FVJN eNews – March 6, 2013

March
3/6 — FVJN-to-Lazarus Mitzvah Dinner
3/10 — Adult Social: Movie & Discussion
(*3/10 — Daylight Savings Time!)
3/16 — FVJN Volunteer at NIFB
3/17 — FVJS
3/17 — Board Meeting
3/19 — FVJN Women’s Gathering
(3/25 — Happy Pesach!)
 
April
4/3 — FVJN-to-Lazarus Mitzvah Dinner
4/5 — Shabbat Evening
4/9 — Book Club
4/13 — Adult Social Dinner (TBD)
4/21 — FVJS
4/21 — Board Meeting
4/22 — FVJN Fundraiser at McNally’s!
(Download entire 2013 calendar at: http://www.fvjn.org/calendar-of-events/)
President’s Corner
Happy Winter, FVJN’ers!
Well, after a sleepy winter we certainly got a true Illinois snowstorm.  Whether you are cursing it or thrilled to be out making snow forts (or both as happens with me), please take this opportunity to grab a cup of cocoa and read through the great eNews that Rachel so tirelessly puts together!
I want to personally thank all of you who were able to make it to our home this past Friday — it was lovely to share an evening of community, ritual and some singing with you all!  Based on comments, we are thinking that when we are not at Peck Farm in the summer, we should plan to have our first Friday of the month Shabbat Evenings at members’ homes.  If you want to host April, let me know and I’ll help with the cooking!
Please survive this last gasp of winter by coming out to some wonderful FVJN offerings and meeting up with others who are questioning whether that groundhog really got it right!  This coming Sunday we have a movie and discussion for adults, then next Saturday the whole family can get involved in volunteering at the Northern Illinois Food Bank.  On March 19th, FVJN does a throw back to its earlier days (but with some new faces) as the Simon-Sohn family graciously hosts a Women’s Gathering at their home.  Read below for more details on all. 
Before I close and wish you all the warmest of days, I want to thank all our volunteers who make this group what it is!  Tonight FVJN volunteers will be providing food to Lazarus House as we do the first Wednesday of each month.  Please consider adding this mitzvah to your mix of good deeds.  And speaking of good deeds, look for an opportunity soon to combine a night out and fundraising for FVJS’s Scholarship Fund.  Does it get better than combining good deeds with good friends?! 
Everyone please do stay warm, and if any of you are reading from warmer climates, please send that weather our way so the groundhog’s credibility remains intact!
Warmest wishes on a true Illinois winter day,
Tammie 
tammiew@fvjn.org
Find a hidden Hebrew word below, and win a prize! Respond to: rachely@fvjn.org.
Adult Social: Movie & Discussion
Sunday, March 10, 3:30pm-5:30 pm   
Join us as we nosh and visit, view and discuss another interesting Jewish-themed film (come and vote!). Feel free to bring snacks and BYOB, if you like.
Please email nccox@comcast.net to RSVP and for more information. 
FVJN Volunteers at NIFB! (Northern Illinois Food Bank)
Saturday, March 16, 9 to 11 a.m.
FVJN families and individuals: Come lend a hand
at NIFB! 
If you wish to participate, please let Rachel know, ASAP (rachely@fvjn.org). For this session, volunteers can be as young as 8 years of age. If you’ve done this with us before, you know how fun it is, and it’s a terrific way to help our greater community!
FVJN Women’s Gathering (New!)
Tuesday, March 19, 7:30 p.m.
FVJN נשים: come together for friendship and conversation!
Bring your ideas for future gatherings!
Snacks and beverages welcome.
Please RSVP to: rachely@fvjn.org, for location and with any questions.
FVJN- to-Lazarus House Mitzvah Dinners 
First Wednesday of Each Month
Volunteers needed for April 3!
We at FVJN are happy to do the mitzvah of providing dinner for the guests at Lazarus House in St. Charles, on the first Wednesday of each month. 
Volunteers prepare a main dish, a salad or two sides (including vegetables), and a dessert. These meals currently feed 60 to 75 men, women and children at Lazarus House.
Please contact coordinator Lisa Garcia to sign up to volunteer: elenanestela08@comcast.net.
Volunteers are needed for these upcoming dates:
May 1, June 5, July 3
Shabbat Evening
Friday, April 5, 6:30 p.m. 
Join us for a friendly Shabbat Evening, with prayers, a potluck supper, and friendship.
All ages welcome!
Please bring non-meat dishes, only. 
RSVPs requested: Please email rachely@fvjn.org with what you will bring, so we can plan accordingly. Please RSVP asap! 
If your last name begins with:
A – G: Beverages (apple and/or white grape juice), and set-up/clean-up
           (*Please come 15 minutes early and stay 15 minutes after.)
H – N: Main dishes (non-meat)  
O – T: Salads or side dishes 
U – Z: Desserts  
*Please provide your own serving utensils. Paper products will be provided.
FVJN Book Group
Tuesday, April 9, 7 p.m. at FVJN
Please come for a discussion of Twelfth and Race, by Eric Goodman.
Newcomers aways welcome, and no RSVP needed!
Below are the book choices for the rest of the year: 
One More River, by Mary Glickman (Tuesday, June 11th)
The Red Tent, by Anita Diamant (Tuesday, August 13th)
Prague Winter, by Madeleine Albright (Tuesday, October 8th)
Fanny Brice: The Original Funny Girl, by Herbert Goldman (Tuesday, December 10th)
FVJN Fundraiser at McNally’s!
Monday, April 22, 6 – 9 p.m.
Dear Friends:
WE NEED YOU! 
Fox Valley Jewish Neighbors is hosting its first ever Guest Bartender Night fundraiser to raise funds for our newly established FVJS Scholarship Fund! 
Your help is needed to make it a success! 
Please join us on April 22, from 6 to 9 p.m., at McNally’s Traditional Irish Pub, 109 W. Main Street, St. Charles. 
FVJN will have two of our participants act as bartenders for the evening, who will serve you by pouring drinks behind the bar.
Our Guest Bartenders will be able to raise tips with their wit and amazing engagement of those dining at McNally’s.  However, the Fundraising Committee wishes to maximize our donations.  Therefore, we are planning on holding both 50/50 and prize raffles.
To help us make this event an overwhelming success, we were hoping that our FVJN participants donate suitable prizes for our raffle.  Whether you individually contribute an item or gift certificate, make a basket give-away, or you are a small business owner providing an item your company produces, any product you could donate to us would be much appreciated. Your donated items will help us raise funds to provide scholarships to children of families who might not otherwise be able to attend Fox Valley Jewish School (FVJS), the religious school offered at FVJN.
If you are able to help please e-mail Kimberly Fivelson as soon as possible and let her know what you will be able to donate as a raffle prize: kfivelson@fvjn.org.
Thank you!
FVJN Fundraising Committee
Nancy Cox
Kimberly Fivelson
Tammie Weinberger
Mike Yackley
FVJN Committees!
Welcoming Committee, chaired by Leslie Shambo
Fundraising Committee, chaired by Mike Yackley
These join the list of existing committees:
Fox Valley Jewish School Committee
Social Action Committee
Building Committee
Interested in learning more and getting involved?
Just send an email to info@fvjn.org! 
Jewish FAQ
A Vegetarian Seder Plate?
Vegetarians in the Jewish community have searched for a suitable replacement for the zeroa (shankbone), one of the components of the seder plate. There have been a number of candidates, the most popular being the beet. 
Some suggestions:
1. Two hard eggs. “The logic of this: the bone on the usual plate stands for the Korban Pesach [paschal sacrifice], and the egg for the Korban Hagigah [festival sacrifice].
2. A combination of “dry” barley or wheat (wrapped in plastic wrap) along with olives and grapes. “As vegetarians, in place of the shankbone, we place olives, grapes, and grains of unfermented barley, which symbolize the commandments of compassion for the oppressed, to be found in the Bible. 
3. A beet in place of a zeroa (roasted shank bone). “For vegetarians, who may object to using a lamb bone on the seder plate (as a remembrance of the paschal sacrifice): it is halakhically [legally] acceptable to use a broiled beet as a replacement.” Its blood-red color also reminds us of the Paschal sacrifice. 
Read more at: http://davka.org/why/bejewish/vegeshankbone.html 
Donations Received
From Liza Bachrach: In appreciation for FVJN promoting Ma’ayan BBYO
From Nancy Sohn and family: In memory of Katherine Lato’s sister, Laura Lato Logan

