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Center Field: Comparing today’s world leaders to Ahasueruses and Hamans – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on February 26, 2020

Its sobering to live in a world overdosing on Ahasueruses and Hamans but missing Esthers and Mordecais.Today, Israel and the United States are led by modern Ahasueruses.Drunk on power, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu foolishly paralyzes an entire country for a year in his desperate refusal to retire. For years, many of us believed that whatever our disagreements with him, he woke up daily asking Whats best for Israel and the Jewish people? Today, he just seems to be asking Whats best for Bibi?Drunk on ego, US President Donald Trump foolishly puts his prejudices ahead of Americas core ideals. And just like Ahasueruss ultimate switch to save the Jewish people didnt undo other mistakes he made, Trumps pro-Israel policy doesnt negate the other damage his bullying causes.Hamans spread like coronavirus. Palestinian dictators and enablers train children to hate, teenagers to kill, and their people to accept living in misery, as the elites live grandly while getting coddled as the worlds favorite underdog. We have strongmen galore, from Hezbollahs bloodthirsty Hassan Nasrallah to Irans oppressive Ali Khamenei to Russias wily Vladimir Putin to Syrias murderous Bashar Assad.True, these contemporary Hamans arent as menacing as the Hitlers and Stalins or even the Nassers and Arafats. Yet their power is amplified today because we lack the Esthers and Mordecais of yesteryear.In Israel, the yearlong electoral stalemate has demoralized most voters and sullied the Bibi alternatives.Within the Right, you wonder what might finally propel Naftali Bennett or Ayelet Shaked to break the predicted third logjam by working with Blue and White a party that includes former generals and former colleagues on the Right who accept Israels security consensus because people like Moshe Bogie Yaalon, Gabi Ashkenazi and Benny Gantz helped define it.You also wonder whether any of the Likud munchkins, who have been diminished by their total devotion to their Perpetual Leader, will ever break, or shake up the Likud bloc.In the Center, the excitement that surrounded the Blue and White campaign launch a year ago has faded.Politics is ugly, and the public arena has become poisoned, Gantz said in his eloquent opening speech, denouncing todays self-absorbed leadership. This election three-peat has clouded his and his allies impressive achievement in creating a party from nothing and winning the most votes in September. Any potential Esthers in the party lack star billing, while none of the four leaders has wowed voters as a modern Mordecai.AT LEAST the four-headed Blue-and-Whiters figured out how to unite against the greater threat. In the US, as Elizabeth Warren slashed, Bernie Sanders bellowed and Michael Bloomberg stumbled, it became clear who won the ninth Democratic debate in Las Vegas: Donald Trump.Its always hard when an incumbent president coasts to renomination, as candidates in the other party first slug it out. Ronald Reagan chuckled in 1984 as Gary Wheres the Beef Hart tagged Walter Mondale as a creature of special interests, just as Barack Obama beamed in 2012, watching the never-ending GOP contest yank moderate Mitt Romney ever rightward.Still, 2020s Democratic civil war feels particularly uncivil and self-destructive. Rather than pulling it together, Trumpophobia seems to be tearing the party apart. At the debate, few even bothered offering anything lyrical, constructive, redemptive: no Reaganesque Morning in America, no Obamaian Yes We Can, to motivate and mobilize.Even worse, the leading candidate (for now), Bernie Sanders, is a walking, talking (or hollering) worst-case scenario for the Democratic Party and the Jewish community.Sanders seems to be channeling Trumps strategy of motivating an aggressive minority to bully, then outlast, the moderates, the party grown-ups. The menace from Bernie bros is not some Russian ploy and serious enough to infuriate Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren, Michael Bloomberg and Pete Buttigieg, who challenged Sanders at the debate: ask yourself what it is about your campaign in particular that seems to be motivating this behavior....Beyond that, pushing the Democratic Party to the far Left in an election that hinges on moderate swing states is like steering the Titanic toward the iceberg.Even before Sanders libeled AIPAC, claiming it offers a platform... for leaders who express bigotry, his rise seemed determined to torture pro-Israel Democrats. Choosing between Trump and a senator who has never shown much love for the Jewish state, who cavorts with antisemites like Linda Sarsour and Ilhan Omar, and acts like a proud Bash-Israel-firster, would be nightmarish. It would be like choosing between eating a poisonous falafel ball laced with ham and a poisonous gefilte fish stuffed with hot peppers.Perhaps, the Berge the Bernie surge will force Democrats to stop ignoring the disturbing fact that after decades as Americas most pro-Israel party, their party, while still majority pro-Israel, now houses a wing that is sneeringly, obsessively anti-Israel and welcomes, even excuses, some antisemites, too.Ive said it before. In 1991, the leading right-winger William F. Buckley exposed the Jew-hatred behind Pat Buchanans isolationism and anti-Zionism, saying it violated Republican values. Its time for Barack Obama or another leading iconic Democrat to read out the Israel-haters from the party of Harry Truman and John F. Kennedy, of Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Nancy Pelosi all passionate pro-Israel liberal Democrats. Thats not a job for a Mordecai or an Esther although Jewish Democrats must stop covering up the problem. Thats a job for a non-Jewish hero willing to defy Twitterdumb and the bullies inside the Democratic Party, while preserving Democrats greater goal unseating Trump.The writer is the author of The Zionist Ideas, an update and expansion of Arthur Hertzbergs classic anthology, The Zionist Idea. A distinguished scholar of North American history at McGill University, he is the author of 10 books on American history, including The Age of Clinton: America in the 1990s.

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Center Field: Comparing today's world leaders to Ahasueruses and Hamans - The Jerusalem Post

The Jewish establishment once expelled communists. Now Jewish socialists are having the last laugh. – Forward

Posted By on February 26, 2020

Despite the fact that Wednesdays Democratic debate in Las Vegas was the first debate to feature both Jewish presidential contenders, the word Jewish was not mentioned once. On top of that, neither Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders nor former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg took the opportunity to discuss their very different relationships to their American Jewish identities, and how it has affected their politics.

But make no mistake: There was still a very Jewish moment in the debate, and it was a moment that shows just how much and how little Jewish politics has changed in the past decades. Facing allegations from other candidates that he is spending his unimaginable fortune to essentially buy himself the presidency, Bloomberg defended himself by saying he didnt inherit his money but made it. The implied contrast with Donald Trump was obvious; While the current president inherited most of his wealth, he himself supposedly started from nothing, worked hard, and earned his money the old-fashioned way, making his wealth more legitimate than Trumps.

But Bernie Sanders, the other Jew on stage, had a ready response: He denied that Bloomberg actually earned his money at all. You know what, Mr. Bloomberg, Sanders retorted, to rapturous applause, it wasnt you who made all that money. Maybe your workers played some role in that, as well.

It was one of the bluntest and most unabashed articulations of Marxs labor theory of value that weve ever seen in American politics.

Of course, the argument over whether labor or management generates most of the wealth of a company is not a uniquely Jewish argument; in fact, its one of the central debates in economic theory. But it is a debate that has divided the American Jewish community for decades, and in fact played a significant role in the making of modern American Jewish identity.

Fears of a public association of Jews with socialism and communism defined mainstream American Jewish political life throughout the past century, and led to many of the political decisions made by prominent American Jewish organizations. It is well known that Eastern European Ashkenazi Jewish immigrants were disproportionately represented in leftist groups in the first half of the twentieth century.

The numbers are well-documented. In the 1910s, the most predominantly Jewish voting districts in New York elected more Socialist Party members to political office than any other area of the United States.

By 1914, at the outbreak of the First World War, Jews comprised fully 15% of the members of the Socialist Party, despite comprising only 3% of the total US population at the time. In 1920, socialist presidential candidate Eugene Debs received 3.4% of the national vote but a whopping 38% of the Jewish vote.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the most well-funded organizations of the American Jewish community feared that this disproportionate Jewish representation in left-wing politics would lead to anti-Semitism a fear that was not unfounded.

