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AROUND THE JEWISH WORLD
Personal ties spur philanthropist
to bring Poles, U.S. Jews together
By Carolyn Slutsky
JTA, August 17, 2005
RAKOW, Poland, Aug. 17 (JTA)
- When Tad Taube decided to create the Polish Jewish
Heritage Program, a branch of his Taube Foundation for
Jewish Life and Culture, he did it for more than philanthropic
reasons.
Vilja Fussell
Tad Taube, left, and his son,
Sean, stand in front of the Taube family?s pre-war home
in Krakow, Poland.
"I was born in Krakow,"
Taube told JTA. "I have linkages that I feel positive
about, and I wanted to make those linkages stronger."
Beyond the personal connection,
Taube is motivated by a perception that Americans misunderstand
Poland and its relationship to Jews - and he wants to
bring Polish and American Jews closer together.
"American Jews are certainly
wary about Poland because they relate it to history
- extreme anti-Semitism - and they don't have much of
a sense of what's different at this point," he
said. "Prior to World War II there were 3.5 million
Jews in Poland; it was the most culturally productive
Jewish population that ever lived. Consigning those
3.5 million people to a postscript in history is unacceptable."
The San Francisco-based Taube
is founder of Woodmont Companies, a real estate investment
and management firm, and president of the Koret Foundation.
He recently traveled to Poland accompanied by the board
of directors of his Taube Foundation.
The group toured Jewish sites
in Warsaw and Krakow and met with local Jewish leaders
to understand the impact of the foundation's work on
the estimated 8,000 Jews in Poland today.
The foundation currently supports
several Poland-based organizations, Krakow's Center
for Jewish Culture and the city's annual festival of
Jewish culture, as well as Warsaw's Jewish Historical
Institute. Allocations for these projects approach $1
million annually, Taube said.
Another project the foundation is helping to fund is
the Museum of the History of Polish Jews, slated to
open in Warsaw in 2008. The museum has received $1 million
in donations from the foundation so far.
While in Warsaw, Taube opened
a new resource center at the Lauder Morasha School,
an institution for Jewish children from kindergarten
through ninth grade started by the Ronald S. Lauder
Foundation, Taube's philanthropic partner in Poland.
Taube dedicated the center in honor of his parents,
Zygmunt and Lola Taube.
"My parents were great optimists.
They believed in tomorrow," he said, before cutting
a ceremonial ribbon. "I can think of no better
way to honor them."
Board members toured the school;
met with groups such as the Forum for Dialog Among Nations,
which works to improve Polish-Jewish relations; visited
the Moses Schorr Center, which offers classes in Hebrew
and on Jewish themes and issues; met with Poland's chief
rabbi, Michael Schudrich; and lunched at Beit Warszawa,
Poland's Reform congregation. The encounters crystallized
what until then they had only heard about Poland's Jewish
community.
"We didn't really feel what
was needed until we came here," said Anita Friedman,
executive director of Jewish Family and Children's Services
in San Francisco. "Now we know."
Stephen Dobbs, the Taube Foundation's
executive director, outlined the major goals of the
Poland initiative: to recover the country's pre-World
War II Jewish culture, preserve, sustain and restore
Jewish facilities, acquire Jewish artifacts, and improve
the lives of contemporary Polish Jews.
"In the U.S., we've had 350
uninterrupted years to engage in dialogue on what it
means to be a Jew," while Nazism and communism
froze that discussion in Poland for many years, Dobbs
said. Only with outside help can that conversation be
relaunched, he added.
For Friedman, who traveled with
her husband, Igor Tartakovsky, and their three sons,
the trip was marred by an encounter with the darker
side of contemporary Polish-Jewish relations.
The daughter of a Polish Jew who immigrated to the United
States in 1947, Friedman took her family to her father's
hometown, Gniewoszow. As the family walked around town,
they were approached by local hooligans who shouted
at them and threatened them.
"Americans have never really
felt" this type of anti-Semitism, she said. "These
are the type of people who pointed out our families"
during World War II. "They were so ready to use
physical violence."
In the end, the hooligans didn't
harm the family but left them shaken.
But Friedman knows Poland is a changing country that
can't be understood in a single visit.
"Poland means death to so many Jews," she
said, "and the notion of vibrant Jewish life is
shocking - it flies in the face of stereotype."
"There's a period of mourning
and then rebirth," she explained.
Shana Penn, director of the Polish
Jewish Heritage Program, said it's important for her
board and other Jews to see Poland up close.
"One wants one's board to
be totally engaged with initiatives," she told
JTA. This project "calls for direct participation
because we're breaking through stereotypes and recognizing
the similarities of being Jews in the world today."
For board member Rabbi Steven
Pearce of Temple Emanu-El in San Francisco, donating
time and money to help rebuild Polish cultural institutions
lays the groundwork for the community's continuity and
future self-sufficiency.
"When Jews here come out
of the woodwork, they now have a place to call home,"
he said.
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