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Author: Rebeca Kuropatwa

On becoming a great leader

On becoming a great leader

Sydney Finkelstein’s most recent book is Superbosses. (photo from Penguin/Random House Canada)

While the target audience for Sydney Finkelstein’s newest book, Superbosses: How Exceptional Bosses Master the Flow of Talent, is businesspeople, it is clear that his ideas carry well into many aspects of life, not just work, and not just business.

Finkelstein, who is a professor at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H., is originally from Montreal. He has authored 21 books and more than 80 academic articles.

“Pretty early on, I was interested in why people did what they did and in people who seem to have a lot of power and influence in society,” said Finkelstein. “I was actually very interested, and still am, in not just business leaders, but political leaders.”

Ten years ago, Finkelstein struck a note with his book Why Smart Executives Fail, and he was invited to give keynote speeches and to consult for several companies.

“Everybody pretty much had the same question, which was how to avoid getting into my sequel,” he said. “In the book, I talked about a lot of things you could do to avoid falling into the trap that led to failure but, over time, I came to realize that there was something else more important – the ability to generate and regenerate talent on a continuous basis. That’s the only way to survive and thrive in the long-term.”

After coming to this realization, Finkelstein set out to learn who possessed this ability. This is what led him to learn of those he came to call “superbosses.”

cover - SuperbossesThe Jewish Independent spoke with Finkelstein around the time of his March 8 talk and book signing at Concordia University in Montreal.

“The big difference was the ‘why smart executives fail’ leaders look at people around them – other managers and team members – as people to be used and exploited for their own purposes…. They didn’t really appreciate the fact that the people around them – team members – are actually probably the most important part of what you are doing, because they help you get better.”

Superbosses, on the other hand, wholly prioritized the idea of having great teams and great organizations of great people, understanding that this is the best way to succeed, he said. “The WSEF leaders didn’t understand that. So, that’s a gigantic difference in mindset – thinking about other people and what role they can play.

“Then, when you look at the details of how they run their businesses, there are many, many differences – from how they identify talent, to how they motivate people, how they develop teams, the role of vision and [of] inspiration.”

While most leaders, good or bad, carry with them a certain amount of ego due to their previous endeavors’ successes, Finkelstein said superbosses find ways to put that ego aside.

“This may be the best first thing for people to work on – having a degree of humility about yourself, your own accomplishments and your own personality even,” he said. “Humility doesn’t mean you’re afraid to take on challenges. It means you understand that there are other people who play a role and that you can’t let your ego run away with things.

“By the same token, listening is one of the most important managerial skills I’ve ever seen – the ability to really listen, to understand, not to critique. A lot of people are listening to find a flaw in their argument or to justify a point of view they already have. I’m talking about listening that’s designed to learn something. That’s a tremendous skill and mindset.”

Another important skill Finkelstein advised honing is open-mindedness, ranked highly with its close cousin, curiosity. These are attributes he regularly discusses with boards of directors and management teams.

“You need to have that curiosity about life, about what you’re doing,” he said. “When you have curiosity, you’re asking why a lot. Kids do that, but when we’re older, we don’t do that so much. You learn so much more by doing that.”

Courage is on the list, too – the kind of courage that challenges convention, and the ability to raise your voice when something is not going the way you think it should. “This doesn’t mean you’re going to win the argument or get your way,” said Finkelstein. “It’s about trying to improve the eventual outcome or situation you’re in.

“Many people often remain silent. They just nod their heads. As a result, they’re not engaged in what’s going on. Later, they spend their time complaining and back-biting, rather than being part of the solution. Sometimes, of course, managers or leaders create an environment where, if you challenge, you get punished, so it can be difficult, but I think courage is a critical factor.”

The next item on the list is accountability – recognizing you need to be responsible for your own actions and behavior, as well as instilling a sense of accountability in others.

“I think, by the way, that most people prefer not to be held personally accountable,” said Finkelstein. “I don’t think people should assume people would automatically be accountable. I think people enjoy it when it happens, but they don’t automatically do it. This is particularly relevant in volunteer organizations.

“Being a teacher, a nurturer of talent, is something anyone can do, no matter what their job is,” he continued. “You don’t have to be a famous CEO. You can be an average person doing whatever you’re doing. But, if you spend some time and energy acting to help others get better, often through teaching, sharing and listening … I think that’s a giant differentiator and extremely meaningful in people’s lives. If you have an impact in helping other people, it makes you feel good, too.

“Younger people, earlier in their career, who are ambitious, have high expectations, want to accomplish great things. How do you find people to work with, to work for? I talk a little about that in the book, but I also think that trying to work for someone who is more like a superboss, rather than less like one, is a great way to learn, develop and accelerate your career.”

