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This Tisha BAv, the Hagia Sophia teaches us about reclaiming sacred spaces – Forward

Posted By on July 31, 2020

Image by Getty Images

An aerial view of the Hagia Sophia, empty during coronavirus.

When the Roman Emperor, Justinian I, dedicated Istanbuls Hagia Sophia as a cathedral, he is said to have proclaimed, Solomon, I have surpassed thee. Indeed, the church-turned mosque-turned museum is an architectural wonder of the world, a gem that inspires devotion.

Understandably, therefore, faithful Muslims were distraught when in 1934 Ataturk secularized the mosque. How painful it must have been to see it serve as a mere museum. It was an ongoing reminder of their subjugation and victimization. Finally, last Friday, their prayers were answered when worship returned to Hagia Sophia.

Putting aside President Erdogans political motivation to rededicate the mosque, the story holds particular interest for us today. As Jews approaching Tisha BAv, exiled from our Temple and from our synagogues, we ask: What is the value of sacred space?

A recent Jewish tour of Jewish Spain and the upcoming holiday point to answers.

Standing in front of a small neighborhood church in Granada, my synagogues tour guide directed our attention to the right of the entrance. It was a sunken area with an arch in the wall and a drain in the floor. Anyone know what it is he asked? After a moment it was clear we were stumped. Our guide explained that this was a place to wash in preparation for prayer- a clear indication that the church was once a mosque. A detail we might have overlooked revealed a complicated past.

Throughout the trip, we saw a similar pattern. In Seville, the placement of an upper window hinted that a church was once a synagogue. In Cordoba, Moorish columns surrounding a Renaissance nave were a clear give-away that the exquisite Mezquite was a church built inside an earlier mosque.

Architectural features like these are presented as a sign of cultural harmony that swept the Iberian Peninsula in the middle ages. Gift shops sell ceramic tiles painted with crosses, crescents and Stars of David to highlight the countrys multi-ethnic heritage. But eclectic building styles and co-exist postcards belie a discordant past.

It was not called Reconquista (re-conquest) for nothing. This was architectural supercessionism indicating the displacement of a population and the disdain of a faith. Walking through these sacred sites, I couldnt help but wonder, what was the craftsman thinking as he converted a synagogue into a church or a church into a mosque? What did the worshipper think as she walked past a washing station or a Hebrew inscription on her way to pray? Did she humbly honor those who came before her? Did his heart swell with pride, proclaiming his ascension?

Tisha BAv offers an important corrective to the pull of religious triumphalism. On this day, we mourn the loss of our Temple. We recall its destruction and pray for its restoration. For political reasons, I object to attempts by radical Jewish groups to pray on the Temple mount. For theological reasons, I have no desire to return to Temple worship of sacrifices. But I understand the longing, the desire to reclaim what was taken from us. I understand the power of certain places to inspire prayer.

Enter King Solomon to warn us against turning a sanctuary into an idol. Upon completing the building of the Temple in Jerusalem, with humility and with hagia sophia (holy wisdom), he asked, But will God really dwell on earth? Even the heavens to their uttermost reaches cannot contain You, how much less this House that I have built! (1 Kings 8:27).

When we mourn the loss of sacred spaces and especially when we reclaim them, we do so knowing that God dwells not in a building but in the heart of the faithful. Renew our days, is not a call to rebuild the Temple but Return us unto You, God.

Rabbi Alexander Davis is a senior rabbi at Beth El Synagogue in St Louis Park, Minn., where he frequently leads Jewish travel tours.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

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This Tisha BAv, the Hagia Sophia teaches us about reclaiming sacred spaces - Forward

Houses of worship take different paths toward reopening – Wicked Local Canton

Posted By on July 31, 2020

Houses of worship are continuing to evolve in their offerings for worship services and programming since Phase 2 of Gov. Charlie Bakers reopening plan that allows them to open their doors.

State guidelines for in-person gatherings as well as congregants preferring to stick with online services have created a challenge and a balancing act for houses of worship trying to meet the needs of all their members.

Prior to reopening, only worship leaders and the technical crew were allowed inside the Faith Baptist Church of Stoughton, according to church clerk Elaine Weischedel. Now, with pews roped and taped off to meet social distance guidelines and attendees required to wear masks, congregants enter through one door and are shown to their seat for the worship service time.

We have not had to use a registration process yet, Weischedel stated. Our congregation is relatively small. Since we are not able to offer nursery care or junior church, families with young children are not coming to the building. Many of our older folk are staying home as well and watching the live-stream service.

The church youth group meets via Zoom, and the weekly prayer meeting is held on Zoom as well as a telephone conference call. Recently, families also were able to participate in a virtual Vacation Bible School program.

Supplies were delivered to the families involved (craft materials, Bible lesson papers, etc.) and there (was) a live-stream skit and Bible story each night, Weischedel said. Only the presenters (were) in the building for that.

Brookville Church in Holbrook now offers both in-person programming and online services, according to Rev. Shawn Keener.

A weekly Thursday night hour-long in-person program began again July 9, following all CDC guidelines - including 6-foot distancing, masks and sanitizer. Electrostatic fogging occurs between events for cleaning.

We only set up chairs for 55 people, and we have lanes of travel marked, Keener stated. We had 17 people; pre-covid it was about 100.

Keener said there currently are no childrens programs. Beginning in August or September, he hopes to open Sunday morning in-person services as well, depending on what Baker does.

Shaloh House Chabad in Stoughton started offering in-person, outdoor services about six weeks ago on Saturday mornings from 10:30-11:45 a.m. Masks, distance guidelines and limits on the number of attendees were implemented, with about 10-12 people. For the synagogue, the only option for a Sabbath service would be in-person as Jewish law does not allow for electricity to be used on Friday night or Saturday, so a Zoom service would not be allowed.