They responded by trying to erect a quarantine against socialism and communism in organized American Jewish life. In 1920, the Anti-Defamation League circulated to 500 newspapers around the US a series of articles trying to prove that most American Jews were anti-communist. The widely-read American Jewish Chronicle went further, not only arguing that most Jews were not communists, but implying that communist Jews were not really Jews at all. If the more prominent local Soviets have admitted many Jews, it is because these Jews are no longer Jews, the pamphlet argued.

By the late 1940s, the American Jewish Committee and the Anti-Defamation League worked to formally expel known communists from Jewish community organizations. As Stuart Svonkin notes in his book Jews Against Prejudice, During the late 1940s and early 1950s, with the aid of intelligence provided by the AJCs Staff Committee on Communism local Jewish communities severed their connections with various pro-communist organizations. American Jewish organizations like the ADL and AJC consistently adopted a liberal, anti-communist line, and were active participants in the anti-communist rhetoric of the postwar era.

It was ironic: Because Jews were disproportionately represented in socialist and communist politics in the early twentieth century, post-World War II mainstream American Jewish politics defined itself as explicitly anti-communist in order to combat the fear that anti-Communism would lapse into anti-Semitism.

Bloombergs mix of pro-capitalist economics combined with social liberalism is closely aligned with the politics of the post-World War II American Jewish consensus, while Sanders represents a Jewish identity which it was fighting. Bloomberg represents the model that was supposed to have won out, while Sanders represents a model that many organs of the American Jewish community tried to banish. So it isnt surprising that Bloomberg has been a financial supporter of institutional Jewish organizations, including the Jewish Museum and Hadassah University Medical Center, whereas Sanderss links to this formal Jewish organizational infrastructure are much weaker.

And yet, here comes Sanders, who says he is proud to be Jewish, getting up on stage at a Democratic debate and defending Marxist labor theory to thunderous applause, while Bloomberg gets booed.

Its enough to make you think that maybe the postwar consensus of American Jewish politics is beginning to crack.

After World War II, American Jewish organizations tried to combat anti-Semitism by purging socialists and communists from organized Jewish life. But it may be the socialists who get the last laugh.

Joel Swanson is a Ph.D. student at the University of Chicago, studying modern Jewish intellectual history and the philosophy of religions. Hes skeptical of any consensus, political or otherwise. Find him on Twitter at @jh_swanson.

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

The Jewish establishment once expelled communists. Now Jewish socialists are having the last laugh.

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The Jewish establishment once expelled communists. Now Jewish socialists are having the last laugh. - Forward

Shas will back Netanyahu for PM even at the cost of a fourth election, party leader says – Haaretz

Posted By on February 26, 2020

Shas chairman Arye Dery said on Tuesday he will support Netanyahu in the upcoming elections, even if it comes at the cost of a fourth election.

Bernie, Bibi and the brutal occupation: Listen to Gideon LevyHaaretz Weekly Ep. 64

"We are natural partners in keeping the Jewish character of the state,"Dery said in a Channel 12 interview.Asked whether he would also support Netanyahu at the cost of the country having to go to a fourth election, Dery replied "yes, unless we persuade Gantz to enter a broad coalition with a rotating premiership."

Dery said he had already sought to build a similar arrangement in the previous election and that "if they had listened to me, Gantz would have been prime minister in just a few more weeks."

Support for Netanyahu was in line with the wishes of the Shas electorate, Dery added.

Last week, Health Minister Yaakov Litzman, head of the Ashkenazi ultra-Orthodox party United Torah Judaism, made a similar commitment.

Asked in an interview on Israeli public broadcaster Kan 11 whether theright-wing blocwould agree tokeep having elections until Netanyahu manages to form a government, Litzman said he had "no problem with this."

"Gantz does not want me as health minister, so he will not be prime minister," Litzman said.

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Shas will back Netanyahu for PM even at the cost of a fourth election, party leader says - Haaretz

ESCAPE Bio to Present at the Cowen 40th Annual Health Care Conference – Yahoo Finance

Posted By on February 26, 2020

ESCAPE Bio, Inc., a clinical stage company developing novel, precisely targeted therapeutics for genetically defined neurodegenerative diseases, today announced that Julie Anne Smith, Chief Executive Officer, will present at the Cowen 40th Annual Health Care Conference on Tuesday, March 3, 2020.

Presentation details

Date: Tuesday, March 3, 2020Time: 10:30 a.m. ETLocation: Boston Marriott Copley Place in Boston, MA

Ms. Smith will present program and corporate updates. ESCAPE recently initiated a Phase 1 multiple ascending dose study in healthy volunteers with ESB1609, a S1P5 agonist being developed for the treatment of CNS lysosomal storage disorders. The company has also initiated preclinical toxicology studies with their G2019S LRRK2 inhibitor being developed as a potential treatment for Parkinsons disease.

About ESB1609, a S1P5 Agonist for CNS Lysosomal Storage Disorders

ESB1609 is a novel, orally-administered, brain-penetrant and selective sphingosine 1-phosphate 5 (S1P5) receptor agonist. S1P5 receptors are one of five receptors within the G-protein-coupled S1P receptor family (S1P1 S1P5). S1P5 couples to Gi and G12 and is predominantly expressed in the central nervous system (CNS) and natural killer (NK) cells. The endogenous ligand for S1P5 is sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), a sphingolipid that plays a significant role in many aspects of cellular homeostasis and proliferation. Activation of S1P5 upregulates several CNS lipid transporters and has been shown to normalize brain ceramide and sphingosine phosphate levels and promote clearance of aggregation-prone proteins across multiple pre-clinical models of neurodegeneration. Multiple genetic forms of neurodegeneration cause perturbations in the sphingolipid pathway and ultimately, lysosomal dysfunction. ESB1609 is currently in a Phase 1 Multiple-Ascending Dose study in healthy volunteers.

About LRRK2 Inhibitor Program for Parkinsons Disease

Pathogenic LRRK2 mutations co-segregate with familial Parkinsons Disease (PD). Almost all PD patients carrying a G2019S LRRK2 variant have two versions of LRRK2 protein; one mutant variant with excessive kinase activity (up to 10-fold) and one healthy version, critical for regulating intracellular vesicular trafficking throughout the body. G2019S is the most common LRRK2 pathogenic mutation, estimated to account for 1-3% of all PD and 1% of people of Ashkenazi Jewish descent. G2019S LRRK2 PD patients experience the same progression of symptoms as idiopathic PD, with onset of tremors and rigidity at rest in their 50s, followed by deterioration of motor and cognitive function and progressive neuropsychiatric symptoms, which culminate in premature death. Pathobiological data suggest that alpha-synuclein, a protein that normally regulates dopamine, forms aggregates which can propagate from one neural cell to another and is specifically harmful to neurons that produce dopamine in the substantia nigra of the brain. There are no disease modifying therapies approved.

About ESCAPE Bio

ESCAPE Bio is a clinical stage, privately held biopharmaceutical company developing novel, precisely targeted therapeutics for genetically defined neurodegenerative diseases. ESB1609 is in a Phase 1, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic and biomarker study of escalating multiple doses in healthy volunteers. ESCAPEs pipeline includes small molecules targeting known genetic drivers of CNS disorders, including ESB1609, an S1P5 agonist for the treatment of CNS lysosomal storage disorders and GBA Parkinsons; a G2019S-selective kinase inhibitor for Parkinsons Disease (PD) patients with that mutation; and an Alzheimer's disease program targeting ApoE4. For additional information, please visit http://www.escapebio.com.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200224005305/en/

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Jason SparkCanale Communications619-849-6005jason@canalecomm.com

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ESCAPE Bio to Present at the Cowen 40th Annual Health Care Conference - Yahoo Finance

Benny Gantz is taking Israel back to the future – +972 Magazine

Posted By on February 26, 2020

Benny Gantzs campaign to unseat Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu centers on a single word: mamlachtiyut. Coined by Israels founding Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion, it is the Hebrew term for civic virtue, for putting the good of the state above sectarian divisions and personal interests above everything. It is the central pillar of Gantzs Blue and White party, which otherwise offers only a vague platform. Gantzs argument is that Netanyahu, facing indictments in three separate corruption cases, no longer possesses this virtue, and that Israel needs a leader who does.