As the book’s subtitle suggests, Finkelstein sees managing the flow of talent as one of the most important things for superbosses to do, and he segments this aspect into three categories.

“One is finding good people,” he said. “Everyone needs to hire when you’re growing, you need to hire and find people…. That’s the first stage in this flow of talent.

“The second stage, which not everyone engages in, is developing that talent, helping them get better. That’s managing the flow of that talent in a team/organization for a number of years.

“The third stage is managing the flow of talent sometimes even outside your own region, division or role in the company. Very few managers, leaders or bosses think a lot about … how they should manage people out of the organization. I’m talking about good and very good performers.

“The typical assumption among most leaders is to keep those people forever,” he said. “But, those who work for superbosses, people that really enhance their skills or have this vision, they won’t be satisfied with that small piece of pie. They want a bigger role themselves so, in fact, many of them will end up wanting to leave anyways. Managing the flow of talent should also consider this kind of radical or counterintuitive idea – managing people out of the company itself.”

Finkelstein said, “The best people know they will move around, look for those opportunities. If you know that will happen, the questions become how can you take advantage of that, how can you be strategic in that, how can you create a win-win out of that situation?’ That’s what superbosses do. They make a spinout business. One example from the book is the Hospital Corporation of America (HCA). The CEO used to create big opportunities for senior executives who were going to leave anyways. He would create a spinout company in a mental health clinic, surgical centre or what have you. That former team member would be given the opportunity to be CEO of that spinout business but, because you’re doing the spinout, you get to participate in a financial sense.”

To see where you sit on the superbosses scale, Finkelstein invites readers to visit superbosses.com and take a 10-12 question quiz.

“The quiz is because people find it interesting to see how they rank,” he said. “The book can help them get better.”

Rebeca Kuropatwa is a Winnipeg freelance writer.

Format ImagePosted on March 25, 2016March 24, 2016Author Rebeca KuropatwaCategories BooksTags business, Finkelstein, leadership, superbosses
Oakridge reenvisioned

Oakridge reenvisioned

The goal is to start construction of the new Oakridge Centre and surrounding area in 2017. (photo from oakridge2025.ca)

At a public hearing in March 2014, Vancouver City Council approved Ivanhoé Cambridge’s proposal for a mixed-use redevelopment of the Oakridge Centre site at 41st Avenue and Cambie Street in Vancouver. The project would urbanize a 1950s-era shopping centre on a significantly underused transit-served site and deliver on a number of objectives for the neighborhood identified by the City of Vancouver and also contained in its larger policy objectives.

Since the public hearing, the project team has continued to refine the design of the redevelopment, while determining the best way to phase its construction. The focus of these efforts has always been to ensure uninterrupted operation of Oakridge Centre as the social and economic hub of the Oakridge neighborhood, and to minimize impacts on the retail tenants and the 2,500 full- and part-time employees who work at the site. There has also been an objective to reduce the length of the construction schedule.

The team was also tasked with finding efficiencies in the design of the parkade that could reduce the depth of excavation in order to minimize intrusions into the large aquifer beneath the site. Working within the aquifer would entail costly and unconventional construction techniques that the project team recommended be avoided. Finally, the design team was challenged to continue to improve the functionality and accessibility of the proposed nine-acre rooftop park and to look at optimizing the location of the 70,000-square-foot Oakridge civic centre on the site.

The project team concluded that maintaining uninterrupted operation of most of the shopping centre throughout construction would require a longer construction schedule. It further determined that minimizing intrusions into the aquifer would require a reduction in the parking supply for the project and, therefore, a decrease in density. Taken together, these conclusions suggested that a modification of the original plan would produce a better result.

While this work was underway, Target, one of the centre’s anchor tenants, announced its departure from Canada. The retail component of the project was designed around a two-level mall with several two-level anchor tenants. Therefore, with only one two-level anchor tenant remaining in the project, the centre’s merchandising plan and layout needed to be reworked.

As a result, Ivanhoé Cambridge is now proceeding with modifications to the plan that would produce a slightly smaller project completed over a shorter time and with reduced impact on tenants, employees, the community and the environment.

To facilitate this process, Ivanhoé Cambridge has retained architectural firm Benoy (benoy.com), based in London, England, to be its lead design architect. Despite the reduced project size, there will be no change to the public-benefits strategy previously agreed to with the city, and the site’s potential for significant residential density at a major transit hub will be realized.

Ivanhoé Cambridge recently began discussions with the City of Vancouver planning department to look at options for modifications to the approved plan that will meet and exceed the design and planning objectives that were achieved in the 2014 rezoning. The nature of the refinements will likely require amendments to the 2014 rezoning, which Ivanhoé Cambridge will pursue in 2016 with a goal of starting construction in 2017.

