His company was sold to Staples. Now this businessman is a leader in the fight against cancer.
As part of the new Kesher KC program, Jewish Family Services has created an additional opportunity for volunteers. Known as Kesher KC Resource Center volunteers, they will play a key role in helping JFS reach more people and increase the positive impact of Kesher KC.
Kelly Somberg and fellow volunteer Lois Rice are leading the charge as Kesher KC Resource volunteers. This “dynamic duo” has been involved since November as part of a pilot program that is growing to engage more clients in Missouri, and eventually Kansas.
In their role as Resource Center volunteers, Somberg and Rice serve as a welcoming face of JFS and the first person that families connect with in person at JFS. Resource Center volunteers meet with families to identify needs and opportunities, provide information and referrals to agency and community resources and link families with immediate or complicated needs with the on-site social worker for further assessment and support.
“We want to get to know their story and what their needs are,” Somberg said. We do a brief description of what we offer and that we can connect them here. We also have a resource center of information about how other organizations may assist them with things JFS does not provide.”
Jewish Family Services’ Kesher KC integrates and builds on the success of its food pantry, social work and employment services. Kesher means connection in Hebrew, and it is the spirit of connection that defines the program. Program goals include:
• Connecting and engaging meaningfully with individuals and families challenged by food, housing and financial insecurity;
• Connecting and linking individuals and families with the resources and services they want and need;
• Connecting staff and volunteers to bring coordinated, affirming services to life.
Kesher KC provides easy access to a range of on-site services centered on the food pantry, a primary access point for families struggling to meet basic needs. Kesher KC focuses on meeting the immediate needs of participating families and moves them toward a more secure future in an integrated manner. The program provides low-barrier access with welcoming and friendly engagement for individuals and families seeking assistance from JFS. Kesher KC also serves as a resource for services that JFS doesn’t provide but other community partners do.
Hillary Light Merryfield beams with pride as she points to the 1,055 photos of adopted children displayed on two of the four walls in her Overland Park office.
A licensed clinical social worker, Merryfield opened her own adoption agency in 1986 and has been placing children in loving homes ever since. Adoption Option, Inc., a nonprofit organization, is the product of her passion for building forever families.
“It’s exciting to see these tiny babies, and now they’re teenagers, or I’ve been invited to their weddings,” Merryfield said. “I love meeting people and helping families grow.”
The local adoption expert will share her experiences June 4 at the next meeting of Bloom, an infertility support group, which will meet at the Jewish Community Campus Board Room.
The Bronfman Fellowship has selected its 33rd cohort of intellectually curious 11th-graders from across North America, including Congregation Beth Torah’s Youth Group Co-President Sam Fine. Other Bronfman Fellows include the president of a club that helps support youth development in the African country of Eswatini, a young physicist whose studies on cosmic ray muons have been used by high schools throughout the country, a professional jeweler who works with ancient gemstones, and an activist who spoke to a crowd of thousands about the violence spawned by white nationalism in the wake of the shooting at the Tree of Life synagogue.
The 26 Fellows, chosen from more than 230 applicants, will participate in a five-week program of study and travel in Israel, followed by a year of programming centered around pluralism, social responsibility and Jewish texts. They also interact with a group of Israeli peers who were chosen through a parallel selection process as part of the Israeli Fellowship, Amitei Bronfman.
The Bronfman Fellowship was founded in 1987 by philanthropist Edgar M. Bronfman, formerly CEO of the Seagram Company Ltd. He passed away in December 2013.
“Edgar Bronfman would have relished the opportunity to get to know this year’s Fellows,” said Becky Voorwinde, executive director of The Bronfman Fellowship. “They are a passionate, inquisitive, talented and incredibly bright bunch. I look forward to seeing them challenge and inspire one another and their communities throughout their lives.”
Following a competitive application process, the 2019 Fellows are from 10 states and Canada and represent a wide range of Jewish backgrounds, including Orthodox, Conservative, Reform, Reconstructionist and secularly/culturally Jewish.
Sam is a junior at Blue Valley High School. There, he participates in debate and business clubs, and has won numerous awards. He won first place at Business Professionals of America’s state competition in Banking and Finance and Personal Financial Management and finished in the top 20 in Personal Financial Literacy (PFL) at DECA’s National Leadership Conference. He also has won first place in PFL at DECA’s state competition for two years in a row. At school, Sam is also involved in Youth Court and honor societies for math, science, Spanish and English, and he is an officer in Investment Club. Outside of school, Sam is the senior patrol leader of Troop 10 and is very involved at his synagogue, Beth Torah. In addition to Beth Torah’s youth group, he is a teacher’s aide for Sunday school. He participates in NFTY, which he said has drawn him closer to his Jewish roots and has given him Jewish friends from around the region. He is interested in economics, politics and philosophy, and he plans to pursue a career in engineering. Sam is also a former winner of The Chronicle’s annual Hanukkah Art Contest, sponsored by Chabad House Center and The J.
