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Menashe looks, with tenderness and equanimity, at a Hasidic community in Brooklyn – The Denver Post

Posted By on August 16, 2017

Walking around Borough Park must feel, to some, like time travel. Residents of the southwest Brooklyn neighborhood are predominantly Orthodox Jews, whose 18th-century traditions still govern everything from custody disputes to attire.

In Menashe, filmmaker Joshua Z Weinstein turns his camera on this community, using non-actors to create a tender portrait of family. In addition to the fascinating everyday details of these characters lives, at the films moving core is a loving father who is struggling to negotiate the gap between community expectations and self-determination.

The title character (played by real-life grocer Menashe Lustig) is a gregarious, oafish type who cant seem to catch a break. After his wife, Leah, passed away, his young son, Rieven (Ruben Niborski), has gone to live with Leahs brother Eizik (Yoel Weisshaus), in keeping with tradition. The reasoning? According to Hasidic culture, a home is incomplete without a woman to raise children and tidy the household. The arrangement will continue until Menashe finds a second wife.

Hes in no rush. Although the extent of his grief is unclear, Menashes peers increasingly see him as a loser. In a fit of frustration, Menashe announces that he wants to raise Rieven on his own. When the rabbi sanctions Menashes decision, albeit temporarily, Menashe aims to prove himself by hosting Leahs memorial ceremony.

Weinstein took his time to ingratiate himself with a community that does not welcome outsiders. Before filming, he gained their trust by putting on a yarmulke and spending time in apartments and at parties and religious gatherings. Lustig stood out hes naturally charismatic and goofy and the film is based on his real-life experience as a widower.

Menashe mixes such cinema verite techniques as natural light and hand-held camerawork with human drama that sidesteps the expected. Weinstein got his start as a camera operator on documentaries, and that experience is an asset here: There are many scenes that capture meaning in the routine, whether its how Menashe gets ready for bed or how he participates in community prayer. At the same time, the film doesnt burrow into the tenets of Jewish dogma. Tradition and ritual are what interest Weinstein, as well as the understated suggestion that Menashe might be more modern and secular than his peers.

Although one character discusses the pervasive depravity of gentiles, Weinstein and his co-screenwriters Alex Lipschultz and Musa Syeed are careful not to judge either community. Some of their choices are bizarre: In one gently comic scene, Menashe goes through the motions of a date, barely hiding his disinterest when his companion announces her belief that women shouldnt be allowed to drive.

By focusing on the details of his characters lives, Weinstein finds common ground on both sides of the religious divide. Menashes boss is a pain, and so is his brother-in-law. Menashe worries about his son, and he has too much pride to ask for help.

These are universal problems, filmed without melodrama. Many characters keep their feelings buried, engaging in the ubiquitous tribal gossip to mask what they really think. The Yiddish language barrier that most viewers will face also adds some mystery to the drama, because there are stretches of dialogue where the characters seem to be saying way more than the subtitles convey.

In a recent interview with NPRs Robert Siegel, Weinstein said that Lustig had never been inside a movie theater until the films Sundance premier. The actors separation from contemporary Western culture pop culture in particular lends his character a unique presence. In scene after scene, Menashe strikes complex notes without telegraphing how the audience should feel.

Theres an odd freedom to this kind of storytelling, even if the communitys gender inequality grows more glaring as the movie goes on. (There are no women at Leahs memorial.) Critiquing this community, however, would undermine Weinsteins greater purpose.

Menashe has little desire to leave the Orthodox world, or to explain what it means to him. But if you were to chat with him over a beer, I suspect, you might find an easygoing rapport that would surprise you.

Three and one-half stars.

Rated PG.

In Yiddish with subtitles.

81 minutes.

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Menashe looks, with tenderness and equanimity, at a Hasidic community in Brooklyn - The Denver Post

Clayton County Calendar of Events – News-Daily.com

Posted By on August 16, 2017

The Clayton Chamber of Commerce Women in Business Council will host a spotlight luncheon from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the continuing education building at Clayton State University, 2000 Clayton State Blvd. in Morrow. The luncheon will feature prominent local business women and their stories of success. Tickets are $35 per person or $280 per table. Register at claytonchamber.org.

The Front Porch Players presents Driving Miss Daisy, a Pulitzer Prize-winning play by Alfred Uhry that begins in Atlanta in the 1940s and affectionately covers the 25-year relationship between a strong-willed Southern Jewish widow Daisy Werthan and her equally indomitable African-American chauffeur, Hoke Colburn. Directed by Karen Ferrell-White, the cast includes Jay Michael Isbell as Hoke and Mary Anne Brannon as Miss Daisy. Showtimes are Aug. 18 and 19 at 7:30 p.m., and Aug. 20 at 2:30 p.m. at First Presbyterian Church of Jonesboro, 1842 Lake Jodeco Road in Jonesboro. General admission is $12 for adults. Tickets are available now at thefrontporchplayers.com.

