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Satanist who tried to torch church said behind Maryland synagogue vandalism – The Times of Israel

Posted By on April 18, 2020

JTA A Maryland man accused of painting a swastika on a local synagogue had firebombed a nearby church as part of his plan to target multiple houses of worship to worship Satan, police said.

Andrew Costas, 28, of Rockville was arrested this week in connection with the anti-Semitic vandalism on March 28 at the Tikvat Israel Congregation in his hometown and the hurling of firebombs on April 8 at St. Catherine Laboure Roman Catholic Church in Wheaton. He is a facing a hate crime charge among other charges.

Police say Costas told his girlfriend that he was the Antichrist and planned to cause damage to 10 churches and three synagogues. The total, 13, has symbolic significance in Satanist circles and literature.

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According to police, Costas is the individual seen in a surveillance camera video parking his car outside the synagogue, walking up and spraying paint on the outside wall. Police said the man painted swastikas and hateful slogans.

Costas and his girlfriend, Rebecca Matathias of Brookville, Maryland, are facing second-degree arson charges. He is being held until his trial. Matathias, who is in her early 20s, also was arrested but is out on bail.

Costas was charged with damaging property because of a persons religious beliefs a hate crime and defacing a religious facility and malicious destruction.

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Satanist who tried to torch church said behind Maryland synagogue vandalism - The Times of Israel

First yahrtzeit of Chabad of Poway shooting victim observed in solitude – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on April 18, 2020

For thousands of synagogues across America, Passover marked the first time in history that their doors were closed for Yizkor. For Chabad of Poway in Southern California, it was the second time.

One year ago, as the Torah was being read on Shabbat morning, just moments before 60-year-old Lori Kaye planned to join the congregation in saying Yizkor for her mother, a lone gunman entered the synagogue lobby and shot her, killing her on the spot. As scores of first responders converged on the scene, services came to a halt. The Chabad center was closed, with congregants made to leave.

As Poways Jewish community prepared to mark her first yahrtzeit, their synagogue is again shutteredthis time to help slow the spread of the coronavirus. Hundreds of Yizkor services, however, still took place in private homes.

For Rabbi Mendel Goldstein, who has stepped into the role of Chabad of Poways rabbi in place of his father, Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, who was permanently injured in the attack on April 27, 2019, it brought to mind the aftermath of that horrific day.

A few dozen congregants joined me in my home, where we concluded the service, he said. By the time we reached Yizkor, we had received the terrible news that Lori was no longer among the living, and we recited the memorial prayer for her mere hours after she passed away.

Poways Jewish community united, rallying around their synagogue and lost congregant. Hundreds attended a funeral serviceremembering a woman who thought of othersbefore herself. Communities around the world remembered Kaye by going to synagogue on Shabbat, putting on tefillin, lighting Shabbat candles and responding to evil with acts of goodness.

Just weeks after the shooting, the community gathered to dedicate a Torah scroll in Loris memory. The final letter was written by her husband, Howard.

In Poway this year, there were no yahrtzeit gatherings and no communal Yizkor services while congregants are home to save lives amid the COVID-19 pandemic. But on Thursday morning, Goldstein walked to the synagogue in solitude in compliance with social-distancing measures. He held Loris Torah and said a prayer for her, and for the family and community she left behind.

This article originally appeared on Chabad.org/News.

The post First yahrtzeit of Chabad of Poway shooting victim observed in solitude appeared first on JNS.org.

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First yahrtzeit of Chabad of Poway shooting victim observed in solitude - Cleveland Jewish News

Meet the guy keeping your synagogue running during the coronavirus crisis – Jewish Journal

Posted By on April 18, 2020

Im the man behind the waterfall of Zoom links that comprise what used to be the COVID-19 updates page, and is now simply our website.

A lot of you dont know me Im usually busy behind the scenes. But allow me to introduce myself.

Im a producer. A director. A tech expert. A monitor of social media chat. Im on seven days a week, mornings, nights, candle lightings, havdalahs, minyans, meet-ups, adult ed sessions, parent talks and preschool classes. Im please mute yourself when youre not talking, we cant hear you - you forgot to unmute yourself and please dont use that Zoom virtual background next time.

Im the man behind the many, many, emails you receive (way more than we used to send), the thrice-daily website updates, and the waterfall of Zoom links that comprise what used to be the COVID-19 updates page, and is now simply our website.

In case you havent guessed yet, Im a synagogue communications director during the coronavirus outbreak.

On a good day I only work 10 hours, primarily on my way-too-old home computer, which is still running Windows 7 and has no direct access to the files on my synagogue computer. I am in a constant state of triage, since each week, and sometimes each day, brings new government-imposed or clergy-inspired changes that require tweaking, pivoting, or occasionally a full stop.

I dont even remember what it feels like to have something ready to go a week in advance. I have hundreds of existing flyers and graphics at my disposal, but havent re-used a single one, since nothing we do these days in any way resembles what we did at this time last year, or last month, or last week.

Im everywhere. Im involved in almost everything. Its exhausting. So. Very. Exhausting.

But its also amazing!

On Friday, my family lit candles with more than 60 congregants many of whom Ive only seen in databases. On Saturday, I attended two different Shabbat services from my living room - one my parents shul, with melodies I havent heard in a decade, and the other our synagogues first ever virtual bat mitzvah! On Saturday night, for the third week in a row, we participated in two different community havdalahs. I cant remember the last time we did havdalah one week in a row in our house.

