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New rabbi in Long Beach brings challah bread and other food to charm the hearts of congregants – liherald.com

Posted By on June 28, 2020

The very night Rebecca Novick and her husband, Avi, settled into their new home in Long Beach a little more than a week ago, they received a welcoming they did not expect: the young new rabbi in Long Beach, Benny Berlin, was at their front door with a traditional Shabbat dinner of chicken and pasta.

"It was really good," said Rebecca, a 32-year-old occupational therapist. "We were so touched by how warm and welcoming it all was.

Since, the Novicks' have decided to join the rabbi's synagogue, the Bach Jewish Center, on Edwards Boulevard. The visit is part of Berlin's strategy to broaden membership in synagogues.

"It was important," Berlin, 30, the former rabbi at Queens College, said last week, of his food delivery to the Novicks. "This kind of thing brings a feeling of home. When you bring a basket of food to someone, you are bringing the shul to their home. Berlin has also brought challah bread to the homes of other congregants.

Berlin took over the Bach Jewish Center June 1, and already the Novicks and one other couple have joined the 200-family congregation. Berlin said he sees his mission, and that of Bach Jewish Center, as focusing on attracting the young and young couples to worship. Avi Novick, a 33-year, is studying neurology. The Novicks have two young children.

The path Berlin took to the pulpit began on a trip he took to Israel while a college student. "I would say that was inspirational," he said of his tour of the Holy Land.

When he returned to Queens, Berlin began teaching Torah courses. His father owned a sushi restaurant, and would give his son a plate of sushi to take to his Torah students.

Bach Jewish Center was founded in 1946 and welcomes Orthodox, Coinservative and Reform Jews. The synagogue's focus is on youth and directing young people to follow Torah and live a Jewish life.

The Center says it wants young people to "embrace our rich Jewish heritage and gain the skills and self-confidence they need to become leaders of both the Jewish community and society at large."

The center has been holding services outdoors to protect worshippers from the coronavirus. They are six-feet apart.

"You can't ask for better ventilation," Berlin said.

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New rabbi in Long Beach brings challah bread and other food to charm the hearts of congregants - liherald.com

