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5 things to know today that arent about the virus – Lowell Sun

Posted By on May 18, 2020

By The Associated Press

Your daily look at nonvirus stories in the news:

1. SUPREME COURT TAKES UP TRUMP TAX CASE Rulings against the president could lead to the campaign season release of personal financial information that Trump has kept shielded from investigators and the public.

2. WHERE TRUMP DIFFERS WITH CAMPAIGN His reelection team is helping Republican voters cast their ballots through the mail even as the president says the process is ripe for fraud and cheaters.

3. SHOOTOUT IN AFGHANISTAN Militants storm a maternity hospital in the western part of Kabul, setting off an hours-long shootout with the police and killing 14 people, including two newborn babies.

4. ANTI-SEMITIC INCIDENTS IN US HIT RECORD HIGH The surge last year was marked by deadly attacks on a California synagogue, a Jewish grocery store in New Jersey and a rabbis New York home, the Anti-Defamation League reports.

5. WHAT BASEBALL IS CONSIDERING The National League might join the American League and use the designated hitter on a full-time basis this season.

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5 things to know today that arent about the virus - Lowell Sun

Rep. Bill Pascrell demands action on COVID-19 antisemitism – Jewish Insider

Posted By on May 18, 2020

A New Jersey congressman is demanding the federal government step up efforts to combat hate and antisemitism amid a surge in attacks on members of the Jewish community during the coronavirus pandemic.

In the midst of people trying to come together and do the right thing [to battle the virus], it is very sad when you see people falsely being accused of being the cause of the COVID-19, and this has being going on for a while, Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-NJ) said in an interview with Jewish Insider on Thursday. The New Jersey Democrat pointed to a report released earlier this week by the Anti-Defamation League, which found a 73% increase in antisemitic attacks in the state, an all-time high. Thats nauseating, absolutely unacceptable, he said. And things like this dont start in a vacuum. They are initiated by those who seek to divide us.

Locking arms: Last week, Rep. Grace Meng (D-NY) introduced legislation requiring the Department of Justice to provide Congress with regular updates on the status of reported bias incidents during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. The COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act (H.R. 6721) commands Attorney General William Barr to designate a DOJ officer to facilitate the review of coronavirus-related hate crimes reported to federal or local law authorities. The officer would also be required to issue a monthly report on the status of the cases for at least a year after the health emergency is lifted.

Time to act: Pascrell expressed hope that the legislation, which was co-sponsoredby more than two dozen Democratic House members, would bring awareness to the rise of antisemitism an issue Pascrell called a very serious problem which is affecting democracy that would precipitate action. Antisemitism has existed before COVID-19, it has existed for years all over the place, and were not addressing it, Pascrell lamented. We bumper-sticker the problem. We say, Oh, we are with you. But what are we doing? Pascrell told JI it was time for lawmakers to call out antisemitism and bigotry wherever and whenever it may appear.

Full plate: Pascrell also called on his colleagues to authorize additional funding for the Nonprofit Security Grant Program, which helps non-profit organizations build and sustain security infrastructure, and to pass Rep. Brad Schneiders (D-IL) Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act of 2020, which would empower federal law enforcement to better monitor and combat acts of domestic terrorism.

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Rep. Bill Pascrell demands action on COVID-19 antisemitism - Jewish Insider

To be Free in our Homeland | Oliver Friedmann | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted By on May 18, 2020

Our species is plagued by intolerance and racism. The effects of those attributes can be observed and felt all around the world. It affects the lives of many people, among those affected are the Jews.

The history of the Jews is also a history of discrimination, prosecution, and annihilation.

Jews were targeted as a religion and as people since biblical times, during which other nations tried to force upon them their beliefs, destroyed their temples and displaced the Jews from their land. They were prosecuted without trial and indicted without the right of defense. No matter how advanced a state is, how educated its people are and how well the Jews were integrated and assimilated into the society, there was not a period in which Jews were not attempted to be annihilated. The history of Antisemitism had its horrible peak in the Holocaust, during which over 6 million Jews were killed, and many more were forced into exile.

In those times of suffering, the Jews didnt have their own country, in which they could feel safe and have the right of self-determination. No country that would be the defendant of the Jewish nation spread all around the globe. The first one to realize the importance of a Jewish home country was Theodor Herzl. He was the founding father of the Zionist movement. It took about 50 years, and the darkest period in human history for the world to see that Theodor Herzl was right.

