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The SCC’s 2019 Bench Press Competition – A Record-Setting Event

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David Jolovitz, judge, spotting Joseph Mazon, division winner.

The enthusiasm of the audience that filled the room was matched only by the determination of the competitors. The pre-competition hype, advertised on various social media platforms, promised a very special evening. And the 2019 Sephardic Community Center Bench Press Contest did not disappoint.

Bench Press Contest Winner, Judges and Staff

Held annually at the Sephardic Community Center during spring since the early 1990s, the contest has drawn the better weightlifters in the community for a generation – as they compete for a title, a very heavy trophy, and right to lay claim as “the strongest.”

Often recognized as the best demonstration of testing one’s strength, the bench press had become popularized during the annual NFL Combine, where the best college football players are tested before the annual NFL draft. Now well established beyond the traditional gym scene, the bench press still remains, after a century, as the premier chest-building exercise of choice, as well as the exercise that offers the participants of all ages the opportunity for “bragging rights,” male and female.

The recently established ‘1901 Fitness’ at the Center was the setting for the community’s 28th annual test of strength, bringing out a mix of some long-time veterans and yet others who were competing for the first time. At this year’s gathering, the youngest competitors were 15 and the oldest athletes, seventy years older. For the mathematically challenged – yes, that’s 85 years old. To allow a fair competition, the athletes are divided into different divisions: 114 lb., 123 lb., 132 lb., 148 lb., 165 lb., 181 lb., 198 lb., 220 lb., 220+ lb., Women and Senior. Given three opportunities to lift the weight, with the heaviest lift registered as that competitor’s “best lift,” each division winner took home a powerlifting trophy – the same one that is awarded at some of the nation’s premier competitions. From among the division winners, an “overall winner” was then chosen.

Howie Hoffman, Lenny Saulkin, Morris Kassab, Ikey Sutton

As announced at the beginning of the contest, this competition is very different than the game of golf or tennis, where a certain quiet decorum is expected. At any bench press competition, the audience that comes to watch is strongly encouraged to make its presence felt – to scream and cheer while music often blasts as a backdrop. Invariably, the participants and the audience are pumped up, lending to an excitement that could be heard far from the room where the contest was staged.

With several local weight class lifting records set this year, the 2019 contest did not fail to impress or entertain. In fact, there were more 300 lb.+ lifts than had been recorded in any of the previous 28 competitions.

The Center’s newly-crowned division winners were:

  • Isaac Taub, 114 lb.
  • Alex Taub, 123 lb.
  • Isaac Sweid, 132 lb.
  • Benny Levy, 148 lb.
  • Chaim Dayan, 165 lb.
  • David Sutton, 181 lb.
  • Arthur Kofman, 198 lb.
  • Joseph Mazon, 220 lb.
  • Sol Setton, 220+ lb.
  • Betty Esses, Women
  • Howie Hoffman, Seniors over 60
  • Jamie Dabah, Seniors over 80.

The overall winner was Chaim Dayan who impressively benched 310 lb. at a weight of 164.

Organized by the Center’s Health and Wellness Director, David Jolovitz, and officiated by Meir Jolovitz, who maintained the tradition when he judged his 24th competition, the 2019 contest was an outstanding success. Now in the record books, the nearly 30 competitors and the two-hundred-strong audience who cheered them on during the two-hour competition – and joined by several hundred more who watched it via live-stream – would collectively agree that the 2019 Bench Press Contest might well be remembered as the best yet.

Until next year’s.

NY’s Museum of Jewish Heritage to Present Largest Exhibition on Auschwitz; Original Objects Never Before Seen In US

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For the first time, 74 years after the liberation of Auschwitz, a traveling exhibition dedicated to the historical significance of the camp will be presented to a U.S. audience.

The Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust today announced plans to present the most comprehensive Holocaust exhibition about Auschwitz ever exhibited in North America. Auschwitz. Not long ago. Not far away. is produced in partnership with the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum in Poland and the international exhibition firm Musealia. The groundbreaking exhibition was curated by an international team of experts led by historian Dr. Robert Jan van Pelt. It will open in New York City on May 8, 2019 and run through January 3, 2020.

Image of the entrance popularly known as the ‘Gate of Death’ in Auschwitz II-Birkenau (today turned into a symbol of the camp and the atrocities perpetrated by the Nazi regime) after World War II. Photo Credit: Auschwitz.net

For the first time, 74 years after the liberation of Auschwitz, a traveling exhibition dedicated to the historical significance of the camp will be presented to a U.S. audience. The exhibition’s opening on May 8 marks the anniversary of VE Day or Victory in Europe Day, 1945, when the Allies celebrated Nazi Germany’s surrender of its armed forces and the end of World War II.

Auschwitz. Not long ago. Not far away. will arrive in New York City after the exhibition completed a successful run at Madrid’s Arte Canal Exhibition Centre, where it was extended two times, drew more than 600,000 visitors, and was one of the most visited exhibitions in Europe last year. The exhibition explores the dual identity of the camp as a physical location—the largest documented mass murder site in human history—and as a symbol of the borderless manifestation of hatred and human barbarity.

Featuring more than 700 original objects and 400 photographs, the New York presentation of the exhibition will allow visitors to experience artifacts from the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum on view for the first time in the North America, including hundreds of personal items—such as suitcases, eyeglasses, and shoes—that belonged to survivors and victims of Auschwitz. Other artifacts include concrete posts that were part of the fence of the Auschwitz camp; fragments of an original barrack for prisoners from the Auschwitz III-Monowitz camp; a desk and other possessions of the first and the longest serving Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss; a gas mask used by the SS; Picasso’s Lithograph of Prisoner; and an original German-made Model 2 freight wagon used for the deportation of Jews to the ghettos and extermination camps in occupied Poland.

Auschwitz. Not long ago. Not far away. traces the development of Nazi ideology and tells the transformation of Auschwitz from an ordinary Polish town known as Oświęcim to the most significant Nazi site of the Holocaust—at which ca. 1 million Jews, and tens of thousands of others, were murdered. Victims included Polish political prisoners, Sinti and Roma, Soviet POWs, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and those the Nazis deemed “homosexual,” “disabled,” “criminal,” “inferior,” or adversarial in countless other ways. In addition, the exhibition contains artifacts that depict the world of the perpetrators—SS men who created and operated the largest of the German Nazi concentration and extermination camps.

Travelling memory of the Holocaust “Auschwitz: Not long ago. Not far away” Photo Credit: Twitter

The Museum of Jewish Heritage has incorporated into the exhibition more than 100 rare artifacts from its collection that relay the experience of survivors and liberators who found refuge in the greater New York area. These artifacts include: Alfred Kantor’s sketchbook and portfolio that contain over 150 original paintings and drawings from Theresienstadt, Auschwitz, and Schwarzheide; the trumpet that musician Louis Bannet (acclaimed as “the Dutch Louis Armstrong”) credits for saving his life while he was imprisoned in Auschwitz; visas issued by Chiune Sugihara, a Japanese diplomat in Lithuania often referred to as “Japan’s Oskar Schindler”; prisoner registration forms and identification cards; personal correspondence; tickets for passage on the St. Louis; a rescued Torah scroll from the Bornplatz Synagogue in Hamburg; and dreidels and bullets recovered by Father Patrick Desbois in a Jewish mass grave in Ukraine.

“Six million Jews were murdered and Jewish ways of life were nearly stamped out forever. Documented facts of this history, original records and photographs, and witnesses’ accounts are our strongest answers to those who deny or minimize the Holocaust. We must ensure that the horrors of the Holocaust are not lost to fading memories,” said Michael S. Glickman, President & CEO of the Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust. “Learning the history of the Holocaust as a history of individuals is an act of resistance. The Museum will present this groundbreaking exhibition to ensure that we mobilize the painful lessons of the past to create a world worthy of our children’s futures.”

Also on display from the Museum of Jewish Heritage collection will be Heinrich Himmler’s SS dagger and helmet and his annotated copy of Hitler’s Mein Kampf, as well as an anti-Jewish proclamation issued in 1551 by Ferdinand I that was given to Hermann Göring by German security chief Reinhard Heydrich on the occasion of Göring’s birthday. The proclamation required Jews to identify themselves with a “yellow ring” on their clothes. Heydrich noted that, 400 years later, the Nazis were completing Ferdinand’s work. These artifacts stand as evidence of a chapter of history that must never be forgotten.

Not long ago. Not far away” in Madrid. It’s the largest exhibition of that kind dedicated to the topic of Auschwitz and the Holocaust in history. Photo Credit: Twitter

“As the title of the exhibit suggests, Auschwitz is not ancient history but living memory, warning us to be vigilant, haunting us with the admonition ‘Never Again.’ It is a prod to look around the world and mark the ongoing atrocities against vulnerable people,” said Bruce C. Ratner, Chairman of the Museum’s Board of Trustees. “While we had all hoped after the Holocaust that the international community would come together to stop genocide, mass murder, and ethnic cleansing, these crimes continue. And there are more refugees today than at any time since the Second World War. So my hope for this exhibit is that it motivates all of us to make the connections between the world of the past and the world of the present, and to take a firm stand against hate, bigotry, ethnic violence, religious intolerance, and nationalist brutality of all kinds.”

Auschwitz. Not long ago. Not far away. was conceived of by Musealia and the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum and curated by an international panel of experts, including world-renowned scholars Dr. Robert Jan van Pelt, Dr. Michael Berenbaum, and Paul Salmons, in an unprecedented collaboration with historians and curators at the Research Center at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, led by Dr. Piotr Setkiewicz.

