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The past

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Rabbi J. D. Gordon was the rabbi of B’nai Israel Congregation of Norfolk until 1947. He gave some spirited sermons in his time and published a collection of his High Holiday addresses for future rabbis to learn from and emulate.

One year, Rabbi Gordon spoke about the past. He reminisced about the days when people travelled around Norfolk by foot or by horse and buggy. If you made a wrong turn or you missed something, you could turn around and walk back a few steps. People had time to stop and smell the azaleas. It’s not like that anymore. We drive cars, we take trains and we board planes, and now, light rails. It’s not so easy to go back. If we make a wrong turn, we could be 10 miles out of the way before we even notice. If we miss something interesting at the side of the road, there is no way that we are going to back up on the highway and get a better look. As time goes on, we move faster, and as we move faster, we move further away from the past.

Our community has a glorious past. There are people that many of us know and love who have been a part of the Norfolk Jewish community for almost 100 years. They have defended and represented Judaism through thick and through thin and through times when people thought that we would cease to exist.

They will tell you that a lot has changed in 100 years. There are a lot of new people. The songs are sung to different tunes and the bubbes and zaides of their childhood are no longer in the back of shul making sure that everyone is entertained and feeling comfortable. Yet, the more things change, the more they stay the same.

We are still passionate about Judaism. We faithfully study Torah and aim to follow its words and lessons to the best of our abilities.

We need to embrace the present. We need to cherish it, and we need to become a part of it. But we dare not forget those who preceded us and define what we stand for today.

A man once climbed to the top of a mountain. It took him several months of training and several weeks of planning. When he got to the top of the mountain after several days of climbing, he was shocked to find a little boy playing soccer. This boy could not possibly have climbed the mountain, yet there he was.

“How did you get here?” the mountain climber asked. The boy looked at him with a very puzzled face, “I was born here.”

Let’s remember the people who brought us to the top of the mountain. Let’s find ways to respect our communal bubbies and zaides and make them proud.

Rabbi Sender Haber, Congregation B’nai Israel


Leon Family Gallery Reba and Sam Sandler Family Campus

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July

Eitan Stern uses a camera to capture ordinary people in an empathetic light. Stern’s love for humanity is expressed through his focus on street photography, portraits, and compositions questioning social issues of today. His photography has received several awards and been featured in exhibits in Israel and the United States.

This exhibit provides an unexpected look at the people and places of Israel, as well as select photos from his travels throughout the world.

Born in Israel, Stern moved to the United States in 2004 with his wife and two children, relocating to Norfolk seven years ago. From the business world, Stern started photography as a hobby.

Proceeds from the sales of Eitan Stern’s work will go to the cultural arts department of the Simon Family JCC.

Tidewater Chavurah changes location for Second Friday Shabbat Service

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Friday, July 13, 7 pm

July’s second Friday of the month Shabbat service for Tidewater Chavurah will take place at the home of Rabbi Ellen Jaffe-Gill and Spencer Gill in the Bayside area of Virginia Beach.

A “congregation without walls,” events are held in members’ homes or at other locations. Rabbi Ellen Jaffe-Gill will lead the service, with an Oneg following.

For event information and location address, email carita@verizon.net or dlqt@cox.net or call 499-3660 or 468-2675. Go to www.tidewaterchavurah.org or Tidewater Chavurah’s Facebook page for more information.

Achievement

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Five years into a successful career as a sales agent with William E. Wood and Associates (now Howard Hanna) Nancy Evans was identified as suited for management. Now, after a 25-year-career of managing, negotiating, coaching, and advising an office full of successful agents, Evans has returned to selling real estate. Evans says she “looks forward to helping clients with all of their real estate needs” by using her years of acquired skills and knowledge to advise, negotiate, and educate.

Evans is a Norfolk native who spent her youth at Temple Israel and the JCC.

Anthony Bourdain seduced us all into confronting our own biases

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NEW YORK (JTA)—Anthony Bourdain was quick—and often willing—to publicly offer his own flaws.

“Until 44 years of age, I never had any kind of savings account,” Bourdain said in 2017. “[I] always owed money. I’d always been selfish and completely irresponsible.”

Despite or maybe because of such flaws, Bourdain would stumble into fame, parlaying his latent talent as a writer into hosting three increasingly sophisticated variants of the same food-oriented travel show—first on the Food Network, then on the Travel Channel and finally on CNN.