February eNewsletter!

Mark Your Calendars!
February
2/6 — FVJN-to-Lazarus Mitzvah Dinner
2/10 — FVJSchool
2/12 — FVJN Book Group
2/17 — Board Meeting
2/24 — FVJSchool (and Purim!)
 
March
3/1 — Shabbat Evening
3/3 — FVJS
3/5 — FVJN Women’s Gathering — New!
3/6 — FVJN-to-Lazarus Mitzvah Dinner
3/10 — Adult Social: Movie & Discussion
3/16 — FVJN Volunteer at NIFB
3/17 — FVJS
3/17 — Board Meeting
(3/25 — Erev Pesach: Passover begins at sunset!)
(Download entire 2013 calendar at: http://www.fvjn.org/calendar-of-events/)
 
President’s Corner
Happy February to all!  It appears Mother Nature took a look at the
calendar and decided it was time for winter.  I certainly hope this
newsletter finds you well.
 
We have a short month full of fun: FVJSchool meets on February 10th
and 24th; Book Club meets at 7pm on the 12th and we’ve already helped
feed our neighbors at Lazarus House earlier this month and had our
ShabbatEvening on the 1st.
 
Given that March will be upon us before we realize it, I would like to
take this opportunity to invite all FVJNeighbors to join us at the
next Shabbat Evening at our home* on March 1st.  Please bring the
family and hopefully everyone can share an evening of blessings, food,
and Jewish community.
 
We are also winding down our annual donation drive and sincerely hope
those of you who have not had an opportunity to support FVJN this year
will do so.  As always, if you have any thoughts as to what you would
like to see FVJN offer, please let me know.
 
Stay warm over these cold February days!
Warmest wishes,
Tammie
FVJN Book Group
Tuesday, Feb 12, 7 p.m. at FVJN
Please come for a discussion of The Book of Blood and Shadow, by Robin Wasserman.
Bring your favorite ספר suggestions for a future book group!
Newcomers are always welcome and no RSVP needed.
 
FVJN- to-Lazarus House Mitzvah Dinners 
First Wednesday of Each Month
Volunteers needed for March 6!
We at FVJN are happy to do the mitzvah of providing dinner for the guests at Lazarus House in St. Charles, on the first Wednesday of each month. 
Volunteers prepare a main dish, a salad or two sides (including vegetables), and a dessert. These meals currently feed 60 to 75 men, women and children at Lazarus House.
Please contact coordinator Lisa Garcia to sign up to volunteer: elenanestela08@comcast.net.
Volunteers are needed for these upcoming dates:
March 6 
April 3
May 1
June 5
 
Shabbat Evening
Friday, March 1, 6:30 p.m. at the Weinberger home!
Join us for a friendly Shabbat Evening, with prayers, a potluck supper, and friendship.
All ages welcome!
Please bring non-meat dishes, only. 
RSVPs requested: Please email rachely@fvjn.org with what you will bring, so we can plan accordingly. Please RSVP asap!
If your last name begins with:
A – G: Salads or side dishes (the host is providing the main dishes!)
H – N: Salads or side dishes 
O – T: Desserts 
U – Z: Beverages (apple and/or white grape juice), and set-up/clean-up
           (*Please come 15 minutes early and stay 15 minutes after.)
*Please provide your own serving utensils. Paper products will be provided.
** Tammie & Mike Weinberger’s house is located at: 0N425 Sulley Place, Geneva, 60134 
(please feel free to call 630-208-7838, if you would like directions)
 
FVJN Women’s Gathering (New!)
Tuesday, March 5, 7:30 p.m.
FVJN women: come together for friendship and conversation!
Bring your ideas for future gatherings!
Snacks and beverages welcome.
Please RSVP to: rachely@fvjn.org, for location and with any questions.
 
Adult Social: Movie & Discussion
Sunday, March 10, 3:30pm-5:30 pm   
Join us as we nosh and visit, view and discuss another interesting Jewish-themed film (TBA). Feel free to bring snacks and BYOB, if you like.
Please email nccox@comcast.net to RSVP and for more information.
 
FVJN Volunteers at NIFB! (Northern Illinois Food Bank)
Saturday, March 16, 9 to 11 a.m.
FVJN families and individuals: Come lend a hand
at NIFB! 
If you wish to participate, please let Rachel know, ASAP (rachely@fvjn.org). For this session, volunteers can be as young as 8 years of age. If you’ve done this with us before, you know how fun it is, and it’s a terrific way to help our greater community!
 
