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Any Hostile Miscalculation to Receive Iran’s Crushing Response: Top Commander – Al-Manar TV

Posted By on June 1, 2020

Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces warned the enemies that a miscalculation in dealing with Iran will trigger a decisive and immediate response from the countrys military forces.

In a statement on the occasion of the anniversary of passing away of Imam Khomeini, Major General Mohammad Hussein Baqeri said the Iranian Armed Forces are fully prepared to counterthreats and respond to hostile measures.

The Iranian military forces are vigorously protecting the countrys independence, territorial integrity, and national security, the commander said.

Under the guidance of Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Sayyed Ali Khamenei, the Armed Forces are sticking to a strategy to boost deterrent power, maximize defense capacities, and update the offense tactics proportional topotential threats posed by the front of enemies, the senior commander added.

Major General Baqeri further gave an assurance that Irans military forces remain vigilant at all times to deal with the modern seditions and plots against the Islamic Republic. As we have announced several times, we will decisively and immediately give retaliatory response to any miscalculation from them (enemies) at any place and any time.

He also highlighted the failure of the front of hegemony, Zionism, and the filthy regional reactionary regimes to harm the Islamic Republic and the Revolution during three decades after passing away of Imam Khomeini, saying their full-blown media wars, cultural onslaught, economic threats and wars, military threats, and psychological warfare against Iran have all ended in failure.

The top commander then pointed to Irans strategy of active and progressive resistance, not stationary and passive resistance, saying such an approach has led to the formation of resistance groups in the Islamic world and the victory of resistance front in West Asia.

Major General Baqeri went on to say thattheactive resistance has defeated the Daesh (ISIL or ISIS) terrorist group and Takfiri terrorism, thwarted the evil plots of the Greater Middle East and the Deal of the Century, and has turned the US withdrawal from the region into a regional and international demand.

Source: Tasnim News Agency

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Any Hostile Miscalculation to Receive Iran's Crushing Response: Top Commander - Al-Manar TV

Shavuot brings out the Jew – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on June 1, 2020

What is a Jew? That is a question that has baffled thinkers over the course of the centuries.

Some claim a Jew is a member of the Jewish religion. But is Judaism really a religion? A religion is defined as a faith. A Muslim who does not believe in Mohammed cannot be a Muslim, and a Christian who does not believe in the tenets of Christianity is not called a Christian.

According to Jewish law, however, any person born to a Jewish mother is considered Jewish, regardless of faith or practice. A Jew who practices Hinduism is still called a Jew. It seems, then, that being Jewish cannot be confined to membership in a certain religion.

Some say Judaism is a race. What is a race? It is defined as people sharing common physical characteristics. Does Judaism fit that criterion? It is impossible to convert into a race; color and characteristics cannot be transferred. Judaism, however, accepts converts from all races. There are Jews of all colors and races, and no color is considered to be more Jewish than any other. Judaism is not a race.

Others claim that Judaism is a nationality. But what is a nation? A group of people who are united by a common geographic area and culture. Here too, Judaism does not seem to fit the bill. Jews have lived in countries across the globe for thousands of years. Even Israel cannot be said to unite all Jews, since Judaism was born before they entered the land, and it has survived for almost 2,000 years after they were expelled from the land.

Culturally too, Sephardic and Ashkenazic Jews share very different cultures and lifestyles. Various Chasidic groups, as well as German and Yemenite Jewish communities, also share quite different lifestyles yet they are all considered brothers and sisters to one another.

So, what is a Jew?

There does not seem to be any definition that can fit neatly in a little box. All we know is that a Jew is a Jew. They are defined by the Torah as being a Jew: A person being born to a Jewish mother or having been properly converted to Judaism. Without Torah, there could be no such entity as a Jew.

Shavuot is the day we celebrate the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai, 3,332 years ago. But, it is not merely a celebration marking an historical occasion. It is the day we celebrate our very identity as Jews. Let us take pride in recognizing our uniqueness as G-ds Chosen People.

Rabbi Ephraim Nisenbaum is the co-founder and director of the Jewish Learning Connection, a Jewish outreach organization offering educational classes and study opportunities throughout Northeast Ohio.

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Shavuot brings out the Jew - Cleveland Jewish News

I joined a club to read an old book and found a new story – Jewish Journal

Posted By on June 1, 2020

wikicommons

The Sarajevo Haggadah

Geraldine Brooks People of the Book was the inspiration for a creative musical work entitled The Sarajevo Haggadah: Music of the Book. Created by Bosnian composer and accordion player, Merima Kljuco, the work uses accordion, piano, and video to trace the unique travels of the haggadah from medieval Spain to 20th century Bosnia.

Hidden and rescued during World War II, the haggadah was later restored by the National Museum in Sarajevo. Commissioned by The Foundation for Jewish Culture, the music reflects the turmoil of the times.

For Kljuclo its not about the violence, its about the power of culture in the face of violence. The music reflects the turmoil of those times. But for Kljuclo, the story is not so much about the violence that threatened the haggadah and the Jews through the centuries. Its about people helping one another, and the power of culture in the face of violence. Its interesting that such a story surprises us, she says, when it should be completely normal.

As a writer, much of what I write about comes to me in very strange and unexpected ways. The result is that often I come upon musical stories that few people know of. Such is the case of this musical composition.

Since I am an inveterate reader, an article from the online Forward caught my attention recently. The article invited interested viewers to join the Forward Book Club on Zoom. The book to be discussed was People of the Book. I had already read the book but was willing to participate. It has been an amazing experience with readers participating from all over the United States! One of the most interesting discussions on the Zoom site involved a museum curator who had worked on the haggadah itself which was an early illuminated haggadah from 14th century Spain.

However, in doing some research, as I generally do when working on a new topic, I came upon the musical connection that I write about in this article.

Merima Kljuco was studying music in Sarajevo when the war in Bosnia broke out. She fled Bosnia in 1993. A few years later a friend gave her People of the Book, Geraldine Brooks novel about the Sarajevo Haggadah. After reading the book, she started thinking of how she could make a musical story telling how the haggadah ended up in Sarajevo.

She brought her project to fruition with a multimedia composition for piano and accordion that includes images from the Sarajevo Haggadah. Many of the scenes, illuminated in copper and gold, depict Biblical stories from Creation to the death of Moses.

