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The Tel Aviv International Synagogue | The Center for …

Posted By on June 15, 2018

Join hundreds of young Tel Avivians, Olim & Israelis alike, for our riveting weekend of Torah Learning & Spiritual Experience with Rabbi Ariel Konstantyn, Chazzan Israel Nachman and our A-List of Guest Scholars, Authors, Mystics and Public Figures with presentations in English, Hebrew and French!!!

7:00pm Mincha & Carlebach Kabbalat Shabbat with Chazzan Israel Nachman followed by our Champagne Kiddush Reception

Drasha Rav Yaakov Medan, Rosh Yeshivat Har Etzion on the topic Why Divide the Land by Tribe? (Hebrew)

Shabbat, May 19 Parshat Bamidbar, Erev Shavuot

8:45am Morning Services with the Chazz

Catered Cholent Kiddush in the Shomron Garden to follow generously sponsored by our dear members Lia Lands and Dean Entebbe in honor of their marriage and Deans Shabbat Chatan MAZAL TOV!

6:15pm Shiur with Rav Yosef Leibowitz on the topic: The Connection between Shabbat, the Order of Festivals and the Coming of the Messiah(Hebrew)

7:20pm Shiur with Rav Eyal Vered, Board Member of Tzohar on the topic: The Tablets and the Broken Tablets (Hebrew)

7:20pm Shiur Gemara with Rabbi Ariel (English)

8:00pm Special Festive Tefillah with the Chazz!

11:00pm Rabbi Yosef Leibowitz, Founder Yad Yaakov Educational Initiatives

Secrets of the Garden of Eden

12:00am Rabbi Dr. Rafael Shuchat, Jewish Philosophy Department, Bar Ilan University

Rav Chaim Volozhins Controversy with Chassidut

1:00am Amit Adler, Astrologist & Author

Shavuot, Ruth, King David, Messiah & You

2:00am Rabbi Ariel Konstantyn, Rabbi of TAIS Beit El

Chag HaTenuvah: Vegetarianism vs. Compassionate Carnivorism

3:00am Open Beit Midrash with Rabbi Ariel & Rabbi Rafi

Cours de pense juive en Franais:

11:00pm Rachel Verliebter, Author & Research Fellow for Kabbalah Research, Bar Ilan University

Le fminin dans la Kabbale

12:00pm Pinchas Shuster, Shamash of TAIS Beit El

Shavuot & Spielberg Quand la Torah rencontre Hollywood

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Sunday, May 20 Shavuot

4:00am Kumsitz Sing-A-Long on Frishman Beach with Rabbi Ariel Konstantyn

4:45am Reading of Megillat Ruth and Sunrise Services

8:45am Shacharit Main Minyan

7:30pm Shiur with Rav Yosef Leibowitz on the topic: Midrash in Tanach Proverbs and Job (Hebrew)

8:15pm Maariv and Havdalah

Invite your friends! See you all there!

Theres NOTHING like SHABBAT & SHAVUOT at TAIS!!!

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The Tel Aviv International Synagogue | The Center for ...

Jewish Budapest-Synagogues, Heritage Tours, Sights, History

Posted By on June 8, 2018

Tours, Sights, History, Events in the Old Jewish DistrictThe Dohany Street Synagogue

The Jewish Quarter of Budapest (district VII.) is packed with historic and religious sights including:

Quick Links: Heritage Tours Jewish Sights in Buda and buda Sights in Pest Restaurants & Cafes in the Jewish Quarter Jewish Events, Programs

The Jews played an important role in the history of Pest, Buda, and buda (Old Buda), and after the unification of the previous three, in Budapests development.

Despite their persecution and the terror of the 20th century, we can still find many monuments of the once thriving Jewish Budapest.

The former Jewish Quarter in district VII. has a quaint atmosphere with

More and more unique cafes and bars (some of the famous ruin bars /romkocsma in Hungarian) are located in the Quarter:

Take your time to absorb this sometimes quirky part of the Hungarian capital!

These two Jewish heritage tours led by a professional guide in English show you the history and the most beautiful monuments of the historic Jewish district of the Pest side.

Note: There are no tours onSaturdays and Jewish holidays:

After payment youll automatically receive an E-Ticket.

Both tours cover the monuments and history of the Pest side.

The first Jewish settlers arrived on the Castle Hill of Buda from Western Europe in the 1050s in the areas of todays Vzivros (distr. I.) and buda (distr. III.).

By the 1200s Jews were in the most important economic positions in Buda.

This was a sore in many peoples eye so the representatives of the Catholic Church had persuaded King Andrs II. to include in the Aranybulla (Golden Bull -special decree issued in 1222) that Jews were not allowed to fill in such positions.

Fortunately the fate of Budas Jewish community turned for the better during the reign of King Bla IV.