Congressman David Scott is hosting his 13th Annual Health Fair from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Aug. 19 at Mundys Mill High School, 9652 Fayetteville Road in Jonesboro. The Health Fair will provide vital health screenings and information at no cost from the regions health care providers and advocacy organizations. To register and view a list of participating organizations, visit http://www.davidscott.house.gov.

Enjoy performances by the Dr. Love Blues Revue with Albert White, Lady D, Sandra Hall and more during the next Dr. Love Blues and Barbecue Summer Jam Series on Aug. 19 from 2 to 8 p.m. at Starr Park, 803 Forest Pkwy. in Forest Park.

Caribbean Cultural Festival

The Caribbean Association of Georgia Inc. hosts the eighth Annual Atlanta Caribbean Cultural Festival on Aug. 19 at Clayton County International Park, 2300 Ga. Highway 138 S.E. in Jonesboro, from 1 to 8 p.m. Come out to celebrate Caribbean American heritage and take part in the largest festival of its kind in Clayton County. This event is free and open to the public. Aug. 24

Al Smith and friends will perform at the Lakeview Amphitheater of the Clayton County International Park, 2300 Ga. Highway 138 SE in Jonesboro, as part of Clayton Countys Sip & Sounds concert series. Bring your own lawn chairs, food and beverages to enjoy this free concert from 5:30 to 9 p.m.

Berryz Bridge and The Next Generation will perform at the Lakeview Amphitheater of the Clayton County International Park, 2300 Ga. Highway 138 SE in Jonesboro, as part of Clayton Countys Sip & Sounds concert series. Bring your own lawn chairs, food and beverages to enjoy this free concert from 5:30 to 9 p.m.

Clayton State University is holding a hiring event for returning citizens, or ex-offenders, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Athletic Center, 2000 Clayton State Blvd. in Morrow. Gain access to employers and learn valuable skills in resume building and interviewing. The event is presented by the Henry County Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc. Register and learn more by contacting jobshcac@gmail.com.

In conjunction with the Premiere Tennis and College Experience, Clayton County Commissioner Sonna Singleton Gregory, along with the Board of Commissioners and Parks and Recreation, will be hosting a college fair at the J. Charley Griswell Senior Center, 2300 Highway 138 S.E. in Jonesboro, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.. This fair aims to showcase colleges and university systems in Georgia.

Erica Dawson and the 911 Band will perform at the Lakeview Amphitheater of the Clayton County International Park, 2300 Ga. Highway 138 SE in Jonesboro, as part of Clayton Countys Sip & Sounds concert series. Bring your own lawn chairs, food and beverages to enjoy this free concert from 5:30 to 9 p.m.

Join the city of Jonesboro Sept. 23 from noon to 8 p.m. for the 2nd Annual Downtown Street Festival. The festival will feature food truck options, street vendors, kids play zones and live music. Vendor opportunities are available by contacting events@jonesboroga.com.

The Forest Park Police Department is now accepting vendor applications for this years National Night Out on Tuesday, Sept. 26 at Starr Park, 803 Forest Parkway in Forest Park. The evening is focused on crime prevention and drug awareness and is geared toward the citys youth and their parents. For more information or to register your business, email CYermack@forestparkpd.com.

A benefit banquet for the Pregnancy Resource Center in Clayton County will be held from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Oct. 5 in the Fellowship Hall of the First Baptist Church of Jonesboro, 147 Church St. in Jonesboro. Keynote speaker is Dr. Haywood Robinson. Reservations are required and can be made at pregnancycare85@bellsouth.net or 770-477-1501.

The Lovejoy Library, 1721 McDonough Road in Hampton, offers an enrichment time from 3 to 4 p.m. for teens to have some fun with their peers, chatting or playing games. Teens welcome to bring and share their own board games.

The Forest Park Al-Anon Group hosts a meeting every Tuesday starting at 7 p.m. at Jones Memorial, 5320 Phillip Drive in Morrow. For more information, call 770-968-8293.

Kids ages 5 to 11 can play Wii from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. the first Friday of each month at the Clayton County Headquarters Library Branch, 865 Battle Creek Road in Jonesboro.

Teens get creative with colors and relieve stress each Thursday from 4 to 5:30 p.m. at the Lovejoy Library, 1721 McDonough Road in Hampton. Coloring pages, sheets, pencils and crayons provided. Program geared for middle and high school students.

Clayton County Fire and Emergency Services holds CPR classes for the community on a monthly basis. Students learn how to provide CPR to adults and how to use an automated external defibrillator. CPR classes are lecture-based with hands-on skills practice. They last approximately four hours. Registration for classes can be made by calling CCFES at 770-473-7833 or by visiting http://www.ccfes.org and clicking on CPR Classes located under Quick Links.

Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous is a free 12-Step Recovery Program for anyone suffering from food obsession, overeating, undereating or bulimia. Meets are held every Sunday at 3 p.m. in Riverdale at 1064 Bethsaida Road and Fridays at 7 p.m. at the Paula Crane Life Enrichment Center, Clayton Community Center, 1792 Mount Zion Road in Morrow. For more information or a list of additional meetings, call 800-566-9010 or visit http://www.foodaddicts.org.

Joseph Store House Food Pantry, 9940 Dixon Industrial Blvd. in Jonesboro, is collecting food the fourth Saturday of every month from 1 to 3 p.m. and every Tuesday from 6:30 to 7 p.m. The food pantry is open the second and fourth weekend of every month. For more information, call 770-335-1250.

Handley Helping Hands Inc. operates a bi-monthly food pantry on the first and third Saturday of the month from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. at 5570 Handley Blvd. in Morrow. For more information, email Rev. Esther K. Powers at handleyhelpinghands@comcast.net.

Clayton County Library System and the Preservation of Life will provide free hot meals during a free after-school program from 4 to 6 p.m. every Tuesday in the Meeting Room of the Jonesboro Branch Library, 124 Smith St.

The Pi Gamma Lambda Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc. in Morrow primarily serves the Clayton County community while serving other parts of Metro Atlanta. Chapter meetings are held on the third Tuesday of each month from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Forest Park Library, 4812 West St. For more information, contact Trenton Bailey by email at trenton_bailey@yahoo.com or visit http://www.pgl1906.org.

Host families are needed for foreign exchange students. Participants will learn about another culture and make a friend for life in the process. Students attend local high school for one school year. All students are well-screened, bring their own money and have great insurance. They will not drive or drink. For more information, call 770-477-1376.

Homestead Hospice in Jackson is looking for volunteers in Clayton County to visit with patients and provide comfort, companionship and emotional support. The hospice provides training and ongoing support to volunteers. For more information, call Gay Moncrief at 770-775-0100 or email gmoncrief@homesteadhospice.net.

Babies, toddlers and preschoolers invited to weekly story time from 10 to 10:45 a.m. at Morrow Library, 6225 Maddox Road in Morrow.

The Experience Work Senior Community Service program is open to residents age 55 and older who are unemployed and need a job. For more information, call 404-500-1547.

Toastmasters International

The Clayton chapter of Toastmasters International meets the first, third and fifth Thursday of each month from noon to 1 p.m. in room 115 of the Clayton State East-Arbor Hall, 5823 Trammell Road in Morrow.

Free Womens Group Counseling is offered Tuesdays from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at 9940 Dixon Industrial Blvd. in Jonesboro. For more information or to register, call 678-698-5094.

Originally posted here:
Clayton County Calendar of Events - News-Daily.com

ADL chief says Charlottesville car-ramming resembles terror attacks against Israel – The Times of Israel

Posted By on August 16, 2017

WASHINGTON The head of the Anti-Defamation League said Tuesday the fatal car-ramming that claimed a young womans life in Charlottesville, Virginia resembled the kind of terror attacks Israel has long experienced.

Appearing on MSNBC, Jonathan Greenblatt was asked to explain the recruiting techniques that white nationalist groups use to attract more people to its cause.

Extremism is a problem in any form, he said. Islamic extremists. Left-wing extremists. But right-wing extremists, like other fringe groups, they try to exploit disaffected young people at an early stage in their lives.

At this point, he was interrupted by the shows host, Stephanie Ruhle, who said the method Greenblatt was describing reminded her of Islamist terrorist organizations. That sounds like the same description you hear when we talk about ISIS recruiters, she said, using a common acronym for Islamic State.

Greenblatt agreed with Ruhles assessment. He went on to say that car rammings in particular have been a common practice for terrorists in the Middle East and Europe.

In this Saturday, Aug. 12, 2017 photo, James Alex Fields Jr., second from left, holds a black shield in Charlottesville, Va., where a white supremacist rally took place. Fields was later charged with second-degree murder and other counts after authorities say he plowed a car into a crowd of people protesting the white nationalist rally. (Alan Goffinski via AP)

Its very similar, he said. Its no accident that the car ramming took place. This young man [Alex Fields Jr.] who murdered the innocent Heather Heyer [was] using the same technique of car ramming that has terrorized Tel Aviv, terrorized France, Germany.

Its domestic terror. he said. So if it quacks like a duck and it walks like a duck, guess what? Its a duck.

Since the Saturday incident, in which the 20-year-old Fields killed Heyer and injured 19 others in the car attack, as hundreds of white nationalists marched the streets of Charlottesville with Nazi, KKK and confederate insignia, several US officials have condemned the episode as an act of terror.

A vehicle drives into a group of protesters demonstrating against a white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, August 12, 2017. (Ryan M. Kelly/The Daily Progress via AP)

Certainly I think we can confidently call it a form of terrorism, US President Donald Trumps national security adviser, H.R. McMaster, said Sunday on NBCs Meet The Press. What terrorism is is the use of violence to incite terror and fear, and of course it was terrorism.

