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Israel and Palestine: a complete guide to the crisis

Posted By on November 6, 2023

Occupied territories, two-state solution, apartheid, peace process, proscribed terrorist organisations, the Nakba, proxy militias, disproportionate force. The decades-long crisis in Israel and Palestine has gripped the world but it has a tangled history that can feel overwhelming and terminology that many find confusing.

Below are Guardian explainer articles that aim to answer the deeper questions and give historical context, as well as provide some simple definitions.

Newcomers should start here: a short history of the dispute in the Holy Land that the world has repeatedly failed to address. Read the full article

Leaving history behind, this explainer was written the day after the 7 October Hamas attack on Israeli communities just outside the Gaza frontier. Information was still emerging but it was clear that militants were deliberately killing civilians as well as Israeli soldiers during the onslaught. The assault left 1,400 people dead, the majority of them civilians, according to officials in Israel. In one attack on a music festival, 260 people were killed. Read the full article

More than 240 hostages were taken to Gaza by militants. The vast majority of those remain captive, although several have been freed under secret deals and at least one Israeli soldier was rescued in an operation. The breakdown of civilians and military hostages is not clear.

For a full breakdown of what happened in the first week of the war, read this piece: Seven days of terror that shook the world and changed the Middle East Read the full article

In retaliation, Israel has launched a war in Gaza, imposing a complete siege on the territory of 2.3 million people. In its war intended to destroy Hamas, Israels military has conducted hundreds of strikes on residential areas, killing whole families, while also working alongside Egypt to block people from leaving. Israeli strikes have killed more than 8,500 Palestinians, nearly half of them children, according to the health ministry in Gaza. Read the full article

Israels siege of Gaza includes closing all crossings but Egypt also shares a border with the territory. Egypt has a number of reasons for tightly controlling its border with Gaza, not least because it has a peace treaty with Israel, and it also does not want Palestinians to enter in large numbers. However, some injured Palestinians and international aid workers have been allowed to leave Gaza. Read the full article

After two weeks of bombing, Israel launched its ground invasion. The urban warfare operation is likely to be lengthy and fraught with danger for its military and for Palestinian civilians. The operations specific goals remain uncertain. Read the full article

Several militant groups operate in Gaza, chief among them Hamas, an armed Islamist group that has ruled inside the blockaded territory since 2007. Read the full article

The second largest armed group in Gaza, which sometimes works with Hamas, is the Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine. It is considered one of the most extreme and uncompromising Palestinian armed factions. Read the full article

Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad are considered to be Iranian proxies groups that receive support from and are influenced by Iran, the arch-enemy of Israel. Read the full article

Hezbollah, the Lebanese political and militant group, is Irans most prominent proxy movement. The group grew in influence during the Israeli occupation of Lebanon and is now a major political force. Many fear the hatred born out of the Gaza war will push Hezbollah and Israel to enter a new war. Read the full article

The slogan is used by Palestinians and Israelis and is open to an array of interpretations, from the genocidal to the democratic. Read the full article

A United Nations independent commission of inquiry has said there is already clear evidence that war crimes may have been committed by Hamas and the Israeli military. Read the full article

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Israel and Palestine: a complete guide to the crisis

Pro-Palestine protests in DC and across the US call for a ceasefire – CNN

Posted By on November 6, 2023

  1. Pro-Palestine protests in DC and across the US call for a ceasefire  CNN
  2. This Weekend's DC Protest Was Largest Pro-Palestine Mobilization in US History  Truthout
  3. Pro-Palestine rallies arent hate marches theyre an expression of solidarity, helplessness and frustration  The Guardian

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Pro-Palestine protests in DC and across the US call for a ceasefire - CNN

Judaism – Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Posted By on November 4, 2023

This article is about the Jewish religion. For more information about the Jewish people, see Jew.

Judaism (Hebrew: ) is the world's oldest Abrahamic monotheistic religion. It is almost 4,000 years old and originated in Israel. It is centered around the Torah. There are about 15 million followers. They are called Jews or Jewish people.[1] It is the oldest monotheistic religion. The Torah is the most important holy book of Judaism. The laws and teachings of Judaism come from the Torah, the first five books of the Hebrew Bible and oral traditions. Some of these were first oral traditions and later written in the Mishnah, the Talmud, and other works.

