Volume XXI, Issue XV | www.thejewishvoice.org Serving Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts
6 Elul 5775 | August 21, 2015
JEWISH WOMEN IN BUSINESS
Team RI, left to right, Gabe Mernoff, Josh Litmanovich, Angela Sullivan, Jake Hammarstrom, Natalie Westrick and Julia Keizler.
Rhode Island is a winner!
PHOTO | IRINA MISSIURO
Deb Norman holds an original menu.
Deb Norman, pioneer restaurateur Rue de l’Espoir owner bids adieu
BY IRINA MISSIURO imissiuro@jewishallianceri.org Deb Norman, owner of the East Side staple, Rue de l’Espoir, the restaurant she just sold after nearly a 40-year run, didn’t get where she is with small talk and shyness. Through the years, she succeeded despite changing tastes, economic hardships and tough competition because she was fearless. Unafraid to go after what she wants, to say what she means and to do whatever it takes. When she states, “I am self-made, possessed with a great deal of creativity and
chutzpah,” she’s not being coy. When she admits, “I have never been short on confidence and have always believed I can do whatever I set my mind to,” she means it. Norman says she moved from cocktail waitress to bartender to management by being “bossy and organized.” She declares, “I am a trailblazer,” referring to the fact that she was a female restaurant proprietor in the 1970s. To illustrate, she tells a story about a liquor salesman who NORMAN | 19
Team RI joined Team Springfield (Massachusetts) for the 2015 Maccabi Games and Artsfest in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida Aug. 9-14. The combined group was 65 teens
strong. With only five athletes, Team RI brought home a total of 12 medals in swimming, tennis and table tennis! Congratulations to all
the athletes. The community looks forward to bringing another team to the 2016 Games and Artsfest in Stamford, Connecticut.
For New Orleans Jews, Katrina still fosters communal bond
BY JOSH TAPPER
NEW ORLEANS (JTA) — One rainy afternoon earlier this summer, Rabbi Gabe Greenberg stood on the backyard patio of the new Beth Israel synagogue telling the story of the deluge that destroyed the Orthodox congregation’s Lakeview neighborhood building. Most of the now 111-year-old synagogue’s possessions were ruined by the 10 feet of water that filled the premises when Hurricane Katrina triggered massive flooding a decade ago this month. The remains of more than 3,000 of its holy books are now bur-
ied under a mound of dirt at the nearby Ahavos Sholem cemetery. Stacked on top of each other in a nearby grave are the disintegrated parchments of seven Torah scrolls that didn’t survive the storm. Those traumatic memories haven’t faded for this aging congregation. But as Greenberg was quick to point out, the view from the patio tells the story of how it survived. In 2012, Congregation Beth Israel erected a new building in the northwest suburb of Metairie. Visible beyond the backyard fence is Gates of Prayer, the Reform synagogue
that lent the congregation prayer space during its seven years of homelessness. And etched into the patio bricks are the names of synagogues and Jewish organizations whose donations kept the congregation afloat as it regrouped. In a sense, Beth Israel is emblematic of how New Orleans’ small Jewish community recovered from Katrina, rebuilding from the ground up in the face of colossal property damage and population decline. As Greenberg, a 33-year-old
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