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A Festival of Jewish Book Purchases on the ‘Holiday of Books’ – Chabad.org

Posted By on December 31, 2019

With more than 2,000 volumes in its vast catalogue, Kehot Publication Society is the worlds leading publisher of Jewish books. Yet close to 20 percent of their annual sales takes place during a single week in late December or early January. Thats when the publishers showroom bookstore in Brooklyn, N.Y., fills to capacity. Adults can be seen dragging shopping baskets laden with bookstomes of Jewish law, Chassidic philosophy and history, rabbinical treatisesfrom aisle to aisle, while children buckle under the collective weight of their brightly-colored picture books.

During this week the store, which has stood at the corner of Eastern Parkway and Kingston Ave. in Crown Heights since the early 1980s, officially remains open from morning until midnight. In reality its later than that.

Were there until the last customer leaves, says Mendel Laine, Kehots managing editor. Its not unusual for that to be 3 a.m.

Welcome to Hei Tevet, the 5th of the Hebrew month of Tevet, the Jewish festival of the books. Since 1987 this day, which this year corresponds to Jan. 2, has been marked around the world with an emphasis on a trait particular to the People of the Bookbuying more of them, specifically Jewish ones. More than two decades ago Kehot introduced a 50 percent off promotion on Hei Tevet, but demand has grown so high in recent years that the sale was extended to a full week.

Now, throughout the week checkout lines snake through the store and past display stands. To help cope with the crush, Kehot hires additional staff for both their store and warehouse. At the same time, orders flood their websitewhere the sale is also availablefrom places that are home to large Jewish communities to the most remote parts of the world. To cope with the online demand, Kehot increases its bandwidth to ensure the site doesnt crash.

Rabbi Dovid Raskin (center) carries a box of books being returned to the Library of Agudas Chasidei Chabad.

Kehot, founded in 1941 by the Sixth Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, of righteous memory, shortly after arriving in the United States from Nazi-occupied Europe, is the central publishing house of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement. Its staff and scholars maintain the task and responsibility of editing and publishing new works on Jewish thought, knowledge and practice; preserving, annotating and reissuing previously published ones; and making available as much of its massive library of prints at one time as humanly possible. Since its founding it has disseminated more than 100,000,000 volumes in Hebrew, Yiddish, English, Russian, Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, Dutch, German, Farsi and Arabic.

But during this season of the books, Kehot is not the only one making more Jewish books available for purchase. Publishing houses, including Chabad.orgs own growing number of print publications, as well as independent Judaica stores, carry their own promotions during this time.

The day has turned into the "holiday of the books," with young and old coming out, or logging on, to purchase Jewish books for their home libraries. A sampling of the crowd at Kehot Publication Society's showroom bookstore. (Photo: Kehot Publication Society)

The Holidays Painful Origins

Hei Tevet marks the day in 1987 when the United States district court for the eastern district of New York ruled decisively that the vast and rare library collected by the Sixth Rebbe and spirited out of the Old World belongedas the Rebbe himself didto the Chabad movement as a whole.

For millennia Jewish wisdom, thought and practice had been passed down from generation to generation via the written word. When printing presses came into existence Jewish works were among the first to be printed, making Jewish books more than just items but links in the transmission of tradition stretching back to Sinai. And what better way to mark this holy librarys return to its rightful place than for each and every individual upgrading and expanding their own home library?

The holidays origins are painful. In the winter of 1985 the Sixth Rebbes estranged grandson began surreptitiously removing hundreds of rare volumes from the librarys home in the central Chabad synagogue at 770 Eastern Parkway in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn. When confronted, he claimed that the books were his own private property, rightfully inherited from his grandfather. By the time his actions were discovered he had already sold a number of them on the rare Judaica market, garnering a six-digit gain; the rare book dealers in turn sold them for even higher figures. An emergency court injunction was placed to put a halt to this activity. The case had then gone to federal court.

Throughout this period the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memorythe Sixth Rebbes son-in-law and successorspent hours speaking about the spiritual challenge to the Chabad movements activities and international growth that the ownership claims over the books truly represented.

In the runup to the court case, hundreds of rare volumes were surreptitiously removed by an individual claiming them as personal property, and then sold piecemeal on the open market. A bookshelf at the library containing the reclaimed books. Credit: Library of Agudas Chassidei Chabad.

As the saga unfolded, writes Asher Deren in a long essay delving into the storys events and significance, it became apparent to the community at large that the issue was not merely a challenge to ownership of the library, but pivoted on such essential matters as the very definition of Jewish leadership, from the times of Moses to the Rebbe today.

These existential and interconnected questions, whose answers flow from Judaisms historical roots in the Divine Revelation narrative of Torahs transmission from Sinai onward, fittingly revolved around the ownership of holy books.

Rabbi Yosef Yitzchaks vast library, containing both valuable books and the priceless ksovimthe writings of the Chabad Rebbes dating back to the founding of the movement conveyed from generation to generationwas a physical and spiritual manifestation of the chain of tradition. Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak had refused to leave the Soviet Union without it, and it had miraculously survived fire and hell. A suitcase of the most irreplaceable writings came with him on his 1929 trip to the land of Israel and the United States, and was with him through the Nazi bombing of Warsaw in 1939. If it was merely personal property, as was being claimed, it meant the chain had ended with him. The self-sacrifice, the mission, the calling, it had all come to an end.