So just who is Merima Kljuco? Checking her out, I found out that she is a classically trained accordionist specializing in contemporary music that draws from many traditions including Balkan, Sephardic and Klezmer.

She was born in Yugoslavia in 1973 but fled to the Netherlands as a refugee of the Bosnian War where she currently is listed as a Bosnian-Dutch resident.

At present, she also resides in Los Angeles. She speaks of the Sarajevo Haggadah as a symbol that inspires respect and tolerance of different cultures and traditions. She remembers a time growing up in Sarajevo in a culture that felt a bond with Jewish, Christian, and Muslim communities.

In many ways, the haggadah reminds her of her own life and the Exodus she experienced. All of this led her to this 12 movement composition starting with Gods creation of the world in an accordion sequence that mimics the sound of breath.

At our final book club session, Geraldine Brooks was the guest author. During the question and answer session, I offered the information I had recently discovered. She responded by saying that in its Boston area debut in 2014, she had contributed an introduction and participated in a post-performance discussion. She commented on the beauty of the musical piece which was very gratifying to me. You can find it on YouTube. Enjoy!

Arlene Stolnitz is a retired educator from Rochester, N.Y. who has lived in Venice, Florida for the last 25 years. Founder of the Sarasota Jewish Chorale, her interest in Judaic Music has led to her column which appears monthly in the Jewish News, a Federation newspaper that appears in Southwest Florida cities from Sarasota to Naples.

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

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I joined a club to read an old book and found a new story - Jewish Journal

Synagogues in L.A. can reopen, but many rabbis are holding off – Los Angeles Times

Posted By on June 1, 2020

When Young Israel of Century City reopens, it will hold satellite services in backyards following social distancing protocols. Fewer people will be in close contact with the Torah. There will be limited singing and no sermons.

Even though the synagogue, which has about 500 families, now has permission from the city and county of Los Angeles to reopen in a limited fashion, its rabbi has firmly decided to hold off. Rabbi Elazar Muskin is among a group of local Orthodox rabbis who have signed a letter stating they will wait at least two weeks to see whether coronavirus cases surge.

This is a question of halacha [Jewish law] and to make sure that you dont, God forbid, put anybody into danger, he said. Synagogue life something in the Orthodox community which is so social can be very contagious. It can be a means of spreading the virus. We want to make sure that would not occur.

Following announcements by officials Tuesday to allow the resumption of faith-based services, rabbis have been grappling with the right thing to do. Some are inviting their congregants back in time for Shavuot, a holiday that begins Thursday night, while others will wait longer. For many, reopening means starting off with significant changes, including backyard services, no singing, and no food or socializing after prayers.

Californias move to roll back coronavirus-related restrictions on houses of worship came amid growing local pressure on Gov. Gavin Newsom to address the reopening of churches. But in the state and across the country, infections have been linked to such gatherings. In early March, an outbreak after a choir practice at a church in Washington state led to more than 40 people diagnosed with the virus or ill with its symptoms, as well as several deaths, despite the fact that participants brought their own music and avoided direct physical contact.

Under new state guidelines, houses of worship must limit total attendance to 25% of a buildings capacity or a maximum of 100 people, whichever is lower. The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles has released guidelines to reopen churches for private prayer and public Mass as early as next week. Parishes must receive their regional bishops approval for reopening after meeting safety criteria to prevent crowding and physical contact as much as possible.

On May 14, 18 local Orthodox rabbis signed a letter stating that under guidelines published by Orthodox Union and the Rabbinical Council of America, they would reconsider reopening their synagogues at least two weeks after the local government has allowed public gatherings of more than 10 people, and has not seen an uptick in cases. They will also not permit communal prayer services or learning groups outside of immediate family over the Shavuot holiday.

Our commitment to the well-being of our community, in particular the elderly and the immune-compromised, demands nothing less, the letter said.

Rabbi Sharon Brous of IKAR, a non-denominational congregation in Mid-Wilshire, is waiting on indicators such as whether cases spike in the weeks after Memorial Day weekend. The community, which has more than 800 families, aims to eventually bring people together in outdoor spaces with congregants sitting in household clusters. Services may be broadcast online to include those who may not attend because they are at high risk of getting severely sick.

Over the last several months, IKAR has held services over Zoom every morning, including on Shabbat, with people from around the world attending.

It does not approximate the real-life experience, and we miss that very much, but the risk is too high, Brous said.

Temple Beth Am, a conservative synagogue on the Westside with more than 900 families, will also take a few weeks to determine safety protocols, including whether it will allow singing. It may first hold daily prayer services, which receive up to several dozen people, prior to restarting Shabbat services typically attended by hundreds, senior Rabbi Adam Kligfeld said.

The synagogue plans to also focus on bar and bat mitzvahs, which might be attended by a small number of people with the rest of guests watching over Zoom.

Theres this notion to go beyond the letter and honor the spirit of the law, Kligfeld said. We dont want to try to impress anyone, least of all ourselves, with piety, saying were going to be the first ones open Even if that means other synagogues are going to open before us, we want to open in such a way where we dont have to close if we didnt do it smartly enough.

Others have decided to move forward. Rabbi Avraham Hirschman of Pico Bais Medrash, an Orthodox congregation in Pico-Robertson, emailed his congregants shortly after officials permitted houses of worship to reopen this week. They would open just in time for holiday services on Thursday night, he said.

Attendance will be limited to men, who under an Orthodox interpretation of Jewish law are obligated to participate in communal prayer, with the hopes of soon expanding to women. Congregants must wear masks and bring their own prayer shawls and books. Only one person will handle the Torah.

Hirschman held its necessary to find a balance between the health risk and the obligation of communal prayer.

The government felt that things are safe to reopen, and on the other side we have a law, a commitment towards God to do this, said Hirschman, whose congregation consists of about 100 members. I just feel like now is the right time to go ahead and do it.

Rabbi Yitzchok Summers of Anshe Emes in Pico-Robertson is also taking the next step.

When Anshe Emes an Orthodox synagogue with up to 100 families reopens Thursday night, members will be instructed not to kiss the mezuzahs, tiny scrolls of Hebrew in a protective case, on the buildings doors. During the services that follow, sections like introductory psalms will be removed to shorten prayer time. There will be no singing and the rabbi wont give his sermon, which he joked some people might be happy about.

