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Debunking the 2 claims: anti-Zionism is anti-Semitism, and BDS … – Mondoweiss

Posted By on July 30, 2017

Demonstration in Support of the Right to Boycott and BDS, Albany N.Y. June 15, 2016

There are two claims one commonly hears from people opposed to any serious action taken in favor of Palestinian rights.

The first is that old standby, that anti-Zionism is anti-Semitism. This claim is meant to intimidate; the intent is to prevent the root of the problem from being discussed. One starts off privileging the Zionist position as unassailably correct and then one can discuss to what extent Palestinians have rights that can be granted after negotiation.

The second claim is closely related: Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) unfairly singles out Israel and therefore (you guessed it) is anti-Semitic.

It is possible and maybe even useful to write long detailed rebuttals of both these charges, but it would probably be more useful to keep them short. A long rebuttal to a blunt one-sentence false accusation might actually make it seem like it had merit. So here are the short ones.

Is anti-Zionism a form of anti-Semitism? If it were, then that would mean all Palestinians were morally obligated to endorse their own ethnic cleansing. That is the only logical conclusion. Not only are Palestinians being asked to accept that they can never go back to their homes and villages, but they are implicitly being asked to bless the ideology that justified their ethnic cleansing or else they are anti-semites. That is nakedly racist.

You can go on from there and go into whatever details you want, but that is all the argument you need.

Does BDS single out Israel unfairly? This will take a bit more discussion. No, it doesnt, because Israel is singled out for billions of dollars in U.S. aid each year and singled out for absurdly one sided praise by our politicians and singled out for diplomatic support by the US when it commits war crimes.

On the negative side, some people refuse to buy their hummus.

Furthermore, look at how we single out other countries in the region. We single out Syria and Libya for support for rebels, with horrific results; we single out Yemen for support for Saudi bombing; and we commonly impose draconian sanctions on countries that hurt the ordinary people far more than they hurt the leaders. We single out Gaza in supporting the Israeli and Egyptian blockade. Would Israelis prefer to be singled out in one of these other fashions?

And why, given all the morally questionable and even barbaric policies the US has in the Middle East, would anyone single out the BDS movement for special negative attention from virtually every local government in the US? We are helping starve Yemen; and my local Westchester County legislature singled out BDS for condemnation.

The phrase is stupid and fundamentally racist, as only supporters of Palestinian rights are singled out and accused of bigotry for using a common nonviolent protest tactic.

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Debunking the 2 claims: anti-Zionism is anti-Semitism, and BDS ... - Mondoweiss

LAWSON: Anti-Semitism is still alive even on the left – University of Virginia The Cavalier Daily

Posted By on July 30, 2017

OPINION Despite their claims of an inclusive space, anti-Semitism still infects the left by Charlotte Lawson | Jul 31 2017 |

In late June, thousands from across the Midwest congregated in Chicago to demonstrate their support for legal rights, recognition and cultural heritage of LGBT communities in the citys annual Pride Parade. The event, which typically emphasizes inclusion regardless of ethnic or religious background, left Laurel Grauer feeling discriminated against after being removed from the parade for carrying a rainbow flag adorning the Jewish Star of David. Organizers of the program, justifying her removal, claimed that the flag was deemed unacceptable due to its association with the State of Israel.

Unfortunately, this incident signals a trend of increasing anti-Semitism masquerading under the guise of anti-Zionism in the United States and abroad. Although not every rejection of the Zionist movement stems from racially-motivated sentiments, the lack of adequate justification for much of the anti-Zionist movement and an active unwillingness to dissect the complexities of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict reflect a malignant underlying reason for opposition to the Jewish state.

Perhaps one of the worst perpetrators of anti-Zionist bias is the United Nations.The international organization has dealt disproportional criticism to Israel in relation to other, arguably far-more-guilty member nations. In its 2015 session, the U.N. passed a whopping total of 20 resolutions condemning Israel, while only passing 3 condemning resolutions against other member nations. In June, U.S. Ambassadors threatened to pull out of the U.N. Human Rights Council for its consistent discrimination against Israel. The 78 resolutions and decisions passed against Israel dwarf the 29 passed against the next biggest offender, Syria. Meanwhile, Russia, China and Saudi Arabia have faced no condemnations at all.

In the words of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel is a country where women fly fighter jets, lead major corporations, head universities, preside over the Supreme Court, and have served as Speaker of the Knesset and as Prime Minister. Contrast these conditions to Saudi Arabias, where women are not only denied their autonomy, but also (quite literally) enslaved into arranged marriages.

Local leaders of surrounding Middle Eastern nations are even more blatant than the U.N. in their opposition to Israel, often employing anti-Jewish rhetoric and propaganda. In 2015, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas encouraged his citizens to take up arms against Israeli civilians, stating we welcome every drop of blood spilled in Jerusalem. Former Egyptian political leader Mohammed Mahdi Akef, along with several Palestinian and Iranian leaders, denied the historical reality of the Holocaust.

