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Passover in the Time of Coronavirus – National Review

Posted By on April 14, 2020

The Passover Hagada from the Guenzburg collection of ancient Hebrew manuscripts and books is pictured at the Russian State Library in Moscow, Russia November 7, 2017. (Tatyana Makeyeva/Reuters)

A morbid joke has circulated here in Israel, where the government has imposed a strict lockdown for Passover evening, barring all vehicular traffic and prohibiting pedestrians from straying more than one hundred meters from their homes: Like our ancient forebears, contemporary Israelites hunker down in our homes tonight, hoping the plague will indeed pass over us.

While ordinarily, Jews in Israel and around the world celebrate the Passover Seder with extended families, friends, and even strangers, this year, we will commemorate the exodus from Egypt with nuclear families only, thanks to the coronavirus restrictions in place in almost every Jewish community across the globe. As Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu enjoined us several weeks ago, when it comes to extended families in the age of coronavirus, love is distance.

For our family, and for many others, this year painfully marks the first time in our lives that grandparents, cousins, uncles, aunts, and close friends wont grace our Seder table with their presence. This is doubly painful for those of us, like myself, who live far away from their parents and siblings and eagerly look forward to Passover as a time to reconnect and reinforce intergenerational family bonds.

But even in ordinary times, both Israelis in general and traditionally observant Jews worldwide tend to be highly social people who pray, study, and dine together in large groups. This tendency is thought to have caused higher-than-normal infection rates among Orthodox Jews in Israel and the New York area, likely tied to communal celebrations of the Purim holiday exactly a month ago.

So as restrictions have successively tightened, at first barring prayer gatherings of more than 100 people, then closing synagogues altogether, then proscribing even open-air prayer quorums of ten people in the streets outside their homes, Israelis and Jews abroad have been forced to reckon with a fundamental inversion not only of their material existence, like billions around the world, but also of their spiritual lives.

To be sure, prayer quorums have continued via Zoom, as have Torah and Talmud classes, and even weddings and bar mitzvahs. Weve learned to adapt at least the trappings of our religious lives to the new normal just as weve adjusted our temporal lives. A fascinating debate has even arisen as to whether the traditional injunction against using electricity on the Sabbath and holidays may be relaxed for tonight only to allow isolated, elderly, or other struggling individuals and families to virtually join a Seder.

But technological adaptations aside, Passover has always highlighted the national aspect of Jewish peoplehood, the forging of our nation in the fires of Egypt, where slavery and oppression transformed our ancestors from the Children of Israel to the People of Israel. At our Seder tables, we will retell the story of how national unity and communal faith sparked our liberation from an evil regime.

And yet, Passover has also always been a familial celebration, deeply focused on ritual and inquiry that can be carried out only at the level of individual families.

The Talmud records that millennia ago, Jews throughout the Land of Israel gathered in family units to eat the Paschal lamb on the outskirts of Jerusalem, not in the Temple itself, where all other sacrifices were performed. Contemporary Seders center on children asking and answering questions, singing songs, and discussing the concepts of freedom and enslavement. In the words of Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks, the former Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom, Passover revolves around the duty of telling our story to our children.

None of these activities, of course, could possibly be carried out at the national or even communal level. Instead, our families, to paraphrase Edmund Burke, constitute little platoons that form the backbone of our larger society; the stronger and more generous they are, the greater our society becomes. And while its become trite to conceive of new ways in which we can use the current crisis to create something good, theres no question that reinvigorating our families will in turn enhance our individual and national lives.

For many in Israel and elsewhere, sitting down to yet another meal with the same four or five or six people weve been cooped up with for weeks doesnt exactly inspire giddiness. But our hope, tonight, is that by casting aside social media and other electronic distractions, by discussing the myriad ways we can improve ourselves and our relationships, by recognizing the role that our heritage plays in how we develop as people, and by wrestling with tough questions, we can pave the way for a renaissance in civil society when all of this nastiness finally passes us over.

The most poignant moment of the Seder arrives early on, when the youngest person at the table recites the Four Questions, which focus on the refrain how is this night different from all the others? This year, for worse, but also for better, it wont be difficult to find an answer.

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Passover in the Time of Coronavirus - National Review

The horrors I saw still wake me at night: the liberation of Belsen, 75 years on – The Guardian

Posted By on April 14, 2020

It was a lovely spring day when Corporal Ian Forsyth arrived at a place of darkness and death. The 21-year-old wireless operator with the 15th/19th Kings Royal Hussars was among the first British troops to reach the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in northern Germany 75 years ago this week.

We werent expecting to see anything we didnt know there was such a place. We had been going ahead without any idea there was anything there. I think that was the worst part, Forsyth, now 96, recalls.

What he and other British soldiers found on 15 April 1945 was beyond comprehension. I couldnt believe what I was seeing I couldnt believe people could sink to that level, and treat people the way they treated these prisoners, he says. When you see a person who is a living skeleton, as these people were, its difficult. Its astonishing that any human being could survive the terrible torture

Anybody who didnt see the place as we saw it would find it very difficult to believe what we actually saw. Bodies stretched out on the ground. Nobody had the strength to move them. The people on the other side of the barbed wire didnt know who we were they just stared as we approached.