Ben Vorspan

In the past week I attended my first lunch n learn (and brought the average age down quite a bit), watched our Hazzan lead an adorable Friday afternoon preschool Shabbat service, co-hosted a zoom session helping 60+ members learn how to lead their own virtual seders, and got to witness our Rabbis endearingly-goofy dancing (Ill go up, you go down) behind the scenes of our broadcast as our Hazzan sang Aleinu.

Yes I, like synagogue communications directors everywhere, became the equivalent of a television studio manager overnight (without relinquishing many of my usual 40-hours of standard weekly tasks, oh and while also becoming a homeschool teacher), and yes - Im in desperate need of a day off (Id settle for a half-hour lunch break at this point), but Im also energized by what I see happening, and what this means for our future.

We are now forced to deliver 100% of our content directly to your phone, and its rejuvenating our community. Its eliminating the barrier that led many to believe we could only attend classes and services in our own sanctuary, or our own city, or our own time zone. Its enabling us to re-open the door that many Conservative Jews closed when they decided Judaism in the building wasnt their brand of Judaism.

And when the current new normal is simply a set of Facebook memories that pop up each Spring (please let it only be Spring!) - that door might still remain open, and we will have an entirely new modality for connection that our community is not just accustomed to, but looks forward to!

And the most exciting part (for me) is Im not just an observer or participant in this Jewish metamorphosis Im a driving force behind it. Im the executive producer of the genesis of Conservative Judaisms new normal. Im also the broadcast engineer, multimedia designer and station manager. Im the physically and emotionally drained, but spiritually invigorated synagogue communications director during the coronavirus outbreak.

Ben Vorspan is the Creative Director (aka communications director) at Temple Aliyah in Woodland Hills, Calif., and despite how it sounds, actually has it easy in comparison to his wife Elana, who is the incomparable communications director at Valley Beth Shalom in Encino.

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

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Meet the guy keeping your synagogue running during the coronavirus crisis - Jewish Journal

To give my Israeli synagogue a chance of surviving the pandemic, I had to quit my job as rabbi – JTA News

Posted By on April 18, 2020

REHOVOT, Israel (JTA) To help my kehillahsurvive the coronavirus pandemic, I had to do something dramatic and counterintuitive: step away from being its official rabbi.

Our faith communities need spiritual leaders in these trying times more than ever. But as a non-Orthodox rabbi in Israel, I am largely constrained in my ability to meet my congregants needs due to the way the government treats and subsidizes non-Orthodox Jewish organizations.

According to the Marker magazine, the Israeli government spent a staggering 8.7 billion shekels, or $2.43 billion, on religious services and grants in 2016. But nearly all the money went to the various streams of Jewish Orthodoxy (about 23% of Jews in Israel, according to a 2016 Pew report), with some funds being allocated to other religions. Conservative and Reform institutions together did not receive even 0.1% of these allocations, even though up to 13% of Jewish Israelis say they are Conservative or Reform.

As a result, of the 80 Masorti-Conservative congregations in Israel, just two dozen employ a rabbi, many only part time. Besides an annual grant of 8,900 shekels ($2,490) from the Rehovot municipality, my synagogue, Adat Shalom-Emanuel, receives absolutely no state funding. Instead, my full-time position is made possible through a delicate mix of funding sources: Membership dues, movement subsidies and our bar/bat mitzvah program bring in about 20% apiece of our annual income, with almost all of the rest coming from fundraising.

Over the last four years, we raised over 600,000 shekels ($170,000) from our capital campaign no small feat for a middle-class Israeli synagogue. About 90% was raised from our own members.

The economic crisis accompanying the pandemic has thrown into question our ability to fulfill our fundraising goals. Over 25% of Israelis are now unemployed, the economy is at a near standstill and world markets are volatile. Nobody knows how long the pandemic and accompanying recession will last, nor what recovery looks like. Our kehillot must, therefore, take immediate steps to protect their financial viability.

So far, about half the rabbis employed by Masorti institutions are either on unpaid leave or have taken serious pay cuts. Nearly half of the remainder only work part time. At a time when we ought to be augmenting support for our rabbis, as they work night and day for their congregants, we are cutting their pay.

In my case, I volunteered to my kehillah board to take unpaid leave a controversial move in the eyes of many of my colleagues. The government is allowing all people on coronavirus-related unpaid leave to collect unemployment benefits, which for me will amount to about 50% of my net salary, with no social benefits. How can I leave the kehillah to fend for itself at such a time? And as the president of the Rabbinical Assembly in Israel, could my decision be seen as pressuring other rabbis to follow suit?

My decision embodies sobering paradoxes. Ethically, I cannot work for free and must cut back my involvement, but I am also a member of the kehillah and wish for it to prosper (also ensuring my own future financial stability). I believe that I have taken the best path for both the kehillah and myself, but it was a painful choice. At a time when my congregants most need their rabbi for practical, emotional and spiritual guidance I am making myself unavailable so the kehillah can survive.

I still pray with my kehillah, give short sermons, teach occasional classes like other leaders in our congregation and am more than happy to serve any spiritual needs that my fellow congregants may have. But in a joint decision with the board, I have relinquished organizational and most teaching duties.