The synagogue will not host the all-night learning thats typical of the Shavuot holiday, which celebrates Gods revelation of the Torah at Mt. Sinai. While congregants could study in pairs, Summers worried about accommodating them with enough room for social distancing.

Transitions are always hard, and I hope it goes well, he said. Of course, Im concerned, but at a certain point you have to jump.

But some community members arent sure if theyre ready to attend services just yet, and while decisions over reopening continue, rabbis have been fielding calls from hesitant congregants. Rabbi Avrohom Czapnik, the director of the Jewish Learning Exchange in Hancock Park, an educational institution that hosts up to 50 people for Shabbat and holiday services, received a text from a man asking for advice because his wife didnt want him to attend services for another few weeks.

I texted him back: Listen to your wife. Dont go, Czapnik said. She has to feel comfortable, and they have to work as a team.

Czapnik, who is Orthodox, decided not to reopen this week but hopes to have services next Shabbat, pointing out he needed more time to coordinate things like seating cards and sanitizer for the bathroom.

Theres no right or wrong, and we tell our congregants. If you dont feel comfortable, you dont have to come, he said. I see both sides of the coin very clearly. On one hand, we dont want everyone to be infected. On the other hand, the world outside is going crazy look at the beaches, look at everything. Its a delicate balance.

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Synagogues in L.A. can reopen, but many rabbis are holding off - Los Angeles Times

Keeping the faith: What will the future hold for U.S. synagogues post-lockdown? – Haaretz

Posted By on June 1, 2020

Rabbi Joshua Davidson feels the weight of the current health crisis as he stands in a cemetery, leading burial services for victims of the coronavirus.

When youre standing with families at the grave, and a mother and son cant even hug as they bury their husband and father, 6 feet has never looked like such a long distance as it does in this moment, says Davidson, who leads a large reform congregation at New Yorks Temple Emanu-El.

The pandemic has upended the way of life for Jewish communities worldwide. Over recent months, synagogues have had to reimagine ways in which they can offer a sense of community to congregants at a time when gathering is not an option. Shabbats and bar mitzvahs on Zoom have become a reality for American Jews. But as talk of reopening America gathers speed, rabbis across the country are preoccupied with planning for Jewish life after lockdown and wondering how much of this new normal will simply become the norm.

Creativity in adversity

Temple Emanu-El, the largest Reform synagogue in New York City, has, like many others, moved its activities to the virtual world since the coronavirus struck. None of our programming or worshipping has stopped, but obviously its different, Davidson tells Haaretz.Attendance to services and other programs online has been higher than it ever has been in person, he notes.

That seems to be a common trend: Many of the synagogues that have held services, Torah studies and educational programs online during lockdown have reported increased attendances.

It turns out that when people can turn on their computer and join a weekday minyan or join a Torah study class and they dont have to get in their car and commute, more do it, says Rabbi Jacob Blumenthal, who currently serves as CEO of the Conservative movements Rabbinical Assembly and will soon take on the additional role of CEO of the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism.

Blumenthal says he has been impressed and even amazed by the creativity of synagogues, and their ability to adapt really quickly to a big change and create connection.He hopes this spirit will continue long after this crisis hopefully goes away.

On a Saturday night in mid-March, Rabbi Sholom Lipskar of The Shul of Bal Harbour in Surfside, Miami, was the first in his Chabad community to be diagnosed with the coronavirus.

I immediately sent an email to the entire community, and that night the entire community shut down, everybody went into quarantine, he recounts.

That swift action, which came earlier than in other Jewish communities, is what he believes spared his community from any serious matter.

Since then, his synagogues employees have been in a spiritual war room, brainstorming ways to connect the community.

Weve been able to sustain a serious program, even during complete lockdown and quarantine, because we have an average of six to eight classes every day on Zoom, Lipskar says. We made sure that we have direct contact with almost every member of the synagogue on a regular basis, he adds.

For the recent Shavuot holiday, for instance, the shul rented an ice cream truck for distributing not just frozen treats to the community but also booklets explaining how to celebrate the festival marking the receiving of the Ten Commandments. Its important to get people inspired and upbeat, he says.

Praying outside the box

With fall on the horizon, spiritual leaders are now anticipating the High Holy Days traditionally, synagogues busiest time of the year.I havent stopped thinking about it, Davidson admits.

On a typical Rosh Hashanah or Yom Kippur service, some 2,500 people gather in the iconic sanctuary at Temple Emanu-El. Despite social distancing regulations and crowd limitations still set to be in place then, Davidson remains confident that the synagogue will be able to welcome everybody who will want to come. And then, of course, the services would be streamed online.

He continues: My strong sense is that not everybody is going to feel comfortable attending in person; some populations will feel theyd just be more comfortable watching at home. Were thinking through all of the contingencies and planning for in-person but also planning for online, should we be limited to that.

In the small Jewish community of Galveston a Texas island located just south of Houston Rabbi Matt Cohen of Temple Bnai Israel was terrified when he held his first-ever Zoom Shabbat service in March. Never having used the video conferencing software before, he was sure something would go wrong.

Two months on, though, it has become almost routine with Cohen holding a virtual service every Friday night. But the High Holy Days are a different situation, he says.

Doing a High Holy Day service on Zoom the way that we do Shabbat seems inconceivable, Cohen tells Haaretz. Now, were all kind of thinking outside the box: What is the essence of the High Holy Days and how can we meet that need without doing what we always do?

Rabbi David Wolpe of the large Sinai Temple in Los Angeles believes it is virtually certain that no congregation in the United States is going to be able to gather on the High Holy Days.

During a recent Zoom chat hosted by the American Jewish Committee, the Conservative rabbi said he was concerned with preserving our authenticity as much and as long as we can, until we can be fully authentic again.

Were trying not to lose people, to give them genuine content and to hold them as close as we can, he added.

According to Blumenthal, the Conservative movement has been preparing for the two festivals in September for weeks already from releasing guiding materials about how to use technology on the High Holy Days, to thinking of innovative ways to hold certain ceremonies while maintaining safety.

Congregations are already thinking about creating squads of shofar blowers who could go to different communities and have everybody gather outside of their homes, on their porches, to be able to hear the shofar, he said, referring to the Jewish New Year tradition.

