Page NEWS-April, 1984 Meichels for Pesach By Norma Barach (Copyright 1984, JTA, Inc.) Now is the time to begin getting your Passover repertoire together. Matzo farfel kugel made with apples and raisins is good with any poultry meal. 2 cups matzo farfel 2 large eggs, beaten % cup sugar 1 tsp. salt dash nutmeg 3 tblsps. melted margarine or oil cup yellow raisins Vi tsp. cinnamon 3 large tart apples, diced V2 cup chopp^ walnuts Pour boiling water over farfel and soak for 5 minutes, covered. Drain. Add rest of ingredients. Grease a 9x12-inch pan. Pour in farfel mixture. Bake for 45 minutes at 350 degrees. Serves 9. Pizzarelle Col Miele (Matzo Pancakes with Honey) Editor's Note: This recipe comes from Edda Machlin’s book “The Classic Cuisine of the Italian Jews, Traditional Recipes and Menus and a Memoir of a Vanished Way of Life.” 8 store-bought regular matzos 5 eggs, slightly beaten 1 tsp. salt 2 tblsps. shredded lemon peel 2 tblsps. brandy V4 cup pinoli (pine nuts) or Vt cup chopped walnut meats V2 tup dark, seedless raisins, 1 cup olive or other vegetable (Passover) oil for frying ^ cup honey 3 tblsps. water 1 thlsp. lemon juice Soak matzos in cold water, placing an inverted saucer over them to prevent them from floating, for V2 hour or until soft all through. Squeeze all the water out. You should have 4 cups of firmly packed soaked matzo. Combine with eggs, salt, lemon peel, brandy, nuts and raisins. Heat 1/3 of the oil in a large skillet. Drop the matzo mixture into the oil by the tablespoon and fry over moderate heat, turn ing until golden on both sides. Drain on a paper towel. Continue to fry until you have used up all the mixture, adding oil as it becomes necesseiry. Combine honey, water £uid lemon juice in a small saucepan. Bring to a boil and cook for 3 minutes. Arrange pancakes on a serving plate and pour the honey mixture over them. Serve immediately. Serves 6. INVITE A COLLEGE STUDENT TO SEDER Want to do a Mitzvah during the holidays? Wliy not invite a college student to your Seder...many of them wUl be unable to be with their own families at this time. For students’ names and information call: ELIZABETH KLEIN - 8474342 home , . economist bulk foods Bulk Food • Self Service Stores nuts • glazed fruit cheese • coffee candy • soup • bagels spices • tea • grains dried fruit • pasta Passover and Easter Greetings To Our Friends and Customers 1931 E. INDEPENDENCE 375-9466 7015 SOUTH BLVD. 554-7385 Interest Free Educational Loans The Jewish Children’s Ser vice, based in Atlanta, Georgia, is a social service agency that provides interest free educational loans to Jewish youth whose families reside in the Southeast region. Following are some of the guidelines that determine eligibility. •Applicant and family must be members of the Jewish Community. •Applicant and family must have resided for at least one year in an organized commun* ity that is affiliated with the Jewish Children’s Service. •Educational loans are to be used primarily for college or post-secondary training. •Applicant must demon strate an interest in secur ing educational training, show evidence of ability to realize success in prior schooling and ■ be accepted by a recognized school. •Loans are granted only on an annual basis. •The principal determinant, in addition to the qualifica tions listed above, is financial need. This is determined and certified by the referring agency. For additional information or to determine eligibility please contact Janice F. Willett or Nathaniel S. Green wood, Jewish Social Services, P.O. Box 220188, Charlotte, N.C. 28222, 375-7738 or 375-7739. JDF Roast The Charlotte Chapter of the Juvenile Diabetes Founda tion will hold its Annual Roast on April 30 at the Sheraton Center. The roast will honor Charlie “Choo-Choo” Justice. “An Evening of Nostalgia” will begin at 6:30 p.m. with cocktails, to be followed at 7:30 p.m. with dinner; the roast will begin at 8:30 p.m. The roast coordinators are Roz and Stan Greenspon. Tickets are $50 per person and may be secured by calling the JDF of fice, 568-4389 or the Green- spons, 366-5797. Cults — The Tender Trap Correction In last month’s issue the story on the Project Site stat^ that the Ground breaking Ceremony was in May. It was actually in December. A Review by Saul Nathanson More than 900 people died in Jonestown, Guyana in Novem ber 1978. Many of them were suicides. All were members of a “cult.” Could it happen again? To you or someone you know? Andy Silver, a former member of the People’s Tem ple, feels that more people are susceptible to cult recruitment than is generally believed. Mr. Silver spoke at a meeting to discuss cults and youth today on Feb. 23 at Temple Beth El. The discussion was co-spon- sored by Charlotte Chapter B’nai B’rith Women and the Conmiunity Relations Com mittee of the Charlotte Jewish Federation. To give another perspective, Betty Silver, Mr. Silver’s mother, spoke and answered questions from the nearly 200 adults and teenagers who attended. Linda Binnick, President of the Charlotte Chapter of BBW, and Vicki Hopkins, chairperson of the CRC, moderated the discussion and introduced Miriam Wallace of the ADL’s Regional Advisory Board. Ms. Wallace spoke on the status of cults in Charlotte currently and what is being done to ^ert the broader com munity. Also, a CBS News film entitled “Cults-Choice or Coercion” was shown. Mr. Silver related his ex periences and what he felt led him tx) join the Rev. Jim Jones and his People’s Temple. At the time Mr. Silver was a senior in college having been raised in a Jewish family in Tarrytown, N.Y. According to Mr. Silver, those in a “transi tion” state in their lives are most vulnerable. This includes those going away to college, or a new job, or undergoing an ■upheaval in their personal lives such as ending a roman tic relationship unhappily. The cult recruiter looks for these types of people by active solicitation or setting up a sidewalk booth. He preys on their naivete and their lack of stable social ties. Particularly those seeking the ultimate meaning of life in general are prime targets. The cultists of fer friendship and “family” of a large organization whose leader has finally found the answers to all of life’s prob lems. They engage in “love bombing,” totally inunersing the subject in the cult and blocking all outside stimuli. At this point, Mr. Silver says, the new recruit becomes an en thusiastic “Zombie” totally devoid of free will. The typical recruit is between 18 and 25, but elderly retirees have been targeted as well, giving away their retirement funds and signing away their social security checks to the living leader of the cult. Mr. Silver urged that the most effective tool in combat ting cults is a healthy skep ticism and a realistic aware ness of one’s, self and surroundings. Miriam Wallace spoke of the re-emergence of the “Moonies” in Charlotte, sell ing roses on the street comers. Another, and much stronger cult, based with national leaders here in Charlotte, is “The Way International” which actively recruits teenagers at rock concerts. Approval has been granted to the Charlotte Chapter BBW by the Area Superintendents of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School System to have a classroom presentation on destructive cults brought to all high school students to alert youth to the presence and danger of cults. The goal this year is to reach all seniors so they can be informed of the true nature of destructive cults before they graduate. f50% oir ■ SIAMSTIESSONOUn • • MMIM ALL DRY CLEANING MMIMUM dOB $4.00 AFTR DISCOUNT ! o u p 0 N ■ 1 I Coming to Southeast Charlotte, the Largest. Most Modern, Full Service Laundry & Dry Cleaning Plant. Located at Hwy 51 - Countryside Shpg. Ctr., next to Food Lion - Revco. SHAKON SNOfflNeCBITBI *710 MONKOi RD. AT SARDIS RO. N. COUNTRYSIDf SHOPfINO CfNTfR HWY. 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