I made this difficult decision amid my own personal coronavirus-induced turmoil. My husband left in February to be Israels ambassador to Cameroon. Besides the emotional strain of not being able to visit each other due to travel restrictions, we also carry the financial burden of maintaining two homes. This is coupled with the governments threat to put its own workers on unpaid leave.

The Israel Trauma Coalition recently trained a group of kehillah members for self-organizing in emergency situations, equipping them with tools to rapidly respond and adapt to new situations. One major emergency undertaking is ensuring regular contact with our members, identifying specific needs and ensuring that they are connected with service providers.

We immediately identified the need to address the loneliness of many members, some of whom have not left their homes since social distancing became the norm. We launched a new program for members to meet twice a week on a purely social footing, to share a virtual coffee and discussion, hosted by the members themselves.

I look forward to resuming my duties as soon as possible. Rest assured that when that day comes, Adat Shalom-Emanuel will offer even more of the warm and amicable ambiance it has developed since it was founded as an egalitarian congregation 50 years ago. My hope is that Israel emerges from this crisis recognizing the value of non-Orthodox congregations like ours and begins supporting them equitably.

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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To give my Israeli synagogue a chance of surviving the pandemic, I had to quit my job as rabbi - JTA News

Estonian Teen ‘Commander’ of Global Neo-Nazi Group Behind Threats to US Synagogue – Algemeiner

Posted By on April 18, 2020

A view of Tallinn, the capital of Estonia. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

JNS.org A 13-year-old boy in Estonia was a key figure in an international neo-Nazi group that has been linked to plots to attack a Las Vegas synagogue and detonate a car bomb at a major US news network, the Associated Pressreported.

The boy, who called himself Commander online, was a leader of Feuerkrieg Division, though severed ties with the neo-Nazi group after authorities in Estonia confronted him earlier this year, according to police and an Estonian newspaper report.

Harrys Puusepp, a spokesperson for the Estonian Internal Security Service, told theAPthat police intervened in early January because of a suspicion of danger and suspended this persons activities in Feuerkrieg Division.

As the case dealt with a child under the age of 14, this person cannot be prosecuted under the criminal law and instead other legal methods must be used to eliminate the risk. Cooperation between several authorities, and especially parents, is important to steer a child away from violent extremism, said Puusepp.

April 17, 2020 2:04 pm

While the spokesperson did not explicitly identify the child as a group leader, leaked archives of online chats by Feuerkrieg Division members show that Commander referred to himself as the founder of the group and hinted to being from Saaremaa, Estonias largest island.

A report published last week by the Estonian newspaperEesti Ekspresssaid Estonian security officials investigated a case involving a 13-year-old boy who allegedly was running Feuerkrieg Division operations out of a small town in Estonia. According to the newspaper the group has a decentralized structure, and while the boy cannot be considered Feuerkrieg Divisions leader, he was certainly one of its main figures.

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Estonian Teen 'Commander' of Global Neo-Nazi Group Behind Threats to US Synagogue - Algemeiner

I cover anti-Semitism on a daily basis. This is why ‘The Plot Against America’ is the scariest show I’ve seen. – JTA News

Posted By on April 18, 2020

(JTA) I wasnt expecting HBOs The Plot Against America, David Simons miniseries adaptation of the Philip Roth novel, to scar me the way it has.

I work with news about the rise of anti-Semitism and hate crimes around the world on a daily basis. As an editor focused more on international coverage recently, here are some of the highlights from this past week or so: a torched synagogue in Russia, a Romanian priest who kind of compared Jews to the coronavirus and a neo-Nazi group run by a 13-year-old that planned to bomb a synagogue.

I have also covered how anti-Semitic and xenophobic attitudes the kind espoused by the Pittsburgh synagogue shooter and those at the Charlottesville rally who shouted Jews will not replace us have seeped back into underground discourse across the U.S.

The thing is, most of this stuff is either a world away from my daily life or numbing in its sheer quantity. Its not that I dont know anything about Romania, it just isnt quite suburban New Jersey, which is where Ive holed up with my parents during this quarantine. On the numbers front, weve had many discussions among editors about how to best cover all of the swastikas that are spray-painted on Jewish monuments and institutions around the world in a given week, because many times we cant get to it all.

So in some ways, I almost expected The Plot Against America to feel like old news. Roths novel (which, it may be worth noting, I havent read) is about a Jewish family stuck in an eerie alternate history, in which the infamous anti-Semite Charles Lindbergh has become president of the United States. He keeps the U.S. out of World War II, establishes friendly relations with Nazi Germany and encourages a strain of just-under-the-surface white nationalism were seeing reemerge today.

Swastikas begin to appear on Jewish graves. A liberal political rally turns violent when Nazi supporters crash it with clubs and fists. A Nazi official comes to Washington for an official visit.

For some, seeing this play out on screen in a compelling and well-written TV series would be horrifying but not for me, the editor who has chronicled the growth of this kind of movement in real life for years. Or so I thought.

But I was completely wrong: The show has made everything I work with feel more immediate, close to home and tangible and subsequently more frightening.

Ive had time to reflect on it (the sixth and final episode airs Monday night) and Ive settled on a few reasons why the show has had such a powerful effect on me.

