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Rep. John Lewis and Alex Trebek have pancreatic cancer. What are symptoms, treatments? – USA TODAY

Posted By on January 3, 2020

Known as the "silent killer," pancreatic cancerhas a five-year-survival rate of less than 10%. Itisone of the least understood cancers among the general public.

Within the past year,civil rights hero Rep. John Lewis and "Jeopardy!" host Alex Trebek werediagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer.

The disease affects the pancreas, the small organ in the upper part of the backside of the abdomen between the stomach and the spine that is responsible for digesting food and regulating blood sugar levels.Although it accounts for only 3% of cancers, it causes 7% of cancer deaths, according to the American Cancer Society.

"Despite pancreatic cancer not necessarily being a prevalent one, it is responsible for a large amount of cancer-related deaths," said Dr. Laith Abushahin, an oncologist atthe Ohio State University James Comprehensive Cancer Center.

The majority of pancreatic cancers take place in cells that help digest food, known as the exocrine pancreas cells, per the National Cancer Institute (NCI).

According to the American Society for Clinical Oncology (ASCO),about 56,770 adults were diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2019. The incidence rate is 25% higher in black people than white people. Ashkenazi Jews also are at higher risk for pancreatic cancer, said Abushahin.

Aside from individuals with genetic and hereditary considerations, individuals with a history of smoking and individuals who are overweight have a heightened risk of pancreatic cancer, according to the NCI.

Individuals with pancreatitis,inflammation of the pancreas often caused by excess alcohol consumption, are also at higher risk for pancreatic cancer, Abushahin said.

It is often difficult to diagnose early, theASCOsays, because of a lack of cost-effective screenings that can reliably detect pancreatic cancer for people without any symptoms.

Stage 4 pancreatic cancer diagnosis: Expressions of support, faith for Rep. John Lewis abound

As a result, it is not often found until later stages of the disease.

"What makes itso challenging is there is no early detection," said Julie Fleshman, president and CEO of the advocacy organizationPancreatic Cancer Action Network (PanCAN). "Usually by the time it is diagnosed, it is late stage and more difficult to treat."

Trebek went to a doctor after experiencing persistent stomach pain, which led to his diagnosis,according to a PSA he released with theWorld Pancreatic Cancer Coalition.

Symptoms tend to be nonspecific, such as stomach pain or nausea.

Alex Trebek on pancreatic cancer battle: 'It's wearing on me ... but I just have to stick with it'

Additional common symptoms, according to the NCI, include jaundice the yellowing of the eyes or skin light-colored stool, dark urine, loss of appetite and weight loss for unknown reasons.

Lewis and Trebek were diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer.

At stage 4, the cancer is metastatic meaning it has spread outside of the pancreas to other parts of the body and it's more challenging to control and treat, saidRobert Glatter,an emergency physician at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

Fifty to 60% of individuals diagnosed with pancreatic cancer have metastasis.

The five-year survival rate for pancreatic cancer is 9%, according to the ASCO. The rate decreases as the cancer progresses and metastasizes.

When it is detected early, Glatter said, the best course of action is surgery, which increases the five-year rate of survival to 15% to 25%. There is a caveat: "While surgery is the only way to cure pancreatic cancer," Glatter said,"less than 1 in 5patients are surgical candidates."

For at-risk individuals, the best way to detect it early on, said Abushahin, is toundergo more frequent imaging tests for the pancreas to check for abnormalities.

When surgical treatment is infeasible, especially as the cancer progresses outside the pancreas, chemotherapy and radiation may help treat the disease.

"Their overall effect," Glatter cautioned,"is minimal, given disease prognosis and severity."

Who has been diagnosed?

Aside from Lewis and Trebek, many prominent people have been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. The list includes Apple co-founder Steve Jobs and soul legend Aretha Franklin both of whom were diagnosed with a rare neuroendocrine tumor in the pancreas as well as astronaut Sally Ride, actor Alan Rickman and jazz icon Dizzy Gillespie.

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg was diagnosed in 2009, which resulted in a removal of growths from her pancreas and spleen. She underwent three weeks of treatment for alocalized cancerous tumor found onher pancreas this year.

Contributing: Savannah Behrmann, Ken Alltucker

Follow Joshua Bote on Twitter: @joshua_bote

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Rep. John Lewis and Alex Trebek have pancreatic cancer. What are symptoms, treatments? - USA TODAY

What is causing the rise in anti-Semitism in New York? – JTA News

Posted By on January 3, 2020

NEW YORK (JTA) For weeks, anti-Semitic attacks have been surging in and around New York City from assaults in Brooklyn to the shooting in Jersey City to the recent stabbing in Monsey on Hanukkah.

Whats still unclear is why the spike is happening now and whether the attacks are connected.

The Hanukkah stabbing capped off a year of rising anti-Semitism in the area. In nearby New York City, anti-Semitic incidents increased significantly in 2019. Through September, according to the New York Police Department, there were 163 reported incidents an increase of 50 percent from that period the previous year. Anti-Semitic incidents make up a majority of reported hate crimes in New York City.

But in most cases, the attackers have not stated a clear reason for their attacks. Unlike the anti-Semitic gunmen in Pittsburgh and Poway, who both wrote white supremacist manifestos before the shootings, the attackers in Monsey, Jersey City and elsewhere have not tried to justify their anti-Semitism with an ideology.

They all had one common theme, which was the hatred of Jews and thats the common thread here and thats what we have to keep our eye on, said Evan Bernstein, the New York/New Jersey regional director at the Anti-Defamation League. Its not any one particular group, its a myriad of people. Anti-Semitism is affecting all parts of our society.

That lack of clarity has left law enforcement, officials and communal leaders with the task of trying to piece together motives based on clues, context and the suspects backgrounds. In the Jersey City shooting, the attackers had expressed sympathy with the Black Hebrew Israelites, a movement of African-Americans who believe they are descended from the biblical Israelites. Some of the movements adherents espouse virulently anti-Semitic views.

The suspect in the Monsey attack also referenced the movement in his journal, according to a criminal complaint, as well as Hitler and the Nazis.

The anti-Semitic attacks in Brooklyn, meanwhile, have occurred in neighborhoods, like Crown Heights, where there has been historical tension between black and Jewish residents. That peaked during the 1991 Crown Heights neighborhood after a car in a motorcade carrying Chabad Grand Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson struck two black children, killing one and severely injuring the second. Some black youths responded by attacking Jews in the area, killing a young Orthodox man, as well as looting and damaging Jewish homes.

NYPD data obtained by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency show that 60% of people arrested in New York City from January through September of 2019 for committing anti-Jewish crimes were white. A third of those arrested were black.The NYPD data does not break down incidents by type of crime, such as vandalism, which represents the vast majority of incidents, as opposed to to assault. JTA has made multiple requests to the NYPD to get a breakdown of the type of incident but has not received the data.

While police data is not available, judging from news reports and other sources it appears that many but not all of the assailants in the incidents of harassment and assault in Brooklyn have been African-American.

Eric Ward, an anti-racist activist who is African-American and frequently speaks about the danger of anti-Semitism, says Orthodox Jews in Brooklyn live in many of the same neighborhoods as black people and are sometimes turned into scapegoats for racism and other societal challenges.

Black people arent in poverty and racial segregation because of the ultra-Orthodox community, he said. They are facing those things because of longstanding white supremacy in New York, in terms of policies and in terms of values. The problem is that there is a segment of black population who believes that Jews can be targeted out of those frustrations, and when bad interactions happen between the ultra-Orthodox and the black community it reinforces to that smaller part of the black population that their anti-Semitic beliefs are justified.

Earlier this year, the ADL found that 2018 saw the third-highest number of anti-Semitic incidents since 1979.