This weeks 75th anniversary of the liberation will be a rather different occasion from the one planned. Events due to take place across the world on Wednesday have been cancelled because of the coronavirus pandemic, and commemorations will instead take place online.

Although people are unable to gather in person, Olivia Marks-Woldman of the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, says: We must each remember the brave efforts of the British liberators, and honour the memory of the thousands of Jews, Roma people, prisoners of war and many others murdered there.

Bergen-Belsen, about 40 miles north of Hanover, was established as a prisoner-of-war camp in 1940. Three years later the SS turned it into a detention camp.

As the Allied forces advanced, the Germans forced prisoners from other camps on death marches to Bergen-Belsen. The camps population grew from about 7,300 to at least 60,000 and tens of thousands of people died in grossly inhumane conditions, including Anne Frank and her sister.

Zsuzsanna Blau was a teenager when she arrived half-dead at the camp in spring 1945. The previous year, her father had been taken from the familys home in Felsgd, Hungary; she never saw him again. Her mother had been gassed at Auschwitz.

The girl was sent to work as a slave labourer in an armaments factory near the Polish border. From there, she was marched to Bergen-Belsen. It was an endless journey across frozen fields, recalls Susan Pollack, as she is now called. We could barely move, but those who could not walk were shot.

At Bergen-Belsen conditions were indescribable. It was a place of immense suffering. There was no food; corpses were left to rot. My mind was a blank there was no me.

After a few days or weeks, convinced she was dying, Pollack crawled from her hut. I felt someone gently picking me up. I didnt know who it was, but I realised something had changed I was being treated with kindness.

British troops found tens of thousands of emaciated and diseased prisoners alongside thousands of unburied corpses. The broadcaster Richard Dimbleby described the scene shortly after liberation. The BBC initially refused to play the report, unable to believe the scenes he recounted. It was finally broadcast only after Dimbleby threatened to resign.

Dead bodies, some of them in decay, lay strewn about the road and along the rutted tracks Inside the huts it was even worse, he reported. Ive seen many terrible sights in the last five years, but nothing, nothing approaching the dreadful interior of this hut.

The dead and the dying lay close together. I picked my way over corpse after corpse, until I heard one voice above the gentle moaning. I found a girl. She was a living skeleton. Impossible to gauge her age, for she had practically no hair left on her head, and her face was only a yellow parchment sheet, with two holes in it for eyes.

The liberation was not the end of the horror: more than 13,000 camp inmates died in the following days.

Pollack, along with other survivors, was taken to a displaced persons camp, and from there went to Sweden, then Canada, before marrying a fellow survivor and settling in London. She lost more than 50 members of her extended family in the Holocaust; only her brother survived.

Recalling the liberation, Forsyth says he changed completely that day. He still wakes in the night with it going through my mind; every detail is still clear.

I hope people can realise how far mankind can sink if they are not careful, he says. Why is there so much hatred? Its something that I just dont understand. We dont choose our life, but we can choose whether we hate others.

The liberation of Bergen-Belsen confronted the world with the incomprehensible cruelty inflicted by the Nazis, said Marks-Woldman of the Memorial Day Trust. We remember with a purpose: to combat denial, which today spreads so easily online, and to challenge all forms of identity-based prejudice and violence. As time passes and survivors of the Holocaust become fewer and less able to tell their stories, we must remember and ensure we work together for a better future.

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The horrors I saw still wake me at night: the liberation of Belsen, 75 years on - The Guardian

Alabama Synagogue vandalized on first night of Passover with neo-Nazi graffiti – Haaretz

Posted By on April 14, 2020

A synagogue in Huntsville, Alabama was vandalized on the first night of Passover with neo-Nazi graffiti.

Among the graffiti spray painted sometime over Wednesday night on the Etz Chayim Synagogue, a Conservative congregation of about 60 families in South Huntsville, were F Kikes, Gas Em All, White Power, Jew Scum, and Holohoax. Several swastikas and the lightening bolt symbol of the Nazi SS also were spray painted on the building and the property.

No services have been held in the building in recent weeks due to the coronavirus crisis, Southern Jewish Life Magazine reported.

The magazine reported that police are reviewing security camera footage but since it was raining at the time of the incident it is not easy to identify the perpetrators.

The City of Huntsville condemns anti-Semitism in the strongest possible terms, Mayor Tommy Battle said in a statement released on Thursday.

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As a city, and as an inclusive community, we stand side by side with our Jewish brothers and sisters and people of all faiths. Any offense against one is an offense against all, Battle also said.

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Alabama Synagogue vandalized on first night of Passover with neo-Nazi graffiti - Haaretz

With Synagogues Closed, Omer App Sees Spike in Use and New Downloads – A daily reminder, inspiration and more on Android and iOS devices – Chabad.org

Posted By on April 14, 2020

With synagogues shuttered indefinitely, Jewish life is evolving to conform with the new home-based reality. When possible, technology is taking a more prominent role, facilitating Torah study, fellowship and more.

