Non-Profit Org. U.S. POSTAGE PAID Pittsfield, MA Berkshire Permit No. 19 JEWISHA publication of the Jewish Federation of the Berkshires, serving V the Berkshires and surrounding ICE NY, CT and VT Vol. 28, No. 3 Adar/Nisan/Iyar 5780 March 23 to May 3, 2020 jewishberkshires.org Above the Drowning Sea ה ! In honor of Holocaust Remembrance Day, a film to tell each other שקט use an emoji בבקשscreening and memorial candle lighting “Israelis can finally to pipe down,” reports the Times of Israel In February, the Unicode Consortium, the California-based group that sets the standard for encoding characters across languages and computer systems, approved 117 new emojis. Among them was the upturned hand with touching fingers, which PITTSFIELD – Discover the story of Berkshire Museum on Sunday, April to Israelis means “quiet down” or “wait a second.” The Emojipedia website, however, the dramatic escape of European 19 from 2 to 4 p.m. describes the image as a sarcastic ‘Italian Hand Gesture,’ Jews from Nazi-controlled Europe to This event is free and open to the leading the Times of Israel to wonder: “Will this bitter truth – Shanghai on the eve of World War II public, and is sponsored by the Jewish the knowledge that the symbol stands for a sarcastic Italian in the feature documentary Above Federation of the Berkshires. After the gesture rather than the equally but nevertheless differently the Drowning Sea, part of a special film, please join us for candle lighting rude Israeli version – diminish Israelis’ excitement?” We’ll program in honor of Yom HaShoah/ and prayers in memory of the victims of find out. In any case, it’s also nice to see that the Unicode Holocaust Remembrance Day at the the Holocaust. Consortium saw fit to honor one of greatest Jewish Americans Above the Drowning Sea is a of the 20th Century (right) with another of the 117 new emojis. 90-minute documentary that was shot Inside in six countries over four continents that will take you on an inspiring Letting Go ....................................................3 emotional journey across time and Meeting Shoah Survivors ..........................4 across the world. HAPPY PASSOVER! As Hitler’s forces sought to expel the Your Federation Presents .......................4-8 Jews from Europe, no other country Super Volunteer Merle Ferber ...................6 would open its doors to the refu- Local News .............................................7-10 gees. Their lives at stake, the refugees Berkshire Jewish Voices .....................15-17 YOM HASHOAH, continued on page 12 IMPORTANT NOTICE Due to the evolving response to coronavirus, some programs listed in this paper may have been canceled or postponed after our press deadline. Please contact the sponsoring organization about the status of its programming. World Chamber Music at April 17 Knosh & Knowledge See story on page 5 Page 2 Berkshire Jewish Voice • jewishberkshires.org March 23 to May 3, 2020 In My View Deepening Berkshires Connections with the Afula-Gilboa Region of Israel By Josh Bloom In January, I had the opportunity to represent the Jewish Federation of the group visited the Berkshires in 2017, I first met Yonish Yaakov, a retired Berkshires in an inter-Federation mission to our Israeli partnership city of Afula kibbutznik who told me about how he wanted to create a Reform Jewish kehilah and its neighboring kibbutzim and villages that dot the mountainous countryside in Beit Hashita. It was heartwarming to hear about his successes in integrating of the Gilboa region. a liberal form of religious practice and identity into his predominantly secular Through the Jewish Agency for Israel’s Partnership2Gether program, the kibbutz. Now bolstered by an Israeli Reform rabbi, the kibbutz hosts regular egal- Jewish Federation of the Berkshires (along with 11 other Federations from itarian Shabbat and holiday services, bar and bat mitzvahs, and other lifecycle Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island) actively invests in strengthening events. the non-profit sector in Afula and Gilboa, and works with activists on the ground It was exciting to meet young artists from the Tarbut Movement who chose to foster people-to-people connections between our communities. to move to what is considered Israel’s periphery out of a modern sense of Ahad In recent years, the Berkshires has hosted a range of delegations from Ha’am’s vision of cultural Zionism. Tarbut has worked with local merchants to Afula-Gilboa, including professional chefs, home cooks, artists, photographers, revitalize the Afula market through art installations and the introduction of studio musicians, and more. and gallery spaces that, in turn, have attracted more food vendors, tradespeople, Reciprocally, commu- and foot traffic. nity activists from the I was moved by hearing how the Haifa Rape Crisis Center would not have been Afula-Gilboa region have able to open a local branch in Afula-Gilboa or sustain a rape crisis hotline had it hosted four delegations