Guide To Jewish Nashville 2013

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Guide to Jewish Nashville Nashville artists’ Jewish roots yield fruits of the spirit..................20 The Secret in the Hidden Dresser: A True Nashville Mystery ..............40



CONTENTS

Shalom

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he other day, on my way home from the Federation offices at the Gordon Jewish Community Center, I noticed cars with license plates from five states in one small area alone. Curious, I checked out the entire parking lot and saw 12 states in all represented. It occurred to me what an interesting Jewish community we have, and how many good stories we have to share with one another. We hope this year’s Guide will tell you a few of those stories and encourage you to tell and share your own. We talked with artists in our community about how Judaism informs their paintings, sculptures, fabric pieces, and paper-cutting work. We’ve highlighted some new-toNashville services in our listings. Someone who grew up in Nashville tells how she found treasured family records that had been lost for decades. Photographs throughout our publication show some of the people you’ll meet when Nashville is your home. So much of who we are as a Jewish community is reflected in this Guide, published by the Jewish Federation of Nashville and Middle Tennessee. It is the only comprehensive listing of congregations, organizations and educational opportunities that bind us together. There is something to address the interests of newcomers and longtime residents, tots and seniors and everyone in between. We urge you to look at the listings and become an active participant in our vibrant community. Our advertisers help make this publication possible. As you leaf through the Guide, you’ll see restaurants, the arts, places to purchase gifts, professional service. When you patronize these businesses and organizations, please thank them and let them know you saw their ads in the Guide to Jewish Nashville.

Features: Nashville artists’ Jewish roots yield fruits of the spirit............................................................20 The Secret in the Hidden Dresser: A True Nashville Mystery................................................40

Listings: Jewish Federation of Nashville .....................................6 Jewish Foundation ............................................................ 9 Gordon Jewish Community Center ......................... 10 Jewish Family Service .................................................... 12 Synagogues..........................................................................15 Schools................................................................................. 23 Organizations .....................................................................26 Community Services Chart ..........................................39 Youth ......................................................................................43 B’nai Mitzvah ..................................................................... 46 Resources .............................................................................47 Publisher . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mark S. Freedman Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kathy Carlson Advertising Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Carrie Mills Layout/Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tim Gregory Telephone Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .615-354-1653 Advertising . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .615-354-1699 Fax 615-352-0056 E-mail Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .kathy@jewishnashville.org Advertising . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .carrie@nashvillejcc.org Cover photo by Rick Malkin, taken at the Federation's 2013 World's Fair event

Kathy Carlson Editor

While the Guide makes every possible effort to accept only reputable advertisers of the highest quality, we cannot guarantee the Kashruth of their products.

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The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 3


TOGETHER

We do Extraordinary Things through your contribution to the Jewish Federation The Jewish Federation of Nashville supports a community-wide network of organizations that do two things: t $BrF fPS QFPQMF JO OFFE IFrF BU IPNe JO *TSBFM BOE BrPVOE UIF worME t /VSUVrF BOE TVTUBJO UIF JFXJTI DPNNVOJUZ UPEBZ BOE fPS GVUVrF HFOFSBUJPOT OUR APPROACH TO FUNDING EMBODIES THE CORE VALUES AND TRADITIONS OF THE JEWISH COMMUNITY. We… t $BrF BCPVU QFPQMF t TBrHFU TQFDJmD QroHSBNT UIBU NFFU PVS NPTU VrHFOU OFFET t *ODVCBUF OFX QroHSBNT BOE TFSWJDFT CBTFE PO /BTIWJMMF DPNNVOJUZ GFFECBDk YOUR SMART CHOICE FOR EFFECTIVE AND MEANINGFUL JEWISH GIVING UP IBWF B rFBM JNQBDU PO B CrPBE SBOHF Pf OFFET. t -FBWJOH B JFXJTI MFHBDZ XJUI PVS JFXJTI FPVOEBUJPO XJMM QFrQFUVBUF UIF WBMVFT NPTU NFBOJOHGVM UP ZPV BOE GVUVrF HFOFSBUJPOT. GET INVOLVED. VOLUNTEER. MAKE A DIFFERENCE. -FBrO NPrF BCPVU UIF worL Pf UIF JFXJTI FFEFSBUJPO BOE IoX ZPV DBO EP B worME Pf HPPE SJHIU IFrF JO /BTIWJMMe. VJTJU PVS wFC TJUF XXw KFXJTIOBTIWJMMe.orH $BMM VT

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4 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013


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Jewish Federation of Nashville and Middle Tennessee

President: Andrew May Executive Director: Mark S. Freedman 801 Percy Warner Blvd., Suite 102 Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 356-3242 Fax: (615) 352-0056 info@jewishnashville.org www.jewishnashville.org

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hange – according to plan. It’s one way to summarize what has been going on over the past few years at the Jewish Federation of Nashville and Middle Tennessee. Because the Federation is blessed with creative and thoughtful volunteer and professional leadership, we’ve been able to channel high communal engagement to create new ways of doing business. A major impetus for change was the Best Jewish Nashville project, a broadbased communitywide assessment process undertaken in 2010 and completed this year. We are energized by sharpened focus on how and what we ask

Nashville's supporters of Israel came together at the Gordon Jewish Community Center to a rally sponsored by the Jewish Federation of Nashville for the Jewish state as hostilities in Gaza wound down last year. PHOTO: RICK MALKIN

of our generous donors in requesting their essential support of the Federation’s annual campaign. As a result, we are serving more people in more settings and we are touching more Jewish lives. Our New Initiatives Fund has supported several new programs targeting adults in their 20s through 40s. NowGen Nashville (nowgennashville.org) has brought together hundreds of young

Shalom Nashville

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he Federation welcomes newcomers with a letter from the Jewish Federation Executive Director, a copy of this Guide to Jewish Nashville, along with information on all of our congregations, as well as our agencies and organizations. The Federation’s web site, www.jewishnashville.org, is the place to go for the latest information on what’s happening in Nashville. If you would like a welcome packet mailed to you or know someone who should receive one, please contact Barbara Schwarcz, (615) 354-1630, barbara@jewish nashville.org. The Jewish Federation works collaboratively with the agencies and congregations to make newcomers feel as welcome as possible as they join this wonderful Jewish community. c

6 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

Jews across Music City with social events like Rosh Hashanah and Purim parties along with service opportunities such as Mitzvah Madness. There are 10 special interest groups called clusters that meet regularly. We continue to build leadership among young adults through subsidizing participation in summer missions to Israel organized by the Jewish Federations of North America. This year, young adults will be chosen for subsidized places on the high-level JFNA Campaign Chairs and Directors Mission in July and to participate in the Nashville Community Mission to Israel and to JFNA’s General Assembly in Jerusalem in November. PJ Library connects with young families by providing Jewish-themed books and music for children up to age 6. There’s now a PJ Library option in Hebrew, Sifriyat Pijama. Satellite Shabbats in outlying suburbs also draw in families and create community.

We’ve continued to serve our seniors through programs like Thank Goodness It’s Thursday, which serves hot kosher lunches to seniors and provides entertaining and enlightening programs as well. The Musical Helping Hands program of Jewish Family Service matches trained Jewish musicians with senior adults living with Alzheimer’s or dementia for monthly sessions to stimulate memory and to experience the healing powers of music. Two new programs bring Shabbat home for seniors. West End Synagogue’s Shabbat Calling, conducted in cooperation with all community clergy, offers a live weekly conference call to seniors at home. It features prayers, music, stories and conversation. Congregation Micah’s Serving Our Seniors program brings weekly webstreaming of Shabbat services to homebound seniors. Our New Initiatives Fund has supported Israel-education


programs and advocacy training. One such program is Increase Your Israel IQ, coordinated by the Community Relations Committee of the Federation, which has brought expert speakers on current Israel-themed topics. We are reaching out to Jews around the world in many ways. More than 40 community members have participated in a Federation-organized mission to Cuba that will build bridges to a small but vibrant Jewish community and provide much-needed medical and humanitarian aid. As mentioned previously, the Annual Campaign Chairs and Directors mission to Israel and to Minsk, Belarus, in the former Soviet Union is planned for July. Our partnership with the Hadera-Eiron region in Israel continues to flourish through the Get Connected community teen trip, related

teacher exchanges and, this year, a program for firefighters. The entire community can connect with Israel by getting to know our community shlicha, Hadar Moskovitz, and attending her classes and events. Every single Jewish organization in Nashville benefits from the Federation’s grantmaking process and the Federation encourages all of its local agencies and the congregations to offer innovative ways to build and enrich Jewish identity and engagement. We expect and welcome this trend to continue as we strive at the Federation to make Best Jewish Nashville even better. We invite you to join us as a volunteer, a donor and most importantly as a participant in the richness of Jewish life in Nashville. We are certain that you will find it fulfilling and enjoyable.

Community Relations Committee Chair: Irwin Venick Director: Abbie Wolf (615) 354-1637 abbie@jewishnashville.org

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he Community Relations Committee is the Jewish Federation’s Israel advocacy arm as well as its outreach arm to the broader Nashville community on social and public policy issues. The CRC has been hosting “Increase Your Israel IQ: From Argument to Advocacy,” a series of speakers on Israel, and facilitated conversations open to the community about how we talk about Israel. These efforts are underwritten by a Jewish Federation New Initiatives Grant. The CRC is a founder of coalitions of interfaith and ethnic groups, social service agencies and others that address immigration, poverty and genocide. The committee is involved in interfaith relations and issues that affect Jewish students in public schools. Each year, the CRC hosts a Social Justice Seder to which the committee invites its Nashville partners in humanitarian causes to see how the holiday Passover addresses issues including hunger, poverty, immigration and freedom. The event has played host to the mayor and other city officials, clergy, social service agency directors and education leaders among others. Members of the community with interests in any of these or related issues are invited to join the CRC. Contact Abbie Wolf, CRC Director, at abbie@jewishnashville.org or (615) 354-1637. c

Please feel free to contact any of our staff members who are ready to assist you in learning more about Jewish life in Nashville, in Israel and around the world. Executive Office Mark S. Freedman, Executive Director – (615) 354-1660 mark@jewishnashville.org Carolyn Benick Brown, Administrative Assistant – (615) 354-1668 carolyn@jewishnashville.org Barbara Schwarcz, Events Coordinator and Newcomers Coordinator – (615) 354-1630

barbara@jewishnashville.org Lynn Fleischer, Archive Associate – (615) 354-1655 library@jewishnashville.org Annual Campaign Naomi Limor Sedek, Campaign Director – (615) 354-1642 naomi@jewishnashville.org Joel Abramson, Community Engagement Associate – (615) 354-1650 joel@jewishnashville.org Susan Pankowsky, Campaign Assistant – (615) 354-1676 susan@jewishnashville.org Continued on page 8

Editor: Kathy Carlson (615) 354-1653 kathy@jewishnashville.org Advertising Manager: Carrie Mills (615) 354-1699 carrie@nashvillejcc.org jewishobservernashville.org

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hen you want news about the Nashville Jewish community, look to The Observer – in print and online at jewishobservernashville.org. The newspaper presents feature articles on local events, on people of interest and news about Israel and the Jewish world. The Lifecycles section posts b’nai mitzvahs, weddings, graduations, honors and obituaries. The paper is sent to all Jewish households in Middle Tennessee as well as to members of the Gordon Jewish Community Center. Individuals and organizations are invited to submit letters to the editor and op-ed pieces, which are always welcome. The Observer’s online presence at jewishobservernashville.org includes postings of all the newspaper’s articles and photos as well as back issues of the paper. A newly reconstituted Editorial Board, consisting of one member from each Jewish congregation, helps the Editor with planning and publishing decisions. Advertising revenue is a major financial source for The Observer. Please let our advertisers know that you saw ads for their businesses in The Observer. The paper also raises muchneeded funds through our annual Patrons Campaign to which readers can contribute to show their support. The Guide to Jewish Nashville is the only comprehensive compilation of all the organizations and services available to our Jewish community. Each organization submits its own listing for publication. The Guide is sent to all Observer subscribers and is distributed to synagogues, newcomers, those contemplating a move to Nashville and to local businesses. c

The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 7


Continued from page 7

Supporting our community one child, one adult, one family at a time

We’re Here for You since 1853

• • • • • • • • • • • •

Adoption - Domestic & International Case Management Counseling & Psychotherapy Emergency Financial Assistance Family Life Education Support Groups Helping Hands Volunteer Program Information and Referral Kosher Food Boxes Hanukkah Gifts for Children Jewish Job Network School Supplies

(615) 356-4234

Community Relations Abbie Wolf, Director of Community Relations, (615) 354-1637 abbie@jewishnashville.org The Observer Kathy Carlson, Editor, The Observer – (615) 354-1653 kathy@jewishnashville.org Carrie Mills, Observer Advertising Manager – (615) 354-1699 carrie@nashvillejcc.org Finance Vanessa Leibowitz, Chief Financial Officer – (615) 354-1624 vanessa@jewishnashville.org Heath Hinson, Accounting Associate/Human Resources Specialist – (615) 354-1654 heath@jewishnashville.org

Allen Cummings, Information Technology Director – (615) 354-1675 admin@jewishnashville.org Toni Caldwell, Business Manager, Akiva School – Akiva (615) 432-2554 tcaldwell@akivanashville.net Federation (615) 354-1641 toni@jewishnashville.org Jewish Foundation Risa Klein Herzog, Director of Foundation Development – (615) 354-1651 risa@jewishnashville.org Planning Harriet Schiftan, Director – (615) 354-1687 harriet@jewishnashville.org Hadar Moskovitz, Community Shlicha (Israel emissary) – (615) 354-1632 hadar@jewishnashville.org c

www.jfsnashville.org 801 Percy Warner Blvd., Suite 103 Nashville, TN 37205

As you ride up the tree-lined drive that leads to The Temple, you begin a journey . . . The laughter of children, the quest for learning and the sanctity of faith greet youand you know at that moment you can call The Temple . . . . . HOME

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The Temple, Congregation Ohabai Sholom 5015 Harding Road - Nashville, Tennessee 37205 - (615) 352-7620 - www.templenashville.org

8 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013


Jewish Foundation of Nashville

Foundation Development Chair: Sandy Averbuch Director of Foundation Development: Risa Klein Herzog, (615) 354-1651 risa@jewishnashville.org 801 Percy Warner Blvd. Suite 102 Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 356-3242 www.jewishnashville.org

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isualize the future of Nashville’s Jewish community ‌ and make it happen! If you have the next great idea in Jewish life, then the Foundation is the place where it comes together. When you leave your Jewish legacy through the Jewish Foundation, you say proudly that Jewish life – in Nashville, in North America, in Israel and the world – will not just survive, or endure, but will also thrive. Whether your passion is a local, national or international agency or service, the Jewish Foundation provides the opportunity to strengthen and build

Shirley Zeitlin (left), James Fishel, Ken Anchor and Annette Eskind catch up at the Jewish Foundation dinner. PHOTO: RICK MALKIN

our Jewish community. The Jewish Foundation offers a variety of tax-advantaged and estate-planning vehicles to enable donors to meet their individual financial and estateplanning needs, to realize their philanthropic dreams and to create a legacy for the Jewish future. Among these are: Bequest, Field of Interest Fund, Designated Fund, Perpetual Annual Campaign Endowment Fund, Lion of Judah Endowment Fund, Charitable Gift Annuity, Tree of Life Fund, Charitable Lead Trust, Charitable Remainder Trust, Donor Advised Fund, Donation

of Qualified Retirement Plan, Gift of Life Insurance, Gift of Real Estate and B’nai Tzedek Fund (generously funded through the Feldman/ Hassenfeld B’nai Tzedek Fund). The Jewish Foundation of Nashville was established in 1980 as the endowment arm of the Jewish Federation of Nashville and Middle Tennessee. In celebration of its 25th anniversary, the Jewish Foundation debuted The Book of Life. The Book of Life recognizes donors who have made, or have promised to make, a permanent endowed gift to benefit a Jewish agency, organization or synagogue, regardless of the size of the gift. Donors whose per-

manent gifts are $25,000 or more are honored with an electronic donor page in The Book of Life featuring their photograph and a personal statement about why they have created this legacy or their hopes for the future. The electronic Book of Life is available for the entire community to view and enjoy in the lobby of the Gordon Jewish Community Center building. The Jewish Foundation is honored to be the community’s trusted resource for philanthropy for generations into the future. What is important to you within the Jewish community? How do you wish to be remembered? The security of our beloved community lies in your answer to these questions and the Jewish Foundation is here to assist you in fulfilling your goals. Jewish Foundation Development Committee Members: Sandy Averbuch, Chair; David Cooper; Annette Eskind; James Fishel; Mark Goldfarb; Ellen Levitt; Jan Liff; Andrew May; Joshua May; Martin Ted Mayden; Stephen Riven; Martin Satinsky; Nan Speller; David Steine, Jr.; and Fred Zimmerman c

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Quality Attendants, Companions And Sitters Bonded & Insured, State Licensed Excellent References Celebrating 13 Years of Excellence Personal Care Assistance At Its Best Thinking about your parents...We can be there when you cannot. Cynthia Albin (left), Sam Averbuch and his wife, Jessica Averbuch, at the 2012 Jewish Foundation of Nashville dinner, where they heard Sam and Cynthia’s mother, Sandy Averbuch, tell why her family has embraced the Jewish Foundation’s goals of ensuring the community’s future. Sandy Averbuch chairs the Foundation’s Development Committee. PHOTO: RICK MALKIN

2000 Richard Jones Road Nashville, TN 37215

208 Uptown Square Murfreesboro, TN 37129

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309 N. Jackson Street Tullahoma, TN 37388

615-383-5656

615-848-6774

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Gordon Jewish Community Center pool; a brand new state-of-theart fitness center; three-star Early Childhood Learning Center (ECLC); the most diverse camp programming in all of Nashville; a teen hangout; a library, banquet hall and meeting spaces; acres of playing fields; resurfaced tennis courts; a nature center, a community garden and an outdoor walking track; a Holocaust memorial; unparalleled programs for all ages from toddlers to seniors and much more! There’s always something going on at the GJCC! Fitness: Latest equipment, experienced staff and certified personal trainers. Group fitness classes – spinning, kickboxing, yoga and more – are free for members. Aquatics: 25-yard heated indoor saltwater pool, 50-meter outdoor pool, and baby pools.

