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Splash & Dash

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Sunday, May 20, 1–4 pm, ages 7–15

The Simon Family JCC is the local regional host for the USA Triathlon Youth Aquathlon Splash & Dash for kids ages 7–15.

This sports event combines swimming and running. Ages 7-10 have a 100-meter swim and 1-mile run, and ages 11-15 have a 200-meter swim and 2-mile run, all to be held on the JCC campus.

This is a fantastic combination event for all skill levels that promotes fitness and fun. Registration includes an event shirt, finisher medal, and USAT youth one-year membership. Live music and vendors will be waiting at the finish line.

Register via the online link.Go to www.SimonFamilyJCC.org/Splash-and-Dash for details and registration.


Elliot Warsof

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Elliot Warsof, who was the recipient of the Bob Reinhard Campaign Award from the Jewish Community Federation of Richmond on Thursday, March 22.

Warsof is a graduate of the University of Miami and a real estate broker for S.L. Nusbaum Realty Co. He is a board member of the Jewish Community Federation of Richmond and serves on the Enterprise Circle and Network JCFR Committees. Warsof is a graduate of the Federation’s Young Leadership Program and the recipient of the 2018 Sisisky Fellowship. In addition, he is the advisor of B’nai Brith Youth Organization’s Monarch AZA and a Tidewater native.

DANIEL GOLDMAN

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Norfolk —Daniel Goldman, 68, passed away peacefully on Saturday, March 17, 2018 after a courageous battle with cancer. He was the chief buyer for Spartan Nash Finch, Military Distributors of Virginia. He was born in France, the son of the late Esther Wondolowicz Goldman and Charles Goldman.

Daniel was a graduate of Granby High School, Class of 1967. Following his graduation, he joined the U. S. Air Force and served during the Viet Nam War. He was also a member of Temple Israel and was an avid hockey fan and big supporter of the Admirals Hockey Team.

Left to cherish his memory is his beloved wife, Susan P. Goldman; a daughter, Shannon Nicole Goldman; a son, Aaron Jacob Goldman all of Norfolk; a cherished grandson, Jordan Alexander Goldman; a brother, Raymond Goldman and wife, Judy of Atlanta, Ga.; two nieces, Lauren Barkan and husband, Alex and Tova Tritt and husband, Dr. Shawn Tritt, M.D.; a nephew, Todd Goldman and wife, Stacey; and many beloved extended family in France, the U.K., Israel, Canada, and California.

A graveside funeral service, with military honors, was conducted in Forest Lawn Cemetery with Rabbi Michael Panitz officiating. Memorial contributions may be sent to the Disabled American Veterans (www.dav.org) or to Temple Israel, 7255 Granby St., Norfolk, VA 23505. H.D. Oliver Funeral Apts., Norfolk Chapel. Online condolences may be sent to the family through hdoliver.com.

SHIRLEY GROSSMAN

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Richmond , Va.—Shirley Laskoe Grossman, 87, was born and raised in Richmond’s Shockoe Bottom and passed away on March 18, 2018.

She graduated from John Marshall, and spent most of her working life in the St. Mary’s Hospital business office, then proudly served as a Friday volunteer there for many years. She loved Mahjongg, knitting, the beach, and made the best cheesecake ever.

She was predeceased by her parents, Rose and Nat Laskoe; and her husband of over 60 years, David Grossman.

Shirley is survived by her children, Michael Grossman (Sharon), Karen Molzhon (William Reber) and Richard (“Rick”) Grossman (Tresa); grandchildren, Nikki Thornton (Tim) and Andrea Molzhon; a great-grandson, Benjamin Thornton; her brother, Alan Laskoe (Helene); and nieces, nephews and cousins.

A graveside service was held at Oakwood Hebrew Cemetery. Donations to Beth Sholom Gardens, 2001 Lauderdale Dr., Richmond, Va. 23238.

IONEL KAHN

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Richmond , Va.—Ionel A. Kahn, age 89-ish, of Richmond, passed away Sunday, March 4, 2018, while surrounded by his loving family.

He was preceded in death by his daughter-in-law, Melinda Kahn.

