Update from Phil Malcom

We’ve all grown accustomed to negativity in our daily news feed. Violence, divisiveness, rising antisemitism—the list goes on, and we’ve discussed many of these items in our updates over the last several months. Most recently, hatred struck close to home with antisemitic fliers spread throughout the Leawood West neighborhood. This was addressed by our own Jewish Community Relations Council in a community update last week. Moments like these make us question the longevity of civil society, doubt our place in the world, and can drive us inward as a community. It is tempting to use these moments as reasons to despair or to close ranks or to live in fear.

But the Omaha Jewish community is different. Every day we make the conscious choice to practice tikkun olam—to go down the path of tolerance, peace, and love for our neighbor. The signs all around our campus announce that “Everyone is Welcome,” and even in moments of fear and anxiety, we double down on this philosophy and choose joy over anger. Of course, we are increasing our security and ensuring we are keeping each other safe, but we do this without losing our spirit along the way.

In 2013 the band Alternate Routes wrote a song for Newtown Kindness, a nonprofit formed in the wake of the Newtown school shooting. Newtown Kindness (recently renamed the Charlotte Helen Bacon Foundation) works to carry on the legacy of kindness inspired by Charlotte Helen Bacon, a six-year-old who lost her life in the shooting. This song, called “Nothing More,” captures the spirit of responding to hatred with goodness:

We are love, we are one
We are how we treat each other when the day is done
We are peace, we are war
We are how we treat each other and nothing more

Today is my 36th birthday. I woke up sore and tired and greeted by the usual collection of distressing news stories. Then I took my daughters to the Jewish Community Center’s Early Learning Center and saw the truly unbridled joy that comes from children in an environment where they are loved, supported, and celebrated. Next week I look forward to visiting my grandmother at the Rose Blumkin Jewish Home. Her dementia has progressed substantially, but she absolutely lights up when she hears the musical guests brought in by the Activities team. When I open up the Jewish Press or observe the good work being done by any of our other agencies and partners I see the ways in which we practice tikkun olam in both big ways and small ways each day. While each passing year teaches me that the world is increasingly complex and challenging, it also presents fresh reminders that people have tremendous capacity for goodness.

We practice tikkun olam when we treat each other with kindness. We practice tikkun olam when we welcome the stranger. We practice tikkun olam when we respond to fear with love. And we practice tikkun olam when we make the conscious choice each day to see the good in the world around us, despite its multiple failings. This is the work of the Jewish Federation of Omaha. It is challenging work, and we are not perfect in it. But it is good work, and I am thankful to have all of you with us as we accomplish it together.

Shabbat Shalom,
Phil Malcom,
JFO Interim CEO

 

10/14/25

Today is a day of hope and, we pray, the beginning of healing for the hostages, their families and all of Israel.
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Update from Jan Goldstein

Going to Israel isn’t just another trip…
…and next year, our Federation will be offering an extraordinary opportunity for our Omaha Jewish Community to explore Israel together, from north to south. We’re calling the trip Meet Me in Jerusalem! and it’s taking place March 15-26, 2023. Information sessions will be held on August 25 and October 6 at 6:00 p.m. in the Benjamin & Anna E. Wiesman Family Reception Room.

According to JFO President Mike Siegel, “Our goal is to enable as many community members as possible to experience their personal connection to the Jewish homeland and travel together as one community. This will be different from simply taking just another trip or vacation. Our journey will be an unforgettable shared experience, whether it’s your first visit in many years, or your first trip ever to Israel. We want our community to learn more about the American/Israel connection and how we are very much a part of it. On the tour we’ll visit our Partnership Region in the Western Galilee, meet members of the local community, immerse ourselves in the tapestry of Israeli culture, and witness how Omaha has invested our local dollars to help build the Jewish nation.”

I want to add a BIG THANKS to the Federation Board under the leadership of Mike Siegel, who understands the importance of Israel to our Federation and has the passion to fully revitalize our long time Missions program, providing the staff and resources to make these kinds of opportunities possible for all ages in our community.

Israel travel has burst wide open in recent months after the pandemic prompted a nearly two-year shutdown. While tourism is now working its way back to its previous 4.8 million visitors per year, trip participants have different expectations than they once did. In response, the JFO aims to provide meaningful experiences and the opportunity not only to see the ancient places of the past, but to understand the history that unfolded around them, including more modern history, such as how the State of Israel came into being. This trip is designed to highlight these various significant aspects for both first-timers and repeat visitors who are in for a surprise at just how much the country has changed over the past decade.

