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75 years after Auschwitz, Eva Erbens untold story reminds us why anti-semitism should be confined to history – YourStory

Posted By on August 2, 2020

January 27, 2020, marked the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz. However, a recent survey of 16,395 people who identified as Jewish, across 12 EU member states by the EU's Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA), found that 89 percent of respondents said that anti-semitism had increased over the last five years in the countries they lived in.

The story isnt too dissimilar in the US. Although less than two percent of US adults are Jewish, there continues to be evidence that anti-semitism is on the rise. Almost 90 percent of American Jews surveyed identified anti-semitism as a problem, and 84 percent agreed that it has increased over the past five years - a perspective backed by data collected by Anti-Defamation League, an international nonprofit that tracks and fights anti-semitism and all forms of bigotry.

YourStory Founder and CEO Shradha Sharma recently caught up with the 89-year-old holocaust survivor on YourStory Inspirations series to talk about her incredible and moving journey. In this conversation with Shradha, Eva shares the tale of her as a young girl struggling to cope with the fear and danger that becomes part of her world. Her experiences of the Holocaust is a poignant and moving story, as well as a critical historical record.

Born in Czechoslovakia, Eva was first taken to Terezin, and then survived Auschwitz-Birkenau, Gross Rosen, and the Death March at the end of the war. During the march, she collapsed along the way and was left for dead, until a local farmer found her and took care of her.

Communal grave for victims of the Nazi-German Belsen Concentration Camp, April 1945. In the weeks before it's liberation, weakened prisoners died by the hundreds daily from typhus, typhoid and dysentery.

Nobody has any right to make us a slave. And neither can we make anyone our slave. Nobody has any right to hurt us or to torture us. Were all equal before the law, and It must treat us all fairly. Our human rights are protected by law. We can all ask for the law to help us when we are not treated fairly. Nobody has the right to put us in prison without good reason and keep us there, or to send us away from our country. If we are put on trial this should be in public. The people who try us should not let anyone tell them what to do.

She is especially distraught about the recent rise in anti-semitism I also dont like everybody who is Jewish. But I dont kill them. Let live. Let people live the way they want to, says Eva.

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75 years after Auschwitz, Eva Erbens untold story reminds us why anti-semitism should be confined to history - YourStory

Daily Mail loses defamation case to Lord Iltaf Sheikh over hate allegations – The News International

Posted By on August 2, 2020

LONDON: Senior Conservative Party politician Lord Mohamed Iltaf Sheikh has won a defamation case against Associated Newspapers Limited, publishers of the Daily Mail and Mail Online.

The case pertained to an article published in August 2018 accusing him of appearing at a hate conference held in Tunisia with former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, for hosting in the House of Lords the well-known Pakistani religious leader Muhammad Hassam Haseeb-ur-Rehman, as well as allegedly supporting a Hamas leader.

The article titled EXCLUSIVE: Top Tory peers appearance at Corbyns hate conference in Tunisia comes after YEARS of rubbing shoulders with Islamists, hate preachers and Holocaust deniers accused Lord Sheikh of mixing with extremist, Holocaust deniers and hate preachers and focused on his attendance at a conference in Tunisia in 2014 where it had earlier been widely reported that Jeremy Corbyn had participated in a wreath-laying ceremony.

In the same article, Mail Online referred to a meeting which Lord Sheikh hosted in the House of Lords for the well-known Pakistani Sunni leader Muhammad Hassam Haseeb-ur-Rehman. This was a multi-faith Conference to promote harmony between people and was attended by the Bishop of Birmingham, another Member of the House of Lords, First secretary at the US Embassy in London, leading Councillors and other dignitaries.

Lord Sheikh initiated his libel claim against Associated Newspapers soon after the article was published and his lawyer informed the court that Lord Sheikh had in fact been invited to speak at the Tunisian conference, which was held a short time after hostilities between Israel and Gaza resulted in over 2,000 deaths.

The lawyer further told the court that Lord Sheikh in his speech at the conference advocated, consistent with UK government policy, that to achieve a lasting peace, a two-state solution should provide security for the state of Israel and also respect for the rights of the Palestinian people.

It has now been determined by the Royal Court of Justice in London that the article published by the Mail Online was highly defamatory in its nature.

The Associated Newspapers Ltd initially defended the claims made in the defamatory article but this week accepted that the serious allegations it published were untrue and agreed not to repeat them and further to pay a substantial sum of damages to Lord Sheikh as well as his legal costs. The court was told by a barrister acting for Associated Newspapers that there was and is no truth in the allegations advanced in the article and that it was happy to set the record straight and apologise to the claimant.

The statement read out in the Court by Lord Sheikhs solicitor contains the following paragraph. Mr Justice Warby in a judgment dated 4 November 2019 ruled that the article would be understood by readers to allege that the claimant has a long history of support for, or close association with, people and organisations that express or hold anti-Semitic and other extremist views and attitudes which, despite his attempts to explain it, 1 provides strong grounds for suspecting that he is secretly an anti-Semite who approves of and sympathises with Holocaust denial, Islamist jihad and hate-preaching, which he is prepared knowingly and actively to support; 2 -is shocking and disturbing".

Speaking to The News, Lord Sheikh, who was appointed as a life peer in 2006, expressed his happiness and said that it was never his aim to win any money.

Both before and since I entered the House of Lords, I have consistently sought to promote inter-racial and inter-faith understanding, tolerance and respect. To find myself accused by a newspaper of the very conduct which I have always opposed was profoundly hurtful.

"I am delighted to have been able finally to clear my name from these shocking and unfounded allegations, and thank my legal team for their constant support in what for me has been a very difficult and distressing time. I never wanted to make any money out of this claim but to set the record straight," he said.

Lord Sheikh said he has known Haseeb-ur-Rehman and he respected him for promoting education, welfare of people and inter-faith dialogue.

The Conservative leader said he has repeatedly spoken out against anti-Semitism and radicalisation and has produced papers on the latter but the paper chose to target him.

In the defamatory article it was stated that two Conservative MPs Robert Halfon and Zac Goldsmith had demanded an investigation into Lord Sheikhs presence at the hate-filled event.

Appearing before Judge Warby, Lord Sheikhs lawyer informed that MPs Robert Halfon and Zac Goldsmith had made a complaint to the Conservative Party which was considered and unequivocally dismissed in November 2018 by the partys independent Code of Conduct panel but the paper neither removed the article from its website nor reported to its readers that Lord Sheikh had been cleared by his own party regarding the complaint made by his own party MPs.

After months of litigation, Daily Mail through its solicitors notified Lord Sheikh that the article which is the subject of these proceedings had finally been taken offline, and put forward an offer of amends to publish a correction and apology and to pay the Claimant compensation.

Associated Newspapers Ltds lawyer told the judge: My Lord, on behalf of the Defendant, I confirm everything my learned Friend has said. The Defendant through me offers its sincere apologies to the Claimant for the distress, embarrassment and upset caused to him by the publication of the Article. The Defendant accepts there was and is no truth in the allegations advanced in the Article and is happy to set the record straight and apologise to the Claimant.

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Daily Mail loses defamation case to Lord Iltaf Sheikh over hate allegations - The News International

Some Other Prominent Jews Who Resigned in Protest – Algemeiner

Posted By on August 2, 2020

Bari Weiss on The View. Photo: Screenshot.

With her recent resignation from The New York Times, Bari Weiss joined a small but distinguished group of American Jews who have resigned in protest from positions of stature, choosing to sacrifice their self-interest for the sake of principle.

