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Celebrating Chanukah 2007 in Saddam Hussein’s Republican Palace, who would think? Yet tonight inside a marble encrusted hall in Baghdad, we lit the eighth light of a hand-made, 6-foot tall menorah. We prayed in Hebrew, joyfully sang a medley of Chanukah songs, ate latkes, and best of all, we were Jews together in the land of our earliest forefathers.
The Jewish community at the US Embassy in Baghdad is growing and thriving to such an extent that we now reliably form a minyan. We call ourselves B’nai Baghdad—a diverse group of US and Coalition uniformed service members and civilians stationed in the International Zone (IZ), known colloquially as the “green zone,” an enclave in central Baghdad that houses Iraqi government officials, various embassies, military headquarters, and international aid organizations.
The Republican Palace, now the temporary home of the US Embassy, is nestled in a scenic bend of the Tigris River, the view unfortunately hidden behind tall blast barriers. It is the largest of the palaces in the IZ and formerly housed the family of Saddam Hussein. But this year it houses our menorah!
Read the rest of the article at Aish...
A Jews in Green reader is currently conducting research for a book, and would like input from Jewish women in uniform.
From this site alone, I know so many female Jewish service members (and those who are prior service) with great stories to tell. For the sake of email security, contact and we’ll forward your experiences directly to the author.
Go for it! We have so many strong and amazing Jewish women in uniform, that I often wish we could conceive an addendum to Aishes Chayil.
In an excellently written and very amusing article in the World Jewish Digest, Alison Buckholtz encapsulates the difficulties Jewish service members can face in more remote duty stations, and by cataloging her family’s efforts to bring yiddishkeit to their military community. Sans crucifix…
From the article:
So as we drove down our new street in Anacortes, it wasn’t the extravagant, blooming landscaping that caught my eye, nor the swing set waiting to give our children a ride to the sky. It was the large brass mezuzah at the entrance of our neighbors’ home.
I breathed a sigh of relief. We had met very few other Jews in the military, but the lack of a Jewish military community had rarely affected our lives. We’d been fortunate to make good friends during my husband’s many tours of duty in a variety of places around the world, and the issue of religion never crossed our minds. Given our children’s growing awareness of their surroundings, however, I worried about how would we mark the holidays in a town with very few Jews and whether our kids would have any Jewish friends.
And yet, here was a mezuzah right across the street! It seemed that my fears were unfounded—at least until darkness fell.
Because that was when those neighbors flipped the switch on their six-foot-tall crucifix. Beaming from an oversized Palladian window, the multicolored cross bathed our yard in light. As we later discovered, our perfectly friendly neighbors were committed Christians who hung a mezuzah to bring an extra measure of holiness to their home.
That cross taught me a lesson: if my husband and I were going to create a haimishe atmosphere for our children in this far-off corner of the United States, we’d have to do it all on our own.

From the Jerusalem Post -
A Torah rescued from Lithuania has a home on the aircraft carrier Harry S. Truman.
The carrier is one of the few Navy vessels to have its own Torah. Few ships are large enough to need one, said Sam Werbel, an organizer of a dedication ceremony Sunday attended by 500 community members and dignitaries. The audience included Holocaust survivors.
“This is not a ceremony alone,” said Mark E. Talisman, founder and president of the Project Judaica Foundation. “It’s about humanity or a lack thereof. It’s about all of us understanding the dignity of human life.“‘
This dedication is significant for another reason:
On May 14, 1948, 11 minutes after the nation of Israel was created, President Truman recognized it diplomatically. Israel’s first president, Chaim Weizmann, thanked Truman with a Torah that now belongs to the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library.
From Canadian Jewish News - Lt. Laurie Zimmet of Los Angeles, an observant Jew of Los Angeles, California, organized a seder over Passover and erected a menorah in one of Saddam’s former palaces.
This story in the Canadian Jewish News is quite fascinating and worth the read.
Colin Wolf being profiled by Israel Television, along with 1LT Adam Tiffen from the MD ANG. I am proud of them.
Gen. Robert Magnus is assistant commandant of the Marine Corps.
By Suzanne Kurtz
Situated deep within the E-ring of the Pentagon, the spacious office suite of Marine Corps Gen. Robert Magnus is surprisingly quiet. Uniformed aides work purposefully outside, while Magnus reminisces about his childhood.
He recalls his boyhood idol, a family friend who regaled him with stories of sinking World War II ships. But that veteran could not have imagined how such stories would inspire a small Jewish boy to scale the heights of the U.S. military.
When he assumed the duties of assistant commandant of the Marine Corps in September 2005, Magnus, 59, became second-in-command of 180,000 Marines and one of only five four-star generals in the Corps.
Despite a 38-year career in the military – where “almost all Marines’ accents start to drift down toward North Carolina, especially aviators,” he says—a faint New York accent belies his roots.
