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Is Zionism still alive in Israel in 2015? – Opinion …

Posted By on April 2, 2017

Those who followed the news in Israel over the past year must think it is a schizophrenic society.

On the one hand, the news described an unprecedented rise in public solidarity and national allegiance during Operation Protective Edge.

On the other hand, for weeks, the news spoke of a campaign of Israelis calling on everyone to leave the Jewish state and move to Berlin because the price of chocolate pudding is lower there. Such reports painted Israel as a tired society, empty of idealism.

On the one hand, this election campaign was one of the most divisive ever run in Israel. The personal attacks on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, reached an all-time low; the negative attacks against the Left were also often distasteful. Israel looked like a divided nation.

On the other hand, how can one forget the incredible unity demonstrated by the nation throughout the kidnapping and murder by Hamas terrorists of Eyal Yifrah, Gil-Ad Shaer and Naftali Fraenkel? Solidarity rallies were organized spontaneously, as were social media campaigns with the hashtag #BringBackOurBoys, taking over the Internet. Unprecedented crowds came to the funeral to mourn the victims who had become everyones children. Israel had never looked this united.

What is telling is that the events showing Israel as a dispassionate and divided country were the creation of a small minority here. The Moving to Berlin campaign never picked up, even after receiving unprecedented and unwarranted media attention; people simply did not join the campaign. The past election campaigns discordant tone was also heavily influenced by the media, with citizens from both sides of the political divide calling for a more conducive discussion.

It seems Israel is at a crossroads. On the one hand, there is a growing sense of national pride and a strong sense of national unity, especially outlined in challenging times. On the other hand, a small post-Zionist elite, well-connected with the various centers of power, pushes an agenda at odds with these values, trying to highlight despair, divisiveness and loss of national pride.

The Im Tirtzu revolution In 2006, shortly after the Gaza disengagement, Ronen Shoval, Erez Tadmor and Amit Barak created an organization called Im Tirtzu (If you will it). The name was based on Theodor Herzls famous phrase, If you will it, it is no dream.

The groups goal was simple. At the time, Zionism seemed to be on the decline. The post-Zionist Left was gaining ground, questioning the very foundations of Zionism and rejecting its premises. These feelings were especially strong in the elites making up the centers of power we described previously. Many started to claim that the main goal of Zionism, which they defined as the creation of a safe haven for Jews, was an utter failure; after all, Jews were much safer in New York than they were in Israel.

On the Right, a different type of post-Zionism had started to develop. With the great disappointment the disengagement brought, some on the Right started questioning the validity of Zionism itself. A few stopped celebrating Independence Day, progressing to a complete opposition to Zionism. Others claimed that secular Zionism had ended its role in history, and that it was time for a new form.

Im Tirtzu entered the ring of public discourse with one clear goal: To reinvigorate the image of Zionism, and to bring back the pride behind this word. One should not be ashamed, rather proud, to call himself a Zionist. Their method? Fighting for more representative elites to represent the majority of Israelis who were still strongly Zionist.

Today, nine years later, one can clearly see that Zionism has returned to its former greatness. In the past election, the Left called its party the Zionist Union, trying to claim that it was the true supporter of Zionist values. The Right fought back, claiming many members had in the past expressed opposition to Zionism.

While both the Left and Right had previously tried to dismiss Zionism, both were now fighting to prove they were the true Zionists.

Zionism is once again in vogue.

The foundation of Zionism While Zionism has returned to fashion, there are still serious challenges to it today. To understand them, we must first better understands the goal of Zionism and the reasons for its creation at the beginning of the 19th century.

With the start of the Age of Enlightenment, the idea of individual freedoms came to light. The argument was made for all individuals to be able to rule their own lives according to their own will, and thus receive personal freedoms.

The Jews then also entered a period of Jewish Enlightenment, known as the Haskala, in which they attempted to gain personal freedoms. As all individuals were granted liberties, the Jews also wanted to receive those rights; yet very quickly, it became clear that in order to get them, they would have to sacrifice their Jewishness. Various models toward this end were presented, such as Be a Jew inside your home, and a man on the street.

However, they all failed since Judaism is not a religion like Christianity that one can confine to their personal home. Rather, it touches all aspects of ones life including national, historical and cultural identity.

It is almost impossible to be fully Jewish while keeping ones Jewishness inside, and many Jews were not willing to sacrifice this.

Therefore Jews, now thirsty for this freedom, continued looking for other ways. Some considered complete assimilation, but Zionism quickly became one of the alternatives.

The most important goal of Zionism was thus to provide a framework for Jewish self-determination and freedom, in its historical homeland, by reviving Jewish nationalism.

Challenges to Zionism on Israels 67th birthday As we move forward from Israels 67th birthday, there are still some serious challenges threatening Jewish self-determination in Israel. Some of these challenges are internal, while others are external.

As mentioned earlier, many Israeli centers of power are controlled by a small elite that does not represent the countrys citizens. This is true of the courts, where judges are selected in a way unique to Israel and is truly unrepresentative.

It is also true of the media, as was so clearly seen in the past election, when the media unsuccessfully took sides against Netanyahu. Finally, it is also true in the academia, the legal advisers office and many other unelected centers of power.

The problem is that these centers of power have an unprecedented influence on policy-making in Israel.

For the Jewish state to truly enable Jewish freedom and self-determination, it must be a representative democracy where the will of people is what defines policy.

