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Belle Jarniewski recognized by Manitoba Legislature for leadership in combatting antisemitism and raising awareness of the Holocaust

l-r Premier Wab Kinew, Belle Jarniewski, The Honourable Anita Neville, MLA Carla Compton

By MYRON LOVE This year’s community commemoration of Yom Hashoah  began on Erev Yom Hashoah – April 23 – with with the Megillat Hashoah interfaith reading of the Holocaust Scroll at Congregation Shaarey Zedek the night before.
Yom Hashoah, Thursday, April 24, began, as usual, in the morning with  B’nai Brith’s “Unto Everyone There is a Name” – at the Legislature – during which members of our community – including a group of Grade 11 students from Gray Academy – and leaders of the greater community took turns reading out the names of relatives of local Holocaust survivors.
Gray Academy Grade 11 and 12 students also participated in the Jewish Federation of Winnipeg’s annual public commemorative service over the noon hour – also inside the Legislative Building – with students Alex Stoller and Aaron Greaves leading the 200 or so attendees in  singing our national anthem and Hatikvah. Later in the program, they also performed “April Wind.”
Political leaders representing the three levels of Government and Jewish Federation leaders  paid their respects leading to the service’s climax – the candle lighting. The ceremony was introduced by Belle Jarniewski, the executive director of the Jewish Heritage Society of Western Canada– with local survivors Saul and Rachel Fink, Susan Garfield, Faye Hoch, Edith Kimelman and Nehama Reuter participating.
The service ended with the traditional El Malei Rachamim prayer (recited by Congegaton Etz Chayim Chazan Tracy Kasner) and Kaddish, led by Rabbi Yossi Benarroch of Adas Yeshurun Herzlia.

This year’s Yom Hashoah commemoration concluded with a special honour for Belle Jarniewski who, later in the afternoon, was publicly recognized in the Legislature for her leadership in Holocaust awareness and the ongoing fight against antisemitism.
In recommending her for special recognition in the Legislature, Tuxedo MLA Carla Compton noted how Jarniewski’s upbringing as the daughter of Holocaust survivors instilled in her a passion for tikkun olam and spurred her to dedicate her life to teach people of all ages about the Holocaust and other genocides.
“Through her work as executive director of the Jewish Heritage Centre of Western Canada,” Compton noted, “Belle brings education about the Holocaust to thousands of students, teachers, administrators and professional groups each year.  She has partnered with Manitoba Education and Training numerous times. She is also a writer who has been published in numerous Canadian, Israeli and European newspapers.”
Compton cited, in particular, Jarniewski’s 2010 book, “Voices of Winnipeg Holocaust Survivors,” which documents the histories of 73 local survivors before, during and after the Shoah and can be found in the libraries of every secondary school in Manitoba and in university and national libraries in several countries.

“At a time when antisemitism is on the rise, we must do whatever we can to combat it,” Compton stated. “Belle is doing this great work every day. Today, on Yom Hashoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, I cannot think of a better person to celebrate and honour.”
In response to this most recent honour, Jarniewski stated that she “feels tremendously humbled and honoured by Tuxedo MLA Carla Compton’s Member Statement in the Legislature about me. Carla has been a true friend, supporter, and ally to our community.”
She added that she met Compton when the latter was running for office about a year ago in the byelection to replace the former MLA from Tuxedo and former premier, Heather Stefanson.
“I feel very fortunate to be able to honour the memory of my parents and that of the many members of my family who were murdered in the Shoah – through my work. I’m sure my mom (Sylvia) and dad (Samuel) would never have  imagined that our provincial government would one day rise to  honour their daughter for working to combat antisemitism and remembering the Holocaust.” 
As mentioned earlier, this was the most recent of several awards that Jarniewski has received over the past few months.  Last month, she was one of several Jewish Winnipeggers who received a King Charles III Coronation medal.  Hers was presented by the Manitoba Government.
Last September, our Jewish Federation – at the annual Shem Tov Awards evening – bestowed on her the Larry Hurtig Communal Professional Award in recognition of her outsized leadership role in Winnipeg, nationally and internationally, in preserving the memory of the Holocaust and fighting antisemitism.
 “About 15 years ago,” she recalled at that time, “Joe Riesenbach, a survivor, reached out to me to help move a project forward that had literally been collecting dust. Before I knew it, I was a member of the Holocaust Education committee and was then named to  the federally appointed delegation to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA), as a member of the Academic Working Group, the Education Working Group and the Committee on Antisemitism and Holocaust Denial. The committee elaborated the first intergovernmental definition of anti-Semitism, adopted by consensus at the 2016 IHRA plenary. “

