Category Archives: News

Susan Stein and Joe Klee pay a visit

On Shabbos, Feb 9, we had two special visitors at the shul.

Susan Stein lives on the upper West Side of Manhattan, but she’s not home often. She travels the country and the world performing her play “Etty” about the life of Etty Hillesom. Etty was a Dutch Jew who was murdered at Auschwitz when she was 29. She left behind diaries that give a glimpse of the last few years of her life. Susan gave 4 performances of her play at Carnegie Stage, one of two live theaters we have in Carnegie. And while in town she also managed to conduct the play for over 300 school students. And come to shul on Saturday morning! We were delighted to have her. She participated in services and stayed afterward for Kiddush. If you missed her performance, you can take 30 minutes and watch this interview she gave to Lynn Cullen.

At the end of services a young man came into the shul just looking around (he didn’t appear dangerous). I introduced myself and he said he was Joe Klee. He was in town on business and his father had advised him to visit the Carnegie Shul while in Pittsburgh. Well, as Dr. Block would say, “there are no coincidences”. Just 10 minutes earlier, while announcing yahrzeits, I mentioned that on Tuesday we would remember Dr. Harry A. Klee who was the main benefactor for the construction of our shul. His name appears on the cornerstone of our building. Joe stayed for Kiddush and afterwards I showed him the plaques for the Klee family on our yahrzeit tablets. The Klee family was numerous and one of Joe’s forefathers, Selig Klee, was a charter member of the congregation 120 years ago. The following day, I spoke with Joe’s father on the phone, Harvey Klee. Harvey explained that his parents were Joseph Klee and Rose Nadel. His grandparents were Hyman Klee and Lena Wilk. I was not aware of the Wilk connection, and will be looking forward to comments from the Wilk family.

As a complete aside, I saw Ethel Sherman McCarthy at the Pour House on Saturday night. She was there celebrating the birthday and retirement of her best friend, Cheryl Riley. As some of you know, Jim and Cheryl have sold the Pour House and are retiring to Florida. Of course I told Ethel that we would like to see her more frequently at shul. Her grandfather Markus Sherman was the founder of our congregation. The minyan met in his house from 1896 until 1903 when they built the first shul on Broadway St.

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GetGo Project Underway

The Giant Eagle GetGo in Gibsonia

The Giant Eagle GetGo in Gibsonia

For many months we have been reporting that Giant Eagle was in the process of purchasing property across the street from the shul. Well, things are finally happening. On Friday, October 31, they completed the property closings. Last Monday, Borough Council approved the “vacation” of a portion of Williams Street that runs through the middle of the property. And yesterday, the demolition crew started razing buildings.

What does this mean for us? Firstly, it means some parking concerns that we will need to address. The parking lot directly across from the shul had belonged to the Fulton family. About 40 years Al Fulton, who owned the Buick dealership on Main St., had given us permission to use his lot on Saturday mornings indefinitely. Fulton Buick is now long closed. Al’s son Pete owned the property in recent years. Now it belongs to Giant Eagle. In that parking lot there will soon be a convenience store. Certainly, when they open we will approach the manager about using some spaces on Saturday mornings. But in the meantime we will need to use what we can. There are generally about 6 spaces on the street near the shul. And I have spoken with the manager of CVS. She has given us permission to use available spaces in the farthest row from the store (the row next to Lydia Street). That should take care of our normal Saturday morning minyan. But we will also be talking with the new owners of the Xytec building (the glass and aluminum office building on Lydia Street just past the shul). That company is called Heyl & Patterson. They purchased the building earlier this year.

The good news is that this vacant property will now be renovated and be an asset to our community. The long term viability of our congregation depends on us being in a healthy neighborhood. Having a new GetGo across the street will bring some new life to the area, just as the CVS did.

GetGo-3 18NOV2014

This is the lot where we normally park on Shabbos. We may still be able to park there for a few more Saturdays, but I can’t predict.

The J&L Travel building was right there, until yesterday. Blink, and it’s gone.

GetGo-1 18NOV2014

A backhoe razes the Fulton Buick garage in the background. That’s where the gas pumps will be located, adjacent to Main St. The convenience store will be located in the area where this pickup truck is sitting, adjacent to Lydia St.

 

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Rabbi Brotsky to visit Carnegie

Rabbi Brotsky

Rabbi Harvey Brotsky

Just a quick note to everyone that Rabbi Harvey Brotsky will be visiting the Carnegie Shul this coming Shabbos, January 28, for morning services.  In 2009, Rabbi Brotsky retired from New Light Congregation after 25 years of service.  He and his wife continue to live in Squirrel Hill but have taken time to travel.  This weekend he will be traveling all the way to Carnegie to spend a Shabbos morning with us!

I am fairly certain we will be able to impose upon the rabbi to daven part of the service.  As a reminder, preliminary services start at 9:20 and Shachris starts at 9:40.  I hope that many of you will be able to join us and welcome Rabbi Brotsky to Carnegie.  Following services, we will have our usual Kiddush— bagels, cheese, and fish.  This week’s Kiddush is sponsored by Burt Dodick.

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Shul blog hacked!

The term “hacking” may be new to you unless you’re a computer geek.  Hacking is the name to given to breaking into someone’s website by using malicious software.  The hacker may just be trying to show how skilled he is at breaking through someone’s passwords or firewalls.  But sometimes he means to do real harm to the website owner.  We can’t be sure what motivated the hacker who trashed the shul website, this blog, on December 26.  It is a lesson for all of us that computers are not completely fool proof and whenever you put something “out there” in cyberspace, it is vulnerable to attack.