Were seeing in the United States a general rise in the acceptance of anti-Semitism, and it is playing out across the political spectrum and across society, Ward added.

Some of the assaults may be copycat attacks. Michael Masters, the director of the Secure Community Network, a group that coordinates safety issues for the Jewish community, said there is always a concern of social contagion, in which individuals may be influenced by the views of prior attackers such as the Black Hebrew Israelites to also commit assaults.

I think that we have to recognize that there is not a monolithic individual or group that dislikes us, he said, noting that threats come from both domestic and international terror groups as well as those inspired by Islamist extremism, white supremacy and the Black Hebrew Israelite movement.

Black and Jewish community leaders have attempted to bridge divides between the two groups with mixed success. Pastor Gil Monrose, who leads Mt. Zion Church of God 7th Day, a predominantly black church in Brooklyn, has worked for years to bridge ties between black and Jewish Brooklynites, and has organized Israel trips for Brooklyn pastors. He draws comfort from the longstanding relationships he has been able to build.

We are confident that we will get through this together, said Monrose, who serves as the director of faith-based and clergy initiatives for Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, because were working on these types of issues for many, many years together.

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He told police he was stabbed for being Jewish. Then his Apple Watch caught him in a lie. – Detroit Free Press

Posted By on January 3, 2020

Sean Samitt mug shot from Dec. 20, 2019(Photo: West Bloomfield Township Police)

A 26-year-old man faked his own stabbing at the West Bloomfield synagogue where he worked and then reported he was attacked because of his Jewish faith, authoritiessay.

Now Sean Samittis facing a felony charge of filing a false police report, according to West Bloomfield Police.

Police said Samitt's Apple Watch helped them solve the case.

Samitt was arrestedon Dec. 20 and arraigned the same daybefore Magistrate Julie Nelson-Klein atthe 48th District Court in Oakland Country on one count of falsely reporting a felony, a crime punishable up to four years. According to authorities, his $7,500 bond was posted by Samitt's mother.

On Thursday, he appeared at the48th District Courtfor a probable cause hearing. He is expected to appear for the preliminary examination on Jan. 14.

Samit reported he was attacked andstabbed in the abdomenby an unknown man in the parking lot at the Temple Kol Ami, where he worked as a cantorial soloist, which is amusic director.

He reported the crime on Dec. 15, telling police that he was confronted about 7 p.m.as he was leaving work bya white male in his late 30s to early 40s.

Samitt said that the alleged attackershouted, "You Jews!" and said "too many immigrants are here," according to the police report obtained by the Free Press through a Freedom of Information Act request.

Samitt told officers that he was punched in the chest and abdomen during the encounter andhe feared for his life, the report said. He said he escaped by kneeing the attacker in the groin and pushing him away, then drove himself to Henry Ford Hospital where a security staffcalled local authorities about the attack.

Police said officers searched the parking lot for a weapon, blood or any other piece of evidence but came back negative.K-9 officers were not able to locate a scent on the suspect.

While searching Temple Kol Ami, detectives found bloody tissues in Samitt's office andthe men's bathroom. They also located a knife in the kitchen area with blood on the tip of the blade.

Suspecting Samitt's wounds were self-inflicted, officers obtained surveillance footage from a house across the street and confirmed that no assault took place.

More: Man dies, woman in serious condition after stabbing in Detroit

More: 2 women escape attempted kidnapping at Detroit coney island, 1 shot

Police said Samitt admitted to making up the attack and said he lost consciousness and accidentally stabbed himself while he was washing dishes at the synagogue. He said he lied about the incident because he was being harassed at work about his medical condition.

The second story also turned out to be fabricated, police said.

Officers were able to obtain information from Samitt's cellphone health application that was synced to his Apple Watch, confirming he did not lose consciousness.Samitt then admitted to intentionally stabbing himself.

"I put the knife in to see like just how deep it went because I wasn't really sure then in the process I probably dug it in a little more."

He told police he wanted out of his contract with Temple Kol Ami and this was his way out.

Temple Kol AmiExecutive Director Cheryl Friendman told police that Samitt had been an employee for about 1 years.

A member of the synagogue told the Free Press, "Sean resigned on Dec. 16 and there is no other information."

When contacted by the Free Press, theJewish Community Center of Metro Detroit would only say it takes these matters very seriously.

"We are so very grateful for our law enforcement in Detroit who takes every hate crime seriously," Assistant Executive Director Heidi Budaj said. "We are fortunate to have a partnership with West Bloomfield Township Police who acts to keep our community safe."

The Anti Defamation League states on itswebsitethata false case "could have a detrimental impact on those actual victims of bias crimes who seek justice in the future."

"Bias crimes are message crimes. They are intended to intimidate the victim and the victims entire community, leaving them feeling fearful, isolated and vulnerable."

A false case "could have a detrimental impact on those actual victims of bias crimes who seek justice in the future."

Samitt's false report occurred in the same month of two major anti-Semitic attacks in the U.S.In Jersey City, New Jersey, ashooting at a kosher marketon Dec. 10 left six dead including two Hasidic Jews. The citys mayor, Steven Fulop,said on Twitterthat officialsbelieved that the gunmen had targeted the location they attacked.

Then last Saturday in Monsey, New York, five people were stabbedat the home of a rabbi during a Hanukkah party.

More: Armed man inside West Bloomfield Hampton Inn surrenders to police

More: Police: Mich. Taco Bell manager trashes restaurant after called back to work

Contact Bisma Parvez: 313-222-6420or bparvez@gannett.comFollow her on Twitter @bismapar

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He told police he was stabbed for being Jewish. Then his Apple Watch caught him in a lie. - Detroit Free Press

In praise of the difficult Jew – The Outline

Posted By on January 3, 2020

One of the many small pleasures I took from Uncut Gems comes fairly early in the movie, when Adam Sandler receives delivery of the movies titular stone, a large black opal harvested from Ethiopia. Sandler, who plays Howard Ratner, the perpetually overleveraged Manhattan diamond dealer who dominates nearly every frame of the 135-minute movie, has hinted at the stones existence and its accompanying financial windfall since we first encountered him on a colonoscopy table at the movies open. As Howard holds the stone, mesmerized, he blurts out: Holy shit, Im gonna come.

Its a line that puts Ratner in a pantheon of ribald Jewish heroes, ranging from Alexander Portnoy (New Jersey liver masturbator) to Duddy Kravitz (horny Montreal geek). Ratner is the latest in a long line of sympathetic Jewish pervs and idiots, men whose fundamentally crude nature can overpower nearly all other parts of their personality. Its a key part of what makes Adam Sandler so well-suited to the role, given the gross-out nature of his oeuvre, and his portrayal revives a variety of Jewish stereotype thats gotten, to my mind, an excessively bad rap.

The basic plot elements of Uncut Gems are thus: Around the time of Passover in the spring of 2012, the gambling addict Howard places a series of large bets on the performance of Kevin Garnett and the Boston Celtics against the Philadelphia 76ers in the NBA playoffs. After bragging to Garnett (and, by extension, the audience) about how hes acquired the valuable black opal, Garnett senses a personal connection with the stone and, failing to buy it outright, succeeds in convincing Howard to let him borrow it. Howard relents, but not before insisting that Garnett give him his championship ring as collateral. But as the viewer knows by now, Howard owes money to various people, not the least of whom is an aggrieved Armenian named Arno whom we eventually learn is Howards brother-in-law.

