Racewalker and senior athlete Alan Poisner is once again a multiple gold-medal winner.

On May 30, he participated in the Double Road Race, a national event held in Corporate Woods in Overland Park. Elite athletes from all over the country came to the area for a unique race that consisted of a 10,000-meter race, followed just a short time later (30 to 60 minutes) by a 5,000-meter race. The times from each race were totaled to determine the winners. Poisner finished first in the 75-79 age division and was awarded the Gold Medal by Billy Mills, the 1964 Olympic Gold Medalist (and KU graduate) in the 10,000 meters. Poisner was the only racewalker in the event.

On July 11, Poisner participated in the USATF National Masters Outdoor Championships held in Olathe. This time he won the 5,000-meter racewalk in his age division (also 75-79) in which athletes from all over the country participated.

Three days later Poisner won another gold medal in the 10,000-meter racewalk at the Olathe District Athletic Center.

“This was a serious competition and with experienced athletes competing in all track and field events,” Poisner said.

Two years ago he won gold medals at both the National Senior Games in Houston and the World Masters Athletics Championships in Sacramento, Calif. The 78-year-old racewalker will be in Cleveland next week to take part in the National Senior Games and plans to race in both the 1,500 meters (a little less than 1 mile) and 5,000 meters (3.1 miles) events. Poisner has attended each of these biannual events since 1993.

Poisner is president of the Heartland Racewalkers club, which has recently announced an affiliation with the Jewish Community Center. The club meets every Saturday morning for one hour, starting at 8:30 a.m., and walks at the nearby Sprint campus. Members currently meet at the pavilion southwest of the tennis courts and near the west parking lot. When the weather turns too cold or wet, Heartland Racewalkers club will use the JCC’s indoor track between 8:30 and 9:30 a.m.

On Aug. 3, Heartland Racewalkers club will have its monthly meeting indoors at the JCC with a review of the recent USATF National Masters racewalking events. For more information, contact Poisner at .

SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE — The Israel Spirit Commission will present a $200 scholarship to a recent high school graduate enrolled in post-secondary education. To qualify, graduates must show involvement with their heritage or Israel. The Israel Spirit Commission is a part of the Ethnic Enrichment Commission and does outreach in support of Israel. The Israel Spirit commissioners are Deborah O’Bannon and Ben Nachum. Request an application from Sue-Ellen Flescher at . Applications are due by Thursday, Aug. 8.

CROCK POT’S JEWISH ROOTS PART II — Last week we learned through Jewniverse the Crock-Pot®, the famous name-brand slow cooker, was created by Jewish inventor Irving Naxon. Reader Marvin Fremerman informs us there is more to that story.

“Bet you didn’t know that the actual name Crock Pot® was created by a Jewish advertising agency executive named Al Coleman who serviced the Rival Manufacturers account,” Fremerman wrote in an email. “Al was one of the nicest guys you’d ever want to meet and was a far cry from the folks seen on the ‘Mad Men’ television show ... He was a real mensch.”

CREEPY CAB RIDE — Former Kansas Citian and radio personality Jay Cooper and his wife Valerie Wolf were featured on the front page of the New York Times on Saturday, July 20, but not for something fun. Under the headline “Florida Couple Held by Cabbie in Deadly Temps, 3.6 mile ride turns into heated kidnapping as driver claims to be lost,” the story recounts how they found themselves “trapped in a compact Yellow Cab in direct sunlight on a JFK airport roadway for nearly an hour, as the taxi driver claimed to not know the route to their hotel (located on airport property), kept the air conditioning servicing only the driver’s compartment, and meter running.” The story explains how the couple kept their cool on one of New York’s hottest days, called the Taxi Authority and were returned safely to the taxi stand where a second taxi delivered them to their destination.

ORIGINAL SCHINDLER’S TO BE AUCTIONED — (JTA) The original list of names of 801 Jews rescued by German industrialist Oskar Schindler is set to be auctioned off on eBay.

The New York Post reported Friday, July 19, that the 14 pages containing the original Schindler’s list would be auctioned off starting that day by California collectors Gary Zimet and Eric Gazin, who set the reserve price at $3 million but are hoping to sell it for $5 million.

The date April 18, 1945, is written in pencil on the first page. Only male names appear on the German-language list, as well as each person’s date of birth and profession.

The list was named for Oskar Schindler, a German businessman credited with saving more than 1,000 Jews from the Nazis by deeming them essential workers for his enamel works factories.

His story reached worldwide attention after the release of the 1993 feature film “Schindler’s List.” Directed by Steven Spielberg, the movie won the Academy Award for Best Picture. It was based on the Booker Prize-winning novel “Schindler’s Ark,” which Australian novelist Thomas Keneally published in 1982.

Of the seven original versions of the list, only four are known to exist — including two at Yad Vashem, the Israeli Holocaust Memorial Museum, and one at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, the Post reported.

