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The Anti-Defamation League Says Ohio Colleges Must Be Ready to Deal with Anti-Semitic Incidents – WKSU News

Posted By on March 10, 2017

The Anti-Defamation League says white supremacists have begun college recruiting drives including at schools in Ohio.

The drives include posters and fliers with racist messages. The Anti-Defamation League has recorded more than 100 incidents this school year alone, with six of them at Ohio schools including Kent State and Ohio State.

Anita Gray, director of the Anti-Defamation League in Northeast Ohio, says she hopes universities will take steps to combat the incidents of anti-Semitism, which have increased since January.

Anita Gray, Anti-Defamation League

I think that students need to be educated as to whats really going on and why these people are doing this. And also, the administrations need to understand whats happening on their campuses.

I look at this as the genie is out of the bottle. With the increase in visibility of the presidential election up to today, after the election the forms of hate in this country and anti-Semitism have grown exponentially. So you can draw your own conclusion as to why.

Gray adds that shes grateful that President Donald Trump has made statements against anti-Semitism, but she hopes he will do more.

Kent State released a statement saying the racist flier found on-campus last fall is repugnant and not in keeping with the schools core values.

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The Anti-Defamation League Says Ohio Colleges Must Be Ready to Deal with Anti-Semitic Incidents - WKSU News

Not just prayers: synagogues are organizing to fight Trump's agenda – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on March 10, 2017

Congregants of Bnai Jeshurun in New York City rally on behalf of immigrants Thursday, Mar. 9, 2017. Bnai Jeshurun is one of several synagogues more assertively embracing activism since Donald Trumps election. (Courtesy of Bnai Jeshurun)

NEW YORK (JTA) The day after the presidential election, as congregants gathered in her Brooklyn synagogue to air their feelings, Rabbi Rachel Timoner was already starting to organize against the incoming administration.

She called her local city councilman, Democrat Brad Lander, and together they organized an activists panel at her congregation, Beth Elohim, to discuss policy changes under President Donald Trump. More than 1,000 people packed the sanctuary for the event.

Four months later, Beth Elohim has been transformed into an activist hub in Brooklyns affluent and historically progressive Park Slope neighborhood. Together with Lander, the synagogue has set up 15 working groups on liberal causes ranging from combating anti-Semitism and Islamophobia to protecting reproductive rights. Ten thousand people are active in the groups, and seven mass meetings of the activists, educating them on issues and teaching organizing tactics, have drawn an average crowd of 1,000.

Our people are awakened, activated, determined, in some cases alarmed, and deeply wanting to be part of preventing harm and healing this country, Timoner said. I have literally hundreds of members who are in acute pain, who are seeing their country become distorted.

Beth Elohim is among several synagogues that have doubled down on political activism since Trumps election. Synagogues are taking on roles usually reserved for nonprofits hiring professional activists, organizing protests, mobilizing congregants to lobby and educating them on immigrant and refugee rights. Several synagogues sent delegations to the Womens March on Washington and its local offshoots in January.

Some of these synagogues dont see the work as partisan, aimed as they are directly at Trumps policies. (Trump himself has called for loosening federal laws that prevent houses of worship from endorsing political candidates.) Others, citing overwhelming demand among their congregants, are less concerned about appearing political. But they all say that regardless of the risks, this is the moment for synagogues to offer their members a chance to engage on issues that matter to them in a Jewish context.

We have Torah, and Torah is very clear that we do not oppress the stranger, that we love our fellow human beings as we love ourselves, Timoner said. What I think it offers to have things like this happen in a synagogue is it provides the moral framework.

Beth Elohim has received a grant to hire a community organizer, a step Manhattans Stephen Wise Free Synagogue is also taking, fueled by more than $100,000 in congregant donations. Stephen Wise is organizing its members into three activist groups on refugees and immigrants; anti-Semitism and Islamophobia; and protecting civil liberties.

Stephen Wise helped raise $20,000 for Jews in Whitefish, Montana, when they were threatened by white supremacists in January. In June, a delegation from the synagogue will travel to Greece and Germany to aid refugees, while educating kids at the synagogue about refugee rights. Ammiel Hirsch, the synagogues rabbi, expects groups to lobby legislators on a range of issues as well.

Judaism is a faith that believes in action, in making the world a better place through policy, Hirsch said. Theres got to be a force of legislation behind it. Otherwise, its just a question of localized humanitarian action, without regard to collective policies that ensure were on a higher moral plane.

Other synagogues have collaborated in interfaith initiatives or served as spaces for activist gatherings. Bnai Jeshurun in Manhattan was the site of a rally that drew thousands before the New York City womens march in January. The synagogue has also set up an action alert list with 200 subscribers to mobilize congregants for protests.