But quite notably, Trump himself has not made a similar declaration. As a candidate, he repeatedly castigated his predecessor, Barack Obama, for not using the phrase radical Islamic terror.

When will President Obama issue the words RADICAL ISLAMIC TERRORISM? he tweeted on November 15, 2016, after an Islamic State attack in Paris, France. He cant say it, and unless he will, the problem will not be solved!

Trump also outraged many when he did not condemn white nationalists during his first remarks about the rally on Saturday, when he also blamed many sides for the violence that transpired.

It was not until two days later, amidst intense pressure and constant negative media coverage, that he begrudgingly said racism is evil and directly called out the racist groups who organized the rally to protest the citys plans to remove a statue of Confederate general Robert E. Lee.

Those who cause violence in its name are criminal and thugs, including the KKK, neo-Nazis, white supremacists and other hate groups that are repugnant to everything we hold dear as Americans, Trump said.

On Monday, the Justice Department said it was opening a civil-rights investigation into the death of Heyer, who was murdered by Fields when he ran a Dodge Challenger into a crowd of people protesting the neo-Nazis in Charlottesville.

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ADL chief says Charlottesville car-ramming resembles terror attacks against Israel - The Times of Israel

In Wake of Virginia Violence, San Diego Jewish Community ‘Stands Up to Hate’ – Times of San Diego

Posted By on August 16, 2017

Share This Article: The Anti-Defamation League, Leichtag Foundation and the San Diego RabbinicAssociation are hosting a forum called No Place for Hate. Photo courtesy ADL

In the the aftermath of thedeadly white nationalist violence in Virginia, the Anti-Defamation League, Leichtag Foundation, and the San Diego Rabbinic Association are hosting a Stand Up to Hate forum on Tuesday, Aug. 15.

The event at 7 p.m.will be held at the Lawrence Jacobs Jewish Community Center in La Jolla at 4126 Executive Drive. It will address White Supremacists, Neo-Nazis and all other forms of hate and extremism.

Speakers will include (list continually updated): Congressman Scott Peters Rabbi Nadav Caine, Ner Tamid Synagogue; Chair, San Diego Rabbinical Association Rabbi Devorah Marcus, Temple Emanu-El Rabbi Yael Ridberg, Dor Hadash Synagogue Rabbi David Singer, Hillel of San Diego

Parking will be available in the JCC lot and overflow parking in the structure directly across from the JCC Executive Drive entrance.

Please arrive at 6:30 p.m. and leave non-essentials at home due to security checks.

In Wake of Virginia Violence, San Diego Jewish Community Stands Up to Hate was last modified: August 15th, 2017 by Debbie L. Sklar

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In Wake of Virginia Violence, San Diego Jewish Community 'Stands Up to Hate' - Times of San Diego

Photo from rally turns focus toward NM native – Santa Fe New Mexican

Posted By on August 16, 2017

In the search for answers after a white supremacist rally in Virginia devolved into deadly violence Saturday, attention turned to a New Mexican.

Dillon Hopper, a native of Roswell, heads the far-right organization Vanguard America that seemed in the chaos of the moment to have some sort of link to the man police say drove a car into a group of anti-racist demonstrators, leaving one woman dead.

Photos showing the suspected driver marching alongside the groups members earlier in the day placed the organization, once described as insignificant, as well as the leader credited with helping build it, at the center of national outrage.

Vanguard America has denied the man charged with murder in Saturdays attack was a member of the group before he showed up at the rally and says it does not condone criminal activity.

But the episode nonetheless shines a light on a white supremacist leader homegrown in New Mexico.

Only a few years ago, Hopper, 29, seemed like a local boy who had made good.

A 2013 column in the Amarillo Globe-News recounted how an elderly Big Brothers Big Sisters volunteer inspired Hopper to join the Marine Corps. Hopper enlisted in Albuquerque and served in Iraq and Afghanistan. When he won a promotion to staff sergeant, he invited his former big brother, living at the time in the Texas Panhandle, to do the pinning the feel-good occasion for the newspaper story.

Hopper later became a Marine Corps recruiter. But while in that role, it appears he also helped build a white supremacist group.

In April of this year, Hopper stood before a gathering of white supremacists in Kentucky and touted his work as head of Vanguard America, an organization that had become part of an effort to recast the racist far-right as mainstream.

Hoppers service with the Marines ended in January, according to federal records. But thats several months after the Anti-Defamation League says he took charge of Vanguard America.

The group had grown out of online message boards and a split with the members of another similarly named white supremacist group, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

By early 2016, Hopper was leading the organization, and under him, it has espoused an ideology increasingly aligned with neo-Nazis, said Carla Hill, an investigative researcher at the Anti-Defamation League.