Ivanhoé Cambridge and its residential partner Westbank remain committed to creating a mixed-use, transit-oriented, amenity-rich project that will establish a new development standard in Vancouver.

 

Format ImagePosted on March 25, 2016March 24, 2016Author Ivanhoé CambridgeCategories LocalTags Benoy, Ivanhoé Cambridge, Oakridge, Westbank
Researching Oakridge

Researching Oakridge

The Jewish Museum and Archives of British Columbia is currently researching an exhibit on the Jewish community in the Oakridge area. (photo from Gail Dodek Wenner)

Oakridge was for many years the heart of the Vancouver Jewish community. First opened for development in the 1940s, the new residential neighborhood was attractive to young families seeking suburban living only a short drive from downtown.

Many Jewish families had previously made their homes in Strathcona, Mount Pleasant and Fairview. With the economic boom of the postwar era, many achieved financial success and, with it, the opportunity to move to the comfort of Oakridge. Jewish community institutions followed, most notably with the construction of the new Jewish Community Centre, which opened in 1962.

photo - Growing up in Oakridge
Growing up in Oakridge. (photo from Gail Dodek Wenner)

Today, the neighborhood still holds a warm place in the hearts of many. For this reason, the Jewish Museum and Archives of British Columbia has been working to develop an online exhibit celebrating the heyday of Jewish Oakridge. Making use of numerous oral history interviews, this exhibit will share the recollections of community members, and aim to provide a comprehensive picture of this era in our community’s history. A new series of interviews are currently underway, filling in gaps in previous research.

Under the supervision of the JMABC’s exhibition development team, made up of coordinator of programs and development Michael Schwartz and archivist Alysa Routtenberg, two volunteers are undertaking this series of interviews.

Junie Chow has volunteered for the JMABC for almost a year now, and recently produced the online exhibit Letters Home. Drawing upon the Seidelman Family fonds, the exhibit shares the letters written by Pte. Joseph Seidelman to his family at home in Vancouver as he fought on the frontlines of Vimy Ridge and Passchendaele during the First World War.

photo - The wedding of Sandy Belogus and Mark Rogen
The wedding of Sandy Belogus and Mark Rogen. (photo from Sandy Rogen)

The second volunteer, Josh Friedman, brings to the project his training as a recent alumnus of Indiana University graduating with a BA in Jewish studies and political science. New to Vancouver, Friedman is excited about discovering how the Jewish community in Oakridge reflected similar and different perspectives to trends in North American Jewry during the 1940s-1960s.

Listening to earlier rounds of interviews, essential themes have appeared. These include the initial motivations for moving to Oakridge, the overwhelming sense of community among residents, and even the eventual reasons for moving out of the neighborhood. However, through this process, new questions have also emerged and are guiding the ongoing research. For instance, how did the local community react and respond to world events affecting Israel and international Jewry? Acknowledging that Oakridge is a multi-ethnic neighborhood, the team is seeking insight into the types of relationships that existed between non-Jewish and Jewish neighbors. All of the results will be shared in the forthcoming exhibit.

Currently online are the exhibits Letters Home and New Ways of Living: Jewish Architects in Vancouver, 1955 to 1975 (see jewishindependent.ca/the-west-coast-style). As well, the JMABC has launched On These Shores: Jewish Pioneers of Early Victoria, which traces the early foundation of the Victoria

Jewish community from their arrival in 1858 to the establishment of Congregation Emanu-El in 1863, and Sacred Sites: Dishonor and Healing, which reflects on Victoria citizens’ response to the desecration of the Jewish cemetery there in 2011, and places this incident in context among other similar events elsewhere. Sacred Sites was produced through a partnership between the JMABC and the University of Victoria.

To visit all the online exhibits, go to jewishmuseum.ca/exhibit.

Format ImagePosted on March 25, 2016March 24, 2016Author Jewish Museum and Archives of British ColumbiaCategories LocalTags archives, Dodek Wenner, JMABC, Oakridge, Rogen, Seidelman
The move from 11th to 41st

The move from 11th to 41st

The Jewish Community Centre at 41st Avenue and Oak Street, November 1962. (photo from JWB fonds, JMABC L.11512)

It’s hard to believe that, in the 1950s, the Oakridge area was considered a ways out of town. In going through the minutes of the Jewish Community Council of Vancouver from 1954, one can see the initial attempts by the council to find a new Jewish community centre building – which at the time was on Oak Street at 11th Avenue – that would be as conveniently located. They considered exchanging space with the Peretz School, which was on Broadway, and buying the land on which Vancouver Talmud Torah stood, on Oak at 26th. However, they soon started examining the prospect of buying land from Canadian Pacific Railway, south of 41st. The following snippets of meeting minutes from 1954-1962 allow readers to fast forward through the development process and the establishment of the JCC where it is currently located.