The sellers said the copy being offered for sale on eBay is located in Israel, according to the paper.

“It is extremely rare that a document of this historical significance is put on the market,” Zimet said. “Many of the survivors on this list and their descendants moved to the United States, and there are names on this list which will sound very familiar to New Yorkers.”

Zack Tanenbaum is a three-time Kansas state wrestling champion. He hopes to return from the 19th Maccabiah Games and announce he’s a Maccabiah champion as well.

More specifically, Tanenbaum would like to be a two-time Maccabiah champion. He is competing in Greco-Roman wrestling on Sunday, July 21, and freestyle wrestling on Monday, July 22. Both competitions will be held in Ashdod. The opening ceremonies are slated to be held tonight, Thursday, July 18, at Teddy Kollek Stadium in Jerusalem.

The biggest Jewish sports event of all time features 9,000 athletes from 70 different countries who will participate in one of 42 different sports. The competition lasts 11 days and takes place in venues all over Israel. Closing ceremonies will be held in Jerusalem on Aug. 30.

The principal mission of the Maccabiah is to facilitate a worldwide gathering of young Jewish athletes in Israel, staging the highest possible levels of sports competitions and strengthening their connection to the State of Israel and the Jewish people. In an interview before he left for Israel last week, Tanenbaum said he was very much looking forward to competing in this event.

“I think the biggest reason why I wanted to go to the Maccabiah is for the international competition,” said Tanenbaum, a 2011 graduate of Blue Valley North who won state wrestling championships as a sophomore, junior and senior. He was the second-place finisher as a freshman.

Not only is he looking forward to the “highly competitive tournament,” but also the fact that this unique competition is strictly for Jewish people.

“Where else can you wrestle other people from all the way around the world in a really highly competitive tournament … and be with other Jewish athletes like yourself,” he said adding that because they are all Jewish he and his competitors will have more in common than simply the sport itself.

“I think that’s pretty cool,” said the son of Kelly Jackson and Rob Tanenbaum. The family belongs to Congregation Ohev Sholom.

In fact Tanenbaum isn’t the first member of his family to compete in the Maccabiah in Israel. Four years ago his older brother Jake competed in the exact same events and earned two gold medals.

Zack Tanenbaum, who wants to be a physician when his competitive wrestling days are over, will be a junior at Brown University in Providence, R.I., this fall studying health and human biology. Another reason he said wanted to earn a spot on the U.S. team was because the event is in Israel.

“I can travel around and I can identify more with my Jewish identity and I can also gain a lot of information about Israeli culture and life,” he said before the trip.

In fact this is his third trip to Israel, one of which was a Birthright trip.

“Birthright was amazing, it’s awesome,” he said.

Team USA arrived in Israel a week in advance of the games to participate in the ISRAEL CONNECT cultural and educational program that is unique to Maccabi USA. The IC program provides these athletes with the opportunity to tour the historic and religious sites of Israel as members of Team USA so they can bond with each other, their culture and heritage and experience the magic and beauty of Israel.

“We take athletes that happen to be Jewish, to compete in the Maccabiah Games,” said Jeff Bukantz, general chairman of 19th Maccabiah USA Organizing Committee. “But we return home with Jewish athletes who have a renewed sense of pride in their Judaism and increased support for the State of Israel.”

By early this week Team USA had already traveled to many places, including the Kotel, Jerusalem, the Dead Sea and Masada. Many more things are on the agenda before the trip is over including a visit to Yad Vashem.

Tanenbaum is one of the 1,140 athletes and coaches representing the United States, the largest traveling delegation ever to travel from the USA to compete in an International Olympic Committee-sanctioned event. An additional group of more than 300 friends and family are in Israel with Maccabi USA to cheer on the team, including some of Tanenbaum’s relatives. Two other athletes from Kansas were selected for Team USA — Jacob Biller, a junior boys baseball player from Manhattan, Kan., and Adam Beren, a master’s tennis player from Wichita.

The Maccabiah, often called “the Jewish Olympics, takes place every four years in Israel. It is the third largest international sporting event in the world, after the Summer Olympics and the Pan Am Games.

Within the Maccabiah there are four separate competitions that take place — open, junior, masters and paralympics. Junior games are open to any qualifying athlete aged 15-18. Masters are divided into a number of different age categories mostly to accommodate older competitors and is open to ages 16-23.

Tanenbaum will compete in open wrestling. He qualified for the team at the trials held in Ohio in May and will wrestle at 66 kilograms, which is around 145 pounds. The first time he wrestled at that weight was at the trials.

“I usually wrestle lighter,” he said, noting that as a member of the Brown varsity wrestling team this year he often wrestled at 141.

He’s been “preparing and training hard” for the event, he said.