The world and history have shown us that there is an urge, a need, and a right that this folk has its own country. Never again would this country let its nation be the victim again.

In this historical context, there is no space and no right for people to argue that there shouldnt be Zionism. Anti-Zionism is the act of singling out the Jewish people and not giving them the right that other nations have. The right of self-determination. In this context, anti-Zionism can be equalized with Antisemitism.

When using examples from the past, it becomes unthinkable to explain that these problems are still very present in this day and time. Unfortunately, I am not always identified as a human, as Viennese or as European. People sometimes choose to single me out as a Jew above everything else, as I often get confronted with prejudgement (e.g., You dont look Jewish, What do you have to say that your people do this and that in Israel) or even with direct antisemitism (e.g., All Jews are the same, Fuck Jews-we should have been done with you 70 years ago).

Antisemitism is still deeply rooted in todays society. Especially in Vienna, the city in which, until very recently its former mayor, the antisemitic Karl Lueger, from which Hitler learned the popularity of Antisemitism, had a big street named after him.

Although history and many extrinsic factors are drivers for Zionism, I could say my Zionism is based on intrinsic factors. My upbringing, my family history, and my love for history and the State of Israel are all personal reasons as to why this issue is close to my heart.

Zionism, though, shouldnt just be understood and linked with Antisemitism. Zionism, for me, is the thousand-year-old wish and desire of the Jewish people to return to their home. The urge of self-determination, of being equal, of not being ruled upon and to be reunited after many centuries of Diaspora. There is no other nation in the world that survived to be spread all around the globe for centuries, except the Jews. Every year during Pesach, those Jews all around the world, some even without contact with other Jewish communities for hundreds of years, would say, Next year in Jerusalem. After so long, the wish was fulfilled, on the 14th of May 1948.

The day of independence of the State of Israel is a holiday. It shouldnt just be a Holiday for Israelis or Zionists. It should also be a holiday for everyone that thinks, that all people have the right of self-determination and for everyone that is in alignment with the belief of equality of all people, as everyone is Israel no matter their belief, their sexuality, or their color is equal and included in the idea of Zionism. It is a holiday that celebrates a young Democracy, build from nothing but the desert and the desire to make this country a great country.

This blog has been submitted as part of a wider campaign, which is being run by the European Union of Jewish Students (EUJS) entitled Theodor & I Zionism and Young European Jews. Being launched on Yom Haatzmaut, the campaign seeks to start a discussion on Zionism, towards challenging the existing conversation surrounding the concept and ultimately highlighting the plurality of Jewish European identity and Zionism.

Oliver Friedmann, born and raised in Vienna. At the age of 22, he decided to join the IDF as a Lone Soldier. He served in the Reconnaisssance Unit of the Paratroopers. He now studies Political Science at the University of Amsterdam.

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To be Free in our Homeland | Oliver Friedmann | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

Gap year: ‘the numbers will probably be lower after Covid-19’ – Plus61 J Media

Posted By on May 18, 2020

In a Plus61J online discussion about the causes of declining participation, ZFA president says further downward pressure from the pandemic could be offset by pent-up demand

THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 is likely to cause a drop in numbers of Australian participants in Israel gap year programs, according to the president of the Zionist Federation of Australia, Jeremy Leibler.

Many people say the cost of international travel will rise by 70%, and practicalities on the ground will change the number of kids you can have in a room, how many people can safely go on bus, Leibler told an online forum exploring the decline in participation in gap year (Shnat) programs, hosted by Plus61JMedia on Sunday night.

[These factors] could exacerbate the decline; the numbers will probably be lower, Leibler said. But I am also cautiously optimistic about a pent-up demand that may have built up as well.

Leibler was one of four speakers at the forum, titled Minding the gap: the future of Australias Israel gap year programs, along with Rochelle Braverman, Chair of the Australian Zionist Youth Council (AZYC), 2019 Netzer Shnat participant Noa Abrahams and the Director of Student Development at , Mt Scopus College, Jared Alford.

The discussion was convened following a series published by Plus61JMedia earlier this year that identified an unmistakable trend downwards, from 133 in 2014 to a new low of 83 this year.

Rochelle Braverman was forthright in her assessment of the problem. We are in a crisis period, even before Covid. Younger people are not feeling comfortable within the Jewish community, she said, because its leaders are presenting one form of Zionism (conservative) which doesnt present Israel as an inclusive experience, referring to Israels occupation of the West Bank.

