1 9 2 0
|
C E L E B R A T I N G
1 0 0
Y E A R S
|
The Jewish Press AN AGENCY OF THE JEWISH FEDERATION OF OMAHA | WWW. JE WISHOMAHA.ORG
INSIDE
2 0 2 0 SPONSORED BY THE BENJAMIN AND ANNA E. WIESMAN FAMILY ENDOWMENT FUND
AUG UST 2 8, 2 02 0 | 8 E LUL 578 0 | VO L. 1 00 | NO. 4 4 | CANDLELIGHTING | FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 7:44 P.M.
Pennie Z. Davis CDC Teachers who care If you are here, you matter Page 4
GABBY BLAIR Staff Writer, Jewish Press ovid-19 swept into Omaha’s consciousness in mid March 2020, bringing chaos to our entire way of life that we are still trying to cope with. The Covid pandemic has brought to light many issues in the way our society works, perhaps none quite as relevant in the current moment as the very delicate relationship balance between work and school. Much of our work force is comprised of parents who rely on their children attending school or child care full time while they work. The sudden -but prudent- closure of schools and child cares this past spring left families shell-shocked and scrambling to make sense of this new reality while highlighting a very real vulnerability in our system’s viability. How can parents work to earn the income they need to support their families when they have no one to watch their children? What about essential workers who do not have the ability to work from home? How can parents Zoom for a work call while their children are trying to Zoom for school at the same time? What about younger children who need constant help and adult instruction to complete tasks? What of those who do not have adequate technology at home that would allow them to keep up with work or school? Obviously Covid has caused a lot of extra pressure on adults and parents - aside from the threat posed by the actual illness- but what about the stress on the kids whose routines have been so severely disrupted? “It was really traumatic to close like normal on a Monday and then find out that was it. Our last day for 2 1/2 months. See Pennie Z. Davis CDC page 2
C
YJO & Chabad present DIY Shofar making Page 6
Jewish High Holiday practice at home Page 12
The Miriam Initiative
REGULARS
Spotlight Voices Synagogues Life cycles
7 8 10 11
OZZIE NOGG Are you a woman looking for a lively conversation with other women? Then mark your calendar for Thursday, Sept. 10, from 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. CDT and Zoom on in for Anybody Can Play A Good Hand — an out-of-the-box conversation for women hosted by Joanie Jacobson. “This program actually had its start at Temple Israel,” Jacobson explained. “Last June, out of the blue, Ellen Platt called. She and Susie Norton were co-chairs of Temple’s Rosh Chodesh programs and they asked me to speak at one. ‘About what?’ I asked. ‘Anything!’ she answered. ‘Just ‘riff ’ it.’ (Defined as a rapid, energetic, often improvised verbal outpouring, ‘riffing it’ was not for me.) But I did have an idea, one that had been sitting on my desk for years. “Ever since I left Ohio State University after two years (college was not for me, either) and transferred to the Goodman Theatre School of Drama in Chicago, life did a 180 and it’s been quite a ride. Not all smooth. I’ve been
shot — hit by a car — married, divorced and re-married to the same guy — single mom for three years — went two rounds with Bells Palsy. You get the picture. But it’s like my dad always said, ‘Anybody can play a good hand. It’s what you do with your s***
The Miriam Initiative cards that says what kind of player you are.’ Amen, Dad. “So for the last 50+ years, I’ve accumulated my very own list of -isms — lessons learned, mostly during the darkest of times, that have served me well along the way (sometimes the hard way) and continue to bring me peace, joy and laughs. I’m like the Farmers Insurance Group, ‘I know a thing or two because I’ve seen a thing See The Miriam Initiatve page 3
This is Goodbye RON LUGASY Community Shlicha, Jewish Federation of Omaha Two years in Omaha are coming to an end. Looking back on this journey brings up a lot of thoughts and emotions. Two years ago when I started my Shlichut, I came to connect the Jewish community of Omaha with Israel, as an outsider who comes to send a message. Today I’m leaving my home, my community who connected me to the Jewish and non-Jewish community in Omaha - connected me to the idea of what it means to live as a Jewish person in the diaspora - what it means to be a minority (generally and within the Jewish community). In one of our first conferences as Shlichim we had a session about community building. The session talked about how we should see ourselves as community builders and not only as Shlichim who came
to teach about Israel. This session was about three months into my Shlichut; it was a concept that was hard to understand in such an early phase of the Shlichut, but it stayed in the back of my mind, always with
Ron Lugasy
the question- how am I to become a community builder? “Our building is not a brick building, it is a building of hearts. A brick stays where you place it, a human heart always twitches, always See Ron Lugasy page 2