Page 1,321«..1020..1,3201,3211,3221,323..1,3301,340..»

A project that helps formerly ultra-Orthodox Jews find their place in the Jewish world – JTA News

Posted By on December 1, 2019

NEW YORK (JTA) I didnt grow up keeping Shabbat. I am an observant Jew now, but my path to orthodoxy was unexpected, slow and steady.

When I was introduced to Torah learning in college, I fell in love with the wealth and breadth of knowledge lying underneath the veneer of the more basic, surface-level Judaism I experienced as a child. I can safely say that becoming an Orthodox Jew has enhanced my life in ways I never would have expected.

Unfortunately, not everyone has had the same experience.

Nechama Schweitzer, a 28-year-old woman now living in a Modern Orthodox community in Brooklyns Marine Park, grew up in what she calls a very sheltered ultra-Orthodox home in Borough Park. But instead of wanting to graduate high school, marry and have kids right away like other girls in her community, she had career aspirations and other dreams she wanted to pursue. But Schweitzer couldnt find anyone to help her understand and accept that there might be a different path not her religious all-girls school, her parents or any of her 11 siblings.

Despite her feelings toward marriage, her parents and rabbi still strongly steered her in that direction.

Growing up, I was taught that this is what I was meant to do in my life, she shared with me. I was told the purpose of living was to be a wife and a mother and so, in my mind, there was really no reason to say no.

So, at 21, Schweitzer was wed through an arranged marriage to a man she met just twice for about 45 minutes before getting engaged.

At that time she was taking antidepressants and trying to recover from an eating disorder. While her therapist didnt think the marriage was a good idea, her rabbi convinced her that once she was married she would be happy, and that she could and should even go off the medication.

I was raised that whatever the rabbi says, you listen, she said. You dont question it. So I went off my meds but by the time I got married, I was relapsing.

Her marriage came to an end six months in, when she put her foot down about not wanting to have kids right away.

After the divorce, she continued to live in the apartment she had shared with her husband for a couple of years. But despite going back on her antidepressant, things got harder.

There was always a part of me still that wasnt being true to who I was, she said. People would ask me, Why dont you want to get married again? I had to answer them while still having all these questions about Judaism and my beliefs.

Schweitzer continued to spiral downward, becoming extremely depressed, even suicidal. Then at 25, she ended up in a psych ward. Disconnected from her cloistered community, she realized there was no way she could go back to her old life. From the hospital, she moved to a group home and eventually to an apartment in Marine Park.

While in the hospital, she reached out to Madreigos, which provides awareness and support for religious Jews suffering from mental health issues and addiction. The organization helped her find the right next step in terms of where to live and continuing treatment programs, and in doing so introduced her to Project Makom, which provides social support and information on nonjudgmental Orthodox Judaism usually a new idea to its members.

Run by Allison Josephs, Project Makom offers classes about a loving God and how to be motivated out of meaning rather than guilt. The organization creates discussion and offers resources to those recovering from traumatic experiences in their own communities.

Through her work as the woman behind Jew in the City, an organization founded in 2007 that educates the secular world about Orthodox Jews, Josephs started to meet real people affected by the difficult realities she sought to disprove.

For example, she would say that in Judaism, women arent subjugated.But then she met women who were taught they should constrict themselves and their ideas, that everything needs to be done according to their husbands wishes. She met others with traumatizing sexual abuse experiences.

Josephs said she realized that the negative stories in the media about Orthodox Jews werent just told by and about a few bad apples but rather were systemic problems in communities.

Because of that revelation, she founded Project Makom in 2014.

Project Makom now offers social events and Jewish classes, as well as Shabbat and career-themed programming. The goal is to help people who are isolated or ostracized find a community of like-minded individuals who are free to ask questions.

We want to validate them when they tell us what went wrong, but ultimately help them find a way to build a new path, Josephs told me.

Its a nonjudgmental community, and members are free to find their own relationship to Judaism through what is offered.

Its absolutely essential that members of Makom know that we dont have any plans for their Judaism, Josephs said. That is between them and God. We are proud to be frum and show them observance as we experience with joy and love, but what each member decides is ultimately up to them.

Though Project Makom, Schweitzer experienced Shabbat meals in a way she never had before.

I didnt feel like I was trapped in something, she shared. I had an opportunity to get all my questions answered from the bottom up in a completely nonjudgmental forum. People took me as I was I wasnt expected to dress or look a certain way.

She added: They saved my life, and not just saved it, but enhanced it and made it so much more meaningful.

Schweitzer at point wasnt allowed back home because she could not meet her familys expectations for tzniut (modesty), and even ended up missing her sisters wedding three years ago. While she agreed to dress according to the halacha (Jewish law) for a divorced woman, some rabbis say she is still required to cover her hair, which was the ruling given by the rabbi for Schweitzers parents. She could not agree to the decision her marriage was just too traumatic so the family rabbi said she was not welcome.

After the wedding, Project Makom helped Schweitzer through the ordeal, providing another rabbi who is respected in Hasidic communities to serve as a mediator between the family rabbi and her parents. Through this work, the family rabbi reversed his ruling, so she was able to go home and visit without covering her hair.

Schweitzer today is a passionate special education teacher for grades K-2 at a Montessori school. She teaches language arts and Judaic studies, a path she says truly shows just how far shes come.

I have a joy and love for Judaism now, she said. Growing up, God was the scariest thing, I was always worried that I was going to get punished. Now its about joy, love and excitement.

Project Makom also can connect individuals with other mental health organizations. It makes referrals to ESL and GED programs as well. As it receives more funding, Project Makom would like to partner with a mental health organization to create support groups and launch a mentorship program to help members with homework and resumes.

Lets not be embarrassed by our problems, Josephs said. Lets fix them and do the right thing.

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:

A project that helps formerly ultra-Orthodox Jews find their place in the Jewish world - JTA News

Man who threatened to behead police intends to convert to Judaism, court told – Sydney Morning Herald

Posted By on December 1, 2019

Pender, who took ice before the police confrontation, wrote a letter of apology to the magistrate on Thursday.

His sentencing hearing in the NSW Supreme Court was played a phone call made by Pender while he was on remand in mid-2017, several weeks after the Surry Hills incident.

In the call, Pender told a woman he knew: "Guess what I'm going to do when I get out? Blow up a train. I'm gearing myself up for martyrdom, to become a martyr."