As long as these unelected elites have such heavy influence on policy-making, and stay unrepresentative of Israeli society, true self-determination will not be achieved. This is a true obstacle to Zionisms vision.

Another obstacle comes from foreign forces intervening in local policy-making. Foreign governments offer high funding to left-wing NGOs who also push to intervene in the policy-making process in order to further their own interests. These interests are often at odds with those of Israel, but their funding enables these small NGOs to gain influence and power over policymakers. This foreign intervention in local politics is also a blow to Jewish self-determination and as such, remains an obstacle to Zionism.

On a military and diplomatic level, Israel is still very dependent on the US. Israelis should be immensely grateful of the foreign aid Americans provide to Israel, but should also worry about the cost of such assistance.

If the cost of the aid is too great, and if it comes with an expectation of Israeli submission when there a policy disagreement between the countries, then this is very dangerous to the Jewish peoples self-determination.

The recent tensions with the Obama administration should be a wake-up call for Israel to look for ways to stand on its own two feet.

Zionism moving forward The century of the various isms has passed, with almost all of them completely disappearing. Communism is almost gone, Fascism and Nazism left Europe, and even nationalism as an ideology has greatly weakened.

Only Zionism has survived. Not only did it survive, its results are almost miraculous.

If one were to tell a friend 100 years ago that in a century, the Jewish people would live in their land, in a Jewish and democratic state, with a strong military and a strong economy, that friend would surely call him messianic at best or completely crazy at worst.

One can only hope that the next 100 years will be as surprising a success for Zionism.

The writer is an attorney and a former legislative adviser to the Coalition Chairman in the Knesset. He previously served in a legal capacity at the Foreign Ministry. He is a graduate of McGill University Law School and Hebrew Universitys masters program in public policy.

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Is Zionism still alive in Israel in 2015? - Opinion ...

Lower Merion Police Department Attends Anti-Defamation League Event – Patch.com

Posted By on April 2, 2017


Patch.com
Lower Merion Police Department Attends Anti-Defamation League Event
Patch.com
According to police, variuos departments were honored at the Anti-Defamation League's Beau Biden SHIELD Awards ceremony Wednesday night in Wilmington, Delaware. The department from eastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, and Delaware ...

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Lower Merion Police Department Attends Anti-Defamation League Event - Patch.com

Ken Livingstone repeats claim about Nazi-Zionist collaboration – The Guardian

Posted By on March 31, 2017

Ken Livingstone outside the Labour disciplinary hearing, where he faced a charge of conduct grossly detrimental to the party after comments about Hitler and German Jews. Photograph: Lauren Hurley/PA

Ken Livingstone has claimed there was at one point real collaboration between the Nazis and Jews, ahead of a hearing concerned with whether he has brought the Labour party into disrepute.

The former London mayor made the fresh series of highly controversial remarks before the start of an internal party tribunal that is hearing evidence about his suspension from the Labour party a year ago.

Livingstones comments expanded on his claim that Hitler supported Zionism because the Nazi government signed the Haavara agreement, which facilitated the relocation of Jews to Palestine in 1933 before the Third Reich turned to mass murder and extermination. The agreement allowed a portion of Jewish emigrants possessions, which they were forced to hand over before they left Germany, to be re-claimed through transfers to Palestine as German export goods.

Referring to Hitler, Livingstone said: He didnt just sign the deal. The SS set up training camps so that German Jews who were going to go there could be trained to cope with a very different sort of country when they got there. When the Zionist movement asked, would the Nazi government stop a Jewish rabbi doing their sermons in Yiddish and make them do it in Hebrew, he agreed to that.

He passed a law saying the Zionist flag and the swastika were the only flags that could be flown in Germany. An awful lot. Of course, they started selling Mauser pistols to the underground Jewish army. So you had right up until the start of the second world war real collaboration.

He also claimed that when senior Nazis objected to sending Jews to Palestine in case it created a Jewish state, a directive came from Hitler ordering them to continue with the policy.

Livingstone was originally suspended for bringing the party into disrepute after MPs accused of him of antisemitism and making offensive comments about Hitler supporting Zionism.

More than 20 MPs, including Sadiq Khan, the London mayor, had called for Livingstone to be expelled over the remarks he made while trying to defend the suspended Bradford MP Naz Shah.

Outside the tribunal, Livingstone claimed the Labour party was no longer investigating him over antisemitism or the claim that Hitler was a Zionist, but focusing on the accusation that his defence of Shah had brought the party into disrepute.

Shahs suspension was lifted after she issued an apology over historic Facebook posts that suggested Israelis be deported to the US.

Livingstone said: Its completely unfair. We have a tradition of law and that is open. Theres absolutely no justification for something like this being done in private. They have dropped all the charges that Im antisemitic. Theyve dropped the charge that I said Hitler was a Zionist.

Its really coming down to claiming I brought the party into disrepute by defending Naz Shah. As shes been readmitted to the party that does seem a bit excessive to try and expel me for supporting her.

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Ken Livingstone repeats claim about Nazi-Zionist collaboration - The Guardian

LIVE Conversation On Feminism & Zionism – Jewish Week

Posted By on March 31, 2017

This is online panel conversation was organized by JOFA. Scroll down to read the ongoing conversation.

