February 15, 2002

Page 1

Vol. LXXX1

No. 23

Omaha, NE

3 Adar, 5762

February 15, 2002

NEXT MONTH: JEWS IN SPORTS: OMAHA HOSTS THE 2002 MACCABl GAMES

Speaker Relates Life of Janiisz Korczak: A Tale of 'Stunning Simplicity1 by CAROL KATZMAN, Editor—

Not until 1978, when she hosted a Polish theater director in her Cape Cod home, did children's book author Betty Jean Lifton hear the name of Janusz Korczak for the first time. "As (the director) was describing what it had been like for her troupe to perform in his ghetto orphanage, I interrupted to ask who Korczak was," Lifton said in the introduction to her 1988 book, The King of Children. "I couldn't tell if she was more shocked at my ignorance or at my mispronunciation of his name, but she spent a few minutes teaching me to say 'Kor-chock' before answering my questions." Needless to say, Lifton was captivated by the story of Henryk Goldszmidt, better known as Janusz Korczak, a physician, educator and writer who built a school that served as a sanctuary for Jewish children during the brutal occupation of the Nazis of the Warsaw Ghetto. Lifton will be in Omaha next weekend to tell the fascinating, but heartbreaking, story of this man, who marched into the fires of Treblinka, carrying a little girl while holding a little boy's hand. She'll speak Friday night, Feb. 22, 8 pan., at Temple Israel on "Striving for Justice: Korczak's Court of Peers and Justice System." On Saturday night, Feb. 23, 7:30 p.m., Lifton will speak at Beth El about "The Rights of the Child." Both events, part of a year-long study of Korczak by the Institute of Holocaust Education in cooperation with the ADL/CRC, are free and open to the public. But Korczak is more than a a legend, according to Dr. Lifton. He introduced the first progressive orphanages to Poland, founded the first national children's newspaper, trained teachers in what is

now referred to as "moral education" and worked in the juvenile courts defending children's rights. Last year, Korczak was posthumously given honorary fellowship into the American Academy of Pediatricians. During the Academy's national convention, its chairman, Dr. Steve Berman, noted that "Dr. Korczak was one of the world's great humanitarians. During the 1920s and '30s, he committed his life to what he called Europe's 'throw-away1 children. "He believed passionately about the need to recognize the rights of children and to respect their dignity," Dr. Berman said, adding that the reason for recognizing Korczak was "to inspire us and challenge us by his actions and deeds." Dr. Lifton, who made four trips to Poland and two to Israel to research her book on Korczak, is also the author of Twice Born: Memoirs of an Adopted Daughter and A Place Called Hiroshima. "Betty Jean Lifton has captured the essence of Korczak's spirit through its historical content, but more so, through the personal accounts and stories of the survivors who relayed their story to her," said Beth Seldin-Dotan, Director of the Institute for Holocaust Education. "Lifton was clearly touched by Korczak's legacy to believe in the child and to allow the child his/her own identifiable rights as a child," she added. "Though Korczak's life ended tragically in the darkest moments of our Jewish history, his educational and philosophical agenda for children can still be brought to the forefront of education today. For more information about Lifton's appearances in Omaha, call the Institute at 330-1303.

Community Purim Celebration Has Something for Everyone by PAM MONSKY, Federation Communications Director •

The only place to be on Purim this year is at the Community Purim Celebration, Tuesday, Feb. 26, 5:30-7:30 p.m., at the Jewish Community Center. The Purim Celebration is sponsored by the Jewish Federation of Omaha, Young Jewish Omaha (YJO), Chabad House, Beth El Synagogue, Beth Israel Synagogue and Temple Israel. Festivities include prizes for costumes, face painting, clowns, storytelling by Nancy Rips, and music by Tuffy Epstein. A festive kosher dinner will be served for $10 per person. Dinner will be available for young children for $5. Rabbi Howard Kutner of Beth Israel Synagogue said, "It's wonderful that our community is once again getting together in celebration of Purim. In the story of Purim, it was the Jewish people's unity, which helped bring about their victory over their enemies. In these trying times for Klal Yisrael, it is most fitting for Omaha's Jewish community to demonstrate achdut (unity or togeth-

erness) by sitting down to the Purim Seudah (feast) as one big family." Temple Israel's Rabbi Aryeh Azriel is also looking forward to the community celebrating together. "I wish the holiday of Purim occurred every month!" he asserted. "As a community, we come together too many times for sad commemoration. Purim is about joy, masks- and good community conversation. Please come!" Rabbi Paul Drazen of Beth El Synagogue, added, "Purim is the most unusual of Jewish holidays, a celebration of life as life reawakens from winter. Formality of such statements aside, the Purim celebration is a great time for us to get together with no other goal than to be together. For reservations, call the Purim Hotline at 334-6402, or e-mail Brenda Frank at bfrank@jewishomaha.org. Dinner orders may be placed on the Hotline using a credit card, or mail or bring your check to the JCC, 333 So. 132nd St., Omaha, NE 68154.

Business Hall of Fame to Induct Joe Kirshenbaum and Harlan Noddle by CAROL KATZMAN, Editor--™--—--™

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According to longtime business associate and friend Jay Lerner, it's no surprise that Joe Kirshenbaum and Harlan Noddle will be inducted into the Business Hall of Fame by the Omaha Chamber of Commerce. "My association with Harlan and Joe is long and far-reaching," said Lerner, who served as President of the Jewish Community Center (and later the Federation), while Kirshenbaum was President of the Federation and Noddle was Chairman of the first Blumkin Home Building Campaign. "There aren't two finer men to work with — professionally, as well as in a volunteer role."

Joe Kirshenbaum Harlan Noddle The Chamber annually honors men and women "whose accomplishments in business were historically significant to the development of Omaha. The award was initiated in 1993 in celebration of the Chamber's 100th anniversary. Noddle and Kirshenbaum will be among a group of six business leaders to be honored at a dinner on Wednesday, April 10, 6 p.m., at the Holiday Inn Convention Center, 72nd and Grover Streets. Probably the best known in Omaha for One Pacific Place, Noddle and Kirshenbaum have developed or purchased more than 85 shopping centers and five office buildings in 16 states. The partnership began in 1971, when a mutual friend brought the two men together to develop a shopping center at 74th and Pacific. At the time, the business consisted of Noddle, Kirshenbaum and a secretary. Today, 20 men and women are involved with the company, including Kirshenbaum's son, Jeff, and Noddle's daughter, Susan. The two partners and friends are not just being honored for their business acumen; they've both served the Jewish and general communities in leadership positions. Jan Perelman, Executive Director of the Jewish Federation of Omaha, described the two men this way, "Joe's and Harlan's importance to our community is immeasurable. Each of them have served in the highest leadership positions of the Federation, and we continue to rely on their guidance and vision today. They have built an amazing legacy that will continue to grow for generations to come," she added. "When you talk about love for Jewish community, you're talking about Harlan and Joe!" (Continued on page 2)

8NS8OE: Elderhood

page 7

Hadassah Celebrates 90th

page 3

Friedel Hires Outside Consultant..,..page II Conservative Anniversary.

Jews

Mark

lOOlh page J 2


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