Weiss, a prominent commentator on Jewish affairs and antisemitism, was hired by the Times three years ago to provide a more centrist perspective within an editorial staff that mostly leans further to the left. In her letter of resignation, Weiss reported that she had been the target of constant bullying by colleagues who disagree with [her] views.

Weiss harassers called her a Nazi and a racist and harangued her for writing about the Jews again. In the Times internal discussion forums, she was openly demeaned by co-workers who said she needed to be rooted out. Even staff members who were perceived to be friendly with Weiss found themselves badgered for associating with her.

The Weiss resignation brings to mind a handful of others who have sacrificed their professional positions for matters of conscience.

August 2, 2020 4:48 am

One was Mark Siegel, a former executive director of the Democratic National Committee, who served as President Jimmy Carters liaison to the American Jewish community. In 1978, Siegel was assigned the task of convincing Jews not to oppose Carters planned sale of sophisticated military aircraft to Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

National Security Council briefers told Siegel that the aircraft were intended for civilian purposes, but when he shared that information with the audience at a United Jewish Appeal meeting, he was roundly booed. Surprised by that hostile reception, Siegel checked with the Defense Department and was informed that the aircraft in question were, in fact, the best-fighter-bombers in the world. A few days later, Siegel submitted his letter of resignation and shared it with the press. In an interview with The Washington Post, Siegel said that resigning in protest was the obvious step. Whenever youre in any kind of position in life and there are things you cannot do, you dont do them, he said.

Walter Reich, executive director of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, felt the same way. The thing he could not do was escort Yasser Arafat on a tour of the museum. State Department official Aaron Miller came up with the Arafat tour idea in 1998, as a way of trying to improve the terrorist leaders image in the eyes of the Israeli public. To many Israelis, among the worst of the Palestinian transgressions was Holocaust denial, Miller later wrote. What better way to counter Holocaust denial than by having the alleged denier in chief visit the museum?

The invitation was first cancelled after a backlash, but then extended again. Dr. Reich was ordered by the museums leadership to welcome Arafat and accompany him on the tour. I refused, Reich later recalled. I told them the museum mustnt be used as a political tool and I wouldnt be part of that. I said it was a matter of conscience in a museum of conscience. I knew that such a refusal constituted an act of resignation. But I felt that the principle of protecting the museum and, more importantly, the memory of the Holocaust dead was more important than holding onto my job.

Reich lost his job. Ironically, Arafat backed out of the tour at the last minute, when the eruption of the Monica Lewinsky scandal diverted the Washington press corps on the morning of his planned visit to the museum thus confirming that he was interested only in the photo-op, not actually learning about the Holocaust, exactly as Reich had warned.

In an op-ed 12 years too late to save Reichs job, Aaron Miller admitted that his Arafat plan was one of the dumbest ideas in the annals of U.S. foreign policy, but only because he failed to foresee that it would set off a storm of protest. Reich told me in an interview that Miller has never apologized to him. In his op-ed, Miller did not even acknowledgethe price that Reich was forced to pay for Millers actions.

Andrew Tarsys experience had a better ending. Tarsy, the New England regional director of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), put his job on the line in 2007 by publicly dissenting from the national ADLs position regarding Turkeys mass murder of 1.5 million Armenians. The official ADL line was to refrain from calling it genocide for fear of offending the Turkish government.

Despite the risk to his job and possibly career, Tarsy publicly acknowledged that the slaughter of the Armenians was genocide. For the sin of telling the truth, Tarsy was fired the very next day. I was not the least bit surprised, Tarsy told me this week. But I asked myself, how can we sustain a recognizable moral tradition and presume to lead on any subject of significance in Jewish life or American civic life while being complicit in the denial of a genocide? I knew I could not.

An outcry in the Jewish community resulted in Tarsys reinstatement, however; and the national ADL eventually changed its position and accepted the historical reality of the Armenian genocide.

Bari Weiss high-profile clash with The New York Times will no doubt make her unwelcome in some segments of the media world, and complicate her professional prospects. But whatever Weiss future holds, one thing is certain. She has already ensured that she will have what Mark Siegel, Walter Reich, and Andrew Tarsy earned with their principled resignations: a clear conscience.

Dr. Medoff, the director of the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies, is a historian and author of more than 20 books about Jewish history, Zionism and the Holocaust.

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Some Other Prominent Jews Who Resigned in Protest - Algemeiner

Things To Do This Week – The New York Times

Posted By on August 2, 2020

Here is a sampling of the weeks events and how to tune in (all times are Eastern). Note that events are subject to change after publication.

The multimedia artist Tony Oursler explores how technology touches humanity through pieces that blend video, painting and collage. In his mesmerizing exhibition Magical Variations, on Lehmann Maupin gallerys website, Mr. Oursler wraps in everything from 5G conspiracy theories to The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.

When Through Aug. 16Where lehmannmaupin.com

Travel back to Elizabethan England as the Black Death sets in, with Maggie OFarrell, the author of Hamnet one of The New York Timess books to watch for this month. Ms. OFarrell discusses her novel, in which she imagines the inner workings of William Shakespeares family, at a virtual event held by Politics and Prose, a bookstore in Washington, D.C.

When 5 p.m.Where politics-prose.com/event

Ponder the complexities and consequences of social interactions with the author and podcast host Malcolm Gladwell. His most recent book, Talking to Strangers, dives into the topic of first impressions which, he argues, are often full of misunderstandings and examines the ripple effect they have on society. Oliver Burkeman, a columnist for The Guardian, joins Mr. Gladwell in conversation. Tickets start at about $6.

When 1:30 p.m.Where membership.theguardian.com/events

As part of a celebration for its 50th anniversary, the Ballet Hispnico dance company releases archival footage of Cada Noche Tango, choreographed by Graciela Daniele and performed in 1992. The piece was inspired by Buenos Airess passionate underground nightlife from the 1920s and 30s. The performance is followed by a talk with Eduardo Vilaro, Ballet Hispnicos artistic director and chief executive, and some of the dancers.

When 7 p.m.Where ballethispanico.org/bunidos/watch-party

Listen to, and learn about, the Stonehill Recordings made in 1948 by Ben Stonehill, a collector of folklore. He cataloged more than 1,000 songs from refugees of the Holocaust who, at the time, were living at the Hotel Marseilles on New Yorks Upper West Side. Miriam Isaacs, a Yiddish scholar, explains more of the back story and the musician Vladimir Fridman performs at an online program hosted by the Museum of Jewish Heritage in Manhattan.

When 2 p.m.Where mjhnyc.org/events

Unleash your inner writer with the award-winning author Curtis Sittenfeld. She shares her tips for writing short fiction and overcoming mental blocks with Amy Virshup, the editor of Travel and At Home for The New York Times. Send the opening sentence of your short story to athome@nytimes.com with the subject line My Short Story, and it may be read live.

When 6 p.m.Where timesevents.nytimes.com

Missing your ceramics class? The Clay Studio, based in Philadelphia, has an array of tutorials on projects you can do from home without a wheel or other professional equipment. Learn about the importance of underglazing and find out how to make prints from your clay creations.

When AnytimeWhere theclaystudio.org/clay-at-home-tutorials

Start your weekend with a viewing of Whos There?, a play directed by Sim Yan Ying, a performer and playwright from Singapore currently based in New York, and Alvin Tan, the founder and artistic director of The Necessary Stage, a nonprofit theater company in Singapore. Whos There? delves into themes of racial injustices with artists participating from the United States, Singapore and Malaysia all in real time on Zoom. Tickets are donation based, with a suggestion of $10 and a minimum of $1.

