May 6, 2005

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Vol. LXXXIV No. 35 Omaha, NE

Celebrating 84 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa

27 Nisan, 5765 May 6, 2005

Only in Israel: Annual Yom Ha’Atzmaut Celebration Is Community Event for All Ages by RACHEL BLUM JCC Program Director The entire Jewish community is excited about this year’s Yom Ha’Atzmaut (Israel Independence Day) Celebration, and members of a variety of Jewish organizations in Omaha have come together to plan what truly has become a collaborative project. This year marks the 57th year of Independence for Israel, and the community wide celebration is scheduled for Sunday, May 15, 12:30-4:30 p.m., at the Jewish Community Center. The theme of the day is, “Only in Israel,” and we hope to bring a true Israeli experience to all who participate. The afternoon will begin at 12:30 p.m. with a Yom HaZikaron ceremony commemorating Israel’s fallen soldiers. Boy Scout Troop #218 will present our nation’s colors as they raise the American and Israeli flags. The flags will be brought to half mast, and the ceremony, which includes our very own synagogue youth, will begin.

The remembrance ceremony will transition into a celebration for Israel’s Independence, as flags will be raised to the top of the mast, and the Yom Ha’Atzmaut celebration will begin with Israeli food service provided by Services Culinary Catering by Nancy Mattley. Falafel lunches cost $6; hotdog lunches are $4. Upon entering the facility, kids will be encouraged to pick up a passport and visit all of the Israeli cities around the JCC. Some of these include a visit to the Galilee for an archaeological dig, making craft projects in Sefad, taking a picture with a camel in the Negev, and building the model city of Jerusalem out of LEGO blocks.

Inflatable games will be a major attraction to this year’s event, as kids of all ages are encouraged to visit Tel Aviv’s Luna Park! Here children will find a moonwalk and a superslide, and just a few steps away, they’ll also have the opportunity to visit the Dead Sea and climb the rock wall at Masada. In addition to all of the activities for kids, this year’s celebration will also feature programs for adult participants, including the B’nai B’rith Trivia Quiz, and Israeli Wine Tasting from Spirit World. There will also be plenty of vendors on Ben Yehuda Street, as Beth Israel’s gift shop and the LOVE gift shop will have booths, along with Shir Tal Jewelry and tie-dye t-shirt sales that say “Omaha” in Hebrew.

Temple Israel Sisterhood will sell Roses from Israel, and two representatives from the Israeli Traveling Gallery will display their works in the auditorium. The Israeli Traveling Gallery travels throughout the United States and sells arts and crafts from Jerusalem, Old Jaffa, Safed, Megiddo and other cities throughout Israel. Some of their pieces include the sculptures of Frank Meisel, the water color, oil and mixed media art of Victor Shrem and the beautiful works of Gabrieli hand weaving, to name a few. At 2:30 p.m., winners of the Elinor A. Whitman Memorial Book Appreciation Contest and the Lieutenant Irving Cohen “Profiles in Jewish Courage” Essay Contest will be announced in the Kripke Jewish Federation Library. The Elinor A. Whitman Memorial Book Appreciation Contest is divided into two categories: Book Jackets (kindergarten through sixth grade) and Book Reports (grades one through six). Continued on page 3

