May 13, 2022 | 12 Iyar 5782
Candlelighting 8:10 p.m. | Havdalah 9:15 p.m. | Vol. 65, No. 19 | pittsburghjewishchronicle.org
NOTEWORTHY LOCAL The passing of a community stalwart
Chantze Bulter dies at 99
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NCJW Pittsburgh embraces role Kollel and as ‘community ally’ as abortion Pittsburgh ‘crisis’ looms Jewish community honor five scholars after ordination By Adam Reinherz | Staff Writer
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realignment task force. Conversations between participants spanning nearly 60 years in age acknowledged that NCJW Pittsburgh is “white-led and that we have a responsibility to unlearn some of our biases and understanding as we approach our work,” Glickman said. Internal discussions, dialogue with other NCJW sections nationwide and a 2019 report from the City of Pittsburgh’s Gender Equity Commission helped local members reach several conclusions, Kate Rothstein, NCJW Pittsburgh’s programming and communications manager told the Chronicle shortly after the realignment process began. It became clear that NCJW Pittsburgh must increase its advocacy for gender and racial equity, but that the manner of doing so needed to change. The organization had to act “with, not for,” interim Executive Director Sara Segel said. Moving forward, NCJW Pittsburgh must become “more inclusive and focused on addressing some of the systemic issues that we have when we go about doing our work,” Glickman said. NCJW Pittsburgh leaders point to the
ore than 200 members of Pittsburgh’s Jewish community celebrated the ordination of five local scholars at a Chag HaSemicha program, a first for the Kollel Jewish Learning Center. The May 8 program was an opportunity to highlight the accomplishments of Pittsburgh’s young Jewish scholars and thank the community for enabling their achievements, Associate Rosh Kollel Rabbi Doniel Schon said. The event, held at Shaare Torah Congregation, celebrated Rabbis Yossi Berkowitz, Binyomin Bauman, Moshe Gans, Shmuli Mandelbaum and Chananel Shapiro on receiving Yoreh Yoreh, a level of rabbinic ordination permitting the rabbis to decide daily halachic matters, such as those concerning kashrut. Carey Balaban, a professor of otolaryngology at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and longtime supporter of the Kollel, described the event as a “convocation,” and praised the scholars on their ordinations. Before receiving Yoreh Yoreh, Berkowitz, Bauman, Gans, Mandelbaum and Shapiro each held Rav U’Manhig ordination, a lower level of semicha. Receiving Yoreh Yoreh required them to study lengthy portions of the Shulchan Aruch (a 16th-century code of Jewish law) and travel to Baltimore for a series of three tests with Rabbi Moshe Heinemann, a nationally recognized Jewish legal authority who serves as head of Agudath Israel of Baltimore and rabbinical supervisor of the Star-K kashrut certification agency.
Please see NCJW, page 14
Please see Kollel, page 14
It’s time to start moving
Demonstrators gather downtown on March 3 for an event organized by Tracy Baton, director of Women’s March Pittsburgh. NCJW Pittsburgh was a community partner.
Photo courtesy of Mark Dixon
The benefits of exercise to older adults
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LOCAL Raise a glass to live music and comedy
City Winery comes to Pittsburgh
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Adam Reinherz | Staff Writer
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or 128 years, NCJW Pittsburgh has advocated for the rights of women, children and families, but the most critical moment in the Jewish group’s history may be happening now, incoming President Andrea Kline Glickman said. If the leaked draft opinion proves correct, and the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade, 50 years of work will vanish, Glickman said. For the organization founded in 1894, and dedicated to social justice issues, the prospect of losing legal access to abortion across the country is not only cataclysmic but contrary to public opinion. Fifty-nine percent of Americans think abortion should be legal in all or most cases, according to Pew Research Center. Within the Jewish community, that figure balloons to 83%. “We are at a crisis moment here,” Glickman said. “In our current world, so much is at risk. Our democracy is at risk.” An organization like NCJW Pittsburgh bears responsibility for effectuating change, the group’s leaders explained. Doing so, however, requires a paradigm shift. Months ago, members convened a
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