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Jewish and Black Grandmas Team Up for a Candid Conversation on Race – Jewish Journal

Posted By on June 13, 2020

The Jewish Life Television series Bubbies Know Best, where Jewish grandmothers set up singles, paused matchmaking to invite three black grandmothers to discuss how Jews and blacks can build and strengthen their alliances as the floodgates on discussing racism have opened.

Joining the normal cast of Bubbies Bunny, Linda and SJ were Granny Angelle (Reverend Doctor Angelle Jones), Granny Beverly (Beverly Daniels) and Granny Dolores (Dolores Petersen).

The stage for an open and moving conversation was set by Reverend Anthony A. Johnson, a black reverend whose grandfather marched with Martin Luther King Jr. and Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, and who recently published a commentary on how white Jews can support black people in this historic moment.

The black church is the salvation of Judaism, Johnson said, quoting Heschel. We have the same Pharaoh in common, which is white racism.

The conversation kicked off with the debate of whether Jews are white.

One of the main petitions I make clear in my article is for all Jews if youre Mizrahi, Ashkenazi, or Sephardic whatever you areto understand and embrace your history as people of color. Youre not white, Johnson said.

The conversation then turned to the grandmothers and their history in the civil rights movement. Bubbie Bunny was one of the original dancers on American Bandstand with Dick Clark who helped to integrate the series. Meanwhile, Bubbie Linda grew up in segregated Florida.

The women discussed the recent Black Lives Matter protests, offering maternal guidance to those on the frontlines. They also drew parallels between how Jewish mothers have to tell their children about the realities of anti-Semitism and the Holocaust and how black mothers have to educate their children on police brutality.

I realize as African Americans we have a very similar experience. You can compare slavery to the Holocaust, Granny Angelle said. However, our talk doesnt consist of us discussing slavery. Unfortunately, our children do not even, a lot of times, hear about slavery, not even in school. So our talk consists of survival. How do you navigate systemic racism?

She noted that especially when black teens start to drive, they must be warned about potential danger and targeting from the police.

My granddaughter is 14 and she is eligible for a learners permit in November and she commented just the other day that in light of all these events, she might not even want a drivers license, Granny Beverly added.

The conversation closed with the Grannies advising the Bubbies how non-black Jews can be allies to Black Americans.

Were looking for a real ally, someone who is willing to sacrifice their own friends or sometimes families because you choose to speak up, Granny Angelle said. Theres a cost for speaking up. There is a cost for African-Americans. Theres going to be a cost for our allies, even more so.

But for Granny Dolores, the work is more simple: How can the Bubbies help? she asked. The Bubbies can invite me to their next Passover seder.

You can watch the full episode here:

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Jewish and Black Grandmas Team Up for a Candid Conversation on Race - Jewish Journal

Chabad of Bedford to Break Ground on New Synagogue – TAPinto.net

Posted By on June 13, 2020

BEDFORD, N.Y. - Chabad of Bedford will break ground on the $6 million, 12,000-square-foot synagogue on Sunday, June 14, at 220 South Bedford Road.

Remarks will be made at 4:30 p.m. by Bedford Town Supervisor Chris Burdick, Westchester County Executive George Latimer, State Senator Shelly Mayer, State Assemblyman David Buchwald and Chabad of Bedford Rabbi Arik Wolf.

To honor this historic moment and at the same time safeguard public health during this pandemic, Chabad of Bedford will limit the ceremony, running from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., to 10 people or fewer. The limit of 10 people aligns with CDC guidance.

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Chabad of Bedford families will take part in this socially-distanced day-long ceremony by reserving, in advance, a 10-minute time slot. Each family will have the opportunity to break ground, write a letter in the new Torah scroll, and put their stamp on an art piece that will reside in the new synagogues education wing. The ground breaking will be livestreamed.

The new Chabad of Bedford Center will be a farmhouse-style, 2.5-story building that will house a sanctuary, an event hall, classrooms, offices and a library. The project is estimated to be completed by the end of 2021.

Follow the latest construction news visit building.chabadbedford.com.

To our Beloved Community: During this crisis, we cant continue to operate entirely as we have been doing when we are only earning a fraction of our previous advertising revenue and still have to pay 100 percent of our payroll. Without that payroll, we would be unable to serve the community with the news and important information you have come to expect. If you feel that weve made a positive difference in your town, we ask that you send us a contribution to keep your community newspaper alive and strong by pressing on our PayPal buttonHERE.

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Chabad of Bedford to Break Ground on New Synagogue - TAPinto.net

Calls to defund the police put Jewish institutions in a tough position – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on June 13, 2020

(JTA) When Rabbi Capers Funnye attends a synagogue thats not his own, he must brace himself for the reaction that he knows will follow after he walks through the door.