“For a long time, Tony thought he was going to have nothing,” his publisher, Dan Halpern, told The New Yorker. “He can’t believe his luck. He always seems happy that he actually is Anthony Bourdain.”

In his professional ascendance, Bourdain developed a unique journalistic voice, demonstrating an underlying, at times seemingly innate ability to acquaint viewers with foreign lands and cultures divergent from their own without mocking his subjects. Instead he humanized the local tapestry of individuals, implicitly encouraging his viewers to do the same. It is for this reason that various communities, including the Jewish community, trusted Bourdain with their respective cultures and heritages—and mourned deeply the news of his death, at 61, on Friday, June 8.

In the opening of the 2013 episode in which he visits Israel, the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Bourdain notes that the region is “easily the most contentious piece of real estate in the world. And there’s no hope—none—of ever talking about it without pissing somebody, if not everybody, off.”

And yet, still simply happy to be here—happy to have accidentally secured the reverence now attached to his name— he worries not of angering partisans, instead focusing on his task: telling individual stories through food.

“By the end of this episode, I’ll be seen by many as a terrorist sympathizer, a Zionist tool, a self-hating Jew, an apologist for American imperialism, an orientalist, fascist, socialist CIA agent and worse. So here goes nothing,” he said.

In addition to addressing his own internal struggles, by wrapping himself in tefillin at the Western Wall and praying, as a Jew, for the first time in his life (he described himself as “hostile to any sort of devotion”), Bourdain interrogates his subjects, who span the cultural, ethnic, and political spectrums. He coaxes them to explicate the extremism of their respective communities.

Over a meal in a Jewish settlement, Bourdain asks a resident about local graffiti reading “Death to Arabs”; the settler admits that it should “probably” be expunged. At the Aida refugee camp outside Bethlehem, he prods a local children’s theater director, asking why communal heroes are armed gunmen, hijackers, and suicide bombers rather than TV stars or singers. The director, like the settler, offers a moderate apology, acknowledging that the situation is not healthy.

In Israel proper, Bourdain speaks with the Jewish Natan Galkowicz, who lost a daughter in a missile attack from Gaza.

“I know that my daughter was killed for no reason, and I know that people on the other side have been killed for no reason,” Galkowicz tells Bourdain. “Bottom line is, let’s stop with the suffering.”

The father’s voice underscores the entirety of the episode—mournful over a fraught situation, yet hopeful for peace, not for any particular ideological reason, but in the hopes of a future in which children neither worship armed gunmen nor are killed by missiles and suicide bombs.

Although ever ambivalent about politics, Bourdain allows this episode, likely inevitable due to its focus, to become deeply political. Yet he navigates the regional ideological complexities with ease similar to his canoe junket into Borneo’s jungles.

As Rob Eshman wrote in the Jewish Journal of Los Angeles at the time, “If you like food and you like Israel, this past week’s episode of Anthony Bourdain’s ‘Parts Unknown’ was a win-win…To me, he showed exactly how smart, curious people should engage a complex country— and how Israelis and Palestinians benefit from that approach.”

Throughout his time on television, Bourdain repeatedly forced his viewers to readdress their own biases. In this particular episode, he renders it difficult for viewers to descend in their own communal extremism. It’s hard to imagine watching the episode without empathizing for both, rather than choosing between, the Palestinians and the Israelis.

It is for this reason—his ability, through food, to present on-the-ground, real-life theater in aims of humanizing its players—that Israelis, Palestinians, Colombians, Georgians, Malaysians, Cambodians, and Hungarians, among countless others, welcomed Bourdain into not only their locales and cultures but also into their own homes. He did not glorify conflict nor local struggles, but yearned to understand and talk about individuals within their midst.

Floating above the ocean of biased or one-sided media coverage that only serves to reinforce pre-existing communal extremism, Bourdain was a lifeboat of, and for, humanity. He made us all a little more interesting, a little smarter and a little more tolerant of others.

A chef and accidental journalist, Bourdain did the type of reporting that all within the field, particularly in the midst of a global expansion of attacks on the free press, should aim to emulate. His suicide, ominously following news of this month’s CDC report indicating that suicide is rising sharply, shows perhaps how deeply he suffered from his own flaws and contradictions. It was these contradictions, however, that made Bourdain so quick to recognize and respect similar tensions in not only other individuals but in other communities.

For his voice, and for all he taught his viewers, Bourdain will be severely missed, not only in the Jewish community but also, due to his international expansiveness, around the globe.