“Auschwitz and the Shoah are not just another single, dramatic event in the linear history of humanity. It is a critical point in the history of Europe, and perhaps the world,” said Dr. Piotr M. A. Cywiński, Director of the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. “While commemorating the victims of Auschwitz we should also feel moral discomfort. Antisemitic, hateful, xenophobic ideologies that in the past led to the human catastrophe of Auschwitz, seem not to be erased from our lives today. They still poison people’s minds and influence our contemporary attitudes. That is why studying the Holocaust shouldn’t be limited to history classes. It must become part of curricula of political and civic education, ethics, media, and religious studies. This exhibition is one of the tools we can use.”

“Seventy-three years ago, after the world saw the haunting pictures from Auschwitz, no one in their right mind wanted to be associated with Nazis. But today, 73 years and three generations later, people have forgotten, or they never knew,” said Ron Lauder, Founder and Chairman of the The Auschwitz-Birkenau Foundation Committee and President of the World Jewish Congress. “This exhibit reminds them, in the starkest ways, where anti-Semitism can ultimately lead and the world should never go there again. The title of this exhibit is so appropriate because this was not so long ago, and not so far away.”

The exhibition features artifacts and materials—never before seen in North America—on loan from more than 20 institutions and private collections around the world. In addition to the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum and the Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust, participating institutions include Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, Anne Frank House in Amsterdam, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, Auschwitz Jewish Center in Oświęcim, the Memorial and Museum Sachsenhausen in Oranienburg, and the Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust and Genocide in London.

“Auschwitz did not start with the gas chambers. Hatred does not happen overnight: it builds up slowly among people. It does so with words and thoughts, with small everyday acts, with prejudices,” said Luis Ferreiro, Director of Musealia and the exhibition project. “When we had the vision to create the exhibition we conceived its narrative as an opportunity to better understand how such a place could come to exist, and as warning of where hatred can take us to.”

Auschwitz. Not long ago. Not far away. will be presented in the symbolic, hexagonally-shaped building at the Museum of Jewish Heritage. This 18,000 square foot exhibition will introduce artifacts and Holocaust survivor testimony through 20 thematic galleries. At the conclusion of this presentation, the Museum will debut its new permanent core exhibition.

Throughout its presentation of Auschwitz. Not long ago. Not far away., the Museum will host a series of related public, educational, and scholarly programming, featuring world-renowned experts on the Holocaust. The Museum will also expand its work with students in the tri-state area and introduce complementary educational tools for in-class and onsite use.

“All through the exhibition there are stories—stories about individuals and families, stories about communities and organizations, stories about ideologies that teach people to hate, and responses that reveal compassion and love. There are stories of victims, perpetrators, and bystanders, stories with heroes and villains—stories that all merge into an epic story of a continent marked by war and genocide,” said Dr. Robert Jan van Pelt, Chief Curator, who has published several books on the camp—including the award-winning Auschwitz, 1270 to the Present (1996) and The Case for Auschwitz (2002)—and participated as an expert witness in Deborah Lipstadt’s case against Holocaust denier David Irving.

Following the New York presentation, the exhibition is intended to tour other cities around the world.

Auschwitz. Not long ago. Not far away. at the Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust is made possible with lead support by Bruce C. Ratner, George and Adele Klein Family Foundation, Ingeborg and Ira Leon Rennert, and Larry and Klara Silverstein & Family. The exhibition is presented in part with major support by The David Berg Foundation, Patti Askwith Kenner, Oster Family Foundation, and The Bernard and Anne Spitzer Charitable Trust. The New York premiere is made possible in part by Simon & Stefany Bergson with additional support from The Knapp Family Foundation.

Yad Vashem Art Museum Presents Never Before Displayed Work

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“The seed of a creative idea does not fade in the mud and filth. Even there, it will sprout and spread its flower like a star shining in the dark.”

Peter Ginz (Prague, 1928-Auschwitz-Birkenau, 1944), Terezin, c. 1943

The display includes works by artists who were already accomplished at the outbreak of World War II, alongside those of younger artists who were just beginning their artistic journey in this period. Photo Credit: Yad Vashem

Last week, Yad Vashem opened a special exhibit entitled “New on Display” in its Museum of Holocaust Art. The exhibit presents works of art that have been added to Yad Vashem’s 12,000-piece Art Collection in recent years, and are now revealed for the first time to the general public. The works were created by artists from a wide range of backgrounds and genres, who were active in Europe and North Africa during the Nazi German occupation under varying circumstances: in hiding, in concentration camps, in prisoner-of-war camps, and in the ghettos.

The display includes works by artists who were already accomplished at the outbreak of World War II, alongside those of younger artists who were just beginning their artistic journey in this period. For both the more experienced artists and the novices, continuing to create art was a means of personal expression, as well as testimony during this time of terrible pain and crisis. Groups of works from these collections are integrated into this exhibit, allowing for a fuller understanding their daily struggle and the life story of the artist who created them.

“Each piece in the exhibition tells at least three stories: the story of the artist and his fate in the Holocaust, the content of the work and what is described within it, and the story of the physical embodiment of the work and how it survived and reached us,” remarked Art Department Director Eliad Moreh Rosenberg. “The ‘New on Display’ exhibit connects many artists who on the surface have nothing in common except with their undying drive to create, in spite of the difficult conditions and often at great physical risk. The art they produced gave them the inner strength to live, and expresses faith in the spirit of humanity even when evil and cruelty prevailed all around them.”

Yad Vashem’s Museum of Holocaust Art is dedicated to the world of Jewish creativity during the Holocaust, and presents works by artists who were active in ghettos, camps, hiding places and forests. Photo Credit: Yad Vashem

Yad Vashem’s Museum of Holocaust Art is dedicated to the world of Jewish creativity during the Holocaust, and presents works by artists who were active in ghettos, camps, hiding places and forests. The works in Yad Vashem’s unrivalled Art Collection will soon be preserved and stored in Yad Vashem’s new Shoah Heritage Collections Center, the heart of the new Shoah Heritage Campus being built on the Mount of Remembrance in Jerusalem. The new Collections Center aims to preserve, catalogue and display these items as everlasting witnesses to the horrors of the Holocaust.

“The Germans Nazis were determined not only to annihilate the Jewish people, but also to obliterate their identity, memory, culture and heritage,” remarked Yad Vashem Chairman Avner Shalev. “For many, all that remains are a treasured work of art, a personal artifact that survived with them, a photograph kept close to their person, a diary, or a note. By preserving these precious items – that are of great importance not just to the Jewish people, but also to humanity as a whole – and revealing them to the public, they will act as the voice of the victims and the survivors, and serve as an everlasting memory.”

Hospital for Special Surgery to Begin $300M Expansion Plan Above FDR Drive

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The Hospital for Special Surgery is starting a $300 million expansion plan — to construct doctors offices and patient rooms above FDR Drive, according to Crain's. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

The Hospital for Special Surgery is starting a $300 million expansion plan — to construct doctors offices and patient rooms above FDR Drive, according to Crain’s.

The proposed building will be constructed by E. 71st Street and E. 72nd Street, according to Crain’s New York.

After completion, most patient rooms at HSS will become private, Crain’s reported, reducing the risk of infection.

“The River Building is a critical component of continuing to protect, invest in and modernize our main campus,” the Hospital’s CEO Louis Shapiro said in a statement. “Modernizing is sort of like trying to repave a New York City road: You need to shut down the road to pave it, and we can’t do that.”

The new offices in the building will allow for greater cooperation between experts in joint replacement and spine surgery, Shapiro told Crain’s. “It allows us to bring people together who are now scattered all over the place,” he said.

Shapiro said that they plan to start construction “within the next year.”

“These are the last air rights we own and have full rights to,” he said, adding: “We have full intention to construct this building.”

HSS will announce another project — the construction of the River building as part of a “transformation” of its campus later this year, according to Crain’s.

Multiple businesses and organization over time have sued the Hospital in an attempt the construction of the River building.

Most notably, Edgewater apartments, a cooperative across the street from where the building is slated to be constructed, has sued the hospital twice.

Edgewater apartments also sued the city’s City Planning Commission in 2008, in an attempt to stop the long-proposed project.

In a 2017 court filing, according to Crain’s, the apartment community’s lawyer said that the commission’s renewal of permits “means that a developer who obtains special privileges to build through issuance of a special permit can sit back for years before deciding to begin construction.”

New York Supreme Court Judge Carol Edmead dismissed the lawsuit last year against HSS.

“Our clients are planning to vigorously contest HSS’ right to put up the building they’ve proposed,” David Scharf, an attorney for Edgewater Apartments, told Crain’s. He acknowledged that the lawsuit is holding up the project.

“When you deal with land-use issues like this, the prevailing wisdom often is you don’t want to start and have to go back to zero,” he said.

New York City Councilman Ben Kallos appeared to suggest that he is willing to work with the Hospital on any concerns he may have.

“I think we can work with HSS to address any concerns,” he said, according to Crain’s. “They’ve been a really good partner.”

Law to Decrease Carbon Emissions to Cost NYC Property Owners Billions

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1 Bryant Park, built by the Durst Organization in 2010, was the first skyscraper to receive a "platinum" rating from the U.S. Green Building Council's Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design program. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

New York’s city council has recently passed several environmental pieces of legislation.

The Climate Mobilization Act, which city council passed last week, imposes limits on greenhouse gas emissions.

The imposed limits will officially go into effect by 2024.

The piece of legislation provides exemptions for various buildings, including place of worship, hospitals, and power plants.