The woman repeatedly told him to "stop" and said authorities would end up cutting the call, but Pender said, "no they won't, they're not even listening to the call".

"The cops are going to die, people are going to die," he said. "It's going to be beautiful. F---ing beautiful. I'm ready ... Allahu Akbar, f--- you all, you're all dead."

Later in the call he advised the woman to cut someone's head off. "I want you to," he said. "Like I'm going to cut heads off when I get out". He ended by saying: "Allahu Akbar, I love you, bye".

Defence barrister Jo Gallagher said the comments were made after Pender missed one of his regular injections of an antipsychotic medication and in the context of him previously having delusions and auditory hallucinations.

She said Pender had previously been diagnosed with schizophrenia and had psychotic episodes during which he carried a knife. Ms Gallagher said one report from Justice Health detailed him hallucinating the phrase "kill kill kill, murder" and having delusions of a demonic prophecy.

Ms Gallagher said the phone call should not be taken into account in sentencing.

Prosecutor Patricia McDonald SC argued the comments in the call were not bravado and were consistent with the radical views Pender had been expressing over a period of about two years.

Ms McDonald said Pender adhered to radical Islam from at least October 2015, when he made a Facebook post which referenced martyrdom and "the first droplet of blood in the river that will follow".

Blake Nicolas Pender.Credit:Facebook

Giving evidence, Pender said he converted to Islam in 2015 and gave up his Islamic faith "a long time ago" but he doesn't recall when. He said he asked staff at Goulburn Supermax for the Torah about five or six weeks ago, when he became interested in converting to Hasidic Judaism.

Asked about the tattoo of a cross under his right eye, Pender agreed he was at one time interested in Christianity.

Justice Ian Harrison said "people who tell police on the streets of Surry Hills that they're going to cut their heads off aren't people we come across regularly".

Pender will be sentenced on December 18.

Georgina Mitchell is a court reporter for The Sydney Morning Herald.

More here:

Man who threatened to behead police intends to convert to Judaism, court told - Sydney Morning Herald

I said I would vote Labour to stop the Tories, but Corbyn’s refusal to apologise changed my mind – The Independent

Posted By on November 30, 2019

Dear Anthony Julius,I appreciate your taking the time to write an open letter to me in the New Statesman and I remain as proud as ever of what we achieved when we successfully defeated the attempt, 20 years ago now, of a Holocaust denier to silence his critics by means of a libel suit.

You are quite right to say that antisemitism, even Holocaust denial itself, has infected the Labour Party. I dont think its central to the partys world-view, and there are many people who have stayed in the party and are determined to fight it think of Margaret Hodge, for instance. It entered the party following the election of Jeremy Corbyn as leader and spread encouraged by social media and the influx of thousands of new members, who had previously been outside it on the far left.

I thought initially Id hold my nose and vote Labour in this election because Brexit is a looming disaster of catastrophic proportions, and tactical voting may be the only way to stop it. The advice of tactical voting websites for my constituency of North-East Hertfordshire is to vote Labour, since the Liberal Democrats dont stand a chance here, so I followed it.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

But would that make any real difference? The sitting Tory MP for the constituency, Sir Oliver Heald, has a reasonably good record in voting against Brexit and seems a decent enough MP. But that, sadly, is not the point here: a vote for him would be a vote for Boris Johnsons Brexit (deal or no deal), since presumably Sir Oliver has been obliged to sign up to support it as a condition of being a candidate.

I wrote to Kelley Green, the Labour candidate, whos new to parliamentary politics, asking for her views on the controversy over antisemitism within her party, but unfortunately I havent received a reply. In the meantime, however, Ive received hundreds of tweets and emails saying (with varying degrees of politeness) that I should reconsider.

That together with the Chief Rabbis intervention backed by the Archbishop of Canterbury and above all Jeremy Corbyns lamentable refusal to apologise for the offence he has caused when asked by Andrew Neill no fewer than four times on television, and his continuing denial that his party has a problem, have indeed made me think again.

The opinion polls have so far stubbornly refused to move away from predictions of a Tory majority, and the prospects of overthrowing it in my constituency are remote were a pretty safe Conservative seat and anything but a marginal. So in the end, a vote for Labour wouldnt make any difference locally. My vote, therefore, will inevitably be wasted in practical terms, so all I can do is use it to make a statement on the issues at stake.

I cant in this situation vote for the Liberal Democrats, because of the responsibility they shared for damaging austerity policies with David Cameron from 2010 to 2016 not to mention their betrayal of students over the issue of student loans.

That leaves the Greens, who are not only anti-Brexit but also take the greatest threat facing the planet in the medium to long term the climate crisis far more seriously than the other parties. So Ill vote for them.

As for Labour, my hope has always been that after the party suffers yet another defeat under Jeremy Corbyn, he will at last be forced to resign and will be replaced by a competent and popular leader who is determined to keep Britain in the EU, recognise how far vile and abusive antisemitism has infected large parts of his (or her) party, and actually do something about it. The damage Corbyn has done to the party is immense, and will take a great deal of hard work and determination to overcome, but it can be done.

Thanks for helping me to think again.

Sir Richard Evans is a historian of modern Europe and professor at Cambridge University

Read the original:

I said I would vote Labour to stop the Tories, but Corbyn's refusal to apologise changed my mind - The Independent

Trupa Trupa: the Polish post-punk band confronting the Holocaust – The Guardian

Posted By on November 30, 2019

Grzegorz Kwiatkowski, the singer, guitarist and co-songwriter of Polish post-punks Trupa Trupa, is thinking of home. At first, we said that our environment had nothing to do with our music, but we were wrong, he says of Gdask, the Baltic city the band hail from and the site of the second world wars first battle. The city has a tragic history.

This sense of tragedy seeps into the bands music, which blends off-kilter melodies, dense instrumentation and lyrical explorations of the darkest side of the human condition. On their recent fifth album, Of the Sun, they tackle some of the bleak issues Europeans face today, including Holocaust denial and populism.

At the beginning of the year, a psychopath murdered our mayor, Pawel Adamowicz, and so once again, history came knocking on our door, says Kwiatkowski. The murderer was probably influenced by rightwing hate speech. Kwiatkowski says the mayors murder changed him. I used to see myself as an isolated citizen of Gdask, but I realised that Im not. I have to fight alongside my city. He dedicated the bands set at US festival South By Southwest this year to Adamowicz.

