Inside Hadassah: A Therapy of Salt; a Peppering of Yiddish
Ruth G. Cole
There is much to celebrate in this season. The Hanukka story
expresses our Jewish courage and commitment; we light our menoras and
rejoice in the miracle of the Maccabees. We can also celebrate Hanukka
by lighting the virtual menora on Hadassah’s Web site, brightening the
lives of many in Israel. And on December 10th, we present the Harold U.
Ribalow Prize to author Peter Manseau at our annual event. We pay
tribute, too, to Young Judaea’s 100th anniversary and recall its
festive summer reunion. May these special milestones inspire us to
further the noble goals of Zionism, Judaism and Jewish peoplehood
through Hadassah. Happy 2010! —Ruth G. Cole
Happy Campers
In celebration of Young Judaea’s
100th anniversary this year, over 700 alumni, friends and family
gathered at Camp Tel Yehudah, in Barryville, New York, on August 16.
The daylong reunion attracted young and not-so-young participants, who
traveled from as far as Illinois, Maryland and even Israel to join in
the festivities.
“Today, 25 years after my own precious days at camp, I am happy to
say that Tel Yehudah looks wonderful,” reported Joelle Schnaider from
San Francisco, who attended the reunion with her two young daughters,
her mother and brother. “The camp has been expanded and improved, yet
maintains its original character. It is clearly a place that is loved
and cared for and is aging gracefully.”
It was an exciting day filled with camp ruah (spirit), including
shira (song), rikud (dance) and memories—from an exhibit of Young
Judaea memrabilia to a ceremony highlighting the movement’s
accomplishments over the past century.
“This is the place where we built our identities,” Schnaider added,
“based on learning and practicing peer leadership, social action and
pluralism while having boatloads of fun with...kids from all over the
country.”
Popular Israeli singer David Broza gave a special concert, and the
Israeli Scouts Friendship Caravan performed, as they have every summer
at Tel Yehudah for the past 35 years.
Mel Reisfield, 81, traveled from Israel for the reunion, where he
was honored for his longtime involvement with Young Judaea—since
1947—as an educator, leader and mentor.
The reunion also kicked off a $100,000 fund-raising campaign to honor both Reisfield and Young Judaea’s important milestone.
Light Up Online
Celebrate Hanukka this year with your Hadassah family. Join us in lighting our virtual menora at www.hadassah.org.
The menora will be available December 7 to 23: You can light one candle
with an $18 donation or kindle the entire menora for $136!
There will also be Hanukka e-cards, holiday recipes, prayers,
advocacy information and family activities just a click away on
Hadassah’s Hanukka Web page. While you celebrate at home with family
and friends, our virtual menora will bring light and hope to so many
people in Israel.
Sit Back, Relax and Breathe Easy
The Dead Sea
area is known for its salt deposits and healing minerals, but, in fact,
the largest salt room therapy clinic and R&D center in Israel is
right on the campus of the Hadassah Medical Center in Ein Kerem.
Derekh Hamelah, a network of 14 salt room treatment centers in
Israel, launched its newest facility in September. It is operated by
Breathewell (www.breathewell.com), which aims to work with Hadassah researchers to further advance the treatment of respiratory diseases.
The clinic takes up the entire first floor of the Jerusalem BioPark,
a new facility on the Hadassah campus opened this past summer to house
independent companies that develop therapeutic life science
technologies. The BioPark is also home to Hadasit, Hadassah’s
technology transfer company.
“We made a strategic decision to locate ourselves on the campus of
Hadassah Ein Kerem,” said Jonathan Kestenbaum, who cofounded
Breathewell together with Jonathan Bennett. “It offers a level of
medical research and care unmatched by any other location in Israel.”
Salt room therapy—known as speleotherapy—allows patients to sit in
rooms built of salt blocks (above) and breathe in microscopic salt
particles that act as a natural disinfectant, accelerating mucus
clearance and improving lung function, while killing harmful bacteria.
Clinical research has shown that those undergoing treatment—especially
children—feel significant relief from such ailments as asthma,
bronchitis, lung disease, respiratory allergies, chronic ear infections
and other respiratory tract disorders.
Last Chance...
To reach out to those who have
been affected by the economic downturn, Hadassah is now offering its
own stimulus package. Membership dues and Associate enrollment fees
have been rolled back through December 31.
- Lifetime membership dues are reduced from $360 to $250.
- Annual membership dues are reduced from $36 to $25 (multiple-year membership is also available).
- Associate enrollment fees are reduced from $300 to $200.