Perhaps one of the most difficult mitzvahs to fulfill in an ordinary year is the counting of the Omer, which requires that each sequential day be counted (after nightfall) without missing a dayfrom the second night of Passover all the way until the eve of Shavuot. (If one misses a day, one should still count, but without making a blessing before the counting.) Those who pray in synagogue have an easier time remembering the brief counting ceremony since it is included in the evening service.

This year, more than ever, thousands are turning to the Omer Counter app to help them remember to count each night.

In addition to remembering to count on each of 49 consecutive nights, the counter needs to verbalize that nights count and the corresponding Kabbalistic formulaall that before daybreak, or at least, before sunset the following evening.

Chabad.orgs app development team has found a novel way to offer assistance with its Omer Counter app. In addition to daily reminders, a live counter tells the user how much time remains for counting that day.

Highly customizable, the appwith texts in Hebrew and Englishtracks the users counting record and can then produce the appropriate text for that person (since a person who misses one day may no longer include the special blessing before counting on the subsequent nights that year).

Beyond the mechanics of the daily count, the app also features a specially created daily meditation from Rabbi Tzvi Freeman, corresponding to the Kabbalistic mystical confluence of sefirot (emanations) associated with each day, as well as a wealth of insights and other information culled from Chabad.orgs repository of Jewish content.

For the novice just foraying into the intricacies of Hebrew reading, the app features a trainer that assists students by highlighting each word as it is chanted, allowing them to familiarize themselves with the Hebrew at their own pace. Supported on mobile devices and tablets, it is ideal for those learning while they are on the move.

Lead developer Dov Dukes notes that the technology for the trainer is built on Chabad.orgs Torah Trainer, which now includes all 54 Torah portions, their Haftarahs and the blessings recited before and after the readings.

This year, Dukes notes that preliminary data suggests a significant spike in people signing up for and using the app, reflecting its added relevance in a time when people struggle to maintain their Jewish observance without the physical presence of a community.

Omer Counter joins Chabad.orgs Jewish Apps Suite in strategically leveraging Chabad.orgs content and know-how to other platforms.

Through the vision and generosity of a group of funders, the Omer app joins the Hayom app, the Passover Assistant, the Jewish.tv Video app, the Shabbat Times app, a JewishKids.org app for children and othersall designed to help bring Jewish wisdom and tools to the fingertips of users. Additional apps are in the planning and developmental stages by an international Chabad.org team.

The drive, vision for and underwriting of the apps, which are available free of charge, come from the generous partnership of Dovid and Malkie Smetana, Alan and Lori Zekelman, the Meromim Fund, and Moris and Lillian Tabacinicall dedicated to spreading the wisdom and practice of Judaism worldwide.

The possibilities in app development for a Jewish audience are virtually endless, says Chabad.orgs managing director, Rabbi Meir Simcha Kogan, and we are determined to implement the drive and vision of our generous partners and our staff to use the best practices and highest standards in leveraging these technologies for strengthening Jewish awareness and observance.

The Omer Counter app is available free of charge on Apples App Store for iOS devices and Googles Play Store for Android devices.

A live counter tells the user how much time remains for counting that day and sends updated reminders as well. It also features a specially created daily meditation corresponding to the Kabbalistic mystical confluence of sefirot (emanations) associated with each day, as well as a wealth of insights and other information culled from Chabad.orgs repository of Jewish content.

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With Synagogues Closed, Omer App Sees Spike in Use and New Downloads - A daily reminder, inspiration and more on Android and iOS devices - Chabad.org

Social Distancing Doesn’t Mean Social Isolation for Churches and Synagogues in West Hollywood – WEHOville

Posted By on April 14, 2020

With Passover here and Easter coming up many want to observe the holy holidays with a church or synagogue service. However, in the age of Safer at Home quarantines to prevent spread of the coronavirus, such gatherings are discouraged.

Luckily, we live in an age of technology where live streaming and video conferencing of spiritual/religious services is possible. Many places of worship are offering online services for congregants who are stuck at home.

By doing in-person services, youre putting people in danger. So, its the responsibility of churches, synagogues and spiritual centers to offer online services, explained Jesse Brune-Horan, the founder of the West Hollywood-based Inspire Spiritual Center. These are times of uncertainty. People need continuity and stability in their lives, which online services can offer.

Brune-Horan feels people are in need of communal interaction which the Safer at Home orders prevent. So, online services and meetings offer the next best thing.

People are experiencing grief and trauma, people are scared, said Brune-Horan. The valuable service is to take care of them, to nurture their soul and their heart.

That was a goal of Hollywood Temple Beth El, which celebrated the second night of Passover on Thursday with a live-cast of Some Enchanted Pesach Seder, a mlange of traditional and contemporary texts and music.

We cant serve you our delicious matzah ball soup this year, but we can serve you with an uplifting experience to share with all your fellows on-line, said Rabbi Norbert Weinberg in an announcement of the event. Then, when we have finished our Enchanted Seder, you can enjoy your dinner and listen to the lovely medley of Pesach music we have prepared for you on You Tube. Other previous services also can be viewed on YouTube.