“I’ve been practicing a lot with some other good college wrestlers, including Symon Syton from Fort Hayes State. I’ve also been training with some of the better high school wrestlers in Kansas City,” Tanenbaum said.

The wrestling tournament itself is only two days. In addition to traveling around the country, the team will find time to fit in two-a-day training sessions.

Here in the United States Tanenbaum normally competes in freestyle wrestling. But international competitions include both freestyle and Greco-Roman styles.

“They are kind of similar but the rules and the scoring are a little bit different,” he explained.

The 10th Maccabiah Games

Over the years the Kansas City area has had several athletes compete in the Maccabiah Games in Israel. Two of those athletes from the area participated in the 10th Maccabiah Games, which were held in July 1977. The Chronicle covered their experiences extensively.
Linda Gollub, who was Linda Kaufman at the time, was a 19-year-old runner who attended the University of Missouri on a track scholarship. She won bronze medals in the 400 and 1600-meter relays on the U.S. team and also finished fourth in three individual races — 100, 200 and 400 meters.
Steve Greenberg was 23 at the time and won the gold medal in the pole vault, setting a new record for the event. He was a graduate of the University of Oklahoma, which he also attended on an athletic scholarship.

Sarah Goldman, 18, is a young woman of few words, but she undoubtedly saves her thoughts for her writing.

A National Merit Scholar, Goldman recently traveled to Iowa City, Iowa, to take part in “Between the Lines” Arab World, a creative writing and cultural exchange program that brings together talented young American writers ages 16-19 with peers from across the Middle East for two weeks of intensive creative study.

Students are chosen based on their writing skills. Goldman said she did not specifically seek out a program to work with other cultures; her brother heard about it and forwarded her the email. She thought it sounded interesting, so she applied.

“I think that in order to become a better writer, having new experiences and meeting new kinds of people are really important, because those things help you grow as a person,” Goldman wrote in her application letter to the International Writing Program.

While on the campus of the University of Iowa (home of the famed Iowa Writers’ Workshop), Goldman participated in intensive writing workshops and seminars, attended literary events and had an opportunity to give a public reading of her work at a local literary landmark, The Haunted Bookshop.

She said her reading went very well.

“Most of the people there were kids from the program and my parents were there, too.”

Before she left for Iowa, Goldman said her writing goals for the program were “to move people, to make them shout and laugh and cry.”

When asked if she did indeed make people shout and laugh and cry, she said, “Well, they laughed.” Which is appropriate since she was reading a humorous piece to them.

Goldman said interacting with Arab students was fun.

“It was really cool to see how a lot of things were similar to us, like they use the same websites and have the same kinds of songs. I thought that was interesting,” she said.

There was no problem communicating; Goldman said all the Middle Eastern students spoke perfect English. They came from a variety of countries. Goldman’s roommate was from Palestine.

“There was a kid there from Egypt and we kind of talked a little bit about what’s going on there with the revolution,” Goldman said. “It was interesting because all the Americans seemed a lot more worried about it than he did. He seemed kind of excited.”

During the two-week program, the participants worked closely with instructors John Murillo, an award-winning poet who serves on the creative writing faculty at New York University, and Ghada Abdel Aal, a bestselling novelist, screenwriter and blogger from Egypt.

“We learned about what writing is like in the Arab world. We had a session where they talked to us about Arabic poetry and how it’s the basis of their written tradition. And we learned about their culture. … I really liked their teachers; I learned a lot about how to approach writing.”

Goldman said she had not known what to expect from the program and was “kind of nervous if I would get along with everybody and what the process would be like. But I ended up having a really good time. I think I learned a lot and made a lot of friends I’m going to keep in contact with.”

While the program was short, Goldman said it felt longer.

“We were only there for two weeks, but by the time we left, it felt like it had been a very long time. Classes weren’t hard, but just a lot of focus.”

Goldman is interested in writing realistic, contemporary fiction for young adults. She plans to attend Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania in the fall, but hasn’t yet decided whether to major in an English program or sociology, which she feels would help foster her writing.

Goldman’s parents are Don Goldman, executive director of Jewish Family Services, and Martha Gershun, executive director of CASA. She has a brother Nathan who is 21. The family are members of Congregation Beth Torah.

Kansas City area native Rabbi Edwin Goldberg became the senior rabbi at Temple Sholom in Chicago on July 1. Temple Sholom, founded in 1867, is one of Chicago’s oldest synagogues. Rabbi Goldberg is now only the seventh senior rabbi in the Reform congregation’s 145-year history.

“It is with great delight that I look forward to beginning at Temple Sholom of Chicago and returning to my Midwestern roots,” he said via email. “Although I grew up in Kansas City I often visited Chicago, since most of my extended family lived there. Chicago is where my mother grew up after escaping from occupied Europe.”

