Devinki siblings join U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Founders Society
Siblings Sam Devinki, Ida Kolkin and Karen Pack recently became members of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Founders Society with cumulative giving of $1 million that will establish The Fred and Maria Devinki Memorial Fellowship Fund within the Museum’s Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies. The fund will support the museum’s fellowship program for research on the Holocaust and related education and publications.
The center’s goal is to provide an ongoing institutional support structure for scholars at all stages of their scholarly careers — from graduate students and junior faculty to post-doctoral researchers and senior scholars. The center’s visiting scholar programs, research initiatives, archival collection program, seminars for faculty, research workshops, publications, symposia, and other activities have made the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum one of the world’s principal venues for Holocaust scholarship.
The Devinki children have been dedicated supporters of the museum for the last 18 years. Sam Devinki served on the museum’s presidentially-appointed council, the museum’s governing body, from 2003 to 2008. In 2012, he was presented with the museum’s Wings of Memory Leadership Award for the Midwest Region for his more than two decades of dedication supporting the museum on a local, national and international level. Additionally, each year, he leads a group of ninth-grade students from Kansas City to the museum.
“The entire family went to Washington, D.C., in 1993 to celebrate the opening of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum,” Sam Devinki said. “It was an overwhelming experience for our parents. There were tears of joy and sadness. They felt the museum would now be a living memorial to the over 100 family members who were murdered in the Shoah. They taught us that there were three values above everything — family, our Jewish heritage and education.”
Both their parents’ families’ lived in Wodzislaw, Poland, 30 miles north of Krakow at the beginning of World War II. The Devinki children’s paternal grandmother and maternal grandfather were both murdered by the Nazis. Their maternal grandfather’s business partner, Jozef Gondrowicz was a member of the Polish nationalist resistance movement Armia Krajowa (A.K. or Home Army.) He alerted the family that the Nazis were coming to liquidate the Wodzislaw ghetto. Gondrowicz arranged to hide Sam’s parents and other family members in a 10’ x 15’ dirt hole underneath a barn where they remained for 26 months.
After the war, their parents, Maria and Fred Devinki, went to Regensburg, a displaced persons camp, and eventually immigrated to Kansas City. There they built the successful real estate development firm that remains in the family to this day.
“The Devinki family has been actively involved with the museum since the very beginning, so to receive this generous gift in our 20th Anniversary year is very meaningful,” museum Director Sara J. Bloomfield said. “We are most grateful for their partnership in helping us ensure that Holocaust history remains a vital subject of academic research and public education.”
A living memorial to the Holocaust, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum inspires citizens and leaders worldwide to confront hatred, prevent genocide, and promote human dignity. Federal support guarantees the museum’s permanent place on the National Mall, and its far-reaching educational programs and global impact are made possible by generous donors. For more information, visit www.ushmm.org.
Last week marked the pinnacle of the rejuvenation of the Jewish Community Center of Greater Kansas City. After nearly six years of renovation efforts, the JCC is seeing the fruits of its labors and is taking time to thank those who made the projects possible.
The nasty winter weather that impacted Overland Park Monday night and Tuesday morning may have kept the Jewish community away from the opening of the new Hy-Vee store located at 8501 W. 95th Street, but when they do visit they will be greeted by a wide selection of kosher goods stocked by the Iowa-based grocery chain. The kosher cases aren’t even completely filled yet.
White’s KC Kosher Co-op, which has a product catalog containing thousands of items, currently serves as this Hy-Vee’s kosher dry goods supplier.(The co-op does not supply the store’s meat.) In fact he and his wife Katie actually helped Anton physically stock the shelves before the store’s grand opening this week.
Rabbi Arthur Nemitoff shared the statistic that there are about a billion people who go to bed every day hungry, without enough food to sustain them, people who are starving. The senior rabbi of The Temple, Congregation B’nai Jehudah said that there is another billion people on our planet who are undernourished and are just one step away to spiraling down into the vortex of hunger from which there is little chance of survival.
At Ethan Loftspring’s first chapter B’nai Brith Youth Organization meeting for Nordaunian AZA, he became sergeant at arms. Since then, he’s climbed through the ranks, never looking back.
Rabbi Shlomo Riskin, chief rabbi of Efrat, Israel, will be at Kehilath Israel Synagogue as part of the Caviar Family Jewish Scholar in Residence series on Wednesday, March 6. His presentation “Women in Jewish Law, which will be followed by a question-and-answer session, begins at 7 p.m. and will continue until 8:30 p.m. The evening will conclude with a dessert bar. The event is free and open to the public.
The New Reform Temple will welcome Anat Hoffman as its annual Krasne Scholar in Residence this spring. Hoffman is executive director of the Israel Religious Action Center (IRAC), as well as a founding member and chairwoman of Women of the Wall (WOW).
Twenty-eight Kansas City teens attended BBYO, Inc.’s annual International Convention over President’s Day weekend in Washington, D.C. The more than 2,000 Jewish teen leaders of AZA and BBG, BBYO’s renowned leadership platform and high school fraternity and sorority, educators, thought leaders, volunteers and philanthropists from 18 countries, were treated to a variety of high-level speakers, including a welcome video message from President Obama.
HE WROTE THE WHOLE MEGILLAH — The Kansas City Jewish community may soon have a certified scribe among us. Rabbi Berel Sosover, who teaches Jewish studies to Hyman Brand Hebrew Academy upper school students, began taking classes to become a scribe about a year and a half ago. The first project he tackled was a Megillah he read for the first time on Sunday at HBHA’s Purim festivities. “I’ve been practicing learning the laws and hope to become a scribe in the near future,” the rabbi said. It took him close to a year and a half to actually handwrite the Megillah, which he chose as his first project because you don’t need to be certified to write one. After he passes the certification test, he hopes to put his new scribe skills to work during summers and free time when he’s not teaching. As a certified scribe, he will be able to write Torah and to check teffillin.