Even though he comes in wearing a kippah and holding a prayer shawl, Funnye knows that if a security guard or police officer is there, hell probably face extensive questioning because hes African-American.

They need to do whatever theyre most comfortable with, said Funnye, the rabbi at Beth Shalom Bnai Zaken Ethiopian Hebrew Congregation in Chicago, regarding security practices at other synagogues. But, he added, If I go to a synagogue where Im not a guest speaker and they dont have my picture and have it advertised, I would be very uncomfortable going into a synagogue with armed policemen.

Interactions between armed police and black Americans have spurred a nationwide protest movement since the death of George Floyd, an African-American man, in police custody in Minneapolis in late May. The movement has put synagogues and other Jewish institutions in a challenging position: They are inclined to stand with the protest movement, but also have built close ties with law enforcement amid rising anti-Semitism, including deadly attacks on Jews in Pittsburgh; Poway, California; and Jersey City, New Jersey.

They feel protected and I understand that, said Tamar Manasseh, an African-American rabbinical student and anti-gun violence activist in Chicago, referring to white Jews. Its not their fault that they feel protected. We just dont. I think the most important thing is for them to be sensitive to that, for them to be aware of that.

She added: Some of the people youre being protected from are actually people you call friends.

Jewish organizations have a history of working closely with law enforcement, and many see police as friend rather than foe. Jewish leaders have been grateful for officers quick response to anti-Semitic attacks, and consistently recommend to local synagogues and other institutions that they build close relationships with the police.

There is prejudice, there is bias [within police forces]. We need to deal with it, said Abraham Foxman, the former longtime national director of the Anti-Defamation League who established and expanded many of its law enforcement programs.

Foxman said he supports increased police transparency and accountability, but at the end of the day, the African-American community will need the same protection as we do.

The ADL is one organization that has tried to straddle the divide. The group has a long record of working for civil rights and has expressed solidarity with the protests. It has called for aggressive legislation against police brutality. It organized a Shabbat dedicated to anti-racism.

But the ADL appears to be far from backing calls to defund the police, one demand of the protest movement that is gaining traction. A photo of two police officers graces the cover of the ADLs guide titled Protecting Your Jewish Institution, which recommends engaging with police and other law enforcement dozens of times.

Get to know local law enforcement and get them to know you before there is a problem, the guide says. Invite local police officers to use your gym, to join you for an oneg Shabbat or just to visit your building and get to know it.

The principal organization tasked with coordinating protection for Jewish institutions is the Secure Community Network, or SCN, which was created in 2004 by two national coalitions of Jewish organizations. SCN also sees law enforcement as the first address, and one of the main tools for synagogues, schools and community centers to turn to when devising a security plan. Its current and past CEOs both come from long careers in law enforcement.

SCN often recommends being in touch with the local police department as one of the first steps in any security plan. In a report issued this year about whether synagogues should hire armed guards a step SCN did not necessarily recommend, and called not a security strategy or plan on its own the group said the best option is to have an on-duty police officer present. The group credits law enforcement for preventing further bloodshed in Pittsburgh, Poway and Jersey City.

Its CEO, Michael Masters, is a former Department of Homeland Security official in the Chicago area. Masters said he supports efforts to increase police accountability and transparency in ways that make black Americans safer, though he did not go into further detail.

He said the Jewish community should take advantage of its relationships with law enforcement to help make that happen while also being more inclusive of Jews of color.

We have had aperhapsmore successful relationship with law enforcement than other communities, and if there arethings to learn from that orways we can leverage thatto effectuatemeaningful change, thatwill benefit other communities, he said. Its also important for us to recognize as a community that were not monolithic. We have incredible diversity in the Jewish community.

But Masters stressed that anti-Semitic attacks remain a present threat and that police are a key partner in preventing it.

A very real, very deadly and likely more active threat against our community exists, he said. If we recognize all that and accept that we need to ensure the safety and security of the community and the people who walk into our institutions, but there are issues with the organizations that provide some of those services, then we have a responsibility to work with those organizations and institutions to address and correct them.

The ADL also plays a role in educating police against extremism and prejudice. The group says its the largest nongovernmental trainer of law enforcement in the country and has trained 150,000 personnel. Some of the training is on counterterrorism, but many of the programs focus on how to recognize hate crimes and fight implicit bias.

One program takes officers to the U.S. Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., to show them how local police during the genocide carried out racist and genocidal policies. The ADLs Center on Extremism has provided intelligence on extremists to the FBI that has helped lead to arrests.

Current ADL officials declined to be interviewed for this article, but the organization did provide a statement from its CEO, Jonathan Greenblatt.

Theres important, deep, systemic work that needs to happen within law enforcement to rebuild trust and prevent tragedies like the murder of George Floyd or Breonna Taylor, he said.Greenblatt added that the ADL is advocating for investments in meaningful police reform and broader efforts to address institutional racism in the criminal justice system.