Blue and White is betting that Israelis have grown tired of Netanyahus style of rule, but not the substance of his politics. The distinctions Gantz seeks to draw are primarily affective and aesthetic. Where Netanyahu is brash, Gantz is soft-spoken; where Netanyahu is frenetic, Gantz is collected. Netanyahu prefers the wide jackets and thick ties of 1990s autocrats, while Gantz wears the tailored suits and skinny ties of todays technocrats. On the podium, Gantz exudes a martial dignity meant to contrast with Netanyahus mafioso-populism. That Netanyahu is not the only Likudnik facing criminal corruption charges helps Gantzs argument that the ruling party lacks the virtues to lead. Likud Welfare Minister Haim Katz and MK David Bitan are also facing criminal investigations of their own.

There is an element of nostalgia to Gantzs presentation. The tall, blue-eyed retired general has modeled himself as the successor to former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and was crowned as such last November, when he delivered the main speech during the annual ceremony in Tel Aviv commemorating Rabins assassination. Unlike Netanyahu, who was raised among Jerusalems right-wing counter-intelligentsia, and whose Likud has long been the party of the Mizrahi working-class, Gantz was born to Holocaust survivor parents on a moshav, an agricultural cooperative, associated with the religious wing of the Labor Zionist movement. His resemblance to Israels bygone generation of farmer-warrior leaders accounts, in part, for his partys success in peeling off voters from the old Labor Zionist parties, Labor and Meretz, which have had to merge to avoid all-but-certain failure to meet the electoral threshold.

The intentional amorphousness of Blue and Whites platform only makes Gantz more of a cipher. He can be more than just the second coming of Rabin for the aging Labor Zionists; he is the champion in the fight against the steady creep of religious indoctrination in public schools for secularists, and in the fight against corruption for the middle-class. For right-wing voters, he is a defense-minded general unafraid to boast of how many Palestinians hes killed.

Blue and White is itself a chimera, only recently cohering into something resembling an actual political party, after a full year of non-stop campaigning and three election cycles. Though listed under Gantzs name alone in this election, it is in reality closer to a jointly-led party, comprised of four distinct factions: Gantzs Resilience for Israel Party, Yair Lapids Yesh Atid (There is a Future), former Likud Defense Minister Moshe Bogie Yaalons Telem (an acronym for National Statesman-like Movement), and former IDF Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazis informal group of supporters. The four leaders call themselves, collectively, the cockpit.

In the previous rounds of elections, Blue and White was a nominal opposition party unsure of, even conflicted about, where it stood equivocating on basic matters of principle, like whether it would sit in a coalition with the Arab-led Joint List. But as time has worn on, and as it has become a genuine challenger to Netanyahus Likud, a clearer ideological bent has begun to emerge.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Blue and White party leader Benny Gantz at a memorial ceremony at the Knesset marking 24 years since the assassination of former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, November 10, 2019. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

Whether for reasons of strategy or principle, or some combination of both, Blue and White has tacked hard to the right in the current round of elections. When Netanyahu pledged to annex the Jordan Valley in November, Blue and White MKs Chili Tropper and Yoaz Hendel said the party would support it. Then, as Donald Trump and Netanyahu jointly unveiled Trumps peace plan in Washington in January, Gantz not only secured a meeting with Trump but also pledged to implement the plan (though not before the elections, as Netanyahu promised to do).

Gantz has made other gestures to show his support for right-wing causes. Earlier in January, for instance, he visited the City of David, a Jewish archeological settlement in East Jerusalem, which he described as the roots of our existence here, in the unified Jerusalem. And whereas a year ago Gantz said the party would be willing to work in coalition with the Joint List, he and other members of the party have recently gone out of their way to deem a coalition with the Arab-led parties as beyond the pale. Gantz has committed instead to forming a national unity government with Likud, preferably without Netanyahu.

As Blue and White has more explicitly positioned itself on the right, one faction has emerged as the partys most prominent, appearing alongside Gantz in public and as surrogates in the media: the ex-Likudnik hawks of Yaalons Telem. These include Yoaz Hendel, Netanyahus former director of communications, and Zvi Hauser, Netanyahus former cabinet secretary and a senior fellow at the Kohelet Policy Forum, a right-wing think tank that played a major role in crafting the Jewish Nation-State Law. Yaalon himself served as Netanyahus defense minister from 2013 until resigning in 2016. All are staunch opponents of a two-state solution; all have long records of anti-Arab and anti-Palestinian rhetoric.

In an interview earlier in February, Hendel told Haaretz that Arab culture is a jungle that has not reached the stage of evolution at which there are human rights. In a video released this week by the Blue and White party, in which the four members of the cockpit jokingly answer questions from voters, Lapid says of Yaalon, Bogie was no small murderer in the army, after which he and Ashkenazi laugh.

Benny Gantz, Yair Lapid, Moshe Yaalon and Gaby Ashkenazi of the Blue and White party, during a faction meeting at the Knesset in Jerusalem, on December 9, 2019. (Hadas Parush/Flash90)

This is what the Israeli center looks like today: racist, militarist, ethno-nationalist, and committed to the perpetual subjugation of Palestinians on both sides of the Green Line. But it is also what the Israeli center has looked like for a long time.

The roots of what we know today as the Israeli center can be found at the end of the Oslo period. It was supposed to be the left that would resolve the conflict with the Palestinians, yet in 2000, after the failure of the Camp David talks, then-Prime Minister Ehud Barak returned from Maryland to Israel to declare there is no partner for peace. The outbreak of the Second Intifada shortly thereafter seemed to prove his words right.

But while Baraks speech marked the end of the Israeli lefts leadership of the peace process, negotiations with the Palestinians had not yet come to a complete halt. The center would pick the mantle of pushing for territorial compromise. In the years after Camp David, Israeli centrist politicians pledged, albeit in different ways, to resolve the conflict with the Palestinians.

In most cases, these politicians came from the right: Ariel Sharon, Ehud Olmert, Tzipi Livni. It is conventional wisdom that the kind of Israeli most likely to successfully negotiate a peace treaty is a right-winger, or a former general preferably both, if possible. After all, it was Menachem Begin, the right-wing Revisionist leader, who signed Israels peace treaty with Egypt. Rabin, a former IDF chief of staff who led Israel to victory in the Six-Day War, not only signed Israels peace treaty with Jordan, but came closer than any other Israeli leader to signing one with the Palestinians.

Such thinking informed then-Prime Minister Sharons decision to split from Likud and form Kadima, a new centrist party, in the fall of 2005. A right-wing former general with a reputation for brutality, Sharon was facing significant opposition from Likud following Israels unilateral disengagement from the Gaza Strip. With Kadima, a party comprised of MKs who had previously been members of Labor and Shinui (a small centrist party) as well as Likud, Sharon pledged to continue working toward a two-state solution.

Tzipi Livni sits with the founder of the Kadima party, Ariel Sharon. January 13, 2001. (Flash90)

Sharon and other Kadima leaders, like former Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, made clear they believed that Israel had a right to all of the historic land of Israel. But they also argued that if Israel were to maintain both its Jewish demographic majority and its democratic character, it would have to relinquish territory for the creation of a Palestinian state.

The rise of Kadima was accompanied by a shift in the discourse around Israeli territorial compromise. While Rabin had spoken openly of the need for peace, his assassination, and especially the suicide bombings of the early 2000s, seemed to remove peace from the national political vocabulary. Instead, Kadima and other centrist leaders began to speak of separating from the Palestinians to preserve Israels security and its Jewish majority. Peace was a nave, impossible dream; separation was hard-headed, realistic, the kind of strategic move a general would make. This was also the rationale that led Sharon to initiate the construction of the separation barrier in the West Bank.