FVJS News and Notes:
Purim Celebration!
Sunday, February 24 from 11:30-1:00
*Volunteers needed! https://docs.google.com/document/d/1AfsJQMBJvfDUrVbOIGk2_6Jsm_v1UUabmMtq8V9m1io/edit?pli=1
FVJS will celebrate Purim on Sunday, February 24 from 11:30-1:00.  Students can wear their costumes to class so they will be all ready for the fun.  Here is what’s planned:
-costume parade
-pizza lunch
-ice cream sundae bar
-Megillah reading
-games
Cost for lunch and ice cream is $3 per child. 
 
Two new committees have recently been added to FVJN’s lineup:
Welcoming Committee, chaired by Leslie Shambo
Fundraising Committee, chaired by Mike Yackley
These join the list of existing committees:
Fox Valley Jewish School Committee
Social Action Committee
Building Committee
Interested in learning more and getting involved?
Just send an email to info@fvjn.org!
 
Jewish FAQ
What do you contribute to our collective experience?
What is our organization missing when you are not there?
Adapted from:
Community is an integral part of the Jewish experience.
By Rabbi Jill Jacobs
www.myjewishlearning.com
A sense of peoplehood has long been the defining characteristic of the Jews. 
On the everyday level, this focus on peoplehood is translated into an emphasis on the community as the primary organizing structure of Jewish life. Wherever Jews have lived, they have built synagogues, established communal organizations, and created systems of communal governance. 
The sense that the community is responsible for the physical and communal needs of its members has manifested itself in different ways throughout Jewish history. 
In contemporary times, Jewish communities have sprung up around other types of institutions, including Jewish Community Centers, schools, camps, local Federations, and Jewish non-profit organizations. In all of these cases, a building or organization serves as the initial point of contact for a group of people who then begin caring for each other and taking care of one another’s needs.
Jewish texts treat participation in communal affairs not as an option, but as a religious obligation. One debate among a number of the early Talmudic commentators and codifiers of Jewish law concerns the question of whether one who is occupied with taking care of a communal need must stop to pray. At the root of this discussion is the legal principle that “one who is occupied with one mitzvah (religious obligation)is exempt from other mitzvot.
If caring for the needs of the community can be defined as a mitzvah, then a person involved in such work will be exempt from other pressing mitzvot, such as prayer. While early religious scholars take various positions on this issue, one modern authority, the Mishnah Berurah (Rabbi Israel Meir Ha-Kohen, 1839-1933) virtually closes the question by declaring,”Most later authorities have ruled [that one does not need to stop to pray]” (Orah Hayim 93:4).
Even more strikingly, one midrash likens removing oneself from the community to destroying the world. According to this source:
“‘With justice, a king sustains the earth, but a fraudulent (terumot) person destroys it.’ (Proverbs 29) [What does this verse mean?] With the justice that the king does, he sustains the earth, but the fraudulent person destroys it. If one makes oneself like terumah (portion of produce that is set aside as an offering), set aside in the corner of the house, and says, ‘Why should I trouble myself for the community? What’s in it for me to take part in their disputes? Why should I listen to their voices? I’m fine [without this],’ this person destroys the world. This is the meaning of ‘the fraudulent person destroys [the world].’
Though the precise structure of Jewish communities has changed according to place, time and current interests, membership in a Jewish community has always demanded a sense of shared destiny, manifested in the obligation to care for other members of the community, as well as in the joy of partaking in others’ celebrations.
———-
Donations Received
Simon/Sohn Family — In Honor of Sarah Anderson’s and Dylan Silver’s b’nai mitzvah
 

Monthly ENews: January 2, 2013!

January
1/2 — FVJN-to-Lazarus Dinner
1/4 — Shabbat Evening
1/6 — FVJSchool
1/13 — Adult Social: Movie & Discussion
1/20 FVJN Board Meeting
1/26 — Adult Social Dinner
1/27 — FVJSchool (Field Trip!)

Plan ahead!
February
2/1 — Shabbat Evening
2/6 — FVJN-to-Lazarus Dinner
2/10 — FVJSchool
2/12 — FVJN Book Group
2/17 — Board Meeting
2/24 — FVJSchool (and Purim!)

Find a hidden Hebrew word below, and win a prize! Respond to: rachely@fvjn.org.

President’s Corner
Happy New Year!

We at FVJN certainly hope you all had a lovely New Year’s celebration and are looking forward to 2013 as much as we are!

Before we detail all of the great upcoming activities, another reminder that we are still collecting donations for our annual fundraising drive, which helps fund so many of these events.  Please visit our website at fvjn.org to donate and support Fox Valley Jewish Neighbor’s programs.

Tonight we are cooking for Lazarus House in St. Charles, as we do the first Wednesday of each month.  Please consider joining us in this rewarding volunteer experience.  Email Lisa Garcia at: elenanestela08@comcast.net if you are interested or would like more information.

This Friday (the 4th) we have our monthly Shabbat Evening, which will now take place on the first Friday of each month.  Hopefully this consistent timing will make it easier for us all to remember and schedule around.  Please join us for an ICE CREAM sundae bar to celebrate the new year!

Please also mark your calendars for this month’s other great events: January 6th Sunday school resumes and on the 13th is the movie afternoon for adults!  We follow this with an adults-only dinner out on the town, later this month.

Please join us for these fun and enriching events to start the new year off right!

Warmest new year wishes,
Tammie

What’s Happening

Shabbat Evening
Friday, Jan. 4, 6:30 p.m. at FVJN
Join us for a friendly Shabbat הערב, with prayers, a potluck supper, and friendship.
All ages welcome!
Please bring non-meat dishes, only.
RSVPs requested: Please email rachely@fvjn.org with what you will bring, so we can plan accordingly. Please RSVP asap!

If your last name begins with:
A – G: Salads or side dishes
H – N: Desserts
O – T: Beverages (apple and/or white grape juice), and set-up/clean-up
(*Please come 15 minutes early and stay 15 minutes after.)
U – Z: Main dishes (non-meat)
*Please provide your own serving utensils. Paper products will be provided.

Adult Social: Movie & Discussion
Sunday, January13, 3:30pm-5:30 pm
Join us as we nosh and visit, view and discuss another interesting Jewish-themed film (TBA). Feel free to bring snacks and BYOB, if you like.
Please email nccox@comcast.net to RSVP and for more information.

