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     'One-stop shopping,' fitness facilities top JCC priorities
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     Red Cross opens center
NATION
     ACLU, city wage battle over seal
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     Five years after Oslo, peace still waits
     Nova Scotia Jews help relatives cope
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     Mideast feeling disillusionment on 5th anniversary of Oslo pact
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     Editorial - Bubba and baseball
     In the Mail - Letters to the Editor
     Marty Latz - Film character's story parallels our history
     Commentary - Judaism can learn from what McGwire has done for baseball
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GETTING ALONG
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TORAH STUDY
     That's the circle of life

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Nova Scotia Jews help relatives cope

PETER EPHROSS
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
NEW YORK - On Sunday morning, about nine people climbed the picturesque rocks near the Nova Scotia coast where Swissair Flight 111 crashed last week. The relatives of some of the tragedy's Jewish victims chanted Hebrew prayers, many from the Book of Psalms.

No words or prayers can completely console the families of the victims, but those who participated in the service appeared to derive some comfort, said Rabbi Mendel Feldman, who led the service. One of the relatives, said Feldman, the Lubavitch emissary in Nova Scotia, came up to him after the prayers and said, "You can't imagine how reassuring it was."

Initial reports said as many as 50 Jews might have been among the 229 victims of the crash near Peggy's Cove, which created some worries that the small Jewish community in the province's capital of Halifax would be unable to accommodate the relatives of the Jewish victims.

But that initial fear proved to be unfounded - as of Sept. 8, only seven Jewish victims could be confirmed and it is unlikely that more than 20 Jews perished in last week's crash, according to Jon Goldberg, executive director of the Atlantic Jewish Council, the Jewish umbrella organization for eastern Canada.

Among the Jewish victims of the crash, which appears to have been the result of electrical failure, was Jonathan Mann, the first director of the World Health Organization's AIDS program.

Local volunteers provided kosher meals, and six rabbis made themselves available to grieving families.

Investigators have identified just one of the bodies so far, which makes it unlikely that traditional Jewish burial rites will be performed for any of the victims. According to halachah (Jewish law), a burial service cannot be performed without a body. Instead, a non-denominational burial service will likely be held for any body parts that are retrieved.

A memorial service for victims was held at the Beth Israel Synagogue in Nova Scotia's capital of Halifax on Sept. 6.

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