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Ahavath Torah begins new chapter,  celebrates its past

Caterer returns to roots

 
 
 

The dedication of Ahavath Torah’s new complex marks a homecoming of sorts for Foremost-Ram Caterers, the synagogue’s new exclusive caterer.

“It’s exciting times for the shul and we want to be part of the excitement,” said Foremost-Ram co-owner Jeffrey Becker.

Randy Zablo, co-owner of the Moonachie-based company, began his catering career at Ahavath Torah. As Foremost expanded, it grew beyond Ahavath Torah, taking on clients around the tri-state area. The catering company is featured at 23 synagogues and hotels around New Jersey, and more than 50 synagogues, hotels, and museums in New York.

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Randy Zablo of Foremost-Ram shows off the new banquet hall at Ahavath Torah. Jerry Szubin

Zablo “cut his teeth” at Ahavath Torah, Becker said, but since then Foremost-Ram has focused on catering gigs at hotels, museums, and the like. Ahavath Torah’s expansion gives the catering company an opportunity to “re-establish” itself.

“This particular shul is appealing to us because many of the congregants know our name, our company, our food,” Becker said, “and now they’ve got a brand new, beautiful building. We thought the time was right to go back to our roots….”

Saul Turtelbaub became a bar mitzvah at an early incarnation of Ahavath Torah on May 5, 1945, three days before the end of the war. As at most bar mitzvahs of his boyhood, “shul was over about 11:30 to 12, and you went downstairs” to what was called the vestry. The adults made a bracha over schnapps, the well-known television producer recalled in a telephone interview from Los Angeles, “and everyone had something to drink and a piece of chopped herring, which nobody liked. [Then] you kibitzed and everybody went home. Nobody had money, and the Orthodox that I knew didn’t have big parties.”

Times have changed and so has the kosher palate. The trend in kosher catering is now for fresh, healthful foods, Becker said. Meat-carving stations are a staple at big events, and there’s always a following for kugels and meat-and-potato dishes, he said, but people typically want health-conscious menus that center around organic food, local products, and fresh herbs.

“That’s what people are looking for today and they’re looking for it without compromise to kashrus,” he said. “People want great contemporary food, whether it be a fabulous veal dish or a lamb dish or an Asian fish dish. Very few people come to me and ask for kasha varnishkes.”

Foremost-Ram does have kasha varnishkes in its repertoire, though, as well as other traditional Ashkenazi fare, such as cholent and matzoh ball soup. These classics, Becker said, will always be part of the menu for certain types of events — such as Shabbat kiddush lunches.

Ahavath Torah’s membership approved the exclusivity deal with Foremost-Ram in December, according to the shul’s president, Drew Parker. The synagogue is host to the full gamut of lifecycle events, and Parker looks forward to Foremost-Ram making its mark.

“We’re very excited,” he said. “We can’t imagine having a better partner than Foremost. We think they’re going to do a great job serving the community.”

 

More on: Ahavath Torah begins new chapter, celebrates its past

 
 
 

A shul with ‘tahm’

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Saul Turteltaub and his grandson Max.

Saul Turteltaub, who is perhaps best-known for producing such popular television shows as “Sanford and Son” and “Kate and Allie,” is also the author of a warm, affecting, funny, and as-yet-unpublished memoir of Cong. Ahavath Torah. Called “The Old Shul,” it is a treasure house of nostalgia and wry and poignant insights about his family and community.

The “Old Shul” of Turteltaub’s manuscript is not the mansion on Broad Street that has been demolished to make way for the new Ahavath Torah, but a building on Englewood Avenue between Armory Street and Bennett Road.

 
 

Rabbi reflects on synagogue’s growth

Rabbi Shmuel Goldin, religious leader of Englewood’s Ahavath Torah for some 26 years, attributes the synagogue’s growth and longevity to “good fortune, proximity to New York, a lovely area, and a sense of openness” toward people striving to lead Orthodox lives.

“A good deal of our character was set by the way it started,” said Goldin.

The rabbi, together with his wife, Barbara, will be honored on March 5 and 6 for their years of service to the congregation.

Describing the synagogue’s founders as “a group of people committed to Orthodox Judaism,” Goldin noted that they also were open to recognizing that they themselves were not always themselves ‘there.’”