Confronting the past as well as the present has always been a part of Trupa Trupas music. On their album Jolly New Songs is the track Never Forget, which examines the brutality unleashed in Poland by the Nazis. On it, Kwiatkowski sings: We never forget those ghetto deaths / They sound like a midnight choir, over bleak drones and bass rumbles. In common with many Poles, his family history from the war has affected his life.

My grandfather was a prisoner in the Stutthof concentration camp near to Gdask, says Kwiatkowksi. When I was a kid, I used to go to the Stutthof Museum and watch him cry. It wasnt just history but reality to me.

This reality hit home harder when, in 2015, while researching for a film about the actor, resistance fighter and Auschwitz survivor Albin Ossowski, Kwiatkowski and a friend made a grim discovery in the forest near Stutthof. They found shoes from European concentration camps that had originally been gathered at the Stutthof camp for conversion into leather goods such as holsters. There were 500,000 of them in total. In the 1960s, communist authorities had saved some of the shoes, which are on display in the museum, and buried the rest. We then started a battle with the museum because for four years they didnt want to do anything about it, says Kwiatkowski. They said it was trash, but for us, these were artefacts of the Holocaust.

Most of the shoes now sit out of sight in the museums Monument of Struggle and Martyrdom. These artefacts should be visible, Kwiatkowski argues. As we say in our song, we must never forget so that this bloody history never returns. (Declining to be interviewed, the museums director, Piotr Tarnowski, said in a statement: I refrain from commenting on the allusions that Poles and the Stutthof Museum neglect to take care of the memory of Jewish victims.)

Trupa Trupa also tackle the twisting and erasure of history on their song Remainder. Over swirling guitars and driving beats, the band take the guise of a denier as they repeatedly sing the line: It did not take place!

We still have antisemitic people, and I think thats because we didnt have the chance to confront history

So why is this happening again? Part of whats happening is because of populism and part of it is education, says Kwiatkowski. We still have antisemitic people, and I think thats because we didnt have the chance to confront this history because everything was so fucked up after communism.

He also believes that Polands liberty in the wake of the Soviet era is a contributing factor. Freedom is a really hard task and a big responsibility for everyone. Now that we are really free, we cant handle it in some ways. Its hard to be free and its hard to be responsible.

To Kwiatkowksis mind, better education, debate and non-violent direct action are key. We have to communicate with people who have different ideas. If we fail to communicate then were back in wartime. We should confront dark forces and if anything is going wrong we should protest.

He says his hero is the notoriously misanthropic and pessimistic philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer. And yet Kwiatkowski does see hope in the world, albeit with caveats.

I think that we should be conscious about the evil that is inside every one of us, he says. We have to really fight with our own dark sides. If we can do that, then the world really will be a bit better. We all have a Donald Trump inside of us and we have to fight with him.

Trupa Trupa tour the UK beginning 2 December at the Hope & Ruin, Brighton

Link:

Trupa Trupa: the Polish post-punk band confronting the Holocaust - The Guardian

We are thankful to have children living in beautiful places – Heritage Florida Jewish News

Posted By on November 30, 2019

When my daughter Julie headed out to Colorado in 2003, it was originally planned as a nine-month adventure teaching environmental science. Soon, however, Julie fell in love with the mountains, Colorado, and Sam, not necessarily in that order. They built a life together, completed graduate degrees, got married, bought a house in Frisco, and had a child. They havesettled into the life at 9100 feet.

Meanwhile, our son Adam chose a different path in another FriscoSan Francisco. After completing a law degree, he moved into an apartment in the middle of the city. Last December, he met Sarah. In a whirlwind romance, they dated, got engaged, got married, and now are expecting their first child. They have settled into life at sea level.

In the middle of all this, my husband, Larry, and I decided to move from Upstate New York, to a 55 plus community in Florida, close to 2000 and 3000 miles from Frisco and San Francisco, respectfully. There are those who ask us when we are moving closer to our children. The answer, for now, is NOT NOW.

Feeling gratitude despite living so far away may be difficult to fathom. However, I am thankful. Both my children have chosen to settle in two of the most wonderful places we have ever visited. Recent experiences bear that out.

Frisco, Colorado is nestled in beautiful Summit County. Surrounded by mountains reaching over 14,000 feet, it is for us a summer wonderland. Trails beckon us on hikes that bring us next to flowing streams, stunning wildflowers, and expansive vista. Larry plays with the Summit County pickle ball league while I take long walks with my granddog. Free concerts are offered in most surrounding towns Thursdays through Sunday.

Our favorite is the one on Main Street in Frisco every week. Hundreds of people congregate around the pavilion in the middle of Frisco Town Park. The adults settle into lawn chairs and on blankets, pulling dinners out of coolers, while their dogs settle near by. Meanwhile, the children dart around the lawn and path around the pavilion. It is a slice of Americana that I hadnt seen since growing up in our Upstate New York town. In addition to the free entertainment, the area has several theater groups and a summer residency for the National Repertory Orchestra. Because of all it offers, Larry and I have rented there for the past four summers.

One-thousand miles away, San Francisco is one of the most beloved city in America. When we visited Adam, we have taken advantage of all its attractions. We have walked through Golden Gate Park and across the iconic bridge. We have visited Alcatraz, Muir Woods, Sausalito, and Point del Reyes. We have used the city as a starting point to attractions as far south as Monterey and as far north as Astoria, Oregon.

With such wonderful places to go, why have we have not picked up again? This question has taken on new meaning now that we have The Frisco Kid in Colorado and a soon-to-be grandson in California.

Let me start with Frisco. Everything I wrote about my favorite town in the world is during the summer. In 2019 its residents experienced snow through the end of June, enjoyed a beautiful summer, and had its first dusting of the 2019-2020 season on a nearby ski resort on Aug. 22. By Sept. 19, the mountains got enough snow to get skiers excited.

When we visited Julie and Sam in mid-October, snow fell on five out of six days. An Upstate New York girl, I always loved the site of clean, white snow on lawns and trees and trails. Unfortunately, sidewalks are not immune. After dropping The Frisco Kid at pre-school the second full day we were there, the sun was shining everywhere, including on the black ice on the sidewalks. We had to leave for the airport a day early as a major storm was expected to bring hazardous conditions to Route 70. The Weather Channel advisory recommended travelers to pack food, water, and blankets in case one was stranded. Although the snowfall never amounted to more than 2 inches (Denver actually got more!), the temperature dipped to 16 degrees above zero, without windchill. We love Frisco but cannot see us living there through their long winters.