- Charles Dunst

BERNICE L. KAPLAN

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Norfolk —Mrs. Bernice Levinson Kaplan passed away peacefully on Sunday, June 17, 2018.

Bernice was born on March 9, 1919 to Julius and Lena Kirsner Levinson. She was the beloved wife of Milton H. Kaplan. A native of Norfolk, Bernice lived in West Ghent and graduated from W.H. Taylor, Blair Jr High, and Maury High School. She attended Ohio State University where she studied sociology, and Norfolk Division of William and Mary.

Bernice and Milton had a loving happy life together for 70 years. In their retirement they traveled extensively spending a month in different European countries. Bernice always returned with beautiful pictures which she meticulously labeled, wonderful stories, and new friends. However it was her large family and her lifelong friends that filled her life with contentment. When she lost her life partner, she proved to be independent and engaging, reading the newspaper nightly to be well informed. To her grandchildren, great grandchildren and all of their friends she was “Mimi.” That was the role she loved best. To her nieces and nephews, she was Aunt Bebe and Bernice adored them like her own children.

Bernice was actively involved in her community. She served as a “pink lady” at Norfolk General Hospital (now Sentara) for 15 years, as auditor for the Norfolk Community Fund and on the PTA board of Taylor School. She was a charter member of the Magnolia Garden Club where her ‘green thumb’ won her many awards. Bernice served on UJFT’s Woman’s Cabinet and on the board of Beth Sholom Ladies Auxiliary. She was a Life Member of Hadassah and also served on the board of Beth El Temple Sisterhood, the National Council of Jewish Women and the Ladies Hebrew Charities. She was a long time member of the Unity and Gold Band social clubs.

Left to cherish their own special memories are her daughter, Joan London Baer and her son, Stanley and Sue Ellen Kaplan; her grandchildren, Robert and Alicia London Friedman, Dr. Scott and Stephanie London, Dr. Jonathan and Betsy London Rubenstein, Nancy Kaplan, Steven Kaplan and Kelly Voss, Lauren Kaplan, Justin and Marissa Baer, and David Baer, her great grandchildren Jamie and Hallie Friedman, James, Charlie and Kate London, Jack, Ryan and Alexis Rubenstein, Lucy Voos Kaplan, Skylar and April Baer.

She is also survived by her sisters-in-law, Tamra Kruger and Libby Kaplan. She was predeceased by her sons-in-law James London and Stephen Baer; her brother, Seymour Levinson; her sister, Rose Frances Glasser; as well as her sister-in-law Hanna Shapiro; and brothers-in-law, Bernard Glasser, Sydney Shapiro, and Howard Kruger.

A graveside service took place in Forest Lawn Cemetery. Rabbi Jeffrey Arnowitz officiated.

Charitable donations to Beth Sholom Home, Congregation Beth El or donor’s choice. H.D. Oliver Funeral Apts. Online condolences at hdoliver.com.

REVA FRIEDMAN KELBERG

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Virginia Beach —Reva Kelberg passed away on June 6, 2018.

Ms. Kelberg was born April 14, 1935 in Norfolk. She settled in Virginia Beach where she and her beloved husband of 56 years, Lee Kelberg raised their two children, Sharon Kelberg Shutler and Jeffrey Kelberg.

Ms. Kelberg pursued a lifelong commitment to educating all children. In 1967, Ms. Kelberg was the first woman appointed to the Virginia Beach School board on which she ably served for 15 years. During that time, she was the school board’s representative to WHRO TV. Later, she received a master’s degree from Old Dominion University and joined the staff of the Old Dominion University Writing Center where she taught and advocated for students with learning disabilities from 1982 through 1984. She took joy in tutoring and mentoring elementary school students.

She adored her grandchildren, Natalie and Virginia, daughters of Sharon and Rob Shutler and Trudy and Miriam, daughters of Jeff and Faye Kelberg. She passionately loved dogs. Ms. Kelberg was an avid sports fan, rarely missing a televised Washington Nationals game. She was loving, generous, ever-curious, and kind. Ms. Kelberg was the daughter of Minnie Swersky Friedman and Robert Friedman. She attended Maury High School and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a bachelor of arts in English.

A funeral service was held at H.D. Oliver Funeral Chapel. Donations may be made to the Virginia Beach SPCA.

SHEILA RAIT

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Norfolk —Sheila Rait, 76, passed away on June 17, 2018.

