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Disease-linked genes in 14 Indian groups – Calcutta Telegraph

Posted By on July 20, 2017

New Delhi, July 19: Millions of people in each of at least 14 population groups across the Indian subcontinent may possess disease-linked genes, inherited from roots in founding populations and passed down generations through within-community marriages.

A genetic study of 260 distinct South Asian population groups has identified 14 groups, each with census counts of more than one million and each displaying genetic evidence for what scientists call "founder events", or descent from small founding populations.

Scientists have long known that similar founder events for certain populations such as the Ashkenazi Jews or the Finns have contributed to high rates of so-called recessive disease-linked genes in these populations.

The South Asian study, published yesterday in the research journal Nature Genetics, has now detected a stronger founder-effect in the 14 populations than what had been observed in the Ashkenazi Jews or the Finns.

The 14 groups sampled in the study were Arunthathiyars from Tamil Nadu, Baniyas from Uttar Pradesh, Manipur Brahmins, Nepal Brahmins, Gujjars from Jammu and Kashmir, Kumhars from Uttar Pradesh, Yadavs from Puducherry, and Reddys and Vysyas from Telangana, among others.

"Fragments of DNA present in the founders of each of these populations have been handed down for at least 100 generations and persist today," said Kumarasamy Thangaraj, a senior scientist at the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB), Hyderabad, who led the study.

Thangaraj and his colleagues from Harvard University analysed sections of the genomic make-up of 2,800 individuals from 260 distinct South Asian population groups and assigned an "identity-by-descent" (IBD) score, a measure of common ancestry.

Each of the 14 population groups had higher IBD scores than Ashkenazi Jews and Finns, who have higher rates of certain congenital disorders such as cystic fibrosis (in the Jews), or congenital newborn kidney disease (in the Finns) than in general populations.

India's Vyasa community in the southern states, for instance, with a census count of about 3 million, has a founder effect 1.2-fold stronger than in the Finnish population. Earlier studies have shown that members of the Vyasa community on average have unusually high rates of a specific enzyme deficiency that makes them particularly sensitive to certain drugs, including muscle relaxants, given prior to surgery.

The study underscores the potential to look for such recessive gene-linked diseases in such populations with strong founder events and within-community marriages. "Groups with strong founder events are expected to have a high recurrence rate of the same rare diseases that arise from mutations carried in the founders," David Reich, principal investigator at Harvard University, told The Telegraph.

Mapping such mutations could help develop strategies for diagnosis, counselling, or managing such disorders. The scientists say a knowledge of these mutations could also guide match-making.

They cite an example of this strategy in a community genetic testing programme among Orthodox Ashkenazi Jews which screens students for common recessive disease-causing mutations and enters those results in a confidential database. Matchmakers can query this database to determine the risk of a couple passing a recessive gene to children. The risk is highest when both the boy and girl carry the same recessive gene.

"This strategy has reduced the rate of many recessive diseases to near-zero among Orthodox Ashkenazi Jews who use the service," said Reich. "A similar strategy may (also) be effective in South Asians."

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Disease-linked genes in 14 Indian groups - Calcutta Telegraph

Anti-Defamation League Categorizes Corey Stewart, Two Other … – Blue Virginia (press release) (blog)

Posted By on July 20, 2017

Among his many other faults, Donald Trump without a doubt has emboldened and energized some really nasty hatemongers in this country. For instance, check out the newly released report,From Alt Right to Alt Lite: Naming the Hate, by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which lists some of the nations most virulent purveyors of overt racism, anti-Semitism, xenophobia, misogyny, and anti-Muslim bigotry. Sad to say, it looks like several Virginians made the ADL list. That includes Corey Stewart, the current front-runner for the 2018 Virginia Republican nomination for U.S. Senate against Tim Kaine, and two others (Richard Spencer of Alexandria and Jason Kessler of Charlottesville). Before we get to their ADL profiles, heres a brief review of what the ADL means by alt right and alt lite (note: personally, I prefer to just call these people what they really are white supremacists, racists, misogynists, Islamophobes, conspiracy theorists rather than the more anodyne alt whatever).

