The virtual journal


Register Today
24th Leadership Institute and
2nd Organization & Management Institute

July 28-30, 2013
Pearlstone Conference & Retreat Center
Reisterstown, Maryland


Read the latest issue of
CJ: Voices of Conservative /
Masorti Judaism


Distance Workshops

Top notch training - no travel!
Click here for information and schedule


Keep KOACH Strong!

Help Women's League ensure the next generation of Conservative leaders on college campuses

Home > > Spring 2010 - The Candle That Made a Difference

The Candle That Made a Difference
 
by Stan Greenspan
 
In the aftermath of the Six Day War, while living conditions in Syria seriously deteriorated there was a dramatic increase in persecution and hostility against Syria’s Jewish population. As the number of imprisonments and executions significantly increased, the Syrian Jewish population urgently sought ways to emigrate. Their plight came to the attention of Judy Feld Carr, a member of Congregation Beth Tzedec in Toronto. Judy was moved by the dire situation of the Syrian Jews, and somehow found a way to obtain their release from Syria.
 
“We were buying Jews, one by one, from a hostile government. It was the best-kept secret in the Jewish world,” Judy said. As a result of her activities, 3,228 lives were saved. Judy was recognized for her efforts with many awards, including the Order of Canada, the Simon Wiesenthal Award for Tolerance, Justice and Human Rights, and the Haifa University Merit Award.
 
This hard work required continuous funding. In 1973, Congregation Beth Tzedec established a fund for Jews in Arab Lands in memory of Judy’s first husband, Dr. Ronald (Rubin) Feld. Unfortunately, because many people did not know about the plight of Syrian Jews, fundraising was difficult. That situation was turned around through the genius of the late Jules Surdin, a past president of the Beth Tzedec men’s club, and his friend Morton Pullan.
 
Jules and Morton modified the traditional yahrzeit candle and connected it to Yom HaShoah. They inspired members of the Beth Tzedec men’s club to hand-deliver the candles to 2,700 households while at the same time requesting help in saving Syrian Jewry. This effort quickly spread throughout synagogues in Canada. The Yom HaShoah Yahrzeit Candle program received international recognition at the 1981 FJMC convention.
 
A young man named Joe Winokur, a member of Temple Ner Tamid in Peabody, Massachusetts, was at that convention. Joe’s father, a Holocaust survivor, had died not long before. Joe modified the Yom HaShoah Yahrzeit Candle in his memory by dyeing it yellow, and he introduced an appropriate box and bag to make mailing and delivery easier.
 
Ner Tamid’s brotherhood used the newly designed candle and supporting materials, distributing candles to all the synagogue’s members. The following year yellow candles were distributed in a similar fashion by men’s clubs and brotherhoods throughout New England. Ner Tamid’s brotherhood was honored with an FJMC Torch Award in 1983. Dr. Jerome Agrest, then FJMC international president, expanded this effort from a regional program to an international one.
 
Last year, through the efforts of FJMC’s dedicated volunteers, nearly 200,000 candles were distributed in North America. The program reached Israel in 2006, and in 2008 the Jewish community of Mumbai held its first Holocaust commemoration and distributed 5,000 yellow yahrzeit candles. This year, the program moves to Latin America through the efforts of Michael Abadi and the FJMC’s Dor Habah program.
 
FJMC’s Yellow Candle program aims to ensure that the victims of the Holocaust are never forgotten. Lighting a yellow candle provides an opportunity for us to think about oppression and genocide in our generation, as well. As a direct result of lighting this little candle, the community of Syrian Jews was rescued from oppression. Today, hundreds of synagogues of all denominations distribute and light the yellow candles and thereby contribute in a variety of ways to their synagogues and men’s clubs for worthwhile, life-affirming activities.
 
Light your candle on April 11, 2010, and make a difference.
 
Stan Greenspan is an international vice president of FJMC.
News & Events

Women’s League Institute Siyyum
Join us on Monday, June 3, 2013, from 11:00 am – 3:00 pm, at the Jewish Theological Seminary. Study Session I (11:00 am- 12:20 pm): Chancellor Arnold Eisen Lunch: 12:30 - 1:35 (Cost of lunch: $20 per person) Study Session II (1:45 - 3:00 pm) Dr. Maud Kozodozy, (JTS, NYU) Between Torah and Maddah: Jews and Medicine in the Middle Ages. RSVP to Lorraine Braun, 212-870-1260 Ext. 7166 or lbraun@wlcj.org click here

Convention 2012 Proceedings Now Available

14th National Masorti Women’s Study Day in Jerusalem
Women’s League for Conservative Judaism, Schechter Institute and the Masorti movement present the 14th National Masorti Women’s Study Day in Jerusalem to any members of Women's League who will be in Israel on June 21. click here

Come to Israel with Women's League
October 21 to November 3, 2013 - this is a trip you do not want to miss! Click below for more information. click here

Gun Control
Women's League joins with the leadership of Conservative Judaism in the United States in expressing a need for more effective gun control. We also ask for your signature on a petition issued by the JCPA expressing our community’s pain and resolve to enact comprehensive reform, including meaningful legislation to limit access to assault weapons and ensure access to quality mental health care for all who need it. click here

 
© 2010 |  Women's League for Conservative Judaism | Terms of Use
 
About Women's League Member Services Programs World Affairs & Public Policy Shopping & Resource  
Who We Are Services to Sisterhoods Education Programs World Affairs Publications  
Regions Training Services Programs Israel    
Sisterhoods Z'havah Sisterhood Events Public Policy    
Locate a Sisterhood Services to Individuals Training Services  Resolutions    
WLCJ Membership     Ba'Olam    
On the World Scene     Partnerships    
Community Service          
Torah Fund          
 
  Designed and developed by PBCS Technology