Rabbi Goldberg was most recently the senior rabbi at Temple Judea in Coral Gables, Fla., which he served since 1996. During his tenure that congregation grew more than 50 percent to nearly 650 families, at a time when the Jewish population in Dade County was declining.

He is also a respected teacher and scholar. In addition to his responsibilities at Temple Judea, Rabbi Goldberg is the coordinator of the core editorial team for the upcoming Reform Movement’s High Holy Day Prayer Book. He is the author of four books: “Midrash for Beginners; Heads and Tales: Stories of the Sages to Enlighten Our Minds”; ”Swords and Plowshares: Jewish Views of War and Peace”; “Love Tales from the Talmud”; and “Saying No and Letting Go: Jewish Wisdom on Making Room for What Matters Most.” He has also published numerous articles and sermons. Rabbi Goldberg has served as an adjunct professor at the University of Miami in the Departments of Judaic and Religious Studies. His courses have included: Judaism and Jewish Thought, an Introduction to the New Testament and Jewish Mysticism.

Rabbi Goldberg was born in Kansas City, Mo., and graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Kansas in 1984. He attended Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Los Angeles and Cincinnati and was ordained as a rabbi in 1989. He earned a doctorate from Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in 1994. Prior to his arrival at Temple Judea, Rabbi Goldberg served as the assistant rabbi at the Isaac M. Wise Temple in Cincinnati, and as the associate rabbi at Temple Israel of Hollywood in Los Angeles. Rabbi Goldberg completed the Kellogg School of Management Institute for Jewish Leaders at Northwestern and will soon complete the Core Practice Leadership Development program at the Institute for Jewish Spirituality.

Rabbi Goldberg is married to Melanie Cole Goldberg, a Jewish educator. They have two children, Joseph (22) and Benjamin (19).

COME TO PLAY — Larry Gordon was honored as a recipient of the Buck O’Neil Seat Program of the Kansas City Royals on July 6 when the Royals played the Oakland A’s. To honor Buck, the Buck O’Neil Legacy Seat Program fills “Buck’s Seat” for every home game with a member of the community who, on a large or small scale, embodies an aspect of Buck’s spirit. Gordon was nominated by the Community Blood Center for giving 25 gallons of blood over the course of 35 years. As a CBC volunteer he also transports donations from blood drives throughout the area to its testing facility in Kansas City. The video presentation shown to the crowd on the Crown Vision HD scoreboard stated, “Larry has made donating blood a life mission and encourages others to do so as well.”

 

SUPPORT FRANK WHITE — Congregation Beth Torah member Lenny Cohen is part of a grass roots committee, “Second to None” hoping to get Royals Hall of Famer Frank White elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame. White is a five-time American League All-Star, eight-time Gold Glove Award winner, World Series Champion and one of only three numbers retired by the Royals. A bronze statue of White is prominently displayed outside Kauffman Stadium. Cohen said the committee is excited that White may be considered for the next ballot as evidenced by the 6,000 signed petitions and the myriad of very impressive letters of endorsement already received!

Fans interested in helping White get elected to the Hall of Fame can learn more about him and sign the petition that will be submitted soon to the Baseball Writers, responsible for developing the ballot, by visiting www.FrankWhitefortheHallofFame.com.

 

BOWLING WITH BARB — No, I’m not the Barb in the title of this event to raise funds to find a cure for mitochondrial disease. The Barb is my dear friend from BBYO days, Barb Mendelsohn, and Sunday’s sixth annual event was another successful one. On behalf of Barb and her family, thanks to everyone who helped make the day special. Larry W., thanks for taking the time to tell me you enjoy reading the paper and this column. All of us at The Chronicle  appreciate it!

 

CELEBRITY BBQ JUDDGE — Readers might wonder why foodie author and celebrity Simon Majumdar would come all the way to Kansas City to judge a kosher BBQ competition. For starters, he did tell Food Network audiences on “The Best Thing I Ever Ate” that K.C.’s own Stroud’s fried chicken beat all the others, hands down. In just  three years, he has become a mainstay on on several Food Network shows including “Iron Chef America,” “Extreme Chef,” “Best Thing I Ever Ate” and as a regular judge on “The Next Iron Chef” in its last two seasons.

But kosher?

Well, why not? Low-and-slow (Kansas City style) smoked brisket is juicy and mouth-watering. And Majumdar will be tasting the brisket, chicken and ribs of some of the 20-plus teams who enter the KC Kosher BBQ competition on Sunday, Aug. 18, on the grounds of The Temple, Congregation B’nai Jehudah.

Hosted by the Vaad HaKashruth,  the BBQ hopes to beat its opening attendance of 3,000 in 2012. Funds raised from the event go toward helping more area residents purchase kosher food.

So an Indian-British celebrity judge meets kosher BBQ at a Reform Temple. Go figure.

