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JA N UA RY 1 7, 2 02 0 | 2 0 TE V E T 578 0 | VO L. 1 00 | NO. 1 4 | 2 SECTIONS | CANDLELIGHTING | FRIDAY, JAN UARY 17, 5 : 04 P.M.
Getting back to Body Basics Omaha Israel Art Trip Pages A4+A5
Read it and eat: Pomegroni Page A8
David and Adam Kutler
GABBY BLAIR Staff Writer, Jewish Press ith the New Year come resolutions, many of which focus on taking steps to improve health. Gyms are usually packed until resolve wanes or the busyness of life gets in the way. Making time to work out requires a commitment that often falls by the wayside; just one more thing penciled into an already overflowing schedule. Alternatively, perhaps the gym just is not a comfortable or feasible environment for some. Either way, one option is to invest in fitness equipment for home, where it will always be readily available and convenient to use. Body Basics, family owned and operated since 1986 by David Kutler, has been at the
W More doctors changing approach to end-of-life care Page B1
How to make a difference for women battling breast cancer Page B8
Come visit Friedel!
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forefront of bringing the gym home for over 30 years. Today, Kutler’s son Adam and longtime employees help him to manage the business, which is conveniently located in Rockbrook Village. “When my brothers and I were younger we would help out in the store warehouse,” Adam reminisces. “My mother, aunt and other various relatives have also helped at the store and administratively over the years.” Well into their third decade, the Kutlers share that much of their business comes from word of mouth and referrals. “We are seeing some third-generation family customers and that really means a lot -and says a lot about us- as a business. We have also had a lot of support from within the Jewish community where not only residential but See Body Basics page A3
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SARA KOHEN Director of Advancement, Friedel Jewish Academy Two opportunities to visit Friedel Jewish Academy—one for adults and the other for kids—are coming up in the next few weeks. First, all adults in the community—not just parents— are invited to Friedel’s Community Open House on Thursday, Jan. 30. See Friedel Open House page A3
The Man in the High Castle I. THE MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE I’ve recently been binge-watching The Man in the High Castle on Amazon Prime. It’s an alternate-history story about a world where the Axis Powers won RABBI BRIAN World War II. STOLLER The United Temple Israel States is partitioned into three sectors: the western part of the country is now the Japanese Pacific States. The central corridor of the country is called the Neutral Zone. And the eastern part of the country, the largest segment, is under German control – part of what is now called the “Greater Nazi Reich.” Throughout the series, they give you bits of information, in subtle dialogue and graphic flashbacks, about what happened to the Jews and African Americans, and other minorities in the Nazis’ conquest of America. Some of the most chilling scenes, for me, are when they show flashbacks of former American soldiers who, at some point, switched sides and became Nazis – and they’re rounding up Jews and forcibly separating parents and children and shooting them in the streets. We know these stories from our Holocaust history, of course – but they always happened in far-away places in Europe with foreign sounding names like Vilna and Bialystok and Babi-yar. But what’s so chilling about this show is that, when they show the name of the place on the screen where the round-ups and killings are happening, it’s cities like New York and Cincinnati. And there’s something really sobering and terrifying about that. Martha Nussbaum, who’s a literary critic and professor at the University of Chicago, says that there’s something about fiction that makes it powerful in ways that non-fiction isn’t. One thing fiction does is that it opens a window into aspects of life that we would otherwise never see. When we read history books or watch documentaries about the Holocaust, it’s terrifying and heartsickening – but in our minds we know that it’s history: it happened then; it’s not now. But when we read or watch fiction, like The Man in the High Castle, we process it differently. Even though we know it’s just a story, good fiction draws us into a world, See Rabbi Stoller page A2