The Evolution of All-American Terrorism – Reveal

Posted By on June 28, 2020

Speaker 1:Reveal is supported by Everlane. When you're staying at home for an extended period of time, 24/7 pajamas just won't cut it. Look and feel great at home with our comfortable, affordable, modern basics, like the organic cotton t-shirt and Perform legging. And right now, their popular 100% Human collection is donating all proceeds to Feeding America's COVID-19 Response Fund. Check out our collection at everlane.com/reveal, plus you'll get free shipping on your first order. That's everlane.com/reveal, everlane.com/reveal.Al Letson:From the Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX, this is Reveal. I'm Al Letson.Audio:Say his name!Audio:George Floyd!Audio:Say his name!Audio:George Floyd!Audio:Say his name!Audio:George Floyd!Al Letson:Over the past month, protests have helped give unprecedented attention to the issue of police brutality. But right-wing extremist are also trying to seize the moment. At a Black Lives Matter rally in Richmond, Virginia, a man claiming to be a KKK leader drove his truck into a group of protestors. In Oakland, a California man who follows the online boogaloo movement allegedly shot and killed a federal security officer.Megan Squire:They want to kick off chaos. They want to start the race war and so they're always waiting for some chaotic event to happen that'll help them kick this off.Al Letson:Megan Squire is a computer scientist who studies online extremism at Elon University in North Carolina. She's seen first hand how the recent wave of protests and counter-protests can get out of control. Someone protesting the removal of Confederate monuments recently punched her in the face. Megan says right-wing extremists are using what's in the news to spread their message.Megan Squire:They track pretty closely to whatever the news headlines are. And then what they do is provide their racist, anti-Semitic, fill-in-the-blank spin on that news.David Neiwert:All of these belief systems are like big funnels. They have a variety of ways of recruiting people into them.Al Letson:That's David Neiwert, a reporter with the non-profit newsroom Type Investigations. A few years ago, Reveal teamed up with Type to track every single domestic terror event from 2008 to 2016. It showed that law enforcement was focused on extremists acting in the name of Islam, but homegrown right-wing terror was a bigger threat by a nearly two-to-one margin.David Neiwert:We were trying to make the point that really right-wing extremism is the much bigger problem than Islamist extremism and that the government needs to be paying attention to it.Al Letson:Now we've updated the database to include attacks from 2017 to 2019. We found that white extremist terror has grown and become more lethal, responsible for almost the same number of deaths during the first three years of the Trump presidency as during all of the Obama years. Though right-wing extremists appear to target different groups, many are driven by the same ideology.David Neiwert:There's a very specific stripe of white nationalism that we're seeing run through, especially these more recent mass killings.Al Letson:Today we're going to connect the dots and show how one act of terror inspires another, thanks to online platforms, and we'll ask why law enforcement is still struggling to catch up. Reveal reporters Stan Alcorn and Priska Neely have been digging into this for months. Priska starts us off with a story of a man who witnessed the deadliest domestic terror attack from last year.Priska Neely:Guillermo Glenn is well-known in El Paso's Mexican-American community. He's 70 now and he's been a community organizer and labor rights activist for most of his life.Guillermo Glenn:We conducted a lot of protests. We blocked a bridge. We went to jail.Priska Neely:On August 3, 2019, he was just going about his weekend routine.Guillermo Glenn:It was a Saturday morning and around 10:00, so I had gone to Walmart to buy some pet food. I was way in the back and I heard this great big noise.Priska Neely:A warning: Guillermo is going to share graphic details about what happened that day.Guillermo Glenn:A large number of families, women and men were running towards me from the front of the building. Then I noticed at least one of the women was dripping blood. I said, "Well, there's something really wrong." I ran into the woman who was ... She had both her legs had received some type either shrapnel or bullet wounds and she was bleeding.Guillermo Glenn:So I stopped there to help her and I grabbed a first-aid kit and tried to at least tend to her wounds in her legs. One of the firemen or paramedic came and told, "You have to get her out. We're getting everybody out of the store." So we put her in one of those grocery baskets.Priska Neely:When he wheeled the woman to the front, he saw what had happened.Guillermo Glenn:Right at the front door there was a lot of blood. I knew then that there'd been a shooter. It was a very traumatic scene. I saw a body of a man with half his head shot off. There was a lady laying on the pavement across from where we were loading the people. I didn't know exactly who he'd taken out, but I didn't have that information that he was actually shooting Mexicans.Priska Neely:The suspected gunman, 21-year-old Patrick Crusius, drove roughly 10 hours from outside Dallas to the El Paso Walmart right near the Mexican border. Police say he opened fire. 23 people were killed and many were wounded. Then he drove off.Audio:... news, minutes later, Patrick Crusius stopped his car at an intersection near the Walmart. He came out with his hands raised in the air and stated out loud to the Texas Rangers, "I'm the shooter."Priska Neely:He's facing 90 federal charges, including 45 hate crimes. After Guillermo witnessed what happened that day, he got in his car and went to the restaurant where his friends always gather on Saturdays.Guillermo Glenn:Several of my friends came up and hugged me and say to, "Oh, you're okay. We're so glad. We've been looking for you. We thought you might be there." Then they showed me the manifesto.Priska Neely:The manifesto. Minutes before the attack, the shooter had posted a document filled with anti-immigrant rhetoric to the online message board 8chan. Some of Guillermo's friends showed him a copy.Guillermo Glenn:So I sat down. I had some food, had some my regular Saturday menudo. Then I finally realized what had happened, after I read the manifesto.Priska Neely:The Crusius manifesto reads kind of like a corporate web site. It has an About Me section and parts where he outlines his warped vision for America. He matter of factly explains how his attack will preserve a world where white people have the political and economic power. He says peaceful means will no longer achieve his goal.Priska Neely:Reporter David Neiwert says this alleged shooter is the quintessential Trump-era terrorist, a man largely radicalized online, entrenched in white nationalist ideology, and fueled by the belief that white men like himself are being replaced by Latino immigrants. Crusius wrote that the media would blame President Trump for inspiring him, but he claimed that his ideas predated the Trump campaign. Here's David:David Neiwert:Patrick Crusius especially was so filled with loathing for Latino people that he didn't see them as human.Priska Neely:When David reads the manifesto, he can immediately see the fingerprints of other white nationalists.David Neiwert:Here's how Crusius opens his manifesto: "In general, I support the Christchurch shooter and his manifesto. This attack is a response to the Hispanic invasion of Texas. They are the instigators, not me. I am simply defending my country from cultural and ethnic replacement brought on by an invasion."Priska Neely:That opening line is a direct signal back to a previous act of terrorism, the shooter who killed 51 people at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand just months before. David says this is part of a trend. One terrorist inspires another and the cycle continues. Guillermo says he didn't understand all of the references at first, but it was clear to him that the manifesto had ties to a larger movement.Guillermo Glenn:I think he was trying to show that somebody had to take action and that really angered me at that point. Why would somebody come and shoot innocent people like that?Priska Neely:David say Crusius started doing online research because of the anger he felt over how the country was changing demographically.David Neiwert:But in the process of doing this research, he came across multiple white genocide theories, including the Great Replacement.Priska Neely:The Great Replacement, or replacement theory, unites many acts of hate that we see across the country, around the world.David Neiwert:That's this idea that comes of white nationalism that white Europeans face a global genocide at the hands of brown people and that they're being slowly rubbed out of existence.Priska Neely:Only a few terrorists in recent years have referenced replacement theory by name, but it's widely popular among right-wing extremists. It's linked to ideas that are many decades old, but one attack in Europe showed how those ideas can be weaponized.David Neiwert:Anders Breivik's terrorism attack in Oslo and Utya Island, Norway in 2011.Priska Neely:Breivik killed 77 people in a bombing and mass shooting. Before the attack, he sent out a 1,500-page manifesto about how he planned to lead white supremacists on a crusade against the, quote, "Islamification of Europe." Around the same time, a French writer named Renaud Camus refined and popularized the ideology in book. The title translates to The Great Replacement.David Neiwert:The Great Replacement essentially is this idea that brown people, particularly refugees and immigrants from Arab countries in Europe, are being deliberately brought into the country in order to replace white people as the chief demographic.Priska Neely:And the conspiracy theory claims all this is orchestrated by a cabal of nefarious globalists. That's code for Jews.Audio:You will not replace us!Audio:You will not replace us! You will not replace us! You will not replace us!Priska Neely:In August, 2017, white supremacists in the US took up this concept as a rallying cry at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.Audio:Jews will not replace us! Jews will not replace us!Priska Neely:The next day, a neo-Nazi drove his car into a crowd and killed 32-year-old Heather Heyer. This incident had an immediate impact on the public perception of terrorism, making it clear that white nationalists violence is a serious threat.Audio:Today the nightmare has hit home here in the city of Pittsburgh.Priska Neely:At a Pittsburgh synagogue in 2018, Robert Bowers is accused of killing 11 people.David Neiwert:He went to a Jewish synagogue because he was angry about the Latin-American caravans. The caravans had been in all the news in the weeks prior to that synagogue attack. He blamed Jews and went to a Jewish synagogue to take revenge for Latino immigration.Priska Neely:These are the ideologies that are zigzagging across the globe. In March, 2019, the gunman who live-streamed his mass shooting in Christchurch, New Zealand on Facebook also wrote a manifesto. The title: The Great Replacement. The New Zealand manifesto inspired the El Paso shooter to target the people he felt were replacing him. Recent manifestos and books put a new spin on violent, hateful acts, but David traces these sentiments back much further.David Neiwert:What's remarkable in a lot of ways when I read these manifestos is so many of them are expressing ideas that I read in the 1920s coming from eugenicists. Look, I would even take it back to the 1890s when we first started seeing the wave of lynchings in the South as a form of social control. This is very clearly a form of terrorism.Priska Neely:After the El Paso shooting, activist Guillermo Glenn says white supremacist ideology was barely part of the conversation. There were brief efforts to unite the community against hate, a few events held under the banner, El Paso Strong.Guillermo Glenn:The politicians, the businessmen, the mayor, everybody was pushing this idea that we had to survive, but they weren't really talking about who caused it or why.Priska Neely:Before we talked for this story, Guillermo says he didn't identify as part of this larger group of survivors that includes Jewish and Muslim communities.Guillermo Glenn:You say, well, it's the Jewish people that they attacked, it's the Muslim people that they attacked, and here on the border, of course, it's the Mexican- and Central-Americans. But nobody talks about what does the Great Replacement mean. Nobody put all these incidences together and say, hey, this is something that we should be aware of nationally.Priska Neely:And he says that's part of the failure, part of the reason these attacks keep happening.Al Letson:That story from Reveal's Priska Neely. As we've been saying, these extremist groups are using online communities to spread their messages and find new recruits. When we come back, we'll hear how it works.Josh Bates:It's a conditioning process; it's a grooming process, and I let myself fall into that.Al Letson:The evolution of the white supremacist internet, next on Reveal.Speaker 1:Reveal is supported by True Botanicals. Life is full of tough choices and trade-offs. Your beauty routine, what you put on your body every day shouldn't be one of them. True Botanicals uses the latest scientific advances and centuries-old botanical extracts to create all-natural formulas in their products like their hydrating face cleansers and face oils for aging, breakout-prone and sensitive skin, and nutrient-packed serum. You've got to try True Botanicals for yourself. Get 15% off your first purchase at truebotanicals.com/reveal. That's truebotanicals.com/reveal.Al Letson:From the Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX, this is Reveal. I'm Al Letson. The FBI and academic researchers say there's no such thing as a terrorist profile. You can't tell who's going to become a terrorist with a personality test or a demographic checklist.Al Letson:But the young, white men who attacked the synagogues of Pittsburgh and Poway and the Walmart in El Paso, they had a lot in common. Not only were they motivated by the same conspiracy theory about white people being replaced, they developed those ideas in some of the same spaces online. Two of them even posted their manifestos to the same web site, 8chan.Al Letson:Now, you can't blame today's white supremacist terrorism on the internet, but you also can't understand it without talking about the way the white supremacist movement uses the internet and how that's changed over the last decade. Reveal's Stan Alcorn is going to tell that story through the eyes of a man who lived it. Here's Stan:Stan Alcorn:Josh Bates' decade as a white supremacist started in his mid-twenties with a YouTube video about the presidential candidate he says he supported at the time, Barack Obama.Josh Bates:I was