While many recognize the need that Jews feel for security in the wake of anti-Semitic attacks, advocates for structural police reform say that physical protection must come with extensive conversations and training to ensure that security measures dont exclude Jews of color.

Funnye said that his synagogue on Chicagos South Side is in touch with police, but relies principally on a network of close relationships across the neighborhood to create a feeling of security.

Security cant come at the expense of black Jews or other black people, said Matt Nosanchuk, a former Obama administration liaison to the Jewish community who now heads the New York Jewish Agenda, a progressive advocacy group that supports legislation to reform police.

We need to take a hard look at these relationships and if we are partnering with law enforcement organizations, we need to make sure that they are observing policies and practices and training that does not turn them into an agent of systemic racism in our country, he said.

Some Jewish activists have joined the call to defund the police. For Jews for Racial and Economic Justice, a New York City group, that means a demand to reduce the $6 billion NYPD budget by at least $1 billion.

Leo Ferguson, a black Jewish organizer with the group, says he personally thinks New York City does need an armed municipal security force, but it should be much smaller than what currently exists. And he hopes synagogues will start building alliances with other vulnerable groups in their neighborhoods to provide mutual allyship and security rather than be under armed guard.

The most powerful thing we can do for the safety of the Jewish community is build solidarity and much stronger relationships with other communities that face white nationalism and violence and hate violence, Ferguson said. Building allies rather than doubling down on tensions thats going to pay long-term dividends in a way that having a cop car parked outside of your synagogue never will.

Carin Mrotz, a Jewish activist in Minneapolis who supported that citys recent vote to disband the police department, said white Jews may look to police for protection because of a deep-seated and justified fear of anti-Semitism. But she hopes that Jewish institutions can think beyond self-defense to dream what else is possible beyond what we have right now.

Part of this is about whiteness and comfort with law enforcement, and part of it is historical, generational trauma and our response to fear which is real, said Mrotz, executive director of the social justice group Jewish Community Action. Our fear is often triggered by these attacks, which makes it hard to really dream or focus on the potential for a different world.

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Calls to defund the police put Jewish institutions in a tough position - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

As they reopen, congregations grapple with including seniors – Martinsville Bulletin

Posted By on June 13, 2020

(RNS) Each Sunday, Larry Little and his wife, Mary, get ready for church. They dress casually, fill two tumblers with water, climb into their golf cart and drive two miles to The Grove, a grassy field next to their church.

There they find a parking place, turn off the engine and settle in for a live service in front of a Jumbotron and a stage.

The Littles, who live in a retirement community called The Villages, about an hours drive northwest of Orlando, Florida, are among the lucky few.

Since mid-March, when state shutdowns forced churches, synagogues and mosques to close amid the coronavirus pandemic, Americans have had to mostly rely on online worship services.

But Live Oaks Community Church has been able to offer continuous outdoor services one on Saturday and two on Sunday with dozens, sometimes hundreds, arriving via their golf carts.

The only negative is that you dont have much interaction with the rest of the congregation, said Larry Little, 77. Our golf carts are 6 feet apart and they dont want us outside the golf cart.

This content is written and produced by Religion News Service and distributed by The Associated Press. RNS and AP partner on some religion news content. RNS is solely responsible for this story.

For many, if not most, older congregants living in colder climates or with no access to outdoor services, such options are a luxury.

Unable to find spiritual sustenance or the comforts of community, many are isolated and lonely. They may struggle with using the technology required for viewing online services or connecting virtually with family, friends and community members.

Its becoming more of a challenge to figure out how we minister to, and with, these older adults, said Missy Buchanan, a writer and speaker from Rockwall, Texas, with a focus on older adults.

Some congregations are making phone calls and writing letters to older members. Others have bought them tablets and are teaching the least technologically savvy how to connect to online platforms.

Now, as states begin loosening lockdown restrictions and churches contemplate how to reopen safely, clergy and other religious leaders face difficult decisions when it comes to their senior members.

For older people, theres a cruel reality to those reopenings.

Mounting evidence suggests houses of worship are probably among the riskiest places for older people. Transmission is much more likely indoors where lots of people come into close contact and where droplets with viral particles might linger in the air for as long as eight minutes. Multiple coronavirus cases across the country have been linked to people attending church and synagogue services or events.

Older Americans are also among the most likely to develop a severe case of COVID-19. Eight out of 10 coronavirus deaths reported in the U.S. have been among adults 65 years and older, according to the Centers for Disease Control.

Many older people like the Littles may not see the insides of a church or synagogue for a very long time.