Many online services are offered through live streaming on the church/synagogue website or though Facebook Live. Just go to the church/synagogue website (included below) and it will provide direction for watching the live streaming on the website or direct you to a Facebook Live web stream.

Alternately, some are offering services through the Zoom video-conferencing website and app. For those unfamiliar with the Zoom, its easy to use. Download the Zoom app for free to your smart phone or tablet. Or if using a computer or laptop, go to Zoom.us (note it is NOT Zoom.com but Zoom.us). Find the link that says JOIN A MEETING and clink on that. It will then ask for a meeting number or personal link name, followed by a password. Type those in and you will be entered into the meeting or service.

To get the Zoom meeting ID number and password for the services, go to the websites of the churches and synagogues which offer that information. Websites are included in the listing below. Alternately, phone or email the church/synagogue for the meeting number and password.

WEHOville is opting not to publish those meeting numbers and passwords to discourage zoom bombing. The practice of zoom bombing is a recent development where strangers invade meetings for the purpose of disrupting it. They often do this by making racist or homophobic comments and/or flashing pornographic images on the screen. In an effort to combat such zoom bombing, Zoom added the password requirement for meetings a week ago.

Heres a roundup of the West Hollywood-based churches and synagogues having services this weekend.

Inspire Spiritual Community

The non-denominational services for LGBTQ+ people and allies are offered through Zoom. Sunday, April 12 Online service at 11:30 a.m. .

Congregation Kol Ami

The LGBTQ Jewish congregation has services streaming on Facebook Live and also holds smaller meetings on Zoom.

First Baptist Church of Beverly Hills

Despite the name, the Baptist Church is located on Cynthia Street in West Hollywood.Sunday, April 12 Services at 11 a.m. via Zoom can be found online.

Hollywood Temple Beth El

The Jewish congregation that meets at 1371 N. Crescent Heights Blvd is live-casting Shabbat services on Zoom and the recording of the service is available on You Tube : https://youtu.be/1Y2VKPpX8eQ. Links to its online services can be found on its Facebook page.

St. Victors Catholic Church

The church on Holloway Drive offers livestreaming mass without congregation present. Access the live stream via its website.

St. Ambrose Church

The Catholic church on Fairfax Avenue is not offering online services. However, the churchs website directs people to the online services held at Our Lady of the Angels Cathedral in downtown Los Angeles. There will be live streaming of masses through its website.

That website also has a detailed list of online services at parishes across the Archdiocese of Los Angeles.

West Hollywood United Church of Christ

The church on Sunset Boulevard at Martel does not have online Easter services currently listed on its website . However, the church did hold online services for Palm Sunday (April 5), so check back to see if the website is updated for Easter services.

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Social Distancing Doesn't Mean Social Isolation for Churches and Synagogues in West Hollywood - WEHOville

Kibbutz Lavi makes sacred furniture for the isolation era – ISRAEL21c

Posted By on April 14, 2020

With synagogues shut, a kibbutz has started working on a solution for the new world of cyber-prayer: a home ark for rabbis to use in their webcam services.

Despite everything, a handful of workers on Kibbutz Lavi in the Galilee are going to their synagogue furniture factory every morning.

They are used to making vast pews and Torah arks, but instead they are making tiny arks tailored specially for services held on Zoom.

Congregations are ordering them so their rabbi can take a single Torah scroll from their shuttered synagogues, keep it at home, and read to the congregation.

We see a special sense of mission in this, explains Aner Amiram, vice president at Lavi Furniture Industries.

After all, its said that Jewish people dont go for three days without reading from the Torah, but today many Torah scrolls are shut in closed synagogues, unread.

It makes us really happy to produce special arks so that people could take some of them home and use them within the limitations of coronavirus rules.

Ready for post-corona worship

A Lavi Furniture Industries carpenter working with a facemask during the corona crisis. Photo: courtesy

The worlds biggest manufacturer of synagogue furniture, Lavi Furniture Industries is now restricting the shop floor to members of the kibbutz, meaning most of the workforce cant show up.

But in the days before Israel went into almost complete lockdown, the full staff entered overdrive mode for the sake of Jewish communities around the world.

They sawed and chiseled; hammered in nails and straightened hinges.

Synagogue life in much of the world has stopped, and were determined to ensure that when it restarts, its stronger than ever, explains Amiram.

Every year, he is inundated with orders from new communities that want to open their doors at Passover but this year, health restrictions mean that all synagogue dedications are on hold.

As soon as the coronavirus crisis started, we said to ourselves that well ensure no community waits a single day longer than necessary once this is over to open, he said. And to do that, we had a race on our hands.

Furnishings for new synagogues, to open the moment coronavirus restrictions end, were made at Kibbutz Lavi in the Galilee by teams working staggered shifts. Photo: courtesy

As Israels restrictions started in mid-March, it became clear the rules would be intensified and the factory would lose most of its staff for an unspecified period, so Lavis 85 workers pulled out all of the stops to get every single order finished.

They completed shipments for France, Switzerland, America, Israel and elsewhere. It got harder as restrictions became tighter. In the final few days when the factory was fully functioning, there were strict limits on how many workers could be in the factory at a time.

