Leonard Reitstein – Mr Chess

Leonard Reitstein
LEONARD RAYMOND REITSTEIN – OBITUARY

Born in Cape Town on 6th June 1928

Died in Cape Town on 2nd August 2019

Age 91

With daughter, Jill Rabinowitz

August saw the passing of Leonard R Reitstein, aged 91, much admired and respected member of the Cape Town Jewish community, particularly Temple Israel, and as South Africa’s “Mr Chess”. 

Leonard’s father Julian was a founder member of the Progressive Judaism movement in Cape Town in the 1940s and brought his son in, where he rose to be President of Temple Israel. Leonard’s admiration and enthusiasm for the Reform movement and his high regard for Rabbi David Sherman, saw him fully committed, and even more so when he and his wife Ruth moved next door to the Temple in Wynberg! Besides presidential and general duties, his contribution included his role as Editor of the annual magazine, and leader of many shiurim and lay services.

Leonard was a man of great intellect, blessed with a sharp mind, quick wit and erudition. His general knowledge was wide and often obscure, his interests ranging from music (he hosted classical soirees), maths (he calculated without a calculator), history, religion, literature, cricket and cryptic crosswords (he called himself a cruciverbalist). He delighted nothing more than to encourage his grandchildren to discuss with and question or challenge him on all topics.

In the words of Rabbi Richard Newman, “He made me think, made me see things from a different perspective, made me realise that here was a man to whom I could turn, for advice and counsel. Here was a man whose knowledge was only superceded by his wisdom. There was a wealth of life, welling forth, a font of meaningful words backed up by well-tempered thought. Here was a saintlike mortal, stretching out his hands to those around him.”

Leonard is regarded as the person who has made the greatest and longest impact on South African chess. Former SA champion David Friedgood describes him as “truly South Africa’s Mr Chess”, with a background as player and correspondence player, captain of the SA team to various internationals and Olympiads, and organizer of major chess events, as well as a stint as President of the SA Chess Federation. Leonard was a chess resource, buying and selling books and publications, and at one stage his home library was regarded as the largest in the southern hemisphere! He single-handedly compiled The South African Chess Player magazine, publishing it for over thirty years, and wrote several Test Your Chess books and other works. His magnum opus, A History of Chess in South Africa, was a labour of love for the game and sold internationally, its author a major force and reputation.

Dr Lyndon Bouah, Director of Sport & Recreation, Western Cape Government, has been appointed as the custodian of Leonard’s “chess world”. He says, “As I have known Mr Reitstein for over twenty years I was honoured and privileged to be requested to be the custodian. The chess material consists of books, magazines and particularly hundreds of copies of The South African Chess Player, documents, minute books, photographs and memorabilia.” These are being collated and digitised for a future public display in Leonard’s honour.

Leonard Raymond Reitstein was born in Cape Town on 6th June 1928. He was the third child of Polish born Julian, and first of English born Greta. His older siblings were Claude and Raie (Gurland) and his younger, Maurice, all deceased.

He attended Sea Point Boys and Oudsthoorn School, and graduated as a bookkeeper accountant. Most of his working life was at Blumberg & Kleinman and for the Jewish Board of Deputies.

Leonard married Ruth Saevitzon of Wynberg in 1953; a long, happy and devoted partnership that lasted over sixty five years. They lived in Newlands and Wynberg, and moved into Highlands House two years ago.

Leonard is survived by his wife Ruth and his children Jillian, Anthony and Michelle. He has five grandchildren and seven great grandchildren, living as far afield as Cape Town, Ra’anana, Sydney, Perth and London!

Jill Rabinowitz, daughter

Perth, Australia

6th September 2019

The Cape Jewish Chronicle

 

Rapport

Translation using Google Translate:

A life: SA Chess loses a giant with Reitstein’s death

 By Herman Lategan 13 October 2019 00:02

A highly respected member of the local Jewish community and the man who for many years served as South Africa’s Mr. Chess, Leonard Reitstein, recently died in Cape Town. He was 91.

Leonard Reitstein: A versatile person.

Former SA chess champion David Friedgood says Reitstein is considered the person who may have had the biggest influence on chess on the ground so far.

Not only was he an active player, he won several tournaments, as far back as 1961. Reitstein was also president of the Cape Chess Club, as well as the SA Chess Federation.