Everything about Howards life is deliriously tacky. He wears transition lenses on Cartier frames, and his youngest sons bedroom in his suburban Long Island home features a glowing race car bed. He exclusively calls Garnett KG, like I did when I played Jewish Community Center basketball at age 17, except that hes doing it to Garnetts face, before reminding him to @ me at Howie Bling on Instagram. There are basically three women in Howards life whom we know of, two of whom (wife, daughter) see him as an embarrassing slug, and the other of which is his mistress. Howard steals from his ostensible friends and embarasses them in public, seemingly just as he prepares to ask them for another favor.

This is the kind of Jewish depiction that used to get Jewish artists trouble. Philip Roth wrote short stories about Jews so unlikeable and stubborn they prompted rabbis to urge the Anti-Defamation League to respond; Budd Schulbergs What Makes Sammy Run? produced the same kind of squirming when it was published in 1941. Wondering is it good for the Jews? is its own Jewish tradition, and before the release of this movie, there were similar moralizing murmurs, suggesting that recent increases in antisemitic violence and fervor might not make this the right time to release a movie about such a repugnant Jew.

Not every Jew depicted in art has to be a saint, or even attempt to be one, and the vague possibility of stimulating a few genuine antisemites has never been a good reason for Jewish artists to stop making good art. To me, the over-ambitious Jewish perv is a welcome departure from Hollywoods current favorite dramatic mode of depicting Jews on screen, the sexed-up and violent Israeli. 2019s Red Sea Diving Resort, and 2018s Operation Finale and 7 Days in Entebbe all feature variations on a similar theme, terrifically strong and beautiful Israelis seeking absolution or revenge for past crimes against the Jewish people and then achieving it. Howie Ratner, on the other hand, is bound for tragedy from the very moment we meet him in the office of his proctologist, Dr. Blauman.

Josh and Benny Safdie, the brother duo who directed Uncut Gems, described Howard in an interview with Slate as someone who is an accumulation of all the negative behaviors associated with Jewish materialistic desires, which were themselves a consequence of stereotypes that were forced onto us in the Middle Ages. What they sought to figure out with Howard, Josh Safdie said, was what are the ill effects of overcompensation?

The present moment for American Jews is, generally speaking, one of great anxiety. Tragedies like a stabbing of Orthodox Jews in Monsey, New York this past weekend, or the mass shooting at a synagogue in Pittsburgh last year, have provoked a sensible amount of panic about Jewish well-being. By and large, however, American Jews have it good. They dont describe themselves as having experienced much antisemitism personally, and they are economically secure at higher rates than the general population. Its those conditions that allow the Safdies to explore murkier moral territory, rather than confine themselves to the pressures of positive representation.

On my first watch of Uncut Gems, the thing I kept going back to was something that Leonard Cohen said in the 1960s, lamenting the absence of God in the midst of materialistic, assimilated Western Jewry, and going on to accurately predict what would happen to such thoroughly Americanized and secularized Jews: our monuments will be new parochial schools, and the State of Israel, and a militant Anti-Defamation League, and maybe even a Jewish President of the United States we must face that despair that none of us dares articulate, that we no longer feel we are holy.Although it was a treat to see so much of my suburban Jewish childhoods religious and communal ritual rendered so vividly, its what the movie says about the absence of holiness in Jewish life that I am fixated with. Howard tells Garnett that they say you can see the whole universe in opals, which is as spiritual as he ever seems to let himself get, as he plans to sell his newly acquired keyhole to the universe as quickly as he can. After all, this is how Howard wins, as the meme goes, by increasingly upping his bet, raising the stakes past every possible limit until its too late.

In the theater, I was ecstatic to see such a beautiful fuck-up like Howard. Though the contradictions of American Jewish life, of successful assimilation and spiritual vacuity, are hardly new terrain for Jewish artists, the Safdies put a novel, anxiety-inducing spin on a fairly traditional kind of story. And when held up against the prevailing brainless model of how to depict a Jew in action on a movie screen, it does offer something particularly fresh: a Jew totally fucking up on his own terms, with no one else to blame for what went wrong.

Noah Kulwin is the Future Editor of The Outline.

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In praise of the difficult Jew - The Outline

Letters: It’s up to Louisiana residents to speak against antisemitism and hate – The Advocate

Posted By on January 3, 2020

The Jewish community has been knocked on its heels from the relentless string of antisemitic assaults we have seen in the New York/New Jersey area over the past weeks. From the tragic, hate-filled attack on the Kosher Supermarket in Jersey City, to the 10 antisemitic incidents that took place during the eight days of Hanukkah, culminating in the horrific attack in Monsey, leaving five Jews injured, two fighting for their lives, we have witnessed a serious and violent surge of antisemitism.

At the Anit-Defamation League, we have tracked the rising scourge of antisemitism through our Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents, which shows 2017 and 2018 as having two of the three highest numbers of antisemitic incidents recorded since the audit began in 1979. While we do not have final numbers for 2019, we will likely see this trend continued.

The solution to confronting and combating rising antisemitism comes not just from within the Jewish population, but from the community as a whole. We all have a role to play in standing up to antisemitism, hate and bigotry, no matter what form it takes.

It is also critically important that we stop looking at hate through polarized lenses. We need an open an honest discussion about how bias and hate are manifesting across the societal spectrum. When we realize that no one group is to blame from rising antisemitism and hate, we can come together as an entire community to address the underlying problems: divisive rhetoric, demonization, social media polarization and amplification of marginal voices, and a normalizing of bias and violence against vulnerable groups.

As the barrage of anger and hate leave everyone feeling vulnerable, it becomes all to easy to retreat onto islands of uniformity or similarity. These islands increase vulnerability rather than strength. We must be there for one another and focus on building bridges of support between communities and islands rather than retreat away from one another.

We will get through this time of rising antisemitism and hate if we band together. If our elected leaders call out hate with a single voice, rather than as a political tool. Enough is enough. It is time for our community to come together and stand against antisemitism and all forms of hate. Let solidarity and ally-ship be our defining call to action in 2020.

Aaron Ahlquist

Anti-Defamation League regional director

New Orleans

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Letters: It's up to Louisiana residents to speak against antisemitism and hate - The Advocate

New Year’s resolutions and traditions | Street Smarts – News-Press Now

Posted By on January 2, 2020

New Years Day finds us with a lot of new people walking around. Even the people we know are strangers today. We may appear strange even to ourselves today.

New Years Day is the day where you put all those resolutions to work in becoming a newer better you. You begin the work of crafting a better version of yourself or a whole nother person through exercise, diet and frugality.

This new person may last a few days or a lifetime, depending on willpower and gumption.

According to a study conducted by the University of Scranton, only 8% of people achieve their New Years goals while 80% fail to keep their New Years resolutions.

Roughly 55% of New Years resolutions are health-related, like exercising more, eating healthier and reducing financial debt. Unrealistic expectations are a big reason these resolutions fail.

Dr. Carly Moores, an associate lecturer and registered nutritionist at Flinders University, advises against trying to make too many changes at once. Thats why most resolutions fail.

Start with small changes and continue to build on these or try to tackle one change at a time, Moore said in a New York Post story. Try to set yourself goals, reflect on your progress towards these, acknowledge that change can be hard and results wont happen overnight, or even in the first two weeks of the new year.

According to a USA Today/Suffolk University poll, 80% of Americans surveyed felt their lives would be better in 2020. And that number stretched across demographic lines. But the optimistic dipped somewhat when asked about the nation as a whole. Overall, 54% predicted better times while 34% predicted worse with 12% unsure. A poll of 1,000 registered voters reached by landline and cellphone from Dec. 10 to 14 participated in the poll.

Personally, I stopped attempting New Years resolutions years ago. I would go out the night before on New Years Eve and break all the resolutions either then or the next day.

