Vol. LXXXVII No. 43 Omaha, NE
Celebrating 87 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa
1 Tammuz, 5768
July 4, 2008
“Bring sandbags, not tallit bags”
Important information for Holocaust survivors:
by ANDREA JACOBS IJN Staff Writer, Intermountain Jewish News, Denver, CO The floods that have devastated portions of Iowa arrived at the IJN’s dry doorstep on June 13. An e-mail sent by Jody Braverman, an Iowa City resident and former Denverite, began with a captivating question: “When does the meteor hit?” “Three years ago,” the e-mail continued, “our home got hit by lightening, which fried many electrical components despite the whole-house surge protector. “Two years ago, just as we finished the second seder meal with 23 friends and family, the tornado hit. “Earlier this year, we awoke in the early morning darkness to the rumbles of the southern Illinois earthquake. “And now we’re struggling with floodwaters.”
One-time German government payment available for former ghetto laborers
In 2003, Braverman and his wife Janie moved to Iowa City with their combined family of four. They had no idea that plagues of potentially Biblical proportions would follow. On Friday the 13th, the situation for the college town’s 60,000 residents was a fluctuating swirl of rising water, flood bulletins, road closures, curfews, sandbagging and evacuations. The 100-year flood plain -- the geographical marker of the worst flood in a 100-year period --had already been surpassed, and officials feared the 500-year flood plain would soon be breached. “At this point, it’s either an attitude of ‘we can handle it, let’s wait and see’ or ‘sandbag and evacuate,’” Braverman said last month from his real estate development office as new bulletins poured in over local TV stations and the Internet. Braverman shared the latest update from the Army Corps of Engineers, which stated: “The current water level of the Coralville Reservoir is 715.9 feet, 3.9 feet over the spillway. “Possible maximum flow expected during this flood event in the Iowa City area is 44,000 cubic square feet, was expected late June 16. This correlates to an additional four-and-a-half to The Voxman Music Building at the University of Iowa, is one of 16 submerged buildings at the Iowa five feet of water. Credit: Nicole Esposito Continued on page 2 City Campus.
by JEWISH PRESS staff In September 2007, the German government announced the creation of a new Ghetto Work Fund that offers a one-time payment of 2000 Euros (approximately $3000 USD) to Holocaust survivors who worked in German-controlled ghettos. It is estimated that there are 60,000 Holocaust survivors who may be eligible for these payments, many of whom live in the United States. According to an article on the Hartford, CT, Jewish Federation website, “The “German Ghetto Work Payment Program” is a $140 million fund created by the German government. One of the first new German reparations programs in recent years, it was established as a symbolic goodwill gesture to help Jewish workers who performed ‘voluntary’ labor in Jewish ghettos in order to survive. Jobs such as snow shoveling, food production and service, road repair, menial factory and agricultural work and house cleaning were often exchanged for bare necessities of clothing, shelter, medicine and food,” wrote Harriet J. Dobin. An application must be made for the one-time payment using a specific German government form. Attorneys from Kutak Rock LLP, an Omaha law firm, in conjunction with Beit Tzedek Legal Services, a national non-profit organization, have been donating their time to assist Holocaust survivors in Omaha and other cities in completing the applications. Holocaust survivors who believe they are eligible for the payment may call Robert Cohen of Kutak Rock at 402.231.8738 to set up an appointment. No fees will be charged for the firm’s services to assist survivors in applying for the reparations payment. For more information about this program locally, please contact Beth Dotan at the Institute for Holocaust Education 402.334.6575.
Sderot and Israelis missing-in-action galvanize U.S. Jews by BEN HARRIS NEW YORK (JTA) -- Gabrielle Flaum always has been involved Jewishly, from attending a Jewish summer camp to participating in social action programs. But the New Jersey teenager's summer trip to Israel in 2006 with a Reform youth group elevated that involvement to a new level. Three days after the group arrived, Hezbollah began firing Katyusha rockets into northern Israel from Lebanon. A friend of Flaum’s Israeli counselor was among the first Israelis killed in the war, and later the counselor left the group when his IDF reserve unit was mobilized. Flaum was so moved by the experience that upon her arrival back home in Millburn, she started SOS: Save our Soldiers, a teen advocacy group dedicated to securing the release of Ehud Goldwasser, Eldad Regev and Gilad Shalit, the three Israeli soldiers kidnapped in the summer of 2006. Twenty to 30 Jewish teens, including some who had never connected to Israel, now gather at the Flaum home for SOS meetings once or twice a month. The group successfully lobbied the New Jersey state Legislature to adopt a resolution last year calling on the United
Inside Opinion Page see page 8
Dorit and Ben Genet, left, with Sderot resident Natan Galkowicz, whose daughter was killed in 2005 by a Kassam missile, stand beneath a banner in Hollywood, Fla., expressing soliCredit: Onefamilyfund.org darity with the people of the besieged southern Israeli town. Nations to help free the soldiers -- the first such resolution adopted in the United States. And it also had the idea to place empty chairs on synagogue pulpits during the High Holidays, an act of soli-
darity that was widely adopted across the country. I knew that I needed to do something,” Flaum, 17, told JTA. “For the families of the soldiers, I really understood. I came
This Week: Beth El honors its volunteers: Page 7 See Front Page Stories & More at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on ‘Jewish Press’
Kansas Gay couple wed in San Francisco: Page 3
to really love this counselor and he had a really large impact on my life. It could have been any one of them.” Along with the plight of Israelis suffering from Arab rocket fire, in particular those in the southern Israeli town of Sderot, the cause of Israel’s missing soldiers has galvanized American Jewry like few Israel-related issues have in recent years. From the $360 million raised in 2006 to help Israel’s North after a month of rocket attacks to the 150,000 signatures on a petition to the secretary-general of the United Nations calling for the release of the MIAs, to the dozen MIA-related groups started on the popular social networking Web site Facebook, the causes of the MIAs and the Israeli communities under Arab fire have prompted American Jewry to close ranks. “We, too, in Omaha, have experienced these emotions and the urgency firsthand. Last February, 22 participants of the Kripke Campaign Leadership Mission met the father of Gilad Shalit, who spoke openly about the pain of his son’s captivity,” added Jan Goldstein, executive director of Omaha’s Jewish Federation. Continued on page 2
Coming This Month: Health & Wellness on July 18 Antique quilt brings back memories: Page 4
After ceasefire, questions about Shalit’s release: Page 5