Bnai Jeshurun congregants at the HIAS rally for refugees in February. (Courtesy of Bnai Jeshurun)

For some of these synagogues, the current activism is just an intensification of a historical tilt toward political engagement. Bnai Jeshurun has a longstanding program to aid New York State farmworkers, while Temple Sinai in Washington, D.C., led two trips to aid undocumented immigrants in Texas in 2014 and 2016, before Trumps election.Synagogues nationwide have long been active on Israel policy, and in the 1970s and 1980s, on behalf ofSoviet Jewry.

But some congregants see synagogue-based political action as a step too far. David Horowich, a Reform Jewish businessman from Syracuse who voted for Trump, appreciates Reform Judaisms cultural and communal aspects. But he feels synagogues shouldnt be in the business of political advocacy, because its not always easy to judge whether policies are successful.

I havent been in favor of coming out with statements that are political, because sometimes they can come back and haunt you, Horowich said. Im open to people expressing their opinions, but you have to wait until it all plays out.

For those who oppose him, Trumps policies on refugees and immigration have become a particular focus of synagogue activism. All four religious denominations and several major organizations opposed the first iteration of his immigrationban in January.

In response to Trumps immigration policies, several synagogues have declared themselves sanctuaries for undocumented immigrants. For some synagogues, including Temple Sinai, that means setting aside rooms should undocumented immigrants need a place tolive. Others, like Philadelphias Congregation Beth Zion-Beth Israel, which is exploring becoming a sanctuary,are holding classes for immigrants and others on immigrant and refugee rights.

Our religious tradition teaches about not only welcoming the stranger but not oppressing the stranger, and making sure the most vulnerable in our midst has been protected and cared for, said Temple Sinai Rabbi Jonathan Roos. The level of fear is at a level unseen during the Obama years, even when the level of deportations was high.

The push for synagogue activism appears to be spreading. Timoner has held two conference calls with rabbis interested in Beth Elohims model. And Truah, the rabbinichuman rights group, drew 200 rabbis to a conference in February, called No Time for Neutrality, that ended with 19 rabbis getting arrested during a protest in front of a Trump hotel in New York City.

We have more power, privilege and social capital than weve ever had in this country, said Beth Zion-Beth Israel Rabbi Yosef Goldman.Its an opportunity for us to be vigilant about using our power to defend our own community, but [also] to defend those around us who are more vulnerable than we are.

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Not just prayers: synagogues are organizing to fight Trump's agenda - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Fight over control of oldest US synagogue reaches appeals court – The Boston Globe

Posted By on March 10, 2017


The Boston Globe
Fight over control of oldest US synagogue reaches appeals court
The Boston Globe
BOSTON Appeals court judges deciding the fate of the nation's oldest synagogue seemed skeptical Wednesday about a lower court's decision to put control of the building and a set of bells worth millions of dollars in the hands of the congregation ...

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Fight over control of oldest US synagogue reaches appeals court - The Boston Globe

VIDEO: Thief Brazenly Steals Tefillin From Coats in Synagogue … – DNAinfo

Posted By on March 10, 2017

The man rode up to the Midwood synagogue on his bike and started picking through coats hanging inside, police said. View Full Caption

NYPD

BROOKLYN A thief brazenly pilfered the pockets of coats hanging on racks inside a Midwood synagogue, stealing an iPod and fivetefillin as people passed him by on Friday afternoon, NYPD officials said.

The pickpocket, who can be seen in police video, rode up on a bicycle to the Congregation Verezky Synagogue at 814 Ave. L, near East Eighth Street, about 12:30 p.m. and started searching through the coats, police said.

Video shows the man reaching into pockets as people walk past him, apparently unaware that he was stealing.

He made off with three cellphones and an iPod, police said.

The thief also stole five tefillin, the black leather boxes with leather straps that Jewish men wear during prayer, an NYPD spokesman said.

The suspect, who is about 5 feet 7 inches, fled on his bike and hadn't been arrested as of Thursday morning, police said.

Anyone with information should contact Crime Stoppers at (800) 577-TIPS (8477).

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VIDEO: Thief Brazenly Steals Tefillin From Coats in Synagogue ... - DNAinfo

Woodbridge synagogue hosts community for Shabbat across America – Inside NoVA

Posted By on March 10, 2017

Congregation Ner Shalom in Woodbridge invited members of Dar al Noor and Grace United Methodist Church to join them for Shabbat across America on March 3 at the temple.

Other guests at the Jewish meal and experience were members of the Prince William County Police Department, VOICE, NAACP and Unity in the Community, along with guests from local houses of worship.

A Mediterranean community Shabbat dinner was served Friday evening and the Shabbat Across America service followed.

