June 10, 2011

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Sponsored by the Benjamin and Anna E. Wiesman Family Endowment Fund AN AGENCY OF THE JEWISH FEDERATION OF OMAHA

Jerusalem Day march

June 10, 2011 8 Sivan 5771 Vol. 90 | No. 40

This Week

The bid for Palestinian statehood by LINDA GRADSTEIN JERUSALEM (JTA) -- While U.S. officials are running a fullcourt diplomatic press against the Palestinian bid for U.N. recognition of statehood this

Summer is here Page 7

Young Israelis walking through the streets of Jerusalem and waving Israeli flags during a 2011 celebration of Jerusalem Day. Credit: Kobi Gideon/Flash90/JTA

Guy cookbooks for the lazy days of summer Page 10

Israel is saving the past for the future Page 16

Inside Point of view Synagogues In memoriam

Next Month Health & Wellness See Front Page stories and more at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on Jewish Press

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by JTA NEWS STAFF JERUSALEM (JTA) -- Some 30,000 Israelis gathered for the annual flag march through eastern Jerusalem in honor of Jerusalem Day, as at least 3,000 police took up patrols throughout the city. The annual march led by the religious Zionist community, in which participants march and dance with flags throughout the city, culminating in dancing at the Western Wall, made its way Wednesday afternoon through the largely Palestinian east-

ern Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah. Jerusalem Day marks the reunification of the city under Israeli control during the Six Day War 44 years ago. While the parade in previous years took place largely in western Jerusalem, this year the parade was rerouted through the eastern sector in order to avoid the new light rail tracks. “Jerusalem will never be divided,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin

Netanyahu said Tuesday night during a speech in the Merkaz Harav yeshiva in honor of Jerusalem Day. “There’s nothing more holy to us than Jerusalem; we’ll protect Jerusalem, its unity, and we’ll build and develop it.” The yeshiva was the site of a terror attack in 2008 in which a Palestinian gunman killed eight students. “Next year in a more built up Jerusalem,” Netanyahu added, a play on the Jewish prayer of ‘Next year in Jerusalem.’

Temple members go to Washington for 50th year of Religious Action Center by CLAUDIA SHERMAN Temple Israel Communications Coordinator Four members of Temple Israel attended the 50th anniversary celebration of the Religious Action Center (RAC) in May in Washington, D.C. Magda Peck, Matt Ray, Mimi Silverman, and Program Director Wendy Goldberg spent three days at high-level briefings with public policy decision makers and social action leaders of the Central Conference of American Rabbis and the Union for Reform Judaism and its affiliates. Created in 1961, the RAC burst onto the scene at the apex of the American civil rights movement. “It quickly became integral in the battle

Wendy Goldberg, left, Mimi Silverman, Matt Ray, David Anderson, and his mother Magda Peck in Washington, D.C. for equality and emerged from the 1960s as the gold standard in Jewish political advocacy,” wrote Adam Kredo in the Washington Jewish Week. “Specializing on matters of social justice and civil rights, the RAC has trained a generation of Reform leaders to fight for their liberal values on Capitol Hill and across the nation. “Though religious leaders and politicians alike now hold the RAC in high regard, the group faced early opposition from many within the

Reform movement.” Critics argued that the movement “had no business bringing Judaism onto Capitol Hill.” But the leaders held their ground “confident that the RAC’s dedication to social equality and the Jewish principle of tikkun olam, repairing the world, would ultimately trump internal disagreements. And they were right.” Since then, the RAC has been instrumental in protecting the separation of church and state, defending Continued on page 2

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Credit: ISRANET September and officials at international Jewish organizations are trying to convince foreign leaders to oppose statehood, the Israeli government appears to be taking a different approach: acceptance. On Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told a Knesset committee that there is no way to stop the U.N. General Assembly from recognizing Palestinian statehood. “It would be possible to get a resolution that the world is flat” in the U.N. General Assembly, Netanyahu said in a jibe at the body, where anti-Israel resolutions have a virtual automatic majority. The Palestinians routinely have relied on the bloc of Arab and Muslim states and their allies in the non-aligned movement of mostly Third World countries to pass anti-Israel resolutions. A senior Israeli official close to the prime minister said Israel is not particularly concerned about a vote for a Palestinian state in the General Assembly. “We have very low expectations of the General Assembly,” he said. “Every year they pass at least 20 anti-Israel resolutions, including one condemning Israel for attacking the Iraqi nuclear reactor in 1981.” Rather, the Netanyahu administration is relying on the fact that General Assembly resolutions do not have international legal standing and that in the U.N. Security Council, where resolutions do carry the force of law, the United States would veto any such resolution. But Israel remains concerned, the official said, that the Palestinians will use a General Assembly resolution to harden Continued on page 2


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