Workers at Lavi Furniture Industries holding their morning meeting at an appropriate social distance during the corona crisis. Photo: courtesy

We normally begin work at 7am, but we started opening the factory at 4am instead, so that we could get staff to do different shifts, said Amiram. I have never seen people work so fast we got more finished than I ever thought possible.

He added: We all feel that Jewish communities have taken a hard enough blow by having to stop services due to coronavirus. We wanted to show them we care by getting their furniture shipped and having it in place so as soon so they can meet again, well see new communities opening their doors.

Well actually see the end of this crisis bring a spate of synagogue openings, with will be a remarkable way for the Jewish world to move forward.

Evyatar Dor, Lavis international sales manager, said: We believe, as Jews, that the good times will come and were determined that when they do, nothing at all will hold back communities.

Nathan Jeffay is a journalist, and a member of a family of carpenters.

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Kibbutz Lavi makes sacred furniture for the isolation era - ISRAEL21c

No, the FBI didn’t seize masks and protective gear from a New York synagogue – FRANCE 24

Posted By on April 14, 2020

A number of widely circulated Facebook posts published in early April claimed that the FBI seized a large cache of surgical masks from a synagogue in New York as part of a nationwide attempt to get much-needed medical equipment for the medical personnel on the frontlines against COVID-19. Turns out, the story that was circulating is false: while the FBI really did seize protective equipment on March 30, it was from a vendor selling it at inflated prices.

One of these posts in particular garnered more than 40,000 views, on a page called "Canal France Algrie Officiel." The post generated generated numerous anti-Semitic comments.

However, we just typed the words FBI, masks and New York into Google and immediately pulled up a number of articles from reputable American and Canadian media outlets that reported the true story of the incident.

On March 30, FBI agents arrested Baruch Feldheim on suspicions of selling medical equipment for inflated prices online. The FBI seized hundreds of thousands of N95 respirator masks as well as surgical gowns, disinfectant towels, particulate filters, hand sanitizer and spray disinfectant, according to the New York Times.

Feldheim had tried to sell a doctor protective gear at a 700 percent markup last month, according to the FBI. The doctor later said he met Feldheim in a garage that was filled with enough equipment to furnish an entire hospital.

In summary, the FBI seized medical supplies that were being hoarded by a man who wanted to make money from the COVID-19 pandemic and not a synagogue. The US Department of Health and Human Services said that they would pay the seller pre-COVID fair market value for the equipment and that it had already been distributed to hospitals in New York and New Jersey.

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No, the FBI didn't seize masks and protective gear from a New York synagogue - FRANCE 24

Sheikh Qassem to Al-Manar TV: Hezbollah is Ready for War with ‘Israel’ at Any Time – Al-Manar TV

Posted By on April 14, 2020

Hezbollah Deputy Secretary General Sheikh Naim Qasem stressed that on April 11, 1996, the Israeli enemy wanted to rift the relation between the Islamic Resistance and the Lebanese people by committing massacres, adding most of the world governments conspired with the Zionists after Sharm el-Sheikh summit.

In an interview with Al-Manar TV Channel, Sheikh Qasem confirmed that the steadfastness of the Resistance, people and Army in the context of the golden formula led the Israeli enemy to humiliatingly stop its aggression on Lebanon and recognize a written pact that guarantees Hezbollah right to fire rockets in response to any Zionist assault on the Lebanese civilians.

His eminence indicated that 1996 confrontation established the principles of the balance of deterrence which subdued the Zionists, stressing that Hezbollah is now ready to confront any Israeli war on Lebanon whenever it erupts.

Sheikh Qassem said that the coronavirus is an enemy for the entire humanity, pointing out that the US administration enhances the pandemic outbreak by insisting on its sanctions against certain countries and pirating the medical stuffs while being sent to EU states.

Hezbollah Deputy Chief maintained that after the coronavirus stage, the world will witness major political and economic changes, adding that the US will no longer be able to lead the world.

Sheikh Qassem considered it is obligatory to thank the Lebanese health minister Dr. Hamad Hasan and all the governmental institutions which cooperated with him to fight the coronavirus, noting that Dr. Hasan works professionally and in accordance with the recommendations of the World Health Organization.

Sheikh Qassem stressed that the international testimonies confirm the Lebanese governments success in controlling the coronavirus outbreak, adding that Hezbollah plan in this regard is not a substitute for the governmental role.

His eminence asserted that Hezbollah used to have the structure of the aid institutions before the coronavirus outbreak, pointing out that the party intensified its efforts in providing people with the socioecoromic support during the pandemic crisis.

Sheikh Qassem also highlighted that Hezbollah anti-coronavirus plan aimed at reassuring the Lebanese people, expressing readiness, if asked, to support any town against the pandemic.

Sheikh Qassem reiterated that Hezbollah endorses the return of the Lebanese expats, adding that the party set only one condition in this regard which is observing the safety measures in this process.

Hezbollah Deputy Chief added that the Rasoul Aazam Hospital is not concerned at all with the fake video circulated via social media to disrepute the medical institution, pointing out Hezbollah specialized a different hospital for the coronavirus cases.