Adult Social Dinner!
Saturday, January 26
Location & Time TBA
Please join us for another fun FVJN dinner, out on the town!
Location TBA, but please RSVP at your soonest convenience to:
info@fvjn.org.

FVJN Monthly Volunteer Project
FVJN- to-Lazarus House Dinners
We at FVJN are happy to do the mitzvah of providing dinner for the guests at Lazarus House in St. Charles, on the first Wednesday of each month.

Volunteers prepare a main dish, a salad or two sides (including vegetables), and a dessert. These meals currently feed 60 to 75 men, women and children at Lazarus House.
Please contact coordinator Lisa Garcia to sign up to volunteer: elenanestela08@comcast.net.

Volunteers are needed for these upcoming dates:
(Jan. 4 is filled)
February 6
March 6
April 3

Fox Valley Jewish Neighbors Annual Fundraiser
Please donate today to help FVJN continue its wide-variety of community offerings!
FVJN does not have dues. Instead, FVJN relies on donations that allow us to offer many activities to our broad constituency.

Your donations are essential for FVJN to continue its work!  Thank you for sending your tax-deductible* donation today to FVJN, P.O. Box 346, Geneva, IL  60134, or submitting it on-line at fvjn.org (by clicking on the “Donate” icon on the upper-right under the main banner).

Tell Us!
Survey Says…
We are seeking input from our FVJN member community to help us ensure that we continue to evolve to best meet your needs and desires for this organization. We are specifically looking for you to answer these questions as to what you personally (and your family, if applicable) want to see from FVJN. Please take the 7 minutes this survey will likely require to let us know what we can do for you! As a token of our thanks for your participation in helping us provide the services you most want, we will have a raffle among all survey responders for a $25 gift certificate.
Thank you in advance for your participation and thoughtful answers!
-The FVJN Board
PLease click on the link below to participate!
http://www.fvjn.org/fvjn-survey/

FVJN Book Group
Seven happy readers attended the Book Group gathering on Dec. 4. They all enjoyed reading All Other Nights, by Dara Horn,
and highly recommend it to all!
The next Book Group meeting will be on Tuesday, Feb 12, 7 p.m. at FVJN.
Please come for a discussion of The Book of Blood and Shadow, by Robin Wasserman.
Bring your favorite book suggestions for a future book group!
Newcomers are always welcome.

———-

FVJS News and Notes:

Field Trip!
Sunday, Jan. 27

Dear FVJS Families:
We hope you are all enjoying your holiday break.  We are busy planning for 2013!  The first class of the new year will be on January 6.  The next FVJS field trip is scheduled for January 27.  We are very excited to be going to Schmaltz Delicatessen!  This will be a great opportunity for the children to learn about traditional Jewish food.
Please see the attachment for more information.
 
We will have room for some parents to join us on this trip.  Please reply to Barbara Anderson: barb.anderson58@att.net asap and confirm if your children will be attending.  As soon as we have a count of students, we will begin taking reservations for other family members.
 
Have a great New Year and we’ll see you on January 6.
The FVJS Committee

It’s Never too Late to Register for FVJN!
The FVJSchool is set to open for its third school year this fall, with educational, engaging and exciting Jewish experiences for our students!

FVJSchool is held from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. every other Sunday, during the school year. Hebrew class will be offered from 11:30 to 12:30, on FVJS mornings.
This program has classes for children beginning
at age 3 and continuing through 8th grade.

FVJS welcomes children from those with no formal religious education or Jewish
knowledge, to those who have previously attended religious education
programs. The FVJS program provides a general Jewish education and does not
adhere to any one particular branch of Judaism.

Information and registration forms are available at www.fvjn.org.
or email Barb Anderson: barb.anderson58@att.net.

Jewish FAQ
The World of Jewish Theater
There’s quite a lot of “Jewish Theater” happening in and around our community, these days. Check out the listings later in this eNews, under “Elsewhere,” where you will find opportunities to enjoy Jewish tales, productions, performances and more, such as: “Fiddler on the Roof”; “Everything is Illuminated”; an evening with Jewish comedienne Robert Klein; and a lively evening with the Maxwell Street Klezmer Quartet.

Judaism is rich with many wonderful traditions, one of which is theater!

Excerpts from:
American Jewish Theatre
A history of Jewish theatre in America.
By Menachem Wecker

Jewish theatre began in America as an attempt to preserve the culture of the shtetl, and as the old collided with the new, Jewish playwrights, actors and theatre owners resurrected it and helped it evolve into a distinctly American Jewish theatre.

In 1903, the Grand Theatre opened as the first place to specialize in Yiddish plays. Three years earlier, The Hebrew Actors Union was founded; Actors’ Equity, the major actors’ union still operative today, was only to arrive on the scene in 1920. Later theatres in New York included the Second Avenue Theater, the National, the Yiddish Art Theater, and the Public.

Avram Goldfadn (1840-1908), who arrived in New York in 1904, is generally regarded as the father of modern Yiddish theatre. The newspaper the Jewish Messenger calls an 1882 performance in New York of Goldfadn’s “The Witch” (1877) the first Yiddish play performed in America.

Jacob Adler (1855-1926) arrived in New York by way of Odessa and London, after Yiddish theatre was banned in Russia. An actor, Adler worked with writer Jacob Gordin (1853-1909) to Americanize Yiddish theatre. For example, whereas Shakespeare’s Shylock had traditionally been played as a madman, Adler chose to play the Jewish moneylender in the 1901 Yiddish performance of Merchant of Venice as a man “with high intellect, proud convictions, and grand character,” who was “governed by pride rather than courage.”

The New York-born Samson Raphaelson (1894-1983) wrote The Jazz Singer in 1925, and Al Jolson (1886-1950) played the lead in the 1927 movie version. In the play, Jakie Rabinowitz abandons his past, his father, and his love for cantorial music to become the American jazz singer Jack Robin.

While Clifford Odets’ (1906-1963) Till the Day I Die (1935) explored Nazi attacks on Communists rather than Jews, his play Awake and Sing! (1935) addressed more specifically Jewish themes, telling the story of a large New York Jewish family. Jewish musicians like Irving Berlin (1888-1989), George Gershwin (1898-1937), and Leonard Bernstein (1918-1990) wrote lyrics and music for numerous shows.

Zero Mostel (1915-1977) famously played Tevye in Jerry Bock’s Fiddler on the Roof (1964), based on stories by Shalom Aleichem. He also portrayed Max Bialystock in Mel Brook’s Holocaust film, The Producers (1968).