President: David Lewis Executive Director: Leslie M. Sax 801 Percy Warner Blvd. Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 356-7170 Fax: (615) 353-2659 info@nashvillejcc.org www.nashvillejcc.org

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he Gordon JCC is a gathering place for all of Jewish Nashville. We’ve got something for everyone: a 90,000-square-foot facility housing an indoor saltwater pool and outdoor Olympic-size

Youngsters exercise their imaginations at the Gordon Jewish Community Center’s Early Childhood Learning Center.

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Worsh ip Education Service Award-Winning Religious School ¥ ChildrenÕs Services ¥ Family Programs ¥ Youth Groups Camp Ramah ¥ Torah Study ¥ Adult Education ¥ Social Action ¥ Seniors Activities MenÕs Club ¥ Sisterhood Cantor Marcia Lane Director of Lifelong Learning Sharon Paz Executive Director Marcia Stewart Education Director Emeritus Miriam Halachmi

10 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

3810 West End Avenue, Nashville 615-269-4592 (toll-free 888-335-8993) http://www.westendsyn.org


Water aerobics classes, from certified arthritis programs to prenatal, these classes are guaranteed to give you the figure you’ve always wanted. Cultural Arts: The Janet Levine March Gallery’s rotating art exhibits, concerts, guest lecturers and social gatherings enrich members’ cultural identity. We also have the Janet Levine March Gallery 2, the Sig Held Art Gallery and the Sports Gallery. Adults: Classes, lectures, luncheons and annual “Nourish Your Mind” series. Programming developments to meet your interests both on campus and off. Adults over 55: Weekly meetings, group fitness, book club, games, trips and more. Camaraderie and companionship in your home away from home. Early Childhood Learning Center: Threestar highest rating from the Tennessee Department of Human Services. Infused with Jewish cultural enrichment, as well as academic and athletic enrichment programs. School-Age Kids:

After-school Kids Konnection (also three-star rated), with transportation from area schools. Camp Davis, which has been making great summer memories for 76 years; specialty camps for science, art, cheerleading, fashion design, Legos and even more are available. Teens: JCC Maccabi Games, an Olympics-style competition for sports and camaraderie; AZA and BBG, BBYO’s two teen groups, which the GJCC sponsors locally. Leagues: Soccer, baseball, flag football and basketball; Tiger Sharks year-round swim team. Adult pickup basketball games weekly; bowling; and tennis and racquetball to come! Jewish Community and Identity: Marking every occasion on the Jewish calendar, from our annual Hanukkah Festival and lighting our menorah to our community Israel Independence Day celebration. For more than 100 years, the GJCC has served the Nashville community. So step inside our doors and check us out – for the history, for the community, for yourself. c

Julietta Bokava connects with Rabbi Strosberg as she studies for her recent Bat Mitzvah on a lovely Fall day in front of Sherith Israel.

Wanna Connect? Sunday School and Hebrew School students connect with Cantor Lieberman who often provides individualized instruction for kids of various backgrounds.

Find your own Jewish identity at Sherith Israel, where you are always welcome. Families, singles, seniors ... all are invited to explore religious, social, and spiritual connections at Sherith Israel. Drop in on a Shabbat, and meet our Open Orthodox, diverse congregation, where people of various backgrounds have found their spiritual home.

Connect with Jewish tradition and connect with your Jewish future at Sherith Israel. 3600 West End Avenue - (615) 292-6614 www.sherithisrael.org The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 11


Jewish Family Service

President: Sandra Hecklin Executive Director: Pamela Kelner 801 Percy Warner Blvd., Suite 103 Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 356-4234 Fax: (615) 301-0676 info@jfsnashville.org www.jfsnashville.org

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ewish Family Service supports our community—one child, one adult, one family at a time. Our agency has provided social services to the Nashville Jewish community for over 158 years. Jewish

Family Service offers a comprehensive range of social services to people of all income levels, ages and backgrounds. Services include: • Adoption • Counseling • Case Management • Family Life Education • Emergency Financial Assistance • Hanukkah Gifts for Children Program • Helping Hands Volunteer Program • Information and Referral • Kosher Food Box Program • School Supply Drive • Senior Adult Services • Support Groups Fees are charged for some services. Counseling fees may be covered through private health insurance and Medicare. A sliding-scale fee is available for those who are without insurance or those who choose to use

12 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

Carrie Mills (right) and Betty Wolf share a song during a Helping Hands music program visit.

it. JFS also serves as a professional resource offering consultations and other services to agencies and congregations throughout the community. Adoption Journeys is a program of Jewish Family Service. The full range of adoption services, including international adoptions, is available. For further information, please see Adoption Journeys of Jewish Family Service listing. Professional, affordable and fully confidential counseling services are provided by

licensed clinical social workers. Our LCSWs can help you work through a variety of issues including, but not limited to: depression; anxiety; significant life transitions, such as divorce, job loss or illness; relationship conflicts with friends, spouse or partners; loss and grief; domestic violence; issues of aging; and child behavior problems. Fees are charged on a sliding scale or may be reimbursed through private health insurance. JFS is a participating Medicare provider.


Jewish Family Service volunteers join residents of the Cumberland in welcoming Shabbat.

Helping Hands is a program designed to support senior citizens and people with disabilities in the Nashville Jewish community. Volunteers match their interests and skills with the needs of seniors to create a mutually rewarding experience. Services include friendly visiting, telephone reassurance, transportation to medical appointments and the grocery store, Shabbat observance, holiday gift basket deliveries, and Jewish programming in assisted-living facilities. In addition, Helping Hands matches musicians with people living with Alzheimer’s and/or other dementias for one-on-one musical visits. The Kosher Food Box

Program provides vital assistance to those who are experiencing financial hardship. The Hanukah Gifts for Children Program provides holiday presents for children who would otherwise go without. Jewish Family Service offers many Family Life Education programs throughout the year, often in partnership with the GJCC, Jewish Federation, congregations or other organizations in the Nashville community. Please support Jewish Family Service by volunteering your time, by making a financial contribution, and by attending Jewish Family Service’s annual Chesed Dinner held in the spring each year. c

Sixth-graders turn out for the Jewish Family Service group Rosh Hodesh: It’s a Girl Thing!

The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 13


‘‘We choose Belmont Village.” “Mom is getting older now and needs a little help with things like meals and daily living activities. Belmont Village is the perfect choice. She has her own apartment in a beautiful community. She has friends, activities to keep her busy, a driver to take her places, even chefs to cook her meals. Plus, she receives hands-on assistance from Belmont’s trained staff whenever she needs it. She’s happy! That makes me happy, too.”

‘‘We Choose Belmont Village.’’ s Chef-prepared, restaurant-style dining s Free scheduled transportation daily s Fitness and social activities s On-site therapy services s Licensed nurse on-site around the clock s Medication management s Housekeeping and laundry s Assistance with daily living s Award-winning Circle of Friends® memory program s Short-term stays available s Specialized Alzheimer’s care

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The Community Built for Life ® greenhills.belmontvillage.com 14 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013


Synagogues Shabbat morning children’s service, which includes story time, edible crafts and prayer. Bar/Bat Mitzvahs and other lifecycle events take place in our new ballroom.

Congregation Beit Tefilah Chabad Rabbi: Yitzchok Tiechtel, chabadnashville@gmail.com Educator and Rebbetzin: Mrs. Esther Tiechtel, etiechtel@yahoo.com President: Judge Scott Rosenberg, scottrosenberg@ jis.nashville.org Men's Club president: Michael Simon, msimon105@comcast.net 95 Bellevue Road, Nashville, TN 37221 (615) 646-5750 chabadnashville@gmail.com

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enowned for warmth and friendliness, Congregation Beit Tefilah offers true Jewish Southern Hospitality. Whether you’re a longtime Nashvillian or a newcomer, Chabad welcomes you and offers something for everyone. A Place to Call Home Imagine worshipping in an atmosphere of total acceptance, where you are welcome and implored to be as nonjudgmental of your neighbors as they are of you. Services are traditional and conducted primarily in Hebrew, with select readings in English.

Jewish Women’s Roundtable Shabbat afternoons bring the popular Women’s Roundtable with discussions on values and ethics, led by Rebbetzin Esther. Weekly classes explore Torah and other topics, including Jewish mysticism.

Boaz Ramon escorts a new Torah under a Chupah into the sanctuary of Congregation Beit Tefilah at the Torah Dedication ceremony. PHOTO: RICK MALKIN

The language you use or your pace aren’t of paramount importance. Our pristine new sanctuary, enveloped in a natural environment, is the perfect setting to feel connected to G-d. Shabbat Shalom As the sun sets on Friday, everyone streams in for that magical moment of candle lighting as the spirit of Shabbat sets upon Nashville. Congregants lift their voices in song and prayer. Mystical insights from the rabbi bring in a meditative peace. Each second and fourth Friday, a grand T.G.I.S. (Thank G-d It’s

Shabbat) dinner follows services and is open to the entire community, always at 6:30 p.m. Shabbat morning brings the reading of the Torah, as the rabbi tells the story of the weekly Torah portion, and guest cantors lead Musaf prayers. Educator Mrs. Esther Tiechtel leads the Kidz Shul weekly

Youth Programming At Sunday morning Hebrew School, children study the Treasures curriculum, mark the holidays with family workshops, and utilize the “Aleph Champ� Hebrew reading curriculum. Teens enjoy their first foray into Kabbalah and their chance to wrap Tefillin together. Chesed and Caring We extend a welcoming hand to guests, giving all visitors a warm welcome and the feeling of being with Mishpacha-family. Continued on page 16

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The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 15


SYNAGOGUES Continued from page 15

Our “Chicken Soup Squad” brings hot foods to the homebound or ill. Congregation Beit Tefilah is a place you want to call home. Come and visit and we are sure you’ll want to stay. L’hitraot! New for Nashville: Mikvah Mei Chaya, Thyme Café Mikvah Mei Chaya Genesis Campus for Jewish Life 95 Bellevue Road Nashville 37221 Appointment line: (615) 601-1895 Mikvah Mei Chaya is the first mikvah to be built in Nashville exclusively for the mitzvah of Taharat Hamispacha – family purity. Experience the beauty of this special mitzvah in the privacy and intimacy of a mikvah that’s fully equipped with all your spa needs. All materials used for the mikvah, from travertine stone imported from Turkey to its glass tiles; from its lighting fixtures to the furnishings and paintings, from the limestone vanities and modern plumbing fixtures to the surround-sound audio system – were selected by a team of top interior designers to make it a five-star MikSPA experience. The word “mikvah” means “a gathering of water,” natural water. Unlike an ordinary tub or pool, complex laws and specifications govern a mikvah’s construction. The primary uses of a mikvah cover many elements of Jewish life, but the most significant today is by brides and married women practicing Taharat Hamishpacha— the Jewish laws of family purity. The new mikvah offers women the opportunity for a deeply moving, spiritual experience—a spa for body as well as soul. It lies at the heart of the beauty and spirituality of the marital relationship, endowing it with a charming dimension of

sanctity and love. For thousands of years, it has been Judaism’s secret to harmonious marital living and Jewish survival. Mikvah Mei Chaya is available by appointment only. Please call for an appointment 48 hours in advance. The private number to make reservations is (615) 601-1895, or send a text to (615) 480-4225. Thyme Café Genesis Campus for Jewish Life Open Sundays for lunch and dinner. (615) 669-8338 www.thyme-cafe.com Thyme Café, Nashville’s newest kosher restaurant, is now here at the Genesis Campus for Jewish Life. The idea behind the café and the planning have been brewing for a couple of years. Scott and Beth Rosenberg have a reputation for being great cooks and hosts. With Thyme Café they have taken the kind and warm atmosphere of their hearts and translated it into a wonderful place to eat, relax, and enjoy the company of friends and neighbors. Thyme Café’s menu includes wraps like the Cuban and Rainbow Veggie, which come with sides such as fresh fruit, the daily side, or potato chips and pack plenty of wellbalanced flavors. The Greek salad and California salad bring a freshness that returns me to my childhood home. Three kinds of pasta are available, with hand-crafted sauces. The pizzas, however, are the stars of the menu. You can enjoy pizza – with homemade sauce and a variety of toppings – at the café, or you can order the Take n’ Bake kosher pizza and get that authentic taste right in your own kitchen. Thyme Cafe is open on Sundays for lunch and dinner. Hours of operation are 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. for lunch, and 5 to 7:30 p.m. for dinner. Takeout orders can be called in to (615) 6698338. Visit Thyme-café.com for a

16 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

complete menu where you can order to go, or simply sit down for some quality time with your family at Thyme Café.

Congregation Micah Reform Rabbis Philip “Flip” & Laurie Rice rabbiflip@congregation micah.org rabbilaurie@congregation micah.org Music Director/Cantorial Soloist: Lisa Silver lsilver@congregation micah.org Accompanist/Composer: Michael Ochs mochs@congregation micah.org Executive Director: Todd Evans tevans@congregation micah.org Education Director: Julie Greenberg jgreenberg@congregation micah.org Membership Information: membership@congregation micah.org Administrative Assistant: Megan Scurlock mscurlock@congregation micah.org Administrative Assistant: Erin Halstead office@congregation micah.org

Maintenance Supervisor: Dave Frechman President: Hope Stringer president@congregation micah.org 2001 Old Hickory Boulevard Brentwood, TN 37027 (615) 377-9799 Fax: (615) 377-7996 www.CongregationMicah.org info@congregationmicah.org

M

icah’s magic is a result of its vibrancy, diversity, and ability to inspire. Promoting the values of liberal Judaism, our services are musical and participatory, our educational opportunities are thought-provoking, and our social gatherings are entertaining. Micah’s 35-acre campus includes a nationally recognized sanctuary with a beautiful ark framed by windows which invite Tennessee’s natural beauty inside, a chapel for intimate worship, social hall space for events, a Tennessee 3-Star rated Preschool, a Religious School wing with multipurpose space, a full kitchen, patios, natural playscape, memorial garden, and cemetery. Shabbat at Micah comes alive through song; services include traditional, contemporary, and original musical settings of liturgy by our nationally known musical team. Fridays we meet at 7:30 p.m., excepting our first-of-the-month 6 p.m. service. Saturday mornings you can have

Schmooze and Views group members celebrate Sukkot with a shake of lulav and etrog in Congregation Micah's sukkah.


