Vol. LXXXVIII No. 14 Omaha, NE
Celebrating 88 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa
Postville Jewish community struggles to survive after raid by BEN HARRIS United States -- Rubashkin is a figure of reverence, a POSTVILLE, Iowa (JTA) -- After former man who built a successful business and thriving Jewish Agriprocessors executive Sholom Rubashkin was arrest- community while performing countless unsung acts of ed earlier this month, Rashi Raices joined several dozen kindness. members of this town’s Jewish community in volunteer- Continued on page 2 ing the equity on their homes to guarantee his return to face trial. All told, they were willing to put up the equivalent of about $2 million, according to the judge in the case. The court also received 275 letters from around the world testifying to Rubashkin’s character. Rubashkin stands accused of a host of crimes stemming from his stewardship of the Agriprocessors meat packing plant in Postville. To much of the outside world he is the public face of a rapacious company that has demonstrated deep contempt for the law. But to the several hundred Jews of Postville -- home of the company’s main plant and once the largest kosher Rashi Raices offered her home equity to the court in an effort to secure bail for former Credit: Ben Harris slaughterhouse in the Agriprocessors executive Sholom Rubashkin.
15 Kislev, 5769
December 12, 2008 2 Sections
Author visits “Chanu-Kids” party at Kripke Library by SHERRIE SAAG Administrative Assistant Center for Jewish Education Celebrate Hanukkah, enjoy storytelling, and eat lots of yummy latkes at the Kripke Jewish Federation Library’s fourth annual “Chanu-Kids” party this Sunday, Dec. 14, 3:30-5:30 p.m., in the Kripke Library. A special guest will be children’s author Anne Marie Asner, creator of Noshy Boy, Klutzy Boy, and Shmutzy Girl. “We are excited to have a children’s author join us for Chanu-Kids this year,” said Gary Katz, library administrator. “Anne-Marie’s books are fantastic! She introduces some basic Yiddish words to beginning readers in a very creative way. My kids love them.” Asner will host a special story time plus kids of all ages will be entertained by a magician, a Hanukkah sing-a-long with Emily Meyers, balloons, crafts and more! Parents and grandparents (aunts, uncles and friends, too!) will have the opportunity to shop the incredible selection of children’s books for sale during the event. While the party is geared for younger children, books for older children and adults will also be available for purchase. “Books make great Hanukkah presents. This is a great way to either begin a child’s or grandchild’s personal Jewish book collection or enrich the one they already have,” said Katz. Continued on page 2
Artist forges a family at new Bellows Studio and Center for Visual Arts by LEO ADAM BIGA If the art world has missionaries then Rebecca Herskovitz has found her calling as an art educator helping young people explore their creative potential. She doesn’t look much older than the kids she works with at the new Kent Bellows Studio and Center for Visual Arts, 3303 Leavenworth St., where she’s education coordinator. She came to Omaha from San Francisco a year ago to fill the post and after months of planning she launched the center’s first after school classes in early September with 21 students. Two 16-week semesters are offered per year. The education program matches students from metro area high schools with professional working artists in classic apprentice-style mentoring relationships. The center, whose classes are being held at the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts in the Old Market until the center’s permanent home undergoes renovation, is named after the late Omaha realist Kent Bellows. The noted Bellows, the subject of a future Joslyn Art Museum retrospective, was well-known for supporting young artists. His studio space on Leavenworth serves as the administrative base for the Kent Bellows Foundation and mentorship program.
Inside Opinion Page see page 12
Rebecca Herskowitz is an artist-in-residence at the Bellows Studio, temporarily located at the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts in downtown Omaha. Omaha native Anne Meysenburg, a Bellows lived and worked will eventually University of Nebraska at Omaha grad, is host classes and gallery shows once the executive director of the Bellows founda- interior is renovated. Largely preserved tion and the Studio/Center for Visual the way the artist left it, the studio will Arts. also be an archive for scholars. For now, The studio where the iconoclastic field trips bring the kids on site to the
This Week: Hanukkah Issue starts on page 17 See Front Page Stories & More at: www.jewishomaha.org, click on ‘Jewish Press’
For Indian Jews, sense of security is shattered: Page 3
Bellows space. Everything from his eclectic personal belongings to elaborate backdrops he made to sayings he scribbled on walls adorn the converted storefront studio. It’s sacred ground for communion/inspiration. “You feel like this is a place where something very special has been happening,” Herskovitz said there recently, “and to emulate that place of creativity and to be inhabiting it is absolutely contagious. It will be exciting to teach classes upstairs where those installations are and where the shrine that Kent made is. You can just feel it’s a place where magic was taking place. For kids to walk in there every day will be an enchanting thing. I’m very excited about that.” Meanwhile, Miss Becca, as she calls herself, leads her young charges in the bowels of the Bemis building at 724 So. 10th St. The basement’s formerly blank walls and exposed pipes-vents have been transformed into dynamic spaces for hanging art made by students and their mentors. She encourages students to make the environment their own -- a living, evolving expression of themselves. “I want them to take ownership over those spaces and I believe in the art space becoming to a certain extent an art piece itself over time. You just want a space that feels alive.” Continued on page 28
Coming This Month: Senior Living on Dec. 26 Iraq is latest mission for Nebraska’s AG: Page 6
Federation honors exec, volunteers: Page 16
Recipes for fall and for Hanukkah: Pages 22 & 34