Letters to the Editor
Valuable program benefits teens
I’d like to commend Hillel Goldstein for bringing the JSU Scholars Program to Kansas City. My son, Ethan, was among the students participating in its inaugural year. Once a week for 10 weeks, Ethan met with other teenagers and a speaker, rabbi or facilitator to discuss a variety of topics with a Jewish twist, from charitable giving to business ethics. He came home after every session with an enthusiastic “Did you know …?” or “Now I understand why …!”
The program helped fill a gap that exists in this community when it comes to meaningful and engaging Jewish education for teens. I sincerely hope that it will be offered again and again.
Sharon Loftspring
Leawood, Kan.
Laws do not prevent tragedies
The country will be forever changed by the horrific events in Newtown. So many questions will continue to be asked even though now, a week later, so many answers have emerged. And those answers have shed a different light on this tragedy than was initially believed.
Now quickly without fail our current political elders have called for legislation that they believe will prevent another tragedy. This is completely ridiculous and preposterous. We have the infrastructure and resources in place to address these regrettable events. We simply do not execute those policies and laws effectively. But that is not worthy of a political advantage, so our leaders call for more laws and less rights for citizens.
If gun laws are changed, the result will be no different. If Michael Bloomberg thinks I cannot order two 16-ounce drinks when I want 32 ounces, which he does, he is the one needing mental intervention. And if our political leaders think that a 10-clip round will not find a shooter simply bringing in an extra weapon, they again lack the common sense to truly be called leaders.
Can we please for once try to not legislate solutions and use common sense to address those things that cause so much pain in our country?
Robert Cutler
Leawood, Kan.
Courageously different
A week ago a young man from Kansas City and living in Kansas City passed away. This young man was always known as being “different” wherever he went and wherever he lived.
I admired this person a great deal for having the courage to live his life as he knew it and as it would make him the happiest and most content. All through life he encountered many people — be it a school, in public places, at meetings, a programs, etc.
He learned to accept himself and life enjoying whatever he accomplished. If people wanted to talk about him, all he needed to do was to hold his head up high and think about all he did and was going to do.
He had a job where he faced the public every day and kept this job for many years.
He was an idealistic person, always saying that one day things would be different and change.
I told him many times that he grew up in an age of “protest.” I told him — he knew this — that he should be proud of himself for accomplishing so much in so short a time.
He left his name in many places and hopefully other people will read of his life and continue to grow as he did.
You will be remembered by many — you touched the lives of many. People will say, “Look at what he accomplished with a smile on his face.”
His one phrase that he wanted all to know — “I did it. So can you!”
Linda Gurin
Leawood, Kan.
One of the real winners in the recent Gaza War was Israel’s Iron Dome Rocket Defense System which successfully knocked down 421 rockets launched from Gaza and bound for Israeli cities, an 84 percent success rate. The system limited Israeli casualties to six during the seven days of bombardment and as a result significantly decreased the pressure on Israeli decision makers to invade Gaza.
When we are facing health and healing challenges, community and tradition are two of the resources we call upon in Jewish life. I learned this lesson of community and tradition most profoundly from a colleague and mentor, Rabbi Simkha Weintraub, rabbinic director of the National Center for Jewish Healing. It forms the foundation of our Jewish Community Chaplaincy program in Kansas City, of which I have the privilege of serving as Kansas City’s Jewish Community Chaplain.
The Jewish Community Chaplaincy program of Jewish Family Services is hosting a healing service at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 6, at Village Shalom.
Imagine that terrorists have taken over the Kansas City Airport and have set up and are firing SAJR rockets (made in Iran) at downtown K.C., Prairie Village and Overland Park. (Yes, these missiles have that kind of range.)
Sol Koenigsberg, executive director of the Jewish Federation of Kansas City from 1968 to 1989, has given us a memoir of his public career, a lively account of the movers and shakers in the Jewish community in the last half of the 20th century, and a guide through Jewish institutional and organizational life in Kansas City. It is an engaging memoir that will evoke nostalgia in the older generation, be a history lesson for the next generation, and serve as a primer and guidebook for future leaders and community members in Kansas City and elsewhere. In many ways it serves as a sequel to Joe Schultz’s edited 1982 “Mid-America’s Promise: A profile of Kansas City Jewry.” But if it also fills in the details and continues the story forward, it is a much richer, more nuanced story not only of Jewish institutions but also leaders and events. If Koenigsberg made Federation the central address of organized Jewish secular life during his tenure, he also played a major role in creating new institutions like the Jewish Community Foundation, the Hyman Brand Hebrew Academy and the Jewish Community Campus.