He invited merchants from Germany to make up for the loss of population caused by the Mongol invasion (1241-42). They paid substantial tax to the king too.

Budas Jewish quarter was on the western side of todays Szt. Gyrgy Square which were pulled down during the construction of the first Royal Palace.

Part of the historic settlement had been restored but cant be visited due to reasons unknown.

Remains of the synagogue were excavated in 1964 part of which operates as a museum exhibiting Jewish relics and gravestones (opening hours: from 1st May till 31st October: Tue-Sun: 10.00-17.00, tickets: full price: 800 HUF, students, pensioners: 400 HUF.).

The renovated labyrinthine cellar system that can be visited as of recently includes a small, 2-3 sqm ritual bath, the mikveh.

The 11th-century ruins can only be visited on a tour organised by Bupap that organizes tours for locals (guiding is in Hungarian).

The street level was 5 meters lower than today and the system includes a.

The Kpes krnika mentions that there stood a synagogue and a mikveh at the Fehrvri gate in medieval times.

The Small Synagogue and the Medieval Jewish Prayer house at 26. Tncsics utca remind us of the everyday life of the Castle Districts Jewish community.

During the 150-year Turkish reign the Jewish community of Buda vanished almost entirely.

In the 17th century German and Czech Jewish settlers established homes in buda.

Buda and Pest didnt permit settlement of Jews until the end of the 18th century.

Under the patronage of the noble Zichy family the Jewish colony of buda developed into a prominent community.

In the 19th century the Reform Movement fought for giving equal rights to Jews too.

As a result of the movements efforts, Jews were free to settle down anywhere in Hungary including Pest and Buda. The Synagogue in buda (Lajos utca 163., III. district) was built in 1820-21 in Classicist style.

Today it houses a TV studio.

Moses Muncz (1750-1831) was the rabbi of the community at that time whose grave you can see in the beautiful Jewish cemetery in buda (Kls Bcsi t 369., III. district).

The memorial stone on the former buda brick factorys site marks the spot from where thousands of Jews were deported and sent to death under the terror of the Arrow Cross Party in 1944-45.

A nice garden surrounds the building of the secular Jewish Lauder Javne School (Budakeszi t 48. XII. district, bus No. 22. from Szll Klmn tr) built in 1996.

While youre there, take a look at the building of the old Jewish kindergarden next to the school.

Synagogues Tree of Life/Raoul Wallenberg Park Martyrs Cemetery Heroes Temple Goldmark Hall Jewish Museum & Archives Carl Lutz Memorial Sztehlo Gbor Memorial/Dek Square Raoul Wallenberg Memorial/Erzsbet Square Shoes on the Danube Holocaust Memorial Center

In the 19th century Pest became the center of Jewish Budapest.

Their religion, holidays and unique traditions made them form a community.

A Jewish quarter started to develop in

Three synagogues were built in the quarter: the most impressive of them is the Great Synagogue in Dohny Street built in 1859 in Moorish-Byzantine style.

Address: Dohny utca 2., district VII.

Winter (till 28. February 2018)

Spring & Autumn (01. March 27. April and 01. October 26. October)

Summer (29. April 30. September)

The synagogue is also closed on major Jewish holidays.

The two-towered temple can occupy 6000 people.

It is a neolog synagogue meaning that the men and women sit in separate areas within the church. The service is in Hebrew, and the 5000-pipe organ provides music.

Location: in the inner courtyard of the Great synagogue

Visiting the park:

You can visit itonly with a ticket to the Synagogue/Museum. The Tree of Life monument is visible from the street through the fence.

The silver metal weeping willow tree, the Tree of Life, stands in the Raoul Wallenberg Park.

It received its name after the Swedish diplomat who helped many Jews to escaping deportation in 1944-45.

The Tree stands in the garden of the synagogue and the Jewish Museum.

Its a very moving and sad monument created by Imre Varga in 1991 with the support of the Emmanuel Foundation (founded by Tony Curtis actor).

Names of the victims disappeared or died during the Nazi terror are engraved on almost each of the 30,000 leaves.

Monuments commemorate the names of other heroes like Giorgio Perlasca and Per Anger.

Location: in the courtyard of the Great Synagogue

Not far from the plaque stands the small Garden of Remembrance where those who died in the ghetto were buried during 1944-45.

Their names are engraved in the stone gravestones.

According to Jewish customs cemeteries are not supposed to be placed next to synagogues, but this one in the garden of the synagogue, overlooking Wesselnyi Street, was created out of necessity during WW II.

Until the 2nd half of 1944 Budapest was reluctant to cooperate with the Nazis to collect and sent Hungarian Jews into concentration camps, though the Hungarian government (lead by Mikls Horthy) stood on the side of the Germans.

Adolf Eichmann arrived in the Hungarian capital in December 1944 to carry out the deportation and execution of Hungarian Jews and Roma people.

