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Cheryl Lutts had worked for Philadelphia's Jewish Exponent as director of business for 18 years. The newspaper discovered the fraud only after she was fired for unsatisfactory performance
WHITPAIN Blue Bell resident Lorraine Drobny knows how it feels to be a devoted family member of a senior in need. After experiencing Abramson Senior Careâs services firsthand with her father, and then subsequently holding several leadership positions on Abramson Senior Careâs Board of Trustees, she is well prepared to serve as Chair of Abramsonâs Board. In October 2020, Drobny became the first female to assume this role in the organizationâs 155-year history.
Abramson Senior Care is a connected array of services that span the aging process and work together to create a stronger, more seamless senior care experience. Over the past year, as the pandemic has focused our attention on the vulnerability of seniors, the importance of the services that Abramson Senior Care provides has never been more painfully apparent.
Places of worship, other faith-based organizations get long awaited vaccine doses to distribute
Places of worship, other faith-based organizations get long awaited vaccine doses to distribute
Come this Saturday the Grace Center Church in Southwest Philadelphia will transform its massive parking lot into a drive-up vaccine clinic.
PHILADELPHIA - Come this Saturday the Grace Center Church in Southwest Philadelphia will transform its massive parking lot into a drive-up vaccine clinic.
Lead Pastor Eric Simmons put out a social media blast for registration. I think the influence in terms of the church with the vaccination process is people look at us as being on the forefront of it, he said.
Keshira haLev Fife is well known in the Jewish community of her native Pittsburgh, where she conducts Shabbat services and Hebrew school classes. But she’s not your average prayer leader or educator.
As a self-described “proud Jewish woman of color,” she said she “sprinkles, sparkles, disrupts expectations and offers blessings in the service of the Divine.”
She is a kohenet (Hebrew priestess), part of a small but growing international movement of mostly queer women, including self-defined witches, who emphasize the feminine aspects of “earth-based transformative Jewish ritual.”
Kohenet Keshira, as she is known, is the founder and leader of an independent, post-denominational community, Kesher Pittsburgh. Many of its devotees are previously unaffiliated multifaith or multiracial individuals, couples or families drawn to its message of openness and acceptance.