Both Christianity and Islam are related to Judaism. These religions accept the belief in one God and the moral teachings of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament), which includes the Torah or "."

Maimonides was a famous Jewish teacher of the 12th century. He listed thirteen of the main beliefs in Judaism. These were called the Principles of Faith.[2][3]

The three main beliefs at the center of Judaism are Monotheism, Identity, and covenant (an agreement between God and God's people).

The most important teaching of Judaism is that there is one God, who wants people to do what is just and compassionate. Judaism teaches that a person serves God by learning the holy books and doing what they teach. These teachings include both ritual actions and ethics. Judaism teaches that all people are made in the image of God and deserve to be treated with dignity and respect.

The main teachings of Judaism are about God, that there is only one God. According to Judaism, only God created the universe and only God controls it. Jewish people refer to God by many names. The most holy name for God in Judaism is "Yahweh", though most Jews avoid saying this name aloud due to how holy it is. Judaism also teaches that God is spiritual and not physical.[4][5]

Jews believe that God is one a unity: God is one whole, complete being. God cannot be divided into parts and people cannot say how God looks in words; they can only say how God is and what God does.[6]

Jews believe that all goodness and morality is from God. God is interested in what people do and that God watches what they do.[7][8]

Judaism teaches that all people are made in the image of God. This is why people must be treated with dignity and respect. A person serves God by being like God. This means that they must do what is fair and just, show mercy, and behave with kindness and love for people.[6][9]

Judaism says that God exists forever, that God is everywhere, and that God knows everything. God is above nature (supernatural) but God is in the world and hears those who pray to God and will answer them. God is the main power in the universe.[6]

Judaism teaches that God allows people to choose what to do this is called free will. Free will is the freedom to do whatever a person wants, but that they must be responsible for their own actions. People are responsible for their actions. God rewards people who do good, and will punish those who do wrong. God gives a person a reward or a punishment in this world, but God gives the final reward or punishment to the soul of the person after their death.[10]

Jews believe that God made an agreement called a covenant with Abraham, the ancestor of the Jewish people. The Bible says that God promised to bless Abraham and his descendants if they worshipped God and were faithful to God. God made this covenant with Abraham's son, Isaac, and with Isaac's son, Jacob. God gave Jacob another name, Israel. This is how Jacobs descendants got the name the Children of Israel or Israelites. God later gave the Torah to the Israelites through their leader, Moses. The Torah told the Israelites how to live and build their community. God gave the Israelites the Ten Commandments and other laws in the Torah (613 in total).[11]

The Jews are sometimes called the Chosen People". This is because the Bible says God told them, You will be to Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation (Exodus 19:6) and For you are a holy people to the Lord your God, and the Lord chose you to be God's own special nation out of all peoples on the earth (Deuteronomy 14:2). Jews understand that this means they have special duties and responsibilities commanded by God. For example, Jews must build a just society and serve only God. Jews believe that this covenant works in two ways: if they follow Gods laws, God will give them God's love and protection, but they are also responsible for their sins bad actions and disobeying what God told them. Jews believe that they must teach other people that God exists and that God wants all people to do good actions. Jews believe that their job in the world is to be "a light to the nations" (Isiah 49:6) by showing the people of the world ways to make the world a better place.[4][12]

Jews believe that God has given them a special job which is to repair the world. Their job is to make the world a better place with more good in it. They must use the things in the world to increase good and come closer to God. They call this tikkun olam repairing the world. Jews see themselves and all people as partners with God. People must repair the world in any way they can to find ways to lessen suffering of people and animals, to make more peace, bring respect between people and protect the earths environment from destruction.[13][14]

Jews do not try to convince other people to believe in Judaism. Jews believe they have a special job to show the world that God exists, but people do not have to be Jewish to follow God. All people can serve God by following the Seven Commandments (rules) given to Noah. But, Judaism accepts people who choose to change their religion to Judaism.[15]

Jews believe that God tells them in the Torah the way of life that they must follow. The Torah says God wants the people of Israel to walk in God's ways, to love God, and to serve God, and to keep Gods commandments (Deut. 10:1213). Actions are more important than beliefs and beliefs must be made into actions.