A spokesperson for the Marine Corps declined to specify what kind of discharge Hopper had received, indicating he had not been court martialed. But in an email, the Marine Corps said that involvement in extremist groups is grounds for separation.

Association or participation with hate or extremist groups of any kind is directly contradictory to the core values of honor, courage and commitment that we stand for as Marines and isnt tolerated by the Marine Corps, Capt. Philip Kulczewski said when asked about Hoppers service records.

Vanguard Americas manifesto depicts America as a country built in the image of the Roman Republic and now on the verge of collapse. Its manifesto blames multiculturalism, arguing that America should be an exclusively white nation.

Using the right-wing slogan blood and soil, Vanguard America romanticizes a notion that people with white blood hold a special bond with American soil. The Anti-Defamation League links that philosophy to the German slogan blut und boden popularized under the regime of Adolf Hitler.

Hill said the group was formerly regarded as insignificant in white supremacist circles. But it has grown in recent years, she added, with a particular focus on recruiting young men.

They are flowering on college campuses, Hill said, pointing to numerous reports of the groups stickers and fliers appearing at universities as well as members participating in white supremacist events.

In a video of his speech to a gathering of the Nationalist Front in Kentucky this year, Hopper declared that the future is about the youth. The group has taken to social media, calling on white people particularly white men to be proud of their race while also attacking minorities ranging from LGBT people to immigrants. It has targeted Jewish communities, its members known for having once hung an anti-Semitic banner from a Holocaust memorial in New Jersey.

Vanguard Americas promotional videos show young men marching in military formation wearing the white polo shirts and khaki pants that have become their uniform.

Members must be presentable, the groups website has said, and white Europeans. They cannot be felons or identify as gay or transgender, which the group describes as sexual degeneracy.

The Anti-Defamation League describes the group as having some paramilitary qualities, with small, active chapters in 13 states. Earlier this year, Hopper claimed the organization boasts about 200 members in 20 different states.

Hopper, who changed his last name from Irizarry in 2006 but uses that name in connection with Vanguard America, has said the group grew out of California about two years ago. Military records show he was last stationed at Camp Pendleton.

Vanguard Americas members were among the organizers of the rally by white supremacists in Virginia last weekend, billed as a protest against plans to remove a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee from a park in Charlottesville.

In a march the night before the event, a crowd carrying lit tiki torches chanted the groups slogan blood and soil.

And on Saturday, the so-called Unite the Right rally erupted into violence between white supremacists and anti-racist demonstrators, reaching a horrifying low when a man plowed his car into a crowd.

The crash killed a local woman and injured several other people.

Police identified the driver as James Alex Fields, 20, and photos from earlier in the day show him marching with members of Vanguard America. He was dressed in the trademark white polo shirt and khaki pants and carried a shield depicting a symbol associated with the group.

A spokesperson for Vanguard America said Tuesday that Fields did not have any prior links to the group but said that Hopper was not available for an interview.

Unfortunately due to safety concerns our leader and president Dillon Hopper will not be conducting any interviews in relation to his connection to New Mexico the state he currently resides in, the organization said in an email, declining to answer further questions about how Hopper became involved with Vanguard America.

Hopper told the news website Splinter that he had not attended the event in Charlottesville.

Unclear is whether Hopper indeed lives in New Mexico.

While Roswell is known as a conservative bastion, the Anti-Defamation League has not received any reports of activity by the group inside the state. And New Mexico, a state where about half the population is Hispanic, is not known as a center for white supremacist groups.

Filings in a probate case in Roswell earlier this year listed Hopper with an address in Indiana. Court records indicate his mother died earlier this year but he has a brother living in the state.

Unclear, too, is whether Vanguard America will weather the fallout from a killing that riled the country.

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Photo from rally turns focus toward NM native - Santa Fe New Mexican

KKK groups are growing in Florida, even as they rise and fall across the US – Miami Herald

Posted By on August 16, 2017


Miami Herald
KKK groups are growing in Florida, even as they rise and fall across the US
Miami Herald
Klan groups tend to be short-lived, according to the Anti-Defamation League, because many KKK groups are led by self-appointed Imperial Wizards and then fail to garner support from individual members, according to the Anti-Defamation League. There is ...

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KKK groups are growing in Florida, even as they rise and fall across the US - Miami Herald

Commandant says ‘no place for hatred’ in Marines after former recruiter tied to supremacist group – CNN

Posted By on August 16, 2017

The Military Times and the Guardian reported that former Marine recruiter Dillon Ulysses Hopper is the leader of Vanguard America -- a group which helped organize the "Unite the Right" protest in Charlottesville, Virginia, that turned violent over the weekend. The Anti-Defamation League identified Hopper as the leader of Vanguard America, which ADL labels a "white supremacist" group, and said Hopper began leading the organization in "early 2016."