First, the Jewish world that Roth (and by extension Simon, the creator of acclaimed shows such as The Wire and The Deuce and one of the best TV writers of any generation) has created is incredibly real. Theres never been such a thing as a typical American Jewish family the country has always been full of a proud range of religious expressions. But the Levin family that anchors Plot comes close to an American archetype.

In many senses, the Levins feel like the 1940s version of my family. Theyre not very religious, but have strong Jewish cultural ties. They go to their local Jewish bakery more than their synagogue. They can recite memorized lines of Hebrew, but dont know what the words mean.

Other recent shows that have depicted Jews have leaned toward stereotype, not archetype. Hunters, the recent Amazon series about Nazi hunters in New York City, offers an example: Its efforts toward Jewish authenticity rely on matzah ball soup, gefilte fish jokes, prayers and ridiculous Yiddish accents. So when one Hunters character calls another a kike, it didnt feel like an attack on me or anyone like me.

By comparison, every slur in Plot packs a strong punch. When the Levins are told to leave their hotel for no reason other than their Jewishness, and the police ignore their claims of discrimination, I got queasy. When an intimidatingly large anti-Semite comes over to their caf table to tell them to be quiet, I cowered into my couch pillows.

But Simon also captures a feeling thats even more crucial, from an affect point of view, than the characters Jewishness: the feeling of being watched over, manipulated and on ones own. Their government claims to support them, but its only a nominal protection, a state of being that could easily slip into a much darker place.

The tension of being on that dividing line, between safety and a lack of it, filled me with dread as I watched. For me at least, that made the show more powerful than a gut-wrenching Holocaust film that shows Jews being violently abused and murdered.

It shows what I could be dealing with in the future, should the gears of history tilt slightly the wrong way.

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I cover anti-Semitism on a daily basis. This is why 'The Plot Against America' is the scariest show I've seen. - JTA News

The Torah scroll of Boskovice finds a new home in Pennsylvania – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on April 18, 2020

Few tourists these days visit the small town of Boskovice. It isnt usually part of a tourists itinerary. As a matter of fact, while the capital of the Czech Republic, Prague, is today one of Europes major tourist attractions, all of Moravia is considered to be off the beaten path and is usually ignored by visitors.After the First World War ended in 1918, Bohemia, Moravia, Slovakia and Subcarpathian Russia were combined to form Czechoslovakia. Under the benevolent and liberal administration of the first president and founder of the republic, Tomas Garrigue Masaryk, this mixture of Czechs, Germans, Hungarians, Roma, Poles, Russians and Jews thrived and lived in comparative harmony.In the center of Moravia, which together with Bohemia forms todays Czech Republic, is the town of Boskovice. Boskovice was probably founded in the 11th century and, at one time, had one of the largest Jewish communities in the country. Today it features the ruins of a 13th-century Gothic castle, St. Jacobs Church, an Empire chteau, a large synagogue and the Jewish cemetery of Boskovice, which was established in the 17th century and is one of the largest in the Czech Republic. BOSKOVICES CENTER, with the Jewish Quarter shown (Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons)The first mention of a Jew in Boskovice was around 1343. By 1589, there were 148 Jews living in 25 family houses. At the turn of the 18th century, there was an active yeshiva and by the mid-19th century, the Jewish population comprised one-third of all Boskovice inhabitants.The Synagogue Maior (Large Synagogue) was built in 1698. In 1705, it was upgraded with beautiful painted decorations and Hebrew liturgical texts on many of the interior walls. During the Holocaust, all the Jews of Boskovice, including many members of the Ticho family, were deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp and from there to Auschwitz, where they were murdered. The 14 Jews who survived the Holocaust did not return to Boskovice, and there are no more Jews there today. The Synagogue Maior survived, but two small synagogues were destroyed. From 1943 up to the 1990s, the Synagogue Maior was used as a storehouse. All the walls were painted white. In 1999, a restoration began and it was then when the old murals were discovered and restored.Boskovice was known as a center of prominent Talmudist scholars. The most famous of these was Samuel ha-Levi Kolin, who is buried in the local Jewish cemetery. In 1851, Rabbi Placek of Boskovice was appointed chief rabbi of Moravia and served until 1884. In 1942, at the height of the Nazi power, a group of members of Pragues Jewish community devised a way to bring the religious treasures from the deserted communities and destroyed synagogues to the comparative safety of Prague. The plan was that, after the anticipated Nazi victory, a Museum of an Extinct Race would be established. The Nazis were persuaded to accept this plan, and they ordered all Jewish communities to send their ritual objects to Prague. More than 100,000 artifacts were brought to the Prague Museum. Among them were about 1,800 Torah scrolls, which were stored in the closed synagogue at Michle, a small town that became part of Prague, where they remained until they were discovered and were brought to London.Today, Subcarpathian Russia has been absorbed by its neighbors, and the Slovaks have decided to go their own way. Typical of the non-confrontational nature of the Czechs, the parties split amicably, and Bohemia and Moravia now form what is today the Czech Republic. One could easily assume that the ethnic Czechs living in Moravia, surrounded as they were for the past millennium by militant countries such as Germany, Austria, Poland and Russia, might have been the victims of constant turmoil.Actually the opposite was true. Moravia, located off the path of the Crusaders, away from the conflict between the Catholic Church and Protestant firebrands and of relatively little economic and political importance, was usually bypassed and ignored as power struggles made the rest of Central Europe a focus of many conflicts.So it shouldnt be a great surprise that even today, most of the visitors to Boskovice are not foreign citizens but rather Czech nationals. They climb the lovely wooded mountain to visit the fortress that once dominated the valley below or tour the castle at the bottom of the hill, which was, and still is, the seat of the Mensdorff-Pouilly family, the aristocrats placed there by the Austro-Hungarian Empire centuries ago to keep the Czechs under control and to protect the Jews.It was the unique position of Moravia, away from the turmoil and turbulence that affected the rest of Europe, that created an unusual and fertile atmosphere for the Jews living in this region. While the kings in Prague and the emperors in Vienna formulated rules and edicts governing the lives of Jews, in Moravia these laws and regulations were often ignored or not enforced. As a result, Jewish life, with few exceptions, tended to be civilized and humane.Visitors to Boskovice, as a result, can wander a few yards from the castle and visit the well-preserved section of the town that once constituted the Jewish ghetto. They can walk the few narrow streets, look for signs of the Jewish life that once thrived there or examine the tombstones of the well-preserved Jewish cemetery and, perhaps, visit the old synagogue. This synagogue was already a hundred years old, when a local scribe sat down to carefully and painstakingly start the creation of a perfect copy of our sacred scripture, the Torah.By the time my grandfather was born in 1846 that Torah scroll had already served three generations of Jews as they gathered each day and on the Sabbath to practice the faith taught to them by their previous generations. In 1899, when it had already reached the venerable age of 85, it may have been used during the bar mitzvah of my father, Nathan Ticho. And when World War I started, the then-century-old Torah scroll continued to mark the passing of each year as it provided the sacred readings each time the congregation met to pray.Then, on March 15, 1939 the Nazis marched into the country. The synagogue of Boskovice was ordered closed and all of the congregations possessions, including all Torah scrolls, were shipped to Prague. Today, after a millennium of Jewish life in Boskovice, there are no more Jews in this city. The only things that remain are the synagogue, the cemetery, the streets and houses of the former ghetto and the sacred articles collected by the Nazis now stored and cared for in Prague by the Jewish Museum, including the 200-year-old Torah scroll. It and 1,564 other Torah scrolls were discovered by a British art collector. He returned to London and found a generous philanthropist who financed the transfer of these holy scrolls to the Westminster Synagogue in London. There, for more than 40 years, they were stored, cared for, repaired, restored and made available to synagogues all over the world.THE only photograph of a Boskovice family gathering their possessions before the deportation of all the towns Jews to the Terezin concentration camp (known as Theresienstadt in German). (Photo Credit: Courtesy)In honor of our grandson Nathans bar mitzvah, after decades of searching for a home, the Boskovice Torah scroll, a survivor of the Holocaust, crossed the Atlantic and became part of the celebrations. My wife, Jean, and I had the honor, in the tradition of midor ldor (from generation to generation), to present this sacred parchment to our son, Ron, who, in turn, passed it to his son Nathan who placed it into the hands of Rabbi Allen Juda, who placed it into the holy ark of the congregation.Today, this sacred parchment, this honored and loved scroll, this Holocaust survivor, resides in the warm and friendly surroundings of Congregation Brith Sholom in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, passing on its power and inspiration from one generation to the next.