These actions are called mitzvot in Hebrew (singular: a mitzvah ). Sometimes they are called laws, "rules" or commandments. Many people think of a mitzvah as "a good act," or "a good thing to do." There are 613 mitzvot in the Torah. Jews believe that the Torah gives mitzvot for all people; all people must keep seven laws that were taught to Noah and his children after the flood. The Jews must keep 613 mitzvot, which are listed in the Torah. The rabbis counted 365 mitzvot that Jews must not do (negative mitzvot), and 248 mitzvot that Jews must do (positive mitzvot). Some mitzvot are for everyday life, and some are only for special times, such as Jewish holidays. Many of the 613 mitzvot are about the Holy Temple in Jerusalem and cannot be done now, since the Temple was destroyed.[16]

Some of the mitzvot are about how people must act to other people. For example, they must give charity to a poor person, or help a person who is in danger. They must not steal or lie. These are ethical and moral mitzvot.

Some mitzvot are about how people must act towards God. For example, they must respect Gods name, or not work on the Sabbath. These are religious or ritual mitzvot. Jews believe that God tells them to do both ethical and religious acts.[4][17]

Jews see mitzvot as acts that sanctify bring holiness to the world and bring people and the world closer to God. Jews do the mitzvot to sanctify the physical world and the things in it, such as food and drink, clothing, and natural activities such as sex, work, or seeing beautiful sights. Before doing many acts, such as eating, Jews say a blessing a short prayer that God makes and gives a person the things that they need for life. In Judaism, life is most holy and important. A Jew must stop doing other mitzvot of the Torah to help save another persons life.[4]

Jews believe that they must do the mitzvot with happiness and joy because the Bible says Serve God with joy; come before God with singing (Psalms 100:2). Doing a mitzvah helps a person come close to God and that makes the person happy. A group of Jews called the Hasidim say this is the best way to live. They say that worrying takes people away from joy and they will not see the beauty and good in the world.[18]

Many mitzvot in the Torah are about the Land of Israel. The Talmud and later books call these mitzvot commandments connected to the Land because Jews can only do them in the Land of Israel. For example, Jews give gifts to the poor or the priests from their fields every year, and before the Temple was destroyed, take fruit or animals to the Temple in Jerusalem, and must stop working on the land every seven years (the shmittah sabbatical year).[17][19]

The Land of Israel is holy in Judaism. A Jewish belief is that God created the Earth from Mount Moriah in Jerusalem in the Land of Israel, and God is always closest to this land. Jews believe that this land is where God told the Jewish people to build a society to serve God, and many mitzvot (commandments) in the Torah are about the Land of Israel.[19][20][21]

The Jewish people believe their history as a nation begins with Abraham. The story of Abraham in the Torah begins when God tells Abraham to leave his country. God promises Abraham and his descendants a new home in the land of Canaan. This is now known as the Land of Israel. It is named after Abraham's grandson, Jacob, who was also called Israel and who was the father of the twelve tribes. This is where the name Land of Israel comes from. The land is also called the Promised Land because in the Torah, God promises to give the land to the children of Abraham (Gen 12:7, Gen 13:15, Gen 15:18, Gen 17:8).[19][22]

The rabbis of the Talmud understood from the Torah (Num 33:53) that it is a mitzvah for Jews to live in the land of Israel. They saw living outside of Israel as not natural for a Jew. Jews often called the land outside of Israel "galut." This is usually translated as "diaspora" (a place where people are scattered), but the word more closely means "exile".[19][23]

The story of leaving Egypt, called the Exodus, is very important in the way the Jewish people understand the world. The Torah tells how God took a group of slaves, the Israelites, from slavery, and tells them how to be God's partner to build the world. Jews see this story as a model for the whole world. In the future, the whole world will change, and all the people of the world will serve the one God. This will be Gods kingdom on Earth. They believe the whole of Jewish history, and world history, is part of this process.[24]