scrolling through the comments section, you know: He's a Muslim, he wasn't born here." Things of that nature. And somebody said, "You guys sound like those Stormfront assholes." I was like, "What in the world is Stormfront?"Stan Alcorn:Stormfront is a message board that a former KKK leader set up in the 90s. Josh says he went there at first because he was curious, then to argue. But then the middle-aged message board neo-Nazis started winning him over. How could they be convincing in these arguments? Can you help me understand that?Josh Bates:Well, I wish I could answer that question because I still ask myself that a lot, how could I end up falling for something like that. But I guess it's probably similar to how we look at people who fall into cults. It's a conditioning process; it's a grooming process and I let myself fall into that.Stan Alcorn:The experts I talked to say that first step is more about the person than what they're stepping into. Josh had just left the Marines, where he used to have a team and a mission. Now all he had was a computer.Shannon Martine...:It's pretty concurrent with a whole lot of people where they felt really deeply disempowered in their lives.Stan Alcorn:Shannon Martinez is a former white supremacist who's helped people, including Josh, leave the movement.Shannon Martine...:So when you encounter information that's presented that this is the real truth, the true truth people don't want you to have because if you did it would be too empowering for you and too disempowering for them, that's an incredibly powerful, toxic drug.Stan Alcorn:That drug, widely available on the internet, is at its heart a conspiracy theory. It says your problems aren't your fault; it's immigrants, black people, Jews.Josh Bates:They talk about, oh, Hollywood and the media and all these Jews that are in these positions of power. When you google that kind of stuff and you see it and you consume it, eventually after a few months you kind of get desensitized to it. Everybody's agreeing with everyone for the most part. You get along. There's that online community. Stormfront was my first one.Stan Alcorn:He didn't know their names, but they were his team now. He'd spend the next 10 years as what he calls "a keyboard warrior" for the white supremacist movement. He'd be there for every step in its evolution, from joining the KKK and the neo-Nazi National Socialist Movement to more diffuse groups and web sites that call themselves "alt-right" and "identitarian." Some of these groups would go to some lengths to appear respectable and say, "We're not racists. We're not Nazis. We're not the KKK."Josh Bates:Mm-hmm (affirmative).Stan Alcorn:Then some of those groups were Nazis; they were the KKK.Josh Bates:Mm-hmm (affirmative).Stan Alcorn:You were in all of them. Does that tell you that the differences between these groups are more about the image and tactics than the core ideas or who they attract?Josh Bates:Absolutely. Absolutely. We'd been using the terms "white nationalism 1.0" and "white nationalism 2.0" for a few years now. And 1.0 is your early groups, Ku Klux Klan. They were the very explicit National Socialist Movement walking around with swastikas on their uniforms and their flags.Josh Bates:Your 2.0 guys, they're your Identity Evropas, where they're dressing in khakis and collared shirts and dock shoes and they've got these nice, cropped haircuts. They call it "good optics." But anybody who was in the early 1.0 movements like myself, I could see right through it. They just put lipstick on a pig. That's all they did.Stan Alcorn:But people who followed the white supremacist movement for decades, like Type Investigations reporter David Neiwert, they say that this alt-right makeover of the old racist right, it was transformative.David Neiwert:That radical right was very backward-looking, very stiff and formal. They didn't have any ... Humor was not part of their repertoire. In fact, their primary recruitment demographic really was men between the ages of 40 and 60. With the advent of the alt-right, what we saw was this very tech-savvy, very agile movement that instead of running away from the culturally-savvy component aspects of the internet, rather embraced them wholly.Stan Alcorn:Instead of writing racist newsletters that people had to sign up for, they were making memes and jokes in places like reddit and 4chan. These forums that celebrated being politically incorrect, they were the perfect place for those ideas to take root, hybridize with other fringe ideas and grow into something that could be shared on more mainstream platforms like Twitter and Facebook.David Neiwert:It was very brilliant because it meant that suddenly their recruitment demographic was much larger and had a lot more political activist energy. They were younger people.Stan Alcorn:And Josh Bates says that energy got a huge boost in 2016 with the rise of a new presidential candidate.Audio:They're bringing drugs, they're bringing crime, they're rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.Josh Bates:Because Trump was spouting off a lot of the same talking points as general white nationalists, he breathed new life into that movement. The thought leaders of the movement just took full advantage, thinking that they could take it even further. And they did.Stan Alcorn:They started to take their ideas into the real world. After Trump's election in 2017, computer scientist Megan Squire set up software to track extremists on Facebook. She'd started out studying the misogynist Gamergate movement, but that had led her to all of these different anti-Muslim and neo-Confederate and white supremacist groups.Megan Squire:At the time, Facebook was a central player if not the central player and it was the place where these guys all wanted to be when I was looking for ideological crossover, group membership crossover, just trying to, I guess, map the ecosystem of hate on Facebook.Stan Alcorn:She watched this ecosystem plan what one neo-Nazi web site would call the "Summer of Hate." Anti-Muslim marches, misogynist Proud Boy rallies and what was shaping up to be this real-world meet-up of all these different mostly online hate groups: the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. This is where she came across Josh Bates.Megan Squire:There was a person who was talking about they didn't have enough money to go to Charlottesville and that someone else suggested, "Hey, we have this crowdfunding site. Why don't you set up a fundraiser?"Stan Alcorn:When Megan clicked the link, she saw this whole list of white supremacist fundraisers on a web site Josh had built, because GoFundMe had started cutting them off. It was the beginning of what Megan calls "alt-tech."Megan Squire:At the time we're talking about, alt-tech was basically just replacements that were coded and controlled by people probably in the movement or close to the movement or at least didn't care about white supremacists using their services. So they were replacing Patreon with hate-reon like it's kind of a one-to-one match there.Stan Alcorn:But when it came to advertising the rally, the alt-right didn't need alt-tech. They had a Facebook event page and it was being promoted by hate groups that Facebook had allowed to remain on the site, even after they were reported by civil rights advocates.Megan Squire:I mean, I'm a solo researcher with a laptop in rural North Carolina and I was able to find well over 2,000 hate groups operating on Facebook in like a couple of months. So I don't have a lot of sympathy that Facebook didn't know what was happening. That's ridiculous.Stan Alcorn:Megan decided to go to the rally in person, in part to see if this convergence of hate she was seeing on Facebook would happen in real life. Josh Bates went for the same reason.Josh Bates:Never in the history of white nationalism had there been that many people all showing up at one place. You had NSM, Ku Klux Klan, Identity Evropa, all these groups.Stan Alcorn:It's like all the groups that you'd ever been a member of.Josh Bates:Yeah, pretty much. And when you see that many people show up to support a common cause, it kind of fills you up a little bit with maybe a little enthusiasm. Like, hey, maybe this isn't dying; maybe this could go forward.Megan Squire:That's exactly right. I believe that. That's exactly why you have to shut that stuff down because ... Ooh. This is not the kind of people we need to be amassing power.Stan Alcorn:The rally wasn't shut down. But when it turned violent and a white supremacist killed Heather Heyer, reporter David Neiwert says this whole plan to unite the racist right backfired.David Neiwert:All of these groups started splitting. There was huge infighting over whether they did the right thing. In fact, the social media platforms actually then began taking it seriously, although that seriousness varied from platform to platform.Megan Squire:It reminded me of when you catch a kid doing something they're not supposed to be doing and all of a sudden they're incredibly sorry. But they already did it. There wasn't a whole lot of foresight there. They're sorry after the fact.Stan Alcorn:It's a pattern we've seen over and over in the last few years. A terrorist attack happens, the social media platforms put out statements but don't fundamentally change their policies. On YouTube you can still find old video manifestos from right-wing domestic terrorists. Facebook didn't ban white nationalist content until a year and a half after Charlottesville. The main step they did take at the time was to remove the accounts of a bunch of individual users and groups.Megan Squire:But that means I don't get to just clap my hands: "Okay, we're done here. Good job. They got de-platformed." Because my job is to worry about where they're going to go next.David Neiwert:You would push them off of platforms like Twitter and they would just go and create their own new platform and they called it Gab. It was just straight for white nationalists. It was on Gab, for instance, that the man who conducted the terrorism act against the Tree of Life synagogue did most of his organizing.Stan Alcorn:He networked with other white nationalists and had a long string of racist and anti-Semitic posts before his infamous final message: "Screw your optics. I'm going in."David Neiwert:On these alternative platforms, they could talk as though they didn't have to fear censors or monitors or people looking over their shoulders, so they were much more open and explicit about their hatefulness. And not just their hatefulness, but, frankly, their lust for violence. Their rhetoric became incredibly violent on a lot of these smaller platforms.Stan Alcorn:This journey, trying to go mainstream only to retreat back to the violent fringe, it's the journey Josh made too.Josh Bates:That's kind of this trajectory of going from white nationalist 1.0, white nationalist 2.0 and then things just crumbling apart, going underground and finding this thing called The Base.Stan Alcorn:The Base is a neo-Nazi network with an explicit focus on real-world violence. They shared bomb-making manuals and planned paramilitary trainings to prepare for a coming race war. When news broke that 11 people had been murdered at the Tree of Life synagogue, they talked about it in terms of tactics.Stan Alcorn:Josh wrote in their private chat: "Infrastructure is what needs targeting. Small hits like yesterday's while striking fear into many, that only ultimately served to embolden the enemy while they're still strong."Josh Bates:Yeah, see, I don't even remember saying that and I guess that goes to show that I was playing a role in a sense and it's just you start to play this role and you start getting into it.David Neiwert:That's the sound of someone who was enthralled with the idea of being a hero. That's how the whole heroism dynamic works, is that you are playing a role. You've created this image for yourself of being the hero and now it's really important for you to live up to it.David Neiwert:This is how people who've been radicalized can get talked into committing acts of violence, is that they feel like they have to. They have to prove that they are the heroes they've made themselves out to be in their own minds.Stan Alcorn:Josh left The Base's chatroom in November of 2018. He says he was turned off by all the glorification of violence. A couple weeks after that, Atlanta anti-fascists published an article exposing his long history in the white supremacist movement. Within days, he was tweeting that he was out of the movement for good.Josh Bates:Looking back now, I don't see myself staying in the movement no matter getting doxed or not. It's just it's tiring. I just don't ... And obviously, everything about it is wrong. In ideological and racial and social sense, Everything about it is wrong. But, yeah.Stan Alcorn:Other men who stayed in The Base would go on to be arrested for vandalizing a synagogue, plotting to murder a couple they believed were antifa activists, and trying to start a civil war at a gun rights rally in Virginia.Stan Alcorn:The FBI says that the greatest terrorist threat in the United States today comes from what they call "lone offenders," terrorists who get their radical ideas from online communities, who attack without ever coordinating with anyone else in the real world. According to our database, they're responsible for nearly half the terrorist fatalities since Trump took office. It's a list that includes the Tree of Life shooter, Robert Bowers, the Poway synagogue shooter, John Earnest, and the El Paso Walmart shooter, Patrick Crusius.David Neiwert:A lot of people will be exposed to these same ideas and not respond in a violent way, but it doesn't take very many of them to actually cause a whole lot of harm.Stan Alcorn:For law enforcement, the tricky question here is how can you tell from what someone says online if they're actually going to commit an act of violence? But for the rest of us there is a different question that's maybe even trickier: What do we do when people say things online that might help push other people to commit acts of violence?Stan Alcorn:Josh said several times in our interview that over the course of his 10 years in the white supremacist movement, he only spent a grand total of maybe five days doing things in the real world. His role was setting up web sites, organizing online and writing propaganda. Like an article he wrote for altright.com, where he told his fellow white people to, quote, "rekindle your inner hate," and that, "an honorable death must be earned."Stan Alcorn:We've talked about this saying that you didn't do anything; you were just writing things. But just as you were radicalized through reading things online, so was Robert Bowers, so was John Earnest.Josh Bates:Yep. Yep.Stan Alcorn:So was Patrick Crusius.Josh Bates:Mm-hmm (affirmative).Stan Alcorn:Isn't writing something doing something and do you think ... Mm-hmm (affirmative).Josh Bates:What I mean by doing something is IRL, like actually getting out to the street. That's what I mean by "doing something."Stan Alcorn:But he's starting to think that