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The Three Weeks & the Nine Days – The Jewish Voice

Posted By on July 1, 2020

By: Rabbi Shraga Simmons

The Three Weeks between the 17th of Tammuz and the Tisha BAv have historically been days of misfortune and calamity for the Jewish people. During this time, both the First and Second Temples were destroyed, amongst other terrible tragedies.

These days are referred to as the period within the straits (bein hametzarim), in accordance with the verse: all her oppressors have overtaken her within the straits (Lamentations 1:3).

On Shabbat during the Three Weeks, the Haftorahs are taken from chapters in Isaiah and Jeremiah dealing with the Temples destruction and the exile of the Jewish people.

During this time, various aspects of mourning are observed by the entire nation. We minimize joy and celebration. And, since the attribute of Divine judgement (din) is acutely felt, we avoid potentially dangerous or risky endeavors.

ASPECTS OF MOURNING DURING THE THREE WEEKS

THE NINE DAYS

The period commencing with Rosh Chodesh Av is called the Nine Days. During this time, a stricter level of mourning is observed, in accordance with the Talmudic dictum (Taanit 26): When the month of Av begins, we reduce our joy.

(1) We avoid purchasing any items that bring great joy.

(2) We suspend home improvements, or the planting of trees and flowers.

(3) We avoid litigation with non-Jews, since fortune is inauspicious at this time.

(4) We abstain from the consumption of meat (including poultry) and wine. These foods are symbolic of the Temple service, and are generally expressions of celebration and joy.

On Shabbat, meat and wine are permitted. This applies also to any other seuduat mitzvah for example, at a Brit Milah or at the completion of a tractate of Talmud.

Wine from Havdallah should be given to a child to drink.

(5) We refrain from wearing newly laundered garments, or laundering any clothes.

If the freshness has been taken out of a garment prior to the Nine Days, it may be worn.

Fresh clothes may be worn for Shabbat.

The clothing of small children, which gets soiled frequently, may be laundered during the Nine Days.

Clothes may not be laundered even if done in preparation for after Tisha BAv, or even if done by a non-Jew.

(6) We do not bathe for pleasure.

It is permitted to bathe in order to remove dirt or perspiration, or for medical reasons. This may be done only in cool water.

Furthermore, the body should be washed in parts, rather than all at one time.

Bathing in warm water is permitted on Friday in honor of Shabbat.

(Aish.com)

with thanks to Rabbi Moshe Lazerus

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The Three Weeks & the Nine Days - The Jewish Voice

3-week-old baby hospitalized with brain infection after brit gone wrong – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on July 1, 2020

A three-weeks-old baby is currently in serious condition at the Bnei Zion Medical Center in Haifa due to a herpetic infection, which began in the genital area and has spread to the brain, leading to convulsions and seizures.

Laboratory tests found that the infant likely contracted the Type 1 herpes virus during his brit, directly from the mohel, who performed the ceremony using the controversial Orthodox method of blood cleaning known as "Metzitzah B'Peh," or oral suction.

Director of Pediatrics at Bnei Zion Medical Center, Prof. Itzhak Sarugo, said that "the baby was hospitalized in serious condition, with a visible inflammation of the brain (encephalitis) accompanied by prolonged convulsions and a severe skin infection that started in the groin area where the circumcision was performed."

The baby was rushed to Bnei Zion Hospital by his parents immediately after they noticed a large infection in the genital area following the brit.

During hospitalization in the pediatric ward, the herpes virus was discovered in both the cerebrospinal fluid and in the lesions that were on the baby's skin.

During the first three days of hospitalization the infant suffered from numerous seizures despite receiving treatment both for seizures and the virus.

Sarugo said that "the antiviral treatment he received is aimed at destroying the virus in the brain and preventing the inflammation of the nervous system. The baby will have to receive this treatment for the next six months."

"The herpes virus can cause a skin infection, which can spread to the brain and cause severe inflammation of the brain and even death," Sarugo said.

The neonatal herpes virus can also be transmitted while a baby passes through the birth canal, though not through the placenta, often leading to preventative C-section surgeries.

However, in adults, the virus is most often spread through saliva, sexual contact or blood transfusions.

Bnei Zion Medical Center further stated that "the nature of the lesions' diffusion and onset in the groin area and the continued spread of the lesions imply infection during the brit in the sucking stage when there is contact between the mohel's mouth and the baby's blood."

The Talmud writes that a "Mohel (Circumciser) who does not suck creates a danger, and should be dismissed from practice." Rashi, commenting on that Talmudic passage, explains that the purpose of this step is to draw some blood from deep inside the wound, to prevent danger to the baby.

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3-week-old baby hospitalized with brain infection after brit gone wrong - The Jerusalem Post

The problem with King Louis and a few other statues of guys weve admired – St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Posted By on July 1, 2020

The problem with King Louis and a few other statues of guys weve admired

Ominous clouds pass the statue of King Louis IX atop Art Hill on March 9, 2019.

A crane removes a bronze sculpture from the Confederate monument in Forest Park in 2017.

The statue quickly became one of the city's most visible symbols, rivaled only by the clock tower at Union Station. Hundreds of businesses added the statue's likeness to their advertising and stationery, just as many businesses do now with the Arch. This photograph from March 1948 shows four participants in an annual fashion promenade in Forest Park, with King Louis IX in the background.

They are, from left, Mary Rascher of 7041 Sutherland Avenue, Germaine Palmer of 6924 Flyer Avenue, Candy Eggleston of 2012 Mitchell Avenue, and Carol Letcher of 6943 Pernod Avenue.

Visitors to the American Museum of Natural History in New York look at a statue in 2017 of Theodore Roosevelt, flanked by a Native American man and an African American man.

St. Louis was named for a French king. Do you remember his history? Do you even remember the Roman numerals behind his name?