Alt Right: a segment of the white supremacist movementconsisting of a loose network of racists and anti-Semiteswho reject mainstream conservatism in favor of politics that embrace implicit or explicit racist, anti-Semitic and white supremacist ideology. Many seek to re-inject such bigoted ideas into the conservative movement in the United States. The alt right skews younger than other far right groups, and is very active online, using racist memes and message forums on 4chan, 8chan and certain corners of Reddit.

Alt Lite: the alt lite, sometimes referred to as the New Right, is loosely-connected movementwhose adherents generally shun white supremacist thinking, but who are in step with the alt right in their hatred of feminists and immigrants, among others. Many within the alt lite sphere are virulently anti-Muslim; the group abhors everyone on the left and traffics in conspiracy theories, including#Pizzagate, which claimed there was evidence of a child slavery ring operating inside a DC pizzeria. The series of increasingly outrageous lies led to death threats against the pizzerias owner and employees, and ultimately resulted in a gunman opening fire inside the restaurant in an attempt to save the imaginary children.

Its also important to note, as the ADL writes, that there is crossover between these two categories, with some alt lite adherents support[ing] alt right figures and events, while others have made a point of steering clear of anything associated with white supremacist beliefs. With that, here are the Virginians identified by the ADL as either Alt Right or Alt Lite.

Alt Right

Jason Kessler,of Charlottesville, Virginia, is an alt right activist and white supremacist who claims that a white genocide is underway in the United States. Kessler is the president of Unity and Security for America and is a contributor to the racist website VDare.com. He also wrote for The Daily Caller until he was revealed to be a white nationalist. At a May 2017 pro-Confederate rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, Kessler reportedly praised racist groups and a Holocaust denier, and was eventually arrested for disorderly conduct.AtJunes Free Speech Rallyin D.C.,he told the crowd that America would be better off if the South had won the Civil War, and advanced conspiracy theories about Jews controlling Hollywood and the media and promoting filthy propaganda. Kessler is one of the organizers of the August 12 Unite the Right white supremacist rally in Charlottesville.

Richard Spencer,of Alexandria, Virginia,is aleader of the alt right movementand a symbol for a new generation of intellectual white supremacists. Spencer, who wants to see a new right that openly embraces white racial consciousness, coined the term alternative right in an article he wrote for Takis Magazine in 2008. He uses the term to refer to people on the right of the political spectrum who distinguish themselves from traditional conservatives by opposing, among other things, egalitarianism, multiculturalism, and open immigration.In 2010, Spencer created an online publication called Alternative Right,where he explicitly promoted white supremacist philosophies. In recent years, Spencer has become more openly anti-Semitic, and now says he wants to establish a white ethno-state in the U.S., where whites can live separately from non-whites and Jews. Since 2011, Spencer has been the President of the National Policy Institute (NPI); he also runs Altright.com, a more provocative iteration of his previous online effort, Alternative Right. The new website is aimed at a younger demographic.

Alt Lite

Corey Stewart,a failed 2017 Virginia GOP gubernatorial candidate, was the states Trump campaign co-chair until he was fired for attending an anti-RNC rally in October 2016. Stewart champions the preservation of Confederate monuments in the South, and has defended the heritage of the Confederate flag. He referred to his Republican primary opponent a cuckservative. Stewart was a featured speaker at thealt lite Rally Against Political Violence on June 25 in Washington, D.C.

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Anti-Defamation League Categorizes Corey Stewart, Two Other ... - Blue Virginia (press release) (blog)

ADL accuses Jewish Voice for Peace of ‘anti-Israel radicalism’ | The … – The Times of Israel

Posted By on July 20, 2017

The Anti Defamation League on Wednesday accused Jewish Voice for Peace of seeking to undermine support for Israel among US Jews, saying the pro-BDS group has adopted increasingly radical positions and uses questionable tactics to promote its agenda.