The Rebbe took these charges very seriously. Once the trial was underway, he traveled to pray at his father-in-laws gravesite, the Ohel in Queens, five days a week as opposed to the twice-a-month visits that had been his custom until then. As the Rebbe did not eat until he returned from the Ohel, this meant he was fasting for most of each week.

Jubilation on the streets of Brooklyn following the federal court ruling on Hei Tevet, the 5th of Tevet, which corresponding that year to Jan. 6,1987. (Photo: Kfar Chabad Magazine)

Agudas Chasidei Chabad, the umbrella organization for the Chabad-Lubavitch movement, retained prominent attorneys Nathan Lewin of Washington, D.C., and Jerome Shestack of Philadelphia, and among expert witnesses to testify on the plaintiffs behalf were the late Elie Wiesel and Prof. Louis Jacobs. The Rebbe instructed the lawyers to follow the path they felt most appropriate, but did point to a letter written by his predecessor to Alexander Marx, the librarian of Jewish Theological Seminary in New Yorkin which the Sixth Rebbe had clearly articulated that his library was not a mere personal possession but a library containing works of infinite value to the Jewish people at large and belonging to the movement he ledas a key piece of evidence. Indeed, it would prove to be invaluable.

Defendants seek to explain this letter as duplicitous and of a piece with the wartime letters in German intended to be read by the Nazi censor. For reasons to be discussed more at length hereinafter, the explanation must be rejected wrote Judge Charles Sifton in his decision. Not only does the letter, even in translation, ring with feeling and sincerity, it does not make much sense that a man of the character of the Sixth Rebbe would, in the circumstances, mean something different than what he says

The other turning point was the testimony of the Rebbes wife, Rebbetzin Chaya Mushka, the Sixth Rebbes second daughter.

The books belonged to the Chassidim, she said simply, but intensely, in her deposition, a tape of which was played in the courtroom, because my father belonged to the Chassidim.

Following a 23-day trial (Agudas Chasidei Chabad of United States v. Gourary, E.D.N.Y. 1987), the court handed down its ruling on the 5th of Tevet, corresponding to Jan. 6, 1987. The conclusion is inescapable that the library was not held by the Sixth Rebbe at his death as his personal property, wrote Sifton in his ruling, but had been delivered to plaintiff [Agudas Chasidei Chabad] to be held in trust for the benefit of the religious community of Chabad Chasidism.

Chabad had retained well-known attorneys Nathan Lewin and Jerome Shestack to litigate the case, who were hailed in the ensuing celebrations. Lewin, a high-profile Washington D.C. constitutional lawyer, can be seen being lifted onto shoulders amidst the dancing in the synagogue at 770 Eastern Parkway. Lewin's wife, Rikki, snapped this photo. (Photo:Nathan and Rikki Lewin)

Within minutes of the news celebration broke out in Brooklyn, rapidly spreading to Jewish communities around the world. In the central Chabad synagogue at 770 Eastern Parkway in Crown Heights, the singing and dancing lasted for seven days straight.

The Rebbe acknowledged this outpouring of joy, giving a talk each day of the festivities. But after a week the Rebbe told the growing crowds that it was time to celebrate the victory in a deeper, more concrete way: By redoubling their work, with a specific emphasis on the added study of Torah.

When the first anniversary of the victory came about the next year, the Rebbe underlined that it was not enough that the Jewish community had regained possession of its rare collection of books, they must be studied. In his talk that Shabbat afternoon, he suggested that to mark 500 years since the birth of Rabbi Yosef Caro, the compiler of the Code of Jewish Law (Shulchan Aruch), Jewish book sellers and stores ought to make a special sale so that more people could purchase the volumes.

He also spoke about the importance of Jewish households containing at the very least the foundational texts of Jewish life: A Chumash (Five Books of Moses), prayer book, Psalms, Tanya and books pertaining to the practical observance of Jewish life. This should be so for newlyweds as well, young men and women just beginning the work of building a household, as well as children, who could in this day and age of readily available books begin building their own Jewish libraries at a young age.

According to worldly conventions, he said, the victory of an expensive object, like precious stones and diamonds, is celebrated by giving it more respect: guarding it in the most dignified place, so that no-one will touch it, and surely not to use it But according to Torah the victory of holy books is by using them and learning from them even morethe more they are used, the more dignity they have, even if they become worn out and torn from use.

Little more than a decade earlier the Rebbe had introduced as one of his mitzvah campaigns one known as Bayis Malei Seforim, or Home Filled with Jewish Books. Now he began expanding on the idea.

With the books back in place the Library of Agudas Chassidei Chabad underwent a massive expansion, digging under the courtyard between the main building of 770 and the adjacent library building, to create a new state-of-the-art library. (Photo: Library of Agudas Chassidei Chabad)

This day is connected with seforim [Jewish books], the Rebbe explained on Hei Tevet a year later, in 1989, and so it is apropos that we discuss the vital importance of Jewish books.

