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Fourth synagogue targeted

Latest attack was most dangerous yet

LocalPublished: 11 January 2012

A firebomb attack on a synagogue in Rutherford is being investigated as an attempted homicide and a hate crime, Bergen County Prosecutor John Molinelli announced on Wednesday.

“You’re looking at 40 to 50 years in prison,” said Molinelli, addressing the “person or persons who are doing this act” at a Wednesday afternoon press conference.

“Turn yourself in and end this now,” he said. “We will ultimately solve this crime and make arrests.”

Around 4:30 a.m. Wednesday morning, several Molotov cocktails were thrown at Congregation Beth El, an Orthodox synagogue on a quiet residential street in Rutherford. One entered the second floor bedroom of the congregation’s rabbi, Nosson Schuman, and ignited his bedspread.

 
 

Oy the tzoris of it all

LocalPublished: 25 May 2012

The last synagogue in West New York turns 100 next week.

Congregation Shaare Zedek continues to hold Shabbat services, although attendance has dwindled to just over a minyan.

The small, square-mile town now has nearly 50,000 residents — more than twice as many as in 1912.

While the town has grown, however, the Jewish population has mostly moved out.

Daniel Kaminsky lives in Oradell, but he has assumed — inherited? — responsibility for keeping the synagogue afloat.

 
 

Alan Brill: Interfaith dialogue nothing new for Jews

Local | WorldPublished: 25 May 2012

The story of how the Dalai Lama encountered the Jewish community in 1990 is well known.

Less known is how the Ashkenazi Jewish community first encountered the Dalai Lama — in a Hebrew-language book published in Europe in 1804, compiled from travelers accounts in English and French.

“Jews then were not as sheltered as we think of them,” says Alan Brill, who quotes from the book, “Meorot Zvi,” in his own book, “Judaism and World Religions: Encountering Christianity, Islam, and Eastern Traditions,” just published by Palgrave Macmillan.

 
 

More about Agudath Israel’s policy on reporting child abuse

The Yudelson FilesPublished: 23 May 2012
 
 

New focus on Agudah’s abuse stance

Criticism even from within of its ‘fox guarding henhouse’ approach

Local | WorldPublished: 18 May 2012

For several years, at least, Agudath Israel of America, the organizational arm of ultra-Orthodox Judaism, has demanded that allegations of child abuse be vetted by rabbis rather than directly reported to police. Increasingly, that position is coming in for harsh criticism. Much of that criticism is coming from within the ultra-Orthodox community itself, where advocates of victims of child molestation accuse their own rabbinic leadership of covering up the crimes of molesters, many of whom continued to prey on children for decades.

Agudah’s position is at odds with laws in New York and New Jersey that mandate reporting of child abuse in many circumstances.

 
 

Mohammed Hameeduddin: Emphasizing commonality is key

Cover StoryPublished: 11 May 2012

As a long-time resident who is completing his first two-year term as mayor of Teaneck and was decisively re-elected to his third council term on Tuesday, Mohammed Hameeduddin has come to understand and revel in the commonalities between his Muslim community and the Jewish community which he serves, and which helped elect him.

Being on the campaign trail — such as it was, in the run-up to this past Tuesday’s municipal’s elections — highlighted one aspect of that commonality.

“The Jewish people of Teaneck are very similar to the Muslim community, because when you walk in, the first thing everybody makes sure to ask is ‘Did you eat?’ That’s the first question every grandmother asks. It’s very similar if you walk into a Muslim household from south Asia,” says Hameeduddin, whose parents came to America from India in the late 1960s.

 
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T’fillin lending library for ladies

Demarest native Alexandra Casser helps spread mitzvah

LocalPublished: 11 May 2012

Alexandra Casser began putting on t’fillin daily as a sophomore in Rutgers.

“T’fillin make davening Shacharis [morning service] more immediately relevant, since you are able to see that your actions respond to an explicit command in the text,” says the Demarest native. “There’s great satisfaction in being able to see that you are fulfilling a mitzvah described in the central text of Judaism.”

Now, Casser wants to make it easier for other women who want to try observing the mitzvah of t’fillin.

 
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He saw a need

Outdoor sanctuary earns Ben Sagerman an Eagle Badge

LocalPublished: 04 May 2012

If leadership means to see a problem where no one else does, and then take the initiative to solve it, Ben Sagerman is definitely a leader.

The 17-year-old high school junior loved the experience of outdoor prayer he experienced at the Union for Reform Judaism’s Camp Eisner — and wanted to make that experience possible for his fellow congregants at Temple Avodat Shalom in River Edge.

So he built an outdoor sanctuary, a small ampitheater, in an empty space on Avodat Shalom’s property.

 
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Dramatizing Torah

LocalPublished: 04 May 2012

Imagine, for a moment, that you are Eve. On the advice of a snake, you have taken a bite from the forbidden fruit. Now, you offer it to your mate, Adam.

Wait a second. Why do you do that? Why don’t you keep it for yourself? What are you thinking? What is your motivation?

These are the sort of questions that are at the core of the “bibliodrama” programs that Peter Pitzele has been leading for 30 years, and which Pitzele will be bringing this weekend to Congregation Gesher Shalom in Fort Lee. Pitzele will serve as scholar in residence, the first endowed by Leonia’s Congregation Sons of Israel which was absorbed into Gesher Shalom last year.

“There are lots of different answers to these questions,” explains Pitzele. “The Bible is full of these gaps, these places where the text is silent.”

 
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Emphasizing the J in JCC

With Taub challenge met, the ‘important work’ begins

Cover StoryPublished: 20 April 2012

There was good reason for celebration in the board room of the Kaplen Jewish Community Center on the Palisades on Tuesday night. Two weeks before, the JCC had received a check for $1.5 million from the Henry and Marilyn Taub Foundation — marking the successful conclusion to six years of fundraising and construction that renovated the JCC’s 40-year-old building and brought in $32 million in donations from the community.

The board members had reason to drink champagne. They had succeeded in an audacious fundraising campaign — one whose scope had sparked heated discussions over the years. And they had reached into their own pockets to grow the institution they loved, that many of them had grown up in, giving to the original capital and endowment campaign and then, this past year, to what was called the Taub Community Challenge. That, in fact, had been a condition of Henry Taub, when he agreed, on his hospital bed shortly before his death last March, to donate $1.5 million: The JCC had to come up with $3 million from other donors, and within a year. “Henry wanted the community to step up and take ownership,” recalls Pearl Seiden, president of the JCC.

 
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