In a statement, the ADL said JVP is engaged in harassing LGBT groups, citing the organizations infiltration of the pro-Israel Jewish Queer Youth during Junes Celebrate Israel parade in New York and its support for the Chicago Dyke Marchs removal of three Jewish women from its parade for carrying Jewish Pride flags.

The ADL also slammed JVP for shutting down dialogue, saying that members of the group shout down speakers whom they deem to be too pro-Israel rather than engaging them in debate.

JVP also came under fire from the ADL for its continued praise of convicted Palestinian terrorists, including its decision to host Rasmea Odeh who was was convicted by Israel of involvement in a 1969 bombing in Jerusalem that killed two and injured nine at an event in April and an advertisement it published in The Forward newspaper hailing jailed Palestinian terror mastermind and political leader Marwan Barghouti that made no mention of his involvement in the murder of Israelis.

Rasmea Yousef Odeh, November 10, 2014. (AP/Carlos Osorio, File)

The ADL also said that JVP seeks to undermine security cooperation between the US and Israel through its Deadly Exchange program, which blames joint Israeli-US police training for causing extrajudicial executions, shoot-to-kill policies, police murders, racial profiling, massive spying and surveillance, deportation and detention, and attacks on human rights defenders.

It also noted a recent video from JVP accusing pro-Israel Jewish groups in the US of fueling racism and police brutality due to their support for those US-Israel security exchange programs.

The ADL said that while it is legitimate to criticize Israel, JVP is using language to describe American Jewish organizations that veers uncomfortably close to age-old anti-Semitic canards and providing a veneer of legitimacy to the BDS movement by playing up its status as a Jewish group.

While JVP had yet to issue a response to the ADL statement, it previously has stated that is not anti-Israel in response to reports from the ADL.

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ADL accuses Jewish Voice for Peace of 'anti-Israel radicalism' | The ... - The Times of Israel

UK Ambassador: What is Religious Zionism’s credo? – Arutz Sheva

Posted By on July 19, 2017

UK Amb. at Merkaz HaRav Yeshiva

INN: Merkaz HaRav

The United Kingdom's Ambassador to Israel, Mr. David Quarrey, paid a visit to the Merkaz HaRav Yeshiva in Jerusalem on Wednesday. The ambassador met with the Yeshiva's dean, Rabbi Yaakov Shapira and several of the rabbinic staff, including the venerable Rabbi Chaim Shteiner, Rabbi Yehoshua Magnes, Rabbi Avraham Sylvetsky and Rabbi Pinchas Mondshein for an hour-long closed discussion.

The meeting was followed by a tour of the yeshiva during which the ambassador, accompanied by his interpreter, talked to some of the students and visited the library where eight of the yeshiva''s students were massacred in 2008 by an Arab terrorist as they leaned over their holy books, engrossed in study. He stood silently at the memorial wall with their names and the glass door shattered with bullet holes located near the library entrance.

Mr. Quarrey said at the meeting that he had asked to visit the yeshiva and talk to its key figures because he understood that Merkaz HaRav Yeshiva, founded by Israel's first Chief Rabbi, the late Rabbi Avraham Yitzchak HaCohen Kook, is the central yeshiva of Religious Zionism whose graduates are to be found in every sphere of activity in the Jewish State.

The ambassador, appointed to his post in 2015, added that he had noticed, in the time he has spent in Israel, that Religious Zionists play significant roles in the country's activities, decision making and in forming its policies. That, he explained, made him want to learn more about the Religious Zionist sector's credo and principles, best done by visiting a central place where these ideas are studied and developed,

Rabbi Kook, Torah luminary and leader, as well as poet and philosopher, is considered the founder of Religious Zionism and was appointed to his position during the period of the British Mandate. He was instrumental in the publishing of the Balfour Declaration of 1917 which recognized the right of the Jewish people to a homeland in Mandatory Palestine. The yeshiva asked the ambassador to help them in obtaining copies of the rabbi's correspondence with the British government during those years.

