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Today, we’re mourning the loss of our social spaces. Tomorrow, let’s redesign them. – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on May 4, 2020

CLEVELAND (JTA) Remember when we used to go to shul, Mommy?

Its Shabbat morning and my children are repeating the same weekly ritual which now seems to have replaced the practice of actually attending synagogue. While my husband and I pray, they pepper us with questions, comments and reminders about the world that once was. They wax poetic about the hot potato kugel at the weekly kiddush.

Prayers are great anywhere, I tell them. And though it doesnt come out of the kitchen in a two-foot long pan, I remind them that my kugel isnt half bad.

But what my children miss is not just the Shabbat services and observances they are also missing the synagogue itself.

I study urban planning, so I have a framework for understanding what my children are yearning for. I know that social interactions are deeply shaped by physical environments. The design of a city the built and natural infrastructure, the designated uses of specific spaces affects the ways that people experience one another and themselves. And what does and does not get built, the amount of space that is dedicated to specific functions and the general flow of the city are fundamentally shaped by what the people within the city believe to be important.

The earliest cities were intended to serve as centers of worship and religious practice. Ziggurats, pyramids, temples, churches, mosques and other religious buildings not only served as a statement to the importance of the religion they were also formally and informally used as mechanisms to maintain religious observance and social cohesion. Either directly, through sermons or practices, or indirectly, through communal gatherings and peer pressure, physical infrastructure plays a significant role in the enduring practice of religion.

So, its clear to me that months of isolation from synagogues, schools, religious non-profits and other internal social spaces even the very cities in which they are located will affect the Jewish community for longer than the virus requires.

With such an abrupt and extended interruption in practice and the decentralization of observance, can we expect that people will simply snap back when buildings reopen? Or will people find it difficult to readjust to the expectations of institutional Judaism having been without the communal aspect of the lifestyle for so many months?

What we know about public space suggests that the latter case is more likely. After months of distance prayer and individualized religious practice, we will grow distant from the social processes that our physical institutions enabled us to maintain.

By nature, individual household standards often differ from those that are enforced through institutions and communal systems. Even for those who can and do utilize technology to engage in prayers, learning and communal events, the experience just isnt the same.

Changes to our Jewish space now overwhelmingly personal and individualized will likely mean changes in the ways we are Jews together. But this new state of Jewish life presents opportunities: When we return to them, we can use our physical institutions to strengthen individual growth and education, giving people the tools to thoughtfully engage with ritual, practice and belief.

Rather than disregard the value of individualized and personal spaces, we can think more creatively about how to create communal spaces that are as flexible, understanding and thoughtful as our personal living rooms. Spaces that encourage us to expand our mindfulness of the needs of others, that thrive on transparency and openness spaces that enable us to avoid the perpetuation of hidden crises, financial debt and under-addressed mental health concerns.

We can redesign the physical layouts of synagogues to maximize the inclusion of people with disabilities, women, and children. We can set up prayer and communal spaces to allow people to interact with one another and encourage more thoughtfulness. We can use communal event landscapes such as a kiddush to engage in thoughtful conversations about food and housing insecurity.

These efforts will require leaders to adapt and bring new voices to the table. And we might be surprised to see that thoughtful design choices can actually enable, rather than hinder, inclusion, personalization and religious adherence.

We cannot pursue or achieve these goals if we maintain a desire and expectation to return to business as usual once the immediate health crisis has ended. Just as COVID-19 has forced us to rethink the ways we live our secular lives, revitalizing our community after this crisis will require our leaders to reconsider their own deeply held views on religious life.

I dont want my children to spend every Shabbat trying to remember what once was. But with a bit of thoughtful work, they will gain tremendously from the Jewish spaces that can be.

This piece is a part of our series of Visions for the Post-Pandemic Jewish Future click here to read the other stories in this series. Use #JewishFuture to share your own ideas on social media. If youd like to submit an essay for consideration, email opinions@jta.org with Visions Project Submission in the subject line.

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

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Today, we're mourning the loss of our social spaces. Tomorrow, let's redesign them. - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Gloria Sadoff Landy – The Two River Times

Posted By on May 4, 2020

Gloria Sadoff Landy, age 86, of Rumson, passed away April 23 at her home. She was born Aug. 12, 1933 in New York City, the oldest of two children to Samuel and Eva Sadoff.

While most of her family members in Europe died during the Holocaust, Glorias parents worked hard to help survivors build new lives here in America. Gloria and her brother Leon grew up as active members of the Old Broadway Synagogue in Harlem, New York. She married Eugene Landy in 1957 and worked as a paralegal supporting him while he attended Yale Law School in New Haven, Connecticut.

Eugene and Gloria raised three sons, Samuel, Michael and Richard Landy. Gloria devoted her life to Jewish causes and the State of Israel and worked tirelessly in these efforts. Gloria was the first woman president of Congregation Bnai Israel in Rumson and remained very involved in all aspects of the synagogue, most particularly youth education, throughout her life.

She worked for many years at the United Nations headquarters in New York City as a leader in the Jewish NGO Caucus. In 2014, she was elected secretary of the World Jewish Congress where she served with great pride and distinction. Her strong voice of solidarity with the Jewish community and the Jewish state was always loud and clear in the public square and in the diplomatic arena.

Gloria was also a gifted poet and served as the president of the New Jersey Poetry Society for several years. She was a voracious reader and writer and had great admiration for the works of William Shakespeare, Fyodor Dostoevsky and Elie Wiesel, whom she was proud to call her friend.