The community doesnt encourage young people to go on progressive Shnat programs [such as Netzer, Habonim and Hashomer Hatzair] compared to conservative programs (such as Bnei Akiva and Betar].

We are in a crisis period. Younger people are not feeling comfortable within the Jewish community because leaders are presenting one form of Zionism (conservative) which doesnt present Israel as an inclusive experience Rochelle Braverman

Leibler replied that he did not think ideology was a main driver of the decline. He said the price of the programs was a factor (one costs US$26285) and so was their structure, referring to length, flexibility and types of content.

The forum also heard the story of a young woman whose Shnat experience involved an internship with the Haaretz newspaper, which she found rewarding because it gave her new job skills. Leibler acknowledged that was a new way for students to experience Israel by upskilling for their futures, rather than immersing themselves in an enrichment program.

As for the relative numbers of youth groups participation, he asserted that there is a direct correlation between the size of a youth movement, and its weekly meetings, and the number of kids who go on Shnat, referring to the large numbers of Bnei Akiva participants.

Looking outside the Jewish world, he also said the huge choice of gap year options for Australian students was a major factor in the decline, which Braverman agreed with.

The huge choice of gap year options for Australian students is a major factor in the decline Jeremy Leibler

Jared Alford reinforced this point, invoking the example of a choice between travelling the Greek Islands with friends as part of a European trip versus the commitment of spending all your time in a structured program in Israel. Independent travelling was not an option in the past like it is now.

Asked whether he had observed a change in Jewish students attitudes to Israel, Alford was definite: No; our kids are very Zionist.

Noa Abrahams, who went on Netzer Shnat in 2019, echoed Rochelle Bravermans comments about the problems facing shnatties who wanted a more progressive, inclusive experience of life in Israel. But she said the fact that Benjamin Netanyahu had been in power for 12 years had not turned her off. Quite the opposite, she declared. He has only made me want to engage more, to help counter the conservative trend in Israeli politics and society.

Leibler told the forum he did not care whether young Jewish people were on the political left, right or centre. His main concern was to instil a passion for Israel. I want to ignite that fire, he said, and to that end the ZFA is undertaking a review of Shnat to get a more forensic picture of the causes of the decline.

Screen capture: Noa Abrahams

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Gap year: 'the numbers will probably be lower after Covid-19' - Plus61 J Media

The Times writer’s book on inner conflicts threatening Israel published in Persian – Tehran Times

Posted By on May 18, 2020

TEHRAN How Long Will Israel Survive?: The Threat From Within, a book by Gregg Carlstrom, a correspondent for The Times and The Economist, which analyzes various internal conflicts threatening the Zionist regime, has been published in Persian.

The book published by Dideman in Tehran has been translated by Ehsan Mohammadi and Mohammad-Javad Akhavan.

In this book originally published by the Oxford University Press in 2017, Carlstrom reviews Israels most serious challenges coming from within.

There was once a national consensus in Israeli society: politics was split between left and right, but its people were broadly secular and liberal. Over the past decade, the country has fractured into tribes: disparate groups with little shared understanding of what it means to be a Zionist, let alone an Israeli.

A once-unified population fights internecine battles over religion and state, war and peace, race and identity contesting the very notion of a Jewish and democratic state.

While this shift has profound implications for Israels relationship with the broadly liberal Jewish diaspora, the greatest consequences will be felt at home.

Israels tribes increasingly lead separate lives; even the army, once a great melting-pot, is now a political and cultural battleground. Tamir Pardo, former head of Mossad, has warned of the risk of civil war.

Gregg Carlstrom maps this conflict, from cosmopolitan Tel Aviv to the hilltops of the West Bank, and asks a pressing question: will Israel survive its own internal contradictions?

Carlstrom contributes to a number of other publications, including The Atlantic, Foreign Policy, New York magazine and others.

Photo: A poster for the Persian version of Gregg Carlstroms book How Long Will Israel Survive?: The Threat From Within.

MMS/YAW

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The Times writer's book on inner conflicts threatening Israel published in Persian - Tehran Times

Prayer in the parking lot: Orthodox Atlanta shuls become first synagogues to reopen – Jewish Journal

Posted By on May 18, 2020

Orthodox rabbis in Atlanta have agreed on a framework for how synagogues can safely reopen - and at least one began doing so on Monday.

