August 8, 2014

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

Holocaust Memoir

August 8, 2014 12 Av 5774 Vol. 94 | No. 47

This Week

by SANDRA WENDEL write on, inc. “Alle raus!” (everybody out), the German soldiers screamed as they pounded on our door with the butts of their rifles.” And thus began four-year-old Milton Kleinberg’s 4,500-mile journey from Pabianice, Poland, as his family used bribery and darkness of night to flee when the Nazis invaded Poland in 1939. They hid in a burned-out synagogue, forded the Bug River in a dilapidated boat, and found refuge (of sorts) on a cattle car bound through Russia to Siberia. In his newly published memoir of his childhood during the Holocaust, young Milt (then Mendel Dawidowicz), from age four to 14, tells in vivid detail about the tortuous journey of his parents, his brothers, and himself in cramped rail cars with other Jewish refugees through frigid Russia, the indignities of forced labor, the shame of begging for bread just to survive, the death of those closest to him—and his eventual landing in a Polish Children’s Home in Uzbekistan in Central Asia for the duration of World War II. The family’s plight includes abandonment, hunger, and separation (and later astonishing twists of fate and tearful reunions) quite unique even among Holocaust stories. Community invitation Milt and Marsha Kleinberg invite Continued on page 2

Eye on Israel hears voices from Israel Page 3

Fills the Void opens Jewish Omaha film festival Page 4

by SHERRIE SAAG Communications, Jewish Federation of Omaha In addition to all the programs, panels, and partying planned for the Omaha Jewish Reunion weekend, the city’s Jewish congregations will open their doors and welcome Reunion registrants for scheduled Shabbat worship serv-

Rabbi Jonathan Rosenbaum

Milton Kleinberg

Down the Rabbit Hole Rachel Martin to lead BBYO program Page 6

Inside Point of view Synagogues In memoriam

This Month Men’s Guide See Front Page stories and more at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on Jewish Press

8 10 11

by ANNETTE VAN DE KAMPWRIGHT Editor, Jewish Press Summer is rapidly coming to an end. That’s unfortunate, because it means no more camp; many of us have to go back-to-school shopping, and those lazy late night dinners on the patio are numbered. However, we also have things to look forward to: a more regular schedule, the High Holidays, pumpkins and autumn colors. And, of course, Fall programming at the Jewish Community Center. The JCC Cultural Arts Director, Esther Katz, has a full schedule planned. While in previous years, two performances were selected for the entire year, this time Esther found three plays she simply fell in love with. “I just couldn’t choose,” she says, “and so we will be offering three separate musicals. The first one, Disney’s Alice in Wonderland Junior, will take place in the fall. Auditions are sched-

L’Chaim! Omaha Reunion

uled for Aug. 24. I’d love to see the “big” roles go to the kids, with few exeptions. For the adults who are eager to be on our stage, we have something else planned, and it’s really exciting.” That ‘something else’ is called Into the Woods Junior; a musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, based on the book by James Lapine. Sondheim is well known for his lyrics for West Side Story and Gypsy, among many others. Into the Woods made its stage debut in San Diego in 1986, and is currently being made into a movie. The musical combines the plots of several Brothers Grimm fairy tales and explores the consequences of the characters' wishes and quests. The main characters are taken from Little

Red Riding Hood, Rapunzel, and Cinderella, among others. The performance is tied together by an original story involving a childless baker and his wife, the witch who has cursed them, and their interaction with other storybook characters. “It has a tremendous score,” says Esther, “and since it’s basically all music, we will be looking for strong adult voices. We will cast 21 parts, and although we’ll welcome anyone 12 and up to audition on Nov. 23, it’s not really meant for children. We’re looking for more serious and experienced actors.” This musical will include rehearsals, which will be mostly on Wednesdays in the evening, and focus on specific song practice, so Continued on page 3

ices. Beth Israel Synagogue, Beth El Synagogue, Temple Israel and Chabad have all planned Shabbat meals and, in most cases, arranged for guest speakers. All the following events are included in your $50 registration fee, as are all the weekend events. Be sure to reserve your space when you register for the reunion at www.oma hajewishreunion.com. Beth El Synagogue welcomes Rabbi Jonathan Rosenbaum, retired professor of Jewish Studies at the University of Nebraska Omaha; past director of the Jewish Federation of Omaha Department of Education; and the former president of Gratz College in Pennsylvania. Following Friday worship services at 6 p.m. and a congregational Shabbat dinner, Rabbi Rosenbaum will discuss “Conservative Judaism at the Crossroads and the Omaha Response”. Rabbi Rosenbaum’s Saturday morning sermon is titled, Who’s in the Pew? How Omaha fits (and doesn’t) American Jews’ Expectations. A Kiddush lunch will follow services. Rabbi Moshe Feller of St. Paul, Minnesota, will be the guest speaker at Chabad House Friday evening. He is director of Upper Midwest Merkos and, according to Shani Katzman of Omaha Chabad, is a “legendary homegrown Midwestern rabbi. He will share charming memories and stories of the Jewish Midwest.” Candle lighting begins at 7 p.m. followed by services, Kiddush and dinner at 7:30 p.m. Temple Israel hosts services at 6 p.m. Friday evening, followed by its congregational dinner at 7 p.m. Beth Israel Synagogue is welContinued on page 2


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