Through her work on Holocaust preservation and education, she was introduced to the Jewish Heritage Centre of Western Canada. She was appointed the JHCWC’s executive director in 2018.
“The Jewish Heritage Centre is the key to our past and our future,” she noted.  Exploring our archive is like walking back in time. It’s a treasure trove reflecting the incredible history and diversity of our wonderful Jewish community stretching back 125 years- the challenges and the many triumphs that have shaped who we are today. As the saying goes, you need to know the past to understand the present.
 “The Winnipeg I grew up in was a golden age for Jews-a tapestry of multiculturalism with shared values,” she continued.  “We thought that the kind of antisemitism earlier generations had faced was gone forever. While we may not be able to bring back the wonder years, we must stand united as a community and be strong in our convictions.”
Jarniewski is particularly pleased with the recent announcement, made by our provincial government on Yom Hashoah, reiterating its new partnership with the Jewish Heritage Centre of Western Canada to put into place Premier Wab Kinew’s earlier promise to create and roll out a Holocaust education curriculum in Manitoba schools.  
In an April 24 press release, Kinew said that “we are one Manitoba that cannot be divided by hatred. Now, more than ever, we must honour the diversity and inclusivity in our province and commit to learning the lessons of history so that they cannot be repeated. Learning lessons from the past protects some of the intrinsic values of our province – diversity, inclusion and human rights. The best way to uphold that basic understanding is to help foster these values in our young people.” 

Beginning in the fall, the grades 6, 9 and 11, social studies curriculum will be updated to include mandatory Holocaust education in all schools across the province. 
The Jewish Heritage Centre of Western Canada has been tasked to develop new curriculum guidance on Holocaust education, including implementation tools, supports and resources.
“Recent surveys have demonstrated that most Canadian students know very little about the Holocaust,” said Jarniewski. “With increased hate-fueled violence and incidents of antisemitism, Holocaust education is a key tool for countering prejudice and cultivating inclusion. We at the Jewish Heritage Centre of Western Canada are tremendously grateful for the opportunity to partner with the Manitoba government in strengthening Holocaust education in Manitoba through the creation of a mandated curriculum. We know that Holocaust education encourages critical thinking and reflection on how individuals could or should act in society and provides important lessons from the past to learn for the present and the future.”

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Former Winnipegger Ezra Glinter wins Canadian Jewish Literary Award

Ezra Glinter/cover of his biography of the late Rebbe Menachem Schneerson

By BERNIE BELLAN (with files from Myron Love)
Former Winnipegger Ezra Glinter, the New York-based son of Nancy and Harry Glinter, is the winner of one of this year’s Canadian Jewish Literary Awards in the category of biography. This will be the 11th year that Canadian Jewish Literary Awards will have been handed out. There are a total of nine award altogether.

According to a press release issued by the Canadian Jewish Literary Awards, the purpose of the awards is to “recognize and reward the finest Canadian writing on Jewish themes and subjects. Winners have been selected in fiction, biography, memoir, poetry, Yiddish, Jewish culture, scholarship, books for youth, and the third Irving Abella Award in History.”