He is survived by his loving wife of 67 years, Bernice Kahn; five children, Michael Kahn (Jacqueline), Alene Kaufman (Ron), William Kahn, Joseph Kahn, Elliot Kahn; eight grandchildren, Jason Kaufman (Jessica), Adam Kaufman, Pinina Morgan (Jacob), Theodore Kahn (Lila Santos), Eitan Kahn, Robert Kahn, Christopher Kahn, Noach Kahn; three great-granddaughters, Maya, Lillian, Aria; and other extended family.

Ionel dedicated his life of service to others through his involvement with temple and education in both New Jersey and Virginia. Another passion of his, in Virginia, was the Tuckahoe Volunteer Rescue Squad.

A funeral ceremony took place at Bliley’s-Central Chapel. Interment took place in Woodbridge, New Jersey. Memorial contributions may be made to Temple Beth Ahabah, Beth Sholom Lifecare Community, or Tuckahoe Volunteer Rescue Squad.

LEWIS A. STERN

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Virginia Beach —Lewis Arthur Stern of St. Thomas, U.S.V.I., passed March 14, 2018 in Beth Sholom Village. He was 83 and suffered from Parkinson’s disease.

Lou was a wonderful husband to Marie-Louise Burnett; father of Isobel Stern Bartel of Chesapeake, Gillian Stern, Emily Stern and Tom Stern; grandfather of Jacob, Ben, Sam, Madeline, Jack, Sally Jane, Lucien, Niall and Delia; father-inlaw of Bill, Scott and Genie; brother of Margery; brother-in-law of Sandy and Audrey; uncle of Andrew, Gary, Phil, Lynique, Gianni, Lynaud Jr. and Anaise; and stepfather of Quentin and Brian Ertel.

He was born in Alliquippa, Pa., April 28, 1934, the eldest child of John and Belle Stern. He received bachelor and law degrees from Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and clerked for Chief Judge Charles Clark on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Lou moved to Brooklyn, N.Y., where with his first wife and law school classmate, Jane, raised their family. During Lou’s legal career of nearly four decades at Fried, Frank LLP in New York, he was a corporate law partner and also did pro bono civil rights work. After retiring, he moved to St Thomas, as CFO of Atlantic Tele-Network, Inc. He married Marie-Louise and fully retired in 2002.

A competitive runner in high school and college, he returned to the sport in his 40s as a member of the Prospect Park Track Club, winning many awards on the Masters Circuit. His taste was eclectic in art and culture. As a board member of the non-profit Arts Alive at Tillet Garden in St. Thomas, he promoted the joy of visual and performing arts. The Caribbean was a happy place for Lou. An avid reader of history and politics, he often took his reading to Magen’s Bay Beach with visiting grandchildren who chuckled when he sang and told corny jokes. He loved to sail, and until his illness was a member of the St Thomas Yacht Club, where he challenged others to an “old man tennis game.” His philanthropic activity with St. Thomas Rotary II Club included operating a soup kitchen and fundraising for the Salvation Army. He was an active member of the Hebrew Congregation of St. Thomas.

His spirit and intellect will be missed by his family and friends. His family gives special thanks those who provided support and loving care for Lou in his final months. They include Carol Riddlehoover and her team of helpers, and the staffs of Beth Sholom Village and Freda H. Gordon Hospice & Palliative Care.

A graveside service was held in Forest Lawn Cemetery. Contributions in Lou’s honor to Community Foundation of VI (CFVI), PO BOX 11790, St. Thomas VI, 00801. H.D. Oliver Funeral Apartments.

JEROME YAVNER

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Virginia Beach —Jerome Yavner, 93, died on Sat., March 10, 2018 in a local convalescent center.

A native of Norfolk, he was the son of the late Bessie Glasser Yavner and Robert Simon Yavner. He was a veteran of the U.S. Navy having served in World War II . He had worked as a Ship Fitter in the Norfolk Naval Shipyard for 10 years. He then devoted his time and efforts to his true love of carpentry and started a career as a master cabinet maker. He was a former member of Temple Israel.

Survivors include his wife, Sonya Lee Yavner; a daughter, Margaret Goff; a son, Robert S. Yavner (Anita); and three grandchildren, Hannah Ross (Michael), Aaron Goff, and Jessica Ellis.

A graveside funeral service was held in Forest Lawn Cemetery. Contributions may be made to the American Cancer Society. H. D. Oliver Funeral Apts. Online condolences may be offered at www.hdoliver.com.