Since I began my professional career over 30 years ago, I have been privileged to make it part of my life’s work to have helped thousands of people visit Israel. I have led over 50 missions and have made many more personal trips on my own. If you were to ask me, “Haven’t you seen it all?” I would tell you, “Absolutely not!” There is so much to experience in this tiny, remarkable country and the world is now taking notice of the way Israel leads and makes a global impact in almost every industry and cultural area it touches.

So, by this point you’ve hopefully figured out WHY an Israel trip is not just another trip, but why do so many go?

There are many reasons. Some have always known they wanted one day to visit Israel. Others decide to go because they’ve heard so much from others who have gone and they see their reactions, or they have sent their kids on a teen trip and saw the effect it had. Maybe they took a biblical or Jewish historical class, or after hearing so much about Israel in the news they just wanted to know more for themselves. And for many, they grew up with parents and grandparents who longed to go, just as Diaspora Jews yearn to return to the Land of Israel. Just as we say at the end of every Passover Seder, “next year in Jerusalem.”

I want to tell you a story from my early years as JFO Missions Director when I was asked by National UJA Missions to be one of the lead professional staff on a multi-bus mission. Assigned to my bus was an older gentleman from another Midwestern city who called me because he wanted desperately to go and had signed up, but was concerned that because of his age and some limitations, he might not be able to make it. It was his life’s dream to finally visit Israel, and did I think he could do it? After much discussion I felt he could physically, and equally important, I felt we needed to get him there. He went, and he did fine. The day we were getting ready to leave, he pulled me aside, kindly took my hand and said, “All my life I have been going to Temple, giving to my Jewish Federation, teaching my children and grandchildren the importance of Judaism, and I supported Israel through every decade. I’ve lived a good Jewish life. I always wanted to come to Israel, but I never made the time to do it, and something always got in the way. I am now 89 years old; I didn’t think I was going to get here, but I made it and I am so grateful to UJA Missions and to you. I have peace to have visited this place we call Home. Thank you.”

So, I’m saying to any of you: IF you are thinking of waiting, DON’T! Figure out YOUR reason why a trip to Israel is important to you and make the commitment now so you can discover your story, your history, your truths, and your connections to a place that we say “Journey Home To.” Join us in March on the Omaha Community Trip to Israel. You’ll be glad you did!

Shabbat Shalom,
Jan Goldstein
Programming and Campaign Consultant

10/14/25

Today is a day of hope and, we pray, the beginning of healing for the hostages, their families and all of Israel.
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Update from Mike Siegel

On behalf of the Jewish Federation of Omaha Board, I am pleased to announce that the Board has unanimously voted to hire Bob Goldberg as the next CEO of the Jewish Federation of Omaha.

Bob grew up in Omaha and spent many days on the Federation campus. He was an active member of BBYO while attending Burke High School. He received a BS in Speech Communication at UNO and earned a Master’s degree in English from UNO. He began his Federation career in 2008 at the JFO where he was Director of Strategic Initiatives.

In 2013, Bob moved to Fort Worth, TX where he became Executive Director of the Jewish Federation of Fort Worth and Tarrant County. Here, he was able to re-establish their Federation’s relevance as the “go-to” organization in the Jewish community. Bob handled all aspects of their business – managing financial resource development, strategic initiatives, community engagement, marketing, and communications. He used his skills to build relationships with donors and community partners. One of his biggest accomplishments in Texas was establishing a lay leadership program which successfully started a pipeline for future leaders.

In December 2020, Bob accepted the role of Executive Director at the Jewish Federation of Greater Des Moines. In the brief time he has been at Des Moines, he has increased their campaign by 20% year to year as well as introduced innovative events to attract community members to their Federation. Bob was very active in the community where he cultivated relationships with city officials, attended services at all synagogues and elevated Des Moines’ core pillars of Education, Outreach, Community and History. The search committee was very impressed with all of Bob’s accomplishments at Fort Worth and Des Moines.

Bob is returning to Omaha as a seasoned Federation leader, prepared to help the JFO grow to the next level. I am excited to see his many skills in action as he leads the Federation into the future.

Bob’s start date will be January 30, 2023 to allow him to properly transition out of his current position in Des Moines. The Board and search committee are more than comfortable with the temporary leadership system we have in place. Interim CEO Phil Malcom, Jan Goldstein, and Marty Ricks are doing a remarkable job and have agreed to stay on in their current roles until Bob officially joins the JFO. I will thank all three of them more thoroughly in a separate email.

Bob and his wife, Kim have one daughter, Lily, who is a senior at Washington University in St. Louis. All three Goldbergs are looking forward to being back in Omaha. Please join me in welcoming Bob as the CEO of the Jewish Federation of Omaha.

Shabbat Shalom,

Mike Siegel
JFO President

10/14/25

Today is a day of hope and, we pray, the beginning of healing for the hostages, their families and all of Israel.
Read More