(July 18) we moved indoors with the same restrictions, Rabbi Mendel Gurkow stated. We also have a service on Zoom on Sunday mornings."

After the pandemic began, Shaloh House switched its weekly Thursday evening adult class from in-person to online.

It also started another daily program for both inspiration and to to keep the community intact.

For the purpose of keeping the community together (from) the very start, we started a daily `Huddle' online, a 15 minute meeting with words of inspiration, prayer and blessing for those sick, Gurkow said. And that is still ongoing on a daily basis.

The Shaloh House pre-school reopened on June 29 with limited hours, staff and an enrollment of 15 rather than the typical 40. Gurkow said things are working well after adjusting to the restrictions, and he expects the number of students returning to increase in September.

He said the Chabad also mobilized a food distribution system for members and, before Jewish holidays, distributes hundreds of holiday packets to share the holiday spirit as people stayed at home.

For us, after excluding all those who are older, vulnerable or choose not to come, we are left with 10-12 who (do) come, Gurkow said. Even after we moved indoors we had the same number and that works well; the larger the crowd, the harder it is to have control.

At the Tabernacle of Praise in Randolph, Pastor Stella Bynoe said the group has decided not to reopen yet and is still uploading services to YouTube.

Were only doing the worship team and pastor in the building to do the recording, Bynoe said. We havent set a date to reopen.

While it could accommodate people with the social distancing protocols set by the state, Bynoe said it wanted to be able to include more people when it opens, so it continues to work on its space arrangements to make sure they can do that.

In the meantime, a worship video is aired on Sundays at 10 a.m. when members are invited to watch the service together.

We chat with each other during the airing, Bynoe said. After that we do a connection call where all members can get in and update us on whats going on and we can update them. We usually have about 50 people on that call (but) it varies.

The congregation was preparing for a recent second outdoor service in the church parking lot, with chairs and cars spread out to maintain social distance guidelines. The first one seemed to work out.

We had about 120 people (on July 5), Bynoe said. We had speakers so it was loud enough for everyone to hear. Were not doing it every Sunday.

Rabbi Leonard Gordon said Bnai Tikvah in Canton has been doing almost all programming on Zoom.

Nightly services, one or two services for Sabbaths and holidays, classes on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday as well as a spotlight on the congregation to share talents and interests with each other on Thursday night has kept the group connected and busy.

On Sunday we have a special program for young families (where) I do some story readings, Gordon said. Were beginning to look for opportunities for people to see each other in person.

He said one of the biggest challenges is supporting young families.

Families are so stressed, Gordon said. We are thinking of starting, in September perhaps, some short programs after 8 p.m. so one of the two parents can join us. Its really hard to find that magic hour.

Gordon said there is no target date to reopen the building, partly because many in the congregation are over 65 and also because of renovations he said need to take place.

We have very detailed plans to clean the building thoroughly before we reopen and we are putting in a new ventilation system, Gordon said. We discovered a lot of our rooms including the sanctuary are poorly ventilated and we werent getting fresh air.

Gordon wonders what the new normal will look like and if synagogues like his will continue to offer online options. Pre-COVID, he said about 12 people would come to the synagogue, but now 35-45 are tuning in online.

It clearly makes it easier for a lot of people, Gordon said. The only thing we dont want is to reduce the number of people that come to the synagogue.

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Houses of worship take different paths toward reopening - Wicked Local Canton

Jews and Aspen: Thoughts on Tisha B’Av Detroit Jewish News – The Jewish News

Posted By on July 31, 2020

My first Tisha BAv memory took place at Camp Ramah, just outside Santa Barbara, California during the summer after third grade. I was a precocious seven-year-old in edah aleph (group one, the youngest class of campers). Our edah worked together to fashion a beautiful outdoor beit knesset (synagogue) beneath a sprawling oak tree with custom painted benches and our artwork hanging from the aron hakodesh (holy ark for the Torah). One fateful morning, we awoke to find someone had upended our precious prayer space. The aron was on its side, benches strewn about, our works of art scattered on the ground. I was shocked to the core. Who could do such a thing? Then our counselors explained the destruction in Jerusalem transpiring three millennia earlier on that very day. This re-creation of the tragic events of the past created an indelible memory and allowed our bunk to bond during the rebuilding process.

The Jewish People are connected more profoundly than any of us realize. In many ways were like the aspen, one of the largest organisms on earth, famous for decorating mountain ranges with brilliant autumnal radiance. Aspen groves are not collections of disparate entities. They are typically distinct expressions of a single subterranean root system, sometimes stretching over a hundred feet from the parent tree. Deciduous aspens occupy a precarious niche in a coniferous forest, swelling their collective sunshine-yellow glory wherever the colony can obtain enough light. Similarly, the Jewish People are an interconnected family weathering the storms of history, shining the light of peace, love and innovation into the world whenever given the chance. The fires of the destruction of Jerusalem, European pogroms or the Holocaust may rage but they cannot extinguish the spark animating the collective Jewish soul. We all feel the pain of our fellow Jew because in essence we are one entity.

Tisha BAv is hard on even the hardiest individuals. In the waning hours of the holiday, everyone is disheveled and drained. Jewish law stipulates we cant don tallis and tefillin until the sun is about to set, having been denied the glory of these crowns earlier in the day. We lumber into a Mincha minyan where we are comforted by the words of divine forgiveness in the Torah reading, which depicts the aftermath of the sin of the Golden Calf. Then in the Haftorah, the prophet Isaiah proclaims: For you shall go out with joy, and be led forth with peace; the mountains and the hills shall break forth before you into singing, and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands. Even when all seems lost, God is with us, guiding us and giving us hope. Even on this most mournful day, we must serve God with joy. We then utter the Amidah and special insertions with an intensity only possible when ravenous and parched, poignantly aware of ones mortality.