The prophets taught that God would send a person to the world who would help all the people of the world see that God is the maker, ruler of the world and has supreme power. This person is called the Messiah. The word Messiah comes from the Hebrew word mashiah, which means "the anointed one". The Book of Isaiah says the Messiah will be a just king who will unite the Jewish people and lead them in God's way. The Messiah will also unite all the people of the world to serve God. People will act with justice and kindness, and the whole world will be filled with peace.[24]

Jews still wait for the Messiah to come. They believe that this will be a person. Other Jews believe in a future time when justice and peace will come through the cooperation of all people and the help of God.[8]

Jews believe that to know what God wants them to do, they must study the books of Torah and its laws and do what they teach. These include both laws about how to behave to other people and how to serve God.[6]

The two most important groups of books in Judaism are the Bible and the Talmud. The beliefs and actions of Judaism come from these books. Jewish teachers and scholars wrote more books, called commentaries. They explain and say more about what is written in the Bible and Talmud.

The Torah is the most important of all Jewish writings. The first five books of the Hebrew Bible (known to Christians as the "Old Testament") make up the Torah. The Torah contains the basic laws of Judaism and describes the history of the Jews until the death of Moses. Jewish tradition says that God told Moses what to write in the Torah, which is also called the Five Books of Moses. Religious Jews believe that Moses brought the Ten Commandments and the Torah down from Mount Sinai. The Ten Commandments are special because they were heard by all of the Jewish people at Mount Sinai. However, in traditional Judaism, all of the 613 mitzvot in the Torah are equally important.

Jews divide the Hebrew Bible into three parts and call it the Tanakh. The three parts are the Torah, which is the first five books; the Nevi'im, which are the books of the prophets; and the Ketuvim, meaning the Writings, which are other books of history and moral teachings.

Rabbinic Jews also believe that there is another part of the Torah besides the five books of Moses. It is called the Mishnah, also called the Oral Torah or Oral Law. It explains how to follow the laws written in the 5 books. There is a commentary (explanation) of the Mishnah, called the Gemara. Together, the Mishna and the Gemara make up the Talmud. But Karaite Jews believe that there is no additional Torah besides the five books of Moses.

Traditional Jews believe that God gave the written Torah and the oral Torah to Moses and that Moses told it to the Jewish people, and that it is the same today as it was back then. Traditional Jews also believe that all of the commandments must still be followed today.

Liberal Jews believe that the Torah was inspired by God but written by human beings. Liberal Jews believe that all of the ethical laws in the Torah must still be followed, but many ritual laws do not need to be followed today.

It is considered good in Judaism to talk about the commandments and to try to understand how to follow them. The Talmud has many stories about Rabbis who argued about the commandments. Over time, some opinions have become the rule for everyone. Some rules are still being argued about. Jews praise logical argument and looking for truth.

There is no single leader of Judaism who can decide how to follow the commandments or what to believe. Even though Jews believe different things and they disagree about the rules, they are still one religion and one people.

Jews who follow the religious rules called "kashrut" only eat some types of food that are prepared by special rules. Food that a Jew can eat is called kosher food.[25]

Traditional Jews are very careful about kashrut. They usually cannot eat many foods in non-kosher restaurants or in the home of someone who does not keep kosher. Sometimes, this makes it hard to visit people or to do business. People help avoid this problem by choosing to dine with Traditional Jews in a kosher restaurant or serve them kosher food in their home.

Liberal Jews are not so careful about kosher, although some of them may keep some rules.

There are other rules for kosher food as well.

One of the commandments is to keep the Jewish Sabbath, or Shabbat. Shabbat starts every Friday at sunset and ends on Saturday at nightfall. Shabbat is a day of rest to thank God for making the universe.

The tradition of resting on Shabbat comes from the Torah. According to the Torah, God created the world in six days and on the seventh day, Shabbat, He rested. Many Jews go to their temple or synagogue to pray on Shabbat.

