Heschel Herald Vol 5 Issue 3

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“...Know that every deed counts, that every word is power...” —Abraham Joshua Heschel

VOLUME 5, ISSUE 3

FEBRUARY 2015

Eighth Grade Visits the Washington DC, US Holocaust Memorial Museum By Mariel Priven

Heschel At Heschel and Martin Luther King, Jr. Service Day By Nina Glesby EVERY YEAR BEFORE Martin Luther King Day, the entire Heschel school celebrates a week devoted to Abraham Joshua Heschel. Each day during the afternoon ten minute break, a different middle school teacher recites a famous quotation by Rabbi Heschel over the loudspeakers in the hallways. This year, teachers Jacob Garmaise and Karen Dorr, decided to combine Heschel at Heschel with the celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King’s Day of Service holiday. The idea was to challenge each Advisory to find inspiration in Rabbi Heschel and Martin Luther King’s words, to come up with and commit to a Hesed project. At the Martin Luther King. Assembly, each advisory presented its project. Several advisories decided to have a series of bake sales to raise money for different causes such as pediatric pancreatitis research or children’s education.

AFTER SEVERAL WEEKS of studying the Holocaust, researching Hitler’s rise to power, and reading and discussing Elie Wiesel’s memoir Night, the eighth grade was prepared and excited to finally have the opportunity to go to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum located in Washington, DC. The students first ate breakfast and prayed at the University of Maryland Hillel before climbing into the bus. Excitement and curiosity ran through them as they began their journey to the museum. In order to enter the museum, the students and teachers had to go through security. Only afterward were they allowed to roam the

The Middle School Musical: Annie Jr., A Hit! By Abby Fisher THIS YEAR, THE Heschel Middle School put on itsfirst annual Middle School Musical. Directed by Anna Savant with assistance from Adam Lubitz, the production used a special adaptation for young performers, Annie, Jr. It is based on the original book and score by Tony Award winners Thomas Meehan, Charles Strouse and Martin Charnin. Little orphan Annie, played wonderfully by Ness Krell, charms everyone's hearts in 1930s New York City. She is determined to find her parents who abandoned her years ago on the doorstep of a New York City orphanage run by the cruel, embittered Miss Hannigan, energetically played by Abigail Sylvor-Greenberg. Annie finds a new home and family in billionaire Oliver Warbucks, played by Adam Kern, his personal secretary Grace Farrell, played by Naomi Kazis-Taylor and a lovable mutt named Sandy, played by Sophie Fisher. Songs such as "It's the Hard Knock Life" and "Tomorrow"

Continued on page 11 exhibits. The museum is designed so that one must take an elevator to the top and make their way down. The floors are set up in a chronological order of history, beginning with Hitler’s rise to power at the top of the museum, and ending at the bottom with the liberation of the camps and the

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The Alan B. Slifka Middle School

Continued on page 9

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February 2015, Volume 5, Issue 3


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Heschel Herald Vol 5 Issue 3 by Heschel School - Issuu