Synagogues across the country shut their doors in March due to the coronavirus pandemic. But three weeks after Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp proclaimed that houses of worship could reopen, 15 Orthodox rabbis in Atlanta released a joint declaration of principles on Friday outlining how they would do so.

The rules are strict: Outdoor services only, with no synagogue access even for bathroom breaks. Only one service a day, and nothing on Shabbat. No children or seniors allowed. Everyone must RSVP in advance, wears masks and stay at least eight feet apart. Only 15 people maximum, although multiple services could happen in parallel if people stand far enough away. And services are cancelled if it rains.

The statement allowed services to begin as early as Monday, but made clear that each rabbi would make their own call based on their own local and logistical factors. Some rabbis began holding a minyan as soon as possible.

The people were very excited, said Rabbi Mendy Gurary of Chabad Israeli Center Atlanta, one of the synagogues that opened its facilities for prayer. They waited for this for a long time.

Gurary had tried to open the synagogue for socially-distanced services once before, but what shut down by his superiors. Now, given that most American Jews still live in states under some form of stay-at-home orders, his synagogue and others in the community are possibly the first in America to allow prayer services on its property. Up to this point, every synagogue in an open state had voluntarily chosen to remain closed to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

Many prayers, as well as the chanting of the Torah, can only be done if there is a minyan, a quorum of 10 Jews. But while Reform and Conservative Jews hold that such a group can be comprised on Zoom, Orthodox Jews do not. This means that Orthodox rabbis have faced more pressure to allow in-person services in some capacity.

Up to this point, Orthodox rabbis, virtually unanimously, have mandated that everybody should pray at home, despite the lack of a minyan. Almost everyone complied, and some of the exceptions - including rogue minyanim in peoples apartments - were met with harsh ritual punishments.

But as quarantine wore on and conditions improved, Orthodox rabbis began to split over when in-person group services could resume again.

The Atlanta Chabad houses previous attempt to open is an example of this tension.

The center, which caters to Israeli expats, had previously announced at the end of April that they would be opening for daily services, including Shabbat, but retracted their plans hours after the Forward published an article about it, saying that they hadnt received approval from regional Chabad leaders.

This time, they had reached an agreement with those leaders and other Atlanta Orthodox rabbis. Gurary said that his congregants were eager to proceed with services, even in the modified outdoor location.

Our community is a traditional community, or became chozrim btshuva, he said, using a Hebrew phrase for people who become more observant as adults. So everyone is very into davening. Shul is very important.

By contrast, Rabbi Adam Starr of Ohr Hatorah said in an email to congregants on Friday that he had convened a re-opening committee and hoped to announce plans in the near future, but that Monday was too soon to begin.

Rabbi Yossi New of Congregation Beth Tefillah, also affiliated with Chabad, is somewhere in the middle. New said that they hoped to work out the final kinks and open their parking lot for daily prayer by the end of the week.

I think people overall feel were doing it in a responsible and safe way, he said. He pointed out that in addition to the rules agreed upon by the areas Orthodox rabbis, his social distancing plan went a little farther: Congregants will have to either sit in their cars or stand just behind the vehicles open door.

In Orthodox synagogues, women are not included when counting to discern whether there are enough people to say those prayers that require a minyan; they also sit in a separate area with a divider called a mechitza. Some Orthodox groups have issued reopening plans that could be used to bar women.

New said that women would be welcome in his parking lot, and that the cars created a natural barrier between the sexes. Have mechitza, will travel, he quipped.

But New cautioned that it would be a long time before the synagogue building itself was opened up for prayer.

Its very important that as shul communities, we broadcast to our constituents that nothing is normal yet, he said. Going back inside, that would be a strong indicator that we will be going back to a normal life. Were not in that stage yet. With synagogue life, we very much echo that reality.

Correction: A previous version of this article stated that Chabad Israeli Center Atlanta on Monday became the first synagogue in the area to open its facilities for services. Other synagogues in the area also opened their facilities for services on Monday as well.

Aiden Pink is the deputy news editor of the Forward. Contact him at pink@forward.com or follow him on Twitter @aidenpink

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Prayer in the parking lot: Orthodox Atlanta shuls become first synagogues to reopen - Jewish Journal

Enough doom and gloom: History shows American Judaism is much more resilient than you think – Forward

Posted By on May 18, 2020

Last week, in the wake of the economic downturn caused by Covid-19 as well as losses from cancelling its summer camp season, the Union for Reform Judaism announced it would be firing sixty employees, furloughing others, and reducing all staff salaries. Jewish professionals across the country, reeling from projected losses throughout Jewish organizational life, immediately took notice.