image - Jewish Community Council minutes 1954-62 re: move of JCC from 11th to 41st

Format ImagePosted on March 25, 2016March 24, 2016Author Cynthia RamsayCategories LocalTags history, JCCGV, Jewish Community Centre, Oakridge
Mystery photo … March 25/16

Mystery photo … March 25/16

Pioneer Women meeting for the Hadassah Bazaar, 1958. (photo from JWB fonds, JMABC L.12594)

If you know someone in this photo, please help the JI fill the gaps of its predecessor’s (the Jewish Western Bulletin’s) collection at the Jewish Museum and Archives of B.C. by contacting [email protected] or 604-257-5199. To find out who has been identified in the photos, visit jewishmuseum.ca/blog.

Format ImagePosted on March 25, 2016March 24, 2016Author JI and JMABCCategories Mystery PhotoTags Hadassah Bazaar, JMABC, Pioneer Women
This week’s cartoon … March 25/16

This week’s cartoon … March 25/16

For more cartoons, visit thedailysnooze.com.

Format ImagePosted on March 25, 2016March 24, 2016Author Jacob SamuelCategories The Daily SnoozeTags queen bee, thedailysnooze.com
נדל”ן לעשירים

נדל”ן לעשירים

ונקובר היא העיר הראשונה וטורונטו במקום השניים עשר בעולם מבחינת עליית מחירי הנדל“ן היוקרתי בשנת 2015. (צילום: Cynthia Ramsay)

נדל”ן לעשירים: ונקובר ראשונה בעולם בעליית מחירים הנדל”ן היוקרתי, טורונטו במקום השניים עשר

ונקובר היא העיר הראשונה וטורונטו במקום השניים עשר בעולם מבחינת עליית מחירי הנדל”ן היוקרתי בשנת 2015. תל אביב נמצאת במקום העשרים ושמונה והמכובד, לפני ניו יורק, לונדון, מוסקבה וטוקיו. הנתונים של “דוח העושר” מתפרסמים בימים אלה על ידי חברת הייעוץ הבריטית ‘נייט פרנק’. לפי ‘נייט פרנק’ חלקו של הנדל”ן היוקרתי מגיע ל-5% בממוצע מסך ערכו של כל שוק הנדל”ן.

את רשימת עליית מחירי הנדל”ן היוקרתי מובילה כאמור ונקובר עם עלייה של 24.5% אשתקד. הרחק מאחוריה במקום השני סידני (14.8%), שלישית – שנחאי (14.1%), רביעית – איסנטבול (13%), חמישית – מינכן (12%), שישית – מלבורן (11.9%), שביעית – סן פרנסיסקו (10.9%), שמינית אוקלנד מניו זינלנד (10.2%), תשיעית – אמסטרדם (10%), עשירית- מונקו (10%), במקום האחד עשר – ברלין (9%) ובמקום השניים עשר טורונטו (8%). תל אביב במקום העשרים ושמונה (3.7%), ניו יורק נמצאת רק במקום השלושים ותשעה (2.4%), מוסקבה אחריה במקום הארבעים (2.3%), לונדון רק במקום החמישים וארבעה (1%) ואילו טוקיו במקום החמישים ותשעה (0.8%).

דוח ‘נייט פרנק’ מתייחס גם למספר העשירים בעולם כיום עם הערכות ל-2025. בקנדה יש כיום: כ-292 אלף מיליונרים ומספרם צפוי לגדול לכ-394 אלף, כ-10,000 מיליונרים (שהונם נאמד ב-10 מיליון דולר+) והוא צפוי לגדול לכ-13,000, כ-3,500 מיליונרים (30 מיליון דולר+) והוא צפוי לגדול לכ-4,800, כ-420 מיליונרים (100 מיליון דולר+) והוא צפוי לגדול לכ-570 ו-35 מיליארדרים והוא צפוי לגדול ל-47. בישראל יש כיום: כ-72 אלף מיליונרים ומספרם צפוי לגדול לכ-111 אלף, כ-4,000 מיליונרים (שהונם נאמד ב-10 מיליון דולר+) והוא צפוי לגדול לכ-6,000, כ-1,500 מיליונרים (30 מיליון דולר+) והוא צפוי לגדול לכ-2,300, כ-180 מיליונרים (100 מיליון דולר+) והוא צפוי לגדול לכ-280 ו-17 מיליארדרים והוא צפוי לגדול ל-26.

