The Voice of the Lehigh Valley Jewish Community
www.jewishlehighvalley.org
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Issue No. 459
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November 2022
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Cheshvan/Kislev 5783
AWARD-WINNING PUBLICATION EST. 1977
Susan Wild and Lisa Scheller: An election forum at the Federation p3
Birthday in a Bag: PJ Library and JFS pack parties-to-go for families in need p17
FROM THE DESK OF JERI ZIMMERMAN p2 WOMEN’S PHILANTHROPY p4 LVJF TRIBUTES p8 JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE p13 JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER p18-19 JEWISH DAY SCHOOL p20 COMMUNITY CALENDAR p27
Lehigh’s new Jewish Student Center finally gets its grand opening By Carl Zebrowski Editor of Hakol The Lehigh University Hillel has had a new home for over a year. The building is larger and more comfortable than the old one. Attendance at events is up. But due to the pandemic, there was never a proper grand opening. Until October 16 of this year. Around lunchtime that Sunday morning, dozens of students, alumni, administrators and community members – and tables brimming with food – filled the front lawn at 233 West Packer Avenue in Bethlehem for the official dedication of the new Jewish Student Center. Standing at a podium on the front porch,
Rabbi Steve Nathan, endowed director of Jewish student life and associate chaplain at Lehigh, was enthusiastic about finally being able to celebrate the opening of the new hub for Jewish students on campus. “We did move in here in March 2021,” Nathan said, “but we know what March 2021 was like.” He highlighted some of the benefits of the new location over the old. “It’s at least twice the size, and in better shape, and universityowned,” Nathan said. “We don’t have to worry when the furnace breaks down.” University ownership of the site makes clear where Lehigh stands. As Rabbi Michael Lehigh Jewish Student Center Continues on page 6
Film director to address Lions and Poms on music in Sderot, Israel Music and war have a longtime relationship. Think of fife and drums corps accompanying Revolutionary War armies on the march, buglers signaling orders to Civil War troops. The Lions of Judah and Pomegranates of the Jewish Federation of the Lehigh Valley will explore a different sort of relationship between music and war when they gather to kick off their new year with Night at the Movies on Monday, November 14. The Lions and Poms will
view the documentary “Rock in the Red Zone” and discuss it and the situation in Sderot, Israel, a half mile from the Gaza Strip, with its writer and director, Laura Bialis. Amid years of continual bombing of the city by Hamas and Islamic Jihad, Israeli musicians turned bomb shelters into music halls and birthed a new sound blending folk traditions from their own diverse cultural backgrounds with rock and roll. “The Sderot bands were essential in the process of Non-Profit Organization
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shifting Israeli music, being a fusion of East and West,” says an on-screen commentator. Laura Bialis traveled to Israel from her native Los Angeles to film the movie. She says on screen that “I encountered some of the most amazing music I’ve ever heard.” She ended up staying, settling right there in the war zone and crucible for art that her film depicts. The Lions and Poms will discuss the tumultuous situation and the artistic innovation that arose from it, the spirit of the musicians and fellow residents, and other aspects of the multilayered
reality represented on screen. The event begins at 6:30 p.m. at the Emmaus Theatre at 19 South Fourth Street in Emmaus. The film will be screened and a discussion with Bialis will follow. Lion of Judah and Pomegranate members who are
donating $1,800 to the Federation’s 2023 Annual Campaign for Jewish Needs are invited to attend and to bring a spouse or other guest along with them. Dinner will be served, dietary laws observed. RSVP by Nov. 7 at mailbox@jflv.org or 610-821-5500.
Lehigh Valley, PA Permit No. 64
Don’t miss our special holiday pages (14-15) or the note of appreciation from executive director, Jeri Zimmerman (2).