 

CROCK-POT’S JEWISH ROOTS — While perusing Jewniverse last month, I learned that the Crock-Pot®, the famous name-brand slow cooker many of us can’t live without, was created by Jewish inventor Irving Naxon. According to his daughter Lenore Naxon, he invented the slow cooker, which he called the Naxon Beanery, and sold it after he retired to Kansas City’s Rival Manufacturing. The story is he invented it as a way to make cholent for Shabbos. You can learn lots of interesting tidbits like this by visiting Jewniverse.com, a project of MyJewishLearning.com.

 

This year the Jewish Community Center camps — specifically Barney Goodman — have three shlichim (Israeli emissaries) on staff. This may be the first time the camp has ever employed so many emissaries at one time.

Almost every year the JCC has had at least one emissary on staff to interact with the campers and teach them about Israel. Usually these Israelis have been young women. This year the trio includes one man, Chen Stern, and two women, Gal Patel and Ronit Porges. The number of shlichim at the camp increased after the Director of JCC Camps Bridey Stangler went to Israel two years ago and learned more about the Jewish Agency for Israel’s program.

“I was blown away by what a fabulous training session the Jewish Agency provides and how much energy the shlichim have, and I realized what they were capable of doing at our camp,” Stangler said.

Last year Stangler changed the responsibilities of the shlichim and hired two young women.

“It went so well with two that we thought it could only go better with three. So far it has. We love having them and it makes Israel even more present at camp,” she said.

The shlichim arrived in town May 28 and will leave the area on Aug. 3, just one day after camp concludes. They are staying with several host families this summer.

Stangler explained that the three shlichim do a lot of tag-team programming, helping each other out whenever possible.

Patel is in charge of the Kol Yisroel room, which provides Israeli culture programming.

“Every year we have a room where the kids go and experience Israel in that room. By bringing in three people now they can experience Israel all over camp, and it’s nice.

Patel said she teaches the campers a different subject every week, trying to demonstrate as many aspects of Israeli life as she can. For instance, she said by using a big map she taught them about the important cities and places in Israel. Early in the camp session, Patel said she arranged Hebrew activities where they learned “some words in Hebrew and learned how to write their name in Hebrew.”

Patel, a 20-year-old from Ramat Gan, has also taught them things like Israeli birthday party games and “all the games I used to do when I was a child in Israel. Some are the same as here but some are new for them.”

Before the camp sessions are over she will have also taught them about Israeli inventions “that came into common use in the world,” and give them a chance to taste Israeli food.

“We got some Israeli Bazooka gum with the Hebrew comics,” she said, noting she’s heard that is always popular with the campers.

Two of the three shlichim — Patel and Stern — have completed their army service. This summer job counts as part of Porges’ service, and she has to report back to base immediately following summer camp where she will serve approximately one more month.

Porges, 20, said some of the kids know the Israelis have or are serving in the army.

“They think it’s cool. But they don’t really understand the variety of jobs we have in the army and what it means for us,” she said.

So Patel plans to teach the campers a little about the IDF.

“Among other things I’m going to teach them that the army doesn’t mean only combat jobs, there are a variety of jobs you can do,” she said, adding that in the army she developed education software, e-learning opportunities and instructed others how to be a teacher. She did all that on the base where they train the intelligent forces.

Porges is the camp’s song leader.

“She’s an excellent piano player and plays guitar, she has a lot of energy and she’s really bringing a special flavor to camp. KC doesn’t have a lot of young song leaders right now, so we brought one in from across the sea and she’s doing a fabulous job,” said Stangler, who noted Porges is working with Jared Schifman from The Temple, Congregation B’nai Jehudah. “Together they are fantastic.”

As the song leader, Porges said one of the songs she sings is about changing the world in Hebrew.

“I try to teach them as many songs as I can with Hebrew words. We always explain the meaning of the words so they will know what the song is about. I saw that a lot of kids know a lot of songs in Hebrew but they have no idea what the song is all about and I think it’s a pity because these are very smart and beautiful songs,” Porges said.

She also likes to teach the campers songs they already know in English, but with Hebrew words.

“It’s easier because they know the melody,” Porges said.

Stern, 23, is the camp’s sports specialist. He explains he does “anything with a ball.”

“Sometimes I don’t use the ball,” I socialize, he added.

Stangler explained, “He gets the kids in Barney Goodman up and running.”

Stern said he wanted to become a part of the Jewish Agency’s shlichim program in the United States because he has at least 15 friends who did it and highly recommended the experience.

“That’s where I got my inspiration” to do this. “I always wanted to be an ambassador and represent Israel,” he said.

Patel said she loves being a counselor, meeting people and representing Israel and the Jewish Agency.

“I’m very proud to be a part of it. It’s a great experience,” said the young woman who just completed her army duty a week before she came to camp.

Porges wanted to be a part of this program because she loves working with kids.