נדל”ן לסטודנטים: יו.בי.סי בונה דירות מיניאטורות בשטח 13 מ”ר

ונקובר נחשבת לכידוע אחת הערים היקרות בעולם כיום ומחירי הנדל”ן ממשיכים לעלות ולשבור שיאים ללא הפסק. על פי דיווחים אחרונים מתברר שבמדד הערים היקרות בעולם שרכישת נדל”ן בהן נחשבת מעבר להישג יד עבור התושבים המקומיים, ונקובר תופסת את המקום השלישי והלא מכובד.

באוניברסיטת בריטיש קולומביה לומדים כיום כחמישים אלף סטודנטים ומתוכם למעלה מששת אלפים סטודנטים, ממתינים ברשימה הארוכה למצוא דיור בקאמפוס. הנהלת האוניברסיטה החליטה להקים מרכז מגורים חדש לסטודנטים (ליד מרכז אגודת הסטודנטים) בעלות של שבעים מיליון דולר. לאור המציאות הקשה למציאת דיור הולם לסטודנטים, המרכז יכלול פרוייקט נסיוני של דירות מיניאטורות עבורם, שהעבודות להקמתן יסתיימו ב-2019. בשלב ראשון מתוכננות שבעים דירות קטנות ואם הפרוייקט יצליח, לא מן הנמנע שיוחלט בסופו של דבר לבנות דירות נוספות, כאמור עקב הביקוש הרב לגור בקאמפוס. הדירות הקטנות מכונות “ננו סטודיוס” ושטח כל אחת מהן שלושה עשר מ”ר בסך הכל (בדומה לספוט חנייה של רכב). כל יחידת דיור כזו שתרוהט תכלול: מטבח (עם כיור, מקרר קטן ותנור), מקלחת, שירותים, מיטה שהופכת לשולחן עבודה, ארון ללא דלתות וכמובן חיבור לאינטרנט מהיר. האוניברסיטה תגבה שכר דירה בגובה 675$-695$ עבור המגורים החדשים.

הנהלת המוסד החליטה להעמיד דגם של ‘הננו סטודיוס’ במרכז הסטודנט כדי לאפשר לסטודנטים לבדוק מקרוב את המגורים המיניאטורים המצפים להם. חלק מתגובות הסטודנטים לפרוייקט החדש אוהדות וחלק פושרות ביותר. הסטודנטים מבינים שאם ברצונם לגור בקאמפוס עליהם להסתפק בדירות קטנות ביותר.

Format ImagePosted on March 23, 2016March 23, 2016Author Roni RachmaniCategories עניין בחדשותTags campus housing, Knight Frank, nano studio, real estate, University of British Columbia, אוניברסיטת בריטיש קולומביה, דיור בקאמפוס, נדל"ן, נייט פרנק, ננו סטודיוס
Blue Jays CEO wants to win

Blue Jays CEO wants to win

Toronto Blue Jays new president and chief executive officer Mark Shapiro. (photo from Toronto Blue Jays)

The Toronto Blue Jays almost made it to the World Series in 2015. With spring training having just started, we’re crossing our proverbial fingers (in the most Jewish way possible) that we’ll see that same Blue Jay magic – and more – in the months to come. Eyes will particularly be on the new leader at the helm, Mark Shapiro, who officially joined the Jays as president and chief executive officer last fall.

Shapiro has arrived at a pivotal time for the franchise, which celebrates its 40th anniversary this season. Many are eager to find out in what direction he’ll take the team, but one thing is certain: he wants to win.

“Clearly, winning has to be the primary area of focus,” Shapiro told the Independent. “A relentless, obsessive commitment to building a winning team.

“Building a team isn’t just collecting talent,” he continued. “It’s about players that are committed, that are willing to take risks and commit to something bigger than themselves.”

He also said he wants to integrate more sports psychology into the team’s routine, and “build a business organization that obsesses about fan experience at every interaction and every touch point.”

Next on his list is Rogers Centre, which is in dire need of a renovation, one that may cost upwards of $400 million.

Shapiro, like anyone else who has experienced the dome, has been a fan of the awe-inspiring structure since his first Jays game, which was in 1989, soon after he completed his history degree at Princeton. “My memory is seeing this building and just being blown away at what an incredible engineering marvel it is,” he said.

Rogers Centre isn’t the only spot that needs an upgrade. The team’s spring training facility in Dunedin, Fla., is widely considered to be the worst in Major League Baseball. Shapiro has to choose between renovating or moving the Jays to a new facility when the team’s lease expires in 2017.

To make matters more difficult, team cornerstones José Bautista and Edwin Encarnación become free agents at the end of this year and the Jays’ stock of minor league prospects was depleted by last year’s trade deadline frenzy. Still, there’s every reason to believe Shapiro will hit it out of the park, given that he’s spent an entire lifetime surrounded by the game, its players, its strategy and its details.