“This will be the largest disruption in the history of New York City real estate,” John Mandyck, the Chief Executive of the Urban Green Council, said in a statement. “Buildings will have to do deep energy retrofits or buy green power or eventually look at carbon trading. We get that it’s tough and that billions of dollars will need to be spent to reduce carbon emissions. But new technology and new business models will be invented to help buildings get there.”

The Urban Council recently created a working group to propose regulations on emissions, according to Crain’s.

“Unfortunately, [the legislation] does not take a comprehensive, citywide approach needed to solve this complex issue,” John Banks, the president of the Real Estate Board of New York, said in a statement. “A coalition of stakeholders including environmental organizations, labor, engineering professionals, housing advocates, and real estate owners came together and proposed comprehensive and balanced reforms that would have achieved these goals.”

1 Bryant Park, built by the Durst Organization in 2010, was the first skyscraper to receive a “platinum” rating from the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design program.

That, however, isn’t enough as a source tells Crain’s that under the new legislation, the building will be fined $2.5 million dollars in 2024.

“The fine will escalate annually from there,” Alexander Durst, the Chief Development Officer of the Durst Organization, told Crain’s.

Ed Ermler, the president of a Jackson Heights co-op told Crain’s that despite convincing the co-op board to invest in green features as of late — he doesn’t think he can reduce emissions much more and will likely become liable under the Climate Mobilization Act.

“We’re already at a minimal baseline, to begin with,” Mr. Ermler told Crain’s. “At the end of the day, I’m going to have my seniors—who are hard-pressed to pay their maintenance on a good day—getting hit with assessments. And I’m going to end up with a lot of co-ops I can’t sell.”

“Real Housewives” Star Ramona Singer Drops Price of UES Pad from $4.9M to $4.5M

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Actress Ramona Singer of “Real Housewives of New York” has reportedly dropped the price of her Upper East Side apartment from $4.9 million to $4.5 million. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

Actress Ramona Singer of “Real Housewives of New York” has reportedly dropped the price of her Upper East Side apartment from $4.9 million to $4.5 million.

“The apartment has been totally renovated,” listing agent Pamela Nichols of Douglas Elliman told pagesix.com. “There are beautiful open views. The apartment has oversized windows, 9-foot-3 ceilings, stunning new oak floors and moldings and high door frames throughout. It’s beautiful!” The living space has been transformed from a four-bedroom apartment to a more contemporary space.

“The entry opens onto a gracious gallery with an updated light fixture that looks onto an open living area,” pagesix.com explains. “The living and dining room — featuring floor-to-ceiling windows — offer city views and high ceilings. The windowed and open eat-in chef’s kitchen features marble countertops and stainless steel appliances. Retire to the private master suite, which includes a walk-in closet, and a marble bath with a soaking tub, and dual vanities. In a separate wing are three more bedrooms, one of which includes an ensuite bath.”

“I’m an empty nester,” Singer commented to the Daily Dish. “I think it just makes sense to move to a smaller place. I’m traveling so much more, and I still have the place in the Hamptons. So I just think it makes good, emotional sense for me.”

“Located on the 16th floor of the Richmond, the full-service, pet-friendly building includes a 24-hour door attendant and a live-in manager. Other amenities include a 4,000-square-foot landscaped roof garden with barbecue grills, a bike room, and private storage,” noted Page Six.

As she explains on her web site, www.ramonasinger.com, the reality star came from a small town in upstate New York “and traveled down to NYC to attend the Fashion Institute of Technology. She was part of the first class to graduate from the honors four-year program, earning her BS in Marketing. She then went on to start her career on the elite training program for Macy’s executives and became a buyer for several ready to wear areas after successfully finishing the program. Ramona continued on in her career as the sales manager for such brands as Calvin Klein and French Connection. By the time she was 30, Ramona had launched her own wholesale business and was working with major retailers across the country.”

Singer joined the cast of Bravo’s The Real Housewives of NYC and continues to be a strong presence on this amazing show.

Did You Ever Wonder How Celebrities Celebrate Passover?

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Mayim Bialik, of “The Big Bang Theory,” “posted a photo of a single, buttered piece of matzah and labeled it “dinner.” Photo Credit: Facebook

The rich are different than you and me, F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote – which is why people are curious about how they spent their night that is different from all other nights.

Jewish celebrities are a diverse group, and so the ways they spent their Passover holiday were, not surprisingly, just as diverse.

“Like the rest of us, some of Hollywood’s Jews observed Passover this weekend — it turns out quite a few of them were eating matzah ball soup, looking for the afikomen and spending quality time with their families,” reported the Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA). Social media posts tell the tales:

“Glee” actress Dianna Agron, JTA reports, “shared a video of herself getting in the mood for her seder by dancing to “Tradition” from “Fiddler on the Roof.”

Mayim Bialik, of “The Big Bang Theory,” “posted a photo of a single, buttered piece of matzah and labeled it “dinner.”

Zach Braff “shared a photo of himself and “Scrubs” co-star Sarah Chalke titled “Happy Passover,” found JTA, adding. “(It’s not quite clear why they are holding goats, but it may be related to an animal-filled Easter celebration from which he also shared photos.)”

Yael Grobglas, a regular on “Jane the Virgin” who grew up in Israel, posted “tasty photos from her seder.”

“West Wing” star Josh Malina “cooked up a pretty big pot of matzah ball soup,” according to JTA. He posted, “On Passover we proclaim ‘Let all who are hungry come and eat,’ yet who among us throws open his door to those in need?” Malina wrote. “It’s a good time to offer a meal to the hungry on our streets, or to make a donation to @MAZONusa (or your favorite organization that addresses food insecurity).”

Actress and deaf activist Marlee Matlin “posted a photo of herself signing both “Happy Passover” and “Happy Easter” and eating a piece of matzah.”

Debra Messing, of “Will and Grace,” “shared two selfies with her son Roman at a seder,” JTA reported. “She also posted a photo of the scene following the meal, with two people passed out on the ride home.” Messing posted this: “Passover Seder with our chosen family,” she wrote, “(and yes, I know there’s something in my teeth so you don’t have to tell me.)” In a separate Instagram post, Messing issued a call to action: “Today is Passover. A Holiday that celebrates the Jews freedom from slavery and oppression,” she wrote. “It’s a happy holiday. We give thanks, and ask God to free all peoples who are oppressed and don’t enjoy equanimity all over the world. We must start in our own back yard.”

Comedian John Mulaney isn’t Jewish, said JTA, “but he shared a photo of him looking for the afikomen and making a joke about the Four Sons from the seder. (His wife Annamarie Tendler is Jewish).”

Michaela Watkins, formerly of “Saturday Night Live” and the Hulu series “Casual,” “was happy with herself for throwing a seder for 12 people.”

Danish Fashion Billionaire Lost 3 Children in Sri Lanka Attack

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Danish fashion billionaire Anders Holch Povlsen lost three of his four children in the horrifying terrorist attacks in Sri Lanka days ago. Povlsen, 46, and his family were vacationing in Sri Lanka when the terrorists attacked. The suicide bombers killed more than 290. Photo Credit: IndiaTV

Danish fashion billionaire Anders Holch Povlsen lost three of his four children in the horrifying terrorist attacks in Sri Lanka days ago.

Povlsen, 46, and his family were vacationing in Sri Lanka when the terrorists attacked. The suicide bombers killed more than 290.

“I can confirm that three children have been killed. We have no further comment and we ask that the family’s privacy is respected at this time,” Jesper Stubkier, communications manager for Holch Povlsen’s wholesale clothing business, Bestseller, told the Press Association.

Povlsen, reportedly the wealthiest man in Denmark, and his wife own an estimated 200,000 acres of the Highlands and plan to rewild the landscape to preserve it for future generations,” according to the Guardian.

Officials in the Sri Lankan government said the coordinated attacks on churches and hotels was perpetrated by the National Thowfeek Jamaath, a Muslim militant group.

In remarks, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told the press, “What was supposed to be a joyful Easter Sunday was marred by a horrific wave of Islamic radical terror bloodshed. It’s heartbreaking that a country which has strived so hard for peace in recent years has been targeted by these terrorists. We mourn the loved ones of the victims, some of whom, we can confirm, were indeed U.S. citizens. This is America’s fight too. I spoke with the prime minister of Sri Lanka this morning. And our embassy and other parts of the U.S.”

Pompeo added the the U.S. stands “with the millions of Sri Lankans who support the freedom of their fellow citizens to worship as they please. We take confidence in knowing that not even atrocities like this one will deter them from respecting religious freedom. Today our nation grieves with the people of Sri Lanka, and we stand committed, resolved to confront terrorism together.”

President Donald Trump called Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and expressed condolences over the attacks. Trump reportedly told the premier that he “pledged United States support to Sri Lanka in bringing the perpetrators to justice, and the leaders reaffirmed their commitment to the fight against global terrorism.”

Prime Minister Wickremesinghe “expressed appreciation for the president’s concern and updated him on the progress of the investigation,” according to the White House.

The Sri Lankan government “said it received warnings from security officials in India and the U.S. on April 4 that they had picked up indications that attacks were being planned in Sri Lanka. While those warnings didn’t include the name of a group, Sri Lankan security officials linked them to National Thowheeth Jamath in a circular it distributed to police authorities on April 9,” the Wall Street Journal reported.

Israeli Supermodel Bar Refaeli to Pay Tax Evasion Fine

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In late December, news of Refaeli’s potential indictment came about. Her mother, who was her modeling agent, was also subject to the money-laundering scheme, according to reports.

Israeli supermodel Bar Refaeli, who has been investigated by the nation’s Tax Authority since 2015, will have to pay taxes for the roughly 16 million NIS (almost $4.5 million) that she earned in 2009-2010.