SYNAGOGUES

The Torah Wrap of students at the end of Religious School is a cherished tradition at Congregation Micah.

a BLT with one of our rabbis— that’s Bagels, Love, & Torah study at 9 a.m., followed by services at 10:30 a.m. Our youngest members (Micah MINIS) gather for Tot-Shabbat services on Friday mornings, as well as additional services with oneg and playtime throughout the year. Religious School includes Hebrew instruction, services,

and creative curricula (pre-K to post-Confirmation). Special classes include the Micah Kids/Teen Choir, music, photography, history, Confirmation, Israel Trips, and Family Education and Social Action Programs. Additional youth enrichment is provided through our Youth Groups (MiTY & Middle MiTY). Micah

Midweek takes place on Wednesday afternoons, where students pray, eat, and learn together. Our Bar/Bat Mitzvah candidates are tutored exclusively by our rabbis. Jewish life for adults at Micah includes continuous Adult Education, Kol Isha – our women’s group, Mah Jongg on Tuesdays, and our seniors gather on Thursdays for Schmooze and Views. Our Micah Book Club meets the first Saturday of every month. We provide volunteer activities and Young Professional events. An inclusive community, Micah welcomes you to visit and see all we have to offer; all of our services are open to the public. For the most up-to-date information, please check our website at www.CongregationMicah.org or call the office at (615) 3779799. You can also find us at facebook.com/CongregationMic ah, twitter.com/micahnashville, and on Pinterest and Vimeo.

Congregation Sherith Israel Orthodox Rabbi: Saul Strosberg Rabbi Emeritus: Zalman Posner Cantor: George Lieberman President: Evelyn Koch 3600 West End Avenue (615) 292-6614 Fax: (615) 463-8260 info@sherithisrael.com www.sherithisrael.com

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et me tell you about my favorite synagogue: Congregation Sherith Israel. Sure, we have what you’d expect at any synagogue that’s been around for more than a century—daily services, Shabbat services on Friday night and Saturday morning, Hebrew School and Sunday School for the kids, adult education, a Continued on page 18

The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 17


SYNAGOGUES Continued from page 17

beautiful sanctuary, a great Shabbat Kiddush every week. But there’s something more…a spirit, a feeling, a warmth. Perhaps it’s a feeling of “connection.” “Our connection with Sherith Israel was a family connection,” says one young family. “We didn’t know what to expect when we came here from Baltimore, but we were very pleased with the openness and friendliness of the Shul and the community. We were welcomed with open arms and it solidified our choice to come to Nashville. Kids are so welcome at Sherith and there are ‘grandparents’ around every corner who dote on our children. Our connection with Sherith Israel is more than we could have asked for.” Rabbi Strosberg says it nicely: “At Sherith Israel, we try to foster a place and time where families can connect, parents to children, to parents, families to other families, individuals to other individuals, and most importantly, for each individual to have an engagement with the Divine, each and every week. This can only happen in a place where people feel comfortable, where there is consistency, and lots of love.” One young woman says, “At first, I didn’t attend services on a regular basis, but once I became a member, I began attending once a month, then semi-monthly, and now weekly. I have also found that the congregation is open to people like

me, who have a traditional, but not Orthodox upbringing. I feel comfortable both learning and participating, as well as teaching (Sunday School), gardening and building multi-generational relationships.” Another member says, “Rabbi Saul is so special. He makes each of us feel as if he or she is the most important member in the synagogue. I’m so glad he made the ‘Nashville connection’ with our Shul.” You’re invited to visit Sherith Israel anytime, and make your own connections in the relaxed, welcoming atmosphere of one of Nashville’s friendliest synagogues.

The Temple – Congregation Ohabai Sholom Reform Senior Rabbi: Mark Schiftan Associate Rabbi: Shana Mackler Rabbi Emeritus: Randall Falk Cantor: Tracy Fishbein Cantor Emeritus: Bernard Gutcheon President: Ray Berk Temple Educator: Lynda Gutcheon Director of Temple Preschool: Corye Nelson 5015 Harding Pike Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 352-7620 www.templenashville.org

op h S t f i G d * 352-7620 e l p m a e T ing Ro d r e a Th 5015 H

Open: Tuesdays, Wednesdays Friday before & after Services Sunday during Religious School

18 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

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ince our beginnings in 1851, The Temple has been the heart of Reform Judaism for Nashville’s Jewish community. We offer a welcoming family to enrich your Jewish life. Our membership is diverse, from singles to married and same-sex couples, families with children to retirees, newcomers to 6th-generation Nashvillians. The Temple has the region’s only nationally accredited Reform Religious School, 3 star full-time Preschool, and many services and programs. 2012 highlights include: Twenty-eight of our 64 NEW member households were under 33 years old; 43 were under 50. More than two dozen nonJews participated in our Conversion Conversations program, many of whom continued to celebrate becoming Jews. Five congregational Shabbat dinners, five Passover Seders (Congregational, GLBT, JACS, Next Dor, Women’s) and pre-service Onegs at Monthly Family Services. Our Green Team hosted Earth Day Shabbat, expanded our recycling, composting, and our Rain Garden. Almost all of our Bar/Bat Mitzvah students continued through Confirmation. Eightyfive percent of our 11th- and 12th-graders stayed on for Post Confirmation. Our Next Dor Group (ages 22-40) activities included two Progressive Dinners, Sushi & Sake in the Sukkah, Family BBQ, Chanukah Party in East Nashville, and Whole Foods Cooking School. Our weekly Women’s Torah Study group celebrated its 11th anniversary. Adult Education programs attracted hundreds of members and neighbors of other faiths. Favorites were weekly Torah Study, Lunch with the Rabbi, Professor A.-J. Levine and Rabbi Rami Shapiro.

Our Mussar Mindfulness Group completed three years of the holy, intimate work of text study for personal growth. Temple hosted the twicemonthly Golden Lunch Bunch, providing a meal and entertainment for our seniors. Our Caring Connection offered support and celebration for over 200 members. Two hundred Temple Arts Festival volunteers participated in our 9th annual fundraiser. Social Action activities included Room in the Inn, Blood Drives, suitcase and coat drives, collection for Second Harvest, and hosting the 19th Annual Boulevard Bolt on Thanksgiving. Congregant Gallery completed its third year of showcasing the artistic talent of members. Visit our Facebook group at http://www.facebook.com/ groups/templenashville/ We hope you might see yourself here with us!

West End Synagogue Conservative Director of Ritual and Music: Marcia Lane cantorlane@westendsyn.org Director of Lifelong Learning: Sharon Paz spaz@westendsyn.org Educational Director Emerita: Miriam Halachmi President: Susan Schwartz Executive Director: Marcia Stewart mstewart@westendsyn.org 3810 West End Avenue Nashville, Tennessee 37205 (615) 269-4592 Fax: (615) 269-4695 E-mail: office@westendsyn.org www.westendsyn.org

W

est End Synagogue is filled with vitality and warmth – a place of Jewish life, inspiration and


SYNAGOGUES celebration. Nashville’s only Conservative congregation has created a Jewish family experience centered on worship, education and service. Our spiritual home infuses traditional rituals with modern meaning. Fully egalitarian services are led by our Director of Ritual and Music with the active participation of congregants and Religious School students. We are proud to offer daily minyans, morning and evening, each day of the year. Shabbat takes on new meaning with our original, innovative Shabbat Unplugged that includes a musical service. K’toni and Kavanah services add to the diversity of celebrating Shabbat in a warm, friendly environment. Lifelong education is an integral part of the West End community. Our award-winning Framework of Excellence Religious School led by Sharon Paz provides a strong religious background designed to inculcate young people with the val-

ues, philosophy, rituals and practices of Judaism. More than 40 of our students spend summers at Camp Ramah Darom in Georgia where they receive an enduring sense of belonging, friendship and joy. Adult education is a vital part of our programming. Whether it be the Total Shabbat featuring guest speakers, learning Hebrew, studying for an adult Bar or Bat Mitzvah or our Book Club, there are programs to increase your knowledge of Judaism. The Vanderbilt Lecture Series helps expand our understanding of the world in which we live. Our members participate in social action by serving the homeless through Room in the Inn, food drives for Second Harvest and filling a Mitzvah Crib for families in need. We welcome you to join our family as we continue to grow and embrace our Jewish heritage. c

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The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 19


Nashville artists’ Jewish roots yield fruits of the spirit

Artist Colony Jerusalem by Kim Phillips

By Kathy Carlson

I

f you’ve ever wondered how artists create the works that can move your soul, this article aims to offer some hints. Some will make it sound simple, others tell of an “aha” moment, and for others, creating their works is part of a lifelong journey. You may have seen the works of these artists; they’re all members of our Nashville Jewish community and their talents have enriched their synagogues, families and friends. Throughout their careers, their Judaism has informed and inspired their art. Here are three stories. 20 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

Prayer Painting - LIghtning - Natural Wonder by Kaaren Hirschowitz Engel

Words, colors, family It may seem inevitable that Kaaren Hirschowitz Engel’s art would weave together letters, colors, and pieces of the physical world. Her late father, Basil Hirschowitz, was a physician and inventor on the faculty at the University of Alabama-Birmingham. Her family traveled around the world as he lectured and taught about his innovation in flexible fiberoptic endoscopy, the technology used for life-saving, cancer-detecting procedures such as colonoscopies. While traveling, the family experienced masterpiece artworks firsthand at museums and galleries. Art classes and projects were part of her life, and her mother, Barbara Hirschowitz, is a painter and artist. Engel’s first career was in law, keeping connected to art by helping to choose works for her law firm and by representing local arts organizations. When she retired from law at age 40, Engel turned to art. Her early paintings were abstract renderings in pencil and ink, incorporating script. “So when asked to participate in a show to promote peace in the world,” she said in an email, “I chose to include Oseh Shalom, the prayer for peace which concludes the Kaddish,” using Hebrew letters. “… It was a watershed moment for me,

Artist/carpenter Zev Goering prepares part of the Chabad of Nashville ark.

and I began including other prayers in my paintings…. The paintings helped me to rediscover my spiritual roots, and define my spiritual path.” “I would estimate that well over half my work includes some reference to Hebrew prayers, but I really consider the work to be more spiritual than strictly Judaica,” she said. “Many of the prayers are about nature – the beauty of a sunset,

Prayer Painting - Hamotzi by Kaaren Hirschowitz Engel


the abundance of a harvest, the joy of a birth. These sentiments are universal, and resonate with anyone of any tradition. My tradition just happens to be Judaism and that feels authentic for me.” Favorite themes are nature and gratitude, and she’s inspired by a walk in the woods or a stroll in the garden. “I collect seed pods, branches, insects, leaves, moss and feathers, many of which find their way into my art, literally and figuratively,” Engel said. “I create spontaneously,” she said. “I don’t plan my work although I often work as the result of an idea or inspiration. To begin, I choose a color that ‘speaks’ to me in the moment, and then start painting.” Often, she will layer color upon color. “For me, a work is rarely ever finished. I have often painted over a painting, and have on more than a few occasions brought a painting home from an exhibit and painted over it. I love seeing the texture of past paintings in my work, giving it a sense of history – a story in itself.”

he says. He learned carpentry while living at Kibbutz Hamadia in Northern Israel for nine months, moved to Nashville and started a business in 1999. He says he practices his Judaism mainly through his art. “Art work allows you to explore your place in the world.”

Before – and after

Work progresses on the ark at Congregation Beit Tefilah Chabad

Before Kim Phillips converted to Judaism in 2001, she was working in black and white only, choosing the pared-down palette. “Almost immediately after I converted I started seeing things in color,” she said. “It was literally like something turned on in my head.” But it took a month of study at the Pardes Institute of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem to turn up the artistic rainbow and to introduce her to a new artistic medium, paper cutting. Jerusalem was the “most visually stimulating place I’ve ever been,” she recalled. Through Izzy Pludwinski, a sofer or scribe, she came to know Jerusalem paper-cutting master Archie Granot.

Of trees and tribes Zev Goering crafted the ark at Nashville’s newest synagogue, Congregation Beit Tefilah Chabad, on the Bellevue campus of the Genesis Center for Jewish Awareness. “The rabbi (Rabbi Yitzchok Tiechtel) came to me with an idea and I just kind of sketched out some things,” he says. As with Goering’s other clients, Tiechtel had a picture of something he liked and Goering came up with additional ideas. Rough sketches turned into computer renderings of the entire sanctuary to show how all of its elements would fit together – the ark, the bimah, the mechitza. The branches of the tree on the ark door represent the 12 tribes of Israel, and the Torah from Genesis into Exodus, he says. The ark is made largely of cherry, with veneers of oak and walnut used in individual elements. Goering used walnut for the tree itself and red oak for the Hebrew letters. He crafted the carvings in smaller panels, a more cost-effective method than using one large panel. “He gave me a lot of leeway on the doors,” he said. Goering also designed the wooden portion of the mechitza, which also is made from cherry. Throughout the sanctuary, the cherry wood has begun to darken into a rich reddish-brown as it ages. Before discovering a specialty in crafting wooden furniture and other pieces, Goering had designed jewelry. “Once you do one form of functional art it’s much easier to learn another form,”

Continued on page 22

West End Synagogue Religious School

WHERE HEBREW IS A LIVING LANGUAGE

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Contact Sharon Paz, Director of Lifelong Learning (615) 269-4592, ext. 17 www.westendsyn.org West End Synagogue

The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 21


“Religious expression can take many forms. Some people are really good at prayer, or visiting the sick, or arranging flowers for the bimah. Doing art draws something from deep inside and makes me feel connected to Torah in a very personal way. When I’m doing a papercut, it

Continued from page 21

Phillips said that as soon as she saw Granot’s work in his shop near her hotel, she knew she had to create paper-cut art. She met Granot, who gradually “saw that he had a true fan on his hands,” she said. He began showing her other works, such as a 20-page leatherbound paper-cut haftorah portion he made for his son’s bar mitzvah. “I literally cried,” she said. “It was the ultimate hiddur mitzvah.” She began learning the craft from Granot, buying up paper cutters and practicing making the cuts each night. Creating paper-cut art starts with creating a work by hand – drawing, designing and cutting it. An individual work is usually 8 inches by 10 inches, although ketubahs are bigger, she said. With papercuts that will become greeting cards, she photocopies the original and reduces its size. The cards are laser cut at a plant in Oregon and become two-color pieces. Some of her works have 14 lay-

becomes a sort of meditation on the text. Nobody was more surprised than I was that my artwork suddenly became colorful.” Jewish paper cutting has been an art since the 1300s, she said. “It’s so accessible. … Every culture that has paper has paper cutting.” c

Nashville artists can collaborate with Israeli peers through P2G Eshet Chayil by Kim Phillips

ers of color – 14 layers of different-colored paper. Along with images of Jerusalem, the sacred texts of Judaism inspire Phillips’ creative work. “The first time I saw a page of Hebrew, I was captivated and made up my mind to learn the language. The shapes of the letters are so beautiful, from the very precise Torah style to looser ones and even fonts I sort of invented,” she wrote.