Religious Jews follow special rules on Shabbat. These rules require Jews not to do creative work on Shabbat. One reason for this is to give people a break from all the things that make them busy during the week. This helps them focus more on appreciating God, their family, and the rest of creation. Also it reminds people that God is the creator and ruler of the world; and no matter how great a person's creative power is, it cannot compare with God's creation of the universe and everything in it. Many of these categories of creative work include actions that people might not think of as work. For instance, on Shabbat a Jew cannot:

Traditional Jews are very careful about Shabbat. It is a special day. They clean their houses and prepare special food for Shabbat. They dress in their nicest clothes. They sing songs and say extra prayers in the synagogue. They have dinner and lunch with their families. Many families also invite guests for dinner and for lunch. They eat special food, and sing together traditional Shabbat songs. On Shabbat afternoon people study Judaism together or just visit friends.

Liberal Jews do not follow those rules. Some do go to synagogue, visit friends, or have special meals. But they may also talk on the phone, drive cars, and go shopping.

For a very long time, most Jews in Europe believed the same basic things about Judaism. Jews in other lands had different beliefs and customs than European Jews. About 200 years ago, a small group of Jews in Germany decided to stop believing in many parts of Judaism and try to become more "modern" and more like Germans. Those Jews were called Reform Jews.

Today there are three main kinds of Judaism: Reform, Conservative, and Orthodox Judaism. There are also kinds with a smaller number of people, such as Reconstructionist Judaism, and Karaite Judaism. Each group has its own practices according to how it understands the Jewish laws. For example, Reform (also called Liberal or Progressive) Judaism encourages people to choose the ways to be Jewish that mean the most to them based on the traditions. Reform Judaism teaches Jews to focus on the ethical laws of Judaism. Conservative Judaism developed after Reform Judaism. The leaders of Conservative Judaism felt that Reform Judaism was too radical. They wanted to conserve (protect) Jewish tradition instead of reforming (changing) it. Orthodox Jews do not believe that Reform or Conservative Judaism are correct because they believe that the laws given by God are timeless, and can't be changed.

In the most recent survey of Jews in the United States in 2000-2001, it was found that 35% of American Jews say they are Reform, 27% say they are Conservative, 10% say they are Orthodox, 2% say they are Reconstructionist and 25% do not say what type they are.

In Israel, almost all Jews go to Orthodox synagogues. There are very few Reform or Conservative synagogues, but there has been a steady increase since 2009. In Israel, Jews do not call themselves Reform, Conservative, or Orthodox. Instead, they mostly call themselves "Haredi" (completely religious) "Dati" (basically religious), "Masorati" (traditional/conservative) or "Chiloni" (secular). Surveys suggest about 20% of Israelis say they are secular, 25% say they are Dati or Haredi and 55% say they are traditional.

Names are very important in Judaism. Many Jews believe that a name not only tells you who someone is, but also tells you something about them. Names of God are very special in Judaism, so Jews do not write them or speak them fully but use other words instead. That is why some Jews write G-d, with a "-" instead of an "o."

HaShem Means "The Name". It is the word Jews use most often when not praying to talk about God.

Adonai means "My Lord." This name tells Jews about God's position. God is the King of the World, and his name Adonai lets us know that.

Elohim means "one who is strong enough to do everything." This name is used when talking about God's power to create or God's justice. This tells us that God is the creator and that God rules the world with just laws.

The two names above are so special that traditional Jews use these names only when they pray and read the Torah. When they are not praying or reading the Torah, they say "Hashem" (The Name) or "Elokim".

God - Some Jews write "God" by replacing the "o" with a dash, like this: "G-d". They do this because God's name is very holy so they are not allowed to throw away a piece of paper with "God" written on it. However, if by accident "God" is written, then the paper can be disposed of in a special way and buried in a special place. Others say that "God" is just an English word, not Hebrew, and so it is not holy.