Kadimas leaders had framed the 2005 unilateral disengagement as a necessary step in a larger process that would eventually end with two states. Instead, the disengagement marked the end of that process, not a new beginning. For an already weary Israeli public, the wrenching images of the Gaza disengagement served as a powerful deterrent for future population withdrawals. And Hamas 2007 takeover of the Gaza Strip and the wars that followed only hardened the view that territorial compromise could not secure a lasting or desirable peace.

A commitment to resolving the conflict would nonetheless remain central to Kadimas platform for the better part of the decade. After Sharon suffered a stroke in 2006, Ehud Olmert took over the party and returned to the negotiating table with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in 2008. But Olmerts efforts were hampered by his own corruption scandal (he would later serve 16 of 27 months of a prison sentence for fraud and bribery), and the two reached no deal.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, President George W. Bush, and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas shake hands at the Annapolis Conference in the Naval Academys Memorial Hall in Annapolis, Maryland, November 27, 2007. (Gin Kai/U.S. Navy)

Kadimas fortunes peaked shortly after, in the fall of 2008, when the party, led by Livni, won the most seats in the elections, yet failed to form a government. After 2009, the party withered. Shaul Mofaz, a former IDF Chief of Staff and Likud defense minister, defeated Livni in elections for party leader in 2012 and then proceeded to lead the party into electoral oblivion. Livni split from Kadima to lead her own party, Hatnua (The Movement), which never gained more than eight Knesset seats on its own. A centrism that focused on ending the conflict with the Palestinians even when framed in terms of separation, not peace no longer seemed to find purchase with a plurality, let alone a majority, of Israelis.

In January 2013, buoyed by the previous year and a half of protests over the high cost of living, Lapids Yesh Atid emerged as the second-largest party in the Knesset and the leading centrist party. Yesh Atid was unlike Kadima in many ways, but one significant difference was that Lapids party had almost nothing to say about the Palestinians, the occupation, or the peace process. Instead, the party focused on social issues, championing an Israeli liberalism of support for LGBTQ rights, secularism, and the needs of students and young middle-class families. Anti-corruption rhetoric also played a role in Yesh Atids rise, which carved out a contrast with the politicians whod previously represented the center, like Olmert and Sharon.

Lapids own background reflected an important change, too. Instead of choosing a decorated general or war hero, the Israeli middle class chose as their leader a TV personality. Just as importantly, Lapid did not join the opposition to Netanyahu; he joined the right-wing coalition. So did Livni, who had promised only to remain in the coalition as long as it was engaged in negotiations with the Palestinians. She broke that promise, remaining part of the governing coalition even after the talks led by then-U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry collapsed in 2014, and through Israels war on Gaza in the summer of 2014.

Yair Lapid and some 25,000 people hold a mass rally in Tel Aviv urging the government to enact universal draft legislation, July 7, 2012. (Tali Mayer/Flash90)

Since Netanyahu became prime minister in 2009, the Israeli center has ceased to represent an ideological alternative to the right when it comes to the Palestinians and the occupation. Indeed, the paradox of the recent period of instability in Israeli politics is that it is, in part, the product of relative ideological consensus on this issue.

Livnis political career can be seen as an index of the political shift to the right from leader of the opposition to Netanyahu, to Netanyahus justice minister, to lacking sufficient public support to lead a party of her own. Another measure of this is the extent to which the Likud has consolidated its power over other parties. Every single Israeli Zionist list for the 2020 elections is led, entirely or in part, by former Likud members.

Unlike in the 1990s and early 2000s, the primary division within Israeli Jewish politics today is not over how to end the conflict with the Palestinians. Instead, it is over competing visions of what Italian Marxist theorist Antonio Gramsci called the national popular over the question of who and what the Israeli state is for. Some contemporary Israeli analysts describe this division as one of Israelis versus Jews between a secular Israeli nationalism, and a religious nationalism that upholds the Orthodox domination of religious institutions and ascribes theological significance to the Land of Israel.

This division is concretized in the electoral blocs that have become a recent mainstay of Israeli politics. Against the bloc of centrists, statists, secularists, and what remains of Labor Zionism the center-left, by Israeli medias standards there is the right-wing bloc, comprised of the increasingly religious nationalist Likud, the far-right settler parties, and the ultra-Orthodox parties. Where both blocs agree is that the demos in Israeli democracy includes only Jews.

By seeking help from the Trump administration to salvage his political future, Netanyahu has brought the Palestinian question back to the heart of Israeli politics. From U.S. recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights to the Trump peace plan, which greenlights Israels annexation of the Jordan Valley as well as of Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank, Netanyahu and the Trump administration together are aiming to end the possibility of a Palestinian state once and for all. The Israeli center, now represented by Gantzs Blue and White party, is poised to support them.

U.S. President Donald Trump meets with Benny Gantz of the Blue and White party in the Oval Office of the White House, on January 27, 2020. (Shealah Craighead/White House)

This is less a deviation from the center-lefts historic orientation toward the Palestinians than a return to an earlier position. It was, ironically, the Trump administration itself that made this point in its 181-page vision document: that while Rabin did in fact speak of peace, what he was offering the Palestinians was substantially less than a state.

In his final speech in the Knesset in October 1995, one month before his assassination, Rabin declared that Israels eastern border would remain the Jordan Valley in the widest sense of this term, and that Israel would eventually annex not only the settlement blocs near Jerusalem but additional settlements as well. We will not return to the June 4, 1967 borders, he said. Rabin did not refer in that speech to a Palestinian state but to a Palestinian entity that would be less than a state.

Two years earlier, in 1993, Edward Said reflected in the London Review of Books on the signing of the first Oslo Accords. Israel had conceded nothing except for recognizing the Palestine Liberation Organization as the representative of the Palestinian people, wrote Said, while the Palestinians had ended the intifada without ending the occupation. To make matters worse, by accepting that questions of land and sovereignty be postponed until a final status agreement, the Palestinians have in effect discounted their unilateral and internationally acknowledged claim to the West Bank and Gaza, Said lamented. He predicted that rather than becoming stronger during the interim period, the Palestinians may grow weaker, come more under the Israeli thumb, and less able to dispute the Israeli claim. He was right.

Said likened the Oslo Agreement signed by Yasser Arafat and Rabin to a modified Allon Plan the proposal drawn up in July 1967, shortly after the Six-Day War, by then-Defense Minister Yigal Allon. The Allon Plan entailed maintaining Israeli military control over the Jordan Valley, making the Jordan River Israels eastern border, while withdrawing from areas with high Palestinian populations. It has not only served as the basis for much of Israeli policy in the West Bank over the past several decades: its core logic is also at the core of the Trump plan. If Gantz, as he and his party have pledged, implements this plan, then perhaps his posturing of the second coming of Rabin has some substance to it after all.

