5007 Providence Road Chariotte, NC 28226 Change Service Requested Non-Profit Organization U.S. Postage Paid Charlotte, NC Permit No. 1208 The Charlotte JEWISH Vol. 22 No. 5 Nisan-lyar 5760 May 2000 Heart of UChaim Charlotte! Beats From Stage MusiCy Dancing Highlight FestivaVs Rich Cultural Offerings / MLM The Yiddishe Bande at L’Chaim Charlotte! 1998. Klezmer is one cultural tie that binds Jews everywhere. But there are distinct styles of the music that are as diverse as the Jewish com munities where they are played the world over. “A Klezmer band playing a wedding in New York sounds very different than one in Israel,” said Yossi Shem-Avi, festival entertainment chairman. “Live Klezmer music is an important part of UChaim Charlotte!; it creates the atmosphere and people love to listen and dance to it. We brought in more bands this year to turn the music into a learning experience as well — in the spirit of the festi val’s educational mission.” Three Klezmer bands are scheduled to appear during L’Chaim Charlotte on May 21: The Charlotte Klezmers (for merly Shira Tova) ^ will lead off the afternoon. Their raucous “Hora- type” style draws from music typi cally heard on Israeli kibbutzim, w Listen for the > prominent accor- dian, Shem-Avi says. Another local band, Viva Klezmer!, plays a more classical Klezmer variety that is popular in New York and features intricate instrumentals, especially the clar inet. Gene Kavadlo, principal clar inetist for the Charlotte Symphony, rocks with this group. Viva Klezmer! has performed a series of educational concerts in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg schools this school year to teach students about Jewish culture through Klezmer music, and to instill an appreciation for cultural diversity. The band has also been another A TR E I TAVIN CEN /or plastic surgery You'r« one-of-a-kind. So are we. instructor based in Atlanta, will lead a workshop and initiate “spontaneous” dancing throughout the afternoon. Returning to the stage will be the always-pop- ular mock Jewish wedding, offici ated by Rabbi Robert Kasman of Temple Israel. (No word yet on who the lucky couple will be.) L’Chaim Charlotte! will also have exhibits of Judaic art, a fea- % ture initiated in 1998. Wendy Petrocoff, member of the festival steering com mittee, has recruited new artisans repre senting a wide range of artwork and crafts from across the region, including: Beyond Surface Design — Fiber artists who hand dye all of their work which is mostly silk and linen. All designs are either (Continued on page 4) tawreMe* »»>ina puvm m invited to perform this summer for ClarinetFest 20(X), an internation al gathering of clarinetists to be held at the University of Oklahoma. Finally, Freilach Time Klezmer Band from Durham will weigh in with an Eastern European-style that includes Yiddish singing. “Close your eye- swhen you listen to them,” Shem- Avi says, “and you can almost imagine yourself at a Jewish wed ding in some small Russian or Polish shtetl at the turn of the cen tury.” By the way, “freilach” means “joyful” in Yiddish. Adding to L’Chaim Charlottef’s rich entertainment mix will be Israeli folk dancing. Steve Weintraub, a professional dance UCHAIM NOTES: L’Chaim Bucks are on sale at the Federation office and all three locations of Phil’s Deli. The tickets, which come in $1 increments, are the official event currency — to be used to pay for food, drinks, raffle tickets, chil dren’s activities, baked goods and other festival mer chandise. They are being sold in bundles of $10 and packaged in a special envelope that is printed with a festival menu and prices. Come early and stay late: the schedule has been expanded to six hours, from noon to 6:00 PM. Look for the festival advertising insert in The Charlotte Obsen/er on Thursday, May 18. Make a fashion statement with a L’Chaim Chariotte 2000 hat? Comes In denim blue wrth khakt bill or khaki with black bill. Only $12. Thanks again to festival spofi^ofB