Stephen Hawking was admired by Israeli physicists for his insights and his humanity

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JERUSALEM (JTA)—Dr. Stephen Hawking was a rare and inspirational man whose deep insights into the mysteries of the physical universe were matched only by his courage in the face of a cruel, debilitating illness, which he met with good spirit and a unique sense of humor.

In the wake of his passing, those who have commented on his legacy have focused not only on his work as a scientist and a communicator of science, but also on his display of human spirit.

At the Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s Racah Institute of Physics, our interactions with Dr. Hawking were marked by our shared love of the discovery of the physical universe and our aspiration for creating a better world.

Dr. Hawking’s most famous theoretical argument, that matter can escape black holes, was intimately related to the ideas of the late Professor Jacob Bekenstein from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. A black hole is the most compact form of matter, as implied by Einstein’s theory of gravity. Surrounded by a seemingly one-way horizon, it is one of the most mysterious objects in nature. In 1972, Bekenstein (1947-2015), then a doctoral student at Princeton University, suggested that black holes might have properties of heat (more precisely entropy, known today as Bekenstein-Hawking black hole entropy).

Dr. Hawking was among the scientists who were skeptical. He believed that black holes absorb everything, yet nothing can escape them and therefore their temperatures would have to be absolute zero. But in 1974, he was led to the theoretical argument that once the effect of quantum physics are taken into account, black holes are not truly black. Dr. Hawking theorized that some radiation does escape from a black hole, and that this radiation represents (non-zero) temperature, just like a heated metal bar would glow in the dark.

At first he resisted this conclusion because it conformed to Bekenstein’s idea. However, he ultimately realized that both are correct and that a new and consistent understanding of black holes had emerged. This radiation is called Hawking radiation, and it remains Dr. Hawking’s single most important contribution to the field of theoretical physics.

So it was Hawking, building off and confirming Bekenstein’s work, who established the theoretical foundation for black hole thermodynamics, a deep connection between gravity and quantum physics that is a cornerstone of our contemporary understanding of these phenomena. Since his passing, some have commented on Dr. Hawking’s relationship with the State of Israel. Over his long career he visited Israel multiple times, accepting the prestigious Wolf Prize in physics in 1988 and, most recently, as an honored guest of the Israel Academy of Sciences in 2006.

Unfortunately, in 2013 he was represented to have made a decision with which we obviously disagree—to contribute to an academic boycott campaign against Israel. After initially agreeing to attend a conference led by then-President Shimon Peres, Dr. Hawking later canceled his participation. While misguided, I believe this decision was made not out of animosity, but rather with the intention of trying to foster a solution to the Israeli- Palestinian conflict.

I was part of a group of Israel theoretical physicists who sent a message to Dr. Hawking to formally protest his decision.

We wrote, in part, “We believe in the goal of a peaceful and prosperous coexistence of Israelis, Palestinians and other peoples. We moreover believe that the freedom of thought, expression and a free sharing of information are some of the core values of science as well as of democracy. A boycott, on the other hand by its very nature, suppresses dialogue and the free exchange of ideas for all parties involved, and we do not consider it helpful for a peaceful resolution of the conflict.”

Putting aside this disagreement, it was both an honor and a pleasure to have met Dr. Hawking on several occasions, and I will always remember his wit and how he faced his challenges with a smile, his typical defying grin. His science will be studied by generations to come and his spirit will continue to inspire millions around the world.

Dr. Barak Kol is a professor of physics working on theories of fundamental laws of nature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where he serves as head of physics studies. His research has contributed to Einstein’s theory of gravity and to Quantum Field Theory.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of JTA or its parent company, 70 Faces Media.

- Barak Kol


Yom HaAtzamut From Holy Land to Club Land— The Evolution of Israel through Music

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Thursday, April 19, 6:30 pm, Congregation Beth El

On 5 Iyar, 1948 the entire world watched as Israel became an independent nation. On 5 Iyar, 2018 (April 19), the entire world will celebrate as Israel turns 70. Eyal Rob, a screenwriting professor by day and Tel Aviv DJ by night, will help Tidewater celebrate.

Along with DJ Eyal Rob, the celebration includes Israeli food, arts and crafts for kids, a joint mural painting for older kids and adults, PJ Library activities, silent auction of local Jewish artists’ work, Israeli wine tastings (with minimal cost) and more.

