Networking Tip of The Week – Givers Gain
CJE SeniorLife Elects New Leadership at 41st Annual Meeting


The leadership of CJE SeniorLife elected a new slate of officers for the 2014 fiscal year at the organization’s 41st Annual Meeting, held on Tuesday, October 22, at the Weinberg Community for Senior Living in Deerfield.
New members of the Board of Directors, each slated for a three-year term:
- Robert T. Bernstein, of Northbrook, practices labor and employment law and is a partner with Laner Muchin, Ltd. He is also a co-founder of the Chicago Business Resource Group, which raises money for various non-profits among other endeavors.
- Samuel P. Brilliant, of Lake Forest, is a Certified Public Accountant and Vice President Strategic Initiatives of Hollister Incorporated, a leading private, employee-owned global healthcare products manufacturer and marketer.
- Steve C. Drucker, of Northbrook, is an accomplished senior level healthcare executive with over 40 years of progressively responsible management experience. He is one of the longest-tenured chief executive officers of any hospital in the Chicagoland area, having served as CEO for 19 years, including 17 at one institution. He recently retired as CEO of Loretto Hospital.
- Jeffrey Graff, of Bannockburn, is an Attending Physician, Division of Emergency Medicine at NorthShore University HealthSystem. He is a Clinical Professor, University of Chicago, Pritzker School of Medicine, and currently a fellow of the American College of Emergency Physicians as well as a member of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.
- Mark Grazman, of Chicago, is a partner at GH School for Healthy Living, a social enterprise that delivers medical exercise therapy integrated with psychological coaching. He has also been active in developing exercise clinical trials for people over 55, and helped his father launch a peer-to-peer coaching program for the Alzheimer’s Association in St. Louis.
Officers slated for an additional three-year term include:
- Stephen P. Sandler, Board Chair
- Judy L. Smith, Vice Chair
- Alan M. Ellenby, Treasurer
- Vicki Pines, Secretary
Directors slated for an additional three-year term include:
- Marc L. Berman
- Kenneth Lorch
- Leslie Markman-Stern
- David M. Rosenberg
- Linda Soreff Siegel
- Dianne Tesler
- Kalman Wenig
For a full listing of current CJE SeniorLife Board Members, please visit http://cje.net/about-cje/board-members.
To read or download our annual report, please visit http://cje.net/annualreport.
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Since 1972, CJE SeniorLife has enhanced the lives of older adults and their families through an innovative, comprehensive network that includes life enrichment programs, supportive resources, healthcare, research and education. CJE is a partner in serving the community, supported by the Jewish United Fund/Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago. For more information about CJE services, call 773/508-1000 or visit www.cje.net.
Networking and Coffee in Bannockburn
Join many active networkers in sharing trade ideas, developing business growth, & creating job opportunities.
Presentation: “What is Networking and how do I do it right?” with Natalie Blatnick
Refreshments will be served.
Sponsorship opportunities are available – email us here.
Skokie Review: Jewish teens connect to their religion through special group (Go Midwest NCSY!)

Some teenagers recently awoke not far behind the sun to get to school and stayed late through after-school activities that pushed their day toward night.
But there they were later that night Wednesday, not at home relaxing from such a hectic day, but at Skokie’s The Sandwich Club. It was worth it to connect to their Judaism in a way that the National Conference of Synagogue Youth makes possible.
This weekly gathering at the kosher restaurant is only one of the programs sponsored by the ambitious Midwest NCSY, whose regional chapter is located in Skokie.
NCSY Midwest bills itself as “a multi-faceted Jewish Youth group” open to all Jewish youth regardless of background and affiliation.
The organization offers social and educational programming in hundreds of communities across the United States and Canada. The Skokie chapter, which covers Chicago and nearby suburbs, is the largest chapter geographically in the United States.
“NCSY is a leader in bringing unaffiliated youth an awareness of what Judaism is all about,” its leaders say.”For Jewish teenagers, NCSY is a relaxed, fun environment to learn about their own heritage.”
The restaurant was packed with about 30 spirited teenagers — some from public schools like District 219 and others from private Jewish schools like Ida Crown Jewish Academy.
“NCSY is very big into informal education,” said Rabbi Moshe Isenberg, the interim director of Midwest NCSY. “It combines education with social programming. We always like to have a component of education in all of our activities.”
But that education is never formal and rigid.
The weekly Sandwich Club program, called MIE Torah High and funded with the help of Associated Talmud Torahs, is a perfect example. Students come for a short but always relevant discussion, have dinner with their friends and then leave usually in a little bit over an hour.
Sometimes those discussions are led by outside speakers, other times by Isenberg or Skokie chapter NCSY advisers Levi Zeffren or Soshana Friedman.