Tisha BAv is the saddest day of the year for those steeped in the Joy of Judaism. Our collective primal scream echoes throughout history like rolling thunder from the original lightning bolt of destruction, the obliteration of our faith by the spies in the desert. Even at the nadir of our joy continuum, there is a kernel of hope. By the end of the fast we teeter on shaky legs, ashen faced and cotton-mouthed. Finally, at the conclusion of Maariv services we drink delicious gulps of water and step outside the synagogue to celebrate the end of the three-week mourning period with Kiddush Levana (Blessing the New Moon), dancing together in the darkness.

After writing this article, I did an online search for aspen tree poetry and discovered a lovely poem by Monica Sharman. I was amazed to see that the biblical passage she quoted was the aforementioned verse from the fast day reading.

Clapping Aspen

In the rising wind of a coming dust storm

a mini-stand of aspen planted between

the heron pond and the stucco home

made some noise; they say its

quaking. But that name makes one

think of timid fear. Listen like

a musician, with the psalters ear,

and hear, instead, the sound of applause:

For you shall go out in joy

and be led forth in peace;

the mountains and the hills before you

shall break forth into singing,

and all the trees of the field

shall clap their hands.

(Isaiah 55:12)

May we continue to dance together like aspen trees shimmering in a gentle alpine breeze. May our unity be as self-evident as the aspens subterranean inter-connectedness. May our miraculous survival mimic that of the age-old grove of this hearty species, with roots so deeply intertwined it can withstand the heat of any conflagration. May we bring life, love, peace and the awareness of the Creator to all nations.

Sam Glaser is a performer, composer, producer and author in Los Angeles. He has released 25 CDs of his music and his book

The Joy of Judaism is an Amazon bestseller. He produces albums and scores for media in his Glaser Musicworks recording studio. Visit him online at http://www.samglaser.com. Tisha BAv runs from sundown July 29 to sundown July 30.

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Jews and Aspen: Thoughts on Tisha B'Av Detroit Jewish News - The Jewish News

In Western Europe, a Jewish ‘Community’ is an organization. They operate like expensive members-only clubs. – St. Louis Jewish Light

Posted By on July 31, 2020

AMSTERDAM (JTA) In the United States, when Jews say they identify as part of the Jewish community, they are saying they belong to a broad cultural and religious framework. They could be referring to the community of Jews in their city, their state, the country at large or the world and it doesnt necessarily mean that they belong to a synagogue.

In Western Europe, that applies in some situations. In others, however, saying that one is part of a Community (capital C) carries different connotations. Thats because Jewish communities and congregations here are arranged in a system that is radically different than the one in the United States.

The European model is called Kultusgemeinde, German for cultural community. Most major cities have organizations called communities for instance, the Jewish Community of Milan, the Jewish Community of Berlin and so on. Membership usually involves genealogical vetting and an annual fee thats determined by income level. (For instance, belonging to the Jewish Community of Amsterdam, a nonprofit that deals with Jewish Orthodox affairs, on average costs over $600.)

Belonging to the communities comes with several tangible benefits, notably free access to Jewish schools in most countries with sizable Jewish populations. That typically costs American families tens of thousands of dollars.

But there are downsides to the model, too, including a culture of homogenization that leaves little room for religious innovation.

The U.S. equivalent would be belonging to the Jewish Community of Seattle, if that existed, instead of just a synagogue in the Washington city.

The decentralized American model and its Western European antithesis were born out of different historical circumstances and today have advantages and disadvantages that both shape and reflect some key differences of Jewish communal life in those parts of the world. Heres what belonging to a European Jewish Community means.

The origins

The Kultusgemeinde model came about in the 19th century in Central Europe because European governments wanted to oversee Jewish communities in an organized way, said Sergio DellaPergola, an expert on Jewish demography at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

It ended up being, at times, a pretty effective tool for Jewish communities to pursue their interests through their own elected leadership, he said.

According to DellaPergola, who was born in Trieste, Italy, and raised as a member of the Jewish Community of Milan, the Kultusgemeinde model has allowed Jews to lobby governments effectively on core issues for centuries. It has helped them unite to successfully fight some attempts to curtail their religious freedoms; pool their communal resources in order to hire rabbis and other communal services; streamline fundraising; care for their poor; and make powerful political alliances, DellaPergola and other advocates of the European model said.

Some of the largest today are in places with large Jewish populations, such as Paris, London, Berlin and Amsterdam.

The nuts and bolts

Many Kultusgemeinde communities receive funding from their state or city governments, which tend to allocate those payments according to membership size. Being a state-recognized religious charity means a Community can receive tax-deductible donations. In Hungary and Italy, for example, taxpayers can choose one charity to which the government will transfer 1 percent of the sum it collects as income tax each year.

To become Kultusgemeinde members, applicants are vetted on their Jewishness. For Orthodox communities, applicants need to prove that their mothers are Jewish. In some cases, applicants also need to choose and commit to one synagogue in a given city under the Communitys jurisdiction.

Reform and Masorti congregations also operate on the Kultusgemeinde model in Europe. They are less strict regarding admissions, but they also have a vetting process.

Once in, members have access to communal facilities and services things like a bris or a wedding chuppah cost less for members. Besides schools and synagogues, the communities can include other organizations such as JCCs, libraries, eateries and even individual media outlets. In France, for instance, the Consistoire, an organization set up in the 19th century by local Jews on the request of Napoleon Bonaparte, operates one of the worlds newest and glitziest community centers, the $17 million European Center of Judaism.

Operating outside the Kultusgemeinde model in relatively small Jewish communities means a huge disadvantage in terms of funding and recognition, said Emile Schrijver, a professor of Jewish book history at the University of Amsterdam and director of the citys Jewish Cultural Quarter (a nongovernmental organization that is not a Kultusgemeinde, but serves as the umbrella structure for five Jewish museums and institutions).