Gloria was a beloved wife, mother, grandmother and great-grandmother. Preceded in death by her parents, Samuel and Eva Sadoff, and grandson Avrohom Landy, she is survived by her husband of 67 years Eugene Landy; her brother Leon Sadoff; her sons (and daughters-in law), Samuel Landy (Laurie), Michael Landy (Tassana) and Richard Landy (Tzipporah); her 10 grandchildren, Jeremy Landy, Monica Landy, Harry Landy, Aaron Landy, Daniel Landy, Chaim Landy, Abigail Landy, Ahuva Landy, Shira Landy and Moshe Landy; her great-grandson Betzalel Ference;and numerous nieces, nephews, cousins and friends.

Donations can be directed in memory to World Jewish Congress at support.worldjewishcongress.org.

The article originally appeared in the April 30 May 6, 2020 print edition of The Two River Times.

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Gloria Sadoff Landy - The Two River Times

California shopper appears to wear KKK hood to grocery store in lieu of coronavirus face mask, sparking out… – Fox News

Posted By on May 4, 2020

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A man was photographed wearing what appeared to be a Ku Klux Klan hood while grocery shopping in southern California over the weekend, inciting outrage from other shoppers, local officials, and the Anti-Defamation League.

The incident Saturday occurreda day after San Diego County began requiring all residents to wear masks or other face coveringsin public, including when making trips to the grocery store, in an effort to reduce the spread of the coronavirus.

Several grocery clerks approached the man pushing a shopping cart inside the Vons supermarket in Santee, a suburban city of about 53,400 residents, to ask him to remove the hood or leave the store, a corporate spokesperson told the San Diego Tribune.

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The store manager approached the man again while he was in the checkout line telling him to remove the head covering and leave. The unidentified man purchased the items in his cart and left, Melissa Hill, a spokeswoman for Vons, Albertsons and Pavilions stores in Southern California, told the newspaper.

At Vons, fostering an environment of courtesy, dignity, and respect is one of our highest priorities, and we work hard to hold everyone in our stores to these standards, including customers, Hill said. This was a disturbing incident for our associates and customers, and we are reviewing with our team how to best handle such inappropriate situations in the future.

"There was an incident in Santee on Saturday where citizens photographed a male wearing attire that depicted a symbol of hatred. The citizens and Vons employees took steps to address the situation, Santee Mayor John Minto said in a statement published on the citys website Sunday evening.

Many thanks to all who stepped forward to curtail this sad reminder of intolerance. Santee, its leaders, and I will not tolerate such behavior.Santee and its citizens are great, and this particular individual's actions are not representative of us as a people and a wonderful city."

Several photos shared on social media showed a man wearing what appeared to by a white KKK hood over his face and head while pushing a shopping cart in the stores produce section. At least one photo showed he had removed the hood, exposing his face at one point.

UPDATE: So I want to say Thank you to the management team. Several employees came over together and told the man to either remove the hood or he would have to leave, so he removed the hood, Tiam Tellez, who snapped photos of the shopper, said on Facebook. So troublesome in so many ways this is still happening in Santee at Vons. Disgusting!

San Diego County Supervisor Dianne Jacob also condemned the mans actions.

The images Ive seen are abhorrent. This blatant racism has no place in Santee or any part of San Diego County. It is not who we are. It is not what we stand for and cant be tolerated, she tweeted Sunday.

Tammy Gillies, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League in the San Diego area, posted on Twitter Monday to thank Minto, Jacob, and Vons for your strong response to this act of hate.

San Diego is #NoPlaceForHate, she had first tweeted Sunday, bringing attention to the incident. In her follow-up tweet she wrote: One year after the tragic synagogue shooting in @Poway, we must ALL continue to stand up together against hate in our community and in our world.

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Just over a year ago on April 27, 2019, a 19-year-old gunmanopened fire inside a synagogue in Poway, another San Diego County town, as worshipers prepared to celebrate Shabbat and the last day of Passover, killing a woman and injuring three others, including a rabbi.

An off-duty Border Patrol agent returned fire but missed the gunman, who fled when his assault-stylerifle jammed, effectively preventing more casualties in the synagogue packed with hundreds of congregants.

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California shopper appears to wear KKK hood to grocery store in lieu of coronavirus face mask, sparking out... - Fox News

Tuesday, May 5, 2020: Let’s not play Russian roulette, getting back to work safely, please give what you can – Bangor Daily News

Posted By on May 4, 2020

By Our readers. Letters submitted by BDN readers, edited and verified by BDN Opinion Page staff. Send your letters to letters@bangordailynews.com. May 4, 2020 9:45 am Lets not play Russian roulette

As a primary care physician, I am writing in support of our governor, Janet Mills, and Maine CDC Director Dr. Nirav Shah. Mills and Shah are doing exactly the right things to protect Mainers by extending the stay at home mandate and allowing phased in business openings.

Our lives are too precious to play Russian roulette! Stay safe!

Catherine Crute

Portland

Regarding the quarantine, let us remove it, with an understanding that businesses, their staff and clients, incorporate protocols that we know mitigate spread of the virus.

In the U.S., we govern ourselves. With guidance from fellow citizens, whom we have elected to assist us, and those who have studied COVID-19, we are certainly capable of applying our ingenuity toward alterations that allow us to work and make a living.

