Among those planning the educational event on the BRCA gene mutation are Merry Prostic (from left), Trudy Jacobson, Federation Women’s Philanthropy chair, Bunni Copaken and Lisa Schifman, Women’s Philanthropy director. Prostic and her husband, Dr. Edward Prostic, have endowed the Penn outreach program series in memory of their daughter, Elizabeth, who had the BRCA gene and died from breast cancer. Copaken is the sister of Prostic and aunt of Elizabeth, and has been involved in the planning of the event.

Elizabeth Prostic was young, married for only a few years and the mother of a new baby. A native of Kansas City, Elizabeth had all the things many of us hope for when she was suddenly struck down by breast cancer. Elizabeth died from BRCA gene breast cancer, a mutation that if detected early can minimize your risk.

We no longer live in world where people get old and then think of themselves as old, so explains Rabbi Rachel Cowan, co-author of “Wise Aging: Living with Joy, Resilience, and Spirit.” Rabbi Cowan, who is senior fellow and co-founder of the Institute for Jewish Spirituality, wrote the book after her own retirement. Through the IJS, she expanded those thoughts and developed, along with Dr. Linda Thal, a Wise Aging program aimed at helping seniors both explore this stage of life as well as cultivate qualities of the soul.

Rick Recht

Rick Recht, one of the top-touring Jewish musicians today, will join Rabbi Alan Londy at the New Reform Temple’s evening services on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. In addition to his role as an artist, Recht is regarded as a top Jewish educator and leader. He lives in St. Louis, Missouri, where he serves as artist in residence at United Hebrew Congregation.

Jerry Sisk, volunteer for Simcha Gifts, helped pack and deliver beautiful flowering plants in honor of Shavuot to area Jewish seniors this past spring.

SIMCHA GIFTS NEEDS VOLUNTEERS! — As the holidays approach, Simcha Gifts is preparing to make a holiday delivery to Jewish seniors who live in nursing homes, retirement centers and in their own homes. The Simcha Gifts program is run by Chabad House, under the tutelage of Blumah Wineberg. She said the program needs “more wonderful volunteers to help pack and deliver Simcha Gifts before the High Holidays. It is such a beautiful mitzvah!

Students from the NRT’s Religious School display mezuzahs they made using candy dispensers.

Beginning this fall, The New Reform Temple (NRT) will begin offering grades K through third at its Henry & Marion Bloch Religious School to members of the Jewish community tuition-free, and “without families having to be members of the NRT,” said Dan Fromm, NRT president. “This option will be available to any Jewish family in the community that is currently unaffiliated with a congregation.”

Jessica Rudnick Kaseff (left) and Miriam Kaseff first worked on a Habitat for Humanity house 11 years ago in celebration of Barry Kaseff’s 40th birthday. They installed insulation to help weatherproof the house.

Most of us in the Jewish community take it for granted that we have a warm — or this time of year cool — home in which we can sleep easy every night. That’s not true everywhere and a group from the Jewish community, led by Barry Kaseff, is making sure a family in Kansas City, Kansas, will have a home of their own where they, too, can feel safe and secure.

One in eight couples, that’s 12 percent of married women, have trouble getting pregnant or sustaining a pregnancy according to a 2006-2010 National Survey of Family Growth reported on by the Centers for Disease Control. That can be devastating news for a couple, both financially and psychologically, as they look for ways to start a family. In the past it’s been difficult to find support for those seeking it within in the Jewish community. Annie Glickman hopes it becomes easier very soon.

Sandi Lerner with her friend Ruth Margolin — one of the many Village Shalom residents benefiting from Lerner’s numerous volunteer hours.

Sandi Lerner is a talker. She’ll be the first to admit it, and anyone who knows her will attest. But on the afternoon of July 30, before a room full of witnesses, Sandi Lerner was rendered speechless for the first time she could remember. It was because on this day, at an impromptu presentation during Village Shalom’s weekly happy hour, Village Shalom President and CEO Matt Lewis informed the crowd that Lerner had been selected as the LeadingAge Kansas “Volunteer of the Year.”

Mendel Segal, aka “RaBBi-Q, cleaned up at the Chicago Kosher BBQ Competition with first places in chicken, brisket and beans on his way to being the grand champion, June 2015. Photo courtesy of Rabbi Mendel Segal

(Editor’s note: The Chronicle has published several stories about the Vaad’s Rabbi Mendel Segal as well as the 4th annual Kansas City Vaad Kosher BBQ Festival and Competition to be held Sunday, Aug. 16, at the Ritz Charles in Overland Park. Since readers of the Times of Israel have enjoyed this story this week, we thought our readers would like it as well.)

LEAWOOD, Kansas — Mendel Segal wears two particular titles that each reflect a devotion to tradition, imply an unending pursuit of precision and command immediate respect.