About three years ago, the city removed a Confederate statue in Forest Park.A statue of Christopher Columbus came down from its Tower Grove Park pedestal not quite two weeks ago.

Now, some are calling to take down St. Louis' namesake, a French king and fervent Christian who lived in the Middle Ages and whose statue greeted visitors to the World's Fair in 1904. A bronze copy overlooks one of the city's greatest vistas, Art Hill in Forest Park.

"I do believe he's going to go," says Umar Lee, a writer and podcaster who lives in north St. Louis. "That, to me, is a slam dunk."

Called "Apotheosis of St. Louis," the former symbol of the city is one of several statues, street names and other commemorations under scrutiny as the nation reassesses monuments to men (and it's almost always men) whose historic actions now repulse many Americans.

Increasing numbers of polled U.S. residentsbelieve in removing from public places the Confederate statues of people who fought for slavery. After all, they were not only traitors to the United States, the arguments go, they supported an egregious, racist system that was abolished more than 150 years ago.

But in California, a statue of Ulysses S. Grant, the guy who defeated the Confederates and cracked down on the KKK, was also removed. He had owned one slave and once launched an illegal war against Lakota tribes. A problematic statue of Theodore Roosevelt will be removed in New York, and other presidents who owned slaves, including founders Thomas Jefferson and George Washington, are under scrutiny.

On Monday, protesters were stopped from taking down a statue of President Andrew Jackson in a park next to the White House.On Wednesday, the Washington Post reported that U.S. marshals had been told they should prepare to help protect federal monuments across the country.

Two walkers at Malcolm W. Martin Memorial Park in East St. Louiswatched the sunset April 6, 2020, over downtown and the Gateway Arch.

Wanda Frizell (left) and Jessie Carson, both of Alton, take photos April 8, 2017, in front of a sculpture of Chuck Berry in the University City Loop.

Under question in St. Louis could be memorials to former slave owners, including Jefferson, Washington, Grant and Henry Shaw. Plus there are admired figures who had tainted pasts, such as rock 'n' roll father Chuck Berry, once jailed for taking a 14-year-old girl over state lines for immoral purposes and sued for sordid videos. Even criticized is the city's most prestigious monument, the Gateway Arch: a tribute to Western expansion, aka American Indian annihilation and displacement.

For some, the answer, though, isn't to pull down the Arch or King Louis but to edit or add more commemorations.

"We have to take a breath and say that as a community, we are strong enough to grapple with our history and address issues of racism," says Geoff Ward, a professor of African and African American studies at Washington University."We'll have to decide as a community how we resolve these concerns."

Starting with Louis IX

Umar Lee is one of the people behind a new effort not only to remove the statue of St. Louis from Art Hill, but also to change the city's name.

He's created a petitionat change.org (it hadalmost 700 signatures Thursday), and he's contacted aldermen and Mayor Lyda Krewson.

In part, the petition says, "St. Louis has a large and vibrant Jewish and Muslim community and it's an outright disrespect for those who are part of these faith communities to have to live in a city named after a man committed to the murder of their co religionists."

Accusations of genocide against Jews and murderous crusades against Muslims sound alarming, but the real history is more complex, according to medieval scholars.

In fact, King Louis' crusades more than 750 years ago were efforts to retake previous Christian holdings from Muslims, who were far more ready for battle than the French, says Thomas F. Madden, a professor at St. Louis University and author of "The Concise History of the Crusades."

"Islamic kingdoms were the superpowers in the Mediterranean world from the seventh century onward, Madden said in a phone interview.

"In 1244, Egyptian and Turkish forces conquered Jerusalem, massacred Christians, and desecrated churches. Louis' crusade was aimed at recovering Jerusalem for the Christian kingdom there,"

Louis set out in 1248 (known as the Seventh Crusade) and landed in Damietta, Egypt. The residents fled, but a few months later the king and thousands of Franks were captured by Muslims. The king was ransomed.

The Eighth Crusade in 1270 was even more of a failure. Louis only got to Tunisia and then died of some sort of pestilence.

Madden says the Middle Ages were not kind to Jewish people, but France was better then than some other countries. At least 5% of Paris was Jewish during Louis' time, and he never rounded up Jews and slaughtered them, as some other rulers did.

But theologians of the University of Paris judged the Talmud to be heretical and thus a danger to Christian society, Madden says.

Under instruction from a pope, the French seized cartloads of the religious writings after rabbis tried to defend the Talmud against claims of blasphemy. The copies were later burned.

"The medieval world was very different than our world," Madden says, with believers who saw little difference between the temporal and spiritual worlds.

Louis IX was considered by many a model French king, giving aid to the poor and founding hospitals. He not only invited the poor to dine with him, he washed their feet before they left, Madden says, and even washed the sores of lepers.

He was the only French king to be made a Catholic saint; in 1764, Pierre de Laclde named the site for his new trading post "St. Louis," after the patron saint of France's then king, Louis XV.

A truck hauls the Christopher Columbus statue out of Tower Grove Park on June 16, 2020.

Artistic and historic

Many local public statues are less important from an artistic viewpoint than as expressions of their historical time, says John Klein, a professor of art history at Washington University.

But removing the St. Louis IX statue, designed by Charles Henry Niehaus and executed in bronze by W.R. Hodges, would be an art loss, Klein says.

"But the bigger loss would be the historical context because he's the figure after whom the city was named," he says.

The statue belongs to the city, not the St. Louis Art Museum. Mayor Krewson said Monday during her regular Facebook Live Q&A that she is not in favor of changing St. Louis' name nor taking down the statue.

"I frankly think that it's a bit of a distraction from doing the real hard work that needs to be done in St. Louis, and around the world, frankly, to reduce the disparities between black and white. And we know there are big disparities."