Sheila was born in New York on April 4, 1942 to the late Paul and Rose Marcus. She was an entrepreneur and also an avid baker. Other than her parents, Sheila was preceded in death by her loving husband of 45 years Howard Rait and brother Howard Marcus.

Left to cherish her memory is her son Eric Rait and daughter Pamela Rait; brother Dr. Philip Marcus, and many other family members and friends.

A graveside service was held at Forest Lawn Cemetery. A 30-day campaign benefitting Myasthenia Gravis will be run in her name. To donate: www.tmcfunding.com.


RICHARD J. BASS

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NORFOLK—Richard Jay Bass, 59, passed away on June 27, 2018.

Richard was born to Marlene and the late Melvin Bass, of blessed memory, on May 19 1959 in Buffalo, New York and was a resident of Hampton Roads since 1972. He was preceded in death by his sister Deborah Bass Sadoff.

He was a member of Chabad of Tidewater. He graduated from Virginia Tech. He received his DDS at VCU/ Medical College of Virginia, College of Dentistry with a degree of Doctor of Dental Surgery in 1985. Richard did a General Practice Residency from Yale. He moved to Portsmouth and married Dr. Patricia Lee Speer and started practicing dentistry while raising their family.

Rick was a ‘Dentist’s Dentist.’ He was extremely kind and gentle. He would go out of his way to assist most anyone with a task—hosting a meeting or delivering a prescription to a patient on his way home. He loved his yard, flowers, wine, and most of all, his sons.

He is survived by his sons Philip Asher Bass and Benjamin Jacob Bass, his mother Marlene Herer Bass of Norfolk, his Aunt Marilyn Bass Buxbaum, numerous cousins, and his dog, Talia.

A funeral service was conducted at H. D. Oliver’s Funeral Apartments. Burial took place at Forest Lawn Cemetery. Rabbi Levi Brashevitzky, Rabbi Aron Margolin, and Rabbi Jeffery Arnowitz officiated. Memorial donations to The Mel Bass, Debbie Bass Sadoff memorial restricted fund of the Hebrew Academy of Tidewater, 5000 Corporate Woods Drive, Virginia Beach or Chabad of Tidewater, 1920 Colley Avenue of Norfolk, or Congregation Beth El, 422 Shirley Avenue Norfolk, Virginia, 23517.

SONYA L. FINE

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Virginia Beach —Sonya L. Fine passed away peacefully on June 30, 2018.

Sonya was predeceased by her parents, Mildred and Edward P. Levine, her beloved husband Barry, her son Nolan, and her sister Hermoine Busko, all of blessed memory.

Lifelong residents of Tidewater, Sonya and Barry later moved to Chapel Hill, N.C. for 16 years where they made numerous Carolina friends and could follow their Tar Heels.

Sonya organized many trips with Barry, as they loved to travel all over the world. Sonya was known for her elegant taste in decorating and always put her family first on the priority list of her life.

Sonya is survived by a son, Mitchell (Peggy), her grandchildren, Stacie Wilson (fiancée Gary), Morgan Zell (Ryan), Jennifer Shaw (Ryan), and Blair Fine (fiancée Ian). She is also survived by great grandchildren, Micah Zell, Gabrielle Shaw, and Madeline Shaw.

May Mom, Grandma and Great Grandma always be watched over and surrounded by those beautiful angels and butterflies she loved so much.

The family would like to thank the staff of First Colonial Inn and Beth Sholom Terrace where she resided over the past seven years.

A private funeral service was held at Forest Lawn Cemetery. H.D. Oliver. Donations to a charity of choice. Online condolences may be offered at www. hdoliver.com.

VICKI KALFUS

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Virginia Beach —Vicki Roslyn Kalfus died July 5 in Sunny Isles Beach, Florida surrounded by family after a long battle with metastatic melanoma.

Vicki was born September 23, 1943 in Childress, Texas and raised in Norfolk.

She was the daughter of Jerome and Raye Cohen. She followed in her mother’s footsteps to study nursing at Mt. Sinai in Baltimore and practiced as an RN in California and Tennessee, and with Jewish Family Service in Virginia Beach.

She married her husband, Abe Kalfus, 54 years ago on November 17, 1963. After time in California and Tennessee, they moved back to Virginia Beach in 1968. Abe and Vicki raised three children and were active in the community. Vicki was an avid reader and Mah Jongg player. In recent years, Vicki enjoyed her time with her nine grandchildren during their frequent visits to Florida.