The weather in Adam and Sarahs now established hometownis admittedly better. Even if you factor in the famous Mark Twain quote, The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco, we would never have to deal with snow. The city, however, is known for its steep hills and even steeper housing prices. If we sold our home in Florida, we could maybe afford a bathroom. No, I am not talking about a one bedroom, one bath apartment. I am talking about a bathroom. No shower included. And to get to that bathroom, we would probably have to walk up four flights of stairs, as the natives seem to eschew elevators.

There are two more reasons not to move. First of all, a number of friends have relocated to be close to their children, only to see them relocate one or two years later because of their careers.

Finally, Larry and I love where we are. We are in a one-floor home that is a perfect size for the two of us. We have activities that fit our needs: pickle ball courts; fully equipped gyms, Olympic-sized pools, restaurants, and entertainment venues. To add to our pleasure, we have our choice of over 250 clubs and organizations with which to participate within our gates.

Within a 40-minute drive, we have all that Orlando has to offer, including world-class entertainment. The Frisco Kid experienced Disneyland for the first time last year, and she is already on a campaign to make it a yearly visit. Hopefully, she will persuade her new cousin to do the same! So we are here to stay for as long as we can maintain our independent lifestyle.

This Thanksgiving, we are grateful that both our children have chosen to settle in two of the most wonderful places we have ever experienced. We have planned visits as well as a promise to them that we can be on a plane in a moments notice if needed. Meanwhile, the guest room is ready for them anytime.

Marilyn Cohen Shapiro, a resident of Kissimmee, Fla., is a regular contributor to the (Capital Region N.Y.) Jewish World and the Orlando Heritage Florida Jewish News. She is the author of two compilations of her stories, There Goes My Heart (2016) and Tikkun Olam (2018). Both books available in paperback and e-book format on Amazon. Her blog is theregoesmyheart.me.

Original post:

We are thankful to have children living in beautiful places - Heritage Florida Jewish News

Children stand up and sing out to Stop the Hate: Strong Points – cleveland.com

Posted By on November 30, 2019

STRONGSVILLE, Ohio The Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage, in partnership with Roots of American Music (ROAM) and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, are celebrating the voices of young people standing up to bias and bigotry through the annual Stop the Hate Youth Sing Out contest. This is the first of three Stop the Hate events that will occur in the 2019/20 school year: two song contests for schools and one essay writing contest for individual students.

Middle school classes from across Northeast Ohio stood on stage last month at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, in front of a panel of prestigious judges and their fellow competitors, to sing original songs they had penned with a teaching artist from ROAM. This was a culmination of a semester-long project that began with a Stop the Hate tour at the Maltz Museum, where students learned about the history of bias. Then, students were asked to reflect on the discrimination they witness or experience in their own lives. Turning their words into song lyrics, their voices share their experiences and speak out against hate.

The Maltz Museum is proud to announce that the winner for the middle school portion of the Stop the Hate Youth Sing Out contest is Wade Park School, CMSD for their song Yours N Mines. Runner Up is Newton D. Baker School of Arts, CMSD for their song Fight the Hate, Dont Discriminate.

An estimated 1,000+ students from 17 middle school classes and 25 high school classes representing 14 different schools will participate this year, to pen and perform songs for Stop the Hate Youth Sing Out. After they perform, their capstone experience is to learn about the power of music in protest on a tour at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

This annual program sharpens written and oral language skills while fostering a deeper understanding of historic human rights events as an arts-integrated learning initiative. Students are also vying to win anti-bias education grants for their schools.

Each year, the Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage gives out $100,000 in scholarships and anti-bias education grants in recognition of 6-12th grade upstanders in Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, Lorain, Mahoning, Medina, Portage, Stark, Summit, Trumbull, and Wayne counties as part of its Stop the Hate program. Included in this number is the grand prize of a $40,000 scholarship for one junior or senior who wins an essay writing contest called Stop the Hate Youth Speak Out.

If young people are looking for a way to express their own experiences with intolerance and speak out about what they have done or want to do to stop the hate, the Maltz Museum encourages them to participate in the Stop the Hate Youth Speak Out essay writing contest. Submissions should to be 500 words or less.

Students can also write essays to use their voices and win big. Deadline for essays for grades 6-10 is Wed., Jan. 8, 2020, 11:59 p.m. Deadline for essays for Grades 11 and 12: is Wed., Jan, 20, 11:59 p.m.

To learn more about this years theme and guidelines for entry, please visit http://www.maltzmuseum.org/STH.

Christmas in the village: The gift of an Olde Fashioned Christmas is waiting for you at the Strongsville Historic Village. Strongsville Historical Society presents Christmas in the Village, Sat. and Sun., Dec. 7, 8, 14 and 15, 13305 Pearl Rd., 2-5 p.m. This is a free event to enjoy with the whole family. Santa and Mrs. Claus will be on hand to greet visitors each day. Mrs. Claus will have a little treat for our youngest visitors and Santa will have candy canes for all. Most of the buildings and the grounds will be open each day where you can enjoy decorations in the style that covers the 150 years the Village represents.

Looking for some holiday crafting fun? On Dec. 14 and 15, local Girl Scouts will be hosting gingerbread building in the great room of the Lathrop House. Donations of $1 or more will be collected and given to the Historical Society for building maintenance.

While youre there, visit the Olds General Store where Merchant Marty will be open with gifts for all ages. Remember, the Olds General Store is your local connection for Strongsville-themed goods. Parking is free.

Visit http://www.strongsvillehistoricalsociety.org to learn more about the Strongsville Historical Society and Historic Village. This is a free event but donations are graciously welcome.

Library lineup: Theres always something interesting and educational going on at the Strongsville library.

Teen Craft Buffet, Dec. 9, 6:30-9:30 p.m. For teens in grades 6-12. Ever wonder what the library does with leftover materials from library craft programs? Nows your chance to find out. All materials will be provided. Just bring your creative ideas. Register at 440-238-5530 or cuyahogalibrary.org.