not been for the advocacy and financial support of our Federations. from Hevreh of Southern It was uplifting to hear how community activists and government officials Berkshire over the last worked with the Afula LGBTQ community to launch the city’s first-ever Pride three years – three cohorts event in 2019, thanks to Home in the Valley, a fledgling local LGBTQ organization of post-b’nai mitzvah that is supported by all of our Federations. students and their parents, We saw how our contributions enabled the growth and expansion of an Afula and one congregational community center’s “Sandwich Club” that feeds 50 teen volunteers each night tour group. who work together to assemble 200 free lunches that get distributed the following While I was in Afula day to local schools. And it was inspiring to meet new olim from Ethiopia at an and Gilboa, I reconnected absorption center in Beit Alfa and hear about the hardships that they had to over- with Israeli Jews, Muslims, come to resettle in Israel after many years of waiting in limbo. and Christians hosted We found hope in expanded opportunities for shared society between Israeli by our Federation in the Arabs and Jews. In the Arab town of Moqeble, for example, we met Muslim Berkshires. I got to see and Jewish middle school girls who told us that had it not been for their mixed projects that our Federation ethnicity basketball team supported by our Federations, they would not have had supports. And I heard from the chance to have meaningful interactions, let alone become friends, with peers beneficiaries about how we from each other’s communities. are impacting them and As we redouble our investment in “living bridges” between the Berkshires and generating real change in Afula-Gilboa in the years to come, we will continue to learn from each and further people’s lives. develop a shared sense of a common peoplehood amongst us. What was particularly To learn more about Partnership 2Gether, visit http://archive.jewishagency. remarkable to me was org/partnership2gether/program/468. seeing how certain projects had grown and developed. Josh Bloom serves on the Executive Board of the Jewish Federation of the For example, when an Berkshires as a vice president Josh helping the “Sandwich Club” prepare lunches interethnic photographers’ for area teens The Partnership2Gether mission meets with Ethiopian olim Thank you volunteers Ellen Rosenblatt and the BJV delivery team, Mitch Greenwald, Roman Rozenblyum, Colin Ovitsky, Pattie Lipman, Amy Cott Filson, and Chris Kelly Berkshire JA EWISHpublicationA publication ofof the the Jewish Jewish Federation Federation of the Berkshires, of the serving Berkshires,V the Berkshires serving and surrounding the ICE Berkshires NY, CT and VT and surrounding NY, CT and VT The color photography in this issue of the Berkshire Jewish Voice is made possible through the generosity of Helene Berger, honorary publisher. The staff of the Federation and the BJV are deeply grateful. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Berkshire Jewish Voice welcomes signed letters on subjects of interest to the Jewish community. Letters are printed upon space availability. The BJV reserves the right to edit all letters for content, length, and style. The BJV does not print anonymous letters, insults, libelous or defamatory statements. Published letters do not represent the views of the Federation, its board of directors, or the newspaper, but rather express the views of their authors. For verification purposes, please in- clude full name, home address, and a day and evening telephone number. Send letters to: Berkshire Jewish Voice, 196 South Street, Pittsfield, MA 01201, or email: [email protected]. Adar/Nisan/Iyar 5780 Berkshire Jewish Voice • jewishberkshires.org Page 3 Rabbi Reflection Spiritualizing the Process of Letting Go and Moving Into a New Chapter Local students also experienced the transitioning powers of mikvah immersion By Rabbi Neil P.G. Hirsch Watching the 2009 documentary Race to There, the students Nowhere was a defining moment in my under- first met with Jeremy Together, the students found a standing of what life as a child is like today. In Burton, the executive shared narrative, and also gave care one scene, a fourth-grader sits on a swing while director of the Jewish he is interviewed. Disturbingly, he innocently Community Relations and support to one another describes the stress that he feels in elementary Council of Greater school to perform, because if he does not do well Boston. Jeremy has spent a good deal of time thinking and writing about hate now, then he will not be ready for middle school, and anti-Semitism, and offered the students an overarching perspective on the which will hurt his opportunities for advanced recent manifestations of anti-Semitism. After his presentation, we invited the placement in high school, affecting the ulti- students to consider their experiences and their community.
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