(Life
membership and Associate enrollment payment plans are excluded from
this promotion.) Act now—before it’s too late! Call 800-664-5646, or
e-mail membership@hadassah.org.
A Generous Gift
The Hadassah Medical Center has announced a generous gift from the
David and Fela Shapell Family Foundation of Beverly Hills, California,
for the Entrance Atrium to the Sarah Wetsman Davidson Tower, currently
under construction on Hadassah’s Ein Kerem campus in Jerusalem.
“The David and Fela Shapell Family Gateway to Health will welcome
the more than 20,000 people that enter Hadassah’s Ein Kerem campus
every day,” said Dr. Shlomo Mor-Yosef, director-general of the Hadassah
Medical Organization.
“Over the years, I have come to know David and Fela Shapell,” Dr.
Mor-Yosef said, “and I am continually awed by the depth of their
commitment to the Jewish people in the United States and Israel. We are
honored that they have chosen to continue their decades of support for
Hadassah with this significant gift.”
The Shapells’ children, Rochelle, Benjamin and Irvin, have chosen to
contribute a special memorial (above) in the lobby of the main building
honoring the memory of their grandparents, who perished in the Shoah.
Scheduled to be dedicated in March 2012 to coincide with Hadassah’s
centennial, the 1-million-square-foot tower will enhance Hadassah’s and
Jerusalem’s standing as a leader in medicine and a beacon of health in
the Middle East.
Discovering the Mamaloshen
When Peter Manseau first discovered Yiddish literature as a recent
college graduate, he felt a certain degree of camaraderie with the
writers of the genre. “Most were raised with a traditional [religious]
education and moved away from it—though they could never really get
away,” he says. “This spoke to my own experience.”
The one difference between Manseau and those
Yiddish writers: His traditional education was Catholic.
Son of a Catholic priest and a former nun, Manseau (right) might
seem an unlikely author to be showered with attention from the American
Jewish community. Nonetheless, he is the winner of Hadassah Magazine’s
2009 Harold U. Ribalow Prize for his novel, Songs for the Butcher’s
Daughter (Free Press). The novel also won the National Jewish Book
Award for fiction, among other honors.
Songs for the Butcher’s Daughter (see excerpt, page 26) weaves
together the “translator’s notes” of a young gentile who lands a job
shelving Yiddish books at the warehouse of a Jewish cultural
organization and the memoirs of Itsik Malpesh, the self-styled
“greatest Yiddish poet in America.”
Manseau, 34, explains that his novel is “only autobiographical in
that I worked for a similar place after college”—the National Yiddish
Book Center in Amherst, Massachusetts—where he “fell in love with
Yiddish.” And, like the translator in the novel, “At the Yiddish Book
Center, I was always confused as being Jewish,” he says. “I learned not
to overexplain myself.” Indeed, nothing about his thick dark hair or
blue eyes gives indication of his Irish and French Canadian roots.
“I didn’t mind creating confusion between the translator and
myself,” Manseau notes. “If readers believe he is real, then they could
believe Malpesh was real, too.”
How did a lapsed Catholic raised in Tewksbury, Massachusetts, who
says he can read Yiddish only “haltingly,” come to write a novel about
Yiddish culture?
“I had written a memoir,” explains Manseau, referring to his first
book, Vows: The Story of a Priest, a Nun, and Their Son (Free Press),
“that didn’t mention Yiddish, though it was very formative for me. I
wanted to write about the language...and I figured the best way to
explore it would be in a novel.” One of his goals was to introduce
Yiddish to readers who would never read it, even in translation.
“Language interests me because I feel hemmed in by having only one,”
Manseau says. “It was great fun writing about another language—it makes
the process of writing about writing more mysterious.”
“The novel required a fair amount of research,” admits the
Washington, D.C., resident. “As I was writing, I realized all the
things I didn’t know...mostly I was filling in the gaps.”
Manseau says he is “humbled and gratified” by the attention he has
received within the Jewish community for his novel. He points out that,
unlike Jewish writers of Jewish fiction, “I don’t have to deal with
concerns of being pegged as an ethnically affiliated writer.”
Manseau has published three books of nonfiction, though Songs is his
first novel. He says he enjoys both forms of writing, “so I’ve been
switching back and forth.” Manseau is currently working on two books,
one a non-Christian, religious history of the United States, and the
other a novel, again with a religious theme, set in China in the 1970s.
He also teaches at Georgetown University, where he is a doctoral
student. He and his wife, Gwen, a government lawyer, have two
daughters, Annick, 4, and Jeanette, 18 months old. H |