Winter Pajama Party at the Library, Dec. 12, 7-8 p.m. For all ages, with a parent or caregiver. Join a snuggly wuggly Pajama Storytime. All should wear your comfy pjs as you hear nighty night stories, do a small craft, and relax with cookies and milk. Register at (440) 238-5530 or cuyahogalibrary.org.

The Cuyahoga County Public Library Strongsville Branch is located at 18700 Westwood Dr. Register online at cuyahogalibrary.org or call 440-238-5530. To register, for more information and a complete list of events, visit cuyahogalibrary.org. All events are sponsored by Friends of Strongsville Branch Library.

Let the Strongsville community know what is going on with your organization, church, school, business or family. Email me at shirleymac48@att.net.

More:
Children stand up and sing out to Stop the Hate: Strong Points - cleveland.com

Service-Gathering the Fragments – Ricochet.com

Posted By on November 30, 2019

The Holocaust took place during World War II, and millions of Jews were put to death over the years of the War, in Nazi concentration camps like Auschwitz, and in forests of Eastern Europe, and in their own towns and ghettos. Today, 75 years later, there are still Survivors alive to tell their inspiring stories. But soon, there will be no Survivors left. For many years, Yad Vashem in Israel, the great Holocaust Memorial, has been seeking and collecting memories; videos, audio records, photos, and other ephemera of Survivors. In the latest issue of Martyrdom and Resistance, the newsletter for American supporters of Yad Vashem, there was an article about the program they call Gathering the Fragments, describing their efforts to collect as many memories as they can from living Survivors and families of victims, to better document the lives of all who were affected by the Holocaust.

There is the story of the 1943 postcard that Samuel Akerman threw from the deportation train taking him to his demise in the Majdanek Death Camp. The postcard was donated by his 91-year-old daughter. The archivists from Yad Vashem snap photos and scan documents into their mobile database, to preserve for posterity the records of those who were murdered, and their relatives who remember them.

On May 2, the cornerstone was laid for the new Shoah Heritage Collections Center on the Yad Vashem Campus in Jerusalem. It will be the permanent home for 210 million documents, 500,000 photographs, 131,000 Survivor testimonies, 32,400 artifacts, and 11,500 works of art related to the Holocaust.

The German Nazis were determined not only to annihilate the Jewish people, but to obliterate their identity, memory, culture, and heritage, said Yad Vashem Chairman Avner Shalev. But the new Heritage Collections Center will be living proof of their failure.

Through this Gathering the Fragments program, Yad Vashem has already collected some 250,000 items from Survivors and their families, to be preserved for posterity and available for online viewing and study. They will continue to collect as many items as they can, so that the Holocaust will never be forgotten, or its influence diminished. Yad Vashem has an excellent Web site for those who are interested in the history of the German Final Solution. Ray and I visited in 2007, when we were in Israel with Michael Medved, and it was a truly emotional experience for us. This initiative is a significant service to the world, so that we Never Forget.

Here is the original post:
Service-Gathering the Fragments - Ricochet.com

Fight over Proposed Sargent Ranch Quarry is Shaping Up to be Silicon Valley’s Standing Rock – San Jose Inside

Posted By on November 30, 2019

Just past noon on Sep. 8, hundreds of people gather in prayer. This isnt a typical Sunday church service, though. The congregation has come to the end of a 5-mile march, a pilgrimage that began at Mission San Juan Bautista in San Benito County and ended at a place now known as Sargent Ranch at Santa Clara Countys southernmost edge, half an hour south of central San Jose.

Here, at the foot of the lowland slopes and iconic golden hills a few miles from urbanizing Gilroy, they begin to pray.

Ceremonies such as these were once common here. Thousands of years ago, long before European settlers arrived in California, the Amah Mutsuna local indigenous tribeheld sacred gatherings on the site they call Juristac, meaning place of the big head.

At their peak, the Amah Mutsun lived in small villages from the San Francisco Bay Area down to Monterey. Juristac is considered a particularly special placehome of their spiritual leader, Kuksui, and a place where the tribal band hosted prayer ceremonies and healing rituals for more than 10,000 years. It is also currently the proposed site of a 320-acre open-pit sand and gravel mine, a potentially new and local source for the grit coveted by the stakeholders in Silicon Valleys construction boom.

It was this prospect that compelled more than a hundred tribal membersalong with hundreds of their supporters from community and environmental organizationsto attend the early September prayer walk.

This is a major issue for our tribe, says Valentin Lopez, chairman of the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band. These developers plan on tearing down and monetizing our most sacred site, and so were fighting to stop that.

Approval of the Sargent Quarry Project is contingent on a number of pending factors. Theres an ethnographic study taking place, along with a draft environmental impact report being undertaken by the county Department of Planning and Development. The EIR was expected in November, but county planner Rob Eastwood said this week, We found a few things that are going to take a little more time to look at and that the reports new expected release date is early next year.

Environmental groups have come out against the proposed mine because of the adverse impact it would likely have on iconic species such as the American badger, puma and California red-legged frog.

After the draft environmental review is issued, opposition groups will likely have somewhere between 45 to 75 days to submit questions or objections to the county Planning Commission, which will then vote on the mine.

Its likely that their findings will be appealed either way, leaving the final decision to the county Board of Supervisors.

Lopez knows that there is still a long fight ahead. It is merely the latest skirmish in a battle that he and his contemporaries have fought for decadesand the latest chapter in a war that his ancestors waged for centuries.

For nearly 20 years, Irenne Zwierleinconsidered an outsider by the tribal majorityhas nonetheless played an outsized role in the Amah Mutsuns ongoing campaign for federal recognition and in the tribes claim to the Sargent Ranch property.

The 74-year-old Woodside resident, who didnt respond to requests for comment, has made no public effort to take part in any of the tribes events and activities and has yet to conclusively prove her Indian heritage. Even after the Bureau of Indian Affairs affirmed in 2007 that Zwierlein forged documents in an attempt to position herself as the Amah Mutsuns rightful leader, she managed to convince the agency to prioritize her petition over that of popularly recognized tribal Chairman Lopez, a fellow septuagenarian who for the past 16 years has served as the face of the tribe.

Under Lopezs leadership, the tribe has emphasized restoring a sense of community among the 500-plus Amah Mutsun members after generations of forced assimilation and trauma. For his part, Lopez says he hopes to see Sargent Ranch returned to the Amah Mutsun, or placed in the stewardship of an organization that shares his vision of maintaining a green, open space and wild space on this tract of land. We want to return to the path of our ancestors and to fulfill our obligation to the creator, he says. And we dont need the BIAs permission to do that.