“Teenagers are the busiest people I know,” Zeffren said. “Their schedules are always busy, but they make time to come here, which shows that it’s important to them.”
“You don’t have to sit in classroom for hours to pick up important Jewish concepts,” Isenberg said. “There’s a social aspect of getting together in this kind of environment, having a brief 15 or 20 minutes of a good concept being taught, and then having dinner. But these guys will go home and remember it.”
During a recent gathering, outside speaker David Strulowitz talked to students about how everything is not what it appears to be.
“The problem is that we have a tendency to pre-judge on a surface level and then we move on,” he told the teenagers.
The conversation progressed to examples about the meaning of miracles and Hanukkah and life in Jerusalem.
“Is Jerusalem holy because the temple was built there or was the temple built there because Jerusalem is holy?” Strulowitz asked.
The answer is that Jerusalem is holy, he said, which is why the temple was built there.
“That’s not generally the way people in the world look at it, but it’s the way we look at it. It’s not arbitrary. Jerusalem is the holy epicenter of the universe. There’s an intrinsic holiness to that place.”
Niles West High School student Emma Lazar joined the local NCSY her sophomore year.
“A lot of my friends did this, and it was really rewarding for them,” she said. “I don’t go to a Jewish high school so it’s a way to stay connected in a way I don’t get in school. This is a very unique experience.”
What makes it a unique experience is that it welcomes all Jewish teenagers no matter how religious. Some go to private school, others go to public school.
“About half of the kids are (Jewish School) kids anyway so they’re already getting half a day of Jewish education,” Zeffren said. “For others, this is their only Jewish education. We’re finding a balance by doing more than Jewish education here. We’re doing inspiration.”
Niles North student David Neuman also joined NCSY to stay connected to Judaism.
“It the connection that’s so important to me,” he said.
For Skokie’s Shana Rosenberg, 16, who attends Ida Crown Jewish Academy, she’s already well connected to her religion. The weekly Sandwich Club visit is not the only NCSY program she attends — she also goes to another weekly program that provides more one-on-one learning opportunities. And she receives daily Jewish education at her school.
“I just love it,” she said about NCSY. “I don’t even think of it as an organization. It’s kind of become a big part of my life. I’m so inspired by everything. I learn with different advisers. I integrate the things I’ve learned into my everyday life.”
NCSY is always reaching out, looking at new programs. It recently began the Jewish Family Experience in Deerfield, which provides Hebrew education for both adults and children. There are NCSY regional gatherings and other activities, as well as summer programs that have helped send teenagers to Israel.
Friedman believes the program works so well because it provides teenagers with adult mentors who are not teachers or parents. They are able to form a special connection, a consistent bond that sustains itself every week. Friedman herself was a student leader in the Skokie chapter as a teenager and now she has become an adult leader.
Leadership is a big goal of the program.
“That’s what we want to see,” Isenberg said. “NCSY is connecting, empowering and inspiring Jewish teenagers. They become responsible adults who stay connected to their Jewish heritage. That’s our mission. That’s what we want to see happen to more teenagers.”
Read more: http://lincolnwood.suntimes.com/people/jyouth-SKO-11282013:article
Wonderful spending time w/ the management and friends of the Double Tree Skokie at Milts BBQ
Motown Legends, “The Temptations” Benefit Concert for Individuals with Developmental Disabilities Raises Over $250,000
Keshet announced today that it raised over $250,000 at its sixth annual benefit concert featuring Grammy Award-winning group, The Temptations, on November 16 at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts in Skokie. All proceeds benefited Keshet’s educational scholarships, vocational training and recreational programs for individuals with developmental disabilities.
“What an inspiring evening! The Temptations brought us back to the magic of Motown with their famous vocal harmonies and dance moves,” says Gil Bathgate, Keshet’s Professional Leadership Board co-chair. “The opening act, Soul Zimra, featured vocals from Keshet program participant, Avi Lesser. Avi’s participation highlighted both the importance and success of Keshet’s programming to the supporters who made our annual concert an evening to remember.”
More than 800 people attended the sold out event, which raised over $250,000 through sponsorships, ticket sales, a raffle, and live auction.
“There are two main reasons why I come back year after to year to Keshet’s annual benefit concert,” says Phil Stern, an annual concert attendee, “The entertainment is always first class and we like to support Keshet. This year’s concert resonated with us more so than past years – seeing a Keshet participant perform in the opening act was truly incredible.”
To learn more about Keshet, visit www.keshet.org or call 847.205.1234.
About Keshet
Keshet: A Rainbow of Hope for Children and Adults with Special Needs is a nationally recognized, state-of-the-art 501 (c)(3) organization, providing community-based educational, recreational, and vocational programs for children, teens and young adults with varying and multiple developmental disabilities. Keshet’s goal is to enable children with disabilities to participate as fully as possible in the mainstream of community life.