distinction doesn't really make a difference.Josh Bates:I didn't actually go out and get in any street brawls or physically attack anybody, but that's no different than writing something and encouraging others to do it. You know what I mean? I would've considered myself in a way a domestic terrorist, because I was spouting off some of these same ideas. It feels so weird to reference yourself in that way, but I have to be honest.Stan Alcorn:The things Josh did may not meet the FBI or the Department of Justice's definition of terrorism. They didn't even get him kicked off social media. But he says he'll be making up for them for the rest of his life.Al Letson:That story was from Reveal's Stan Alcorn. We reached out to Facebook for a comment. They sent us a statement saying that they don't want to be a place for promoting hate or violence and that they're making progress. They told us in the first three months of 2020, they banned more than 250 white supremacist organizations and removed 4.7 million pieces of content tied to organized hate. We reached out to YouTube and the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism as well, but they didn't respond.Al Letson:If social media companies aren't stopping white supremacist terrorism, what about the US government? That's after the break on Reveal.Al Letson:From the Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX, this is Reveal. I'm Al Letson. A year after Josh Bates left the white supremacist group, The Base, another member of the organization shot a video of himself speaking into a camera, wearing a gas mask. He was calling on white people to acquire weapons, derail trains and poison water supplies in order to ensure the survival of the white race. Later, a federal judge outside of Washington, DC would read a transcript of that video into the record before prosecutors held a press conference:Audio:As the evidence gathered by the FBI demonstrates, these defendants who are self-proclaimed members of the white supremacist group The Base were dedicated to the idea of doing harm to African Americans, Jewish Americans and others who the defendants viewed as a treat to their twisted idea of a white ethno-state. Put simply, this domestic terrorism investigation likely saved lives.Al Letson:But this, stopping white supremacist terrorism before it happens has been the exception. According to the database we put together with Type Investigations, since 2008, law enforcement has stopped about one in three terror plots by white supremacists and other right-wing extremists.Al Letson:Meanwhile, they've stopped terror plots by those claiming to act in the name of Islam at more than twice that rate. They've stopped three out of every four of those. In other words, the FBI seems to do a better job going after terrorists whose ideas resemble the 9/11 attackers than the right-wing terrorists who've killed far more people in the two decades since.Al Letson:But in the last year, reporter David Neiwert says the FBI's statements and arrests seem to show a shift towards taking white supremacist terrorism more seriously.David Neiwert:It's very clear that the FBI has caught on that this is a problem. But it's also very clear that they have a lot of catching up to do.Al Letson:Getting the FBI to describe how it's catching up isn't easy. Here's Reveal's Stan Alcorn again:Stan Alcorn:In theory, there are people who can force the FBI to explain itself: Congress. But Congress has not always been focused on white supremacist terrorism either. For instance, this hearing from 2011:Audio:Morning. The Committee on Homeland Security will come to order.Stan Alcorn:Led by Republican congressman from New York, Peter King.Audio:This Committee cannot live in denial, which is what some of us would do when they suggest that this hearing dilute its focus by investigating threats unrelated to Al Qaeda. The Department of Homeland Security and this Committee were formed in response to the Al Queda attacks of September 11th. There is no equivalency of threat between Al Queda and neo-Nazis, environmental extremists or other isolated madmen. Only Al Queda ...Stan Alcorn:Actually, there were more than twice as many right-wing domestic terror incidents that year as anything inspired by groups like Al Queda, according to our data.Audio:Now it's my privilege to recognize the distinguished ranking member of the Committee, the gentleman from Mississippi, Mr. Thompson.Stan Alcorn:The ranking member, or top Democrat, Bennie Thompson ...Audio:Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.Stan Alcorn:Had a different perspective.Audio:I understand that our personal experiences play a role in how we see the world. We've all come to this place from somewhere else. I'm from Mississippi. My ...Stan Alcorn:He'd become the first black mayor of his hometown in 1973, a place where cross burnings were used to intimidate civil rights activists. 20 years later when he was elected to Congress, he made national news for pushing to finally prosecute the mastermind of the KKK killing that happened when he was in college.Audio:But we are not here in these places now. As members of Congress, our ...Stan Alcorn:In this hearing, he brought up an arrest just happened the day before. A man had placed a bomb along the route of a Martin Luther King Day march in Spokane, Washington.Audio:News reports identify the suspect as a member of the same white supremacist group that influenced Oklahoma City bomber, Timothy McVeigh. I urge you, Mr. Chairman, to hold a hearing examining the Homeland Security threat posed by anti-government and white supremacist groups. I yield back.Stan Alcorn:Over the next eight years, Thompson and other Democrats would keep asking for that hearing on domestic terrorism. They'd never get it.Stan Alcorn:I called up Congressman Thompson on Skype at his office in Bolton, Mississippi, the same town that elected him mayor nearly 50 years ago.Bennie Thompson:There are about 500 people who live in this little town.Stan Alcorn:So I bet you must know every single one of them more or less.Bennie Thompson:Not only do I know them, I know their business, they know my business. There are no secrets.Stan Alcorn:We talked about how it felt to struggle to get his colleagues to pay attention to this threat of right-wing terrorism.Bennie Thompson:Well, it was frustrating, to be honest with you because I knew this problem was growing in America and somehow our Committee was missing the opportunity to address it, and that's unfortunate.Stan Alcorn:But in 2019, Democrats took control of the House and Bennie took control of the Homeland Security Committee.Bennie Thompson:And finally after I became chairman, we held a hearing. It was only in this hearing that members of Congress and the public get a chance to see and hear for the first time what was going on.Stan Alcorn:This hearing and other Democrat-led oversight hearings got the FBI to finally acknowledge the serious threat of white supremacist terrorism. They said that, quote, "racially motivated violent extremism was now as big a threat as ISIS." But these hearings didn't turn up a lot of details on exactly what the FBI was doing to deal with that threat on the ground, like the number of agents or cases or arrests. So I asked the FBI agent in charge of counter-terrorism for the Newark field office, Joe Denahan.Joe Denahan:I think there's really been a surge in what we assess as racially-motivated violent extremism, both here in New Jersey and across the nation. I think a lot of the profiles of the subjects we had seen conduct successful attacks or younger males, all of them really radicalized online. Now that the velocity of those threats and successful attacks appears to be increasing, we obviously dedicate a greater number of resources to that threat.Stan Alcorn:When you talk about that dedicating a greater number of resources, can you share anything in the way of numbers, something to kind of just concretely get a sense of what that looks like?Joe Denahan:Unfortunately, I can't give any specifics on that in terms of our personnel or assets. But I can tell you that there is a tremendous emphasis put on this. We recognize that the threat is evolving and we're evolving with it, no question about it.Stan Alcorn:Just to be clear, why is it that you can't give more details on that?Joe Denahan:I'm not comfortable talking about the number of agents that we have working a specific threat.Stan Alcorn:So no numbers. Then there's the terms itself: racially-motivated violent extremism. Why call it that? Are we primarily talking about white supremacists terrorism?Joe Denahan:I mean, no question that white racially-motivated extremism is a very serious problem.Stan Alcorn:Well, what else fits into that ...Stan Alcorn:What he isn't saying is the whole point of the term "racially-motivated violent extremism" is that they are not just talking about white supremacists who've been responsible for more plots and attacks in the last few years than any other kind of terrorist in our database.Stan Alcorn:What happened was, in 2017 an FBI document was leaked to Foreign Policy magazine about something they called "black identity extremists." The FBI defined them as anyone using violence, quote, "in response to perceived racism and injustice in American society, in particular, police brutality." It was so broad former FBI agent Mike German said, "Basically, it's black people who scare them."Stan Alcorn:When Congressman Thompson heard about it, not from the FBI but from reading about it in the press, he wondered if it was really about countering terrorism at all.Bennie Thompson:I went through Cointelpro in the '60s where the FBI kind of spying on people of color. So they said, "Look, are we trying to unfairly target black people and black organizations again?"Stan Alcorn:This was a scandal and the FBI said it got rid of the black identity extremist category. But in 2019, more FBI documents were leaked to reporter Ken Klippenstein and they showed that the FBI had really just taken the black identity extremists and the white supremacists and put them both in one combined category: racially-motivated violent extremism.Stan Alcorn:Can you say with confidence now that the FBI is not focusing on so-called black identity extremists as a terrorist threat and potentially going after activists?Bennie Thompson:Well, no, I can't. No, I can't. Because I know-Stan Alcorn:And why not? You're at the head of the oversight committee looking at them. Why can't you say it with confidence that you know?Bennie Thompson:Well, I can't say it because a lot of what I found out as a member of Congress is there's a term: "a need to know."Stan Alcorn:Hmm.Bennie Thompson:So even though you might be in a classified setting and supposedly have top-secret clearances, there's still certain information that if an agency decides for whatever reason you don't need to know it, in all probability, they're not going to tell you.Stan Alcorn:The FBI's lack of transparency is why we built our own domestic terror database. It's also why the most important thing this Congress did on domestic terrorism might be something that's barely been noticed.Stan Alcorn:Tucked into the National Defense Authorization Act on page 957, there's language that requires the FBI to for the first time lay out in detail its domestic terrorism data, describing every incident, assessment and investigation since 2009 and breaking them down by category and saying exactly how many agents are working each threat. That data was due to Congress right as we released this story.Bennie Thompson:Why would you have to pass an act in Congress to get somebody to collect data that ought to be part of one's job?Stan Alcorn:Mm-hmm (affirmative).Bennie Thompson:Well, needless to say, we had to take it to that level.Stan Alcorn:And you had to get it in the defense spending bill too, right?Bennie Thompson:Yeah. Well, it's what you call a little home-cooking.Stan Alcorn:As Congress Thompson waits for the results, he's worried that attention is again being diverted away from right-wing terrorism, this time by President Trump. In the midst of the recent protests over racism and police brutality, President Trump tweeted he would designate antifa, short for antifascist, a terrorist organization, even though the FBI says antifa is really more of an ideology than a group.Bennie Thompson:He's president of the United States and he should lead this country based on what the facts are at the time he's presented with them.Stan Alcorn:Thompson says he hasn't seen any evidence of a connection between antifa and violence at the recent protests. Whereas when we spoke, a right-wing extremist who was obsessed with the coming civil war had just been charged with killing a federal security officer near a protest in Oakland.Bennie Thompson:And I'm glad that the law enforcement officials have identified and apprehended that individual, but he should let the professionals do their job.Al Letson:That story was from Reveal's Stan Alcorn. Just to be clear, the president does not have the power to designate terrorist groups. Still, since his tweet there've been multiple reports of the FBI interrogating protestors about their political views and what they know about antifa.Al Letson:Before we go, I want to remind you that we're just one week away from launching our first-ever serial, American Rehab. Chapter One begins with a look inside a rehab that sends people to work without pay and calls it therapy. Then we'll chase the origins of this type of rehab to a dangerous cult that started in the 1950s and came to a crashing end after performing mass sterilizations on its members and using a rattlesnake to attack one of its most vocal critics.Al Letson:We launch American Rehab on July 4th. You can hear it on your local public radio station or right here on the podcast. Just make sure you subscribe to the Reveal Podcast feed.Al Letson:This week's show was produced by Stan Alcorn and Priska Neely and edited by Jen Chien and Taki Telonides with help from Esther Kaplan and Soo Oh. Special thanks to our partners at Type Investigations, David Neiwert, Darren Ankrom and Sarah Blustein. Victoria Barenetsky is our general counsel. Our production manager is Najib Aminy.Al Letson:Our sound design team is the dynamic duo, J-Breezy, Mr. Jim Briggs, and Fernando, my man, yo Arruda. This week's show was mixed and scored by [Ron Tean 00:51:31], [Ara Bluey 00:51:31] with help from Amy Mostafa. Our CEO is Christa Scharfenberg. Matt Thompson is our editor in chief. Our executive producer is Kevin Sullivan. Our theme music is by Comorado, Lightning.Al Letson:Support by Reveal is provided by the Reva and David Logan Foundation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Jonathan Logan Family Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Heising-Simons Foundation, the Democracy Fund, and the Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation.Al Letson:Reveal is a co-production of the Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX. I'm Al Letson, and remember: There is always more to the story.Audio:From PRX.

