July 6, 2007

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Vol. LXXXVI No. 42 Omaha, NE

Celebrating 86 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa

20 Tamuz, 5767 July 6, 2007

Summit exposes key Nebraska Jewish Historical Society preserving and persevering for 25 years differences between Silvia Roffman. From that by SUZANNE SINGER “kitchen cabinet” in 1982, the The 25th anniversary of the Nebraska Jewish Historical Nebraska Jewish Historical Society (NJHS) was founded, Society will be celebrated with and the rest is history! the opening of its new exhibit The 25 years of the Historical “There WAS Film in the Society will be chronicled in a Camera!”, along with a provideo produced by Ben gram and dessert reception on Nachman and Ozzie Nogg. Sunday, Aug. 5, 2 p.m., at the The Mary Fellman Award will Jewish Community Cen-ter. In be presented to the Riekes famfact, the JCC was where the first ily, whose generous gift enabled seed of this Society was planted. NJHS to create the Henry and The 1929 film Disraeli, starDorothy Riekes Museum housring Oscar winner George Arliss ing an historic representation of as the British prime minister the B’nai Jacob Adas Yeshuron who acquired the rights to the synagogue, known as the Suez Canal, was shown at the “Kapulier Shul.” Midge JCC theater. After viewing this Bowers, president; Renee historical drama, Mary Fellman Corcoran, executive director; started chatting about the film and Pollak, NJHS historian as with Oliver Pollak, a law stuwell as co-founder, will also be a dent and UNO professor of hispart of the program. Joanie tory. She then began telling him about a fascinating oral history Oliver Pollak and Mary Fellman celebrate the fifth Bernstein will serve as master of she was reading about the Jews anniversary of the Nebraska Jewish Historical ceremonies. The exhibit, “There WAS of Philadelphia. Society in 1987. Film in the Camera!” features As Pollak recalls, “She got excited and said she knew a lot about the Jews in over 500 photos taken by Gary Gerelick at community Omaha, and since I was a professor, I must know about events from B’nai B’rith banquets to synagogue and researching history. Why can’t we do something like that JCC activities. This treasure trove of faces of the Omaha Jewish community was discovered after Gerelick’s death here?” Then Pollak continued, “The next thing I knew, last year. His cousin, Michael Staenberg, will speak Mary was off and running with the idea.” She soon had about him and the exhibition of his photos, which were the first of many meetings around her dining room table edited by Bob Belgrade. with Pollak, Lois Friedman, Betty Lazer, Joie Simon and Continued on page 2

Israel and its neighbors by LESLIE SUSSER JERUSALEM (JTA)-- How to turn the disaster of the radical Hamas’ capture of Gaza into a political opportunity was the main focus of this week’s four-way summit in the Egyptian resort town of Sharm el-Sheik. Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, Jordanian King Abdullah, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert all expressed hope for a renewed Israeli-Palestinian peace process now that Abbas has set up a moderate, Fatah-led government without Hamas. The subtext was clear: A vibrant Israeli-Palestinian peace process could help stop the radical, Iranian-backed power that Hamas represents -- and which all four leaders fear -- from spreading. But although they agreed on the general direction and even on some of the specifics, there were major differences on a number of key issues. Mubarak, for example, spoke of the urgent need for Fatah and Hamas to reconcile. The Palestinians, he said, needed to speak with a single, united voice. But a new Fatah-Hamas deal is precisely what Olmert does not want to see.

Omaha college student reflects on a different kind of mission to Israel by DAVID PHILLIPS For the Israeli government, the problematic war against Islamic extremism has been compared to ‘cutting the grass’ while ignoring the greater problem of the ‘roots’ underneath. However, Israeli lawyer and mother of two Nitsana Darshan-Leitner has found a unique method of using non violent means to fight back against even the most savage terrorist groups. Her organization, Shurat HaDin (Israel Law Center), works with help from the Israeli Mossad to track down the finances of terrorists and their state sponsors to sue the banks they work with. Her organization has met with shocking success, proving to courts that Iran, Syria, and organizations like Hamas, have been holding hundreds of Banners on an observation deck are just 200 feet from the border of Gaza Photo by David Phillips millions of dollars in European and between the Israeli town of Sederot and Gaza. As proof of her hard work, Middle Eastern terrorist American bank accounts used to directly finance terror organizations are now virtually incapable of banking in attacks against Jews. On behalf of the injured and murdered victims of ter- America and Europe. Her legal work and successes have rorist attacks, Shurat HaDin offers to cover all the legal helped hundreds of terror victims fight for due justice fees involved in suing terrorists with the ultimate goal of and crippled terror organizations without shedding a freezing accounts worth hundreds of millions of dollars drop of blood. Shurat Hadin coordinates a yearly action-packed misand giving the money to their victims. Her work against banks that hold terrorist funds like the Arab Bank and sion trip called ‘The Ultimate Mission to Israel’ to raise the French bank Credit Lyonnaise has provoked a virtu- money for their expensive legal actions. I had the honor al domino effect of international bank compliance and of participating in support Shurat HaDin and enjoyed its widespread voluntary refusals to transfer or hold the unprecedented access to the Israeli military. Continued on page 6 blood money of organizations that finance terror.

Inside Opinion Page see page 12

This Week: Educator’s mission to Israel returns: Page 7 See Front Page Stories & More at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on ‘Jewish Press’

The Jewish boys of summer: Page 4

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, left, meets Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas at Sharm el-Sheik summit on June 24. Credit: GPO/BPH IMAGES He fears the return of Hamas would undermine any chance for a genuine Israeli-Palestinian dialogue. And he is worried that Abbas may be pressured into striking a new deal with the radicals. More significant, whereas Mubarak, Abdullah and Abbas all want to see accelerated talks on a final IsraeliPalestinian peace deal, Olmert has his doubts. He sees the split between Gaza and the West Bank as making the conflict easier to manage but more difficult to resolve. Olmert favors a more careful, step-by-step approach that gradually would create conditions for a final settlement rather than making a gigantic leap toward a peace accord that would likely fail. In the summit’s concluding news conference, Mubarak, Abdullah and Abbas all urged quick movement toward a two-state solution, Israel and Palestine, side by side, at peace. Abbas proposed setting a clear timetable for negotiations and insisted that all the core issues, including borders, refugees, Jerusalem and water, were soluble. The new Palestinian government under former finance minister Salam Fayyad and the international community’s lifting of its economic boycott on the Palestinians created genuine opportunities for peace, Abbas said. Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, added that the establishment of a Palestinian state was now the most urgent issue on Abbas’ agenda. Many Israeli analysts, however, doubt whether Israel and the Palestinians are yet in a position to cut a final Continued on page 2

Coming Next Week: Health & Wellness -- July 13 Local author pens locale fiction: Page 9

“A light unto the nation”: Page 11


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