In recent months, intersectionality politics have become a powerful force in many activist movements. Intersectionality is an ideology that considers how the convergance of various social identities race, gender, religion, sexual oreintation, etc. impact ones identity and life experiences. For some, intersectionality has been an empowering tool for advancing social change, while others have been challenged by the assumption that particular social identities are at odds with one another.In this online panel conversation,JOFA brings together a diverse cohort to discuss these ideas and the way it may or may not impact ones ability to identify as both feminist and Zionist.

Click here see the full list of panelists and to read their bios.

You can read the ongoing conversation here, on our website, or on ReplyAll.me. Scroll to the end for a link to get email notifications.

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LIVE Conversation On Feminism & Zionism - Jewish Week

Tracing Your Roots: The Story of My Ancestor’s Origins Keeps Changing – The Root

Posted By on March 31, 2017

Schofield Love, circa 1955 (family photo courtesy of Sherilyn Morgan)

A great-granddad appears to have been the marrying kind, which may explain why records vary on when and where he was born.

Dear Professor Gates:

Im curious about the origins of an elusive family member, my great-grandfather Schofield Love. There were rumors of Native American and Jewish ancestry, but an Ancestry.com DNA test of his son (my grandfather Milton Love) came back with 74 percent West African and 25 percent European heritage, and no European Jewish or Native American ancestry. It did show traces of Polynesian DNA, oddly.

Records show that Schofield was born in approximately 1885, yet there is a World War I record with a birth date of 1877. From my research, I found that Schofield was married about three times and possibly lived in several states. Grandpa Milton says that Schofield was from Enfield, N.C., but a 1910 census record shows California as his place of birth. Schofield appears to have been married and had a family in New Jersey, Philadelphia (this 1930 photo shows his wife, Louisa Boddy, and their children, my grandfathers half-siblings) and, ultimately, Virginia, where my lineage comes in. Schofield married my great-grandmother Claudine Campbell.

Id like to know: Was Schofield Love from California or North Carolina? Did he have siblings? Is there any information about his parents, who are listed on his death certificate as John and Jane Love? Sherilyn Morgan

Youve already done an excellent job of chipping away at the legends around your great-grandfather Schofield Love to get to the truth of his origins. Indeed, the DNA test results you sent us for his son Milton Love show no evidence of Native American or Jewish ancestry. We consulted genetic genealogist CeCe Moore about the results, and she told us in an email that either heritage definitely would have been picked up by AncestryDNA if Milton had substantial ancestry from either population.

As for the trace results of Polynesian admixture that you saw in his AncestryDNA test, Moore said that such a small amount is probably not meaningful. If you would like to explore it further, she recommended taking an additional DNA test using 23andMe to see if Polynesian ancestry (called Oceanian there) is detected in those results as well. I would recommend testing the oldest living generation possible on that family line, she added.

Like you, we encountered varying information about Schofields birth year and location, even in records that were otherwise largely consistent with each other. It is possible that in some instances the informant for the record was incorrect about details of his birth, or that Schofield himself may have been unclear on the details or even had reasons for changing them over time.

One thing that emerged during our research was the fact that Schofield may have made more trips to the altar than those of which you are aware. We also noted that in censuses recorded in between weddings, his marital status was frequently listed as widowed. Keep in mind that in those days, the term widowed was sometimes used by people to indicate a separation, abandonment or divorce and not always the death of a spouse. However, it would not be a stretch to suggest that someone with a complicated past might have an interest in obscuring details of his or her origins.

Given the challenges, we decided to work backward along Schofields timeline. Schofield Loves death certificate (on Ancestry.com, subscription required) indicated that he was born Feb. 29, 1893, in North Carolina. It says that he was a carpenter by trade and his parents were John and Jane Love.

However, Schofield F. Love was buried in Crewe, Nottoway County, Va., and his headstone records his birth in 1880 and death in 1958. Findagrave.com also includes a burial for Claudean C. Love, who appears to be your great-grandmother, in the same cemetery. She was born in 1900 and died in 1972.

A Social Security life claim was made for Schofield Farrane Love on Nov. 17, 1950. A life claim is taken when a person is still alive but needs money for his or her care, so this would still fit with the timeline of your Schofield Love, who died eight years later. According to this, his birth date was Feb. 29, 1878, in San Francisco.

You indicated that Schofield Love lived with your great-grandmother Claudine in Nottoway County, Va. We located this family in that county in the Winningham Magisterial District in 1940; your grandfather Milton Love (age 8) was in their household. This record indicates that all the members of the household were born in Virginia. However, be wary of information in census records because they can vary based on who provided the information to the census taker.

Ten years earlier, Scorefield Love was recorded as a widowed Negro farmer residing alone at 96 Mountain Hall Road in Winningham, Nottoway, Va. Based on the ages of his children in the 1940 U.S. census (all age 10 and under), the 1930 census may have been recorded just prior to his relationship with Claudine. It seems likely that Schofield, as head of his own household, provided the information about himself to the census taker. He claimed that he was born in California and that both of his parents were born in Virginia.

You mentioned that Schofield Love registered for the draft in World War I. The draft registration for Schofield Love was dated Sept. 12, 1918, and recorded his nearest relative as Ella Love, residing at 610 Warren St. in Essex County, N.J. This was also his permanent home address, suggesting that Ella was his wife.

Here, Schofields date of birth is listed as Feb. 29, 1877. It also states that he was occupied as a carpenter for the Ward Baking Co. in Ampere, Essex, N.J. The day and month of the birth date match those provided on the Social Security Life Claim that we found for him in 1950, meaning that this is almost certainly the same person.