Vicki is survived by her husband Abe, daughter Ingrid Edery (David) of Ft. Lauderdale, son Evan (Lori) of Virginia Beach, and son Mason (Susan) of Washington, DC. She is survived by her grandchildren Moshe, Josh, Eliana (Merric), Malka, Kaitlyn, Jack, Jeremy, Ryan, and Sadie. She also leaves behind two sisters, a brother and many nieces, nephews, and friends.

A graveside service took place at Beth David Memorial Gardens in Hollywood, Florida. Donations to Jewish Family Service of Tidewater or the Melanoma Research Foundation.

JAMES W. LEGUM

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Norfolk —James William “Jimmy” Legum 72, of the 600 block of W. Princess Anne Road, died June 30, 2018.

Born in Norfolk, he was the son of the late Sol S. Legum and Sylvia Siegel Legum. Jimmy attended Norfolk Public Schools and the Virginia School for the Deaf and Blind. He retired from Shoney’s Restaurant on 21st Street after 29 years.

Jimmy was a member of Congregation Beth El. He was an avid sports fan; he knew all the teams and their records, and most of all, baseball.

Survivors include his brother, Bertrum N. Legum and his wife, Joyce of Norfolk, and a nephew, Ross E. Legum and his wife, Anne and their children of Virginia Beach, and his many friends throughout Ghent.

A graveside funeral service was conducted at B’Nai Israel Cemetery in Norfolk with Rabbi Jeffrey Arnowitz officiating. H.D. Oliver Funeral Apartments. Online condolences may be sent to the family through www.hdoliver.com.

LESLIE JAY LEVIN

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Palm Sprngs , Calif— Leslie Jay Levin passed away peacefully on June 30, 2018 in Los Angeles, Calif.

Jay was born on February 26, 1953 in Portsmouth, to the late Millie and Irvin Levin. He was preceded in death by his brother, Marc F. Levin.

Jay was a graduate of Churchland High School and the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore. Jay made Norfolk his home, successfully operating his interior design business, Atlantic Coast Design. In 2013 Jay relocated to Palm Springs, where he continued to showcase his concepts of integrating art and function into his designs.

Jay is survived by his loyal four-legged companion, Happy, who will be well taken care of by his partner, Chad Sain. Jay is also survived by his aunt, Ruth Ellen Myers Gans, his niece, his nephew, and many cousins.

No services we held, per Jay’s request. Donations in Jay’s honor to the Desert AIDS Project in Palm Springs, where he volunteered his time and services.

JOEL MAZEL

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Columbus , OH—Joel M. Mazel of Columbus Ohio, age 54, passed away on July 1, 2018.

He was preceded in death by his father, William Mazel. He is survived by his mother, Irene Mazel, his brothers, Mark (Hindi) Mazel and David (Jodi) Mazel; his wife, Alyson Leeman; daughter, Gila Mazel; step-children, Mitch and Caroline McGuire; Aunts and Uncle Trudy and Dr. Behrooz Dayanim, Adel (David) Kruger and many family members and beloved friends.

Joel was an inspiration to many people, sharing his humor and wisdom with everyone he met.

He was a graduate of Old Dominion University and University of Dayton Law School. He was the mashgiach for Vad HaKashrus of Tidewater and worked with the Jewish Burial Society. His generous nature and kindness provided a bright example for his community.

Burial took place in Jerusalem. Contributions to Congregation B’nai Israel, 420 Spotswood Avenue, Norfolk, VA, 23517.

RICHARD IRWIN MILLER

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Virg inia Beach —Richard Irwin Miller, 87, passed away peacefully on June 24, 2018.

Born in Brooklyn, New York, he lived most of his life in Norfolk and established deep roots in our community. Dad graduated from Maury High School in 1948, and attended the University of Virginia, 1948–1954, where he participated in the ROTC program as a Jefferson Sabre. He was president of his fraternity, Zeta Beta Tau, for many years. He served our country in the Army as a Second Lieutenant and was stationed in the North Pole as a Platoon Leader for a truck unit re-supplying the Distant Early Warning Line (DEW Line), among other duty stations.

Dad was the general manager of the family-owned business Ocean View Amusement Park in Norfolk and general manager and owner of Seaside Amusement Park in Virginia Beach. He was also the owner of Delmar Propane Gas for many years and a family partner in several trailer parks. He owned and operated Cleveland Street Bingo and others and appreciated the invaluable help from Charlene Bell.