When 10 a.m.Where newohiotheatre.org/whos-there.htm

Combine snack time and play time with the Childrens Museum of Manhattans mystery taste testing guide, which engages all five senses by suggesting different foods to taste and questions to ask your children. This game is also a good way of subtly encouraging them to expand their palates studies show that it can take several tries before kids start to like a new food. Best for ages 4 and up.

When AnytimeWhere athome.cmom.org

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Things To Do This Week - The New York Times

Twitter Finally Bans the Nazi. No, Not That One. No, the Other One. – Gizmodo Australia

Posted By on August 2, 2020

Twitter has finally booted David Duke, a former KKK grand wizard and founder of the KKK revival group the Knights of the Klu Klux Klan.

Why has it taken years for a company whose policies explicitly bar individuals who affiliate with and promote violent extremist groups? Gizmodo wondered about this earlier this month and asked Twitter, to which the company replied that Duke is not currently a member of the KKK and has distanced himself from the organisation publicly. Nothing from Dukes daily ranting indicated that hed dropped the racism, just that he was a free-agent type of racist. Bewilderingly, it still doesnt explain why Richard Spencer, head of the white supremacist National Policy Institute, is still on the platform. (Today, Twitter declined to comment to Gizmodo on why this is.)

Dukes account has been active since 2009, and, as of yesterday, he had over 53,000 followers.

Previously, Twitter said that it had temporarily suspended Dukes account and culled content, telling Gizmodo earlier this month that it would permanently ban the account if he continued to violate rules. But generally, in a recap of its guidelines, Twitter indicated that the hate could stand so long as the tweets didnt explicitly call for hurting people or promoting violence against specific groups.

For years, Duke has screamed on Twitter about supposed Zioglobalism, called Black people radical savages, defended the Nazi salute, and constantly used the anti-Semitic triple parentheses, or echo symbol, intended to point at people of Jewish heritage. He spewed hate at homosexuality and transgender insanity, calling gender dysphoria a sick product of the media. Duke threateningly tweeted the names and faces of a group of Antifa protesters, calling them the faces of domestic terror, which I wont link to here. Even if all of that flies under a technicality, there is simply no excuse under Twitters hateful conduct policy, which prohibits inciting fear about a protected category, for which Twitters example is all [religious group] are terrorists. Duke loved to call people terrorists, but most specifically to Twitters example, Israel. That this guy espouses hate doesnt exactly require a nuanced reading.

Toward the end of Dukes run on the platform, Twitter started putting sensitive material labels on his tweets, but it mostly blocked his racist memes and links, not his commentary.

The account you referenced has been permanently suspended for repeated violations of the Twitter Rules on hateful conduct, a Twitter spokesperson said in an email. This enforcement action is in line with our recently-updated guidance on harmful links. Those include links to content that harasses people based on race or ethnicity.

It took YouTube until last month to do the same. Weeks after that ban, Duke tweeted:

The fact that Google and Youtube are 100% owned and run by radical Zionists who give millions of dollars to Jewish causes and to proIsrael-biased Wikipedia has no impact on the tech company that controls 85 per cent of all Search engines. Got that? Goy?

In late June, an unverified account for Duke was created on the free speech Facebook copycat Parler. The social network is rife with fake accounts, but it looks to be a promising candidate for the right-wing exodus. Earlier this month, Republican Reps. Jim Jordan and James Sensenbrenner of the House Judiciary Committee sent a letter to the platforms CEO extolling Parlers commitment to free expression, though they didnt necessarily point to what freedoms the other platforms are denying, which, based on virtually every prominent example of Twitter and YouTubes censorship, is freedom to spread misinformation, hatred, and threats. For whatever reason, theyve kept complaining about Twitter and used it anyway as perfectly good conservative-friendly, liberal-enemy-free alternatives have come and gone.

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Twitter Finally Bans the Nazi. No, Not That One. No, the Other One. - Gizmodo Australia

The Hagia Sophia as a palimpsest: Memories of the monument in five acts – Scroll.in

Posted By on August 2, 2020

Saint Sophia, Hagia Sophia, the Church of the Great Wisdom, Aya Sofia. There have been so many forms to the pristine rose.

Over the course of an astonishing 15 centuries, this domed treasure on a hill has been witness to a wide disparity of scenes. Like the city she inhabits, she has served as both cradle as well as cemetery to the myriad civilisations which have sought her sustenance. In this way she is essentially a palimpsest; a stratified layer upon layer of memory and preservation. Like the vastness of the Bible, hers is a story played out over an eternity of time. To define is ultimately to limit her. And so what follows is merely a supplication A few scenes from her many acts

The fabled Hagia of Constantinople is already over four centuries old, and has accrued a treasure of relics from all parts of the Byzantine world. Mosaics and frescoes in gold and lapis lazuli depict Christ, the Virgin Mary and a succession of virile emperors. It is in this year that Vladimir of Kiev, King of Russia, must choose a religion, and so he sends emissaries to investigate the faith of each of his neighbours: Latin Christianity, Greek Christianity, Judaism, and Islam.

Put off by Islams distaste for alcohol, dissuaded by Judaisms tribalism, he waits to hear from his emissaries just returned from Byzantium. The emissaries, intoxicated, attempt to recreate the otherworldly atmosphere. Their tale is one full of awe of the veins of gold, the clouds of heavy incense and the comforting ritual which the radiant Church gives off. The building soars impossibly high 15 stories, by our modern metrics yet retains an intimacy for the believer. We can imagine too, how the rustle of the heavy thread of the garments worn by those in the Church stiff gold-laden caftans favoured by the Byzantines, rich silk coverings worn by Chinese merchant traders who visited much have contributed to the feelings of inadequacy on the part of the emissaries.

When we stood in the temple, they are said to have told him on their return, we hardly knew whether or not we were in heaven for, in truth, upon earth it is impossible to behold such glory and magnificence. There, verily, God has His dwelling among men, and the worship of other countries is as nothing. Never can we forget the grandeur which we saw. Whoever has enjoyed so sweet a sight can never elsewhere be satisfied, nor will we remain longer as we are.

The persuasiveness of the Grand Mosque of Damascus, it seems, has been eclipsed by the paradise on earth to be found within the Hagia. The King decides to become a convert to the Greek Church.

Te deum laudamus, she exults breathlessly, to you God we praise.

We have moved forward 200 years, to a year which will serve to upend many of the notions of Christian brotherhood and it is not a good year for our great basilica as she approaches her seventh century.

The intervening period has not been favourable to the once-glittering Byzantine Empire. In the West, its reach covers modern-day Italy to go with the Greek isles and Asia Minor; in the East, its heartland are the vast Anatolian plains, the breadbasket for the Empire. Till the 11th century, it had been a splendid and dominant power, the champion of Christendom in the fight against the Islamic juggernaut.

But the rise of other Christian kingdoms the Normans, the Venetians, the Genoese, the Flemish amongst others now threaten the Byzantines. There is also the question of ecclesiastical spirit. The Normans are famed not only for their martial spirit but also for their Catholic piety, and their allegiance is to the Bishop of Rome. But the Byzantine Church has its own Patriarch. Then there are the issues of the Trinity, the existence of Purgatory, even the role of unleavened bread, to divide the Eastern and Western Churches. These religious differences, deep seated in origin and exacerbated by politics during the course of the eleventh century, means that the two are now in undeniable schism. Ultimately, Christian unity counts for little when weighed against the lure of booty. The shocking result is the Fourth Crusades side-foray to Constantinople, which results in the city unwittingly being besieged and engulfed by Western Crusaders.