Some, recalling Reform Judaisms declining membership numbers even before the pandemic, viewed the news as a warning sign for the movement as a whole. Others, like Rabbi Aaron Spiegel, president of the Synagogue Studies Institute and himself a trans-denominational rabbi, proclaimed that American Judaisms movement model is outdated and that organizations like the URJ placed too much emphasis on theological issues. Still others, recalling the Pew study of 2013 (A Portrait of Jewish Americans), suggested that Judaism itself is imperiled in America, as growing numbers of young Jews, the children of intermarried parents in particular, proclaim themselves Jews of no religion and turn their backs on organized Judaism completely.

None of these prophecies of gloom and doom are particularly new. In 2008, when the stock market plunged far more than it has now and the Bernard Madoff ponzi scheme wiped out billions of dollars of Jewish communal capital, the same dire predictions were made. Since then, many synagogues and even some congregational bodies, like the Orthodox Union and Chabad, have thrived.

Earlier, when the American economy collapsed during the Great Depression, the best known Jewish social scientist of his day, Uriah Zvi Engelman, observed in the distinguished American Journal of Sociology in 1935, that religion was losing its influence among young Jews, many of whom were entranced by socialism and communism. On this basis, he predicted the total eclipse of the Jewish church in America. That prophecy too did not come to pass; indeed, the 1950s witnessed a dramatic and totally unexpected revival of Judaism in the suburbs.

So predictions concerning post-Covid American Judaism should be made cautiously. History suggests that Judaism in America is far more resilient than critics imagine. Still, crisis has often engendered change in American Judaism. That will likely happen now as well.

Most obviously, synagogues across the spectrum of American Jewish life can be expected to harness the newly-appreciated power of virtual connectivity among Jews. Zoom-services, classes, lectures and meetings are unlikely to disappear once the pandemic does. Instead, successful synagogues will likely offer both in-person and virtual services and events, thereby strengthening their reach and engaging shut-in or far-flung Jews previously excluded from synagogue life.

Massive synagogue buildings, by contrast, are likely to be devalued after so many of them have stood shuttered for months. This trend, like Zoom, began prior to the pandemic.

In the Boston area, for example, one synagogue transformed itself into an ambitious campus shared by multiple synagogues, Jewish organizational offices, and elderly housing, while another is contemplating plans to rent space to a local Jewish college. One suspects that synagogues elsewhere that once took pride in their vast edifices may now likewise prefer to glory in how efficiently they use their space, and find ways to trim back and share.

Mergers are inevitable in the wake of the current crisis. Recent years, even prior to this downturn, have witnessed a slew of synagogue mergers. Institutionally, the movement known as Reconstructing Judaism has merged its congregational and seminary arms, while the Conservative Movement has also combined some aspects of its rabbinic and congregational organizations. Rabbi Richard Jacobs has suggested that the Reform Movement may likewise be contemplating cost-savings of this sort, though details remain vague.

Will American Judaism someday revert to a bifurcated nineteenth-century model consisting of Liberal Jews and Orthodox ones? Much depends, one suspects, on how long the current economic crisis lasts.

For now, the greatest casualty of the current crisis seems to be Jewish education. Ninety years ago, historian Jonathan Krasner has shown, the Great Depression had a devastating effect on American Jewish education, virtually wiping out many of the tentative gains of the previous two decades. Today, with so many young Jews missing out on Sunday and Hebrew School classes, Jewish summer camp, bar and bat mitzvah celebrations, and Birthright Israel trips, even as some Jewish day schools confront financial collapse, the effect on Jewish education may be no less great.

Already the Jewish Federation of Greater Indianapolis has dramatically reduced its Jewish education allocation. Unless the post-Covid American Jewish community finds ways to make up for the losses sustained this year, the generation of young Jews now coming of age will be characterized by Jewish ignorance and detachment, with dire future implications.

The firings and furloughs at the Union for Reform Judaism should thus serve as a warning that changes in American Judaism are coming. Those changes should not just be tallied in reductions, firings, and losses. Instead, leaders and funders should use the current crisis to shape the future wisely.

Jonathan D. Sarna is University Professor and Joseph H. & Belle R. Braun Professor of American Jewish History at Brandeis University, and the author of American Judaism: A History, recently published in a second edition.