Here’s what the press release announcing the awards had to say about Ezra Glinter’s biography of the late Lubavitcher Rebbe: “Last October, former Winnipegger Ezra Glinter published ‘Becoming the Messiah: The Life and Times of Menachem Mendel Schneerson,’ the first biography of Rabbi Schneerson to combine a nonpartisan view of his life, work, and impact with an insider’s understanding of the ideology that drove him and that continues to inspire the Chabad-Lubavitch movement today.

” ‘Menachem Mendel Schneerson: Becoming the Messiah’ (Yale University Press: Jewish Series) is a highly readable, non-partisan biography that allows the reader to understand the gifts, the accomplishments and perhaps the limitations of a man admired by Jews and non-Jews alike. It places Schneerson within the intellectual context of Hasidism and the historical context of Eastern European Jewry. It follows him through his educational journey, surprisingly, in secular institutions in Berlin and Paris that continued alongside his religious studies. It delves into the politics of leadership and succession within the Lubavitch Hasidic movement and Schneerson’s role in establishing Chabad/Lubavitch in America. Its distinctive ideology is at the centre of a worldwide Jewish outreach program with the Rebbe as its sage and sometimes messianic figure. The photograph on the cover has become a meme signifying both the Hasidic movement that Schneerson led as Rebbe and the messianic beliefs and aspirations of his followers, including arguably of himself.”

This past March Myron Love wrote about Glinter’s book in anticipation of Glinter’s appearance here at the Limmud Festival of Learning.
Love wrote: “The New York-based son of Nancy and Harry Glinter has had an interesting life journey of his own – a journey that has included his own immersion for several years in the Orthodox world – making him an ideal individual to explore the Rebbe’s life and  work and impact on Judaism.


“ ‘It was helpful that I could apply the skills that I learned in Yeshiva to the research,’ Glinter notes. 
The fact that he is also self-taught in Yiddish was also helpful.”
“Glinter is a graduate of Talmud Torah.  At the age of  16, Glinter chose to pursue a more religious lifestyle.  With his parents’ support, he enrolled in Ner Yisroel in Baltimore.
 In 2004, after four years in yeshiva, he enrolled at McGill, graduating with a BA in English (in 2008), followed by a year at New York University.  Since then, he has pursued a career as a freelance journalist.  For five years, he served as deputy arts director for the Jewish Daily Forward. Over the past eight years, he has contributed book, theatre and arts reviews and lifestyle stories to numerous prestigious  American publications, as well as the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, and the Paris Review.


“The Schneerson biography is his second book.   In 2016, he published ‘Have I Got a Story for You’ – a compilation of 42 stories – published in Yiddish in The Forward over its almost 130—year history.  


“The stories are an assortment of wartime novellas, avant-garde fiction, and satirical sketches about immigrant life in New York – with short biographies of the contributors. Glinter served as editor of the project – with  the stories being translated into English by leading Yiddish translators who were able to capture the sound of the authors and the subtleties of nuance and context.


“Glinter notes that he spent four years doing the research for his current book.  He reports that his Shneerson biography has been generally well-received – although, he adds, there haven’t been a lot of reviews.


“ ‘It seems that both followers of Chabad and secular readers appreciate the book,’ he comments.
 For the past two years, he has been working as the senior staff writer and editor for the National Yiddish Book Centre, which is located in Amherst, Massachusetts.  ‘We have our own press and newsletter,’ he points out.  ‘We translate newly published Yiddish works into English.’ ”  
 

If you would like to receive a link to view the  Canadian Jewish Literary Awards or if you would like to register to attend the awards or simply to obtain more information, go to https://cjlawards.ca/

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Gustavo Zentner talks about his role as CIJA Vice-President for Manitoba and Saskatchewan