 
 

Unity is the underlying theme for the formal dedication of Cong. Ahavath Torah’s two-story, 60,000-square-foot synagogue complex, planned for the first weekend in March and culminating in the shul’s annual dinner honoring Rabbi Shmuel and Barbara Goldin.

Yeshiva University President Richard Joel is scheduled to join the Englewood congregation that Shabbat as scholar in residence during services as well as at a Friday night Oneg Shabbat and Saturday afternoon seudah shlishit. A festive Shabbat morning service is to be led by Cantor Chaim Muhlbauer, with Joel delivering remarks to the community.

 
 
 
 
 
 
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In balance, in harmony

Agnes Adler is a little pixie of a thing with a musical Hungarian accent. As she and her husband David walk into a room, she tells him to smile, to say hello, not to be a grump, and he lovingly responds, “Yes, Mammi, whatever you say.” He is wont to stay in the background, however, as an invisible flying buttress, supporting her in artistic endeavors and much more, while also creating his own massive sculptures.

David stands a full head taller than his wife, continues to smile the smile of the gentlemen chauvinists of his generation. He and Aggie love to sharpen their blades on their wit and humor. She complains, “I have to do everything and he expects me to wait on him hand and foot. Men! Impossible!”

 

Haiti: Two years later

‘When all else is broken, human dignity must stand whole’

Two years after the earthquake that devastated Haiti, medical students at Quisqueya University earlier this month took part in the island nation’s first “White Coat Ceremony,” marking the commitment of medical students there to providing compassionate, patient-based care.

This symbolic ritual for future doctors, now common at U.S. and Israeli medical schools, was introduced in 1993 by the Englewood Cliffs-based Arnold P. Gold Foundation. It has since spread to 18 countries, including Afghanistan, Japan, and now Haiti, thanks to the efforts of Tenafly resident Dr. Galit M. Sacajiu.

“Some of you may be asking yourselves, when medical school buildings and operating rooms have yet to be rebuilt and a single medical textbook is a luxury, when we have no laboratories, and so many of our brothers and sisters still live in makeshift homes, why invest in an event such as this ceremony of humanism in medicine?” asked Sacajiu, in her remarks at the Jan. 16 ceremony.

 

Love and hate in Bergen County

Communal meeting, interfaith gathering follow in Rutherford bombing’s wake

With the Jewish communities of Bergen County on heightened alert, some 200 religious and community leaders gathered on Jan. 12 to discuss the recent string of anti-Semitic incidents in the county with law enforcement and government officials.

The meeting followed by one day the most recent, and most serious, attack — a firebombing that could have claimed the lives of eight people. The incident targeted the old Queen Anne building in Rutherford that houses Orthodox Congregation Beth El, as well as the home of its rabbi and his family. Five of the eight potential victims were children.

 

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Iran threat

Will March 5 be D(ecision) Day?

WASHINGTON – March 5 is shaping up to be a crucial day in the effort to rein in Iran’s nuclear program.

In Vienna, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) will convene to consider its inspectors’ latest report on Iran’s nuclear program. The last such report came closer than ever to indicting the Iranian regime for making weapons, and it helped spur stronger international sanctions against Tehran.

Several hours later, in Washington, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu will deliver a speech to an American Israel Public Affairs policy conference about what should happen next with Iran. Either before or after the AIPAC meeting, Netanyahu likely will meet with President Barack Obama to discuss Iran options.

 

Iran threat

After a string of foiled plots...

WASHINGTON – When America’s top intelligence official said that Iran’s regime is considering attacks on U.S. soil, he cited a single incident and qualified the assessment with a “probably.”

Intelligence and law enforcement experts, however, say that the Jan. 31 warning by the director of national intelligence, James Clapper, was likely based on more than the evidence he cited.

“I would be surprised to learn a statement like that was not backed up by intelligence,” said Mark Dubowitz, executive director of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

 

Iran threat

Locally, fear not but be alert

News reports notwithstanding, “There is no indication that there are any specific and/or imminent threats to Jewish communities in the U.S. at this time as a result of recent events,” according to an alert received this week by the Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC) of the Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey. Nevertheless, the alert said, that could change “should military action break out in the Middle East in coming months.”

An open attack on Iran is only one “trigger” that could raise the threat level, the alert said. “Increased pressure from sanctions, continued perceived threats from Israel, the United States, and others, sabotage against nuclear facilities, and continued alleged assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists” could also bring about an Iranian response aimed at Jewish or Israeli targets in the West, especially the United States.

 
 
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