(A protest at noon Saturday had been announced by the conservative website the Gateway Pundit to defend the statue.)

Klein says it's easy to see why Confederate statues should be taken down: "That American history is still being played out. The Civil War, slavery, Reconstruction, Jim Crow that is still very present history."

Harder to argue is removing statues of Washington and Jefferson. The history of their enslaved people should be taught, Klein says, but he questions whether that is the most important part of the early presidents' place in U.S. history:

"For most people, it is probably no."

Eugene Robinson, a columnist with the Washington Post, made a similar argument this week:

The 9-foot-tall marble statue of Thomas Jefferson stands in the Missouri History Museums loggia. Karl Bitter, head of the sculpture programs for the St. Louis Worlds Fair, created the statue.

"There is an obvious difference between George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, who founded our union, and, say, Jefferson Davis and Stonewall Jackson, who tried to destroy it. The fact that Washington, Jefferson and other early presidents owned slaves should temper our admiration for them but not erase it entirely. They gave us a nation grotesquely disfigured by slavery, but they also gave us the constitutional tools, and the high-minded ideals, with which to heal that original, near-fatal flaw."

For Umar Lee, good acts by historical figures aren't usually enough to counter acts of racism, antisemitism or persecution of Muslims.

Lee, who converted to Islam at 17, believes St. Louis' statue would be better placed, perhaps, on the grounds of the Archdiocese of St. Louis.

When the statue went up, "the only perspective that mattered at the time was the viewpoint of white Americans," he says.

"We want to move toward an equitable society."

Now when Jews and Muslims come out of the St. Louis Art Museum, they see the crusader holding his sword with its blade pointed down and its hilt held up like a cross: "Muslim families have to look at Louis IX and feel trauma."

Rabbi Susan Talve, founding rabbi of Central Reform Congregation in the city, remembers coming to St. Louis some 40 years ago and feeling unease that it was named after a medieval crusader. "The way that I learned it, it was not a pretty picture."

She wouldn't mind if the statue were removed. But, she says,if conversations "bring us to a place where we can redeem the past by dismantling the structures of racist oppression, then St. Louis will redeem himself."

Chip Starr (left) of Starr Restoration Services uses dry ice in 2017 to blast the protective coating from the statue of King Louis IX on Art Hill. Robert Marti (right) of Russell-Marti Conservation Services was hired to repair and restore the iconic statue.

Reparative justice

Ward, the professor of African American studies, says "there has been a new understanding or acceptance of what's at stake" in the last month during the Black Lives Matter and other protests following the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

But he emphasizes that before the surge of antiracist protests, there were already efforts to address the "commemorative landscape" in the city.

He stresses that protesters are pulling down statues themselves because public officials have neglected to act. "If public officials and other civic leaders are more responsive to these concerns, and create inclusive processes for evaluating and addressing these concerns, our communities are likely to benefit from both that process and its results," he says.

Ralph Clayton, the Virginia-born farmer who donated land for the seat of St. Louis County after the city-county divorce became final in 1877.

"Our landscape is riddled with the names of people who were perpetrators of crimes against humanity," he says. Former slave owners memorialized by street and city names include Ralph Clayton, Martin Hanley, Walter Dorsett, Thomas Skinker and Henry Shaw.

"This uncritical commemoration suggests that Black Lives do not matter, and Black Histories do not matter here," he wrote by email. "To its credit, Missouri Botanical Garden is taking initiative to grapple with how it represents and interprets the legacy of Henry Shaw in contemporary St. Louis. This is exactly what we must do in this moment of commemorative reckoning."

Ward moved from California to Clayton after taking a position at Washington University two years ago. Recently, he sent the city's Equity Commission a note about a 1955 marker near the St. Louis County Police Department on Forsyth Boulevard.

"The St. Louis County historical marker is carefully worded to memorialize white settler colonialism," Ward wrote, in part, saying it suggests the city is a "white place." He asks that it be removed or amended.

He, like others, suggests that reparative justice for a racist history would include more commemorations that highlight parts of St. Louis history that have been largely overlooked. Possibilities include recognizing the history of Mill Creek Valley, the East St. Louis racial massacre, and the death of Francis L. McIntosh, a free man of color burned alive by a mob in an area near the current Kiener Plaza.

Interpretive plaques could be added to sites like the Louis IX statue to provide greater understanding of our complex history.

Klein would like to see not just markers, but programming instituted to help educate residents about the history.

He even wonders if the time for more monuments is past: Contemporary sculpture has changed, and we now live not in an age of machines but of information. "Digital media is the big new medium of our time," Klein says.

For Ward, changing symbols of racism and changing laws or politics are two sides of the same coin.

"Symbolic objects construct meaning and rationalize attitudes and behaviors," he says. This is why people are fighting for monumental anti-racism."

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The problem with King Louis and a few other statues of guys weve admired - St. Louis Post-Dispatch

The Year of the Vilna Gaon – Aish

Posted By on July 1, 2020

Long after most of its once-vibrant Jewish community is gone, Lithuania is embracing the legacy of the Vilna Gaon.

Visitors to the only remaining Jewish cemetery in the Lithuanian capital of Vilnius witnessed something unusual on April 23. Despite the coronavirus pandemic, the area filled with cars, and out of one spilled high-ranking Lithuanian officials, including Foreign Minister Linas Linkevicius. Careful to observe social distancing, they all joined Israeli Ambassador to Lithuania Yossi Levy near one of the headstones to mark the 300th anniversary of the birth of the great Torah scholar Rabbi Eliyahu Ben Shlomo Zalman, better known as the Vilna Gaon.

The Vilna Gaon was born on April 23, 1720, in the village of Selz in modern-day Belarus. Whenhe was living, Vilnius, known as the "Jerusalem of Lithuania" was anything but Lithuanian, and home mostly to Poles and Jews. The Holocaust changed that forever.