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

Enough doom and gloom: History shows American Judaism is much more resilient than you think

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Enough doom and gloom: History shows American Judaism is much more resilient than you think - Forward

Reform Judaism is a wounded giant. A historian explains why it got so big. – Forward

Posted By on May 18, 2020

Amid a seeming avalanche of Jewish organizational cutbacks, closings and furloughs, the Union for Reform Judaism (URJ) announced last Wednesday, that it would be cutting its staff by 20% due to coronavirus-related stresses. As with so many basic institutions of American life, the economic disruption caused by the pandemic is highlighting existential questions about the viability of key historic and contemporary institutions of American Judaism.

Founded in 1873 under a different name, the URJ is one of the longest-lasting institutions still framing American Jewish life. It set out to provide the infrastructure for an American Judaism independent of European texts, authority, and leadership. Founder Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wises primary goal in creating that first body was the creation of a rabbinical college, although he and his lay colleagues also wanted to help individual synagogues with things like curricula for Jewish religious schools. Hebrew Union College (HUC) was created within two years, with Wise as president.

The menu of littleneck clams, crab, shrimp and frog legs at the schools first ordination dinner signaled that Wise would not be able to realize his vision of a union for all American synagogues. Still, the progenitor of the URJ represented the American belief in the possibility of a Judaism led by American rabbis, responsive to the needs of American Jews. Both that body and the rabbinical college were the first successful and long-lasting national institutions of American Jewish life. They modeled the structures other denominations would adopt to create their own versions of American Judaism, including sisterhood, brotherhood, and youth movements.

While most Reform Jews see their synagogues as the setting of their Jewish lives, in the background the national Reform movement mainly the URJ and HUC has always supplied the rabbis, prayer books, and larger networks that have shaped that religious experience. The funding mechanism has always been drawn from membership dues paid to local congregations.

Dissatisfaction with local funds being directed toward national needs has increased in recent decades, but its far from new during the Depression, congregations fell into serious arrears with the movement, some owing up to tens of thousands of dollars. But even then, and certainly at the height of synagogue life during the 1950s and 1960s congregations needed what the national movement with its monopoly on the supply of Reform rabbis and provision of prayer books, curricula, and youth programming provided.

The Union worked continually to expand its points of contact. Starting in the 1950s, Reform Jewish camps (currently there are fifteen) provided strong regional hubs for immersive Reform Jewish experience. The creation of the Religious Action Center in 1961 likewise created another access point for Reform Jews committed to civil rights and progressive politics. Summer youth travel to Israel flourished in the 1970s, connecting Reform teenagers both to Israel and each other. Regional offices were created to support rabbis and congregations throughout North America. The rabbinical school campuses in Cincinnati and New York were joined by additional campuses in Los Angeles and Jerusalem.

Each of these entities met the needs of important regional and demographic constituencies, though by the last decades of the twentieth century, questions arose about the cost of such an apparently inefficient infrastructure. Yet, when questions were raised about the viability of any one piece of the network, supporters howled in pain at the suggestion that their own piece might be cut loose. Moreover, with the shrinking of the Conservative movement, many in the Reform movement believed that their relative openness to intermarried families could secure the movements future.

The last few decades, however, have not favored top-heavy denominational bodies. As individual congregations struggle with the cost of their own expensive physical plants and highly-paid clergy, it has become increasingly harder to justify, for instance, a four-campus rabbinical school serving a shrinking student body. Attempts to restructure, however, are fraught, as was evidenced by the outcry from the generations of Reform leaders trained at Camp Kutz, when that camp was closed last year.

As important as the URJ and HUC are as sources of Reform Jewish content and community, they no longer hold a monopoly on the provision of congregational needs. New seminaries provide potential rabbis outside denominational strictures. Liturgical options abound on the internet. Youth groups can be trans-denominational without requiring URJ dues. Thus, local versions of an active Reform Judaism no longer necessarily involve commitment to larger movement structures. Many congregational leaders do not understand why they are expected to pay 12% of membership dues to support the URJ and HUC.