“It’s very interesting for me and I love my country,” she said. “I think it’s a good way to influence things and also to learn about things in the world and people in the world and different cultures.”

Because of her army service, Porges must return directly to Israel when camp ends. Patel will spend some time traveling in the United States and visiting family in Pennsylvania before she goes home.

When Patel returns to Israel she will relax and then study for college entrance exams. She said she will probably get a job and maybe do a little more traveling. She isn’t sure what she wants to study in college.

Porges will also study for her college entrance exams once she concludes her army service. Stern, who has already traveled and worked as a waiter, plans to move to a kibbutz in the south of Israel when he returns to Israel and begin his education there.

They all like working at camp.

“The kids are so sweet. Of course it is challenging sometimes but it’s still fun,” Patel said.

“I like it when they ask questions and they get what I try to teach them. One girl asked if I would be here next year and I told her I don’t know and she said, ‘Oh I want you to be here.’ I was so happy because it is these little moments when you see that you are influencing them. … To know that there is a meaning that we are here. It’s like the best moments.” Patel continued.

Porges likes that everything at camp is very positive. She especially appreciates the way counselors are instructed that the children are the most important part of camp.

“We don’t concentrate on ourselves, we concentrate on the child and what we want him to learn and the values we want to give them,” Porges said.

Porges finds it very funny that everyone in the Jewish community seems to know everyone else.

“Our families know each other and their friends and we are going together places. I think our families are amazing people, so nice,” Porges said.

Patel added, “They have really made us feel comfortable and feel at home here.”

One thing Patel has particularly enjoyed during her visit is seeing the way other movements of Judaism practice the religion here in the States.

“It was the first time we had seen women say prayers, and it was beautiful,” said Patel of her visit to Congregation Ohev Sholom.

Porges had experienced a little of that in her hometown of Jerusalem, but still found it interesting.

“The language was different, the atmosphere was different. I remember coming in and everyone was sitting together. It was very different and I liked it,” Porges said.

Stern enjoys the “peaceful environment and the good vibe” he gets here. He is from Rishon Letzion near Tel Aviv, where he said there is always “such huge pressure.”

“Tel Aviv is right in the center of Israel where all the chaos is,” he said.

“Kansas has very nice people. This is my first destination in the United States. The people are very warm and welcoming. Everybody told me just before I came here that Americans are nice and everything is big here. I couldn’t really believe it. But then I got here and everything is true,” he said.

It’s being billed as one great show — two fabulous theaters!

The one great show is “Hairspray” and it is being co-produced by the White Theatre and Theatre in the Park in the first collaboration between the two entities. It opens Saturday night, July 13, at the White Theatre and moves to Theatre in the Park Aug. 2.

Tim Bair, TTIP’s producing artistic director, first had the idea to produce this show together when he discovered the White Theatre had been awarded the rights for the show. He knew both theaters wanted to produce the show and thought it would be silly if they both did it at roughly the same time. He also really didn’t want to compete with the White Theatre with this particular show. So he talked with the show’s director Mark Swezey and Krista Blackwood, the JCC’s director of cultural arts, and suggested they use the same cast and split all the production costs.

“You guys have a great audience at the White Theatre, you could probably fill the place,” he said. “Our cast can get to do it for twice as long as they ever would have at the individual theaters and we can cross promote.”

The cast was a big reason to collaborate because Bair and Blackwood both knew this show would attract the best in the area.

“We knew that they would all like to do it because it’s a brand-new show and something really fun that they’ve never had the opportunity to do before,” Bair continued.

Blackwood said Bair’s assessment was correct.

“It caused people to come out of the woodwork. The cast has been fantastic and we’ve got people in the cast that we haven’t seen in a long time. It’s been a great thing for them and a great thing for us at the same time,” she said.

Cast members started rehearsals June 3 and committed about eight weeks to this show, about double the time commitment usually required for community theater productions. Blackwood admits that initially worried her.

“I was a little concerned that the time commitment would actually cause people to stay away … but it was not detrimental at all. People were actually quite excited to be able to do this show in both places,” Blackwood said.

The length of the show, Bair believes, actually attracted people to the cast.

“A lot of them are so excited to be able to do the show and to be able to do it for so long. It’s a five-week run for people who generally commit to a two- or three-weekend run,” Bair said.

From an actor’s perspective, Bair said it’s a very cool thing to get to know a cast, and a show, that well.

“It’s also really exciting for them to get to perform for as many people as they are going to get to perform for. That’s one of the unique things about this collaboration,” he said.

“Hairspray” takes place in 1960s Baltimore, where teen Tracy Turnblad, a plus-size girl with big hair and a kind heart, has only one passion — to dance. When she wins a spot on the local TV dance program she finds herself transformed from outsider to teen celebrity. She must use her newfound power to dethrone the reigning teen queen, win the affections of heartthrob Link Larkin and integrate a TV network.

