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Jewish Community News News: June 2006 Building a Jewish high school from
the ground up Four years ago, 33 brave freshmen made local history when they walked into rented facilities at the Blackford School campus in Campbell as the first-ever class at Kehillah Jewish High School. This month, these same students will walk out the door of Kehillah’s new Palo Alto facilities as the first graduating class and will be moving onto colleges that include Dartmouth, Yale, NYU and all the U.Cs. The school’s founders feel they finally have some hard data to support their triumph. “We knew we were doing a great job. The families knew we were doing a great job. And now seeing that independent confirmation from so many colleges is very encouraging,” said founder Len Lehman. More
20-year-old Jewish Stanford student shows fighting for Darfur is not futile Wearing faded jeans and a back pack hanging from one shoulder, Elissa Test, 20, looks like any other Stanford University student. The difference is that she spends most Friday and Saturday nights working to end the genocide in Darfur.
Interfaith Seder aims to educate
Hispanic community about Jews What do Mexican immigrants have in common with Old Testament Jews? Local Jews attempted to answer that question at an interfaith, bilingual Passover seder held in San Jose in April that attracted more than 200 people.
Barbie-Jewish connection explored What does Barbie have in common with the Jewish people? This poignant cultural question will be the subject of Women's Philanthropy’s next outreach event in May. On Monday, May 22 from 7 – 9 p.m. at the Levy Family Campus, Women's Philanthropy will screen the independent short film, “The Tribe,” as well as host its San Francisco-based filmmaker, Tiffany Shlain. More
SVYAD changes leadership Three years ago, hundreds of young Jewish adults in the Silicon Valley had little organized opportunities to come together and schmooze. Today, three years after the December 2003 establishment of the Jewish Federation of Silicon Valley’s Young Adults Division, monthly cocktail hours follow weekend volunteer opportunities and winter ski trips. More
Even the youngest remember on Yom HaShoah The high-pitched, cheerful chattering at Yavneh Day School petered out quickly on Monday, April 24, as the children sensed that this wasn’t their standard morning Tefilah. Six yellow candles stood on the table at the front of Yavneh’s multi-purpose room, “One for each million Jews killed in the Holocaust,” explained Mrs. Abramson, head of school. Her normally upbeat voice was subdued as she addressed the group of students, ranging from tiny kindergarteners to adult-sized sixth graders, on this difficult topic. While the details were kept deliberately vague, the children clearly understood the import. More
Orthodox conversion opening up to
intermarried couples No one has easy answers to these questions. In fact, until
recently few Orthodox rabbis even were asking them, at least not in a
public forum. And most, if not all, did not accept applicants with Jewish
spouses. Now the Orthodox community gradually is encouraging non-Jewish spouses to convert in accordance with halacha, or Jewish law. More
Boy with Autism wins essay contest
Local love blooms on trip to Israel When Beverly Friedman finds time, she cultivates colorful tulips in the front yard of the Sunnyvale home she shares with her husband Alan. The house is set at the end of a quiet dead-end street; the couple sits in the sun-stricken living room on a Tuesday afternoon.
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