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Helen Thomas topic for lecture


David Nesenoff, who filmed the video exposing the anti-Semitic and anti-Israel views of longtime White House correspondent Helen Thomas, will speak Sunday, Jan. 6 at 7 p.m. at Congregation Young Israel.

The lecture, “To Catch an Anti-Semite,” will kick off Chabad of Tucson's 2013 lecture series.

Nesenoff, ordained as a Conservative rabbi, filmed Thomas at a May 2010 White House reception for Jewish Heritage Month, asking the dean of the White House Press Corps if she had any comments about Israel.

Her response, that Jews should "get the hell out of Palestine" and "go home" to Poland and Germany, led to across-the-board condemnation. Thomas, then 89, ultimately resigned from Hearst newspapers.

The video, viewed close to 2 million times on YouTube.com alone, thrust Nesenoff into the limelight, with interviews by the New York Times, the Washington Post, CNN and Fox News. He also received 25,000 pieces of hate mail, including several death threats.

The video also shed light on Nesenoff's work as an advocate for anti-bias and tolerance. In the 1990s, he counseled youth who had committed bias crimes and was a consultant to the U.S. Department of Justice in the Denny's Restaurant racial discrimination case.

A filmmaker and musician, Nesenoff is the author of "David's Harp," a collection of satire, humor and commentary.

In Tucson, he will speak about his encounter with Thomas and explore hate crimes, media bias, cyber-hatred — and how to cultivate a community of tolerance and respect.

Admission is $18 in advance or $25 at the door. RSVP here

(Arizona Jewish Post)

Young Jewish Girls Light Too

On her third birthday, Goldie Ceitlin has helped renew an age-old custom that has been practiced in many Jewish communities dating back to the matriarch Rebecca.

Standing on a plastic chair at Congregation Young Israel of Tucson, Ceitlin proudly lit a Shabbat candle for the first time and said the traditional blessing.

She was followed by her mother Mrs. Feigie Ceitlin, and grandmothers Mrs. Chanie Shemtov of Tucson and Mrs. Adina Ceitlin of Montreal, Canada and the women and girls among the crowd of 100 people.

Researches say that it was only during the World Wars that the custom of young girls lighting candles stopped being observed.

At that time, candles became scarce and even the heads of households could not easily obtain candles. Therefore the custom of young girls lighting candles was forgotten.

With this no longer an issue, the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M.Schneersohn, of righteous memory, encouraged all Jewish girls to light their own Shabbat and holiday candles with the consent of their parents.

Her father, Rabbi Yehuda Ceitlin and grandfather, Rabbi Yossie Shemtov of Chabad Tucson urged participants to have Shabbat candles lit in their own homes (learn more about this special mitzvah).

Honored with lighting the menorah on the 7th night of Chanukah was Tucson Mayor Jonathan Rothschild.

A video starring Goldie Ceitlin based on the children's book "Is It Shabbos Yet?" was shown before candle lighting: 

Author to highlight Inquisition in America

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Sandra Toro, author of several historical novels including the recently published "Secrets Behind Adobe Walls" (Gaon Books), will shed light on the little known activities of the Spanish Inquisition in America in a lecture on Thursday, Dec. 20 at 7:00 p.m.

The talk, hosted by Chabad of Tucson, will be held at Congregation Young Israel, 2443 E 4th Street, Tucson.

Toro's new book explores the experience of being a converso, a hidden Jew, in the middle of the 18th century in what is now New Mexico.

"The Holy Office of the Inquisition was opened in Mexico City in 1620 and not closed until 1831. During those years it was dangerous to practice Judaism in the privacy of one’s home, even here in what is now the United States," says Toro, who teaches creative writing at the University of New Mexico.

Toro also has worked as a journalist and producer for ABC-TV and PBS, was a staff member in U.S. Department of Energy during the Carter administration and was a consultant to the Department of the Interior during the Clinton administration.

Admission is $18 (free for students). To RSVP and pay online - click here.

For more information, call 520-881-7956 or e-mail [email protected].

Documentary Tells of Mystic Shawl

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A new video biography, "The Black Shawl — Chana Fels' Journey Remembered," provides chilling details of Jewish life in Poland during the Nazi occupation.

 The story, narrated by Chana's son, Moses Sterngast, follows the journey of two Jewish women, Chana Fels and her mother, Sara Fels, as they experience the horrors of the Holocaust.

As Sterngast tells it, one stormy evening there was a knock on the door of the home that belonged to his great-grandparents, Chava and Samuel Hiller.

A stranger appeared, wet and shivering from the cold. Chava invited him in and left the room to bring him a warm meal. When she returned, there was no sign of him — not even footsteps in the snow. The only proof he'd been there was a black shawl left on the chair.

Sterngast believes that this shawl, inherited by his grandmother Sara, was imbued with deep mythic and mystic meaning, woven into the fabric of his mother's survival story.

The film is based on an article Fels wrote for the New York-based newspaper The Jewish Press and recorded interviews with her before her death in 2009.

Her sons David and Moses teamed up with Pamela Asherah, a producer of family biography films in Tucson, after watching a production she created about her father, also a Holocaust survivor.

"What began as a family project is blossoming into a life of its own," says Sterngast, who is in talks about the film with the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles and the Jewish Federation of Southern Arizona's Holocaust education program.

The film will premiere on Sunday, Dec. 23 at 4 p.m. at Congregation Young Israel, 2443 E 4th Street, in connection with the "general kaddish day" for the victims of the Holocaust on Tevet 10, a fast day.