Alarmingly, Americans are not immune to anti-Jewish sentiment in the form of anti-Zionism. At UC Berkeleys Students of Color Conference, two Jewish students saw their religious and ethnic identity attacked. In a session titled Existence is Resistance, speakers supported violence against Israeli civilians and denied the role that the Holocaust played in the Zionist movement. UCLA student Mokhtarzadeh claimed that the views expressed reached beyond a reasoned opposition to the State of Israel: it wasnt that they dont like us because were pro-Israel they dont like us because were Jews. Even in the United States, which has shown longstanding support for Israel, anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism are often indistinguishable.

On July 16, on the 75th anniversary of the Vel dHiv Roundup, which saw the deportation of over 13,000 of Parisian Jews, French President Emmanuel Macron declared: We will never surrender to the messages of hate; we will not surrender to anti-Zionism because it is a reinvention of anti-Semitism. The denial of Israels history, use of anti-Jewish rhetoric and unprecedented discrimination against the Jewish state on the global stage all point to the truth behind Macrons statement.

Charlotte Lawson is an Opinion columnist for The Cavalier Daily. She can be reached at opinion@cavalierdaily.com

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LAWSON: Anti-Semitism is still alive even on the left - University of Virginia The Cavalier Daily

An exciting conversation with Rabbi Steinsaltz – Israel National News – Arutz Sheva

Posted By on July 30, 2017

Rabbi Steinsaltz on the phone

Machon Shefa

President Reuven Rivlin called Rabbi Adin Even-Israel Steinsaltz Sunday to congratulate the rabbi and wish him good health on his 80th birthday.

Rabbi Steinsaltz is considered one of the great rabbinical commentators and scholars of this generation, and has written numerous world-renowned commentaries on the Bible, the Talmud, and many other religious Jewish texts. Rabbi Steinsaltz suffered a stroke six months ago.

The rabbi recently returned to work, to the joy and relief of his students and colleagues. An event was held earlier this month in celebration of the release of Rabbi Steinsaltz's new commentary of the works of the Rambam (Maimonides).

President Rivlin called Rabbi Steinsaltz by the title for Torah sages, "our teacher and rabbi."

The president noted that he had learned Talmud in his youth, but not as much as he would have liked. "Had there been a Steinsaltz edition of the Talmud when I was young, we would have learnt much more Talmud at the Hebrew Gymnasium school in Jerusalem."

The president concluded the conversation with a blessing: "Congratulations, and you should have many more productive and good years, first of all with good health, as well as wisdom and the continued ability to learn, to teach, and to glorify the Torah in Israel.

Those in the room during the conversation said that the rabbi was very moved by the president's words and warm wishes.

Rabbi Adin Even Yisrael-Steinsaltz was born in Jerusalem in 1937 to a secular family. He studied chemistry and physics at the Hebrew University, worked as a school principal, became observant and chose to focus on the writing of Jewish books on various subjects, the most famous of which was the 'Steinzaltz Talmud,' a commentary on all 2,711 pages of the Babylonian Talmud.

Rabbi Steinsaltz received the Israel Prize for Jewish studies in 1988 and the President's Prize for his scholarship in Talmud from former President Shimon Peres in 2012.

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An exciting conversation with Rabbi Steinsaltz - Israel National News - Arutz Sheva

A most surprising law for the 9th of Av – Arutz Sheva

Posted By on July 30, 2017

It is forbidden to study Torah. This is one of the surprising Halakhot of the fast day of Tisha BAv, which we will be marking during the coming week.

And the reason its forbidden to study Torah, is thatTorah gladdens the heart. Thats what we learn from thePassuk(verse) inTehillim19,Psalm19,Pekudei Hashem Yesharim Mesamchei Lev, the laws of the Lord are upright, they bring gladness to our hearts.

You see, when you study Torah, you haveSimcha(joy),at a number of levels. First of all, the actual engagement of study, the Talmud Torah, the excitement of grappling with aSugyah (topic)inShas (Talmud), of learningPesukim (verses), fromChumash (Pentateuch), either by oneself or in aChavruta (learning partner)or through attending aShuir(lecture) it brings realSimchato one.

And then, at a deeper level, we internalise the values and the information that we receive through our study, it transforms our characters and it brings us a huge amount of meaning and happiness in our lives.

I went to Israel to attend the funeral,Levaya,of my teacher Rav Aharon Lichtenstein, ztl, and in one of theHespeidim(eulogies)given by one of his children, they said how Tisha BAv was the most difficult day for Rav Aharon. That was because he loved to learn and he was denied that opportunity on the fast day. And when it came to the end of Tisha BAv, whereas everybody else just raced to the dining room table to have something to eat or to drink, Rav Aharon raced to the bookshelf and at the end of the fast, he would always take out aGemarahand he would start to study, because he had been thirsting for that Talmud Torah, throughout the fast day.

Thats what Torah really does for us. Rav Aharons father in-law, Rav Soloveitchik, ztl, would commute every week from Boston to New York, but during the last few years of his life, they enabled him to stay in thePenimiah, the dormitory, of Yeshivah University. And it so happened, that one night, some of the boys threw a party and they had friends over they were making a lot of noise. At 2am in the morning, there was a knock on the door. They opened the door and there was the Rav, in his dressing gown and there was hushed silence. And then the Rav said, whats going on here, its 2 oclock in the morning do you not realise that some of us are trying to learn?

