RASHI, RAMBAM and RAMALAMADINGDONG

A Quizbook of Jewish Trivia Facts & Fun

12/20/2021

The number of COVID cases has increased dramatically across the country. Universities such as Cornell, Georgetown, and Princeton, among others, have gone back to virtual-only classes and exams. The NFL postponed three of this weekend’s games. And in New York City, which saw the positivity rate double over just three days last week, many Broadway shows have canceled performances. In addition, the Radio City Rockettes announced that they have canceled the remainder of their Christmas Spectacular season, which had been scheduled to run through January 2. Which of the following is part of the Jewish history of the Rockettes?

Rockettes by Ralph Daily is licensed under CC BY 2.0

A. One former Jewish member of the troupe, Alyssa Epstein, went on to become a Reform rabbi. Every year since, she has returned for the Rockettes organization’s holiday party where she has led the group in a Chanukkah candle lighting.

B. The Rockettes have performed at many events besides the Christmas Spectacular, including the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, Radio City Easter Pageant, and President Donald Trump’s Inaugural Ball. The group has also been hired to perform at private events including Jared Kushner’s bar mitzvah at the Plaza Hotel in 1994.

C. Christine Frances Masave Horii, a Protestant Japanese-American, who was a Rockette in the 1990’s, later converted to Judaism and moved to Israel, where she now only dances in front of all-female audiences.

D. The Rockettes were conceived of and created by Samuel “Roxy” Rothafel, who was inspired by the group dancing of the hora which he saw and participated in at many bar mitzvahs and weddings.

E. The Jewish co-producer and choreographer of the Rockettes, Leon Leonidoff, also produced a Kol Nidre spectacular that performed at Radio City Music Hall.

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12/13/2021

Five years ago Israel purchased a used jet with the intention of customizing it for the use of the Prime Minister and the President for official travel. Prior to that these officials had been renting commercial planes. While the aircraft’s upgrade has been completed, the plane is still sitting in a hangar and it is not clear if or when the current Prime Minister, Naftali Bennett, or Israel’s president Isaac Hezog will use the craft. While it hasn’t been publicly stated, it is believed that there is reticence because the plane is viewed as a symbol of the corruption of former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, under whose authority the plane was purchased and renovated at a cost of almost $300 million. What do they call this plane, the equivalent of the United States’ Air Force One?

A. Kochav Tzion, Star of Zion.

B. Aliyat Tzion, Rising to Zion.

C. Yonat Tzion, Dove of Zion.

D. Knaf Tzion, Wing of Zion.

E. Bibi’s Follies.

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12/06/2021

Supply chain problems have led to shortages of many consumer products, including computer chips, breakfast cereal, running shoes, paint and more. What product has been in short supply recently which has affected the Jewish community?

Containers by russellstreet  is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

A. Chanukkah candles, causing many consumers to use birthday candles and even votive candles for their Chanukkah menorahs.

B. Cream cheese, leaving New York bagel stores scrambling to be able to fulfill orders for bagels with a shmear.

C. Parchment, which is holding up the production of new Torah scrolls, megillot, and mezuzah scrolls.

D. Kosher meat, resulting in more vegetarian or dairy Shabbat dinners in Jewish households.

E. Common sense and decency among many Republican politicians, who continue to compare COVID restrictions to those imposed on Jews during the Holocaust (just a short list includes Georgia Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, New York gubernatorial candidate Rob Astorino, Maine state Representative Heidi Sampson, Oklahoma Republican Party chairman John Bennett, North Carolina Representative Madison Cawthorn, and Pennsylvania Congressman Scott Perry).

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11/29/2021

Musical theatre lyricist and composer Stephen Sondheim passed away last week at the age of 91. The legendary artist wrote the lyrics for West Side Story and Gypsy, and wrote lyrics and music for many shows including A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, Company, Follies, Sweeney Todd, Sunday in the Park with George, and Into the Woods. He was the winner of multiple Tony and Grammy awards, an Academy Award, and a Pulitzer Prize among others, and he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama. Sondheim, the grandson of German-Jewish immigrants, had no formal Jewish upbringing. However, when asked about his Jewish identity, he replied, “It’s very deep. It’s the fact that so many of the people I admire in the arts are Jewish. And art is as close to a religion as I have.” Sondheim’s upbringing did include attendance at summer sleepaway camp with many other Jewish campers. Where did Sondheim go to summer camp?

