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Clear uptick in US antisemitism since election, says ADL – Jerusalem Post Israel News

Posted By on March 1, 2017

The desecration of Jewish cemeteries in Philadelphia and the St. Louis area have prompted an outcry from Jewish groups nationwide: The problem of antisemitism in the United States appears to be rapidly worsening. They can see it and they can feel it.

And the rest of the country is beginning to sense it as well.

But who is measuring it? That would be the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which records hate crimes nationwide, and the Anti-Defamation League, the Jewish nongovernmental organization that tracks and verifies antisemitic incidents on an annual basis.

Neither the FBI nor the ADL has yet issued a report for 2016, much less for the beginning of 2017, which has witnessed a slew of high-profile attacks and threats against Jews and their institutions.

But both can discern from their collection of reported incidents a clear increase in activity beyond what they have seen in recent memory.

Regardless of what final numbers of antisemitic incidents will be, were definitely seeing an uptick in reporting and thats actually why it takes longer to go through this data and verify everything. It was happening before Election Day, but definitely since Election Day, weve seen an uptick, said Oren Segal, director of the ADLs Center on Extremism.

Weve never seen anything like this before, he added.

The ADL was alarmed by a spike in antisemitic behavior on social media in 2016, facilitated by the anonymity that attackers enjoy on platforms like Twitter. The group issued a special report on the phenomenon late last year that found more than two-thirds of 19,253 antisemitic tweets targeting journalists during the presidential election campaign had been sent by roughly 1,600 Twitter accounts.

Now it is investigating over 70 bomb threats phoned in to Jewish community centers over the past two months and into its own headquarters, prompting a brief evacuation last week.

The perpetrators of the bomb threats have not yet been identified, and law enforcement has been unable to confirm whether one individual is orchestrating the campaign or whether several people are involved.

Were looking at the impact of this, so who does it is important we need to find out but what the impact of this is on the communities is our primary concern, Segal said.

The ADL has also received reports of approximately 90 different white supremacist flyers being distributed on college campuses, an unprecedented number.

Alt-right groups have determined that now is their time to strike, said Segal, referring to a political coalition of nativists and ethnic-nationalists who supported President Donald Trumps political rise.

FBI and ADL reports from 2015 recorded an increase in antisemitic incidents from the prior year, which at the time was considered significant.

But that relatively small increase has now been dwarfed by recent developments, Segal said, making note of a decade-long decline in activity leading up to the recent spike.

I dont think we can draw a direct line from any one thing to say thats why antisemitism seems to be up, except for perhaps one place: social media, Segal said.

The reality is, he continued, more people are likely to encounter a swastika on their [cell]phone than they are in their neighborhood.

And when you see the number of trolls engage online in this antisemitic narrative, our concern is that their Internet activities will mainstream these hateful messages and have real-world consequences.

Jewish Federations of North America president and CEO Jerry Silverman has expressed deep concern over the issue.

Talking to The Jerusalem Post on the sidelines of the Jewish Agency Board of Governors winter meeting in Tel Aviv, Silverman said: The level of hate crimes, both antisemitic and against other faiths, around the world scares me deeply.

On the other hand, he said, the Jewish community has great confidence in law enforcement authorities, the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security, all of which he referred to as great partners. He also referenced training that has been conducted over the past few years in all community infrastructures.

Weve increased the capacity and capability of our security network over last three years because the wave was building and we saw what was happening, Silverman asserted.

With clear methods and protocols in place, he said, its business as usual within a very short space of time following an incident.

A phone call creates an environment of terrorism that is designed to change behavior, said Michael Siegal, former chairman of the Jewish Federations of North America Board of Trustees and a member of the Jewish Agency Board of Governors.

The good news is that the calls have not manifested themselves into anything serious, even though the call in and of itself is serious, said Siegal, who also serves as head of the Secure Community Network, a project of the JFNA and the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations.

When you have to evacuate a JCC and see children standing outside, as a parent, you wonder whether or not I should continue to send kids to those environments, he reflected. But we dont know if its one person or an organization, and until we work with the government to discover who is doing these particular calls, the pattern is that its probably one person or organization very sophisticated but not a groundswell of lots of people doing something.