When churches regather, older people may be the last to go back, said Amy Hanson, an instructor in the gerontology department at the University of Nebraska at Omaha who has a consulting ministry to help churches engage older adults. Some will want to return. But it will be hard for those who do go back. Therell be no handshaking and hugging things older adults are missing. They wont feel all theyre hoping to feel.

Older American were nearly twice as likely as younger Americans to attend church, synagogue and mosque before the shutdowns. A recent Pew Research survey found that 61% of those born before 1945 (the so-called Silent Generation) attended religious services monthly or more, compared with 35% of millennials (born between 1981 and 1996).

In this in-between time, congregations should assess their older adult members, charting whether they live alone or have family nearby. Do they have hearing or vision impairments? Do they have access to chaplains at assisted living or nursing homes?

They would also do well to recognize that older Americans are not monolithic in their needs, said Buchanan, who writes devotionals for older adults. Buchanan has identified four basic groups of older adults: the go-gos, those who are still very active and independent; the slow-gos, those who may have some physical limitations; the no-gos, those who are homebound; and the not-gonna-make-me-go, young Boomers who dont attend religious services on a regular basis.

Many congregational ministries, Buchanan said, focus on only one or two of those groups.

Large churches, such as Johnson Ferry Baptist Church in Marietta, Georgia, can do a lot more. In the days after the shutdown, the 7,000-member church prepared meals for many isolated church members and made daily phone calls to those living alone.

Now the emphasis has shifted to finding ways to engage older adults and allow them to contribute to the life of the church.

Theyre not here to take up space, said Peggy Fulghum, minister to older adults at Johnson Ferry. We want to keep them serving. I try to create ministries for them to be active and serve and give back to the community.

For example, after noticing that in-person high school graduations were canceled, Fulghum asked older members to write congratulatory cards to high school seniors, encouraging them on their journey to adulthood and sharing a bit of their wisdom.

The cards were mailed to the church and the church staff is now sending them to families with high school seniors.

The church has also started a Tuesday morning Zoom call for older members where they can greet each other, sing a song and pray as a group. They hope it encourages groups of older adults to start their own Zoom gatherings. And the church is retooling its GrandCamp ministry to allow grandparents and children to interact through online projects.

Live Oaks Community Church in Florida has recently announced it will resume indoor worship for up to 100 people with social distancing.

The Littles, however, have decided to continue worshipping outdoors at least for the time being.

We think the golf cart experience is unique and we enjoy it, Larry Little said. Its completely open and theres always a little breeze. You dont feel that sense of isolation. Isolation is worse than the virus for old folks.

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As they reopen, congregations grapple with including seniors - Martinsville Bulletin

Local rabbi and pastor lead coast-to-coast ‘Night of Hope’ to fight racism – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on June 13, 2020

When Rabbi David Booth heard about George Floyds death at the hands of Minneapolis police, the spiritual leader of Congregation Kol Emeth in Palo Alto called his friend, Pastor Kaloma Smith.

I asked for guidance from him, Booth said. He is a wonderful leader and voice.

Smith, the pastor of University AME Zion Church, the oldest black church in Palo Alto, has visited Israel twice with Booth, first on a clergy trip organized by the S.F.-based Jewish Community Relations Council and then last summer with both their congregations.

The two men spoke several times those first days after Floyds May 25 death, with Booth asking Smith what he, as a rabbi, could do to help.

One thing he said that stuck with me was the need to preach to our own communities, Booth said.

So Booth reached out to colleagues at Conservative synagogues around the country, asking them to join a virtual evening of prayer and learning, and to invite their congregants to join in, as well. First and foremost to share our grief at the violence in our communities, specifically against black people, the invitation read. Second, a call for action, encouraging people across the country to add their voices to those advocating for police forces dedicated to de-escalation.

Held June 9 on Zoom, Fighting Racism: A Night of Hope and Memory drew nearly 200 participants from eight synagogues (in six states) from coast to coast, including one other local synagogue, Congregation Beth Ami in Santa Rosa.

The Jewish community has an historic friendship with the black community and this is a time to show that we stand together,Booth told J.

He opened the event by admonishing the Jewish community for allowing itself to spend too much time standing by and allowing racism to flourish.

For repentance to mean anything, our behavior has to change, he said. For too many years we have been passive. We have spent generations standing idly by, being concerned with our own Jewish issues. Its time to open our eyes.

This is an important moment to mourn, but also to make a commitment to action.

The evening was filled with prayer: the Mourners Kaddish, of course, and a reimagined version of El Malei Rachamim, a Jewish prayer for the soul of a person who has died. In this version, led by Rabbi Adam Rosenbaum of Synagogue Emanu-El in Charleston, South Carolina, the group called out to the souls of our brothers and sisters who have been killed, burned and lynched because of racism and baseless hate.