In the crisp, spare prose of the medieval scholar Sir Steven Runciman, the sack of Constantinople is unparalleled in history. For nine centuries the great city had been the capital of Christian civilisation. It was filled with works of art that had survived from ancient Greece and with the masterpieces of its own exquisite craftsmen. The Venetians indeed knew the value of such things. Wherever they could they seized treasures and carried them off to adorn the squares and churches and palaces of their town. But the Frenchmen and Flemings were filled with a lust for destruction snatching up everything that glittered and destroying everything they could not carry, pausing only to murder and to rape.

In an account of the horrors reported to him, Pope Innocent III records how within even Hagia Sophia, drunken crusaders could be seen tearing down the silken hangings and pulling the great silver iconostasis to pieces, while sacred icons were trampled underfoot. A woman set herself on the Patriarchs throne and began to sing a ribald song. Nuns were ravaged in their convents.

All that is left, all that she has the strength to do, is to silently chant the Dies Irae as part of the Mass of the Dead.

This second act, then, sees the Hagia as war booty, pillaged and claimed by the Venetians under a short-lived Latin Empire of 60 years before being returned once more as damaged goods to a new Byzantine Patriarch.

Despite this gross affront, she accepts her fate with valour, her beauty undimmed and her authority unquestioned. She remains a sceptred sway, floating above all things impermanent. Her gold mosaics of the Virgin Mary and Jesus continue to dazzle, each of the thousands of squares responding slightly differently to the light to create a dazzling overall effect. The four squinches which hold up her great dome remain untouched. High above the ground they continue to show the huge cherubim with their folded, powder-blue wings. And up on the North balcony, in a quiet corner where the afternoon sun gently reaches, she meditates thoughtfully on the private pain of John the Baptist as it is reflected there.

She is under no illusions about the age she lives in, nor the people who supplicate within her. It is an age of constant warfare. The belief in the afterlife leads many to live with a fatalism which is unnerving. Grotesque violence and retribution of a kind she knows future generations will scarcely comprehend. And so she moves on, wearily, for another two-and-a-half centuries, though in her heart she knows the Empire, though temporarily recovered, is moribund.

The Empire is encircled, feeble. As the man in the middle between two more aggressive powers Western Christianity and Ottoman Islam Byzantium has exhausted itself by fighting on two fronts. Its vast lands heave no more. The Italian lands have been lost to the Christian Franks, and the heartland of Anatolia, which gave the Empire most of its soldiers and its food, have been absorbed into the Sultans dominion. The latters armies have even reached the Danube.

Of course, it makes sense to steel oneself for the destruction which must inevitably follow. Yet a little vainly perhaps, she still has time to admire each of the new additions as they periodically appear to adorn her. By some curious alignment of the constellations, there are occasional periods in human history in which gradual political decline is accompanied by last-gasp cultural and artistic outbursts.

Such is the one in which the Hagia now allows herself to temporarily luxuriate. It is known as the Paleologan era, after the Greek Emperor who with a cold hand clings on to power over 50 years with grim determination, despite the jewels in his crown gradually being replaced with glass. During this time fresh artworks and frescoes are created for her, each displaying a vigour not seen elsewhere. She allows herself an inward smile despite herself. For the rest of the human inhabitants along the Bosphorus, it is a damp, melancholic time.

When will her new master arrive to claim her? There have been 12 previous attempts by Muslim armies to capture Constantinople, and over the course of the centuries, a considerable body of prophetic literature has developed which promises the capital will fall to Islam before the End of the World. In April that year, having constructed a fortress at Rumeli Hisari on the Eastern side of the Bosphorus, thus isolating Constantinople from its grain supplies on the Black Sea, the Sultan Mehmet begins his siege of the city. By May, he is victorious and enters the city in triumph through the Adrianople Gate. His troops acclaim his as Fatih, the Conqueror.

But Mehmet has waited the customary three days to enter after the city was taken; three days in which his troops are allowed to plunder. The city is ransacked, plundered, raped. There is much callous slaughter even, sacrilegiously, within her own confines when the gates are battered down. The blood ran in rivers down the steep streets from the heights of Petra towards the Golden Horn notes the Venetian Niccolo Barbaro, a ships doctor whose diary is a contemporaneous account of the siege. Miserere, have mercy, Hagia weeps; and yet it is ever thus, she recovers her composure to announce stoically, for only I remember the violations of the Crusaders and the Iconoclasts before.

Her new master is a mixture of cruelty and humility, as befits a conqueror of God from those times. He knows that his name will reverberate through history as the man who brought to an end a thousand years of Empire and will create a new one on its ruins. Stubborn in his purpose, and bold in everything, he aspires to more fame than that of Alexander the Great records the Italian contemporary Languschi. Mehmets faith must be rewarded.

By experience he has come to learn the perils of Pericles words, that it is a dangerous thing to acquire an Empire. And so, as he dismounts at the entrance to Hagia Sophia, he falls to his knees, pouring a handful of earth over his turban as a gesture of humility toward what stands before him. His new mistress is famed as much throughout the Islamic world as the Christian lands.

Mehmet will put a forceful end to the bloodshed and looting. He will find a new Patriarch, the Greek monk Gennadius, and install a seat for him at the other great church, that of the Holy Apostles second only in size and repute to the Hagia herself. He will converse over many hours with the Patriarch on ecclesiastical matters his mother having been born Christian and between the two of them they will work out a new constitution for Mehmets Greek subjects. They will be formed as a milet, or self-governing community within the Ottoman Empire, under the responsibility and protection of the new Patriarch.

The Jews of the city will similarly have their chief rabbi restored. Mehmet will also set about restoring the city with alacrity and vigour. Noble Byzantines will be allowed to return, and Armenian, Jewish and Venetian craftsmen, artisans and merchants encouraged to settle in the city. Ambassadors from across Western Christendom are to be welcomed back. Within a decade, the citys population will increase four-fold and with it a return to prosperity and artistic excellence.

Yet, the implication of one particular act threatens like no other to imperil the Hagia. At his first supplication at the basilica, he declares she shall be transformed into a mosque, under the name Aya Sofia Jami Kabir, or the Great Mosque of the Hagia Sophia. A minaret is constructed for the azaan and within a few short days the Fatih attends the Jumaa prayers.

What went through Mehmets mind as he announced Hagia Sophias conversion to a mosque? Not known to be a particularly religious man, was he simply flushed with victory and seeking to thank God for his victory? Did he see it as a necessary step in order to establish the new Ottoman Empire on the old city, even as he sought to extend the multi-religious nature of the city in other aspects? Did he even consider the precedent established by the second Caliph of Islam, Omar, who upon accepting the surrender of Jerusalem after a bloodless siege, famously chose to respect the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and offer it his protection rather than seek its conversion? Was his hand stilled at all by the Quranic injunction to protect all places of monotheistic worship regardless of religion?

The answer to the last two questions clearly seems to be not. And so, the Hagia, now renamed, assumes an Islamic countenance.

She remains beautiful, though. She suggests, rather than reveals. No light veil can diminish her soaring buttresses and marble columns. Though great discs inscribed with the name of the Prophet and the First Caliphs are mounted up high, Aya Sophia continues to exude calmness and spirituality. Her dome is still a reflection of the sky, except now it does so through the prism of a delicate Muslim sensibility. The golden light of the early evening is still diffuse on her walls; for her visitors she retains the ability to shelter and not intimidate.