Shapiro invested nearly a quarter-century with the Cleveland Indians, having worked his way up from player development to team president. It was there that the Sporting News named Shapiro Executive of the Year in 2005 and 2007.

His managerial style hasn’t changed all that much, he maintains. “If you have a moral compass and a set of well-defined values, those are going to be the determinacy of how you lead,” he said.

But baseball and Shapiro go farther back than Cleveland. Son of Baltimore attorney and sports agent Ronald M. Shapiro, the game was ingrained at a very early age.

“Baseball was a part of the fabric of my childhood growing up. It was a connection and a bond for me with my dad,” said Shapiro. “It’s hard to separate out baseball from my childhood, whether it was stickball, wiffleball, Little League or playing catch in the street. Maybe it was the fact that my dad, at some point in my adolescence, started representing Major League players and they started being part of my life. Baseball, informally or formally, was always a part of my life.”

Among his baseball heroes growing up was Baltimore Orioles’ Brooks Robinson, for “consistency, the way he treated people and his artistic style of play,” said Shapiro. Jewish ball player Al Rosen, aka “the Hebrew Hammer,” who played for the Cleveland Indians from 1947 to 1956, was also a role model.

The Hebrew Hammer wasn’t his only source of Yiddishkeit growing up. Shapiro said he was reared with a “strong Jewish identity,” associating most with the “education, culture, understanding of history, and the values intertwined in that history.” They include, he said, “work ethics, commitment to community, compassion and tolerance,” which, he said, were “defining attributes and values that were a part of my childhood.”

Shapiro and his wife Lissa Bockrath-Shapiro try to instil those same values in their children, son Caden, 13, and daughter Sierra, 11.

Even though today’s Jewish players are few and far between, every now and again Shapiro will run into a fellow Jew and shmooze.

“It’s obviously a rarity and, obviously, there’s a lot more front office guys, like Mike Chernoff [Cleveland Indians general manager]. When we saw a Jewish player, we’d always chuckle with pride at that player succeeding. It was a topic of conversation,” said Shapiro.

Cleveland player Jesse Levis and Shapiro used to kibbitz about being MOTs, members of the tribe. Since he began work in Toronto after the ball season was over, Shapiro has not yet met lone Jewish Jay Kevin Pillar.

Meanwhile, one item needs clarification. There’s been no shortage of times that Shapiro has been asked why he pronounces his name Sha-pie-roh instead of the usual Sha-peer-oh. For the record – and he wants to set the record straight – his name has always been that way.

“People say, ‘Are you trying to hide the fact that you’re Jewish?’ If I did, wouldn’t I call myself Smith?” he said with a laugh. “Come on, really, there’s got to be a better way to do that.”

The story is familiar to many: as immigrants coming through Ellis Island, there was a name change and a mispronunciation that stuck. Philadelphia and Cherry Hill, N.J., lay claim as the “only places in the world you’ll hear ShapIro spelled Shapiro, and you’ll hear Shapiro spelled Schapiro,” he explained.

To be sure, fans are less concerned about the name than they are about the game. And, if he could impart one message, it would be that he’s here to win.

“My favorite Blue Jays stories are waiting to be written,” he said.

Dave Gordon is a Toronto-based freelance writer whose work can be found in more than a hundred publications globally. He is managing editor of landmarkreport.com.

Format ImagePosted on March 18, 2016March 17, 2016Author Dave GordonCategories NationalTags baseball, Blue Jays, Mark Shapiro
Exploring winter landscapes

Exploring winter landscapes

Ian Penn’s exhibit Winter Paintings: The Figure in and on the Landscape opened March 10 at Zack Gallery. (photo by Olga Livshin)

The theme of Ian Penn’s solo show at Zack Gallery is winter. The artist’s love for winter, for the mountains of British Columbia and for skiing reverberates through the gallery.

“I’m affected by the seasons, by my surroundings,” said Penn in an interview with the Independent. “I only paint current seasons. In summer, I paint summer; in the fall, I paint its rioting colors. In winter, I paint snow and skiing.”

Penn spends lots of his free time in the mountains. “Our whole family likes to ski,” he said. “When we first moved to B.C., we bought our first place in the mountains before we settled in Vancouver.”

Penn has been skiing since his youth in Australia, but it was cross-country skiing until he immigrated to Canada and saw the mountains. At the age of 35, he started alpine skiing – and loved it.

Around 2000, he went a step further. He joined the ski patrol in Whistler, volunteering part-time his professional skills as a doctor. He still does that. “I like the ski patrol community. They are nice people,” he said.

About the same time, he also became seriously interested in painting, which eventually led to a degree from Emily Carr.