Men, women and children, he asserted, ought to utilize the special day of the books to purchase new Jewish books, repair old ones, or assist and enable fellow Jews to buy or repair Jewish books. To spur this on the Rebbe personally participated, standing in the synagogue at 770 distributing two dollar bills to each individual, one for charity, the second for the express purpose that they use them to buy or repair Jewish books.

Thats when the crowds started filling the store, says Rabbi Yosef B. Friedman, director of Kehot. The Rebbe said that buying books was the way to mark the victory, so we got swarmed.

Hei Tevet comes on the heels of Chanukah, and so he recalls children of the youngest age coming into the store and fishing through their pockets for the Chanukah gelt they had received from their parents or grandparents to buy new books. Then neighborhood schools began bringing class by class to the store.

Now we stretch the sale out over a week because theres no way we could handle the demand otherwise, says Friedman. The schools, in New York and around the world, also coordinate with publishers, Kehot among them, to arrange book fairs at school.

A l'chaim after the books' return. (Photo: Kehot Publication Society)

Kehot stands out from other publishing houses in its calling to print works that are both wildly popular, and those with a necessarily more limited audience. The standard Chabad prayer book, compiled and edited by Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi and today published in, among other forms, the popular blue Hebrew-English prayer book seen in synagogues around the world, is a perennial blockbuster item (it is available in seven languages). Rabbi Schneur Zalman also wrote a longer version with lengthy kabbalistic explanations, which, on the other hand, is a much more difficult and inaccessible work for most. Re-typesetting and annotating the kabbalistic prayer book cost to the tune of $200,000, and to even hope to recoup costs would have required Kehot to price the two-volume set at a prohibitive $150. Instead, with the help of generous donors, it sells for $30.

Among the yearly best-sellers, says Laine, are basic works such as My Prayer, Lessons in Tanya, The Lubavitcher Rabbis Memoirs and the multi-volume Chassidic Heritage Series, a collection of bi-lingual renderings of classic works of Chassidus.

At times, the item in demand can be surprising. This year the ninth volume of Sefer HaErchin, the scholarly encyclopedia of Chassidic concepts that a small team of scholars has been at work on for decades, is being released, and Laine predicts it will fly off the shelves.

The Rebbe encouraged people of all ages to mark Hei Tevet by buying or reparing Jewish books, and then studying them. A group of young girls with their teacher in Kehot's showroom. (Photo: Kehot Publication Society)

The theme and call of Hei Tevet, both during the ordeal and in the aftermath of the spectacular victory, was Didan Notzach, which literally translates as We are victorious, or Victory is ours. The phrase, which originates from a relatively obscure Midrash [Vayikra Rabbah 24:3] and which the Rebbe had spoken about at great length, was printed on bumper stickers and signs, and put to song, more than one. But there was only one way, the Rebbe explained in 1988, to see if the victory was real.

The concrete lesson from everything we have discussed until now , he said in Yiddish, is that from this point forward Torah study must grow and be strengthened This will be the true test of whether the books were truly victorious, Didan (dHaseforim) Notzach, The victory (of the books) is ours.

With thanks to A Chassidishe Derher magazine and Rabbi Avraham Vaisfiche of Kehot Publication Society.

To take advantage of the Hei Tevet annual sale, visit the Kehot online store here.

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A Festival of Jewish Book Purchases on the 'Holiday of Books' - Chabad.org

Hitler-row SNP councillor allowed to join election victory party despite ban – Daily Record

Posted By on December 31, 2019

An SNP councillor banned over anti-Semitism was allowed to join a leading MPs election victory celebrations.

Frank Anderson appeared in a photograph with Hannah Bardell behind a YES banner wearing a rosette, despite having been suspended for sharing a blog post that compared a Jewish trade union official with Hitler.

The SNP last night insisted the West Lothian councillor had said sorry over the incident.

It said: Councillor Anderson apologised for sharing the blog at the time in October 2018, admitting that he hadnt understood the context and acknowledged his lack of insight on the topic.

Bardell is understood not to have been aware Anderson was in the election picture. He received a three-month suspension from council duties after a hearing by his partys ethics watchdog in November.

The sanction came after he shared a controversial blog on the pro-independence Grouse Beater website about GMB Scotland organiser Rhea Wolfson, who is Jewish.

The piece cited Mein Kampf to claim Wolfson was making the most of Hitlers fascist ideology. It claimed Hitler had alleged Jews gradually assumed leadership of the trade union movement and it stated: Whether or not Wolfson is intellectually aware of Hitlers outlook is unknown but she certainly knows how to make the most of it.

The SNP suspended and expelled the blogs Edinburgh-based author Gareth Wardell.

After it emerged Anderson had shared the material, the councillor initially defended the article, and maintains he had no idea Wolfson was Jewish.

He said: I dont accept that it was an anti-Semitic article, nor was I aware of any of Miss Wolfsons Jewish heritage.

The article was, in context, about the self-serving attitude of Labour. But he was later forced to apologise unreservedly. The SNP swept the board in West Lothian on December 12. Bardell retained her Livingston seat and Martyn Day was also returned as MP for Linlithgow and Falkirk East.

Both saw a substantial increase in their majorities and were photographed with Anderson shortly afterwards.

Another SNP candidate, who was suspended for using anti-Semitic language on social media, also won his seat.