Arthur Miller (1915-2000) often depicted Jews or crypto-Jews in his plays, as some critics have suggested of Willy Loman in Miller’s Death of a Salesman (1949). Miller’s The American Clock (1980),Playing for Time (1980), and Broken Glass (1994) all portray Jews and Jewish themes.

With many questioning what it means to be a Jew in a postmodern world, Jewish playwrights today are raising similar questions in their work. Gay Jewish playwright Tony Kushner (b. 1956) explores homophobia in his works, as in “Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes,” which prominently features the gay Jewish character Louis Ironson.

Composer and lyricist Jason Robert Brown (b. 1970) explores assimilation and intermarriage in The Last Five Years (2002), which features the song “Shiksa Goddess.” Brown became famous by writing the music for Parade(1998), which explored the lynching of Leo Frank.

A bit further from the beaten path, Lazarre Seymour Simckes found inspiration in Theatre of the Absurd when he wrote Nossig’s Antics (2004), based on the life of Alfred Nossig, a Jewish artist who many charge with collaborating with the Nazis.

With the decline of Yiddish, Jewish artists found ways to explore Judaism and their Jewish identities. In recent years, theatregoers interested in Jewish themes have enjoyed a variety of options of explicitly Jewish plays.

———-

Donations Received
Linda Cohen, in honor of FVJN’s new Executive Director
Linda Cohen, in honor of Mike Simon winning the 2012 Geneva Mayor’s Choice Award
Thank you to all who have donated to the annual FVJN Fundraiser! We so appreciate your support!

Happenings Elsewhere

BBYO/BBYO Connect!
All Jewish 5 – 12 graders, come join the fun!
LazerMaxx – 941 S. Mc.Lean Blvd, Elgin, IL
Sunday, January 6
12:30 pm to 2:45 pm
Early Bird Discount if you RSVP and pay by Jan. 2: $25.00 per person
Regular Price: $30 per person
Includes two 30-minute laser games, 20 arcade tokens, Pizza and Soda!
(Bring extra money if you want to purchase additional arcade tokens)
Please RSVP to Liza at 847-622-8855, Archbroch@comcast.net
Mail checks to: Liza Bachrach, 7 Clove Ct., South Elgin, IL, 60177

BBYO Great Midwest Regional Invite!
Hello All,
Throughout the year BBYO leaders plan large scale Regional events for the teens in the Region to partake in. On January 25-27 BBYO Great Midwest Region is hosting its Regional Invite.
The weekend long program includes service work, Shabbat activities, and educational programming. After Havdallah, the teens begin a competition portion, where chapters compete in events and earn points along the way.
Overall this is a great way for the Ma’ayan teens (and FVJN teens!) to meet other Jewish teens from around the Chicagoland region.
Registration for the event can be completed online at b-linked.bbyo.org/event/60472.
Additional information about the event can be found at bbyo.org/region/gmr/invite_2013.
If you have questions about the event please feel free to contact me or the BBYO Regional office (224-406-9261).
Thank you,
Jay Pliskow
Ma’ayan BBYO Chapter Advisor
248-259-7718

Congregation Kneseth Israel Caps Off 120th with Robert Klein and the Maxwell Street Klezmer Quartet.
Elgin’s Congregation Kneseth Israel (CKI) completes its 120th Anniversary Celebration with two special events.  On Saturday, February 9th CKI, in cooperation with Elgin Community College, will be welcoming comedian Robert Klein at 7:30 p.m. in the Blizzard Theater of the College. An alumni of Second City, Klein was the first comedian to film an HBO special and has made nine specials for the network. He’s appeared on The Tonight Show and The Late Show with David Letterman over 100 times, and can be seen in films like The Owl and the Pussycat, Primary Colors, and Radioland Murders. You may purchase tickets to the Robert Klein Show through the CKI website at www.ckielgin.org, or by contacting Elgin Community College at 847-622-0300.

Then on Sunday, February 10th CKI will be hosting a Celebratory Brunch at 11:30 a.m. featuring the Maxwell Street Klezmer Quartet. Founded in 1983 by Lori Lippitz the Maxwell Street Klezmer Band reintroduced traditional dance music to weddings and other Jewish celebrations. Over the years, the band has performed on stages across the country (including Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center) and played nine tours in Europe. Their third CD, You Should Be So Lucky!, is one of the ten best-selling klezmer recordings in America. You may purchase tickets to the Brunch by contacting Zahava Raz at the CKI office. The phone number is 847-741-5656.

According to the 120th Anniversary Chairperson Richard Kruth, “Robert Klein is a legendary veteran funny-man entertainer who will not only make you smile, but laugh with his comedy act. Plus you can’t go wrong with klezmer music whenever there is a celebration. We are very pleased to have reached this milestone. Join us for one or both events as we in celebrate CKI’s 120 years in Elgin.”

Congregation Kneseth Israel serves the diverse Jewish Community of the Greater Fox Valley area. We offer weekly services, a religious school, observance of all lifecycle events, and a variety of additional programming. For regular updates or more information, please visit our website at www.ckielgin.org.

FIDDLER ON THE ROOF
MARCH 6 – 24, 2013
The unmistakable image of a Fiddler on the Roof…a metaphor for balancing life, for survival and for tradition. This is the story of Tevye, a simple and loving milkman, who does everything he can to maintain his family and their religious traditions. But despite his best efforts, with five strong-willed daughters, a loyal yet independent wife and an ever-changing society, the safety and stability of his old world is disappearing.
A journey of love, loss, beliefs and family, Fiddler on the Roof is a celebration of life and all its challenges. From the rich orchestrations and lyrics, to the powerful full-company numbers to the emotionally charged story, this is the show everyone should experience.
This show is Rated G.
http://paramountaurora.com
Paramount Theatre
23 East Galena Boulevard
Aurora, IL 60506
Box Office – 630-896-6666

EVERYTHING IS ILLUMINATED
February 21 – March 31, 2013 
With only a yellowing photograph in hand, a young man, Jonathan, sets out to find the woman who may or may not have saved his grandfather from the Nazis. Accompanied by an old man haunted by memories of the war; an amorous dog named Sammy Davis Jr. Jr.; and the unforgettable Alex, a young Ukrainian translator who speaks in a sublimely-butchered English; Jonathan is led on a quixotic journey over a devastated landscape into an unexpected past.
http://www.nexttheatre.org
Next Theatre Company
Noyes Cultural Arts Center
927 Noyes Street, Suite 108
Evanston, IL 60201

Fox Valley Jewish Neighbors Annual Fundraiser!

