Monday, September 14, 2015

For Cuba’s Jews, a rekindling of faith on the island

For Cuba's Jews, a rekindling of faith on the island
New shipments from abroad allow faithful to keep kosher
Cuban athletes participating in Maccabiah Games in Israel
Jewish population now at 1,500, mostly in Havana
BY MIMI WHITEFIELD
mwhitefield@MiamiHerald.com

HAVANA
A few years ago, Adela Dworin noticed a tall stranger in a worn T-shirt
looking around the Beth Shalom synagogue in Havana's Vedado section.

When she greeted him and struck up a conversation, he asked her about
the needs of the Cuban Jewish community. Dworin, now president of El
Patronato, the House of the Cuban Hebrew Community, told him her dream
was to send some 50 Jewish athletes from Cuba to the 19th Maccabiah
Games in July 2013.

He said he wanted to help. Dworin told him the athletes and trainers
needed uniforms but it would cost a great deal of money. Dworin thought
maybe he would offer $10 or $20, if anything.

Then the visitor told her to look more closely at his scruffy shirt. It
said New York Giants. The man then revealed himself as film producer
Steve Tisch, a co-owner and chairman of the football team. He offered to
pay for the uniforms on the spot. They were worn by the first official
Cuban team ever sent to the Maccabiah Games — although individual Cuban
athletes have participated from time to time.

That these Cuban Jewish athletes made it to Jerusalem at all was one
more indication of the rebirth of Cuba's small Jewish community — thanks
to the generosity of Jews from aboard who are helping the revival — and
the government's increased tolerance for religious expression.

At the time of the 1959 Cuban Revolution, there were 15,000 Jews on the
island and five synagogues in Havana, but the community dwindled after
thousands left in the 1960s and death claimed many of the older Jews who
stayed.

The Cuban government has always allowed Jews to practice their religion,
but for decades, until 1985, rabbis weren't allowed on the island to
perform religious ceremonies.

By 1990, there were only about 1,000 Jews left in Cuba, most of them
elderly, and only a handful who remembered the old rituals. Only about
100 people gathered for services on High Holy Days at Beth Shalom.

"Sometimes we couldn't every get a minyan for the High Holidays," Dworin
said.

And services had to be held in a small sanctuary downstairs because the
walls of the main synagogue were riddled with termites and rain came in
through holes in the roof as did birds that sometimes nested and left
droppings all over the seats and floor. Slowly the Cuban Jewish
Community was dying out.

But now it numbers around 1,500 with about 85 percent living in Havana.
There are also Jewish families in Santiago, Camaguey, Santa Clara,
Cienfuegos, Sancti Spiritus, Guantánamo, Holguín and a few other locations.

Dworin traces a significant opening toward religion to Pope John Paul
II's visit in 1998. "During the 1990s, there was an opening for religion
in general, not just for the Catholic Church, especially after John Paul
came," she said. "It used to be that you couldn't be a Communist Party
member or a member of the Young Communist League if you believed in God,
but now things have changed and they must continue to change."

In November 1998, 11 months after John Paul's visit, she and other
religious leaders were invited to meet with Fidel Castro. She asked him
why he had never visited Beth Shalom. He said he had never been invited.
When Dworin said she would invite him to the temple's Hanukkah party,
the Cuban leader asked what Hanukkah was.

"I told him Hanukkah was the revolution of the Jews and he said he would
come," Dworin said. That December, Castro arrived at the party and his
brother Raúl has participated in subsequent Hanukkah candle-lighting
ceremonies.

Now Dworin is looking forward to Pope Francis' arrival in Cuba on
Saturday. "I think it will be very important for Cuba — first of all
because he's a Latin American," she said. "I think he is a pope of our
times and progressive."

Dworin plans to attend "Francisco's" Mass next Sunday in Havana.

In the early decades after the revolution, there was a rift between Jews
who chose to stay and those who left, said Dworin, whose parents came to
Cuba from Poland in the 1930s, fleeing Hitler.

"Many families were divided after the revolution. It was very sad," she
said. "The children left and the parents remained."

But there was a rapprochement as Jewish communities abroad discovered
the efforts Cuban Jews were making to keep traditions alive and began to
reach out to them. "Thanks to them, Judaism exists in Cuba," Dworin said.

The Comite Central Israelita of Mexico, the Canadian Jewish Congress and
the New York-based Appeal of Conscience Foundation helped out by sending
special food for Passover. But matzoh, gelfite fish and kosher chicken
loaf only arrived for special occasions.

