New York News

Leonard Lauder Gifts $1 Billion In Art To Metropolitan Museum

04/11/2013

Businessman Leonard Lauder donated a collection of paintings to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York valued at more than $1 billion.

Cosmetics tycoon Leonard Lauder and actress Elizabeth Hurley. Getty Images

Heirs Of Shoah Victims Get Fresh Hope Of Funds

4,000 names in comptroller’s unclaimed assets could be matches; new link on website of DiNapoli’s office to aid process.

04/10/2013
Staff Writer

New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli has created a new link on his website to help the heirs of Jewish Holocaust victims claim money in the state’s unclaimed funds database.

‘Young Turks’ Of Bridge Building

Cross-cultural program between Jewish and Turkish Muslim teens flourishes in south Brooklyn as Israel, Turkey eye calm.

04/10/2013
Staff Writer

Hayrunnisa Kalac, a teenager from northern New Jersey who attends high school in southern Brooklyn, stepped into a taxi outside of Port Authority Bus Terminal Sunday morning and told the driver her destination: the Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust in Battery Park City.

Jewish and Turkish Muslim members of Young Peace Builders have bonded through joint religious and educational programs.

Increased Competition Shakes Up N.J. Schools

Englewood’s Moriah letting teachers go as nearby schools thriving.

04/10/2013
Associate Editor

The mood at the Moriah School this spring could be described as more somber than hopeful.

Moriah is struggling to adjust to enrollment declines. Moriah School Facebook Page

Kosher Lunch Takes A Punch

Two New York kosher lunch programs face opposition.

04/09/2013
Assistant Managing Editor

One of two kosher lunch programs fighting to keep its doors open has won a reprieve, organizers and a city councilman told The Jewish Week Monday.

Seniors come to Club 76 at the West Side Institutional Synagogue for lunch. Adam Dickter

Geller Forum Shifts To New Venues

Edison, NJ, shul and Great Neck Chabad host controversial speaker on radical Islam.

04/09/2013
Staff Writer

 

Pamela Geller, the controversial Jewish activist whose warnings about radical Islam earned her scorn and fierce opposition on the left -- leading the Great Neck Synagogue to cancel her scheduled appearance last weekend, has also earned admiration on the right, with two other synagogues scheduling her in the wake of the cancellation.

The two synagogues where Geller spoke on Sunday were the Chabad of Great Neck, where the attendance was said to be over 600, and Congregation Beth El in Edison N.J. where she was heard by an estimated 150 – while the synagogue was threatened with a firebombing.

Rabbi Bernhard H. Rosenberg of Beth El, who has written extensively about the Holocaust, said he turned over the threat, made by e-mail, to the police, whom he said were investigating. The unsigned e-mail said, “why do I have the feeling this synagogue will be attacked with firebombs and tainted with swastika graffiti in the coming weeks?”

Additionally, Rabbi Rosenberg’s home was pelted around 40 times, “something was thrown at the garage door” leaving “indentations, big ones.” The police were notified about that, as well, and they’ve brought in “the [Middlesex] county bias people,” said the rabbi.

Despite the attacks that preceded her, “all I can say it was nonsense. The woman is very articulate. There was no meshugas. I found her speech [posted on YouTube] to be very logical and very professional. Geller, to me, seems straight down the pike.”

Even prior to Geller’s speech, the Edison area has experienced inter-religious tensions lately. Rabbi Rosenberg, who has written extensively on the Holocaust, agreed two years ago to omit Hatikvah from the local interfaith Holocaust commemoration when Muslim imams stayed seated in protest while the anthem was being sung, This year the rabbi felt that Hatikvah had to be reinstated because not to do so would be “giving in to the current atmosphere of anti-Semitism” in Europe and the Arab world, an atmosphere that Geller addresses.

The rabbi told The Jewish Week that he, too, believed that “extremist Muslims are a tremendous danger, especially in Europe.” The problem with the Jewish people today is that “we’re milquetoast,” said Rabbi Rosenberg, “in the face of all the threats and insults.” When he heard that Geller’s appearances were being cancelled elsewhere, he said, “Not on my watch” would he buckle and be party to a speaker being silenced and intimidated.

At the Chabad of Great Neck, earlier Sunday, Rabbi Yoseph Geisinsky said the Geller event, with over 600 people, was “very nice, very peaceful,” with no threats or opposition. She was very positive. She did not attack Islam or religion. She specifically said that we are only opposing Hamas, jihadists, terrorism and anti-Semites.”

Pamela Geller: Her planned speech at Great Neck Synagogue draws heavy criticism.

Will Yad Vashem Honor A Goering?

The strange case of Hermann Goering’s ‘righteous’ brother.

04/04/2013
Associate Editor

In the Third Reich, other than Hitler himself, was there a more infamous name than Goering — Germany’s second in command, the bombastic Reichsmarshall, commander of the Luftwaffe, and arch anti-Semite?

Believed by some to have aided endangered Jews, Albert Goering may be designated a “Righteous Gentile.” That’s Goering, as in…

Orthodox-focused Holocaust Museum To Open In Borough Park

04/04/2013
Staff Writer

Although his father was a Holocaust survivor, and he lived near many other survivors, Rabbi Sholom Friedmann grew up learning only the broad strokes of the Shoah.

An artist’s rendering of the Kleinman Family Holocaust Education Center, scheduled to open later this year.

Next Year In Brooklyn

No longer in Israel, not yet at home in Midwood — and it’s Passover. What is this service to you?

04/04/2013
Special To The Jewish Week

Brooklyn, 2009: I was sitting on the windowsill, watching the evening crowds fill the synagogue across the street. From the apartment below, snatches of songs and the faint clinking of glasses were already rising.

Orli Santo

Candid Memoirs Of Lives Lost And Found

04/04/2013
Editor and Publisher

Harriet Rossetto’s new book, “Sacred Housekeeping: A Spiritual Memoir” (Author House), is a fitting companion to her husband’s 2004 best-seller, “The Holy Thief: A Con Man’s Journey From Darkness To Light” (HarperCollins).

Syndicate content