Financial hit

As the United States came to a grinding halt this spring, it quickly became clear that the coronavirus was not just a health but also a financial disaster, including for religious institutions.

Earlier this month, a report in the Forward revealed that the Union for Reform Judaism was forced to lay off about 20 percent of its staff, in addition to organization-wide pay cuts of between 3 and 16 percent.

According to an internal email quoted in the report, URJ leader Rabbi Rick Jacobs said the organization was now at the point that the long-term viability of the URJ is at risk if we do not reduce personnel costs further.

The Shuls Lipskar notes that every synagogue relies on donations. When people are struggling to put food on the table and pay rent, all of a sudden their donations go down to the bottom of the list.

Many people who under normal circumstances were major donors all of a sudden have gone through major relapses in their businesses and their economy, and we know that things are going to be a little more constricted, he says. When theres no cash flow, its hard to ask people to give.Although his synagogue has received some financial aid from the U.S. government, Lipskar and his team have been discussing how to manage the crisis.

We had the same crisis in 2008. And what we did was we had a 20 percent across-the-board salary cut so we didnt have to fire anybody, he explains. He adds that The Shuls 40 or so staffers are prepared for such necessary small sacrifices.

At New Yorks Temple Emanu-El, Davidson says some congregants have lost their jobs due to the economic situation, but he remains confident that those in our congregation who are able to continue to give at the level they have been will continue to give.

However, he stresses, no one is ever turned away for financial reasons, and the most important gift anybody can give to our congregation is their presence.

Far more valuable than their financial commitment is their willingness to attach their name to ours, because it signals that what we do matters, he adds.

In Galveston, too, Cohen feels his small congregation is fortunate. This is thanks to the foresight of people in previous generations who laid the foundation for us that if something should happen, we have the money to fall back onto, he says.

I think were gonna see a number of [synagogue] closings over the year if this doesnt get any better, he warns. I have colleagues who have taken voluntary pay cuts; I have colleagues who have had to lay off their staff.

The last time Jewish life took such a hit was over a decade ago with the 2008 recession. In the wake of that economic downturn, between 16 and 29 percent of Jewish households in three American-Jewish communities (Baltimore, Cleveland and Chicago) reported that financial costs prevented them from purchasing synagogue memberships; caused them to reduce their donations to Jewish causes; and, for those with children, prevented them from sending a child to a Jewish preschool or summer camp according to a study released by the Berman Jewish DataBank in 2014.

It is too early to know the long-term effects of this crisis, Blumenthal says. But we do expect that some congregations will consider either integrating aspects of their operations or merging as a result of financial pressures if conditions do not improve in the fall.

Reopening risks

U.S. President Donald Trump recently designated houses of worship as places that provide essential services, calling on governors to allow them to reopen immediately.

Following his announcement, the URJ released a statement saying: We have known for millennia that houses of worship are essential institutions. While we long to gather in person, we believe that there is no higher value than pikuach nefesh, saving a life.

Even though the state of Texas began reopening in May, Cohen has kept Temple Bnai Israels doors closed.Texans eager to enjoy the relaxed regulations headed for Galvestons beaches in large numbers, causing the rabbi to reflect that wed be crazy to think this is going away anytime soon.

According to Cohen, some of the local churches that reopened recently had tens of people infected within days and had to close their doors again. Reopening at this time, he believes, would be against Jewish values.How can you live Jewish values and put people at risk? he asks, adding that for now he prefers to keep services on Zoom.

Its better than nothing, and I think its much better than being in a room where everyone is standing 6 feet apart from each other with masks on. That wouldnt even feel like the Judaism that has kept us, he says.Lets say I do reopen and half the people or even three-quarters of the people that typically come are afraid to now Im leading a service for six people in a room and doing a Zoom call for everyone else. It just doesnt feel like the Jewish community, he sums up.

After more than 10 weeks on pause, The Shul finally held services at the end of last week for Shavuot and Shabbat. For the holiday, four separate services were held to maximize participation, attended in total by some 150 worshippers.

We could have opened a week ago, Lipskar explains. But at the same time we said, Lets wait till Shavuot and see what the trend is, [see] if there are any spikes.

He says the first services went extremely well almost like clockwork. Everyone followed all the rules and regulations to the utmost, wearing masks, maintaining social distancing and each of the other protocols we instituted. As a result, we are contemplating a more regular schedule for services.

In compliance with social distancing guidelines and to ensure there is a 10-foot space between all worshippers, fewer than 15 percent of the hundreds of people who usually attend services at The Shul are now able to physically attend.

Congregants are being asked to register for prayer quorums in advance, temperatures are checked at the door, masks are required and worshippers have to bring their own prayer books. Preparing and implementing the new regulations, Lipskar says, has been nothing short of a strategic military operation.

Still, as community members struggle financially, physically and mentally during the crisis, he believes that reestablishing the sense of community was vital. There is nothing like personal contact, he says. You have to make sure the cure is not worse than the disease.

Lipskar says of last weeks services: It was an exhilarating feeling to be back in our community home and to have a communal prayer accompanied with singing and a deeper sense of connection and passion than I have experienced in the past, with each person really concentrating on their prayers and totally there in every way. The joy and appreciation on peoples faces was strong and noticeable. Even the priestly blessing was said with much more power and fervor, he reports.

Both the Orthodox Union and Rabbinical Council of America had started prepping Orthodox congregations for reopening when they issued a letter in mid-May detailing the principles that should guide the decisions and planning of synagogues and communities in the United States.

We must be clear: the COVID-19 crisis is far from over, the organizations wrote in their statement. We must proceed with caution, recognizing the immense gravity of the decisions we are making and their impact on the lives of our community members and fellow citizens.

Losses and gains

Imagining Jewish life in America after the coronavirus crisis abates, Blumenthal says there will be losses and gains.

The online world is here to stay, he says. Therell be things well want to experience on our computers, but there are other times when well want to be in person. In fact, what happens online can feed into what happens in person.

What synagogues need to understand, he adds, is that their value wont just be how many people might come into the building on a Shabbat morning. It might also be about how many other people theyve engaged in their homes or on their screens over the course of a given Shabbat.

He believes this will level the playing field for large and small congregations.