A discussion with Sterngast and Asherah will follow. Refreshments will be served after the fast ends. Admission is free; for more information, e-mail Asherah at [email protected].

Chabad: Let AZ Inmates Light

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Chabad of Arizona asked the state Department of Corrections to allow inmates to light menorahs during Chanukah using real flames.

Arizona is one of seven states that do not allow prison inmates to light menorahs using real candles or oil, Chabad told the Arizona Republic newspaper.

"It's wrong to deny their religious freedom, especially when there are so many ways it can be done," said Rabbi Zalman Levertov, regional director of Chabad of Arizona.

Levertov proposed having a prison guard light a menorah that is visible to the Jewish inmates. 

Bill Lamoreaux, a Department of Corrections spokesman, told the newspaper that having an open flame in the prison is both a "safety and security risk."

Arizona has some 680 Jewish inmates in its prisons, but some 11,000 inmates who want to use burning candles for ceremonial purposes.

"Any accommodation for any religion has to be allowed for others as well," Mike Linderman, administrator of pastoral activities for the Department of Corrections, told the newspaper. 
 
(JTA

Chanukah Movie & Game Night

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Chabad of Tucson and Congregation Young Israel of Tucson are holding the second Chanukah Movie & Game Night on Saturday night, December 8, at 8:00 PM.

A fun night for the whole family, the first candle of Chanukah will be lit and traditional holiday melodies will be sung.

The event will feature foods that commemorate the miracle of the oil in the Holy Temple in Jerusalem lasting for 8 days. Latkes (potato pancakes) and sufganiyot (donuts) will be served with applesauce, macaroni and cheese, fresh salads and drinks.

Board games will be spread out on tables at the social hall of Young Israel at 2443 E 4th Street, corner Tucson Blvd.

Screening for the night will be Chanukah at Bubbe's, a 1991 puppet production designed by David Silverman, an animator best known for directing numerous episodes of The Simpsons.

The 30-minute program will keep both children and adults drawn to the tales of the holiday celebrate at the boarding house of everyone's favorite grandmother.

Admission is $18 for 2 people or $36 per family.

Chabadniks proud of 'criminal' past

A column by Rabbi Yehuda Ceitlin of Chabad of Tucson, published in the November 30, 2012 issue of the Arizona Jewish Post.

 

By Rabbi Yehuda Ceitlin, Arizona Jewish Post

On Dec. 3, corresponding to the Hebrew date of Kislev 19, Chabad followers around the globe celebrate the release from prison of the founder of Chabad Hasidism, Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi. 

A few days earlier, Kislev 10, is named by Hasidim the "festival of liberation" as the day his successor, Rabbi DovBer of Lubavitch, was released from prison as well.

In fact, there are more such commemorations. It is told about a father whose son was becoming religious and was spending time in Chabad circles: upon hearing the causes for many Hasidic celebrations, the father commented, "Son, perhaps you should not be hanging out with such lawless folks."

My great-grandfather, Rabbi Aaron Eliezer Tzeitlin, belonged to that seemingly shady club as well.

On Dec. 20, 1937 he was sentenced to eight years of "restorative work" in Russia's Siberia (he ultimately died there, never to be properly buried). The counts he was convicted on explain why I am so proud of his criminal past — and why Chabad pays tribute to its rebbes' felonious activities.

According to the investigation file, Rabbi Aaron Eliezer was accused of being "a member of the underground group and promoted among Jewish workers anti-revolutionary propaganda against Soviet rule and its leaders." He also "persuaded Jews to immigrate to Palestine."

This referred to the Torah classes he gave, the mikvah he built and the kosher food he supervised for Belarus Jews. And later, the underground synagogue and Jewish day school he operated in his home in the Moscow suburb of Mozhaysk, until the Soviet secret police finally got hold of him.

Today it is hard to imagine living a Jewish life with the challenges our forefathers faced, or the existential dangers our grandparents confronted not too long ago.

The options for observing Torah and mitzvot are practically laid out in front of us. In-depth learning can be done with a swipe on the iPad, communities and charities welcome involvement with open arms, Trader Joe's carries American Kosher Beef Salami and lighting a Shabbat candle does not have to be done in a windowless room.

Yet, the abundance of options and choices in a free society often leads to taking reality for granted.

The rabbinic sage Ben Zoma observed, "How many labors Adam carried out before he obtained bread to eat! He plowed, he sowed, he reaped, he bound, he threshed and winnowed and selected the ears, he ground, and sifted, he kneaded and baked, and then at last he ate; whereas I get up, and find all these things done for me."

The key to securing our commitment to Jewish ideals and tradition is perhaps gratitude. 

If we must learn to be grateful to those who provide for many of our physical needs, then we must surely learn to appreciate those who provide for our spiritual ones, as Rabbi Lazar Gurkow points out in his new book, "Reaching For G-d."

When we observe the Torah, we validate not only our mandate but also the millions who sacrificed much to attain and preserve it, Gurkow says. Conversely, when we abandon the Torah, we betray not only our mandate but also our ancestors' many sacrifices.

What the farbrengens (Hasidic celebrations) remind us is that if our rabbis back in the 1800s could endure imprisonment in Czarist Russia for keeping the faith, how difficult can it be for us? 

King David implores in Psalm 34: "Taste it, and you will see that G-dliness is good." Today, you can do so much more than taste.


Rabbi Yehuda Ceitlin is development director of Chabad of Tucson and associate rabbi at Congregation Young Israel of Tucson.

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