Sheikh Qassem stressed that PM Hassan Diab invited all the Lebanese political parties to have a ministerial share in his government, adding that this grants it a national legitimacy.

His eminence called on certain parties to avert the slogan of the one-color government, considering that it is the government of the brave who accepted to assume the responsibility of addressing the crisis caused during the past 30 years.

Sheikh Qassem voiced Hezbollah support to the government, adding that the party will propose a plan to address the economic crisis in a way that protects the rights of all the Lebanese.

Source: Al-Manar English Website

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Sheikh Qassem to Al-Manar TV: Hezbollah is Ready for War with 'Israel' at Any Time - Al-Manar TV

COVID-19 in Quebec: A timeline of key dates and events – CTV News Montreal

Posted By on April 13, 2020

MONTREAL -- The global COVID-19 pandemic began in January with China, Italy, Iran and Korea being hit hardest first. The entire world was soon engulfed in the pandemic that forced the shutdown of institutions, businesses, schools and most of society within months.

Here are some major milestones in the province of Quebec:

February 27 First Quebec Case

While Canadas first presumed case of coronavirus was noted Jan. 29 after a man returned to Toronto from Wuhan, China, Quebecs first presumed COVID-19 case is reported almost a month later when a Montreal-area woman returned to the province from Iran with symptoms.

March 2 Quarantine units set up

The Jewish General Hospital announces it is one of two designated COVID-19 response hospitals in Montreal.

March 5 More cases confirmed

A Mont-Laurier man in the Laurentians returns from a trip to India and is treated for COVID-19 symptoms. Hours later, provincial health authorities confirm a third case. The province notes that 20 people are under investigation and 242 have been cleared.

March 9 Screening clinics open

After a fourth case is confirmed, Quebec opens three screening clinics in the province.

The English Montreal School Board begins asking students who travelled to countries including Italy over March break to stay home and call Info-Sante before returning to school.

The STM increases cleaning protocols on its buses and metros.

March 10 Flight cancellations begin, COVID-19 enters public transit

Air Canada cancels flights between Canada and Italy, and Quebec now has seven confirmed cases, all people who had travelled outside of Canada.

Montreals public-health officials confirm that a person with COVID-19 had taken public transit before testing positive.

March 11 COVID-19 is a pandemic

The World Health Organization declares the COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic, Quebec numbers hit double digits, and Quebec minister of Health Danielle McCann advises Quebecers to avoid taking cruises. World Figure Skating Championships is cancelled. NBA season is suspended.

March 12 Large events cancelled, seasons suspended, schools close, isolation grows

Quebec Premier Francois Legault asks all who travelled abroad to self-isolate for two weeks, and organizers of indoor events attracting more than 250 people to cancel them unless they are considered essential.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau self-isolates after his wife Sophie Gregoire Trudeau tests positive after returning from the U.K.

The NHL joins other sports leagues and postpones its season, and Montreals St. Patricks Day Parade is postponed.

College International Marie de France in Cote-des-Nieges is the first school to close classes after a student is suspected of contracting the coronavirus.

March 13 Shutdown begins

Quebec closes daycares, public schools, CEGEPs and universities for 14 days, and a new toll-free COVID-19 specific number is set up: 877-644-4545.

More flights are cancelled; cruise season put on hold; VIA Rail cancels Montreal-Halifax and Toronto-Vancouver routes; and officials start asking Canadians to limit non-essential travel.

March 14 Public health emergency declared, seniors asked to stay home

Legault asks Quebecers over 70 to stay home to prevent spread, and hospital and seniors residences close to visitors, as he declares the coronavirus a public health emergency.

First child tests positive for COVID-19.

March 15 Its time to act.

Legault closes bars, sugar shacks, pools and other public gathering places, while restaurants are asked to operate at 50 per cent capacity.

Its not time to panic, said Quebec Public Health head Horacio Arruda. Its time to act.

March 16 Borders closed

Trudeau closes the border to all but the U,S. International flights restricted to four airports, including Montreals.

Quebec confirmed cases hit 50.

March 17 Rise in racism towards Asian-Montrealers

The Koran consulate in Montreal urges Montrealers of Korean heritage to be cautious after a Korean man was stabbed, and many Asian Montrealers commented on a rise in racist taunts and tension.

March 18 First COVID-19-related death recorded

Mariette Tremblay, an 82-year-old woman in the Lanaudiere region dies due to coronavirus, as confirmed cases hit 94.

Quebec City opens the first drive-thru screening clinic for COVID-19 at the Chauveau Hospital. The first drive-thru clinic in Montreal opened four days later at the Place des Festivals and was the first that did not require an appointment. Thousands were tested within days of it opening.

Border closes to non-essential travel, and aid packages begin for businesses attempting to weather the crisis.

March 19 Quebec cases pass 100

The number of COVID-19 cases hits 121, and Legault asks Quebecers to stay in their regions.

Funeral services are postponed and moved online.

March 20 Woman arrested for leaving isolation

A woman in Quebec City was arrested for leaving her home after testing positive for COVID-19. She was not charged, but more enforcement of COVID-19 protocols would occur.

March 21 Gatherings banned, new deaths

Quebec Premier Legault announces that all indoor and outdoor gatherings are banned.