People who grew up in a small town may be able to go back to that small town, and may be able to go back to that small town on their computer screens to be part of that community for the holidays or on a Shabbat, he says. A small community might bring in a wonderful speaker and may be able to offer that to a whole network of congregations.

The Jewish community was in the process of changing even before the pandemic, Blumenthal notes.We had already expanded our understanding of synagogue life to include what happens in peoples homes and also in many cases outside the synagogue itself,he says. What weve now discovered is that theres another space we also need to think about seriously: online, virtual spaces.

Although he sees the post-lockdown era as a lot of opportunity for Jewish life in the United States, the conservative rabbi says theres also a sense of loss that has come with the new normal.

Weve already lost the ability to come together in physical proximity, to be able to give each other a hug, to be able to look each other in the eye directly, Blumenthal says. Those losses are real, and were looking forward to when well be able to do that again.

When a woman called Sinai Temples Wolpe to ask how she could sit shivah for a deceased family member during the pandemic, he realized that in some ways, the entire world right now is sitting shivah.

Theres a certain element of mourning, no matter what you do online, from the fact that youre home, and well see what the world will be like when we can go out again, he said on the AJC Zoom chat, pointing out that Judaism is characterized by the idea of community.

Online [activity] widens and shallows our community. Anybody can join, but they can also turn away at any moment, and it loses the organic and authentic connection that you have in person, he said. So I think of this in some ways as a stopgap measure.

Wolpe also admitted to concern about the effect the current crisis will have on Jewish life and Judaism practices going forward.

Its going to be a very long time before everybody feels comfortable congregating again, and even then theyll have been introduced to a new way to relate to one another and I dont know if they will universally abandon couches and Zoom, he said.

'Silver lining'

Although community members have grown accustomed to practicing Judaism from the comfort of their own homes, New Yorks Davidson doesnt expect the phenomenon to affect in-person attendances.

What I do anticipate is that all of the new tools Jewish institutions have found and mastered as a result of these circumstances, theyll continue to utilize and develop, he says.

Indeed, with increased participation online, Davidson believes synagogues will have an opportunity to capitalize on that interest.

I dont see our traditions as weakening after this experience ends, he says. I think well actually have learned more about ways of creating meaning than we would have otherwise.

For Lipskar, the new normal may include many restrictions, but normal is a relative process, he reasons.

Just the fact that congregants are able to come: The radical difference between being quarantined and isolated to all of a sudden being in a space with other human beings, listening to their sounds and singing together, having the Torah brought out, and participating in this communal connection and spiritual prayer that already is a major positive move, he says.

There is a silver lining in the cloud, Lipskar concludes:Theres a new normal that I consider, which is another level of recognition, a reprioritization of priorities, of values, of relationships which is important, he says. If we could keep this energy going, thats going to be a fantastic new normal.

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Keeping the faith: What will the future hold for U.S. synagogues post-lockdown? - Haaretz

Neighborhood farmers’ markets, to-go cocktails and online art: Tel Aviv’s very Israeli response to staying at home – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on June 1, 2020

TEL AVIV (JTA) For years Shlo Shalfy, a kindergarten teacher here, thought about the day she would send her 18-year-old son off to the army.

She would drive him to Bakum, the enormous military induction base in central Israel, and like all mothers of combat fighters, pray that it wouldnt be their last car ride.

In late March, as Israel was under near total lockdown, Shalfy received a letter instructing her son Ely to report to a smaller, alternative military base. He would need to pack a months worth of clothes, face masks, hand sanitizer and other essentials, since weekend visits were now likely impossible. Shalfy and the other parents were to do the drop-off as quickly as possible no selfies and no prolonged, tearful hugs, kisses or goodbyes to prevent people from congregating and potentially spreading the coronavirus.

I cant tell you how much I cried, Shalfy said. I thought, My child is going into the army and I cant go through this with him. This has taken something that is important to our Israeli-ness.

With just over 280 coronavirus-related deaths out of around 17,000 reported cases, the pandemics death toll in Israel has been relatively small compared to other hard-hit countries. Additionally, as of last week, some restaurants and bars were open for in-person business, along with shops and schools but many still stayed home, cautious of catching the lingering virus.

The crisis has still upended families, gutted small businesses and wreaked profound emotional damage in Israels social and cultural capital of Tel Aviv which is well known for places where people congregate, like beaches, in addition to its many bars and restaurants.

Here are some of the ways that Tel Aviv residents are adapting to the new normal.

Neighborhood farmers markets, sort of

A young woman visits her grandmother in Kibbutz Barkai, Israel, April 26, 2020. (Guy Prives/Getty Images)

The need for warmth, for closeness, generosity in Israel is huge, Shalfy said. This coronavirus, too, is a kind of military operation, and I think when its over, well say, we went through this.

With that in mind Shalfy, 55, has become part of a burgeoning, grassroots movement to forge connection here, even under the constrictions of social distancing.

These days, she does a regular grocery store run for a few elderly residents in her building, and several times a week, she organizes rooftop gatherings for her neighbors where they can unwind and discuss the challenges of home schooling, cooking for the family, or keeping in touch with relatives, all while two meters apart and wearing face masks.

She has also become the local middleman for asparagus farmers who drive their truck down from their moshav, or agricultural community, to sell to an eager market. They put in their orders ahead of time through an Excel spreadsheet that Shalfy posts in a neighborhood Facebook group.

She is just one of the unlikely organizers of what are being called neighborhood farmers markets, which have become a regular occurrence in Tel Aviv. They are facilitated by neighbors who are eager to do their part in supporting farms that are teetering on the brink of bankruptcy.

Throughout the week on any given street, farmers are trucking in their fresh fruits, vegetables, flowers and artisanal cheeses for curbside, minimal contact pickup. For the farmers, this new direct farm-to-consumer system helps regain some of the catastrophic losses that have hit the industry in the past three months.

If its asparagus or going to the rooftop to meet up with neighbors, weve all realized that this sense of community, of belonging is something thats really been missing, Shalfy said.

To-go cocktails take off

The Imperial Craft Cocktail Bar at the Imperial Hotel in Tel Aviv went without in-person patrons for months. (Ben Yuster)

In regular times, the upscale, colonial-themed Imperial Craft Cocktail Bar, tucked into the Imperial Hotel just steps from the beach boardwalk, can be impossible to get into. But since March up until last week, when restaurants and bars were allowed to cautiously reopen the coronavirus had virtually paralyzed Tel Avivs vibrant eating and drinking scene.