Please donate today to help FVJN continue its wide-variety of community offerings! As in past years, we come to you this time each year with our annual end-of-the-year fundraiser request. This is our only concerted donation drive of the year and we rely on your support to help keep FVJN and all of its activities running smoothly.
FVJN does not have dues, and generally does not charge for our activities. Instead, FVJN relies on donations that allow us to offer our many activities to our broad constituency.
We have a matching gift program in place this year, increasing the value of your donation to FVJN this month. Please help your dollars go further, and enable FVJN to provide even more wonderful services to our community in the coming year by sending in your tax-deductible* donations right away online or through the mail.
FVJN has completed another year as the vibrant and dynamic Jewish organization that welcomes all who are interested in being part of our ongoing building of our local Jewish community. Each year we have more people participating in an ever-increasing number of programs. This year, through FVJN, people gathered for:
• Social service activities, including working at Northern Illinois Food Bank and participating in the International Day of Peace
• Interfaith- and family-friendly services and celebrations, including baby-naming ceremonies, Shabbats, Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, and Sukkot
• Fox Valley Jewish School: FVJN’s religious school
• Book Club meetings
• Adult education programs, including film nights
• Bar and bat mitzvah celebrations
• Social activities
Please help FVJN meet its costs for our fabulous staff; for maintaining our space on Third Street and renting other space when needed; and for supplies in providing our wide-range of services.
FVJN makes a significant difference in the Jewish presence in our area. Local papers frequently cover FVJN events, and people interested in Jewish activities in our area are consistently referred to FVJN. Each year we find more fellow Jews located in the far western suburbs!
Help us to continue to gather together, and to welcome all who want to be part of our Jewish community. We welcome you without regard to synagogue affiliation, your brand of Judaism, your religious background, your marital status or sexual orientation, or your age.
Your donations are essential for FVJN to continue its work! Thank you for sending your tax-deductible* donation today to FVJN, P.O. Box 346, Geneva, IL 60134, or submitting it on-line at fvjn.org (by clicking on the “Donate” icon on the upper-right under the main banner).
Best wishes to you each for a wonderful holiday season.
Warmly, on behalf of all of the FVJN Board,
Tammie Weinberger, President
*FVJN is a 501c3 organization, and thus your donations are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by your individual circumstances.

December eNews!

Monthly eNews – December 5, 2012
 
 
Mark Your Calendars:
This month:
12/5 — FVJN-to-Lazarus House Dinner
12/8 — Light your Chanukah candles: It’s the first night!
12/9 — FVJN Chanukah Party!
12/9 — FVJN Board Meeting
12/14 — Shabbat Evening 6:30 @ FVJN
12/16 — FVJSchool
12/16 — Adult Ed. Movie Club
 
Coming in January:
1/4 — Shabbat Evening
1/6 — FVJSchool
1/12 — Adult Social Dinner
1/13 — Adult Ed. Movie Club
1/20 FVJN Board Meeting
1/27 — FVJSchool
 
Find a hidden Hebrew word below, and win a prize! Respond to: rachely@fvjn.org.
 
President’s Corner
Happy Winter and Hanukkah to all!
 
While it may seem hard to believe with 69 degrees outside just two days ago, the winter holidays have nearly arrived for all of us in the Fox Valley.  
 
Please take the time to read this eNews.  Ideally we will all read all of the eNewsletters that Rachel works so hard to put together for us.  That said, at the end of the year I find we sometimes reaffirm our connection with our best selves — especially as Jews who come right off of the High Holy days before the secular New Year.  This eNews is full of opportunities to grow.  Tzedakah and celebration fill its digital pages.  
 
As many from varied religious backgrounds do this time of year, we are presented with countless opportunities to give charity or tzedakah.  We are also approached by every non-profit and political, social, and special-interest group we have ever considered being associated with, to give our financial support.  As with many worthwhile organizations, it is this time of year that FVJN asks its members to consider giving generously.  Please help support the great work that FVJN does, whether you attend many events, only one, or have yet to share time with us.  Your financial support and volunteerism keep this organization going and growing.  
 
In addition to your financial support, we are limited in how much we can take on by the number of volunteers we have to help lead the way!  In 2013, please consider getting involved and leading this group in new endeavors or helping sustain those we already undertake.  As a group, this year alone we have helped: feed the area’s homeless and those who have fallen on hard times, educate a new generation of children on the joy and wonder of studying Judaism, donate and volunteer to pack food at the Northern Illinois Food Bank (last time we got to pack candy–every kid’s dream come true!), care for rescued horses, and deepen our sense of community through shared book clubs, movie nights and social outings. We thrive or wither based on the many who come together to determine our fate.  Consider getting involved!     
 
If you cannot join us in volunteering, please just join us!  We have our annual Hannukah party this coming Sunday (December 9) and we are co-sponsoring (at our space on 3rd Street) along with the Pushing the Envelope Farm and Temple Beth Israel a Channukah-focused potluck Shabbat Evening the following Friday (December 14).  We have a movie night next Sunday (December 16) and are making food for Lazarus House on January 2 (as we do the first Wednesday of each month).  Please consider joining us for all of these events — we’d love to see you there!
 
For those looking for the quick summary — This month consider:
  • *Donating to help support the great work FVJN does throughout the year
  • *Volunteering to help FVJN feed those at Lazarus House
  • *Volunteering your time and energy to help the great service project FVJN undertakes (including coordinating Lazarus House meals and helping with the upcoming Chanukah party)
  • *Attending and sharing fellowship with fellow FVJN friends at the upcoming Hanukkah party (12/9) and the Chanukah-focused Shabbat Evening (12/14) 
  • *Completing the FVJN Survey so we can better understand and serve your needs!  And maybe WIN a gift card in the process :-).  
A very happy Hannukah and New Year to all!
Warmest wishes through a chilly December,
Tammie
 
 
FVJN’s Annual Chanukah Party!
Dec. 9, 12:30 – 3 p.m.
Persinger Rec Center, Geneva
Please join us for this fun-filled family event!
 