Then, in accordance with the #SayTheirNames campaign, the names of 26 black men and women murdered, mostly by police, in recent years were read aloud, with a pause between each name so it could be repeated by participants. George Floyd. Breonna Taylor. Ahmaud Arbery. Trayvon Martin. Eric Garner. The list went on in solemn cadence.

We will say their names, and we will use Jewish ritual to remember them and to see the lost humanity, Booth declared.

Most of the hour-long gathering, however, was given over to Pastor Smith, who gave an impassioned plea for American Jews to be allies to the black community. Its a long process, he explained, and it takes real work. Uncomfortable work.

First, he said, get educated. Read about the black experience in America, he said. Once you start educating yourselves, you will see the complexities. The answers are not always that simple.

Then, he said, stand together with those who are protesting. The only way we can honor the work these young people are doing in the street is to stand behind them, he said. This is a generation that is eager to go to the streets. They are leading us.

Calling out to those in the virtual gathering that he recognized from his trips to Israel, Smith smiled, saying; One of the things I admire about the Jewish community is your ability to create advocacy, to go to government and get things done. We need your advocacy at this moment.

Remember, he told the crowd, the same white supremacists who oppose the black community will [work against] the Jewish community. Our interests are aligned.

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Local rabbi and pastor lead coast-to-coast 'Night of Hope' to fight racism - The Jewish News of Northern California

Briarcliff Congregations Organic Farm Serves the Community – River Journal Staff

Posted By on June 13, 2020

The COVID pandemic has laid bare our vulnerabilities with regard to so many of lifes essentials. Exposure to the virus aside, our mental health and sense of well-being, the fulfillment of our spiritual needs, our access to the right foods (and at reasonable costs), our mobility, and our ability to interact with friends and family are but a few of the critical challenges we have encountered.

And then there is the unusual case of the Organic Farm at Congregation Sons of Israel in Briarcliff Manor, NY.

Beginning in 2016, and led by Rabbi Steven Kane and members Ryna Lustig, Fred Schulman, Jill Greenstein, and David Leavitt, CSI, driven by an effort to expand spiritual, educational, and recreational connections to the synagogue for its members, and acknowledging a renewed interest in organic produce and working the land, about two acres of synagogue land were cleared for farming. They drilled a well for irrigation, built a chicken coop (with fresh, free-range eggs available every day), divided and fenced two fields (one Commercial Field for volume production, and one Community Field with 36 beds that could be rented for each season to members of the congregation who plant their own produce and flowers and tend to their own garden).

CSI, like all houses of worship, has been closed for these past months, but the Organic Farm has been alive with activity. Fields have been prepared, kale and herbs are already being harvested, tomatoes and other vegetables have been planted, 16 beds in the Community Field have been rented and those families have been actively working their gardens, and a new flock of an additional 15 chickens has recently arrived.

At all times being cautious of pandemic concerns, the open areas of the Farms two acres provide plenty of room for people to work and enjoy at a distance. All watering and tools are provided by CSI to the Commercial Field volunteers and Community Field renters.

As the effects of the pandemic became apparent, CSI decided that opening the Farm would be a service both to its members and to the community at large. Involving members in this synagogue-sponsored activity would safely bring members and families into safe and open areas during the spring and summer seasons. Rewarding physical activity, shared with family, would be beneficial for mind, spirit, and body. Working the land and seeing (and eating) the benefit of your labor would provide some light in the darkness. Having these experiences through a synagogue facility would reconnect people with their house of worship.

As CSI made the decision to open the Farm for this season, there were many views. Should it only be opened on a partial basis assuming fewer participants? Should there be fewer plantings since restaurants (the main purchasers of the produce) were not operating? After finding that the pandemic had created food shortages for many of the areas most vulnerable, the decision was made to not only open the Farm, but to maximize its productivity so that a majority of the harvests could be brought to local food banks and delivered directly to those in the community who are in need.

Last season, the Organic Farm harvested 3,282 pounds of produce, with approximately 20% (i.e., 676 pounds) donated to local food banks. This year, the fields have been slightly extended and the soil has been enriched with organic matter, with projections for over 4000 pounds of harvested produce. The Farm will be growing tomatoes, cherry tomatoes, lettuce, sweet pepper, basil, pak choi, chard, zucchini, squash, eggplant, cucumbers, celery, Brussels sprouts, and broccoli rabe. Most of the production will be dedicated to charitable donation to food banks and people in need.

During these challenging times, finally something that is good for body and soul.

Excerpt from:

Briarcliff Congregations Organic Farm Serves the Community - River Journal Staff

Police in German city of Halle say local Jews requested no additional protection for Yom Kippur – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on June 13, 2020

BERLIN (JTA) Police officials in the German city of Halle say that the Jewish community had not sought additional protection last Yom Kippur, the Jewish holiday when a gunman sought unsuccessfully to enter the synagogue.