Neale Hanvey still appeared on the ballot paper as the nationalist candidate for Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath because his suspension came too late for the list to be updated.

He is now able to sit as an independent MP until a disciplinary process is completed.

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Hitler-row SNP councillor allowed to join election victory party despite ban - Daily Record

Mast to Gardens synagogue: Be prepared to defend yourself and the ones you love – Palm Beach Post

Posted By on December 31, 2019

On the last day of Hanukkah, U.S. Rep. Brian Mast, R-Palm City, was one of the guest speakers at the Chabad Jewish center in Palm Beach Gardens.

The note affixed to the door at the Chabad Jewish center in Palm Beach Gardens warns those who wish to enter that All bags, vehicles and persons may be subject to search Photo IDs may be required. Armed security man the doors. And Rabbi Dovid Vigler assures that the center spends many, many thousands of dollars on security a topic so sensitive, he declines to detail it further.

But after a weekend in which a machete-wielding man felled five Hasidic Jews in New York and a gunman opened fire in a Texas Church of Christ, killing two, the leaders at the synagogue say they wanted to hear from and be heard by their elected and government officials

On the last day of Hanukkah, a holiday intended to celebrate the miracle of enduring light over the darkness of oppressors, the guest list at the synagogue just west of Floridas Turnpike included U.S. Rep. Brian Mast, R-Palm City, the local assistant police chief, Marty Bechtel, and Gardens Councilman Matthew Lane.

One takeaway Mast and several around him took from the weekends violence the targets fought back, no doubt saving lives. Indeed, the Texas shooter was himself shot dead within seconds by a member of that churchs volunteer security team.

I always said on the battlefield I wasnt going to die for lack of shooting back, Army veteran Mast told the crowd.

Are you saying worshippers should be shooting back? questioned the audience.

Absolutely, Mast said.

Theres always been a need to guard places of worship. Jews have had to defend themselves in the face of evil for thousands of years, Mast said. Train. Go out and train. Be prepared to defend yourself and the ones you love.

Police cant be everywhere, Mast said. He told his audience he is comforted knowing that security teams are in place at Christ Fellowship Church where he worships.

The local police also are playing an integral security role in places of worship, said Bechtel.

The citys department works with congregations to keep accurate building schematics on hand and coordinate active shooter training.

Instances of anti-Semitic acts are on the rise nationally, according to the Anti-Defamation League, which counted 1,879 such incidents, including more than 1,000 involving harassment, in 2018. The organization has yet to tally figures for 2019, but it estimates the numbers will meet or exceed last years.

The uptick in violence is particularly palpable in New York City, where anti-Semitic crimes have jumped 21 percent in the past year, The New York Times reported. Across the state, anti-Semitic incidents from harassment to murder have totaled in the 300s this year and last, according to ADL tracking.

In Florida, the numbers including harassment, vandalism and assault have been trending higher in the past seven or eight years, but peaked at 137 in 2016 and then dropped into double digits in 2017 and 2018, according to the last annual report issued in May.

Most of those incidents happened in South Florida, including several in Palm Beach County. The local offenses, none involving violence, included unwelcome email screeds to a Jewish organizations general inbox, a swastika etched on a home doorpost, a defaced sign at a synagogue and a middle school girl on the receiving end of an anti-Semitic text from a classmate.

But by the time incidents rise to the level of a police or media report, its gone too far, said Lonnie Wilk, director of ADL Florida.

In most cases perpetrators dont start at the point of violence, Wilk said. That has to be cultivated or learned. And it begins with acts of bias, jokes, rumors or stereotypes. When that goes unchecked it can easily elevate to bullying and slurs.

Hate can become normalized, Wilk said. To get to the base of the problem, the ADL advocates for anti-bias training in schools, where students learn what Wilk and the ADL refers to as the pyramid of hate.

At least one congregant at Mondays gathering stood to ask Mast how he could support President Donald Trump, whom she described as the most hateful president weve ever had.

But before she could finish her question, her voice was lost in a sea of boos and met with a chorus of retorts including, This is not a political forum. This is the wrong place. And Run for Congress.

Take your hate somewhere else. Shame on you. And Write a letter.

After the room was hushed, Mast said, I do support our president. He doesnt hate somebody for being Muslim or of color or being Jewish or any other thing. The policies he undertakes are policies to make sure we have a safe nation.

sisger@pbpost.com

@sonjaisger

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Mast to Gardens synagogue: Be prepared to defend yourself and the ones you love - Palm Beach Post

ADL Official on Anti-Semitic Attacks in New York: We Are in an Epidemic for the Jewish Community – Mediaite

Posted By on December 31, 2019

Theres been growing concern about attacks on Jews in New York after several that took place just in the last week alone, the most recent being the stabbing at a rabbis home in Monsey Saturday night during Hanukkah celebrations.

Last week, NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio announced an increased police presence after a number of attacks, saying, Anti-Semitism is an attack on the values of our city.

Governor Andrew Cuomo today called the stabbing an act of domestic terrorism.

This morning on CNN, Jake Tapper spoke with Anti Defamation League vice president Oren Segal, who said, We are in an epidemic, in New York City of all places, for the Jewish community.

The community is in shock. Theres a lot of fear and anxiety, he said.