Above all, she understands that she must endure. This too, shall pass.

A short while later, she ushers in a thousand years of her existence; her masonry solid, her arches everlasting.

***

Speak now. Speak with passion, she commands, of the glories of that new age, of my esteemed reimagining as Aya Sofia. Of the majesty of the Ottomans. How they created an insurmountable treasure trove in everything they set their minds to. How Mehmet and his first 23 successors lived above me in the great palace of the Topkapi Sarayi, whose gardens and pavilions graced the acropolis hill at the confluence of the Bosphorus and the Golden Horn, where their waters meet and flow into the Sea of Marmara.

Tell limpid tales of how what they created was the worlds envy, a grand seduction. I never smelt a rose so sweet, nor swooned at the promise of a tulip so delightedly, as during my long service to them.

Regale everyone with verses of how my masters were always gentle, and wanton, and capricious. How their kisses impaled my love and left a cold scent in the morning.

How if ever a word was meant to encompass them, it was cornucopia. The Abundance.

You have been away a very long time.

Oh, centuries and centuries; so long, she said, that Im sure Im dead and buried and this dear old place is heaven.

Edith Wharton, The Age of Innocence, 1920

It is now 1934, and half a millennia has passed. After what promised to be an eternal age first in the glorious sunlight but then, for the long afternoon, in its afterglow the Ottoman Empire must like all human endeavours come to outlive its time and place. It seemed impossible once that thered come a time when cows would graze among the ruins of the Forum of the Caesars. In a similar fashion so too does she recall a time when it seemed an affront to reason to suggest her masters might one day be called the sick men of Europe. Yet by the end they were. And so she must inherit a new master, one with a constant hand. He tells her shes been a chatelaine in a gilded cage. Has she been? After all this time, 550 years, she cant quite remember.

Still, adaptable as always, she knows she must accept her reversion with forbearance and equanimity. She must learn to sing in the lost key.

The Hagia Sophia, once more; no longer trapped but now a museum.

The man who has cast off her veil has also abandoned the Sultans fez. He is dressed in the European style and is determined that though the city strands aside two continents, that Hagias restored gaze should now tilt firmly towards Europe.

Mustafa Kemal is aloof, haughty, enclosed in temperament. He is also overflowing with ability and ambition. As a military cadet in coastal outpost of Monastir, he first began to understand the true condition of the Empire as it was by the start of the 20th century. What a deplorable picture it was. During the Great War of 1914 to 1918, Kemal had become a war hero, responsible for the Ottomans sole victory against the Allies in Gallipoli. Appalled by the dissolution he found himself surrounded by, he longed to restore his countrys prestige but as a country, not an Empire.

Gradually, over a decade, he had become the totem for a secret reform movement backed by the military which rose up against the Sultan. By Wars end he was confident enough to resign his commission whereupon he was elected President of the Grand National Assembly. The Empire having been resoundingly defeated by the Allies, a grim tug-of-war now took place between the Kemal and the Sultan over its body, but the Allies, recognising his power, prefered to negotiate directly with him.

By 1922, he emerged victorious. Dominating the National Assembly, he drove to abolish the Sultanate and modernise the nation hed freed. With the Empire vanished, he resolved to be taturk the father of the Turks; and under his vision Turkey should resemble as soon as possible civilised Western countries in outlook and progress. Is he creating something noble, or merely a vainglorious Western faade grafted onto Eastern lands that time will ultimately cast aside? It is a question which will hang in the air for some time, ultimately coming to haunt future generations.

As a museum Hagia welcomes back all that is best and magnanimous of both Christian and Islamic worlds. The Christian iconography restored, they now take their place alongside Islamic calligraphy and design.

This fourth Act ends with a typical 21st century scene, as millions of visitors pour in to see her. On a typical day there are English voices, and German, and French, and Japanese, tourists dressed in clothes that seem in modern times to be all alike, a world of jeans and T-shirts, and the man-made textiles of travelling clothes in chemical colours. There is a sprinkling of women in black yasmaks from the Arab countries too.

***

Arent final acts meant to bring closure to the tension rather than heighten it? Through what curse of the gods do we even require a fifth Act and such an atavistic one at that? But one has been ordained for this month. The Turkish nationalist Recip Erdogen has just fulfilled a pledge made to his conservative Islamic heartland that Hagia Sophia is to be restored, once again, to a mosque, trampling her UNESCO World Heritage Status and sending ripples of consternation through the religious world. Erdogen is a direct attack on the secular vision of Ataturk. In his 15 years in power, he has strengthened and reinvigorated his base, while simultaneously dividing his country profoundly. Turkey is Islamic, hence Aya Sofia is for the true believers only, his message proclaims in a voice which commands when it should soothe.

And so, as we stand here today the Hagia, venerable with age and with wisdom, is once again a mosque. She is reserved only for the believer and not the world entire.

We have come to the end of our epic play. Like the glides of a bowed kamenchah, it has started off languidly with deep strokes but the final notes have ended in a frenzy. Before the curtain falls, we are in need of a final sentence, a denouement to tie together these doubtful series of occurrences which have been laid before you.

How will the final sentence read?

***

In the first reading, we come back to Mehmet in May 1453; Mehmet the valiant conqueror whose misjudgement on that fateful day unknowingly unleashed a strand of narrative which 550 years later, Erdogen has seen fit to resolve. Contemplating the ruined columns of the destroyed city, perhaps even moved by the acts of desecration which he and his army had committed on the Hagia, Mehmet is said to have sadly worded a melancholy distich of the Persian poet Saadi:

The spider is now the curtain-holder in the Palace of the Caesars.

The owl hoots its night-call on Afrasiabs towers.

In this version, the desolation of the poets words mirror the empty heart of the current tyrant Erdogen, a seemingly pious man who in substance is bereft of any true spirituality or wisdom. A man with no plans for the future who cynically uses the past to sow further division between Hagias Eastern and Islamic past. As the azaan sounds once again amidst the colonnade of memories, the words of the poet mirror the litany of broken treasures which now lie scattered in the dust of the magnanimous version of the faith, of the severed ties between eastern Christianity and Islam.

The stories we once belonged to have been lost. Just as you do not know who we are, where we came from or where we are going, you dont even know which part of the story we fit into, and that is even worse. After passing through so many misadventures and catastrophes, after walking such great distances, it is almost as if we too have forgotten our stories, forgotten who we are.

Orhan Pamuk

It is twilight in the aging city.

But there is an alternate reading. Here, the Hagia speaks directly to her audience. Shed no tear, she says, not without reason was I called the Holy Wisdom. Do not try to define me. Just as there were those who tried to define my beginning, so too now are there those who seek to define my end. I will submit to whatever new garment you choose to cloak me in, but I will not wear it forever. Do not assume that you own me. You may possess me, you may worship me but I will outlast you.

I am a palimpsest. Layer upon layer, I will endure. Then at the last, when the final layer is to be added, it will be added by me.

There remains extant within Hagia Sophia today, the empty tomb of the Venetian Doge, Enrico Dandolo. He was nearly 90 and blind when, in 1204, he was the first Venetian ashore at the capture and sack of Constantinople during the Fourth Crusade. A year later he was buried in the basilica. Yet when the Byzantines returned, 60 years later, it is said they took the bones of Dandolo and threw them to the dogs in the street.