I would also suggest reviewing the benefits of our current situation. Using the information gleaned, we can modify work and lifestyle behaviors to further enhance the well-being of ourselves, our fellow inhabitants and our planet.

Compared to SARS and MERS, with 10 percent and 34 percent rates of mortality, with respect to those who have lost loved-ones, we are getting off easy. While systems facilitate our survival, we have witnessed among the empty shelves that they can also break down or exclude.

It is not the job, or ability, of our elected officials to care for capable citizens. Our grandparents often kept on hand extra food, water, funds and staples. Whether it be an illness in the family or the next world-wide pandemic, we are wise to do the same.

Tammera Fenn

Charleston

I want to extend a grateful thank you to Melissa Kelly, chef of Primo of Rockland, and her staff for cooking, packing and delivering the annual Easter dinner that Adas Yoshuron Synagogue sponsors and serves at St. Peters Church.

We usually serve a sit down dinner, but due to COVID-19 we served a ham dinner take-out style with mashed potatoes, gravy, roasted vegetables and brownies. Thanks also to Hannaford and Shaws for donating the hams and gift cards to buy the vegetables and potatoes.

In spite of COVID-19, thanks to them, we were able to serve a delicious meal.

Linda Garson Smith

Adas Yoshuron Synagogue

Belfast

There are a lot of very smart folks working on protecting us here in Maine from COVID-19 and we should thank them. Reading the April 30 editorial made me realize just how far off track weve gone, with Maine CDC Director Dr. Nirav Shah getting the media to follow them.

Shah warned repeatedly that Maine has tested a tiny fraction of our population. Agreed, but what does that tell us? If we test half the population and the number of infected goes from 1,000 to 100,000 are we any sicker? Are more people going to the hospital or going to die?

Absolutely not; it would likely be great news at this point. Active cases of sick folks, not total cases, is the number to watch and they are decreasing. Every day we see more masks, there is more sanitizer available and more large events are canceled, even through late summer. We are continuing to do more to prevent infection when the rates are already dropping.

In a month weve gone from panicking about ventilators to having plenty, and with some promising brand new treatments there will very likely be fewer needed. Folks, everything in life is about rate how quickly or slowly events occur. If we dont start very soon to get back to work safely and still understanding the dangers of this virus, our rate of bankruptcies will be much more devastating than this virus and the recovery wont be nearly as fast.

Pike Bartlett

Veazie

When I heard of the stay-at-home order, I was sitting comfortably in my recliner with my black Lab Gracie at my side. I am lucky to have a home, but I am worried for those who dont. How must it feel to be encouraged to stay healthy at home when a home is exactly what is missing?

Luckily, there are people in our community dedicated to providing shelter and services to the homeless. For the past several years I have volunteered at the Bangor Area Homeless Shelter and the Brick Church. My favorite thing to do is to sit down at the tables and get to know the people. I always come away with more than I bring. How can you sit at a table with a man whose life was turned upside down by blindness and depression, and not be changed by his positive message of hope and perseverance?

I have also been inspired by the services given by Boyd Kronholm and his staff. Unfortunately, the Hike for the Homeless, which is a major source of financial support, has been postponed. It will happen but we are not sure when. The Brick Church continues to provide meals prepared by Bill Rae, which are being delivered outside.

As one of privilege who has been listening to heartfelt stories, I feel moved to ask those with a roof over their head to give whatever they can to the Bangor Area Homeless Shelter or the Brick Church in these difficult times when the homeless are at a high risk.

Robert Bach

Bangor

Due to the coronavirus, many details concerning this years 2020 primary election have yet to be determined. What we do know is that the election date has been set as July 14.

On that day, we will be given a choice of candidates for nomination, enhanced by this states decision to implement ranked-choice voting. Voting is your privilege to support the person who will carry your hopes, ideals and values to the general election in November. In my opinion, this is where we have the greatest grassroots influence in choosing those who represent us in Washington.

Because of the coronavirus threat, absentee voting is expected to be high so if you opt to vote absentee, contact your municipal office soon.

Please dont miss your chance to make a difference. Vote on July 14!

Susan Harvey

Dover-Foxcroft

...

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Tuesday, May 5, 2020: Let's not play Russian roulette, getting back to work safely, please give what you can - Bangor Daily News

What’s on around the J-Com: Melbourne – The Australian Jewish News

Posted By on May 4, 2020

MONDAY, MAY 4

Access Inc online programs: Access Inc is excited to launch a new suite of programs developed in response to the current COVID-19 situation,Access Online. For the first time Access is also welcoming participants from across Australia not just Melbourne! These virtual programs are different to Access regular physical programming, however, they retain a link to our regular learning streams and are intended to provide participants with low intensity skill development, social connection and purposeful engagement. For more information, visit: http://www.accessinc.org.au/courses

Morning minyan: Kehilat Nitzan is hosting a morning minyan from Monday to Friday with Emanuel Synagogue. 8am. To join: https://zoom.us/j/702546413

Daily minyanim: Central Shule Chabad is hosting daily minyanim on Zoom. Shacharit 8am/Maariv 5.25pm. Meeting ID: 590-584-121

TUESDAY, MAY 5

Ethics of the Fathers: Central Shule Chabad is hosting Zoom Torah classes at 7.30pm Tuesdays. Meeting ID 2982741250