A ghetto was established between Kirly utca and Dohny utca.

Because of the cold and the state of war the people in the ghetto werent able to carry their dead to the cemetery and bury them properly so thousands of corpses were left at the walls of the synagogue for 40 days.

During the liberation of the ghetto on 18. January, 1945 thousands of unburied dead victims lay on the streets. 1140 known and 1170 unknown martyrs were buried in 24 common graves in the courtyard of the central synagogue. The Dohny Street Synagogue is the only synagogue in the world that has a cemetery in its garden.

Address: Dohny utca 2., district VII., next to the Great Synagogue, M2 (red) metro Astoria station, bus 7, tram 49 Astoria stop

Tickets (includes visiting the synagogue, without guiding):

TIP: The Jewish Museum of Budapest on the left of the Great Synagogue has a collection of religious relics, historical documents, along with temporary exhibits. An arcade connects the museum with the modern-style Heroes Temple.

It can seat 186 people and is used for weekday worship services.

The Heroes Synagogue commemorates the 10 000 Hungarian Jewish soldier who gave their life for their country in the 1st World War.

A huge Star of David formed of Hebrew text adorns the entrance.

In winter the Friday evening and Saturday morning services are held here instead of the Great Synagogue.

Address: Sp utca 12. Wesselnyi utca 7., district VII., entrance from Wesselnyi Str.Opening hours: Mon-Tue-Wed: 10.00-16.00, Thurs: 12.00-16.00, Fri: 10.00-14.00 tel: (+36 1) 413 5547

After the Raoul Wallenberg Park and the Heroes Cemetery youll find a 3-storey building which houses the Federation of Hungarian Jewish Communities (MAZSIHISZ) and is the centre of Budapests Jewish Community.

The 12 reliefs on the facade symbolize the 12 tribes of Israel with their names in Hebrew.

The building also gives home to the Goldmark Hall, a multifunctional cultural centre named after Kroly Goldmark world-renowned composer.

The Hungarian Jewish Archives has created a new permanent exhibition about Pests Jewish Quarter at the back of the room.

On the 1st floor youll find the Gykerek/Roots centre where databases and resources are available for those doing a family research.

At 10., Dob utca on a small square youll find the Carl Lutz Memorial standing against a white wall on a tiny plaza.

Lutz (1895-1975) as a Swiss diplomat had great connections with the Germans and Palestine thus he was able to help many Jews to flee from the terror.

The quote from the Talmud engraved on the metal plaque next to the monument says: He who saves but one man is as if he had saved the whole world

From Dob utca turn left on Rumbach utca where another striking Synagogue stands completed in 1872.

Walk along Rumbach utca then turn right into Kirly utca, walk until you reach Kazinczy utca on your right. There stands the synagogue of Budapests Orthodox Jewish community.

Read more on Kazinczy Street.

Address: Kazinczy utca 29-31., district VII.

Tickets: 1 000 HUF

The huge, Art-Nouveau synagogue is unmissable in the narrow Kazinczy Street.

It functions as the house of worship and teaching centre of Budapests Jewish communitys orthodox branch.

Bla Lffler and Sndor Lffler, disciples of Bla Lajta, designed the temple that was built between 1910-1913.

Besides the synagogue, the complex includes

From Kazincy Street turn right into Dob utca.

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Jewish Budapest-Synagogues, Heritage Tours, Sights, History

Beit Hashofar Synagogue

Posted By on June 8, 2018

Special Events

Shavuot Services

Sat. May 19thNO MORNING SERVICE

5PMMincha Service6PMDairy meal celebrating Shavuot8:30PMShavuot Maariv Service(followed by group study)

No services on Sunday

In our community, character matters. We created a program to help us balance our character traits. Browse our learning materials and strengthen your own character. This should be the basis of every healthy faith community.

Click here for a great starting point.

Stay informed of events and classes at BHS

by Rebbetzin Malkah

As a child, I fondly remember flipping through the channels looking for some of my favorite shows. Occasionally, the music for one particular show would stream onto the television as the ever popular cartoon train moved across the screen - yes, I mean Soul Train. I would pause for a moment and watch the train go by and then continue my search. I can still hear the music in my head to this day. What was unique about this show is that for many, it was a window into African-American culture that for some might otherwise never have been experienced. The latest fashion and dance trends were discussed, and new or popular artists donned the set to sing the latest hits. During the 70's and 80's, it was a cultural and spiritual tutor for many.