Indeed, Siegals successor on the board of the JFNA, Richard V. Sandler, pointed to a recent Pew Research Center study that found Jews as a religious group received the warmest ratings among Americans.

I dont believe myself that as a result of whatever happened over the last year that there are a greater number of antisemites in the country, Sandler said.

Antisemitism is a problem; always is. I think more have felt the freedom to raise their ugly heads, but hopefully that will subside.

Silverman, too, sees light in the darkness, highlighting the thousands of dollars donated by Muslim charities to renovate the vandalized St. Louis cemetery and the fact that Vice President Mike Pence made time in his schedule to help clean up the damage. He added that he himself had received phone calls from the largest nonprofits in America offering their help.

We dont know enough information at this point, frankly, for this in any way to change our culture or our attitudes, he said. What it does is make us more alert and smarter in how to deal with it, and it allows us as communities to come together and thats a good thing.

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Clear uptick in US antisemitism since election, says ADL - Jerusalem Post Israel News

ADL San Francisco Office Evacuated After Bomb Threat – YubaNet

Posted By on March 1, 2017

New York, NY, February 27, 2017 The Anti-Defamation Leagues San Francisco Regional Office was evacuated late this afternoon after a bomb threat was received by a staff person answering calls at the location. The threat was the latest in a series of nearly two-dozen threats fielded by local Jewish institutions across the country earlier today, and the second bomb call threat received at an ADL office in the past week.

Local law enforcement authorities are currently on the scene and an investigation is underway. The ADL offices were evacuated without incident. A number of Jewish Community Centers in Northern California were targeted in the first wave of calls several weeks ago.

One threat or evacuation is one too many, and yet weve now seen more than 20 incidents in a single day not just to ADL, but to childrens schools and community centers and more than 90 incidents since the start of this year, said Jonathan A. Greenblatt, ADL CEO. The level of threats and incidents is astounding, and must not stand. We will do everything in our power to combat this wave of anti-Semitism.

The call to ADLs San Francisco Office was logged at 4:19 p.m. local time.

ADL is working closely with law enforcement officials at the local, state and national level in response to the calls and has previously convened community security briefings. Earlier today, Mr. Greenblatt released the ADL Action Plan on Anti-Semitism calling on the Trump Administration to adopt a plan of action to address the scourge of threats aimed at Jewish institutions, including ordering the Justice Department to launch a robust investigation into these incidents, establishing an interagency task force o combat anti-Semitism, and improving hate crime training, reporting, and response.

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ADL San Francisco Office Evacuated After Bomb Threat - YubaNet

ADL Demands That Gorka Disavow ‘Anti-Semitic Hate Groups’ – LobeLog

Posted By on March 1, 2017

by Eli Clifton

Deputy Assistant to the President Sebastian Gorka has had a rough two weeks. It began with LobeLogs report that he wore the medal of Vitezi Rend, an anti-Semitic Hungarian organization that collaborated with the Nazis during World War II, at an inaugural ball. There followed the publication of a series of articles questioning his credentials and experience as a counter-terrorism expert, not to mention the circulation on the web of an audio recording of his hectoring and threats against of one of his critics. Most recently, Yale historian Eva Balogh, reporting for LobeLog, laid out Gorkas family relationship to Vitezi Rend, while Lili Bayer, writing for The Forward, published a detailed investigative article on Gorkas ties to anti-Semitic groups in Hungary while he was politically active in that country from 2002 to 2007.

Bayer wrote:

Gorkas involvement with the [Hungarian] far right includes co-founding a political party with former prominent members of Jobbik, a political party with a well-known history of anti-Semitism; repeatedly publishing articles in a newspaper known for its anti-Semitic and racist content; and attending events with some of Hungarys most notorious extreme-right figures.

In the context of his February 6 denunciation of criticism of the White Houses Holocaust Remembrance Day statement (which failed to mention Jews or anti-Semitism) as asinine and absurd, the new disclosures of Gorkas ties to Vitezi Rend and anti-Semitic parties are raising yet more questions about his core beliefs.