He played this game in various places around the world, even in Cuba in 1966, where he met Fidel Castro. There he was the captain of the SA chess team during an Olympics.

His contribution was dynamic. He has published numerous books on the subject, including Test Your Chess. Reitstein’s magnum opus, however, was the coffee table book A History of Chess in South Africa, which received international recognition.

He has published numerous books on chess.

His collection of books, photos and memorabilia is believed to be the largest in the Southern Hemisphere on the subject. His collection also eventually developed into a bookstore in the small, a home business he operated from his home in Newlands, Cape Town.

“My dad also published The South African Chess Player magazine himself,” says his son Anthony. “The whole family really helped. We posted them to people. There were many! One child had to put the magazines in the envelopes, another had to put up the seals, then another had to lick and apply the envelopes again. My mother wrote the addresses in a neat handwriting on it. It was a whole family affair.”

“My parents also loved horse racing. I remember how he took us to the stables as kids to talk to the horses and caress them. ”

His daughter Jill from Perth: “He was a connoisseur of English and knew words in all their shades. He completed every crossword puzzle imaginable in record times. His general knowledge was not only wide, but also completely obscure.

“Throughout the day he worked at Blumberg & Kleinman in the city, where people could buy porcelain ware, cutlery and even diamonds. Then for the Jewish Board of Deputies. He was charming and always wore a neat suit, with a nice tie. “

Reitstein and Fidel Castro.

Reitstein’s father, Julian, was a founding member of the Progressive Judaism Movement in the 1940s in Cape Town and has been a faithful and devoted member of Temple Israel all his life. He took his faith seriously and lived it to the full, so much so that the family later moved out of Newlands into Wynberg next to the temple.

Reitstein was versatile. He could make complicated sums without the help of a calculator. Their home became known for classical soirees, where afterwards talks were held on history, religion, cricket and every subject imaginable.

Born in Cape Town, Reitstein attended school at Sea Point Primary School for Boys and later Oudtshoorn High School. His father was a Polish refugee and businessman and his mother, Greta, an artist and poet. He married his wife, Ruth Saevitzon, in 1953.

He is survived by his wife and three children. Reitstein has five grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren, all over the world from Cape Town to Ra’anana in Israel, Sydney and Perth in Australia and London. † Leonard Raymond Reitstein, born June 6, 1928, passed away August 2, 2019.

With children Michelle, Anthony & Jill and wife Ruth nee Saevitzon 
J-WIRE AusTralia

http://www.jwire.com.au/mr-chess-passed-away-in-south-africa/

J-Wire
The Cape Times

The Argus

Where’s Wally (and Bernice)!

With Jill, and our visitors, Bernice & Wally Kegel, from Seattle

A tourist drive around Perth and Fremantle

Fremantle

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Old Synagogue, Fremantle

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Notre Dame University – Manjaree Place

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STUNNING ABORIGINAL MURAL AT NOTRE DAME UNI

STUNNING ABORIGINAL MURAL AT NOTRE DAME UNI

    It was full house at Fremantle Notre Dame University’s Manjaree Place this morning for the unveiling of the major 5.5 x 2.2 metre  Manjaree Mia Kaart Aboriginal painting. The wo…

Source: freoview.wordpress.com/2017/12/06/stunning-aboriginal-mural-at-notre-dame-uni/

Cottesloe

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Trigg Beach

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Hillarys Boat Harbour

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WE ARE HERE! Project Event #1

WE ARE HERE!- Professional learning event for teachers

WE ARE HERE!- Professional learning event for teachers

ECU’s School of Education is proud to host a free professional learning seminar to introduce teachers and educators to a social justice project designed to inspire young people with the confidence and ability to be “upstanders” rather than “bystanders”; to stand up in the face of prejudice and oppression in their communities. The WE ARE HERE! project is sponsored by funding provided by the United States Government. Using the stories of the Partisans in the forests during World War 2, WE ARE HERE! empowers young people to take steps to confront and combat acts of discriminatory prejudice and injustice with their voices and their actions. WE ARE HERE! aims to enable the individual to make a real difference towards the goals of social justice. For more information about WE ARE HERE! please visit the WAH Foundation website. About this seminar The seminar will be facilitated by Nance Adler, a highly experienced educator from the U.S. Nance is a Museum Teachers Fellow at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and a Powell Fellow at the Holocaust Centre for Humanity in Seattle.This professional learning seminar will also feature the short film “Ties That Bind” – a conversation between Aboriginal “upstander” William Cooper’s grandson Uncle Boydie and a Holocaust survivor . Attendees will be provided with a lesson plan and other resources to incorporate WE ARE HERE! into your classroom activities. This is a free professional learning event. Registrations and afternoon tea will begin at 3.30pm and the seminar will commence at 4.00pm – 5.00pm.