The draft record helped us locate Schofield in the 1920 census. His address in 1920 was the same one provided on his draft registration, 610 Warren St., Newark, Essex County, N.J., in 1920. According to this record, Schofield was born in San Francisco, which was crossed off and replaced simply with California.

The record also tells you that he was a 39-year-old widower, placing his birth about 1881. It also records that both his parents were born in California. His occupation was carpenter and he had three boarders residing in the household who were all born in Virginia. The fact that Schofield was a widower by this date suggests that Ella either died or separated from Schofield between 1918 and 1920.

You said that you have a photograph of Louise Boddy and her children dating to the 1930s. This would indicate that she separated from Schofield at some point beforehand, since we know that in 1918 he was with his wife Ella, was recorded as a widower in 1920 and 1930, and was with Claudine in 1940.

Because Louise Boddy appears to the earliest wife of the three you know about, more information on her and her children may help you sort out Schofields younger years. The 1910 census records Schofield as the head of household with wife Louisa W. Love and six children, all under the age of 10. Tracing these children may provide you with more clues about Schofield, including their fathers birthplace (which in 1910 was listed as California).

Louise may not have been his first wife, however. Curiously, there is a marriage record for Schofield Love in Nansemond County, Va., to an Annie Lee Jones on Dec. 4, 1898 (pretty much ruling out the 1893 birth year listed on his death certificate). According to the index, his parents were Edward J. Love and Annie Lee Jones.

There is also a marriage record for Schofield Love in Petersburg, Va., on May 24, 1921, to Josephine Scott. Here, his parents were E.J. and Eliza Love, and his birthplace was San Francisco.

Neither wife appears with him in any census records, though the Schofield Love who was residing at 431 Harrison Ave. in Petersburg, Va., in the 1921 Petersburg City Directory was a carpenter, which matches what we know about your Schofield Love around this time. The originals of these marriage records are available on microfilm, and examining the originals may provide you with more clues than you can gather from the index alone.

Interestingly, there is an Ed. J. Love and his wife, Eliza, residing in Enfield, Halifax, N.C., in 1880 with several children, though none are named Schofield. This is the same location where your grandfather Milton claimed that Schofield was born, and the parents names match the two marriage records we located, though they do not match the parents names provided on Schofields death certificate. Perhaps he is one of the children in the household but assumed a different name later in life. You may want to investigate the members of this household further to see if you can connect them to your Schofield Love.

Furthermore, we searched the 1870 and 1880 censuses for individuals with the surname Love residing in San Francisco, but the results returned only white families. This should be around the time of Schofields birth (based on the wide variations of his birth year). However, we did note that there was a Richard Schofield, described as mulatto, who was residing in San Francisco in 1870. If this is the same person, then perhaps your great-grandfather later adopted his surname as a first name.

We did not locate any records for this Love family that mentioned a Eugene Love. We also checked the U.K. census collection for a Eugene Love born in America and did not have any positive results, so we were unable to confirm or deny the claim that you had a great-granduncle Eugene Love who left the United States for England.

What we were able to do is fill in additional details of Schofield Loves long and colorful life. We discovered that he may have been married up to five times; the 1893 date of birth on his death certificate is probably incorrect, and he was more likely born between 1870 and 1880; and North Carolina and California are still both possible birth locations, though for most of his life, the latter was reported to be his place of origin. We wish you luck with your continuing search to uncover the details of your great-grandfathers early life.

Henry Louis Gates Jr. is the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and founding director of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University. He is also chairman of The Root. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.

Send your questions about tracing your own roots to TracingYourRoots@theroot.com.

This answer was provided in consultation with Meaghan E.H. Siekman, Ph.D., a senior researcher from the New England Historic Genealogical Society. Founded in 1845, NEHGS is the countrys leading nonprofit resource for family history research. Its website, AmericanAncestors.org, contains more than 1 billion searchable records for research in New England, New York and beyond. With the leading experts in the field, NEHGS staff can provide assistance and guidance for questions in most research areas. They can also be hired to conduct research on your family. Learn more today about researching African American roots.

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Tracing Your Roots: The Story of My Ancestor's Origins Keeps Changing - The Root

A taste of Black history and a side of Jewish culture – Jewish Journal

Posted By on March 31, 2017

As an African-American Jew by choice, the esteemed author and culinary historian Michael Twitty considers Passover his favorite Jewish holiday.

Nothing pulls more at my heart than the songs and traditions and recipes of the worlds oldest Emancipation ritual, Twitty wrote on his blog, Afroculinaria. There is also no other holiday where I feel more whole as an African-American who happens to be Jewish, thanks to the shared history of slavery leading to redemption and freedom.

In two separate events at the Skirball Cultural Center on April 13, Twitty will share his lifes journey as well as Passover recipes that draw on his penchant for what he calls kosher/soul.

Its taking the foods of African and Jewish diasporic people and blending them together, Twitty, 40, who lives outside of Washington, D.C., said during a recent telephone interview.

At the Skirball, hell whip up his West African brisket, seasoned with spices including ground ginger, paprika, cinnamon, chili powder and cayenne, then seared in olive oil before being baked atop sauted onions.

For the seder, his hard boiled eggs are cooked in water steeped in hibiscus, accompanied by a salt water brine spiked with a touch of lavender and preserved lemon.

During seders past, Twitty has served sweet potato kugel, matzo-meal fried chicken, and an apple-rhubarb charoset.