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Benny Gantz is taking Israel back to the future - +972 Magazine

Grapevine: All the world loves a scandal – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on February 26, 2020

Conventional wisdom has it that all the world loves a wedding; but even more than a wedding, all the world loves a scandal. For the past year or so, the Israeli media by and large have been drooling over the possibility that Blue and White leader Benny Gantz might become the next prime minister, replacing Benjamin Netanyahu, who has served even longer than founding prime minister David Ben-Gurion. But no sooner did the news break about Gantzs failed former company allegedly not having played according to the rules than all the knives came out, not to mention snippets of fake news. ICONOCLASTIC SATIRIST Tom Aharon outdid himself last week in his show Paam Beshavua (Once a Week) in which he proved that people in glass houses shouldnt throw stones.There is no more vulnerable glass house than the political arena, and although it has been stated that Gantz is not under investigation in the case of the Fifth Dimension, which is the name of his former company, its conduct was certainly not above reproach. Gantzs own involvement, while possibly kosher, still smells.To prove that, Aharon featured part of an interview that Gantz gave to Dana Weiss on Channel 12, in which he kept contradicting himself and getting into deeper water as he went along. Aharon wanted to show that corruption is a two-way street, and that whoever keeps pointing an accusatory finger at someone else should be aware that corruption, however unintended or well-concealed, has a habit of rising to the surface. According to Aharon, Gantzs convoluted denial of any wrongdoing sounded almost like an echo of There wont be anything because there isnt anything.Meanwhile, Gantz has more than once declared that if elected and indicted, he would step down. All we can do is quote the favorite expression of US President Donald Trump: Well see what happens. SAUDI ARABIA has become a favored destination for the Jewish traveler. Hot on the heels of a visit to the kingdom by the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish organizations is that of an interfaith group that includes British-born Rabbi David Rosen of Jerusalem. Before heading for Riyadh, Rosen was in Vienna for a meeting of the Muslim-Jewish Leadership Council, and prior to that he was in Poland where, with the leadership of the American Jewish Committee, he accompanied a delegation of top-level Muslim spiritual leaders to Auschwitz. At his meeting with King Salman, Rosen sat with people of different faiths who are fellow members of the board of the King Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz International Center for Dialogue, which promotes dialogue around the globe with the aim of preventing or resolving conflicts and enhancing understanding and cooperation with the aim of achieving peace. Rosen is also familiar to the Vatican, which years ago made him a papal knight. IN AN era in which the hallmark is largely intolerance of the other, the Simon Marks Jewish Primary School in London stands out like a beacon of light, so much so that it attracted the attention of The Guardian, a left-leaning British newspaper, whose writers are not always well disposed toward Israel or the Jewish people. But the article by Harriet Sherwood was so endearing that the powers that be at The Observer magazine section of The Guardian decided that it must be published.The school is Orthodox, but its teachers and its 117 pupils are people of all faiths. Studies are taught in accordance with the regular British school curriculum plus two hours of Jewish studies each week, and pupils are taken on school outings to various houses of worship such as a mosque and a Buddhist temple. All the boys wear kippot, the girls wear modest dresses, and the food served is kosher. Some of the non-Jewish children have a fondness for Jewish holidays.If you teach non-Jewish children about the Jewish faith, theyre likely to have a positive attitude later in life, head teacher Gulcan Metin-Asdoyuran who is from a Turkish Muslim background told Sherwood.The full story can be accessed online, and it makes for a heartwarming read. SUNDAY IS not a general working day in Australia, so President Reuven, Rivlin went to the Taronga Zoo in New South Wales, where animals injured in Australias horrific bushfires are being treated at the zoos wildlife hospital, which cares for some 1,400 animals each year and returns them to their natural habitat. Rivlin got to see some of the animal patients, such as a platypus, wallabies, kangaroos and even a koala bear, with which he gingerly tried to make friends.Koalas are marsupials not really bears at all, but the first white settlers who came to the southern continent, in 1788, didnt know the difference, other than size, between these cute little indigenous animals and big bears. As cute and cuddly as the koala looks, it can be very aggressive and quite vicious. Its bite can do a lot of damage. However, koalas rescued from the Australian bushfires seem to have taken on gentler characteristics.For Rivlin, who stopped off in Fiji en route to Australia, much of his visit has been delightfully informal, although there was a degree of formality when he rang the bell at the Australian Securities Exchange in Sydney to start the days trading on Tuesday, which according to Jewish tradition, is the luckiest day in the week.He really got into the spirit of things in Fiji, where he and President Jioji Konrote and Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama wore identical casual blue shirts in an ethnic print at a state dinner hosted in his honor by Konrote and attended by representatives of various Pacific island states who had come to Fiji for a Pacific summit. At the dinner, Rivlin stood with his hosts and watched a performance by traditional, grass-skirted Polynesian dancers. NOW THAT Australia has been included in the list of countries from which travelers entering Israel must be quarantined, some people are wondering whether this also applies to Rivlin. If it does, the president will not be able to leave his residence in order to vote. Unless the members of his regular security detail spends their quarantine period at the Presidents Residence, he will need a new security team, which cannot really get as close to him as the rules demand. However, if his regular team and his staff are all stuck at the Presidents Residence, in observance of quarantine regulations, a polling station presumably will be set up there as well. SEVERAL POLITICAL pundits would have us believe that the Israeli public is apathetic about the upcoming elections because it thinks that very little will change in terms of results, and if thats the case, why bother? Of course, the why bother element could be the essential difference between winners and losers, or conversely may be the very reason that whoever wins will be unable to form a government. Journalists covering political rallies report that, in most cases, there are fewer people than in the past, unless the rally is tied to something else, as was the case with the Friends of Tel Aviv University association, which held a preelection event with a slightly different twist.TAU president Prof. Ariel Porat, president of the association Amnon Dick and CEO Adi Olmert invited the associations academic business club to come to listen to Ayelet Shaked, Nitzan Horowitz, Gabi Ashkenazi, Avigdor Liberman and Gideon Saar, who were interviewed by veteran Maariv journalist Ben Caspit together with Arie Eldad, both of whom can be heard regularly on FM 103.Unfortunately, it wasnt a debate such as the ones held in the US. Each of the politicians spoke separately, one after the other. None were strangers to the audience, having spoken to them previously in different capacities, and three are actually TAU alumni. Shaked has a software engineering degree from TAU, and Saar and Horowitz, though politically polarized, are both TAU law graduates.One of the questions that each of the politicians was asked was what they planned to be doing on March 3. Liberman said he wrote in his diary that he plans to have a long sleep. Saar said that he will take his wife to dinner.Among those present were Liora Ofer, Etty and Gabi Rotter, David Furrer, Sami Sagol, Gabi Last, Marius Nacht and Prof. Jacob Frenkel. THERE CAN always be surprises in politics. At this stage, the only thing that is certain is that regardless of which party gets the most votes, the first name of the leader of the winning party will be Benjamin. ITS THAT time of year again with Tel Aviv Fashion Week on the horizon in mid-March. The gala opening on Monday, March 16, at Hangar 11, at Tel Aviv Port, will feature the creations of couture designer Efrat Kalig, 50 of whose clients will model her high-end evening and bridal gowns.The special runway show, aimed at eliminating stereotyped images of the ideal woman, is in line with the philosophy of Motty Reif, who is the producer of Fashion Week, and who revived it in 2011 after a long hiatus.In the 1980s, Israel Fashion Week was one of the most glamorous events in the country. Held in luxury hotels in which there were private and public fashion shows for scores of international buyers, it was a wonderful showcase for Israels fashion creativity. When Fashion Week, with updated ideas, was reintroduced by Reif, it was enthusiastically received by fashion writers from around the world. It is now a fixture on the Tel Aviv calendar.Reif, who is himself a former model, felt that promoting the stereotype reed-slim fashion model was unfair to women who were somewhat more endowed, and he chose models of different shapes, sizes, ages and ethnic backgrounds. Thus, nearly all the women in the audience can find someone on the runway with whom they can identify.Among the well-known personalities who will be modeling Kaligs designs at the opening gala will be Dikla, Leah Schnirer, Noam