BIAV member named one of Professional Builder’s ‘40 Under 40’
Zalman Kohen, vice president and chief operating officer at Summit Custom Homes, was featured in the March 2014 issue of Professional Builder in the magazine’s “40 Under 40” list. As described by the article, the 40 individuals who made the list “represent the next generation of leadership and innovation in home building.”
Kohen is a “very talented and dedicated executive, and is absolutely deserving of this award. He certainly is representative of the next generation of leadership and innovation in home building,” commented Summit’s President and CEO Fred Delibero.
Professional Builder received more than 100 submissions for this year’s awards.
“When selecting candidates, we primarily look for impressive and concrete accomplishments, such as contributions to noteworthy revenue and company growth, integrating new systems or technologies that reduced cost, and giving back to the community,” said Kyle Clapham, Professional Builder’s managing editor.
In 1995, when he was 15 years old, Kohen and his family immigrated to the United States and the Kansas City area from Uzbekistan, an independent republic that was part of the former Soviet Union until 1991.
“My uncle was the one who sponsored us and the Jewish Family Services provided us some assistance initially,” said Kohen, a member of BIAV.
The Jewish Community Center, the Heart of America Shakespeare Festival and Johnson County Community College Performing Arts Series are collaborating to produce Kansas City’s first professional production of “The Merchant of Venice” since 1950.
THANKS FOR A JOB WELL DONE! — Alan Bram was honored Monday night for his 26-plus years at the Jewish Community Campus. He became its executive director while it was still being built and he stepped down as its full-time exec in April 2013. However he stayed on behind the scenes, as is the way he always likes to keep things, and continued working for the Campus in a consultant role. Little did he know he would have to ramp it back up last month just after two people were killed in the Campus parking lot. Bram was responsible for instituting all the security procedures that were put into place that day and will continue to help Jewish communal leaders review and revise those procedures and policies. At the reception in his honor, a plaque was unveiled that hangs next to the security desk at the Campus’ main entrance. It reads: “In appreciation of Alan’s outstanding advice as the first executive director of the Jewish Community Campus. Alan gave his ‘Heart and Soul’ to the Campus. Alan’s dedication, devotion, diligence, time and talent made the Campus the ‘Crown Jewel’ of Kansas City’s Jewish community.” I hope I speak for everyone who has ever walked through the doors of the Campus when I say there aren’t enough plaques in the world to thank you for working so hard to keep us — and all those children attending the CDC and HBHA — all safe at the Campus.
We don’t always give teens the credit they deserve. Teens are often accused of being young and preoccupied. Even if they are young and preoccupied, they often do good things, especially the BBYOers who planned the Friday night service, vigil and walk to Village Shalom from the Jewish Community Campus last week.
“We’re not going anywhere. We’re going to be back in our synagogues, we’re going to be back in our JCCs, our children are going to be attending the schools because if they don’t and if we aren’t, the act of one hater, one individual, has impacted this entire community and has won and that’s not what this is about.”
The feelings we’ve been having, Paul Goldenberg said, “can almost be described as a punch in the stomach.”
The Hyman Brand Hebrew Academy, in cooperation with Jewish Family Services, is hosting trauma experts from Project C.H.A.I., a project of Chai Lifeline International, to help explain to parents how to talk to their children about the tragic events last week when three people died following shootings at the Jewish Community Campus and Village Shalom. The event will be held at 7 p.m. tonight, Thursday, April 24, in the Social Hall of the Jewish Community Campus. It is open to adults in the community.
The Jewish Federation of Greater Kansas City announces three upcoming events that will provide an opportunity for all members of the Kansas City community to celebrate together, in honor of Israel. All three events are sponsored by the Israel Committee of the Jewish Federation.
The power of the pen has proved critical to an Edison rabbi’s push to pass the lessons learned through the Holocaust to future generations.