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UK Ambassador: What is Religious Zionism's credo? - Arutz Sheva

Scottish Court Rules Opposing Zionism Is Not Racism – Mintpress News (blog)

Posted By on July 19, 2017

The SPSC has faced repeated efforts by pro-Israel lobbyists and Scottish prosecutors to criminalize the groups pro-Palestine activities.

Activist from the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign protest Israels violations of Palestinian rights outside the Glasgow Sheriff Court, Scotland on July 10, 2017. (Photo: Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign/Facebook)

In yet another landmark legal victory, members of the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign emerged from court victorious today after being accused of racism. Their crime? Standing up to Zionism.

The trial ended three years of speculation and pressure for SPSC members whose robust defense of their actions won the day in Glasgow Sherriffs Court when the verdict was announced on Friday.

Five days of evidence and cross-examinations earlier this month focussed on the actions of two SPSC members who faced charges of racism and aggravated trespass for a protest against Israeli company Jericho cosmetics, which operates around the Dead Sea in the occupied West Bank. The protest was held in the wake of Israels 2014 military offensive against Palestinian civilians besieged in the Gaza Strip. More than 2,200 Palestinians were killed by the Israelis during the offensive, including 550 children, before in the war ended on 26 August. During the demonstration on 13 September 2014, the SPSC protesters denounced the killings.

The protest was held in the wake of Israels 2014 military offensive against Palestinian civilians besieged in the Gaza Strip. More than 2,200 Palestinians were killed by the Israelis during the offensive, including 550 children, before in the war ended on 26 August. During the demonstration on 13 September 2014, the SPSC protesters denounced the killings.

Police were called to the shopping center where the protest was being held, leading to the arrest of the two SPSC members accused of racism. In other words, explained Mick Napier, one of those arrested, we were accused of being motivated by hatred of Israelis rather than opposition to Israels repeated massacres, apartheid across the whole of Palestine and genocidal violence in Gaza.

During the Glasgow trial, the SPSC was buoyed by a High Court ruling in London that the Conservative government in Westminster acted unlawfully when it tried to prevent local councils in Britain from divesting from companies involved in Israels military occupation. The successful legal challenge for the right to boycott was brought by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign in London, supported by War on Want, the Campaign Against the Arms Trade and the Quakers.

However, Napier wasnt convinced that the result of the latest trial was a foregone conclusion. Given their past record, we felt it was unlikely that even this High Court ruling in favor of BDS [boycott, divestment and sanctions] would stop Scottish prosecutors related efforts to criminalize the campaign in support of Palestinian freedom.

The prosecutor called the Procurator Fiscal in the Scottish legal system claimed in open court that the two accused in the Glasgow case were recycling an ancient anti-Semitic Jewish blood libel by speaking about Israeli mass murder of Palestinians. The Procurator Fiscals office made these claims, said Napier, while the violated people of Gaza were still looking for ice-cream freezers and vegetable refrigerators in which to store the bodies of children killed by Israels military.

In their testimony, last month, Napier and his co-accused Jim Watson both rejected the claims made by prosecution witnesses, a Chief Inspector of Police, the manager of the Jericho stall and two local Zionist activists. The prosecution claim was that staff was intimidated by racist placards and the shouting of racist abuse; this was the description of the SPSCs criticism of the pro-Israel counter-demonstrators for supporting Israels most recent massacre of Palestinians.

The racist placard with which the Procurator Fiscal and Zionist witnesses took particular issue was a symbolic but graphic image of blood dripping under the name Dead Sea cosmetics. Napier pointed out that at the time of their protest, the UN Secretary-General was describing Israels massacre of thousands of Palestinians as a moral outrage and criminal act and a gross violation of humanitarian law.

When the Scottish government joined in by denouncing the deep inhumanity of the Israeli massacre, noted Napier, the Scottish procurators fiscal were working hand in glove with pro-Israel lobby groups to silence voices of Palestine solidarity.