Although the now-independent Lithuania is home to only a tiny Jewish population, the locals try to remember the rabbi, who helped make their capital famous throughout the Jewish world. One of the streets in the old city of Vilnius has been renamed after the rabbi. In 1997, a statue of him was erected in what used to be the city's Jewish quarter.

The Vilna Gaon lived near the city's great synagogue, which was later badly damaged in World War II and completely destroyed by the Soviets. Still, much of the area remains as it was during his life. The nation's Jewish museum is named after the Vilna Gaon, and another site in Vilnius linked to the rabbi is the Widow and Brothers Romm print shop, which published the first version of the Talmud with the Gaon's commentary.

Ironically, the first version of the statue to commemorate the great scholar portrayed him withoutany head covering, an error that was later fixed. Although there are many images of the rabbi, no one knows what he really looked like, as all 11 "portraits" were painted long after his death.

The Vilna Gaon monument, Vilnius (Ariel Bulshtein)

The 300th anniversary of the Gaon's birth inspired decision-makers to step up their efforts to commemorate his life. The Lithuanian Parliament declared 2020 the Year of the Vilna Gaon and the Year of Jewish History. But even before 2020, Lithuanian authorities sought to have the Gaon's manuscripts included in UNESCO's Memory of the World Programme. The Lithuanian Central Bank issued a special commemorative coin to mark the celebrations of his birth and legacy.

The celebration scheduled originally included nearly 70 separate events, but coronavirus upended everything. An international conference on Jewish study and intellectualism in Lithuania from the 18th to 20th centuries has been postponed until October, and possibly to next year.

The Vilna Gaon himself would probably wonder, and maybe be dismayed, if he knew the honors being heaped upon him in his homeland, which since his lifetime has been nearly emptied of its Jewish population. He was noted for scholarship and modesty, so much so that he consistently refused an official position with the local rabbinate, as the job would have disrupted his studies.

His sons said he never slept more than two hours a day, divided into four half-hour parts. It's hard to imagine him making time for the "nonsense" of national honors.

The unusual interest in the great scholar's life seems quite appropriate to Lithuanian Ambassador to Israel Lina Antanaviien. "The Jews were an inseparable part of society in Lithuania from the days of the great duchy in the 14th century," Antanaviien said.

"The Jewish community made an important contribution to the rise of Lithuania, its history, culture, and science. We see the 300th anniversary of the Gaon's birth an opportunity to promote knowledge of the history of Jews in our country, and improve and preserve their legacy and invest more in keeping that legacy alive. In the broader sense, this is an opportunity for the Lithuanian people and for the entire world to learn more about the achievements of Jews who were born in our country and lived and created for our country, and to be proud of them," the ambassador said.

The Lithuanians' desire to show pride in a spiritual authority who was active in their capital city is worthy of praise, but it is a challenge. The Vilna Gaon's work, his thinking, rulings, and innovations to the Talmud and the Kabbala are not immediately comprehensible to anyone who is not familiar with Jewish texts, and virtually inaccessible to anyone who does not read Hebrew. And without the content, the Vilna Gaon could be reduced to a folkloric figure, as happened with Judah Loew ben Bezalel of Prague, whom residents and visitors associate with the famous legend of the Golom.

The organizers of the year of events honoring the Vilna Gaon will try to bridge knowledge gaps with an exhibition titled "The Years of Eliyahu," which is scheduled to open in October at the National Library of Lithuania and will focus on the rabbi's enormous influence on Judaism. State authorities plan to borrow the famous notebook from the Gaon's own synagogue, which is currently preserved at the Yiddish Scientific Institute in New York, for the exhibit.

The Lithuanian national broadcast company is making a special effort to bring the Vilna Gaon's work to the general public. A special radio program devoted to the Gaon shared some of his pearls of wisdom with listeners, and stressed his critical approach as well as his broad familiarity with general subjects like mathematics and astronomy. The Gaon wrote a book on the sciences, and was also knowledgeable about engineering, biology, geography, linguistics, and music.

The broadcast underscored the Gaon's importance as a spiritual authority not only to the Jewish people, and shared a piece of his practical advice: "Today, this teaching from the Vilna Gaon is important to us. If a person desires to understand something, he must follow three rules: to look at what he is shown, to hear what he is told, and to feel all this in his heart."

Ambassador Antanaviciene agreed that the legacy of the Vilna Gaon includes universal messages. "The Vilna Gaon's philosophy is as relevant in the changing world of today as it was in the 18th century. Living in a community, while developing independent thought and aspiring to make positive changes in society that teaches us an important lesson about the development of modern democracy in Lithuania," she said.

This article originally appeared on Israel HaYom

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The Year of the Vilna Gaon - Aish

Unprecedented Aliyah Wave from the US. 12 Apartments Sold in Ramat Givat Zeev in Just One Week – Yeshiva World News

Posted By on July 1, 2020

Recent events throughout the United States have led to record-breaking interest in Aliyah among Jewish communities. Real estate entrepreneurs in Israel are noting that the huge demand greatly outweighs supply, considering the sheer numbers of potential buyers who are specifically interested in making Aliyah.

The Kass Group, one of Israels leading real estate companies, said they received over 100 inquiries this past Wednesday alone, and more than 500 by the weeks end, causing their phone system to collapse under the pressure.

The Kass Group is building the prestigious Ramat Givat Zeev neighborhood, designated specifically for families ofOlim. Due to its large percentage of English-speaking families, as well as the combination of families from a variety of backgrounds, Ramat Givat Zeev is recommended as one of the prime neighborhoods where newOlimcan experience a smooth landing.