By BERNIE BELLAN Gustavo Zentner has played many roles since arriving in Winnipeg from his native Argentina in the late 1990s.
In a May 2022 article written for The Jewish Post & News by Myron Love, Love wrote this about Zentner, who had just become President of the Jewish Federation of Winnipeg at the time:
“The new president of the Jewish Federation of Winnipeg – who originally hails from the city of Corrientes in northeastern Argentina – notes that his great-grandfather, among the earliest Jewish immigrants to the country, was one of the founding members of the organized Jewish community and its cemetery – and his mother was the first (and thus far still the only) female to lead the community.
‘My earliest memories are of my mother always chairing meetings of the Federation,’ he recalls.
Thus, it is no surprise that Zentner threw himself into volunteering with the Jewish Federation of Winnipeg very soon after he arrived in our community – among the wave of Jews from Argentina who immigrated here 20–25 years ago.
‘I was delighted to come to Winnipeg,’ the new Federation president said. ‘I found a warm and welcoming community and was happy to contribute in any way I could.’ Zentner added, ‘This is a wonderful community, and I believe that everyone counts. Every person has a story to tell and something to contribute. Let’s make sure everyone is part of the conversation.’
As a board member, Zentner has, over the past 15 years, chaired first the Human Resources Committee, followed by the Community Planning and Allocations Committee, and most recently served as Treasurer, chairing the Finance and Audit Committees. He has volunteered with many other organizations; no doubt that experience will serve him well as he builds bridges throughout the community.
In his business career, Zentner was the president of InterPOC, an international business consultancy, and Honorary Consul of Brazil in Manitoba. Zentner places a lot of emphasis on consultation and planning.”
It was during his term as President of the Federation, in the immediate aftermath of the October 7, 2023 Hamas massacre, that Zentner played a pivotal role in rallying not only members of the Jewish community, but also members of the broader Winnipeg community, in support of Israel. Zentner headed a Manitoba government secretariat dealing with economic diplomacy and worked with many organizations developing trade and investment relations.
That year, Zentner chaired three major rallies: the first at the Asper Campus in October, when more than 2,000 individuals gathered on the campus lawn; a second at the Manitoba Legislature; and a third in the Rady JCC gym, held in memory of the late Vivian Silver.
Each time, Zentner struck just the right chord, demonstrating eloquence and a sincere passion for Israel and the Jewish community. In 2024, he developed strong lines of communication with various levels of government to raise awareness about the surge in antisemitism that followed the October 7 attack. He was especially successful in forming a strong bond with then–Winnipeg Police Service Chief Danny Smyth, along with other WPS members, to respond to and, where possible, prevent antisemitic incidents in the city.
Thus, it was no surprise that shortly after completing his term as Federation President, Zentner assumed a new role as Vice-President for Manitoba and Saskatchewan for the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA).
On September 25, Zentner spoke at the Remis Forum Luncheon, where he outlined his role with CIJA.
Zentner began by describing his firsthand experience with terrorism as a young Argentine Jew during the 1990s:
“I was there when there were two terrorist attacks – on March 17, 1992, and July 18, 1994. That forged my Jewish identity and my commitment to becoming more visible in terms of leadership in the Jewish community, while building a business or working for others or government. I understood that antisemitism shouldn’t define me; instead, it highlighted a path for my involvement in open society, celebrating the contributions of those who came before me – our leaders who built community and led countries.”
While much of his talk focused on the need for Winnipeg Jews to support Israel and engage younger generations, Zentner also explained CIJA’s mission and his particular role within the organization.
“Our main business is Canadian Jewish advocacy,” he said. “CIJA is the advocacy agent of Jewish federations across the country.”
The head office of CIJA is located in Toronto. Zentner noted that the organization’s President and CEO, Noah Shack, made his first official visit to Winnipeg shortly after assuming his new role.
“We met with Premier Kinew, Mayor Gillingham, MP Ben Carr, and with community organizations, funders, and allies,” Zentner said.
In addition to Winnipeg, CIJA has staff in Montreal, Ottawa, and Vancouver.
“Our core objective today is to combat antisemitism across Canada,” Zentner stated.
In addition, CIJA consults with other Jewish advocacy organizations worldwide in a group known as the “J7,” modeled after the G7 economic alliance.
“Canada’s is one of the seven largest Jewish communities in the world,” he explained. “Our counterparts include Argentina, Australia, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States. When the Prime Minister of Australia or Great Britain is considering a policy, we engage in discussion with our counterparts so we can anticipate and respond—not only to support another Jewish community abroad, but also to understand the implications for Canada.”
Zentner also noted that CIJA represents Holocaust survivors in Canada through the Claims Conference.
When it comes to combating antisemitism, he emphasized, it cannot be left to one organization alone.
“In Canada, antisemitism has to be confronted by society at large, not exclusively by the Jewish community,” he said. “Working closely with the Jewish Federation, other organizations, volunteer groups, and individuals is the only way forward.”
“The ideal scenario is one where we identify advocacy channels, messaging, and issues, and support organizations and individuals to advance our cause—protecting Jewish life and ensuring that Jews have access to all aspects of society, free from intimidation, harassment, or hostility.”