The Tavin Centre for Plastic Surgery, Montag Famffy Foundation and the Silverman Family Foundatk>n. Annual Community Campaign Edges Towards $2 Million “Frum Dos Macht a Leiben?” Exhibit of Line Drawings by Arnold Mesches at Jewish Community Center of Charlotte During May The 2000 Annual Conununity Campaign sponsored by the Jewish Federation is well within reach of the $2 million mark. The goal for the 2(XK) Campaign is $2,250,(XX). The current campaign total is $1,918,028, $331,972 away from reaching the goal. “We are pleased with the results thus far,” said Eric Sklut, 2(XX) Annual Campaign Chair. The overall campaign total represents a 14% increase over last year’s cam paign. Our goal is to finish the campaign in the next several weeks with 100% participation from the community.” “Step into the Limelight,” the Federation’s second annual com munity fundraiser, provided initial momentum for the campaign by raising over $260,0(X). The Federation’s Major Donors (those men giving $10,000 or more and those women giving $5,(XX) or more) also moved the campaign forward by increasing their giving more than 12%. The Womdn’s campaign is also up 14.7% from last year, raising a record total of $450,000. Dollars raised for the Annual Campaign are used to support local Jewish institutions (such as the Jewish Community Center and Jewish Family Service) and pro vide funding for social services, Jewish education and hunger relief in Israel and 49 countries through out the world. If you have not already been contacted and would like to make a contribution to the campaign, please contact Cary Bernstein (944-6762). 0 Of GteBATER Qiarixhte Like so many other villages in Lithuania, the village of Grodno was unable to escape the pogroms, pillaging and rapes of the Cossacks in the late 19th and early 20th cen turies. And like so many Jews before and since, the Mesches family pulled up their roots and left Grodno for the United States. Their patriarch, a hospital superintendent in Lithuania, was unable to find woric in the U.S. His son, Benjamin, faired little better, buy ing and selling old gold in Buffalo. But the grandson, Arnold, decided to become an artist. The subject mat ter he chose - att^king war and the makers of war - stemmed from hearing of the experiences of his grandfather in Europe; of growing up during World War II and hear ing of death camps, death march- to move should. .. Arnold Mesches ’ stark line drawings of scenes from concentra tion camps are on display at the Jewish Community Center of Charlotte during May 2000. es, and atomic bombs. “I wanted my paintings to have...structural mystery and complex emotions,” Arnold Mesches says in an essay about his father. “I wanted my art people like good art I wanted to find a way to make my art serve humankind...” He was disappointed in his father’s reaction to his decision to become an artist. He had expected his father to applaud his route to teaching about jus tice and evil, about conscience and Jewish ness, about right and wrong. Unfortunately, he was mistaken. “My being an artist was indiscernible to him,” says Arnold. When Arnold invited his father to his studio to see his first body of work - paint ings of meat packing workers hacking up sides of beef - all ■Continued on page 3! Inside tiiis issue... Inqrficfttkms of a Unilateral Israeli Withdraw! from Lebaiion.....p. 3 By Dr. XmSttm Lag B *Omer . ^pp. 20 Jmtt what cr 0^9 And why is there a holUiay on (he day? Yon lU’AttBuM..... pp. 21*23 Bi^py Birthdtay of the flag. hrn>r\ and mitre L. Federation Page page 4 CAJE ... 10 Women’s Events ....page 11 Temple Iv tcl .. .page 12 Lut>avitch of North Carolina .... page 13 Temple Beth El page 14 Jewi-ih F iinily Service.-. • page 16 Spei/n. n Jeviish l.ibrtrry page 17 Yo*?th V page :4 V^-:l 1.-V . . . page lb C'' rk*ne Dav ScNiol .. 2s T* V ■frvvi>h Travel-*- payt pape« U) T^ma. ... Conmell^ IhldWIOR Expansion Campaign Gifts Exceeds 750! See Pages 6 4 7 MAKE YOUR PLEDGE TODAY!