March 17, 2017

Page 1

Volume XXIII, Issue VI  |  www.jvhri.org Serving Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts

19 Adar 5777 | March 17, 2017

SPRING HOME & GARDEN PASSOVER

Jews of Rhode Island challenged to do good together BY FRAN OSTENDORF fostendorf@jewishallianceri.org

Isn’t there always time for mitzvot? That’s one of the ideas behind the community Good Deeds Day, coming on April 2. Good Deeds Day is an annual tradition around the world. Launched in 2007 in Israel by Ruach Tova (NGO), a part of The Ted Arison Family Foundation, the philanthropic arm of the Arison Group, it has grown every year. The fi rst Good Deeds Day had 7,000 participants. It went global in 2011, with volunteers in 10 cities in four countries, including the United States. By 2012, residents of 50 countries were participating. In 2016, 1.5 million people in 75 countries joined in.

The number of projects to date: 14,000, totaling 4 million hours of service. “All over the globe, millions are trying to positively change the world,” said Kara Marziali,

PHOTO | CHUNG SUNG-JUN/GETTY IMAGES

Cody Decker of Team Israel holding team mascot the Mensch on a Bench after the World Baseball Classic game against the Netherlands in Seoul, South Korea, March 9.

Team Israel baseball gear a home run Control over Touro Synagogue with kvelling American Jewish fans GOOD DEEDS | 27

and its $7.4 million silver bells back in court

BOSTON (JTA) – Ownership of the country’s oldest synagogue and its valuable religious and ritual objects is being decided by a federal appeals court. The hearing of the case by a three-judge panel of the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston is the latest development in a closely watched legal battle pitting New York City’s Shearith Israel, the oldest Jewish congregation in the nation, against

BY ANDREW TOBIN

Congregation Jeshuat Israel, located in Newport. At stake is control of Newport’s 250-year-old Touro Synagogue, the religious home of Congregation Jeshuat Israel and a pair of historically significant silver bells that are used to adorn Torah scrolls. The bells, called rimonim, are late 18th century filials handcrafted by Myer MyTOURO BELLS | 26

TEL AVIV (JTA) – A couple of weeks ago, Adam Atkins didn’t know Israel had a baseball team. But since the squad started winning games last week in the World Baseball Classic, he has become a fan. Atkins and his friends wanted team caps, but were frustrated to discover they were sold out online. “The only thing available was a youth size, and I considered if my head was small enough to fit! That’s how bad I want a hat,” Atkins, a 33-year-old renewable

energy consultant based in New York, told JTA. Israeli baseball “is defi nitely in the air.” Team Israel’s improbable five-game run in the international tournament has many American Jews kvelling, and looking to purchase a piece of their people’s baseball history. The supply of official caps has since been reupped and expanded, and the team’s “Jew Crew” T-shirts worn off the field are a mini-sensation. “I think the league probably underestimated the number of American Jews who would be interested in merchandise,”

Steve Adler, who owns the company that makes the “Jew Crew” shirts, told JTA. “You can’t really blame them. Who could have predicted this?” Israel was the lowest-ranked team to qualify for the World Baseball Classic, coming in at 41st. Yet the club, with seven former major league players and 20 minor leaguers, started the tournament last week by beating third-ranked South Korea, fourth-ranked Taiwan and ninth-ranked the Netherlands to win its pool in the fi rst round BASEBALL | 8

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

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