Late Friday, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) issued the following statement, calling on Gorka, a protg of Trumps chief strategist, Stephen Bannon, and former national security editor of Bannons Breitbart news, to disavow these associations.

Jonathan Greenblatt, ADLs CEO, said:

We are deeply disturbed at the allegations that the Deputy Assistant to the President, Sebastian Gorka, may have had close ties to openly racist and anti-Semitic hate groups and figures while he was active in Hungarian politics. These are very serious charges. With anti-Semitism and hate on the rise in the United States and around the world, it is essential that Mr. Gorka makes it clear that he disavows the message and outlook of far-right parties such as Jobbik, which has a long history of stoking anti-Semitism in Hungary.

How much impact the ADLs position will have on a Trump administration that has put forward the bombastic Gorka as perhaps its most aggressive foreign-policy spokesman remains to be seen. But such a strong statement by what has been a relatively cautious organization constitutes an important marker of how concerned leaders of the U.S. Jewish community have become about the alt-rights influence in the White House.

Photo: Sebastian Gorkas Facebook profile.

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ADL Demands That Gorka Disavow 'Anti-Semitic Hate Groups' - LobeLog

We Are Living in the Second Chapter of the Worst-Case Scenario – Slate Magazine (blog)

Posted By on March 1, 2017

A vandalized headstone at a Jewish cemetery in Philadelphia on Monday.

Mark Makela/Getty Images

There was a lot of discussion, while Donald Trump was running for president, about just how destructive his administration could really be. Would he follow through on his radical policy plans and continue to behave at all times like a peevish, cruel child, or would he govern via popular, inoffensive centrism and try to act in an at least somewhat more dignified fashion? After his first month in office, my colleague Michelle Goldberg wrote that the Trump administration's cruel and unconstitutional attack on Muslim immigrants and his personal debasement of various norms of public integrity and decency were, in fact, as bad a worst-case scenario as could have been imagined. The ensuing week has seen the situation deteriorate further.

1. An Indian engineer in Kansas was shot and killed by a white man who reportedly shouted "get out of my country!" and may have believed he was shooting at a Middle Eastern immigrant.

2. Hundreds of headstones have been desecrated at Jewish cemeteries in St. Louis and Philadelphia while a wave of bomb threats triggered evacuations of Jewish community centers, schools, and day cares across the country. It's the fourth national outbreak of anti-Jewish bomb threats that's taken place this year.

3. Old recordings of a prominent, Nazi-fetishizing "alt-right" figure named Milo Yiannopouloswhose career has long been supported by Trump's top adviser, Steve Bannon, and whom Trump has tweeted about approvinglyresurfaced in which Yiannopoulos defends the right of adults to sexually abuse 13-year-olds. Breitbart.comthe publication for which Yiannopoulos worked, and on which he published an infamous column praising several white supremacistswas on Monday given an exclusive interview in the Oval Office.

4. Customs agents met a domestic flight from San Francisco to New York at an airport gate and demanded identification from every passenger in what was allegedly a search for an undocumented individual (who was not located).

5. Individuals including a children's book author who writes about tolerance, a historian who has written about Nazi collaborators in France, and Muhammad Ali's son Muhammad Ali Jr. have given public accounts of being detained and aggressively questioned by border agents despite (in Ali's case) being a native-born citizen and (in the other two cases) traveling on valid visas.

6. The Trump administration apparently distributed a press release to the conspiracy site InfoWars, which has asserted that the Sandy Hook massacre never took place and Israel helped plan 9/11. The administration also seemingly confirmed that Trump and InfoWars proprietor Alex Jones occasionally speak on the phone.

Do you feel sick? I feel sick.

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We Are Living in the Second Chapter of the Worst-Case Scenario - Slate Magazine (blog)

NBA Star Amar’e Stoudemire Awarded MLK Prize in Jerusalem – Forward

Posted By on March 1, 2017

On Sunday, former NBA player and now Israeli basketball star Amare Stoudemire, was awarded Israels Martin Luther King Jr. Award, given to individuals who embody the spirit and ideals of Dr. King.

