May 9, 2014

Page 1

Volume XX, Issue XXX  |  www.thejewishvoice.org Serving Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts

9 Iyar 5774 | May 9, 2014

TEENS & GRADUATION

THIS TEEN HAS SOUL Gotta Have Sole’s Nicholas Lowinger helps repair the world, one shoe at a time BY IRINA MISSIURO imissiuro@jewishallianceri.org

PHOTO | IRINA MISSIURO

Gifts for graduates We’ve rounded up a list of ideas for your favorite student BY IRINA MISSIURO imissiuro@jewishallianceri.org It’s that time of year. The trees are blooming and so are the teenagers. You probably have some young people in your life who are graduating this year.

To ease the usual conundrum – figuring out what to buy for a present – we have compiled a list for you of the 10 best gifts for graduates. There’s something for all the high school graduates here. Hopefully, you will GIFTS | 15

You’d be hard-pressed to fi nd an American who hasn’t heard the famous John F. Kennedy inaugural address, where he calls on the listeners to ask what they can do for their country. Nicholas Lowinger took those words to heart. An impressionable sixthgrader focusing on Kennedy for a history project, Lowinger was moved to make a difference. He says that the president’s words “had a major impact on me. I launched Gotta Have Sole Foundation that same year and also started encouraging youth to take action in their communities.”

The beginning

Many boys just want to get through their Torah portion at their bar mitzvah, more concerned about the party afterward than about the significance of becoming a man in the eyes

PHOTO | LOWINGER FAMILY

Nicholas Lowinger is making sure that children in shelters have new shoes and showing other teens that taking action is the right thing to do. of God. Not Lowinger, who took the concept of assuming responsibility for one’s actions to a whole new level. At the ripe old age of 13, he

stumbled onto an opportunity to do good and has never looked back. Working on a community SOUL | 9

Odessa Jews make plans to evacuate if violence worsens JNS.ORG – Odessa Jewish community leaders said May 4 that Jews in the Western Ukrainian city are preparing to evacuate if violence there worsens. Over the past few days in Odessa, violent clashes between proRussian and nationalist forces resulted in more than 40 deaths, according to reports. About 30,000 Jews live in Odessa. Representatives of the

Ukrainian Jewish community insisted that the violence is not specifically targeting Jews. But Rabbi Refael Kruskal, who heads the Odessa-based Jewish philanthropic organization Tikva, said there were several Jews wounded in the clashes. “Over the weekend we closed the [Great Choral] Synagogue [in Odessa]. We took all the students out of the center of the city

where the violence was, because we were worried it was going to spread. We sent a text message to everybody in the community on WhatsApp that they should stay at home over the weekend,” Kruskal told the Jerusalem Post. “If it gets worse, then we’ll take them out of the city. We have plans to take them both out of the city and even to a different country if necessary, plans which we

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prefer not to talk about which we have in place,” he added. Kruskal is also wary that the weekend of May 9, which marks the anniversary of Soviet Russia’s victory over Germany in World War II, could get very violent. He is considering setting up a camp away from the city where 600 Jews could stay while the fighting transpires. Other Odessa Jewish orga-

nizations also have evacuation plans in place, including the Migdal International Center of Jewish Community Programs. The local Jewish community and the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews have fueled 70 buses, which are prepared for an evacuation if needed, said local Chabad-Lubavitch emissary Rabbi Avraham Wolf.


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May 9, 2014 by Jewish Rhode Island - Issuu