This horrific attack last night is the ninth apparent anti-Semitic attack in New York in just the last week, Tapper noted. Obviously there has been an increase in hate crimes against Jews in New York and nationally. Why do you think this is happening, specifically the attacks in New York?

Segal pointed to a concerning rise in anti-Semitic incident and the mainstreaming of anti-Semitic in our public discussion, on our phones.

At this point we dont have a luxury in the Jewish community, whether you are visibly Jewish or otherwise, to take security as a lax thing, Segal said. So being able to get the support from law enforcement and government in order to protect Jewish institutions I think that will help make the Jewish community and in particular the Orthodox community feel a bit more safe and secure.

Tapper asked about the argument being made that there would be more of an outrage if the attackers were white supremacists and thus fell more easily into a political narrative.

You can watch above, via CNN.

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ADL Official on Anti-Semitic Attacks in New York: We Are in an Epidemic for the Jewish Community - Mediaite

Cooper: Will new gun law be a help or hindrance In 2020? – Chattanooga Times Free Press

Posted By on December 31, 2019

Tennessee will begin 2020 on Wednesday with a new law allowing residents to qualify for a state-issued "concealed carry" handgun permit by watching a 90-minute online video training.

The question many state residents will rightly ask is if such a law will precipitate more incidents like Sunday's shooting at a Texas Church of Christ or help prevent them.

In the church confrontation, a gunman opened fire, killing one person and seriously injuring another, but was shot and killed by a volunteer security officer on duty at the time.

A 2017 Texas law allows armed security guards in churches, and a 2019 law allows licensed handgun owners to bring guns into churches unless the churches oppose them doing so. The latter law was passed in response to the 2017 Sutherland Springs, Texas, church shooting that left 26 people dead.

Tennessee and Texas are two of the 48 states in which the law allows residents with concealed carry permits to go armed in churches and places of worship.

While we believe gun owners should take as much training online, in person and at ranges as is possible, most gun violence is not perpetrated by individuals who have taken time to get proper training and obtain proper documentation.

Similarly, many shootings in which handguns were used were committed by individuals using stolen guns or guns otherwise obtained illegally.

An FBI agent said the Texas shooter, Keith Thomas Kinnunen, was "relatively transient with roots to this area" and had been arrested numerous times in different municipalities.

Sadly and perhaps ominously, the shooting in the church was not the only violent incident involving a religious group over the weekend.

In a New York City suburb, a stabbing spree at a gathering of Hasidic Jews ended with five injured at a rabbi's home as adherents celebrated Hanukkah.

The state's governor, Andrew Cuomo, said it was the 13th anti-Semitic attack in the New York City area since Dec. 8.

Anti-Semitism has been on the rise in Europe for nearly a quarter of a century. As early as 2006, according to an Anti-Defamation League survey, 30% of respondents said Jews had too much power in business. A different survey by the Journal of Conflict Resolution that same year said almost no respondents in countries of the European Union regarded themselves as anti-Semitic.

Unquestionably, those attitudes have spread across the Atlantic Ocean, with 1,879 incidents of anti-Semitism in the United States in 2018, according to the Anti-Defamation League. That year's violence included a gunman killing 11 congregants at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, the largest anti-Semitic attack in the history of the United States.

It can happen anywhere, Michael Dzik, executive director of the Jewish Federation of Greater Chattanooga, said in a television interview Sunday. It's happened here, he said.

The report didn't elaborate, but he might have been referring to a bombing that demolished the small Beth Sholom synagogue in Brainerd in 1977. No one was killed in the blast, but had a scheduled service that night not have been canceled the loss of life would have been significant.

Neo-Nazi Joseph Paul Franklin was indicted for the bombing in 1984. He was executed in 2013 for killing a man at a St. Louis-area synagogue in 1977.

Tennessee's new handgun permit updates a 1996 law in which people ages 21 or older who pass a criminal background check take eight hours of training, including live-fire training. Individuals who want to receive an "enhanced" handgun carry permit, allowing them to carry a handgun open or concealed, still must take the eight hours of training.

Those who want to obtain only a concealed-only carry permit must pass a background check but can take the online video training that covers basic knowledge and skills of firearm usage and safety and concludes with a test "that confirms competency."

Our inclination is that more training is better and safer, especially for those who might provide security, but we don't see the online training component leading to a rise in errant handgun deaths. Gun control supporters said the 1996 Tennessee law in which the Department of Safety began issuing handgun carry permits would lead to a rise of gun violence, but it did not.

Nevertheless, we should all be concerned by the rise of hate, hate crimes against specific groups and overall crimes against people of faith in this country. And if they can be prevented by wider communication, more mental illness assistance and better parental guidance, that's preferable to any church shootout whether the hero is trained online or in person.

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Cooper: Will new gun law be a help or hindrance In 2020? - Chattanooga Times Free Press

Satmar Hasidim Is Ultra-Orthodox Judaism

Posted By on December 30, 2019

Satmar Hasidism is a branch of ultra-orthodox Judaism founded by Rabbi Moshe Teitelbaum (1759-1841), Rabbi of Storaljajhely in Hungary. His descendants became leaders of the communities of Mramarossziget (now Sighetu Marmaiei) (called "Siget" in Yiddish) and Szatmrnmeti (now Satu Mare) (called "Satmar" in Yiddish).Like other Haredi Jews, Satmar Hasidic Jews live in insular communities, separating themselves from contemporary secular society. And like other Hasidic Jews, Satmar Hasidim approach Judaism with joy. Like the Neturei Katra sect, Satmar Hasidim oppose all forms of Zionism.