Without a legal right to their ancestral turf, Lopez says the Amah Mutsun wont be able to unilaterally say what can be done here. However, in the course of his time fighting for Juristac and other significant Amah Mutsun sites, Lopez has forged partnerships with open space districts, conservationists and private property owners who have helped him and his tribe to uphold its mission of protecting land it holds sacred.

Zwierleins priorities, by contrast, seemingly depend almost entirely on the federal governments affirmation of the tribes sovereignty to secure the rights to Sargent Ranch.

Fifteen years ago, La Jolla developer Wayne Pierce inked a development contract with Zwierlein, who promised to allow development on the land in exchange for a $21 million cultural center and homes for tribal members. The pact gave Pierce a way to bypass state and county anti-sprawl zoning and brought Zwierlein some powerful allies.

Though Pierces blueprints for a luxury gaming resort surfaced online years after signing his covenant with Zwierlein, she has consistently denied advocating for a casino. But the potential profit windfall from Indian gaming cast doubt on Zwierleins motives as well as those of investors, labor groups and political office holders aligned with her.

When he authored a bill in 2005 to expedite federal recognition, Congressman Mike Honda (D-San Jose) swore he wasnt taking sides in the tribes internal conflict. But the language appeared to favor Zwierlein by citing the title of her BIA petition, raising questions about the lawmakers intentions. The bill never passed. A few years later, the economy took a nosedive and set Pierce on a course that ended in bankruptcy and foreclosure on the La Jollans 85 percent stake in Sargent Ranch.

The proposed quarry has now overtaken the sidelined casino plans as the immediate threat to Juristac.

Three bookmarks prevent suburban sprawl from spilling seamlessly from San Jose to Salinas: the Coyote Valley, undeveloped land stretching from Hollister to Prunedale and Sargent Ranch.

Earlier this month, San Jose snatched up 937 acres of Coyote Valley from Brandenburg Properties and the Sobrato Organization in a $93 million deal aimed at creating a permanent greenbelt between the city proper and the rural South Valley.

Further south, San Benito County supervisors on Sept. 24 greenlighted nodes off four Highway 101 off-ramps for tax revenue-generating commercial development. A petition by environmentalists to bring the rezoning decision to voters was certified last week, in hopes of reversing the decision that will transform the corridors rural landscape.

Sargent Ranch would extend Santa Clara Countys developed footprint by converting the pristine lands to industrial use. The proposed quarry seeks to unearth about 40 million tons of sand and gravel estimated to lie beneath the surface of the bucolic property.

As the project nears a vote, the applicant has hired controversial lobbyist Ed McGovern to sway the Board of Supervisors. McGovern previously served as campaign manager to county supervisor Cindy Chavez and political consultant to disgraced former Santa Clara councilman and county supervisor candidate Dominic Caserta. For the past several months, lobbying records show that McGovern, Sargent Ranch representative Verne Freeman and officials from the South Bay Labor Council have held meetings and led site tours with county supervisorsnamely Cortese, Chavez, Joe Simitian and Susan Ellenbergto sell the mines value as a job creator and tax revenue-booster.

County Supervisor Mike Wasserman, whose district includes Sargent Ranch, has expressed strong support for the mining project as a local source of aggregate for concrete to fuel the regions surging construction. As developers tout the economic benefits of carving gravel out of ranchland, the stakes are high for the broader public as well. If Sargent Ranch is developed, it may catalyze further sprawl.

Cortese, who hails from a family with a multi-generational agricultural background, says hes more inclined to protect the ranchland as open space. Every time we make a decision theres consequences, he tells San Jose Inside. My default is to keep it pristine, to keep it as unimproved as possible.

This certainly aligns with Lopezs hopes, as the mine would desecrate a site thats inextricably intertwined with the 3,000-year history and cultural identity of the Amah Mutsun people.

Tribal members joined environmentalists and allies at a Sept. 8 prayer walk in support of protecting Juristac.

While Lopez has been dealt many defeats and setbacks in his decades-long fight, he comes into the battle for Juristac on the heels of a partial win.

With the help of the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space Districta special district that manages 26 open space preserves around the Bay AreaLopez recently managed to reclaim a small piece of one of his peoples most sacred sites, the summit of Mount Umunhum. The 3,489-foot peak, one of the highest that surrounds the valley, is now the home of a permanent Amah Mutsun prayer circle, which was completed two years ago.

Silicon Valley denizens may recognize Mount Um by the large, white rectangular structure standing atop its peak. The most obvious vestige of the Almaden Air Force Station, which operated there from 1958 to 1980, the structure is a five-story concrete radar tower, which once supported an 80-ton radar antenna built to detect incoming Russian Bear Bombers during the Cold War.

The station was manned by the 682nd Radar Squadron and, at its peak, was almost like a little town of its own, housing 120 airmen and their families in a community that included a fallout shelter, a cafeteria, a commissary, a bowling alley and a basketball court. In 1980, the station was abandoned by the military and closed to the public because of the asbestos, black mold, fuel-storage containers, PCB transformers, lead-based paint and other hazardous materials on site.

The summit of Mount Umunhum was cordoned off for decades. But in 2009, with the help of Honda, fellow House Democrat Zoe Lofgren, California senators Barbara Boxer and Diane Feinstein and Midpenas the special district is knownreceived $3.2 million to clean it up. They removed 3,000 cubic yards of hazardous material, re-contoured the the site and constructed a trail between Mount Umunhum and its neighbor, Bald Mountain. After almost 60 years, the summit would again open to visitors.

When we got the call from Midpen, we talked to our tribal council about what our vision was and what we would like to see here on Mount Umunhum, Lopez says. We all agreed almost immediately that we would like to see the opportunity for us to return here as a place for prayer and ceremony.

On Sep. 14, 2017, around a circle set by traditionally cut stones, Amah Mutsun tribal members held the first ceremony on Mount Umunhum in perhaps 200 years. The circle overlooks Silicon Valley and is marked with an informational plaque, which explains the historical significance of Mount Umunhum for the Amah Mutsun tribe.

Umunhum can be loosely translated as the place where hummingbird rests. Growing up in the shadow of this mountain, most residents have some vague understanding of thisor at least a version of it. What many locals may not know, however, is that Mount Umunhum is not just named after an Amah Mutsun wordits actually the center of the Amah Mutsuns creation mythologyliterally the center of their universe.