The SPSC has faced repeated efforts by pro-Israel lobbyists and Scottish prosecutors to criminalize the groups pro-Palestine activities. The Zionist record to-date is one of almost total failure; legal action has failed to secure any convictions of pro-Palestine activists. There was, however, a consolation prize [for the Zionists] when we were both found guilty of refusing to leave the shopping center when asked to do so by the police, said Napier. I was also convicted of aggravated trespass for protesting inside the shopping center. We will be appealing against both convictions so any celebrations by the Zionists will, I suggest, be a bit premature.

In February last year, two employees of the pro-Israel Community Security Trust made allegations against SPSC members but that was also thrown out by Kilmarnock Sheriff Court when the Sheriff ruled that the crime as alleged had not taken place. Had we not had the benefit of anAl-Jazeera Arabic language broadcast of the protest where the CST tried to secure an assault conviction there might have been a different outcome, added Mick Napier.

Stories published in our Hot Topics section are chosen based on the interest of our readers. They are republished from a number of sources, and are not produced by MintPress News. The views expressed in these articles are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect Mint Press News editorial policy.

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Scottish Court Rules Opposing Zionism Is Not Racism - Mintpress News (blog)

The unalterable eternality of Torat Moshe – The Jewish Star

Posted By on July 19, 2017

Rabbi David Etengoff

The phrase, aleh hamitzvot (these are the commandments), appears twice in the Torah in the concluding pasukim of Sefer Vayikra, and in our parasha, Matot-Masei, in Sefer Bamidbar:

These are the mitzvot that the L-rd commanded Moses to [tell] the children of Israel on Mount Sinai. (Vayikra 27:34)

These are the mitzvot and the ordinances (vhamishpatim) that the L-rd commanded the children of Israel through Moses in the plains of Moab, by the Jordan at Jericho. (Bamidbar 36:13)

The pasukim are dissimilar in that the geographic location mentioned in the first is Mount Sinai, whereas the second refers to the plains of Moab, by the Jordan at Jericho. Additionally, the first verse only mentions mitzvot, while the second includes mishpatim. In both cases, however, Moses is charged to teach the commandments to the entire Jewish people. This concept is alluded to, as well, in the well-known verse, Torah tzivah lanu Moshe morasha kehillat Yaakov (The Torah that Moses commanded us is a legacy for the congregation of Jacob, Devarim 33:4)

While the substantive meaning of aleh hamitzvot is elusive, we are fortunate that the Talmud Yerushalmi enables us to better understand this phrase: [This means,] that these [and these alone] are the commandments that Moses instructed us to observe. (Megilah I:V)

The Talmud Yerushalmi adds this crucial statement: And so, too, did Moses teach us In the future, and from this point forward, no other prophet may originate a new commandment for you. In addition, this principle is found in the Midrash Sifrei to Sefer Bamidbar and four separate times in the Talmud Bavli. Its inclusion in these multiple sources bears powerful testimony to its singular import in classical halachic thought.

The Rambam (Maimonides), basing himself upon the above cited sources, codifies the expression, no prophet is permitted to create a new matter (i.e. mitzvah) from this point forward, in a straightforward juridic formulation:

It is clear and explicit in the Torah that it is [G-ds] commandment, remaining forever without change, addition, or diminishment, as [Devarim 13:1] states: All these matters which I command to you, you shall be careful to perform. You may not add to it or diminish from it, and [Devarim 29:28] states: What is revealed is for us and our children forever, to carry out all the words of this Torah. This teaches that we are commanded to fulfill all the Torahs directives forever. It is also said: It is an everlasting statute for all your generations, and [Devarim 30:20] states: It is not in the heavens. This teaches that a prophet can no longer add a new precept [to the Torah]. (Mishneh Torah, Sefer Hamada, Hilchot Yesodei HaTorah 9:1)