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The Torah scroll of Boskovice finds a new home in Pennsylvania - The Jerusalem Post

Md. man charged in fires planned to vandalize 13 temples and churches, girlfriend says – WTOP

Posted By on April 18, 2020

A man and woman have been arrested for setting small fires outside a Montgomery County church. The man had also recently been charged with a hate crime for defacing a local synagogue.

A man arrested for throwing lit Molotov cocktails at a Wheaton, Maryland, church allegedly told his girlfriend he was the anti-Christ and that he had plans to vandalize 13 local houses of worship, according to charging documents.

Andrew Costas, 28, of Rockville, also faces charges in a recent hate crime for scrawling swastikas on a local synagogue last month.

He and Rebecca Matathias, 23, of Brookville, Maryland, were arrested on second-degree arson charges and other counts in connection with the small fires set April 8 at St. Catherine Laboure Roman Catholic Church, in the 11800 block of Claridge Road in Wheaton.

According to charging documents obtained by WTOP, Matathias told investigators she and Costas were dating.

She described Costas as satanic, and that he labels himself as the anti-Christ, wrote Capt. Erin Wirth, of the Montgomery County Fire Marshals Office.

He told her he wanted to vandalize three synagogues and 10 churches, Wirth wrote, describing what Costas allegedly told Matathias.

As the couple drove around Montgomery County in Costas Chevrolet Tahoe, bearing Georgia plates, he told Matathias he wanted to torch a church. They stopped at a Rockville gas station and filled a large, red plastic can with gasoline.

According to investigators, Costas and Matathias drove to the religious school adjacent to the church, and filled two Mason jars and a soda bottle with gasoline from the can. Lids with holes in them were screwed onto the Mason jars.

Matathias then stuffed crumpled newspaper into the jars and bottle until it reached the gasoline, while leaving the newspaper sticking out of the top. She lit the soda bottle, and threw it against the wall of the church.

According to Wirth, the woman lit both Mason jar devices and handed them to Costas, who threw them at the wall of the building.