According to Hopper's service records, he was a member of the Marine Corps from July 10, 2006 until January 30, 2017. If ADL is correct, that would mean he began leading the white nationalist group while still technically in the Marines.

Following those reports, Neller told CNN: "Our core values of honor, courage and commitment frame the way Marines live and act. Bigotry and racial extremism run contrary to these core values." The US Marine Corps could not confirm if the service branch had knowledge of Hopper's involvement with the hate group.

CNN was not able to determine whether Hopper participated in the Charlottesville protest, and attempts to reach him have been unsuccessful.

With his statement, Neller becomes the second member of the Pentagon's Joint Chiefs of Staff to speak out about events in Charlottesville. Last week, Adm. John Richardson, the Chief of Naval Operations, called the events in Charlottesville "shameful" and "unacceptable."

"The Navy will forever stand against intolerance and hatred" Richardson said in a statement posted on Twitter and Facebook. "We want our Navy to be the safest possible place -- a team as strong and tough as we can be, saving violence only for our enemies."

Secretary of Defense James Mattis also told reporters he was saddened by what he saw in Charlottesville.

Hopper was an "average recruiter" who "was kind, attentive, humorous and had friends in the command of all races and sexes," his immediate supervisor, Staff Sgt. Kristen Chambasian, said in a statement provided by the Marine Corps. She added that "Hopper recruited students from high schools in his area of all nationalities and backgrounds," saying those recruits "were screened, interviewed and found basically qualified mentally, morally and physically."

Marine Corps recruiting procedures require perspective recruits to go through multiple levels of scrutiny from multiple people. Of those Marines recruited by Hopper, Chambasian said she did "not personally know of any of them having had any issues with racism" due to their interactions with him.

She added: "I cannot speak to when or what changed in Staff Sgt. Hopper that resulted in his recent and current life choices."

A Marine Corps official told CNN the service is attempting to determine if Hopper may have recruited like-minded individuals into the Corps, but has found no evidence of that so far.

Participation in supremacist or extremist organizations is a violation of Defense Department orders and leads to mandatory dismissal from military service following the first substantiated incident.

Hopper served in at least two combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan and went on to serve as a Marine recruiter from 2011-2014 before leaving the Marines on January 30, with the rank of staff sergeant. During his service in the Marine Corps, Hopper was a recipient of the Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal three times.

A Marine Corps official said Hopper's status is that of a retired Marine, though he did not serve a full 20 years.

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Commandant says 'no place for hatred' in Marines after former recruiter tied to supremacist group - CNN

What Trump Means When He Says ‘Both Sides’ – Pacific Standard

Posted By on August 16, 2017


Pacific Standard
What Trump Means When He Says 'Both Sides'
Pacific Standard
And, generally speaking, right-wing extremists have been responsible for many more deaths than left-wing extremists since at least the 1970s, according to the Anti-Defamation League; over the last two-plus decades, white supremacists were behind 43 ...

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What Trump Means When He Says 'Both Sides' - Pacific Standard

Zionist Group Shunned At Chicago SlutWalk But Organizers Cry Sabotage – Forward

Posted By on August 15, 2017

There are some things you might expect from a SlutWalk an annual march designed to bring attention to sexual assault and rape culture. You would expect participants to show up in fishnets and tutus and pasties, carrying protest signs and chanting things like My dress is not a yes! You would expect that the marchers would attract attention from passersby, especially tourists, and that there might be some conflicts with local law enforcement, particularly if the chants included insults to the police and if the march obstructed traffic. You might even expect arrests. All of these things did, in fact, happen at Saturdays Chicago SlutWalk.

You would probably not expect loud chants of Free, free Palestine! But that happened, too.

The SlutWalk is the latest chapter in a summer of increasing tensions between the citys Jewish community and some LGBTQ groups. In June, at the Dyke March a more radical alternative to the citys main Pride parade three women had been asked to leave because their rainbow flags emblazoned with Stars of David were supposedly making other marchers uncomfortable. It reminded some Palestinian marchers, the organizers said, of the Israeli flag.

After the story went viral, the Dyke March organizers faced accusations of anti-Semitism, and Chicago Jews began wondering if there was a place for them within the LGBTQ community. In the middle of this, the organizers of SlutWalk declared that, in solidarity with Dyke March, they, too, would be banning Jewish stars from their own march. They later rescinded the ban and said it only applied to nationalistic symbols such as flags; religious symbols would be permitted.

Amanda Berman, a lawyer in New York, had been following the story from afar. She had been participating in progressive politics, including events like SlutWalk, since she was a teenager. She is also the director of legal affairs for the Lawfare Project, a nonprofit that describes itself as the legal arm of the pro-Israel community. It upset her that recent public conversations had started to conflate Jews and Israel. Im not Israeli, she said. Im not the Israeli government. She also supported the message of SlutWalk, that women should be able to express their sexuality without fear of harassment or assault. Last week, she formed her own self-described progressive Zionist womens organization, Zioness, and announced her intention to come to Chicago to march in SlutWalk.