Thats the beauty of Torah,Vehagita Bo Yomam Valayla, study in it, transform your lives through it, day and night. The beauty of Torah is just so magnificent for us and as a result we have one day in the year on which it isAssur, it is forbidden, to study Torah, as a reminder of our privilege throughout every other day of the year, to have our lives enhanced and to provide us with an opportunity of genuineSimcha, of wonderful happiness, through studying of the Torah.

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A most surprising law for the 9th of Av - Arutz Sheva

New Report Exposes Scottish Palestine Solidarity Activists as Purveyors of Holocaust Denial and Antisemitism – Algemeiner

Posted By on July 30, 2017

Email a copy of "New Report Exposes Scottish Palestine Solidarity Activists as Purveyors of Holocaust Denial and Antisemitism" to a friend

A sample of antisemitic social media posts shared by members of SPSC. Image: David Collier/JHRW

One of Europes most notorious pro-Palestinian solidarity groups has been unmasked as a home for Holocaust deniers and other hardcore antisemites, a new report revealed on Sunday.

The report by British researcher David Collier,in association with advocacy group Jewish Human Rights Watch is the culmination of two years of research into the activities of the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign (SPSC), particularly on social media.

Everywhere the SPSC stands, there is widespread evidence of anti-Semitism, the report, entitled Jew Hate and Holocaust Denial in Scotland, states. Not an anti-Semitism that is explained away as an exaggerated description of Israels activity. Nor an anti-Semitism that has anything to do with opposition to Israeli government policy. It is a hard-core hatred of Jews, anti-Semitic global conspiracy theory and Holocaust denial.

July 30, 2017 3:36 pm

The report continues: At every event checked, on every high street, at every demonstration, those pushing hard-core anti-Semitic ideology were at the very front of SPSC activity. Two separate case studies suggested that between 40% and 50% of SPSC front line activists (at a minimum) engage in sharing Jew-hating material.

The report systematically traces the echo chamber that SPSC operates across social media platforms like Facebook, which frequently includes comparisons of Israel with Nazi Germany, outright denials of the Holocaust, portraits of Israeli power and influence using the imagery of an all-powerful global Jewish cabal, and the recycling of ugly antisemitic falsehoods about Jewish control of the banking industry, or of the trans-Atlantic slave trade.

One SPSC activist, Steve Davies, was shown in the report in a photo wearing a Palestinian keffiyeh as he stood alongside Scotlands First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon. Davies has used terms like Holohoax to describe the Holocaust, as well as pushing wild conspiracy theories about the Rothschild banking family.

Other posts parrotthe constant stream of propaganda from the Iranian regime and its Syrian ally Bashar al Assad about Israel controlling Sunni terrorist groups like Al Qaeda and ISIS.

One key section of the report concentrates specifically on the antics of Mick Napier, a university lecturer who serves as Secretary of SPSC. On July 18, both Napier and his SPSC colleague Jim Watsonwere found guilty in court of aggressive behavior at a protest outside an Israeli-owned cosmetics store in Glasgow during the 2014 Gaza war. After his conviction, Napier accused those who brought the case forward of trying to criminalize criticism of Israeli apartheid and Israeli genocide.

Among the antisemitic individuals hosted by Napier under the SPSC banner are Azzam Tamimi, a Hamas supporter and enthusiastic cheerleader of suicide bombing, and Gilad Atzmon, a former Israeli who now devotes the bulk of his time topenning antisemitic articles and books. Napier is also a devoted supporter of Jackie Walker, a British Labour Party activist suspended for antisemitism who is currently promoting a lecture tour entitled Lynched in which she compares having to defend herself from the charge of antisemitism to the thousands of African-Americans beaten and hung by white supremacists in the Jim Crow South.

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New Report Exposes Scottish Palestine Solidarity Activists as Purveyors of Holocaust Denial and Antisemitism - Algemeiner

Irish Journalist Behind Antisemitic Sunday Times Article Unmasked as Holocaust Denier – Algemeiner

Posted By on July 30, 2017

Email a copy of "Irish Journalist Behind Antisemitic Sunday Times Article Unmasked as Holocaust Denier" to a friend

Journalist Kevin Myers tells Sunday Times readers that Jews always drive a hard bargain. Photo: Screenshot via Tom Gross Media

An Irish journalist fired from his post on Sunday morning after penning an antisemitic attack on two British Jewish TV presenters is a known Holocaust denier, whose article denying the Nazi genocide of six million Jews was removed only today from the website of the Irish newspaper that had hosted it since 2009.

Social media users took to Twitter to point out that the Holocaust denial article by journalist Kevin Myers in which he opined,There was no holocaust (or Holocaust, as my computer software insists) and six million Jews were not murdered by the Third Reich. These two statements of mine are irrefutable truths had finally disappeared from the online pages of the Irish Independent.