But Im always optimistic. Maybe its because we still honor that old family tradition from the south of eating black-eyed peas with ham hocks, greens and cornbread for good luck in the coming year. On New Years morning, the smell of black-eyed peas and ham hocks cooking in the Crock-Pot and waiting on the college bowl games sets my year off right.

Eating black-eyed peas, greens and cornbread on New Years Day is actually a southern tradition. No one knows how it began, but some say it was after the Civil War when Union troops took all the Confederate food supplies aside from the black-eyed peas.

Another belief is that it originated with Sephardic Jews who settled in Georgia in the 18th century and brought that tradition with them to America.

Thats a more relaxing and tasty way to bring in the New Year. New Years customs in other countries seem much more dubious.

For example in Denmark, residents toss broken dishes at their neighbors houses for good luck. Here in America youd start the new year in jail after that celebration.

In Spain, the tradition is to eat 12 grapes at midnight one grape for each stroke of midnight in the hopes that will ensure the next 12 months will be filled with luck and good fortune.

In China, New Years Day is a day to clean your house from top to bottom to clear out last years residue. To ensure the good luck doesnt get swept out with the bad, youre supposed to sweep the house inward, collect the dirt and throw it out the back door instead of the front door to avoid sweeping away any lingering fortune.

In Scotland, the first person who crosses your homes threshold in the new year is required to bring you an assortment of symbolic gifts such as a coin, salt, bread, coal and whiskey. For me, the scotch would be enough.

Ill just settle for being a better person than I was last year in my relationship with others and in life.

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The New York Times ran a disturbing op-ed. But the backlash misses the mark – The Guardian

Posted By on January 2, 2020

Just three days before the dawn of the third decade of the 21st century, one of the worlds top newspapers published a column by one if its full-time opinion contributors arguing that one ethnic group is inherently more intelligent than others. In this case, the superior ethnic group in question was, unsurprisingly, that to which the writer belongs.

I wish I were making this up. I cant believe I had to type those words.

As the novelist Gary Shteyngart wrote on Twitter: Woke up to a New York Times op-ed about one group being intellectually superior to others and citing a paper co-authored by a white supremacist as evidence.

The op-ed in question, by columnist Bret Stephens, was called The Secrets of Jewish Genius, and the white supremacist Stephens invoked from ignorance, one hopes, rather than malice was the late anthropologist Henry Harpending. Harpendings work has been repeatedly and spectacularly debunked by far better scientists, and most recently rejected as unfounded in March 2018 on the pages of the New York Times itself. Its too much to expect Stephens to read the newspaper for which he works, I suppose.

Within a day, the Times appended an editors note to Stephens piece, explaining that it removed the reference to Harpendings paper and to Ashkenazi Jews in general. The bizarre note also denied the column said what it said: that Ashkenazi Jews are inherently superior to others, including Sephardic Jews.

Sadly, the morning the column debuted, Twitter commentary lurched from biting and witty takedowns of Stephens to calls to boycott the New York Times over the foolishness of one of dozens of contributors to but one section of a massive multimedia news and entertainment company. (Disclosure: I occasionally write op-eds for the Times.)

Although the harsh criticism of Stephens and the Times was completely warranted, in other respects the response especially the calls for boycott was misguided. Such posing not only simulates real political action, it displaces it, satiating ones need to feel like one has done something. This is an example of a non-boycott boycott, narcissistic stunts we have seen emerge with targets like Starbucks and Facebook in recent years.

Before anyone says What about South Africa? or What about the lunch counters during the civil rights movement?, yes, specific, targeted, organized boycotts that generate real financial harm and demand serious sacrifice or risk by participants can effect change. But none of that is happening with these hashtag eruptions.

Potentially effective boycotts are focused, local, disciplined, and have specific, articulated goals and demands. They must bring public shame and measurable financial harm to a firm. A few people tweeting Im going to stop subscribing to the Times because of Bret Stephens does not rise to the level of successful social movements or tactics.

If one believes, in the absence of evidence, that a few dozen Twitter users canceling subscriptions to the New York Times would affect decisions at the Times, one does not understand the incentives embedded in the attention economy. The Times, like most other globally available web publications (including Breitbart and any number of white supremacist sites), benefits from umbrage as much as applause.

Futility aside, to threaten to withhold revenue to any respectable news publication at this moment in history is hard to justify. We need quality journalism, expensive investigations, and bright commentary more than ever. The Times, for all its flaws, overwhelmingly delivers all of these things. The Times has serious lapses in judgment and reporting like any publication, including The Guardian but we should not wish for a day when The New York Times does not exist.

A fake boycott of the Times would be meaningless at best, counterproductive at worst. What can we do about the Bret Stephens problem, then? The only reasonable and potentially effective response is to push at what the leaders of the Times care about as much as their revenue: their reputation for seriousness and responsibility. Shaming the Times works better than threatening the Times.

You cant put essential history like the #1619Project and bullshit race science under the same masthead without giving credibility to the lie, entrepreneur and critic Anil Dash wrote on Twitter. The stakes are higher than ever with daily concerted attacks on the idea of accurate information itself, and the NYT is failing at this.

James Bennet, the editor of the opinion pages of the Times, does not have to invoke Bret Stephens promotion of eugenicist garbage to fire him, as moral a decision as that might be. Bennet could just fire Stephens for being a weak thinker and a weaker writer. Bennet could hire so much better and has. There is a vast surplus of underemployed smart and talented writers in the world. Bennet has managed to hire some of the best of them, along with some remarkably shallow and lazy writers, like Stephens.

In an attention economy, we should promote and publicize work that undermines racism rather than promotes it. This is one of the few decent ways to respond to any publication that publishes mostly essential work along with occasional horrifying content. Every publication tracks its reader engagement. Signalling that quality work can generate attention is our only reasonable response to a perverse media economy and poor editorial judgement.

Shteyngart concluded his tweet about Stephens with a sentiment we should all hold close to our consciousness. The 2020s will be the most difficult decade in modern history. I hope we can face it with laughter and love.

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The New York Times ran a disturbing op-ed. But the backlash misses the mark - The Guardian

Putting Modernism All Over the Map – Jacobin magazine

Posted By on January 2, 2020

Today, the word Bauhaus evokes clearheaded, functional design with a vague whiff of revolutionary modernism. In countless ways, the relatively short-lived school gave form to the modern experience from the shapes of the letters we read to the arrangement of the cities we inhabit.

A straight line of influence, as the architect and critic Mark Wigley has argued, connects the Bauhaus to the smartphones that now mediate and organize many of our lives. Wigley did not mean this as a compliment. While an iPhones minimalist, intuitive form gives an impression of deadpan honesty, that same form can help obscure social realities: mining, sweatshops, limitless surveillance. Such contradictions were just as characteristic of the Bauhaus as its clean lines and primary colors.

The Bauhaus had three periods: first, it was a multidisciplinary school of art and craft in Weimar (191925), then a production-oriented Institute of Design in Dessau (192532); finally it was a private architecture school in Berlin (193233). During the Bauhauss brief and turbulent lifespan, interpretations of the institutions politics varied widely. The eclectically progressive directorship of Walter Gropius in Weimar gave way to a more politically neutral Dessau period.

During the final, crisis-wracked years in Dessau and then Berlin, the Bauhaus swung from an overt engagement with Marxism under Hannes Meyer to a coexistence with National Socialism, under the direction of Mies van der Rohe. But even when the Bauhaus was most compliant to right-wing pressure, its approach to design met passionate resistance. Flat roofs, bare industrial materials, and sans-serif typography were read by nationalist commentators as irredeemably internationalist and un-German or, in the more extreme version of the critique, inherently Jewish and cultural-Bolshevist.