A. Joel Gluck DDS, MS Diplomate, American Board of Orthodontics

Green Hills 2002 Richard Jones Road, Suite A200 Nashville, TN 37215 Phone 615.269.5903 www.drgluck.com 2012 22 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

I

n February 2012, the Southeast Consortium and Hadera-Eiron Partnership2Gether Region sponsored an art exhibition titled “Windows of Identity” featuring works from our Partnership communities in the US and Israel. We are now planning for the next Partnership exhibit, titled “The Sounds of Many Waters,” to coincide with the Jewish Federations of North America General Assembly to be held in Jerusalem on November 10-13, 2013. The exhibit will then be shown in the Hadera region, and travel on to the Partnership cities in the U.S. There will be some form of professional documentation of the exhibit. Partnership2Gether, a project of the Jewish Agency, pairs Israeli and Diaspora communities to develop friendships and connections. “The Sounds of Many Waters” will revolve around the concept of water, evoking spiritual, historical, geographic, political and metaphorical images that artists may find inspirational for their work, such as: rivers, brooks, the sea and ocean; the Garden of Eden, parting of the sea, striking the rock, the rain and the dew, symbolism of the well, purification, birth, boundaries and borders, the politics of water and water rights, water for plants, agriculture, making the desert bloom, lifeblood for our planet, drought and floods, sustenance and thirst, etc. A prospectus is being developed with the calendar and more specific information about the exhibition. Eligibility: 1. Artists living and/or working in the Hadera-Eiron region in Israel and the Partnership cities of Charlotte, N.C., Chattanooga, Flagler and Volusia counties, Fla., Fort Meyers, Fla., Jacksonville, Fla., Knoxville, Nashville, Pinellas County, Fla., and Richmond, Va. 2. All art media, including painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, photography, fiber, video, mixed media, glass, metal, ceramics, etc., as long as it can be hung on a wall. 3. There will be a size and weight limit, to be announced in the prospectus. 4. The artwork will address the theme of the exhibit. Entry: Artists in the Nashville-Middle Tennessee area interested in participating will submit a proposal to the Jewish Federation of Nashville, including a bio, digital images of current work, a description of the piece they propose to create, and a statement telling of their approach to the theme from a Jewish perspective. Entry proposals are due June 1; selected works will be delivered to the Nashville Federation office Sept. 15. For further information and a detailed prospectus, please contact Harriet Schiftan, Jewish Federation of Nashville: (615) 3541687 or harriet@jewishnashville.org. For direct questions about the exhibit, please don't hesitate to contact Leslie J. Klein, project co-chair: (615) 649-8284 or lesliejklein@gmail.com. c


Schools Akiva School President, Board of Directors: Shaul Kelner Vice President/Treasurer: Gary Fradkin Head of School: Alina Gerlovin Spaulding General Studies Director: Jere Carman Judaic Studies Director: Daniella Pressner Director of Admissions: Christina Evans 809 Percy Warner Blvd. Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 356-1880 www.akivanashville.net

A

kiva School is a highperforming, K-6 academic institution, a leader among Jewish day schools in the South. Our mission is to pursue excellence, foster critical inquiry and inspire informed Jewish living. Akiva graduates are consistently accepted into the most selective private middle and high schools, as well as public magnet schools, and are recognized as leaders in both character and academics, in their schools and in Nashville. The rigorous curricula in both General and Judaic Studies challenge students to analyze, investigate, question, and take risks. Classes include mathematics, language arts, science, social studies, Jewish Studies, Hebrew language, music, dance, art, and physical education. Our students are praised for their ability to express themselves as well as listen and learn from their peers. In 2012, over 30% of our 5thand 6th-grade students scored

above the 95th percentile on their annual standardized math test, compared with 4% of students in independent schools nationally. Many students graduate from Akiva fluent in Hebrew and able to analyze and understand high-level texts in Hebrew and English. An Akiva education moves beyond the classroom, allowing students to not only learn about their Jewish and American identities but to live them. Students learn about Jewish history, culture, and current events in an environment that promotes love of learning, appreciation of our shared experience, and pride in one’s growing and changing identity. Akiva students participate in extracurricular activities such as after-school clubs and sports teams. Akiva also hosts Nashville’s annual Math Olympics, one of the city’s finest middle school math competitions. Our goal is that all families, regardless of affiliation, feel welcome at Akiva. We take pride in the diversity of our student body and respect each family’s decisions regarding religious observance. We maintain smaller class sizes to provide a nurturing atmosphere that meets individual students’ needs. Teachers create strategies to enhance each child’s learning experience and are committed to ongoing professional development. Akiva is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. We’d love to welcome you into the Akiva family. To visit,

contact Director of Admissions Christina Evans at 615-356-1880 or cevans@akivanashville.net.

Gordon Jewish Community Center Early Childhood Learning Center Early Childhood Education Director: Melissa Worthington

801 Percy Warner Blvd. Nashville TN, 37205 (615) 356-7170 Fax: (615) 353-2659 melissa@nashvillejcc.org www.nashvillejcc.org

A

t the GJCC Early Childhood Learning Center, sounds of fun, laughter and learning echo through the halls. Starting with infants as young as six weeks and working up to children who are kindergarten-eligible, the GJCC ECLC embraces families of all backgrounds and Continued on page 24

The Temple Preschool Serving children 6 weeks - Pre-K Corye Nelson . . . . Director Our mission is to nurture your child’s whole development in our stimulating, play-based environment. The emergent curriculum provides hands-on experiences with math concepts, science, language, reading, music, cooking, and art. Our Jewish enrichment allows developmentally appropriate experiences with rituals, symbols, prayers & everyday celebrations of our Jewish heritage. We offer multi-cultural & interactive music experiences, on-site “ eld trips” & multi lingual staff. 3 Star DHS Rating, Small Class Sizes, Low Child to Teacher Ratio, Developmentally Appropriate Curriculum, Jewish Curriculum/Shabbat & Holiday Celebrations with Rabbi, Full & Part-time Programs, Teachers trained in Child Development, CPR & First Aid

5015 Harding Road • 356-8009

The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 23


SCHOOLS Continued from page 23

cultivates a connection to Jewish values and traditions. With practices rooted in research, our teachers work collaboratively to nurture the gifts of each child, encourage a questioning mind, spark creativity and foster independence. The ECLC holds a threestar rating from the Tennessee Department of Human Services—the highest possible. Here’s why: Location: The ECLC is located in the Gordon Jewish Community Center, a securitycontrolled environment with acres of fields for play space, gardening, and outdoor exploration. The building features beautiful engaging classrooms, two age-appropriate playgrounds, an indoor pool, and a full-size gymnasium for our children’s enjoyment. Education: At the ECLC we believe it’s never too early to start learning. We offer art,

science, math, pre-reading, language, music and movement, every day in every classroom. Our pre-kindergarten and junior kindergarten classrooms use Handwriting without Tears and Everyday Math curricula to help facilitate kindergarten readiness. In addition, visiting specialists in music, art, swimming, physical education, Jewish enrichment and Hebrew add to the experience of our students. Jewish enrichment: Jewish language and culture are central to our program, and are worked into every classroom. Every Friday our preschoolers welcome Shabbat with song and dance during Rockin’ Shabbat celebrations. Each Jewish holiday is also marked with special activities, projects and celebrations. Extracurricular activities: The GJCC ECLC also offers several supplemental afterschool programs, including Rising Stars Sports

Enrichment, Cyberkids, Martial Arts, private swim lessons and ballet. Service and convenience: The GJCC ECLC offers yearround scheduling to meet family needs. Staff members are always available to answer questions and to give and receive feedback. To find out more about the GJCC Early Childhood Learning Center and to schedule a guided tour, contact the director, Melissa Worthington, at 356-7170 or melissa@nashvillejcc.org.

Micah Children’s Academy Lynn Heady, Director lheady@micahchildrens academy.org Theresa LePore, Assistant Director tlepore@micahchildrens academy.org

2001 Old Hickory Blvd. Brentwood, Tennessee 37027 (615) 942-5162 www.micahchildrensacademy. org

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apping into the natural curiosity of preschoolers, the Micah Children’s Academy is designed to be a place where students enjoy playing and learning in a secure and nurturing environment. This Tennessee three-star rated preschool, housed at Congregation Micah and opened in August 2010, works to provide a warm, nurturing place where students develop and grow emotionally, intellectually, socially, and spiritually. We offer a custom curriculum centered on monthly schoolwide themes based in Jewish values. These themes are then translated into ageappropriate activities and experiences. For example, the schoolwide unit “Hakarat Htov” is scheduled during

Montgomery Bell Academy is a school where boys are taught the value of leadership and character; are equipped with the fundamental tools to succeed in the classroom and beyond; develop an appreciation for the effort required to achieve excellence; and form friendships that last a lifetime. MBA is home to: • 21 National Merit Semifinalists from the Class of 2013 • 2012 Science Olympiad & MathCounts State Champions • 2011-12 State Champions in Swimming, Rifle, and Tennis • grants that send more than 100 students per year to immersion programs in the United States and abroad

Building Boys into Better Men

• active community service that includes soup kitchen, peer tutoring, Race for the Cure, and Time to Rise • an average class size of 14 and a 7 to 1 student-teacher ratio • 25 Advanced Placement offerings • international exchanges and programs to Great Britain, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Colombia, and China • $1.8 million in need-based financial aid

MONTGOMERY BELL ACADEMY 4001 Harding Road • Nashville, TN 37205 615-369-5311 • MONTGOMERYBELL.EDU 24 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013


SCHOOLS November so students concentrate their learning on thankfulness for our families and community. Students sing, learn prayers, and read books to supplement their activities. Students (depending on age) receive a music lesson taught weekly by our cantorial soloist, a nature class, a fitness program, a Spanish immersion class each week, and a celebration service every Friday to welcome Shabbat led by our rabbis and our cantorial soloist. Students spend outside time enjoying our natural playscape—an environment that helps develop large motor skills and fosters creativity. A large stage encourages acting and dance with items from our “dress-up center,” miniature huts inspire pretend activities, a Plexiglas art wall allows budding artists to create pictures of their world, a drum and xylophone inspire musical talents, and a planting garden is a spot where students can experience how food is grown, tended, harvested, and eaten. Lynn Heady, director of the Academy, has a rich background in curriculum and instruction via the Pittsburgh School District and the Williamson County School System. She is committed to developing a team of teachers, activities, and experiences that are high quality, and guaranteed to provide students the needed concepts to be successful. In addition, a strong parent

board open to all families is valued and plays an important role in defining quality preschool education. Our hope is that Jewish families will find the right blend of learning and spiritual growth at the Academy, and we welcome new families with open arms.

Temple Preschool Director: Corye Nelson 5015 Harding Rd. Nashville, TN 37205-8009 Phone: (615) 356-8009 Fax: (615) 352-9365 E-mail: corye@temple nashville.org

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he Temple Preschool is a DHS three-star rated preschool that accepts infants through pre-kindergarten children. We offer parttime and full-time enrollment, Monday through Friday. Our emergent curriculum is based on hands-on, interactive, developmentally appropriate philosophies. Our mission is to enable, empower, and encourage each child to develop physically, socially, cognitively, and spiritually to his or her fullest potential. The Jewish curriculum includes a weekly Shabbat service with a Temple rabbi, special holiday events, regular Judaic enrichment classes and familiarity with Hebrew. Related art, cooking, and an introduction to Jewish ethics

and values offer opportunities for family participation in our school celebrations. Our goal is to instill a love of learning in each child who attends The Temple Preschool. In addition to ongoing emergent projects, teachers provoke children’s interest through the presentation of natural and open-ended materials, as well as through books, songs and other experiences. Children may explore and express their creativity through paint, drawing, clay and other media. Through hands-on experiences children build their own knowledge and develop their own theories, giving them ownership and pride in their learning. Each classroom is unique, with curriculum threads and projects pursued each year based on the interests of the children in that group. As interests are followed, teachers carefully integrate and weave in developmental goals, explor-

ing concepts of literacy, science, math, art, and movement through their investigations with the children. Corye Nelson, director, has a B.S. in early childhood administration from Belmont University and has many years of experience in early childhood administration. Through a hands-on approach, she works to promote a child-centered and child-directed philosophy in a center that is rich in play-based learning. We are fortunate to have an Advisory Committee that helps set policies for the Preschool and gives advice in all aspects. Our parent committee is an integral part of our program and supports the school by fundraising and planning fun family events. We would like to extend a warm welcome to the Jewish community and invite you and your child to learn and grow with us! c

The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 25


Organizations ADOPTION JOURNEYS: A Program of Jewish Family Service Contact: Teri R. Sogol, LCSW, Casework Director, or Toni L. Jacobsen, LCSW, Adoption Supervisor 801 Percy Warner Blvd., Suite 103 Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 356-4234 Fax: (615) 301-0676

E-mail: info@jfsnashville.org www.jfsnashville.org

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ewish Family Service is a Tennessee-licensed adoption agency. Our adoption program, Adoption Journeys, provides confidential, professional services to prospective adoptive parents, adoptees and birthparents without regard to race, religion, marital status or sexual orientation. Whether a prospective adoptive parent is seeking a child domestically or internationally, independently or

Go Beyond your expectations Come to Harpeth Hall!

Surround yyour ddaughter a ght with ithh excellence ll everyday y y... yday individualized learning, exceptional faculty, innovative curriculum supportive and safe environment The Harpeth Hall School t 3801 Hobbs Road t Nashville, TN t 615-297-9543 www.harpethhall.org Limited bus service available t Financial aid available

26 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

through an agency, JFS can provide the required education, preparation, home studies and post-placement services. We maintain relationships with domestic and international placing agencies across the country. We are partners with two of the largest and most respected international placing agencies in the country, Children’s Home Society and Family Services in St. Paul, Minn., and Holt International in Eugene, Ore. However, we will work with any licensed international placing agency our clients choose. Our services are available not only during the adoption process but throughout the life cycle of the adoptive family. JFS does not provide placement services for expectant parents but does offer counseling to enable them to examine the available options in order to make a decision that is in their, and their child’s, best interest. Such counseling may also be offered to support them through the placement process and to address issues of grief and loss post-placement. If

the expectant parent decides to make an adoption plan, Jewish Family Service will provide referrals to a list of licensed adoption agencies and attorneys within the Middle Tennessee area. Jewish prospective adoptive families may be eligible for adoption loans through the Earl Kirshner Free Loan Program. Contact Jewish Family Service for additional information about this program.

AIPAC – The American Israel Public Affairs Committee, America’s Pro-Israel Lobby Southeast Regional Office 980 Hammond Drive, Suite 775 Atlanta, Ga. 30328 (770) 541-7610 www.aipac.org AIPAC regional contacts: Elliott Mendes, Southeast Regional Director, emendes@aipac.org

Thanks, Nashville ... For voting us Best Mediterranean Restaurant for 2004, 2005 & 2006 We think the world of you, too! Mon-Thurs 11-8pm • Fri & Sat 11-9pm Closed Sunday • BYOB Green Hills • 3764 Hillsboro Road, Phone: 383-8700 • Fax: 383-8788


O R G A N I Z AT I O N S Kate Samuels, Southern States Area Director, ksamuels@aipac.org Jeff Stein, Southern States Leadership Management Director, jstein@aipac.org Local contacts: Michael Dobrin, michael.dobrin@comcast.net Jeff Jacobs, jjacobs@ stradishealthcare.com Andy Neuman, andy@ hmcnashville.com Jeremy Werthan, Jeremy@werthangranite.com Political contacts: Sharon Bell, sharonb@foursquared.com Fred Zimmerman, fredz@foursquared.com

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IPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, is the only American organization whose sole mission is to lobby the U.S. government about legislation that strengthens the relationship between the United States and Israel. AIPAC is not a political action committee and does not rate or endorse candidates. AIPAC is a proIsrael, bipartisan lobbying organization. More than 100,000 citizens from across the country work with AIPAC staff to strengthen the bonds between the United States and Israel. AIPAC members in all 50 states are encouraged to be politically active and develop

relationships with their members of Congress to help educate them about the importance of U.S.-Israel ties. While building support in Washington is essential, AIPAC is found wherever the future of the U.S.-Israel relationship could be affected. AIPAC has a network of 10 regional offices and seven satellite offices that help pro-Israel activists from Missoula to Miami learn how they can affect Israel’s future and security by promoting strong ties with the United States. Pro-Israel advocacy and strengthening the U.S.-Israel relationship is a cause that concerns a broad spectrum of Americans. AIPAC professionals work with synagogues and churches to promote pro-Israel advocacy throughout their congregations. African American and Hispanic leaders work with AIPAC staff and their members of Congress to ensure that America supports our ally in the Middle East. AIPAC also works on hundreds of college and high school campuses, empowering and educating student activists to answer Israel’s detractors and how to use political involvement to build support for Israel. AIPAC empowers pro-Israel activists across all ages, religions and races to be politically engaged and build relationships with members of Congress from both sides of the aisle to promote the U.S.-Israel relationship. Continued on page 28

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The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 27


O R G A N I Z AT I O N S Continued from page 27

For more information or to learn how you can get involved, please call our local office at (770) 541-7610.