Four more deaths are recorded for a total of five with only one death not occurring in the Eva seniors residence in Lavaltrie.

The number of cases is at 181.

An Air Canada plane brings back 433 people who were stranded in Morocco.

March 22 No more dining out

Dining rooms at restaurants are ordered closed, as well as salons and beauty parlours. Shopping malls are also closed, but pharmacies and grocery stores with exterior entrances are allowed to remain open.

Place-des-Festivals drive-thru screening clinic opens.

Singer Martha Wainwright teams up with Pop Montreal for a sing-along to Leonard Cohens So Long, Marianne from her balcony.

March 24 Quebec cases pass 1,000

Legault announces that the number of COVID-19 cases is at 1,013 with 439 in Montreal.

March 25 First death in Montreal

The City of Montreal records its first death due to COVID-19 as cases in the metropolis rise to 603. It is the second death recorded that day with the total number of Quebec COVID-19 cases reaching 1,339.

The federal government is ordering all people returning to Canada from outside the country to isolate.

March 27 Montreal declares state of emergency

Montreal Mayor Valerie Plante declares a state of emergency to help the citys homeless population, who are having a harder time finding space in the citys shelters.

Ten deaths are recorded in one day bringing the total to 28.

March 28 Checkpoints installed

Quebec Deputy Premier Genevieve Guibault announces police would man checkpoints throughout the province to stop the virus from spreading.

March 29 No fatalities

Though the numbers continue to rise with confirmed cases at 2,840, there are no fatalities to report and the percentage of new cases has gone down.

The Tosh Jewish community in Boisbriand asks for help enforcing a quarantine on its 4,000 members.

March 31 Montreal is the hot spot

Montreals 1,991 cases make up nearly a quarter of the countrys cases (8,505).

The city sets up more outdoor day shelters for homeless people.

Police break up small gathering at the residence of Montreal opposition leader Lionel Perez, who was celebrating his daughters engagement.

April 1 Gatherings continue alarming leaders

The premier and mayor of Montreal note that people continue to gather in parks with the weather improving. Quebec now has 4,611 confirmed cases and the death toll is at 31.

April 2 Crackdown of gatherings

With more people taking advantage of the warm weather to head outdoors in groups, Legault orders the police to begin cracking down.

Police begin handing out tickets that range from $1,000 to $6,000 for those not following physical distancing guidelines.

Jacques-Cartier Bridge lit up in rainbow colours as a beacon of hope.

April 3 Huge jump in the numbers

The number of deaths rises to 61, an increase of 27. It is the highest one-day increase, The province now has over 6,100 cases, and its first death of a person under 40. Quebec Head of Public Health Horacio Arruda says the man was significantly overweight.

Just For Laughs, JazzFest, FrancoFolies and others cancel summer events.

April 6 Deaths from COVID-19 pass 100

Premier Legault says theres light at the end of the tunnel though the confirmed death total rises to 121.

Legault announces $100 million for small businesses to train employees to work remotely.

April 8 Quebec passes 10,000 cases

In his daily briefing, Legault confirms that there are 10,031 positive cases of COVID-19 in the province. The number of deaths is now at 175.

A security guard is hit by a car driven by a customer originally thought to be irate at the one-person-per-car rule at the Walmart in Sherbrooke. Later security camera footage conflicts with the initial reporting.

April 10 Troubling reports from seniors homes

Quebec announces it will test all long-term care facility staff and that the health network will redeploy hundreds of doctors and nurses from hospitals to seniors residences to deal with the major amount of outbreaks.

The global death toll is now over 100,000.

April 11 31 deaths reported in one care facility

Premier Legault announces that 31 seniors have died at the Maison Herron long-term care facility in Dorval. He is opening a police and public-health investigation.

Read more from the original source:

COVID-19 in Quebec: A timeline of key dates and events - CTV News Montreal

French Jews find out Zionism and family wont win them refuge in Israel during coronavirus – Haaretz

Posted By on April 13, 2020

PARIS In the Jewish world, perhaps one of the most controversial outcomes of these unprecedented times is the new restriction on the relationship between Israel and the Diaspora. For the first time since its establishment, the country has shut its doors to non-Israeli Jews living abroad.

And some of them are outraged. In France, for example, coronavirus-related deaths in the Jewish community are reportedly four times the proportion for the overall population.

People are shocked in France, says Bernard Abouaf, president of the radio station Radio Shalom. This is an existential issue. It never happened before that Jews who have the power on the land tell to Jews who dont have this power you cant come because we have to protect ourselves.

Abouaf, a prominent on-air personality in the Jewish community, has relatives in Israel but isnt a citizen. He is especially upset because, despite the Foreign Ministrys efforts to bring back stranded Israelis from abroad, Israel is leaving behind its most dedicated advocates, he says.

The French community is a very Zionist community. You wont find one unit in the IDF without the French, you wont have one district in Jerusalem or in Tel Aviv without the French, Abouaf says. But then we saw all these planes of El Al going to search for Israeli people and bring them home, without us.