Ner Shalom is the countys only Jewish congregation since it formed after the merger of congregations Ner Tamid and Bayis Shalom in 1985.

For almost a decade Ner Shalom held weekly and holiday services in Community Baptist Church, until finally settling into its home at 14010 Spriggs Road in Woodbridge.

The congregation shared these photos from the evening on its Facebook page.

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Woodbridge synagogue hosts community for Shabbat across America - Inside NoVA

Fight over control of Newport's historic Touro Synagogue goes to next level – The Providence Journal

Posted By on March 10, 2017

Lawyers for New York and Newport congregations argued before a 3-judge panel of the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in Boston, over a District Court decision awarding the nation's oldest synagogue to Newport-based Jeshuat Israel.

BOSTON -- The two Jewish congregations vying for control of Touro Synagogue in Newport sparred with vigor Wednesday before the federal appeals court.

Louis Solomon, lawyer for New York City's Congregation Shearith Israel, argued to the three-judge 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel that U.S. District Court Judge John J. McConnell Jr. was wrong toaward authority over the nation's oldest synagogue to Newport-based Congregation Jeshuat Israel. McConnell's ruling cleared the way for the Newport group to sell ornate bells, it said, to protect the synagogue's financial future.

Solomon asserted that Shearith Israel held a 1903 lease to the synagogue and as such was the rightful owner of the building as well as the bells, valued $7-plus million. He cast the lease as a "valid and vital" agreement. Solomon insisted, too, that the congregation wasn't seeking to evict Newport Jews from the synagogue, but the Jeshuat Israel congregation itself.

"So long as the cathedral was there, the finials [bells] would be part of it," Solomon said. Shearith Israel has objected to the sale of the silverfinial bells, or Rimonim, saying it runs counter to the traditionsof the Orthodox Spanish and Portuguese, or Sephardic, Jews who founded the synagogue.

"That is what we want enforced," Solomon said. He charged that McConnell had no right to remove Shearith Israel as the Touro's trustees.

But Gary Naftalis argued for Jeshuat Israel that the bells were not part of the leasethe two congregations entered into in 1903. Naftalis told the court that the Newport congregation has served as the keepers of the storied synagogue and its relics since the 1700s.

Retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter, who sat on the panel Wednesday, asked Naftalis why that 1903 agreement and others reached and documents over the past century don't supersede the synagogue's more dated, historic records. Judges Sandra Lynch and Bobby R. Baldock joined him in that line of inquiry.

And why had Jeshuat Israel paid Shearith Israel a lease for all those years?Souter asked.

"The lease covers the synagogue," Naftalis said. "It doesn't cover theRimonim, period." If the lease had intended to convey ownership of the bells to Shearith Israel through the 1903 agreement, it would have stated so explicitly, Naftalis said.

"What could paraphernalia possibly refer to if it's not personal property?" Souter said, referring to the agreement's language.

"We would suggest paraphernalia was used for fixtures ... not for theRimonim," Naftalis said.

Judge McConnell in May declared Jeshuat Israel the rightful caretaker of Touro Synagogue and its religious artifacts. McConnell named Congregation Jeshuat trustee and removed Shearith Israel from that role, saying it strayed from its obligation to ensure public Jewish worship at Touro.

The dispute was sparked in 2012 when Congregation Jeshuat asked state court to declare it the owner of the decorative silver finial bells, crafted in the 1700s by renowned Colonial silversmith Myer Myers. The move would have cleared the way for the congregation to sell the bells to the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston for $7.4 million.The museum later withdrew the offer.

Shearith Israel took the case to federal court, asking for it to be found as the rightful owner of the synagogue, its grounds and all its possessions. It sought to end Jeshuat Israels lease of the building.

Neither party would comment afterward about any impressions they drew from the judges' questioning, other than to say it was clear that the panel was very well versed on the case and the issues in play. In closing, Judge Lynch thanked the lawyers for the high quality of their advocacy.

- kmulvane@providencejournal.com

On Twitter: @kmulvane

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Fight over control of Newport's historic Touro Synagogue goes to next level - The Providence Journal

Residents angry after Bloomingburg Planning Board meeting cancelled – Times Herald-Record

Posted By on March 10, 2017

Richard J. Bayne Times Herald-Record @RichardBayne845

BLOOMINGBURG Opponents who had come to Thursdays Planning Board meeting prepared to speak against a temporary community center at the controversial Chestnut Ridge development shouted protests at the board chairman when he abruptly canceled the meeting because he couldnt get a quorum.

One resident accosted the Planning Board chairman, Chaim Friedman, because, the accuser said, electrical workers were on the job site, at 1-3 Cherry Court, yet the public hearing on the site plan hadn't occurred. Youre a lying sack of (expletive), the man told Friedman.