In Hebrew, Hasidic Jews are known as Hasidim, a term derived from the Hebrew word "chesed," which means "loving kindness."

The Hasidic movement began in Eastern Europe in the 18th century.Over time, the Hasidism branched out into different groups, such as the Breslov, Skver, and Bobov, among others. The Satmar was one of these sects.

Hasidim wear traditional clothing, which for men emulates the formal dress of their 18th-centuryforebears, and for women requires modesty, with legs, arms and heads covered. Most sects of Hasidim wear slightly different versions of the traditional outfits to differentiate themselves from other sects.

Rabbi Yoel Teitelbaum (1887-1979), one of Rabbi Moshe Teitelbaum's descendants, led the Satmar Hasidic movement during the Holocaust. During the war, Teitelbaum spent time in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp and later emigrated to the British Mandate of Palestine.

Whilehe was in Palestine, he founded a network of yeshivas (Jewish religious schools).The day Teitelbaum was released by the Nazis (the 21st day of the Hebrew month of Kislev) is considered to be a holiday by Satmar Hasidim.

As a result of financial difficulties, he traveled to New York to raise money for the seminaries. As the founding of the State of Israel was taking place, Teitelbaum's American followers convinced him to stay in New York. Teitelbaum died of a heart attack in 1979, after being in ill health for several years.

In America Teitelbaum established the foundations of a Satmar Hasidic community in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. In the 1970s, he bought land in upstate New York and founded a Satmar Hasidic community named Kiryas Joel. Other post-Holocaust Satmar communities were founded in Monsey, Boro Park, Buenos Aires, Antwerp, Bnei Brak, and Jerusalem.

Satmar opposition to the State of Israel is based on their belief that the creation of a Jewish State by Jews is blasphemy. They believe the Jews should wait for God to send the Messiah to return the Jewish people to the land of Israel. Satmar Hasidism considers the ongoing unrest in Israel to be a result of Jews being "impatient" and not awaiting God's word.

Despite their opposition to the Zionist State, Satmar Hasidim aim to protect the Holy Land from secularism and bloodshed. Many Satmar Hasidim visit and even live in Israel, and Teitelbaum himself visited numerous times. But Satmar Hasidim do not vote, pay taxes, accept benefits, serve in the armed forces or recognize the authority of the court in the state of Israel.

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Satmar Hasidim Is Ultra-Orthodox Judaism

5 stabbed at Hasidic rabbi’s house in New York City suburb …

Posted By on December 30, 2019

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Video by ABC 7 New York

Five people have been stabbed at an Hasidic rabbi's house in Rockland Country, outside of New York City, authorities say.

The attack occurred shortly before 10 p.m. in the town of Monsey, a predominantly Orthodox Jewish community about 30 miles north of the city.

The incident happened at a Hanukkah celebration, according to an official with the Orthodox Jewish Public Affairs Council for the Hudson Valley region.

All of the victims were said to be Hasidic Jews, part of an ultra-Orthodox sect of Judiasm.

On Friday, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that the New York Police Department was stepping up patrols at several synagogues in the city following a spate of anti-Semitic attacks over the past two weeks.

Three women were allegedly slapped Friday morning by another woman who said she thought they were Jewish, four days after surveillance video showed a 40-year-old man in traditional Jewish clothing being punched in the face.

"Anti-Semitism is an attack on the values of our city -- and we will confront it head-on," de Blasio said in a social media post Friday evening.

This is a breaking news story. Please check back for updates.

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5 stabbed at Hasidic rabbi's house in New York City suburb ...

How Monsey became a center of Hasidic life in America – Haaretz

Posted By on December 30, 2019

Monsey was the scene of a stabbing attack on Saturday that left five people wounded, two seriously. This hamlet is one of several in Rockland County, not far from the New Jersey border, to have seen an influx of Hasidic Jews in recent decades.

Indeed, Rockland County situated north of New York City and on the western bank of the Hudson River now has the largest Jewish population per capita of any U.S. county, with 31.4 percent (90,000) of its residents identifying as Jewish. The areas Hasidic hubs include Monsey, New Square and Kiryas Joel. But how did this area become such a mainstay of Hasidic life?

>> 'We are genuinely scared': New York Jews say Hanukkah attack shows 'words have consequences' In the 2010s, anti-Semitism went mainstream | Opinion <<

It began back in the 1950s, when New Yorks ultra-Orthodox Jews were seeking affordable real estate for their quickly growing communities. They started moving out of their Brooklyn strongholds Borough Park, Crown Heights and Williamsburg and heading north to the suburbs of Rockland County.

These spaces offered the possibility of moving en masse and establishing enclaves where they could lead lives based on halakha (Jewish religious law) without coming into regular conflict with their non-Orthodox neighbors. Such a dynamic is a familiar one in Israel, where young ultra-Orthodox families from Jerusalem and Bnei Brak have relocated in recent years to settlements in the West Bank, such as Modiin Ilit and Betar Ilit, which were built with their particular needs in mind.