Lunch & learn: Rabbi Kim Ettlinger is hosting Temple Beth Israel (TBI)s lunch & learn from 12-1pm. To join: meet.google.com/mgn-fjnf-hye

WEDNESDAY, MAY 6

Discussion: Courage to Care is hosting Alpha Cheng, speaking on Being an Upstander in the Time of COVID-19, discussing the ugly and violent racist attacks against people of Chinese and Asian descent being scapegoated for the COVID-19 pandemic, to help us develop individual strategies to stand in solidarity with our fellow Australians. Alpha Cheng is a teacher, Churchill Fellow, Young Australian of the Year nominee, adviser to the Department of the Prime Minister, humanitarian and Courage to Care ambassador. 3pm. To join the discussion click the Zoom link by 3pm, May 6: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86995262563 Meeting ID: 869 9526 2563

Parasha Zoom: Caulfield Shules Rabbi Ralph Genende hosts a contemporary exploration of the weekly Torah reading. 9-10am. To join: https://zoom.us/j/4896145327 Meeting ID: 489 614 5327.

Lunch & learn: Rabbi Gersh Lazarow is hosting TBIs lunch & learn from 12-1pm. To join: meet.google.com/mgn-fjnf-hye

Torah Texts for Troubled Times: Rabbi Ralph Genende draws on texts as diverse as the Book of Psalms and Rabbi Jonathan Sacks latest book as a springboard for discussion of the pressing issues of our perplexing corona age. For texts, contact rgenende@caulfieldshule.com.au. 7-8pm. To join: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/4896145327

Parashat Hashavua: Kehilat Nitzan together with Emanuel Synagogue host a contemporary look at our ancient texts. Delve into the weekly portion looking at difficult passages, inspiring texts and stories that you think you know to cast new light on the stories essential to our identity. 8.15pm every Wednesday. No prior experience necessary. To join: https://zoom.us/j/93124176951

THURSDAY, MAY 7

A Journey through Jewish Philosophy: Caulfield Shule is hosting David Solomon, delivering a fascinating series that will outline, explore and explain the major developments of Jewish philosophy, including the works and ideas of Philo, Saadia Gaon, the Rambam, Yosef Albo, Franz Rosenzweig, Rav Soloveitchik, Rabbi Jonathan Sacks and many others. David not only clarifies these great thinkers, but also puts them in their historical context and assesses their impact on todays Jewish thought. 12.30pm. Bookings essential, Zoom password provided on booking: https://www.trybooking.com/BJMGJ

Musical lunch & learn: TBIs cantor Michel Laloum is hosting a musical lunch & learn from 12-1pm. To join: meet.google.com/ffh-twjy-yjs

Three Steps to Start Preserving Your Family Archives: Presented by Dr Anna Hirsch, Jewish Holocaust Centre (JHC) senior archivist, and hosted by Jennifer Levitt Maxwell, JHC education engagement manager. Do you have a collection of family artefacts, and are wondering how to best look after them? This free introductory session will guide you with straightforward advice on how to begin preserving and documenting your personal collection of historical items. 7.30pm. Bookings/enquiries: https://www.trybooking.com/BJLJX. You will receive the Zoom meeting invitation via email, upon booking.

Parasha for retirees: Central Shule Chabad is hosting Torah classes on Zoom. 11am Thursdays. Meeting ID882-8880-0473

FRIDAY, MAY 8

Bubs & Bagels: Join the TBI community for a unique experience of play, music and engaging interactions designed specifically for grandparents, parents and guardians with children aged 0-2 years, and their siblings. 10.30am. To join: https://www.facebook.com/tbimelbourne/

Kehilat Nitzan Shabbat service: Musical Shabbat service with Moshe Perl and Rabbi Yonatan Sadoff. 4pm. To join: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/944784251

TBI Shabbat: TBI is running its services on a Friday and Saturday, as well as daily minyans Saturday through Thursdays at 6.15pm. https://www.facebook.com/tbimelbourne/

Central Connections: Central Shule Chabad hosts its Erev Shabbat service at 4.15pm. Meeting ID298-274-1250

SATURDAY, MAY 9

Parashat hashavua: TBI is hosting a weekly Torah study at 9am. To join: https://meet.google.com/uss-wbzh-viy

SUNDAY, MAY 10

Health Care, Human Rights and Israeli Democracy During COVID-19: NIF is hosting executive director of Physicians for Human Rights in Israel (PHRI), Ran Goldstein, speaking about the impact of COVID-19 in Israel and how this pandemic is impacting the refugees, people seeking asylum and undocumented workers, as well as Palestinian inhabitants of the West Bank and Gaza. He will share the important work PHRI is doing with vulnerable populations in these difficult times. An NIF grantee and leading human rights organisation, each year PHRI provides more than 20,000 people with medical care or assistance in accessing the right to health. There will also be an opportunity to ask questions about whats happening on the ground and the future prognosis for those impacted. 7.30pm. Register for all NIF events on Zoom via: https://www.nif.org.au/events_and_more

Sunday morning minyan: Every Sunday morning, Kehilat Nitzan is hosting a minyan together with Emanuel Synagogue. 9am. To join: https://zoom.us/j/306800789

Central Connections: Central Shule Chabad hosts Central Connections at 8.30am. Meeting ID298-274-1250

