Listening Post


SELICHOT — It was a busy weekend here in the Jewish community as more than 180 people along with our local clergy and members of the community choir attended Selichot services, sponsored by the Rabbinical Association of Greater Kansas City Saturday night at Congregation Beth Torah. The service has been a community endeavor for many years and it continued in that tradition this year, with 10 rabbis and spiritual leaders conducting nine different study sessions prior to the worship service. The spirit of cooperation continued into the worship portion of the evening as more rabbis joined in leading the worship along with Cantor Sharon Kohn, Hazzan Rob Menes and Linda Sweenie, music director of Beth Torah.
GIVE TO UNITED WAY — The 2011 United Way of Greater Kansas City fundraising campaign is officially underway. Campaign leaders are asking those who can afford to do so to dig a little deeper this year to help those who are still struggling because of the sluggish economy. Campaign leaders announced Monday that the campaign is off to a great start. Sixteen companies who conducted early United Way employee campaigns this summer have raised nearly $6.7 million. Ron Howard, United Way’s PR director and a member of the Jewish community, reminded me that three agencies in the Jewish community are recipients of United Way funding:
• Jewish Community Center — $118,834
• Jewish Vocational Services — $120, 953
• Jewish Family Services — $183,111
The funds these three agencies receive come from allocations and designations from the fundraising campaign and United Way grant funding for community initiatives. This year United Way is also partnering with the Roasterie, which created a special "Live United" blend of coffee. The coffee is available for sale online at www.theroasterie.com/causes with 10 percent of the proceeds going to United Way. This year’s fundraising campaign is expected to conclude Nov. 18.
BABKA AT PANERA — Our friends at Panera have changed its menu to a more autumn theme to reflect the current season. Now, in addition to bagels there is another Jewish twist on the menu. Panera is introducing Chocolate Pecan Babka. Babka is the Polish name for grandma — and it’s also the name for the rich, buttery, yeasty bread that Eastern European immigrants brought to America in the 19th century. For Tom Gumpel, Panera Bread’s head baker and former associate dean at The Culinary Institute of America, the introduction of Panera’s babka is an opportunity to help spread the word about international breads — something he’s always been passionate about.
"Unless you’re from New York City or Chicago, or grew up in a Polish or Jewish family or neighborhood, most Americans might not know what a babka is," says Gumpel. "I’m excited to bring a personal favorite of mine into the homes of those who may not have otherwise experienced the intricacies of the babka." Panera Bread skilled bakers artfully create each babka with a brioche-type dough with a buttermilk flavor to craft sweet egg bread that is marbled with a chocolate-flavored filling and toasted pecans.
SHOFAR FACTORY — Rabbi Benzion Friedman has been helping people, mostly youngsters, make kosher shofarim for more than 20 years. Before the activity begins, he gives a short lesson about shofars. Here he shows what the horns would look like if they were still attached to the animal they came from.
Rabbis in Kansas City are proud of the fact that across the board they get along well. Many will tell you it’s highly unusual for rabbis of very different spiritual beliefs — from Chabad to Reform to Orthodox — to support each other in one organization such as the Rabbinical Association of Greater Kansas City. The local rabbis want to take that support for each other a step further and begin finding ways for their congregations to collaborate more in an effort to build a more vibrant Jewish community for the future.
There are several collaborative ventures already taking place. For example, beginning this fall Beth Shalom and Beth Torah entered into an agreement that allows Beth Torah families to enroll their children at Beth Shalom’s preschool at a reduced rate. As part of the agreement, Beth Torah’s Rabbi Vered Harris now has an official presence at the preschool.
In the spirit of cooperation and collaboration, the two largest Reform congregations in town —The Temple, Congregation B’nai Jehudah and Congregation Beth Torah — will worship together for the first time at 6 p.m. Friday, Sept. 30, at B’nai Jehudah. The service will follow B’nai Jehudah’s ritual and, at the invitation of B’nai Jehudah’s Rabbi Arthur Nemitoff, Beth Torah’s Rabbi Mark Levin will give the sermon.
Rabbi Levin points out that the congregations, as well as the entire Jewish community, are very different than they were two decades ago.
Just as a caterpillar spins her cocoon and slowly changes into a beautiful butterfly, Back in the Swing is undergoing a major metamorphosis as it emerges from its first decade of retail therapy and enters its second decade with a revised program of parties and learning.
Today (Thursday, Sept. 22) is Ann and Isak Federman’s 65th wedding anniversary. The two moved to Kansas City only months before they married. Coming to the center of the Midwestern United States is still one of Ann’s most treasured memories of their 65-plus years together.
Ann Warszawski Federman is from Bendzin, Poland. In 1942 she was sent to a labor camp in Czechoslovakia along with her sisters, Gertrude and Lola. Ann was 20 when she was liberated in 1945.
BRAVO — The opening events of the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts were the talk of the town this weekend and early this week. It was designed by Israeli architect Moshe Safi, and the buzz is it’s magnificent. Many local Jews were involved in opening-weekend activities. One was Hyman Brand Hebrew Academy junior Avery Parkhurst, who plays violin in the Kansas City Youth Orchestra and performed Sunday in Helzberg Hall. Greg Azorsky had a booth outside the Kauffman Center during the open house Sunday selling one of his KC Cool shirts, which is an expansion of his Meshugge Shirts featured in the paper earlier this year. The design, “Move Over, Sydney,” sold well. Describing the design, Azorsky said that “the Sydney Opera House has been such an iconic building for the performing arts and now we have this new building here that may very well become another such building. I had a lot of people come up to our tent who said ‘That is just what I was thinking.’ ” Even Kansas City Symphony Music Director Michael Stern purchased a shirt! If you didn’t get a chance to see Kauffman Center last weekend, check it out when Marvin Hamlisch performs Nov. 3 in honor of the Midwest Center for Holocaust Education’s 18th anniversary.
Eric Korsten simply loves bees.
A package of 12,000 bees, Korsten explained, usually grows into a community of as many as 50,000. Each hive is a family with its own queen. A first-year hive might produce just a “shmear” of honey. As much as 250 pounds of honey can be extracted from a mature hive. Once the honey is extracted, the beeswax is spun, filtered and screened, before it can be jarred and ready for distribution.
While growing up in New Jersey, Victor Finkelstein, a member of Congregation Beth Torah, dreamed of performing and being on television. Though life took Finkelstein in a different direction, he has helped start a new program to give kids that are facing difficult times more resources to follow their dreams.
Hannah Caplan is a special person. Her parents know this; Laura Hewitt, who nominated her as a Salute to Youth honoree knows it … and now the rest of the Jewish community can learn why.
REACHING OUT — Goldie’s Gift, a program offering cheer and holiday items to area seniors in nursing homes and retirement centers, is expanding. This year, in honor of the upcoming High Holidays, it hopes to expand its services to include seniors living in their own homes. If you know of anyone — he or she could be a loved one, friend or neighbor — who is home bound and would enjoy a friendly visit and pre-holiday gift bag, Goldie’s Gift wants to know. To add someone to the list, or to make sure someone living in a nursing home or retirement center is on the list, contact Denise Ellenberg at 913-491-1619 or Blumah Wineberg at 913-940-1113.