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by Rebbetzin Malkah

The car packed to the hilt, the Thule threatening to burst at the seams atop our car, our family drove with desperation for one purpose only: to be near the mountains. The familiar rental cabin nestled fifteen miles from Mt. Baker in Washington affords five star mountain accommodations: no cell phone access, no wireless internet and no cable TV. In essence, the goal was to set up shop, our own Mishkan, away from the roar of everyday life. While some of the usual technological conveniences were lost, we knew we would not be without the four elements crucial to the Mishkan and considered symbolically essential in any Jewish home: the Ark, the Table, the Menorah and the Incense Altar. Ok, well not literally - they wouldn't fit in the car. However, all of these elements are interconnected to the basic physical elements that still exist in this world: air, fire, earth and water. Being out in the more remote areas at the foot of a mountain, it wasn't hard to see that I was in a larger than life Mishkan model that was vitally connected to all of these natural elements. Perhaps it was noticing on our second day the Holy Smoke bus, clad in gold (or school bus yellow paint) that waited outside the gate of the cabin properties boasting of an eatery just down the road. It sat there, as if some beacon, reminding me that even in this remote area, under the Heavens, we carry our own Mishkans with us today and follow suit with the kohanim: setting up, tearing down, wherever we go, wherever we stay.

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Beit Hashofar Synagogue

Cameron Boyce Ethnicity of Celebs | What Nationality …

Posted By on June 7, 2018

Place of Birth: Los Angeles, California, U.S.

Date of Birth: May 28, 1999

Ethnicity:*Afro-Caribbean, African-American (father)*Ashkenazi Jewish (mother)

Cameron Boyce is an American actor and dancer. His father is black, of Afro-Caribbean and African-American descent. His mother, who is white, is Ashkenazi Jewish (of Hungarian Jewish, Russian Jewish, Lithuanian Jewish, and German Jewish descent).

A picture of Camerons parents can be seen here. A picture of Camerons paternal grandparents can be seen here.

Cameron has said, I like to say that Im bl-ewish, Im black and Im Jewish. So you know, me and Drake, we got that in common.

Camerons paternal grandfather is Victor Elliott Boyce. Victor was from the Caribbean.

Camerons paternal grandmother is Jo Ann Crozier Allen (the daughter of Herbert Allen and Alice Josephine Hopper). Jo Ann was born in Clinton, Tennessee. In 1956, Jo Ann was one of the Clinton Twelve, one of twelve students who were the first group of African-American students to attend a desegregated high school in the Southern U.S. (Clinton High School).

Camerons maternal grandfather was Roger Small (the son of Marvin Small, born Marvin Stanley Smallheiser, and of Blanche D. Abrams). Roger Small was one of the early founding members of Temple Emanuel in Greater New Haven, Connecticut. Marvin was born in New York, to Hungarian Jewish parents, Maximillian Smallheiser and Lottie Schoenberger. Blanche was born in New York, the daughter of Louis Abrams and Marion Mazer, who were of Russian Jewish descent.

Camerons maternal grandmother is Joan Berland (the daughter of Irving Louis Berland and Beryl Wormser). Irving was a Jewish immigrant from Vilna, Lithuania, and the son of Samuel Berland and Hannah Horowitz. Beryl was born in Pennsylvania, the daughter of Morris Wormser, who was born in New York, to German Jewish parents, and of Sadie Goltman, who was born in Glasgow, Scotland, also to German Jewish parents.

Sources: Genealogy of Cameron Boyce https://www.geni.com

Camerons maternal grandfather, Roger Small, on the 1930 U.S. Census https://familysearch.org

Obituary of Camerons maternal grandfather, Roger Small http://www.legacy.com

Marriage record of Camerons maternal great-great-grandparents, Maximillian Smallheiser and Lottie Schoenberger https://familysearch.org

Camerons maternal great-grandmother, Blanche D. Abrams, on the 1910 U.S. Census https://familysearch.org

Camerons maternal grandmother, Joan Berland, on the 1930 U.S. Census https://familysearch.org

Camerons maternal great-grandmother, Beryl Wormser, on the 1900 U.S. Census https://familysearch.orgBeryl Wormser on the 1910 U.S. Census https://familysearch.org

Photo by PrPhotos

Tagged as:African, African American, Afro-Caribbean, Ashkenazi Jewish, Caribbean, German Jewish, Hungarian Jewish, Jewish, Lithuanian Jewish, Russian Jewish

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Cameron Boyce Ethnicity of Celebs | What Nationality ...

Zionism: Is Zionism Racism? – Jewish Virtual Library

Posted By on June 4, 2018

In 1975, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution slandering Zionism by equating it with racism. In his spirited response to the resolution, Israel's Ambassador to the UN, Chaim Herzog noted the irony of the timing, the vote coming exactly 37 years after Kristallnacht.

Zionism is the national liberation movement of the Jewish people, which holds that Jews, like any other nation, are entitled to a homeland.

History has demonstrated the need to ensure Jewish security through a national homeland. Zionism recognizes that Jewishness is defined by shared origin, religion, culture and history.