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The Evolution of All-American Terrorism - Reveal

Extremist activity is growing in the pandemic. How worried should Jews be? – Forward

Posted By on June 28, 2020

On the last day of Passover last year, a young nursing student went into the Chabad of Poway synagogue and shot four people, killing 60-year-old Lori Gilbert-Kaye.

The accused murderers manifesto was filled with anti-Semitic sentiments, but it also contained another element: The shooters wish that his actions would lead the government to start confiscating guns, and thus provoke a civil war between white nationalists and everyone else.

If this revolution doesnt happen soon, we wont have the numbers to win it, the alleged murderer wrote. Stop the slow boil of the frog. Make the Jew play all of his cards to make it apparent to more people how their rights are being taken away right before their eyes.

This idea is called accelerationism and over the past two years, its popularity has jumped dramatically in online extremist communities, tied to their excitement over anti-Semitic attacks. In the last month, accelerationist extremists have grown increasingly active, in response both to the pandemic and the anti-racist protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd.

Experts worry that, as these groups become more brazen, they will carry out physical, violent attacks against minority communities especially Jewish ones.

Civil unrest and economic decline may induce individuals to plan and undertake targeted attacks as our facilities reopen, said Michael Masters, the CEO of the Secure Community Network, the Jewish communitys largest provider of security training and policy. That is a reality.

The most prominent accelerationist group to come out of the pandemic so far is called the Boogaloo Boys, a complex, anti-establishment movement that researchers say is not strictly tied to anti-Semitic sentiment but whose propensity for violence may have cascading effects for all minority communities, including Jews.

Boogaloo is internet extremist slang for a second civil war. Though the term and its meaning have existed for years, the group has exploded onto the national scene over the past six months. Their members have been seen at protests and political rallies over the past several weeks, in their trademark Hawaiian floral shirts under bulletproof vests, often armed with assault rifles. Various Boogaloo groups have different political philosophies, but all of them seek the armed overthrow of the government.

Members of the movement use the Boogaloo as a meme that fantasizes about a violent uprising against the state, and violence waged towards the law enforcement community and government officials that they perceive as an enemy, said Alex Goldenberg, a lead intelligence analyst at the Network Contagion Research Institute, a Princeton-based group that studies online extremism.

While the movement is not inherently anti-Semitic, there are white supremacists and neo-Nazis on its fringes, Goldenberg said. Paul Nehlen, a white supremacist in Wisconsin who mounted two unsuccessful campaigns for Congress, has posted a picture of himself wearing a shirt emblazoned with the face of the Poway shooter over the word BOOGALOO. The Anti-Defamation League reported last year that a white supremacist group shared lyrics to a song called Do the Boogaloo on an encrypted group chat, with lines like Kill the kikes and save the whites and Plug a pig and then a Yid.

Image by Courtesy of ADL

Paul Nehlen, a white supremacist and far-right figure, wearing a shirt with a picture of the Poway shooter over the word BOOGALOO.

The past few months has seen two alleged Boogaloo Boys face charges for murder and attempted murder of federal agents, and three other men arrested for allegedlying trying to firebomb a Black Lives Matter protest. On Thursday, a chat platform shut down a Boogaloo server over extensive threats of violence.

They have shown that theyre willing to cross a line and use firearms for their beliefs, said Thomas Holt, director of the School of Criminal Justice at Michigan State University. Holt said he was concerned that other groups who admire the Boogaloo Boys efforts might try to replicate their success (and current media attention) by targeting Jews.

The Jewish community is already plenty on edge after four deadly attacks in two years, which have caused the deaths of 17 people: the Tree of Life synagogue massacre, in Pittsburgh; the Poway shooting; the Jersey City, N.J. shooting; and the machete attack in Monsey, N.Y.

Other incidents, less deadly but no less dangerous or traumatizing, are also on the upswing. FBI data found that violent assaults against Jews grew from 2017 to 2018. In its audit of anti-Semitic incidents of 2019, the Anti-Defamation League counted 61 total anti-Semitic assaults that year, a more than 50% increase from 2018 even though only 13% of all anti-Semitic incidents were carried out by people with ties to extremist groups.

Online anti-Semitic activity was already trending upward before the pandemic, but since it began, it has spiked even further, researchers say. A report from the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a London think tank, found that online communities that shared both COVID-19 disinformation and race war propaganda also shared media and messages linking Jews and Muslims to the creation of the coronavirus.

A growing number of Internet users are also sharing more conspiracy theories about the Jewish financier George Soros, blaming him for allegedly creating the coronavirus and accusing him of staging Floyds killing.

The current situation, with millions of people unemployed or otherwise stuck at home with nothing to do but surf the web, has created a funnel to extremist organizations, said Jason Blazakis, director of the Center on Terrorism, Extremism, and Counterterrorism at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey.

Image by Getty

A member of the Boogaloo Bois walks next to protestors demonstrating outside a police building just outside of downtown Charlotte, North Carolina, on May 29, 2020.

People radicalized by exposure to anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, as well as angered or scared by the unprecedented state of the country, may grow to support the accelerationist theory, supported both by violent white nationalist groups and the Boogaloo Boys, that only armed violence (against the government, or against Jews) will make things better.

Some veteran white nationalist leaders have long expressed concern that the optics of violent uprising ultimately hurt their movement consider how many racists were arrested or lost their jobs as a result of the 2017 Charlottesville white nationalist march. But all it takes is one exception: Before killing 11 Jews, the Tree of Life shooter posted online, Screw your optics, Im going in.

Were seeing the growth of the accelerationist wing, which openly embraces terroristic violence as a political tool, because the question of optics now holds far less weight, a Southern Poverty Law Center researcher wrote on Tuesday.

Security experts worry that some of the newer recruits may feel they have something to prove and that theyll go after the people considered the most ambitious target: Jewish communities who they think control global events.

The Jewish community is the primary target of all the hate and all the anger and all the conspiratorial thinking that goes along with this, said Amarnath Amarasingam, a professor of religion at Queens University in Ontario, Canada, who studies terrorism and radicalization. If any of these guys tip over into violence in a real sense, the Jewish community is always top of mind as a potential target for a lot of these people.

Law enforcement appears to be deeply attuned to these groups activities. FBI probes have already this year resulted in the dismantling of The Base, and the Atomwaffen Division, two violent white supremacist groups. Law enforcement agencies now list white supremaicst extremists under High in their threat assessment reports, while jihadists threats are marked Low.

And while there have been several right-wing terrorist plots mounted against Jewish communities over the past year an attempted bombing of a synagogue in Pueblo, Colo.; a plot to bomb a Jewish nursing home; a plan to spread coronavirus to Jews they have failed or been foiled by law enforcement.

The Jewish community also has a strong security apparatus in place, one which has seen an injection of funding over the past year. The Secure Community Network has increased its revenue from $1 million to $8 million since 2017, and added 25 employees. The Community Security Service, a group that trains Jewish volunteers to guard synagogues and Jewish institutions, said its annual budget for this year is double last years, at $1 million.

Jewish communities have invested better than other communities in the security, because they already have the infrastructure, said Ali Soufan, a former FBI counterterrorism agent and the head of the Soufan Group, an international security firm.

Soufan said that another critical step to protecting Jewish institutions and efforts the Jewish groups should join in is to force social media companies to stop hosting extremist groups, as well as dramatically increase the size of federal security grants for religious nonprofits. The Boogaloo movement has incubated on Facebook, where researchers recently found over two-dozen affiliated groups. The ADL is encouraging companies to stop buying ads on Facebook, and several major firms have joined the growing boycott movement, including Verizon, The North Face and Ben & Jerrys.

Soutan and Rep. Max Rose of New York are also pushing the White House to label white nationalist organizations as foreign terrorist groups, since many of the most violent members have received training overseas. Despite the FBI and the State Department pushing for the same, the White House has yet to respond.

Our tools are in place, we know what to do, Rose said. Its just a question of whether we are going to treat all forms of terrorism as terrorism.

Rose, who is Jewish, said that without a significant response from the government and tech companies, right-wing extremist groups are not going away.

This movement right now looks very similar to what Al-Qaeda looked like in the early- to mid-nineties, he said. If that doesnt scare somebody, I dont know what does.

Ari Feldman is a staff writer at the Forward. Contact him at feldman@forward.com or follow him on Twitter @aefeldman

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Extremist activity is growing in the pandemic. How worried should Jews be? - Forward

From Saudi Arabia, a welcome call for tolerance and moderation – The Boston Globe

Posted By on June 28, 2020

For years, Saudi Arabia worked tirelessly to export Wahhabism, its home-grown strain of intolerant Islam, to Muslim communities worldwide. It poured many billions of dollars into funding mosques, schools, and cultural organizations that promoted Islamist extremism an extremism capable of turning murderous, as Americans learned on Sept. 11, 2001, when 19 Al-Qaeda terrorists, 15 of them Saudi citizens, murdered thousands of people.

Given the link between Saudi Arabias monarchy and the rise of radical Islam, Muhammad Al-Issa might not be your idea of a typical Saudi cleric.