B’nai B’rith Couples and Social Unit President: Larry Goldberg (615) 661-5148 Lgetal@msn.com

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ur chapter was founded in 1994 as a social group for active couples who are about to be or are already empty nesters. Our chapter has served as a model for other like-minded B’nai B’rith groups around the country who are driven to promote friendship, social awareness and fellowship while conforming to the values of Judaism and the mission of B’nai B’rith. Our membership is highly involved in a wide range of activities, such as relocation advice and recommendations for everything in the Nashville Jewish community; delivering Meals on Wheels, theater nights and monthly social

events which have included our annual summer picnic, dinner get-togethers, game days, musical events, unique Jewish education programs, and our end-of-the-year December 24th Theme Party. We look forward to welcoming new members to our chapter whether they are newcomers to Nashville or longer-term residents of our community. For further information, please call Joyce Fox at 615661-9499 or Larry Goldberg at 615-661-5148.

B’nai B’rith Maimonides Lodge #46 Treasurer: Michael Gryll (615) 352-7070 nashgryll@comcast.net

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’nai B’rith Maimonides Lodge #46 is the oldest chartered Jewish organization in Nashville. First founded in the fall of 1863 during the Civil War, the Lodge continues an outstanding record of brotherhood and benevolence. Lodges are established all over the world. In 2013, the Lodge is

going to have a celebration of the 150th anniversary for members and guests. The Lodge has committed to assisting the visually impaired children of Nashville and the surrounding area since 1971 by establishing and running for 38 years the Mary and Harry Zimmerman Camp for Visually Impaired Children and is committed to continuing support to visually impaired children by sponsoring the Braille Challenge at the Tennessee School for the Blind and partnering with the school’s summer camp program. As part of community outreach, brunches throughout the year provide interesting speakers. The Lodge held its 42nd annual Cohens and Kelleys night, an interfaith dinner cochaired with the Knights of Columbus that was held at the Cathedral of the Incarnation. Rudy Kalis was the guest speaker. The Lodge is also working with Jewish Family Service by helping to meet the many needs of our local visually impaired with products that will enhance their lives. Maimonides Lodge is very proud of the programs and projects that have stood the test of time. The Lodge continues to research and apply methods to recruit and retain membership to meet today’s busy lifestyles. Join the oldest chartered Jewish organization in Nashville, founded in the phi-

losophy of Benevolence, Brotherly Love, and Harmony. For more information or questions concerning membership and programs, please contact Mike Gryll.

Genesis Campus for Jewish Life Chabad of Nashville Rabbi Yitzchok Tiechtel, Executive Director Tommy Bernard, President 95 Bellevue Road, Nashville, TN 37221 (615) 646-5750 chabadnashville@gmail.com www.chabadnashville.com

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ooking for a connection, for meaning in the everyday, for joy in our tradition? Chabad of Nashville has what you’re seeking. We welcome you regardless of affiliation, perspectives on Judaism or levels of observance, whether you’re just starting your journey for spirituality, or seeking to renew your commitment to Judaism in a judgmentfree environment. Chabad of Nashville is delighted at the completion of the Genesis Campus for Jewish Life in Bellevue, built on nine wooded acres. The facility boasts a Jerusalem-like entrance; hip new Kosher Café,

One City All People Your Resource for Community Education and Engagement x Diversity & Culture x Workplace Inclusion & Equal Opportunity x Civil & Human Rights Learn more at: www.nashville.gov/humanrelations Email: mhrc@nashville.gov Phone: 615.880.3370 Connect with us on

facebook.com/NashMHRC

28 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

Passover brings friends and families together for Seder at the Genesis Center for Jewish Life. PHOTO: RICK MALKIN


O R G A N I Z AT I O N S

Pizza, pasta, wraps and salads - there's something for everyone at Thyme Cafe, the new kosher cafe at the Genesis Center.

“Thyme Café;” state-of-the-art Mikvah; sanctuary with soaring floor-to-ceiling windows; oak library for Torah study; magnificent ballroom with outdoor patio for lifecycle and communal events; two Shabbat guest suites; child-friendly classrooms for summer camp and Hebrew School; two full commercial kosher kitchens, and meditation courtyard. It’s a true Lighthouse of Judaism. Chabad offers services for people of all ages. Our philosophy is based on the work and wisdom of the Rebbe, who taught us to teach and care for every single person, for every individual is important and can have a positive effect on this world. Chabad publishes Nashville’s Jewish art calendar. Holiday programs include The Shofar Factory, Family SukkahFest, and Purim celebrations. We ignite Jewish pride with the lighting of public Chanukah Menorahs at the State Capitol and around Nashville, and host community Passover Seders. With the GJCC we have co-sponsored a Kosherfest Food Show, with a Model Matzah Bakery. Educational programs include the Jewish Learning Institute, Lunch N’ Learn sessions for businesspeople, Atara Women’s Group, and Torah To Go, tailored to level of study and interest in Judaism. There’s also Shabbat-ToGo, Glatt Kosher Take-Out Shabbat meals by order, and Shabbat Bed and Breakfast getaway suites (“The ChallahDay

Inn,”) that include lodging and delicious Shabbat meals. Call our office about these new services. We publish the Jewish Holiday Times and the weekly e-magazine “eTorah” (sign to receive at rabbi@chabadnashville.com). We host the web site www.chabadnashville.com. We assist Jewish prison inmates and families in the military services. Call, e-mail, join a program, and become a link to the future. We look forward to seeing you soon. At Chabad of Nashville it’s “Judaism Done Joyfully.”

Chabad Jewish Student Center at Vanderbilt University Rabbi Shlomo & Nechama Rothstein, Co-Directors 111 23rd Avenue North Nashville, TN 37203 (615) 686-3905 www.chabadatvanderbilt.org

Chabad-on-Campus International and Chabad CJA of Nashville, Rabbi Shlomo and Nechama Rothstein opened Chabad Jewish Student Center in December 2007. Since then, hundreds of students have benefited from Chabad’s programs, classes, and the genuine warmth of the Rothsteins. Rabbi Shlomo is a Chaplain with Vanderbilt’s Office of Religious Life and offers counseling and guidance. For many students, just having a personal Rabbi or Rebbetzin in their life, that they know is there for them for whatever they need, is very significant. At college, students are exposed to new ideas and experiences; Chabad seeks to provide resources that students graduate as stronger and more empowered Jews than when they entered. There are social events, joyous holiday celebra-

tions, women’s groups, and lively Shabbat meals with something for everyone to enjoy and take part of. We encourage students to take ownership of their experience and take an active role, empowering them as Jewish leaders on campus. Through unique classes and discussions taught by the Rabbi and Rebbetzin, hands-on programming and Jewish Awareness tables, there are a variety of opportunities to take part in to develop a deeper appreciation of our rich heritage. Chabad offers retreats such as Mayanot Taglit-Birthright Israel, Israelinks and the National Jewish Student Shabbaton in New York. For more information, please contact Chabad Jewish Student Center at Vanderbilt (615) 739-6019. Continued on page 30

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habad at Vanderbilt isn’t simply another organization; it’s a family that opens their doors and hearts to every Jewish student, being always available and accessible. Chabad is dedicated to engaging every Jew, regardless of background, affiliation, or personal level of observance, and providing a place where they can grow as individuals and resources to help increase their level of Jewish knowledge, enthusiasm, and commitment. Chabad’s warm atmosphere makes it every ’Dore’s Jewish “home away from home” on campus. Full-service Chabad Jewish Student Centers are found on over 130 campuses worldwide, with community Chabad organizations providing hundreds of other campuses with Jewish resources. Under the auspices of The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 29


O R G A N I Z AT I O N S Continued from page 29

GJCC Adults of All Ages Coordinator: Meryl Kraft 801 Percy Warner Blvd. Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 356-7170, ext. 223 meryl@nashvillejcc.org www.nashvillejcc.org

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dult Education Series for ALL Ages: The Adult Educational/ Discussion series expands each year and includes a very popular five months of adult Classes. The 2013 series kicked off with a talk by Mayor Karl Dean on Martin Luther King Day. Additional classes and events will include sessions in Events, Art & Crafts; Fashion; Food & Wine; Gardening & Social Responsibility; Health, Wellness, & Fitness; History, Politics, & Travel; Investing; Music & Theater; Social Media; Cards & Games; Writing, Recording, & Literature; and Thank Goodness It’s Thursday for the 65-plus crowd. If you want it, just suggest it; we’ll offer it. Between January and May of last year more than 1,000 folks participated in our classes. This series is funded by the Sol Stern and Rose Stern Adult Education Fund, the Leah Rose Werthan Designated Fund of the Jewish Foundation of the Jewish Federation, The

Jewish Federation, The Meryl Kraft Discretionary Fund, and the GJCC Nourish Your Mind Fund. Adult Summer Camp, Fall Classes and Ongoing Classes: Summer Camp for Adults and Teens celebrated its fourth season last summer. We also offer a small group of fall classes that includes mah jongg, computer classes, health and wellness, writing and others. Ongoing weekly classes include knitting, bridge, mah jongg, poker and oil painting. And, if you like to read, the GJCC Book Club meets monthly. Adult Health and Wellness: There is also a series of lectures presented by St. Thomas Health Services. A few of the topics have included run/walk well, eat well, stroke prevention, memory and enhancing the power of the brain, and sleep well. Watch for more!

GJCC Adults Over 65 The Prime Time Group Coordinator: Meryl Kraft 801 Percy Warner Blvd. Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 356-7170, ext. 223 meryl@nashvillejcc.org www.nashvillejcc.org

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30 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

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he most welcoming group at the GJCC is The Prime Time Group for active senior adults. They host a huge variety of activities including monthly dinners with interesting programs; monthly meetings; day and overnight trips; parties, brunches and lunches; monthly casino day trips; overnight casino trips; holiday programs; varied classes; cultural events including plays and the TPAC Broadway series; concerts; potluck dinners with original entertainment; and opportunities for group participation in community events. The Prime Time group also hosts a yearly retreat or trip. If you missed “Amish, Hippies, Diners and Wine” and “Trains, Boats and the Highlights of Chattanooga,” watch for another trip in 2013. Prime Time activities attract groups of 25-150 individuals at each of the many programs during the year. Health and Wellness is of the utmost importance to us all. The “Nourish Your Body” series for the 65-plus crowd began two years ago and speakers touched on topics ranging from keeping your mind young to over-the-counter medications to heart health. TGIT (Thank Goodness It’s Thursday): For more than 63 years, we have had a blast at the GJCC on Thursdays. The Golden Age Club met every Thursday. The group has now been replaced by a new program, TGIT. Up to 70 folks participate in a blood pressure check with a nurse, an exercise class, have a delicious lunch underwritten by a generous grant from the Jewish Federation of Nashville and Middle Tennessee, and enjoy an exciting program. Upcoming programs include Broadway Show Tunes and Theater Dance, The New Face of Jewish Family Service, Victory over Crime, Tu

B’Shevat Seder, Music with Sheldon Kahane, A Virtual Tour of Jewish Nashville with Jean Roseman, Love & Music with Lisa Webb and Carole Shaw, Purim Party with Howard Pink, Survival Tips for Seniors, I Didn’t Know That with Karlen Evans, The Changing Weather with Barak Shapiro, Israeli Day, Cuba: A talk by Federation Executive Director Mark Freedman, CURB Symphony Dress Rehearsal, Chopped and Diced, Memorial Day Commemoration, and Music with Dennis Scott. And … we do great things at the GJCC so tell your family and friends because YOU BELONG HERE!

Hadassah Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America Nashville Chapter President: Victoria Cohen-Crumpton President Elect and VP Education/Programming: Leslie J. Klein Immediate Past President: Jill Melody Pankowsky nashvillehadassah@yahoo.com www.nashville.hadassah.org Nashville Chapter Associates Chair: Mike Gryll, (615) 352-7070, nashgryll@comcast.net

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n February 14, 1912, seven women including Henrietta Szold organized the first meeting of what was then called The Daughters of Zion. This became Hadassah, which now includes 300,000 members (the largest Jewish and volunteer organization in the U.S.). The hub of Hadassah is in Israel, where the Hadassah Medical Organization is a world leader in research and health care. The Hadassah College Jerusalem provides educational


O R G A N I Z AT I O N S

Nashville Hadassah Executive Board (The Pink Ladies) Pose With 2012 Donor Honoree Lee Gryll (center, seated) at the Hadassah Happy Days Sock Hop.

opportunities for many young Israelis who would normally not have a college education. Hadassah’s Kibbutz Ketura is part of the Green Kibbutz movement and does environmental research. The HadassahNeurim Youth Village provides educational opportunities for gifted students from underprivi-

leged homes. Hadassah International has groups on five continents, enhances the image of Israel through the work of the HMO and serves as a bridge to the nations through medicine. In the U.S., Hadassah assists Young Judaea with its camping and youth educa-

tional opportunities, including the well-attended Year Course in Israel. Hadassah Associates (men) began in 1996 to involve men and identify new sources of funds to support Hadassah’s initiatives. Our Associates are a vital part of Nashville Hadassah. Our Nashville chapter of 150 Associates and more than 800 women offers many programming and volunteer opportunities. Some of our events include: • Annual Sukkah Party • Hadassah Happy Days Donor Sock Hop Honoring Lee Gryll • Monthly Study Group • Holiday Gift Wrap • Simply Social • Hadassah Shabbat Celebration and Dinner • Healthy, Wealthy, Beautiful and Wise Series • Men’s Poker Tournament • Young Women’s Girls Night

Out Call or e-mail if you’d like to attend any of our events. Let us know if you are new to our community so we can offer you a ride and an introduction to our friendly, fun group.

Jmingle 801 Percy Warner Blvd., Suite 102 Nashville, TN 37205 Contact: Joel Abramson joel@jewishnashville.org Telephone: (615) 354-1650 Fax: (615) 352-0056 www.jmingle.org Facebook Group: Jmingle

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mingle is a partnership between The Temple, Vanderbilt Hillel graduate student organizations, and The Jewish Federation to welcome and foster the community for Jews ages 22 - 35. We seek to Continued on page 32

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O R G A N I Z AT I O N S Continued from page 31

create a strong, active, and vibrant community through a diverse array of social activities, holiday events, and community service. Jmingle is a great way to get connected to a vibrant Nashville scene and make a lot of amazing friends. Trivia nights, happy hours, and of course, the annual Rosh Bash, are just a few of the popular programs offered. Don't hesitate to check out Jmingle, and connect with us!

J Street Nashville Co-chairs: Ruth and Bill Smith P.O. Box 58525 Nashville, TN 37205 nashville@jstreet.org www.Jstreet.org/nashville

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Street Nashville is the local organization of J Street, a national political organization. J Street is the political home for pro-Israel, pro-peace Americans. The organization gives political voice to main-

stream American Jews and other supporters of Israel who, informed by their progressive and Jewish values, believe that a two-state solution to the IsraeliPalestinian conflict is essential to Israel’s survival as the national home of the Jewish people and as a vibrant democracy. J Street’s mission is twofold: first, to advocate for urgent American diplomatic leadership to achieve a twostate solution and a broader, regional, comprehensive peace; and second, to ensure a broad debate on Israel and the Middle East in national politics and the American Jewish Community. J Street Nashville offers a variety of educational activities and opportunities, such as nationally and internationally recognized speakers presentations, which are open to the public, smaller group presentations on various topic relating to American Jewish concerns regarding Israel, and presentations on topics relating to Israel and the Middle East. If interested to know more or to join, please go to www.Jstreet.org/nashville.

