April 21, 2006

Page 1

Vol. LXXXV No. 32 Omaha, NE

Celebrating 85 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa

First Winners of Sokolof Javitch Music Scholarships Named by CLAUDIA SHERMAN Foundation Public Relations Coordinator Cantor Gastón Bogomolni of Beth El Synagogue and Dani Burr, a 20-year-old Omahan who attends The Boston Conservatory, are the first recipients of the Karen Sokolof Javitch Music Appreciation Merit Scholarships. Phil Sokolof, who died two years ago, established Cantor Gastón Bogomolni the music scholarships in recognition of his daughter Karen’s talent and appreciation for musical and theatrical arts and to encourage and develop that appreciation within the Jewish community. “It’s very fitting that my dad would establish these scholarships,” said Karen Javitch. Both her parents “had a real love and feeling for music. We were a musical family.” She recalled that her dad started out to be a singer and dancer and that her mother played the piano. “Dad knew all the time and effort that went into performing.” From the Fund, up to two annual scholarships are available to Jewish students from the Omaha metropolitan area who are majoring in or pursuing an advanced degree in music performance or composition or in music education at a university or music conservatory.

Dani Burr

Cantor Bogomolni and Dani Burr will be honored, along with the scholarship winners and the Outstanding Teacher Award recipient of the Phil and Ruth Sokolof Honor Roll Fund, at the “Live from the 92nd Street Y” broadcast featuring well-known author, Rabbi Joseph Telushkin on Thursday, May 11, 7:15 p.m., at the Jewish Community Center.

A reception will follow. “I grew up in a family that was full of music,” remarked Cantor Bogomolni, a native of Buenos Aires, Argentina. His parents participated in choirs, his father played guitar and organ, his mother performed Israeli dancing, and his grandfather played violin. “Music was all over the place whether it was rock ’n roll or classical, Paul Anka, the Beatles, or Jewish music. I started in my Jewish day school when I was threeyears-old, and I guess my love for music, especially Jewish music, was discovered then and has flown forever in my veins,” the cantor explained. A student of music all his life, the Cantor privately

23 Nisan, 5766 April 21, 2006

Operation Promise Humanizes Focus of Fundraising Efforts by EUNIE DENENBERG Last fall Buzz and Jody Malashock participated in the Federation’s Leadership Mission to Ukraine and Israel. The experience was electrifying--emotionally, intellectually and spiritually--and now the Malashocks have volunteered to co-chair the Operation Promise fundraising event on Thursday, June 8, at the Jewish Community Center. “We’re eager to tell our stories and share our excitement,” Jody says, “and, above all, make everyone aware of the needs.” Operation Promise is a national effort to raise funds over the next three years and keep our promise to the Jews of Ethiopia and the Former Soviet Union. Up to 20,000 Ethiopians must be brought to Israel, educated and integrated into Israeli society. In the FSU we need to develop a strong Jewish identity among young people and provide food, medicine and social welfare assistance to the elderly.

Continued on page 19

Jewish Activist Hopes to Stir Pot on Darfur with Washington Protest by RACHEL SILVERMAN NEW YORK (JTA) -- Ruth Messinger has borne witness to some of the world’s most horrific tragedies. A tireless human rights activist, Messinger has walked through earthquake-devastated villages in Turkey, traveled to Thailand in the wake of a tsunami and visited Balkan refugee camps during Milosevic’s ethnic cleansing campaign. Still, the scenes she saw in Darfur during the summer of 2004 were “a great deal more depressing. “The people there have no expectation that the world cares about their situation or that they’re going to be able to come home,” Messinger said, sitting in her New York City office last week. “The word I use for it when I speak most American Jewish World Service executive director, Ruth Messinger, holds a baby in Sudan’s Darfur region often is just, chilling.” The Executive Director of the in August 2004. According to the AJWS, the child’s twin American Jewish World Service, sister was saved at a clinic funded in part by the agency. Credit: AJWS Messinger is leading the charge to Temple Israel Joins Efforts to Save Darfur restore hope to this ravaged communi- by CLAUDIA SHERMAN ty. Her approach is Temple Israel Communications Coordinator A humanitarian crisis is taking place in Darfur, Sudan. At the multi-pronged: hands of government-backed militias, as many as 400,000 people form interfaith have been killed and an additional 500 die each day. Nearly two alliances through a million innocent civilians have been displaced from their homes in Save Darfur Coathe Darfur region. lition, flood the On Sunday, April 30, 11:30 a.m., there will be a prayer assembly, White House with open to the community at Temple Israel. From there, the gathering postcards and add will walk to Memorial Park to join other members of the community to the AJWS’s $2.4 to rally against genocide in Darfur. million humanitariContinued on page 2 an aid campaign.

Inside Opinion Page see page 16

Next on the agenda is an April 30 rally in Washington, D.C., where Messinger expects a large turnout, thanks, in part, to efforts by synagogues, Hillels, JCCs and other Jewish organizations across the country. The message she trumpets is simple: The world needs to determine a “communal response to genocide” and apply it across the board. Messinger says that Jews, of all people, should heed this call. “We’re the people whose constant context and language since the Shoah has been, ‘Never again’,” Messinger said. “Do we mean what we said or not? And if we do, then are we going to respond for everybody, and not just wait til Jews are attacked again?” For Messinger, the answer is an easy one. The Jewish call for tikkun olam, or repairing the world, mandates a response. “It’s the Judaism I was raised on,” she explained. “Every person is made in the image of Continued on page 2

During last fall’s mission to Israel, Jody Malashock meets with a Ethiopian child at an absorption center. Buzz recounts how he wept after visiting an old woman in a shtetl (village) in Ukraine. “Ill and alone,” he goes on quietly, “she depends on our contributions for her very existence.” “We’re not so far removed from that lady,” says Jody. “My grandparents were born in Kiev and, for me, being there brought my family’s story full circle.” She shifts gears.“And then, in Israel, I found myself showing some little girls, straight off a plane from Addis Abbaba, how to use the bathroom! How do I convey such experiences?” “It’s hard,” Buzz agrees, but sitting face to face with the very p e o p l e Operation Promise will help certainly humanizes this project for us.” Jody interjects, “You In Ukraine, Buzz Malashock chats with an know, people elderly woman, who, he says, “depends on u n d e r s t a n d our contributions for her very existence.” the needs locally and our community is good at heart. If we can make Operation Promise real for people, they will respond.” “It’s a humanitarian effort,” concludes Buzz. “We’re going to do our best to fire up this town!” Continued on page 15

This Week: See Front Page Stories and more at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on ‘Jewish Press’ Educator Relates “Journeys of Conscience” at YomHaShoah: Page 3

Scion of Local Fortune 500 Runs for Senate Seat: Page 8

Friedel’s 40th Includes “The Art of Tzedakah”: Page 10

Next Month: Mother’s Day Issue Conservative Movement Chooses Scholar, Not Rabbi to Lead: Page 14


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