The realization of the Zionist dream is exemplified by more than four million Jews, from more than 100 countries, including dark-skinned Jews from Ethiopia, Yemen and India, who are Israeli citizens. Approximately 1,000,000 Muslim and Christian Arabs, Druze, Baha'is, Circassians and other ethnic groups also are represented in Israel's population.

Many Christians have traditionally supported the goals and ideals of Zionism. Israel's open and democratic character and its scrupulous protection of the religious and political rights of Christians and Muslims rebut the charge of exclusivity.

The Arab states define citizenship strictly by native parentage. It is almost impossible to become a naturalized citizen in many Arab states, especially Algeria, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. Several Arab nations have laws that facilitate the naturalization of foreign Arabs, with the specific exception of Palestinians. Jordan, on the other hand, instituted its own "law of return" in 1954, according citizenship to all former residents of Palestine, except for Jews.

The presence of thousands of black Jews in Israel is the best refutation of the calumny against Zionism. In a series of historic airlifts - labeled Operations Moses (1984), Joshua (1985) and Solomon (1991), Israel rescued almost 42,000 members of the ancient Ethiopian Jewish community.

To single out Jewish self-determination for condemnation is itself a form of racism. "A world that closed its doors to Jews who sought escape from Hitler's ovens lacks the moral standing to complain about Israel's giving preference to Jews," wrote noted civil rights lawyer Alan Dershowitz.

When approached by a student who attacked Zionism, Martin Luther King responded: "When people criticize Zionists, they mean Jews. You're talking anti-Semitism."

The 1975 UN resolution was part of the Soviet-Arab Cold War anti-Israel campaign. Almost all the former non-Arab supporters of the resolution have apologized and changed their positions. When the General Assembly voted to repeal the resolution in 1991, only some Arab and Muslim states, as well as Cuba, North Korea and Vietnam were opposed.

Below, you can listen to Chaim Herzog's historic speech lambasting the 1975 UN resolution equating Zionism with racism, and US ambassador to the UN Daniel Patrick Moynihan's response to the resolution as well.

Go here to see the original:
Zionism: Is Zionism Racism? - Jewish Virtual Library

CBT-BI Synagogue – serving South Jersey

Posted By on June 3, 2018

Welcome To Our Synagogue!

Congregation Bnai Tikvah-Beth Israel in South Jersey is a vibrant, welcoming, egalitarian Jewish community with over 125 member households primarily from Gloucester and Camden Counties. We offer religious services and activities, parties, socials, and education for all ages as well as an active Mens Club, Sisterhood and PTO. Learn More

All are welcome to join us every weekend throughout the year:Friday nights: 7:00 pm (generally lasting 1 hour)Saturday mornings: 10:00 am (generally lasting 2 hrs.)Onegs after services provide a place to mingle and enjoy refreshments. Learn More

NEW! CBT-BI offers free tuition for kindergarten through second grade, and membership is not required to receive free kindergarten tuition.

Our classes meet as follows:Kindergarten 2nd grades Sundays, 9:15-Noon3rd 7th grades Sundays, 9:15 NoonWednesdays, 4:15 6:15pmConfirmation (8-10th Grades)Wednesdays, 6:30pm 8:30pmLearn More

There are singles, married couples, Holocaust survivors, Jews by choice, intermarried families, blended families, those who studied for many years in Jewish day schools, as well as those who have little or no formal Jewish education. All have found their place in our community. Rabbi Jordi Gendra

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CBT-BI Synagogue - serving South Jersey

Different Hoax for Different Folks – Taki’s Magazine

Posted By on June 3, 2018

At its Never Is Now anti-Semitism summit this week, the Anti-Defamation League gave its ADL Americanism Award to Lt. Gen. Jay Silveria, superintendent of the Air Force Academy, for his famed speech last September denouncing white racists for scrawling antiblack slurs on the dorm door of a black student.

Silverias order to racists to Get out (an admiring reference to the antiwhite horror movie) was celebrated by the media, with Silveria being declared 2020 presidential timber and an admirable rival to the deplorable Donald Trump. Silveria was especially adulated for dog-whistling:

We would also be tone-deaf not to think about the backdrop of whats going on in our countrythings like Charlottesville and Ferguson, the protest in the NFL.

The only problem with the ADLs ceremony honoring Lt. Gen. Silverias commitment, dedication, and leadership in the fight against hate was that six days earlier the Air Force Academy had admitted that the graffiti had been a hoax perpetrated by an unnamed black student.

In other words, the Air Force Academy incident had indeed been a racist hate crime, but, contra General Silveria, one perpetrated to spread fear and loathing against its white victims.

The ADL, however, is not in the business of letting reality get in the way of business.

The ADL is not in the business of letting reality get in the way of business.