Perhaps, ultimately, this is the final lesson for those attempting to find a single meaning for the Hagia Sophia. That there is none. No one and nothing, including the great basilica herself and all that she stands for, can be considered sacrosanct or permanent for all time.

Those of us who love her may well wring our hands at the injustice of the past week. We are appalled. But what is simple injustice when you have sung the Dies Irae so many times before? To have known both catastrophe and genius and to have accepted each with equal forbearance? This is the promise and this is the destiny; the price of having existed for a thousand years and more.

Kalim Rajab is a writer based in Johannesburg, South Africa. This essay first appeared in South Africas Daily Maverick newspaper.

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The Hagia Sophia as a palimpsest: Memories of the monument in five acts - Scroll.in

‘Chaos’ at Victoria’s Epping Gardens: how privatised aged care has failed during the coronavirus pandemic – The Guardian

Posted By on August 2, 2020

Melbourne aged care home Epping Gardens, where 85 residents and 35 staff have tested positive for Covid-19, is in chaos, a relative of one of the infected residents has told Guardian Australia.

Nobody has the answer, but she cant go back to Epping Gardens, said Carla Gangi, whose 89-year-old grandmother Concetta Mineo was hospitalised on Tuesday.

Guardian Australia has learned that an additional 11 Epping Gardens residents were to be sent to hospital on Thursday, in addition to two who were hospitalised on Wednesday due to coronavirus.

The chief executive of operator Heritage Care, Greg Reeve, denied allegations the company had resisted the takeover of the home by health authorities and did not respond to questions about Mineo and residents who were sent to hospital.

Company documents show that Heritage Care is half-owned by the founder of aged care giant Estia, Peter Arvanitis, and his wife, Areti Arvanitis.

The other half is owned by Heritage Cares founder and managing director, Tony Antonopoulos, and his family.

There is no suggestion any of Heritage Cares owners have done anything wrong.

The private aged care sector has found itself at the centre of Victorias second-wave coronavirus outbreak, with the states premier, Daniel Andrews, saying it was associated with 10 of 13 deaths recorded on Wednesday.

Federal or state health workers have now taken control of Epping Gardens and three other aged care facilities battling coronavirus outbreaks: St Basils in Fawkner, Kirkbrae in Kilsyth and Outlook Gardens in Dandenong North.

There were at least 73 further cases linked to Victorias aged care crisis on Thursday, with 58 staff and 15 residents testing positive for Covid-19.

The stricken St Basils added another 22 cases, reaching a total of 111 infections, while the Estia Aged Care facility in Heidelberg recorded 11 cases to make up a total of 67.

Kirkbrae has recorded 81 cases, with three further infections recorded on Thursday.

A kitchen worker at Gary Smorgon House in Caulfield has also been diagnosed with Covid-19, the homes operator, Jewish Care, said.

Gangi said she learned her grandmother, Mineo, was diagnosed with Covid-19 on Wednesday, four weeks after she had last been able to communicate with her.

Mineo had initially returned a negative coronavirus result after being rushed to nearby Northern Hospital following a fall on 20 July.

She was returned back to the facility something Gangi said she only learned after constant calls to Epping Gardens workers who, she said, have been dripping information to her and other residents in recent weeks.

Gangi said she was surprised to receive a call on Tuesday night from Royal Melbourne Hospital. Her grandmother had been transferred there after falling twice that day in the morning she fell in the bathroom, and in the afternoon, she fell off her bed.

She was also suffering from dehydration and had a urinary infection.

She was found face down and moaning in the bathroom, but my grandmother cant walk by herself. So how did she get into the bathroom? And how many hours had she been in there before they found her? Gangi said.

The following morning, Wednesday, the hospital called Gangi to tell her that Mineo had tested positive to a Covid-19 test on being admitted.

While terribly concerned for her grandmother, Gangi is more comfortable with her being in hospital than staying in Epping Gardens, largely because she believes she is getting more attention.

Despite not being able to visit her, on Thursday morning, hospital nurses organised a Facetime with Mineos family something Gangi said Epping Gardens had not been able to organise since the facility was closed off to visitors when cases in Victoria escalated.

When they saw Mineo for the first time this month on their phone screen, they were extremely confronted by the sight of her completely black and blue face that had developed after her fall.

I dont even think she knows what year it is. She was totally delirious because shes getting so confused and agitated, Gangi said.

She has moved from the complete chaos of Epping to another hospital.

Gangi said she was shocked to hear reports that Epping Gardens management had refused help from Austin Health which was sent in to assist during the crisis.

Guardian Australia has been told that relations between Heritage Care and Austin Health reached breaking point on Wednesday night after management attempted to take control of clinical care.

Sources said the federal department of health ordered control of Epping Gardens be handed to Austin Health after the service threatened to walk out of the facility if management continued to direct care.

You need to ask for help, you need to let them help you, because clearly youre not doing your job, Gangi said.

We trusted these people to look after our family members.

Asked about the allegations, Reeve said: Put simply I refute what has been stated in its entirety.

More importantly we are all working together, including the Austin resulting in some very positive traction for our residents and staff, he said.

On Thursday, Andrews said Epping Gardens was a very, very challenging environment.

I do not think there is much gained by me running commentary on what may or may not have happened last night between management and health, the premier said.

Only 33 residents remained at Epping Gardens, of whom 11 had Covid-19, Heritage Care said in a circular to residents, families and staff.

The Victorian health minister, Jenny Mikakos, said that across the aged care system her department had already transferred more than 200 people to hospital.

If there is a need for residents to be transferred to hospital, because they need to clinical care, or if there are operators who are struggling to manage residents in a safe environment, then we will not hesitate to ensure that those residents get moved to a hospital environment, she said.

There have been just five cases of coronavirus in the public system, compared to almost 900 in the private sector, raising questions about the for-profit industrys preparedness for the virus outbreak.

Only three of the 440 aged care residents with coronavirus this month have recovered from the disease, aged care royal commission chair Tony Pagone said.

The crisis has also inflamed tensions between state health authorities and the federal department of health, which has responsibility for the aged care sector, over how to respond to the soaring number of cases.

Families have complained to state authorities that they cannot make contact with their elderly relatives.

In turn, state health workers have complained that difficulties getting contact information for relatives from private operators have forced them to escalate their complaints to the federal health minister, Greg Hunt, or the federal aged care minister, Richard Colbeck.

In May, when the Senate select committee on Covid-19 was examining the outbreak at Sydneys Newmarch House aged care facility where 19 residents died Amy Laffan, the acting first assistant secretary in the Department of Healths aged care reform and compliance division, spoke of how the government needed to be more forceful with operators who initially resisted intervention.

Laffan said Newmarch Houses operator Anglicare had waited six days after first being offered the assistance of private operator Aspen Medical, on 14 April, before allowing their clinicians to enter the facility.

Speaking about how aged care operators respond to government health interventions at their facilities, Laffan said they think that theyre going to be all right.

We have learned to now counsel them aggressively at the start, she said.

Do you know more? luke.henriques-gomes@theguardian.com

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'Chaos' at Victoria's Epping Gardens: how privatised aged care has failed during the coronavirus pandemic - The Guardian

The day after: Israel may be the exception to a COVID-19 baby bust – Haaretz.com

Posted By on August 2, 2020

Mary, 20, was pregnant when the coronavirus reached Papua New Guinea. Four weeks after the country went into lockdown, doctors refused to treat her because of the closure, even after she collapsed in the clinic. She was suffering from pregnancy toxemia and her fetus died in utero.