The name Zioness was deliberately chosen to provoke. Zionism has become a provocative word, said Lawfare Project executive director Brooke Goldstein, who also came to Chicago to march in SlutWalk. But Zionism is the civil rights movement of the Jewish people. Its a sad state of affairs that its considered provocative that Jews should be proud of their civil rights.

Goldstein believed that by marching in SlutWalk, the members of Zioness would be setting a positive example to young Jewish women who felt rejected by progressive politics. They would also be making sure that the Dyke March would not have set a precedent of ejecting Jews.

Other people involved in SlutWalk didnt interpret Zionism in the same way Berman and Goldstein did. Two days before the march, SlutWalk organizers announced that Zioness would not be welcome.

SlutWalk Chicago does not support the Zioness progressives planning on coming to the walk Saturday, they wrote. We at SlutWalk Chicago stand with Jewish people, just as we stand for Palestinian human rights. Those two ideologies can exist in the same realm, and taking a stance against anti-Semitism is not an affirmation of support for the state of Israel and its occupation of Palestine. We oppose all oppressive governments whether they be the United States or Israel, as we recognize these regimes often disproportionately oppress women and femmes. We find it disgusting that any group would appropriate a day dedicated to survivors fighting rape culture in order to promote their own nationalist agenda.

The post prompted a lengthy and angry debate about the nature of Zionism, whether SlutWalk and the entire left were anti-Semitic and deliberately rejecting Jews, and whether SlutWalk was abandoning its mission of opposing rape culture in favor of opposing Israel. Some insisted the two causes were deeply intertwined.

Freedom of women is a core value of Judaism, said Scout Bratt, a member of Jewish Voice for Peace, a pro-Palestinian group. Im speaking as an American Jew who stands with Palestine and BDS. There are so many ways in which Israel perpetuates oppression in my namemy Jewish identity and my tax dollars as an American. Israel is a highly-militarized society that is integral to gender-based violence.

Members of JVP also argued that Berman and Goldstein were not as progressive as they claimed, since the Lawfare Project has received funding from the MZ Foundation, which also funds right-wing Jewish groups like the Zionist Organization of America.

Nonetheless, Zioness insisted it was their legal right to marchas an American, said Goldstein, it is your right as a civilian to stand in a public place, and no other civilian can make you leaveso on Saturday at noon, they gathered with the rest of the marchers in Lake Shore Park. In contrast to the other marchers, who carried homemade signs, theirs had been professionally printed and featured a Shepard Fairey-style illustration of a woman wearing a very conspicuous Jewish star around her neck. Although the group was only four days old, it had already attracted local supporters.

This is an important time, said one of them, Nate Stender. We cant afford to say, If youre not with us, youre against us. Ive been a feminist my entire life. Ive been a Zionist since my political awakening. Its only since 2017 that Ive been told I cant be both.

As the rally began, with speeches two African-American queer activists in support of incarcerated black women and sex workers, the Zioness marchers stood behind the makeshift stage, holding their signs high so that it would be impossible to miss them. Other marchers attempted to block the signs with red umbrellas, the international symbol of sex worker rights. The Zioness marchers moved and dodged, and the red umbrella-holders moved and dodged, too, so the signs would remain blocked. They crowded nearer and nearer to the speakers and made it difficult for other people in the audience to see or hear what was happening. Several people in the crowd, including a woman who held a sign that read Dont hijack the march, were visibly and audibly annoyed.

Aimee Levitt

The Chicago SlutWalk goes on the march.

The SlutWalk organizers maintained that the Zioness contingent was to blame for the chaos.

They were deliberately being confrontational, said Red Schulte, one of the organizers. They were deliberately trying to sabotage us. They were blocking people and shouting over speakers and shouting down supporters who were around.

The Zioness leaders, naturally, felt otherwise.

They accused us of hijacking the march, said Berman. They came to attack us. When we were walking away, they were chasing us around. Added Goldstein, How can you stand for womens rights and obstruct other women? Nonetheless, instead of putting an end to the distraction, they kept their signs raised throughout the rally.

Despite SlutWalk organizers insistence that Palestinians were only one of the many marginalized groups they supported, the speakers who deliberately addressed the Zionism/Palestinian issue received the most attention and applause. SlutWalk is partnered against all forms of violence, said Andy Thayer, a longtime LGBTQ activist and co-founder of the Chicago Gay Liberation Network. We cannot have a democracy defined by ethnic and religious standards. Its no accident that members of the Christian right support Zionism.

Scout Bratt also spoke on behalf of JVP: As a Jew, I have a responsibility to speak out against the racist and sexist occupation.