The concern for Israel is so great, according to Abouaf, that people are more interested in whats happening there than in France. When I present the news to our audiences every night at 6 P.M., I begin with an update on the corona situation in Israel, not in France, he says.

To him, barring non-Israeli Jews from entry shows that theres a difference between a citizen and a Jew, and this alarms him. I dont only disagree, I am shocked, he says about the policy. Suddenly if youre French, nobody cares, because youre not Israeli.

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The new restriction poses a problem for people like Lionel Brami, 47, a restaurateur from Paris 17th Arrondissement who hoped he would be able to join his wife Emily and two children, ages 11 and 17, in Israel.

My wife and children hold Israeli IDs and have been living in Tel Aviv for the past couple of years, he says, though Brami divides his life between the two countries.

I visit Israel for 10 days every month, but when I called the consulate I was told its forbidden to go to Israel because I dont have an Israeli passport, even though I told them Im married to someone who lives there.

Brami says he has since contracted the coronavirus, most likely from a colleague at the restaurant; he tested positive on April 2.

I stay at home, I have a fever, cant taste food anymore. Now that I have the COVID-19 I dont want to come [to Israel] any longer, he says, adding that despite the painful situation, he agrees with the restrictions. We know that Israel is always open for the Jewish people but now its closed because it doesnt want to be responsible for the danger.

As he puts it, If I didnt have the COVID I would have been very angry. I think they should have given me the pass to go because I have my family there its not normal to be like this on Pesach, alone in my house.

Some understand

Gilles Guthman, 64, and his wife, Ruth, 65, are in a similar situation. Four of their six children live abroad, two of them in Israel.

Our daughter Fanny is 26 years old, a student at Bar-Ilan University in Israel, Gilles says. She is single and alone in this situation. She doesnt know when shell be able to come and when well be able to visit her.

While both his children are Israeli citizens, Guthman and his wife are not. We know we cannot visit Israel but we cannot blame anybody. This is unprecedented all over the world; its a problem for everyone with family abroad, he says.

The Guthmans usually visit Israel at least three to four times a year, so staying away is difficult. I guess what the Israeli government decided to do is hard but its the right thing to do in order to manage the crisis, Gilles says.

No place to go

Talya Lador-Fresher could not have imagined such an assignment. Dropped in as Israels temporary ambassador to France in January, Lador-Fresher, previously the ambassador to Austria, was quickly forced to navigate extremely volatile waters.

In March, the Israeli government decided not to accept nonnationals into the country, she says, adding that, despite this, the flood of entry requests from French Jews only heightened. We have since been constantly working with the Jewish community here.

The local consul, Michel Harel, who is responsible for handling these requests, says every appeal is addressed but some cases are complicated.

The main problem is when one spouse is an Israeli citizen and the other is not, or when the center of life of the appellant is not in Israel, he says. The request is then transferred to the Israeli Foreign Ministry, which considers each case individually.

According to Shimon Mercer-Wood, the embassy spokesman, much of the support that the consulate provides is simply emotional.

Relatively early on in the crisis I received a phone call from a member of the [Jewish] community who told me he was scared that if tomorrow morning a Holocaust takes place in France, he has no place to go, Mercer-Wood recalls. And while this is an extreme example, it shows the range of emotional reactions weve been facing, and simply answering their calls and talking to them I believe helps.

According to Lador-Fresher, while the embassy officials sympathize with the Jewish communitys particular suffering during the crisis, they say there is little they can do for nonnationals.

I think that the Jewish community here was upset when it was only Israel taking this step, she says. But once most countries, including France, had shut their doors, then these emotions and criticism decreased and what was left was sadness, which we can all relate to.

But Abouaf of Radio Shalom remains unsettled. For us, Israel is all our lives; I think its a scandal, he says, noting the many events in the past when the French Jewish communitys solidarity with Israel was unquestionable.

During the second intifada the only Jewish community in the world that came to Israel to spend the holidays and vacations there was the French, he says. Every single Jewish institution organized a trip to Israel to help boost its economy; we felt we had to do it. And now you tell us you dont have a passport? You stay in France.

This policy runs contrary to Israels Law of Return, which gives Jews the right to live in Israel, and to Israels efforts over the decades to bring in Jewish people from places like the Soviet Union, Ethiopia and Iran.

This is the first time that we see the plane passing in front of us and not only are we not part of the story, but they tell us please dont bother us. So for us its very shocking, Abouaf says.

He adds that he has encountered dozens of painful stories, ranging from people who have elderly parents in Israel to those who have children serving in the Israeli military but are barred from seeing them.

Someone showed me a picture of his son, who was in the terror attack in Toulouse and is now serving in the Golani, Abouaf says, referring to the 2012 shooting attack, and of his daughter, who is a doctor fighting against corona in Israel.

He told me that [for Israel] to take my children is okay, but if I want to see them now, then no. I explained this in the embassy, and was refused.

But despite this recent aggravation, Abouaf believes that the Jews of France will not turn their backs on Israel. Were not at the point that we will distance ourselves from Israel, he says. These things shock me but not to the point of divorce. Still, I feel taken for granted.

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French Jews find out Zionism and family wont win them refuge in Israel during coronavirus - Haaretz


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