Vol. LXXXIII No. 32 Omaha, NE
Celebrating 83 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa
One Womanâs Passion for Genetic Testing
Former Brandeis-Bardin Institute President to be Kaiman Scholar at Temple
by LYNDA MIRVISH for Greater Omaha Committee for Jewish Genetic Testing Jean Duitch has a passion, a passion to spare other families the heartache that she and her family have suffered since her grandson, Gershie, the son of daughter Debby and her husband Avi Brickner, was diagnosed with Canavan Disease. That is why she has fought to put together a partnership that includes the Jewish Federation of Omaha, Boys Town National Research Hospital, and a group of concerned women whose aim is to make available free genetic testing to 100 adults over the age of 19. âNo one else should ever have to go through what our family has gone through the past nine years,â says Duitch. âWe want to give families the information they need to make what ever personal and private decisions are right for them.â Canavan is only one of the inherited or genetic diseases which occurs more frequently in Jews of Above: Gershon, son of Dr. Debby Duitch and Avi Brickner, Eastern European (Ashkenazi) descent than in the is nine-years-old. He was diagnosed with Canavan Disease general population. In fact, about one in 40 when he was only five-months-old. Below: Jean Duitch Ashkenazi Jews is a carrier for the recessive gene for INFORMATIONAL MEETING Canavan. May 17, 7:30 p.m., at the JCC Neither Debby nor Avi ever dreamed they were carJean Duitch and Dr. Edward Cohn, riers. Soon after Gershie was born, Debby, a child psyDr. William Kimberling, Dr. Patrick chiatrist, who had taken courses in pediatric neurology, Brookhauser, Toba Cohen-Dunning noted that his muscle tone didnât seem to be all it and Krystal Platt, all of Boys Town should; she was convinced there was something seriNational Research Hospital, will be ously wrong with her precious baby. However, their on hand to answer questions about pediatrician told them on several visits their son was genetic diseases and upcoming testnormal, thus raising their hopes. ing on July 11 and Sept. 1. Later, his parents thought Gershie might have Participants can register on May 17. Continued on page 6
Community to Stand Together April 21 to Remember the Holocaust by CLAUDIA SHERMAN They were married Temple Israel and settled in Los Communications Angeles. They had one Coordinator child, Julie, who now On a rainy October carries on her parentsâ morning in 1938, 19legacy by telling her year-old Hanna Block parentsâ story at schools stood on the sidewalk and to community crying softly as a bus groups throughout the departed Prague and country. She will presdisappeared from view. ent the story, âVoices of Her sweetheart, Walter the Generations,â at the Kohner, was a passenOmaha Yom HaShoah ger on the bus. He had community observance an American visa and on Wednesday, April planned to go to Julie Kohner, center, with photos of her parents, Hanna and Walter. 21, 7 p.m., at Temple Hollywood to become an actor and arrange for Hanna Israel. As part of her presentation, Julie will show a to join him. video about her parents that originally aired on televiIt couldnât happen too quickly as swastikas had sion in 1953. There will also be a candle lighting cerealready been appearing in their town in mony, and Templeâs adult choir, Kol Rina, will sing. Czechoslovakia. Although they wrote to one another âThis yearâs observance is especially important,â said frequently during the first two years, they eventually Guy Matalon, executive director of Jewish Educational lost track of each other. Hanna was taken prisoner by and Library Services (JELS). âWe, as a community, have the Nazis in 1943 and hauled around in cattle trains decided to take the responsibility of remembrance, to between concentrations camps. Eventually, she found share the burden of never again by teaching it to our herself in Auschwitz. children, to become educated and involved in Shoah Walter was drafted into the U.S. Army. As his unit education. It is one evening when we have the oppormade its way from the beaches of Normandy in France tunity to stand together and show the survivors that we to Luxembourg, he learned about the gas chambers-- are committed to never forget and never again.â and thought of Hanna. Then, Walter received a letter Julie and her husband, an aerospace engineer, live in from an American soldier who had helped liberate the same Bel-Air home where her parents raised her. Hanna. Walter received permission to travel throughout She has a son, Danny, who will become a Bar Mitzvah Europe to search for her and finally found her in later this year. Amsterdam. Continued on page 2