Halle Police Chief Annett Wernicke and several colleagues told a committee of inquiry in the Magdeburg state parliament on Wednesday that the local Jewish community had not made any special request for security on that day.

Police have admitted that they were unaware that Oct. 9 was Yom Kippur last year, but they also said the Jewish community had not shared a list of important dates with them and as a result they had not deployed any addition protection.

In the wake of the attack, in which a gunman killed two people after failing to penetrate the synagogues newly fortified doors, Jewish officials criticized the police for failing to adequately protect the site.

Halles Jewish community president, Max Privorozki, told the German media that he had tried to get more protection for Jewish institutions in the state of Saxony-Anhalt but was always told everything is calm, everything is fine.

Josef Schuster, the head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, said the police failing was scandalous.

This man could have been disarmed before he could attack the others, Schuster told Deutschlandfunk public radio the day after the attack.

The head of police inspection in Halle, Mario Schwan, who oversees security for religious institutions, said there had been not a single suggestion of any danger on the Yom Kippur holiday. The person in charge on Oct. 9, Christian Baust, said he had not known the significance of the date.

Sigmount Koenigsberg, the commissioner on anti-Semitism for Berlins Jewish community, said in a Facebook post this week that the police should have known.

Everyone says there were no indications after a terror attack, he said. But the security authorities must have known that Jewish establishments are always targeted. At least since the terror attack on the Israeli Olympic team in 1972.

The accused gunman is due to stand trial in July on two murder charges and 68 counts of attempted murder motivated by hatred of Jews and others.

The post Police in German city of Halle say local Jews requested no additional protection for Yom Kippur appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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Police in German city of Halle say local Jews requested no additional protection for Yom Kippur - Cleveland Jewish News

Brush fire caught early at Walnut Creek synagogue J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on June 12, 2020

A brush fire broke out on the property of Congregation Bnai Shalom in Walnut Creek around 6 p.m. June 7, the synagogue said.

The Sunday evening fire was contained to the hill behind the synagogues main building, with some property damage to a nearby cell tower, as well as an area with outdoor garden equipment, according to a community-wide email sent by president Tim Plattner. Contra Costa firefighters responded after a neighbor called.

I want to thank the Contra Costa Fire Protection District for responding promptly and bringing the fire under control, Plattner said in his email. We owe them a huge debt of gratitude and I will be writing a letter to them saying exactly that.

Plattner also thanked executive director Alyssa Faulkenberg, the synagogues office staff and the secretary/buildings and grounds chair Jim Solomon for deciding to preemptively remove overgrowth on the affected hill two weeks ago.

If that hadnt been done at the proper time, this could have been much worse, Plattner said.

The synagogue has a yearly abatement program to clear away excess brush on its property, according to Faulkenberg. She said it is too early to determine total monetary damages from the fire.

Were happy the fire and damage was not more severe, Faulkenberg said in an email to J.

According to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE), the 2020 wildfire season in the state is expected to be more active than usual in June. On June 6, firefighters battled a 135-acre fire in Contra Costa County, southwest of Concord.

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Brush fire caught early at Walnut Creek synagogue J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Defying their own dire projection, the Orthodox Jewish community of Antwerp has weathered the coronavirus surprisingly well – JTA News

Posted By on June 12, 2020

(JTA) Most of the 20,000 or so haredi Orthodox Jews in Antwerp, Belgium, live close to one another in a centrally located neighborhood, an area of about 20 narrow streets that borders the citys main railroad station.

While many Orthodox communities around the world have struggled during the coronavirus pandemic to gather minyans groups of 10 or more worshippers required by Jewish law to recite certain public prayers many Antwerp Jews developed a hack to do so: gathering on their apartment balconies.

For months, the Jewish neighbors have recited prayers with each other from balcony to balcony. The sound was so loud at times that non-Jewish neighbors complained to police, the Gazet van Antwerpen reported. Some even placed a Torah scroll in a courtyard visible from hundreds of apartments on the same block, said Rabbi Pinchas Kornfeld, secretary-general of Machsike Hadas, Antwerps main religious community.

We have three minyanim on my street alone, Kornfeld said. Of course I miss synagogue, its a place of reflection, social interaction, belonging. But these balcony minyanim give normalcy, they kept the rhythm of life and the ability to pray.

This unique setting could be one reason why the citys Orthodox community avoided the COVID-19 catastrophe that it was worried about.

The community projected in March that 85% of its members could contract the coronavirus because of its close conditions and frequent social interactions, and that over 500 could die. A communal taboo about dealing with the virus, which some labeled as a scourge of the secular world, added to the danger.