By Dr. Alex Grobman, author of Rekindling the Flame: American Jewish Chaplains and the Survivors of European Jewry, 1944-1948.
The American Jewish Historical Society’s exhibit “Particular Responsibility: The Making of the U.S. Army Talmud,” has brought a very important part of the history of the Jews in post-war Europe to the attention of the public. The chapter they cover, however, is incomplete.
After the war, observant Jewish survivors were in need of religious articles-- fringed garments (tzitzit) prayer shawls, phylacteries (tefillin), candles for candle lighting, holiday prayer books, daily prayer books, the Torah and religious texts.
There were very few of these items available. In the late 1930’s, the Nazis began confiscating Jewish books and artifacts in Germany. During the war, the Nazis extended the operation, using German military forces and other Nazi agencies and individuals to seize Jewish books, archives and ritual objects wherever they went--from “occupied Ukraine to the French-Spanish border, and from Greece to the British Isle of Man.”1 Rabbinical and communal libraries from Italy, an Axis power, were also looted. 2 Books were stolen from the Ecole Rabbinique, the Israelitische Gemeinde Bibliotek and the Verein fur Judische Geschicte und Literatur of Nurnberg, the Bibliotheca Polska, Alliance Israélite Universelle, and the Rothschild libraries.3
Came across this article, I think it’s great (especially when we supply the Jewish stuff!)
Dee - Jewish Prime Vendor
A “Tent of Peace” On the Korean Peninsula
SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA
By Rebecca Rosenthal
(Original Article)
North Korea’s Kim Jung II may be detonating nukes and playing war games with the international community, but Jewish U.S. troops in South Korea are not in duck-and-cover mode. With Uncle Sam’s blessing, they’re out in the sukkah Chaplain (Col.) Jacob Goldstein built on the Yongsan Military Base in Seoul.
Plans had been to construct the nylon and aluminum frame sukkah booth in the DMZ. Just before Yom Kippur, days before the North Korean dictator boasted of an underground nuclear test, plans changed. By phone with Lubavitch.com, Goldstein kept mum on the shift in location except for explaining, “We decided this base is much better, more centrally located, and people can stay overnight here.”
Sukkot guests – military personnel based at the DMZ or elsewhere in the region - are comfortably accommodated in the base’s 45-bed spiritual retreat center. Over Rosh Hashannah, 130 Jews prayed together on base. Israel’s Ambassador to South Korea Yigal Caspi and American Ambassador Alexander Vershbow joined in the prayers as did six Jewish Fulbright scholars studying in Korea, and a professor who pinch-hit as cantor. A Canadian Jewish business traveler arrived at the last minute and received military clearance to attend on base after locating Yongsan’s High Holiday services through the Jewish OnStar, more commonly known as the worldwide Chabad-Lubavitch network.
Spending the High Holidays in Iraq is becoming a regular occurrence these days. While the novelty of celebrating such an important Jewish holiday in an Arab land might have worn off, the level of support for those deployed there has only strengthened. A substantial force of reserve, active duty, and volunteer rabbis will be heading to the Sandbox in order to officiate services and meet the needs of our Jewish service members in harm’s way.
Looking back to last year, Captain Perl shares his tale of his Rosh Hashanah joy:
“I took a helicopter flight with a Sergeant from Camp Taji to Baghdad, about a ten minute ride. In Baghdad, we were met at the helipad by Rabbi Schranz, a Navy LT COL Chaplain.
“One of the congregants made an Ark for the Torah Handmade Ark, and we had candles Candlelighting, a Kiddush cup, Machzors, challah, apples, honey, what more could we ask for? After services Friday night, we made Kiddush and had some challah with honey, and then about 14 of us went to dinner together in the army mess hall.“When the Rabbi said this would be a Rosh Hashanah service we would always remember, I knew he was right. Although we were not in imminent danger, we had Military Police guarding the Chapel during our services as a safety precaution. Right in the middle of services, we heard the loud booms of some Improvised Explosive Devices (road side bombs) going off in the distance. On the second day, we heard 15 big booms from some artillery rounds being shot at the bad guys. The Chapel shook with each artillery round that was fired - we just kept on going like it was thunder from a rain shower.
Read Captain Perl’s full story here.
This kind of experience is nothing new. U.S. service men and women have been serving in war during the holidays since there has been a U.S. military. The Jewish Journal of Los Angeles has an article you must read that tells the holiday stories of four service members in four different wars.
Ralph Goodman recited those words in a hillside tent in southeastern Belgium. Warren Zundell’s “shul” was a patch of no-man’s-land somewhere in North Korea. For Robert Cirkus, it was a jungle clearing in the bug-infested Central Highlands of Viet Nam. And for Lee Mish, it was Saddam Hussein’s former palace.
The four men have never met, but they share an uncommon bond. They represent four generations of Jewish servicemen for whom the High Holidays—and their signature Unetanah Tokef prayer—took on new meaning.
Read the full article here.