Prof. Glen Mola, the head of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Papua New Guineas School of Medicine, used Marys story to call on women in his country to avoid pregnancies for the next two years. But there were only 11 diagnosed coronavirus patients in Papua New Guinea when the doctor made his recommendation. What about countries where COVID-19 has infected hundreds of thousands and killed tens of thousands?

Historical precedent and initial data suggest that the pandemic will bring about far-reaching demographic changes, accelerating the trend of lower birth rates in most of the world and damaging the global economy. A baby bust is on the way.

Historically, economic crises have never been the preferred period for a couple to decide to have a baby. The millions of jobs lost in those circumstances, even when a couple is not directly affected, create a climate of great uncertainty, which depresses family projects. We may therefore expect the economic crisis due to the coronavirus emergency to produce similar demographic outcomes, write three researchers in a paper published in May that surveyed people aged 18-43 in Italy, Germany, France, Spain and Great Britain. Most of the participants said they will postpone having children, or not to have children at all.

Even before the pandemic struck, the birthrate in most of the world was in decline. The rate in half of the countries of North America, Europe, East Asia and the Middle East has dropped below the replacement rate, meaning their populations will gradually shrink. A study published in the The Lancet two weeks ago estimated that by 2100, the world population will be two billion less than the present United Nations forecasts; within 80 years, the populations of Japan, Spain and Italy will have fallen by half. That endangers economic growth because fewer young people of working age are there to support the older people who have retired.

According to the Washington-based Brookings Institution, the decline in births could be on the order of 300,000 to 500,000 in the U.S. next year. This estimate was reached by looking at studies of fertility behavior and data from the Great Recession of 2007-2009 and the 1918 Spanish Flu. Why? As any parent will tell you, children come at a cost. They require outlays of money, time, and energy. Certainly, they are also a source of joy and love, the researchers explain in a blog post.

Anxiety vs. advantage

Israel may be an exception. In conversations with TheMarker, women of childbearing age express anxiety about the economic crisis, but almost all of them see many advantages in expanding the family.

Sharon, 33 (not her real name), married with a 2-year-old, had been trying to get pregnant when she was put on unpaid leave and later laid off from her job at a large bank. The moment I discovered that I was fired, we stopped the process [of trying to conceive]. I thought of postponing the start of pregnancy, but after several weeks we discovered it was too late. I know that things will be much harder for me now, but life moves on and there are things that shouldnt be put off. I dont regret the pregnancy, she says.

Almost all the researchers who spoke to TheMarker said that Israel wont experience a baby bust, and might even see a rise in the birth rate among certain populations. But they arent lauding the trend: Israels continued high birth rate will make the country more crowded, exacerbate social disparities and lead to shortages of resources.

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It will be a sick place. Think about the traffic jams, the number of children in each class. Israel already has only half the number of nurses per person than other developed countries, and a shortage of doctors. When will these gaps be closed? asks University of Haifas Prof. Daphna Birenbaum-Carmeli, an expert on the social and political aspects of medical technologies and a member of the steering committee of Tzafuf (crowded), an nongovernmental organization studying the implications of population density in Israel.

The worlds rules dont apply to Israel, she says. On the one hand, the economic catastrophe is seen as unprecedented in its gravity and thats not a theoretical issue: You need to house and feed children and you cant afford to buy an apartment for them. On the other hand and this is very significant in Israel this pandemic is causing great existential distress. People are cut off from their family frameworks. People in small families are gathering a critical mass of relatives around them. Being limited to the nuclear family is not entirely natural in Israel. Many extended families meet on a weekly basis, in addition to holidays and special events.

Shira, an artist and teacher who lives with her partner in Tel Aviv, has experienced just that. Three months after she gave birth to her first child in December, Israel went into lockdown. Family ties were disrupted, she says. My mother doesnt come to see our child, and her other grandmother comes once or twice a week. For me personally its very hard. We havent thought about more children yet, but the coronavirus shows that its hard to raise children without help and family, and without meeting friends.

When theres no help, its difficult to combine work and child care during a lockdown. People are under pressure and stress is not good for births even on the physical level. If were lucky, the pandemic will end in a year from now, but the recession wont end so fast. It will take years to recover from it.

But when it comes to children, Birenbaum-Carmeli says non-economic considerations may also play a factor for many Israeli families. The longer the restrictions on contact and the separation continue, ... the more likely that in some way my home is my castle will take on the meaning of I have to fill this house, she says.

Paradoxically, a child is the sure thing. In this balance, between the overcrowding and economic distress on the one hand, and existential distress on the other, I imagine that different people and communities will arrive at different solutions, she concludes.

Sharon, who was laid off during her pregnancy, found the lockdown to be a source of joy. When I was at home with my son, I experienced him as I never have before. As someone who had been returning home every day at 6 P.M., suddenly I enjoy my child, I have this experience of creation. Shira, whose baby is 6 months old, found great satisfaction in a shared fate with her partner: My partner is at home and were raising her together. Daddy no longer returns from work between 6 and 7 P.M.

Rassem Khamaisi, a professor of geography at the University of Haifa, warns that its still too early to see a change in trends. In periods such as these theres a tendency toward an increase, even if not at a high rate. Israeli society is a more religious society, and in such societies, behavior patterns differ from those in the Western world. Although the middle class is more sensitive to the economic situation, it doesnt affect the weaker populations, because their situation is problematic in any case, he explains.

Khamaisi notes that faith is not the only reason, and perhaps not even the main one, for fertility patterns in Israel. Among the middle-class Jewish population theres the factor of national and cultural mobilization. This is a society that still sees children as part of the national project, without anything being planned on the family level. Even in the middle class theres a trend toward becoming more religious, and there are even [financially] strong families that want more children for community and heritage reasons, he says.

That applies to Arab society, too, he says: Fifty percent of the community is already below the poverty line, so they wont be affected as much. The coronavirus will affect the middle class, which is entering a period of financial distress and already exhibits behavior patterns such as getting married when older. Among Bedouin Arabs, particularly in the unrecognized villages, we anticipate an increase, among the Christians and Druze there wont be a change, and among the Muslim population there will be a slow increase.

All these processes are likely to lead to an increase in economic disparities, especially in the outlying areas, where there are large weak populations, stresses Khamaisi. We have to prepare: We have to create policy mechanisms that will moderate the gaps, and create employment opportunities and education in outlying areas in order to improve their quality of life and bring about effective and correct family planning.

No luxury

Dr. Micha Baum, director of the sperm bank at Sheba Medical Center in Tel Hashomer, says fertility treatments have not declined due to the crisis on the contrary. Fertility treatments seem like a luxury, but that really isnt so, he says. This crosses ages, religions and communities. Last month there was an unusual boost. We thought that it was a rebound from the month when there was no activity, but its continuing and maintaining the pace that existed before the virus.

Im not a demographer, Im only a gynecologist, but were a nation that lives in existential fear and distress. The moment were threatened, we have some kind of urge to multiply. The fear and the threat dont deter us from having children, they actually reinforce the need.

Nairouz, 37, from Haifa, is the mother of a 2-year-old boy. Last week she gave birth to a baby girl. Before the coronavirus crisis, she and her husband ran arts events. Before the birth, I sent my son to nursery school, but a month and a half later came the coronavirus and destroyed all my plans. Before the birth we asked an aunt to come to babysit for our son, she says.

She wonders how families with three or four children are managing with distance learning. And if the mother is also a teacher, and has to teach remotely? Its problematic. The childrens future is unclear. It changes all the aspects of raising children, she says. Two children, especially a son and a daughter, is enough for me. I dont want more children. As far as Im concerned, it doesnt make sense to have children and be preoccupied all the time with findings ways to feed them, but it depends on your order of priorities. I know that other people do want [more children].