Bar Shira, a partner in the Imperial cocktail bar group that owns the Imperial and three other bars, said that with more Israelis drinking at home though mostly beer and wine to-go cocktails have become a niche market, as in other cities like New York.

He says that while the group has suffered immense financial losses, they hope to stay afloat as delivery orders rush in. The ready-to-drink cocktails come in 500 milliliter bottles and, Shira says, are often gifted by delivery to family and friends.

Unemployment in Israel has reached a record million people. With local disposable incomes and international tourism predicted to be on the decline for the foreseeable future, Shira and hundreds of thousands of workers in the restaurant and bar industry are hoping to somehow make it to the other end.

Tel Aviv really loves to go out, but the question will be if they can, Shira said. Weve seen economic problems in the past and weve gotten through them. Its a guess, but I hope we can get through this one, too.

A breath of fresh air for the elderly

Participants in the Golden Gardens program clap for a speaker. (Yalya Galam/Iris Cohen)

While a good amount of the governments promised $23 billion in aid has remained tied up in red tape, its been local, community-based projects that have delivered information and social distancing-friendly programming.

Among the beneficiaries are Tel Avivs thousands of elderly residents defined as over 65 who have needed to watch from the sidelines as restrictions on movement have lifted, schools and markets have opened, and society has begun to return to normal. The group is considered at risk and has been directed by the Health Ministry to remain at home.

Elad Sela, a City Hall community leader for southern and eastern districts of Tel Aviv, realized that it was critical to provide something uplifting for them. So he launched the Ginot Hazahav, or Golden Gardens program, which cordons off sections of dozens of parks throughout the city for several hours in the morning, for the exclusive use of the elderly.

Dozens of people arrive every day, equipped with face masks, and participate in instructor-led activities like sing-alongs and stretching class, or even just sit on plastic chairs, chatting about issues that have been on their minds.

It doesnt need to be complicated. Actually, its better to keep it simple, Sela said. The effect of even just a little music and dancing is amazing.

Artists go online and look for other work

Noy Haimovitch, left, and Tamir Erlich launched Bidud, quarantine in Hebrew, an online artist residency. (Courtesy of Erlich)

The world-famous theaters, art galleries and dance spaces that employ tens of thousands of Tel Aviv residents have been the last in line to receive financial aid from the government, and, by all accounts, will also be the last to return to work. Many, with heavy hearts, have abandoned the sector completely, while others have looked for alternative in essential work like deliveries.

In April, faced with mounting bills and a nationwide ban on all cultural and leisure activities, actor and playwright Daniel Botzer launched Habima Deliveries, named after the national theater located in Tel Aviv. Its manned by dozens of out-of-work actors desperate for work.

Maybe this really is the difference between self-actualization and making a living, Botzer told Channel 11 News in April, as he drove his delivery route from Herzliya to Rosh Hayain.

Culture and Sports Minister Miri Regev announced that theaters and cinemas would reopen on June 14, with the caveat that every two seats be left empty.

When we were cooped up in our homes, we all went to the poems, the books, we watched a movie, a TV show. We dont just consume culture, we need culture, Israeli actor Tuvia Tsafir said at a recent protest.

Tamir Erlich, an Israeli artist who at the end of March left behind his life and his studies at the Royal College of Art in London, said that with all the difficulty brought by the crisis, its also been a creative boon to the fringe art world. When he came back to Israel, like all travelers coming into the country from abroad, he needed to go into a two-week quarantine. He was joined by his partner and fellow artist Noy Haimovitch and, partly out of boredom, partly out of curiosity, they launched Bidud, or quarantine in Hebrew, an online artist residency that hosts a different artist every day and has attracted hundreds of visitors on a daily basis.

Erlich, a multidisciplinary artist, hopes that this could be an opportunity to accelerate an already existing movement to increase access to art as the online shift is forced into happening.

In a more global way, I think this will be very important for education, to create an equalization of access, to also open up the art world beyond Tel Aviv, he said.

Religious communities change their expectations

Atara Lindenbaum teaches at the Modern Orthodox Tel Aviv International Synagogue. (Courtesy of Lindenbaum)

Atara Lindenbaum, who immigrated with her family last August, was excited for her position as a teacher at the modern-Orthodox Tel Aviv International Synagogue.

In late March, though, just as the nationwide lockdown was being rolled out, and as a third of cases were reportedly traced back to synagogues, including one at the International Synagogue, she realized she was in for a different kind of journey than she imagined.

Instead of connecting with her community in person, the community has had to move online. The synagogues rabbi gives 10-minute Torah talks on Facebook Live several times a week, interacting with congregants in Hebrew, English and French. Shabbat services have started streaming on Zoom, then turned off once Shabbat starts. Congregants, including dozens of new converts as well as many others unfamiliar with the prayers, have been left to carry on by themselves.

Lindenbaums 70 students or so sign into her Zoom conversion class four times a week. Instead of the small room in the synagogue with no blackboard, she can present organized slides and links to articles and websites that they can then discuss in real time. So shes trying to find a silver lining.

I know that Shabbat is a time of gathering and it is painful for people, but I also think that its not necessarily necessary that Shabbat needs to happen in synagogues, she said. I dont know if thats the only power of Shabbat. I think its ok for people to find the power of Shabbat within themselves.

Sara Naiditch, the co-director of Chabad on the Coast in central Tel Aviv, which caters mainly to international young professionals, says shes been inspired by her communitys dedication to staying together. Though shes gone from Shabbat meals of 300 people down to only her nuclear family, she says the time of difficulty has made her and her husband reached out personally to new people in their community.

I think its kind of back to the basics of building individual connections, she said. I think when we do come back, together and we will well all be much stronger for it.

The post Neighborhood farmers markets, to-go cocktails and online art: Tel Avivs very Israeli response to staying at home appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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Neighborhood farmers' markets, to-go cocktails and online art: Tel Aviv's very Israeli response to staying at home - Cleveland Jewish News

Stunning recreations of historical Jewish buildings destroyed years ago – Plus61 J Media

Posted By on June 1, 2020

DARA HORN: The digital venture, called Diarna, takes you back to painstakingly revived synagogues and destinations once lost to history

ON A NARROW STREET in Damascus, one of the oldest cities in the world, I pull open a heavy iron door in a cinderblock wall and enter an ancient synagogue. Behind the door, just past a tiled courtyard shaded by a large tree, I am stunned by what I see.