My first hint that something was wrong actually came on December 26 when I started to get junk mail from our blog.  Since I have software on the blog that filters filters out junk, I knew that something had stopped working.  But it didn’t seem serious.  I had family matters to attend to last week and decided I would look at it on the weekend.  However, on Shabbos morning at shul, Joel informed me that the shul blog was “down”.  This elevated my concern, and I began an investigation right after we finished Kiddush.  Little did I know that I would be spending the rest of the day, New Year’s Eve, performing website maintenance. Continue reading

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Mosque Mishegas

It’s been quite a while since I’ve written anything— I’ve been busy!  Debbie made an unexpected visit to the hospital for most of a week.  That, plus her recovery, set us back a bit.  But, the folks at St. Clair were very good to her and she has fully recovered.  Thanks to all of you who sent well wishes.  And my business has picked up after a couple pitiful years.  I’m actually making a living now; hope it lasts!  And finally, I’ve been immersed in all this furor over the fact that Muslims are going to be praying in Carnegie, heaven forbid.  I’ve seen my name in the paper more times in the past two weeks than in the past 20 years.  Today, I got a phone call from New York City.  Yeh, the story is getting around.

former church; future mosque

So, what’s all the fuss about?  Well, last year the Muslim congregation called Attawheed Islamic Center contacted our borough manager and said they were looking to buy a building in Carnegie.  For 10 years they’ve been renting a space on Banksville Road, and now they’ve outgrown it.  As it turned out, the building they had originally picked in Carnegie was not really appropriate for a worship site.  Consequently, they decided that it wouldn’t be worth the trouble and expense of trying to make it fit.  But they really liked Carnegie.  They like Carnegie for the same reasons we all like Carnegie.  It’s easy to get to (their congregation is spread all over the place, just like ours), convenient to the city, and has a nice Main Street business district.  So, they kept looking in Carnegie for the right building.  And they found it— the former First Presbyterian Church at the corner of Washington and Main.

As a member of Borough Council and president of the Carnegie Shul, I was placed square in the middle of this.  What position would I take?  But as controversial as it may sound, there wasn’t any conflict for me and there wasn’t any controversy within Council.  Rightly so.  The Muslim congregation submitted an application for use of the building, which is required for anyone who buys a building in the commercial district.  The application was reviewed by the Planning Commission and they found no fault with the proposal.  Our Code Enforcement Officer reviewed the application and found no fault with it.  I’m sorry, but it’s a “no brainer”.  A religious group buys an old church and wants to use it for worship services and Sunday school.  We could have scrubbed through that application for the the rest of our lives and not found fault with it.  But perhaps more to the point, Council wasn’t looking to invent a reason to shoot it down.  We view this development in a positive light.  For decades people have been bailing out on Carnegie, and now there’s a congregation that wants to come to Carnegie because they think Carnegie is a nice town.  Council welcomes them and I welcome them.  Carnegie is undergoing a bit of a resurgence right now and this development is part of that renewal.  It’s all good.

During this whole controversy, I must say that Police Chief Harbin has been on the right side.  As a fellow Marine, he is not only my colleague in the borough building, but a good friend.  His support of the Carnegie Shul has been steadfast for as long as I’ve known him, and I trust him completely.  His number one mission is the safety of our citizens.  He was on the scene when Baumhammers went on his shooting spree and he is well aware of what dangers lie in our community.  He knows that during the past 15 years the FBI has doubled its presence in Western PA.  Because of Muslims?  No, because of the significant increase in Neo-Nazi and Klan activities in our region.  With his hyper-vigilant demeanor, I am quite certain that he would have alerted me if he was concerned about Muslims moving into a church near the shul.  On the contrary, he has always assured me that this new mosque is no security threat.  So to the resident who spoke at the last council meeting and questioned the patriotism of council members and the Chief, I say, “go crawl back under the rock from whence you came.”  There is no one in Carnegie who is more concerned about our wellbeing than the Chief.

Last week an acquaintance suggested that I should vote for what’s best for my congregation, not what’s best for Carnegie.  I could write an encyclopedia on what’s wrong with that suggestion, but the short answer is that I have never observed a conflict between being a good Jew and being an good American.  Jews have been abused in just about every country in the world, but in America we’ve had a pretty good life.  It’s not an accident or fate; it’s not just a coincidence.  It’s America’s liberal attitude about religion that is enshrined in the Constitution.  The strength of that document, and the conviction of those who would die to defend it, is what has made America a good place for all of us to live.  Two times in my life I have formally sworn a solemn oath to support and defend the Constitution.  I will not waiver from that pledge, and I won’t apologize to bigots and racists.

I’ll leave you with the words of President George Washington.  During the early years of our republic, President Washington wanted to reassure the minority Jewish communities that they were safe in America— that our rights to worship as we please would be safeguarded in our Constitution.  He wrote the following to the Hebrew Congregation of Newport, RI.  “The Citizens of the United States of America have a right to applaud themselves for giving to Mankind examples of an enlarged and liberal policy: a policy worthy of imitation. All possess alike liberty of conscience and immunities of citizenship. It is now no more that toleration is spoken of, as if it was by the indulgence of one class of people that another enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural rights. For happily the Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance, requires only that they who live under its protection, should demean themselves as good citizens”.

God bless America.

Trib Story- June 11
Trib Story- June 14
Trib Story- June 25
PG Story- June 14
PG Story- June 16
Signal Item- June 23

(note particularly the bigoted and moronic comments by readers of the Signal Item)

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