Yet Antwerps Jewish community has weathered the pandemic one that has killed about 10,000 of their compatriots, giving Belgium the worlds highest per capita COVID-19 death rate (behind the microstate San Marino) surprisingly well. To date, 11 people from the citys Jewish community have succumbed to the disease, all of them aged or having suffered from preexisting medical issues, communal leaders told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

Community members believe that the responsible leadership of their rabbis and their followers discipline in following orders stemmed the spread of the virus.

We are blessed in that we have rabbis that gave clear instructions and community members who listened, said Shlomo Stroh, a 38-year-old community activist and father of seven children.

But at first, the opposite seemed to be happening. The communitys own dire projection was influenced by the fact that some members seemed to be flouting government instructions to isolate and refrain from group prayer.

At one point, Shmulie Markowitz, head of the Hatzole Antwerp Jewish community emergency and rescue unit, sent a WhatsApp message to many Antwerp Jews urging them to respect rules that prohibited more than 10 people from occupying the same space at a store.

People push in, and they bring their children with them, and this must stop, he said in the message.

Haredi Orthodox Jews walk in Antwerp, Belgium, March 16, 2016. (Cnaan Liphshiz)

The community also at first downplayed the danger of the virus.

People call it the disease or they say they have fallen ill, but theres a taboo, a stigma on it and a sense of shame around it, Martin Rosenblum, a doctor there with several haredi Orthodox patients, told JTA in April. It means that some people with the virus wait until theyre in really bad shape before they try to go to hospital or get help.

But the community took swift action following the death rate projection, implementing strict social distancing measures that included the closure of all synagogues on March 13 five days before federal authorities imposed a nationwide lockdown.

Its just a few days, but with a pandemic that grows exponentially it was a crucial early step, said Stroh, who was involved in the decision-making process led by the citys chief rabbi, Aaron Schiff, and the citys beit din, or rabbinical court.

Getting the Orthodox Jewish community of Antwerp to adhere to social distancing was a gradual process, according to Claude Marinower, an alderman in charge of the city governments communications efforts, among other portfolios.

At first there was some pushback from some community members against the closure of synagogues, said Marinower, who is Jewish but is not Orthodox. But there was more cooperation as the dimensions of the pandemic emerged and especially in Belgium, where about 10,000 people have died of the coronavirus.

When rabbis issued strong instructions against gatherings, it was accepted by all, Marinower said.

Michael Freilich, an Orthodox Jewish lawmaker from Antwerp who serves in the federal parliament, also attributed the low death rate among Jews to a combination of rabbinical leadership and authorities strict enforcement. Together, he told JTA, it meant we were saved from disaster.

The efforts werent always easy. On March 15, more than 20 students at a yeshiva, a religious seminary, barricaded themselves inside a synagogue when the police asked them to come out and maintain social distancing, HLN reported. They eventually let the officers enter.

Dozens of fines have been handed out to people from the Orthodox community for failing to stay indoors, or for congregating for minyan or at grocery stores, one member of the community told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency on condition of anonymity. The source added that police led the way in the social distancing effort, not the rabbis.

The real reason we were spared of many deaths was the very strict guidelines by the authorities and the strict enforcement of the rules by police, the source said. So yes, the rabbis played a role, but only after they had no choice to do otherwise.

Other influential rabbis around the world have been less consistent in their messaging to community members.

Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, an Israel-based leader of Litvak Jews in that country and beyond, ordered strictly Orthodox schools in Israel to ignore the Health Ministry shutdown orders on March 18. He would order those schools closed on March 29.

Others gave social distancing decrees that often were ignored, including in the London neighborhood of Stamford Hill, where many Orthodox members have close family ties with members of the Antwerp community. As in the United States, police in the United Kingdom have stepped in multiple times to break up gatherings of Orthodox Jews, including at weddings and prayer groups.

Another factor that aided Antwerp Jews was their unity. As Stroh explained, Stamford Hill is too big, with too many separate Jewish sects. It was harder to get them all on the same page.

Antwerp also has fringes, like the Satmar [Hasidic dynasty] and others, but none are big enough [to go it alone], Stroh said.

Rabbi Kornfeld said the layout and demography of the Jewish community of Antwerp certainly helped keep up morale as well and made it easier for members to observe the social distancing measures and synagogue shutdowns.

Typically, a prominent member of the community or a local cantor from the block would read aloud from a Torah scroll that he took to the center of an interior yard. Dozens of residents prayed from the balconies upstairs with the reader.

Although some complained about the noise, neighborhood resident Barbara Pieters told the Gazet van Antwerpen that she enjoyed the balcony prayers.

Usually we go to concerts, now we get them in our yard, she said. Its interesting to hear what usually only goes on at synagogue.