Im standing inside a jewel box. The small room is illuminated by dozens of elaborate beaded chandeliers; its walls are covered with thick red velvet draperies, its stone floor with richly patterned carpets. In front of me is a large flat stone topped with a golden menorah: Here, an inscription informs me, the Hebrew prophet Elijah anointed his successor Elisha, as described in the biblical Book of Kings.

For a place that drew Jewish pilgrims for centuries, it is remarkably well preservedand startlingly intimate. There are no pews here; instead, there are low cushioned couches facing each other, as though this were a sacred living room.

A raised marble platform in the centre has a draped table for public Torah readings; at the rooms far end is an ornate wooden cabinet filled with ancient Torah scrolls, their parchments concealed inside magnificent silver cases.

On the walls are framed Hebrew inscriptions, featuring the same prayers my son is currently mastering for his bar mitzvah in New Jersey.

I should mention here that Ive never been to Damascus. Also, this synagogue no longer exists.

FULL STORY: Inside the incredible effort to recreate historic Jewish sites destroyed years ago (Smithsonian magazine)

Photo: Moshe Nahon Synagogue in Tangier, Morocco. This is a flattened view of a 360-degree photograph from Diarnas archives (Joshua Shamsi/Diarna Geo-Museum)

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Stunning recreations of historical Jewish buildings destroyed years ago - Plus61 J Media

I started watching this German rabbi praying alone early in the pandemic, and I couldn’t stop – JTA News

Posted By on June 1, 2020

(JTA) On a Friday early in the coronavirus crisis, isolated in my apartment and facing the first of what would be many weekends with only Netflix for companionship, I came across a live Facebook video of Rabbi Zsolt Balla praying alone from the pulpit of his synagogue in Leipzig, Germany.

I had met Balla years before reporting for the Jewish Telegraphic Agency in Europe. I had attended Friday night services at the synagogue and a wedding a few days later the first Jewish nuptials held there since the Holocaust.

One of the first ordainees of the reconstituted Hildesheimer rabbinical school in Berlin, Balla settled in Leipzig with his wife in 2010 and began slowly rebuilding a Jewish community rejuvenated by the arrival of thousands of Russian Jews. Balla had even managed to sustain a daily prayer service before the coronavirus shuttered the countrys synagogues. Now here he was, praying alone into a computer, the rows of empty pews visible over his shoulder. It broke me to watch.

As the weeks unfolded, Balla would occasionally pop up in my feed. Id click through and spend a few minutes watching him lead the prayers, his booming baritone echoing through the empty sanctuary behind him. Sometimes it was a weekday morning and he would be wearing his tefillin. More often it was Friday night, and he would chant the psalms welcoming the Sabbath in his pitch-perfect cantorial inflection. Unlike Zoom services with their sea of disembodied heads, Balla was streaming via Facebook alone in a room, no virtual congregation surrounding him. I found it stark and poignant, even beautiful in its own way. And I wasnt the only one.

Dear Zsolt, a Facebook commenter wrote. I am not even jewish, and I do not really understand what you are talking about yet somehow I managed to watch you and listen to you on a regular basis It helps me somehow to end the day and to calm down I do not know why this is but I hope you dont mind

In those early weeks, as the depth of the pandemic (and its staying power) was just beginning to sink in, I would regularly catch a few minutes of Balla doing his thing and acutely feel all that was being lost not just to the Jewish community but to the world. All the lives on pause, the jobs lost, the scared and isolated people locked away in their homes staring into those hopeless little screens. The whole lot of human suffering seemed to echo in the sound of Ballas prayers.

But as time went on, that faded. Humans adapt quickly, and what had once seemed unfathomably painful became just part of the furniture. Balla would appear in my feed, I would click through dutifully, but I was increasingly unmoved. What had seemed just weeks before like a potent symbol of these terrible times came to feel like just how it is now. People pray on Facebook in empty rooms in Germany.

Balla himself is a living symbol of the rebirth of Jewish life in that part of the world. Born in Budapest in 1979, he learned only as a child of 9 that he was Jewish. In 1991, the year after Hungary held its first free election following the fall of communism, Balla began attending a Jewish school in his hometown funded by the American cosmetics magnate and philanthropist Ronald Lauder.

Lauder was beginning to sink many millions into his quest to rehabilitate Jewish life in Central and Eastern Europe, and Balla was both an early beneficiary of his largesse and a poster child for its impact. He went on to become a counselor at Camp Szarvas, a Jewish summer camp in Hungary funded by Lauder and the JDC humanitarian group, and after finishing his masters degree in engineering and management studied at Lauder Yeshurun, the Jewish studies program in Berlin for young Jews with little background in Judaic studies.

That was the first time I ever encountered successful young and normal Orthodox youth, which was an incredible experience, Balla told me when we spoke in 2018. In Hungary, I always had the impression of living up totally to the standards of Orthodox Judaism and at the same time being normal its a contradiction. In Berlin, at the age of 23, I encountered that this was not the case.

Balla wound up staying for three years, then spending another one in Israel. Upon his return, he began rabbinical studies, becoming one of the first two graduates of the Rabbinerseminar zu Berlin in 2009. The following year, he and his wife, the child of a secular Russian family who had come to Germany after the fall of communism, settled in Leipzig.

For Balla, it was less a job than a calling. He saw a reflection of himself in the Russian kids who had come of age under a repressive regime, barely aware that they were Jewish and understanding little of what that even meant. With hardly any locally grown rabbis to serve them, Balla felt a sense of duty to ensure they didnt wait until their 20s to find out.

Its very important that we do not look at ourselves as people who got a job, Balla said. Thats not what we are here for. We are part of this community. Im one of them. I happen to be the rabbi, but Im one of them.

On Friday, when Balla popped up in my feed, he was wearing a face mask. I had never seen him do that before, and my first thought was that something terrible had happened. But as I looked closer, I understood: There were other people with him in shul. Only a handful were visible in the frame, and they were masked as well and sitting well apart from each other. Like so many others around the world, the Leipzig synagogue was taking its first tentative steps back toward normalcy.