Granted, the ADL, with $81 million in net assets, isnt as rich as the money-crazed Southern Poverty Law Center, Americas most lucrative hate organization. Still, the ADL has done very well for itself in its 104 years of activity, collecting, for instance, $56,000 over the years from Donald Trump.

Trumps election has provided the ADL with a profitable pretext for ramping up fund-raising efforts. Jewish Insider reported a week after the 2016 election:

The Anti-Defamation League has seen a dramatic increase in online donations since the election of Donald Trump, new data shared with Jewish Insider showed. Last Wednesday, the day after the surprising election results, the ADL received a 50X increase in online donations, mostly from new donors. We are heartened by the outpouring of support that we and reportedly other nonprofit organizations in this field have received over the past week, ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt told Jewish Insider.... ADL is kicking off its inaugural Never is Now! two-day summit in New York City on Thursday to address some of the most urgent challenges facing the Jewish community and identify new strategies to effectively combat anti-Semitism. Tickets to the events are sold out, according to ADL.

Last winter, for example, the ADL had been doing well off blaming the sudden spate of threats against Jewish community centers upon Trump.

But then it turned out that eight of the calls had been made by a black leftist journalist named Juan Thompson. And next it emerged that up to 2,000 threats were the work of an energetic young Jewish man in Israel with dual Israeli-American citizenship, Michael Ron David Kadar.

Undeterred, the ADL responded to Kadars arrest in Israel not by demanding his extradition to the U.S. but by issuing an amusing press release announcing:

While the details of this crime remain unclear, the impact of this individuals actions is crystal clear: These were acts of anti-Semitism.

Similarly, Silverias disgrace didnt dissuade Jonathan Greenblatt, the head of the ADL, from honoring him for stoking hatred.

Similarly, Kansas State University discovered last week that its nationally publicized antiblack hate crime on Halloween was actually another antiwhite hate hoax. Likewise, the destruction of a Jewish ceremonial tent at Kansas State earlier in the fall had not been anti-Semitic violence by vicious Trump supporters as originally theorized, but an Act of God: A gust of wind had blown over the tent.

Nonetheless, KSU president Richard Myers announced, without mentioning the hoax, that he was suspending classes for two hours on Tuesday of this week for a rally against racism. With 24,766 students and an out-of-state tuition of $23,000, wasting a quarter of a school day at KSU to fulfill the goals of the hoax would appear to cost nearly a million dollars.

That would seem to be atrocious management. Yet ask yourself: What bureaucrat has ever gotten in trouble for falling for a hate hoax? After all, the concept of a hate hoax has been successfully kept out of the mainstream mentality. In all its years since its founding in 1851, The New York Times has never once used the words hate and hoax consecutively.

In contrast, it ought to be said, American cops have been fairly admirable in not rushing to persecute the victims of hate hoaxes. For example, the cops initially got the George ZimmermanTrayvon Martin tragedy right, while the national media later went hysterical.

Last week, in response to the Air Force and Kansas State fiascos, it was widely asserted in the press that the ratio of hate hoaxes relative to the number of hate crimes is tiny.

But, having followed the topic of hate hoaxes carefully going back to the 2004 fraud at Claremont McKenna when a professor trashed her Honda in order to blame it on her conservative white male students, my estimate is that about as many nationally publicized bias crimes turn out to be fallacious as turn out to be confirmed.

Hate-hoax perps are sometimes arrested and even punished. For instance, the Claremont professor was sentenced to a year in prison. On the other hand, the perps at Air Force and Kansas State were spared legal involvement.

More important, higher-ups almost never suffer consequences for encouraging hate hoaxes by taking them seriously. Both Silveria of the Air Force Academy and Greenblatt of the ADL have fallen for hate hoaxes this year in what should have been a humiliating fashion. But instead, the two chumps/exploiters were honoring each other this week.

Last week, comedy legend Larry David shocked much of the country by devoting one joke in his Saturday Night Live monologue to noticing that his fellow Jews were overrepresented in the ongoing Harvey Weinstein-inspired sexual-harassment scandals.

Similarly, Jews tend to disproportionately figure in validating and promoting hate hoaxes. But few know this because David-style criticism of any Jewish tendencies toward self-indulgent behavior is punished in modern America.

Indeed, the ADL says it exists to to put an end forever toridicule of any sect or body of citizens. In essence, Jews are off-limits to satire. Yet being vulnerable to criticism encourages us to behave better, which is why people like Weinstein and Greenblatt are able to run amok for so long.

There actually are a certain number of classic hate crimes committed each year by whites against nonwhites. But these usually involve lowlifes and the cops come down on them like a ton of bricks, so the stories dont because national causes clbres.

In contrast, a high proportion of the cases in the national media turn out to be absurd. For example, when The New York Times a year ago was promoting the idea of a wave of hate following Trumps victory, its top-featured case was from Lindenwood U. There a jolly Polynesian lady rugby player had jokingly assembled a wall of tennis shoes to divide her half of the dorm room from that of her Mexican roommate. The outraged Mexican coed called campus security.