The Bauhaus was chased across three cities by a metastasizing fascist movement, and the last options for negotiation evaporated in spring 1933 when the Gestapo occupied the Berlin campus and shut down the school. On the centenary of its founding, the legend of the Bauhaus remains overshadowed by the circumstances of its closure. Due to its long struggle with threats from the Right, the school is often remembered as a left-leaning and utopian project which was snuffed out by an enemy that was always external. But a closer look at the political alignments of Bauhaus professors and students reveals a much messier picture itself characteristic of the ideological chaos that reigned during Germanys interwar period.

In the fragile early years of the Weimar Republic, nationalist and proto-fascist sentiment was on the rise. Rightists blamed the Social Democrats for Germanys humiliation in World War I. This resentment blended into paranoid fantasies about communists, Jews, and foreigners conspiring to stab the nation in the back.

Although the Bauhaus would ultimately become synonymous with rootless internationalism in Germany, the dominant atmosphere of nationalism played an important role in the schools founding. When the Belgian architect Henry van de Velde, director of the Weimar School of Arts and Crafts, was forced to resign amid mounting anti-foreigner sentiment in 1914, he named the young architect Walter Gropius as a potential successor. Weimars Academy of Fine Art also had their eye on Gropius, who had recently distinguished himself with the Fagus shoe-last factory in Alfeld the first building with a multi-story curtain wall of glass supported by a subtle grid of steel.

While a soldier at the front, Gropius drew up plans for a new type of school, and he received approval for a merger of the two institutions in 1919. Typical of the Bauhauss vaunted minimalism, its name was whittled out of the much more cumbersome State School of Building [Staatliches Bauhuas] in Weimar, United former Grand-Ducal Saxon Academy of Fine Art and former Grand-Ducal Saxon School of Arts and Crafts.

The orientation of the Weimar Bauhaus was initially more artisanal than futurist. Gropius was heavily influenced by the English Arts and Crafts movement, an early confrontation with industrial capitalism that called for the reform of everyday objects and spaces. The cover of the Bauhauss founding manifesto carried Lyonel Feiningers woodcut of a cathedral rising into a turbulent sky, beset by shafts of light.

In the writings of Arts and Crafts theorists like John Ruskin and William Morris, the Gothic cathedral had represented the integration of art, labor, and life in the pre-capitalist world. Bauhaus pedagogy reimagined the structure the medieval guilds: apprentices worked under a master of form (normally a painter) and a master of craft (a skilled artisan). Students who passed the initial coursework became journeymen eligible for waged work in the workshops. Many later became young masters junior teachers themselves.

The Bauhaus Manifesto promised to raze the arrogant wall between artist and artisan through a dual education that would form a new type of producer. This mission was undoubtedly successful. Bauhaus students would go on to transform the profession of architecture and to occupy wholly new job descriptions in the furniture, textile, and printing industries.

It is our duty, Gropius wrote, to enlist powerful, famous personalities wherever possible, even if we do not yet fully understand them.

The first masters of form were drawn from an international cohort of expressionist painters. The US-born Feininger was hired in 1919 and Paul Klee, from Switzerland, followed in 1920. Wassily Kandinsky joined the following year. Already a renowned painter and theorist, Kandinsky had recently left the USSR after his idiosyncratic, spiritual approach came into conflict with the materialist emphases of post-revolutionary art.

But it was the Swiss artist Johannes Itten who provided the strongest initial influence on Bauhaus pedagogy.

Among a cast of characters that all upheld eccentric theories on the magic of form, Itten gives the strongest impression of the Weimar Bauhaus as a kind of avant-garde Hogwarts. His classes opened with movement and breathing exercises, and his teaching ranged across color theory, art history, and mysticism all aimed at developing an individualized sensitivity to materials.

He kept his head shaved and wore a monk-like outfit; his most devoted students wore matching robes. At Ittens request, the Bauhaus canteen expressly served what one visitor described as uncooked mush in garlic. A disciple of the Mazdaznan sect, Itten practiced strict sexual and dietary discipline, and he was nearly successful in making his spiritual practice an official component of the schools pedagogy.

According to former Bauhaus Archive curator Magdalena Droste, Itten was not the only master in whom a nostalgia for individual artistic production blended with ideas of natural racial hierarchy: in one essay, he depicted the white race as the pinnacle of human civilization. The Bauhaus, argues Droste, was constituted in a volatile matrix of conflicting ideas.

At the beginning, German nationalists and anti-Jewish students tried to gain the upper hand. Messianic visionarieswere allowed to speak and Itten and Muche to canvass for their vegetarian Mazdaznan beliefs. Anarchist, socialist, conservationist, life-reformist, and esoteric schools of thought all found support at the Bauhaus.

Admission to the Bauhaus reflected the Weimar governments progress on equality of access to education and training. But while the first class of students boasted an unprecedented gender parity, all of the women were shunted into a weaving workshop later the home of the Bauhauss only female master, Gunta Stlzl.

As Droste points out, this gendered division of labor proved to be one of the Bauhauss deepest ironies. Textile production integrated long traditions of craft knowledge with a rigorously mechanized work process. Far from a marginal adjunct to the real, male world of architecture, the activity of the weaving workshop would establish a clear model for the industrial focus of the Dessau period.

Anni Alberss striking textile designs, for example, were also technically innovative: one fabric, utilizing unfamiliar materials that included cellophane, was engineered to reflect light on one side while absorbing sound on the other.

Gropius publicly affirmed gender equality, but privately commented that the masters should not undertake unnecessary experiments with the fairer sex. The Bauhaus would never produce a woman architect. In the broader area of student life, however, access was more even. Dance, theater, and sports were co-ed. Sexual morality was generally relaxed and bohemian.

As Elizabeth Otto documents in her recent book Haunted Bauhaus: Occult Spirituality, Gender Fluidity, Queer Identities, and Radical Politics, feminist critique and queer expression were also common, though these currents mostly flew under the radar of official production. Right-wing pressure on the schools existence was fueled, in part, by provincial shock at the non-traditional lifestyles of the students. Fittingly, many of these objections would crystallize around a single piece of furniture.

In 1922, apprentice Peter Keler designed a baby cradle using the elementary forms that had become de rigueur in Kandinskys course. A suspended platform on rockers was formed from three interlocking shapes: a yellow triangle, a red rectangle, and a blue circle. When the crib appeared in the Bauhauss inaugural exhibition of 1923, a story began to spread that it had been produced as a gift to a pregnant student.

A contemporaneous newspaper editorial seized upon this apparent celebration of a fallen girl as evidence for the destructive methods of teaching and education practiced at the Bauhaus. Others contended that the cradles heavy-handed geometry constituted child abuse in and of itself.

Aside from their origins in Bauhaus coursework, the basic shapes of Kelers cradle also reflected a turn toward design for mass production. The 1923 exhibition opened at the height of Germanys postwar inflation, and many of its displays were explicitly framed as solutions to housing and materials shortages.

The schools own finances, meanwhile, were in dire shape: the exhibition itself had been the stipulation of a loan agreement. Bauhaus theatre director Oskar Schlemmer remarked in 1921 that the schools dominant spirit was split between Indian cult and Americanism the latter a shorthand for a fascination with assembly lines and automation.

As the schools focus moved away from the individual artwork and toward partnerships with industry, Itten prepared to resign. His courses were divided between the young master Josef Albers and the Hungarian artist Lszl Moholy-Nagy, newly hired to run the metals workshop. Gropius had, in the meantime, revised the schools motto: A Unity of Art and Handicraft became Art and Technology a New Unity.

With a rightist electoral victory in 1924, the Bauhauss funding was immediately slashed in half. In response, the masters preemptively closed the school and weighed their options.