I turned up the volume, but there wasnt much to hear. Where Balla had sung all the words of the prayers aloud earlier in the pandemic, with a crowd on hand he was now saying most of the prayers quietly to limit the possibility of infection.

That particular shift was a hard one for Balla, who happens to lead an institute in Germany that trains Jewish prayer leaders. Singing has always been the part of prayer that most spoke to him, which is apparent to anyone who watches him lead services. Even as normalcy begins to draw tantalizingly near again, its obvious it wont come immediately and will look different when it finally does.

Balla is trying to see that as an opportunity. Having seen the reception of his livestreams across the world, he plans to continue them even once regular synagogue services are possible again.

Its only a superficial change perhaps, but indicative of something deeper. When I started watching him back in March, my sense or perhaps hope was that the coronavirus was just a speed bump. Wed hunker down for a time, the storm would pass and wed continue on our way. But increasingly its looking more like a fork. Like the mask that suddenly appeared on Ballas face last week, thats likely to be jarring for many of us at least initially. But Balla wants to see it as an opportunity.

You have to reboot, you have to rethink, Balla said when we spoke this week. I have always believed that one of the most important things that moves people is communal singing. In the local synagogues of my youth, it was mainly one guy in front giving a concert. This has never spoken to me. Its like God is now saying, you think this was your value? Think again. Its like a slap in the face.

He continued: I think this whole thing I dont feel like whatever we did was in vain. I feel like its a great opportunity to rethink whats important for us. Where do you think as a Jewish community youre going? I dont have all the answers, but I think its a great time to contemplate these matters.

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I started watching this German rabbi praying alone early in the pandemic, and I couldn't stop - JTA News

Higher lung cancer risk seen with two new germline mutations – Reuters

Posted By on May 31, 2020

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Two newly identified germline genetic variants are associated with an increased risk of lung cancer, researchers report.

We were surprised by finding new variants that have not previously been associated with cancer or other diseases, Dr. Christopher I. Amos of Baylor College of Medicine, in Houston, Texas, told Reuters Health by email.

While hereditary factors are important in lung-cancer pathogenesis, only rare germline mutations responsible for lung-cancer etiology have been reported. Still, these mutations can confer as much as an 80% lifetime risk for developing cancer and influence as many as 10% of cancers diagnosed yearly.

Dr. Amos and colleagues used data from two independent datasets comprising more than 39,000 individuals of European ancestry to identify reliable germline mutations that highly affect lung cancer risk and to discover new genes involved in the etiology of lung cancer.

They identified two variants, rs56009889 and rs150665432, that were associated with a more than two-fold increase in the odds of having lung cancer, the researchers report in Nature Communications.

The first variant maps within the ATM tumor suppression gene and results in an L2307F missense mutation in the FAT domain that regulates ATM activity. Carriers of this variant had 4.19-fold increased odds of developing lung cancer. The increased risk was significant among females (3.22-fold increased odds) and for lung adenocarcinoma (2.48-fold increased odds).

All five L2307F homozygotes in these datasets had lung adenocarcinoma.

The L2307F variant of the ATM gene that we identified occurs fairly frequently in Ashkenazi Jews, at a little over 4% of the population carrying this variant, Dr. Amos said.

The second variant maps within KIAA0930 and codes for Q4X, which results in the truncation of the full-length protein, whose function is unknown, from 409 to three amino acids. Carriers of Q4X had 2.59-fold increased odds of developing lung cancer, and all 29 homozygotes in the discovery set developed lung cancer.

KIAA0930 was significantly overexpressed in lung cancer cells, compared with normal lung samples, whereas ATM showed limited variability of expression. KIAA0930 was also significantly upregulated in the majority of carcinomas developing from epithelial cells, suggesting that it is a carcinoma-associated candidate gene.

Given the high prevalence of the ATM mutation in Ashkenazi Jewish people, it is possible that tailored screening based on this and other genotypes that influence risk for this population may be warranted, just as Ashkenazi Jewish individuals have precision screening based on the higher prevalence of BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations in this population, Dr. Amos said.

The KIAA0930 gene has not been well-studied, and the interpretation of our finding of a mutation that truncates its expression is novel and needs to be reproduced, he said.

These studies reinforce the value of large collaborative studies, which enabled us to identify a novel variant that poses higher risk to specific populations, Dr. Amos said.

Dr. Rakesh Kumar of the Cancer Genetics Research Group, Shri Mata Vaishno Devi University, in Katra, India, who recently identified a genetic variant of TP63 associated with lung-cancer risk in a northern Indian population, told Reuters Health by email, The elevated genetic risks associated with these variants imply potential clinical benefits in using these variants for the identification of individuals who would benefit most from screening programs, as well as suggestions for therapeutic targets.

The identification of the novel lung cancer-related germline mutations could greatly advance our understanding of lung-cancer etiology, said Dr. Kumar, who wasnt involved in the new work. Drugs specifically targeting these mutations or their byproducts are well within reach, as there are a lot of studies where ATM inhibitors have been used in isolation or in combination with other drugs.

The study did not have commercial funding, and the authors report no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: go.nature.com/2ziu9q2 Nature Communications, online May 11, 2020.

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Higher lung cancer risk seen with two new germline mutations - Reuters

BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Jacob Kornbluh, national politics reporter at Jewish Insider – Politico

Posted By on May 31, 2020

Whats a trend going on in the U.S. or abroad that doesnt get enough attention? I dont think the general public is aware of the level of online attacks on reporters that sometimes surpasses the widely reported hate speech and anti-Semitism. Journalists, thought leaders and communal figures often receive personal insults and threats -- including from within their own communities -- just for doing their job in such a difficult and divisive climate.

Hows the Trump presidency going? At Jewish Insider I have more than a full plate to cover the White House and national politics with an angle of interest to the Jewish community. Theres an election coming up in November and I trust the process will be less dramatic than the three consecutive Israeli elections over the past year.

Whats a fun fact that people in Washington might not know about you? I love cooking my favorite Shabbat dishes. Every Friday, after finishing work, I walk into my small kitchen and start preparing my Hungarian-style salmon, Israeli-style tahini and matbucha, and finish off with my Ashkenazi-style cholent (bean/beef stew).

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BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Jacob Kornbluh, national politics reporter at Jewish Insider - Politico


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