The pros

The centralized model of organization can reap great benefits.

In the Netherlands and Belgium, Kultusgemeinde organs the Belgian CCOJB and the Central Jewish Organization of the Netherlands have served as legal entities that were necessary to fight proposed national bans on kosher slaughter, which would have dealt a major blow to observant communities. This fight succeeded in the Netherlands in 2012 and is currently being fought by the Belgian Kultusgemeinde community.

In France, where Napoleon essentially forced the Jews there to form the Kultusgemeinde-like Consistoire, that structure is now disseminating aid to help thousands of French Jews overcome the financial repercussions of the coronavirus crisis.

The central design of the community means there is a clear address, in Frances case, for financial issues, DellaPergola said, noting the Fonds Social Juif Unifi, or United Jewish Social Fund, where Jews can get assistance.

The Kultusgemeinde model also means that Western European Jews have chief rabbis who act as a supreme religious authorities and, at times, help give Jews a voice in social debates. In England, for example, Britains current and former chief rabbis (Ephraim Mirvis and Jonathan Sacks, respectively) have helped amplify the claims of anti-Semitism surrounding the Labour Party in national media, partially because of the authority that their title assumes.

Then theres the free schooling.

Many European governments, including France, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Belgium and Italy, have agreed to allow religious Jewish schools to operate as public schools as long as they also teach the minimum required curriculum. This mixing of church and state has led to repeated clashes between education officials and Jewish faculty who critics say fail to teach such subjects as evolution and sexual education.

The cons (and costs)

In normal times, being a member of a Kultusgemeinde community can get expensive.

Even after paying several hundreds of dollars a year for membership a tax-deductible expense in most European countries additional substantial payments are required for rabbinical and other services at ceremonies such as weddings and bar and bat mitzvahs.

(The situation is different in the revived Jewish communities of post-communist Eastern Europe, where membership fees are mostly covered by external donations, government funding and Holocaust restitution funds.)

The model also has pitted multiple communities against each other for government recognition and funds and led to decades-long tensions between the in crowd and the outsiders. Its even started legal battles.

In Hungary, a notable fight between two competing federations of Kultusgemeinden has gone on for years. It pits the Mazsihisz federation, which is largely Neolog, a local denomination akin to Masorti or Conservative, against EMIH, the Chabad-affiliated Orthodox federation of communities.

In Poland, a 2012 court ruling forced the Orthodox Jewish Community of Warsaw to allow in a non-Orthodox congregation called Ec Chaim. When the non-Orthodox congregation joined the Community, some local Reform Jews a minority within the Jewish population of most European countries dismissed Ec Chaim as a sham group meant only to give the illusion of inclusion while other non-Orthodox communities remained outside the umbrella.

We are prone for infighting, and when you create a polity and give it leaders, they will become targets, increasing the impression of division, DellaPergola said.

The model also disincentivizes attempts at modernization in many Western European communities including the largest of them in France, where some 500,000 Jews live. That in turn alienates younger Jews,said Nigel Savage, who was born in Britain and is the CEO of Hazon, an environmental organization based in New York City.

Whether over the costs, or this sense of conservatism, the numbers show that the model is becoming less popular. In the Netherlands, where there are 45,000 Jews, less than a quarter are community members, whereas before the Holocaust about 75% of Dutch Jews were members, said Ruben Vis, the secretary-general of the Orthodox Organization of Jewish Communities in the Netherlands, or NIK.

In the United Kingdom, where 250,000 Jews live, a report from 2017 showed that only about 80,000 Jewish households, many of them older individuals, are registered members. That figure constituted a 20% decrease in membership from 1990.

The American influence

DellaPergola still favors the European model, in part because he believes the American alternative has been less successful at bringing Jews together over common causes.

I think that attempts to achieve union end up increasing it, and thats preferable to the chaos that defines Jewish communal life in the United States, DellaPergola said.

That chaos, he says, is also costing U.S. Jewry money.

In the American Jewish community there is crazy replication and overlaps, which arguably leads to a certain waste of money, said Savage, who has lived in New York for 20 years. At this point there are far too many synagogues and synagogue buildings, for example.

But, he added, the adaptive freedom that Jewish communities have in the U.S. has led to an explosion of creativity thats being exported across the Jewish world.

Savage referenced the establishment in 2018 of Adamah, the first Jewish environmental farm in the United Kingdom, styled after the successes of that growing movement in the U.S. The creation in 2013 of a modern Jewish community center in London also was inspired by New York institutions.

In a world with so many interest groups and clubs competing for people to engage with them, the Kultusgemeinde needs to become a community of values much like the American one, Vis said. I think thats where were headed, like it or not.

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In Western Europe, a Jewish 'Community' is an organization. They operate like expensive members-only clubs. - St. Louis Jewish Light

‘History will judge us’ Have progressive UK rabbis reached end of the road on Israel? – Mondoweiss

Posted By on July 31, 2020

Progressive rabbis in the UK havewritten to the Israeli embassy in Londonto express their concern over the Israeli governments plans to annex parts of the West Bank. The letter has been sent fromBritish Friends of Rabbis for Human Rights, an organisation which supports the work of Rabbis for Human Rights working in Israel and the West Bank. It draws its members from both Progressive (Reform and Liberal) as well as Masorti and Orthodox rabbis. However, the forty signatories to this latest statement are dominated by Reform and Liberal rabbis, including the outgoing Reform senior rabbi, Laura Janner-Klausner, and former Liberal senior rabbi, Danny Rich, whose communities make up around 20% of UK Jewish synagogue membership.

Theanti-annexation letterreads powerfully and asks rhetorically:

If Judaism teaches us not to oppress, not to disenfranchise, not to stand idly by the blood of our neighbour, then where do we all stand?