Myers final fall from grace occurred after he published an article in the Irish edition of the UKs Sunday Times newspaper in which he asserted that the BBC presenters Claudia Winkleman andVanessa Feltz were well paid because they are Jewish.

Under the headline Sorry ladies, equal pay has to be earned, Myers wrote: I note that two of the best-paid women presenters in the BBC Claudia Winkleman and Vanessa Feltz, with whose, no doubt, sterling work I am tragically unacquainted are Jewish. Good for them.

Myers continued: Jews are not generally noted for their insistence on selling their talent for the lowest possible price, which is the most useful measure there is of inveterate, lost-with-all-hands stupidity. I wonder, who are their agents? If theyre the same ones that negotiated the pay for the women on the lower scales, then maybe the latter have found their true value in the marketplace.

After the column was removed, the editor of the Sunday Times, Martin Ivens, issued a statement saying Myers comments were unacceptable and should not have been published.

It has been taken down and we sincerely apologize both for the remarks and the error of judgment that led to publication, he said.

The editor of the papers Irish edition, Frank Fitzgibbon, added: I apologize unreservedly for the offence caused by comments in a column written by Kevin Myers and published today in the Ireland edition of the Sunday Times.

This newspaper abhors antisemitism and did not intend to cause offense to Jewish people, Fitzgibbon concluded.

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Irish Journalist Behind Antisemitic Sunday Times Article Unmasked as Holocaust Denier - Algemeiner

Can 23andMe Tell Us If Jews Are A Race And Is That A Good Thing? – Forward

Posted By on July 30, 2017

Phil Mazo, a comedian based in Jersey City, NJ, was reading through the to-do list on his phone when he decided it might be time to check off one item that had been on the list for some time: Buy a take-home genome testing kit from the company 23andMe. After finding a deal on a kit on Ebay a man had bought tests for his whole family, but was left with an extra kit after his brother got divorced Mazo hit purchase.

Mazos parents emigrated from Soviet Russia. They were completely secular, and theres a lot he doesnt know about his family tree. Maybe the test could give him the proof of his own Jewishness that religious observance never could.

I wonder if part of that is also a search for identity, he said.

Learning your genetic makeup has never been easier than it is in 2017. For less than the cost of a doctors visit, some people are trying to use the service to find out if or to what extent theyre Jewish, a phenomenon that worries historians and scientists. Buyers of mail-order gene testing kits do get solid information from them. They learn where their ancestors were living nine generations ago. Some have even found living, but long-lost, family members. The danger, experts say, is that in relying on these kits to learn more about their genes, users are perpetuating the notion that Jews are a race a concept they say has no scientific basis.

In a culture like America, where most Jews are largely assimilated and a lot of Jews are not religious in any way, the idea that there is some invisible essence that ties us to our ancestors, even without us behaving Jewishly, is a very appealing idea, says Steven Weitzman, a professor of Jewish history and author of The Origin of the Jews: The Quest for Roots in a Rootless Age. Its a stable source of identity that is appealing at a time when Jews feel like theyre losing their identity.

Eighty years after the Holocaust, in which about 6 million Jews were killed in the name of purifying the Aryan race, the business of direct-to-consumer genetic testing is booming and its never been cooler to spit in a sterile plastic tube. Ten years ago 23andMe started holding spit parties at New York Fashion Week to get publicity. Now the company has a valuation of over $1 billion. People who use genome testing services routinely post videos on YouTube of themselves learning their ancestry in real time.

Though genome tests may not sway ones sense of Jewish identity, they have become popular at a moment when Jews are talking more and more about what Judaism is: Is it a race? Are Jews white? The movie Wonder Woman starring Israeli Gal Gadot, a fair-skinned Jew of Eastern European descent, triggered an online debate about whether Israelis could be considered people of color.

The idea of race has historically slotted humans into a handful of categories: Asian, African, white, etc. But research has shown that there can be as much genetic difference within these races as between them, and experts say the notion that ones skin tone and facial features alone can predict social behavior is plain wrong.

Its really important for all of us to resist the attempt to revive this discredited notion that race is a biological category rather than a political and social category, said Marcy Darnovsky, director of the Center for Genetics and Society, a not-for-profit scientific ethics group.

Indeed, 23andMe and Ancestry.com doesnt even try to attempt to isolate Jewish genes just Ashkenazic genes. 23andMe lists Ashkenazi Jewish as a reference population within the larger European population. Ancestry.com calls Jewish genes European Jewish. Sephardic Jews are not considered a distinct population by either company, or by researchers their genetic make-up is not sufficiently different from surrounding North African, Iberian and Greek populations. Ashkenazic Jews often find themselves in the peculiar situation of being 90% Ashkenazi Jewish and 99% European. Sephardic Jews may be told they are mostly Middle Eastern and North African and less than 10% Ashkenazic.

Stuart Schuffman, a travel writer and blogger who writes under the name Broke Ass Stuart, said he bought a kit from 23andMe because even though his family insists theyre exclusively Jewish, he thought there was a possibility that he had some non-Jewish ancestry.

I was curious, because you never know, said Schuffman. Family stories are just stories.

