Vol. LXXXVIII No. 18 Omaha, NE
Celebrating 88 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa
13 Tevet, 5769
January 9, 2009
Rocket fire from Gaza becomes personal for Israeli in Omaha by TAMAR HALEVY JCC Community Shlicha The morning Operation Cast Lead began, I received an invitation to a new Facebook group called: “newcomers to the Hamas’s attacks range”. A Facebook group is usually something you’re proud of, a group of people you identify with. If you’ll look at my Facebook profile, you’ll see who I am: I belong to the Israeli Border Police group, my army unit for the last four years, a Young Jewish Omaha group which I just joined recently, the Jewish Agency for Israel Shlichim group, and several others. This is the first Facebook group to which I wish I didn’t belong. I’m a 23-year-old working at the Jewish Community Center of Omaha as Omaha’s Community Shlicha (which literally means “messenger”) representing the Jewish Agency for Israel. I’m from a small village in Israel called Kibbutz Hatzor, located 22 miles from Gaza Strip and 29 miles from Tel Aviv. This is where I was born and raised; this is where my whole family lives today. Joining this Facebook group didn’t mean just another feature on my profile; it means that I’ve joined 500,000 Israelis, soon to be one million, who have no safe place to live since the rockets being fired from Gaza by Hamas can now reach as far
A 27-year-old construction worker from the Bedouin village of Aroer was killed and 14 other Israeli construction workers injured when a Grad rocket fired from Gaza landed on their construction site. Five of the wounded were in serious condition. Of the 60 rockets that have been fired into Israel just on the morning of Dec. 29, nine have landed in Ashkelon. Rockets also landed in Ashdod and Sderot during the day and in Beer Sheva the next day, where an empty school was hit. This was the deepest into Israel a Palestinian rocket has yet to strike. Credit: ISRANET
Community loses two giants
as Beer Sheva. I’ve joined a larger uncountable group of people who cannot sleep at night anymore, spending hours worrying about their closest beloved friends and family, asking themselves, “Will they survive the day?” On Dec. 27 the Qasaam’s alarm was heard in my home announcing: “Red Color, Red Color.” My family didn’t even have a shelter to go to, because who would have imagined that this area, in the heart of Israel, only 29 miles from Tel Aviv and 39 miles from Jerusalem, would ever be attacked by rockets from Gaza? For the first time since Israel’s Independence War in 1948, my home was under attack again. My father, Michael, who was a baby in 1948, was evacuated to a safe place in the Tel Aviv area during the Independence War. Now, 60 years later, he is not going anywhere he says. “This is my home,” he insists, “and I’m sticking to my home.” Just like my father 60 years ago, my newborn nephew, Noam, now eightweeks-old, and my sister-in-law, Noga, have left the kibbutz for a safer place. Noam’s father, my brother Ram, an officer in the Israeli Army, left home on Dec. 26 to protect us all. In my kibbutz -- for the first time in 60 Continued on page 2
Friend to immigrants, Sol Parsow dies at 86
Supporter of Blumkin staff, Jack Schrager dies at 95
Anne Shackman receives prestigious Kipnis-Wilson/ Friedland award
by JOAN K. MARCUS Funeral services were held Jan. 4 at Beth El Synagogue for Sol Parsow, retired Omaha clothier who had dedicated himself to helping Russian artists and artisans market their works in the United States. Parsow died Jan. 1. His wife, Lee Jane, and two sons, Dr. Jay Joseph Parsow and Steven Parsow, preceded him in death. Parsow was born in Cleveland to Russian immigrant parents. He often remarked that his parents didn’t know each other in Russia. “My father hiked over the mountains to escape being drafted by the Cossacks. He got to America penniless and met my mother in Cleveland.” Sol was seven when the family moved to Pittsburgh where they “starved” for three years. His father was a floor-sanding contractor who didn’t get much work and the family exhausted their credit at the grocery. As a young boy, he fainted at school from malnutrition. He never forgot that some of the other children brought Continued on page 15
by CAROL KATZMAN Editor of the Jewish Press A self-made man and friend to the staff at the Rose Blumkin Jewish Home, Jack Schrager died there Dec. 19 at the age of 95. Services were held Dec. 23 at Temple Israel. According to his son Phil, who gave one of the eulogies, “by the time he was 10years-old, Dad was selling newspapers in Milwaukee. It was the Depression and anyone who was old enough was expected to help earn money for the family.” A high school graduate, Jack was making deliveries with his father one night when their truck crashed. Jack survived, but his father didn’t. The experience defined him, making him the “man of the house” that included his mother and sisters. By the time he married his first wife, Sonia, in 1934, and started a career in sales in the early 1940s; he was known as “ace salesman.” With two children in tow, the couple moved to Omaha in 1946 and with business partner Irving Herzog, started Central Construction Continued on page 15
by LISA LIEB Having been a dedicated volunteer for more than 30 years, Anne Shackman was recently honored with the Kipnis-Wilson/Friedland Award. She has participated in a variety of Junior League programs, served on the Police Chief’s Task Force for Drug Prevention, and done extensive work for the Children’s Museum, including a term as President of the Guild. But Shackman’s first commitment has always been to the Jewish community, where she has held innumerable local, regional and national leadership positions. Shackman was the liaison for the Omaha Section of the National Council of Jewish Women to the ProChoice Coalition, served on the Jewish Family Service (JFS) board and chaired its fundraising campaign. Her involvement with the Anti-Defamation League/Community Relations Committee has included participating in the Prejudice Elimination Workshop, serving on the board, and co-chairing ADL’s exhibit: Anne Frank in the World”, a major project which drew” close to 50,000 visitors to Joslyn Castle. The project won the Jewish Federation’s Community Service Award in 1991. Continued on page 9
Inside Opinion Page see page 12
This Week: Special Issue on Women’s Health See Front Page Stories & More at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on ‘Jewish Press’
Former Omahans’ grandchildren serving in IDF: Page 3
Coming Next Month: Simchas & Celebrations on Feb. 6 Federation salutes women’s philanthropy: Pages 8-9
Author highlights fictionalized account of Sarajevo Hagaddah: Page 16