Source: www.eventbrite.com.au/e/we-are-here-professional-learning-event-for-teachers-tickets-63414518532?utm_campaign=reminder_attendees_48hour_email

Upcoming Talks In Israel

KDS Linksfield

Jerusalem,  23 June 19

Telfed Jerusalem Wits Zionist Council Event June 23rd 2019 PDF
Jerusalem Talk 19

 

Ra’anana 27 June 19

Eli Rabinowitz 27 June 2019
William Cooper – The Upstander
Jesse John Fleay, ECU
Bialik Toronto
Herzlia CT
Herzlia & World ORT collaboration
Beis Aharon Bielski School and Orphanage | Yad Yisroel in Pinsk

For more information, visit

WE ARE HERE! An Education Program That Inspires Upstanders

WE ARE HERE! For Upstanders

For Upstanders

Source: wah.foundation

The Maccabean, 7 June 2019

Lena Goldstein Passes Away

Shoah survivor Lena Goldstein passes away at 100 – The Australian Jewish News

Shoah survivor Lena Goldstein passes away at 100 – The Australian Jewish News

TWO weeks after lighting a candle at Yom Hashoah, 100-year-old Lena Goldstein died peacefully in her sleep on Tuesday night.

Source: www.jewishnews.net.au/shoah-survivor-lena-goldstein-passes-away-at-100/89950

In Lena Goldstein’s story, we journey from her youth in Lublin Poland, through her life and deathstruggle in the Warsaw Ghetto, to a new life in Australia. Weaving this within the historical context, author Barbara Miller creates a gripping account of how Lena survived the lowest ebb in Jewishhistory. Lena’s story will inspire the next generation to be upstanders, and always to have hope!

Eli Rabinowitz, Educator, genealogist and filmmaker – WE ARE HERE! Foundation

Book Launch Sydney Jewish Museum 10.2.19
Back Cover If I Survive

 

Moshe Fiszman

 I never met Moshe Fiszman, but I have watched and studied a 9 minute video of Moshe and Uncle Boydie, produced by Viv Parry, which has greatly influenced me. This film will serve as an introduction to an inspiring global project being launched in Australia in August. See below.

The following is what Viv wrote for me this morning, the day Moshe was buried in Melbourne, Australia,

Moshe Fiszman passed away aged 97  May 13, 2019
 
Moshe Fiszman, at 17 years of age, was a young man who suddenly became the  sole carer for his family in the ghetto at Radom, Poland.
 
For the next five years Moshe was interned as a slave labourer at five different Concentration camps including Auschwitz.
 
As Moshe would say “How I survived I will never know “.  He did survive and went on to be a caring husband of his wife now 99 and a loving father to his two daughters.
 
Moshe gave his testimony on a regular basis to the Aboriginal men in drug and alcohol recovery as part of the program I devised to help these men learn about William Cooper and to witness a role model in Moshe, a man who survived against all the odds.
 
Moshe told of the day, lying in the snow with the last of the survivors after a final “Death“ march, he realised they were finally free; the Nazis had fled, fearing the advancing Russian Army.
 
Freedom after five and a half years meant no family, no country, no future.  He wept for twenty four hours, then picked himself up and decided to go on.  His mission was to search for any remaining family members. 
 
Most importantly, though, his mission was to tell what really happened during the Holocaust, to make sure those who were murdered were honoured by his telling their story and to keep their memory alive.
 
Now it is Moshe’s story that must be kept alive. I am hopeful in my own small way, through my film Ties that Bind, Moshe’s story will inspire and will be shared, and it will honour his family and all those who perished, for generations to come.
 
May his name and his memory be as a blessing.
 