Nashville Jewish Film Festival Managing Director: Fran Brumlik Co-directors: Laurie Eskind Jackie Karr Cindy Moskovitz Loretta Saff 801 Percy Warner Blvd. Nashville, Tennessee 37205 (615) 356-7170 www.njff.org nashvillejewishfilmfest@ gmail.com

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he Nashville Jewish Film Festival is a program of the Gordon Jewish Community Center. In 2013 the NJFF will celebrate its 13th year of bringing educational, entertaining and thought-provoking Jewish-themed films to the historic Belcourt Theatre in Nashville. This year, the NJFF will host its opening night on Nov. 6 and its closing night on Nov. 14. A schedule of screenings will be available as details are confirmed. The NJFF aims to create a forum for the wider Nashville community to understand the complexity of issues surrounding Jewish life in contemporary society. The films chosen each year are meant to demonstrate the breadth and depth of the Jewish cultural, religious, historical, and social conditions of the modern era. Along with special guests, panels, and Opening and Closing Night celebrations, the NJFF is an annual event dedicated to the awareness and cele-

bration of Jewish life in contemporary society. Each year NJFF presents the Annual Kathryn H. Gutow Student Film Competition. Originating in 2005 and named in memory of the co-founder of the festival, the competition features student films with Jewish themes or content from campuses around the world. Student filmmakers are eligible for a $1,000 cash prize made possible by the Kathryn H. Gutow Fund for Jewish Arts and Culture and Creative Artists Agency (CAA). Student film competition finalists will be screened during film festival. The winning film will also be screened at the Nashville Film Festival in spring 2014.

The Nashville Israeli Folk Dancers Contact: Sharon Morrow (615) 662-4881 (615) 312-9019 days smorrow@wswcpasnashville. com www.vanderbilt.edu/israeli dance

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he Nashville Israeli Folk Dance Group was started in 1993 by a small group of amateur folk dance enthusiasts. It is modeled after groups found in every major city in the world where folks of all ages and cultures get together regularly to dance Israeli folk dances. Since Israel’s popula-

See what’s happening in the community. Go to www.jewishnashville.org 32 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013


O R G A N I Z AT I O N S tion is the result of an ingathering of many different nationalities, its folk dance repertoire is truly international. Dance styles include: Spanish, Chassidic, Moroccan, Yemenite, Greek, and even disco and rock. The Nashville group has flourished with weekly dance sessions, courses for beginners, workshops with renowned instructors from Israel, community outreach, parties, and performances. In Nashville, Israeli dancing means great music and exercise among the friendliest people in town! Weekly dance sessions are Thursday nights at the Ben Schulman Center for Jewish Life at Vanderbilt University. The first hour, 7:30-8:30 p.m., is devoted to beginning dance, and from 8:30-10 p.m. we have teaching of intermediate/ advanced dances and request dancing. If you would like to be on our mailing list to receive notices of upcoming events (including special beginners courses and

dance workshops), or if you have any questions about our group, please contact us. There are special dance workshops featuring dance instructors from Israel. Check our web site for upcoming workshops.

National Conference on Jewish Affairs Contacts: Michael Dobrin, Daniel Bregman, Harvey Eisen, Alan Kaufer, Jill Melody, Tomer Minuskin http://ncjausa.org/ ncjanashville@gmail.com PO Box 210981 Nashville, TN 37221

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he National Conference on Jewish Affairs is dedicated to supporting the rights and safety of the Jewish people in America, in Israel and around the world under the

Rule of Law by providing strong Jewish leadership to respond to and counter the growing, orchestrated demonizing of Israel, Jewry, and America. An umbrella organization uniting active Jewish leaders and groups across America, NCJA was formed to give voice to those who want to express support for and act on behalf of justice for Jews, Israel and Zionism. NCJA asserts the right of the Jewish people to the Land of Israel based on history, religion and international law. NCJA demands an end to the funding of the culture of hate, which sabotages the development of a true and lasting peace in the Middle East. NCJA works with likeminded Americans who share our commitment to defend our country and our people, recognizing that a strong America means a strong Israel, an America proud of its

liberty means a strong example to the world. NCJA supports, through action and assistance, Jewish students on campus. NCJA focuses on defending the individual rights of students and faculty to study, pursue research, articulate arguments and learn in an open intellectual, environment, free of physical and intellectual intimidation. NCJA comes to the defense of Jews who, because of their strong Jewish identity or beliefs, are being attacked from within or from without. NCJA works for the security of the United States and to protect the U.S. Constitution. NCJA promotes historic American values that have been under assault from academia and in the media. NCJA restores the pride and moral confidence of those Jews proud of their JewishAmerican heritage. Continued on page 34

Join the Tradition

FOUR GENERATIONS • 85 YEARS OF SERVICE

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615-356-1700 • 800-356-4282

www.zanderinsurance.com The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 33


O R G A N I Z AT I O N S Continued from page 33

National Council of Jewish Women, Nashville Chapter Officers: Acting President – La Quita Martin Treasurer - Mary Jones Recording Secretary Freya Sachs Corresponding Secretary Jamie Brook 801 Percy Warner Blvd. (615) 352-7057 nashvillencjw.org

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he National Council of Jewish Women is a volunteer organization, inspired by Jewish values, that works through a program of research, education, advocacy and community service, to improve the quality of life for women, children and families and strives to ensure individual rights and freedoms for all. Nationally, inspired by Jewish values, NCJW courageously takes a progressive stance on issues such as child welfare, women’s rights, and reproductive freedom. The Nashville Chapter is pleased to join in the education and advocacy efforts in support of NCJW’s Plan A – Campaign for Contraceptive Access, which educates and empowers individuals to advocate for women’s universal access to contraceptive information and

health services. Please contact one of the local officers if you’re interested in working with us to help secure and protect access to contraceptive information and health services for all. Locally, NCJW’s 600-plus members continue their involvement in service to the community. Members can volunteer in a number of ways, and some of the programs NCJA currently supports are: • Buz-A-Bus – transportation for our community’s seniors; • CASA – Court Appointed Special Advocates for Children; • Jewish Family Service Kosher Food Box - Food for families in the Jewish community; • Mary Parrish Center – Residence for victims of domestic and sexual violence; • P.G. 13 Players – Program that combines peer education with theater to help young people deal with teen issues; • REACH FOR SURVIVORSHIP Cancer Survivorship Program – The Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt and Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center have developed a cancer survivorship program for children and adults. • Renewal House – Nashville’s first, largest, and most comprehensive long-term recovery community for women with substance-use addictions and their children; • Scholarship Loan – No-

Bobbie Limor Catering Bobbie Limor has unique and varied menus to help you plan your special occasion. Her client-friendly service will help assure the success of your simcha. In addition, Bobbie can help with flowers and linens. Trust your event to Bobbie from a Simple Kiddush, Bar/Bat Mitzvah Luncheon, Wedding or Elegant Multi-course Banquet.

356-4045 34 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

NowGen members gather together over a glass of wine.

interest loans for undergraduate and graduate students; • Senior Friends - Delivery of Rosh Hashanah traditional food items to community seniors; • Snack Box Program- For area children attending the Sexual Abuse Clinic; and • Vanderbilt Hillel Shabbat Dinner If you are interested in becoming a member of NCJW, please contact one of our officers.

philanthropic, community service, and professional development events, we are dedicated to helping make Nashville a meaningful place for you. Events include the Purim Masquerade, Mitzvah Madness, the New 2 Nashville Social, Torah on Tap, Potluck Shabbats, and Leadership Development Seminars. We are dedicated to supporting the Jewish community both here in Nashville in Israel, and around the world. It is our turn, it is our time. Join us as we look to lead the way.

NowGen Nashville Contact: Joel Abramson joel@jewishnashville.org 801 Percy Warner Blvd., Suite 102 Nashville, TN 37205 Telephone: (615) 354-1650 Fax: (615) 352-0056 nowgennashville.org Twitter:nowgennashville Facebook Group: NowGen Nashville

Publisher: Mark S. Freedman (615) 354-1660 Editor: Kathy Carlson (615) 354-1653 kathy@jewishnashville.org Advertising Manager: Carrie Mills (615) 354-1699 carrie@nashvillejcc.org

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801 Percy Warner Blvd., Suite 102 Nashville, TN 37205 Fax: (615) 352-0056 jewishobservernashville.org

owGen Nashville is the Jewish group for young professionals in their twenties and thirties. The Nashville Jewish Federation, in partnership with the area's Jewish community and organizations, has helped establish NowGen Nashville so these young professionals can enhance their engagement in the community. With a wide variety of social, networking,

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he Observer is your source for what’s going on in the Nashville Jewish community, from major events to B’nai Mitzvah, from organization meetings to High Holiday service schedules. We also publish national


O R G A N I Z AT I O N S and international news, articles on Israel and opinions from renowned scholars, rabbis and Jewish leaders. You also have the opportunity to express your opinion in letters to the editor or opinion articles. Founded in 1934, the Observer was in private hands until its purchase in 1985 by the Jewish Federation. The Observer is the only Jewish newspaper published in Middle Tennessee. It’s available in print, delivered to your mailbox, and now online at jewishobservernashville.org. Jewish organizations understand that the best means to reach all Jews in Nashville and Middle Tennessee is through the Observer. As a community newspaper, we respond to our readers’ needs and interests. Articles and clear digital photographs may be submitted by email to the editor for consideration for publication. If you have story ideas about peo-

ple or events in the community, please let us know. The Observer subscribes to the JTA for national and international news and feature articles. We belong to the American Jewish Press Association. National and local advertisers utilize the Observer to reach prospective customers and clients. To advertise in the Observer, contact Carrie Mills at carrie@nashvillejcc.org. An annual Observer Patron Campaign enables readers to express their support of the newspaper through financial contributions. We are grateful for everyone’s support. Special editions are published for Rosh Hashanah, Chanukah and Passover. Additionally, we publish a Simchas (celebrations) supplement to help people plan special Jewish family events, as well as special Dining Out and Health and Beauty sections.

There are special topics for the remaining months of the year. This annual Guide to Jewish Nashville is the only comprehensive compilation of all the organizations and services available to our Jewish community. Each organization submits its own information for the Guide. In addition to regular subscribers, the Guide is distributed to newcomers and those contemplating a move to Nashville. It is also distributed at local businesses, the GJCC and our Jewish congregations.

PJ Library® Coordinator: Melissa Sostrin 801 Percy Warner Blvd. Nashville, TN 37205 pjlibrary@nashvillejcc.org

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here is a library based in Western Massachusetts that you don’t visit; it comes to you. The PJ Library is a program of the Harold

Grinspoon Foundation in partnership with local Jewish communities. Its goal is to support the Jewish journeys of families raising young children. Knowing that families read together in the quiet moments before bedtime, when kids are in their PJs and getting ready for sleep, the program’s founders thought, “Why not make those moments Jewish moments?” The PJ Library program mails free, high-quality Jewish children’s books and music to families on a monthly basis, helping them explore the timeless core values of Judaism. All The PJ Library families share a desire to give their children a taste of Judaism in the comfort of their own homes. The PJ Library enables each family to do just that. Today, more than 70,000 children in more than 136 communities in the United States and Canada receive the Continued on page 36

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The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 35


O R G A N I Z AT I O N S Continued from page 35

gift of The PJ Library experience. By partnering with local Jewish organizations, the Harold Grinspoon Foundation makes The PJ Library not only possible, but free! In Nashville and Middle Tennessee, The PJ Library is open to families that are raising Jewish children ages six months to eight years. This year, with the help of our community shlicha, Hadar Moskovitz, we’ve begun Sifriyat Pijama, which is PJ Library in Hebrew and for children with at least one Hebrewspeaking parent. The PJ Library and its partners – the Jewish Federation of Nashville and Middle Tennessee, the Gordon JCC Early Childhood Learning Center, Micah Children’s Academy and the Temple Preschool – serve hundreds of families and promote Jewish literacy and education for generations to come.

For more information, please contact us or visit pjlibrary.org/communities/Nashville .

Republican Jewish Coalition Contacts: David Cooper davidscooper@yahoo.com Bob Brod (615) 305-8204

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he Republican Jewish Coalition is the wellrespected representative of the Jewish community to Republican elected officials and party leaders and is the pre-eminent Republican organization in the Jewish community. The Republican Jewish Coalition, founded in 1985, is the sole voice of Jewish Republicans to Republican decision makers and the Jewish community, expressing our viewpoint on a wide

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variety of issues. We work to sensitize Republican leadership in government and the party to the concerns and issues of the Jewish community, while articulating and advocating Republican ideas and policies within the Jewish community. Our Nashville chapter is led by David Cooper and Bob Brod. They can be reached at (615) 305-8204.

Sherith Israel Sisterhood 3600 West End Avenue Nashville, TN 37205 615/292-6614 President: Rose Ann Ellis

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ome join us at Sisterhood as we discover our Jewish paths together. If asked, in a word, to best describe the work of the women at Sherith Israel’s Sisterhood, the answer would be chesed. Expertly modeled by our mentor, Rebbetzin Risya Posner, of blessed memory, chesed – or loving acts of goodness and kindness, is what Sisterhood strives to achieve. In our mentor’s memory, we have established The Rebbetzin Posner Fund for Acts of Goodness and Kindness. The proceeds are used for assisting those in need, for Shabbos hospitality, for kosher food to mourners and the families of the ill, for women’s Torah Shabbatons and lecture series and mikvah education. Our young Rebbetzin, Daniella Pressner, skillfully continues the legacy with weekly women’s Torah studies and with young ladies’ bat mitzvah classes. If asked the mission of Sherith Israel Sisterhood, we would answer: to support Jewish family living. Sisterhood educates women on the tremendous power, value and

influence we all possess. Because the Jewish home can be considered the single, most influential space in the world since the destruction of the Temples, we strive to learn Torah principles that elevate our individual and family lives – ultimately radiating out to the community – with the goal of bringing more light into our small corner of the world. Most of our Torah study takes place at Shul. The sessions provide ideas for creating and for enhancing a Jewish home and for finding answers to the challenges families face in today’s non-family oriented world. If asked what programs and processes we offer, the reply? We oversee the Shul’s mikvah and maintain two kosher kitchens. Our Sisterhood-sponsored Chanukah Latke Supper has become a community tradition. We support our cheder (religious school) and sponsor the Purim Seudah and Sukkah Jamboree. If asked what we, at the Sherith Israel Sisterhood, are yearning for, we would respond: continual Torah learning and growth in chesed and spirituality, in order to improve our lives, to give to our families and to serve our community. Come join us as we explore our Jewish paths together.

Tennessee Holocaust Commission Commission Chair: Allen Exelbierd Executive Director: Danielle Kahane-Kaminsky 2417 West End Ave. Nashville, TN 37240 (615) 343-2563 danielle.kahane-kaminsky@ vanderbilt.edu www.tennesseeholocaust commission.org Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” – George Santayana


O R G A N I Z AT I O N S

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ne of the oldest and most recognized commissions of its kind in the United States, the Tennessee Holocaust Commission was formed in 1984 to educate about and commemorate the Holocaust. We provide seminars, educational resources, workshops, traveling exhibits and commemorations to school systems and communities statewide. The THC creates awareness of the Holocaust to fight prejudice and to encourage tolerance and understanding among all people. Our current programs include: • Educator programs; • Teacher workshops and fellowships; • Customized classroom resources; • Holocaust loaned literature; • Educational outreach; • Trips to U.S. Holocaust Museum; • Trips to primary Holocaust sites in Europe; • Belz-Lipman Holocaust Educator of the Year Award; • Adult workshops; • Speakers bureau; • Annual Days of Remembrance commemorations; • “Living On” multimedia exhibition featuring Tennessee survivors and liberators; and • Traveling exhibits.