Grab your menorahs, bundle up the kids and come to the annual FVJN Chanukah Party, for friends, food, 
activities for kids, music and more! Everyone is invited! There is no charge, but donations are always welcome (and can always be made at www.fvjn.org)
 
Party details:
FVJN Chanukah Party
Sunday, Dec. 9, 12:30 to 3 p.m.
Persinger Rec Center, NW corner of Peck and Kaneville roads
Questions? Comments? Email rachely@fvjn.org
 
Volunteers are needed for the following:
Cookie Baking
Crafts
Games
Set-up
Clea-up
Helpers
 
A dairy/vegetarian potluck meal is part of our annual FVJN Chanukah Party! Please see the list below, and sign up to bring a dish to share.
Email Rachel: Rachely@fvjn.org, with what food you’ll be bringing. Please be sure to put “FVJN Chanukah Party” as the subject of your email response.
 
For the potluck:
Latkes
  • Salads (green, tuna salad, tomato salad, etc.)
  • Bagels (cut into quarters since little kids often eat less than 1/2)
  • Hummus and veggies
  • Cheese/crackers
  • Desserts
  • FVJN will provide sour cream and applesauce, as well as beverages and paper products (if you would like to provide/donate any of these things, let us know!)
 
Shabbat Evening & Chanukah Potluck!
with Temple B’Nai Israel (Aurora) and Pushing the Envelope Farm 
Friday, Dec. 14, 6:30 p.m. at FVJN
Join us for a friendly Shabbat evening, with prayers, a potluck supper, and friendship.
We’ll welcome Chanukah and Shabbat with song and celebration.
All ages welcome!
Please bring non-meat dishes, only. 
RSVP to rachely@fvjn.org with what you will bring, so we can plan accordingly.
 
If your last name begins with:
A – G: Desserts
H – N: Beverages (apple and/or white grape juice), and set-up/clean-up
           (*Please come 15 minutes early and stay 15 minutes after.)
O – T: Main dishes (non-meat)
U – Z: Salads or side dishes
*Please provide your own serving utensils. Paper products will be provided.
 
There is no charge for this event, 
but reservations are required.
Make yours NO LATER THAN DECEMBER 12
at Tammiew@fvjn.org.
 
Adult Film & Discussion
Sunday, December 16, 3:30pm-5:30 pm 
At the בית of Nancy Sohn and Mike Simon.  
Join us as we view  the film “Israel vs. Israel”,  a look at four Jewish Israelis who are working for peace and for the rights of Palestinian Arabs.  Though produced in 2010, the topic is as
timely as ever! 
Snacks provided, BYOB.  Please email nccox@comcast.net for RSVP and
directions.
 
FVJN Monthly Volunteer Project
FVJN- to-Lazarus House Dinners
Tonight!
We at FVJN are happy to do the mitzvah of providing dinner for the guests at Lazarus House 
in St. Charles, on the first Wednesday of each month. 
In order for us to continue doing this, we need plenty of volunteers, so no one person needs to do too much. Please sign up to volunteer: rachely@fvjn.org.
 
Volunteers prepare a main dish, a salad or two sides (including vegetables), and a dessert. These meals currently feed 60 to 75 men, women and children at Lazarus House.
 
Tonight’s meal is being provided by the following volunteers:
Dec. 5:  Tammie W, Nancy S.,  Joanne S., and Mim E.
 
Volunteers are needed for these upcoming dates:
January 2 
February 6
March 6 
April 3
 
Thank you!
Rachel Yackley
rachely@fvjn.org
 
Tell Us!
Survey Says…
We are seeking input from our FVJN member community to help us ensure that we continue to evolve to best meet your needs and desires for this organization. We are specifically looking for you to answer these questions as to what you personally (and your family, if applicable) want to see from FVJN. Please take the 7 minutes this survey will likely require to let us know what we can do for you! As a token of our thanks for your participation in helping us provide the services you most want, we will have a raffle among all survey responders for a $25 gift certificate.
Thank you in advance for your participation and thoughtful answers!
-The FVJN Board
PLease click on the link below to participate!
http://www.fvjn.org/fvjn-survey/
 
FVJN Book Group
Seven happy readers attended the Book Group gathering on Dec. 4. They all enjoyed reading All Other Nights, by Dara Horn, 
and highly recommend it to all!
The next Book Group meeting will be on Tuesday, Feb 12, 7 p.m. at FVJN.
Please come for a discussion of The Book of Blood and Shadow, by Robin Wasserman.
Bring your favorite book suggestions for a future book group!
Newcomers are always welcome.
 
———-
 
FVJS News and Notes:
 
It’s Never too Late to Register for FVJN!
The FVJSchool is set to open for its third school year this fall, with educational, engaging and exciting Jewish experiences for our students! 
 
FVJSchool is held from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. every other Sunday, during the school year. Hebrew class will be offered from 11:30 to 12:30, on FVJS mornings.
This program has classes for children beginning 
at age 3 and continuing through 8th grade. 
 
FVJS welcomes children from those with no formal religious education or Jewish 
knowledge, to those who have previously attended religious education 
programs. The FVJS program provides a general Jewish education and does not 
adhere to any one particular branch of Judaism.
 
Information and registration forms are available at www.fvjn.org.
or email Barb Anderson: barb.anderson58@att.net.
 
Mazel Tov to One of Our FVJN Members!
Mike Simon Wins 2012 Mayor’s Choice Award
Little Traveler co-owner Mike Simon received a surprise award earlier last month.
Simon was presented with the first-ever “Mayor’s Choice Award” during the Nov. 1 annual holiday kickoff breakfast.
According to the city’s newsletter, Mayor Kevin Burns recognized Simon’s commitment to downtown through stewardship and investment in his downtown properties and his tenants.
A year ago, Simon announced the closing of the Fashion Walk shops, “to the collective worry of the community,” the city newsletter said. “In the past year he has been systematically cleaning, repairing and rebuilding the buildings—and, placing great tenants in each!”
The tenants include Beaute by Sulvie/C’est La Vie, Mossy Twig, and All Chocoate Kitchen.
The exteriors of their shops have been restored as has the corner exterior of the former Merra Lee shop, and the newsletter offers one more tantalizing prospect.
“Stay tuned for news of a new tenant at the corner!” it says.
 