Schuffman, who learned that he is 99.8% Ashkenazi Jewish, said the test hasnt made much of a difference on his sense of Jewish identity.

Judaisms really informed who I am, and my values and my worldview, Schuffman said. [23andMe] hasnt made me more or less Jewy at all. Im just Jewy.

However, Schuffman added, hes Jewy and white, while other Jews Sephardic Jews, Ethiopian Jews cant claim that distinction. Hes an ethnic minority, but a white one nonetheless.

I get all the benefits of white privilege, he acknowledged.

Geneticists say white is an empty concept, connoting nothing about intelligence or personality.

Jews do, however, have shared genetic origins, wrote Dr. Harry Ostrer, a population geneticist and author of the book Legacy: A Genetic History of the Jewish People.

That means that while Jews originated in the Middle East, they began forming long-term communities in various places Iraq, North Africa, the northern Mediterranean, central Asia and, eventually, Eastern Europe after their expulsion from the ancient Israelite kingdoms in modern-day Israel. Even as these communities formed their own unique genetic signatures and intermarried with non-Jews around them, they retained certain sequences of DNA that are unique to people descended from ancient Israelites.

Thus, if you are nearly 100% percent Ashkenazi according to 23andMe or Ancestry.com like Stuart Schuffman you likely have an abundance of these particular genetic sequences. If you are 10% Ashkenazi and have Sephardic heritage, you may still have an abundance of Jewish genetic sequences they may have just come by way of Morocco, or Iran, and be different from the genes that make Ashkenazi Jews unique.

To make this easier to explain, Dr. Ostrer describes Jewishness at the genetic level as a tapestry.

The threads of the tapestry, he writes in Legacy, can be represented as shared segments of DNA and no single thread [is] required for composition of the tapestry. In other words, there is no single Jewish gene more a collection of genetic sequences that scientists have come to identify with a certain community that originated in the Middle East before migrating around the Mediterranean region. (Incidentally, people of Middle Eastern origin sometimes find they have a small amount of Ashkenazi ancestry for this reason.) Many modern Jews have this story encoded in their DNA.

Jews in the 20th century and late 19th century have gone through this experience of genealogical rupture, said Steven Weitzman, the Jewish historian. These genetic testing companies give you a very quick way to establish a connection to ancestors in the old world.

Weitzman said that he thinks the excitement over services like 23andMe will fade as genetics fails to answer the political questions we hoped it would. He likened it to archaeology: many people once assumed that uncovering ancient Israelite society would strengthen the Jewish claim to the land of Israel.

The more we learn about archaeology, more we debate, Weitzman said.

My feeling is that genetics is likely to move in the same direction, he added. It offers insights, but at the end of the day the data has to be interpreted, and it can be interpreted in different ways ways that can be construed as politically motivated.

But for Phil Mazo, the comedian, politics are the farthest thing from his mind as he waits on his 23andMe kit to come in the mail. His cousin, a medical resident, recently took 23andMes health test and learned about his genetic predisposition to degenerative diseases like Parkinsons and Alzheimers. Mazo wasnt sure he he could live with bad news.

I was thinking, like, if he can do it I can do it, he said. But then I think, What good would it be to know?

Contact Ari Feldman at feldman@forward.com or on Twitter @aefeldman.

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Can 23andMe Tell Us If Jews Are A Race And Is That A Good Thing? - Forward

New York exhibit revives Europe’s lost synagogues – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on July 30, 2017

NEW YORK Once pillars of Jewish life in Europe, hundreds of synagogues across the Old Continent had been destroyed in the period around World War II. Now, in New York City, the Museum at Eldridge Street, a landmark synagogue itself, has decided to bring them back to life in an exhibition running through September 8.

The exhibit, The Lost Synagogues of Europe, features a collection of 156 postcards depicting shuls in Germany, Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, Ukraine and other countries.

The images, reproduced for the display, date from the last years of the 19th century through just before the start of WWII.

Postcards are very eloquent little things, Nancy Johnson, the museums archivist, told The Jerusalem Post, walking through the narrow exhibit. They really tell you a lot about a time and a place.

Organized geographically, the cards, which belong to Prague native Frantisek Banyai, reflect the vibrancy of the Jewish communities represented and show much diversity of synagogue design. Depending on the time and place in which they were built, they range from humble wooden structures to grand synagogues.

Other postcards show life in the communities that existed around these synagogues including families on their way to worship; men praying; ghetto streets crowded with shoppers; and greeting cards for the Jewish holidays.

Of the 156 synagogues represented in the postcards, only 57 still stand today. And of them, only 14, like the opulent Jubilee Synagogue in Prague, are still Jewish houses of worship. The rest have all been destroyed.

World War II was the biggest culprit, Johnson said. Thirty-eight were destroyed just during Kristallnacht [in 1938], some were destroyed by the communists after the war, especially in the Czech Republic, and there are 11 that we are not sure what happened to them.

There are some that are churches, there are some that were used for storehouses and then kind of abandoned, there is one that is a fitness club, Johnson said.

Banyai, who created the displays himself, grew up collecting vintage postcards on Jewish themes as a way to connect with the past.