Rob, a co-founder of Israel’s first music television channel, Israeli journalist and culture critic, brings the Tel Aviv music scene to Tidewater, reflecting the young Jewish nation’s songs through wars, peace, struggle and hope for an interactive Yom HaAtzamut celebration for all ages.

A member of Soulico, Tel Aviv’s hottest DJ collective, until recently signing on to the NYC label JDub, Rob has DJ’d in various festivals around the world, including twice at SXSW in Austin, Texas, and spins in the top notch clubs and events for the Jewish community and campus parties around the world.

The event will begin at 5:45 pm for Minyan (all are invited, but not required).

Beth El is located at 422 Shirley Avenue. This program sponsored by the CRC, Beth El, and in part through grants from the Tidewater Jewish Foundation and the United Jewish Federation of Tidewater.

For more information or to RSVP (required), call Melissa Eichelbaum at 321-2304 or visit jewishva.org/eyal-rob.

Jane Gardner to speak at Temple Emanuel’s 7th Annual Pink Tea

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Sunday, May 6, 2–4 pm

Jane Gardner, survivor of four types of cancer, a former TV anchor, and a former health reporter, will be the guest speaker for this year’s 7th Annual Pink Tea. Hosted by Temple Emanuel, the event continues the legacy of its founder, Renee Heyman (of blessed memory). In 2012, Heyman envisioned helping the underserved women in the community and began her quest to raise funds for cancer screenings and mammograms for the local Beach Health Clinic.

Since that first year, the Pink Tea, through its supporters and a lot of hard work, has donated more than $12,000 to the Beach Health Clinic. Since it is “Derby Day,” this year’s theme is “Race for the Care.” Everyone is encouraged to wear a crazy hat for the “Derby.” The Tea will offer (alcohol-free) pink mimosas, pink champagne, pink lemonade, strawberry and pink desserts, pecan pie, and other wonderful Southern delights prepared by the Beth Sholom Village Caterers. Decorations will again be creatively and beautifully arranged by Leslie Siegel.

Admission is a minimum of $12.50; donors of $25 and above receive a “Pink Angel” ribbon and recognition. Speakers will share informative, interesting, and personal stories. RSVP by Wednesday, April 25. Call the Temple Emanuel’s office, 757-428-2591 or office@tevb.org or Paula Krukin Levy, 757-467-6677.

Virginia Stage Company’s Disgraced covers myriad issues

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Simon Feil, an accomplished Jewish actor from New York City, is in Hampton Roads performing in Virginia Stage Company’s production of the Pulitzer Prizewinning drama, Disgraced.

The play revolves around a dinner party that Issac, played by Feil, attends with his African American wife hosted by her law partner, a Pakistani lapsed Muslim, and his Caucasian wife. This explosive drama covers topics such as religious discrimination and politics. According to its director, Khanisha Foster, “It’s both really funny and takes some heartbreaking turns. The play is about what we can’t take back, the mistakes we made, and how we got there.”

Community conversations, sponsored by the Tidewater Jewish Foundation, follow each performance. Disgraced runs through April 22 at the historic Wells Theatre in Downtown Norfolk. Tickets range from $20 to $55. Vastage.org or 757-627-6988.

ALUT—Courageous Expressions In observance of Autism Awareness Month

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April

Courageous Expressions is a mixed media, group exhibition based on a variety of works created by untrained artists from the Israeli Society for Autistic Children (the ALUT Institute), a leading care provider for individuals with autism in Israel.

The exhibition’s body of work is both uniquely beautiful and interestingly abstract, while individual works are supremely complex in depicting the expressive voice behind each piece. Often the artist’s only or more comprehensive voice, each exhibited piece warrants a narrative depth far beyond what meets the eye.

All pieces are for sale and can be purchased at the Simon Family JCC front desk. Proceeds from the sales of the Courageous Expressions exhibit will go towards additional art classes in the ALUT employment centers for young adults with severe autism in Israel, as an additional means of therapy and rehabilitation.

For more information about this exhibit or future exhibits, contact Melissa Eichelbaum, program department associate at MEichelbaum@ujft.org or 321-2304.

Mark Wygoda is featured speaker at 2018 Holocaust Commemoration

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Wednesday, April 11, 6:45 pm, Congregation Beth El

United Jewish Federation of Tidewater’s Holocaust Commission’s annual Holocaust Day of Remembrance, Yom Hashoah will feature Dr. Mark Wygoda, who will share the story of his father, Hermann Wygoda.