Jewish FAQ
50 Jewish Things to do Before 13
(Excerpt from: http://forward.com/articles/158131/-jewish-things-to-do-before-/
  1. 1. Find out whom you were named after.
  2. 2. Plant a tree in Israel.
  3. 3.  Volunteer in your community. (Explain to your kids that Jews believe in tikkun olam — repairing the world.)
  4. 4. Dress up for Purim.
  5. 5. Learn how to blow a shofar.
  6. 6. Make cookies, and bring them to a Jewish retirement home; talk to the people at the home.
  7. 7. Go to a rally for a good cause. (Explain that Jews believe in standing up for what’s right.)
  8. 8. Go into the voting booth with a voter. (Explain that Jews are thrilled with democracy.)
  9. 9. Dance the hora.
  10. 10. Find the afikomen at the Passover Seder.
  11. 11. Go to Israel, or get an Israeli pen (or Facebook) pal.
  12. 12. Play Gaga! (A soccer-dodge ball mash-up invented in Israel).
  13. 13. Eat in a sukkah.
  14. 14. Sleep in a sukkah.
  15. 15. Hunt for traces of chametz, by candlelight with a spoon and feather. Or even a Dustbuster.
  16. 16. Listen to Israeli rap music.
  17. 17. Listen to Arabic rap music (to get a feel for the Middle East that has nothing to do with politics).
  18. 18. Go to synagogue, and sit between two adults who love you.
  19. 19. Learn some Hebrew. (Even “Sheket!” counts.)
  20. 20. Learn some Yiddish (even curses!) or Ladino. (My favorite Ladino word growing up: moorsah — used when someone was in a bad mood and was trying to get everyone else into a bad mood, too.)
  21. 21. Visit a Jewish museum.
  22. 22. Make some money, and give it to charity. (Explain that Jews believe in tzedakah.)
  23. 23. Try a matzo ball.
  24. 24. Attend Jewish camp. (Or come to the old-fashioned bungalow colony we go to: Rosmarins, in Monroe, N.Y. Yes, that’s a plug.)
  25. 25. Cook something for the Jewish holidays with the help of a grandparent.
(Read the rest in next month’s eNews!)
 
———-
 
Donations Received
Tammie & Mike Weinberger, in Memory of Barbara Baruch
Rachel, Mike & Rebecca Yackley, in Memory of Barbara Baruch
 
Celebrate and Commemorate with FVJN
Fill out and mail the form below — or — donate online at www.fvjn.org
When choosing to make a contribution in honor or in memory of someone, consider a donation to Fox Valley Jewish Neighbors (FVJN). Your generosity will support our programs, our school, and our future growth, and those you designate will receive a special acknowledgement of your gift on their behalf, in addition to your message being printed in the FVJN eNews.
— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —  
Enclosed please find $___________ 
Your Name
 ___________________________________________________________
 
Your Address & Phone #
___________________________________________________________
 
Message for Acknowledgement letter: 
___________________________________________________________
 
___________________________________________________________
 
Circle the Occasion (e.g., “in honor of” or “in memory of”)
Please send acknowledgement to:
Please print legibly and include complete address. Thank you!
 
Recipient’s Name 
___________________________________________________________
 
Recipient’s Address
___________________________________________________________
 
Mail completed form and payment to:
FVJN, PO Box 346, Geneva, IL  60134
 
Zekher Tsadikeem L’vrakha – The memory of good people is a blessing.
  
 
Fox Valley Interfaith — Tonight!
Dec. 5, 7 p.m., UUSG
Hello Friends of FVI–Hope you had a fun, tasty Thanksgiving AND have our next FVI program on your calendar. Next week, Wednesday December 5, 7:00 p.m. we will meet at Geneva Unitarian US at the corner of 2nd St. & James. Khadija Walker of the Aurora Baha’i Community will share with us. Since we’ve never learned much about the Baha’i faith at a FVI meeting, I am really looking forward to this. Many of you have driven north in Chicago on Lake Shore Dr. & have seen the gorgeous white temple in Wilmette–that is a Baha’i temple & I’m sure Khadija can tell us more about it. We will also watch a short video, “Education under Fire,” about denial of higher education in Iran. Amnesty International & many other human rights organizations have declared support for this video and cause. Please come meet, greet & learn together.
If you CAN come, kindly drop me a quick e-mail so we can plan for seating, etc.
Janet Bell: janetb316@gmail.com
 
Calling all Friends of Becca’s LEGacy!!
It’s toy drive time again!!  Now is your chance to be a part of our 5th
annual toy drive.  We can fulfill Becca’s dreams while bringing smiles to
the faces of children with cancer.  Each year, we have grown.  Last year,
we collected over 2000 toys.  Let’s make this our biggest toy drive yet!
 
We need your help:
 
1.  SPREAD THE WORD!  Please tell friends, coworkers, family, colleagues,
and everyone about Becca’s dreams and our toy drive.  Feel free to forward
this email, refer people to www.beccaslegacy.org (to be updated shortly
with drop off locations) and to the Becca’s LEGacy Facebook page.
 
2.  COLLECT TOYS FOR US!  If you have or know of a business, school,
religious organization, scout troop, community group, etc. that would like
to be a drop off location, please let me know ASAP.  I’ll get you set up
with a box and whatever you need.  The more locations we have, the more
toys we collect, and the more kids we can help.
 
3.  DONATE NEW TOYS!  Locations to be listed soon on our Faebook page and
www.beccaslegacy.org.  There are some new restrictions, per hospital
request: no plush animals, toys with magnets, toy weapons, food, or
holiday/religious toys/items.  SPECIAL REQUEST: We are hoping to collect
some of the new Bratz and Moxie True Hope Dolls.  These are bald dolls to
raise childhood cancer awareness. They are available at Toys R Us.  Becca
loved her dolls that were “like her.” American Girl is also making a bald
doll, available by phone order.
 
4.  VOLUNTEER TO HELP DELIVER TOYS IN JANUARY!  For germ control and
privacy, we can’t give the toys directly to the kids.  But, we give the
boxes to the very special child life specialists who make sure that each
child receives the toys that will be most meaningful to them.
 
Thanks for being a part of Becca’s LEGacy!!
With appreciation,
Francine
Becca’s LEGacy
www.beccaslegacy.org
Because children deserve a childhood
 
Comedian Robert Klein Coming to Elgin!
In celebration of Congregation Kneseth Israel’s 120th anniversary, CKI and the Elgin Community Arts Center
announce this special comedy performance in Elgin!
 
Saturday, February 9, 2013, at 7:30 p.m.
ECC Blizzard Theatre
Tickets: $39/$35
Pre-show Dinner: $35
 
Deadline for reserved seats and dinner reservations
Don’t miss this master of stand-up comedy!