The 55-year-old secretary general of the Muslim World League, a graduate of Imam Muhammad bin Saud University with a degree in comparative Islamic jurisprudence, has become a leading exponent of moderate Islam. Al-Issa vigorously criticizes religious extremism and vocally supports interfaith cooperation. He has been hailed by Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the Catholic archbishop of New York, as the most eloquent spokesperson in the Islamic world for reconciliation and friendship among the religions and extolled by the president of the Mormon church, Russell Nelson, as a peacemaker [and] a bridge-builder.

Especially notable has been Al-Issas insistence on condemning hate crimes against Jews, including the lethal synagogue shootings in Pittsburgh and Poway, Calif. In January he led a Muslim delegation to Auschwitz, then published a column calling Holocaust denial a crime that should appall true Muslims. This month, speaking from Mecca to an online conference on anti-Semitism, he said he had made it his mission to work with my brothers and sisters of the Jewish faith to advance inter-religious harmony, and to confront the extremists falsely claiming inspiration from our religious texts.

Clearly it is significant that a Saudi religious leader and politician (Al-Issa was his countrys minister of justice from 2009 to 2015) is impassioned in defense of religious tolerance and so strongly opposes political Islam, or Islamism the supremacist doctrine that all societies must be ruled by uncompromising Islamic law. Al-Issas moderation and open-mindedness are 180 degrees removed from the totalitarianism of the Taliban, ISIS, Nigerias Boko Haram, or the hard-line regime in Iran.

Yet Al-Issas views havent prevailed in his own land, either. Saudi Arabia is among the most unfree nations on earth, particularly for religious minorities and dissenters. Dissidents, reformers, and human-rights activists are frequently arrested, imprisoned, or brutalized. The grisly murder of Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul shocked the world. There have been real reforms in Saudi Arabia in recent years, but the country is still far from anything resembling Al-Issas vision of openness.

Winston Churchill described Russia in 1939 as a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma. But, Churchill added, perhaps there is a key. If the same is true today of Saudi Arabia, perhaps the key to its internal contradictions is that Islamism is in retreat not just in Saudi society, but across much of the Muslim world.

Writing in the Globe four years ago, Daniel Pipes, president of the Middle East Forum, suggested that there were two weaknesses that might bring about an unraveling of the Islamist movement. One was internecine fighting among Islamists themselves the classic dynamic of one-time allies turning on each other as they compete for dominance. Of that there have been examples aplenty, such as the falling out in Turkey between Recep Tayyip Erdoan and the religious leader Fethullah Glen, or the bitter clash in Iran between Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

But the bigger peril for the movement, Pipes wrote, was rising unpopularity as populations experience Islamist rule firsthand, they reject it. He pointed to the widespread antipathy of ordinary Iranians to the theocratic regime in Tehran, and to the massive demonstrations in Egypt against the Muslim Brotherhood government of Mohamed Morsi in 2013.

Today, there is a profusion of indications that Islamism is losing its grip.

Across the Arab world people are turning against religious political parties and the clerics who helped bring them to power, the Economist reported in December. In Iraq, Lebanon, and other Muslim-majority countries, the Arab Barometer polling network finds a notable drop in trust for Islamist political parties and a declining share of Arabs who think religious leaders should have influence over government. The Turkish analyst Mustafa Aykol writes that there has been a backlash to Islamism in the form of a new secular wave breeding in the Muslim world. Another Turkish scholar, sociologist Mucahit Bilici, concludes: Today Islamism in Turkey is associated in the public mind with corruption and injustice.

The 2019 Arab Youth Survey, a study of 3,300 men and women between 18 and 24 in the Middle East and North Africa, found that two-thirds believe religion plays too big of a role in the Middle East and 79 percent believe that the Arab world needs to reform its religious institutions.

This may be what is unfolding, ever so gradually, in Saudi Arabia: a halting shift to moderate Islam in what was the worlds foremost exporter of radical Islam. There are no guarantees; this may be only a lull between storms. But the rise of so outspoken a Saudi moderate as Muhammad Al-Issa offers reason for encouragement. For decades, Saudi Arabia peddled a version of Islam that was repressive and narrow-minded. Let us hope it now works just as assiduously to promote Al-Issas message of tolerance, peace, and empathy, and thereby cultivate the very best in Muslim tradition.

Jeff Jacoby can be reached at jeff.jacoby@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @jeff_jacoby. To subscribe to Arguable, his weekly newsletter, go to bitly.com/Arguable.

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From Saudi Arabia, a welcome call for tolerance and moderation - The Boston Globe

Places of worship allowed to reopen for prayer and wedding services from 4 July – Jewish News

Posted By on June 28, 2020

Synagogues across England will be permitted to reopen for prayer and to hold services from next month, Prime minister Boris Johnson said today.

As of 4 July, places of worships in England will also be able to reopen for wedding services with a maximum of 30 guests, subject to social distancing, in the governments latest easing of lockdown rules.

Mr Speaker, I know that many have mourned the closure of places of worship and this year Easter, Passover and Eid all occurred during the lockdown, Johnson told the House of Commons on Tuesday.

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Other changes include the halving of the two metre social distancing rule to one metre and reopening of restaurants and pubs from 4 July.

Sector-specific guidance will be published later today, Johnson said.

We can now go further and safely ease the lockdown in England, he said. At every stage, caution will remain our watch word. Each step will be conditional and reversible.

Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis said the return to congregational activity will be as cautious as is necessary to protect our communities, with further guidance released in the coming days.

It is a cause for additional celebration that couples, some of whom have had to wait for several months, will now be able to marry, he said in a social media post on Tuesday.

We now look forward to being together again in our communities, to enjoying the blessing of communal prayer, to mourning for those we have lost, to marking life-cycle events and to thanking the Almighty for His protection during these challenging times, he wrote.

Steven Wilson, chief executive of United Synagogue said in a statement on Tuesday that measures such as strict social distancing, hand sanitising, compulsory face coverings and a booking system will all be in place to keep each other safe, but nevertheless we are thrilled to be able to open our doors again.

Each of our communities will be restarting services at its own pace depending on the needs of their members and we will support each community every step of the way, he added.

Matt Plen, chief executive of Masorti Judaism, said communities are considering options for resuming face-to-face services based on a careful assessment of the health risks.

Any communities who are able to resume face-to-face services in the coming weeks will do so with strict social distancing measures, restrictions on the number of participants, and rigorous cleaning and hygiene procedures, he said.

Board of Deputies president Marie van der Zyl welcomed the announcement but urged caution to prevent a second spike in cases.

She said:Over the last couple of months, the Board of Deputies has worked with different religious denominations to ensure the right balance between preservation of life and maintenance and restarting of religious customs.

Weddings were a particular concern in the Orthodox and Strictly Orthodox communities and we held discussions with Downing Street and the Ministry of Housing Communities and Local Government including organising a roundtable for Charedi stakeholders to make sure these perspectives were understood.

However, on the day that we reveal that the total number of deaths in the Jewish community has reached 500, we would urge people to proceed with caution and stick within the Governments guidelines to ensure there is no second spike in cases.

The national death toll among those tested positive for coronavirus across all settings was 42,647 as of Sunday, health authorities said Monday.

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Places of worship allowed to reopen for prayer and wedding services from 4 July - Jewish News

Living with Covid-19 in Israel – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on June 28, 2020

It aint over till its over, legendary baseball player Yogi Berra once said, and indeed resurfacing in Israel these days are COVID-19 concerns. Following days of fewer new infections and critical cases, Israel began to open up last month, starting with small stores and businesses, then malls.

In addition to bag checks, temperatures are taken at most entrances. The weather is lovely, flowers are blooming. Schools opened, then cafes and restaurants, with the caveat that seating had to be outside and distanced. Tel Avivians hit the beaches. And then the new figures started to come in.

New infections were reported at the Rehavia Gymnasia, where a significant number of students and teachers exhibited signs of the virus. Soon, there were other schools, and now some hospital workers have tested positive. Once more, thousands are in quarantine. Unlike the first wave of coronavirus, this one is hitting younger people. Did Israelis relax too soon?

Everyday dilemmas abound. We wear masks whenever we go out, and my husband, Irv, likes to kid me about how I keep searching for the comfortable in hot weather mask of my dreams. We had workers here for repairs to our apartment. Some of them wore masks, some did not. How much risk is too much?

Dilemma: Where would we say kaddish, or Shabbat and holiday tefillah? Our mothers share the same post-Pesach yahrzeit. We needed a minyan. We found it among ever-resourceful Israelis meeting in a parking lot, on an empty street and in a garden. Our synagogue held a weekly pre-Shabbat Zoom call and has been holding outdoor services for

50 people, for which we sign up in advance. The communal holidays of Pesach, Yom Hazikaron and Yom Haatzmaut, however, were observed alone, with TV ceremonies and celebrations providing community on the two yoms.

Dilemma: Can we safely socialize with other people? Clevelanders Shirley and Paul Eisenberg arrived here in February to volunteer at the Goldstein Youth Village in advance of a grandsons bar mitzvah, which was canceled. Our friend, Esti Shemla, who had taught another Eisenberg grandson while on shlichut at the Joseph and Florence Mandel Jewish Day School, wanted to meet them. Knowing that they would soon return to Cleveland, we took a risk and invited the masked Shemlas and Eisenbergs to our courtyard. Since this time, we have visited friends and hosted friends, outdoors, wearing masks and maintaining appropriate distancing.

Dilemma: Could we take a bus? After watching near-empty buses pass us by on our many walks, Irv and I decided that, masked and carrying hand sanitizer, we could go downtown by bus to buy the hot-weather clothes we needed. We kept masks on when we tried on the clothes and then washed them immediately back home.