Known as “Comandante Enrico” to the 2,500 partisan troops he commanded as a Division Commander in the Italian Liberation Army, 1944–45, Hermann Wygoda planned war actions, negotiated prisoner exchanges with the local German commander, and ultimately helped liberate the city of Savona, Italy.

In addition to Wygoda, the evening includes a poignant candle lighting ceremony and prayers from area clergy and leadership. Additionally, student winners of the Holocaust Commission’s annual Elie Wiesel competitions and recipients of the Commission’s Excellence in Education awards will be honored and recognized.

For more information, visit www.HolocaustCommission.org, email info@holocaustcommission.org, or call 757-965-6100.

JACK G. BARR

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Norfolk —Jack G. Barr, 89, died Thursday, March 29, 2018 in a local hospital.

He was a native of Baltimore, Maryland and was the son of the late Lewis and Ruth Reisig Barr. He was preceded in death in 2006, by his loving wife of 58 years, Yvonne Roberta Barr and his brother Melvin Barr.

Jack graduated from Maury High School and from the University of Virginia. He married his High School sweetheart on Christmas of 1948 at the Monticello Hotel. He was the founder of Barr Construction and president until his retirement in 1993. He was an active member and former board member and president of Congregation Beth El, chairman of Bonds for Israel, former president of the Tidewater Builders and Contractors Association, chairman of the building committee for JCC, a recipient of its Krug Award, chairman of the building committee and member and former president of the board of Beth Sholom Home of Tidewater, eight-year board member of the Salvation Army.

He is survived by his daughter, Susan Patricia Barr, his sons, Mark H. Barr and Jeffrey A. Barr, all of Norfolk; his stepson, Rabbi Daniel and Jennifer Lehrman of Brooklyn, N.Y. and his grandchildren, Matthew and his wife Terri, Noah and his wife Laura, Rachel, Joshua, Rebecca, Ilana, and Maia; his former wife Gail Blairman, his former daughters-in-law Terry Colby Barr and Dr. Lisa Barr, and his significant other, Barbara Fulp of Norfolk. He is also survived by his great-granddaughter, Julia, his nephews Burt and Henry Barr, and many cousins.

The funeral service was held at Congregation Beth El with interment in Forest Lawn Cemetery. Rabbi Jeffrey Arnowitz and Cantor Wendi Fried officiated. Memorial donations to the charity of the donor’s choice.

H.D. Oliver Funeral Apts. Online condolences to the family at hdoliver.com.

STEVE AVIV YETIV

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“Dr. Yetiv is one of the most influential instructors of all I have had the pleasure to study under throughout my college career. His unique teaching style couples a thorough knowledge of the subject material with a keen insight and great sense of humor. It is a pleasure to be in his class. We learn about the world above and beyond the limits of the class topics. Kudos and accolades don’t do justice to his talent.”

—Old Dominion University Political Science student

Norfolk —Steve Yetiv, an extraordinary teacher, mentor, and true friend to many throughout the Old Dominion University and Hampton Roads communities, died March 21, 2018 at age 53 following a sudden heart attack. Steve’s passing is a profound loss to hundreds of admiring students and faculty at ODU as well as colleagues in his field of study around the world. As a loyal and supportive friend who was generous with his time and encouragement, there was no one else like him. Around the university and beyond, he gained the respect, love and gratitude of everyone in his extended family. For a man of such great achievement, he was remarkably humble, yet always a shining and smiling presence.

Dr. Steve Yetiv was the Louis I. Jaffe Professor of International Relations at Old Dominion University and a leading expert on world oil markets, energy security, the Middle East, and U.S. foreign policy. He was a consultant to the U.S. Departments of State and Defense; the U.S. General Accounting Office; and CNN International where he worked on a documentary that won an Edward R. Murrow Overseas Press Club Award. He appeared on outlets such as CNN, BBC, CNBC, CSPAN, and NPR, and published over 250 op-eds which include essays in The New York Times, USA Today, The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, The International Herald Tribune and the Christian Science Monitor.

He received Harvard University awards for excellence in teaching (1992 and 1993); the U.S. Secretary of State’s Open Forum Distinguished Public Service Award from the U.S. State Department for “contributions to national and international affairs” (1996); the Virginia Social Science Association’s Scholar Award (1999); the Choice Outstanding Academic Book awards (in 1998 and in 2005); and ODU research and teaching awards.