The final speaker, a Palestinian woman identified only as Leilah, declared that no one could be both a Zionist and a feminist because feminism supports all oppressed people, while Zionists are oppressors. Zionist terrorism led to the Nakba, she said, referring to the catastrophe of the 1948 Israeli War of Independence, when more than 700,000 Palestinians fled or were expelled from their homes. Zionism means violence for Palestinian women!

The crowd, with the conspicuous exception of the Zioness contingent, responded with chants of Free, free Palestine!

Although the organizers warned the crowd several times that the march would not tolerate antagonistic behavior, no one was asked to leave, said Schulte, the SlutWalk spokesperson. Many of the Zioness protesters left as the march began making its way eastward toward Michigan Avenue, and those who remained joined in the chant of Survivors! We all stand together!

After the Zioness contingent left, the march assumed more of the mood and tone typical of a SlutWalk. About 100 people marched down Michigan Avenue chanting slogans decrying the patriarchy, rape culture, and the police, particularly when the officers escorting the marchers refused to let them cross the street because they were obstructing traffic. You should move for us! the marchers yelled. Tourists stopped and took pictures, and a few raised their fists in solidarity. (Thats city living, one woman commented.)

The number of marchers steadily dwindled, particularly after the group passed Trump Tower, about a mile from the starting point. As the march entered the Loop, police officers warned the marchers not to step in the street. When one did, to avoid a pedestrian as the marchers turned off of State Street, the police arrested her and the others who stepped in to help.

It was very apparent that the cops were grabbing people they had identified as organizers, said Schulte. It happened incredibly fast. All the organizers except two were arrested, and one supporter. It was very deliberate.

Four of the five detainees were released that same day. The fifth was held overnight, but released on bail the following afternoon. This was the first time, said Schulte, that there had been arrests during SlutWalk.

The police were aggressive, she said. They hate SlutWalk. Weve always done an amazing job of taking streets. They hate that. They hate that we test boundaries and take up so much space for our demonstration.

Berman and Goldstein left the march long before the arrests and were unaware of what had happened. They were pleased that they had asserted their right to be at the SlutWalk. People from several other cities had already invited them to come spread their message of progressive Zionism and free speech.

There are teenage Jewish girls who wont go out into public demonstrations, said Goldstein. There are students who dont wear stars of David on California campuses. This is America in 2017!

Denise Sprague, a Chicagoan, had heard about Zioness earlier in the week and met up with the group before the rally. She later overheard some of the Palestinian marchers making disparaging remarks about her Zioness sign. She said she wouldnt characterize it as harassment, but it made her sad.

Its a shame, she said. In one way, I was glad to be part of [a larger group]. In another, I wonder if maybe I would have been better off being there as an independent Jewish woman. You want your voice to be heard as a liberal Jewish person. I dont think any organization should be saying, Jews who believe in Israel shouldnt be a part of this. I find it horrible that this is the state of the world.

Aimee Levitt reports regularly on Chicagoland for the Forward. Contact her at feedback@forward.com. Follow her on Twitter, @aimeelevitt.

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Zionist Group Shunned At Chicago SlutWalk But Organizers Cry Sabotage - Forward

Down Comes Another Synagogue, Up Go More Condos – Habitat magazine

Posted By on August 15, 2017

In yet another blow to historic preservationists, a state Supreme Court judge has cleared the way for demolition of a century-old synagogue on the Upper West Side of Manhattan to make way for a new high-rise condominium, DNAinfo reports.

The Congregation Shaare Zedek, which has held services in the building since 1923, sent an email to its congregants, saying that after the High Holy Days in September it would "say goodbye to our space," according to a neighbor of the of the 212 West 93rd Street structure. Shaare Zedek joins a growing list of aging buildings synagogues, parking garages, SROs, mom & pop businesses, gas stations that are being razed to feed the citys ravenous appetite for new hotels and high-end apartments.

The Ornstein Leyton Company, which bought the West 93rd Street property last year for $34.3 million, is planning to demolish the synagogue and replace it with a 14-story condominium. The bottom three floors will remain for Shaare Zedek and its new synagogue, plans show. Scott Leyton, a partner in the development company, called the old synagogue building antiquated, beautiful, but really nonfunctional.

The synagogues president, Michael Firestone, has said in the past that the sale was a necessary financial move as the congregation was struggling with the upkeep of the building and with the cost of maintaining the deteriorating 16-acre Bayside Cemetery in Queens.

When the news broke of the synagogues intention to sell the building last year, residents banded together as the West Nineties Neighborhood Coalition to oppose the demolition of what they considered as a gem of the community. The coalition pleaded their case before Community Board 7, the Landmarks Preservation Commission, and the areas elected officials, all of which could not help them prevent the demolition. The court decision sealed the building's fate.

Demolition is expected to start sometime in January. Shaare Zedek will hold a farewell meeting on September 10 to commemorate the space.

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Down Comes Another Synagogue, Up Go More Condos - Habitat magazine


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