TUESDAY, MAY 12

From the Vault: JHC lecture series: Unlock past lectures held at the JHC from over a decade ago, and watch these in the comfort of your home. The first lecture dates back to 2007: Do Holocaust Museums Have a Future? by the Hebrew Universitys Professor Yehuda Bauer. On registration, you will receive a password to unlock the first lecture. A new lecture will be released each fortnight, and you will receive email notification. Remember to register for the lecture that interests you. 7.30pm. Bookings/enquiries: https://www.trybooking.com/BJMWA

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13

Torah Texts for Troubled Times: Rabbi Ralph Genende draws on texts as diverse as the Book of Psalms and Rabbi Jonathan Sacks latest book as a springboard for discussion of the pressing issues of our perplexing corona age. This week with guest lecturer James Kennard. For texts, contact rgenende@caulfieldshule.com.au. 7-8pm. To join: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/4896145327

THURSDAY, MAY 14

The Triumphs and Tragedies of Israeli Politics: The Jewish Museum of Australia is hosting a Zoom event with Australian oleh and Jerusalem-based journalist Ittay Flescher, delivering an insiders glimpse into the last years three Israeli elections, then allowing participants to break out and debate key questions. 7.30-9pm. Cost: $25/$28. Enquiries/tickets: http://www.jewishmuseum.com.au/events/the-triumphs-tragedies-of-israeli-politics-during-covid-19. Flescher is the education director of Kids4Peace, and interfaith movement for Israelis and Palestinians, and Jerusalem correspondent for Plus61J Media.

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What's on around the J-Com: Melbourne - The Australian Jewish News

The difference between Israeli and American responses to Jew-hatred – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 4, 2020

The short period on the Hebrew calendar between Holocaust Remembrance Day, Remembrance Day for the Fallen of Israels Wars, and Israel Independence Day - a period in Israel known as Aseret Ymei HaTkuma, the 10 days of rebirth - is an opportunity to reflect upon the symbolic disparity between these two key commemorative events. Much thought and writing has been dedicated to this subject in Israel, but the most poignant comparison is that the former is the result of the Jewish people without an army while the latter represents the Jewish people with an army.It is around this time each year, because of Holocaust Remembrance Day, that the Anti-Defamation League publicizes the results of its annual survey on antisemitism in the United States, now home to the worlds second largest Jewish community.The most recent survey, to no ones surprise, reflects the growing number of antisemitic incidents recorded during the past year. According to the ADL report, Over half (54%) of Jews in America have either experienced or witnessed some form of incident that they believed was motivated by antisemitism over the past five years. About half (49%) of Jews have heard antisemitic comments, slurs or threats targeted at others. One in five (21%) have been the target of antisemitic comments, slurs or threats. The same number (22%) report vandalism, damage or defacement of a Jewish institution they are associated with because of antisemitism. One in seven (14%) knew someone who was physically attacked because they were Jewish. One in 20 have had their home, car or property deliberately vandalized or defaced because of antisemitism (6%) or have been physically attacked (5%). To these figures may be added the scurrilous conspiracy theory, echoing the 14th-century bubonic plague calumny that world Jewry is responsible for the creation and spread of the current novel coronavirus, or COVID-19, pandemic.Antisemitism, no different than all other forms of social or racial prejudice, must be confronted and challenged. As an American Jew who spent his formative years in the United States but has been living in Israel for nearly four decades, I recognize a telling difference in the way American Jews and Israeli Jews react and relate to antisemitism.Throughout the post-World War II era, even as is revealed in the recent ADL survey, the most common form of antisemitism known to American Jews has been verbal. Vandalism to property and physical assaults have been far less common. OF COURSE, the more recent horrific exceptions to this rule were the cold-blooded shooting murders of Jewish worshippers at Pittsburghs Tree of Life Synagogue in October 2018; the Chabad of Poway, California, shooting in April 2019; and the stabbings in Jersey City, New Jersey, and Monsey, New York in December 2019. In contrast to American Jews, Israeli Jews are, in general, far less responsive to verbal and written expressions of antisemitism. American Jews typically take great offense and sense an atavistic threat to their security when exposed to any derision of Jews or the Jewish religion, even if couched in humor, and even if they are secular. History demonstrates that what begins at the verbal level has the potential to escalate into the potentially lethal physical realm.In addition to verbal antisemitism, American Jews remain alert to the possibility - though rare these days due to strict federal laws - of discrimination in hiring practices, admissions policies or in the workplace. It is the American legal system upon which the American Jewish community has come to depend for protection from antisemitism.Israeli Jews, particularly those raised in the Diaspora, are well aware of the antisemitism that exists in the US and elsewhere. They are not insensitive to it, but they care less. Why? It is because this type of antisemitism - classic antisemitic caricatures, name-calling and conspiracy theories offered up by non-Jews in far-away places, but even found today in abundance over the Internet - has no direct effect on their daily lives. It is brought to their attention through various Israeli media. Hearing or reading about antisemitism in New York, Miami or Los Angeles is to an Israeli Jew somewhat like reading a novel. They may be shocked, but they sense no personal looming danger, and feel no fear. Israelis look upon this antisemitism from afar and view those responsible as simply cretins. This is exactly the condition that the early Zionists sought to bring about with the creation of a Jewish nation-state. Unfortunately, a different form and level of antisemitism, much more lethal than the chanting of hate calls or even the smashing of synagogue windows, does threaten the Jews of Israel. This antisemitism emanates from the Muslim world and today especially from Shiite Iran. Iran not only promotes the hatred of Jews on a worldwide scale. It is also responsible for decades of deadly attacks on Israeli Jews beginning even before the creation of the state. Israel has nevertheless succeeded in undermining and detering its enemies. It not only survives but thrives. At its worst, the antisemitism that confronts Israel poses an existential threat and should rightly be the cause of national anxiety, from Metula to Eilat. Yet international surveys conducted in recent years consistently reveal that Israelis rank among the top 15 countries on a scale of happiness. There is a matter-of-factness, a feeling of normalcy and an internal security about being a Jew in Israel that cannot be found elsewhere. This outlook even finds expression in the ways in which Israel has employed its unique resources to battle the COVID-19 virus. The going certainly hasnt been easy, and the story of the first sovereign Jewish state in nearly 2,000 years is far from over. But there is a clear parallel and an historic lesson in the symbolic chasm that divides Holocaust Remembrance Day from Israel Independence Day, and also in the way American and Israeli Jews each confront the ongoing scourge of antisemitism.The writer is the founder and director of iTalkIsrael in Efrat. italkisrael.com.