Mount Umunhum is a place of our creation, Lopez says. Our creation story tells us that it was there that Creator made all lifeforms that we see today: the four-legged, the birds, the fish, the plants, etc. It's a sacred place to us, a place where our people would go to pray. And it was desecrated to bring in a military installation.

This is not a new story.

A view from Mt. Umunhum. (Photo by Nicholas Chan)

Since colonizations earliest days, Amah Mutsun history has been one marked by violence, destruction and genocide. It began during the Mission period in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, when native populations were moved to compounds and lived in harsh conditions. During this time, 19,421 Indians died at Mission San Juan Bautista alone, and its estimated that the population of Californian Indians as a whole was reduced from 350,000 to 200,000.

The mission period was followed by the Mexican period, from 1822 to 1846. During this time, huge tracts of land were granted to non-Indian settlers and the native population was maneuvered into debt-peonage, working lands that were taken from them. European diseases and poor living conditions contributed to the death of another 100,000 California Indians.

The American period, which began after 1848 was perhaps the worst. During this time, the already devastated population of native Californians experienced what might have been the worst slaughter of Indians in US history. Its estimated that the Indian population of California went from 150,000 before 1849 tofewer than 30,000 in 1870an 80 percent loss in just 21 years.

Who we are today, how we think, how we love, how we hate, how we fear, what scares us, what makes us braveall those qualities are given to us by the seven generations before us, Lopez says, standing atop Mount Umunhum. Theres a lot of recovery and healing thats needed for our people when we look at that history.

Although Midpens efforts to acknowledge the Amah Mutsuns historical claim to the land have been warmly received, the decision to keep the Cold War-era radar tower standing atop the summit has been a point of contention.

Despite the conclusion that it would be more expensive to maintain and seal the tower, which was full of toxic materials and is still chipping lead paint, radar tower champions prevailed. The county Board of Supervisors (the same entity that has the final say on the Juristac development), voted unanimously to list the massive concrete radar tower on the County Heritage Resource Inventory, giving it official historic status and protecting it from demolition.

It was a big win for those at the Umunhum Conservancy and others who felt it was important to monumentalize the United States military history. But to Lopezs mind, the decision was disgraceful.

That radar tower operated for something like 20 years, Lopez says. Our history there goes back over 10,000 years. And yet, the county of Santa Clara recognized Mount Umunhum as an important county heritage site for the military. They totally ignored our history20 years of military presence is more important than thousands of years of Native American presence.

One of the most intractable challenges facing the Amah Mutsun is the reality that the United States government hasnt officially recognized them as a tribe. This leaves them without the rights, benefits and legal status that come with federal recognition, protections which could have played a significant role in determining Juristacs fate.

Recognition gives a tribe and its members special rights, including sovereignty over their lands, a right to self-governance and federal benefits, services and protections.

Through Zwierleins efforts to control the Sargent Ranch property, she has played a role in thwarting official federal recognition.

I tell you, if we were Catholic or Muslim or Jewish or a Buddhistif we were any other religion, and this was known as a sacred site, they wouldn't dare think of proposing a sand and gravel mine, Lopez says. But because were Native American, because were not federally recognized, it doesn't matter.

Lopez has successfully advocated for the Catholic Diocese of Monterey to issue a formal apology, which it gave in a 2013 ceremony of mass reconciliation for enslaving and killing the Amah Mutsun hundreds of years prior. He helped forge a tribal land trust partnership with the Sempervirens Fund and a program through UC Santa Cruz for the Amah Mutsun to reclaim ancient knowledge of environmental stewardship and native plants. He spearheaded an agreement with Pinnacles National Park to hold rites-of-passage ceremonies, spring and fall dances, talking circles with elders and other events that aim to restore indigenous knowledge.

For the past decade, the tribe has held bimonthly meetings led by a psychiatrist and two psychologists, in which members delve into the trauma from a history of dislocation. All the while, he has consistently convened members for holiday gatherings, basket-weaving seminars and other events to preserve a cultural identity and meet one of the tests for tribal recognition.

Though Zwierlein has all but disappeared from public life in recent years, her contested claim remains the BIAs primary reason for declining to grant Amah Mutsun federal tribal status. On Sept. 3, the BIA gave both factions a chance to submit more paperwork to prove who has the rightful claim to leadership. Lopez says hell go through the motions by giving the feds what they ask for, but that he long ago lost faith in the process.

To be honest, were not even sure we want that, Lopez says. Even though you do get certain benefits and sovereignty, when youre federally recognized you also become a ward of the governmentand the government has never had our best interests at heart.

If it ultimately falls to the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band to protect its heritage on its ownwithout help from the federal governmentLopez is fine with that.

The BIA is evil, Lopez says. Theyre just waiting for us to assimilate or die. Lopez does not plan to do either.

Valentin Lopez has served as chairman of the Amah Mutsun tribe for 16 years. (Photo by Nicholas Chan)

The fight for Juristac is just getting started, and its likely to be a long and contentious one. Although there was a strong showing of solidarity among environmental and advocacy groups on Sep. 8, there was almost no media coverage of the event.

What I have been saying for a period of time now, a number of years actually, is that the destruction and domination of Native Americans never ended, it just evolved, Lopez says. It evolved to what we see todayour important, sensitive cultural sites are being destroyed. And that's what's happening at Juristac.

Despite everything, Lopez remains hopeful.

Weve been told that the most effective way to stop this mine is by public opinion, he says. Because if the county supervisors want to get re-elected, they have to do what the people want. And so we're hoping we can get the people to stand with us and tell the supervisors that they must not approve that mine.

Knowing the importance of public opinion, the Amah Mutsun, in tandem with environmental groups and organizations like the Silicon Valley Democratic Socialists of America, have begun a campaign to organize and press their case. Last week they held an event at the First Unitarian Church of San Jose, where speakers, including Lopez, encouraged attendees to support the cause. Bumper stickers were on hand with the message, No Sargent Quarry on Amah Mutsun sacred grounds.

Of course, there are many recent precedents to these kinds of battles. It was during events at Standing Rock in 2016, when members of the Standing Rock Sioux fought to block an oil pipeline development near their reservation in North Dakota, where the native community honed their organizing skills. Despite the fact that the Standing Rock Sioux are a federally recognized tribe, the Dakota Access Pipeline project was ultimately approved by the Trump administration after months of fierce opposition.