Dad loved going to local sporting events. He supported many of the arts organizations in Hampton Roads, such as Virginia Symphony Orchestra and Pops, Virginia Stage Company, and Virginia International Tattoo, and he served on the statewide board of directors for the Virginia Opera. He proudly performed in three Opera performances as a Supernumerary (group scenes), including this past March with his daughter, Dorianne, in Lucia di Lammermoor. His favorite night of the week was Tuesdays, when he gathered with longtime friends for the past 40 years to play poker. He loved to travel, go to the movies, have breakfast on Sundays at Pocahontas, and you’d better not talk to him while he was watching Fox News!

A born leader, Dad enjoyed his life to the fullest. He never saw an obstacle in his way; he just figured out how to fix the problem and move forward. He was the tower of strength to his extended family, always counted on for his loyalty and passion for his family. He welcomed everyone to our proverbial family table. His sense of humor constantly surprised us and made us laugh. He was the source of all knowledge and blessed all of us with his wisdom and advice. The only subject that could not be discussed peacefully was politics; in fact, he said in the hospital that it could not be his time to go because President Trump was counting on him for his vote.

Dad loved his family and friends with his whole heart. He was a loving father to his three children and their heart-broken families: Dorianne and Dan Villani, Sandi and Jack Levi, and Hank Miller; grandchildren Matthew, Katelyn, Benjamin, Kari Anne, Samantha (Kevin), Cady and Nathan; great-granddaughter Felisa. He is survived as well by his sister, Joan Greta Miller, his ladyfriend (as he called her), Thelma Oser, Wanda Shehe, who he thought of as a daughter, his dear first cousins and many friends, and his treasured grand-dog Mika. Dad was pre-deceased by his first wife and mother of his children, Hallie Cohen Miller and his second wife, Joan Barbara Miller. He was also pre-deceased by his parents, Anne and Ulysses Sam Miller.

Burial took place at Forest Lawn Cemetery, the memorial service and reception followed at Ohef Sholom Temple. Memorial donations to Virginia Opera or The Buddy Brigade Therapy Dog Program at Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters. Online condolences through www.hdoliver.com.

Dad was doing two of the things he loved most before his last minutes: eating ice cream and spending precious time with family. We are all thankful and comforted to be left with the memory of him smiling and joking, with final hand squeezes and hugs, and exchanges of “I love you, sleep tight.”


LEONARD SCHLAIN

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Sarasota, Fla .—Leonard Schlain, age 77, passed away after suffering a long illness on Friday, June 29 at Sarasota Memorial Hospital, where he was admitted on June 24.

Born in Norfolk, the son of Max and Fanny Schlain, he had been a resident of Sarasota, Florida for almost 20 years. A graduate of Old Dominion College, he had a career as a business executive with Monsanto, LaZ Boy, and most recently in Sarasota with Sleep King. He was a kind, generous, and friendly man, and will be missed by everyone who knew him.

He is survived by his beloved partner, Barbara Kupferberg, his brother Louis Schlain (Eydie), nephew Adam Max Schlain, devoted cousin Joyce Blumberg, and several other cousins. He will be greatly missed.

SEEMAN WARANCH

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Virginia Beach —Seeman Waranch, 85, passed away peacefully on July 3, 2018 in his home surrounded by his family.

He was born August 11, 1932 in Norfolk, Virginia to the late Eldridge and Nellie Waranch.

Seeman grew up in Richmond, Virginia and after graduating from the University of Richmond, he served in the U.S. Army on the military police force.

Seeman married Doris Epstein on August 14, 1960 and shortly thereafter, started Insurance Agency of Norfolk, now known as Insco Insurance Group. Seeman was a pioneer in the insurance industry on both local and national levels, serving as the national president of CPCU (Chartered Property Casualty Underwriters) from 1981 to 1982. As an accomplished author, he co-wrote insurance textbooks for CPCU courses, and his love for insurance led him to teach college courses at Old Dominion University.

In the 1980’s, Seeman’s passion for music led to his work on the weekends as a disc jockey for WTAR under the radio name Bob Warren. He loved the Dallas Cowboys and Duke basketball, but his greatest passion was his family and he is survived by his wife of 58 years, Doris, his children Lisa, Michael (Nisha) and Neil (Elizabeth), grandchildren Matthew, Blake, Lyle, Sloan, Zack and Harper, his sister, Shirley, as well as many nieces, nephews, and cousins. Seeman was predeceased by his daughter, Michele, and son in-law, Mark.