The show was originally produced on Broadway in 2002 and won eight Tony awards in 2003, including Best Musical. Blackwood said this show doesn’t have a specific Jewish message, “It’s just a really great, fun musical and we always try to do a really great, fun big-cast musical in the summertime.”

While the message isn’t specifically Jewish, it does tell a tale of the fight for equal rights.

“The tie-in we’ve made this year is the Jewish connection to the Civil Rights movement,” she explained.

Even though the White Theatre’s 2013-14 season does not include another collaboration with Theatre in the Park, Blackwood said it could happen again in the future.

“It is my hope, and I think Tim’s hope, that because we have worked so well together that as things come up we will be able to reach out and figure out better ways to collaborate,” she said.

Both organizations benefitted by saving costs from this collaboration, but Blackwood said even in this economic climate that’s not the most important thing to come from the partnership.

“Sharing costs is great but it’s really not the best way to collaborate. I’m hoping that we can create a deeper relationship where we can share our facilities and share our people and really do something that is more of a partnership than this is, which is really sharing expenses and sharing a cast,” she concluded.

Bair agreed.

“I think we’ve just stepped into the shallow end of the pool with this. We just said let’s see how nicely we all play together in the same pool and it’s been lovely and very easy. Like Krista said, I think there are a lot of things down the road that we can look at from a broader perspective in terms of collaboration,” Bair said.

Blackwood said it’s a great cast and people should come see it.

“I would encourage people to buy their tickets in advance for both our production and for Theatre in the Park,” she said.

Bair said tickets can be purchased online for Theatre in the Park and they can be used anytime during the season.

“We have some reserved seats, but we’re a park and it’s really hard to reserve grass,” he said. “Maybe you buy tickets and something happens on the night you wanted to go. That’s OK. Just use your ticket any night we have a performance and tickets are for any performance of any production.”

‘Hairspray’ performance dates

“Hairspray” opens at the White Theatre on Saturday night, July 13. All Thursday and Saturday night performances begin at 7:30 p.m. Those dates are July 13, 18, 20, 25 and 27. Sunday afternoon performances on July 14, 21 and 28, begin at 2 p.m. Tickets are available by calling 913-327-8054 or visiting the website at jcckc.org.
The Tony Award-winning musical continues at Theatre in the Park Aug. 2-4 and Aug. 8-10. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit www.theatreinthepark.org.

“From Gods to God” by Avigdor Shinan and Yair Zakovitch. Translated by Valerie Zakovitch. Jewish Publication Society

Bible study is different from most other forms of learning. Normally, the more you study a subject, the more you know. But sometimes it seems that the more you study the Bible, the less you know. Case in point: everyone “knows” that David killed Goliath. But look at 2 Samuel 21:19, which gives credit to Elhanan.

Anomalies such as this are at the heart of Shinan and Zakovich’s “From Gods to God,” which explores the Tanach (Hebrew Bible) not as a unified whole but rather as a collection of documents, some of which contradict each other, each with its own purpose. The authors’ central thesis is to show how “we often become aware that the official version of a story (i.e., the Bible’s version) was meant to dispute views and opinions that were accepted when the story still made its way orally through the world.”

In particular, they demonstrate how, in a number of occasions, the biblical authors’ purpose was to reconcile narratives based on polytheistic sources with the monotheism that had become central to Jewish theology. One well-known example, for which they give credit to Cassuto, can be found in Genesis 1:21, where God is given credit for creating the sea monsters, a line which may seem overly specific in its context, until we realize that it was meant to refute other creation stories that were well known at the time, in which God’s creation of the world involved triumphing over forces of the sea.

Later biblical authors allude to these tales (Isaiah 51:9, Job 38: 8-11), raising the perhaps troubling possibility that at least parts of the Torah were written after some of the other books. Likewise, the authors point to a number of other instances where the biblical authors sought to demythologize hero stories, as in the story of Samson, where his status as a sun god (Shimshon, his Hebrew name, being a variant of shemesh, Hebrew for “sun”). They further suggest that the birth narrative may be directed at refuting alternative versions of the story in which the angel who announces Samson’s birth may actually be his father.

Sometimes, the authors contend, the intention of the biblical authors may have been political. For example, there are two different accounts of Rachel’s burial place. While Genesis puts it in the South, near Bethlehem, 1 Samuel 10:2 places it in the territory of Benjamin, a northern location. This may have reflected the rival kingdoms’ desire to be considered the legitimate heirs of the patriarchal legacy.

Likewise, there is the puzzling incident in which the Northern king, Jeroboam, builds two golden calves. The authors suggest (as have others before them) that the story of the Golden Calf is a Southern story meant to defame him. (Note: since the calves have not been found, it is possible that the story of Jeroboam was written later, for the same purpose).