Among many offers for a new location, Gropius chose the manufacturing center of Dessau, home to large factories for IG Farben and the engineering firm Junkers. Just as importantly, Social Democrats were in power in Dessau, and they were receptive to Gropiuss plans for standardized developments of workers housing.

The Dessau campus itself would become a proving ground for the Bauhaus approach to space. Discrete structures for workshops, studios, apartments, and offices were linked by a floor that gathered collective activities: meals, performances, and intricately-conceptualized parties. The structures literalized pedagogical ideals of transparency, openness, and collaboration.

Observing the enormous curtain wall that ran the length of the workshop wing, the art theorist Rudolf Arnheim marveled that every object displays its construction, no screw is concealed, no decorative chasing hides the material being worked. It is very tempting to see this architectural honesty as moral, too.

Bauhaus pedagogy and production underwent several important transformations in Dessau. Bauhaus GmbH was founded as a limited company to market the products of the workshops, which were increasingly pitched as industrial prototypes: Marcel Breuers tubular steel chairs, for example, were adapted for airplane seating at the Junkers aviation factory.

Under young master Herbert Bayers leadership, the printing workshop increasingly left behind the art print and embraced typesetting and advertising design; it soon became a kind of public relations office for the school and its wares. The guild-era categories were mostly dropped: masters and apprentices were now referred to as professors and students. Finally, though the Bauhaus was planned with building Bau at its center, Gropius was only able to start an architecture department in 1927.

Years of political wrangling had delayed many of Gropiuss plans, but the institution seemed to be on secure footing when he abruptly announced his departure in 1928. Gropius offered the directorship to Hannes Meyer, hired the previous year to head the architecture department. While still a professor, Meyer had lampooned the schools bogus-advertising-theatricalness; after assuming the directorship, he announced a new functional-collectivist-constructive direction. The Bauhaus would now be oriented toward necessities rather than luxuries, centering the needs of the proletariat. Design problems would take their cues less from formal exercises directed by painters, and more from current research in the natural and social sciences.

Departing from the official position that the Bauhaus was engaged in objective, entirely non-political cultural work, Meyer was open in his communist sympathies. He rearranged the class schedule to more closely approximate an industrial workday and happily reported that increased cohesion and cooperation during his directorship signaled an undeniable degree of proletarianization. Under Meyer, a growing body of communist students came to understand the Marxist worldview as the only consistent outcome of a Bauhaus education.

Trade union facilities and workers housing completed under Meyer, after all, had clear precedents in projects initiated by Gropius who once defended his own generous masters quarters by saying, what we today consider luxury will tomorrow be the norm! In the background, however, Gropius, Kandinsky, and Josef Albers were already plotting Meyers dismissal.

Meyers political sympathies naturally attracted controversy. Bauhaus students were overheard singing communist songs at a 1930 party, which produced a feeding frenzy in the right-wing press. Later, it came to light that Meyer and a Bauhaus student group had each donated money to a Communist-led miners strike.

Attempting to stem the formation of a fully-fledged communist cell at the Bauhaus, the masters dismissed twenty students in a move that made Meyer himself a target of student anger. Nonetheless, the liberal mayor of Dessau encouraged by Gropius and the old masters (with the exception of Klee) demanded his resignation.

A few months later, Meyer boarded a train to Moscow with several of his closest students. Stalinist policy on design and architecture, however, would prove hostile to Meyer, who rounded out the rest of his career as a city planner in Mexico. Over the next decades, Gropius and the remaining masters would construct a canonical version of the Bauhaus that erased Meyers contributions altogether.

Gropius had meanwhile contacted the talented and rigorously apolitical architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. Though Miess Bauhaus directorship is mostly remembered for his series of increasingly desperate efforts to keep the school open, his first order of business was in fact to shut it down. Bauhaus students had called a strike in response to the lack of transparency in Meyers ousting, and a Communist student paper ran a searing indictment of Gropius and Kandinskys roles in particular.

When the masters demanded the names of its authors, they were met with silence. Backed by the mayor, van der Rohe responded with police raids that ejected a total of twenty students.

The first to go were five of Meyers remaining foreign students, who were accompanied to the train station in a procession of red banners. The next month, students were ordered to apply for readmission. This involved signing a new constitution that affirmed a more purely aesthetic program of study, ended shared governance by students and professors, and even banned smoking. In an attempt to reduce expenditures, Mies increased tuition even as he slashed support for the workshops that provided advanced students with a wage.

The onset of a global depression in 1929, followed by a substantial electoral breakthrough for the Nazis in 1930, signaled the beginning of the end for the Dessau Bauhaus. Local National Socialists circulated a flyer ahead of the 1931 elections demanding an immediate cessation of its funding; the cover of a protest against frivolous spending was belied by an accompanying demand to immediately destroy Gropiuss campus. (The Nazis would later convert it into a home economics school for women.)

During the last days in Weimar, Social-Democratic and Communist politicians had been united in attempts to defend the school. But this time, the Social Democrats abstained in the final vote. Mies rented a telephone factory in Berlin, and the Bauhaus began its final incarnation as a small private school.

On his arrival in 1931, one Bauhaus student noted that only a handful of his classmates did not identify as communists; a year later in Berlin, he wrote that the balance had completely flipped. By 1933, the anticommunist contingent included a number of Nazi Party members, including the professor Friedrich Engemann. None of this stopped the Gestapo from locking the school down for three months.

Students pleaded to Joseph Goebbels in personal letters; among Miess many entreaties, he argued that the Bauhauss closure would affect people with almost exclusively nationalist beliefs. In the end, the state canceled its obligations to pay professor salaries and presented a list of demands including the dismissal of Kandinsky that van der Rohe found unworkable. With an informal vote and a champagne toast, the Bauhaus closed for good on July 19, 1933.

The Bauhaus inspires enduring interest due in part to the unbelievable personal trajectories of many of its alumni. Bauhaus professors and students with Jewish heritage or leftist affiliations had begun to emigrate even before the schools closure, but its final end accelerated the globalization of modernist forms and concepts.

In the US, Anni and Josef Albers found a home at North Carolinas Black Mountain College, where they taught alongside John Cage and Willem de Kooning. Moholy-Nagy continued his work at Chicagos New Bauhaus later the IIT Institute of Design with support of the industrialist (and ardent Bauhaus fan) Walter Paepke.

In Ulm, West Germany, Bauhaus alumnus Max Bill helped to establish another successor institution in 1953. Co-founder Inge Aicher-Scholl dedicated the Ulm School of Design to the memory of her siblings Sophie and Hans Scholl, executed ten years earlier for their work with the resistance group White Rose.

There were many who never got out of Germany. Textile workshop alumni Otti Berger and Hedwig Dlberg-Arnheim, metalworker Lotte Mentzel, and book artist Friedl Dicker-Brandeis all died at Auschwitz where crematoriums and gas chambers had been designed by their classmate, Waffen-SS officer Fritz Ertl.

In a perverse betrayal of his education at Dessau, Ertl pleaded ignorance of the buildings precise function in a 1972 trial and was acquitted. Outside of Germany, graphic designer Moses Bahelfer forged identification papers for the French Resistance, while photographer Irena Blhov published underground newspapers from Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia. These extremes paint a picture of the late Bauhaus as a microcosm of broader social forces that were then tearing the world order to shreds.

The careers of three prominent Bauhaus masters awkwardly straddled these extremes.

One of the most controversial projects of the Weimar period was the Monument to the March Dead a memorial to workers killed in the 1920 Kapp Putsch, an attempted right-wing coup. Commissioned by the local trade union syndicate, the jagged concrete bolt was a project of Gropiuss architecture studio, built with the assistance of the Bauhaus workshops.

