soul Celebrity Chef, Food Critic Anthony Bourdain Found Dead At 61 of blessed memory continued from page 63 Times of Israel HARRIET WEITZ, 95, of Bloomfield Hills, died June 8, 2018. She is survived by her sons and daughters-in-law, Jeffrey and Deborah Weitz, Marty and Weitz Linda Weitz; daughter, Norma Zager; grand- children, David Weitz, Daniel Weitz, Jamie (Marshall) Eskowitz, Andrew (Alexandra) Weitz, Bradley Zager, Laurie (Adam) Herz; great-grandchildren, Sam, Ben and Wyatt; many other loving fam- ily members and friends. Mrs. Weitz was the beloved wife of the late Mark Weitz. Interment was held at Adat Shalom Memorial Park Cemetery in Livonia. Contributions may be made to Jewish Senior Life or to a charity of one’s choice. Arrangements by Dorfman Chapel. • 64 June 14 • 2018 jn C elebrity chef Anthony Bourdain took his own life June 8, 2018. He was 61. Bourdain took viewers around the world for the CNN Parts Unknown series. CNN said Bourdain was in Strasbourg filming an upcom- ing segment in the series. The celebrity foodie and chef Anthony Bourdain’s food tourism show took viewers to Jerusalem, Gaza and the West Bourdain Bank in its 2013 season. Focusing on what he called “the most contentious piece of real estate in the world,” Bourdain used the episode to reveal his own Jewish heritage: “I’ve never been in a synagogue. I don’t believe in a higher power,” he told viewers. “But that doesn’t make me any less Jewish, I don’t think.” During the show, Bourdain puts on tefillin by the Western Wall, takes a walking tour of the Old City with famed international chef Yotam Ottolenghi, eats a meal with an American-born set- tler, chats with members of the first all- Palestinian race car team in Ramallah, and eats fire-roasted watermelon and other Palestinian foods in Gaza. Bourdain noted at the episode’s onset that he “doesn’t know what to think” of Israel. “It is incredibly beautiful here,” Bourdain observes at one point. “I don’t know why I didn’t expect that.” Although Bourdain had never been to Israel prior to making this episode, he was no stranger to the Middle East or to politi- cally rocky terrain. When he went to Lebanon in July 2006 to film an episode of his previous show, the Travel Channel’s No Reservations, he found himself in the middle of a regional con- flict — the Second Lebanon War — as the Jewish state retaliated against a Hezbollah attack in northern Israel. Bourdain watched from his hotel balcony as Israel destroyed the Beirut airport — in part to prevent the delivery of arms — which left him stranded in a war zone. In the Jerusalem episode, he preemp- tively listed accusations he anticipated would be lobbed at him in the show’s aftermath, including “terrorist sympa- thizer,” “Zionist tool” and “self-hating Jew.” Bourdain had not previously identi- fied as a Jew, but he disclosed that he had one Catholic parent and one Jewish parent (Gladys Sacksman Bourdain), though he was raised without religion. In Jerusalem, Bourdain was taken through the Old City via the Damascus Gate by Chef Ottolenghi, who discusses “food appropriation” over freshly cooked balls of falafel next to the Via Dolorosa. Ottolenghi rejoined Bourdain later in the episode to take him to the restau- rant Majda in Ein Rafa, an Israeli Arab village west of Jerusalem. Bourdain also visited Gaza, where he noted that Hamas, “considered a ter- rorist organization by both the U.S. and Israel,” was elected to lead Gaza in 2006. His host was Laila El-Haddad, author of The Gaza Kitchen. The show closed with Bourdain talk- ing to Natan Galkowicz, proprietor of Mides Brazilian Restaurant in the Negev kibbutz Bror Hayil near the Gaza bor- der, whose daughter Dana was killed in 2005 outside her home, three months before her wedding, by a mortar fired by Hamas. “I know that my daughter was killed for no reason, and I know that people on the other side have been killed for no reason,” Galkowicz told Bourdain. “Bottom line is, let’s stop with the suffering.” •