The family wishes to thank Dr. Barbara Parks for her dedicated medical care.

Funeral services were officiated by Cantor Jennifer Rueben graveside at Forest Lawn Cemetery.

Donations to Ohef Sholom Temple, 530 Raleigh Avenue, Norfolk, VA 23507. Online condolences at hdoliver.com.

NANCY WEISSMAN YACAVONE

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Virginia Beach —Nancy Weissman Yacavone, left this life at 11:55 am, July 8, 2018.

She was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1943 to the late Bernard and Virginia Weissman.

She was a successful model, nurse, business owner, wife, and mother.

Survivors include her husband of 39 years David Yacavone, her daughters, Nancy Christine, Rebecca Noel, and Briana Shestack (nee Yacavone) and her husband Adam, a stepson Jason David and three grandchildren.

A service was conducted at H.D. Oliver Funeral Apts. Laskin Road Chapel by Rabbi, Dr. Michael Panitz. Burial followed at Forest Lawn Cemetery.

Donations to Temple Israel (Norfolk), the Memory Center of Virginia Beach or the Alzheimer’s Association.

TAYLOR SHEA VIA

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Taylor Shea Via

VIRGINIA BEACH—Taylor Shea Via of Virginia Beach, age 26, passed away unexpectedly on July 20, 2018.

Taylor was born in Richmond, Va. and raised in Hampton Roads. She is survived by her mother, Rochelle Rosenberg, father Charles Via, brother Aaron, sister Hannah, stepsisters Tila (Adam) Fly and Tara Balkus, Uncle and Aunt Marc (Stephanie) Rosenberg, cousin Samantha, grandmother Toby Lerman and her Aunt Michele Brooke. She was preceded in death by her grandparents, Stanley and Sandra Rosenberg of blessed memory.

Taylor, also known as Tay Shea, was such a special loving young woman with a very old soul. Her bright blue eyes sparkled, and her beautiful smile would light up a room and fill the sky with stars. Her laughter was contagious and would put a smile on your face. She felt compassion and concern for those less fortunate and went out of her way to make others feel
better even when she was experiencing the pains of Juvenile Diabetes. She was artistic and had a flair for fashion, design, music, and art. She was the light in the darkest of nights and was always there for her family through the good and bad and would drop everything to ensure her family came first on every occasion. Taylor wrote “I’d break my own heart and use those pieces to fix yours.”

Our dearest Taylor will be missed so much more than the air we breathe.

A funeral service was conducted at the Norfolk Chapel of H. D. Oliver Funeral Apts. with Cantor Jennifer Reuben officiating.
Burial followed in Forest Lawn Cemetery. Donations in Taylor’s memory to the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation
(www.jdrf.org). Online condolences may be sent to the family through www.hdoliver.com.

RONALD BURT ZEDD

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Ronald Burt Zedd
NORFOLK—Ronald Burt Zedd, 80, of Norfolk, died peacefully on July 22, 2018, after a brief illness. He lived in Norfolk his entire life and was blessed with a wide network of family and friends, all of whom loved him very deeply. He was best known for his sweet personality, kindness and most of all for his inimitable sense of humor. He brought joy to everyone he touched.

Ronnie graduated from Maury High School, UVa and the William & Mary Law School, then practiced law skillfully for 53 years. He was an avid golfer, racquetball player, and enjoyed crosswords and the Arts. He felt most at home on Colley Avenue, where he would regale everyone he met with stories and humor derived from a life well lived.

He was predeceased by his loving wife, Judith Golding Zedd; his parents, Maxwell and Burnett Shuman Zedd; and his brother,
Morton Zedd, of blessed memory. He is survived by his sons, Gordon and Barton; and grandchildren, Jacob, Michael and Eliot, who will treasure every moment they had with this sweet man. Also surviving in a close-knit family are his loving sister, Kay Zedd Kesser, his brother-in-law Barry Kesser, sisters-in-law, Leslie Zedd, Linda Cohen (David) and Sandra Peskin (Howard), and many nieces and nephews.

Funeral services were held at Congregation Beth El. H. D. Oliver Funeral Apts. Online condolences may be sent to the family through www.hdoliver.com.

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