Unlike many newer lodestones of American Jewish life, like Birthright, the liberal Jewish denominations depend on members not megadonors or foundations to pay the cost of doing business. With camps now closed for the summer, and with synagogues anxious about retaining dues-paying members, the URJs business model is under extreme stress. No one knows what will emerge from the disruptions instigated by the current pandemic. The URJ, HUC, and numerous other institutions that define todays Jewish ecosystem were forged by folks who understood that a meaningful American Judaism required long-term and costly commitments to infrastructure, leadership and community that transcended local needs. These days, otherwise meritorious programs like Birthright and OneTable have been acclimating young American Jews to the idea that its the job of the Jewish community to invest in them, rather than the other way around.

Its possible that after a virus-driven season of virtual seders, Shabbats, and bnai mitzva, American Jews may return to their synagogues with renewed commitment to IRL communities and to institutions like the URJ that have sustained those communities. American Jews may emerge from this crisis with their collective affluence relatively intact still able to sustain historic denominational structures. Still, theres no guarantee that their commitment to building a dynamic American Judaism will mimic the choices of their predecessors of almost 150 years ago.

Karla Goldman is the Sol Drachler Professor of Social Work and Professor of Judaic Studies at the University of Michigan, where she directs the Jewish Communal Leadership Program. She is the author of Beyond the Synagogue Gallery: Finding a Place for Women in American Judaism (Harvard).

Reform Judaism: a wounded giant. Heres why its so big

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Reform Judaism is a wounded giant. A historian explains why it got so big. - Forward

How will antisemitism and Zionism look after the coronavirus? – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 17, 2020

As a result of the coronavirus and the health and economic crises it generates, values in the most advanced Western countries may pivot toward material survival and away from post-materialist values such as self-expression and human rights.

Such a shift could have complex implications for the Jewish people, generating more antisemitism on the one hand and increased support of Israel on the other. In such a reality it will be vitally important to maintain dialogue and open lines of communication between Israel and the affected Diaspora communities.

The World Values Survey has been surveying representative population samples from more than 100 countries since 1981 regarding basic attitudes and values. It has broadly grouped its data into two main categories: one measures how religious/ traditional or secular a population is; the other measures how concerned a population is with survival and material well-being, or to what extent is it concerned with spiritual, psychological, or social goods such self-fulfillment, self-expression, meaning, etc., because it takes material well-being for granted.

Secular-rational values have the opposite preferences to the traditional values. These societies place less emphasis on religion, traditional family values and authority. Divorce, abortion, euthanasia and suicide are relatively acceptable.

Survival values place emphasis on economic and physical security. This is linked with a relatively ethnocentric outlook and low levels of tolerance and trust of people, especially those outside their own ethnic or religious group.

Self-expression values give high priority to environmental protection, growing tolerance of foreigners, gays and lesbians and toward gender equality, and rising demands for participation in decision-making in economic and political life.

The survey groups countries according to these value orientations. The countries of Eastern Europe Ukraine, Moldova, Romania are secular but survival-oriented. Their citizenry does not enjoy an abundance of material goods, so they are focused on material well-being.

Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic share similar attributes, but to a somewhat lesser extent.

In contrast to this group of countries, we find the countries of Western Europe and Scandinavia, which are also secular but oriented toward self-expressive values: France, Germany, Netherlands, Finland, Sweden, Denmark, and Norway.

These are countries the survey researchers termed post-materialist. They have experienced material abundance since the Second World War; their populations do not have to worry about survival. Instead, they are concerned with self-expression human rights, gay rights, feminism, environmentalism, etc.

The English-speaking countries Great Britain, Australia, Canada, and the United States are similarly concerned with self-expression but they are somewhat more religious.

Attitudes toward the Jewish people can be examined in this context. The more survival-oriented countries of Eastern and East-Central Europe, (the Baltics, Hungary, Poland) are ethnocentric and distrustful and hostile toward strangers. They have a tendency toward antisemitism.

At the same time, they are sympathetic to Israel as a similar ethno-state that experiences challenges to its survival.

IN THE post-materialist states of Western Europe and Scandinavia, countries are formally against antisemitism and guarantee minority and human rights. They have official mechanisms to measure antisemitism and racism and are supposed to struggle against it.

At the same time, because of their post-materialist values, they are sympathetic to the Palestinians and their rights, and oppose certain Israeli policies, sometimes strenuously. These countries also carry antisemitism, but it is mainly a spillover from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and mainly perpetuated by Muslim populations and the Left.

Regarding Western European antisemitism, Israel and the local Jewish communities have similar if not identical interests.

They are both opposed to the Red-Green antisemitic alliance.

In Eastern Europe, Israel and the local Jewish communities may have opposing interests.