These are just a few of the 30 topics discussed in this fascinating book. The one aspect of their methodology which I might question is their assumption that rabbinic literature often contains versions of the narrative that were suppressed by the “official” narrative rather than representing new versions intended to meet the needs of later generations. Sometimes they may be finding a gap where none exists, as where they assert that the ascension of Elijah to heaven (from the same place where Moses is buried) proves that a similar story about Moses’ death has been suppressed. I also disagree with their interpretation of the book of Ruth, which they see as an attempt to provide information about David’s ancestry. The more likely interpretation is that its purpose was to advocate for the acceptance of people not of Jewish birth who were willing to accept Jewish law and belief.

Nevertheless, this book will open readers’ eyes to a whole new way of reading our sacred texts. It could forever change the way its readers will approach the subject. The term “must read” may be overused, but I believe it is appropriate in describing this book.

Stuart Lewis holds a doctoral degree in English from the University of Colorado. He writes from Prairie Village, Kan.

RESTAURANT HONORED — Alan Gaylin, owner and CEO of Bread & Butter Concepts restaurant group, was honored July 4 at Prairie Village “VillageFest,” with the Community Spirit Award in the Business Community Service category.

VillageFest Community Spirit Awards have been presented to citizens, business leaders, businesses, students and organizations that help to improve the high quality of life experienced in Prairie Village since 2003. Gaylin’s contributions include sponsorship of city events, charitable donations to local schools and groups, and creating locally owned businesses that support the city of Prairie Village economically.

Gaylin was surprised and honored to receive the award. He said, “I really enjoy working with the City of Prairie Village. Urban Table and BRGR Kitchen + Bar-Prairie Village, are supported by the residents of this city, and it’s a privilege to be able to give back to the community whenever possible.”

In addition to the restaurants mentioned, Gaylin owns Gram & Dun, in Kansas City’s Country Club Plaza, the Taco Republic Truck, based in Kansas City, Kan., and is opening two new restaurants this summer: BRGR Kitchen & Bar in downtown KC’s Power & Light District, opening this week at 14th and Main; and Taco Republic, located at Mission & County Line Roads, and slated to open in late August.

 

THE ‘MOVIE GUY’ RECOMMENDS — Keith Cohen “The Movie Guy” recently saw two films he recommends. “Fill the Void” was Israel’s selection for best foreign language film at last year’s Oscars. He gives it 3 1/2 stars. It is about a teenage girl who must decide whether to marry her widowed brother-in-law. Her older sister died giving birth. Her brother-in-law is considering leaving Israel to marry a widow in Belgium. The young girl’s mother wants her daughter to make the ultimate sacrifice so that her grandson will stay put in Israel.

“The Attack” is about an Arab doctor living in Israel who is shocked to learn that his wife has been killed by a suicide bomber. When the facts reveal that his wife IS the suicide bomber, he just can’t believe it. He travels to a Palestinian city to find answers. The movie points out that you can’t really know another individual. He gives this movie, that has been banned in several Arab countries, 3 stars.

“Fill the Void” is opening Friday, July 12, at the Glenwood Red Bridge,  Tivoli and AMC Town Center 20. “The Attack” continues its run at Glenwood Arts and Tivoli.

 

BLOOD DONORS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY — The American Red Cross has issued an emergency request for blood donors of all blood types to roll up a sleeve and give because  fewer donations than expected were received in June and the first week of July.

Nationwide, donations through the Red Cross were down approximately 10 percent in June, resulting in about 50,000 fewer donations than expected. The shortfall is similar to what the Red Cross experienced in June 2012.

Congregation Beth Torah regularly schedules blood drives for another organization, The Community Blood Center, and members of Congregations BIAV and B’nai Jehudah make donations at these quarterly blood drives as well. If you don’t have time to make a donation in July, consider setting an appointment to attend Beth Torah’s next blood drive from 2:30 to 7:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 12. Schedule online today at www.esavealifenow.org (click on “find a drive” and sponsor code “bethtorah”), or call the Beth Torah office at 913-498-2212.

June can be among the most challenging months of the year for blood donations as regular donors delay giving while they adjust to summer schedules. High school and college blood drives account for as much as 20 percent of Red Cross donations during the school year. Donations from those who usually give at these drives drop by more than 80 percent when school is out for the summer.  In addition, a mid-week Independence Day holiday reduced the number of blood drives scheduled in early July. Many sponsors, especially businesses, were unable to host drives because employees took extended vacations.

The Red Cross urgently needs donations to ensure an adequate blood supply is available for patients all summer long.  Each day, the Red Cross Missouri-Illinois Blood Region needs approximately 800 blood donations to keep up with hospital demand. Eligible donors with types O negative, B negative and A negative blood are especially encouraged to give. Type O negative is the universal blood type and can be transfused to anyone who needs blood. Types A negative and B negative can be transfused to Rh positive or negative patients.