Washington Post: Rabbi on the Roof: N.J. Candidate Gets Taste of Washington
August 2nd, 2008
By Monica Hesse
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, August 2, 2008; C01
Occasionally, a situation presents itself in which the straighter it’s told, the more it sounds like a joke — so you might as well just roll with it.
A blind rabbi walks onto a roof and announces he’s running for Congress.
The blind rabbi is Democrat Dennis Shulman. The district is New Jersey’s 5th, a solidly Republican region in the northern part of the state that has been represented by conservative Scott Garrett since 2002.
The roof, located approximately 4 1/2 hours from any of the counties in play, belongs to Tac Tacelosky, a Dupont Circle Web designer. He heard about Shulman, who is 58, through a mass e-mail from the National Jewish Democratic Council and wanted to get involved.
Around the same time, construction was being finished on his sprawling R Street rooftop deck.
Low-budget fundraiser? he e-mailed the campaign.
Next week? they wrote back.
Tacelosky went to Costco. He had workmen come install the rest of the railing. “Because,” he explains, “you don’t really want to have a missing part of your deck when a blind person is coming to speak there.”
And now, on the last Thursday of July, Tacelosky and about 60 of his friends from various circles (there’s a strong showing from Bike & Brunch, a Jewish cycling group), congregate on the roof and eat kosher-style food and pay $36 a person to cluster around a candidate for whom none of them will ever vote. (The donation amount? Twice times 18, a number that Jews associate with good luck.)
(Read more at The Washington Post)
Last 5 posts in News Clippings
- NJ Herald: Shulman, Garrett make final pitches to county - November 2nd, 2008
- The Star-Ledger: The rabbi is giving incumbent a good run - October 31st, 2008
- The Record: Report says government officials boosted Garret - October 31st, 2008
- The Record: Sticking to their guns - October 31st, 2008
- The Record: Editorial: Shulman for Congress - October 31st, 2008