He was raised in Prague, after the Second World War, when the communists were in power and so he had no religious education, Johnson told the Post. He started collecting these cards as a way to reconnect with his Jewish past and in the process, became very involved in the Jewish community in Prague.

Banyai believes that in addition to their authentic beauty, these postcards capture a sense of indelible grief, as they reflect a major part of the Jewish world that disappeared almost without a trace.

On many of the images, one may observe Moorish style architecture featuring horseshoe arches, keyhole-shaped windows, bulbous domes, and even minaret towers. This style gained popularity in the mid to late eighteenth century, and is reminiscent of a time when Jews, Muslims and Christians lived peaceably together in Spain.

The Eldridge Street Synagogue, housing the exhibit, was also built in this fashion, perhaps inspired by the European shuls portrayed in the cards.

Today known as the Museum at Eldridge Street, it was the first functioning synagogue built by Eastern European Jews in the United States, in Manhattans Lower East Side, which was once the main hub of Jewish life in the city.

This congregation was unusual in that it brought together immigrants from all over Eastern Europe, not just from one place, Nancy Johnson said. They all spoke Yiddish.

The building opened in 1887, to serve a flourishing community made of Jewish immigrant. By 1924, however, US immigration laws changed and cut off the arrival of most Jews from Eastern Europe. The Eldridge Street congregation started to shrink.

When the Great Depression hit in the 1930s, it also begun struggling financially.

Whatever money the congregation had, they used to share with people who were struggling, Johnson told the Post.

The main space inside was too expensive to maintain and heat during the winter. The congregation stopped using it and it deteriorated over the years with holes in roof, leaks, stain glass falling out of the windows and birds flying around.

It is only in 1986 that a professor who visited the abandoned synagogue initiated its restoration. Twenty years and $20 million later, the process was completed.

Even though the congregation is very small and sometimes struggles to form a minyan, the Orthodox synagogue is functioning. After the space was fixed, it was granted museum status and today hosts various exhibitions, building tours, concerts and festivals.

Several shuls on Banyais postcards have undergone a restoration as well. This common aspect was one of the reasons Johnson and her team decided to host the Lost Synagogues of Europe exhibit.

It was also a way to see into the minds of the early congregants and what they may have worshiped before they came here, or what the architects, who were German-born, may have seen to influence their decisions here, Johnson said.

The exhibit is a reminder of just how much was lost in the Holocaust, she said.

Its harrowing, Johnson said. Everybody knows about World War II, everybody knows about Kristallnacht, but to see places that dont exist anymore because of this, and then to think about the people who would have been associated with those places, its just incomprehensible.

When we first put the show up in the spring, there had been a number of antisemitic acts in the city, and it was kind of scary, she added, looking at one of the panel of postcards. In a way you look at this and you think this would never happen again, but then, maybe it could happen again. You cant just be passive about it.

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New York exhibit revives Europe's lost synagogues - The Jerusalem Post

‘They were partners in hate, intimidation, and crime’ – Arutz Sheva

Posted By on July 30, 2017

New Jersey State Capitol Building.jpg

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Two New Jersey men convicted in the firebombing of North Jersey synagogues in 2011 and 2012 were each sentenced to 35 years in prison.

Anthony Graziano and Aakash Dalal were charged on a 30-count indictment in 2013 with arson and bias-related incidents that occurred from December 2011 to January 2012 in the Bergen County towns of Paramus, Rutherford, Maywood and Hackensack, according to NorthJersey.com, which reported their sentencing Friday.

Aakash Dalal, a resident of the New Jersey borough of Lodi was convicted last November for vandalizing and firebombing synagogues and a rabbis home in 2012. He was convicted by a Bergen County court on 16 other counts, including conspiracy to commit arson, attempted arson, bias intimidation, possession of a weapon and possession of a destructive device.

Dalal, a former student at Rutgers University, was arrested in March 2012. Dalal has been called the mastermind behind the attacks and did not actually participate in them.

Graziano, his former high school classmate, was found guilty of terrorism and 19 other counts in May 2016 for the attacks.

The two, both in their 20s, were sentenced together because they worked as a partnership, Brian Sinclair, an assistant Bergen County prosecutor, told NorthJersey.com.

They saw the world with the same set of eyes. They saw Jewish people not as people but as subhuman and like reptiles, Sinclair said. They were partners in hate, intimidation and crime.

In one attack, Molotov cocktails thrown at Congregation Beth El in Rutherford set fire to a bedroom in the synagogue residence where the rabbis family lived. The rabbi, Nosson Schuman, was injured. He lives in the residence with his wife, five children and his parents, who were sleeping at the time.

At two other synagogues, Graziano spray-painted anti-Semitic epithets, including swastikas and Jews Did 9/11. Graziano allegedly was scared off an attack by an increased police presence.

The men also were charged with the January 2012 firebombing of Temple Khal Adath Jeshurun in Paramus and the attempted arson four days later of the Jewish Community Center of Paramus. The bias intimidation offenses related to Temple Beth Israel in Maywood and Temple Beth El in Hackensack.