Viv Parry
Melbourne, Australia
 

Ties That Bind

Ties That Bind

A short documentary conversation between Uncle Boydie (Alf Turner) – grandson of Indigenous activist William Cooper, and Moishe Fiszman – a Holocaust survivor … This movie was mad…

Source: elirab.me/ties-that-bind/

Filmed by Justin Olstein

Ties that Bind forms an important introduction to our WE ARE HERE! Project for Upstanders, starting in Australia in August 2019:

WE ARE HERE! For Upstanders

WE ARE HERE! For Upstanders

Source: wah.foundation

This program is sponsored by a cultural grant from the U.S. Department of State

Moshe Bernstein

 

 

 

 

Rabbi Dr Moshe Yehuda Bernstein is a native of Quincy, Massachusetts. Prior to moving to Australia in 1993, he studied for nine years in the Klausenberg Rabbinic Academy in Safed, Israel, concurrently receiving a diploma in Rabbinic Studies from the Eeyun ha-Talmud Institute in Monsey.

After coming to Australia, he worked as Director of Jewish Studies for secondary schools in Sydney and, later, after settling in Perth in 1996, at Carmel School for eight years. He has lectured extensively at schools throughout Western Australia and in adult education programmes for both the Jewish community and general public. He also served on the executive board of the Curriculum Council and the Council of Christians and Jews Western Australia. In 2010 he completed a BA majoring in Mandarin Chinese at Curtin University, spending a semester on exchange at Beijing Language and Culture University.

In 2016 at UWA he completed his doctoral thesis, Globalization, Translation and Transmission: Sino-Judaic Cultural Identity in Kaifeng, China,examining the cultural identity of the Chinese Jews. It was published by Peter Lang AG in January 2017. Moshe is currently a research fellow at Curtin University, working on a historical fiction at the China Australia Writing Centre, in collaboration with Fudan University in Shanghai. He is a member of the International Advisory Board of the Sino-Judaic Institute in Pal Alto, California and has lectured extensively in Europe, Australia, the US and China on themes relating to Sino-Judaic history and culture. He has also published several journals articles and contributed to various academic anthologies. He currently resides in Roleystone, Western Australia with his wife Batsheva.

Dr Bernstein’s Papers:

https://independent.academia.edu/MosheYehudaBernstein%E7%8E%89%E6%A2%A6%E8%88%8D

Amazon links to Dr Bernstein’s thesis and two anthologies to which he has contributed:

https://www.amazon.com/Globalization-Translation-Transmission-Sino-Judaic-Cultural/dp/3034325436

https://www.amazon.com/Chinese-Jews-Kaifeng-Millennium-Adaptation/dp/1498550266

https://www.amazon.com/Contemporary-Jewish-Identities-Post-Modern-Society/dp/1618114204

Staff profile at Curtin University. Scroll down to “Overview”:

https://staffportal.curtin.edu.au/staff/profile/view/Moshe.Bernstein

Coming Up

 
 
 
Coming Up in the UK, Europe and Israel in June, Europe and the US in July, and Australia in August!
 
I will be participating in:
 
a commemoration in June in Birzai & a shabbat weekend in Kedainiai, Lithuania;
 
an eight day educators’ seminar in June at the International School of Holocaust Studies at Yad Vashem; 
 
a 100-strong gathering in Novogrudok, Belarus in July, where a full and interesting program will include learning about the Partisans’ Song, and then singing it in the Naliboki Forest, where the Bielski’s lived and hid from 1942 to 1944; 
 
the IAJGS39 conference in Cleveland in July, where I am giving two presentations, including one as part of the educators program – see below; and
 
WE ARE HERE! An Education Program That Inspires Upstanders in Australia in August.This educational program, which promotes universal human rights and inclusive development, is funded by the US Dept of State, and brings Holocaust educator and specialist Nance Adler of Seattle to Australia.
 
 

 

Busy times ahead!

Chag Pesach Sameach and Happy Easter
 
 
 
Please contact me for further details.
 
Best regards
 
Eli
 
 
———————————
 
Further details:
 
I have been invited to be one of six speakers who will presentat the Educators Program at IAJGS39 (International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies) in Cleveland OH, USA on 28 July, the opening event at thisconference.
 

My topic is:


Projects That Draw Youth to Ancestral Roots.

The details appear below
 
My second talk is on 30 July on the WE ARE HERE! Project for Upstanders. 
 
 
 
 

A Special Program for Jewish Educators

Sunday, July 28, 2019

The IAJGS International Conference on Jewish Genealogy is being held in Cleveland for the first time. It features a special day designed specifically for Jewish educators!