Penn has a general fascination with landscapes, especially mountain scenes, as an art form. He has painted dozens of landscapes, in every season, and some of his favorite areas to paint are around Whistler and the Callaghan Valley.

“I was always interested in mapping a territory, but a map and a territory are not the same,” he explained. “The painting of a landscape is not the same as if you stand in that place, experience it with all your senses. Or with devices – photo cameras and cellphones. I wanted to capture that difference in my paintings. That’s why I started a series of diptychs. My diptychs are like a single painting in two parts.”

There are several diptychs on display in the gallery. One is a landscape, a vista with the majestic mountains and forest, with tiny human figures. The second affords a closer look. The human figure is larger, the artist’s focus has narrowed, and the people in these paintings are doing something, engaging with the mountains. They whip down the slopes on their skis. They stop to take photos. They enjoy the invigorating exercise and the beauty around them. They laugh and horse around.

Penn captures their movement in his paintings. His objects are not static. They don’t pose. They are just going about their business, and the artist is going about his.

“Initially, I wanted to paint on location,” he said. “I want to paint everywhere I go, but I couldn’t do that in winter. It’s too cold both for my hands and for the paints. Or it might snow. What I do when I’m in the mountains skiing, I take photos and make quick drawings.”

The drawings provide him with the first impression, the emotional subtext. The photographs he uses for details.

“All the details in my landscapes are accurate. The precision is important to me. I want to be able to navigate by them. I want the ski patrol to be able to use my paintings when they have to rescue someone,” he said, only half-joking.

Many of his paintings have personal stories attached, some of which are more obvious than others. In one painting, there was to have been a person but there isn’t; the close-up view is surprisingly empty of life. “He got erased. I erased him,” Penn said. “He was a vain fellow. He was dancing around, making selfies of himself with his cellphone, turning so he would get every possible angle. He didn’t notice anyone else, almost stepped on my ski. At first, I wanted to show it, as a portrait of self-absorption, but I disliked the fellow so much, I finally erased his figure from my painting. But, mostly, I want my paintings to tell your stories, not mine.”

The dominating color in all of the paintings is white, of course, overset by green forest and dark mountains. Only people provide splashes of color: a red jacket or a yellow parka.

“I use five different whites for the snow,” Penn said. “And then there are color patches reflecting the surroundings. Snow is never simply white. It’s complex and a challenge. It’s always different. And so is the sky: blue but different in each painting. But I never used black in any of these paintings. When I needed the dark, I mixed colors.”

Penn paints landscapes because they are endless. “Wherever I go, there is a new and amazing landscape waiting for me. Painting them, making drawings, photographing slows me down, allows me the time to look, to see the beauty around me.”

Winter Paintings: The Figure in and on the Landscape will be at the Zack until April 3. For more information about Penn and his work, visit ianpenn.com. An interview with Penn about his exhibit last year, called Pole, can be found at jewishindependent.ca/memorials-to-millions.

Olga Livshin is a Vancouver freelance writer. She can be reached at [email protected].

Format ImagePosted on March 18, 2016March 16, 2016Author Olga LivshinCategories Visual ArtsTags Ian Penn, landscape, winter, Zack Gallery
Kashua talks at U of W event

Kashua talks at U of W event

Sayed Kashua spoke in Winnipeg as part of the University of Winnipeg’s annual Middle East Week. (photo by Rebeca Kuropatwa)

On Feb. 25, as part of the University of Winnipeg’s annual Middle East Week, about 75 people came out to hear what guest speaker Sayed Kashua had to say on the topic The Arabs in Israel: The Inaudible Cry for Full Citizenship.

Born and raised in Tira, Israel, Kashua is an author and journalist. His three novels – Dancing Arabs, Let it Be Morning and Second Person Singular – have been translated into English, with the stories of his first and third novels being combined to become the film Dancing Arabs. Among other things, he is the creator of the Israeli TV show Arab Labor and the subject of the documentary Forever Scared. His 2013 talk in Vancouver sold out.

At the recent Winnipeg event, Global College executive director Dean Peachey and U of W president Dr. Annette Trimbee welcomed Kashua and the audience to the U of W’s Eckhardt-Gramatté Hall.

Kashua moved with his family to Champaign, Ill., a year and a half ago, finding the “noise” in Israel too distracting.

“When we arrived,” he said, “I taught my kids two things: that people here stand in line and that, if you’re asked where you’re from, just say you’re from Jerusalem … and, according to their response, you’ll decide if it’s east or west.”

When Kashua enrolled his kids at school, he found himself stumped by the forms when he came to the question about race, as Arab was not listed.