Friedman, who is Hasidic, told the angry resident the contractors have a demolition permit to work at the Cherry Court buildings, which is legal under village law in advance of site plan approval. Im not the code enforcer, Friedman said. File a complaint.

The two townhouses that are to be converted into a temporary community center are located near the entrance to the development. Construction crews were at work Thursday, using front-end loaders. There was a trash container parked in the driveway of one of the townhouses.

Chestnut Ridge is the subject of a lawsuit, filed a week ago by the Town of Mamakating. The town is seeking to have the court annul the village's approvals of the 396-unit townhouse development and require the developers to file new applications.

Opposition has focused on the fact that the developers proposed a luxury golf course development, but the plans morphed into townhouses, apparently marketed toward a Hasidic clientele, with occupancy as high as 10 people per unit.

On Tuesday, the Village Board certified that the townhouse-community center conversion met SEQRA (State Environmental Quality Review Act) requirements, a necessary step before the Planning Boards site plan consideration could occur.

As Thursdays meeting dissolved, Holly Roche, president of the opposition group Rural Community Coalition, asked Freidman why the Planning Board had set up Thursdays hearing before the Village Board certified SEQRA. Its like setting a date for a wedding before you get engaged. Roche said.

Friedman said the board had had no intention of approving the site plan after Thursdays planned public hearing. He said that would not have been possible because the project is still waiting for approvals from Sullivan County.

The Planning Board, which should have five members, was already down one because member Bob Cassidy resigned two weeks ago. On Thursday, members Moshe Fried and Jim Johnson didnt show. Friedman and only one other member, Moshe Gancz, were there.

Friedman said he couldn't immediately say when the community center conversion issue would come up. Regularly scheduled meetings are generally held on the fourth Thursday of each month.

dbayne@th-record.com

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Residents angry after Bloomingburg Planning Board meeting cancelled - Times Herald-Record

Gere delights Israeli fans at premier of Israel-US movie – Channel NewsAsia

Posted By on March 10, 2017

JERUSALEM: Hollywood actor Richard Gere delighted fans after walking the red carpet in Jerusalem for the Israeli premiere of his new film "Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall Of A New York Fixer".

The "Pretty Woman" star plays Norman Oppenheimer, a veteran "fixer" in New York's Jewish community who runs into trouble when he tries to win over a visiting Israeli politician, played by Israeli actor Lior Ashkenazi.

In the film, screened at Jerusalem's Cinematheque on Wednesday, Gere's character's life changes when he buys an expensive pair of shoes for an Israeli dignitary who eventually becomes prime minister.

Critics have said the storyline is reminiscent of the connection between former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, and a New York-based businessman alleged to have given him cash envelopes. Olmert is currently serving jail time for corruption.

Israeli-American writer-director Joseph Cedar said he felt compelled to explore the life of a "fixer" - someone who thrives on connecting with people and getting in with the right crowd - from his own personal life experience.

"It took him (Gere) some time to feel comfortable with a different body language, a story line that I don't think he's ever had to bring to the screen, and gradually he felt more and more comfortable until he really became this character," Cedar told reporters at a news conference on Thursday.

Gere said he was not getting involved in the politics of the region and the challenge for him was portraying an unusual personality.

"I am not interested in politics, I am interested in human beings. The people that I am meeting are also people who are primarily involved with relationships and bridging the problems between human beings... I am coming froma country that is in deep anxiety and chaos right now," the American actor and humanitarian activist said.

(Reporting by Lee Marzel, writing by Rinat Harash, editing by Ori Lewis and Pritha Sarkar)

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Gere delights Israeli fans at premier of Israel-US movie - Channel NewsAsia

Cronig's Celebrates 100 Years of Feeding the Vineyard Community – The Vineyard Gazette – Martha's Vineyard News

Posted By on March 10, 2017

Appeals court hears arguments over Newport synagogue – WPRI 12 Eyewitness News

Posted By on March 9, 2017


WPRI 12 Eyewitness News
Appeals court hears arguments over Newport synagogue
WPRI 12 Eyewitness News
In this Thursday, May 28, 2015 photo Touro Synagogue, the nation's oldest, is seen from the "ladies gallery" in Newport, R.I. Women attend synagogue seated on the second floor while men take their places on the ground floor. A federal judge has allowed ...
Fight over control of Newport's historic Touro Synagogue goes to next levelThe Providence Journal
Fight over control of oldest US synagogue at appeals court | The ...Sacramento Bee
Fight over control of oldest US synagogue at appeals court ...WWSB ABC 7

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Appeals court hears arguments over Newport synagogue - WPRI 12 Eyewitness News


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