We are placing a strong emphasis on community partnerships and recently celebrated a meaningful example through the Asper Community Shabbat program. The Gwen Secter Creative Living Centre and CIJA co-hosted a special Shabbat gathering with members of Indigenous communities, including First Nations Elders, representatives from the Manitoba Métis Federation, the Inuit community, and the Southern Chiefs’ Organization.
As CIJA’s representative, Zentner described his approach to working with governments, the Winnipeg Police Service, and other law enforcement agencies:
“As the advocacy agency for the federation system, we support Jewish organizations and individuals when they need advocacy or policy change. Our work includes engaging with the City of Winnipeg and the Province of Manitoba, driving accountability and action when our community is attacked or discriminated against.”
He added that he has been direct in telling officials, particularly the police, to take concrete action against antisemitism.
“To do that, we consult and engage with law enforcement on an ongoing basis,” he said. “When it comes to defending Jewish members of the community, we look to law enforcement to do that for us. At the same time, the community can play an important role through volunteers and professional programs through the Jewish Security Network.”
Zentner clarified that asking governments to protect Jewish Canadians is not a special plea for the community:
“We’re not telling civil society to defend the Jews,” he said. “We’re saying: defend Canadian citizens, Canadian values, and minority groups under attack.”
A second objective, Zentner explained, is revitalizing partnerships with Israel so that governments can maintain “positive, healthy relationships” with the Jewish state.
“In my role, I’m responsible for ensuring that we have viable, credible, open lines of meaningful engagement with all levels of government. That is not easy. We hope that the U.S.-led peace plan will open opportunities to reimagine and strengthen Canada–Israel friendship and collaboration. A recent example was the official visit of H.E. Iddo Moed to Saskatchewan, advancing economic diplomacy, collaboration, and market diversification opportunities for both countries.”
A third component of his work, he said, is “community mobilization”—educating and activating members of the Jewish community.
“This is where I spend a lot of time speaking with members of our community—those born here and those who immigrated from elsewhere, like me. There is a large South American Jewish community that began with the Federation’s Grow Winnipeg initiative 25 years ago, as well as significant Hebrew-speaking folks from Israel and Russia. These communities bring valuable lived experience in facing antisemitism and security challenges. Working with them and mobilizing their networks gives us greater access to the broader community.”
Zentner also highlighted CIJA’s ongoing advocacy efforts:
“We advocate for Jewish life, protecting synagogues, community centres, and schools, and influencing policy,” he said, citing the federal government’s recent passage of Bill C-9, which strengthens laws against hate crimes.
Zentner also addressed the federal government’s recent decision to recognize a Palestinian state, pointing to their communication with the PMO:
“Recognition cannot come without clear conditions for Palestinian statehood,” he said. “We have been communicating with Prime Minister Carney since he first signalled that intent in July, to ensure it was not a unilateral, pre-emptive gift to Hamas. CIJA advocates not only for Israel or the Jewish community, but for upholding Canadian values.”
Another aspect of CIJA’s work, Zentner added, is providing antisemitism training and Holocaust education.
“We support organizations qualified to deliver training for all levels of government and civil society. Currently, we are working with the provincial government, the Civil Service Commission, and others to increase training opportunities and accountability, ensuring anti-racism policies are in place and enforced.”
During the Q&A, Zentner discussed CIJA’s consultations with police during Folklorama, when regular pro-Palestinian protests occurred outside the Asper Campus.
“We reached an understanding to ensure that, whether through permits or other mechanisms, such protests would not take place immediately outside the campus in the future,” he said, adding that the Winnipeg Police Service has committed to a stronger presence and more effective action next year.
To advance these advocacy projects, he emphasized, CIJA works collaboratively with the Jewish Federation, Asper Campus, Rady JCC, and community representatives who share their perspectives with police leadership.
At the close of his remarks, Zentner returned to his personal story, recalling that his family left Argentina following two terrorist attacks against Jews in 1992 and 1994.
“We must not go into a dark space,” he said. “That’s my role every day—and it’s a difficult role. But I won’t let that define who I am or how we define our community.”
He noted that collective advocacy has already produced tangible results, such as the provincial government’s appointment of a hate crimes prosecutor, commitments to hate training across public institutions, and increased financial support for Jewish organizations in Winnipeg resulting from a first time ever pre-budget consultation held with the province earlier in the year. CIJA has also worked with the City of Winnipeg on measures to protect Jewish institutions from hostile demonstrations and to ensure that publicly funded cultural organizations do not engage in antisemitic programming.
“Our community is not alone,” Zentner concluded. “We have countless allies who actively support our right to exist—here at home and in Israel. The Jewish community has played a significant role in building this country and contributing to all aspects of life. We need to continue engaging allies to stand visibly and vocally with us today.
I believe we all have a role to play in improving Jewish life in Canada and supporting the relationship between our community, Canada, and Israel. There is truly no work I could imagine more meaningful or impactful than serving our community, advancing our advocacy, strengthening government relations, and expanding our partnerships.
We are resilient, strong, and proud of our Jewish identity, and our relationship with Israel, as the homeland of the Jewish nation.”