Vanderbilt Hillel Ben Schulman Center for Jewish Life at Vanderbilt University Vanderbilt Hillel Executive Board President: Cynthia Morin Executive Director: Ari Dubin

2421 Vanderbilt Place Nashville, TN 37235 Direct Line: (615) 322-5042 Main Line: (615) 322-8376 Fax: (615) 322-7286 ari.dubin@vanderbilt.edu www.vanderbilt.edu/hillel/

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anderbilt Hillel is the center for Jewish life on campus. Our students, staff, and the entire community are dedicated to providing a strong, supportive environment for Jewish students and maintaining a strong Jewish presence on the Vanderbilt University campus. Hillel actively seeks to engage uninvolved Jewish students on their own terms: to provide them with opportunities to do Jewish activities that are meaningful and appealing to them. Students are empowered to take responsibility for their Jewish identity, whether they wish to participate in a community service project, express themselves artistically, participate in a social event, engage in informal Jewish learning or attend religious services. Any Jewish student may participate in Hillel. The Vanderbilt Jewish community contains a diverse spectrum of Jews, and we strive to provide a home away from home for every student. With the founding of the 10,000square-foot Ben Schulman Center for Jewish Life, the establishment of a Jewish Studies program, the creation of a kosher, vegetarian cafe, and the hiring of program staff, we have seen a dramatic increase in the number of Jews attending this school. Since 2008, Vanderbilt’s Jewish student population has topped 1,000 students, approximately 15 percent of the undergraduate population. This is a far cry from the 3 percent levels seen just a few years ago. In addition to a wide range of social and cultural programs, Hillel offers students a variety

of religious activities, including: Reform, Conservative, and Orthodox services on Friday night; Kosher Shabbat dinner; High Holiday services and meals; and Passover Seders. Many of our programs are free and open to the community. For further information, please contact Vanderbilt Hillel.

West End Synagogue Men’s Club President: Steve Potash 3810 West End Ave. Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 269-4592 Fax: (615) 269-4695 office@westendsyn.org

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he WES Men’s Club was reestablished in 1990 and is affiliated with the Federation of Jewish Men’s Clubs, a branch of the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism. Men’s Club plays a vital role in synagogue life, providing social, cultural, and spiritual activities. Through your donations, Men’s Club provides scholarships and other funding for Camp Ramah Darom, and we support various synagogue programs. West End Men’s Club encourages the attendance and participation of non-Jewish spouses in our community and for them to participate fully in all of its events, including the annual retreat at Ramah Darom. WEMC also seeks to support the integration of interfaith families in West End Synagogue. This year is full of enriching events and opportunities, including Room in the Inn, building the congregational Sukkah, Yellow Candle Program observing Yom HaShoah, Passover Wine Sale, Bagels for Brotherhood and a Sounds baseball game.

The Annual Worldwide Wrap encourages people to learn how to lay tefillin and learn the morning minyan. Last year’s participation in the program exceeded 100 participants. We have an annual retreat with Anshei Darom Southeast Region Federation of Men’s Clubs at Camp Ramah Darom. This is a weekend of fun, fellowship, and spirituality. We have a great year planned! Come be a part of Men’s Club. New members to WES are invited to receive a one-year complimentary membership in Men’s Club.

West End Synagogue Sisterhood Co-Presidents: Sarah Bengelsdorf and Renee Stein, sisterhood@ westendsyn.org 3810 West End Ave. Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 269-4592 Fax: (615) 269-4695 office@westendsyn.org

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ES Sisterhood women are involved in activities that enrich our congregation, support religious education and enhance our youth programs. Members span a wide range of interests, ages, and backgrounds. The Sisterhood was founded in 1903 and affiliated with the Women’s League for Conservative Judaism (WLCJ) in 1948. New female synagogue members receive a one-year free membership in Sisterhood. WES Sisterhood helps support our religious school financially and through actions and deeds. Annually, Sisterhood helps fund enhanced school programming and hosts a first day of school brunch for religious school parents. Sisterhood prepares several Shabbat Kiddushes and Friday night Continued on page 38

The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 37


O R G A N I Z AT I O N S Continued from page 37

family dinners annually. Sisterhood supports our kosher kitchens and financially supports a Yom Kippur Break Fast meal. We help fund our two youth groups, Kadima and the United Synagogue Youth (USY), and we send packages to our college students during the school year. Sisterhood also provides babysitting throughout the High Holidays and scholarship support for children attending Camp Ramah Darom. Through the WLCJ Torah Fund project, we raise funds to support rabbinical, cantorial and Jewish educator programs at the Jewish Theological Seminary (New York), the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies (University of Judaism in Los Angeles), and the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies (Jerusalem)

2012 38 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

We operate the WES Judaica Shop, open on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons until 5:30 p.m. and on Sunday mornings during the school year. Other hours by appointment. For more information contact Helen Crowley at (615) 830-4683 Other planned special events: • Sushi in the Sukkah • Mishloach Manot (for Purim) • Torah Fund Fundraiser • Vodka & Latkes • “Affairs to Remember” – Spring Fundraising Events • WLCJ Southern Region Conference • WLCJ Leadership Workshops A Rosh Chodesh group meets several times during the year to celebrate the new month. For more information on West End Synagogue Sisterhood, contact Sarah Bengelsdorf or Renee Stein at sisterhood@westendsyn.com. c


COMMUNITY

1. 2. 3. 4.

Pro-Israel, bipartisan lobbying organization Archives, original sources Leadership development, Jewish learning Hosts twice-monthly free community Shabbat dinners 5. Mikvah, Thyme Cafe, 2 shabbat guest suites, banquet facilities 6. Community subsidized Israel trips for rising HS seniors 7. Meeting space, banquet facilities, Nashville Holocaust memorial on site, summer day camp

SERVICES

CHART

8. Develop leadership skills, work toward better Israel & US 9. Job networking; Rosh Chodesh programs for girls 10. Central coordinating, planning, budgeting and community relations agency for Nashville-area Jewish community 11. Foundation is the Federation's endowment arm, providing long-term funding for programs benefiting Nashville's Jewish community 12. Religious inspiration for teens, addressing/ providing age appropriate religious needs

13. Monthly newspaper for Nashville Jewish community 14. Provides Jewish books/music to families with young children 15. Links Jewish community, Republican party 16. Daily minyan 17. See web site for information on other services 18. Houses Grins Kosher vegetarian cafĂŠ, open to public 19. Daily minyan 20. Rosh Chodesh group meets monthly

The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 39


The Secret in the Hidden Dresser: A… solvedTruemanyNashville Mystery years later…

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his is a mystery with a happy ending. No one is harmed, although a woman goes to a morgue. There is a secret, but it’s not embarrassing or worrisome. The mystery spans two states, but the FBI didn’t work the case.

40 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013


The mystery goes back about 60 years, but things didn’t really get interesting until 2003. That year, former Nashville resident Edith Schulman and her husband, Charles, who live in Florida, packed up the grandkids and headed for Music City to show them where they grew up. One stop was Edith Schulman’s family home in a quiet West End neighborhood. The latest owners of the house, a young couple, invited them inside to look around. “I happened to mention that I was trying to write my family’s history, but had no early pictures or records,” Schulman wrote in a letter to the Observer. “She told me they planned to add on to the house. As people will do, we exchanged e-mail addresses and phone numbers.” Two months later, back in Florida, her phone rang. The owner of her childhood home told her that contractors working on the house had found an old dresser behind a wall they were tearing down. Inside the dresser were pictures, letters, and records of all kinds, the woman told her. The name on the letters was something like Lefwich. “They’re mine,” Schulman told her caller. “I wanted to jump in the car and

drive to Nashville, but cooler heads prevailed.” The owner mailed her all 27 pounds of the dresser’s contents.

I happened to mention that I was trying to write my family’s history, but had no early pictures or records. Inside the box were family photographs, records and letters, she said in a telephone interview. There also were socks – lots of them – that belonged to her brother. She guesses he stashed them in the dresser along with the family documents. The new owners found the dresser in

what used to be the attic of the house. “It’s a two-story house and the upstairs was an attic,” Schulman said. “They made my brother a bedroom and half-bath up there. His bedroom was the only thing (in the house that was) air conditioned.” To make the attic into a bedroom, paneling had been installed. The dresser ended up behind the paneling, with access through a door that had been cut into the paneling. Later, the paneling – including the door – was painted over. Everyone forgot about the dresser until building contractors discovered it. “There were a lot of real finds in there,” Schulman said. She found an unopened letter from a cousin in Canada, a postcard from a first cousin, an application her mother filled out to an insurance company for money for college. Before the dresser was found, she had hit a wall in researching her family history, she said. Now, after “perfect strangers were nice enough to send me the stuff from the dresser,” she returned to her project. It became a book she completed last December and titled “La dor V’dor – From Generation to Generation.” Continued on page 42

The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 41


The long-lost family records supplemented information she had gathered all over Nashville, including the library at The Temple, the Annette Levy Ratkin Archives of the Jewish Federation of Nashville; the Metro Courthouse and the Tennessee Library and Archives. She also worked with others in Nashville, including Annette Levy Ratkin (z�l) and Griff Haber. “Griff sent me some information from my great grandmother and her grandmother and her great grandmother. I’m really indebted to him for that.� Although much information is available online today, Schulman prefers the

Continued from page 41

“It was written for my children and my grandchildren,â€? she said. “They’re busy. ‌ They don’t have time for genealogy. I truly feel that this is something they’ll have when they need to know and they’re ready to know.â€? The book includes information on causes of death for past generations. “That’s important as my children and my grandchildren get older. ‌ I would advise anybody to put down causes of death of members of their families. I also wanted to put the ancestors and the places they lived.â€?

hands-on approach. “I wouldn’t give anything for the time I spent at the Nashville Library and the newspaper morgue (inhouse library) of the Banner, Observer and all.â€? To those wanting to write their own family history, she says, “Start at the present and work backward – don’t start with someone born in 1700. ‌ There’s a saying – don’t worry about what you can’t find –be happy with what you do find.â€? As for the dresser, she says, “When they tore the wall down – as far as I know – the dresser was destroyed. ‌ I’d rather have what was in it than the dresser.â€? c

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42 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 2012

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Youth B’nai B’rith Youth Organization BBYO Connect Sheri Rosenberg Program Associate, Nashville BBYO (615) 354-1659 sherirosenberg@bbyo.org 801 Percy Warner Blvd. Nashville, TN 37205

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re you a Jewish teen in 9th through 12th grade? Then BBYO is looking for you! (And if you’re not quite in high school, check out BBYO Connect.) BBYO is the leading pluralistic Jewish teen movement nationwide. BBYO reaches tens of thousands of Jewish teens from all over the world, from all types of Jewish backgrounds. Involvement in BBYO is open to any Jewish teen, regardless of current or previous communal and congregational affiliations. BBYO is a teen-led organization, where the teens themselves plan their own programs under the supervision of volunteer adult advisers and BBYO professional staff. For more than 85 years, BBYO has offered unique and exciting opportunities for Jewish teens to connect with one another, building friendships that can last a lifetime, while learning leadership skills that will serve them during college and into adulthood. The majority of programming occurs on the local and regional levels but many excit-

ing opportunities for travel exist nationally and internationally. BBYO also has a range of summer experiences for teens, from leadership development to Jewish learning to Israel travel, entrepreneurship, community service, and more! Most last about two weeks and need-based scholarships are available. New Member Intake is in early fall for incoming 9th graders. However, any Jewish 10th-12th grader who has not attended previously is welcome. Jewish teens can also join BBYO at any time during the year. There’s also something for younger teens and tweens. It’s called BBYO Connect and it’s for Jewish middle schoolers in grades 6 through 8. We offer fun social opportunities for Jewish middle schoolers in Nashville to get to know each other. Please let me know if you have any questions! Nashville BBYO is partially funded by the Gordon Jewish Community Center and the Jewish Federation of Nashville and Middle Tennessee.

Get Connected

11th grade? Then you need to Get Connected! Get Connected is a community program that connects Nashville teens with themselves, to Israel and to Judaism. Participation in Get Connected is open to any Jewish teenager, regardless of current or previous communal and congregational affiliation. Get Connected has three main components. The first is our Kallah or educational sessions. Our Kallah programs are taught by a professional educator. The purpose is to help the teens connect socially among themselves and to prepare

them for their journey to Israel. The second part and probably the most fun is a 14-day trip to Israel during the summer. The teens not only connect with the land of Israel but with the people through home hospitality stays (four nights). The final part of the program is hosting some of the same Israeli teens from their trip. These visits reinforce the important connections made in Israel. Here are some quotes from Get Connected alumni. “I had never felt closer to Judaism and Israel than I did at Continued on page 44

Book this unique venue for an out of this world event. Bar/Bat Mitzvah’s Wedding Receptions and Ceremonies Corporate and Fundraising Events Meetings, Luncheons and Banquets All Celebrations For information 615.401.5106

President: Andy Neuman andy@hmcnashville.com Telephone: (615) 516-9540 Fax: (615) 255-1550 www.getconnectednashville. org P.O. Box 50418 Nashville, TN 37205

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ant to go to Israel? Are you a Jewish teenager in 10th and The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 43


YOUTH

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our first Shabbat in Jerusalem and it helped me see the similarities and differences between American and Israeli Jews.� – Leah C., Temple “I had the best two weeks of my life. We all began to view the program name a little differently. Getting Connected was exactly what we did in so many ways.� – Emma D., Micah “One of the best parts of the trip was the home stay.� – Alex R., West End Synagogue Get Connected is highly subsidized through funding from the Jewish Federation of Nashville and Middle Tennessee, the Zimmerman Fund and private donations. The cost to each teen to participate is under $1,000.

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MiTY (Micah Temple Youth) members (9th – 12th grades) enjoy a variety of social and spiritual activities each year, including attending and hosting national and regional NFTY (North American Federation of Temple Youth)

The Get Connected class of 2012 drink in (not literally) the desert scenery from the side of the Dead Sea.

kallot. Locally, the youth develop social action projects, host lock-ins, and hold fundraisers to support their travel and tzedakah efforts. Students contribute to Jewish Family Services by leading an annual Shabbat worship service for seniors in assisted-living facilities. During our High Holy Days, MiTY members participate in our youth services, revealing their insights and visions as engaged young Jews. Just as importantly, they also help run programs for our youngest members, Micah MINIS, as well as host the Religious School’s annual Purim Carnival. Middle MiTY is Micah’s Junior Youth Group (6th-8th grades), which includes similarly fun activities centering on worship, social action, and team-building. Students make and sell their famous “Mensch Munch� to support their various activities as well as to fund


YOUTH their annual contributions to Tzedakah Tzunday and the Get Connected program – true philanthropists in the making. Call the Micah office for details and come see what all the fun’s about!

MTUSY/Kadima Middle Tennessee United Synagogue Youth President: Hannah E. Stein Youth Commission Chair: Helen Crowley West End Synagogue 3810 West End Avenue Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 269-4592 Fax: 269-4695 www.westendsyn.org

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he United Synagogue Youth (USY) is the official youth organization of United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism (USCJ). USY is an international organization with thousands of high school-age members. USY provides a comfortable social and educational environment for Jewish teens in Nashville, the Southeast region, the United States and throughout the world. USY strives to build meaningful relationships between its members. MTUSY is West End Synagogue’s chapter of USY and falls under the HaNegev region, which covers USY for the Southeast. HaNegev includes the following states: Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Florida and Mississippi. HaNegev is divided into 3 sub-regions; MTUSY falls under the Ein Gedi sub-region. MTUSY participates in local, sub-regional, regional and national events including

conventions, leadership training at Camp Ramah Darom and Shabbatons with sister chapters. MTUSY plans a wide variety of local events. These have included Friday night dinners, Shabbat service for USY, social action projects (e.g., Room in the Inn and High Holiday food collection), baking Hamantashen, leading services, Ein-Gedi sub-regional conventions, HaNegev Conventions, Yom Disney in Orlando, Fla. and much more. MTUSY is open to all Jewish youth in the 9th through the 12th grades. United Synagogue also has Kadima, a youth group for kids in 6th through 8th grades with lots of social, cultural and religious events. There are also regional conventions and events for this age group. If you are interested in learning more about USY or Kadima, please visit www.hanegevusy.org. You may also contact West End Synagogue at 269-4592.

