Volume XXIV, Issue V | www.jvhri.org Serving Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts
SENIORS
15 Adar 5778 | March 2, 2018
Hello from Key West, Florida Calling on southernmost Jews BY M. CHARLES BAKST
Dorothy Barry flanked by her son Phillip (seated) and her daughter -n-law Roberta
Play, learn and socialize at the Bridge Place BY LARRY KESSLER If you can’t get enough of bridge, or are curious about the popular card game, then head down to the Bridge Place at the Alliance’s Dwares Jewish Community Center, in Providence. You don’t have to know much about the game, and you’re never too old to learn how to play, according to the Bridge Place’s director and teacher, Barton Buffington, 76. Buffington is a board member of Rhode Island’s Unit 145 of the American Contract Bridge League, the national governing body, as well as being an ACBLcertified teacher and an enthusiastic bridge advocate. In an email interview with The Jewish Voice, Buffington touted the game’s universal appeal and its benefits for seniors. Here are excerpts:
Q. How often does the group meet and how many people regularly attend? A. Attendance varies. Tuesdays, 25-35 people; Fridays, 15-20. Monday and Wednesday classes [are] not well attended at this time. [There are] two games on Mondays: open and 0-20 master points [new players or ones with fewer than 20 master points]. Q. Is it open to anyone? Where are most folks from? A. The group is open to all players and students from Rhode Island and Massachusetts. Q. When did the group form and why? A. [The] origin of the organization [was in] the 1940s. [The goal was] to establish a duplicate bridge group in Rhode Island. BRIDGE PLACE | 14
KEY WEST, FLA. - What, you’re surprised there is Jewish life here? This is the southernmost point in the continental U.S., a city of 27,000, with an artsycraftsy live-and-let-live vibe. Bars and souvenir shops. Gorgeous sunsets and beaches. Quiet side streets of white wooden homes with graceful fences, porches and balconies. Roosters wander about. Hemingway lived here. Truman vacationed here. A good place to wind down or drop out. Rabbi Shimon Dudai of Conservative Congregation B’nai Zion says that when he’s away and he tells people where his temple is, they respond, “I didn’t know there were Jews in Key West.” Well, I recently had a nice visit to B’nai Zion. And Mam’s Best Food restaurant, certified Kosher by the lo-
Arlo Haskell cal Chabad, was doing a lively business when I stopped in to chat with local resident Arlo Haskell, 40. He is the author of a fascinating new history, “The Jews of Key West: Smugglers, Cigar Makers, and Revolutionaries (1823-1969)” (Sand Piper Press, 2017).
The tiny eatery, with a counter, cloth canopy and a handful of outdoor tables, is owned by an Israeli expatriate. The food – falafel and hummus for me, a mix of chicken and shawarma for Haskell – was outstanding, and the conversation as interesting as the book. Haskell, often, online, exhaustively researched letters, news stories, records, pictures and so on and spoke to people fi rsthand. He grew up here, but he illuminates a history that was full of discoveries for him and of which the Jewish community, let alone the rest of the population, was only dimly aware. He might seem an unlikely chronicler. He’s not Jewish. He comes from a secular Catholic family. But his wife, Ashley, is from a secular Jewish family in New Jersey. Their daughter, Aviva, was named at KEY WEST | 11
Parkland students begin to heal at Jewish conference in New York BY BEN SALES JTA – Seven survivors of the Parkland school shooting were among thousands of Jewish high school students who attended the annual conference of the Chabad movement’s youth group. Responding to the Feb. 14 shooting became an impromptu theme of the conference, which was hosted in New York City
by CTeen, the teen arm of the Hasidic outreach movement. CTeen, which has 100,000 members worldwide, has eight chapters in the South Florida area surrounding Parkland. The shooting, which killed 17 students and staff at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, has galvanized a youthled movement for gun reform. But the students at the conference, each of whom had taken
part in previous local Chabad activities, said they appreciated the opportunity to grieve and be comforted. “We all have been feeling better because we’ve been with other teens who have been supporting us,” Marc Susskind, 14, told JTA. “They’ve been checking in on us, keeping us company.” PARKLAND| 3
OSCAR | 6