Sponsored by the Benjamin and Anna E. Wiesman Family Endowment Fund AN AGENCY OF THE JEWISH FEDERATION OF OMAHA
Klutznick Symposium
October 17, 2014 23 Tishrei 5775 Vol. 95 | No. 5
This Week
Dr. Michael Grodin by LIZ FELDSTERN IHE, Executive Director On Oct. 23 and 24, the Institute for Holocaust Education (IHE) will be hosting Dr. Michael Grodin of Boston University to speak on the topic Jewish Medical Resistance during the Holocaust. In just two days, Dr. Grodin will speak five times in Omaha and Lincoln, with
Rabbi Naomi Levy to deliver ‘Spirituality To-Go!’ Page 3
Never a dull moment at the Klutznick Symposium: Jews and Sports, in 2010.
Incredible experiences in Israel Pages 6 & 7
by LEONARD J. GREENSPOON Kutznick Chair in Jewish Civilization Dictionary definitions of the “mishpachah” are quite similar: “Mishpachah is a Jewish family or social unit including close and distant relatives—sometimes also close friends.” As accurate as such definitions are, they fail to capture the vitality of real, flesh-and-blood mishpachahs. These are among the topics that will be addressed in Omaha on Oct. 26 and 27 at the Twenty-Seventh Annual
Klutznick-Harris-Schwalb Symposium, titled Mishpachah: The Jewish Family in Tradition and in Transition. This year’s presentations will kick off with a session at UNO, scheduled for room 201 in the University’s new Community Engagement Center. This session will run from 9 a.m. until 11:30 a.m., This marks the first year the Symposium has held a session on the UNO campus. The first speaker, Susan Marks, New College of Florida, will deal
with “Uncovering the Ongoing Parental Role in Education in the Early Rabbinic Period.” Marks pays due attention to the dynamics of ritual practice and lived religion to suggest that the question of the son’s relationship with the family in which he grew up is more complicated than previous scholars acknowledge. The second presenter is Charles D. Isbell, Louisiana State University. His presentation is titled, Family Values Continued on page 2
Decorating Sukkahs in Israel Tensions rise in eastern Jerusalem neighborhood after 200 Jews move in Page 12
Inside Point of view Synagogues In memoriam
Next Week Sports and Recreation See Front Page stories and more at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on Jewish Press
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by ELIAD ELIYAHU Community Shaliach This Sukkot the Omaha Jewish community should be very proud of the students from Beth El, Beth Israel and Temple Israel, plus the BBYO teens, for their contribution to decorating special sukkahs in Israel. These youths showed their solidarity for the IDF soldiers by creating decorations for various IDF sukkahs in the Western Galilee region. They also provided decorations for the sukkah of the Central IDF Ministry of Defense and IDF Chief Officer. Many soldiers visited that sukkah during Sukkot and many national ceremonies took place including the honoring of excellent soldiers, lone soldiers and special IDF volunteers. “We Stand with Israel,” “Thank you for taking care of our home,” “Peace and Love,” are examples of the warm thoughts written on the decorations that proudly hung in the soldiers’ sukkah.
Students at Temple Israel show off the decorations they created. The idea of decorating soldiers’ sukkahs came immediately after Operation Protective Edge when many letters and greeting cards supporting the IDF soldiers were received through Partnership2Gether. Partnership has a strong connection to the lone soldiers in the Western Galilee, many of whom fought during the Operation. Decorating the sukkah for that special group was a meaningful initiative for Omaha’s Partnership efforts. Efrat Srebro, the incoming Israeli chair for Partnership’s Education Task Force, was the person who took this initiative to a point person in the
IDF. Once he understood the power of this initiative, it was agreed to also use the decorations from the U.S. to decorate the sukkah of the Ministry of Defense and the IDF Chief Officer. “Blessings and prayers of kids and teens are so touching, and you can feel that it comes straight from their pure hearts,” says Srebro. “The IDF soldiers were very excited with this gesture, and it shows once again the togetherness and unity of our nation from both sides of the ocean.” Omaha, as one of 12 communities who comprise the Central Area Consortium of Partnership2GETHER, a Continued on page 2
three of those presentations open to the public. The IHE is partnering with Creighton University, the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC), the University of Nebraska – Lincoln (UNL), and the University of Nebraska – Omaha (UNO) to bring these events to the community. Michael Alan Grodin, M.D., is Professor of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights at the Boston University School of Public Health, where he received the distinguished Faculty Career Award in Research and Scholarship, and 20 teaching awards including the Norman A. Scotch Award for Excellence in Teaching. Dr. Grodin is Professor of Family Medicine and Psychiatry at the Boston University School of Medicine. In addition, he is Director of the Project on Medicine and the Holocaust at the Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies where he is also a senior member of the faculty of Judaic Studies in the Division of Religious and Theological Studies. He completed his B.S. degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, his M.D. degree at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, his postdoctoral and fellowship training at UCLA and Harvard, and he has been on the faculty of Boston University for the past 34 years. Faced with infectious diseases, starvation, lack of medicines, and lack of clean water and safe sewage, Jewish physicians practiced medicine under severe conditions in the ghettos and concentration camps of the Holocaust. Despite the odds against them, physicians managed to Continued on page 3