Author, Storyteller Rabbi Jack Riemer Jewish Veterans of World War II to Share Magic During Beth El’s Swell with Pride, if not with Money by SUE FISHKOFF Scholar-in-Residence Weekend ROSTOV-ON-DON, Russia, (JTA)-ing his inspiring career. He by JILL BELMONT Beth El Publicity Coordinator was ordained and received He is a renowned author, a his M.H.L. and D.D. from storyteller, an inspirational the Jewish Theological speaker. One of the many Seminary, and did his graduprayers he has penned was ate studies at Brandeis once recited at a White University. House prayer breakfast by During his stay at Beth El, President Clinton, and Elie Rabbi Riemer will speak Wiesel has stated that his during 6 p.m. Kabbalat words “are songs of hope Shabbat services about the and faith.” And now, our real reason we eat dairy; he entire Omaha Jewish comwill also discuss “Ruth, the Rabbi Jack Riemer munity will have the opporFirst Modern Woman,” at a tunity to experience first-hand the magic special Shabbat dinner afterward. On of Rabbi Jack Riemer, during a special Saturday morning, his D’var Torah will scholar-in-residence weekend at Beth El focus on “Boaz, the Single in our Midst”, Synagogue during the weekend of June then at a special Sunday morning break3-5. fast at 10 a.m., he will explore how a perRabbi Riemer is the author of numer- son heals, and will discuss Naomi. (There ous books, including So That Your Values is no charge to attend the breakfast.) Beth El’s Rabbi Mordechai Levin Live On, a treasury of ethical wills; the three-volume The World of the High Holy encouraged the entire community to take Days, and Jewish Reflections on Death, a part in this fascinating weekend, saying, classic resource which assists mourners. “People will be delighted to hear Rabbi He has lectured at universities, healing Riemer, one of the best Jewish speakers centers, synagogues and churches around in the country. He is a brilliant observer the world and has been called “probably of life, a storyteller and preacher who has the most quoted rabbi in the country” by the ability to describe the human conditzedakah guru Danny Siegel. tion and lead the way towards new In addition Rabbi Riemer has written resolve and worthy living. His tales go prayers and poems that have been pub- directly to the hearts and souls of his lislished in prayer books of both the teners, and his messages are filled with Conservative and Reform movements, warmth, wit and wisdom.” Cost of the Shabbat dinner is $12.50; and has published articles in most major journals of Jewish thought throughout reservations may be made by calling the synagogue office at 492.8550. America and abroad. Rabbi Riemer’s scholar-in-residence Recently retired from Congregation Beth Tikvah in Boca Raton, FL, Rabbi weekend has been underwritten by the Riemer also served congregations in La Ida and Samuel Kaiman Scholar-inJolla, California, and Dayton, Ohio, dur- Residence Endowment Fund.

Inside Opinion Page see page 8

Sunday, May 9 marks the 60th anniversary of V-Day, the date in 1945 when Nazi Germany capitulated. Nowhere has it been as resolutely commemorated each year as in the former Soviet Union, which lost a staggering 25 million citizens during what is still called the Great Patriotic War. Of approximately 11,000 World War II veterans still alive in the southern Russian capital of Rostov-on- Don today, 211 are Jewish. Three of those Jewish soldiers marched in the great Victory Day parade in Moscow’s Red Square on June 24, 1945. One was 90-year-old Leonid Abelich Klevitsky, a tall, white-haired man of erect bearing who heads the city’s Jewish war veterans association. “It was the day before my 20th birthday,” he told JTA in an interview conducted during last year’s Victory Day celebration. “I’d been celebrating all night, and almost fell flat on my face The Omaha Jewish com- Omahan Alex Kulik (now stain Red Square.” tioned in Falluja, Iraq, with the When Germany munity will commemorate U.S. Army Rangers), was a attacked the Soviet Union the 60th anniversary of V- four-year-old at this May 9 in June 1941, Klevitsky Day at the Livingston parade in Minsk, Belarus, in was a student in a presti- Plaza, on Sunday, May 1985. He is the son of Rita and gious military academy. Gregory Kulik. 9, noon. He graduated in time to fight on the Ukrainian front and took moved back to Rostov. He became head of the city’s Jewish war veterans association part in the bombing of Berlin. “I never understood my Judaism,” he when it was founded six years ago. Rostov-on-Don lies just over the border says of his upbringing. “I had a MarxistLeninist education in the military academy. from Ukraine, right in the path of the 1941 And only because I was Jewish, I got a ‘D’ Nazi onslaught. Few of the city’s 20,000 instead of an ‘A’ because I corrected the Jews fled the advancing German forces. Rostov’s Jews were urbanized, and many teacher when he quoted Stalin wrong.” After a 25-year career in the army, in had studied in German universities. 1967 Klevitsky retired, and he and his wife Continued on page 2

This Week: Omaha Election Guide on Pages 4-5 Omaha Site for National ADL Holocaust Curriculum: Page 3

NCJW to Host Spring Gala Next Month: Page 4

Coming May 20: Senior Living Special Issue Teen Age Features Young Women of BBG: Page 7

After Key Departures, Who Will Guide AIPAC?: Page 9


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