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New play structure – “Gan Reut” (Friendship Garden) opens at Asper Campus

By BERNIE BELLAN It was a gorgeous Friday afternoon, October 3, when Lori Binder, Gray Academy Head of School (also Board of Jewish Education CEO) welcomed about 40 individuals to the opening of a brand new play structure on the Asper Campus – situated exactly where the old play structure (which had opened in 1997 with the opening of the campus) had been.
Most of the individuals who were there that day had played a role helping to see the new play structure built – either as donors, or as members of organizations that had participated in the planning and construction of the new play structure.

Gray Academy CEO Lori Binder

As Binder explained, “We wanted to call this the Friendship Garden. We wanted it to have a Hebrew name. ‘Reut’ – play, is the language of friendship and it’s also the language of learning. And so today for the very first time, as our kids were watching the structure be built – and that too was also an amazing learning tool, they began to learn to use the structure.”

Why was there a need for a new playground, some might wonder – when the old one was only 28 years old?

Binder cited several reasons for wanting a new play structure: “A lot of injuries were happening because there was pea gravel, and the pea gravel was surrounded by a border of wood. And if you did not have the ability to step over or walk through the pea gravel, you could potentially have an injury.”
She added that “pea gravel is only used in 3% of playgrounds today because you might skid and need a bandaid or have a cut.”

“But we also recognized that with the broken structure and the inability for all children in our community to play we wanted to begin to envision a new structure,” Binder added.