Stephen_Sondheim_-_smoking by an Unknown photographer is in the public domain, via Wikimedia Commons 

A. He attended Camp Androscoggin in Maine. The camp focuses on athletics, including archery, tennis, boating, and soccer. Other Jewish attendees over the years at Camp Androscoggin were Alan Jay Lerner, Tom Lehrer, and S.I. Newhouse, Jr.

B. He attended Herzl Camp, a Zionist camp in Webster, Wisconsin, where he learned to play piano. Attending Herzl in other years were Bob Dylan, who learned to play guitar there, and Ethan and Joel Coen, who both focused on photography.

C. He attended Surprise Lake Camp in Cold Spring, New York, where he sang in the camp choir. Other Jewish campers who sang in the choir at other times included Eddie Cantor, Neil Diamond, and Gene Simmons.

D. He attended Interlochen Arts Camp in Interlochen, Michigan. The camp program is centered around musical theatre (which Sondheim concentrated on), plus creative writing, dance, and visual arts. Other Jewish attendees have included actor Tovah Feldshuh and singer Peter Yarrow.

E. He attended Fleet Street Camp in London Town. At camp Sondheim learned to shave and also to bake pies.

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11/21/2021

This year Americans will be celebrating the 400th anniversary of the first Thanksgiving feast which took place in Plymouth Colony in 1621. At that event, roughly 50 Pilgrims came together with more than 100 American Indians to celebrate a successful harvest. There was some concern in the past among Jews as to whether observance of the holiday might violate the proscription against copying “the ways of the Gentiles.” However, the great 20th century Orthodox authorities Rabbi Moshe Feinstein and Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik agreed that the holiday is secular, not Christian, and therefore celebration by Jews is not religiously prohibited. There has been another controversy around the holiday, however. What past Thanksgiving event led a group of rabbis to protest?

A. In the mid to late 1800’s, the largest producers of turkeys were Arkansas and Virginia. Being fresh on the heels of the Civil War, and recognizing that New York had a very sizable hog farming industry, in 1867 Governor Reuben Fenton of New York called on New Yorkers to “punish the people of the states of insurrection, and support the good people of the state of New York, by gracing your Thanksgiving table with ham rather than turkey.” A group of rabbis protested that the governor’s comments were insensitive to the “beliefs of the children of Abraham, who are also good citizens of New York.”

B. In Israel, it is a tradition for the President to attend a Thanksgiving dinner at the United States Embassy. But in 2007, rabbis from a number of Chassidic sects, including the Belz, Ger and Bobov, protested when Israeli President Shimon Peres attended the event. In that year, Thanksgiving happened to fall on the 10th of Tevet, a minor fast day commemorating the siege of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar in 597 BCE. The rabbis did not believe that the Israeli president should have attended a meal celebration on that date, even though only a small number of very religious Israelis observe the fast.

C. In 1868, Pennsylvania Governor John W. Geary issued a proclamation calling on Pennsylvania citizens to celebrate Thanksgiving by praising “the name of God and magnify Him with thanksgiving,” and to pray that “our paths through life may be directed by the example and instructions of the Redeemer, who died that we might enjoy the blessings which temporarily flow therefrom.” All seven of Philadelphia’s rabbis criticized the governor for his exclusion of Israelites, which they said cast “reflections upon thousands, who hold a different creed from that which he avows.”

D. In 2013, Thanksgiving overlapped with Chanukkah, leading many to reference Thanksgivukkah, and to combine the celebrations. Some people served latkes at their Thanksgiving meal, while others lit Chanukkah menorahs shaped like turkeys. Rabbis from the ultra-Orthodox Satmar community in Brooklyn objected to this combining of the holidays, saying that it was a “chillul HaShem” (a profaning of God’s name) to mix the religious and secular holidays.

E. In 2013, Thanksgivukkah was celebrated by many Jews as the two holidays of Thanksgiving and Chanukkah overlapped. Macy’s, the sponsor of the annual Thanksgiving Day Parade, picked up on that theme by including a giant Menurkey balloon, a turkey which featured Chanukkah candles on its back. However, immediately behind that balloon was a float sponsored by Kraft Macaroni and Cheese. This float featured the Cheesasaurus Rex, and rabbis from the Orthodox Union objected to that float’s position right behind the Jewish-themed balloon, as they felt the dinosaur that was covered with cheese violated the Jewish prohibition of mixing meat and milk.

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