Vol. 90 No. 4 Omaha, NE
Celebrating 89 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa
“The biggest Mitzvah in the world” by CLAUDIA SHERMAN Brandon had been to Israel. He participated in an Temple Israel Communications Coordinator ARTZA trip while he was still in high school. Just after Brandon Thomas was an organ donor. There was a lit- graduating, he spent a year in Israel with the Young tle red heart under his picture on his driver’s license Judea Year Course. “He loved it. He was definitely conalerting medical personnel of his wish to give others this nected to his Judaism,” she said bringing a little smile to ultimate gift if circumstances should take his life. her face. At least four people But cooking was will have a chance now Brandon’s passion. He to live a healthy life. started working at More students will have Frank’s Pizza at age 16. an opportunity to pursue Thanksgiving was his a career in culinary arts favorite holiday, accordat Metropolitan Coming to Gordman. “In our munity College. They family,” she said, “the can all thank Brandon men cook Thanksgivwho died July 12 at the ing.” For the last couple age of 21 as the result of years, she commented, a motorcycle-car crash Brandon and Gordman’s on July 8 near 36th and brother, Jay, were “the Leavenworth Streets. head chefs.” They “I had no idea” he was planned Thanksgiving a potential organ donor, dinner, tried new recipes, admitted Andie and organized it. Gordman, Brandon’s In 2008, Brandon Brandon Thomas mother. “It’s not someenrolled in the Institute thing you talk to your 21-year-old kid about.” I would for the Culinary Arts at Metro Community College. have probably made the same decision (after he died), “He was really working hard to get his degree as well as but it became a matter of honoring his decision,” she working full time at Lo Sole Mio,” an Italian restaurant, explained. as a line cook, Gordman added. Born in Boston in 1989, Brandon came with his famDino Losole, Brandon’s employer, posted on the carily to Omaha before he was a year old. He was a 2007 ingbridge.org website that “although Brandon was one Millard North High School graduate as well as a gradu- of my newest employees at Lo Sole Mio, I knew he was ate of Temple Israel’s high school. He’d been going to a great person. Filled with a love for food and a passion Temple since he was about four years old, his mother for becoming a great chef, he was following his dream at Continued on page 2 recalled.
Partnership with Israel brings unique multi-media dance performance to JCC by JANIE MUROW rently teaches dance and is living in Jerusalem studying Community Development Director literature. Noa Druker was also born in Nazareth Illit Once again the JCC theater will come alive on and has participated in a folklore dance group which has Monday evening, Oct. 4 at 6:45 p.m. with the artistic toured throughout the world. She has taught Israeli folk talent of Omaha’s own Kim dance at summer camps in the Goldberg and dancers from the United States and is currently a Western Galilee. Just Another student of media. Liron Ben Day is a multi-media performYaakov was born in the south of ance which grew out of a Israel and currently lives in Partnership with Israel friendship Beersheba. Liron has a combetween Naama Grinstein and bined degree in art and philosoKim. They originally performed phy. A professional oriental at the 2009 Israeli Festival for dancer, she teaches and performs Alternative Theater in Acco as part of the group Dasha Lotus which draws its audience from with Sigal Ziv who is considered throughout Israel. This year, Just one of the best dancers in Israel. Another Day is traveling to sev“This is truly what Partnership eral of the Partnership is all about – building bridges Consortium cities. The 35 throughout our community with minute performance combines our Israeli family. This is an modern and ethnic belly dancopportunity to share in a unique ing, music and video art which collaboration between our local merges to communicate the celartist, Kim Goldberg, and our ebration of life from a new point artists from the Western Galilee,” of view. The performance is said Lisa Epstein, Omaha inspired by biblical text and is Partnership With Israel Chair. designed to encourage the audi“Because the performance is 35 Dancers from the Western Galilee. ence to live, create and move. minutes in length, it’s a perfect Three dancers will be coming to Omaha. Naama opportunity for women to bring their daughters and Grinstein, born in Nazareth Illit Israel, began dancing at granddaughters for an evening of dance and community.” the age of 13. She has studied many styles of dance and While in Omaha the dancers will be celebrating graduated from the Gaaton Dance Village. Naama cur- Continued on page 3
Inside Op-Ed Page: see page 12
This Week: Arts & Entertainment, page 8 See Front Page Stories & More at: www.jewishomaha.org; click on ‘Jewish Press’
Immingration myths debunked at ADL forum Page 4
16 Tishrei 5770
September 24, 2010
Twenty-third annual Klutznick-Harris Symposium on Jews in the Gym by LEONARD GREENSPOON Klutznick Chair in Jewish Civilization, Creighton University What—or rather, who—do you get when you mix a Columbia University PhD graduate, with a Yeshiva University professor, an expert on sports history, an experienced marathon runner, and a basketball coach? If you’re lucky, and we are, the answer is Jeffrey Gurock. Dr. Gurock, Libby M. Klaperman Chair of Jewish History at Yeshiva University, is the keynote speaker for this year’s TwentyDr. Jeffrey Gurock Third Annual Klutznick -Harris Symposium, Jews in the Gym: Judaism, Sports, and Athletics. Gurock’s presentation, titled “American Jewry’s Contemporary Scoreboard: Home and Away,” will take place at the Omaha Jewish Community Center on Sunday, Oct. 24, at 7:30 pm. Gurock, a popular and accomplished speaker, is widely known for his work on American Jews and Sports and for his innovative writing on Orthodox Judaism. Among his many books on these topics are A Modern Heretic and a Traditional Community: Mordecai M. Kaplan, Orthodoxy and American Judaism; Orthodoxy in Charleston: Brith Sholom Beth Israel and American Jewish History; Orthodox Jews in America; and Judaism’s Encounter with American Sports. Sometimes he is able to combine both of his interests, as he did in a fascinating presentation at an earlier Klutznick-Harris Symposium on Jews and Popular Culture, with his paper The Crowing of a ‘Jewish Jordan’: Tamir Goodman, the American Sports Media and Modern Orthodox Jewry’s Fantasy World. Gurock is enthusiastic when he speaks about his keynote presentation for this year’s Symposium: “My talk uses the metaphor of sports to understand where Jews and Judaism stand today in terms of acceptance in a tolerant American host society; at the same time I discuss the problems of Jewish continuity through the lens of sports. Sports, as a ‘community-defining situation,’ is a serious subject that can be used to understand larger trends in modern Jewish history.” A self-described “gym rat, who is a sports legend in my own mind,” Gurock spends a great deal of his time away from the office and on the road or court. He has run the New York marathon twelve times and the Boston marathon twice. In his over thirty years at Yeshiva University, he has frequently been called upon to serve as an assistant coach for the men’s basketball team. He adds that the men’s team is called the Maccabees; the women are styled Lady Macs. It is clear that Gurock not only studies sports, but also enjoys participating in them. This is also the case with most of the other presenters at this year’s Symposium. More than a dozen individuals from throughout the United States and Europe will make presentations on topics ranging from Jews and sports in antiquity to Jewish athletics today. There will also be consideration of differing attitudes toward sports by Jews and the various ways in which non-Jews have perceived Jews in athletics. Continued on page 2
Coming Next Month: Jewish Camping October Community Calendar Pages 10 & 11
In awe of schach: Searching for the perfect sukkah covering Page 16