In 2012, he won Virginia’s highest research, teaching and service award, the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia (SCHEV) Outstanding Faculty Award, based on the rankings of Virginia’s leading professors by 30 peer academic reviewers.

Steve is survived by his brother Dr. Jack Yetiv of Houston, Texas, and his family of close friends in Norfolk.

A private funeral was held at the Hebrew Cemetery in Norfolk. A Memorial Service for Steve will be held Tuesday, April 24, 6 pm at the Diehn Center for the Performing Arts, Old Dominion University.


Holocaust survivor Sala Kirschner, whose letters hidden from the Nazis became a book

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Sala Kirschner, a Holocaust survivor whose 350 letters, postcards and photographs that she hid from Nazi guards eventually became a book written by her daughter, has died.

Kirschner died Wednesday, March 7 in New York of congestive heart failure. She was 94.

Born in Sosnowiec, in southwestern Poland, Kirschner and the rest of the city’s Jewish population were confined to a ghetto until their deportation—most to Auschwitz, where her parents died.

Kirschner, who also lost four siblings in the Holocaust, was an inmate in seven labor camps over five years, starting when she was 16, according to an obituary published in the New York Times.

In her first years in the camps she was permitted to send and receive mail as the Nazis continued to try to make it look like everything was normal.

Kirschner hid the letters in the camps’ barracks or buried them despite the possible horrific punishments if they were discovered. She told the Times in earlier interviews that she kept them since they represented her only link to her family, whom she believed she would never see again.

Kirschner was liberated by the Soviet Army in May 1945 and was reunited with two of her sisters. She married a Jewish soldier she met at Rosh Hashanah services shortly after the war ended and who brought her home as a war bride.

In 1991, hours before cardiac surgery that she worried she would not survive, Kirschner gave her daughter Ann the trove of letters and other documents hidden in the red cardboard box of an old board game. She said she had kept them hidden to protect her children from being emotionally wounded.

The letters and a diary Kirschner kept were put on display in 2006 at the New York Public Library. The same year, Ann Kirschner, a professor at the City University of New York, published a book about the letters titled Sala’s Gift: My Mother’s Holocaust Story. A play, Letters to Sala, also was written by Arlene Hutton.

Along with her daughter, Kirschner is survived by her husband of 72 years, Sidney; a son, David; eight grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. She was predeceased by a son. (JTA)

Johan van Hulst, Dutch politician who saved hundreds of Jewish children during Holocaust

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AMSTERDAM (JTA)—Johan van Hulst, a Dutch seminary leader who saved hundreds of Jewish children during the Holocaust and later became a senator, has died at the age of 107.

Van Hulst and resistance activists smuggled the children to safety over several months. He was the director of a Protestant religious seminary in Amsterdam with a yard that bordered on the nursery section of a facility in which the Nazis and collaborators imprisoned Jews before their dispatch to concentration camps.

The late director, who died Thursday, March 22, hid in his school the children from the nursery of the Hollandsche Schouwburg, whom he and his helpers would hoist over the hedge that separated the two yards. From there, resistance activists and fighters would smuggle the children to safehouses, sometimes in laundry baskets and other times on bicycles, pretending that the children were their own.

Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial and museum in 1973 recognized Van Hulst as a Righteous Among the Nations – a title for non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews from the Holocaust.

In 2012, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu honored Van Hulst during a state visit to the Netherlands. That year, Van Hulst’s heroism was immortalized in a film titled Susskind.

“We say, those who save one life saves a universe. You saved hundreds of universes. I want to thank you in the name of the Jewish people, but also in the name of humanity,” Netanyahu told Van Hulst, who after the Holocaust became a senator for the Christian Democratic Appeal party.

In 1943, a Dutch Education Ministry official named Fieringa discovered several Jewish children at Van Hulst’s Hervormde Kweekschool and asked for the meaning of their presence there and whether they were Jewish. In a 2012 interview, Van Hulst recalled telling him after a long silence: “You don’t really expect me to answer that, do you?”

Fieringa, an inspector, did not report back on what he had seen.

The grounds of the Hervormde Kweekschool currently houses the National Holocaust Museum of the Netherlands. The joint wall carries a permanent exhibition in his honor.