I am truly honored to be receiving this amazing award, said Stoudemire, who signed a two-year contract with Israels Hapoel Jerusalem club last year. In a video to his Instagram followers, Stoudemire stood against the night skyline of Jerusalem and described the award as honoring my courage to be an Israelite and also to be able to work and talk about equality to all nations.

Every Black History Month, the Jewish National Fund, the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York and the State of Israel give out this award to individuals who promote diversity and tolerance, a press release read.

Amare Stoudemire paints with children in Chicago last year as part of his In The Paint series, which combines sports and art activities.

Stoudemire runs the Amare and Alexis Stoudemire Foundation with his wife, Alexis which supports at-risk youth around the world, according to the foundationss website.

In Israel, Stoudemire is continuing his philanthropic work. He hosted a basketball peace camp this summer, which drew participants from a range of distinct Israeli communities, including Palestinians, Hebrew Israelites and Ethiopian Jews. Stoudemire also hosted another childrens camp at the Israel Museum, part of an annual series called In The Paint, which joins together basketball and art activities.

Israeli officials lauded Stoudemire.

Stoudemire has again set an example that sportsmanship supersedes nationality, ethnicity, or religious affiliation, said Russell F. Robinson, CEO of Jewish National Fund-USA. Robinson said that all of these qualities are welcome in Israel, a country he called a beacon of democracy in an otherwise turbulent part of the world.

Amare Stoudemire has spearheaded many initiatives that empower the less fortunate and advance important principles like tolerance, peace, creativity and healthy living, said Dani Dayan, Consul General of Israel in New York.

Past recipients of Israels MLK Award have included former New York City Mayor David Dinkins, the author Toni Morrison, entrepreneur Russell Simmons and Harry Belafonte.

When Stoudemire signed his deal with Hapoel in early August moving to Jerusalem with his entire family his spiritual and professional paths converged.

Stoudemire has been on a years long journey into religion and heritage, a path that has fascinated, and at times bewildered, American Jews and Israelis. He is not Jewish, as some continue to report, but a Hebrew Israelite meaning he views the Torah as an ancestral record of African Americans, and sees the land of Israel as part of his heritage.

Stoudemire poses in an Instagram photo, wearing a fur and a piece of jewelry modeled on the priestly breastplate of ancient Israelites.

Stoudemire maintains close ties with the Hebrew Israelites of Dimona, and even executive produced a documentary film about that community. Stoudemire regularly peppers his social media with biblical quotes.

If your ancestors were brought to America, or any other part of the world by slave ship, you are from the ancient tribe of the Hebrew Israelites, Stoudemire said in a February 2016 YouTube video alongside a Hebrew Israelite pastor in Chicago. This is black history, this is true black history.

Despite the praise from Israeli officials, since the move to Jerusalem Stoudemire has faced some adversity.

The Stoudemires 12-year-old son, Deuce, was barred from playing games with Hapoel Jerusalems youth team because he is not an Israeli citizen. Deuce was invited to play baseball instead.

Stoudemire has also clashed with Israeli basketball referees on a number of occasions, even taking to social media to rail against the officials. I have witnessed the worst officiating in the world of basketball, Stoudemire wrote on Instagram. Way to discourage other top players from coming to play in Israel.

Email Sam Kestenbaum at kestenbaum@forward.com and follow him on Twitter at @skestenbaum

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NBA Star Amar'e Stoudemire Awarded MLK Prize in Jerusalem - Forward

"It’s Devastating And Hurtful:" Anti-Defamation League Raise Concerns About Anti-Semitic Threats – WLRN

Posted By on March 1, 2017

At least 86 Jewish organizations in the United States have received threats since Jan. 1, 2017, according to authorities. South Florida is no exception. Just this Monday, a bomb threat forced the evacuation of a Jewish Community Center in Davie. A synagogue in Miami Beach was desecratedover the weekend and several cars in an Orthodox Jewish neighborhood were marked with swastikas.

WLRN spoke withYael Hershfield, Florida's interim regional director of the Anti Defamation League, who expressed his concerns about the increase infrequency of these anti-Semitic incidents.