YHWH ("Yehovah"/"Yahweh") is the most sacred name of God in Hebrew, and is not pronounced by most Jews. No one knows where the name came from, or what exactly it means. It looks like the Hebrew word "hayah," which is the verb "to be." (According to Hebrew scripture, when Moses asked God who God was, God told Moses I am that I am/I am who I am.) Jews believe that the name YHWH shows that God is endless. Instead of trying to say it, most Jews say "haShem", which means "The Name." Some people pronounce this name as Yahweh, or Jehovah. Scholars of religion sometimes refer to "YHWH" as the Tetragrammaton, from an old Greek word that means "four letters".

Continued here:

Judaism - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Israel issues global travel warning, telling citizens ‘to avoid displaying any outward signs of their Israeli or Jewish identity when traveling’ -…

Posted By on November 4, 2023

Israel issues global travel warning, telling citizens 'to avoid displaying any outward signs of their Israeli or Jewish identity when traveling'  Yahoo News

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Israel issues global travel warning, telling citizens 'to avoid displaying any outward signs of their Israeli or Jewish identity when traveling' -...

Cornell University cancels classes Friday amid extraordinary stress on campus after violent antisemitic threats led to the arrest of a student – CNN

Posted By on November 4, 2023

  1. Cornell University cancels classes Friday amid extraordinary stress on campus after violent antisemitic threats led to the arrest of a student  CNN
  2. Cornell University student accused of posting online threats about Jewish students appears in court  The Associated Press
  3. Jewish schools to US colleges: Dont recruit students unless you can guarantee safety  The Times of Israel

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Cornell University cancels classes Friday amid extraordinary stress on campus after violent antisemitic threats led to the arrest of a student - CNN

Jewish group in Iowa City makes call to action to end violence in Gaza, holds mourning event at Ped Mall – KGAN TV

Posted By on November 4, 2023

Jewish group in Iowa City makes call to action to end violence in Gaza, holds mourning event at Ped Mall  KGAN TV

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Jewish group in Iowa City makes call to action to end violence in Gaza, holds mourning event at Ped Mall - KGAN TV

Brick from a bigot has Jewish community coming together on William & Mary campus – WAVY.com

Posted By on November 4, 2023

Brick from a bigot has Jewish community coming together on William & Mary campus  WAVY.com

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Brick from a bigot has Jewish community coming together on William & Mary campus - WAVY.com

The Legacy of Filmmaker Claude Lanzmann – United States Holocaust …

Posted By on November 4, 2023

Filmmaker Legacy

November 27, 1925, to July 5, 2018

Claude Lanzmann spent 12 years locating survivors, perpetrators, eyewitnesses, and scholars for his nine-and-a-half-hour filmShoah,released in 1985. Deliberately rejecting the use of archival footage in his film,Shoahweaves together extraordinary testimonies to describe the step-by-step machinery implemented to destroy European Jewry. Critics have called it a sheer masterpiece and a monument against forgetting.

The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum purchased theShoahouttakes from Claude Lanzmann on October 11, 1996, and ever since Museum staff have been performing the painstaking work necessary to reconstruct and preserve 185 hours of interview outtakes and 35 hours of location filming.The Claude Lanzmann Shoah Collection is jointly owned by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and Yad Vashem, Israels Holocaust memorial.

Claude Lanzmann (right) interviews Holocaust survivor Abraham Bomba (left), September 1979. US Holocaust Memorial Museum, RG-60.5011.

Claude Lanzmann was born in Paris to a Jewish family that immigrated to France from Eastern Europe. He attended theLyce Blaise-Pascal, a high school in Clermont-Ferrand, France. His family went into hiding during World War II. At 18, he joined the French Resistance and fought in the Auvergne. Lanzmann opposed the French war in Algeria and signed a 1960 antiwar petition. From 1952 to 1959 he lived with French writer and intellectual Simone de Beauvoir. In 1963, he married French actress Judith Magre. Later, he married Angelika Schrobsdorff, a German-Jewish writer (who served a vital role as interpreter and editor on the film), and then Dominique Petithory in 1995. He is the father of Anglique Lanzmann, born in 1950, and Flix Lanzmann (19932017).

