tell you one is never too old to learn something new about yourself. Stern just recently learned the name of the organization that helped him escape Austria following Kristallnacht and eventually arranged for him to come to the United States.
Who will be the first Jewish baby of 2014? Will the baby be born on Jan. 1 or will we have to wait until later in the month until we hear the good news? This year, as is our custom, The Chronicle will shower the first Jewish baby of 2014 with prizes. Information about The Chronicle’s annual contest, and the 2014 prize package, appears on pages 12, 13 and 14 of this edition of the newspaper.