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The difference between Israeli and American responses to Jew-hatred - The Jerusalem Post

Commentary: One year after Poway attack, let us recommit ourselves to confronting anti-Semitism and hate – The San Diego Union-Tribune

Posted By on May 4, 2020

Monday marked one year since a gunman walked into Chabad of Poway during Sabbath services on the last day of Passover and opened fire on worshipers. Several people were seriously injured. Lori Gilbert Kaye, a beloved member of the San Diego community, lost her life to this senseless act of violence.

This anti-Semitic attack has had a significant impact on our local Jewish community, on Jewish communities throughout the country and on us personally. This attack also greatly affected the Poway community and the larger San Diego region.

This is our community, and we never imagined that an act of hate like this could happen where we call home.

Last week, the Anti-Defamation League released the results of a recent survey on Jewish Americans experiences with anti-Semitism. The survey reveals the anxiety and fear of a community that has faced deadly attacks on homes, community centers and synagogues.

Of the American Jews who took the survey, 63% feel their communities are less safe than they were a decade ago. More than 50% of those polled are worried about a violent attack or vandalism at a synagogue. It is devastating to think that this has already happened in San Diego.

There is no doubt that the anti-Semitic-fueled shooting at Chabad of Poway last year, like the 2018 Tree of Life synagogue massacre in Pittsburgh and the 2019 Hanukkah stabbing attack in Monsey, New York, has left a lasting mark on the American Jewish psyche, and on communities of faith. In San Diego, the attack in Poway followed an act of arson a month before at the Dar-ul-Arqam mosque in Escondido. Going into places of worship and faith in America should not be an act of courage.

From the asylum seekers abandoned within our city with no shelter to government shutdowns to the current challenges of the novel coronavirus pandemic, Jewish Family Service of San Diego continues to be a source of support when our community faces challenges and crises.

The Anti-Defamation League of San Diego County has further strengthened partnerships with Jewish agencies and synagogues and had deeper conversations with other communities impacted by rising tides of hate. We have reaffirmed our commitment to the security of our local Jewish community and continue to respond 24/7 to reports of anti-Semitism, even during stay-at-home orders.

As our county practices physical distancing, like cities across the country, we still see daily reminders that hate is growing. We know that when times are uncertain and troubled, people seek a group to scapegoat and a place to target their anger.

This rings true today, as our country grapples with this pandemic.

The Asian and Pacific Islander American community is ignorantly being targeted and blamed for the pandemic. In addition, hate groups are encouraging their members who are diagnosed with the coronavirus to intentionally spread it to religious and ethnic groups.

It is easy to turn inward when the future seems uncertain, with so many afraid of what tomorrow brings, but what we must remember, as we saw following the Chabad tragedy, that it is easier to heal, grow and learn if we turn outward and support each other.

What we must remember on this one-year anniversary is the love that poured in. The congregation of Chabad of Poway and the local Jewish community had thousands of allies locally and worldwide. Meaningful actions of support included vigils, blue-clad school children, flower-laden memorials for Lori Kaye, emails, calls, conversations about anti-Semitism, events on how to stop hate and new security policies.

Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, one of three people injured in the Poway attack, told the U.N. General Assembly in June that, If hate can leap across continents, so can love and light that will defeat it.

This is the love and support for one another we must remember and carry forward.

In the current times, we are reminded even more that as individuals and as a community our health and well-being are inextricably connected. Writer and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel said, Just as despair can come to one only from other human beings, hope, too, can be given to one only by other human beings.

We must not accept as normal the fear that so many of us feel today. To honor the memory of Lori Kaye and all victims of hate across the world, we must use this moment to recommit ourselves to confronting anti-Semitism and hate of all kinds head-on.

Hopkins is the CEO of Jewish Family Service of San Diego and Gillies is the regional director of the Anti-Defamation League of San Diego County.

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Commentary: One year after Poway attack, let us recommit ourselves to confronting anti-Semitism and hate - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Hundreds join Capitol protest to Reopen Illinois – WGEM

Posted By on May 4, 2020

Springfield, IL - Hundreds of people gathered in Springfield to rally against Gov. JB Pritzker's extended stay-at-home order Friday afternoon. Protesters of all ages joined the chorus to reopen Illinois. The Illinois Secretary of State's Office says there were about 500 people participating, although organizers hoped to see close to 1,000. Most of the people outside the Capitol participated without face coverings and few were concerned about social distancing.

