August 14, 2009

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Vol. LXXXVIII No. 49 Omaha, NE

Gates, Crowley and the Jews by AMI EDEN NEW YORK (JTA) -- Following Cambridge police officer Jim Crowley’s arrest last month of Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates, both men found themselves locked in a public feud and under attack from various ideologues. Some called Crowley a bigoted cop, others tagged Gates as a race-baiter. In the end, however, they both took President Obama up on his offer to make peace earlier this month over beers at the White House -- a development that probably should not have come as a shock for those in the Jewish community who know either man. On the eve of the July 30 beer powwow, The Wall Street Journal’s SpeakEasy blog reported that in 2007 Crowley attended a three-day program for police officers on racial profiling at the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles. The Journal quoted museum officials as saying that the staff was so impressed with Crowley that they invited him back a year later for an advanced seminar, museum officials say.

President Obama toasts with Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., left, and Cambridge Police Sgt. James Crowley at the start of their meeting in the White House Rose Garden on July 30, 2009. Credit: White House/Pete Souza “He stands out to me,” said Sunny Lee-Goodman, director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center program that Crowley attended. “He was one of those people who really engaged in sessions, who really showed a high level of understanding of the issue.” As it turns out, according to the Journal, Gates is also “prominently featured” at the center's law enforcement training programs: “At the center’s New York tolerance center, etched on a wall near inspirational words from Gandhi and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., is a quotation from Gates: ‘There is no tolerance without respect. There is no respect without knowledge.’” Of course, a two-sentence quote on a plaque is unlikely to impress Gates’ critics. But Gates has previously drawn praise for a much-talked-about opinion piece that he wrote in 1992 in The New York Times criticizing black anti-Semitism and some of its main purveyors at the time, including Louis Farrakhan and Leonard Jeffries. In particular, Gates took aim at the scholarship and underlying racist world view behind the Nation of Islam’s “The Secret Relationship Between Blacks and Jews,” a discredited but popular tract asserting that Jews played a disproportionate role in the slave trade. “Many Jews are puzzled by the recrudescence of black anti-Semitism in view of the historic alliance,” Gates wrote. “The brutal truth has escaped them: that the new anti-Semitism arises not in spite of the black-Jewish alliance but because of it. For precisely such transracial cooperation -- epitomized by the historic partnership between blacks and Jews -- is what poses the greatest threat to the isolationist movement. In short, for the tacticians of the new anti-Semitism, the original sin of American Jews was their involvement -- truly ‘inordinate,’ truly ‘disproportionate’ -- not in slavery, but in the front ranks of the civil rights struggle.” More recently, Gates wrote a blurb for Alan Dershowitz’s The Case for Israel, describing the 2003 book as “indispensable reading for those of us who are deeply disturbed by the rise of anti-Semitism in American society, even on college campuses.” This article was adapted from JTA’s The Telegraph blog, http:blogs.jta.org/telegraph.

Inside Opinion Page see page 8

Celebrating 88 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa

24 Av 5769

August 14, 2009

Home’s new auditorium to become “everything space” thanks to Silverman family gift by OZZIE NOGG A large screen for movie projection ... a wireless sound system to amplify visiting entertainers ... high definition TV. All these newfangled features will be part of the Stanley and Norma Silverman Family Auditorium (shown as the multi-purpose room on the plans at right) now under construction on Main Street at the Rose Blumkin Jewish Home. “We also plan to hardwire the Home’s camcorder to our internal Channel 18,” said Josh Gurock, RBJH Administrative Intern. “The channel always provides recorded programming, but by hardwiring it residents in An architectural rendering shows the location of the new Stanley and Norma Silverman their rooms will be able to Family Auditorium, now under construction at the Blumkin Home’s new Main Street . watch live activity in real time. That means all residents will be able to participate and the community.” According to Blumkin Home Building Chairman, in an event in the auditorium even if they are bedHoward Kooper, “The Silverman family gift was one of bound.” In addition to its use for general activities and pro- the key, original gifts that helped create momentum for gramming, the multipurpose room will also be available the New Beginning campaign. The community is very for meetings, luncheons and dinners. “The auditorium grateful to Stanley and Norma Silverman and their son, will be easy to access from three different directions,” Jeffrey, and to all the other contributors who helped Gurock added. “We consider it our ‘everything’ space, make this dream a reality.” and envision it as a hub of ongoing activity for residents Continued on page 6

Vandals torch Beth Israel playground

The Omaha Fire Department’s arson investigators were on the scene July 30 -- the evening of Tisha B’Av -- when the playground at Beth Israel was destroyed by fire. The synagogue’s leadership is working with its insurance company

This Week: Harlan, Iowa, school ‘rocks’ Holocaust Memorial: Page 3 See Front Page Stories & More at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on ‘Jewish Press’

Foundation’s new B’nai Tzedek program draws in teens: Page 2

to re-build the playground as soon as possible. The arson investigation is ongoing; damage was estimated at $3000. Constructed in 2005, the playground was made possible through the Beth Israel Sisterhood and community donors.

Coming Next Week: The Learning Curve

Newman Supporting Foundation appoints new member: Page 5

Star of ‘Blossom’ reflects on how belief changed her look: Page 12


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