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Jewish heritage, Holocaust remembrance

Over the next few months, for example, young people will connect Legos as a creative means of learning about their Jewish heritage at Congregation Sha’aray Shalom in Hingham. Other Jewish programs in the south suburbs will address social issues and education in new ways, for instance, by creating a support group for Jewish grandparents of interfaith grandchildren. “Grandparents are literally the carriers of tradition,” Shrage said. At Temple Beth Emunah in Brockton, Caryn Budd-Myers from Franklin works with her special needs son Korey Myers age 13, as he studies.
Debee Tlumacki for The Boston Globe
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By Meg Murphy, Globe Correspondent
Over the next few months, for example, young people will connect Legos as a creative means of learning about their Jewish heritage at Congregation Sha’aray Shalom in Hingham. Other Jewish programs in the south suburbs will address social issues and education in new ways, for instance, by creating a support group for Jewish grandparents of interfaith grandchildren. “Grandparents are literally the carriers of tradition,” Shrage said.

At Temple Beth Emunah in Brockton, Caryn Budd-Myers from Franklin works with her special needs son Korey Myers age 13, as he studies.
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