Vol. LXXXIX No. 24 Omaha, NE
Celebrating 89 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa
It was Purim-palooza last weekend at Beth El, as holiday festivities took center stage for revelers of all ages: adults, teens and children packed the sanctuary on Saturday night for the Family Megillah reading and costume parade. See page 7 for more photos of Purim celebrations around the Heartland.
Mossad chief seen as indispensable on Iran By LESLIE SUSSER can do everything, in the end we won’t do anything,” JERUSALEM (JTA) -- Israel has not claimed respon- Dagan was quoted as saying when he was appointed by sibility for the assassination in Dubai of top Hamas arms then-prime minister Ariel Sharon in 2002. smuggler Mahmoud Mabhouh, but the killing is raising Sharon reportedly told Dagan to run the agency “with questions about whether it will compromise Israel’s a knife between its teeth.” effort to stop Iran from obtaining the bomb. The main focus of his tenure has been Iran. Soon after That’s because one of the Dagan took over the key figures behind the Mossad, the agency reporteffort, Mossad chief Meir edly passed on information Dagan, is coming under to the United States and heavy criticism for the slopothers that the rogue py operation in Dubai. Pakistani nuclear dealer Operating under the Abdel Qadir Khan was helpassumption that Israel was ing the Iranians build a urabehind the Dubai hit, some nium enrichment facility at Israeli analysts are calling for Natanz. Dagan’s ouster. They say the Since then, a string of Mossad has adopted an irreunexplained accidents has sponsible, trigger-happy afflicted the Iranian nuclear approach to fighting terrorproject: scientists have disapism, and they point to the peared, laboratories have diplomatic imbroglio facing caught fire, aircraft have Israel for the use of fake crashed and whole batches British and Irish passports by Mossad chief Meir Dagan, shown at a Knesset meeting in of equipment have proved members of the hit squad, 2008. faulty. who traveled under the names of European citizens now In 2007, Israeli intelligence detected work on a secret living in Israel. nuclear program in Syria, and in September of that year Dagan’s tenure at the Mossad is up for renewal at the Israeli planes bombed the site of a North Korea-style end of the year. Defenders of Dagan point to the long reactor the Syrians were building. list of Mossad achievements in the war on terrorism and The Mossad also was credited for the discovery of a the campaign against Iran’s nuclear program, and argue hidden Iranian enrichment plant near the holy city of that his tenure at the intelligene agency should be Qom last September -- a find that finally convinced even extended for an unprecedented fourth time. They insist previously skeptical international observers that Iran that his knowledge of the Iranian theater is unmatched, indeed was conducting a clandestine nuclear weapons and that as the clock reaches zero hour on the Iranian program. nuclear threat, his input will be invaluable -- and not Although the Mossad has not claimed credit for any of only for Israel. this, regional players have little doubt as to who has Under Dagan, the Mossad has had just two priorities: been behind the killings, the accidents and the pinpoint delaying Iran’s nuclear program and counter-terrorism. intelligence. “The list must be short. If we continue pretending we Continued on page 2
Inside Opinion Page see page 12
See Front Page Stories & More at: www.jewishomaha.org; click on ‘Jewish Press’
Hadassah facing demands from hospital staff Page 2
March 5, 2010
Annual Brooks lecture explores long history of religious doubt
Purim in the Heartland
This Week: Home and Garden staerts on page 8
19 Adar 5770
by KATHRYN COX SCHWARTZ Managing Editor, Journal of Religion & Film Staff Assistant, Department of Philosophy and Religion The 2010 Rabbi Sidney H. Brooks Lecture is scheduled for 7 p.m. Thursday, March 18, in the Milo Bail Student Center’s Chancellor’s Room on the University of Nebraska at Omaha campus. Jennifer Michael Hecht, Ph.D. in History of Science from Columbia University, will present “Doubt, Disbelief, and the Meaning of Life,” demonstrating a long, strong history of religious doubt from the origins of written history to the present day all over the world. Hecht will discuss how non-belief, skepticism, and doubt have paralleled and at times shaped the world’s great religious and secular belief systems. She says, “Throughout history some of the great- Jennifer Michael Hecht, Ph.D. est religious thinkers have expressed great doubt in the supernatural aspects of religion while describing the awesome strangeness of our real situation. This is true for all the great world religions and especially for Judaism. From Koheleth, to Maimonedes, to Spinoza, to the present day, the Jewish contribution to philosophy has included a robust poetic atheism that takes the human feeling of sacredness as sufficient to the definition of sacredness. “Convinced that there is no God with a mind, no being that made us and thinks about us, Jews throughout history have chosen to call the beauty of the world itself “God.” Some of us today don’t want to, because the word is often used to mean a personality in the sky that attends to us, and such an idea seems willfully misleading. The great thinkers of the past shared this worry and came up with brilliant ways of managing it. This talk will be a happy recap of great minds as they have conceived of finding real meaning without giving up real truth.” Jennifer Michael Hecht is a philosopher, historian, and poet. Her Doubt: A History demonstrates a long, strong history of religious doubt. Hecht’s The End of the Soul: Scientific Modernity, Atheism and Anthropology won the Phi Beta Kappa Society’s 2004 Ralph Waldo Emerson Award “for scholarly studies that contribute significantly to interpretations of the intellectual and cultural condition of humanity.” Her book The Happiness Myth takes a skeptical look at modern ideas of the good life. Hecht’s poetry books have won national awards, including the Poetry Society of America’s first book prize for The Next Ancient World, and Publisher’s Weekly called her most recent poetry book, Funny, “one of the most original and entertaining books of the year.” Her work appears in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The New Republic, and The New Yorker. She now teaches poetry in the graduate writing program of The New School University in New York City. The lecture is the result of an endowment honouring Rabbi Sidney H. Brooks. It is presented through the sponsorship of the Religious Studies Program, the Natan and Hannah Schwalb Center for Israel and Jewish Studies, the College of Arts and Sciences and Temple Israel. It is open to the public at no charge. For more information, please call Dr. William L. Blizek, 554.3347, or Dr. Guy Matalon, 554.2139. For information about Temple Israel’s scholar-in residence see story on page 10.
Coming March 26: Passover Issue JLand introduces virtual trading cards to its gaming site Page 5
Convert cuts up in one man show Page 11