The supermodel claims she was living mostly in the United States at the time with her then-boyfriend, actor Leonardo DiCaprio. However, an Israeli district court found that her primary residence was in Israel during those years.

She filed a civil suit in the Lod district court, appealing the Tax Authority’s ruling, which claimed she lived in Israel during the time she dated DiCaprio and that she would have to pay taxes on money earned during that span.

Judge Samuel Bornstein said records prove that Refaeli was in Israel for 185 days in 2009 and 131 days the following year, according to Globes.

In late December, news of Refaeli’s potential indictment surfaced. Her mother, Tzipi, who was her modeling agent, was also subject to the money-laundering scheme, according to reports. The goal was to avoid Israel’s higher taxes for those who live within its borders.

Her mother is suspected of lying to authorities about where the model lived during this period, with reports saying she resided in Tel Aviv. Additionally, she allegedly concealed relevant information for the years 2011-2012, with the total income hidden coming to NIS 23 million.

Back in December of 2018 it was reported that Refaeli and her mother had been investigated by the tax authority a number of times in the past on suspicion of tax fraud. The report says that according to Israel’s Channel 10, the investigators focused on the years 2005, 2007, 2009 and 2012, when Refaeli was with DiCaprio.

Refaeli also was suspected in a 2015 tax investigation of hiding facts about her place of residence from an Israeli tax assessor. According to Israel’s tax law, an Israeli resident would be liable to pay income tax on all income earned abroad whereas a foreign resident would only pay taxes on income generated within Israel. The Tax Authority alleges Refaeli falsely claimed to be living outside of Israel to avoid the higher taxes.

She is also accused of receiving “celebrity benefits,” which she failed to report, including a discount on designer goods and an SUV.

According to Israel’s tax law, an Israeli resident would be liable to pay tax on all income earned abroad whereas a foreign resident would only pay taxes on income generated within Israel.

Another six million shekels were allegedly hidden from the taxman during a previous compromise agreement signed in 2009, when Refaeli claimed to have paid all the taxes she owed in Israeli and overseas income during 2005-2007.

Refaeli and both of her parents still face indictment for several tax evasion schemes.

Refaeli will file an appeal for the district court’s decision in Israel’s Supreme Court. (World Israel News) Read More at: worldisraelnews.com

 

Who is Shopping the Robert Kraft Video?

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A pair of ladies who have been charged in the brothel sting that caught New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft are reportedly alleging that a controversial video from the scene has been shopped to media outlets by prosecutors.

The video reportedly shows Kraft cavorting in the nude at the Orchids of Asia Day Spa in Florida.

The pair, identified as Lei Wang and Hua Zhang, reportedly said in a court filing that as far as they can tell, the video in question must have been leaked by the Palm Beach County State Attorney’s Office or the Jupiter Police Department, according to Fox Business.

The notion that the video was being offered “to multiple media outlets” was first reported last week by The Blast.

“Representatives of our news operation viewed the footage, and upon watching, can verify the tape appears to show Kraft in the massage parlor with another person, presumably the massage therapist,” the Blast said in a statement.

Kraft is said to have pleaded not guilty to solicitation of prostitution and is fighting the allegations. According to the New York Post, his attorneys are looking to bar prosecutors from releasing surveillance footage from the spa, “arguing it would prejudice a future jury; on Wednesday a judge blocked the release of the footage, at least for the time being. Kraft’s lawyers have disparaged the footage as “basically pornography.”

Kraft received some good news last week when Palm Beach County prosecutors said they found no human trafficking at the Jupiter massage parlor where he allegedly paid female workers for sex, according to the Boston Globe. It added, “The disclosure provides the 77-year-old billionaire his first legal breakthrough as he attempts to restore his reputation and suppress the video evidence against him. Police had cited possible human trafficking when they successfully applied for a “sneak and peek’’ warrant under the Patriot Act to conduct covert video surveillance at the spa.”

A bit of humor was injected into the controversy by the Miami Herald, which recently wrote that Kraft’s attorneys “desperately, frantically, do not want the tapes released. Under Florida’s Sunshine Law, however, such evidence is a public record. The media will fight, as it should, to get copies. Kraft’s lawyers will fight to suppress. With the exception of gleeful fans of the Miami Dolphins and other Patriots rivals, it’s difficult to imagine why anyone in their right mind is dying to see videotape of a 77-year-old man with his pants around his ankles wriggling on a massage table. Seriously, folks, hasn’t America been through enough?

“My guess is there are millions of people, like myself, who — despite a profound reverence for the Constitution, especially the First Amendment — would reach into their pockets and pay good money to not have to see whatever Kraft was doing at the Orchids of Asia,” the Herald added.

 

Kushner Opens Up About Trump’s Soon-to-be-Released “Deal of the Century”

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“We’re not trying to impose our will,” Trump adviser Jared Kushner said regarding the soon-to-be-released ‘deal of the century.’

White House senior adviser Jared Kushner, U.S. President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, was interviewed at the TIME 100 Summit Tuesday, answering questions on a wide range of issues, including criminal justice reform, the Mueller report findings, the Middle East, immigration, his role in the Trump administration, and more.

Asked about the U.S. relationship with Saudi Crown Prince, who, according to U.S. Intelligence Services, ordered the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, Kushner said he would not dispute the intelligence agency nor would he discuss intelligence-related issues.

What he did say was that during the president’s trip to Saudi Arabia in May 2017 – his first trip abroad as president – the administration laid out its top four priorities in the region.

Number one priority: Iran

The number one priority, he said, is “countering Iran… We worked with allies to push back at Iran’s aggression.”

“Everywhere in the Middle East where you look, there’s terrorism…all being funded by Iran, and they’re trying to destabilize the region. They chant Death to America, Death to Israel,” he added.

The second priority, he said, was to defeat ISIS, and “we have now destroyed the physical caliphate and taken that land back.”

Third is “defeating the ideology of extremism. We’ve worked very closely with the Saudis to try to figure out how do you clean out a lot of the poison that was being taught in the mosques, and I think we’re making more progress than people thought we would be able to do.”

The fourth priority is the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. Kushner reiterated that President Trump’s long-awaited peace plan for the Israelis and Palestinians will be unveiled after Ramadan, which ends on June 4.

‘We’ve taken an unconventional approach’

“Hopefully it provides a framework to maybe break through a very difficult problem that’s been plaguing that region for a very, very long time. We’ve taken an unconventional approach,” analyzing why previous attempts have failed, he said, while allowing that “there’s been some tremendous work done” by previous negotiators.

“We’ve tried to do it a little bit differently,” Kushner explained. “Normally they start with a process and then hope that the process leads to a resolution for something to happen. What we’ve done is the opposite. We’ve done very extensive research and a lot of talking to a lot of the people. We’re not trying to impose our will.”

Asked whether the plan will involve a two-state solution and whether it could get Arab countries’ support, he didn’t answer the question directly, saying, “I think that if people focus on the old traditional talking points, then we’ll never make progress.

“Our focus is really on the bottom up, which is: How do you make the lives of the Palestinian people better? What can you resolve to allow these areas to become more investable? We deal with all the core status issues because you have to do it, but we’ve also built a robust business plan for the whole region…

‘Tough compromises for both’ sides

“I think that the two together have the opportunity to push forward,” he continued. “And then, from Israel’s point of view, their biggest concern is just security.

“We’ve done a lot of things that are very important for Israel’s security. That’s one of the president’s priorities; he campaigned on it…

“I’m not saying they’re going to look at it and say, this is perfect and let’s go forward. I’m hopeful that what they’ll do is to say, look, there are some compromises here, but at the end of the day, this is really a framework that can allow us to make our lives all materially better. And we’ll see if the leadership on both sides has the courage to take the lead to try to go forward…

“There’ll be tough compromises for both,” Kushner said. (World Israel News) Read More at: worldisraelnews.com

President Trump Proclaims ‘Education Day’ for Rebbe’s Date of Birth

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Proclamation emphasizes connection between ‘knowledge, character and freedom’

The White House released a proclamation that designated April 16, 2019, as “Education and Sharing Day, U.S.A,” in honor of the 117th anniversary of the birth of the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory. The proclamation, signed by President Donald J. Trump, states that it is a day to recognize and reaffirm the Rebbe’s teaching that “education is not only about the transmission of knowledge, but that it is also integral to the formation of character.”

It is the 41st year since the Rebbe’s date of birth was first designated as a time to reflect upon the state of education in society, a bipartisan tradition that began in 1978 with President Jimmy Carter and has been carried out by every subsequent president since.

“In the face of unspeakable tragedy, Rabbi Schneerson championed the teaching of principles of scholarship, justice, charity, and unity,” reads the proclamation. The Rebbe “sought to expand freedom in education while finding common ground with those of differing beliefs and backgrounds. His unfailing example offered those around him an opportunity to deepen their understanding of the inherent connections between knowledge, character and freedom.”

In reacting to the very first designation of “Education Day,” the Rebbe expressed that while the timing of the day was a tribute to the Chabad-Lubavitch movement “which sees in education the cornerstone not only of Jewish life, but of humanity at large, and has been dedicated to this vital cause ever since its inception more than 200 years ago—it is a fitting and timely tribute to the cause of education in general, focusing attention on what is surely one of the nation’s top priorities.”

The Rebbe spoke often about education as the bedrock of society, underscoring that it should not be limited to preparation for a career or even the acquisition of knowledge but, as he wrote to Carter, “education in a broader and deeper sense—not merely as a process of imparting knowledge and training for a ‘better living,’ but for a ‘better life,’ with due emphasis on character building and moral and ethical values.”