Frost, Rona-Lee Shimon, Saga Sagit Revivo, Efrat Rotem, Michal Weizman (better known as Michal Haktana Little Michal), Romi Nest, Ira Dolfin and Galit Gutman.Trained in New York at the Parsons School of Design, Kalig has worked with legendary fashion icons such as John Galliano and Jean-Louis Scherrer. She also worked at the Wax Museum in Paris and opened her own haute couture salon in the heart of the citys main quarter, where the total environment is chic.All in all, Tel Aviv Fashion Week will run from March 16 to 19 inclusive, and will feature a total of 29 fashion shows. JERUSALEM-BORN expatriate iconic fashion designer Elie Tahari was one of the recipients this week of awards conferred by the American Sephardi Federation at its New York Sephardic Jewish Film Festival. Tahari received the Pomegranate Lifetime Achievement Award for Fashion Design.He has been living in New York for more than half his lifetime. He arrived there penniless in 1973 and initially worked in the garment district, changing light bulbs. He is a self-taught fashion designer and manufacturer. These days, hes a multimillionaire. Other Pomegranate Awards were given to filmmakers lie Chouraqui, who received the Ronit Elkabetz Memorial Award for Lifetime Achievement on Stage and Screen, and Keren Yedaya, winner of the Camra dOr at the Cannes Film Festival. The fourth recipient was actor Dan Hedaya. MEMBERS OF some of Israels leading law firms responded favorably to a proposal by Israel Bar Association chairman Avi Himi that they sign a declaration affirming their belief that women lawyers should earn as much as their male counterparts. The signing ceremony, at Beit Hapraklit (Lawyers House), took place in the presence of Himi; Justice Varda Wirth Livne, president of the National Labor Court; Deputy Attorney-General Orit Kotev; Naamat chairwoman Hagit Peer and several other prominent figures. This is an issue that women have been advocating for years, but it took a man to do something positive about it. NATION-STATE Basic Law notwithstanding, Rafik Halabi, the mayor of Daliat al-Carmel, was thrilled when informed by El Al CEO Gonen Usishkin that the company, which had just taken delivery of its 15th Dreamliner plane, planned to name it Daliat al-Carmel. What better proof could there be of the esteem in which Israel holds its Druze community? A happy Halabi and members of his municipal council joined El Al officials on board the plane for the naming ceremony at Ben-Gurion Airport.Daliat al-Carmel now has an honored sign on a plane in the fleet of the national carrier, which Halabi said would help to strengthen the ties between the Druze community and the rest of Israel. Usishkin said that its exciting to receive every new plane, but particularly so on this occasion when El Al was able to pay its respects to the Druze community. ACCORDING to the old adage, the way to a mans heart is through his stomach. Actually, the way to anyones heart, regardless of gender or status, is through their stomach. This was obvious at an Israeli food fest hosted by Naor Gilon, Israels ambassador to the Netherlands, who invited some 30 of his fellow diplomats to come to sample Israeli street food prepared by chef Asaf Shinar, who is currently touring Europe under the auspices of the World Zionist Organization.Working together with Israel embassies, Shinar is conducting culinary workshops and introducing some of Israels favorite foods to diplomatic communities throughout Europe and the interest is very keen. Curiously, no one seems to mind that the alcoholic beverages are from the Golan Heights Winery. SO MANY things change in a relatively short span of time that out of sight, out of mind becomes more than a clich. Its a sad reality. People not seen are quickly forgotten. But in the case of those who once had a claim to fame, theres almost always someone who, for whatever reason, wants to remind the public of that persons existence, regardless of whether the person in question is alive or dead.Thus, almost 10-and-a-half years after the death of television and stage star Dudu Topaz, who was convicted of conspiracy to commit a violent crime, and who committed suicide while in prison, journalist Haim Etgar produced a two-part documentary on the rise and fall of Dudu Topaz, which was shown on Channel 12, received flattering reviews and prompted high ratings.For whatever reason, Topazs three sons, Daniel, Omer and Jonathan, were not interviewed for this production, even though all three are now adults. Although much has been written about Topaz, who at the peak of his career was Israels top television celebrity, most of what was shown on screen was previously unknown to his sons. Though each was born to a different mother, Topaz bonded with them as a family and maintained a friendly relationship with their mothers. Thus the Topaz brothers enjoy close ties and, after the first episode of the documentary was shown, posted on social media that this was not the Dudu Topaz they knew. Their Topaz was a little weird but a great entertainer and a loving and doting father.The big question is: was it necessary, after more than a decade, to show a documentary that would be hurtful to the Topaz brothers and to their uncle Mickey Goldenberg, who was their fathers brother? What purpose did it serve other than to warn that all the mighty can fall? Even if that was the reason for making the documentary, none of the mighty would believe that it applies to them until it happens. BRITAINS JEWISH and general media are agog with the fact that celebrity fashion model and actress Lady Kitty Spencer is converting to Judaism prior to her marriage to South African-born fashion tycoon Michael Lewis, who is old enough to be her father.Lewis married his first wife, Leola, with whom he has three adult children, in 1985, long before Spencer was born. Lewis and his family are philanthropically minded and in 2011 donated 3 million to Oxford University to fund the appointment of a professor of Israel studies.The Spencer family is descended from the Earl of Marlborough, as was Winston Churchill. Lady Kittys father, Charles, the ninth Earl Spencer, is the brother of Princess Diana.Although Lewis may be the first full Jew marrying into the royal family, he will not be the first person with a Jewish bloodline to do so. Edwina Mountbatten, the countess of Burma, was married to Lord Louis Mountbatten, who was an uncle to Prince Phillip and who was also related to Queen Elizabeth. Both the queen and her husband are great-great-grandchildren of Queen Victoria. Edwina was the granddaughter of Sir Ernest Cassel, a German-born British banker who was the scion of an Orthodox Jewish family from Cologne. He converted to Catholicism at the request of his wife.Meanwhile, the past 12 months have been somewhat turbulent for the queen. Just after Prince Harry moved to Canada, the queens eldest grandchild and her nephew each announced that they were getting amicably divorced. Divorce is, after all, nothing new in the royal family. Three of the queens four children were divorced, and so was her late sister. On top of all that was the scandal of Prince Andrews friendship and business relationship with the late Jeffrey Epstein, the pimp of pedophilia, who allegedly supplied him with underage companions. AMONG THE proudest moments for Holocaust survivors in Israel is when they see a grandson or a granddaughter wearing the uniform of the Israel Defense Forces. Even people who are not Israelis, and who managed to escape the Holocaust just in time, get emotional over the sight of young Jewish men and women in the uniform of the Israeli army. One such person is 93-year-old Irving Bienstock, a resident of Charlotte, North Carolina, who earlier this month realized his dream of visiting an IDF military base, when he got to tour the Yarden Camp on the Golan Heights. His dream come true was facilitated by the Friends of the Israel Defense Forces (FIDF) and members of his local community, headed by Dana Kapustin.Bienstock and his family escaped Germany in January 1939 and arrived in the United States in April 1940. Five years later, in April 1945, he returned to war-scarred Europe this time as an American soldier on the USS Wakefield. Since the founding of the State of Israel, Bienstock has cherished a desire to visit active members of the Israeli military on an IDF base.I grew up as a Jewish boy in Nazi Germany, and when I saw a policeman or soldier, I would turn and run the other way, he said. I was proud to spend two years in the US Army at the end of the war, but I was still a Jew in a foreign army. This is my last chance to see my army. Today, to see a Jew in uniform serving the Jewish state is a victory, and it feels we have come such a long way.During the visit to the base, Bienstock and the other participants, including several of his friends and members of the local Charlotte Jewish community, met with members of Yarden Camps Eagle Battalion of the Combat Intelligence Collection Corps, which serves as Israels eyes on Syria. Bienstock presented a short movie about his life to the battalion and spoke to the soldiers about his story and concerns over rising antisemitism in todays world.Bienstock even spoke in German to one of the soldiers, Cpl. Shawn, who is originally from Germany and currently serves as a lone soldier in the Eagle Battalion. He has no immediate family in Israel. The Combat Intelligence Collection Corps was adopted by the FIDF Southeast Region as part of the FIDFs Adopt a Brigade program. It gets people involved at a more personal level.In addition to its regular donations, FIDFs involvement increases by providing financial assistance to soldiers in need, caring for lone soldiers with no immediate family in Israel, and funding rest and recuperation breaks for combat brigades. Program supporters can visit the soldiers in their adopted units on IDF bases and communicate with unit commanders. In 2019, FIDF supporters formed unbreakable bonds with the soldiers of 10 brigades and 75 battalions, squadrons, and flotillas.greerfc@gmail.com

