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With move back to Calgary, Joyce Kerr’s life comes full circle

By MYRON LOVE While it has often been said that you can’t go home again, Joyce Kerr proves you can. After 35 years working in our Jewish school system, the long-time teacher and school administrator is set to return to her hometown, Calgary, and the Calgary Jewish Academy.
“I have mixed emotions about leaving,” Kerr says. “On one hand, I am happy to have the opportunity to move back to Calgary and reunite with my father and mother-in-law. On the other hand, I will miss our tremendous community here. I have loved teaching here. And I have loved my students, families, and wonderful colleagues.”
Kerr observes that she has always viewed Gray Academy of Jewish Education and Ramah – where she taught before – as integral parts of the community. “I really appreciate that parents have been willing to share their children – our future community leaders – with me each and every day,” she adds. “I have learned a lot from the students over the years.”
As already noted, Kerr grew up in Calgary. Her father, Bill Aizanman, is the Life Time Honorary President of the Chevra Kadisha after serving for 25 years, and her late mother, Lynne Aizanman, served as president of the sisterhood at the Shaarey Zedek in Calgary. She cites both as significant role models for herself and her siblings, instilling a sense of community responsibility from a young age.
Kerr attended the Calgary Hebrew School, now called Calgary Jewish Academy, until graduation at the end of Grade 9 (the final year of day school), and continued attending supplemental high school Hebrew courses through Grade 12. She was the only graduate in that class. Kerr also began her teaching career at the Calgary Jewish Academy in 1987.
It was a job offer for her husband Jeff, a licensed optician, that led them to Winnipeg many years ago, and now, in a twist of fate, they are returning to Calgary because she has been offered a new position, Principal/Head of School at CJA.
“Jeff came to Winnipeg at the beginning of January in 1988,” she recalls. “I moved in with my baba and stayed behind to finish the school year. I didn’t want to leave my students.”
Right near the end of June,” she recounts, “I received a call from Miriam Maltz, who was Ramah’s principal at the time. She wanted to hire me. I started as an educational assistant for Paulette Migie, and a year later, I stepped into a new role as a Judaic Studies teacher for kindergarten and Grade 1.”
She continued to teach kindergarten and Grade 1 after the move to Gray Academy in 1997. She later added Judaic Studies co-ordinator, shared with Lori Binder, to her responsibilities and, in 2005, became vice-principal. In 2015, Kerr became the elementary school’s principal upon Hart Sera’s retirement.
Throughout her time in Winnipeg, in addition to her work in the school system, Kerr has volunteered for other community organizations – notably having served on the Jewish Child and Family Service board.
Though she was not looking for a new job, Kerr explains that the opportunity seemed too perfect not to consider; she at least had to apply.
“Someone sent me the notice that the Calgary Jewish Academy was looking for a new principal and head of school,” she says. “I saw it as an opportunity to go full circle – to return to the community and the school that helped shape my life – as well as to be back with family that we have lived away from for more than three decades.” She notes that neither her sister nor brother live in Calgary.
Kerr reports that Gray Academy colleagues scheduled a goodbye party for her on June 28, also her birthday, open to the community. “I have had so many emails and shows of love and support from former students, parents, and colleagues throughout North America,” she notes. “The response has really been special.”
She adds that she always calls each of her students by their Hebrew names – even 35 years after graduation – and that one former student who reached out to her signed with his Hebrew name.
A further irony in Morah Joyce’s story is that, in most cases, the kids move away, not the parents. She notes that not only is her son, Josh, staying – he works for the Jewish Foundation of Manitoba – but that her daughter, Lindsay, is moving back here from Vancouver, where she was most recently Director of Student Life at Hillel BC, which serves multiple campuses across the lower mainland and Vanco
“Living away from both of my kids will be an adjustment, but one I know is worth making,” says Kerr. “We have more than enough family group chats to remind us we’re never too far away.”