The Malbim (Rabbi Meir Leibush ben Yechiel Michel) further explicates the meaning of our phrase, no prophet is permitted to create a new matter from this point forward. He opines that aleh hamitzvot connotes these and no others, and adds, our teacher Moses was the sole prophet of the Torah. As such, the Malbim explains, all of the subsequent prophets had but one purpose to encourage loyalty to Moses Torah (Torat Moshe). Thus, by definition, they could neither add nor subtract [from the Torah]. (Commentary on Sefer Vayikra, section 120) The Malbims use of the expression, Torat Moshe is similar in kind to a verse in Sefer Malachi wherein the prophet proclaims, Remember My servant Moses Torah (Torat Moshe) [inclusive of] the laws and ordinances which I commanded him in Horeb (i.e. at Mount Sinai) for all Israel. (3:22)

The promise of reward for fulfilling Torat Moshe (i.e. the mitzvot) is found throughout the Torah. One of the most celebrated of these passages appears in the second paragraph of the Shema:

And it will be, if you hearken to My commandments that I command you this day to love the L-rd, your G-d, and to serve Him with all your heart and with all your soul, I will give the rain of your land at its time, the early rain and the latter rain, and you will gather in your grain, your wine, and your oil. And I will give grass in your field for your livestock, and you will eat and be sated. (Devarim 11:3)

This narrative focuses on the physical rewards that will accrue to our nation if we demonstrate true allegiance to the Almighty. Thus, the focus is on rain, grain, wine, oil, livestock and the general satisfaction of our earthly needs. In contrast, the prophet Malachi turns our attention to the ultimate spiritual reward, namely, the fulfillment of Judaisms eschatological vision: Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the coming of the great and awesome day of the L-rd, that he may turn the heart of the fathers back through the children, and the heart of the children back through their fathers. (23-24)

With Hashems love and guidance, may we have the wisdom and desire to keep His eternal Torat Moshe. Then, with His chane vchesed vrachamim (grace, kindness and mercy) may we, as Michah declared, behold Elijah the prophet and the coming of Mashiach ben David soon and in our days. Vchane yihi ratzon.

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The unalterable eternality of Torat Moshe - The Jewish Star

What Is the Meaning of Life? – Cape May County Herald

Posted By on July 19, 2017

I recently returned from Israel, having spent 10 glorious days in the Holy Land. It was a magical trip with lots of spiritual moments and adventures. In my last article, I mentioned that I intend to devote the next few articles to answering questions that I have received on my Ask the Rabbi website.

One of my favorite questions is this one: "What, according to Judaism, is the meaning of life?"

Judaism sees the life that is given to each human being as a gift to be used for the benefit for all who dwell on earth.

Being a good person is clearly at the core of Judaism, and Gods first concern is with a persons decency. In an interesting Talmudic passage (Shabbat 31a), a person is brought before the heavenly court in heaven for judgment and asked a series of questions.

One might think that the question would be, Did you observe the Jewish holidays or do observe all of the rituals?" You might be surprised that the first question quoted in the Talmud by the rabbis is: Did you conduct your affairs honestly?

Rabbinic advice states that a person is to stay honest and learn to be good and honorable by adhering to Judaisms special system of religious obligations, called mitzvot in Hebrew.

God gave us a variety of religious obligations (the Ten Commandments being the most familiar), and if we are diligent, I believe they will help us all do our part in bringing more mercy, kindness, and peace into the world.

The Book of Deuteronomy asks us to follow and walk in Gods ways. I understand this phrase to mean that we should follow the attributes of God.

So just as God clothed Adam and Eve, so should we give clothing to those in need. Just as God visited Abraham when he was sick after his circumcision, so we too should make it our duty to visit those who are ill.

All acts of justice and goodness are closely connected with the concept of honoring Gods name by following Gods ways.

Back in the 1990s, I had the good fortune to host a central New Jersey radio show called The Jewish American Hour.

As the host, I decided to end each program by going off the air with a verse from the Bible that was so important to me that I wanted my listeners to always remember it.

The verse that I chose is one of my favorites (it even adorns the wall of my home office). The verse is from the Book of the Prophet Micah, and sums up for me what God requires of all of us, and thus how God intended for us to find lifes meaning:

"God has told you what is good, and what God wants of you: only to do justice, to love goodness, and to walk modestly with your God."(Micah, 6:8).