The first Hasidic community to make the move from New York City to Rockland County was led by Rabbi Yaakov Yosef Twersky (1899-1968), the grandson of the founder of the Skverer Hasidic dynasty that had its origins in the Ukrainian town of Skvera (or Skvyra).

Twersky survived World War II in Romania and arrived in the United States in 1948. Almost immediately, he began making plans to leave Williamsburg for a 130-acre (526-dunam) tract of land purchased by his community in Ramapo, a town about 65 kilometers (40 miles) north of New York City. They named their settlement New Square an English-language nod to the birthplace of their sect.

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Principal language: Yiddish

In 1961, New Square became incorporated as an independent village, which made it possible for this self-governing Torah community to rewrite the local ordinances to reflect its needs. The result was something of a New World shtetl whose principal language was Yiddish. Population density was high, and zoning regulations were rewritten so as to allow small workshops to open in the basements of homes. By 2010, some 70 percent of the population there was reportedly living below the poverty line.

In 1974, a group of Satmar Hasidim also left Williamsburg this time for Monroe in Orange County, some 40 kilometers north of Ramapo. It was there that 14 Satmar families established the housing project of Kiryas Joel, which is named for Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum (who led the community until his death in 1979). Earlier this year, Kiryas Joel formally separated from Monroe and became its own town following tensions between the local municipality and its Hasidic residents.

Monsey itself is a hamlet of some 22,000 people, situated to the west of New Square. Its name comes from the Munsee group of Lenape Indians who once lived in these parts although today, according to Marcin Wodzinskis Historical Atlas of Hasidism, it is home to such sects as Berditschov, Vizhnitz, Spinka Monsey and Lizensk.

It is also home to a small group of Koson Hasidim, who are led by Rabbi Chaim Leibish Rottenberg, in whose home Saturdays attack was carried out. The suspect, whom police named as Grafton E. Thomas, will face five counts of attempted murder and one count of burglary.

While Brooklyn has been at the center of most anti-Semitic attacks over the past year, ultra-Orthodox Jewish residents of Rockland County have been targeted online, with other community members blaming them for overdevelopment, public school budgets and zoning.

Last summer, for example, a video released by the Rockland County Republican Party was slammed as anti-Semitic and deeply disturbing. Titled A Storm is Brewing in Rockland, the video which was eventually removed featured menacing music, the slogan If They Win, We Lose and a warning that they, referring to ultra-Orthodox Jews, will change our way of life.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Link:

How Monsey became a center of Hasidic life in America - Haaretz

My Hasidic community taught me to avoid non-Jews, but I decided to live differently. What if they were right? – JTA News

Posted By on December 30, 2019

NEW YORK (JTA) While a shooter was firing rounds of ammunition into two Jews in Jersey City, New Jersey, a kosher market worker and a police officer simply for who they are and where they were, I was halfway around the world, in Paris. More specifically, I was hurrying past a Parisian cafe where I was made to feel humiliated for being visibly Jewish exactly a year prior.

The attack felt more personal to me, a proud Brooklyn Jew. The Jewish community in Jersey City is comprised largely of Hasidic Brooklyn Jews who cant afford living across the bridge. An anti-Semite went after my home community, the largest Jewish population in the world outside of Israel.

When I travel, I always wear a yarmulke. I refuse to hide my Jewishness the argument that assimilation will offer Jews safety fails when I consider the yellow stars that assimilated, cultured German Jews were forced to wear as their community was systematically murdered. So I wear my kippah when I travel as a proud banner to counter the cheer that Jews will not replace us.

But this is not how I was raised. I was taught in yeshiva that Jews merited being saved from slavery in ancient Egypt because they didnt change their names, their language or their clothing. Their refusal to assimilate was their ticket out.

In Brooklyn, I heard the message that sticking to my tight-knit Jewish community was the clearest path to safety that the best way to save myself from anti-Semitism was to simply avoid interacting with non-Jews.

Im working on unlearning this narrative. I proudly travel while Jewish, across nearly 30 countries so far. But recent events have made me question my own conclusions about my place in the world.

Last year, after a red eye from New York on the last day of Hanukkah, I arrived in Paris city center with enough time to take part in a Parisian ritual, at least according to the movies sip an espresso on a table with a checkered tablecloth. I found the perfect cafe and ordered espresso in the little French I memorized on the plane. I sat in the booth and took off my beanie, revealing a yarmulke.

I tried to get comfortable as I took in the scene the pretty bar, the checkered pattern and the non-kosher food I could only enjoy with my eyes. And the waiters, who were all wearing uniforms. One was heading my way. He didnt look happy. He was yelling in French. His body language told me he didnt want me there. I surmised that to him, I was poison. Humiliated, I paid the 2 euros for my coffee, downed it and headed out into the cold.

The event challenged my place in the world. The liberal beliefs I held close, that the Holocaust is now behind us and that Jews are welcomed in Western society, didnt hold up in light of this experience. I was caught between the idea that Jews should never integrate because assimilation will be our downfall and the idea that best way to combat anti-Semitism is to be even more public with my Jewishness caught between the push to assimilate and the need to stick to my guns as a Jew and wear my Jewishness more proudly.