In President Ronald Reagan’s 1984 Education Day proclamation he echoed the Rebbe’s teachings when he noted that “throughout our history … our educational system has always done far more than simply train people for a given job or profession; it has equipped generation upon generation of young men and women for lives of responsible citizenship, by helping to teach them the basic ethical values and principles that are both our heritage as a free people and the foundation of civilized life.”

The Rebbe spoke about his hope that ‘Education Day’ would become a permanent institution, one which due to the universal nature of education would lend further significance to other days, such as Father’s Day and Mother’s Day.

“It is fitting indeed that the U.S.A. has shown, through a forceful example to the world, that it places education among its foremost priorities … ,” the Rebbe said. “The proclamation of ‘Education Day USA’ is of extraordinary significance in impressing upon citizens the importance of education, both in their own lives as well as, and even more so, for the young generation in the formative years—particularly, in the present day and age.”

(Chabad.org)

Court Strikes Down Intrusive NYS “Substantial Equivalency” Guidelines:

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Agudath Israel of America, one of the plaintiff groups that challenged the SED guidelines in court, welcomed the ruling as “a major victory in the battle to preserve the educational autonomy of yeshivos and other nonpublic schools.”

Agudath Israel Hails Decision

A New York State Supreme Court judge in Albany has invalidated the State Education Department (SED)’s recently enacted guidelines for evaluating the education provided at private schools. Agudath Israel of America, one of the plaintiff groups that challenged the SED guidelines in court, welcomed the ruling as “a major victory in the battle to preserve the educational autonomy of yeshivos and other nonpublic schools.”

Under New York State law, nonpublic schools must offer education that is “substantially equivalent” to that offered in local public schools. On November 20, 2018 the SED promulgated new “Substantial Equivalency Guidance and Tool Kits,” establishing an extensive checklist of specific courses that must be taught at each grade level, and in some cases even the amount of time that must be devoted to those courses. Moreover, the new guidelines set timelines by which each nonpublic school in New York State must be proactively visited and evaluated by its local public school district.

Recognizing that the new SED guidelines would constitute a serious intrusion on the independence of the yeshiva community, Agudath Israel joined with PEARLS, Torah Umesorah, five prominent yeshivos and a group of parents in bringing a lawsuit challenging the legal validity of the new guidelines on several grounds – most notably, that the Commissioner of Education had not followed the state-mandated procedure for promulgating a new rule or regulation, thereby depriving any opportunity for formal input in the process, and thus nullifying the new guidelines.

Similar lawsuits were filed by two other plaintiff groups: one representing the state’s independent school community, the other representing the Catholic School community. Religious and secular nonpublic school groups alike saw these guidelines as unprecedented, and potentially erosive to the very definition of what it means to be a private school.

Earlier this week, on April 15, New York State Justice Christina L. Ryba held a hearing on the three plaintiff groups’ motion for a preliminary injunction, through which they hoped to halt enforcement of the new guidelines while the lawsuits were pending. In her ruling today, Justice Ryba went a step further: she ruled definitively that the new guidelines were null and void, as the Commissioner of Education had failed to comply with the statutory requirements governing the promulgation of new rules and regulations.

Agudath Israel’s executive vice president Rabbi Chaim Dovid Zwiebel hailed the court’s ruling. “Strict enforcement of the new regulations would have wreaked havoc in many if not most yeshivos in New York. There is nothing more important to the yeshiva community than the independence of our educational institutions. Today’s ruling preserves that independence, retaining the parental right to make educational choices for their children, by the educators they have entrusted their children to, rather than government bureaucrats.”

Rabbi Zwiebel lauded the leadership of the Roshei Yeshiva, Rabbi Elya Brudny, Rabbi Yisroel Reisman and Rabbi Yaakov Bender, who devoted themselves tirelessly to the effort. He praised the work of Avi Schick of the law firm Troutman Sanders, who represented the Jewish plaintiff groups in the court proceeding, and whose expert counsel has guided the yeshiva community since the outset of the challenge to the yeshivos’ independence. He also thanked the Orthodox Union for its effort to submit an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief; and singled out for special praise his Agudath Israel colleagues Avrohom Weinstock, Esq. and Ami Bazov, Esq. for the work they did on this matter, including the submission of affidavits in the court proceeding.

 

Passover in Hell – Hiding from the Nazis in the Krakow Ghetto

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My grandfather’s Passover Seder

A raging fire burned through Europe through the years 1939 – 1945, destroying European Jewry. Mendel and Moshe Brachfeld – my great uncle and grandfather – were two brothers who walked through the fires of the Holocaust together. After the rest of their family was killed by the Nazis they made a pact that they will stay together any cost. They survived together, grew together and were welded together. These two brothers outsmarted the Nazi machine by staying alive, staying sane, and sticking together, staying strong in their mitzvah observance. They survived the war and rebuilt their lives, raising generations of committed Jews, and today are buried next to each other on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem.

23 Jozefonsky St. The building where the Seder was held

Many survivors were never able to speak about the horrors that they witnessed. My grandfather would never speak of the killing and torture but he would recount as often as he could tales of spiritual growth in the most harrowing of situations. How he and his older brother, with great sacrifice, managed to put on tefillin almost every day in that hell. How they smuggled tefillin from camp to camp, how at one point 500 Jews would line up every morning to put on their tefillin. How they broke open a jail cell and over 100 people were able to escape. How they found a mikva before Yom Kipper and how they survived on only potatoes one Passover. Many stories, all with the same theme – not of horror but of heroism.

There is one story that was repeated every year at the Passover Seder – when my grandfather and his brother celebrated Passover in the Krakow ghetto in 1943.

On the Run in Krakow

During World War II, the Nazis established more than 400 ghettos in order to isolate Jews from the non-Jewish population and from neighboring Jewish communities. The Germans regarded the establishment of ghettos as a provisional measure to control and segregate Jews. The assumption behind this separation was to stop the Jews, viewed by the Nazis as an inferior race, from mixing with and thus degrading the superior Aryan race.

Nazi high officials also believed that the Jews would succumb to the unfavorable living conditions of the ghetto, including lack of food, water, and living space. Furthermore, the ghettos served as round-up centers that made it more convenient to exterminate large numbers of the Jewish population later. The Brachfeld brothers were living in in the Krakow Ghetto, one of the bigger ghettos in Poland1 which was established in March 1941. In March 1943, five weeks before Passover, the Germans liquidated the ghetto either killing or removing all remaining Jews. The great city of Krakow – a city that had been home to Jews for 700 years – was officially declared Judenrein – clean of Jews.

The two brothers understood that listening to the Germans surely would lead to their deaths. They decided to go into hiding. In the five weeks leading up to Passover they were caught along with 100 other Jews, and managed to break out of jail. They were running from attic to attic, trying desperately to stay alive and working on getting papers that they could use to escape.

With Passover approaching, the two brothers wanted to find a way to eat matzah on the first night of Yom Tov. It took a lot of inventiveness and sacrifice – getting caught meant getting shot – but they found some flour and built themselves a makeshift oven2. They found ablech and some highly flammable paint. They set the paint on fire and were able to kasher the blech – and they had a kosher for Passover oven. They baked a few small maztahs for the Seder. (How the smell of burning paint was not detected by the Germans can either be a miracle or perhaps the stench of dead corpses in the ghetto was so overwhelming that the smell of burning paint was insignificant.)

The night of Passover came and they sat down to their makeshift Seder, celebrating the Jewish exodus from Egypt in a hidden attic on Jozefonsky Street in the Krakow ghetto. In years past they had sat at a beautiful set table with the finest silver and surrounded by family. Tonight they sat down in a dark attic, all alone in the world, running from the Nazis, their very lives in danger, with a bit of matzah for which they sacrificed their lives . Marror was not needed; they had enough of that in their lives.

What Freedom?

My grandfather, then 21 years old, said to his older brother, “There is no way I can have a Seder tonight. The Seder is to celebrate our freedom, our going out of exile, yet here we sit, our lives in danger, our family is all gone, our parents, sister and her kids were all killed, the entire city is up in flames. The Nazis, with their wild dogs searching for us, won’t be happy until every Jew is dead. Isn’t this worse than the lives the Jews had in Egypt? What kind of freedom are we celebrating tonight?”3

His brother answered, “Every night in the evening prayers we praise God for taking us out of Egypt to an ‘everlasting freedom’. The everlasting freedom that we gained and are thankful for isn’t a physical freedom – that is only a byproduct of what we got that night. Rather it’s the spiritual freedom that we recognize. Passover celebrates the birth of a nation, when we went from being Egyptian slaves to becoming a newly born Jewish nation – a nation that God could call his own. When we sit down at the Seder we celebrate something bigger than life, a going out of slavery into the embracing hands of our Father in heaven, becoming a Godly nation. This is something that no one can ever take away from us. No matter how much they beat, torture and kill our physical bodies, our souls will always remain free to serve God.”

With those words the two brothers, my grandfather and his older brother, sat down to a Seder that consisted of dangerously produced matzah and a little bit of borscht in place of wine.

My grandfather often said that this was the most magnificent Seder he ever experienced.

(Aish.com)

1.Jews had been living in Krakow since the 13th century. Many great rabbis through the generations had lived in Krakow including Reb Herschel of Krackow, the Rema and the hassidic master the Meor Veshomish.

2, My grandfather died on the 9th of Nissan 2008, 66 years – almost to the day, when they baked those matzahs.

3 Interesting to note: my grandfather would repeat this story with pride. He was never ashamed to repeat his question and of his initial unwillingness to participate in the Seder. There is nothing wrong with a sincere question that leads to a profound answer.

