A large crowd, estimated between 2,000 and 2,500 people, enjoyed the fourth KosherFest at Congregation Ohev Sholom in 2010.

Where can you find cheese blintzes, challah, stuffed cabbage rolls, knishes, tabouli and an authentic egg cream all in one spot on Sunday, June 1? Ohev Sholom’s KosherFest: Kansas City’s Celebration of Jewish Food, Fitness & Fun. (Details may be found below.) 

Editor’s note: We last updated Chronicle readers in January about the progress of Blake Ephraim, a 16-year-old member of Congregation Beth Torah who suffered a stroke in early November. May is National Stroke Awareness Month and Blake was featured in a campaign conducted by the University of Kansas Hospital. The following is an update of her story.

Josh Kolkin (left) and Gavi Glickman make a banner of healing.

CARDS OF SUPPORT — Since the April 13 tragedy in the Jewish Community, the Jewish Community Center has received hundreds of notes and cards of comfort and support from all over the county. They came from Jewish Hebrew school students from Oregon; Muslim

Rabbi Mark H. Levin will retire as the pulpit rabbi of Congregation Beth Torah at the end of June and assume the title of founding rabbi.

After 38 years as a rabbi — all of that time serving congregations in the Kansas City area — Rabbi Mark H. Levin is ready to relax a little. He’s been the pulpit rabbi for 25 of those years at Congregation Beth Torah, the congregation he helped found in 1988 with a handful of others committed to creating a modern American Jewish community in southern Johnson County. He has been a rabbi in this city longer than any other currently serving a local congregation full-time. Of those rabbis, he also has the longest tenure at one congregation of any “senior” rabbi here. 

Kansas City was just one of a few cities Roman Polonsky (right), head of the Jewish Agency for Israel’s Russian-speaking Jewry Unit, visited after he spent three days in the Ukraine last week. He is shown with Karen Pack, a member of JAFI’s board of directors, and Dusty Heist-Levine, JAFI’s manager of community relationships.

In 1990, when Roman Polonsky left the former Soviet Union with $150 and a piano and made aliyah to Israel, he said, “We had nothing to lose. We didn’t own much.” Many Russian Jews were underemployed or had no prospects for future advancement in their fields. While it’s easy to compare the situation today in Ukraine to the mass emigration of Jews from the FSU, Polonsky insists it’s totally different.

Rabbi Dr. Akiva Tatz

For those who have followed Rabbi Dr. Akiva Tatz’s teachings, his books, podcasts from earlier tape recordings and lectures, his visit here May 30-June 1 is a welcome one. At last, the great Torah scholar, author, physician and medical ethicist will reveal what seems so difficult to laymen — “the inner reality” — the hidden meaning in the Torah. 

Katie ZemelCourageous, strong, determined as well as incredibly warm and genuine are words that describe this year’s Amy Thompson Run for Brain Injury honoree Katie Zemel. A native of Overland Park, Zemel suffered a traumatic brain injury in 1998 when struck by lightning during a soccer game in her freshman year of high school at Shawnee Mission South.

Gary Friedman with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell at the NFL Draft on May 10. GO CHIEFS! — Last month we told you Gary Friedman was the highest bidder in an auction to attend the NFL Draft in New York City as a guest of the Chiefs. He and his wife Patti flew to New York for the draft, held May 8-10. As the Chiefs’ representative, Friedman carried the draft pick’s hat on the red carpet and was to hand NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell the team jersey the commissioner traditionally gives to each of the first-round draft picks. But the Chiefs’ first-round draft pick, Dee Ford, a defensive end from Auburn, wasn’t in New York so Friedman didn’t get to meet him. He did, however, have a first-class