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Defying their own dire projection, the Orthodox Jewish community of Antwerp has weathered the coronavirus surprisingly well - JTA News

We Orthodox Jews have been largely complacent about racism. It’s time to change that. – JTA News

Posted By on June 12, 2020

DALLAS (JTA) Before COVID-19, when my community convened every Shabbat at our synagogue here, two men stood at opposite ends of the property wearing Kevlar vests and holding makeshift nylon shields. These shields covered the mens long automatic rifles so that our communitys children wouldnt face heavy firearms every time they ambled into services.

How should I feel about those police officers standing tall in the Texas heat, and the protection they afford me, when they wear the same badge as the officer who murdered Botham Jean in his apartment? How should we religious Jews feel about police officers who ran toward the gunfire in Pittsburghand Poway when they wear similar badges as those responsible for the deaths of George Floyd and many others?

As Jews, we regularly study the Talmuds discursive pages, and know that more often than not life is filled with gray areas and grayer areas. As an observant Modern Orthodox Jew, I also know that those complexities are no excuse for living an unprincipled and unregimented life. We take strong stands on everything from how long one should wait between mixing milk and meat to defending Israels right to exist. Yet these days, I hear more silence than not from our community leaders on the racial issues engulfing our nation.

I get the sense that a majority of the Orthodox community, who I believe are good people, feel hesitant about the current protests. They feel reluctant to articulate a strong position: They trust the police to protect us, and they are wary of any perceived threat to their security, whether real or imagined. Jews generally dont fare well when the law breaks down. Perhaps more pointedly, deep down, the white among us know that we will never face the same violence that black people do today why care too much about it?

Too many in our community have forgotten that not so long ago, we were the targets of government-sanctioned violence. Our community knows better than most what results from systemic persecution. Indeed, we wail with fury at the resurgence of anti-Semitism in the United States and Europe, and correctly demand solutions from our lawmakers and community leaders.

Yet when faced with the systemic persecution of black Americans, the results of 400 years of slavery and oppression, how do we respond? We issue milquetoast statements about bigotry and racism, and urge ourselves to seek greater understanding among our fellow men and women.

Where is the righteous anger that we muster against anti-Semitism? Where are the complex policy proposals that we offer when waging political war against Irans terrorist regime? Where is the sound and the fury that we lend to our advocacy for Israel? Where is the uproar that followed in 2018 when our community came under attack by white supremacists? Despite a few notable exceptions, we are hearing mostly silence or fumbling for words that fall short.

Two of our bedrock religious concepts can help us here: kavod habriyot, respect for all of Gods creations, and hakarat hatov, gratitude to those who do good things for you. It is a particularly Jewish position an essentially Jewish one to argue that we can both embrace the Black Lives Matter movement and the police forces that protect us when we worship.

We know that police need funding to rout out and find those who would seek to harm our community because of our religion, but we also should know that a significant amount of that funding must go to retraining our police force to deescalate without force, to respect black lives and to create community policing initiatives.

We know that many police officers especially those who protect us while we pray are dedicated to the public good, but that doesnt preclude us from supporting the repeal of qualified immunity laws that often shield police from the consequences of their actions.

We know through our own recent tragic experience that armed police are required in our cities, but we can work toward the wholesale changes needed in the United States that will ensure an armed police officer does not pose a danger to our fellow citizens.

Swaths of our community might disagree with this, in style or substance, believing that we should either sit this one out, or that police reform and larger scale societal change is unnecessary. They should be embraced in avid discussion.

First, though, we must confront the outright racists that have been our shame a nasty open secret that our Orthodox communities have turned a blind eye to for too long. Whether racism presents in loved ones, synagogue buddies or chavrutas, all efforts must be made to eradicate its presence from our synagogues and spiritual shtetls. If indeed, in the words of the Orthodox Unions anodyne statement, indifference is not an option, then we must look inward at those who would actively encourage indifference. No longer should we only save our most passionate debates for synagogue infighting or questions about Israeli politics.

Jews can show up to this conversation in a full-throated manner, informed by Jewish values and ideas, representing a broad spectrum of Jews who might not agree on other issues. We can bring our particular identity, lived experience, nuanced position and religious principles to this fight. We shouldnt shy away from it just because a majority of us Modern Orthodox Jews in America are personally unaffected by police abuse, some of us have politics that trend conservative and all of us are grateful for the police protection that we enjoy at our places of education and worship.

When we finally reconvene in our synagogues and come together again as a religious community, I will still feel relief when I see our two sentries standing outside our synagogue, alert for any threat. I know that every congregant will as well, and voice their hakarat hatov in that moment. When we enter the synagogue, I hope that we use the opportunity afforded by our protection to have the conversation about kavod habriyot that we need to have right now among ourselves, our country and our God.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of JTA or its parent company, 70 Faces Media.

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We Orthodox Jews have been largely complacent about racism. It's time to change that. - JTA News


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