The couple also filled a Fosters beer can with gasoline, stuffed in newspaper, lit it and threw it down a staircase toward the church.

Matathias advised the fire was so big it blew the door open at the bottom of the stairs, and that was corroborated by a Ring security camera mounted nearby.

Montgomery County Fire and Rescue responded to an automatic alarm at the church last Wednesday evening and found several small fires. A photo provided by spokesperson Pete Piringer showed charring on a metal door, leading into the brick church.

Costas and Matathias were each charged by fire investigators with two felony counts of arson, two felony counts of malicious destruction over $1,000, four felony counts of using a destructive device and one misdemeanor count of damaging property of a religious entity.

The previous Friday, Costas had been arrested for the March 28 defacing of Tikvat Israel Congregation, located in the 2200 block of Baltimore Road in Rockville.

Costas was charged with the hate crime of damaging property because of a persons religious beliefs, as well as defacing a religious facility and malicious destruction.

In the synagogue incident, Costas was arrested after police released surveillance video of a man parking his car outside the building, walking up and spraying paint on the outside wall. Police said the man painted swastikas and hateful slogans.

Matathias was released on bond. Costas is being held in custody.

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Md. man charged in fires planned to vandalize 13 temples and churches, girlfriend says - WTOP

Sermons in Solitude: Jews of Faith Are Never Alone – Commentary – – Commentary Magazine

Posted By on April 18, 2020

On Thursday, March 13, my synagogue, Congregation Shearith Israel in New York City, announced it would not be holding services on Shabbat. To refrain from praying in a community is a traumatic moment for any house of worship. But for my community, the suspension of our communal Sabbath prayer due to the pandemic echoed down through history. Shearith Israel is the oldest Jewish congregation in America; tracing its origins to 23 souls that had landed in New Amsterdam, with a public synagogue first built in 1730, its members had joined one another in sanctifying the Sabbath for centuries. The last time Shearith Israels sanctuary had been abandoned by its congregants was 1776, when the patriot members of the congregation had fled in advance of the British taking Manhattan. But the very same Jews formed a minyan in Philadelphia, and the public rituals continued apace.

Now, however, it was the minyan itself that had been rendered impossible.

I delivered a sermon on Friday afternoonby conference call. What, I asked, does it mean to be joined,as a Jew, to others, precisely when we are forbidden from engaging with others? In my words to my community, I noted that on the Internet, many had been mentioning breakthroughs achieved by men of genius in solitude to suggest that forced aloneness might have unexpected advantages. After all, the argument went, Isaac Newton discovered the rules of calculus while in quarantine. But what interested me more, I said, was what I had learned about another insight achieved by Newton while in a period of solitude created by a plague: his conceptualization of gravity. A student described Newtons eureka moment:

In the yearhe retired again fromCambridge on accountof the plague tohis motherin Lincolnshire &whilst he wasmusing in agarden it cameinto his thoughtthat the same power ofgravity (which madean apple fall from thetree to the ground)was not limited toa certain distancefrom the earth butmust extend muchfarther than wasusually thought Why not as highas the Moon saidhe to himself & ifso that must influence her motion& perhaps retain herin her orbit

In his solitude, Newton conceived of a gravitational bond that could exert its power over long distancesthat could even span heaven and earth. It is, I suggested, a spiritual form of just such a bond that we now must discover, one that binds us to others and indeed binds those in Heaven and those on Earth. The Hebrew term for synagogue is Beit Knesset, a house of gathering, and it is called so because, in the rabbinic tradition, the phrase Knesset Yisrael refers to the mysterious bonds that connect Jews to one another. A synagogue is not merely a physical gathering of individuals, but rather, Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik explained, it reflects an invisible Knesset Yisrael, which embraces not only contemporaries, but every Jew who has ever lived.

The synagogue is meant to embody this bond, this connection to all Jews past and present. But there are other ways to experience it, and those other ways can have a singular power of their own. Anatoly Sharansky concludes his prison memoir by reflecting that at times, in the solitude of his cell, he felt more connected to his people than in the prosaic bustle of his newfound freedoms:

How to enjoy the vivid colors of freedom without losing the existential depth I felt in prison? How to absorb the many sounds of freedom without allowing them to jam the stirring call of the shofar that I heard so clearly in the punishment cell? And, most important, how, in all these thousands of meetings, handshakes, interviews, and speeches, to retain that unique feeling of the interconnection of human souls which I discovered in the Gulag?

Our challenge, I said, was to attempt a Newtonian insight, to find what Sharansky had felt: to ponder the meaning of relationships, and our bond as Jews with one another, until we were able to see each other in synagogue once again.

Several days after my first sermon from solitude, I delivered a lecture on video about Rabbi Soloveitchiks seminal work, The Lonely Man of Faith, from inside Shearith Israel. I had spoken there nearly every Shabbat for the prior seven years and on many other occasions as wellonly now I had no one physically in front of me. It is difficult to describe how disconcerting this was. The rabbinic speaker draws energy from his audience; in Orthodox communities, where electricity on Shabbat is eschewed, only people generate the electricity in the room.

I explained my great-uncles thesis, one I have previously outlined in these pages. The book of Genesis presents us in its first two chapters with two very different biblical accounts of the creation of man. In Genesis 1, humanity is created in the image of God, man and woman and at the same time. In contrast, in Genesis 2, Adam is created alone, from the finite dust of the earth, and has to sacrifice, to give of his own body, to provide for the creation of his companion. In Genesis 1, both man and woman are instructed by the Almighty to fill the world and subdue it, whereas in the second chapter, man is told to stay with God in the Garden of Eden.