Other clear advantages include schools which were established to suit children ofOlim(including a girls school and a Talmud Torah for boys), many spacious parks, the shopping area (which will include a supermarket, pizza shop, deli store, dry cleaning, and many more businesses that will provide essential goods and services), as well as a number of shuls with varyingnusachimand a luxurious mikveh. Amenities were planned to be as similar as possible to those in upscale American neighborhoods in the United States

Real estate experts predict that within a year, Israel will face a severe housing shortage. Considering the already existing shortage, the estimated number of families intending to make Aliyah during this time (approximately 100,000), along with the fact that COVID-19 has stopped many of the construction launches in Israel, experts predict a significant increase in real estate prices in Israel, perhaps by tens of percentage points. For those still hesitating, its highly recommended to make a move sooner than later.

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Unprecedented Aliyah Wave from the US. 12 Apartments Sold in Ramat Givat Zeev in Just One Week - Yeshiva World News

What’s next for social ad spend as one third of brands plot hate-speech boycott? – The Drum

Posted By on July 1, 2020

As brands continue to add their name to the growing list of companies boycotting Facebook, fresh research from the World Federation of Advertisers (WFA) has painted a sobering picture of how marketers view the social network and its rivals.

Volkswagen and Mars are the latest corporations to halt ad spend with Facebook over its handling of damaging content and misinformation. The car marque and food giant join Levi's, Coca-Cola, Unilever and more in signing up to the 'Stop Profit for Hate campaign' which is backed by civil rights groups including the NAACP, Color of Change and the Anti-Defamation League.

The coalition has been calling on major corporations to put a pause on advertising on Facebook for the month of July, citing its "repeated failure to meaningfully address the vast proliferation of hate on its platforms".

Some brands have gone further, pulling the plug on all investment for the foreseeable future across all social networks.

The WFA's research has revealed a diminishing faith in not only Facebook, but also its bedfellows, to address the issue at hand.

The WFA's members control nearly $100bn in global ad spend. Following the news of the Facebook boycott, the trade body asked members about their policies on social media ad spend. 76 responded, representing 58 companies and $92bn in marketing dollars.

Almost one-third of these marketers (31%) said they will, or are likely to, suspend advertising on social media over platforms' failure to police hate speech. A further 40% said they were also considering doing so.

17% said they were unlikely to withhold spend. 12% said they had no plans to withhold spend.

Brands were also asked which other actions they'd taken or had considered. 53% said they'd already had direct conversations with social platforms about hate speech. 48% said their main approach was to work through industry bodies to deal with the issue. 32% said they weren't taking action for now and 13% said they were taking other actions.

If anything, the survey shows how divided the industry is on how to handle the issue. Some brands are set on pulling spend, where others remain undecided.

The WFA also released some anonymised qualitative responses as part of the research. Again, these are a mixed bag: one marketer laments that it's "simply depressing" how much the platforms are still falling short and says they would "appreciate support with identifying and viable alternatives for investments".

Another pointed out that neither the platforms nor the advertisers propping them up are perfect: "Advertisers may pull out of these platforms," the brand marketer continues, "but consumers will not.

Hate speech and how brands inadvertently fund it is an issue that has been on the WFA's radar for some time. Working with social networks to find a solution to the problem is already being prioritised by the trade body's Global Alliance for Responsible Media (GARM).

For its part, Facebook has promised new policies to connect people with authoritative information about voting, crack down on voter suppression, and fight hate speech.

Actions include labelling posts that are potentially harmful and even in violation of the platform's policies but are not censored by the platform because they are deemed newsworthy.

Facebook will also add a link to its voting information centre to posts that reference voting, including those made by politicians such as President Trump.

Speaking to the Financial Times earlier this week, chief executive of the WFA Stephen Loerke noted how this moment feels like a turning point amid the pressure of the 'Stop Hate for Profit' campaign.

Whats striking is the number of brands who are saying they are reassessing their longer-term media allocation strategies and demanding structural changes in the way platforms address racial intolerance, hate speech and harmful content, he explained.

The magnitude of the brand exodus wont really be clear until Facebook releases its Q3 results in October.

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What's next for social ad spend as one third of brands plot hate-speech boycott? - The Drum

Dozens of Retailers to Pull Facebook Ads in Boycott Starting Today – Total Retail

Posted By on July 1, 2020

Last week, we reported that Patagoniawas the latest company to join other retailers such asREI and The North Face in a boycott of Facebook and Instagram advertising for the month of July. Today, July 1, dozens of companies begin boycotting the social network after a civil rights coalition, which includes the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and the NAACP, launched the #StopHateforProfit campaign and called on corporations to put a pause on advertising on Facebook, citing the company's "repeated failure to meaningfully address the vast proliferation of hate on its platforms."

The campaign's primary objective is to stop online hate and racism by asking social media giants like Facebook to adopt new features that curb such behavior. The list ofretailers and brands participating in the boycott includes Coca-Cola, Adidas, Starbucks, Ben & Jerry's, Clorox, Levi Strauss, Unilever, and many more, according to CNN. Last week,FacebookCEO Mark Zuckerberg said the company will change its policies to prohibit hate speech in its advertisements, reports CNBC. However, that isn't satisfying many who are calling for more action.

Total Retail's Take:As the old adage says, money talks. As the #StopHateforProfit campaign grows, we've already seen reports of Zuckerberg's $7.2 billion net worth lossfrom the halt in Facebook and Instagram advertising, and shares of the social media company fell 8.3 percent last Friday. That equates to an elimination of$56 billion from Facebooks market value, according to Bloomberg,and the month of July has only just begun. The civil rights coalition that called for the boycott has certainly succeeded in getting Facebook's attention, and now will wait not-so-patiently for the social network to answer to its demands toaddress racism across its platforms.