Inside
This Week: Teen Age Features AZA on Page 7 Bânai Jeshurun to Support Israelâs Reform Rabbis: Page 2
Jewish Perspective on Jesus Class Offers Reading List: Page 3
18 Nisan, 5764 April 9, 2004
by CLAUDIA SHERMAN Temple Israel Communications Coordinator Rabbi Lee T. Bycel, former president of The BrandeisBardin Institute, a national conference and retreat center for Jewish learning and culture in Southern California, will be the Samuel and Ida Kaiman Memorial Fund Scholar-in-Residence at Temple Israel during the weekend of April 30-May 2. He will speak on the topic, âLiving as a Jew in the Modern World: Challenges and Opportunities.â The community is invited to attend. Rabbi Bycel said he âwill address the complexity and challenges of living a Jewish life in America in the 21st century. America has provided the Jew with great opportunities, and Jews have been outstanding contributors to this country.â Currently on sabbatical Rabbi Lee T. Bycel studying, teaching, and traveling, Rabbi Bycel served as senior rabbi of Fairmount Temple in Cleveland, Ohio, a congregation of approximately 1,800 families from 1998 to 2000. From 1987 to 1997, he was the dean of Hebrew Union CollegeJewish Institute of Religion (HUC-JIR) in Los Angeles where he also served as senior academic and administrative officer of the campus. In addition, he was the Smither Visiting Professor of World Religions at the Claremont School of Theology in Claremont, California. âRabbi Bycel has shown by example his contribution to making this world a better place,â said Donna Kaiman Gilbert, daughter of the late Samuel and Ida Kaiman. âAs dean of Hebrew Union College, Rabbi Bycel was responsible for training hundreds of Reform rabbis over a 15-year period of time. At the BrandeisBardin Institute, he greatly influenced the lives of many youth who attended. I am certain that the community will enjoy his dynamic and meaningful presentations.â Born in Los Angeles, Dr. Bycel graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1971 with a degree in philosophy. He was ordained as a rabbi at HUC in New York in 1979 and completed his doctoral studies in applied theology in 1995 at the school in Claremont. Serving as a moderator for executive leadership seminars at the Aspen Institute, Rabbi Byel is also a member of the board of Mazon: A Jewish Response to Hunger. He is on the advisory board of The Skirball Institute on American Values, dedicated to exploring the connections between 4,000 years of Jewish heritage and the vitality of American democratic ideals. The Skirball Institute welcomes and seeks to inspire people of every ethnic and cultural identity in American life. Rabbi Bycel has facilitated leadership retreats and programs and has lectured and consulted on leadership and ethics throughout the United States. In 2001, 2002, and 2003, he addressed the U.S. presidential scholars in Washington, D.C., on the subject of leadership and ethics. Each year, 141 graduating high school seniors are named by the president of the United States as presidential scholars who demonstrate leadership, scholarship, contribution to school and community, and accomplishments in the arts, sciences, and other fields. Actively involved in a variety of interfaith, social justice, and educational organizations and activities, Rabbi Bycel served as president of the County of Los Angeles Commission on Human Relations. He has met with Jewish leaders in the former Soviet Union, Italy, Spain, and Israel. Rabbi Bycel has a number of publications to his credit and was the recipient of several awards including the National Conference of Community and Justice (NCCJ) Humanitarian Award in 1999. Married to Judy Pam Bycel, former director of the NCCJ in Santa Monica, the couple are the parents of Micah and Moti.
Coming This Month: Motherâs Day Gift Guide on April 30 Crossword Puzzle-Jewish Poets: Page 6
Public Library Gets Isaac Bashevis Singer Grant: Page 12