By 1933, Gropius was compiling an exhaustive proposal for the German Reichsbank, which married the open geometry of the Dessau complex to the monumental style increasingly favored by the Nazis. Though he was a finalist for the project, Gropius could see the writing on the wall; it would soon be a matter of Nazi policy to denounce anything connected to the Bauhaus as a degenerate, Jewish-Bolshevik conspiracy.

Gropius quietly emigrated to the UK in 1934 but, as Jonathan Petropoulos documents in Artists Under Hitler: Collaboration and Survival in Nazi Germany, he still hesitated to burn bridges. In 1936, he requested permission from Goebbels to accept a position at Harvard, in a letter that argued for the propaganda value of his teaching work in the US. Though Gropius spent the remainder of his career obscuring the details of his Berlin years, he also made several attempts to secure visas for endangered architects and designers.

In 1926, Mies van der Rohe designed a monument to Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht: an asymmetrical construction of rough brick evoking the walls against which countless socialist martyrs had been shot. Luxemburg and Liebknecht were victims of the Social Democratic Partys haphazard policy of appeasing the far right, only to be betrayed in turn a pattern which repeated itself, albeit less dramatically, in the final throes of the Bauhaus on Miess own watch.

In 1933, Mies, like Gropius, was a finalist for the Reichsbank competition; a submission for the Third Reichs pavilion at the Brussels Worlds Fair followed in 1935. As the architecture critic Tom Dyckhoff has suggested, it is easy to picture Miess hesitation as he added a stone eagle and swastika flags to his sketches less for their content than for their status as external embellishments, mere decorations.

In 1937 he emigrated to the UShaving realized, Dyckhoff writes, that

his future patron would be no government, no political system, but the economic system that was emerging triumphant in the US. Modernismwould succeed as the landscape not of communism, bolshevism or nazism, but of international capitalism.

Researcher and curator Patrick Rssler has uncovered, in the case of Herbert Bayer, an exceptionally high degree of collaboration by a Bauhaus alumnus with no known Nazi sympathies. Bayer left the Bauhaus with Gropius in 1928 and established a successful advertising practice in Berlin.

Despite the danger faced by his many Jewish friends (including his estranged wife Irene Hecht), he stayed on well after the Nazi takeover. Bayer contributed design and illustration to three highly-visible propaganda exhibitions between 1934 and 1936; in the case of German People, German Work, he was joined Gropius and Mies. But even Bayers 1936 design for a pamphlet on the Hitler Youth provided insufficient cover for his links to the Bauhaus; he fled the next year when one of his paintings was included in the anti-modernist Degenerate Art exhibition.

In the 1940s and 50s, he would play a central role in the consolidation of corporate modernism in the United States. Bayer joined New Bauhaus patron Walter Paepke in founding the International Design Conference in Aspen a meeting-ground for design and management which would become the model for TED (Technology, Entertainment, and Design).

The political zig-zags of these former masters were not uncommon in a period of capitalist crisis met by rising challenges from the Left and the Right. However, the incoherent commitments of its most prominent alumni underline the ambiguity of the Bauhauss politics of form. A century since its founding, it is commonplace to say that the Bauhaus was neither a school nor a style, but a utopian ideology.

In its investigations of modern productive capacities and its rejection of waste and want, the Bauhaus was utopian in the positive sense of that word. But just as often, it was utopian in the negative sense. The Bauhaus idea convinced a number of influential designers that their practice had an inherent life-reforming potential one which could be actualized above or beyond the existing relations of social power.

But since they nonetheless remained entangled in those relations, they frequently stumbled into affirming and even intensifying them. Gropius, Mies, and Bayers pioneering design ideas proved compatible with anyone be they revolutionaries, dictators, or capitalists that flattered this sense of world-historical importance.

Original post:

Putting Modernism All Over the Map - Jacobin magazine

Your ultimate list of major dates and events in New York City in 2020 – amNY

Posted By on January 2, 2020

Theres plenty of reasons to be excited about 2020 in New York City and they have nothing to do with the presidential election.

As we close out a year and a decade, and start anew, lets take a look ahead at some of the major events, dates and anniversaries well mark this coming year.

Jan. 1 is the start of a new era in Queens, as Melinda Katz becomes the boroughs first new district attorney in 28 years. Katz resigned from her post as Queens borough president to take her new job. Six candidates are seeking to replace her in a special election that Mayor Bill de Blasio will likely schedule for February or March. Itll be the first of several critical elections in the city this year.

Jan. 25 marks the arrival of the Asian Lunar New Year. On the Chinese calendar, its the Year of the Rat, which according to the zodiac symbolizes the start of a new era, and is a sign of wealth and surplus. The biggest Asian Lunar New Year celebration will take place on Feb. 9 in Chinatown, with thousands set to enjoy food, dancing dragons and firecrackers.

Feb. 9 is the start of the Westminster Dog Show at Madison Square Garden. Thousands will enjoy the canine spectacle featuring some of the best-trained (and cutest) dogs in the world.

Feb. 29 is Leap Day, as the world gets an extra day this year. This Leap Day happens to fall on a Saturday. How will you spend your extra day?

March 17 is St. Patricks Day, and the Irish of New York City will again celebrate Irelands patron saint in grand style with the annual St. Patricks Day Parade along Fifth Avenue. Tens of thousands will again revel in the wearing of the green, enjoying the bagpipes and drummers and saluting the many first responders who participate every year.

March 26 is Opening Day for Major League Baseball and a date most frustrated New York sports fans cant wait to arrive. The Mets are scheduled to host the defending World Champion Washington Nationals at Citi Field in Flushing at 1:10 p.m., while the Yankees will begin their season on the road in Baltimore, facing the Orioles at 3:05 p.m.

The first full week of April marks the holiest time of the year for the citys Christian and Jewish communities. On April 8, Jewish families will gather around the table to celebrate Passover with the traditional Seder dinner commemorating the Israelites escape from Egyptian enslavement. Then, on April 12, Christian families will celebrate Easter Sunday, marking Jesus Christs resurrection three days after his crucifixion.

April 15-20 is the Tribeca Film Festival. The stars are expect to come out in Lower Manhattan for the five-day showcase of some of the best cinema in the world, and a litany of events featuring film makers.

April 28 is Primary Day in New York State. Voters will head to the polls to make their choices not just in the anticipated presidential primary, but also for primary contests in various legislative races. This year, all U.S. House and State Legislature seats are up for grabs, in addition to the presidency. New York Democratic delegates will head to Milwaukee the week of July 13-16 for the Democratic National Convention, while Republican delegates will gather in Charlotte, North Carolina the week of Aug. 24-27 for the Republican National Convention.

May 23 is Eid Al-Fitr, one of the holiest days of the year for Muslims across New York City. It marks the end of Ramadan, a month of dawn-to-sunset fasting during the most spiritual time of the year for Muslims. Families will gather together for large feasts celebrating the breaking of the fast.

Memorial Day, May 25, is not only the unofficial start of summer, but a day to pay tribute to all the men and women who served in defense of our nation and made the ultimate sacrifice. Communities across the city will mark Memorial Day with parades and ceremonies honoring those brave soldiers past and present.

June 6 marks the Belmont Stakes at Belmont Park on the Queens/Nassau border. Its the third jewel in thoroughbred racings Triple Crown. Thousands are expected to gather at the track for the big race, which depending on the outcome of the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes in May could have historic implications.

Broadways best will be honored on June 7 during the Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall. The star-filled spectacle will honor the actors, writers, musicians, producers and other creators behind some of the Great White Ways top musicals and plays.

June 14 will feature the National Puerto Rican Day Parade. Tens of thousands of Puerto Ricans from across the city will celebrate their heritage and culture with a grand parade along Fifth Avenue in Manhattan.