Lanzmanns most renowned work,Shoah, is widely regarded as the seminal film on the subject of the Holocaust. He began interviewing survivors, historians, witnesses, and perpetrators in 1973 and finished editing the film in 1985. In 2009, Lanzmann published his memoirs under the titleLe livre de Patagonie(The Patagonian Hare). He was chiefeditor of the journalLes Temps Modernes, which was founded by Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, until his death on July 5, 2018.

Gertrude Schneider (who later wrote a book about her experiences during World War II) and her family were deported from Vienna to Riga, Latvia in February, 1942. In this clip, Schneider, her sister, and her mother discuss the Germans' attempts to prohibit pregnancy in the ghetto and the consequences for women who became pregnant. They laugh at the idea that the Germans issued official orders forbidding sex in the ghetto, and Gertrude's sister speculates that disobeying this prohibition against sex was a form of spiritual resistance. Later in the interview (available in Collections Search) Claude Lanzmann encourages the three women to sing songs from the ghetto, one of many examples of Lanzmann's interest in recording songs written and sung by Jews during this period. November, 1978, New York, NY.

Roswell McClelland, serving as a representative of the American Friends Service Committee, describes to Lanzmann his attempts to ameliorate the situation of the French Jews at a meeting with Vichy French official Pierre Laval in 1942. He recalls that Laval regarded the foreign Jews as a particularly negative influence, and supported their relocation to an "ethnic reservation" in Poland. Laval also denied that Jews were being murdered in Poland. Roswell McClelland continued his efforts to aid Jews in Europe and later became the US Representative to the War Refugee Board in Switzerland. November, 1978, Chevy Chase, MD.

Lanzmann was relentless in his pursuit of interviews with perpetrators. In some cases he used a camera hidden on his body, or adopted a fake name and framed his project as either neutral or even sympathetic toward the Nazi point of view. This compilation of clips shows Lanzmann and his interpreter, Corinna Coulmas, ringing the doorbell at the home of Gustav Laabs, an SS commander and gas van operator who murdered between 100,000 and 200,00 Jews at Chelmno, for which he served 13 years in prison. Getting no answer at Laabs's home, Lanzmann talks to some of his neighbors. One couple with whom he speaks are, throughout the conversation, irate at being filmed without permission. In response to Lanzmann's questions, the couple say they know Mr. Laabs and that he is a very nice neighbor. Lanzmann asks if they know about his past, whether they know what a gas van is, and if they are aware that their nice neighbor murdered 200,000 Jews by gassing them. The man seems taken aback and can only answer that they are the next generation, implying their innocence. The next neighbor Lanzmann speaks with denies knowing anything about Laabs,including his age or career. Lanzmann then states bluntly that Laabs killed hundreds of thousands of Jews in gas vans at Chelmno. The man claims that his only knowledge of these events is from the TV series Holocaust. This man, too, does not like the presence of the camera. Lanzmann asks him what he thinks in general about the activities of the Holocaust. The man says perpetrators should be judged but keeps a very distant stance throughout. Corinna and Lanzmann walk toward their van as if followed (out of frame) by one of the neighbors who is insisting that they leave. In these scenes the viewer can sense both the determination of Lanzmann to compel his subjects to reveal as much as he can, and the personal danger that might result from his aggressive tactics. 1980, Germany.

Lanzmann sits in a hotel room reading some papers, preparing for a secretly taped interview with Karl Kretschmer, a senior official with Einsatzgruppe 4a (Babi Yar). Lanzmann takes off his jacket and shirt and sound engineer, Bernard Aubouy, fits him with the hidden camera. The camera is held in place on Lanzmann's left side by a strap around his chest. Aubouy helps him with his shirt and tie, and they speak in French as Lanzmann continues to dress. Lanzmann reads from the French translation of Kretchmer's letter to his family in September 1942 about Babi Yar. Later in the hidden camera interview, Kretschmer is reluctant to talk. 1980, Germany.