 

The 1929 Struggle to Send Matzah into the Soviet Union

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The shochet (ritual slaughterer) of the IKOR colony, western Crimea, circa 1930. (Photo: Joseph Rosen Collection/Archives of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee)

Marking 90 years since Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn’s international campaign

It was the end of 1928, and food shortages were once again starting to hit the Soviet Union. By November, “Leningrad had already introduced food rationing … Moscow soon followed, as did other industrial cities, going beyond bread to sugar and tea, then meat, dairy, and potatoes.” The situation in Ukraine and Belarus, in whose towns and villages the vast majority of the country’s 2.7 million Jews lived, was even worse. And it was only the beginning.

Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn photographed in Leningrad around 1927

“At every time the Jewish people have had their poor, even the destitute, those lacking bread and wearing tattered clothing,” wrote the sixth Chabad-Lubavitch Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, of righteous memory, in an early 1929 letter outlining conditions in the USSR. “But impoverished people such as our eyes have seen during these years of famine and since the end of private enterprise, my lips do not err if I say that in all countries there are none like them, and a scene such as this has never been witnessed by a foreigner.”

“People have lost the feeling of being ashamed of acting as paupers … ,” one anonymous eyewitness wrote in a letter titled “The New Book of Lamentations,” published on the pages of New York’s Hadoar in mid-1928. “In the villages, on the cross-ways, we met groups of Jewish children stretching out their hands to every passer-by. Woe to the eyes that see this! One who has not seen the little, thin, consumptive hands grabbing the piece of bread from the peasants or farmers can have no conception of the meaning of … hunger.”

Dr. Bernard Kahn, director general of the JDC in Europe circa 1930. (Photo: Archives of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee)

Although exiled from his home and flock in Russia since his 1927 arrest and release by the Communist government, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak was closely attuned to the Jewish condition in the Soviet Union, managing a vast network of underground religious and humanitarian activities from his temporary base in Riga, Latvia.

“It is necessary for the work in Russia to be continued illegally and secretly,” wrote Dr. Bernard Kahn, the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) representative in Berlin in a confidential February 1928 memo to the JDC’s Dr. Cyrus Adler in New York. “It seems that Rabbi [Schneersohn] is the only one who knows really reliable and [skillful] people, in Riga as well as in Russia, whom he needs for this kind of work. Then too, he is the only one who gets all the information from Russia through a net of people, and he is in a position, although he is staying in Latvia, to obtain new people in Russia to replace others who can no longer be useful to the work for various reasons.”

Now, pained by the terrible material conditions of his Russian Jewish brethren and months before Passover of 1929, the Rebbe foresaw yet another looming crisis.

Jewish farmers on JDC-sponsored colonies eating breakfast in the fields of Nai Haim/New Home colony in the Cherson province of Ukraine. (Photo: Joseph Rosen Collection/Archives of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee)

“According to reports that have come from the entire breadth of the Soviet Union … central Russia, White Russia, Ukraine, Volhynia, the Caucasus, Bukhara, Georgia, Dagestan, the Donetsk Basin—flour for matzah cannot be found,” he wrote. “ … This year marks a new era in the lives of the Jews of Russia, a bitter era, one that has not occurred since the beginning of this deluge of suffering and troubles—G d should have mercy—and at this time the question of kimcha dePischa [“flour for Passover”] is a burning question.”

The Soviet grain shortage was not unintended. In a process that began slowly in 1925 and now, at the end of 1928, was picking up steam, Joseph Stalin was forcing through his national collectivization campaign and introducing his first Five-Year Plan for the economy. Farmers and peasants who had worked the land and fed Russia for generations were being forced into state-run collectives, with countless arrested, exiled or executed for resisting or to make an example for others. Productivity inevitably plummeted, bringing about food shortages, but it was not an accident.

Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak (center, holding a cane, partially obscured) at the Riga train station circa 1930, speaking to Mordechai Dubin (in bowler hat with bowtie). The Rebbe’s eldest son-in-law, Rabbi Shmaryahu Gourarie, is at center-left. (Photo: Rabbi Mordechai Glazman via Jewish Educational Media/Early Years)

“Coercion was the only way to attain wholesale collectivization,” writes historian Stephen Kotkin about Stalin’s position, which he took as a believing Marxist-Leninist. “The extreme violence and dislocation would appall many Communists. But Stalin and his loyalists replied that critics wanted to make an omelet without breaking eggs.”

Into this crisis stepped Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak, 48 years old at the time. He had become the leader of Russian Jewry with the passing of his father nearly nine years earlier, suffering greatly at the hands of the Bolshevik government for his leading role in reinforcing traditional Judaism during its time of greatest despair. Now, the Rebbe insisted that the ancient mitzvah of assisting needy Jews with Passover supplies, matzah specifically, titled in Aramaic as maot chitim (“wheat money”) or kimcha dePischa, would be needed more than ever in the land where the force-building of socialism was underway. He noted that not only was this a spiritual concern, but a material one: Almost all of the country’s Jews desperately sought matzah, and hundreds of thousands hanging between life and death would refuse to eat chametz on the holiday, thus placing their very survival at risk. Rabbis and Jewish leaders throughout the Soviet Union, including a specially formed emergency matzah committee in Moscow, were sending messages begging for help.

Baking matzah in Russia circa 1914. (Photo: Solomon Yudovin/Petersburg Judaica Center)

On Dec. 30, 1928, the Rebbe called a meeting with his eldest son-in-law, Rabbi Shmaryahu Gourarie, known as the Rashag, and Mordechai Dubin, a wealthy and influential leader of the Riga Jewish community and member of the Saeima, Latvia’s parliament, as well as a devoted Lubavitcher Chassid, informing them of his plan to spearhead an international aid campaign to send matzah and flour into the Soviet Union for distribution among all its Jewish centers.

The Bolsheviks had never allowed such a thing before, nor did anyone knowledgeable with the situation believe they would. “Dr. Rosen,” wrote a JDC staffer at the time, referring to Dr. Joseph Rosen, the JDC’s longtime representative in Moscow, “stated that bulk shipment of matzoths could not be made to Russia.”

Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzinski (right) with Rabbi Shimon Shkop (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

“Until this day, thank G d, we have not known a situation as evil and bitter as this,” the Rebbe wrote in a public proclamation asking Jews around the world for assistance—an appeal that was co-signed by the greatest Jewish luminaries of the day: Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan, renowned as the Chofetz Chaim; Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzinski, the head of the beit din in Vilna (then Wilno, today Vilnius); as well as the heads of the rabbinical committees of Poland, Lithuania and Latvia. “There is a whole country that will be left without matzah for Passover!”

In the coming months, the Rebbe would overcome Soviet policy and bureaucracy, European naysayers and American apathy to see the project to success, delivering 28 train cars of matzah and 5,689 packages of matzah flour into the Soviet Union for Passover.

Climax of Suffering

Archival photo of Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan, the Chofetz Chaim, in Radin. The Chofetz Chaim can be seen sitting on a chair at lower right, holding a cane, in conversation with his son-in-law, Reb Leib Poupko.

By the end of 1928 and the beginning of 1929, the Jews of Russia had been through a great deal, the “deluge of suffering and troubles” alluded to by Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak that had begun with the outbreak of World War I only 15 years earlier. The war had devastated the Jewish shtetls and towns of Ukraine and White Russia, bringing with it violence and privation, and unleashing a terrible refugee crisis. These events dovetailed with the 1917 Russian Revolution and the seizure of power that October by the Bolsheviks, the most extreme of the revolutionary groups. The Bolsheviks’ coup was followed by the bloody Russian Civil War, which pitted the disparate anti-Communist opposition White Army forces against the emerging Communist Red Army.

Although there were cases of Red Army abuses, it was the White Army and aligned Cossack groups, as well as Ukrainian nationalist bands in particular, who brutalized the Jews most, raping and pillaging as they tore through defenseless Jewish villages and making infamous the names Denikin and Petliura in Jewish memory.

Rabbi Dr. Meir Hildesheimer, photographed in 1921. Hildesheimer was the administrative director of the Berlin Rabbinical Seminary and an influential German Jewish communal leader. He would play a central role in Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak’s matzah campaign.

The Jews of western Ukraine suffered similar inhumaneness at the hands of Polish forces. Between 1918-21, more than 2,000 pogroms took place, mostly in Ukraine, leaving 150,000 Jews dead, either killed directly or due to disease, and half a million homeless.

As the Bolsheviks fought off the White Army and solidified control over the country, they began doing just what they had campaigned on: constructing a Communist society. This “involved the nationalization of the means of production and most other economic assets, the abolition of private trade, the elimination of money, the subjection of the national economy to a comprehensive plan, and the introduction of forced labor.”

The result was economic disaster. As compared to 1913, industrial production fell by 82 percent and worker productivity by 74 percent. Cities emptied as people ran to the countryside in search of food, and the government responded by confiscating peasant “surpluses.” As the first signs of famine appeared, violent rebellions began popping up around the country.

Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak wrote in some detail describing each of these distinct eras and how despite it all the Jews of Russia had, with great difficulty and “by the sweat of their faces,” been able to obtain matzah for Passover. “Due to the self-sacrifice of rabbis and community leaders in each and every city [throughout these years] they procured flour to bake a limited quantity of matzah, and despite everything—thank G d—not one community or congregation was left without matzah.”