The actual project took shape in a relatively short period of time. Design and construction was handled by a company known as Playgrounds R Us. President of the company, Matt Lacroix, noted that “typically a playground of not even this size” would take much longer to plan and build.
“We typically work with schools probably three to five years, sometimes two. So, from start to finish, for us to start a year and a half ago to now is pretty phenomenal,” Lacroix observed.

The structure can even accommodate a child in a wheelchair – as seen in the photo above, where the young girl seated has casts on both one of her arms and one of her legs

There are many new innovations included in Gan Reut, including the resilient rubber foundation, the handicap accessible play structures (that can even accommodate children in wheelchairs) and, on an unexpectedly hot October day – something that proved to be most welcome: shade everywhere you went.

Getting the project done required cooperation among Gray Academy, the Rady JCC, and the Asper Campus. When Binder first approached the Jewish Foundation for funding assistance, however, she said that initially, “we got denied.” However, rather than that being an impediment to moving forward, Binder said “it turned out to be a blessing.”

The reason, she explained, is the Jewish Foundation “plays such an integral role in matching us with potential donors, helping us bring something to light or getting something started.”
In the case of the playground project, it was the Rich family, led by Gavin Rich, who stepped up as lead donors. There were many other donors as well. (You can see all the donors’ names in the accompanying photo.) Also, the Jewish Foundation did come through with a grant – for the rubber foundation.

Names of all the donors

Binder spoke of the important role that play serves in children’s development: “Diane Ackerman states that play is the brain’s favourite way of learning. And if you go into the daycare or into any of our early childhood classrooms, you will see that they learn through play. Dr. Stewart Brown notes that nothing lights up a child’s brain-like play. And I bet some of you will want to also play because even at as adults, we like to play.”

The blue and white colour of the playground was also a deliberate choice, Binder noted. “Blue and white,” she suggested, was “very purposely chosen to match the colour of the Israeli flag and give us a reminder every day of coming to this amazing Jewish community campus.”

When it came to planning what would go into the playground, Binder thanked Rob Berkowits from the Rady JCC and Curtis Martin from the Asper Jewish Community Campus, “who were along for the journey…We also have many of our educators, an occupational therapist, early childhood specialists, elementary specialists, student life coordinators, all coming together with all of the different ideas.”

“I have to say it is overwhelming,” Binder added. “I’ve not really been involved in such a renovation project; it’s hard to make decisions. You can have a million different kinds of playgrounds.”

Not only will the playground, however, serve as a major enhancement to be enjoyed by students at Gray Academy and the Rady JCC daycare during weekdays, it will be open to everyone in the community 24/7, Binder noted.

Rady JCC CEO Rob Berkowits

Following Binder’s remarks, attendees heard from Rob Berkowits, CEO of the Rady JCC, who acknowledged the key role Binder had played in bringing the project to fruition: “I want to extend a heartfelt thanks to Lori Binder, Head of School at Gray Academy, for unwavering leadership in bringing this vision to life.”

Member of Asper Jewish Community Campus Board Jill Winograd

Finally, Jill Winograd, who was representing the Asper Jewish Community Campus, offered remarks: “Spaces like this are more than slides or swings. They’re about belonging, imagination, and giving kids a safe place to grow together. So this project wasn’t about starting fresh, but renewal, taking something well used.

“So what makes this playground matter isn’t just the newer equipment or the safer surfaces, but the thoughtfulness behind it. Accessible roots, quiet corners. And spaces that welcome kids, parents and grandparents together. It’s built for inclusion and community. And I think grandparents is such a key word here because it’s really so lovely to see from our sponsors how many are in memory of grandparents and how special that time is at the playground for them.”

Ribbon cutting by Gavin Rich and Marni Slonim

And, with that – and a ceremonial ribbon cutting by Gavin Rich and Marni Slonim, Grade 2 students from Gray Academy descended upon the structure – many with parents in tow, to demonstrate all the many features of the beautiful new playground.

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