Volume XXI, Issue XX | www.thejewishvoice.org Serving Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts
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17 Heshvan 5776 | October 30, 2015
National JCPA resolutions impact Rhode Island BY MARTY COOPER mcooper@jewishallianceri.org Each year the Jewish Council for Public Affairs (JCPA) hosts a national conference called a plenum to discuss issues important to local communities. This year the “Town Hall” plenum, held in Washington, D.C., mirrored the important issues of the day: anti-Semitism, the refugee problem in the Middle East and Europe, income inequality, race relations and all things related to Israel. It was no accident these issues were front and center of the program. Besides being timely, most were brought up as resolutions for the JCPA to consider. If passed, resolutions become a policy position and focus for the JCPA and its partners, including more than 125 Jewish Community Relations Councils (JCRC/CRC) as well as over a dozen national organizations including the National Council of Women, ADL, Reform Action Center, Orthodox Union and Hadassah. The resolution with the most impact on the Rhode Island
community was one calling for the United States to officially recognize as genocide the atrocities that took place in Armenia over a hundred years ago. It was overwhelmingly passed. Written and sponsored by the Community Relations Council of the Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island, the resolution asks for member organizations of the JCPA to call on their congressional delegations to support a resolution to fi nally recognize the Armenian Genocide with the president’s signature. The resolution was co-sponsored by the Boston and Palm Beach JCRCs as well as the Jewish Labor Committee and the Reform Action Committee. With a significant Armenian population in Rhode Island, it was important the CRC take the initiative by creating a strong resolution on this issue. Currently the CRC, with the Holocaust Education and Resource Center and members of the Armenian, Cambodian, African American and Christian comJCPA | 9
PHOTO | JOHN TAVARES
The Temple Beth-El “World Series of Treasured Jewish Family Recipes” winners proudly display their trophies. (Left to right): Lisa Brosofsky, winner of the People’s Choice Award; Rep. Aaron Regunberg, first runner-up for Best Recipe; Emily Torgan Shalansky, second runnerup for Best Recipe; and Bob Sandy, winner of Best Recipe. Over 200 people tasted 27 recipes and raised over $6,000 to benefit the Rabbi Leslie Yale Gutterman Religious School.
Home run for these all-star cooks
Fifth annual event features treasured Jewish family recipes
BY ARIEL BROTHMAN
On Oct. 25, Temple Beth-El, in Providence, held the World Series of Treasured Jewish Family Recipes. Affectionately called simply “the World Series” by many entrants, the fi fth annual culinary event attracted chefs
of all ages and included first-to sixth-generation family recipes. The five judges sampled 27 recipes, each of which had its own story. Photos of family members involved in creating the dishes were propped up alongside printouts of the recipes
and their origins. Violet Orth, and her 8-yearold daughter Amy handed out cups of “152 Cucumber Salad,” named for the address of the diner where Amy’s greatgrandparents regularly ate an WORLD SERIES | 14
Billboard is turning drivers’ heads
BY FRAN OSTENDORF fostendorf@jewishallianceri.org
Have you seen the new billboard next to I-95 northbound near the Thurbers Avenue curve in Providence? “Too Jewish?” it says. Exactly what does that mean? Go to the Web address on the billboard – TooJewish. info – and you’ll learn that it’s the work of the Jewish Community Day School of Rhode Island (JCDSRI). And it’s meant to, as the billboard says, “challenge your assumptions” about Judaism and the Jewish day school ex-
perience, according to Adam Tilove, head of the school. High profile? Yes. Provocative? Yes. Controversial? Maybe. Why choose a billboard? And why this particular question? “We’ve been thinking about this for a long time,” Tilove said. “We hope it’s going to help the school.” He wants the message to be in the minds of everyone. “It’s easier to remember ‘Too Jewish’ than JCDSRI,” he says. According to Tilove, a Jewish day school imparts
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