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Area volunteers join effort to memoralize massacre victims

 
 
 
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A montage of the victims of the Merkas HaRav massacre. courtesy of Jeremy Joszef

Since December, Teaneck resident Aliza Kranzler has been alerting schools and synagogues across the country to a worldwide memorial for the eight students murdered last March at Jerusalem’s Merkaz HaRav Yeshiva.

She is one of 150 volunteers working with B’lev Echad (With One Heart), a grassroots organization begun by Yeshiva University student Jeremy Joszef from Woodmere, N.Y.

B’lev Echad aims to sign up groups and individuals for Torah learning and performing good deeds in the days leading up to the first yahrzeit of the victims. On that day, eight Torah scrolls will be dedicated at Merkaz HaRav by an anonymous donor who wanted others to participate in a meaningful way.

So far, volunteers like Kranzler — many of them Bergen County residents — have registered more than 125 groups, ranging from Ivy League Hillels to Chabad Lubavitch outposts. Joszef said B’Lev Echad is not funded or sponsored by any organization and is not soliciting funds.

Kranzler, a Stern College freshman, remembers the massacre on the night of March 6, 2008, all too well. Then a student at the nearby Michlelet Mevasseret Yerushalayim, she and her classmates had been to the yeshiva several times and were stunned when news of the shooting reached them. Afterward, she paid shiva visits to three of the grieving families.

The terror attack left 11 wounded and eight dead: Neria Cohen, 15; Segev Pniel Avihail, 15; Avraham David Moses, 16, Yehonatan Yitzhak Eldar, 16; Ro’i Roth, 18; Yohai Lipshitz, 18; Yonadav Chaim Hirshfeld, 18; and Doron Mahareta, 26.

The shooter, 26-year-old Alaa Abu Dhein, had worked as a driver at the yeshiva. He was later shot dead by a student and an off-duty soldier.

Jozsef said the family donating the Torah scrolls “wanted the dedication to be a unifying event for people all over the world, to feel involved and not just to watch.”

The dedication is to be broadcast live on blevechad.com at noon EST on Feb. 24, which corresponds to Rosh Chodesh Adar, the Hebrew date of the attack.

Joszef’s goal is to have the study of the entire Torah and Talmud completed eight times. The completion, or siyyum, is to be celebrated along with the dedication.

Arthur Poleyeff, principal of Torah Academy of Bergen County in Teaneck, said he heard about B’lev Echad just as he and his staff were contemplating how to mark the yahrzeit of the tragedy.

“All 265 students will assemble to watch the Torah dedication,” said Poleyeff. “In addition, we also will be learning the entire Masechat [Tractate] Pesachim. Each student will learn an amud [page of Talmud], and we will make our own siyyum that morning prior to the worldwide siyyum. The kids have really taken to it.”

Last week, Kranzler and two other volunteers went to Ma’ayanot Yeshiva High School for Girls in Teaneck to participate in a call-a-thon to register as many additional participants as possible.

“I saw there were shuls in Teaneck on the list that hadn’t signed up and I knew they would jump at the opportunity so we started contacting them,” she said. As of late last week, their e-mails had been answered positively by Teaneck’s Cong. Bnai Yeshurun and Cong. Beth Aaron.

 
 
 
 
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It was so beautiful

Teaneck youth helps Israeli boys celebrate b’nai mitzvah

At his bar mitzvah at Cong. Keter Torah in February, Teaneck resident Daniel Raykher announced that he’d use a portion of his gift money to sponsor bar mitzvahs for disadvantaged boys in Israel.

True to his word — and with lots of help from his parents and Bris Avrohom executive director Rabbi Mordechai Kanelsky — Daniel and his family traveled to Israel this summer to join 13 young men at the festive occasion.

 

Hudson cultural forum tackles diverse issues

When North Bergen resident Burt Gitlin launched the HudsonJewish social/intellectual salon project in June, he was looking for a way to bring area Jews together.

“I thought this might be an easy, soft sell,” said Gitlin, stressing that HudsonJewish — which seeks to revive local Jewish life by pulling together disparate elements of the community — is not a religious entity but more of a cultural organization.

“We try to be secular,” said Raylie Dunkel, the group’s program director. “The salons take a look at what affects you as a Jew, but not in terms of being a religious person.”

 

Update planned on swine flu vaccine

The initial outbreak of H1N1 (also known as swine flu) in the spring, first in Mexico, and then in the United States, has provided some lessons on what will be needed when the flu virus returns this fall. Based on patterns seen in past flu outbreaks, health-care professionals and government officials expect a more widespread outbreak of H1N1. They are preparing for this by educating the public, providing for extensive vaccinations, and planning strategies to handle workplace and school outbreaks.

A report by the non-profit group Trust for America’s Health projects that in the case of a severe pandemic more than 2.5 million New Jersey residents could get sick, and tens of thousands might die.

 

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Reality check: Konrad Adenauer Foundation brings Muslim leaders to Holocaust sites

Rabbi Jack Bemporad wants it known that the visit he organized of eight Muslim-American leaders to concentration camps was a historic success.

Bemporad, director of the Carlstadt-based Center for Interreligious Understanding, called the Aug. 7 to 11 trip to Auschwitz in Germany and Dachau in Poland “a breakthrough in many respects, because … we took imams like [Yasir] Qadhi, for example,” who 10 years ago called the Holocaust a hoax. (Bemporad led the trip, which was sponsored by the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, with Prof. Marshall Breger of the Catholic University of America.)

 

Reality check: Konrad Adenauer Foundation brings Muslim leaders to Holocaust sites

‘Stand up firmly for justice’

Following is a statement issued by the Muslim leaders who visited Auschwitz and Dachau last month.

“O you who believe, stand up firmly for justice as witnesses to Almighty God.” (Holy Qu’ran, al-Nisa “The Women” 4:135)

On Aug. 7-11, 2010, we the undersigned Muslim American faith and community leaders visited Dachau and Auschwitz concentration camps where we witnessed firsthand the historical injustice of the Holocaust.

 

Future of Union for Traditional Judaism sale uncertain

The Union for Traditional Judaism’s Teaneck headquarters sold at auction early last month, but a motion filed last week in U.S. bankruptcy court last week cast doubt on the transaction.

UTJ’s attorney, Janice Grubin, filed a motion on Aug. 27 requesting an extension for her client to file a Chapter 11 plan. Extending this period of exclusivity, during which the debtor can create a plan to pull itself out of bankruptcy without imposed outside solutions, is not atypical in bankruptcy cases, she said. The property went to auction on Aug. 4, which was won by 333 Realty for $1.45 million.

 
 
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