Its a stronger statement than you would find being made formally by the Reform or Liberal movements themselves, so in practive its an outlet for the rabbis to speak out as individuals rather than representatives of the organisations which employ them. That reflects the hypersensitivity, professional risk, and fraught communal politics generated by Israel.

The wording of the letter is significant in what it reveals about the condition of Progressive rabbinical thought on Israel. But before diving into the exegesis, let me offer some personal history on Reform Judaism.

I grew up in the Reform synagogue movement in the UK and it remains my spiritual home. I use the Reform Judaism prayer book to welcome in the sabbath with my family each Friday night, and during lockdown Ive been following the services conducted via Zoom fromthe shul in which I was raised, Bromley Synagogue in South East London.

In my youth I dont remember support for Israel being the focus of division in synagogue life that its become today. In those days, the main external preoccupation of Bromley synagogue wasthe plight of Soviet Jewsfacing cultural, economic and religious persecution by the Soviet Russian authorities.

Led primarily by women in our synagogue, we campaigned, protested and adopted Jewish families in Moscow, offering what practical and emotional support we could. I remember international phone calls being set up at the synagogue and relayed via loud speaker to the gathered community. We listened to our refuseniks on the crackly telephone line telling their experience of being denied permission to leave Russia for Israel and the consequences for their daily lives.

The motivation for this work fitted well with Progressive Jewish concerns for justice, compassion and for the victims of oppression. Little did we know how this story would play out and how it would influence politics in Israel thirty years later.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 90s, a million former Soviet Jews migrated to the Jewish State welcomed with open arms by a government looking for an influx of Jews to bolster Jewish demography (against rising Israeli Arab population growth). Politically, the Russian Jews making their new home in Israel turned out to be less concerned with universal rights and compassion for the oppressed than we had been in Bromley. The majority of Russian Jews have voted consistently for right-wing Israeli parties opposed to peace deals and enthusiastic for Settlement expansion. Broadly speaking, they are secular and highly nationalistic in behaviour and outlook. Its an ironic consequence of all that Progressive Jewish action that took place on their behalf in the 70s and 80s. Perhaps, its a metaphor for the entire relationship between Israel and Reform Judaism: mismatched visions, conflicting agendas and compromised values.

The co-author of this months anti-annexation letter, Rabbi Sylvia Rothschild, became the rabbi for Bromley Synagogue in the late 1980s while I was completing my undergraduate degree at Manchester University. By that time, I was already on a journey to Palestinian solidarity driven by my roots in Reform Judaism, influenced by the motivations behind the Soviet Jewry campaigns, and bya determination to understandwhat had caused the outbreak of the First Palestinian Intifada.

Ever since those student days, Ive followed the statements made by Reform and Liberal rabbis concerning Israel. Im sorry to say, theyve been consistently disappointing. On each occasion they failed to address the enormity of Palestinian dispossession and the on-going injustices committed against them. They pulled their punches on the moral questions for the State of Israel, and as rabbis, they shied away from publicly examining the ethical consequence for the global Jewish diaspora and for Judaism itself.

I long ago understood that however critical of specific Israeli actions these rabbinic statements might be, Progressive rabbis would avoid the most serious implications of their concerns. Their public letters and press releases would begin with a preamble of fidelity to the Jewish State, intending this to give them permission to speak out. The statements would invariably conclude with expressions of even-handed compassion and desires for peace. No doubt they appeared bold, radical and controversial to some, but to me they were mired in denial about the true power dynamics and immorality at work in Israel/Palestine.

A good example of this rabbinical genre of Israel related handwringing wasa letter sent to The Timesin August 2014 as the Israeli assault on Gaza was taking place. During those summer weeks, 500 Palestinian children were killed by the IDF, mostly by Israeli aerial bombardments using the most sophisticated and precise weaponry available. Meanwhile, one Israeli child was killed by a Hamas rocket. Heres how the Progressive rabbis began their letter:

Sir, We write as passionate and proud supporters of Israel. This past month we have witnessed devastating loss of life on all sides, so many of whom are civilians, as Israel has again been thrown into conflict with her neighbours and tried to deal with the missiles and tunnels used by Hamas. We have watched with great sadness as communities in the region and beyond have become embroiled in anger and hatred towards the other.

The letter concluded with the affirmation that the rabbis remained dedicated to Israels character as a Jewish and democratic state along with the values of social and political equality for all citizens, alongside freedom, justice and peace as envisaged by the prophets of Israel, and as enshrined in itsDeclaration of Independence.

That appeal to Israels Declaration of Independence as being the true soul of the Jewish State crops up time again in Liberal Zionist discourse, even though the document was never enshrined in constitutional law and contains plenty of historical airbrushing out of diaspora Jewish history whichProgressive rabbis ought to object to.

I like to think that behind the composition of these weak texts (which always ended in both political and ethical failure) there were some spiritual and intellectual struggles that went on in the hearts and minds of those who composed them.

Theres always been a tension at the centre of Reform Judaisms relationship with Zionism. That was bound to be so. Reform Judaism, as it developed in 18thand 19thcentury Germany, was a response to enlightenment thinking, the social emancipation of Jews in Western Europe, and a Jewish theology which looked to emphasise a universalistic mission for Jews and Judaism based on themes of biblical prophetic justice. The Jewish people were understood as being a religious community with a shared historical experience, commissioned by God to build a just society wherever they lived. Religious practices were guided by reason and ethics.While Reform Judaism would speak of a Jewish people or a Jewish nation, this was understood as broad and transnational in character, rather than narrow and territorial.

These ideas continued as the movement spread from Germany to north America (where it became a dominant Jewish denomination) and to the United Kingdom. Before the Second World War, Reform Judaism did not favour Zionism as a response to the issues of Jewish modernity in the early 20thcentury. All that began to change after the Holocaust, as it did for all Jewish institutions.

