Jacksonville Jewish News - March 2017

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CELEBRATING WOMEN’S REPAIRS NOW UNDERWAY HISTORY MONTH IN IL 1st Congregation

WEEKLY LUNCHES WITH DAD Trio of Jacksonville brothers take time out of their busy schedules to sit down for special Friday lunches Page 4

Israel gives a nod to its most accomplished females Page 7

Sons of Israel gets needed attention following damage from storm Page 10

A publication of

March 2017

• Adar/Nisan 5777 • www.jewishjacksonville.org

River Garden to celebrate annual Anniversary Day on March 26th

Fun and face painting on Anniversary Day

BY SKIP WILLBACH

Director of Communications and Marketing

River Garden Hebrew Home will celebrate its 71st year, Sunday, Mar. 26th from 3-6 p.m., with a wonderful, fun-filled Anniversary Day festival. Home board member Larry Goldberg will be the chair of the day for this exciting event as the entire community is invited to attend this celebration, which promises to be fun for the whole family. In recent years, upwards of 500 people, ranging in age from infants to seniors, have spent the afternoon together, reveling to their hearts’ content. “All of us are truly delighted,” said Marty Goetz, River Garden CEO, “that each year more and more people come out and join the River Garden family to celebrate this wonderful Home and campus that our Jewish community has built.” The afternoon will include a delicious barbecue lunch and terrific musical entertainment. Attendees will have the opportunity to purchase ceramics handmade by River Garden residents and the Auxiliary Gift Shop will be open. In addition, there will be so many activities to keep the youngsters

8505 San Jose Blvd. Jacksonville, FL 32217

Jewish Federation of Jacksonville

Published Monthly POSTMASTER PLEASE DELIVER BY MARCH 1ST

Non-Profit Organization U.S. Postage PAID Jacksonville, FL Permit No. 146

See ANNIVERSARY DAY, p. 7

JaxJewish

@jaxjewish

JaxJewishTV • Volume 29, Number 9 • 36 pages

Super Sunday nets nearly $175,000 in funds for the community By Jewish Federation of Jacksonville

2017 proved to be a super year for super heroes in our community as a total of 262 people stepped up, answering the call on Super Sunday, Feb. 5th and donating $174,820 to the Federation’s annual campaign. The event was sponsored by Gary and Nancy Perlman and the funds collected that morning will eventually be dispersed to local synagogues and agencies throughout Jacksonville as well as going overseas to help displaced and underprivileged Jews throughout the world. Aside from those who gave of their hard Rabbis Shaya Hauptman and Jim Rogozen earned dollars, others donated their time delicious breakfast courtesy of Whole Foods that Sunday as more than 65 people from Market during their calls and a special the community came to the JCA to make pump up video featuring members of the calls to their peers. The groups with the Volunteers like rGEN’s Stephanie Seebol were most volunteers were the Torah Academy of Jacksonville Jewish community beforehand. busy making calls the morning of Feb. 5th That video can be viewed on YouTube via Jacksonville, which took home a $500 cash JaxJewishTV here: http://bit.ly/2kWB5iy, A prize for their efforts, while the Martin J. Photos by Larry Tallis complete list of donors and volunteers can Gottlieb Day School was awarded $250 for be found on page no. 2 of this issue of the coming in second place. See SUPER SUNDAY, p. 5 Jacksonville Jewish News. The many volunteers were treated to a

Local clergy make appearance at Jax city council meeting in support of the human rights ordinance BY MATT FRANZBLAU

Federation Communications Director mattf@jewishjacksonville.org

In late January, clergy from Congregation Ahavath Chesed (The Temple) and the Jacksonville Jewish Center joined with nearly 1,000 of their peers to attend the Jacksonville City Council’s meeting on the expansion of its human rights ordinance (HRO). Rabbi Howard Tilman and Hazzan Jesse Holzer of the Jacksonville Jewish Center, in addition to Rabbi Matt Cohen of The Temple, were just three of a few hundred men and women from the River City to step up to the microphone and make public comment on the matter. “Currently, my own religious freedom is not being respected in this city,” Tilman explained before City Council members . “It is my religion and my faith in the bible that teaches that you should love your neighbor as yourself and that you should treat each and every person with the inherent dignity

that they deserve, but right now in this city, the freedom to believe that is not there.” Tilman spoke for the allotted three minutes that each person coming to speak on the record was afforded, as did Cohen, who echoed his fellow Rabbi’s sentiments. “The issue is whether or not we want to accept discrimination as right or wrong,” the Temple’s associate Rabbi stated. City Council members had the difficult task of weighing public opinion with their conscience, but voted to pass the HRO 12-6, when 10 out of 19 members needed the nod for approval. “I am from Ohio and when I tell my friends there about how wonderful Jacksonville is, I also tell them a little bit about what’s going on with the Human Rights Ordinance and they are in utter disbelief Hazzan Jesse Holzer of the Jacksonville because it doesn’t make any sense,” Cohen Jewish Center speaks before the Jacksonville said.

But now Jacksonville’s actions do make City Council in January about the city’s HRO sense to Cohen and his peers as it becomes one of 250 major cities in the U.S. See JAX CLERGY HRO, p. 8

One local man’s quest to bring Jewish music to Jacksonville BY MATT FRANZBLAU

Federation Communications Director mattf@jewishjacksonville.org

On Sunday, Apr. 2, the local Jewish community will be treated a unique and free concert at the Jacksonville Jewish Center, courtesy of the group ‘Pharoh’s Daughter’, headlined by lead singer Basya Schechter. The music being played that afternoon is part of a larger movement known as ‘Radical Jewish Culture’, which found its way to Northeast Florida through very circuitous means and a man named Keith Marks. Marks is a Jacksonville native who became involved in this movement and eventually founded a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization called Avant, aimed at creating and exploring new and exciting music outside

the confines of genre and expectation. “I have been somebody who has always been into music, art and culture, so I connected to this music and this movement,” Marks said. “I really became a fan when I lived in Israel and I went to a couple of shows featuring different artists and musicians as I was really just blown away by the range and diversity of it all.” This unique sound was born three decades ago in the lower east side of New York City and has been growing ever since, forming an even stronger identity in the Big Apple and around the nation. “A lot of musicians who were Jewish had no real bridge to create a connection to the

See AVANT CONCERT, p. 6

Avant founder Keith Marks

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