When 12-year-old Max Levin was looking for a meaningful way to celebrate his upcoming bar mitzvah, he decided to do a project in Israel that did more than simply mark his coming-of-age ceremony. His decision in 2006 created a unique link between today’s teens and their peers who died in the Holocaust before ever reaching that special milestone.
“I used to come to Israel every year with my parents, partly because of my dad’s work, but mostly because our family is very Zionistic,” says Max, today a 22-year-old paratrooper and officer in the Israel Defense Forces. Max’s father, Bud Levin, is Jewish National Fund (JNF) vice president, Negev and Galil, and oversees organizational efforts in the southern and northern regions of Israel.
In 2006, when the Levin family came to Israel searching for a bar mitzvah project, they eventually honed in on the Golden Books of Honor that JNF keeps at its offices in Jerusalem. Max Levin recalled seeing those volumes that over the years have documented donations to JNF, and that by now contain more than 200,000 inscriptions.
The “Golden Books” comprise the largest registry of names in the history of Zionism and bear testimony to communities since destroyed, to active Zionists, and to Jewish families.
“One of these books contained the names of young people who, during the Holocaust, donated money in honor of their bar mitzvahs. When I asked my dad what happened to them, he told me they all died and that there’s nobody left to remember them. I was very moved and decided that for my project I would make sure that they were remembered,” says Levin, a Los Angeles native who made aliyah in 2012.
To do this, he created the B’nai Mitzvah Remembrance Wall in American Independence Park, located in the verdant Jerusalem hills near Beit Shemesh. The wall is shaped like a Torah scroll, and glass tiles representing donations to JNF are mounted on it, each inscribed with the individual name, hometown, and bar or bat mitzvah date of a modern-day honoree, as well as the name and home country of a “twin” from the Golden Book. Levin’s was the first tile, and he was twinned with Pinchas Cohen of Germany.
“I had two goals in creating the wall. First, I wanted to remember Pinchas and to somehow continue the life that was taken from him. Second, I wanted kids looking for bar or bat mitzvah projects to do the same with other young Holocaust victims and in that way establish a link between them and those who perished,” Levin says.
Since then, more than 150 boys and girls have followed Levin’s lead and commemorated their special day with teens and pre-teens whose names are inscribed in the Golden Book. For those who wish, JNF honors them and their donation with a ceremony at the Wall of Remembrance. One held recently feted four young American cousins, who gathered there with their parents, grandparents, and members of their extended families.
“My tile is going to be here forever and I can come back years from now and show it to my children,” says Katie Kort of Phoenix, whose father, Ted, is a former JNF Arizona Region director. Katie’s brother, Ben, adds, “This gift is meaningful to me because it comes from my grandparents and because they gave it to me during my first time in Israel.”
Levin attributes his appreciation of remembrance to his family. “My grandfather died when I was six, and on his yahrzeit every year we light a candle and speak about him,” he says. “I always felt it was an important and moving way to keep his memory alive.”
That’s why, when he first learned about the young Holocaust victims, Levin’s reaction was almost innate. “I thought it wasn’t right that there was no one left to remember them,” he says.
And with his grandfather in mind, he created a way to do just that.
“Through the Wall of Remembrance, the names and lives of these kids will live on,” says Levin. “This is something I did for Pinchas, and now people are doing it for others. The wall is my contribution to Jewish continuity, and anyone who cares to join me in this commitment is welcome to.”
Learn more about the B’nai Mitzvah Remembrance Wall by searching at JNF.org.
A Lifeline for San Diego’s Poorest Seniors
By Paul Downey, President/CEO of Serving Seniors
For the past 45 years, Serving Seniors has helped San Diego’s most vulnerable seniors remain healthy, independent and active members of the community. Our model of care, which emphasizes collaboration with other charitable organizations, has received national and international recognition. Serving Seniors offers an array of comprehensive services including nutritious meals, care management, health education, affordable housing and lifelong learning opportunities.
Statistics show a startling two in five seniors in San Diego do not have enough money to meet their basic needs like food, rent and medications. The need for a warm meal is often what leads seniors to Serving Seniors and our relationship grows from there. Our services are in high demand because most of our seniors live on $850 per month and are in crisis mode when they arrive. The impact of our programs can be measured in lives saved and changed. We also take great pride that, by keeping seniors healthy, we reduce overall healthcare costs and save taxpayers money.
We also take seriously the responsibility of not just providing direct services but advocating forcefully in Washington and Sacramento for favorable aging policies. I currently serve in leadership positions for several advocacy entities, including the California Commission on Aging, and have been a member of task forces on aging convened by the Jewish Federation and Jewish Community Foundation.
With help from our generous supporters, Serving Seniors helps more than 5,000 seniors a year, but the need for our services will only continue to increase as the aging population grows and available resources dwindle.
Visit ServingSeniors.org to find out how you can get involved and make a difference.
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