August 7, 2015

Page 1

Volume XXi, issue XiV |  www.thejewishvoice.org Serving Rhode island and Southeastern massachusetts

22 Av 5775 | August 7, 2015

BACK TO SCHOOL

cLicK oR cALL FoR HELP: AccESSJEWiSHRi.oRG iS HERE By JewiSh VoiCe StaFF

PHOTO | FRAN OSTENDORF

Two years ago, our community was shocked by a Brandeis University study, “Living on the Edge: Economic Insecurity among Jewish Households in Rhode Island,” commissioned by the Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island with support from the Hassenfeld family. The study found that half of Jewish households in the Alliance’s community face economic troubles. The Living on the Edge (LOE) initiative, born of that study, has brought together

Alliance staff, leaders, partner agencies Jewish Family Service (JFS) and Jewish Seniors Agency (JSA), and area synagogues. Co-chairs Susan

Leach DeBlasio and Alan Hassenfeld are leading the effort to help community members, whether fi nancially vulnerable, in need of social services, or in need of information about

Jewish Rhode Island. Say hello to AccessJewishRI.org, an information and referral website debuting today. And this is more than a website; there’s a free confidential phone line offering p er son a l i z e d assistance to those who do not use a computer or who can’t fi nd what they are looking for online. “We think of ourselves as a warm hug on the other end of the phone,” says Kara Marziali, director of communications at the Alliance. aCCeSSJewiShRi | 24

What can iran hide in 24 days?

Answering the questions posed by the nuclear deal By Ron KaMpeaS

PHOTO | IRINA MISSIURO

Summer fun at camp

Campers at J-Camp at the Dwares JCC have been having a great summer of fun and activities. At top, the Big Nazo Puppet paid a visit and showed everyone the inner workings of those fun characters. The children got a chance to try out many of the life-size costumes. Above, carnival week ended with an all-camp carnival including a dunk tank and pie throwing. Can you guess who had more fun, counselor or campers?

WASHINGTON (JTA) – Congress has until mid- to late September to consider whether to reject the nuclear restrictions for the sanctions rollback deal reached by Iran and six major powers on July 14. Some of the debate is over the meaning of certain provisions in the accord. Here’s a breakdown of differences in how the sides interpret parts of the deal.

The 24 days

All sides agree that the deal has a rigorous inspections regime for Iran’s known sites: “24/7” scrutiny, as President Barack Obama has put it, with inspectors and video monitoring. But what happens when intelligence agencies suspect nuclear weapons activity at an unmonitored site? Under the agreement, Iran has 14 days to work out terms to check the site in question with

a joint commission composed of its own representatives along with those from the United States, Britain, France, Germany, the European Union, Russia and China. If after 14 days terms are not agreed upon, the commission has up to seven days for a majority of its members to decide on terms of inspection. Iran must comply within three days — a total of 24 days. Obama and his Cabinet have said that detectable signs of nuclear enrichment activity iRan | 13

Somerset Auto Group Closer than you think…… Only 15 minutes from Providence

The Jagolinzer Family

Quality Automobiles for 3 Generations

195 East • Exit 4, Somerset, MA somersetautogroup.com 800-495-5337

FREE pick-up and delivery available


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.