He follows the Sephardic custom of eating legumes and rice during Passover, the latter a Carolina Gold version originally brought to the United States by enslaved Africans.

His Pesach table is graced with two distinct seder plates: one a traditional Ashkenazi version, the other influenced by African and African-American cuisine. There is a collard green for the bitter herb maror, for example, as well as a molasses and pecan charoset.

Twitty noted that Passover often comes in April, which is the same month in 1865 that his enslaved forebears were freed after the Civil War.

In Alabama, a great-great-grandmother was liberated on that day from her particular labor camp called a plantation, Twitty said. A great-great-great-grandfather, Edward, born in 1839, had toiled on a tobacco plantation in Virginia. One day my ancestor was hot, so he knelt by a creek and splashed some water on himself. Thats when my Daddy saw the whip marks on his back, Twitty said.

For me, being Black was a great preparation for becoming Jewish, Twitty added. When you are African-American, your antennae [for sensing trouble] are planted deep inside your skull. Its learning how to recognize and process prejudice.

Twitty grew up in a nominally Christian home in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., where his grandparents had fled Southern racism during the Great Migration north almost a century ago. I didnt like soul food, and I didnt like being Black, Twitty said in a 2016 TED talk of his early years.

But he slowly learned to appreciate his heritage, even as he was drawn to Judaism, first after watching the film adaptation of Chaim Potoks novel The Chosen when he was 7. He promptly told his mother that he wanted to be Jewish, yet he was taken aback when she informed him that conversion would require him to have a second circumcision.

Even so, his interest in Judaism persisted, and Twitty continued to fall in love with the culture, especially through food, while hanging out with his Jewish friends grandmothers in the kitchen.

Years later, Twittys uncle, an avid genealogist, found that their family tree included distant relatives who were Jewish. A recent medical test revealed that Twittys own DNA features some Ukrainian Ashkenazi ancestry.

While researching Jewish cuisine for a festival in 2000 sponsored by the Smithsonian, Twitty learned to make challah from the prominent Jewish chef Joan Nathan. When he dropped by a Sephardic Orthodox synagogue in Maryland, in part to obtain recipes from the rebbitzen, a caterer, Twitty discovered a spiritual home. He converted to Judaism in an Orthodox ceremony in 2002 while he was in his early 20s.

Of why he was drawn to Judaism, Twitty said, Its a very realistic [spiritual] path. The Hebrew word for worship is avodah, which is the same word for work. And prayer is actually tefillah, which comes from the word LHitpalel to turn inside and examine yourself. Its also a very humorous religion, where laughing at yourself is almost a 614th mitzvah, he said, a reference to the 613 in the Torah. Black culture, he added, also relies a lot on humor as a means of survival.

As Twitty began teaching Jewish studies around Washington, however, not everyone in the community was welcoming. One fellow educator accused him of teaching his students to steal. Others told him he might be religiously Jewish, but could never be culturally Jewish.

People often want to put me in a box, he added of his diverse identities, which include his being gay. But I try to be as unboxable as possible.

Twittys work as a culinary historian includes research on how slaves helped to create Southern cuisine, as well as extensive interviews with Southern Jews about how their traditional recipes changed after their families settled down South (think gumbo and matzo ball soup).

A turning point for Twitty came in 2011, when he read a book, In Memorys Kitchen: A Legacy From the Women of Terezin, filled with family recipes that had been written down by prisoners of the concentration camp. In doing so, the women were performing an act of defiance, preserving their heritage even while suffering.

It dawned on me that the same thing could and should be done with the African-American connection to slavery: how we should connect to our food roots and use that as a means of preservation of our heritage and resistance against the narrative that says we should forget, he said.

Twitty thereafter embarked upon what he tartly describes as his Southern Discomfort Tour to research his upcoming book, The Cooking Gene: A Journey Through African-American Culinary History in the Old South, due in stores in August. The book describes his odyssey retracing his African ancestors cuisine, including how he prepared food as slaves once did, on historic plantations and dressed in period garb; how he shared meals with both African-Americans and descendants of his familys former slave masters; and how he taught kosher soul cooking classes at an Alabama synagogue.

Preparing historically accurate dishes on the very plantations where his ancestors had labored is another act of defiance, Twitty said.

I wanted to reclaim those spaces for the people who were victimized and hurt there, he said. Thats also why he believes that Auschwitz might be a good place to celebrate a bar mitzvah. I want to look into the faces of those who would destroy, oppress, minimize and erase us and go, You didnt vaporize us sorry, he said.

Twittys goal is to seek what he calls culinary justice for African-Americans, whose food was appropriated by white Southerners who refused to acknowledge its origin. Its [in part] about honoring the source, he said. Some [white] people who are on top may feel they have a certain amount of privilege and power, so they can freely access [African-American] culture. Its not borrowing, its not quoting; its taking without giving credit. Its theft and exploitation.

Part of Twittys inspiration comes from the Reform, Reconstructionist and Jewish Renewal rabbis hes known who are dedicated to social causes. Culinary justice is a very Jewish concept to me, he said.

This is a blend of old school, antebellum recipes with my own special kosher/soul touch.

1 teaspoon kosher salt 2 teaspoons Bells Poultry Seasoning 2 teaspoons coarse ground black pepper 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon (sweet) paprika 1/4 teaspoon allspice 1/4 teaspoon ground cloves 2 kosher chickens, preferably fryers, cut into breast, wing, leg and thigh portions 4 eggs 3 cups matzo meal 3 cups per whole chicken kosher-for-Passover cooking oil or, if you are Sephardic like me, vegetable oil mixed with Crisco

Combine the salt and seasonings together in a bowl.