The Fellowship promotes the study of Jewish texts, traditions, history and culture as a way for Fellows to engage with each other and the world. The Fellows will study with an esteemed faculty including Gila Fine, editor-in-chief of Maggid Books (Koren Publishers Jerusalem) and a teacher at the Pardes Institute of Jewish Studies; Rabbi Dahlia Kronish, director of Jewish and student life at the Abraham Joshua Heschel School in New York; Jake Marmer, education and programming director of The Bronfman Fellowship, author of two poetry collections and contributing editor/poetry critic for Tablet Magazine; Evan Parks, Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Germanic Languages at Columbia University where he studies German-Jewish thought and modern German literature; and Rabbi Yehuda Sarna, the executive director of the Edgar M. Bronfman Center for Jewish Student Life at NYU and the university chaplain at New York University.
For more information about The Bronfman Fellowship, including how to apply, visit bronfman.org.
CONGREGATION BETH TORAH CELEBRATES 30 YEARS —
It’s been a festive year for the Reform congregation founded in 1988.
Congregation Beth Torah (CBT) began its yearlong anniversary celebration a little more than a year ago on May 4, 2018, with a Shabbat dinner following services. A full year of Pick a Parties followed, where congregants hosted different gatherings to build camaraderie and raise funds for the synagogue.
Celebratory events also included a luncheon following Rosh Hashanah services. This past year CBT hosted two scholars in resident, Rabbi Ron Wolfson and Rabbi Sam Joseph. Panim El Panim programs were established celebrating CBT’s history of tikkun olam and future social justice activities, including making the urban area of Kansas City a safer place through Tikkun KC, headedby CBT member Larry Myer, and making the synagogue’s own back yard more beautiful through the Beth Torah park cleanup program led by member Greg Zarobsky, as well as other projects.
The celebration continued April 13 with a BASH. There was music by the Jewbie Brothers, food by Kosher Connection, a silent auction and a parody of its history written by Estelle Edelbaum and Vic Finkelstein specifically for the 30th anniversary.
I’m told by reliable sources the Jewbie Brothers have offered to play again in another 30 years for the 60th anniversary celebration! Mazel tov Beth Torah on 30 years of being
“a vibrant, modern Reform Jewish congregation where everyone matters.”
KU HILLEL HAS ITS OWN CUSTOM COFFEE BLEND —
If you are one of those who believes “good ideas start with brainstorming, great ideas start with coffee,” then you should check out KU Hillel’s new Roasterie blend coffee.

Following a presentation by The Roasterie Kansas City Air Roasted Coffee Founder and CEO Danny O’Neill, several students suggested a KU Hillel blend. The students worked with O’Neill and his team at The Roasterie to create a completely custom coffee blend that is now available to purchase. Jacob Milgrim mixed up the winning coffee blend and Margo Hellman won the label design competition. The coffee is described as creamy and rich with notes of pear, cocoa powder and hazelnut in the finish. A portion of the proceeds for every package purchased will support ongoing Jewish programming at KU Hillel.
To purchase, go to theroasterie.com/causes or search KU Hillel.
It’s a busy time for Rabbi Elana Nemitoff. On Mother’s Day she was ordained by Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion (HUC-JIR). On Father’s Day she will get married. Then on July 1 she will begin serving as rabbi/educator at Temple Israel in Westport, Connecticut, a 70-year-old congregation with approximately 800 member families.
The daughter of Leslie and Rabbi Arthur Nemitoff, the newest Rabbi Nemitoff was confirmed at The Temple, Congregation B’nai Jehudah, the Reform congregation her father has served since 2003. He estimates his daughter joins a group of 18 to 20 children of the congregation, including him, who have become rabbis.
Rabbi Daniel Rockoff, who has been the spiritual leader for Congregation Beth Israel Abraham & Voliner (BIAV) since 2008, has accepted a position as Judaic studies principal/school rabbi at the Denver Academy of Torah (DAT). He will complete his official capacity with the congregation on June 30 and relocate with his family to Colorado in mid-August.
In an interview last week, Rabbi Rockoff said he had informed BIAV’s leadership in December 2018 that he planned to make a career shift. At that time the congregation decided to begin searching for a rabbi to take over for Rabbi Rockoff in the summer of 2020. It was further agreed that if Rabbi Rockoff found a very desirable new position sooner, he would pursue that opportunity.
On Monday, BIAV President Eva Lipner Sokol told The Chronicle the congregation had a meeting scheduled for Tuesday evening, after the paper goes to press, to vote on the new slate of officers and discuss the next phase for BIAV. Rabbi Ronald Schwarzberg, director of Jewish career guidance and placement at Yeshiva University, was expected to help facilitate the discussion. He will be BIAV’s point person throughout the search process and is, Lipner said, “a true expert in the field.” Members were expected to discuss the nuts-and-bolts of the search process and begin to establish the community’s needs and the characteristics of a rabbi that will help lead the congregation forward.