In an attempt to quell unrest and gain a more secure footing, in March of 1921 Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin introduced new measures of economic liberalization called the New Economic Policy, or NEP, which allowed a limited market economy. While it was a tactical and temporary retreat from Lenin’s hardline Marxist beliefs, things turned around on the ground and food once again began appearing on tables. There was even a new quasi-moneyed class created—a concept antithetical to Communist ideology, and a bone of contention between Lenin and his opposition on the left—called NEPmen.

Jewish colonists on a JDC-sponsored settlement stand in a wheat field in the Khaklay settlement in Crimea, Ukraine, circa 1925. (Photo: Agro-Joint/Archives of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee)

“During the years of … NEP … flour for matzah could [easily] be found,” the Rebbe explained, “there was even large sums of money collected for the support of the poor.”

In April of 1922, Lenin appointed Stalin to the powerful position of general secretary of the Communist Party, and a month later experienced a debilitating stroke. By the time Lenin died two years later, Stalin was in position to seize control. He skillfully played his opponents off of each other, with his “complete political triumph over the opposition” coming in December 1927.20 From that point, in the name of his Marxist ideals and while pursuing a personal dictatorship, he would order the murder of millions of people and change the course of history.

Stalin’s first step in breaking the will of the people would be one of his most ruthless. It began slowly, almost immediately after he took power, and “by 1928, he had decided that 120 million peasants in Soviet Eurasia had to be forcibly collectivized.”

‘Will We Find Matzah This Year?’

Rabbi Elya Chaim Althaus, who took responsibility for overseeing the baking and shipping of matzah and matzah flour out of Riga. Althaus was later killed by the Nazis in Riga.

Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak’s fear that the Jews of Russia would not have matzah for Passover was not based merely on religious feeling, but stemmed from a deep understanding and empathy for the Russian Jewish soul. Passover was, and throughout the Soviet period remained, the Jewish holiday most Soviet Jews remembered and cherished.

“One who knows well … the nature and character of Russian Jewry can openly and confidently say that you will not even find 10 percent who eat chametz on Passover, G d spare us, while 90 percent seek out matzah,” the Rebbe wrote. “Regardless of the philosophy or worldview of each individual, whether a religious view, or nationalist, or from the habit of or love for the ways of their fathers, there are 2,500,000 Jews who plead for matzah … [and ask] ‘Will we find matzah this year?’ ”

In his description of the prior 15 years, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak wrote about the hardships that began with Stalin’s curtailing of NEP and the gradual end of private enterprise. He describes a man of means who in 1922 was able to support local causes, but by 1924 had died penniless and was buried at the expense of the community. Almost immediately, finding matzah became difficult.

But now the Jews of the Soviet Union were entering a new era—one that would eclipse everything that had come before. The question of obtaining matzah could no longer be left to communal leaders remaining in Russia, but desperately needed the help of international Jewry.

Aside from the war on religion that had continued to be fought harshly throughout the decade by Soviet authorities—NEP policy, in fact, went hand in hand with “intensified political repression”24 —when synagogues were closed, mikvahs destroyed, and rabbis and shochetim (ritual slaughterers) arrested, Stalin’s policy of collectivization, which formally commenced in October 1928, was designed to break the people. Instead of attempting to avoid a famine, he welcomed it, and even as Soviet harvest figures fell he blocked the importation of grain from abroad.25 The question now was twofold: How would the regime react to a mass international campaign to send matzah and flour in to the country as a form of assistance? And would world Jewry respond to the call for help?

The first step in the matzah campaign, it was decided at the initial meeting in Riga, would be for Mordechai Dubin to approach the Soviet ambassador to Latvia to request that a certain number of train wagons bearing flour or matzah be permitted into the Soviet Union. Dubin, true to his punctilious nature, met the next day with the ambassador, who promised he would do all within his power to help. A few days later, Dubin and Gourarie together met with the Soviet trade representative in Latvia who told them the request had been sent in writing to Moscow, and there would be a response in the coming weeks.

Week after week went by, with Dubin and Gourarie consistently requesting an update from the Soviet embassy and being told there was still no response. On Jan. 21, 1929, they were again received by the trade representative, who said he was traveling to Moscow and would be able to clarify things there for himself.

Meanwhile, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak sent a detailed proposal for a matzah campaign to Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzinski, the Chofetz Chaim and Rabbi Dr. Meir Hildesheimer—a prominent Orthodox rabbi in Germany and the director of the Berlin Rabbinical Seminary—asking them for their feedback. All three responded that they would gladly support Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak’s campaign. The Rebbe then wrote the text for an appeal which he, Rabbi Chaim Ozer and the Chofetz Chaim signed. Within weeks, Rabbi Yechezkel Livshits of Kalish (Kalisz), Rabbi Avraham Dovber Kahane Shapiro of Kovno (Kaunas) and Rabbi Menachem Mendel Zak of Latvia had signed on, too. This call for support was widely published in Jewish newspapers around the world. The chief rabbis of England, France, Holland and Belgium would soon lend their support as well.

An American Shrug

Even as the question of Soviet permission hung overhead, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak began sending messages to the JDC in New York—the united front of the three largest Jewish relief organizations in America, making up the establishment of Jewish philanthropy in the country—asking them to financially support the matzah campaign. The response from a number of influential leaders at the JDC was underwhelming.

They felt that the work of JDC’s Agro-Joint, which established and supported Jewish agricultural settlements in Ukraine, and into which they ultimately sank $16 million (a value of $238 million in 2019) before the Soviets shut the project down in 1938,28 would be placed at risk if they had any formal connection with the matzah campaign. They had also stopped funding Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak’s religious efforts in the Soviet Union in early 1928—at least partially because they feared the illegal nature of his work—and some on the committee felt that meant their policy was not to support any religious work in the Soviet Union at all.

At the same time, however, Max Manischewitz of the Manischewitz Matzah Company heard of efforts to send matzah into the Soviet Union and turned to the JDC offering to help. At the JDC, the decision was made that whatever the case may be, they could not formally support the campaign. What they could do was have Rosen in Moscow inquire with authorities as to whether it might be permitted.

Not everyone at the JDC was happy with this stance.

“While I fully understand that the Agro Joint has nothing to do with relief in Russia and is not supposed to handle it,” wrote the organization’s Adler to its secretary, Joseph Hyman, “I cannot understand why we should be so terribly tender in dealing with a country which has not sufficient flour of its own but will only permit the flour to be introduced surreptitiously.”

Hyman responded by laying out their concerns, explaining that they feared Jewish Communist groups—i.e., the Yevsektzia, the Jewish sections of the Communist Party—might embarrass them by delaying delivery of matzah until after Passover. They also worried that due to the general lack of white flour in Russia, “the Government might deem it inexpedient to permit any special group of the population to have white flour products, particularly on religious grounds, while the rest of the population could secure white flour only on the prescription of a doctor.

“These are some of the elements of the situation which make it difficult for the J.D.C., as you appreciate, at this time to have any official relationship with the matter.”

In Riga, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak was almost immediately made aware of these developments in New York, writing to Rabbi Chaim Ozer in Vilna on Jan. 24 that he had just received bitter news via telegram that the JDC had met regarding aid for the matzah campaign a day earlier and “With regards to the budget, there is no hope.”

“This bitter news made a strong impression on me,” he wrote less than a week later to Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum, the head of the Central Relief Committee, a member of the JDC executive, as well as head of the Agudath Harabbonim in New York. The Rebbe had since received news that there was a possibility of help, but he expressed shock at the initial blanket dismissal. “Is it possible that our brothers in America see the pain in the souls and bodies of their brothers and hear their pleading and they will not help them? I did not believe what my ears heard … ”

By this time, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak, Rabbi Chaim Ozer and Rabbi Meir Hildesheimer had formally created a central committee for the matzah campaign, with Gourarie as their representative. In the coming time, two committees would be formed under its auspices: a financial committee in Berlin, to which any funds collected would be routed; and a logistical one in Riga, where the matzahs would be baked and sent into the USSR.

“Help for this cause can only come from abroad and it is the duty of honor of the Jews of other countries to provide for this … ,” the Rebbe wrote directly, in German, to Adler on Feb. 1. “We see no other way out of this desolate situation than that matzos from abroad be imported to Russia for the Jewish population … Russian Jewry will never forget your service … ”

Soviet Bureaucracy

Time was ticking and the holiday of Purim approaching. With Passover less than three months away, no response was forthcoming from the Russians. A second front had to be opened, and Dubin and Gourarie traveled to Berlin, where Hildesheimer had assembled some of the country’s most influential Jewish figures including Leo Baeck and Oskar Cohn. The members of the Berlin committee, along with the JDC’s representative in the city, Bernard Kahn, ultimately played key roles in the operation’s success.

In Berlin, the delegation approached the Soviet ambassador to Germany, Nikolai Krestinsky, again requesting Soviet permission, with Krestinsky—an Old Bolshevik whose one-time support of Trotsky would lead to his execution less than a decade later—promising he’d have an answer soon.

From Berlin, Dubin and Gourarie went to London and Paris. While they were at first greeted warmly and enthusiastically, with representatives of the umbrella Jewish organizations promising financial assistance, it seems that one prominent donor insisted that the plan to send matzah was impossible, using his influence to cool down the initial willingness of these organizations to help.

Despite this, both these communities created local committees to collect funds for the project. Similar committees were formed in Holland, Finland, Copenhagen, Switzerland, Poland, Belgium—which Gourarie and Hildesheimer visited together—the land of Israel(where it was publically supported by Rabbi Avraham Yitzchak Kook, chief rabbi of Palestine; Rabbi Yosef Chaim Sonnenfeld, head of the Eida HaCharedis; and Sephardicchief Rabbi Yaakov Meir) and the Alsace region of France. Committees were even formed in Shanghai and Harbin, China.