Dilemma: Without many tourists, was it less risky to tour Israel? When the Shemlas invited us to go with them to see the very full Kinneret, we put on our masks and went. We had a breakfast picnic en route, eating at a table far away from other picnickers and delighted in the sight of the beautiful Kinneret.

Dilemma: How long should we wait to return to Cleveland? In March, United Airlines offered bookings without cancellation or change fees. We bought tickets to return on May 12, but then canceled the flights. We have not set a new return date.

We miss our family and our house, but twice each week at the street fair set up by the Jerusalem municipality to sustain Derech Bet Lechem cafe owners, we hear talented musicians, eat ice cream from our favorite ice cream shop, and enjoy the amusing street performers. As we wait out the virus, or await the vaccine, we know, more than we expected, that Jerusalem remains a good place to be at this time.

Julie Jaslow Auerbach, a Jewish educator who lives part of the year in Jerusalem and part of the year in Shaker Heights, writes regularly about life in Israel for the Cleveland Jewish News.

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Living with Covid-19 in Israel - Cleveland Jewish News

The fallout from Eliot Engels likely defeat and a look at other primaries – Forward

Posted By on June 27, 2020

WASHINGTON (JTA) Jamaal Bowman, the middle school principal who challenged longtime Rep. Eliot Engel in New Yorks 16th District, has declared victory based on his 2-1 lead among voters who headed to the polls for this weeks primary. Mail-in votes are still being counted, so Engel, the Jewish chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, has not conceded.

That, however, hasnt stopped the big picture takes. One is that the traditional pro-Israel views among Democrats are in big trouble, at least in their center-right expression: Keeping differences with Israel on the down low, and on the rare occasion where you feel compelled to speak out, leaving aid to Israel sacrosanct.

Bowman is openly critical of the policies of the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and has said assistance to Israel should be conditioned on its behavior. Among House Democrats, Engel may be the closest to the pro-Israel center and right.

Heres a typical take from the National Interest: Will This New York Progressive Be the AOC of Foreign Policy? The reference is to the perception that Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who ousted a longstanding moderate in the 14th District, has moved the entire party left. AOCs district shares the Bronx borough with the 16th as well as the 15th.

The article quotes foreign policy progressives who backed Bowman as saying his election is determinative of the end of militarism among Democrats, and Republicans are seizing on the defeat as the death knell for pro-Israelism among Democrats.

Jewish Republicans have had plenty of disagreements with Rep. Engel during his 32 years in Congress, but his defeat is a blow to the historically bipartisan support for Israel in the US Congress, the Republican Jewish Coalition said in a release.

In New York magazine, Eric Levitz notes that in the 15th district, the likely winner is Ritchie Torres, who is progressive on domestic issues and boasts of a past affiliation with Bernie Sanders, who endorsed Bowman and backs leveraging aid to Israel. But Torres, Levitz writes, has barricaded Israel-Palestine off from the rest of his progressivism.

Torres had the backing of mainstream pro-Israel PACs, including the Democratic Majority for Israel PAC and Pro-Israel America, as well as NORPAC, which leans right. He forcefully rejects leveraging aid to Israel. Torres, who is gay, hates it when anti-Israel progressives accuse him of pinkwashing Israel, and he does not stint on firing back.

I found it utterly baffling that you had LGBT activists doing the bidding of Hamas, which is a terrorist organization that executes LGBT people, he told Jewish Insider.

So its more complicated than the Engel-Bowman tea leaf readers would have us think.

Theres more to it than the results in the 16th and the 15th, however. Lets take a look at the fallout from this week.

Talk about reducing assistance to Israel has been ongoing for ages, but until the current Congress it was an anomaly for both parties an attention-getter for folks on the margin. In fact, before 2018, its most prominent advocate was Rand Paul, the Republican senator from Kentucky. Donald Trump the candidate flirted with the idea in 2016, on the very day in March he was set to address the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. Virtually the only advocate for aid cuts among Democrats until 2018 was Rep. Betty McCollum, D-Minn., who framed her proposed cuts narrowly, tying them to the number of Palestinian minors in Israeli detention.

In 2018, victories by two Democrats who support the boycott Israel movement Rashida Tlaib in Michigan and Ilhan Omar in Minnesota were the most obvious signal that aid to Israel was not sacrosanct. But there were other signs: J Street, the liberal Jewish Middle East peace group that endorses more than half of the Democratic caucus, flirted with the notion last year, and leading candidates for the nomination, including Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and Pete Buttigieg, were open to it.

Israel likely was not a factor among voters in the 16th, but that may prove this point: Bowmans expressed criticism of Israel did not spur Jewish voters in a district where they are substantial (particularly in its Westchester portion) to vote against him.

Cutting aid, on the other hand, has hardly become an orthodoxy among progressives. Mondaire Jones is leading the pack in New Yorks 17th to replace Nita Lowey, like Engel, a Jewish pro-Israel leader who is in a powerful position as chairwoman of the Appropriations Committee. Jones was the only candidate who had announced before Lowey said she was retiring, and he was setting up a campaign to challenge her from the progressive left but Israel did not factor.

Jones, like most other Democrats, opposes Netanyahus proposal to annex parts of the West Bank, but otherwise he cant praise Lowey enough when it comes to her Israel policies.

Im going to continue in the legacy of Nita Lowey in being a friend to Israel we have to continue our security assistance, he said last week at a debate organized by the Jewish Democratic Council of America.

In New Yorks 12th District, Suraj Patel is neck and neck with Rep. Carolyn Maloney, the chairwoman of the Oversight Committee who attracted centrist pro-Israel financial backing. Patel challenged the longtime incumbent from the progressive left, but also told Jewish Insider that he emphatically opposes Israel boycotts, and has even before he publicly contemplated a political career and was able to prove it.

A narrative emerging from Bowmans victory is that centrist pro-Israel funding no longer matters: The Democratic Majority for Israel PAC reportedly dumped more than $1.5 million into the district, to little avail.

There is something to this, but its less that the impact of pro-Israel money has diminished and more that funding from other interests in the Democratic Party has increased. Thats been the case since 2004, when small online donors helped propel Howard Deans candidacy in the pre-primaries season, and MoveOn became a force to be reckoned with. Sanders endorsement of Bowman unleashed an army of donors. Outside groups spent more than $1.3 million on the newcomers behalf.

But pro-Israel funding still has an impact: See under Torres. See also under Joe Biden, the partys presumptive presidential nominee who forcefully rejected making aid to Israel contingent, and whose candidacy weathered troubles in part because of his longtime pro-Israel backers.

If Engel loses, the influential committee he chairs, the Foreign Affairs Committee, will remain in reliably centrist pro-Israel hands. His likely successors include Brad Sherman of California, Gregory Meeks of New York and Ted Deutch of Florida all friends of AIPAC. But thats a short run prediction. What 2022 and beyond brings in terms of committee chairmanships is susceptible to the broader vicissitudes in the party.

Bowmans campaign seized on a moment of broader American unhappiness with the status of race in America, particularly in policing.

Im a Black man who was raised by a single mother in a housing project, Bowman said in a victory statement. That story doesnt usually end in Congress. But today, that 11-year old boy who was beaten by police is about to be your next representative.

Israel has not featured large in the protests, and as Mari Cohen wrote in Jewish Currents, Jewish groups are setting aside past divides over Israel with the Black Lives Matter movement to join them in solidarity now. The issue in 2016 was over a platform by a group called the Movement for Black Lives (one does that not bind the many diffuse groups that come together under Black Lives Matter). The platform accused Israel of genocide and apartheid.

Cohen reports that a new platform is under consideration. That could signal a big shift between BLM and the Jewish community.

Dont call him the next AOC: Dr. Robbie Goldstein, an infectious diseases physician, is running in a Democratic House primary against Stephen Lynch, the incumbent in the 8th District, south of Boston. Goldstein, a progressive, says it doesnt make sense for a Massachusetts district that voted overwhelmingly against Trump to elect a moderate who votes with Trump 20% of the time.

If that sounds a lot like Ocasio-Cortez in 2018 and Bowman this year, Goldstein told me this week that it shouldnt. He said the better cognate for his race is Marie Newman, who earlier this year defeated Dan Lipinski, a Democrat who represents a Chicagoland district. Goldstein is not starting a revolution so much as hes arguing that the likes of Lipinski and Lynch are too far right for the Democratic Party, even in its current establishment iteration.

Lynch calls himself pro-life, although he rejects the extremes of the movement, and he has backed some of Trumps health care initiatives, including keeping non-citizens from receiving health care subsidies.

I am running against an anti-choice Democrat, I am running against a Democrat who voted against the Affordable Care Act, I am running against someone who is outside the norms of the Democratic Party, and thats a bit different than whats happening in New York, Goldstein told me.

On Israel, Goldstein opposes the boycott Israel movement but warns that annexation could be a game-changer.

It is a step that would completely change our relationship with Israel in many ways, he said.

**From J Street to CUFI: **Sen. Jacky Rosen, the Jewish Democrat from Nevada, accepted J Streets endorsement in her freshman run in 2018. Next week, shes the sole Democrat appearing at the annual conference of Christians United for Israel. Rosen worked with CUFI to pass her Holocaust education bill, but the gap between the two groups on Israel policy is fairly stark. CUFI backs Trumps peace plan; J Street stridently opposes it. Rosen, who has expressed her reservations about the peace plan, will be the first Democrat to grace CUFIs stage (albeit a virtual one) in several years.

Meanwhile, CUFI founder John Hagee penned an op-ed in Haaretz arguing for the Trump peace plan. Its an interesting venue for Hagee the Venn overlap covering Haaretzs readership and those intrigued by Hagees views may be, well, my desk. But the most important signal it sends may be to settlers to Netanyahus right who say the plan, as minimal as its concessions to the Palestinians are, gives away too much. Hagee is telling these settlers not to expect evangelical backing for that posture.