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Grapevine: All the world loves a scandal - The Jerusalem Post

Belgian parade features costumes of haredi Jews with insect bodies – Forward

Posted By on February 26, 2020

JAMES ARTHUR GEKIERE/AFP ...

Revellers dressed as Ultra-Orthodox Jews are pictured prior the start of the Aalst Carnivals on February 23, 2020, Aalst, Belgium.

AALST, Belgium (JTA) Caricatures of Jews, including ones depicting them as ants, were prominently displayed at this citys annual parade.

The displays came a year after the Jewish Telegraphic Agency exposed anti-Semitic displays in last years parade in Aalst, located about 10 miles west of Brussels. Participants said the new displays were designed to reject the criticism of the town and carnival that followed JTAs report.

This is us saying were not going to stop making fun of everyone, a man who identified himself as Fred van Oilsjt, 26, told JTA Sunday while wearing a costume that exaggerates the suits favored by haredi Jewish men. (Oilsjt is Aalst in the local dialect.)

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He and 11 other members of his group also wore an ants abdomen and legs attached to their backs and a sticker that read obey on their lapels. Anti-Semitic imagery has often associated Jews with vermin, but he said the display was meant to be a pun referencing how the Dutch-language word for the Western Wall sounds like complaining ant.

Another group wore fake hooked noses and haredi Jew costumes as protest. Their float had a sign labelled regulations for the Jewish party committee, and it included: Do not mock Jews and Certainly do not tell the truth about the Jew.

Among the thousands of revelers who watched the parade from the sidelines, dozens of people wore fake haredi Jew costumes, including one person who also wore large troll feet.

Rudi Roth, a journalist for the Antwerp-based Joods Actueel Jewish paper, said the expressions of anti-Semitism in Aalst this year were more numerous and prominent than last year. He called it a backlash effect.

Last year, JTA reported that the Aalst carnival included effigies of grinning Orthodox Jews holding bags of money, with a rat perched on one effigys shoulders.

The report brought scrutiny to the city. In December, UNESCO pulled its endorsement of the Aalst Carnival as a world heritage event, and Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz on Thursday called for what he labelled a hateful event to be banned. Meanwhile, celebrities have backed out of appearances with Aalsts mayor, who has defended the parade displays.

The mayor, Christophe DHaese of the right-wing New Flemish Alliance, said on Sunday that in the context of the carnival, these displays are not anti-Semitic. Any illegal hate speech, he added, would be dealt with by law enforcement.

This is not an anti-Semitic event, he told journalists at a press conference.

Joel Rubinfeld, the president of the Belgian League Against Anti-Semitism, condemned the displays, which although are the work of a minority of participants and spectators, stain the whole event.

He said the event certainly has anti-Semitic elements, the likes of which he said had not been on display since the end of the Nazi occupation in 1945.

Aalsts name is now associated with anti-Semitism, Rubinfeld, said, and thats partly because of the mayors inaction.

The post Belgian parade features costumes of haredi Jews with insect bodies appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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Belgian parade features costumes of haredi Jews with insect bodies - Forward

Cleveland area park vandalized with swastikas, graffiti saying F*** the Jews – Jewish Journal

Posted By on February 26, 2020

Cleveland area park vandalized with swastikas, graffiti saying F*** the Jews The Forward

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Parma, Ohio.

(JTA) A park in suburban Cleveland was vandalized with swastikas and anti-Jewish statements.

The graffiti on Veterans Memorial Park in Parma also included obscene images, racist epithets, the Confederate flag and the words I love Hitler, F**k the Jews and Jewish Nazi Anne Frank.

A Jewish woman from Cleveland first noticed the vandalism in November, but returned on Tuesday to photograph the images, the Cleveland Jewish News reported. She posted the photos on a private Jewish Cleveland Facebook page.

The images and epithets are indicative of whats been seen across the region, James Pasch, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League in Cleveland, told the Cleveland Jewish News.

Theres no place for this hate in our parks, at our universities or any space, he said.

The Parma Police Department said the images would be immediately removed.

The post Cleveland park vandalized with swastikas and graffiti saying F***| the Jews appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

Cleveland area park vandalized with swastikas, graffiti saying F*** the Jews

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Cleveland area park vandalized with swastikas, graffiti saying F*** the Jews - Jewish Journal

Antisemitism, the evil which must not be named – Arutz Sheva

Posted By on February 26, 2020

Matthew M. Hausman, J.D. Matthew M. Hausman is a trial attorney and writer who lives and works in Connecticut. A former journalist, Mr. Hausman continues to write on a variety of topics, including science, health and medicine, Jewish issues and foreign affairs, and has been a legal affairs columnist for a number of publications.

Despite laudatory coverage of the No Hate, No Fear Solidarity March against antisemitism in New York last month, none in the political or media establishments have acknowledged their complicity in facilitating Jew-hatred and shielding its purveyors. For many progressives, the rally cry no hate, no fear was a platitude used to obscure their own biases and excuse identity communities where antisemitism is flourishing.

And few of the mainstream commentators professing support showed any self-awareness given their initial efforts to blame the deadly assaults against Jews in Monsey, NY and Jersey City, NJ on white supremacism, right-wing extremism or President Trump, when in fact they were perpetrated by members of minority groups some with suspected ties to an antisemitic religious sect.

Misdirection in assigning blame is perhaps unavoidable when vague euphemisms instead of graphic specificity are used to describe anti-Jewish hatred. While the No Hate, No Fear rally was organized to denounce violence against Jews, its moniker omitted the words Jew and antisemitism. Indeed, the event name avoided any appearance of ethnocentrism and seemed to project an aura of inclusiveness, though antisemitism targets only Jews and the lethal attacks being condemned affected no other minority. And despite declarations of concern regarding hate violence generally, there has been no similar uptick against any other class or group.

Whatever the reason for this apparent inhibition, it seems to echo an establishment reluctance to offend those who should be offended, i.e., doctrinaire progressives and identity communities where antisemitism is thriving but with whom liberals find common cause. Moreover, it evokes the efforts of those who seek to reconceptualize Jewish history as a universal metaphor to validate a political agenda that, among other things, heaps disproportionate criticism on Israel and downplays left-wing antisemitism.

It appears Democratic leaders are unable to condemn antisemitism without generalizing its meaning or diluting its focus. They instead analogize it to other hatreds, especially those affecting demographic groups favored by progressives. Or they turn it into an allegory to justify their goals and programs. Not all hatreds are equal, however, and none is more pernicious than antisemitism. Indeed, no other group has been as persecuted throughout history and across national and cultural boundaries as the Jews. Though the left tries mightily to genericize antisemitism, there was never a Final Solution calling for the extermination of the Black, Hispanic or gay populations, women were never subject to pogroms or deported to concentration camps because of their gender, no other people were so unflatteringly integral to apocalyptic Christian and Muslim eschatology, and American slavery shameful and dehumanizing as it certainly was was not genocide.

Progressives use exaggerated outrage over the Holocaust as a tool for labeling ideological opponents racist and solemnizing their political sacred cows. In the process, they obscure its meaning and insult its victims with false parallels, e.g., comparing Trump to Hitler, likening Republicans to Nazis, equating southern border detention centers with Auschwitz, or analogizing Nazi Germanys abrogation of Jewish civil rights to the struggle for same-sex marriage. These comparisons are clearly inapposite, but there is no shortage of nontraditional rabbis and secular communal leaders willing to provide a gloss of Jewish approbation. Ironically, such affirmation provides cover for those who incite Jew-hatred on the left.

Whereas the No Hate, No Fear rally was organized with good intentions, it was difficult for many to reconcile the presence of anti-Israel progressives, e.g., members of Jewish Voice for Peace, whose website proclaims support for the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement. It was likewise difficult to condone the presence of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, an outspoken supporter of former British Labor leader (and unrepentant anti-Semite) Jeremy Corbyn. Ocasio-Cortez has in the past justified violence against Israel and identifies with the Democratic Socialists of America, who at their rallies have chanted the slogan, from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free, calling for Israels destruction. Her participation was therefore incongruous and offensive.