However, from a retailer's perspective, how can companies give up an entire month's worth of social media advertising, which has proven to drive purchasing? Levis Strauss CMO Jen Sey said in a statement, "We will suspend advertising at least through the end of July. When we re-engage will depend on Facebooks response."

This signals that some larger brands are looking to hold off on advertising with Facebook indefinitely until they're satisfied with the social network's actions. However, the retailers participating in the#StopHateforProfit campaign haven't stated how they plan to make up for the lost revenue generated from social advertising, as well as they're adjusting their marketing strategies to compensate. A logical guess would be to move ad spend from Facebook and Instagram to other popular social media platforms, such as Tik Tok and Snapchat. We'll be keeping close watch through July as Facebook responds to the boycott, and retailers evaluate other ways to drive sales without advertising with the social media company.

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Dozens of Retailers to Pull Facebook Ads in Boycott Starting Today - Total Retail

Students, parents want Nazi reference removed from High Tech High School 2020 yearbook; board says probe un – nj.com

Posted By on July 1, 2020

The administration at High Tech High School has launched an investigation after students and parents at the Secaucus school claimed a senior used a commonly recognized anti-Semitic, white supremacist hate symbol as his yearbook quote.

An online petition demanding that the Board of Education acknowledge and apologize for the incident and help distribute replacement yearbook pages has gained more than 400 signatures since it was created Monday.

On a page of quotes that students chose to represent themselves in the 2020 yearbook, one student chose 88, a number that the Anti-Defamation League calls one of the most common white supremacist symbols. The group says its a numerical code 8 standing for H, the eighth letter in the alphabet for Heil Hitler.

The entire Hudson County Schools of Technology community prides itself on being an open and welcoming learning environment where students of all backgrounds can feel comfortable and supported, said Amy Lin-Rodriguez, superintendent of the Hudson County Schools of Technology. Recently, an issue was brought to our attention by concerned parents regarding the High Tech High School yearbook.

Pursuant to district policy and state law, we have opened an investigation into the situation that is being conducted by our District Harassment, Intimidation and Bullying (HIB) Coordinator, (who) is a district level administrator. State law precludes the district from commenting on the matter any further until that investigation is completed.

The students and parents who created the petition said they first directly contacted the school board and superintendent, urging them to publicly address the issue and send out new versions of the yearbook page. After simply being told that the district had opened an investigation, the group started the petition.

The yearbooks represent the graduates high school years and how they will remember where they grew up, the group said. We dont want the yearbook to have Nazi numerology in it. Our diverse school is supposed to be better than that. We want to be able to look back on this and be glad that the adults in charge did something to fix it and stand up to hate.

Many petitioners commented, some saying they are alumni and disappointed to see that the administration let the senior quote make it into publication.

One commenter, Daphne Anshel, said her profession gave her insight into how the incident could affect the community.

As a child psychologist, I know the impact of implicit acceptance of racist hateful discourse, she said.

Read more:
Students, parents want Nazi reference removed from High Tech High School 2020 yearbook; board says probe un - nj.com

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are reportedly supporting Facebook advertising boycott – Tatler

Posted By on July 1, 2020

The Duchess and Duke of Sussex

Chris Jackson / Getty Images

As keen philanthropists and campaigners for social justice causes from female education to climate change the Duke and Duchess of Sussex are no doubt invested in holding powerful corporations accountable for their ethical decisions. And now it seems that Facebook has become an object of the couples efforts, following new reports that they are seeking to target firms to help a Facebook boycott.

The Times reports that Prince Harry and Meghan asked the organisers of an advertising boycott against Facebook which brands they could help target. The couple are said to have offered their support to the Stop Hate for Profit campaign last weekend, seeking to aid them in calling for the urgent and pressing need for reform and advocating structural changes to the online world.

The initiatives website explains that the campaign is asking all businesses to stand in solidarity with our most deeply held American values of freedom, equality and justice and not advertise on Facebooks services [Facebook and its sister site Instagram] in July. The call comes after Facebook allowed incitement to violence against protesters fighting for racial justice in America in the wake of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade, Ahmaud Arbery, Rayshard Brooks and so many others, following Facebooks apparent endorsement of output from publications that have records of working with known white nationalists.

Mark Zuckerberg

BERTRAND GUAY / AFP via Getty Images

Stop Hate for Profit alleges that Facebook turned a blind eye to blatant voter suppression on their platform, failed to protect and support Black users, to call out Holocaust denial as hate or to help get out the vote. Because 99% of Facebooks $70 billion is made through advertising, the initiative is calling on advertisers to send Facebook a powerful message: Your profits will never be worth promoting hate, bigotry, racism, antisemitism and violence. The Times reports that the campaign has attracted the support of over 160 brands, including major names like Coca-Cola, Levis, Diageo and Unilever.

Common Sense Media is a charity that promotes safe technology and media for children and one of the organisations behind the campaign. Its CEO and Founder Jim Steyer told the Times that the Duke and Duchess of Sussex had reached out to him over email to ask how they could help. Professor Steyer, who teaches about civil rights and civil liberties at Stanford University, stated: Harry and Meghan, they came to us. They endorsed Stop Hate for Profit. They wrote to me saying: Which companies can we help target? They have jumped on board. They reached out to us personally and said we want to be part of this movement... they are outspoken advocates of Stop Hate for Profit and we appreciate that.

As well as Common Sense Media, fellow partners organising the Stop Hate for Profit campaign include US-based civil rights groups such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Color of Change and the Anti-Defamation League.

The Times alleges that one strand of Harry and Meghans forthcoming charitable foundation, Archewell, will be addressing online hate speech, according to an unnamed source. Professor Steyer added: We are gratified that they have spoken out. This is a multiracial couple that has dealt with hate speech and racist statements, so the fact they want to be part of the Stop Hate for Profit movement is terrific, and now they are thinking of their own kids.