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First year medical student Tim Rozovsky founds new association for local Jewish medical students

By MYRON LOVE In the face of a concerning surge in antisemitism over the past nearly three years, I am happy to report a good news story in that regard.  Tim Rozovsky, the founder of the new Jewish Medical Students’ Association of Manitoba, reports that he and his fellow Jewish students enrolled in the University of Manitoba’s Max Rady College of Medicine are not experiencing any significant issues involving antisemitism.
Hopefully, the matter of the notorious Med school Valedictorian who used his podium to attack Israel was a one-off.
“My goal in forming the Jewish Medical Students’ Association of Manitoba,” says the first year medical student, “was to create a safe, supportive environment for my fellow Jewish medical students.”
He reports that the current first year class at the school has eight Jewish students – an increase over more recent years – with maybe a dozen more in the other years.
For a new medical student, Rozovsky already has an impressive resume. He was born in Russia and grew up in Israel. After the completion of his army service in 2018, the then-22-year-old rejoined his parents, Dr. Katya and Alexander, who had moved to Winnipeg a few years before.  
Prior to coming to Winnipeg, Rozovsky had completed a personal trainer program out of The Academic College at Wingate in Jerusalem. Some readers may know the young man from his work as a Master Personal Trainer at the Rady JCC.
Shortly after arriving here, he enrolled in a kinesiology program at the University of Winnipeg. He graduated with a BKin Honours in 2023 and did post graduate work at the University of Manitoba. Last fall, he received his MSc in Physiology and Pathophysiology  – earning two gold medals, along with 32 awards and scholarships in the process.
Rozovsky says that it was his mother who inspired him to pursue a career in medicine. Dr. Katya Rozovsky is an associate professor at the University of Manitoba and an attending radiologist, specializing in pediatric diagnostic imaging. 
(Tim also adds that his wife, Irina Gelzin, whom he married about a year ago, is training to be a nurse.)
Insofar as the  Jewish Medical Students’ Association of Manitoba is concerned, Rozovky reports that the group gets together multiple times a year. One of its programs was a joint Chanukah celebration with the Jewish Physicians Association of Manitoba.
There was also a joint program with the Christian Medical and Dental Students’ Association of Manitoba.
“More recently, we have been helping prospective Jewish medical students with their applications,” he says. “Hopefully we will be able to get together over the summer with the incoming Jewish students.”
As to his own future plans, Rozovsky notes that it is too early for him to be deciding on a specialty.  “My goal,” he says, “is to work hard and get good grades and become the best doctor that I can be.”

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Gray Academy to Represent Manitoba at National Reach for the Top Competition

Gray Academy staff (l-r): Daniele Miller, Lindsey Leipsic, Nick Maier

By NOAH STRAUSS Posted June 6) Gray Academy’s Reach for the Top team is headed to Moncton, New Brunswick, to represent Manitoba at the National Reach for the Top tournament.
Reach for the Top is a Canadian school league that quizzes teenagers on a variety of different topics, from science and history to pop culture. Reach started out in 1961 in Vancouver, where a local CBC station broadcasted the new show; it eventually became a national broadcast starting in 1966. Alex Trebek, who famously hosted Jeopardy!, started out by hosting Reach for the Top.
Gray Academy’s very own team, made up of Grade 7 and 8 students, will travel to Moncton, New Brunswick, to compete as Team Manitoba. By winning the provincial Reach tournament, they secured their spot in the national competition.
Faculty members at Gray Academy are very supportive of the program. The Jewish Post spoke with three different staff members at the school. Coach and high school teacher Danielle Miller says she is excited for the trip; although she will not be accompanying the team herself, shehas coached them all year.
“This year we had over 20 students come to the club to join us, they practice twice a cycle at lunch,” Miller said. Due to the large turnout this year, two teams had to be formed. At lunch practices, students split into two teams of four where each player has a buzzer. The two teams compete to see who can answer the most questions correctly.
One of the two teams did exceptionally well at various tournaments throughout the year and will be traveling to nationals as the sole team representing Manitoba.
Co-coach Micah Doerksen described Reach as a great academic competition where young minds are tested on various topics through quick,fast-paced questions.
High school guidance counselor Lindsey Leipsic said, “We have athletes, non-athletes, we have students who are really involved and students who are not as involved at school, and we have quiet leaders, and we’ve seen friendships be built in Reach.” Some of her favorite memories of Reach involve seeing students from across Winnipeg come to Gray Academy and bond with one another. Lev Chisick, who is competing at nationals, agreed, saying, “Moncton is going to strengthen our school spirit and make us a better team.”
As the junior team makes their way to Moncton, the senior team will head to provincials. Later this week, students from the senior team will travel to Virden, Manitoba, to compete at the provincial level. The team qualified after placing high enough at their most recent tournament, which took place at St. Paul’s.
Confidence is high as the school heads into these final tournaments. When Nath Goldenberg, who is also competing at nationals, was asked what he is most looking forward to, his answer was short and sweet:“Winning.”

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