We are, Rabbi Soloveitchik suggested, both Adam 1 and 2. Created in the image of God, we seek dignified inventive existence. Man of old, he writes, who could not fight disease and succumbed in multitudes to yellow fever or any other plague with degrading helplessness, could not lay claim to dignity. Only the man who builds hospitals, discovers therapeutic techniques, and saves lives is blessed with dignity. This, I noted, was very much at the heart of our endeavor in the age of the coronavirus. Yet like Adam and Eve in Genesis 2, we find true fellowship, true communion, with God and with others. And precisely because these very same scientists now tell us that part of the fight against this disease involves acts of isolating ourselvesincluding, quite often, from those we lovewe find ourselves in a moment where we must ponder the nature of solitude.

Loneliness and aloneness, Rabbi Soloveitchik explained, are different phenomena. Contemporary Western man, Adam 1, is physically surrounded by people.But that does not mean that he has covenantal communion with people. Contemporary man goes to parties, bars, coffee shops, stores; he tweets with likeminded political partisans or Facebooks to his many thousands of friends. He is not alone. But he lacks true spiritual communion. And so, lonely he remains.

Consider Starbucks. Its longtime CEO, Howard Schultz, explains in his autobiography that the company conducted focus groups to understand Starbuckss success. The groups all responded that we go to Starbucks stores because of a social feeling. In other words, there appeared to be an espirit de corps to the entire caf, allowing everyone to feel less alone, more together.But Schultz reports with puzzlement that fewer than 10 percent of the people they observed in our stores at any given time actually ever talked to anybody.Most customers waited silently in line and spoke only to the cashier to order a drink.

Human beings have an innate need to be among others, but now we are seeing a kind of antisocial social mixing, when we are constantly in the general vicinity of people with whom we have no bond.

The only true remedy to loneliness is in a covenant, not only the covenant of marriage, but the larger covenant of faith. There, Rav Soloveitchik writes, not only hands are joined, but experiences as wellone lonely soul finds another soul tormented by loneliness and solitude yet unqualifiedly committed.

Adam 2 finds Eve only because he is brought to her by God. In the utilitarian world of Adam 1, heconcludes, we may find collegiality, neighborliness, civility, or courtesybut not friendship, which is the exclusive experience awarded by God to covenantal man, who is thus redeemed from his agonizing solitude.

Here is where the thesis gets deeper. If God is at the heart of human relationship, then because God is beyond human time, covenantal community extends across time as well. Time, for the Jew, Rabbi Soloveitchik explained, does not simply consist of fleeting, imperceptible moments. The Jew walks alongside Maimonides, listens to R. Akiva, senses the presence of [the Talmudic sages] Abaye and Raba.He rejoices with them, and shares in their sorrow.Both past and future become, in such circumstances, ever present realities. For us today, in a secular age, in a non-covenantal culture, this may be hard to imagine, but there are great individuals from our own lifetime who were sustained by this feeling of covenantal bonds that cut across space and time.

I made mention of my hero, Menachem Begin. While in prison in his native Soviet Union in 1940, Begin was subjected to an extreme form of isolation by his Communist torturers in the secret-police division called the NKVD: He was forced to stare at a wall for 60 hours. Begin was so very alone; but even then he was not truly lonely. Through covenantal connection, he was transported to the most beloved moments in his life, as well as moments that were yet to come:

Even a point on a wall can conjure up again pictures that one has forgotten and that help one to forget. Even a point on a wall can tell of home; of the hot tears that fall from a childs eyes because of a bad mark he has received from the teacher, not because he had not learnt or did not know his lessons, but because he did not want to write in a Gentile school on the Sabbath, and wanted to say in the face of the humiliation and the contempt for his people: Yes, I am a Jew and I am proud of it.As you sit and stare, a miracle occurs.The reality imposed upon you disappears entirely, and the reality for which your soul yearns, and upon which even the NKVD cannot impose its will, appears in all its splendor.

As I read Begins words aloud, facing the camera, the oddity of my own environment began to alter itself. Begins description of covenantal connection suddenly became, for me, a primal experience. The vast emptiness of my synagogues magnificent 1897 sanctuary seemed to bespeak the generations of Jews who had prayed there, whose births, bar mitzvahs, and weddings had been celebrated there, whose deaths had been mourned thereand whose presence now remained there all the same.

And rightly understood, how could it be otherwise? After all, Shearith Israel had originated in a group of Israelites who found themselves quite literally the only Jews on the continent, and with the vastness of the Atlantic between them and their mother community. To feel disconnected, to disappear, would have been so easy; to maintain ones Jewishness could have been achieved only by a profound bond to the Jewish people from whom they seemed to be cut off. We love to tell the joke of the Jewish Robinson Crusoe, who built two synagogues on a desert island so that there could be one that he did not attend. But these early American Jews felt instead a bond to others: to those they had left behind in Europe, and to the traditions they maintained because they saw themselves as joined in Knesset Israel to past and posterity.

Is this not a Newtonian achievement, a Jewish gravitational pull, all its own? And if it could be felt by a few Jews alone on the other side of an ocean, can it not be felt in solitude of our own homes?

