Vol. LXXXVII No. 51 Omaha, NE
Celebrating 87 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa
28 Av, 5768
August 29, 2008
Biden and the Jews: Strong ties and friendly disagreements by RON KAMPEAS and ERIC FINGERHUT DENVER (JTA) -- Before he announced his vice presidential pick, Barack Obama said he wanted someone to spar with but who ultimately would be loyal enough to create a comfortable working relationship. No one knew then that Obama had picked his U.S. Senate colleague Joe Biden (D-Del.), 65, but the Democratic presidential candidate’s ad fit Biden’s relationship with the Jewish community to a tee. On Saturday, two days before the start of the Democratic National Convention here, Obama chose Biden to be the No. 2 man on the party’s ticket.
Hailing Olympic heroes
Israeli Olympic swimmers Tom Beeri, left, Itai Chammah, Gal Nevo and Guy Barnea connect with students at the Shi Jia Elementary School in Beijing who have been learning about Israel for two years before the Games. Credit: Alison Klayman
The loquacious Biden, a senator since 1973, has sparred frequently with the pro-Israel community and with Israelis, particularly on the issue of settlements. But he has a sterling voting record on pro-Israel issues and as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has helped shepherd through key pro-Israel legislation. His straightforwardness is considered an asset, even among those supporters who have disagreed with him. “He’s open minded, he votes his own conscience,” said Gary Erlbaum, a Philadelphia-based real estate developer who is backing Republican candidate John McCain for president but has supported Biden’s Senate campaigns. “I don’t always agree with him” -- Biden is a staunch critic of the Bush administration’s Iraq policy, Erlbaum helped found the pro-Iraq war group Freedom’s Watch -- but “he does not try to sugarcoat.” Biden has been especially sharp in criticizing the United States and Israel in their failure to support Mahmoud Abbas in 2003, when he was the Palestinian Authority prime minister attempting to establish a power base to challenge then-President Yasser Arafat. Abbas eventually was sidelined by Arafat, allowing the Palestinian leader to continue his policies of corruption and stasis until his death -and creating a vacuum ultimately filled in large part by Hamas terrorists.
Joe Biden (D-Del.)
Credit: U.S. Senate “I’ve had my shouting matches over 25 years, privately, in my office and in the offices of prime ministers,” Biden said in a March 2007 interview with the Forward. “I’ve had disagreements. Israel’s a democracy and they make mistakes. But the notion that somehow if Israel just did the right thing, [the peace process] would work, I mean that’s the premise, give me a break.” In that same interview, Biden firmly rejected calls for the United States to distance itself from Israel and assume a more neutral role in brokering Middle East peace talkes. “The suffering is real on both sides, but there is a side that can impact ending it,” he said. “The responsibility Continued on page 3
Teen talks about accident at next drug and alcohol education seminar Final session of three-part drug and alcohol prevention series by ANDREA BARTMAN for Jewish Family Service He just didn’t think that it could happen to him. How many of us, adults and teenagers alike, have made the decision to drink and get behind the wheel of an automobile? Matt Robinson, now age 18, doesn’t describe himself as an alcoholic; now or back then. He’s a kid who was doing what a lot of other kids were doing. Partying on the weekend here and there and masking the pain in his life with his drinking. Matt will tell the story of his accident, which resulted in the tragic loss of two of his high school friends, at a drug and alcohol education seminar on Tuesday, Sept. 9, 6 p.m., at the Jewish Community Center. “I was at that point in my life where I based my friends around partying. Basically the sole glue to my friendships was drinking,” Matt says, as we discuss his life before the accident -- on Dec. 28, 2006 -- a rollover crash at high speed with Matt as the driver and sole survivor.
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“Since the accident, I think I have one friend that I had from before,” he says. So much in his life has changed that he hardly recognizes the person he was. After the crash, Matt completed his senior year of high school and is now enrolled at Metropolitan Community College. He’s completing his court ordered probation and community service and trying to carry on with a life forever changed by the poor decisions of just one night; just one moment. Just think -- If other teens could be spared this kind of tragedy in their life. This is Matt’s focus right now and his goal as well as the goal of Jewish Family Service and the JCC -- to help teens and pre-teens in the community to make the right decisions at the right time, before it’s too late for them.
Matt before the accident had, himself, attended drug and alcohol prevention programs. “Basically, when I was sitting there (in the programs),” he says, “I just thought this couldn’t happen to me. It’s true that it’s hard to learn unless you’ve had a first-hand experience, but that’s why I’m trying so hard to help kids to not have that first hand experience. No one should lose their life drinking and driving.” We discuss human nature and how each of us seems programmed to this sort of thinking. That it won’t be us that has an accident; it won’t be us that hurts or kills someone else as a result of our poor decisions. As part of his community service, Matt has been speaking about his decisions and the consequences of his actions. He estimates he’s spoken around 50
This Week: The Learning Curve special issue on education
See Front Page Stories & More at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on ‘Jewish Press’ Opinion Page see page 12
Columns on Hebrew on the web, starting kindergarten: Page 2
times now on the subject, groups ranging from hundreds of people down to just a few. The first time Matt gave a speech about his accident was in front of a group of 750 people. “I talked the best I could,” he says. “I broke down and cried pretty hard.” Since the accident, Matt has a lot to say about what he’s learned. He’s been forced to grow up quickly because of the events of that December night. “I’ve learned that there are other ways to deal and to truly meet problems instead of masking the problem with alcohol,” he says, “to try your best to rely on your family, or a true friend (not friendships based solely around alcohol or partying) if your family is part of the problem.” He describes the pain of knowing that, just days after his accident, high school friends were already making plans to go out drinking for New Year’s Eve -- and what he thinks it takes to help change those decisions for young people like him. Continued on page 10
Coming Next Month: New Year’s issue on Sept. 26 Monthly Calendar for September: Pages 8-9
It’s back to school for Friedel students and new principal: Page 16