I look forward to hearing from you with your questions and comments.

Wishing you a restful and tranquil summer and if in the area, do visit historic Beth Judah Temple where you will be welcomed with open arms.

On July 28, Sabbath services will take place at 6:30 p.m. in North Wildwood at the Booth Amphitheatre.

All are welcome for a musical and spirited worship experience. I wish you a peaceful and tranquil summer.

Rabbi Ron Isaacs is Interim Rabbi of Beth Judah Temple in Wildwood. Contact him at http://www.rabbiron.com.

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What Is the Meaning of Life? - Cape May County Herald

How One Interfaith Family Found A Home At Synagogue – Forward

Posted By on July 19, 2017

iStock

For my husband and me, preparing for our wedding almost 30 years ago was a turning point. I was raised Reformed but no longer lived near my childhood Temple, nor had any connection to anyone there or to institutional Judaism at all. My husband, who grew up Catholic but was no longer practicing, was supportive of my desire to be married by a rabbi, to please my family and because I did feel a strong and positive connection to my Jewish heritage. However, my first attempt at finding a rabbi was met with a judgmental, resigned response. Although the rabbi I spoke to did suggest someone, it was clear that he had as much disdain for the rabbi he named who was willing to marry an interfaith couple as he did for the choice that I was making. Had we not found a wonderful Reconstructionist rabbi through a friend, who turned the whole process into a positive experience for both of us, that could have been the end of Judaism for me. I would still have identified culturally, but I could easily have written off organized Jewish life, as so many disenchanted Jews choose to do. However, after several meaningful planning meetings with Rabbi Linda, we had a lovely Jewish-style ceremony complete with Hebrew prayers and a chuppah made from ribbons woven together by our friends. (My husbands idea.) And we were both left with the feeling that there was room in the Jewish community for us, if we chose to pursue that.

Several years later, we were invited by friends to join an Interfaith couples group at a local Reconstructionist synagogue. My husband and I were immediately made to feel welcome by our rabbi at the time, who facilitated the group. Soon after, when we decided we were ready to join a synagogue so that our daughter could go to Hebrew school, our choice was an easy one, since we had already found our Jewish home. If my husband and I had not felt welcome and accepted by the community, our time there would have been short-lived, and, again, I could have walked away from organized Judaism and never looked back. But instead, the opposite occurred. Not only did my daughter receive a Jewish education, but I did as well. Because of the inviting programs at our synagogue and the surrounding Jewish community, I have been more Jewishly involved and aware than I ever was, or ever imagined I would be. As for our Interfaith couples group, a number of us are still meeting after 25+ years, but long ago we became more of a social and general support group, because any interfaith-related issues that arose in our lives were so comfortably and satisfactorily resolved.

I know that one of the big fears is that if a Jewish person chooses to marry outside the faith, that person and their children will be lost to the Jewish community, and will no longer affiliate, participate, or identify as Jewish. But it is clear to me that the attitudes and expectations of rabbinic and congregational leadership regarding the issue of interfaith marriage become a self-fulfilling prophecy. If a congregation sets an inclusive and welcoming tone for interfaith families, then there is no reason why those families cant and wont participate in the life of the community as fully as any other members. On the other hand, rabbis and congregations who are focused on their concern about the interfaith marriage problem, and whose attempts to be open are half-hearted and insincere, will never be able to encourage or experience the truly positive results that are possible in the right environment.

At our synagogue, we have had Jewish members in interfaith marriages who have been on the board, have headed and participated in various committees, organized and led healing services, performed music at Shabbat services, sung in the choir, taken adult ed classes, and so on. We have a number of non-Jewish spouses who have opted to convert to Judaism not because they were pressured or even necessarily encouraged to do so, but because the Judaism they experienced resonated with them, and they made the choice to convert for their own personal enrichment. These Jews-by-choice have been fully involved in synagogue life, probably more so than the average Jew-by-birth. Perhaps most importantly, our non-Jewish husbands and wives who have not chosen to convert have nonetheless provided invaluable support in raising our Jewish children, and have been embraced as active members of our Jewish community.