“I almost checked off ‘other,’ but I was so worried about losing my visa within three days of landing in the States…. I almost signed my kids as Asians, because I can easily prove that Jerusalem is part of Asia…. I didn’t know what to do. I raised my hand and the nice lady asked how she could help. I said I don’t know what my race is. She asked where I was from. I said Jerusalem. So, she said that I’m from the Middle East … so, I’m ‘white.’ That was the point that I knew I loved Champaign.”

For the first time, Kashua was part of the majority.

It was not until he went to the United States that he was asked about Islamophobia. As a secular Muslim, he had to think about the question, and he decided that the more important aspect to him was his nationality.

However, he recently found out at a parent-teacher meeting that his son was going to prayer. Kashua asked the teacher which religion or faith his son was following.

“The teacher said, ‘What do you mean? [He prays] with the Muslims. You are Muslims?’

“I said, ‘Yes, but I had no idea that my son prays.’ It was shocking for us, how the majority defines you, and how my son who is only 10 already realized he belongs to the group of Muslim kids in their school.”

Kashua then spoke of his greatest influence in becoming a writer – his illiterate grandmother who had lost her husband in the Israeli War of Independence.

“She was illiterate, but she was intelligent and sharp,” said Kashua. “She always told me bedtime stories. Maybe writing for me is just [a way] to keep telling myself bedtime stories. She told me wonderful stories, sometimes fairy tales. A huge part of her stories were about the war.”

According to Kashua, most Palestinians who became citizens of Israel after the war – farmers and those who remained in their villages – were or are illiterate.

“In 1948, most Palestinian villages, especially on the shore, were demolished,” he said. His grandmother had stories about her husband, “who was shot in the war, killed in 1948.” Kashua’s father was born in 1947, “so he was less than 1-year-old when his father was killed.

“She told stories about how she was trying to protect her son, sometimes running in the wheat fields, trying to cover him, when the bullets were whistling around her … escaping to the mountains,” said Kashua. These were, he added, “my childhood stories, and, to me, it’s history. It was never part of our education system, we belong to the Israeli education system. We are Palestinians, but also Israelis … became Israelis after the war of 1948. The war is never mentioned in our history books.”

It was not until after the war that Kashua’s grandmother learned that she no longer had land. To his family, he said, that was a bigger loss than losing their house.

“My grandmother, who used to have a lot of land, became a worker, picking fruit for Jewish bosses, sometimes in her own private land, picking fruit in fields she planted herself,” said Kashua. “That’s a very strong feeling I received as a boy, about being a refugee.”

When Tira became part of Israel people received Israeli citizenship. They lived under a military regime he said, until 1966, just a few months before what he described as “the occupation of the West Bank,” noting that “the military regime meant you couldn’t leave your village without permission from the military officer in charge.

“My father was telling us [that] only on Israeli Independence Day, you didn’t need a permit. Kids would jump onto trucks to go to another town, just to see, for a chance to go out. Of course, they were forced in their schools to celebrate Independence Day with Israeli flags.”

Even today, according to Kashua, conditions are different in east Jerusalem than in west Jerusalem. He said that Palestinian Israelis do not have equal rights, and are discriminated against in all aspects of life.

With Tira’s population at 25,000 now – growing from 1,500 in 1948 – Kashua said that poverty and crime there is hard to control.

“Maybe, at the beginning, people wanted to defend our identity, language, culture and tradition, but that’s no longer the case. We are trying to escape the ghetto, but there are so many laws that forbid us to do so. That’s the situation, you are completely segregated.”

Kashua described Israel as an “ethnocracy.”

“It’s democratic only if you’re Jewish,” he said. “If democracy is judged by how it treats minorities, Israeli democracy is facing a very big problem with the Arab minority…. We are still considered a national threat, a demographic problem.

“If you look at the history, you will see that, since 1948 until now, it was very rare that Arab citizens of Israel were activist against or being a real threat to the security of Israel. All Israelis know that reality and they know we are completely discriminated against when it comes to all aspects you can think of – land, the ability to move from your village. The sad thing is, sometimes the slave feels like he needs the master more than the master needs the slave. You have no idea how strong of a feeling it is when you don’t have even the ability to dream.”

Kashua was fortunate to find a Jew willing to sell him an apartment in west Jerusalem. They were the only Arab family living there and this was one of the reasons they moved to the United States.

Kashua believes that Palestinians want to be citizens of Israel and that they do not want to destroy the state, but they do want equal rights, as well as acknowledgement for the suffering they feel they have endured since 1948. This is something Kashua does not see as possible with the current leadership in Israel.

Rebeca Kuropatwa is a Winnipeg freelance writer.

Format ImagePosted on March 18, 2016March 16, 2016Author Rebeca KuropatwaCategories IsraelTags Israel, Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Middle East Week, peace, Sayed Kashua, University of Winnipeg

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