September 27, 2013

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Sponsored by the Benjamin and Anna E. Wiesman Family Endowment Fund AN AGENCY OF THE JEWISH FEDERATION OF OMAHA September 27, 2013 23 Tishei 5774 Vol. 94 | No. 02

Colorado flooding

This Week

Dr. Sara Horowitz by MARK KIRCHHOFF Administrative Assistant, The Center for Jewish Life Prominent Holocaust and women studies scholar Dr. Sara Horowitz will present a special lecture titled “Re-inventing Anne Frank” on Oct. 3 from 7:30 – 8:30 p.m. in the Kripke Jewish

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A Chabad volunteer helps people clear damaged goods from their homes in Colorado. by ANDREA JACOBS DENVER (IJN) -- Before the start of Yom Kippur, a flood of historic proportions swallowed Boulder, Co., and surrounding areas, displacing families, damaging synagogues and threatening services on the holiest day of the Jewish year -- until determination came to the rescue. Orthodox Boulder Aish Kodesh hit the Internet first, sending a mass email to 500 residents announcing that heavy rains and flooding had destroyed the tent it had prepared for the holiday. The email offered alternative locations for services, at Chabad centers and Denver synagogues out of harm’s way. Elon Bar-Evan, executive director of Boulder Aish Kodesh, said the tent and parking lot were under water and that many prayer books intended for the services were ruined.

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Yachad 2013 Page 12

Rabbi Marc Soloway, spiritual leader of Conservative Bonai Shalom in Boulder, told the IJN Friday that his synagogue had sustained significant flooding. “Our Yom Kippur services are scheduled elsewhere, but it is unclear whether we will be able to have them there at this point due to flooded roads and so forth,” Soloway said. “It’s a mess.” At Har HaShem, Boulder’s major Reform synagogue, the power was out. “The lower level of the main building was under four feet of water,” said communications and membership director Ellen Kowitt, reached at her home in Erie, Colo. Because Kowitt often works from home, she was able to update the website. Before the server collapsed, Rose wrote an email to the congregation: “The Talmud teaches that rain is a

Credit: Chabad

sign of blessing. That might sound questionable right now. Whether we can turn this into a blessing remains to be seen... I believe in us.” Chany Scheiner of Chabad of Boulder described a scene of utter chaos at the synagogue, which is attached to the side of her home. “CU and other places closed on Thursday,” she said. “My husband, Rabbi Pesach Scheiner, and I thought they might be making a big deal out of nothing.” When three rooms filled with water later that night, they knew it was serious. “There was a flood in front of our house and the backyard was a nice sized swimming pool,” she said. The Scheiners and their children were evacuated. Neighbors convinced them to leave. “We went in their car,” Scheiner said. “It was like the parting of the Reed Sea.” Continued on page 2

It’s a B’nai Mitzvah Party! Inside Point of view Synagogues In memoriam

Next Month Jewish Camping See Front Page stories and more at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on Jewish Press

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by SHERRIE SAAG Communications Specialist, Jewish Federation of Omaha We are throwing a party and you’re invited! Join your family and friends and celebrate the 2014 Annual Campaign with a B’nai Mitzvah Party for the Jewish Federation of Omaha. The JFO is celebrating Jewish Omaha with a party that emulates all the best of B’nai Mitzvah celebrations. Music, great food, dancing, videos, a community slide show and plenty of schmoozing are on the agenda. Complimentary kosher dinner and endless fun for the entire

community is practically guaranteed. Cindy Goldberg and Kimberly Robinson are co-chairing the event and have been hard at work as chief party planners. Throughout the planning process, both Robinson and Goldberg have been adamant that this community celebration be accessible to everyone. “We want everyone, absolutely everyone, to join us. Come celebrate Jewish Omaha. Join us and just have fun!” said Robinson. According to Jewish law, when a child becomes a Bar or Bat Mitzvah they agree to assume responsibility for Jewish ritual, law, tradition, and ethics. They are able to participate fully in all

areas of Jewish community life. Learning how to become a committed and involved Jewish community member involves more than one’s Bar or Bat mitzvah service and congregational community. It should include the larger Jewish community of which the child is a part. “The Jewish Federation of Omaha is an important partner in this process. The programs and services funded in part by the Annual Campaign – the Pennie Z. Davis Child Development Center, The Kripke Library, camp and Israel experience scholarships, BBYO and Friedel Jewish Academy – Continued on page 2

Dr. Sara Horowitz Federation Library. Her talk is presented through collaboration with the Center for Jewish Life, the Institute for Holocaust Education and the Schwalb Center for Israel and Jewish Studies. Dr. Horowitz is visiting Omaha as the guest lecturer for the 38th Annual European Studies Conference sponsored by the University of Nebraska at Omaha. Horowitz described her talk as one that “would look not at the historical Anne Frank, but at the way that she is imagined in the eyes of ordinary readers, as well as in the writing of literary authors and in movies by filmmakers. What I have in mind is not those who re-tell the story of the diary, but who imagine wholly other scenarios for Anne Frank and her companions of the Annex, as characters in novels and movies.” Dr. Moshe Gershovich who directs the Schwalb Center and is the Martin Professor of History at UNO, studied with Dr. Horowitz during a two-week teachers’ workshop on the Holocaust, held at Northwestern University in the summer of 2008. “Sara is a prominent scholar and great teacher on issues related to Holocaust literature and women studies,” he says. “I’m confident that her lecture on Anne Frank will be most illuminating for our community.” Horowitz’s lecture is being presented without charge. Horowitz is the immediate past Director of the Israel and Golda Koschitzky Centre for Jewish Studies at York University in Toronto, and former President of the Association for Jewish Studies. She is the author of Voicing the Void: Muteness and Memory in Holocaust Fiction, which received the Choice Award for Outstanding Academic Book, and served as the senior editor of the Continued on page 2


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