But lining up sneakers toe to heel isnt illegal, yet.

America has tens of thousands of social scientists. Yet as far as I can tell, not one has ever studied quantitatively what percentage of nationally publicized hate incidents turn out to be misleadingly fallacious.

This ought to be the highest-priority social science question in America, but its likely to remain off-limits for objective study.

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Different Hoax for Different Folks - Taki's Magazine

Anti-Defamation League Joins Call for HB Finance …

Posted By on May 30, 2018

Van Der Mark and pals in Santa Monica (YouTube Screenshot)

Gracey Van Der Mark somehow remains on the Huntington Beach finance commission even after a controversy erupted around her online bigotry earlier this month. As the Weekly reported, Van Der Mark recently deleted comments on YouTube where she referred to blacks as colored people and suggested they dutifully did the bidding of Jews at a white privilege workshop in Santa Monica she helped crash last summer. Van Der Mark also scrubbed a Holocaust hoax? playlist from her YouTube channel.

But for all the online erasures, residents and concerned community members turned out to Huntington Beach city council last night to call for Van Der Marks removal from the post councilman Patrick Brenden appointed her to. This individual has posted material on the internet that one could fairly describe as anti-Semitic, as Islamophobic and as racist, said Rabbi Stephen Einstein of Fountain Valleys Congregation Bnai Tzedek. It is my urgent request that you look into this and investigate it and then take whatever appropriate action you deem as right.

The Anti-Defamation League weighed in on Van Der Mark with a letter sent to city council on Friday. We dont always write letters but when we do its because we feel very strongly that its an opportunity for you as the mayor and the city council to take the statement and do whats right and accurate, Rabbi Peter Levi, the ADLs OC regional director, said at council. Its not about liberals or conservatives. Its about extremists that are beyond the spectrum.

Obtained by the Weekly, the ADL letter echoed the call for an investigation into Van Der Marks remarks and associations. There is ample evidence she has made bigoted and hateful comments and that she has participated in activities organized and led by white supremacists, Levi wrote. These words and actions call into question her ability to serve as an appointed leader in the Huntington Beach community. The organization noted the Weeklys reporting and described Van Der Marks colored people comments about Jews as classic anti-Semitic trope in stating she should be removed from her commission post.

And its not just antisemitism. The ADL also noted Van Der Mark belonged to a Three Percenters Facebook group and made Islamophobic comments on the social media site suggesting that the U.S. Department of Education is funding sharia indoctrination in public schools. Did we mention that Van Der Mark also serves on the Ocean View School District Measure R Citizens Oversight Committee in Huntington Beach? Maybe shes making sure taxpayer funds dont go towards constructing mosques on school grounds or something.

Either way, the ADL sent the same letter to the school district. Trustee Gina Clayton-Tarvin, who appointed Van Der Mark in June, denounced her hateful statements and beliefs in calling for her removal at council. I want to note that there have been two past commissioners who have stepped down when their actions and speech were deemed unacceptable by residents, Clayton-Tarvin said. I must ask all of you, do you believe that a representative of a city commission should be publicly denying the Holocaust and posting that it is a hoax? Do you accept that? I dont.

Kim Sorgente, a Huntington Beach resident and Proud Boys reject, helped crashed the anti-racist workshop in Santa Monica with Van Der Mark and others, including two scheduled Unite the Right speakers in Charlottesville. Sorgentecame to her defense at council. I cant say Im too fond of her, he said. What I can say is this; Gracey is a person of color and shes darker than any of these people that took this podium and spoke against her. She was there to make America a better place. Sorgente babbled on about white genocide in South Africaa favored talking point among white supremacistsand how he hoped a similar poison doesnt take route in the United States.

Outside of public comments, OCs Scariest People 2016 honoree Chris Epting backed Van Der Mark in an email sent to councilman Brenden and others that he proudly posted on the infamous Huntington Beach Community Forum on Facebook. Please do not give these dishonest cowards the pound of flesh they desire, Epting wrote. OVSD Trustee John Briscoe could not even get Graceys name right tonight. Funny. Epting couldnt either, writing the commissioners last name as Larrea-Van Der throughout the email in missing the Mark. Oh, and taking a reference from The Merchant of Venice in defending an anti-Semite aint too bright either!

Notwithstanding Eptings hissy fit, if Van Der Mark already deleted her colored people comments and Holocaust hoax? YouTube playlist, why hasnt councilman Brenden dropped her from the finance commission yet?

Gabriel San Roman is from Anacrime. Hes a journalist, subversive historian and tallest Mexican in OC.

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Anti-Defamation League Joins Call for HB Finance ...