Wash chicken and pat dry. Season the chicken with the spice mixture and set aside for a few hours in the refrigerator.

Prepare the egg wash by beating eggs with a fork and mixing with a little water. Then prepare your station: The egg wash should be in a shallow dish and the matzo meal should be in a separate shallow dish.

Brush the chicken with the egg wash, then cover in matzo meal. Place the coated chicken pieces on a rack over a cookie sheet in the refrigerator to set. This will help keep the coating on. The chicken can sit for up to 30 minutes.

Heat the cooking oil in a frying pan until hot but not smoking, about 325 degrees or so. Follow the rules of frying chicken: Ease the pieces into the frying pan or Dutch oven. Do not crowd the pan. Remember dark pieces take a bit longer to achieve doneness. Seasoning the coating is a no-no because some herbs and spices will burn in the coating. Adding more chicken will cool the oil, so adjust accordingly.

Fry around 8 minutes each side and turn to brown all around another 4 minutes per piece. Use your best judgment crispy and golden brown on the outside doesnt mean done on the inside. To test, you should aim for 160 degrees or above for white meat and 175 degrees or above for dark meat. The appearance of the chicken and the doneness of the meat inside are the two factors you have to balance when frying chicken. There is no exact formula, so have oil and meat thermometers handy, and use your eyes, ears and nose to do the rest of the work. Use tongs, not a fork, to deal with the chicken.

When the pieces are done, transfer them to a clean rack over paper towels on a cookie sheet. Want to get rid of more oil?After 5 minutes, transfer to a plate or basket or bowl with paper towels, just dont do this when they come out of the pan fresh it will affect the crust.

Makes 8 servings.

Source: afroculinaria.com

For more information about Michael Twittys appearances at the Skirball Cultural Center on April 13, visitskirball.org.

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A taste of Black history and a side of Jewish culture - Jewish Journal

Police: Anti-Semitic fliers in Scottsdale contain no threat, violate no laws – AZCentral.com

Posted By on March 31, 2017

Anti-Semitic fliers were circulated in an area of north Scottsdale on Wednesday, and the organization asked Scottsdale police to investigate.(Photo: Arizona Anti-Defamation League)

Anti-Semitic flierswere circulated in an area of north Scottsdale on Wednesday, and the organization asked Scottsdale police to investigate.

In a post on its Twitter account Wednesday, the Arizona Anti-Defamation League said it was "disgusted by anti-Semitic flyers left in Scottsdale neighborhoods this morning."

The Anti-Defamation League said the fliers were circulated in areas around the Valley of the Sun Jewish Community Center near Scottsdale Road and Sweetwater Avenue.

The fliers showa drawing of a man spray-painting a swastika onto a wall, along with headlines referring to threats against Jewish community centers and a suggestion that the stories are "fake news.'' The fliers listed a website to find more information.

Scottsdale police said the fliers violated no laws.

"The flyers contained no specific threats and though potentially disturbing to some residents, the content did not violate any criminal statutes," Officer Kevin Watts, a Scottsdale Police Department spokesman, said in an email statement.

MORE:Swastikas, 'white power' painted on Pinnacle High School in Phoenix

MORE:4 people arrested in vandalism of Chandler family's menorah

Carlos Galindo-Elvira,regional director for theAnti-Defamation League, said that this is another hateful act in a string of recent incidents in the Phoenix area.

A wall of graffiti painted Friday nightat Pinnacle High School includedmultiple swastikas in different colors, as well as the words "White Power" and other words.

In Chandler, a menorah display was contorted into a swastika in December. Arrests in that case were made earlier this month.

The Anti-Defamation League will reach out to schools or specific communities to see if there is an interest ineducational programming, Galindo-Elvira said.

"Whether it is this incident or other incidents, we stand ready to be at service to the community, whether anti-Semitic, homophobic or anti-immigration," Galindo-Elvira said.

Galindo said theJewish community had received lots of support and was not afraid.

"We feel that the act of dropping those fliers was a message to the Jewish community, " Galindo-Elvira said. "We are not frightened. We are not deterred and we won't be silent."

Tempe Councilman David Schapira was among those who tweeted about the fliers, saying he thought it was an example of "18th Century anti-semitic propoganda'' until he learned that the fliers had been circulating in Scottsdale.

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Police: Anti-Semitic fliers in Scottsdale contain no threat, violate no laws - AZCentral.com

VIDEO: Joe Biden is guest of honor at Inaugural Anti-Defamation League Beau Biden SHIELD Awards – WDEL 1150AM

Posted By on March 31, 2017

Law enforcement from the region are honored at the Anti-Defamation League at its Inaugural Beau Biden SHIELD Awards.

The event honored law enforcement from Delaware, Eastern Pennsylvania and Southern New Jersey for their efforts in fighting hate crimes, extremism, terrorism and protecting civil rights.

Former Vice President Joe Biden was the guest of honor.

"I have been their friend and supporters since the day I took office. There's no group or women or men I admire more. Every time they put on that shield and walk out the door--their families wonder if they're going to receive a phone call," said Biden.

26 winners--from local, state and federal agencies--were chosen by a selection committee of top law enforcement officials from major federal, state and local agencies.

