December 26, 2014

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Sponsored by the Benjamin and Anna E. Wiesman Family Endowment Fund AN AGENCY OF THE JEWISH FEDERATION OF OMAHA

The PJ Library rocks!

December 26, 2014 4 Tevet 5775 Vol. 95 | No. 15

This Week

Jeanne Shechet retires by MARGIE GUTNIK Beth El Program Director Jeanne Shechet, longtime Beth El Synagogue school secretary, announced her retirement last month. After 23 years as the school’s secretary, her last day at the synagogue was Dec. 23.

Hanukkah celebrations Page 5

Shanghai lessons at Beth El Page 6

Ancient rock adds evidence of King David’s existence Page 12

It’s bubbles, bubbles and more bubbles with Shira Abraham and her helper, Miriam Ginsburg. by MARY SUE GROSSMAN ham. Shira is the museum’s Manager see so many friends. Another parent Center for Jewish Life of Learning Experiences. The event, said having a Jewish event in a nonIt was a fabulous PJ Library night which also included dinner, was free Jewish location was a great experiat the Omaha Children’s Museum on of charge thanks to the generosity of ence for his children. Numerous Dec. 13. From the Imagination Play- the Special Donor-Advised Fund and parents expressed their thanks for the ground, to the Creative Arts Center, the Esther K. Newman Memorial event and said both they and their the Fantastic Future Me area, explor- Fund, both funds of the Jewish Fed- kids had a great time. PJ Library is a program through ing the “Once Upon a Farm” exhibit eration of Omaha Foundation. More than just a great evening of which Jewish children ages six or any of the other spaces at the museum, it was three hours of fun and fun for the kids, the event was a won- months through eight years receive play for the nearly 200 children, par- derful opportunity for parents to free age-appropriate Jewish-content ents and grandparents who attended. meet new people and schmooze with books every month. The program is A highlight of the evening was the old friends – all without the cost of a designed to strengthen the identities Amazing Bubble Show presented to babysitter. One parent commented of Jewish families and their relationa standing room only crowd by the that her kids love going to the mu- ship to the Jewish community. community’s very own Shira Abra- seum and it was such fun for her to Continued on page 2

Noah’s Ark Inside Point of view Synagogues In memoriam

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

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by OZZIE NOGG The JCC was the place to be this past Nov. 14, when Noah’s Ark: An Original Mini-Musical (complete with Noah’s family and singing animals) landed on the Theater stage. The performance, written and produced by Deborah Greenblatt and David Seay, featured Rose Blumkin Jewish Home Residents and students from the Friedel Jewish Academy singing selections in a variety of styles, inducing blues, Cajun, calypso and Klezmer. The animals on the Ark were played by Friedel students Noah Blair, Jack Cohen, Oliver Lucoff, Sophia Mavropoulos, Doniven Polivka, Noah Shrago, Aviva Chana Shyken, Batsheva Shyken, Julian Witkowski and Maayan Zinman.

Simon, chorus; Danny Goodman, percussion; and Louise Abrahamson, program attendant. “The show was very warmly received,” said Maggie Conti, Blumkin Home Director of Activities and Outreach Programs. “The Blumkin Home staff is so proud of the Residents for learning their parts and embracing the whole experience. And the Residents enjoyed working towards their goal of creating something marvelous. We only had four working Friedel 4th-grader Noah Schrago, left, and Blumkin days to pull the show Home Resident Mitzie Monovitz. off, and Deborah and Blumkin Home Residents participat- David did a great job leading us ing in the production included Steve through the process. They are very Abrahamson, Annette Fettman, Art calming, so the performers felt very Jacobsen, Mitzie Monovitz, Betty little pressure.” Conti admitted that Muskin and Marvin Parilman who the music from Noah’s Ark is still in played Noah’s family; Jane Cohen, her head. “The songs grew on me. I narrator; Candy Bold, Bernice went to bed singing the songs and Green, Joan Raduziner and Joie Continued on page 3

Jeanne Shechet Jeanne began her career at Beth El with Rabbi Drazen after the kosher butcher shop, “The Kosher Pickle” at 132nd and Center that she owned with her husband closed. In between, she worked at the Jewish Press for a short time, with Editor Morris Maline and Assistant Editor Judy Marburg. Jeanne’s office was in the original Beth El at 58th Street and Hamilton, when the school was called UTTO, United Talmud Torah Omaha, and was a combined school with Beth Israel Synagogue. “The students met at the JCC, so I never saw them,” she recalled. “After just a year, the school wing was built on 144th and Dodge and staff and students could be together in one place.” Soon after, the school was renamed BESTT – Beth El Synagogue Talmud Torah. Scott Littky, past Beth El education director and now program director at Temple Israel, remembered working with Jeanne. “I was always fortunate to have Jeanne right by my side to provide advice and guidance as I learned how to be an education director.” Jeanne has worked alongside five school directors and always loved being around the kids. “In the beginning, school was in session every day, different days for different ages, so we had children running through the halls every afternoon. It was great and, of course, the thing I will miss the most are the kids running into the building and waving hello or stopping in to say hi,” she remarked. Judy Bisman Rubin, Educational Director of BESTT from Continued on page 2


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