Jennifer Wadsworth, Grace Hase and Nick Veronin contributed to this report.

Related

More:
Fight over Proposed Sargent Ranch Quarry is Shaping Up to be Silicon Valley's Standing Rock - San Jose Inside

Anti-Zionism Is Antisemitism | Avi Benlolo – The Times of Israel

Posted By on November 30, 2019

One of the darkest periods at the United Nations took place in 1975 when Zionism was declared to be racism. A more enlightened General Assembly reversed this decision in 1991 but the stench of politically driven antisemitism remained. No other group has suffered near physical extinction as the Jews have and few other groups suffer continued defamation to its national character and religious identity.

What anti-Zionists often intentionally overlook is the inherent connection of the Jewish people to the land. They try subterfuge linking the term strictly to a political movement connecting it to popular academic terms like colonialism, occupation and worse, apartheid. Whereas the Jew historically has been mythicized, dehumanized, marginalized and disallowed by the majority to determine its own fate, today the new form of antisemitism is politicized and attempting to destroy and disrupt our existence once again.

Zionism is an expression not only of that self-determination that irks antisemites (the Jew is not entitled to be here), it is in truth both a physical and spiritual representation of the Jewish peoples historical and biblical connection to the Land of Israel. The Antisemite simply cannot accept, no matter the physical evidence on the ground, that the Jewish people are indigenous to the land, that their status on the land and inherent right is as legitimate as the uncontested and obvious right of the indigenous peoples of North America and elsewhere on earth.

Zion is not merely a synonym for Jerusalem and the Land of Israel as a whole. It not only refers to a specific hill in Jerusalem (Mount Zion), which is located just south of Mount Moriah. The word itself is said to appear in biblical text dating back to the period of Samuel from 630-540 BCE. Therefore, our connection as a people to our homeland to Zion is not merely a political movement founded by Theodore Herzl at the first Zionist Congress in Basil in 1897. It is connected to our very religion.

Those who deny Zionism or who call it a racist endeavour fail to comprehend its historic significance in Judaism. Our historic pledge to return to Zion after the destruction of Jerusalem is in our prayer liturgy, which is more than 2,000 years old. As an example, Zion and Jerusalem are mentioned five times in the central Jewish prayer called the Amidah and it is no coincidence that for 20 centuries we have been facing East toward Zion when praying.

In a historic speech condemning the 1975 UN resolution, American Ambassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan said: What we have here is a lie a political lie of a variety well known to the twentieth century, and scarcely exceeded in all that annal of untruth and outrage. The lie is that Zionism is a form of racism. The overwhelmingly truth is that it is not.

Similarly, Israeli Ambassador Chaim Herzog emphatically expressed to the General Assembly that for the Jewish people, this resolution based on hatred, falsehood and arrogance is devoid of any moral or legal value. For us, the Jewish people, this is no more than a piece of paper and we shall treat it as such. Ambassador Herzog concluded his speech by ripping the paper in which the resolution was written upon in half.

Bret Stephens is right when he says that today it is very difficult for people to be antisemites and to hate Jews for racial reasonsit is unfashionable to hate Jews simply on a religious basis, but it has become fashionable to hate Jews using the excuse of their statehood, of their nationality and of their willingness to defend their borders, as the latest pretext to single out Jewish people for opprobrium and for hatred that is applied to almost no other people in the world.

And so, those who claim Zionism is a form of racism deny the very connection of the Jewish people to the land of our forefathers. They deny history and they deny the truth in order to bend reality to their own political and strategic purpose. By claiming Zionists are colonizers of their own land, that they have no right to their own aspiration for freedom on their indigenous land while effecting a double standard only in and of their critique of Israel these provocateurs are in themselves exerting a form of racism.

Our homeland the land of our forefathers, of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob has been sought after and pursued by many peoples and civilizations. But the Jewish people held on to faith and to their connection to the land of Zion. No matter where they were dispersed to, they cried out in prayer next year in Jerusalem. Those who deny our connection to Zion and who demonize and delegitimize our inherent right to a Jewish homeland are still stuck in in the darkest periods of time. They should do some serious soul searching.

Avi Benlolo is the President and CEO of Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies (FSWC), a Jewish non-profit human rights organization. Avi is a prominent Canadian human rights activist dedicated to promoting tolerance, freedom, democracy and human rights.

See the rest here:
Anti-Zionism Is Antisemitism | Avi Benlolo - The Times of Israel

Corbyn ally who called Zionism ‘enemy of peace’ says party ‘sorry’ over Jew-hate – Jewish News

Posted By on November 30, 2019

A Labour frontbencher who falsely denied claiming Zionism was the enemy of peace has said the party is sorry for the hurt caused to the Jewish community.

Shadow justice secretary Richard Burgons comments come after the Labour leader refused to apologise for his partys handling of the issue.

Jeremy Corbyn faced a backlash for his lack of contrition during a TV interview with Andrew Neil on Tuesday where he was asked on four occasions if he would say sorry to the community.

Get The Jewish News Daily Edition by email and never miss our top storiesFree Sign Up

This came in the wake a blistering attack on his record by Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis, who said a poison sanctioned from the top had taken root in the party and suggested Corbyn was unfit to be prime minister.

Burgon however insisted Corbyn had already apologised on a number of occasions but acknowledged Labour had not acted fast enough to deal with the issue and said they were sorry for the very real hurt that had been caused.

Of course were sorry for the hurt caused, he told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme.

Jeremy has apologised on a number of occasions and said that hes sorry for the very real hurt felt by people in the Jewish community.

So, on a number of occasions last summer for example, he has made those statements and its right that he did.

Jeremys already said that the Labour Partys processes were wrong, they werent swift enough, they werent hard enough, thats been proved and thats right.

In May of this year Burgon insisted he certainly did not lie when he claimed he had not described Zionism as the enemy of the peace.

Following his denial, a video emerged of him making the remarks, which he was shown during an appearance on Andrew Marr show, and faced criticism from the Jewish community.

Original post:
Corbyn ally who called Zionism 'enemy of peace' says party 'sorry' over Jew-hate - Jewish News


Page 1,321«..1020..1,3201,3211,3221,323..1,3301,340..»

matomo tracker