The ADL named the awards after late Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden, and described the former AG as a tireless advocate for civil and human rights.

"I'm really proud to be here, and I'm honored," said Biden. "Beau would be embarrassed--but he would truly be honored because this combines everything he believed."

The winners are below.

Delaware State Police, Delaware Office of the State Fire Marshal, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, for the investigation and community response to a series of arsons targeting churches in Delaware:

Duane Freeman, Jr., Trooper, Delaware State Police

Scott Weaver, Detective, Delaware State Police

Robert Daddio, Detective, Delaware State Police

Todd Ritchey, Detective, Delaware State Police

Matthew Addonizio, Detective, Delaware State Police

Alan Brown, Assistant State Fire Marshal, Delaware Office of the State Fire Marshal

Michael Chionchio, , Assistant State Fire Marshal, Delaware Office of the State Fire Marshal

Robert Brode, Deputy State Fire Marshal, Delaware Office of the State Fire Marshal

Joshua Coulbourne, Deputy State Fire Marshal, Delaware Office of the State Fire Marshal

Brian Schad, Deputy State Fire Marshal, Delaware Office of the State Fire Marshal

Victoria Richtol, Special Agent, Federal Bureau of Investigation

Philadelphia Police Department, for the investigation and community response to alleged bias-motivated home invasions targeting the Chinese-American community:

John Walker, Lieutenant, Philadelphia Police Department

Richard Antonini, Detective, Philadelphia Police Department

Craig Fife, Detective, Philadelphia Police Department

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Kert Wilson, Detective, Philadelphia Police Department

Chester County District Attorneys Office, for the investigation and prosecution of senior administrators in the Coatesville Area School District:

Joseph Walton, Detective, Chester County District Attorney's Office

Tom Ost-Prisco, Deputy District Attorney, Chester County District Attorney's Office

Andrea Cardamone, Assistant District Attorney, Chester County District Attorney's Office

Brian Burack, Assistant District Attorney, Chester County District Attorney's Office

Thomas Goggin, Detective Sergean, Chester County District Attorney's Office

Roy Calarese, Detective, Chester County District Attorney's Office

Edward Nolan, Detective, Chester County District Attorney's Office

U.S. Attorneys Office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, for the investigation and prosecution of Christian Womack and Rashidah Brice for sex trafficking children by force, fraud or coercion.

Michelle Morgan, Assistant U.S. Attorney, U.S. Attorney's Office

Melanie Babb Wilmoth, Assistant U.S. Attorney, U.S. Attorney's Office

Michael Goodhue, Special Agent, Federal Bureau of Investigation

Jennifer Batish, Special Agent, Federal Bureau of Investigation

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VIDEO: Joe Biden is guest of honor at Inaugural Anti-Defamation League Beau Biden SHIELD Awards - WDEL 1150AM

What We Talk About When We Don’t Talk About The Nakba – Forward

Posted By on March 29, 2017

In recent weeks, I have been paying particular attention to the arguments in favor of Zionism from those who call themselves progressive Zionists and call for a two-state solution, support Israels right to exist as a Jewish state, and express criticism of some of Israels policies and actions. More precisely, I have been paying attention to what is NOT being discussed in these arguments, namely, anything about the Nakba (Arabic for catastrophe), the expulsion of approximately 750,000 Palestinians from their homes and land before and during Israels creation. If we are talking about Zionism, then we are also necessarily talking about the Nakba.

So why does the Nakba not enter these discussions?

Let us not accept as a given, as happens too often in discussions of Zionism, the belief that those who are deeply connected to Jewish culture and history and concerned about Jewish safety have no choice but to support Zionism even though (as it is sometimes acknowledged in a footnote) its implementation was at the expense of others. Those others are the Palestinian people who the Zionist movement and then Israel forced out of their homes and their land. The Nakba doesnt enter these conversations and is made invisible because it is not considered relevant. This logic assumes that the suffering and anti-Semitism Jews have endured provide a free pass for the ongoing dispossession of the Palestinian people, all in the name of Jewish national liberation and self-determination.

In short, the Nakba doesnt enter these conversations because it is the legacy and clearest manifestation of Zionism. Those who ignore the Nakba which Zionist and Israeli institutions have consistently done are refusing to acknowledge Zionism as illegitimate from the beginning of its implementation. (Just a few days ago in Israel, the police refused to allow the Palestinian community to commemorate the Nakba by denying a permit for the annual March of Return).

We cannot ignore the anti-Arab and anti-Palestinian racism, the othering, and the Islamophobia, as well as the centering of Ashkenazi Jewish voices and experiences that are inherent in this discourse about Zionism. We need to be clear about what is being promoted and address these questions:

Whose lives are being valued and whose are not? Whose lives are being privileged and whose are not? Whose lives seem to matter and whose do not? Whose interests are being served and whose are not?

How we respond to those questions says so much about our values, our principles, and our commitments, and whether we support liberation or oppression.

One argument put forth among Zionists of all persuasions is that Israel is unfairly being targeted in ways other countries with terrible human rights records arent. But what is that argument really saying? Are the Nakba and Israeli apartheid less wrong if they are not discussed alongside many other atrocities? Israel is by far the largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid, which makes it an extremely appropriate target for condemnation. Many Jewish and Zionist organizations also support Israel right-or-wrong, providing enormous financial and political support, despite ongoing land theft, multiple forms of violence and harassment, discriminatory treatment against Palestinians in every sphere of life, and much more.