As for our commitment to raising Jewish families, our children have become Bar/Bat Mitzvah, and the non-Jewish parents were every bit as proud on those special days as the Jewish ones. Many of our kids continued through confirmation, some attended Jewish summer camps, quite a few have been on Birthright trips, some became involved with Hillel or other Jewish organizations at college, and one even came back to direct our synagogue choir. To the best of my knowledge, every one of them identifies as Jewish. Their level of engagement varies, just as with the children of Jewish-Jewish marriages, but their place as members of the Jewish community is clear.

So, then, what comes next? As these children of interfaith families approach marriage-age, will they choose Jewish spouses for themselves? Probably no more, although very possibly no less than their peers with two Jewish parents. But that is not the appropriate question. The question is will they, and all Jewish young people regardless of their family backgrounds, find in Judaism and the Jewish community something that is meaningful and valuable for them? And if they do choose a non-Jewish partner, and try to find a rabbi to marry them, will they be accepted and counseled warmly and openly? Will their interest in honoring their Jewish heritage with a Jewish-style wedding be respected and appreciated? Or will they be made to feel that they are being judged for marrying the person with whom they have fallen in love, who happens not to be Jewish? Will they feel unwelcome in the very synagogues and communities which raised them?

These are some of the turning points that Jewish leadership needs to consider. Its clear that Jews of all backgrounds are less and less likely to affiliate with so many other demands and opportunities competing for their money, energy, and time, and other types of communities they can choose to be a part of. Instead of worrying about how to stop intermarriage, and how to stop Jews from leaving the synagogues, it is much more productive and effective to think about how to embrace and encourage anyone who is open to Jewish community life. Promoting Jewish summer camps and Birthright trips are terrific ideas not specifically to encourage in-marriage, as some people imagine, but to engage young people in Jewish life in ways that are positive and meaningful to them, regardless of their ultimate choice of a mate. Congregations should continue to reach out to members, and potential members, with activities that are not just religious in nature such as music and dancing, social action, field trips and outings, discussion groups, adult ed and so on. Its important to accept that each person is entitled to choose the right level and type of involvement for them, and expressing even subtle disapproval toward someone who isnt religious enough doesnt attend services, didnt marry another Jew, etc. will only drive them further away.

The reality is that widespread interfaith marriage is here to stay, and thats a good thing, as far as what it says about our acceptance as a people into mainstream American life (despite recent incidents to the contrary, stirred up by the current political climate). As everyone should be, we are free to follow our hearts and choose our partners without restrictions. The lesson to be learned is that this is not a problem, but rather an opportunity to find creative, positive ways to offer engagement in Jewish life to all who are interested.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

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Posted By on July 19, 2017

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Man armed with knives arrested while trying to enter synagogue - The Jerusalem Post mobile website

Man brandishing knives detained near synagogue – Jewish Chronicle

Posted By on July 19, 2017

Police officers arrive in Bell Lane in Hendon (left) where the man was detained (credit: Amir Cohan, YouTube)

A man has been detained under the Mental Health Act after he was seen carrying two knives near a synagogue in Hendon.

Concerns were raised when Community Security Trust (CST) volunteers spotted the man, who was not wearing shoes or a shirt, running towards the Toras Chaim Synagogueduring Shabbat services yesterday, at about 11.15am.

He was holding two knives, the CST confirmed.

Contrary to rumours, the man did not attempt to enter the shul, and the incident is not being treated as terror-related, nor is it reported to be connected to politics or antisemitism.

CST security volunteers intervened, detaining the man in Bell Lane, where he was sectioned under the Mental Health Act by police officers.

Police confirmed that there were no injuries, a fact echoed by the CST which said: We deeply thank the CST security volunteers who immediately intervened, courageously helping ensure that nobody was hurt.

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Man brandishing knives detained near synagogue - Jewish Chronicle


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