August 3, 2012

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

Dinner and a movie

August 3, 2012 15 Av 5772 Vol. 92 | No. 45

This Week

Kids have blast at Camp Gan Israel Page 5

Temple Israel family walks to cure diabetes Page 7

Despite militarized society, Israel has strict gun laws Page 12

Inside Point of view Synagogues In memoriam

This Month Real Estate Special See Front Page stories and more at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on Jewish Press

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by MARK KIRCHHOFF Administrative Assistant, Center for Jewish Life Now in its 11th year, the annual Omaha Jewish Film Festival presented by the Center for Jewish Life will begin on Sunday, Aug. 19, with the chance to both have dinner and see a movie. A deli dinner, prepared under the supervision of Chef Mike Aparo in the kosher kitchen of the Star Deli, will feature 4 oz. turkey, corned beef and pastrami sandwiches plus coleslaw, chips and drinks. Dinner will be served in the Social Hall beginning at 6 p.m. Following dinner, the feature film A Bottle in the Gaza Sea will be shown at 7 p.m. in the JCC Theater. Cost for the deli meal is $12 and a movie ticket is $8. You may attend either or both of these events. To allow for adequate dinner planning, advanced reservations are required by calling or emailing Mark Kirchhoff, 402.334.6463 or mkirchhoff@jew ishomah.org by noon on Aug. 17. The Aug. 19 movie is based on the book published in 2009, titled A Bottle in the Gaza Sea. It tells the story of Tal Levine, a seventeenyear-old from Jerusalem. Tal comes from a family that always believed peace would come to the Middle East. She cried tears of joy when President Clinton and Yitzhak Rabin shook hands with Yasser Arafat in 1993 – a moment of hope that would stay with her forever.

One day a horrific terrorist attack in a café around the corner from her as she lay in bed changes her life forever. Tal decides that the only way she can deal with the pain is to reach out to

someone on the other side. She needs to know that they are not all heartless. She places a note in a bottle and asks her brother to put it in the Gaza Sea. Instead, he plants it on a beach where it is discovered by Naim. a young Palestinian man. Naim, who knows Hebrew, initiates email correspondence with Tal. Known only as Gazaman to her, they come to know each other and what life is like “on the other side.” One day Tal witnesses a terrorist bomb-

ing of a bus. Her insights into the other side are quickly challenged. Can the friendship she has formed with this stranger help her through the

by HILLARY FLETCHER Marketing Assistant, Institute for Holocaust Education On Sunday, July 8, at the Kripke Jewish Federation Library, Milton Kleinberg spoke for the first time in public about his experiences as a child during the Holocaust. Kleinberg published a book in 2011 titled, Memories of My Childhood: During and After the Holocaust 1937 – 1951. His Holocaust memoir traces Kleinberg and his family’s escape from Nazi-occupied Poland in 1939 and their subsequent capture and internment in the Soviet Union. Hosted by the Institute for Holocaust Education, more than 60 people attended this very moving testimonial.

trauma? Will she be able to find a way to be whole once more? The story weaves utter despair together with the hope that young people hold the promise of future peace. The film is recommended for those 12 years old Continued on page 2

Beth El welcomes new cantor to congregation by JILL BELMONT Beth El Publicity Coordinator As Beth El readies for a new year, the synagogue’s Board of Trustees is pleased to announce the hiring of Hazzan Michael Krausman as the congregation’s new cantor and invites the entire Jewish community to a special Shabbat dinner in his honor, on Friday, Aug. 10. A native of Toronto, Hazzan Krausman received his Bachelor’s degree in Sacred Music and Diploma of Hazzan from the Jewish Theological Seminary in 1995. He is also a graduate of the University of York, in Toronto, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology. Hazzan Krausman moves to Omaha from Temple Sinai in Hollywood, Florida. His contributions to that congregation have been

Hazzan Michael and Laurel Krausman, with sons Zev, left, and Zach. numerous: among them, he led a number of family education programs; created a Tallit and Tefillin Club for post Bar/Bat Mitzvah students, which combined prayer, fellowship and social justice themes; he also established and led “Have a Cup

Kleinberg speaks out

of Coffee with God,” a monthly alternative Shabbat Shacharit learners’ service. In addition, he produced an annual festival of Jewish music, and organized a Children’s Choral Festival with over 100 Continued on page 3

Milt Kleinberg speaking about his Holocaust experiences. Jewish community member, Marti Rosen-Atherton commented, “I expected that Milt’s story would be different than the stories of concentration camp and hidden children survivors, and I knew very little about the Jews who were sent to the Soviet Union. But what struck and humbled me, once again, was how they held on and kept holding on. That survival core in spite of all the pain, losses and horrors. I was awestruck by his mother’s strength and constancy and resiliency – she was beyond remarkable. Through all that and for more than a half century since, she created a family whose lives are a blessing. Milt was a testament to that. It was aweinspiring.” Kleinberg wrote the book as a personal legacy for his children, grandchildren and siblings who were born after the war so they could better understand how the horrors of the Holocaust affected their family and the people living in Europe and Russia during World War II. “Memories of My Childhood is a personal account of how my parents and I were swept up by the torrent of World War II and managed to survive our ordeal in the Soviet Union,” Kleinberg said in press for his book. “Our most memorable Continued on page 2


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August 3, 2012 by Jewish Press - Issuu