Wednesday, March 30, 2011
The diversity derby - Day at the races for Jewish, Muslim scouts
The secret behind Jared Johnson's race car? He has a tiny Lego glued to the rear of its 5-ounce chasis.
"It's very stealthy," the 9-year-old Fairfax resident said of the vehicle that took him almost four days to build from a small block of wood.
Even though Johnson did not come in first, the race itself - the Interfaith Pinewood Derby - was a precedent-setting event in the Washington area, bringing together Jewish and Muslim Cub Scouts to compete and build friendships in an updated version of this traditional scouting exercise.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Passover long and short - How late does your seder go?
Passover is famous for its fours. There are four sons, four cups of wine and four questions. But an unofficial fifth question has some Jews asking after the sedarim: On those nights, how late did you go?
Marilyn Fine, a Jewish educator in Silver Spring, says that among her friends and acquaintances, there is usually a hint of friendly competition to see whose seder lasted the longest. At her home, she proudly answers, it can last up to five and a half hours -- or about the time it takes to fly from Washington, D.C., to Los Angeles.
The key ingredient, however, isn't an unofficial fifth glass of wine (or six or seven). It is the rich dinner table discussions, explains Fine, 59.
Marilyn Fine, a Jewish educator in Silver Spring, says that among her friends and acquaintances, there is usually a hint of friendly competition to see whose seder lasted the longest. At her home, she proudly answers, it can last up to five and a half hours -- or about the time it takes to fly from Washington, D.C., to Los Angeles.
The key ingredient, however, isn't an unofficial fifth glass of wine (or six or seven). It is the rich dinner table discussions, explains Fine, 59.
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Kingsley reflects on Shoah-themed roles
In the opening scene of the 1989 autobiographical film Murderers Among Us, Simon Wiesenthal staggers to the ground, clutching sketches of the atrocities he witnessed inside the newly liberated Mauthausen concentration camp.
For Sir Ben Kingsley, the acclaimed British actor born Krishna Pandit Bhanji, playing the famed Jewish Nazi hunter, was both a privilege and a responsibility.
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Majoring in good deeds - Listening 101 a required course at Sh'ma U
B'nai Shalom of Olney became a one-stop-shop of Jewish learning, good deeds and loving-kindness Sunday morning as the shul underwent its annual transformation into Sh'ma University, a multifaceted program that attracted more than 250 participants.
Delivering the event's opening remarks, California-based author and rabbi, Naomi Levy, one of Newsweek's 50 most influential rabbis, said: "The most important part of what sh'ma means is that we have to listen and pay attention and understand that God has a job for us ... to be God's helper [and] make this world a better place."
Delivering the event's opening remarks, California-based author and rabbi, Naomi Levy, one of Newsweek's 50 most influential rabbis, said: "The most important part of what sh'ma means is that we have to listen and pay attention and understand that God has a job for us ... to be God's helper [and] make this world a better place."
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