In an address at his sons high-school graduation, Antonin Scalia once warned the audience to ignore the platitude most commonly spouted at commencement that we live in unprecedented times. The statement, he argued, is not only untrue, but dangerous, because it leads us to conclude that the past has no wisdom to offer us as we face our current challenges. In these past several weeks, we have been told, over and over, that we live in unprecedented times, but in my own sermons online and by phone I have attempted to communicate the opposite. We are not the first human beings to be challenged by disease, and we are not the first Jews to confront, and seek to overcome, our solitude.

The isolation we face is not that of being in prison; our trial is not akin to Begins or Sharanskys.But it is a trial. It is physical isolation from many we love, often precisely in order to safeguard the well-being of those we love. At these times, our moments of separation, and distance, we are inspired to think of the relationships that we have taken for granted and whether those relationships are truly covenantal; whether we have placed God at their center; whether we have thereby allowed these encounters to be part of a great covenantal union that is our people.

Throughout these weeks, my Friday-afternoon sermons from solitude have continued, and every week I speak of precedents: of Jews in the past who have embodied the covenantal connection that times have challenged us to discover. Bidding my congregants a Shabbat Shalom, and entering the Orthodox Sabbath shut off from the world, I find that my sermons are reified: The message has become the medium. I am a political aficionado, but I have thought less and less of politics, and more of covenant. The world of the Talmud has been more real than that of the Twittersphere. As I walk the stairs of my own home, I do so with Maimonides and Rabbi Akiva, with Abbaye and Rava, who sit with my family at the Sabbath table. And I wonder, like Sharansky, whether I will feel their presence as profoundly when life goes back to normal.

As Passover approached, the role models and precedents to whom I homiletically turned were American Jewish chaplains, who throughout the centuries had to mark the holiday with soldiers separated from their families. I cited a Rabbi Max Braude, who, while traveling across Europe in 1945, had attempted to publish a Haggadah for the soldiers. In a letter home to his wife he described what went awry: Yours truly ingeniously decided to photostat the haggadah portion of the abridged prayer book except that there was no one to do offset printing and so the Hebrew Text is UPSIDE DOWNyet I thinkin fact I am almost certain that it represents the first Hebrew Printing on the Continent since its liberation. Writing this letter on a Friday afternoon in the days before Passover, Braude faced a challenge that now confronts us allentering Shabbat often shut off from those we care about. Yet the timelessness of the Haggadah seemed to offer him a source of solace, and so he concluded:

I dont know where I will be for the Sedarimbut wherever I will be it will be with youkeep a little space beside you for mejust as I shall for youand pray for me as I will for youabove all, my dear, pray as I do that this will be our last Seder apart; and lets make the next one the biggest best that ever was anywhere. So long, my sweetand Good Shabbat to you, Love, Max

And now, as I compose this article prior to Passover, and prepare to write and deliver my pre-holiday sermons on conference call, I am convinced that my own eloquence cannot exceed this simple letter, for every Pesach involves an inversionnot of Hebrew, but of space and time, one that connects us beyond the reaches of gravity itself. In every generation and generation, we read, one is obligated to see ones self as if he left Egypt. It is this bond that will sustain us, until this years seder in solitude is replaced by next years in Jerusalem.

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Sermons in Solitude: Jews of Faith Are Never Alone - Commentary - - Commentary Magazine

Baton Rouge Holocaust commemoration will be held online this year – The Advocate

Posted By on April 18, 2020

Although the Holocaust was all too real, the local commemoration of it will be virtual this year.

The Jewish Federation of Greater Baton Rouge, Congregation Bnai Israel, Beth Shalom Synagogue and Temple Shalom will join the Los Angeles global event organized through the Museum of the Holocaust at 4 p.m. Sunday on the Zoom internet meeting site.

The museums annual Yom HaShoah Commemoration will remember those who perished, honor those who survived and mark the 75th anniversary of liberation and the end of the Holocaust, in which an estimated 6 million Jews died from actions carried out by Nazi Germany and its collaborators.

Two Holocaust survivors will be recognized, and David Estrin, founder and CEO of Together We Remember, is the featured speaker. Together We Remember is a nonprofit dedicated to empowering the next generation of leaders to make never again a reality.

To participate, register at zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_9RFa7oKST4ipWe97EJmA7g.

The local observance had been scheduled for Sunday at Beth Shalom Synagogue but could not be held due to the coronavirus pandemic. Rescheduling was not considered because this date is close to the anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising near the end of World War II, said Ellen Sager, Jewish Federation executive director.

The Jewish Federation has announced the winners of its annual Holocaust Essay Contest. Elementary school winners are fifth graders from Copper Mill Elementary: first place, Louis Martin; second place, Zuri Wheaton; third place, Preston Horton. Middle School winners are seventh graders from the Runnels School: first place, Annie Garrison; second place, Jenna Sheika; third place, Jack Ezell. High school winners are: Andrew Gawarecki, 12th grade, Catholic High School; Luke Bella, 12th grade, Catholic High School; and Jacob Schmidt, 10th grade, Runnels School.

If you have questions about coronavirus, please email our newsroom at online@theadvocate.com.

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Baton Rouge Holocaust commemoration will be held online this year - The Advocate


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