NYC – Nashville Youth Chabad Adviser: Esther Tiechtel Congregation Beit Tefilah Chabad 95 Bellevue Road Nashville, TN 37221 (615) 646-5750

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he teen group “Nashville Youth Chabad” is a great social and learning group for all teens seeking to further their knowledge and connection to their Jewish heritage. Among other activities, NYC meets over Shabbat and holiday dinners as teens find a place they can celebrate and enjoy great food in the true Jewish holiday style. In the words of one teen who attends a private high school: “When I’m around other people I feel sometimes like an outsider, but

when I’m with my people I feel at home. They can talk about churches. I don’t relate. But here, I’m proud to be a member of my Jewish family in Tennessee.” From Pizza in the Hut for Sukkot to having fun at a Chanukah Bowl or watching the menorah being lit at the Predators hockey game for Jewish Heritage night, NYC – Nashville Youth Chabad – is a place where you can feel your Jewish pride ignite. For Purim and Passover we hit the town distributing goodies and matzah to Israelis making them feel at home. The Shabbaton to New York is always an amazing experience filled with highlights of seeing Jewish life in the “Big Apple.” If you are a teen living in Nashville, come join us at our events. You’ll always find a warm and friendly face to welcome you! c

NCSY/ Junior NCSY Congregation Sherith Israel 3600 West End Ave. Nashville, TN 37205

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CSY is the National Conference of Synagogue Youth, which has a local chapter at Congregation Sherith Israel. NCSY is open to all Jewish youth in Nashville regardless of religious or synagogue affiliation. NCSY serves the religious desires, questions and needs of all its participants as well as just ensuring fun, positive experiences and great memories all in a safe and nurturing Jewish environment. NCSY serves grades 8-12 and Junior NCSY serves grades 5-8.

The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 45


B’nai Mitzvah 2 0 1 3

Congregation Beit Tefilah Chabad Arianna Hefter Malka Shuman Levi Tiechtel

January 19 June 15 August 24

Congregation Sherith Israel Max Yudkin Itzik Sedek Felipe Izaguirre Yoni Taeed-Kashani Ephraim Hanai Naomi Horn Malka Shuman Ethan Mercado Ezra Woolf

February 25 March 2 April 27 May 18 May 25 June 9 June 16 August 2013 November 30

The Temple – Congregation Ohabai Sholom Ryan Scott Shira Acklin Shayna Beyer Jake Wolfson Alexander Weitzman Sophie Latter Maya Penson Simon Weinberger Harrison Halprin Daley Hall Jonathan Ghertner Daniel Jacobs Jacob Bressman

February 2 February 16 March 9 May 4 May 25 June 1 August 31 October 12 October 26 November 2 November 9 November 16 December 14

Congregation Micah West End Synagogue Naomi Horn Sarah Stein Brandon Coleman Jakob Schaefer Bianca Sass Liam McDonald Samantha Prebus

June 8 August 10 August 17 October 5 October 12 October 19 December 21

Melissa Rothenstein Ryan Ghertner Rachel Karp Carter Koch Daniel Saul Samuel Carini Zachary Carini Andrew Zolensky Elijah Murphy Kimberly Keller* Becky Hackett Benjamin Guzman Joseph Frank Matthew Friedman Kaitlyn Stout Everett Roth Soren Ettinger DeCou Kimberly Kiepec

February 16 March 16 March 23 April 6 April 27 May 4 May 4 May 11 May 25 June 1 June 8 August 24 September 28 October 5 October 12 November 2 November 23 December 7

*Adult Bar or Bat Mitzvah

46 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013


Resources Annette Levy Ratkin Jewish Community Archives Lynn Fleischer, Archive Associate 801 Percy Warner Blvd. Nashville, TN 37205 Phone: (615) 354-1655 Fax: (615) 352-0056 library@jewishnashville.org www.jewishnashville.org (Resources)

T

he Archives has since 1979 collected the records of the families, businesses, and institutions of the Jewish communities of Middle Tennessee, which began in the middle of the nineteenth century. Housed in the Gordon Jewish Community Center Library, the Archives has the records of such local organizations as the Nashville Section of the National Council of Jewish Women; Hadassah; B’nai B’rith; the Jewish Community Council, which later became the Jewish Federation; the synagogues; Jewish Family Service, which celebrated 150 years of service in 2003; and book clubs, such as Magazine Circle, organized in 1898, and their daughters, the “Junior Magazine Circle,” which soon became Tri Arts, organized in 1925. Microfilms and hard copies of the Observer, which began publication in 1935, and its predecessor, The Y.M.H.A. News, first published in 1915, are in the Archives. An oral

history audiotape collection, sponsored by the NCJW, documents the memories of older adults who grew up in Nashville, and has been transcribed, as has a collection of reminiscences by NCJW past presidents. A DVD/videotape oral history collection, sponsored by the Jewish Federation, records the experiences of Holocaust refugees, survivors and liberators. Tombstones dated before 1900 in the Jewish cemeteries of Nashville have been photographed, preserving their inscriptions. All documents and photographs are stored in acid-free folders and boxes, and are available to researchers from the Jewish and secular community under supervision of the archives staff. “A Caring Community, the History of the Jews of Nashville,” is a multimedia program produced by the Archives. It traces the development of the Nashville Jewish community from 1851 to date through source material and photos from the Archives. Available in DVD and VHS formats, it can be purchased from the Archives for $10 plus postage. The Archives assisted in the production of “Bagels & Barbeque, the Jewish Experience in Tennessee,” an exhibit prepared with the Tennessee State Museum and other Tennessee Jewish Federations for the 2007 General Assembly of the United Jewish Communities. The Archives seeks to preserve the records of all of the Jews of Nashville and Middle

Tennessee, whether here for six generations or six years. Please consider donating your family’s papers to the Archives.

Gordon Jewish Community Center Library Library Associate: Carrie Mills 801 Percy Warner Blvd. Nashville, TN 37205 (615) 356-3242 ext. 299 Fax: (615) 353-2659 carrie@nashvillejcc.org

W

hether you are looking for a recent book of Jewish interest, a book for your child, or Jewish music, the GJCC Library is the place to start. There, you can find children’s books, fiction, biographies, history, and cookbooks, along with books about Jewish practice, Jewish holidays, the Holocaust, Israel, and many other topics related to Jewish life and religion. The library has special collections of large-print books, and yizkor books compiled by survivors of Continued on page 48

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RESOURCES Continued from page 47

East European shtetls. The fiction and non-fiction collections are located by using the patron Internet station located in the library or by accessing the catalog through the Jewish Federation website, www.jewishnashville.org.

There are audiotapes of Jewish music, Jewish short stories from Eastern Europe, and lectures and commentaries by Dennis Prager, plus a selection of films on videotape. Additional, limited materials are available on CD. Library materials may be

borrowed for two weeks and renewed by phone. The library is open whenever the GJCC main building is open. Please call the library office if you have a reference question or want to know more about the library.

Vanderbilt University Judaica Collection Vanderbilt University Divinity Library 419 21st Ave. S. Nashville, TN 37240-0007 (615) 343-2865 Fax: (615) 343-2918 DIVLIB@library.vanderbilt.edu

N

Hart Ace Hardware Belle Meade - 5304 Harding Rd. Bellevue - 8203 Highway 100

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ot for scholars only! Vanderbilt’s renowned Harry and Mary Zimmerman Judaica Collection is not limited to university students and faculty. The librarians want Nashville’s Jewish community to know that anyone who wishes to use this extensive collection of religious books, research material and Yiddish and Hebrew literature is welcome to do so. The Judaica collection, the largest in the South, includes works by Franz Rosenzweig, Gershom Scholem and Martin Buber. There are also 1,600 Yiddish and Hebrew books, many of them poetry and literature. Much of the collection was acquired in 1991 when Vanderbilt purchased Nahum Glatzer’s library of 7,000 items, thanks to a substantial donation from Raymond Zimmerman. The Judaica collection is located in the Divinity Library, on the bottom level of the Jean and Alexander Heard Library. To use the Judaica material, anyone in the Jewish community may apply for a library card at the circulation desk of the Divinity Library. Books may be borrowed for three weeks. c

See what’s happening in the community.

Go to www.jewish nashville.org 48 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013


Perennially voted one of Nashville’s best Italian restaurants.

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The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 49


Quality and Craftsmanship Since 1928 Our philosophy for 3 generations has been to make each memorial the best way we know how. We find that it still takes the hands of a skilled craftsman to produce a monument that will be everlasting.

MARSHALL-DONNELLY-COMBS FUNERAL HOME 327-1111

Nashville's Only Certified Memorialist and Member of AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF COMMEMORATIVE ART Hunt Memorials, Inc. 4807 Gallatin Rd.

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For Over 150 years, our dedication to service and personal attention has made us the premier choice of families in our community. Our staff is dedicated to compassionately supporting your family before, during and after the loss of your loved one.

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50 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013


Find it all...at Hermitage Lighting Gallery!

Lighting

Cabinetry Hardware

Plumbing Appliances

Nashville’s largest lighting showroom • Come see over 4,000 handpicked light fixtures, lamps and lamp shades, unique decorative accessories, and fans • Multiple lines of cabinetry allow us to provide a wide range of styles and woods to fit almost any budget • We have designed and installed hundreds of beautiful and functional kitchens and bathrooms • We offer a full line of appliances including, U-Line, Dacor, Miele, Frigidaire, KitchenAid, Wolf, Whirlpool, Sub-Zero, Scotsman and, Viking just to name a few • Quality hardware and plumbing products provide an added convenience for our customers who can now shop for their bathroom and kitchen design needs at one place. Call or come in and see why “We’re More Than Just Lighting”

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The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 51


52 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013


The Jewish Observer

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES DIRECTORY ACCOUNTANTS Cathy Werthan, CPA, PFS CPA Consulting Group, PLLC Providing traditional tax and accounting services in a non-traditional way 109 Kenner Ave., Suite 100 (615) 322-1225 • www.cpacg.com

ADVERTISING The Observer

Carrie Mills

The best use of your advertising dollar. 801 Percy Warner Blvd. 356-3242 x299

APPLIANCES ELECTRONIC EXPRESS now carries a full line of home appliances as well as consumer electronics! We have the brands you know and trust: Whirlpool, KitchenAid, Maytag, General Electric, Frigidaire, and LG. Count on Electronic Express to help you make the best choice. Nobody beats our prices. Free basic delivery and pick-up of your old appliances with this ad. Available at any of our 16 stores. Visit us on the web at www.electronicexpress.com for a location near you. HERMITAGE LIGHTING GALLERY Lighting • Appliances • Hardware Custom Cabinetry and Baths We Light Up Your Life! 615-843-3300 www.hermitagelighting.com

ATTORNEY MARTIN SIR, ATTORNEY Family Law / Personal Injury / Probate Fifth Third Center 424 Church Street, Ste. 2250 Nashville, Tennessee 37219 (615) 256-5661 www.martinsirlaw.com

HEARING AID/ AUDIOLOGY SERVICES AUDIOLOGY ASSOCIATES AND HEARING AIDS TODAY Dr. Jina Scherer, Doctor of Audiology Specializes in hearing and hearing aid services. Specializing in the Lyric-extended wear device. 99 White Bridge Road, Ste. 106 615-354-8011 www.hearingaidstoday.com

BALLOON DECOR PARTY ANIMALS Balloon Decor & Entertainment 615-941-3177 www.PartyAnimalsTN.com

CARE GIVER FAMILY STAFFING SOLUTIONS, INC Stay Independent*At Home*In Charge® ‘Personal Care Assistance At Its Best” 2000 Richard Jones Road Nashville, TN 37215 615-383-5656 208 Uptown Square Murfreesboro, TN 37129 615-848-6774 119 McGrew Street, Suite A Shelbyville, TN 37160 931-680-2771 www.familystaffing.com

ELECTRICIAN BOB’S ELECTRIC CO. Fair Price - Quality Work Residential - Commercial Bob Acklin (aka Shira’s Dad), Journeyman Ph. 615-584-8197 (m) 615-352-1914 (h)

HOME IMPROVEMENT YOUR HOME HANDYMAN Rich Adler, Small Job Specialists. Free estimates, Excellent references. 615-646-4900 or 615-972-3093 cell Natcheztrace100@aol.com

INSURANCE FRIDRICH, PINSON & ROTHBERG Jamie Rothberg 3825 Bedford Ave. Suite 203 Ph 327-9105 Dir 277-1483 jrothberg@FPRinsurance.com GIL FOX, LUTCF Individual & Business Insurance Life, Disability, Medical, Estate Planning, Annuities, Charitable Giving, Long Term Care 7003 Chadwick Drive, Suite 287 Brentwood, TN 37027 • ph. 472-9161 MANAGED BENEFITS, INC. Rodney Rosenblum CLU - REBC - RHU Ruth Alexander Life Insurance, Health Insurance, Disability and Long Term Care Insurance 214 Overlook Circle, Suite 251 Brentwood, TN 37027 Ph. 615-371-2467 • Fax 615-371-5390 ROBINS INSURANCE Bruce Robins, CPCU, CIC, ARM; Tom Loventhal; Marsha Jaffa, CIC; Van Robins, CIC Auto, Home, Life, Health, Business Insurance 30 Burton Hills, Suite 300 Ph. 665-9200 • www.robinsins.com ZANDER INSURANCE GROUP, INC. Julian “Bud” Zander, Jr., CIC Jeffrey J. Zander, CIC Michael Weinberger Auto, Home, Life, Health, Business, Long Term Care 212 Oceola, Nashville, TN 37209 356-1700 www.zanderins.com

MUSICIANS AND DJs BLUE TONE MUSIC Jewish Wedding Ceremonies The Nashville Blue Tones Party Band DJ Services. 615-352-6358 www.BlueToneMusicUSA.com

OPHTHALMOLOGIST HOWARD ROSENBLUM, M.D. Eye Physician & Surgeon Nashville Eye Center St. Thomas Hospital • Ph. 386-9200 Continued on next page The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013 • 53


The Jewish Observer

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES DIRECTORY OPTOMETRIST

REAL ESTATE con’t

TEAM NASHVILLE Your Running/Walking Swimming Headquarters 3205 West End Ave. Nashville, TN 37203 (615) 383-0098

DR. MICHELE SONSINO Optique Eyecare & Eyewear 2817 West End Ave., Nashville 615-321-4EYE (4393)

ORTHODONTISTS A. JOEL GLUCK, DDS, MS Specialist in Orthodontics Diplomate, American Board of Orthodontics Green Hills 269-5903 2002 Richard Jones Road, Ste. A-200 www.drgluck.com

PROPERTY MANAGEMENT GHERTNER & COMPANY Homeowner Association and Condominium Management Full Service and Financial Management Property Management since 1968 255-8531 www.ghertner.com REGENCY MANAGEMENT CO. Keith Kraft & Morris Kraft Rentals ~ Residential ~ Commercial 95 White Bridge Rd. ~ Nashville TN 37205 …for over 45 years 352-1448 mkkraft@aol.com

REAL ESTATE

TRAINING & CERTIFICATION Patricia Straus, Broker, MBA, CRS, CRS-Divorce, ABR Marketing Real Estate to a Global Clientele RE/MAX Elite www.PatriciaStraus.com pstraus@realtracs.com 615.661.4400 (o) 615.305.8465 (m)

54 • The Guide to Jewish Nashville 2013

PHASE ONE CONSULTANTS EPA RRP Lead Certification For Contractors, Renovators, Remodelers Contact @ 615-942-5110

VETERINARIANS MURPHY ROAD ANIMAL HOSPITAL, P.C. Compassionate Medical Care for Your Pet Professional Pet Grooming & Boarding Puppy and Kitten Adoption Center 4408 Murphy Road 615-383-4241 www.murphyroadvet.com

WEIGHT LOSS www.ZeitlinRealtors.com

Residential & Relocation Specialists JESSICA AVERBUCH Managing Broker, ABR, CRS, ePRO 383-0183 (bus.) • 294-9880 (cell) jessica.averbuch@zeitlinrealtors.com www.jessicaaverbuch.com LORNA M. GRAFF Broker, GRI, CRS, ABR 371-0185 (bus.) • 351-5343 (cell) lorna.graff@zeitlinrealtors.com www.lornagraff.com

Jackie Karr, REALTOR Website: www.JackieKarr.com Email: JackieKarr@gmail.com Mobile: 615.330.9779 Office: 615.463.3333

SPORTING GOODS

NAN SPELLER Broker, GRI, ABR 383-0183 (bus.)• 973-1117 (cell) nspeller@bellsouth.net

NASHVILLE WEIGHT LOSS CENTER Lose 3-7 pounds of FAT per week! Mention this ad for 1 week free. Suriva Fischer 615-499-4222


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