The universalistic mission of Reform Judaism, with its belief in working towards of messianic age of global justice now had to accommodate an inward looking and less ambitious agenda. The safety and security of the Jewish people became the post-Holocaust preoccupation, and the modern State of Israel became the accepted vehicle for achieving that security.

Over time, the narrow purpose of tribal physical security has grown from political theory to religious tenet, merging seamlessly with scripture, liturgy and religious festivals so that Zionism appears entirely consistent with centuries of Jewish self-understanding. In truth, it was an abrupt break with past rabbinic understanding of religious exile and spiritual redemption. For Reform Judaism, Israel created a tension between defending the fledgling Jewish State, seen as existential for Jewish survival and future growth, and Reforms previous ideals for the humanistic and ethically grounded role which Jews could and should play in all societies.

But have Progressive rabbis now recognised the ethical cul-de-sac theyve led their communities down over successive decades?

This monthsletter to the Israeli embassyin London starts to look like Progressive rabbis are finally confronting the Jewish implications of the entire Zionist project. Although the layers of denial and ethical dissonance are still on display, its the strongest and most despairing expression of criticism Ive seen.

Once again, the rabbis letter lacks any historical context or political analysis concerning whats brought us to this point. The authors see the prospect of annexation as a pivotal moment, threatening our moral survival as a people of integrity, when in fact its just the latest stage in a long drawn out process of colonisation of Palestinian land. If the problem is this serious today, what made it any less serious yesterday?

But heres the key paragraph, which implicitly acknowledges a collective Jewish (certainly rabbinical) responsibility, which goes far beyond any specific Israeli government or Prime Minister:

The moral integrity of the Jewish people is at stake. History will judge us and ask us: have we been faithful to the prophetic teachings of justice, compassion and peace? Or have we created a mockery of our Jewish tradition and of the founders of the State, by standing on the wrong side of Jewish teachings and our history?

The questions are asked rhetorically but they demand actual answers. The obvious response to the rabbis is: No, you have not been faithful to Jewish teaching through your mild-mannered criticism of Israel. And Yes, you have created a mockery of our Jewish tradition by failing to centre your teaching on Palestinian suffering. I would also caution them against their on-going moral confidence concerning the founders of the State since the greatest single moment of Palestinian dispossession was not the Six Day War of 1967 but the Nakba of 1948.

The rabbis letter once again drags Israels Declaration of Independence into service as evidence of a righteous past that has been lost, but could yet be found again:

And where do we stand in relation to Israels Declaration of Independence? The State of Israel that was created was to be based on the principles of liberty, justice and peace. These plans deny those foundational principles of the Declaration.

But the Declaration of Independence was never enacted, its never been a legal document. There has never been social and political equality for Palestinians in Israel. For the first 20 years of Israels history, its Arab citizens were ruled under military law as a fifth column; internally displaced, their homes and land were confiscated through government legislation; their friends and relatives who had fled their homes in fear and crossed borders, were never allowed to return even when the fighting ended.

Palestinian Israelis remain socially, politically and economically disadvantaged to this day. They are not a small minority, they are 20% of the countrys population. Its not an accident. Its not their fault. Its institutionalised discrimination thats existed since the day David Ben-Gurion read the Declaration out loud in the Tel Aviv Museum more than 70 years ago. Israel as a Jewish and democratic state of all its citizens was always a myth. As all Progressive rabbis will tell you, religious myths serve an important function in the development of morality, this though is a political myth, which serves only to prop up a false narrative that denies another peoples lived experience. The rabbis need to let go of the Declaration rather than continue to use it to obscure the truth.

This letter, even with its failings, is setting up a watershed moment for its Reform and Liberal signatories and the congregations which they lead. Even if annexation is delayed indefinitely, something has changed in Progressive rabbinical thinking on Israel. And if the rabbis are serious about the moral integrity of the Jewish people and how history will judge us, then some big changes are required.

Whats needed is a return to the bolder ambitions of religious purpose that characterised the first century of Reform theology. A Jewish mission of universal justice thats applied to Israel as well as every other nation on earth.

In practice what must that look like?

Any understanding and teaching of Zionism must embrace the experience of Palestinians. Zionism has been a national project of self-determination for Jewsandan act of brutal settler colonialism for Palestinians. Both experiences are true and valid. One cannot be told without the other. In this century, the Jewish and the Palestinian stories have become entwined and interdependent. Our future wellbeing is locked together. This is what we must teach ourselves and our children if we are serious about respecting the heritage of Progressive Judaism.

In making that educational commitment, Reform and Liberal rabbis must abandon their support for politicised definitions of antisemitism which end up silencing Palestinian solidarity and denying Palestinian history. Many of the same rabbis whove signed this months letter on annexation, including Sylvia Rothschild, Danny Rich and Laura Janner-Klausner, also signeda letter to the Guardianin July 2018 supporting thedeeply problematic IHRA definitionof antisemitism.

The rabbis need to understand the damage such documents are doing to the prospects of a genuine Jewish/Palestinian dialogue. Anti-Palestinianism is as bad as antisemitism.

Support for Israel from Reform and Liberal movements must become conditional on equal rights and equal security for all who call the Holy Land their home. How can a Jewish religious movement call for equality and justice for all, while making an exception in the very place where we claim our Jewish origins?

Jewish education about the Holocaust needs expanding and reframing too. Today, we are in danger of merely passing on to future Jewish generations an on-going, unprocessed, collective trauma. Its a trauma that informs our understanding of Israel/Palestine and what constitutes Jewish safety and security. A Sparta State dependent on superpower backing and endlessly suppressing an indigenous population will never deliver Jewish security. Progressive Judaism must reclaim its universal principles and apply them to a Jewish understanding of the Holocaust which recognises that our security will always be dependent on promoting a common humanity, based on justice, equality and mutual responsibility.

And heres my final challenge to the rabbis.

