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5 Things You Can Do in December to Repair the World Where in Jewish BFLO?


5 THiNGS YOU CAN DO
in December to Repair the World
SPONSORED BY Do you think you are a target of religious discrimmination? If so, talk to us. The Law Offi ce of LINDY KORN LINDY KORN
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Join your Federation and Foundation friends at the 2022 joint
Annual Meeting Wednesday, December 7 beginning at 5:30 p.m. at Congregation Shir Shalom, 4660 Sheridan Drive. Wine & cheese at 5:30; program followed by dessert & coffee at 6:00 p.m. RSVP to:
bit.ly/celebratejewishbuffalo2022.
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Celebrate Hanukkah this year with Buffalo friends. Check out page 12 of this issue of The Jewish Journal to see Hanukkah events around town.
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Join your friends from PJ Library and PJ Our Way for “Get Your
Hanukkah On!”, Sunday, December 11 from 4:30-6:30 p.m. at Sto Lat Bar Event Space, 4475 Transit Road in Williamsville. It’s ideal for families with kids 12 and under. See the ad on page 10, and RSVP to
bit.ly/GETYOURHANUKKAHON.
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Join the JCC and Congregation Beth Abraham for the multimedia program, “They Don’t Write ’em Like That Anymore — the Great Jewish Song Lyricists of the 20th Century” Tuesday, December 20
@ 7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. at the JCC. The program spans the American musical eras from Tin Pan Alley through rock and roll with biographical information interspersed with live musical performance by Barbara Levy Daniels. Hanukkah-themed reception to follow.
Registration Required at jccbuffalo.org.
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Give a year-end gift or pay your 2022 pledge to the Buffalo
Jewish Federation’s Campaign for Jewish Buffalo to get a 2022 tax deduction and the feeling of making a difference for your Jewish Community, because you have! Go to buffalojewishfederation.org/
donate and click on Campaign for Jewish Buffalo or call Assistant Executive Director Randi Morkisz at 716-463-5051 before the end of December.
Where in JBFLO
Where is this found exactly in Jewish Buffalo?
The first 5 people to correctly identify the location will be mentioned in next month’s Jewish Journal.
Email your answers to ellen@buffalojewishfederation.org.
For the November issue, Cheryl Tobias once again identified the photo, which is a plaque at Temple Beth Tzedek that notes the architect,
Maurice Finegold, left a “section of the building incomplete as a memorial to our people’s past.”