But that was only in France, where earlier this month another Jewish cemetery was filled with graffiti swastikas. Not in the United States, where I was safe. This was in Europe. It wasnt like this in America.

This juggling act came to mind when I accidentally passed the cafe after making a wrong turn on the day of the New Jersey shooting, exactly a year later. I remembered the awning and the layout, including the wicker chairs outside under the electric heaters. I hurried past it.

As I traveled to the airport, I read more about the shooting and how it is being investigated as an act of domestic terrorism with anti-Semitic and anti-police intent.

I am now back in New York, my former city of safety. But today it feels more like being in Europe as a Jew, with or without a kippah. France was where I realized that I could stay safe in my tristate shtetl, but Jersey City taught me that staying here will never offer complete security. My hopefulness in my place in the world is waning.

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

Read more from the original source:

My Hasidic community taught me to avoid non-Jews, but I decided to live differently. What if they were right? - JTA News

Is anti-Hasidism more acceptable than antisemitism? | Jane the Actuary – Patheos

Posted By on December 30, 2019

Incidental initial comment: once upon a time, when I was a college student, I took a class on the subject of the Holocaust, and the professor, who was, by the way, a rabbi, said that the proper label for antipathy against Jews should not be spelled anti-Semitism because it was not opposition to Semites as a general grouping of Middle Eastern peoples, but to Jews specifically.

Having said that, here are some recent developments in New York City and environs:

On December 10, A kosher grocery store in Jersey City was attacked and 3 people killed.

This was next door to a Jewish school which appears to have been the real target.

In response to this, and to ongoing attacks over the past several years, New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio announced an increase in patrols in the affected neighborhoods.

But various leftists on twitter objected, such as this example:

Then last night, 5 people were stabbed at a Hanukkah celebration in suburban New York City.

Of course, we have a narrative for antisemitism: Neo-Nazis who see Jews as not-white, who march with torches and chant, Jews will not replace us. The Tree of Life shooting in Pittsburgh fit this narrative. Whats going on in New York City doesnt, and, hence, whats going on in New York City isnt being talked about, because there the perpetrators are black.

And heres where I claim bloggers privilege and write without sourcing: the grocery attack and the Hanukkah attack are not new; there has been ongoing violence against the Jewish communities of New York City and its suburbs for some years now, without outsiders taking much interest in it. Passers-by on the streets mothers, the elderly, and others considered to be innocent and defenseless, assaulted in ways that range from petty to serious injuries. But those same voices who in other contexts proclaim their opposition to racism and prejudice of all kinds, back off and say, its complicated.

In the neighborhoods of New York City, they stand accused of gentrification.

In suburban areas, they are accused of a litany of wrongdoing:

Having disproportionately many children, relative to the taxes they pay into the school system. Or, in the case of the East Rampo Central School District, causing trouble by sending their children to private schools and being unwilling to fund public schools sufficiently.

Focusing on religious study in their schools to such an extent that their children are insufficiently educated in secular subjects.

Mistreating women and girls by teaching them to be wives and mothers, observing strict forms of modest dress and other behaviors.

Looking all weird and cult-like.

(Fun fact: the same folks who scorn Hasidic Jews in this manner defend Muslims, even those who oblige women and girls to veil at young ages, because in that case, its about preserving their heritage.)

It reminds me of those marriage equality activists who insisted that there was nothing anti-Christian in demanding that Christians bake the cake because they knew that real Christianity included acceptance of same-sex marriage, so that people who insisted that their religion prevented them from these actions that would be a form of participation in a same-sex marriage, were not real Christians.

Likewise, the leftists who vocally oppose antisemitism just as much as other sorts of racism/prejudice, but then start to waffle and say its complicated when it comes to Hasidic Jews, are playing the same sort of game: real Jews are different than these weirdos, so I can fully support freedom of religion in the abstract without having to accept that this includes these people I dont like.

Is this antisemitism? Can one legitimately say, instead, no, this is anti-Hasidism? That is, is it a different sort of anti-ness, in which mainstream Jews are safe and Hasids with their extreme nonconformist behaviors are treated as a different sort of Identity Group which has nothing to do with Judaism except by happenstance?

That would be a nice tidy answer to the question but are we really ready to say, of any ethnic group of any religion, that its OK for them to be targets of violence, regardless of how weird or nonconformist they are? At any rate, that gives us the ability to say, its just an isolated issue similar, I suppose, to if Amish communities were being harassed, and we say, thats not for me to worry about because its a different part of the country.

But at the same time, those who are harassing the Jews in New York and those who shrug off being concerned, use the age-old antisemitic slurs that have been recited over and over again: they are greedy, they have too much control over the economy, over Hollywood, over the government, etc. Heck, wasnt it a New York politician who claimed that the Jews control the weather?

So, no, there are not any acceptable justifications for the assault of Jews in New York City or elsewhere.

Image:https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:ReadingOfTheTorah.jpg; By Roylindman (Template:Roy Lindman) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0) or GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)], via Wikimedia Commons

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Is anti-Hasidism more acceptable than antisemitism? | Jane the Actuary - Patheos


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