Israel maintains friendly relations with countries that are sympathetic to it and support it diplomatically, while the local Jewish communities may suffer under antisemitic rhetoric and practices.

How does coronavirus figure into all this? It threatens basic well-being in a way that was unthinkable just a short while ago. It is not unreasonable to think depending on how long it lasts, the extent of its severity and recurrence and the speed in which vaccines and cures are developed that it will put more focus on survival.

In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, some countries Switzerland, the Netherlands, and the United States moved from self-expressive values toward more survival-related ones. In fact, it could very well be that the election of President Trump (as well as the rise of other populist-nationalist leaders) is connected to this shift in values.

The attitude of the Trump administration toward the Jewish people mirrors that of the East European states. It is relatively tolerant of antisemitic white supremacists (indeed, some of whom have perpetrated antisemitic attacks), and at the same time, it is very positive with respect to Israel, its government and policies.

Much of the American Jewish community, too, finds itself in a dilemma that somewhat resembles that of the Hungarian and Eastern European Jewish communities. It opposes a government that has close relations with the Jewish state.

Some have predicted that the coronavirus will be the undoing of some populist leaders because of their poor crisis performance.

Even if it does, on the more tectonic level it might still engender a shift of values, especially on the back of the financial crisis of 2008.

Societies, including those in the United States, Western Europe and the other English-speaking countries, might become more survival oriented, more concerned with material and economic well-being, more ethnocentric and in-group oriented and less open to outsiders.

Such attitudes form a ready platform for antisemitism but also for sympathy for Israel as an ethno-state. Because, in such a reality where Israel and local Jewish communities may have opposing interests, continued Jewish solidarity will take on a new urgency. It will be vitally important to maintain dialogue and open lines of communication between Israel and the affected Diaspora communities.

The writer is a sociologist and senior fellow at the Jewish People Policy Institute.

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How will antisemitism and Zionism look after the coronavirus? - The Jerusalem Post

Iran media: Israel ‘cancerous’ and a ‘virus’ after burning of Esther tomb – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 17, 2020

Iranian media slammed Israel on Quds (Jerusalem) Day, calling the Jewish state a cancerous gland and Zionism a virus, a clear attempt to link Israel to the pandemic and also to use historic antisemitic tropes against the Jewish state. The article was found on Fars News as part of a piece claiming that there was a conspiracy afoot after the attempted burning of the tomb of Esther and Mordechai in Iran.The article claimed that the burning of the tomb was fake news and that it was part of a Saudi international media plot with Voice of America and the Zionist media. Irans regime media has now adopted so many conspiracies about Israel and Jews that it doesnt know which one to believe. It now argues that the Zionists are working with the Saudis to control international media.Ayatollah Khamenei tweeted on Saturday night that the Zionism regime has proven it doesnt abide by any treaty. He then accused Israel of brutality, trampling on moral norms and of massacring women and children. He called Israel a rapid, predatory dog. This is a way to dehumanize Israel, as part of the regimes attempt to try to portray Israel as both a dog and a virus. This has parallels with historic antisemitism where Jews were accused of being vermin-like and accused of spreading disease. Iran has long pretended it is a tolerant regime and Jews are able to live in Iran, while the regime's narrative portrayed other countries in the region as antisemitic. But the language Irans regime uses to discuss Israel is language that has clear meanings to the people expected to read it in the original.For Irans Quds Day, a day the regime reserves every year to distract from its own failures by pretending to take up the Palestinian cause, the ayatollah slammed Israel for oppressing Palestinians and said Iran would fight against the Zionist regime and continue its resistance.Irans obsession with Israel corrupts every element of the regime. Its sports councils seek to prevent Iranian athletes from participating in matches with Israelis. A new article at Tasnim media looks at a review of a plan to deal with the hostile actions of the Zionist regime via sport and to confront the evil nature of the Zionist regime in sports. But it appears that Iran was on the verge of letting a law lapse that prevents its athletes from competing with Israelis.Irans regime propagandists complained on Quds Day that the world media didnt give them enough attention, claiming Arabic, Hebrew and Western media had marginalized their special day. In asserting that the media ignored them, Iranian media also took credit for the Covid1948 hashtag, meant to connect the virus with the 1948 war, which one commentator said shows how Israel would not survive another 25 years.

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Iran media: Israel 'cancerous' and a 'virus' after burning of Esther tomb - The Jerusalem Post


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