"If you want the state to open up, let me hear you say hoorah! Hoorah!"

Many protesters feel the extended stay-at-home order is infringing on their rights as Americans. While organizers stressed this wasn't a political event, many people held flags or posters supporting President Donald Trump or bashing Pritzker. Rep. Darren Bailey (R-Xenia) was also welcomed as a hero for his court battle against the governor.

"The question of the day is are you ready to restore Illinois and ready to regain our freedom. Free us," Bailey said. Many supporters are calling the Eastern Bloc lawmaker "Gov. Bailey," as he continues his court battle with the real governor over abuse of executive powers. Bailey says the case will move forward swiftly, and "justice will be served."

"JB Pritzker will be found unconstitutional. He will be found to be a failed leader, a failed governor of this state," exclaimed Bailey. Later, other Republican lawmakers joined the calls to reopen the state and demand transparency from the Pritzker administration. "Accountability, transparency and the truth - we're not getting that from our government," said Rep. Blaine Wilhour (R-Beecher City).

Throughout the day, several protesters displayed signs of hatred and racist messages toward Gov. Pritzker. For example, Jackie Fletcher drove over two hours from Morris to participate in the protest. Fletcher proudly displayed a sign "Heil, Pritzker" with a swastika. The Pritzker family is Jewish and started their life in Chicago after fleeing pogroms in Kyiv. However, the protester had "Re-Open Illinois" on the other side of her sign, as "some people get touchy about swastikas."

"I'm here to protest the loss of our rights," Fletcher said. "We're protesting for our First Amendment and other things. Our speech isn't really being prohibited, but our freedom is. We're unable to leave the house and have to wear a mask."

The American Jewish Committee in Chicago saw the woman's sign on Twitter and sent the Capitol Bureau this statement in response: "At least two signs at an anti-shutdown protest at the State Capitol in Springfield today compared Pritzker to Hitler. Regardless of ones politics, comparisons between our state's efforts to save lives and the slaughter of millions are offensive, irresponsible and downright dangerous," said Executive Director Laurence Bolotin.

Another Trump supporter held a sign stating "7,700+ People Died Everyday Before This Wuhanvirus." The Midwest region Anti-Defamation League tweeted, "Deeply concerned by some of the posters at today's rallies in Springfield and Chicago. The scapegoating and racist attacks on Asian Americans and the offensive use of a swastika and Nazi references have no place in Illinois or America."

During the rally, a pastor from The Grove Fellowship took the microphone and told the crowd, "We live in the land of Lincoln, but we stand here today as slaves." Brian Phillips went on to say Illinoisans are tired of sitting at home and, "We're tired of paying for Gov. Pritzker's mistakes."

The majority of people participating say they don't care about the state's growing number of cases and deaths. On Friday, the Illinois Department of Public Health announced 3,137 new COVID-19 cases and 105 deaths since Thursday. Illinois has 56,055 cases and 2,457 Illinoisans have died since the pandemic started.

"The people here have taken time to look at the numbers and educate themselves and feel safe enough to go out and do something like this," said protester Elton Wood. No matter what experts say..."It's, it's, it's the greatest hoax in the history of the world," said Theresa Johanson. "Not that it's not killing people. Yes, but I think it has an end goal that's not something any of us want."

The Capitol Bureau asked several people if they were concerned about getting COVID-19 by joining the large crowd. Most said they didn't care. Pritzker addressed the protests during his afternoon briefing in Chicago. "There are a few hundred protesters today, both here and in Springfield, and they're exercising the right to free speech and we ought to defend to the death their right to exercise that right, even when they're wrong," Pritzker said. The governor said Illinoisans staying home to keep others safe should be recognized since, "they're the ones who are keeping people from getting sick and dying."

Excerpt from:
Hundreds join Capitol protest to Reopen Illinois - WGEM

Wilmington Trust’s Sharon Klein Named to 2020 Forbes/SHOOK List of Top Women Wealth Advisors – Citybizlist Real Estate

Posted By on May 4, 2020

Wilmington Trust today announced that Sharon L. Klein, President, Family Wealth, Eastern U.S. Region, has been named as one of the top 200 advisors in the country on the Forbes Top Women Wealth Advisors list. This annual list recognizes the top 1,000 women advisors in the United States. Less than one-in-five of these top women advisors oversee $1 billion or more in client assets, and Klein is featured as one of them.

The ranking is a merit-based designation developed by SHOOK Research for advisors with at least seven years of experience. It is based on both qualitative and quantitative data from nominations and in-person interviews. The data is evaluated by an algorithm and considers factors such as revenue trends, assets under management, client experience and industry experience. Forbes received 32,000 nominations this year.

This follows Klein's earlier recognition to the Forbes Best-In-State Wealth Advisors 2020 list, an annual designation that recognizes the top advisors in the United States. Klein is featured on the list of the top high net worth wealth advisors in New York City.

"Sharon's ranking on these prestigious lists reaffirms the high-quality of wealth services and the professionalism she brings to her clients every day," said Bill LaFond, Head of Family Wealth Wilmington Trust. "With over 25 years in the wealth management arena, Sharon continues to demonstrate an outstanding commitment to her work, and it's gratifying to see her honored by Forbes on multiple occasions."

Klein is responsible for coordinating the delivery of all Wealth Management services, leading teams of professionals across the areas of planning, trust, investment management, family office, and private banking, to high-net-worth clients in the Eastern United States. She also heads Wilmington Trust's National Divorce Advisory Practice.