Like many Jews I know, I was raised to stand for justice and learned that Never Again meant never again for anyone. Also, like many Jews, I had an extensive Jewish education and learned about Israel without ever learning about the Nakba. In the years since, I, like so many others, have listened to and learned from the stories and experiences of Palestinians who had been expelled from their homeland. I have studied and read about the Nakba and the disastrous impact and consequences of the Zionist movement on Palestinian society and on the Palestinian people. And then, like so many others, I went where the truth and my conscience brought me which did not include support for Zionism, but, rather, meant standing with the Palestinian-led movement for justice.

Why does this matter? It matters because peoples histories matter and deserve to be respected and honored. It also matters because fully understanding the Nakba necessarily leads to a different recognition of what is a fair and just solution.

Then it becomes clear why the global call for Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) until Israel complies with basic rights is fair and just. Then it becomes clear why the BDS call to end the occupation and colonization of Arab lands and dismantle the wall is fair and just. Then it becomes clear why the BDS call to recognize the fundamental rights of the Arab-Palestinian citizens of Israel to full equality is fair and just. Then it becomes clear why the BDS call to respect, protect, and promote the rights of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes and properties as stipulated in U.N. resolution 194 is fair and just.

Many of us know what its like to have our histories denied and how painfully wrong and harmful it is. So, when we have discussions about Zionism and Israel within our communities, we must not just include, but we must center, the Nakba. And we must then go where the truth leads us.

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

The Forward's independent journalism depends on donations from readers like you.

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What We Talk About When We Don't Talk About The Nakba - Forward

Zionism and the Authentic Life – Algemeiner

Posted By on March 29, 2017

Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-80), leading proponent of existentialism. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

To continue our discussion of existentialism, the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movementand Zionism: While sometimes philosophers can stretch sentence-length discoveries into whole books and careers, the simple existentialist credo of Existence precedes essence in fact packs many vital ideas into just three words.

Arguments for a God-given immortal soul often claim there is a human essence (the soul) that precedes our coming into physical existence and subsequently outlives us. As an essence, this entity defines who or what we are: it remains fixed and unchanging, even as certain of our features (our size, our shape, our hair, etc.) change. A brief visit to a college campus today will also introduce you to many secular alternatives for pre-existing essences that allegedly define us, such as race, gender, or the culture and society into which we were born. In calling these essences, again, one is suggesting that these traits fix and determine who or what we are.

The existentialist credo, to the contrary, rejects such fixed essences. It holds instead that we have full freedom to choose who or what we are, regardless of any of our predetermined traits (mystical, genetic, or societal). Our existence comes first; we subsequently are free to define ourselves after. So when Martin Luther King asked that a man be judged not by the color of his skin but by the content of his character, he was actually making an existentialist statement insisting we treat each human being as an existing agent defined by freely-made individual choices (which make up his character), rather than by essences he was born with (such as skin color).

March 29, 2017 7:31 am

You can see what a powerful argument this idea offers against bigotry, since defining human beings by essences such as race and gender is not just morally wrong, but robs people of their most important freedom the freedom ultimately to choose the meaning of their own existence.

Insisting that pre-existing essences do not define us does not mean doing away with all distinctions and backgrounds. You can, for example, take pride in your ethnic, cultural or religious heritage and even choose to define many elements of your character around such factors. In fact, building on tradition offers a powerful platform for existential transformation, far better than tearing down the world and starting from scratch.

The most successful recent example of this phenomenon is Zionism, a movement which led to not just the establishment of a homeland but the (re-)creation of a people. Clearly there are historical precedents and religious arguments for Jews living in their own nation. But the ultimate success of Zionism came from its ability to create meaning for living Jews, rather than relying on the history and faith of dead ones.

If you want to see the staggering power that derives from choosing lives of meaning and purpose, you need only look at the miracle of a people who were at deaths door in 1945 establishing and defending their own state just three years later. And in the seven decades since, the small state that these people created has taken in millions of exiles, made the desert bloom, defeated powerful enemies again and again, and built a world-class economy from the brains and determination of citizens who are free not just externally (politically), but internally (existentially).

Stories that Israelis are among the happiest people on earth can be confusing for those living in more peaceful lands, who wonder how anyone could be happy living under constant threat of annihilation. What they miss is that the need to defend ones homeland while also building it provides meaning to many Israelis, sweeping away existential angst (anxiety), leading to happiness. In contrast, those who inherited the societies in which they dwell (rather than created them) might not live in fear of physical destruction, but still live in terror that they (or we!) are living inauthentic lives, lives devoid of self-created meaning (which most of us do, at least by existentialist standards).

Claims that Israel would be a light unto nations is often derided by foes, but also questioned by friends who wonder if it set the Jewish state up to live by impossible moral standards demanded of no one else. But in an age when so many are blaming their failure on factors outside personal control (such as accidents of birth, economic forces, or faceless political actors) and turning to religious or political dogma to avoid responsibility for their own decisions and lives (leading to chaos, and even genocide), Israel does provide the world a shining example of an alternative way to live.

That example is not of a morally perfect people or state, nor of a utopia that allows one to live life without sorrow or compromise. Rather, it is a demonstration of what all people can achieve once they embrace their freedom and accept the frightening but awesome responsibility of using that freedom to take full responsibility for their own lives.

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Zionism and the Authentic Life - Algemeiner


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