The Duke and Duchess reportedly declined to comment when contacted by the paper.

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The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are reportedly supporting Facebook advertising boycott - Tatler

Facebook boycott: View the list of companies pulling ads – CNN

Posted By on July 1, 2020

A civil rights coalition, which includes the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and the NAACP, launched the #StopHateforProfit campaign last week when it called on major corporations to put a pause on advertising on Facebook, citing the company's "repeated failure to meaningfully address the vast proliferation of hate on its platforms."

Within days, outdoor retailers REI, The North Face, and Patagonia said they were in. Other companies, including Upwork and Dashlane, have joined too.

Other companies including Adidas and Clorox are pulling ads, though have not said they are formally joining the campaign.

In a statement to CNN on Friday, Carolyn Everson, vice president of Facebook's global business group, responded by saying, "We deeply respect any brand's decision and remain focused on the important work of removing hate speech and providing critical voting information. Our conversations with marketers and civil rights organizations are about how, together, we can be a force for good."

Adidas

The sportswear company Adidas said Monday it is pausing advertising on Facebook and Instagram on a global basis, becoming yet another major brand to put pressure on the social media giant.

"Racist, discriminatory, and hateful online content have no place in our brand or in society," the company said in a statement. "As we focus on better practices within our company and communities to ensure lasting change in the fight against racism, Adidas and Reebok will also pause advertising on Facebook and Instagram globally throughout July."

Adidas, which also owns Reebok, added: "Over the next 30 days we will develop criteria to hold ourselves and every one of our partners accountable for creating and maintaining safe environments."

The company did not say it was formally joining the #StopHateForProfit advertiser boycott, which is being organized by civil rights groups.

Arc'teryx

The outdoor apparel brand added that it will be donating the money it would have spent on Facebook and Instagram ads toward "building more inclusive outdoors."

Ben & Jerry's

"We call on Facebook, Inc. to take the clear and unequivocal actions called for by the campaign to stop its platform from being used to spread and amplify racism and hate."

Beam Suntory

Beam Suntory the company behind Jim Beam, Maker's Mark and other spirits said on June 28 that it will join the #StopHateForProfit boycott of Facebook.

In a statement, Beam Suntory said it will pause all Facebook and Instagram advertising for the month of July and hinted it could last longer.

"We stand up for what's right, and we stand with all who are committed to the fight against hate speech, racism and prejudice," the statement said. "We hope this collective action helps catalyze positive change and accountability, and we will evaluate our advertising approach beyond July as we await Facebook's response."

Birchbox

Birchbox, the monthly beauty box subscription, said on June 26 it is joining the advertising boycott against Facebook.

The company said that instead of spending on Facebook and Instagram in July, it would be reallocating its ad dollars toward "other platforms and to support more individual content creators."

Blue Bottle Coffee

"We stand with the Anti-Defamation League, the NAACP, Color of Change, and many more organizations and brands to call on Facebook and its platforms to do more to prevent hate speech, incitement and misinformation," the company said. "While the leadership of Facebook has made some changes, we support Stop Hate for Profit's call for continued action by Mark Zuckerberg to meet the full demands of the campaign."

Blue Shield of California

Blue Shield of California said it would join the campaign organized by civil rights groups and said it would donate the unused money to a social justice non-profit.

"Blue Shield of California stands against injustice and stands for equity. We are committed to using our voice, influence and power to inspire change. And this is one way we can do that," Blue Shield of California said in a statement to employees that was also posted to its website.

Chobani

Yogurt maker Chobani said Monday it is joining the #StopHateForProfit ad boycott of Facebook and pausing all paid advertising on social media.

"Action over advertising," the company said in a tweet. "We've always stood against hate & bigotry and it is our duty to help change these platforms."

Clorox

Clorox said Monday it will pause advertising on Facebook and Instagram through the end of the year.

In a statement on its website, Clorox predicted an increase in hate speech "through the balance of the year."

Clorox, whose brands include Pine-Sol, Glad, Tilex and other cleaning and household products, said it would reallocate its ad spend to other media.

"We will continue to monitor this situation and revisit our position as needed," it said. "In the meantime, we will evolve our standards and guidelines for progress for all platforms and publishers to reflect our rising expectations for greater responsibility as these channels continue to become a more important part of people's lives."

Clorox did not say it was formally joining the #StopHateForProfit campaign.

Coca-Cola

Coca-Cola is pausing all social media advertising, not just on Facebook, "for at least 30 days" beginning in July, the company said on June 26.

Dashlane

Dashlane, which is a password manager, has committed to pulling advertisements for at least the month of July, Joy Howard, the company's CMO, said in a blog post via the company's website on June 22.

Howard hinted that the boycott could extend beyond that.

Howard has called on CMOs from other tech companies to join the boycott.

Denny's

Denny's, the popular diner-style restaurant chain, said on June 29 that it is also joining the boycott and will pause all paid advertising on Facebook starting July 1.

"As America's Diner, we offer an inclusive and welcoming environment where all people can enjoy a nice meal and we strongly oppose hate speech of any kind. It is our belief that Facebook has not done enough to address this important issue on its platform and we are calling on Facebook to make positive changes to its process for combatting hate speech and disinformation," Denny's said in a statement.

As of now, Denny's will pause ads on Facebook for the entire month of July, a spokeswoman for the company told CNN.

Diageo

"We will continue to discuss with media partners how they will deal with unacceptable content," the tweet said.

Eddie Bauer

The company did not indicate, as some others have, whether their suspension could last longer.

Eileen Fisher

Ford

Ford said Monday it is pausing "all national social media advertising for the next 30 days" amid a wider advertiser backlash against Facebook.

