Volume XXII, Issue V | www.thejewishvoice.org Serving Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts
24 Adar I 5776 | March 4, 2016
PHOTO | REPRINTED WITH PERMISSION FROM THE NEWPORT DAILY NEWS
Rabbi Marc Jagolinzer stands near the source of the damage.
Broken pipe floods Temple Shalom BY FRAN OSTENDORF fostendorf@jewishallianceri.org The weekend of Feb. 13-14 was unusual during what has been a particularly warm winter. Temperatures dipped below zero. Homeowners were warned to beware of frozen pipes. Rabbi Marc Jagolinzer of
Temple Shalom, in Middletown, said he worried a little about the synagogue building because there had been “issues” with the heating system. “When I entered the building,” he said in an email to The Voice, “I was pleased to feel the warmth of the heat in each of the rooms.” FLOOD | 12
PETS PURIM
Scott Pray
Mehdi Khosrovani
Lynne Heinzmann
BY FRAN OSTENDORF fostendorf@jewishallianceri.org
is the two-phase plan that includes the new Bornstein front entrance, upstairs Salmanson lobby, back entrance and downstairs lobby, making the building accessible to all with ramps and an elevator. Mehdi Khosrovani is the president of n|e|m|d architects Inc., of Providence. No, that’s not a copyediting error: The firm’s name is all lowercase. Khosrovani’s firm conducted a master study of the Dwares Jewish Community Cen-
ter and formulated the master plan that’s driven construction throughout the renovation. The two companies have extensive experience working on projects, large and small, both inside and outside of Rhode Island. Often, they work together on what’s called design/build projects. In interviews and at a Jewish Alliance town hall meeting several weeks ago, both company presidents and their representatives
Experienced ‘team’ guiding JCC renovations
When the renovations to the Jewish Alliance’s Dwares JCC are complete, the building will have a much more cohesive feel, so it’s not surprising that the architects and general contractors are working as a team. Scott Pray is president of D.F. Pray General Contractors, in Seekonk, Massachusetts, which is in charge of the building renovations that start March 7. This
RENOVATIONS | 6
Meet 5 Israeli companies driving disability tech BY BEN SALES
The Israeli startup Paratrek created an augmented wheelchair that allows people with paraplegia to go on hikes.
TEL AVIV (JTA) – After a missile strike during the 1973 Yom Kippur War left Omer Zur’s father paralyzed from the chest down, his dad vowed to continue life as normal. But there was one Israeli pastime he couldn’t enjoy: hiking. “He’d say, ‘I’ll go in the car
and meet you on the other side,’ ” said Zur, a certified Israeli tour guide. “I said, ‘Why can’t he do this with us?’ ” In 2008, Zur decided that he and his wheelchair-user father would complete a 300-mile trek in southern Turkey. With the help of dozens of friends who joined them on segments of the hike, Zur and his father were
able to complete the trail, sleep in tents and cook meals over an open fi re. The hike sparked Paratrek, a startup Zur founded in 2014 that aims to make hiking accessible to people with paraplegia by outfitting wheelchairs with accessories that enable them to DISABILITY | 25
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