Who Should Attend

Educators who:

  • Work in formal and informal settings
  • Work in day or synagogue schools
  • Create and facilitate family and intergenerational programs
  • Teach history
  • Teach writing and research skills

Sunday, July 28th is the date. The program begins with breakfast and a keynote by noted Jewish educator and genealogist Carol Oseran Starin, former Vice-President of the Jewish Federation of Seattle. Participants may select from two workshop time periods, each with a choice from three nationally known presenters, followed by lunch and idea exchanges.

Program Details

Goal

To introduce educators to how Jewish genealogy strengthens students’ Jewish identity through the experience of researching their roots and how their history shaped family and community.

Schedule

8:30–9:00 Registration and light breakfast
9:00–10:00 Keynote speaker: What is Jewish about Jewish Genealogy, Carol Starin
10:15–11:15 Three workshop sessions
  1. Jewish Genealogy for Beginners, Maurice Kices
  2. Designing an “Introduction to Jewish Genealogy” Program: Being Ready for Surprises, Sylvia Abrams
  3. Projects That Draw Youth to Ancestral Roots, Eli Rabinowitz
11:30–12:30 Three workshop sessions
  1. DNA as a Genealogy Tool, Gil Bardige
  2. JewishGen—Everything You Need to Know, Phyllis Kramer
  3. How to Get Kids Involved in Family History, Daniel Horowitz
12:30–1:15 Lunch and “tachlis” how to implement ideas
1:15–2:45 Participation in SHARE Fair and Exhibits
2:45–4:00 Education track participants are invited to the conference keynote address
 
 
Title of the Presentation  Projects That Will Draw Our Youth Back To Their Shtetl 
Short Title  Visit the shtetl: the virtual way forward! 
Type of Session  Presentation 
Topic or Category  Jewish History and Culture 
Methodology and Mechanics 
Telling Your Family Story 
Using Technology for Research 
   
Brief Abstract of Your Presentation  Since 2011, and after nine trips to Poland and Lithuania, as well as travel to Belarus, Germany, Russia, Latvia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Turkey and Israel, I have compiled a sizeable collection of information, stories, photos and contacts. My focus is not only about my own family history, but that of Jewish cultural history, general history, as well as contemporary Jewish life. Working with schools in these countries, I have been able to bring students together online to collaborate and to exchange information about the lands of their heritage.

My presentation takes you on a tour of how you can use this body of work to further your own knowledge on family research, Jewish cultural heritage and Jewish life. This includes a tour of my 86 JewishGen KehilaLink websites, including 55 in Europe, plus over 600 posts and pages on my Tangential Travel and Jewish Life website and associated social media. 
Presentation is best suited for  All skills 
How will your presentation help your intended audience?  Expand research skills 
Develop interview skills 
Teach best practices 
Expand social media skills 
Teach innovative strategies 
Assist with personal research 
 
 
 
Second Talk – Tuesday 30 July 2019
Title of the Presentation  WE ARE HERE! Project: Becoming An Upstander Rather Than A Bystander 
Short Title  How Jewish Partisans Inspire Our Youth To Stand Up 
Type of Session  Presentation 
Topic or Category  Genealogy and Jewish History Related to WW2 
Jewish History and Culture 
Methodology and Mechanics 
Preserving our Jewish Past 
   
Brief Abstract of Your Presentation  WE ARE HERE! Project
This project seeks to inspire in young people the confidence and ability to stand up in the face of prejudice and oppression.
Encourages and inspires Upstanders through the stories of Jewish Partisans and the learning of Zog Nit Keynmol
Provides role models for standing up for yourself in the face of prejudice, hatred, violence and evil
Shows that an individual can make a difference – regardless of their personal circumstances
Translates the stories of Jewish Partisans and the words of Zog Nit Keynmol into a universal message of hope and inspiration for all who are victims of prejudice and oppression
Empowers young people to create the change they want to see in their communities and the world.
Teaches that while the partisans used weapons – they were fighting the Nazis – you can fight oppression with only your voice and presence 
Presentation is best suited for  All skills 
How will your presentation help your intended audience?  Teach best practices 
Expand social media skills 
Teach innovative strategies 


With Heather Blumenthal and Richard Freedman at the Cape Town Holocaust & Genocide Centre

http://ctholocaust.co.za