June 20 will mark the eighth-annual Juneteenth Celebration in Harlem, a commemoration of the emancipation of all African-American slaves from the former Confederate states after the conclusion of the Civil War.

June 26 is an especially anticipated date for every New York City student as its the last day of the public school year. The kids will get to enjoy two months of summer vacation before returning to school on Thursday, Sept. 10.

June 28 marks the NYC Pride Parade through Manhattan. Rainbow flags will proudly fly across the city as the LGBTQ community celebrates love and freedom.

Saturday, July 4, is Independence Day, and the city will pause to celebrate the 244th birthday of our nation with barbecues, beach parties, fireworks and, of course, the annual Nathans Hot Dog Eating Contest at Coney Island in Brooklyn. The grandest pyrotechnic display, the Macys Fourth of July Fireworks Extravaganza, will occur on the New York City waterfront. (Americans will also get July 3 off in observance of Independence Day.)

Aug. 18 marks the 100th anniversary of womens suffrage. On this date in 1920, the 19th Amendment was ratified, granting women across the United States the right to vote. New York City will hold tributes to this occasion in the months and days leading up to the anniversary.

The U.S. Open tennis tournament begins on Aug. 24 at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows Corona Park. The sports greatest stars will take the court for 12 days of incredible matches as they seek a grand slam championship.

Sept. 7 marks the annual West Indian American Day Carnival and Parade along the streets of Brooklyn. The annual event features music, entertainment, dance and food celebrating the heritage of Caribbean residents across the city.

Sept. 11 will mark the 19th anniversary of a date that, for many New Yorkers, seems like a recent, tragic memory: the terrorist attacks that brought down the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center. Thousands will gather at the National September 11 Memorial in Lower Manhattan to honor the 3,000 souls lost in the attacks; communities across the city will also hold their own tributes and vigils on the anniversary and the days leading up to it.

Jewish New York residents will celebrate the start of a new year on Rosh Hashanah, which begins at sundown on Sept. 18. More than a week later, they will take part in the most solemn day on the Jewish calendar, Yom Kippur, the day of atonement which begins at sundown on Sept. 27.

Sept. 20 marks the annual African-American Day Parade through Harlem. The annual march along Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard recognizes and honors African-American heritage and great leaders of the nation through the years.

The Jacob Javits Convention Center will again host New York ComicCon on Oct. 8-11, drawing tens of thousands of costumed New Yorkers for days of exhibits, interviews and other fun activities focused on comic books, science fiction and pop culture.

Halloween, Oct. 31, falls on a Saturday this year, and the citys spookiest, most ghoulishly fun party will take place in Greenwich Village. The Village Halloween Parade has only grown in popularity and participants over the decades, as tens of thousands walk the streets for an evening of not-so-scary fun.

Early the next morning, Nov. 1, thousands more will gather at the foot of the Verrazzano Narrows Bridge on Staten Island and start the New York City Marathon. The 26.2-mile, five-borough journey features some of the best runners in the world, along with regular New Yorkers seeking to achieve a personal goal of crossing the finish line near Tavern on the Green in Central Park.

Do we need to remind you that Election Day is Nov. 3? As you may have heard, its kind of a big deal as the country will decide whether to re-elect Donald Trump to a second term in the White House. Regardless of whom you support in the presidency and the other races on the ballot, make sure you have your voter registration in order before October so you can vote on Election Day, or participate in early voting in New York City.

Before you know it, the holidays will be here again. Thanksgiving is Nov. 26, and the Macys Thanksgiving Parade will mark the arrival of holiday season across the five boroughs. Christmas is Dec. 25, and as of this moment, you have 359 days to shop for your special someone.

From all of us at amNewYork, we wish you a happy, healthy and prosperous new year!

Oh, we almost forgot for all of you who drive, heres the 2020 Alternate Side Parking Calendar, courtesy of the citys Department of Transportation.

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Your ultimate list of major dates and events in New York City in 2020 - amNY

Steps being taken to tighten security in Kiryas Joel – Times Herald-Record

Posted By on January 2, 2020

State troopers have increased patrols in Kiryas Joel and sheriff's deputies have visited the main synagogue in the Satmar Hasidic village to recommend improved security measures in the wake of deadly attacks on Hasidic Jews in Jersey City and Monsey.

The synagogue tour took place on Monday, two days after five people were stabbed in a rabbi's home in Monsey, but already had been arranged after the Dec. 10 shooting at a kosher market in Jersey City. Kiryas Joel officials asked the Orange County Sheriff's Office for a security assessment after that incident, and also have broached the possibility of hiring deputies to be stationed in the village.

State Police spokesman Steven Nevel said Tuesday that troopers had raised their visibility in Kiryas Joel by driving through the village more often and making occasional stops there on their patrols. He said the purpose was both to deter any would-be attackers and to reassure people in the community that we're here law enforcement is on your side.

The horrific attack in Rockland County, which took place during a Hanukkah celebration, followed a spate of other anti-Semitic assaults in the New York City area and escalated demands for stronger security and efforts to combat anti-Semitism. Sen. Charles Schumer has proposed a steep increase in federal funding for security upgrades at houses of worship and at nonprofits, and Gov. Andrew Cuomo has suggested punishing major hate crimes as acts of terrorism.

Anti-Semitic assaults in New York increased from 11 in 2017 to 17 in 2018, a 55 percent rise, according to the Anti-Defamation League. Alexander Rosemberg, director of communications for the ADL's New York-New Jersey region, said Tuesday that he expected a similar jump in cases in 2019 once the ADL has verified the most recent incidents.

In just the last eight days, 11 anti-Semitic assaults and acts of harassment had been reported in New York and New Jersey, Rosemberg said. They included vicious assaults on Hasidic Jews in Brooklyn that have been recorded on surveillance cameras and broadcast on Twitter, sparking outrage and calls for further action.

Ever since vandals desecrated a Jewish cemetery in the Village of Florida in 2016, the Orange County District Attorney's Office has worked with Jewish Federation of Greater Orange County to combat bigotry in several ways: creating a hate-crimes hotline, holding school assemblies, distributing anti-hate brochures, training police and assigning an investigator and prosecutor to handle hate crimes.

District Attorney David Hoovler said this week that he sees ongoing tension in Orange County over its growing Hasidic community, largely related to housing development and bloc-voting. I'm not calling it blatant anti-Semitism, but the tension is there, Hoovler said.

He argued the most effective way to defuse that tension or not inflame it was by choosing carefully the words used in public statements and working with people in small groups, where they are more likely to listen to one another. Young people have proven to be most receptive to that education, he said. Hoovler also advocated cultivating relationships to bridge the Hasidic community and its neighbors.

You can talk until you're blue in the face, but the only way you're going to make any strides with it is in small groups, he said.

Yossi Gestetner, an Orthodox community activist from Rockland County, said elected officials in Orange and Rockland could improve relations simply by going to Hasidic community events and publicizing their attendance in Facebook photos, just as they do with any other constituents. They could still disagree with the Hasidic community on municipal matters without distancing themselves for political reasons and thereby dehumanizing the community, he argued.

Show the hell up, and make it known that you showed up, said Gestetner, co-founder of the Orthodox Jewish Public Affairs Council. It's as simple as that.

Harvey Kallus, president of the Jewish Federation of Greater Orange County, said his organization has spoken to congregations about increasing security since the recent attacks. Already, he said, many of those synagogues have cameras and speakers at their entrances to let people in, and hire private security guards or police officers to provide protection during Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.

Kallus said the federation was concerned about recent reports of anti-Semitic remarks being directed at students in schools.

It's more than just an isolated incident here and there, he said.

Read the rest here:
Steps being taken to tighten security in Kiryas Joel - Times Herald-Record


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