"The existence of content that includes hate speech, violence and racial injustice on social platforms needs to be eradicated," Ford said in a statement Monday. "We are actively engaged with industry initiatives led by the Association of National Advertisers to drive more accountability, transparency and trusted measurement to clean up the digital and social media ecosystem."

This marks the second major automaker to pull back on digital advertising in June following Honda's US division's decision last Friday.

Hershey's

The candy company announced on June 26 it is joining the boycott, even after Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg took to a public livestream that day to meet the public backlash.

In addition to joining the monthlong pause in July from Facebook advertising, the company said it will "cut our spending on Facebook and their platforms, including Instagram, by a third for the remainder of the year."

"We do not believe that Facebook is effectively managing violent and divisive speech on their platform," the company said. "Despite repeated assertions by Facebook to take action, we have not seen meaningful change. Earlier this month we communicated to Facebook that we were unhappy with their stance on hate speech. ... We are hopeful that Facebook will take action and make it a safe space for our consumers to communicate and gather. As a company, we stand for the values of togetherness and inclusion and we are resolute in our commitment to make a difference and be part of positive change."

Honda

The automaker's US division said on June 26 it will join the boycott, pulling its marketing from Facebook and Instagram.

The decision marks the first car manufacturer to sign onto the campaign.

"For the month of July, American Honda will withhold its advertising on Facebook and Instagram, choosing to stand with people united against hate and racism," the company said in a statement. "This is inalignment with our company's values, which are grounded in human respect."

On Tuesday, Honda-owned Acura said it's pausing advertising on Facebook and Instagram, though the company did not say it was joining the #StopHateForProfit campaign.

HP

The technology giant HP said Monday it is suspending its advertising on Facebook and warned that other social media platforms could soon see similar decisions.

"We have expressed deep concerns to Facebook and are stopping U.S. advertising on the platform until we see more robust safeguards in place," the company said. "We are also reviewing our social media strategy across all markets and platforms, and we will take additional actions as needed to protect our brand and combat hateful content."

HP was Facebook's 80th-largest advertiser last year, according to Pathmatics, a market intelligence firm. The company spent an estimated $24.7 million on Facebook ads in 2019 alone.

HP did not indicate it was joining the #StopHateForProfit campaign.

JanSport

Known for its iconic brand of backpacks, JanSport announced on June 26 it would no longer advertise with Facebook and Instagram for the month of July.

It is the second brand owned by VF Corp. to sign onto the #StopHateForProfit campaign, a week after The North Face also announced it would pull ads from Facebook and Instagram.

Lego

Lego said it would suspend its social media advertising globally in July, though it did not say it was joining the #StopHateForProfit campaign.

In a statement, the Lego Chief Marketing Officer Julia Goldin said: "We are committed to having a positive impact on children and the world they will inherit. That includes contributing to a positive, inclusive digital environment free from hate speech, discrimination and misinformation."

The company said it will reallocate its social media ad spend to other platforms. It added that during the pause, it will review the standards it applies to social media advertising.

Levi Strauss

The apparel company behind the Levi's and Dockers brands announced June 26 it would pause all ads on Facebook and Instagram as part of the campaign.

Magnolia Pictures

Magnolia Pictures become the first Hollywood studio to join the boycott against Facebook on June 23.

The studio behind films such as "Food, Inc." and "Man on Wire" said it would stop advertising on Facebook and Instagram immediately through at least the end of July.

MassMutual

The life insurance company MassMutual said on Twitter it will pause "all of our organic and paid Facebook and Instagram marketing for the month of July."

"Anything less would be inconsistent with our values and purpose as a company," said Jennifer Halloran, the company's head of marketing.

Microsoft

Microsoft halted its advertising on Facebook and Instagram in May, and since then has expanded that moratorium to include Facebook's platforms worldwide, according to a top executive.

The revelation shows how Facebook lost one of its biggest advertisers weeks before the boycott began.

In 2019, Microsoft was Facebook's third-largest advertiser after Home Depot and Walmart, spending nearly $116 million on the platform, according to Pathmatics, a market intelligence firm.

Chris Capossela, Microsoft's chief marketing officer, wrote in a recent internal messaging post that while the company's pullback from Facebook is not a part of any boycott initiative, Microsoft's decision could "continue through August."

"Based on concerns we had back in May we suspended all media spending on Facebook/Instagram in the US and we've subsequently suspended all spending on Facebook/Instagram worldwide," Capossela wrote.

Capossela's post was first reported by Axios, and confirmed by a Microsoft spokesperson, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal communications.

According to Capossela's post, Microsoft's decision is being driven by brand safety concerns about its advertisements showing up beside content such as hate speech and terrorist material. CNN has reported that brand safety issues are a likely factor in many brands' decision making about whether to suspend advertising on social platforms such as Facebook.

Patagonia

Patagonia, another outdoor apparel brand, pulled advertising on Facebook and Instagram on June 21 as part of the boycott.

"As companies across the country work hard to ensure that Americans have access to free and fair elections this fall, we can't stand by and contribute resources to companies that contribute to the problem."

The company said it stands with the campaign and that the social media network's profits is never "worth promoting hate, bigotry, racism, antisemitism and violence."

Patreon

The crowdfunding website Patreon said on June 29 it is joining an advertising boycott of Facebook.

The company, whose platform raises money for online content creators, said in a tweet it's pausing all ads on Facebook and Instagram "effective immediately."

"At Patreon, we believe in building safe communities for creators and their fans, which means we do not tolerate hate speech of any kind," Patreon said in a tweet. "We encourage our industry peers to do the same by stopping the monetization of hate based on race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, age, medical conditions or disability."

Pfizer

Pfizer said Monday it is joining the #StopHateForProfit campaign to boycott Facebook's advertising platform.

Link:
Facebook boycott: View the list of companies pulling ads - CNN


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