**Speaking of evangelicals: **Trumps Middle East peace team is meeting this week to consider whether to green-light annexation, and The Associated Press Matt Lee says evangelical support in November is likely factoring into Trumps decision. But evangelicals tell Lee it might not be enough to stem what appears to be diminishing support for Trump among that base. Robert Jeffress, the pastor who blessed the new embassy in Jerusalem, says annexation is too in the weeds for evangelical voters to be an issue. Evangelicals love Israel, but Israel and the pro-Israel community (and even Israel-critical groups) have long overstated how that factors into their vote.

**Cruz control: **Theres the letter from House Democrats opposing annexation, theres an array of letters and statements from Senate Democrats opposing annexation, and theres a letter from House Republicans saying they will support annexation. Now theres a letter from seven Republican senators, spearheaded by Ted Cruz of Texas, nudging Trump to accept annexation as of a piece with his peace plan.

Netanyahu recently announced that the Israeli government will extend Israeli civil law into some of its territories, the letter sent this week says. It is the sovereign decision of our Israeli allies whether or not they do so, but of course their decision takes place against the backdrop of the Vision for Peace and its assurances of American recognition.

Weve covered the Jewish fallout from the war between Trump and his former national security adviser, John Bolton. At The New Yorker, Adam Entous dives deep into a casualty of that war: Fiona Hill, formerly the top Russia staffer on the National Security Council. In congressional impeachment hearings, Hill spoke out against the anti-Semitic conspiracy theories that infected some of the defenses of Trump against charges that he was pressuring Ukraine to investigate Biden.

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[]: https://twitter.com/NTarnopolsky/status/1273676958493216774

An array of streets in Jerusalem honor non-Jewish Zionists. Among them is Lloyd George, honoring David Lloyd George, the British prime minister who recognized the Jewish longing for a homeland. Noga Tarnopolsky, an Israeli journalist, posted a snapshot of a street sign that was tweaked to recognize the Black longing for equity.

Share your thoughts on The Tell, or suggest a topic for us. Connect with Ron Kampeas on Twitter at@kampeasor email him atthetell@jta.org.

The post The fallout from Eliot Engels likely defeat and a look at other primaries appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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The fallout from Eliot Engels likely defeat and a look at other primaries - Forward

Sarsour Organization Promoted Juneteenth Rally as Open to Everyone ‘Minus Cops and Zionists’ – Jewish Journal

Posted By on June 27, 2020

MPower Change, which calls itself the largest Muslim-led social and racial justice organization in the U.S. and is headed by Linda Sarsour, encouraged its social media followers to attend a Juneteenth rally that was open to everyone minus cops and Zionists.

Ariel Behar of The Investigative Project on Terrorism wrote in a June 24 op-ed published in the Algemeiner that MPower Changes June 17 tweet stated that it was joining a Juneteenth rally on June 19 hosted by an organization called Muslims for Abolition. Muslims for Abolition is part of an organization called Believers Bailout; Believers Bailout describes itself as a community-led effort to bail out Muslims in pretrial incarceration and ICE custody.

The image in the tweet states: Open to all, minus cops and zionists [sic].

StandWithUs co-founder and CEO Roz Rothstein tweeted on June 24, Linda Sarsour says: No Zionists at civil rights rallies Linda, that didnt work out too well for everyone when you tried that with the Womens March. Why would you do this again? Stop hijacking movements.

Journal columnist and Israel-based writer Hen Mazzig similarly tweeted on June 22, *Open to all* (minus ~90% of Jewish people who are Zionists). We wont make this moment about us, if you wont. Stop it. This fight is too important for anti-Semites to abuse this way.

He added in a later tweet: Jews should start holding protests against anti-Semitism and the other oppressions we face and put no anti-Zionists on the invite. And then yell at people who get outraged and claim they are bigots who never supported these causes in the first place.

Israellycool blogger David Lange wrote in a June 21 post about the advertisement, Why not just say No Jews allowed and be done with it?

MPower Change and Believers Bailout did not respond to the Journals requests for comment.

Juneteenth commemorates June 19, 1865, the day federal orders proclaimed slaves in Texas, the last state harboring slaves, were free.

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Sarsour Organization Promoted Juneteenth Rally as Open to Everyone 'Minus Cops and Zionists' - Jewish Journal

1967 Jordanian Ammo Stash Discovered at the Kotel – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on June 27, 2020

Photo Credit: Yoli Schwartz, Israel Antiquities Authority

The Western Wall Heritage Foundation and Israel Antiquities Authority archaeologists who are digging under the lobby of the Western Wall Tunnels, were surprised on Wednesday to discover an ammunition stash from the Six Day War. Among the findings uncovered are rifle magazines full of bullets, a bayonet, and rifle parts. The ammunition was hidden at the bottom of a water cistern. Israeli police sappers examined the stash.

The excavations are being conducted in cooperation with the Western Wall Heritage Foundation, in preparation for a new tour which will be added to the classic Western Wall Tunnels tour.

Dr. Barak Monnickendam-Givon and Tehila Sadiel, the IAA directors of the excavation, reported finding about ten full magazines of a Bren light machine gun, full clip chargers, and two bayonets for a British Lee Enfield rifle. Usually, in excavations, we find ancient findings from one or two thousand years ago, but this time we got a glimpse of the events that occurred 53 years ago, frozen in time in this water cistern. Apparently, this is an ammunition dump that was purposely hidden by soldiers of the Royal Jordanian Army during the Six Day War, perhaps when the IDF liberated the Old City. The water cistern we excavated served the residential structures of the Moghrabi neighborhood that was built in the area of what is today the Western Wall Plaza.

Assaf Peretz of the IAA said the ammunition was produced in Britain in the Greenwood and Batley Ltd factories in Leeds, Yorkshire. Based on the head stamp on the rim, the ammunition was produced in 1956 and reached the Royal Jordanian Army.

The discovery of the ammunition stash for Bren light machine guns match two other Bren guns that were found about a year and a half ago in a different water cistern in the Western Wall Plaza, in an excavation directed by Dr. Shlomit Weksler-Bdolah of the IAA, Peretz added.

The Western Wall Heritage Foundation said in a statement: Along with other glorious discoveries of our nations past from the Second Temple period, we are also happy about discovering findings from the war of this past generation to return the Jewish nations heart and be able to cling to the stones of the Western Wall. This discovery is a privilege for us to be able to acknowledge the miracles of the Creator of the Universe at this site.

About a month ago, the Israel Antiquities Authority and the Western Wall Heritage Foundation announced that an interesting subterranean network hewn into bedrock from the Second Temple period was uncovered in an archaeological excavation at the foot of a 1400-year-old public structure.

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1967 Jordanian Ammo Stash Discovered at the Kotel - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

After 75 years, Baton Rouge’s Beth Shalom synagogue will have its first female rabbi – The Advocate

Posted By on June 26, 2020

When Beth Shalom Synagogue began 75 years ago in Baton Rouge, women could not be rabbis in North America. When that status changed in 1972, Teri Appleby was at Stanford University with an eye toward law school.

It took a while, but Appleby joined the rabbinate, and shes about to become the first female rabbi at Beth Shalom.

Appleby, 68, begins her one-year interim rabbi position on July 1, replacing Rabbi Natan Trief. It also will mark the first time that Baton Rouge will have two female rabbis. Batsheva Appel has been named interim rabbi at Congregation BNai Israel, which hired its first female rabbi, Corie Yutkin, in 2007.

Gender wasnt a factor in selecting an interim rabbi, said Mark Posner, president of Beth Shalom.

I just think we were looking for the person who best fit our needs, Posner said.

Teri Appleby is a very intelligent, calm, even-tempered kind of person, said Karen Ceppos, a member of the Rabbinic Transition Committee, who belonged to a synagogue in Reno, Nevada, when Appleby was rabbi there from 2009 to 2012. She cares very deeply about community relationships and having relationships in the larger community. She has done a lot of pastoral work, working with congregants or others who have illnesses or need counseling or pastoral kinds of work. So, she has a broad range of experience.

That experience includes 6 years as a public defender in Los Angeles. When her husband, John, got a job that took them to San Francisco, she put her career on hold to help raise their children and volunteered in community and synagogue activities.

I just fell in love with Judaism as an adult, the wisdom and the richness of the ritual and the strength of community, Appleby said. We had a wonderful rabbi who was my role model and mentor. I was just taking all of the classes I could take and had leadership roles in the congregation. When it was time to go back to work, I wanted to work in the Jewish world. My rabbi said, Knowing you, what youre talking about is the rabbinate. I agreed.

I love the teaching. I love the pastoral work, helping people through those tough times in life and helping those families through a death in the family. Those things are very meaningful and satisfying.

Appleby became an assistant rabbi in Newport Beach, California, in 2007, and she has served in synagogues in Nevada; Ontario and Alberta, Canada; Tennessee; and, most recently, Nebraska.

Some of these posts also have been in an interim capacity. Her husband is semiretired, and his occupation as an environmental lawyer and consultant gave them the flexibility to relocate. Appleby said living in different sections of two countries has been educational, and her interim status has not prevented her from forming deep relationships with congregants.

I really love the interim work, she said. What I have found is communities do not interact with me like, Youre only here for a year, so I wont get to know you. I have found that people let me into their lives and theyre a part of my life whether or not its education, its religious services, if its the pastoral work. If somebodys in the hospital, they dont care that youre only there for a year.

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After 75 years, Baton Rouge's Beth Shalom synagogue will have its first female rabbi - The Advocate


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