The Claude Lanzmann Shoah Collection contains over 220 hours of footage and includesthousands of original 16mm film reels with corresponding separate sound tapes, negative logs, interview summaries, and transcripts. Most of the film material consists of Lanzmanns penetrating interviews with survivors, eyewitnesses, and Nazi perpetrators, but there are also dozens of reels of so-called location footageillustrative scenes of the forest in Poland, for example, or of the railroad tracks leading up to the gates at Auschwitzshot by some of France's greatest camera operators. The collection is comprised only of outtakes, that is the scenes that were shot in the course of makingShoah but that were not used in the final version.

The Museum has been strongly committed to preserving and safeguarding the archive of Lanzmanns cinematic achievement and exposing its contents to a broad public. We have undertaken extensive, complicated, and expensive work to reconstruct the film materials, so that over 85 percent of theShoahinterview and location outtakes are fully available for research and freely accessible for viewing on the Internet, accompanied by original transcripts.

This film, produced by the Museums Spielberg Film Archive staff, features 55 minutes of previously unseen interviews from the Claude Lanzmann Shoah Collection. SHOAH: The Unseen Interviews includes the testimony of Abraham Bomba, a barber in the Treblinka killing center, who escaped, was smuggled back into the ghetto, and tried to warn friends, who refused to believe what was happening; details of American responses to the Holocaust from Peter Bergson, who tried to rally American Jews and the US government to act sooner to save the Jews in Europe; and Ruth Eliass harrowing tale of survival in Theresienstadt and Auschwitz-Birkenau.

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The Legacy of Filmmaker Claude Lanzmann - United States Holocaust ...

PM Netanyahu invokes Amalek theory to justify Gaza killings. What is this Hebrew Bible nation? | Mint – Mint

Posted By on November 2, 2023

PM Netanyahu invokes Amalek theory to justify Gaza killings. What is this Hebrew Bible nation? | Mint  Mint

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PM Netanyahu invokes Amalek theory to justify Gaza killings. What is this Hebrew Bible nation? | Mint - Mint

What Is Zionism and Is It Fueling the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict?

Posted By on November 2, 2023

If Europe's Jews needed a catalyst to pursue independent nationhood, they found it in the Dreyfus Affair.

In 1894, a French army captain named Henry Dreyfus was falsely accused and convicted of treason in a highly publicized trial. Dreyfus, a secular Jew, became the target of openly anti-Semitic attacks in the press.

"Here is this army officer, the epitome of an emancipated and assimilated Jew," says Kotzin, but even he wasn't seen as a true Frenchman. "The people behind the treasonous accusations spread this false idea that Jews could never be part of the European nation state and should always be viewed with suspicion."

Among the journalists covering the Dreyfus Affair was an Austrian playwright named Theodor Herzl, who was living in Paris as a foreign correspondent for a Viennese newspaper. Herzl, himself a fully assimilated and nonreligious European Jew, wrote later that he identified deeply with Dreyfus. If a man of Dreyfus' stature wasn't immune from anti-Semitism, who was?

In 1896, Herzl published "Der Judenstaat" ("The Jewish State"), a call to Jewish nationhood that launched the modern Zionist movement. In it, Herzl argued that the establishment of an independent Jewish nation would not only be good for Jews, but good for Europe.

"Herzl said that anti-Semitism causes divisions within nations," says Kotzin. "If you can find a place for Jews to go, then that would solve a problem that was more than a 'Jewish problem.' It was a problem that plagued Europe."

Coming on the heels of the Dreyfus Affair, Herzl's writings found a ready audience among many Jewish intellectuals. In 1897, the First Zionist Congress met in Basel, Switzerland, and Herzl dedicated the rest of his short life he died from a heart attack in 1904 to securing political and financial support for the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine.

Kotzin points out that while Herzl is considered the father of the "Political Zionist" movement, there are several different streams of Zionism present in the 19th and 20th century. "Cultural Zionism," for example, was a movement led by the Ukrainian-born intellectual Ahad Ha-Am, which called for a spiritual rebirth of Judaism in Israel, not necessarily an independent state.

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What Is Zionism and Is It Fueling the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict?


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