Having become unfortunately accustomed to the majority of non-Orthodox Jews neglecting their heritage, the trailer to the Netflix film You People, directed by Black-ish creator Kenya Barris and co-written by Barris and Jonah Hill, seemed promising as a romantic comedy between a Jewish man and his Black girlfriend, with hip-hop music playing in the background.

There are more than a thousand Jewish families in West Hempstead, and among those known in all its shuls are Ann & Mark Koffsky and their three children. This past week, they offered comfort and mourned together with them following the tragic death of their daughter Adira, 18, in Jerusalem last Wednesday. She was killed when a 76-year-old driver lost control of her car, which then rolled towards Koffsky, killing her, a passenger in the car, and injuring the driver.

Is West Hempstead Next?

The name of a civic leader was removed from a street last week in Malverne, after a report by school students revealed that Paul Lindner was a Klan leader whose local chapter twice burned an African American orphanage and kidnapped a Jewish business owner in the 1920s.

How do you explain the world’s oldest form of hatred to today’s young audiences? With an author who knows how to combine a narrative with memorable visuals and short visuals. The task was handled ably by Israel B. Bitton, a marketing and advocacy professional who devoted two years to produce A Brief and Visual History of Anti-Semitism, published by Gefen.

The second yahrzeit for Rabbi Yehuda Kelemer zt”l, the late rav of the Young Israel of West Hempstead, was marked by a busy weekend that included a parent-child tish on Friday night with singer Eitan Katz, who also led Shabbos davening, and Kollel Yom Rishon with two leading speakers from Yeshiva University. The events were attended by members of all West Hempstead shuls, demonstrating Rabbi Kelemer’s influence across the community.

Gene Richter, 90, has been a Queens resident for most of his life. A veteran of the United States Navy, he speaks of his experiences to schools and shuls. One such encounter inspired a team of teens to depict his story in comic form in a new children’s magazine published by the Youth Department at the Young Israel of Queens Valley.