In Judaism there is a tradition of collective responsibility, which the rabbis letter on annexation alludes to. On Yom Kippur, the most solemn and holy day of the Jewish religious calendar, we stand together in the synagogue and ask for forgiveness for the sins we have committed, not just as individuals, but as a community, as a people. When our Reform and Liberal rabbis have the courage to lead us in asking for forgiveness from the Palestinian people and offering them restitution, then we will have finally arrived at a place from which we can move forward with a genuinley progressive Jewish agenda.

This post first appeared on the Patheos site on July 26.

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'History will judge us' Have progressive UK rabbis reached end of the road on Israel? - Mondoweiss

Survivors Urge Facebook to Remove Holocaust Denial Posts – TIME

Posted By on July 31, 2020

(BERLIN) Holocaust survivors around the world are lending their voices to a campaign launched Wednesday targeting Facebook head Mark Zuckerberg, urging him to take action to remove denial of the Nazi genocide from the social media site.

Coordinated by the New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, the #NoDenyingIt campaign uses Facebook itself to make the survivors entreaties to Zuckerberg heard, posting one video per day urging him to remove Holocaust-denying groups, pages and posts as hate speech. Videos will also be posted on Facebook-owned Instagram, as well as Twitter.

Zuckerberg raised the ire of the Claims Conference and others with comments in 2018 to the tech website Recode that posts denying the Nazi annihilation of 6 million Jews would not necessarily be removed. He said he did not think Holocaust deniers were intentionally getting it wrong, and that as long as posts were not calling for harm or violence, even offensive content should be protected.

After an outcry, Zuckerberg, who is Jewish himself, clarified that while he personally found Holocaust denial deeply offensive he believed that the best way to fight offensive bad speech is with good speech.

Read more: You Shall Never Be a Bystander. How We Learn About the Holocaust When the Last Survivors Are Gone

Since then, Facebook representatives have met with the Claims Conference but the group, which negotiates compensation payments from Germany for Holocaust victims, says Zuckerberg himself has refused to. The goal of the campaign is to get him to sit down with Holocaust survivors so that they can personally tell him their stories and make their case that denial violates Facebooks hate speech standards and should be removed.

In Germany or in Austria people go to prison if they deny the Holocaust because they know its a lie, its libel, said Eva Schloss, an Auschwitz survivor who today lives in London and has recorded a message for Zuckerberg.

How can somebody really doubt it? Where are the 6 million people? There are tens of thousands of photos taken by the Nazis themselves. They were proud of what they were doing. They dont deny it, they know they did it.

Schloss family escaped before the war from Vienna to the Netherlands, where she became friends with Anne Frank, who lived nearby in Amsterdam and was the same age. After the German army overran the country, the Schloss and Frank families went into hiding but were discovered by the Nazis separately in 1944, the Schloss family betrayed by a Dutch woman.

Schloss and her mother survived Auschwitz, but her father and brother were killed, while Otto Frank, Annes father, was the only survivor of his immediate family and married Schloss mother after the war. Otto Frank published his daughters now-famous diary so that the world could hear her story. Schloss has written about her own story, is a frequent speaker and would like to tell Zuckerberg of her own experience.

It was just every day, the chimneys were smoking, the smell of burning flesh, the 91-year-old told The Associated Press, adding that she had been separated from her mother and assumed she had been gassed.

Can you imagine that feeling? I was 15-years-old and I felt alone in the world and it was terrible.

Read more: Europes Jews Are Resisting a Rising Tide of Anti-Semitism

Facebook said in a statement that it takes down Holocaust denial posts in countries where it is illegal, like Germany, France and Poland, while in countries where it is not an offense, like the U.S. and Britain, it is carefully monitored to determine whether it crosses the line into what is allowed.

We take down any post that celebrates, defends, or attempts to justify the Holocaust, Facebook told the AP. The same goes for any content that mocks Holocaust victims, accuses victims of lying about the atrocities, spews hate, or advocates for violence against Jewish people in any way. Posts and articles that deny the Holocaust often violate one or more of these standards and are removed from Facebook.

Earlier this month, a two-year audit of Facebooks civil rights record found serious setbacks that have marred the social networks progress on matters such as hate speech, misinformation and bias. Zuckerberg is one of four CEOs of big tech firms who face a grilling by the U.S. Congress on Wednesday over the way they dominate the market.

More than 500 companies on July 1 began an advertising boycott intended to pressure Facebook into taking a stronger stand against hate speech. The Claims Conference decided to launch its own campaign after concluding the boycott doesnt seem to be making a dent, said Greg Schneider, the Claims Conferences executive vice president.

Several Holocaust denial groups have been identified on Facebook by the New York-based Anti-Defamation League, some hidden and most private.

On one, Real World War 2 History, administrators are clearly aware of the fine line between what is and isnt allowed, listing among its rules that members must avoid posts that feature grotesque cartoons that FB censors can construe as racist or hateful.

Another page, the Committee for Open Debate on the Holocaust, features regular posts of revisionist videos, including one from February in which the commentator says the Zyklon B gas used to kill Jews in Nazi death camps was actually employed to kill the lice that spread typhus, claiming this chemical was used to improve the inmates health and reduce, not increase, camp mortality.

Though not overtly advocating attacks, such postings are meant to perpetuate a myth, anti-Semitic tropes that somehow Jews made this up in order to gain sympathy or political advantage and could easily incite violence, Schneider said.

The United Nations has acknowledged that Holocaust denial is a form of anti-Semitism, and of course anti-Semitism is hate speech, he said.

For Charlotte Knobloch, a prominent German Jewish leader who survived the Holocaust in hiding as a young girl and is participating in the campaign, it is particularly important for social media platforms to be vigilant about preventing denial because many in younger generations rely on them for information.

They have a particular responsibility, the 87-year-old told the AP.