“A desire to aid the Jewish families in Soviet Russia who require matzoth for the forthcoming Passover holiday led the Harbin Jewish community, composed mainly of refugees from Soviet Russia, to forward $1,000 to the Berlin Matzoth Committee … ” reported the Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) on April 7, 1929. “The action … was prompted by reports … telling of the efforts being made throughout the world to supply Russian Jews with matzoth … ”

Yet in mid-February, the Soviets had still not granted permission for the importation of matzah.

“Berlin Jewish Committee in connection with Schneerson [sic] trying get permission mazzoth import,” Kahn cabled to the JDC in New York on Feb. 15. “Answer expected next week.”

As they waited, a false report appeared in Warsaw’s influential Yiddish-language newspaper, Haynt, that permission had been explicitly denied, this setting off a flurry of worry among the various matzah committees, with the Rebbe even receiving a mournful telegram from the Manischewitzes, saying, “We have done all we could with regards to sending matzah to Russia … ”

That same day, Feb. 22, Hildesheimer called Adler at the JDC in New York begging him to help stem the false news and noting that it had already done grave damage. Adler even drafted an item for the Jewish Daily Bulletin to that effect, but by that time another news report had appeared in Europe, in the JTA, stating perhaps optimistically that the Russians had on the contrary given permission (although they still had not).

Despite this mini-crisis, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak began leading discussions with three matzah bakeries in Riga to straighten out all the details of matzah-baking, which would need to commence immediately once permission was, if at all, received. He then traveled to Berlin to meet with the Hildesheimer committee, as well as Jewish representatives from London, Basel, Vienna, Frankfurt, Hamburg and Warsaw where it was decided, among other motions, to immediately prepare 10 wagons worth of matzah.

On the morning of March 6, 1929, Hildesheimer again met with Krestinsky, with the latter saying that the Soviet government had officially granted permission for 50 train cars of matzah to be imported to the Soviet Union, but that the instructions had been sent to the embassy in Latvia. Dubin, by then back in Riga, arrived at the embassy there the very next day, informing them of what had been communicated from Berlin. The Soviet trade representative in Riga, however, knew nothing of it.

“It is difficult to describe how hard it is to have a discussion and to reach a decision in anything with Soviet bureaucracy,” Gourarie later wrote. “This is their method: Every day they say, ‘We have no answer;’ ‘This is beyond my authority;’ ‘I must telegram Moscow;’ ‘There is no answer from Moscow;’ ‘The answer is in Riga;’ and in Riga the same scene plays itself out, except that from there the matter is referred back to Berlin, and every day telegrams are exchanged from Moscow and to Moscow, and no clarification can be reached.”

On Wednesday, March 13 (Rosh Chodesh Adar II)—just 42 days away from Passover, a week after the initial conditional good news from Krestinsky and after days of repeated visits to the Soviet embassy in Riga—Dubin once again met with the Soviet trade representative who told him that since they had still not received instructions from Moscow the embassy had decided to allow them to send five wagons of matzah—three to Moscow, one to Leningrad and one to Minsk—with a modest duty of five kopeks per kilo. The discussion of duty, which had been an open question during the previous weeks of organization and fundraising, would yet play a role in the matter.

At 1 a.m., Dubin returned from the Soviet embassy with the good news. Preparations in Riga were spearheaded by Rabbi Eliyahu Chaim Althaus, Rabbi Mordechai Cheifetz and Shimon Wittenberg (who would later join Dubin in Latvia’s parliament), as well as a group of young volunteers, and they began working immediately. By Thursday, two wagons were already on their way into the Soviet Union.

But the Soviet representatives had jumped the gun. The Soviet Union, badly in need of hard currency,47 was going to allow the matzah in, though the Jews would have to pay a price. On Thursday night the Soviet trade representative telephoned Dubin and told him that he had made a mistake, and if the wagons had not yet been sent to please hold off, as he was awaiting special instructions from Moscow. Dubin, a powerful political operator in the country, refused to back down, telling him that if he regretted it, then now Dubin knew that this had just been a matter of politics. Three hours later the Soviet official conceded the point to Dubin, allowing the first five wagons to proceed to their destinations.

In Riga, another five wagons were prepared immediately, but then came news from Berlin. The Russians had granted permission for 50 wagons of matzah, but there was a catch: They would need to pay the luxury duty of two rubles per kilo.49 Each wagon could hold approximately 5,000 kilo of matzah, 250,000 kilo all together, and in 1929 one gold ruble (the regular Soviet ruble was not convertible to foreign currency) equaled approximately 51.7 U.S. cents.50 This brought the sum needed to approximately $130,000 for duty alone, the equivalent of nearly $2 million in 2019.

But What About the Money?

Although funds were trickling in from throughout the world, the matzah campaign’s financial committee in Berlin was waiting for some sort of appropriation from the JDC. For his part, Alder sent a telegram to Kahn in Berlin requesting him to communicate (carefully) with Rosen in Moscow, and ask whether “he can apply any part his new appropriation palliative relief in matzoth purchase through kehillahs or mutual aid societies,” before asking whether the “Hildesheimer committee perfected any plans,” adding: “preferably his committee should take charge of this entire matter.”

Kahn responded on March 6 that Rosen needed his new appropriation for Passover relief within the Soviet Union and could not spare any money for matzah purchase outside of it. “Hildesheimer committee has permission to import fifty carloads matzoth but not duty free,” Kahn cabled. “For this matzoth problem $45,000 needed of which $20,000 will be collected Europe. They urge you appropriate $25,000 and ask for cable reply.” The Berlin committee, added Kahn, had also decided that baking matzah in Riga would be cheaper and simpler than shipping Manischewitz’s specially priced matzah from New York, bringing to an end their role in the matter.

During this time, the Rebbe himself cabled the JDC asking for the $25,000 towards the wagons, but they remained unmoved.

“Officers other members committee indicate no possibility securing new allotment requested by Schneersohn for matzoths,” wrote Adler in the name of the JDC (the telegram was drafted by others and signed by Adler). “Please so advise Schneersohn Hildesheimer making clear Passover relief Russia available only from what Rosen can grant … ”

Kahn, who seems to have been supremely devoted to the cause of maintaining Jewish religious life in Russia—and who remained a staunch defender and supporter of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak’s, despite the change of heart of many at the top of his organization—responded in his own fashion: by granting money from his own funds.

“Sorry you cannot make new allotment for matzoths,” he telegrammed on March 9. “Non-participation JDC may bring matzoth action to complete failure[.] Other donors may withdraw their donations therefore have granted $10,000[.] Will discuss [with JDC chairman Felix] Warburg [and] Adler how to cover new appropriation.”

Contrary to what has been written elsewhere before, this would be the only JDC appropriation to the matzah campaign of 1929.55

            (Chabad.org)

The Drisco Hotel in Tel Aviv Unveils New Culinary Concept

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Amberjack Sashimi and Coal Smoked Cabbage

George & John Restaurant blends modern Israeli cuisine with broader Mediterranean flavors at the city’s new hip dining establishment

The Drisco Hotel just unveiled George & John Restaurant, a new culinary concept under the helm of rising star Chef Tomer Tal.

Inspired by the grand atmosphere of the Tel Aviv property and its storied past, the new dining establishment pairs modern Israeli dishes with broader Mediterranean influences. Named after American colonists George and John Drisco, who set out to create the very first luxury hotel in the region in 1866, the restaurant draws inspiration from historic dinners served to famed international guests over the years. It is also inspired by traditional dishes and cooking methods used by Israel’s diverse communities, Chef Tomer Tal’s ability to pair, fuse, deconstruct and re-imagine dishes, and a respectful homage to Chef Haim Cohen’s iconic Keren restaurant previously hosted in the Villa Drisco (now part of The Drisco Hotel), one of the last original houses of the American Colony neighborhood.

After honing his skills at Tel Aviv’s best restaurants, Chef Tomer Tal decided to take over the kitchen at The Drisco and fuse antique and modern cooking techniques, such as smoking, grilling, pickling, as well as use local, indigenous herbs and high-quality products. The result is an elevated dining experience featuring a menu reflective of the cultural and gastronomic melting pot in Tel Aviv, complete with meat, fish and vegetable-centric dishes inspired by Asian, Levantine, Italian and French cuisines.

Standout items include Amberjack Sashimi with blood orange, coriander seeds, spicy-sour Hass avocado, and Israeli caviar, Coal Smoked Cabbage grilled in a Burmese pot with sumac yogurt, and Veal Cheek cooked overnight, glazed in its own gravy, with pan-grilled root vegetables and roasted kohlrabi. An impressive wine list with Old World and New World selections was developed by a team of talented Sommeliers, providing perfect pairings for the rich yet delicate dishes served in the hotel’s alluring restaurant space.

George and John Restaurant continues to offer the hotel’s sumptuous traditional Israeli breakfast with rich, fresh and healthy options, along with à la carte brunch dishes. Breakfast is served daily starting at 7am, and dinner is available Sunday through Friday from 7pm to 11pm. For reservations, please visit the restaurant’s website.

The Drisco Tel-Aviv is a luxury boutique hotel located in a restored landmark building in the heart of the American Colony, a hip and eclectic neighborhood at the southern tip of the city. The property is steps away from the beaches, the famous Rothschild Blvd, the charming Neve Tzedek district, Jaffa’s Flea Market, Carmel Open Market and Old Jaffa. It is conveniently located a short drive from Ben Gurion International Airport and Ha-Hagana Train Station. Rooms start at $400 for double occupancy.

For more information or to book a stay at the hotel, please visit www.thedrisco.com.