Or maybe not. All over the world, millennials are less likely to marry and more likely to live with their parents well into adulthood and postpone starting a family. The phenomenon is less prevalent in Israel, but the coronavirus and the social protests led by young people may be heralding a sea of change.

Im starting to see people in their mid-twenties mainly my impression from people I know who say theyre not sure that they want children, or that they know they dont want children, says Birenbaum-Carmeli. Ten years ago it was less legitimate to say such a thing. Its the start of a trend of choosing not to be parents. The pandemic is likely to be a trauma that will change things. Maybe people will be afraid to have children, afraid that they wont be able to support them.

Its something of a shock doctrine. These thoughts were already in the air, but the pandemic could reinforce them. Dont forget that these children [the millennials] grew up in prosperity they traveled abroad, studied whatever they felt like, including impractical subjects. So the thought that they will encounter material distress and raise a child in material distress can be very threatening for them.

Mor Yaacov, 30, is in her ninth month of pregnancy. The married Tel Avivian works at Playtika, a high-tech company. Im grateful that Im working. I dont want to think about the mental distress of people who have no job, she says. The coronavirus didnt hit me hard. But it does raise fears about what our new life will look like.

Yaacov is sure that the crisis will affect family planning for many people. Anyone who was affected will think twice about whether to have a child. I wouldnt have a child if I didnt have a job. But people say, Everything will be all right, the child will bring the money. In the final analysis, its a phase, and it will pass. We shouldnt let our fears control us.

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The day after: Israel may be the exception to a COVID-19 baby bust - Haaretz.com

Thessalonikis Jews: ‘We cant let this be forgotten; if its forgotten, it will die’ – The Guardian

Posted By on August 2, 2020

Five centuries after they were expelled from Spain and eight decades after they were almost annihilated in the Holocaust, the small community of Sephardic Jews that lives on in the Greek city of Thessaloniki is looking to its past to help safeguard its future.

On Tuesday, Thessalonikis Jewish community signed a deal with the Spanish governments Instituto Cervantes to create a small centre where people will be taught modern Spanish while also learning about Sephardic culture and the exiles still-spoken language, Ladino.

Many Spanish Jews came to Thessaloniki, which was then part of the Ottoman empire, following their expulsion by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella in 1492. The community endured and thrived over the centuries but came close to total destruction when the Nazis deported and murdered more than 90% of the citys Jewish inhabitants.

Today, Thessalonikis Jewish community has dwindled to about 1,200 people, most of them the descendants of the Iberian exiles.

The community here was built by Jews from Spain places such as Toledo, Granada and Seville, said David Saltiel, president of the Jewish Community of Thessaloniki. It was a community that spoke, ate and sang Spanish. After the Holocaust, only 1,500 Jews were left, but weve always kept that idea of our Spanish past in our hearts and we want to keep our traditions alive.

Under the new agreement, the community will provide premises, memories and tradition, while the Instituto Cervantes which promotes Spanish language and culture will provide teachers and academic experts on contemporary Spanish and Ladino, which is also known as Judeo-Spanish.

While the project is mainly aimed at children and young people in the Sephardic community, it will open to those of all ages and faiths.

Cristina Conde de Beroldingen, director of the Instituto Cervantes in Athens, said the initiative was designed to help preserve Sephardic culture and language, and also to stop Thessaloniki losing a piece of its past.

After the Holocaust, many of those who survived decided to move to Israel, taking their history, language and culture with them. With that, Thessaloniki as a city also lost a piece of its own memory, said Conde de Beroldingen.

But, as the president of the community put it, Spanish is coming back to Thessaloniki after 500 years. We want to recover this legacy for Thessaloniki: there were a lot of newspapers in Judeo-Spanish, so its a good time to go digging in the archives.

Conde de Beroldingen said the idea was to strike a balance between teaching modern Spanish and preserving Ladino. We want to teach young people to distinguish between the two and learn about the different words for the same thing, she said.

Thats really important, because theres sometimes a danger of standardising things, and thats something were keen not to do.

Ladino, she added, was a reminder of both the exile of the Iberian Jews and of how people spoke Spanish 500 years ago. I dont think theres another community that was expelled from a country but which has managed to keep its identity and its language for so many years, she said.

But Judeo-Spanish is also the language of Don Quixote, of how Spanish was written back them. Its the Spanish of the time, but enriched by words from the countries through which the exiled Jews passed. Theres obviously Hebrew, but theres also Turkish, Greek, French and Italian.

For Saltiel, the new centre is a lifeline for Thessalonikis Jewish community and for its language. We cant let this be forgotten; if its forgotten, it will die, he said. But if we carry on speaking, it will live on.

The project, however, is about more than the survival of the citys Sephardic inhabitants; it is also about Europes past.

The Greeks can learn about our story because its part of Greek history, too, said Saltiel. Weve been here for 530 years, and thats a long old time. We lost 97% of the community in the Holocaust, but were still here and were going to carry on and show everyone that this Spanish-Jewish community is alive, is still speaking Spanish, and is going to keep carrying on.

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Thessalonikis Jews: 'We cant let this be forgotten; if its forgotten, it will die' - The Guardian

David Galante, 94, Auschwitz Survivor Who Taught About The Holocaust After A 50-Year Silence – Forward

Posted By on August 2, 2020

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David Galante

BUENOS AIRES (JTA) It took 50 years for David Galante to begin talking about his experience at Auschwitz.

Born to a Sephardic family in Rhodes in 1925, Galante studied in a Jewish school as a child, learning Italian, French and Hebrew. He was a teenager when he arrived at Auschwitz in the summer of 1944. When he was liberated a year later, he weighed just 83 pounds and had the number B 7328 tattooed on his arm.

The Russian soldiers, especially female soldiers, cried their eyes out and some of them vomited when entering and saw, he recalled in an interview.

Galante died at 94 on July 27 from COVID-19 in Buenos Aires. He had arrived in Argentina in 1948 with his brother Moshe, the only survivors of their family and two of the 151 Jews from Rhodes who survived the war.

In Argentina, Galante married and had two children, Sandra and Ezequiel, but he remained silent about his wartime experience for decades.

It was painful, embarrassing to tell all the horror we had to endure, he said later.

It would take roughly a half-century before Galante began to talk about what he had witnessed. In interviews, he would describe how the Nazis disembarked on Rhodes and put the vast majority of Jews on boats for the long trip to Athens, and then on to trains for Auschwitz. Describing his wartime experiences, the wounds began to heal in a slow way, he would often say.

Galante became an active member of the Holocaust Museum of Buenos Aires, giving speeches in schools, public interviews, and also writing a book of his memories. He said that he felt that his real liberation began when he started to speak out.

In a video made by the Holocaust Museum of Buenos Aires, his wife Raquel said that she slowly persuaded him to bring all the truth, pain and horror out. His daughter Sandra made a brief appearance saying, I want to make a wish for my father that life doesnt make him suffer anymore, give him a break.

Galante was buried on July 28 in the main Jewish cemetery of Argentina, in the La Tablada area of Buenos Aires. The funeral was broadcast online to friends and relatives.

The post David Galante, 94, Auschwitz survivor who taught about the Holocaust after a 50-year silence appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

David Galante, 94, Auschwitz Survivor Who Taught About The Holocaust After A 50-Year Silence

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