MANDEL: The sad politics around a Jewish Heritage Month …

Posted By on May 26, 2018

It began as an outrageous mockery of Canadas first Jewish Heritage Month. And ended with Jewish students learning the importance of fighting back.

When Noa Elfassy and her friends from Forest Hill Collegiate recently returned from March of the Living an emotional two-week trip that takes Jewish high school students to Poland to examine the horrors of the Holocaust and then to Israel to learn about the birth of the Jewish state they were told their schools annual Holocaust Remembrance assembly wasnt being held this year.

So the Grade 11 students decided to organize their own two-day program and were asked by school administrators to hold it in May to coincide with Canadas inaugural Jewish Heritage Month.

The teens invited the Holocaust survivors from their trip to speak at their school andto publicize the event, they hung a blue and white banner featuring the Star of David and Jewish Heritage Month in English and Hebrew in the school foyer.

For a week, there was no issue.

But on the eve of their program, the banner was removed without warning or consultation. When questioned by concerned students and parents, principal Reiko Fuentes said the banner was too controversial because it resembled the Israeli flag.

Too controversial? Have anti-Israel politics now invaded our high schools as well as our universities and ironically at a high school whose population is 30% Jewish?

Everyone was pretty enraged, Noa said.

As was her mother. Yael Elfassy called Fuentes. Her response was: I dont understand why you have to use the Israel flag when there are Jews all over the world.

Elfassy was rightfully appalled. The fact that the educator of my child doesnt understand that Israel is the Jewish state and the Israeli flag is as much a flag of the Jewish people as it is of Israel is disturbing, she said. She has no right to tell Jewish students to remove Israel from their heritage.

No right at all.

What did this say to those students at a time when a recent Toronto Police study found Jews were again the single most targeted group for hate crimes in Toronto: even your high school is not a safe harbour? A month set aside to celebrate Jewish identity and inclusion was instead used as just another excuse for discrimination.

The school and the TDSB (Toronto District School Board) are unilaterally deciding what elements of Jewish heritage theyre allowed to mark at school, complained Aidan Fishman, national director for the League for Human Rights at Bnai Brith Canada.

Added Bnai Brith CEO Michael Mostyn: This month is supposed to symbolize the acceptance and inclusion of Jewish students and teachers in Toronto schools, but is now marking the exact opposite.The administration at Forest Hill Collegiate Institute must immediately return the Jewish Heritage Month banner to its rightful place, and apologize to the Jewish students who have had their heritage denigrated by their own principal.

TDSB trustee Alexandra Lulka took to Facebook: Jewish students must feel welcome in TDSB schools. This incident creates a toxic atmosphere. The TDSB does not get to dictate to Jewish students what aspects of their identity are appropriate for Jewish Heritage Month.

The TDSB did not return a request for comment.

The principal promised a meeting with parents and students to discuss the matter but that meeting never happened. Instead, Fuentes announced the banner would be closeted in the library where Jewish Heritage Month events were being held.

And what is most telling? The principal didnt bother to show up for the students program Wednesday.

In protest of the banner decision, many of the Forest Hill students wore the Israeli flag colours of blue and white and held a rally outside the school. Jewish organizations issued outraged press releases and their representatives met with TDSB brass. To see the whole community come together and really support us was awesome, Noa said.

By the end of the day, the banner was back in the foyer of Forest Hill Collegiate.

This was a victory for diversity, her mother said. This should just be an example of fighting for what you believe: We all have a right to our voice as long as there is no hate in that voice.

But as for the apology they deserve? Dont hold your breath.

mmandel@postmedia.com

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MANDEL: The sad politics around a Jewish Heritage Month ...

New York City – B’nai B’rith International

Posted By on May 23, 2018

New York - B'nai B'rith Young Leadership NetworkThe program year in NY kicked off in October 2014 with a joint Shabbat Dinner with Manhattan Jewish Experience-East. The evening provided a traditional Shabbat Dinner with over 85 young Jewish professionals coming together to observe Shabbat and meet new people.

Following that event, on Thursday, Jan. 22, 2015, the YLN-NYC met up at the German Consulate for Conversations Around the World. About 18-20 young Jewish leaders came together to hear the Consul General of Germany, Brita Wagener, speak about the current German-Jewish community and the impact of the various anti-Semitic situations in many countries on their community. After she spoke, there was a brief question and answer session, followed by wine and light refreshments. It was a great event and the YLN-NYC plan to have more events at the many consulates and diplomatic missions on the calendar for the spring and summer schedule.

A March event will be a social program in conjunction with the Congregation Agudath Israel- Young Professionals, who have an active group in both NYC and NJ.

Upcoming events will include a fundraising event to benefit the National Mitzvah project, which will be chosen soon by the National Committee of Young Leadership.

NYC young pros gather for one of the Global Round Table events.

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New York City - B'nai B'rith International


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