B’nai B’rith’s Bershad Scholarship Winners Look Back on Unique First Year Experience50 Years of Senior Housing: B’nai B’rith I, II & III Apartments Administrator Jim LynchThe B’nai B’rith Senior Housing Network was born 50 years ago—in 1971—when the B’nai B’rith Apartments opened in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, for low-income seniors in need of housing. The Senior Housing Network, operated by the Center for Senior Services (CSS), is now made up of 38 communities across the country, one of the largest being the B’nai B’rith Apartments in Deerfield Beach, Florida, which opened in 1987. Now known as B’nai B’rith I, II & III Apartments—II opened in 1994 and III in 2008—the location has a total of 270 units across the three buildings. Jim Lynch has been the building administrator of B’nai B’rith I, II & III Apartments for 17 years. As administrator he handles everything including interviewing prospective residents, turning over apartments and coordinating with the maintenance staff. Although it’s busy and unpredictable, Lynch says he and his staff love their work.
Lynch manages a staff of 10, all of whom have been with B’nai B’rith Apartments for years. The newest staff member has been there for 9 years, the longest-serving for more than 30 years—longer even than Lynch. “They’ve grown old with the seniors,” Lynch joked. Lynch and his staff interact with residents on a daily basis, although those interactions have looked different over the past year due to the pandemic. Because they work with a vulnerable population, Lynch said dealing with the changes was extra challenging. “We are just trying our best to get through this pandemic like everyone else,” he said.
Affordable housing where seniors can age in place is in high demand in Florida. B’nai B’rith Apartments had a three-year waiting list—now down to about a year and a half—and CSS hopes to add a fourth building that could be home for 70 low-income seniors. Lynch said residents love living at B’nai B’rith Apartments because the program allows them to live somewhere they can afford and where they can maintain dignity and independence.“I get it all the time, they move in and they’re like, ‘Wow, this is amazing, thank you so much. Thank you for letting me have my own place, thank you for letting me be independent, to live on my own and not to have to worry about where my next meal’s coming from.’ So those are the things that make you feel really good,” Lynch said. B’nai B’rith World Center-Jerusalem Ceremony Honors 2021 Journalism and Arts Awards WinnersB’nai B’rith World Center-Jerusalem honored recipients of its 2021 Award for Journalism Recognizing Excellence in Diaspora Reportage, considered the most prestigious prize for Israeli media reporting on Diaspora issues. The July 1 ceremony took place at the Konrad Adenauer Conference Center, Mishkenot Sha’ananim.
Greeting the audience, Alan Schneider (at right, with award winner Danny Sanderson), director of B’nai B’rith’s World Center-Jerusalem, remarked that “The recent conflict between Israel and Hamas helped to deepen the chasm between Jewish American progressives and the State of Israel. A recent wide-ranging survey of American Jews undertaken by the Pew Research Center before the conflict found that among American Jews, of whom 27% do not practice their faith, fully 60% attest that they have little or nothing in common with Israeli Jews. Here lies the challenge of our generation: To turn around this growing trend of alienation between the two greatest communities of world Jewry.”The award jury includes: Ya’akov Ahimeir, past editor and anchor, Israel Public Broadcasting Corporation and 2016 Lifetime Achievement Award winner; Professor Yehudith Auerbach, School of Communication, Bar-Ilan University; Professor Sergio DellaPergola, The Institute of Contemporary Jewry, Hebrew University; Sallai Meridor, former Israeli ambassador to the United States and former chairman of the Zionist Executive and Jewish Agency for Israel; Professor Gabriela Shalev, Higher Academic Council, Ono Academic College and former Israeli ambassador to the United Nations; journalist Yair Sheleg; and Asher Weill, publisher and editor of Ariel: The Israel Review of Arts and Letters (1981-2003).Credit for all photos: Bruno Charbit FROM THE VAULT Recalling Trude Weiss Rosmarin, Prolific Writer and Thinker
How does one maintain belief in God in an increasingly rational world? That was one of the questions that Weiss Rosmarin answered in a number of features in B’nai B’rith’s National Jewish Monthly (NJM, now B’nai B’rith Magazine) during the 1950s and 60s.Weiss Rosmarin simplified concepts and arguments for readers experiencing doubt and confusion, who she feared were treading a path leading them away from their Jewishness. The content of her essays was intended to persuade them that leading a Jewish life conformed to 20th century notions of leading a good life. Some of them underscored her conviction that of all religions, Judaism’s essential altruism, and its commitment to individual freedom and thought, was the most modern of faiths.Comparing Judaism and Christianity in articles published during 1955-1956, she notes: “Judaism does not exclude love or make light of its importance. It places ‘law’ and ‘love’ in a relationship of interdependent equality. The Sages held that God is just because He is merciful, and He is merciful because He is just. The Hebrew genius expressed this conviction when it invested the word tzedakah with two meanings, justice and charity. In Judaism, provision for the needy and helpless is not left to the subjective emotion of love…; it is an objective requirement of justice, complied with by personal devotion and lovingkindness.” Her NJM 1958 essay “What can a Modern Jew Believe?” explained that: “Judaism has no catechism. It does not instruct its confessors precisely what to believe of God and man’s destiny. To be sure, the Talmudic folklore and many early teachers propounded in minute detail what they believed about God, and sin, and the last judgment…These views, however, as all views on matters of the belief, are not binding on other Jews. In the realm of the definition of God, Judaism recognizes no authority.” In her assessment of Weiss Rosmarin’s life, Jewish history writer Deborah Dash Moore commented: “Judaism was probably her first true love, and one that she never abandoned. Her passion for Judaism informed her Zionism, her politics, her cultural vision, her interpretation of religion, and her feminism. It was her prism to refract the world around her.” B’nai B’rith ExtraPolicy experts, diplomats, historians, authors, chefs, actors, athletes, tech experts, scholars, musicians and more—Who will we talk with next?!See what you’ve been missing: Check out B’nai B’rith Extra! for meaningful discussions on today’s most pressing and interesting issues! Backstory: B’nai B’rith’s Dutch Relief EffortsB’nai B’rith was the only Jewish organization honored by the Dutch government in 1947 for its non-sectarian European Relief Program, which provided food and clothing to refugees, children and others in need. Acting Consul General of Holland G.R.G. van Swinderen and B’nai B’rith Secretary Maurice Bisgyer (l) hold a plaque written in the Dutch language, whose translated dedication reads: “Presented to B’nai B’rith for the innumerable tangible evidence of brotherly love, by which the people of the Netherlands, encouraged and strengthened during the time of their greatest need, arising from the devastation of war, were enabled to begin life anew.”When the Netherlands was flooded six years later, B’nai B’rith donated $10,000 (the equivalent of more than $99,000 today) to assist its citizens during the disaster. |
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