A noted expert on family wealth issues, Klein has addressed a number of professional organizations, including the Heckerling Institute on Estate Planning, the New York University Institute on Federal Taxation, the Notre Dame Estate Planning Institute, the Duke University Estate Planning Conference, and the Bloomberg BNA Tax Management Advisory Board.

She is a Fellow of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel and a member of New York Bankers Association Trust & Investment Division Executive Committee, The Rockefeller University Committee on Trust and Estate Gift Plans, the Professional Advisory Council of the Anti-Defamation League, the Estates, Gifts and Trusts Advisory Board for The Bureau of National Affairs, and the Thomson Reuters Trusts & Estates Advisory Board. Klein is Chair of the Domestic Relations Committee of Trusts & Estates magazine, where she sits on the Board. She is on the Board of Directors of the American Brain Foundation, and a member of its Finance Committee. Klein was also recently named as an Accredited Estate Planner by the National Association of Estate Planners and Councils.

For more information about this designation, please visit Forbes.com.

ABOUT WILMINGTON TRUSTWilmington Trust is a registered service mark, used in connection with various fiduciary and non-fiduciary services, including trustee, custodial, agency, investment management, and other services, offered to trust, individual, and institutional clients by certain subsidiaries and affiliates of Wilmington Trust Corporation. Such subsidiaries and affiliates include, but are not limited to, Manufacturers & Traders Trust Company (M&T Bank), Wilmington Trust Company (operating in Delaware only), Wilmington Trust, N.A., Wilmington Trust Investment Advisors, Inc., Wilmington Funds Management Corporation, and Wilmington Trust Investment Management, LLC. Wilmington Trust Corporation is a wholly owned subsidiary of M&T Bank Corporation. International corporate and institutional services are offered through Wilmington Trust Corporation's international affiliates. Loans, credit cards, retail and business deposits, and other business and personal banking services and products are offered by M&T Bank, member FDIC.

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Wilmington Trust's Sharon Klein Named to 2020 Forbes/SHOOK List of Top Women Wealth Advisors - Citybizlist Real Estate

New information revealed on Ukrainian priest who saved Jews in Holocaust – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 4, 2020

Pope Pius XII, the leader of the Catholic church through the World War II years, does not have a great reputation in the Jewish community.

Although he hid some Jews in churches during the Holocaust, a large body of historical evidence, including some researched by John Cornwell, points to the fact that Pius helped Hitler to power and trivialized the Holocaust, despite having reliable knowledge of its true extent. Cornwall wrote a 1999 book titled Hitlers Pope, and the nickname has since stuck.

But the archives also shed new light on a lesser-known but crucial figure in the story: Andrey Sheptytsky, who led Ukraines Greek Catholic Church at the time.

Some have long called for Sheptytsky to be made a Righteous Among the Nations, Israels title for non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews from the Holocaust. But Yad Vashem, Israels Holocaust memorial, has resisted doing so. The new information about Sheptytsky offers his supporters a new chance to have his historical record honored.

The background

Born to a noble Polish family in Ukraine in 1865, Andrey Sheptytsky joined the clergy despite his fathers opposition. Klymentiy, who was four years younger than Andrey, followed in his older brothers footsteps. Andrey spoke Hebrew fluently and was a regular donor to Jewish causes in the Lviv area, where he lived.

But Andrey Sheptytsky also welcomed the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941 and sent chaplains to accompany the Ukrainian soldiers who fought with the Nazis, as part of the Galizien Waffen-SS Division.

A determined objector to the anti-religious Soviet Union which was an enemy of Germany when the Nazis invaded Ukraine Sheptytsky saw the Germans briefly as liberators, Snyder wrote in a 2009 defense of Sheptytsky.

These lamentable choices, as Snyder called them, have stood in the way of recognition for Sheptytsky and his Catholic beatification, which is also being blocked because of resistance by Polish clergymen albeit for reasons connected to the complicated history between the two nations.

The new evidence

In the Vatican archives, University of Munster researchers discovered that Sheptytsky wrote the pope a letter that spoke of 200,000 Jews massacred in Ukraine under the outright diabolical German occupation.

Writing such a letter, whose full contents have not been published yet, constituted a capital crime under the Nazi occupation, and may therefore be seen as new evidence the Sheptytsky risked his life to save Jews.

It could also have a big impact on whether to reopen Yad Vashems review of the case, said Berel Rodal, a founder of Ukrainian Jewish Encounter, which promotes dialogue between Jews and non-Jewish Ukrainians.

A staffer under Pius XII at the Vaticans Secretariat of State, Angelo DellAcqua, who later became a cardinal, warned in a memo at the time not to believe a Jewish Agency report about the Holocaust because Jews easily exaggerate. He also dismissed the Sheptytsky account by saying that Orientals are really not an example of honesty, the German research revealed.

Pressure isnt going to work. Whats necessary is for Yad Vashem to receive new material so they can reverse their decision without appearing inconsistent. This letter could be it, Rodal said.

Experts are monitoring the news coming out from the Vatican, aYad Vashem spokesperson said.

We hope that once the health crisis is over, we will be able to resume regular work and examine these documents first hand, the spokesperson said. At that time historians will have a better understanding of all their implications.

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New information revealed on Ukrainian priest who saved Jews in Holocaust - The Jerusalem Post


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