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'They were partners in hate, intimidation, and crime' - Arutz Sheva

Songs of the Sephardim | Humanities

Posted By on July 30, 2017

In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, it was the dominant language of trade in the Balkans. Carried around the world by Jews expelled from Spain, Sephardic Spanish is quickly disappearing as the number of people able to speak it declines.

The rise of a global economy that favors modern languages and the spread of mass media, which use standard forms of a language rather than dialects, contributes to making Judeo-Spanish obsolete, says Samuel G. Armistead, a professor of medieval Spanish literature at the University of California at Davis. "Today, Judeo-Spanish wouldn't get you into the world of commerce or technology. It is the language of the Sephardic past."

That past includes a rich legacy of storytelling and ballad making that stretches back to medieval Spain. To save those tales and songs, Armistead and his colleagues have been gathering them from Sephardic Spanish speakers in communities as far flung as Seattle, Washington, and Tetun, Morocco, for more than forty years.

Decades of tape recordings have provided the raw material for Folk Literature of the Sephardic Jews, a study of Judeo-Spanish ballads, lyric poetry, riddles, and folktales. Three volumes of Folk Literature have been published so far. The series is slated to include sixteen volumes on ballads, one each on Sephardic lyric poetry, riddles, and folktales, and a one-volume supplement and index. Armistead hopes to have volumes four, five, and six out later this year.

NEH grants have helped support work on volumes two through eight. The NEH is also helping create an online database of the collected materials through the Digital Library Initiative, a program conducted by the National Science Foundation in partnership with the NEH, NASA, the Library of Congress, and other federal agencies. The program promotes the use of computer technology in the humanities and other areas.

Lamenting the amount of time people today spend watching TV and going to movies, Armistead says, " We don't really participate in a creative way. Ballads and folktales and other forms of oral literature take us back to a time . . . when everybody was potentially a poet and everybody participated in this process of traditional creativity."

Storytelling in the Middle Ages involved much more than memorizing and reciting a particular tale. Ballads were sung while harvesting crops and doing housework. They were used to celebrate weddings and to mourn the dead.

Performing stories of family duty and love fulfilled or gone awry was a way for communities to preserve their shared values. It also gave people the chance to be creative by adapting ballads as they were passed down from singer to hearer and from generation to generation.

"For Sephardic Jews, the ballad was a way of affirming their own peculiar Jewish and Spanish culture," says Armistead.

Jews in Spain struggled to preserve their communal values through several periods of persecution often aimed at converting them to Christianity. Many of these New Christians, or conversos, continued to practice Judaism in secret. Fearful of the influence that practicing Jews might have on Christians in Spain, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella finally issued a decree in March 1492 calling for the expulsion of all Jews who refused to convert.

While many Jews converted in order to stay, tens of thousands left Spain for North Africa, Italy, and what was then the Ottoman Empire. During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Sephardic Jews emigrated to parts of northern Europe, England, and North America. Approximately twenty-five thousand Sephardic Jews had moved to the United States by 1926. As they settled in communities around the world, Sephardim relied on ballads to help preserve their memories of Spain.

According to Armistead, there was some significant study of this Sephardic oral literature conducted in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The Second World War and the devastation of the Holocaust created greater urgency among scholars to study and preserve the Spanish-speaking Sephardic culture, which had been virtually wiped out in Greece, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Rumania, and what is now Bosnia.

Folk Literature of the Sephardic Jews is the first comprehensive study of Sephardic literature to consider not only the texts collected by Armistead and his colleagues, but also those previously collected by scholars since 1885.

The immensity of the project is matched only by the painstaking work involved. Each recording, culled from interviews with more than two hundred Sephardic Spanish speakers in the United States, North Africa, and Israel, must be carefully transcribed and then compared with other versions collected in the field or compiled previously by other scholars. This laborious process can help to explain how the structure and content of a text might have evolved over time.

Armistead began collecting material in 1956, while he was an instructor at the University of California, Los Angeles. The following year, the late Joseph H. Silverman, then a colleague on the Spanish faculty, joined Armistead on the project. The university supported them with a modest grant of $17.50 to buy reel-to-reel tape. From its humble beginnings with the large Sephardic immigrant community in Los Angeles, the project grew as the two interviewed more sources in San Francisco, Seattle, and New York.

In 1959, Armistead and Silverman were joined by Israel J. Katz, then a doctoral student in ethnomusicology at UCLA. After transcribing the melodies sung by Sephardic sources and comparing transcriptions of different renditions, Katz determined how the ballad music has changed through years of oral transmission. He now works at UC Davis as a research associate for the Folk Literature project.

According to Armistead, the Spanish ballads, or romances, evolved from epics recited at banquet halls, marketplaces, or other public gatherings. They were particularly influenced by the chansons de geste, heroic French poems that were adapted by peoples across medieval Europe. Chanson protagonists like Roland and Charlemagne, who fought against the Muslims in eighth-century France, and the legendary El Cid, who later battled them in Spain, appear in early Sephardic poems.

Certain scenes from the longer epics were more popular than others, says Armistead. Because of their brevity and compelling narrative, these epic fragments were easily memorized by listeners who went on to adapt and perform their own versions. Epic fragments became independent pieces of poetry.