Now, shipments from abroad have improved to the point where Dworwin says
she can keep kosher. The government also allows a kosher butcher shop
and Jews get one kilo of kosher meat per month on their ration cards.

Samuel Szteinhendler, a rabbi from Chile, also visits El Patronato every
two months, and the community's young people know the prayers and
blessings for Friday services, too.

The process "of teaching our members to be Jews again" began in the
1990s with the help of the New York-based American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee (JDC), Dworin said. "We now have lay people who
can celebrate bat mitzvahs and bar mitzvahs."

Success also came at the Maccabiah Games. The Cuban team won five medals.

One of the best indicators of the rebirth of Judaism in Cuba is the
young people who now can be seen around the community center. The former
women's gallery in the synagogue has been turned into a Sunday school
classroom for 10- to 12-year-olds.

Downstairs, colorful drawings by younger children commemorating Jewish
holidays and depicting the flag of Israel decorate the walls, and on a
recent afternoon, a group of teenagers hung out in a lounge, watching
videos and using the computer. Eighty children attend the synagogue's
Sunday school, Dworin said. "Now, we have a new generation and they
know a lot about Judaism."

But some younger Jews have chosen to emigrate to Israel. "I'm happy
they're going to Israel but I'm sad because I want the community to grow
and become 15,000 Jews again like it was at the beginning of the
revolution," she said.

One of the biggest transformations has come in the synagogue, which has
been meticulously restored through donations, including those from the
Greater Miami Jewish Federation, the JDC, and The Harry and Jeanette
Weinberg Foundation. The $250,000 restoration included a new roof,
replacing window glass and installing 300 new seats to replace the
seating chewed up by termites.

There also is a pharmacy at El Patronato, thanks to donations from
abroad but it still needs more antibiotics and sugar-free food for young
diabetics. Outside, a van that ferries elderly Jews to services,carries
provisions to those in need and runs other errands is parked. It was
contributed by Bill and Maggie Kaplen, of Tenafly, N.J. and says Kaplen
Van on the back, provoking many questions from passing Cubans who think
the words are Hebrew and want to know the translation, Dworin said.

"We receive many, many visitors now. We aren't isolated any more,"
Dworin said. "We hope that more Jews will visit Cuba with the
normalization of relations between Cuba and the United States."

U.S. Congressional delegations stop by, and U.S. Assistant Secretary of
State Roberta Jacobson, who was the lead U.S. negotiator in the recent
normalization talks, has visited three times, Dworin said.

Tisch still keeps in touch with Dworin via email. He said he hopes to go
to Cuba again before the end of the year to visit her, check up on the
community and experience Cuba now that diplomatic relations between the
United States and Cuba have been restored.

He said he expects to go after the Giants play Tampa in November, or
more likely tack on a trip to Cuba when he comes to Florida for the
team's Dec. 14 game against the Miami Dolphins.

What prompted his Maccabiah Games gift, he said, was that it was a
perfect meshing of his professional and personal life — he has long been
involved in youth sports — and the force of Dworin's personality."She's
charming, passionate and so invested in the Jewish community in Havana,"
he said.

When Dworin explained the need for the uniforms, "in a matter of
seconds, I said, 'Done,'" said Tisch. "It touched me so much. It was
just so meaningful, so symbolic for Jewish athletes to wear the uniforms
from their country in Israel in what is one of the most watched
Olympic-style events in the world.

"I walked out of that temple in my dirty shirt feeling really good,"
Tisch said.

Dworin admits she can be convincing. "I say I have a master's degree in
schorrering [schnorrer is a Yiddish word for beggar or scrounger] but I
am a beggar for good reasons," she said.

Hollywood director and producer Steven Spielberg also stopped by El
Patronato in 2002, leaving a note that is on display. It says: "When I
see how much cultural restoration has been performed by you and others,
it reminds me again why I am so proud to be a Jew."

LOS GIGANTES IN HAVANA?
New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch says he would consider taking the
team to Cuba to play American football.

Asked if, with the renewal of diplomatic relations between the two
countries, the Giants might some day head to Havana for an exhibition
game, Tisch seemed to warm to the possibility. "It's a good idea. It's
worth looking into," he said.

"It would take a lot of organization and preparation," Tisch said,
adding he didn't even know if Cuba has a stadium that could host a
professional football game.

Source: For Cuba's Jews, a rekindling of faith on the island | Miami
Herald -
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/cuba/article35116920.html

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