Separately, Yad Vashem last month recognized as a righteous gentile a police officer from the town of Beverwijk, near Amsterdam, and his wife and another couple, Willem and Ali Bleeker, for their rescue of a Jewish girl, Dolly Drilsma. The Bleekers hid the girl, whose parents went into hiding without her.

When the Bleekers suspected that the Nazis were watching them, they transferred Dolly to the police officer, Leo van der Hoorn. Days later her parents were found and sent to be murdered. As a police officer serving the Nazi occupation forces, van der Hoorn risked stiff punishment, including a summary execution, had he been found out.

The Netherlands has more than 5,000 righteous gentiles, the world’s highest number after Poland.

It also has the highest death rate among Jews in the Holocaust of any Nazioccupied country in Western Europe, largely due to widespread betrayal of Jews and collaboration with the Nazis by locals.

Steven Bochco, Emmy-winning creator of ‘Hill Street Blues’ and ‘LA Law’

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Steven Bochco, the Emmy-winning television writer and producer who was responsible for iconic series such as Hill Street Blues, NYPD Blue and L.A. Law, has died.

Bochco died Sunday, April 1 at his home following a years-long battle with leukemia. He had received a stem cell transplant from an anonymous donor in 2014, according to the Hollywood Reporter. He was 74.

The winner of 10 Emmy Awards and four Peabodys, Bochco also created the popular series Doogie Howser, M.D, starring Neil Patrick Harris.

Bochco worked on Hill Street Blues at MTM Enterprises, a production company started by Mary Tyler Moore, for five of seven seasons, during which time it won 26 Emmys. The Jewish writer and producer later formed the Steve Bochco Productions company.

He had his first job at Universal after graduating from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh in 1966 with a theater degree and worked on Columbo for a few seasons. The first episode he wrote was directed by Steven Spielberg, and with that came the first of 34 Emmy nominations, according to the Hollywood Reporter. He stayed at Universal for 12 years.

“Steve was a friend and a colleague starting with the first episode of Columbo, in 1971 that he wrote and I directed,” Spielberg said in a statement. “We have supported and inspired each other ever since, and through many deep mutual friendships we have stayed connected for 47 years. I will miss Steve terribly.”

Bochco was born in New York and attended the High School of Music and Art in Manhattan, where he sang. His father, Rudolph, was a violinist, and his mother, Mimi, was a painter and jewelry designer. (JTA)

Lag B’Omer

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Thursday, May 3, 5–7 pm, Simon Family JCC

Food, drinks, activities for kids, a bonfire, and fun are planned for this annual celebration.

For information, contact Adi Abramov, Jewish Life and Learning program coordinator, at 757-321-2334 aabramov@ujft.org.

Spring Into Art at Park Place School

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Luncheon: Tuesday, May 1, 11 am–12:30 pm, Congregation Beth El

Beth El is bustling with activity in the art studio now being run in the Park Place School. Each week, under the direction of art therapist Kimberly Fisher, all 65 of the second through sixth graders explore different media to develop their skills as budding artists.

In answer to the call for Beth El congregants to participate with the Park Place students, several have joined in to launch Spring Into Art, a program designed to inspire the students to create, draw, and paint together. Lisa Stein Delevie leads the volunteers in working with the students on two projects. The second, third, and fourth graders diligently trace their hands and then paint designs on their work. Stein Delevie is mounting their art on a giant canvas, making a masterpiece of their creations. Shirley Stein, Patti Wainger, Roy Karp, and Helene Rosenfeld directed the fifth and sixth graders in a study of the art and career of Park Place born artist Clayton Singleton. After watching WHRO’s Curate presentation on Singleton, the students Skyped with the artist who spoke with them from Lake Taylor High School where he chairs the art department. The artist inspired his viewers to be “the best they can be” and to create art. With his direction, the students are painting and Stein Delevie is mounting their work. To expand their horizons, the students will visit art shows at Norfolk Academy and the Chrysler Museum.

In preparation for Spring into Art, the students are painting mermaids, donated by the Mermaid Factory, to be centerpieces at the luncheon. At this event, visitors will have the opportunity to learn about the Park Place program and its outstanding students and staff. A Spring into Art silent auction will feature art and jewelry by local artists, as well creations by the Park Place students.

The event is free, open to the entire community, and offered as a “thank you” for the support provided by Park Place donors and Beth El Synagogue. To attend the luncheon, RSVP to aphillips@parkplaceschool.org or call 624-3473.

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