Democrats who bemoan the threat of white supremacism should be just as outraged at the presence in their midst of BDS advocates and leftists who facilitate bigotry. They should also publicly question why antisemitism is flowing from identity communities they embrace.

Antisemitism is unique because it is driven by often disparate motivations. In that Jewish identity is both religious and ethnic, Jews have been persecuted because of heritage, ancestry, and otherness as well as belief.Perhaps the greatest hypocrisy comes from Democratic politicians who accuse others of prejudice while refusing to castigate their partys tolerance of Jew-hatred. Claims of pro-Jewish solidarity are dubious in light of their ongoing failures to: (a) censure anti-Israel bigots like Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib; (b) shun party members who embrace Al Sharpton, Louis Farrakhan, and Linda Sarsour; and (c) chastise Barack Obama for publicly expressing pride in Tlaib despite her use of hateful slurs, including her recent retweet (since deleted) of a false story that Israelis had killed an Arab child in Jerusalem.

This hypocrisy is abetted by journalists who always seem to blame Jews for inciting the passions of those who hate them. Some reports about the fatal Jersey City shooting, for example, made sure to mention the growth of Jewish communities in urban areas as if to imply that Jews create antisemitism by their very presence. These stories conveniently failed to report the outbursts of community members and neighbors who were captured on video praising the shooters and calling for more violence against Jews.

The same media dynamic has been in play since the Crown Heights riots of 1991, when mobs inflamed by community provocateurs attacked Jews and murdered rabbinical student Yankel Rosenbaum. Blame-the-victim reporting was employed then to mitigate the rioters culpability by depicting pogrom-like conduct as reactive rather than hatefully aggressive. And it has since become standard in a media that portrays terrorists as victims, applies vile stereotypes to the Jewish State, falsely accuses Israelis of massacring Arab children, and publishes bogus reports of IDF soldiers murdering Palestinian-Arabs to harvest their organs. Though such slanders are deeply rooted in blood libel mythology, they are disseminated without shame or embarrassment.

Todays mainstream establishment bears a large measure of responsibility for enabling partisan disinformation. It falsely accuses conservative Republicans who support Israel and condemn Jew-hatred of innate antisemitism, for example, while exonerating progressives who slander Israel, disparage Jewish tradition, and validate the BDS movement that they created. If Democrats truly want to combat antisemitism, they should acknowledge and repudiate their partys complicity.

Throughout history, anti-Jewish hatred was rooted in religion, culture, and economics and was ubiquitous in both Christian and Muslim society. And while it was never the exclusive province of the left or right, it infected the entire political spectrum consistent with prejudices inherent in common culture. Religious antisemitism can be expressed by word or deed:

-In Christendom it provided the foundation for replacement theology, targeted evangelism, and programmatic misrepresentation of Hebrew scripture, while also spawning ghettos, massacres, expulsions, Crusades, the Inquisition, and ultimately the Holocaust.

-In the Islamic world, canonical antisemitism mandated subjugation of the Jews and their homeland, generations of persecution and enmity, forced conversions, and genocidal slaughter in the name of jihad.

-On the political right, antisemitism was often fueled by baseless fears of disproportionate Jewish political and economic influence, toxic cultural stranger anxiety, and the Jews refusal to renounce their religious and ethnic heritage.

-The left was inspired by similar stereotypes, but often for different ideological reasons. Specifically, in attempting to remake the political and social order, European progressives were leery of religion and divergent nationalisms, which they believed fostered societal division. Accordingly, they mistrusted Jews who resisted assimilation while maintaining their distinctive religious and national character.

Antisemitism is unique because it is driven by often disparate motivations. In that Jewish identity is both religious and ethnic, Jews have been persecuted because of heritage, ancestry, and otherness as well as belief. Consequently, Jews were exterminated during the Holocaust whether they were observant, secular or agnostic, communists or capitalists, traditional loyalists or baptized apostates. Sadly, the multifaceted nature of the oldest hatred makes it difficult to combat because it means different things to different people.

Those who are influenced by anti-Jewish beliefs in Christian and Muslim tradition cannot change their views without conceding critical errors of faith. Likewise, those whose bigotry arises from the common culture will cling to their biases unless they acknowledge the foundational flaws that mold their historical and cultural perspectives.

In many ways, Jew-hatred today is no different than in generations past. But in an age ruled by political correctness and moral relativism, its purveyors are often absolved by progressives who rationalize it as merely responsive to Jewish behavior. Unfortunately, the problem will continue until the establishment admits its complicity and repudiates the hateful zealotry it has encouraged and empowered.

Matthew M. Hausman is a trial attorney and writer who lives and works in Connecticut. A former journalist, Mr. Hausman continues to write on a variety of topics, including science, health and medicine, Jewish issues and foreign affairs, and has been a legal affairs columnist for a number of publications.

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The BroadsheetDAILY ~ News of Lower Manhattan ~ 2/25/20 – ebroadsheet.com

Posted By on February 26, 2020

Enoteca on the Hudson

City Winery Prepares to Open at Pier 56

A rendering of City Winerys new, soon-to-open location on Pier 56, with the Little Island Park (now under construction) visible at left.

As Lower Manhattan has morphed into a residential community and dining destination, another ongoing evolution has attracted less notice: Downtown is becoming a performing arts district. The highest-profile illustration of this shift is the Perelman, which (thanks to the largesse of its eponymous benefactor) has become the shorthand name for the World Trade Center Performing Arts Center that is slowly rising out of the ground near the intersection of Vesey and Greenwich Streets. But the opening of this facility is still several years away.

In the meantime, music lovers can look forward to the April debut of City Winery, at Pier 57 (within the Hudson River Park), near West 15th Street. Occupying 32,000 square feet within a 1950s steamship dock that is also being remodeled to serve as office space for Google, the new restaurant, wine bar, and music hall will replace the legendary venue of the same name that vacated its decade-old home on Varick Street last summer, forced out by Disneys purchase of the entire block, with plans to build a massive new headquarters there.

The new City Winery will seat 100 in its restaurant space, with room for 350 in its concert venue. All rooms will have views of the nearby Little Island Park (which consists of undulating, tulip-shaped platforms) now being constructed at Pier 55. Another amenity likely to draw passersby into City Winery is the two-acre park now being laid out on the roof of Pier 56.

Founder Michael Dorf (who made his reputation as the creator of the Knitting Factory music venue) opened City Winery in 2008, and quickly built it into a musical and viticultural powerhouse, with branches in Nashville, Boston, Atlanta, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C. The venues are noted for an eclectic roster of musical acts, and for a diverse selection of wines made possible by a custom-developed tap system that dispenses fine reds and whites from a dozen-plus aluminum tanks and more than 300 wooden barrels. A large part of the wine list comes from blends made on the premises, for City Winery is one of the small handful of functioning wine-making facilities in the five boroughs of New York. Mr. Dorfs passion for wine may also be familiar to Lower Manhattan residents who have visited his other restaurant, City Vineyard, located on Pier 26 (near North Moore Street), also in the Hudson River Park.

Like the Knitting Factory before it, City Winery became famous as an intimate venue, where headline acts performed for audiences numbering in the hundreds, rather than the thousands. Among the artist that City Winery will welcome to Pier 56 after its April opening are Southside Johnny & The Asbury Jukes, Sinead OConnor, and the Mountain Goats.

Mr. Dorf, who is the father of three children, has lived in Tribeca since 1994. In addition to running a successful restaurant empire, he has built a reputation as a philanthropist in recent years. He created the Tribute series at Carnegie Hall, which has partnered with artists like Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Neil Sedaka, Elton John, REM, The Who, Neil Young, the Rolling Stones and Paul Simon to raise more than $1 million for charitable causes. Mr. Dorf is also the founder of Tribeca Hebrew (an after-school Hebrew program in Lower Manhattan) and Downtown Arts Development (which oversees the New York Jewish Music and Heritage Festival).

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The BroadsheetDAILY ~ News of Lower Manhattan ~ 2/25/20 - ebroadsheet.com


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