Over time, the ballad was adapted to narrate stories of family and marriage. Advice, like that in this Moroccan Sephardic wedding ballad, was given in song:

My daughter, if you are departing, Look out and pay attention. On the roads you will travel, There are no cousins or relatives. Unknown women will be your family; Be sure you're not disliked.

Singers also used the medieval ballad form to describe historical events that were in the recent memory of the community. Called romances noticieros, these ballads were being written until relatively recent times by Spanish-speaking Moroccan Jews, says Armistead. There is one, possibly from early this century, that tells of the capture of Jewish muleteers on the road to Tangier by members of the Beni der tribe and their subsequent ransoming and release.

In studying the ballad tradition, Armistead has particularly enjoyed discovering that the tradition is eclectic and far from frozen in the Middle Ages. He recalls that when he began his research, "Many Hispanists who approached this material assumed that everything that the Sephardim sang dated from the epoch of the expulsion. Little attention was directed to material the Sephardim may have acquired after their exile from the diverse peoples among whom they lived."

Armistead, however, has been pondering the ways Sephardic singers adapted new material almost since the beginning of his research. He remembers going to a used-book store in Los Angeles in the late 1950s and coming across a collection of Greek folk poetry, translated into English. The old poems had been gathered in the nineteenth century. While perusing the collection, he ran across a poem that closely resembled a Sephardic ballad that was believed to be from Spain. In the Sephardic version, seven brothers are on the road to Aragon when their thirst leads them to devise a dangerous plan for getting water from a bottomless well.

In 1959, after his experience in the bookstore, Armistead and Silverman collected yet another version of the well ballad in Brooklyn. Their source was an 84-year-old Sephardic Spanish-speaking woman who had been born in Greece. After comparing the Greek poem and the Sephardic well ballad, Armistead concluded that the well ballad was not of medieval Hispanic origin at all. Sephardic singers at some point had simply taken a traditional Greek song and, in translation, put it into the ballad formula that characterizes Sephardic works.

But how does Armistead know that the song traveled from the Greeks to the Jews and not the other way around? Because the well story is known throughout Greece. "Sephardic culture in Greece was largely marginalized," says Armistead. "It would have been hard for the Sephardim to get the poem so widely dispersed," says Armistead.

Armistead has since created a critical text of "The Bottomless Well" from all of the known Sephardic versions of the ballad. It appears in the 1993 essay collection Sephardim in the Americas: Studies in Culture and History, edited by Martin A. Cohen and Abraham J. Peck:

Now the seven brothers depart, Now they depart for Aragon. The heat was intense; they could find no water. Along the way, they found a deep well. They drew lots; it fell to the youngest. Now they tie him to the rope; they lower him into the well. Halfway down that well, the rope broke. The water became blood for them; the stones became serpents. "If my father asks you, tell him: 'He was left in the well!'"

Among the Sephardic ballads many virtues, says Armistead, is its plain, concise language. That plainness is central to the form's vitality because it leaves so much to the listener's imagination. "The ballad appeals to us to participate in the poetic process."

Studying the ballads also show the process of change that languages undergo. Sephardic Spanish would seem familiar to modern Spanish speakers, says Armistead. It retains pronunciations from the Middle Ages as well as words that have since died out, but along the way it borrowed from Arabic and Turkish. Hebrew words usually appear in a religious context.

Sometimes the words used change meaning over time. For instance, the Hebrew phrase 'sheth hayil from Proverbs is translated variously as capable wife, virtuous or wise woman, or woman of valor. Sephardic women in Morocco, who did not know much Hebrew, interpreted these words to mean a woman who is brave and heroic. This mistranslation led to a body of North African Sephardic ballads featuring courageous female characters significantly different from those seen in ballads from Spain.

In terms of music, Katz's analysis has revealed how the melodies of the ballads have changed since exile. The Sephardic Jews who had moved to the eastern coast of the Mediterranean continued to sing medieval Spanish narratives. But they set these stories to the Turkish and Greek tunes they heard after leaving Spain.

Such insights into the history of Sephardic language and literature are threatened by the dwindling resources available to scholars like Armistead. From 1962 to 1963, one Moroccan woman provided Armistead and fellow researchers with about a month's worth of interviews. Luna Elaluf Farache, a champion ballad singer, knew more than sixty ballads and numerous stories, says Armistead. To hear her and others was often a thrilling experience because "we heard things that were never written down from their creation in the Middle Ages. It was like hearing the echo of voices of centuries ago."

For now, the work of Armistead, Silverman, and Katz serves as a crucial resource for the study and preservation of a culture that is being forgotten.

Armistead says that there are currently efforts under way in Israel to revive Judeo-Spanish by teaching it in school and by establishing an organization devoted to preserving both Sephardic and Yiddish cultures.

While he admires these efforts, he is keenly aware of the cultural and economic obstacles that stand in the way.

"Some people in Israel say they can bring Judeo-Spanish back," observes Armistead. "I hope they can."

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Songs of the Sephardim | Humanities


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