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Survivors Urge Facebook to Remove Holocaust Denial Posts - TIME

Security guard disarms ax-wielding man inside Ukraine synagogue – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on July 29, 2020

A security guard at a Ukraine synagogue overpowered a man armed with an ax who broke into the compound shouting wheres the synagogue?

The intruder slightly wounded the guard, who managed to wrestle the weapon away from him. No one else was injured in the incident Tuesday in Mariupol, in eastern Ukraine.

Police are looking for the intruder, who fled after breaking free from the grip of the security guard, according to Christians for Israel, a Netherlands-based organization that funds security costs for the synagogue, including the guards salary.

The incident happened shortly after morning prayers when Mendel Cohen, the local rabbi, was in the building with two other people. The synagogue was nearly empty because of coronavirus measures.

Thank G-d, the security guard managed to disarm him, Cohen said in a statement about the incident sent out by Christians for Israel. I was in the synagogue at the time this was happening. I went inside and exited through the back door.

Cohen thanked Christians for Israel, saying he would probably not be alive if it were not for the security they are providing.

He is in shock but coming to terms with what happened, Dutch Chief Rabbi Binyomin Jacobs, who facilitated the Christians for Israel sponsorship of the synagogues security needs, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency after Jacobs spoke to Cohen several times Tuesday on the phone.

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Security guard disarms ax-wielding man inside Ukraine synagogue - The Jerusalem Post

Door That Held Back Halle Synagogue Gunman Removed, Will Become Part of Memorial – Jewish Exponent

Posted By on July 29, 2020

Visitors at the synagogue in Halle the day after a gunman targeted the house of worship in eastern Germany in October 2019. (Jens Schlueter/Getty Images via JTA.org)

By Marcy Oster

Now pockmarked with bullets, the door of the synagogue in Halle, Germany, that held out a far-right gunman last October was replaced on Tuesday.

The heavy wooden door will become the centerpiece of a memorial to the attack and the two bystanders killed by the assailant, The Associated Pressreported.

Its removal comes as the suspect, Stephan Balliet, is standing trial at the state court in Naumburg.

The gunman tried but failed repeatedlyto force his way into the synagoguein Halle, in eastern Germany, with 52 worshippers inside during High Holiday services before opening fire near the synagogue and at a kebab shop, killing two. The assailant said that Jews are the root of all problems.

Amanifestobelieved to be written by the alleged attacker wasposted onlinebefore the shooting and distributed by sympathizers on the messaging app Telegram. Written a week before the shooting, the manifesto said his objective was to kill as many anti-whites as possible, Jews preferred.

On the first day of the trial, which began a week ago, Balliet repeated anti-Semitic conspiracy theories and anti-immigrant statements, and showed no remorse, Deutsch Wellereported.

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Door That Held Back Halle Synagogue Gunman Removed, Will Become Part of Memorial - Jewish Exponent

Door that held back Halle synagogue gunman is removed and will become part of memorial – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on July 29, 2020

(JTA) Now pockmarked with bullets, the door of the synagogue in Halle, Germany, that held out a far-right gunman last October was replaced on Tuesday.

The heavy wooden door will become the centerpiece of a memorial to the attack and the two bystanders killed by the assailant, The Associated Press reported.

Its removal comes as the suspect, Stephan Balliet, is standing trial at the state court in Naumburg.

The gunman tried but failed repeatedlyto force his way into the synagoguein Halle, in eastern Germany, with 52 worshippers inside during High Holiday services before opening fire near the synagogue and at a kebab shop, killing two. The assailant said that Jews are the root of all problems.

Amanifestobelieved to be written by the alleged attacker wasposted onlinebefore the shooting and distributed by sympathizers on the messaging app Telegram. Written a week before the shooting, the manifesto said his objective was to kill as many anti-whites as possible, Jews preferred.

On the first day of the trial, which began a week ago, Balliet repeated anti-Semitic conspiracy theories and anti-immigrant statements, and showed no remorse, Deutsch Welle reported.

The post Door that held back Halle synagogue gunman is removed and will become part of memorial appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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Door that held back Halle synagogue gunman is removed and will become part of memorial - Cleveland Jewish News

Israel to relax synagogue attendance restrictions ahead of Tisha B’Av, ministers say – Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Posted By on July 29, 2020

Israels Health Ministry will increase the number of worshipers permitted in synagogues ahead of Tisha BAv, which begins on Wednesday evening, the heads of the ultra-Orthodox political parties announced on Monday. The current limit is 10 worshipers only.

The United Torah Judaism and Shas parties said in a joint statement that the decision was reached following a meeting between party leaders, Health Minister Yuli Edelstein and ministry deputy director general Itamar Grotto, according toChannel 12.

The statement did not specify what the new attendance limit would be, and the ministry has yet to officially announce any change in policy.

Tisha BAv (the ninth day of the Jewish month of Av) is a day of commemoration of the destruction of the two Jewish Temples.

In the statement, Shas leader Interior Minister Aryeh Deri said, The Torah community is going through a major crisis at the moment We must all work to achieve order and especially towards the [Hebrew] month of Elul, the days of mercy and forgiveness.

Deri also said he had requested assistance to regulate and manage the issue of opening the upcoming school year to include the yeshivot and the kollels.

Construction and Housing Minister Yaakov Litzman (UTJ) said, Along with the need for extreme caution to prevent the further spread of the coronavirus, everything must be done to continue the world of Torah, yeshivot and kollels, expanding the possibility of prayer in synagogues on a daily basis and ahead of Tisha BAv. But it must be adjusted according to the size of the area. We held a special meeting with Health Minister Edelstein on the subject and we hope that the right way will be found for the required solution. JN

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Israel to relax synagogue attendance restrictions ahead of Tisha B'Av, ministers say - Jewish News of Greater Phoenix


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