✡
ottawa jewish
Jewish reggae violinist page 8
www.ottawajewishbulletin.com
bulletin february 4, 2013
Ottawa Jewish Bulletin Publishing Co. Ltd.
•
volume 77, no. 8
21 Nadolny Sachs Private, Ottawa, Ontario K2A 1R9
•
shevat 24, 5773
Editor: Michael Regenstreif
$2.00
Emerging generation: Building a foundation for new leaders By Alex Baker Corporate continuity. Upward mobility. Organizational strength. Development program. In the business and sports worlds, the key to long-term success is grooming future leaders to take over when the time is right. In Ottawa’s Jewish community, the challenge is the same – but perhaps even more difficult. Over the past few years, the Jewish Federation of Ottawa has been facing this obstacle head-on with initiatives, programs, campaigns and events designed to attract what it calls the “emerging generation.” Speaking at the Federation’s annual general meeting on June 6, 2012, Federation Chair Debbie Halton-Weiss described how the initiative is starting to bear fruit. “One [objective] was to engage those on the periphery of our community, by developing new and creative initiatives and providing clear leader-
ship opportunities. I can confidently report that we have made huge strides in this area, particularly with the emerging generation and their increasing involvement in our community activities, and the Federation Board, committees and programs where they are now well represented.” Halton-Weiss’ statement at the AGM was not mere rhetoric. Since holding a symposium in 2007 asking, “Will our kids be Jewish?” engaging the emerging generation has been a focal point of the Federation’s agenda. This effort led to initiatives like jnet and the 2011 openOttawa symposium, which Federation executives have come to see as a catalyst moment in creating or revitalizing community institutions – such as the Social Action Mission to Israel and the Young Women’s Leadership Council – which the emerging generation would want to be part of, and see value in. (Continued on page 2)
The openOttawa Road Hockey Tournament, August 19, 2012, was a popular event in support of initiatives for the emerging generation.
Art show and book celebrate the life and legacy of Josh Silburt By Louise Rachlis The work of Josh Silburt (1914 - 1991), a prolific Jewish Canadian artist, political activist and cartoonist, will be shown at the Cube Gallery from February 5 to 17. It will be the first gallery show of Silburt’s work in a decade and will celebrate both his fine art paintings and his political cartoons. The show’s vernissage on February 6 will also celebrate the launch of a new book, A Colourful Life: The Art and Drawing of Josh Silburt by Ottawa resident Allan Silburt, the artist’s youngest son. Josh Silburt was born in Plum Coulee,
Manitoba, in 1914 and spent most of his childhood in Winnipeg before riding the rails to Toronto in the early-1930s. As a teenager, he enrolled in night school classes at the Winnipeg School of Art under the direction of LeMoine FitzGerald, later a member of the Group of Seven. Silburt was part of the Willowdale Art Group, based in north Toronto, which focused on interpreting the Canadian wilderness, building upon the style of the Group of Seven. Allan Silburt, 55, remembers road trips where he’d “sit and amuse myself at the side
the road,” while his father and the other artists worked. He said putting the book about his father’s art together was “a huge amount of work, but a joy for me to … bring it to life. It has been my passion.” Allan started writing the book three years ago, but the actual curatorial work began in 1999 after his mother, Beth, died and he realized someone had to take responsibility for cataloguing and setting up a database. “The book is intended … to establish the breadth of his career, and his place in that slice of history. That was something I really
wanted to do, and had to do, to secure the legacy of this artwork. He’s not a Tom Thomson where others are writing the story, so someone had to write it.” According to Allan, there are more than 1,000 of Silburt’s paintings in people’s homes, and they get passed down by generations to new owners who don’t know his father’s story. “We’re re-establishing a footprint for the art so people can know more about its history and its worth,” he said. Allan, an engineer and CEO of Insight (Continued on page 12)
World Class Outsourcing ... and more!
613-744-6444
Publications Mail Registration No. 07519
Providing quality service to the National Capital Region since 1947!
613-744-5767
613-244-7225
613-244-4444
www.boydgroup.on.ca