Florida's interim regional director of the Anti Defamation League, Yael Hershfield, discusses the increase this year in anti-Semitic acts.

HERSHFIELD: The Anti-Defamation League is disheartened that the Jewish community continues to be the target of hate crimes and hateful incidents. There has been a rash of bomb threats since the beginning of the year. We're talking 90-plus bomb threats to Jewish institutions [and] two cemeteries that have been desecrated. It's devastating and it's hurtful, and that is not the only place where hate was expressed against the Jewish community. We have seen vandalism of personal property. There were the cars in Miami Beach, a car here in Boca Raton, at schools. We see this increased presence of the symbol of hate against the Jewish community. Its history cannot be denied.

WLRN: Would you say that there's been an uptick in the last couple of months? Can you compare it to any other time in recent years?

What we're seeing is an increased frequency. I don't think the Jewish community has experienced this in a while. We know these bomb threats have been hoaxes. It's still very disruptive to the Jewish community.

What do you say to families, especially young people, about what they see, whether they see it in the news or online or up close?

I think parents can be prepared to talk to their children about hate and how hate manifests itself in our society. But in the same token, talk about the good people in our community, law enforcement, the leaders of the community that are doing all that they can to keep them safe and to look around and see that the Jewish communities have been prepared, have protocols in place to assist in the evacuations.

So while it is disruptive, on the other hand people need to remember that the Jewish community is organized in that we are constantly reminding them about the security protocols that need to be in place.

At what point does security have to increase at schools or community centers within the Jewish community?

I think that the Anti-Defamation League message has always been that security needs to be a mindset. It has to be something that is constantly being explored, how improved procedures have to be practiced. This is not a one time deal. This is something that unfortunately Jewish communities are all very familiar with and needs to be implemented and be viewed every day 24/7.

I am confident that right now those conversations have been happening and that law enforcement is ready to assist any Jewish institution to review their plans and how to improve them.

Monday we saw Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz show a bit of emotion and anger in the efforts to try to catch the folks involved in this. What's your response to what you've been hearing from lawmakers and law enforcement? Are you satisfied that they are doing everything possible?

There's always room for improvement. I know the president, from a few days ago, expressed his disgust with the anti-Semitic incidents and condemned it. But we want to see words matched with action.

There are many different things that could be done to address the situation. For example, the FBI has determined that the bomb threats passed the threshold of civil rights violation. So the Department of Justice, under the leadership of Attorney General Jeff Sessions, has it within its power to really open a full investigation and allocate the resources behind it so that we can catch the perpetrators.

We would also like to see a high level Cabinet task force address this incident as well as other hate crimes. And again, Attorney General Sessions has the capability of combining such a task force under the direction of the White House, bring in the Department Of Justice, the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and really look at what needs to be done to address this matter.

We're also talking about the fact that there are still five states around the country that don't have hate crime statutes on their law books. Just last week the FBI made an arrest of a man in South Carolina; that man could not be charged under South Carolina statutes with a hate crime because they don't have one. Every single state in the nation should have a hate crimes bill on their books right now.

And lastly, the ADL has been training law enforcement on how to recognize and investigate hate crimes. More of such training needs to be in place so that the community can feel safe and know that law enforcement is responsive to this kind of incident.

I think that when we stand as a community and we denounce hate wherever we see it we stay stronger. We need to show moral leadership from all corners of our society to condemn anti-Semitism and all crimes of bigotry. And when we do that we will push those bigots, those hateful individuals, to the corner, and that's our hope.

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"It's Devastating And Hurtful:" Anti-Defamation League Raise Concerns About Anti-Semitic Threats - WLRN

San Francisco Market Street Reopens Following Anti-Defamation League Bomb Threat – Breitbart News

Posted By on March 1, 2017

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The threat came in over the telephone around 4:19 p.m. Monday and resulted in a sweep of offices and nearby buildings.

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According to the San Francisco Chronicle, Two dozen San Francisco police officers [arrived] on the scene once the threat was reported. They evacuated a Wells Fargo bank branch, a 7-11, a CVS and a Walgreens, then searched them all for explosive devices.

No explosives were found.

The bomb threat against the SF ADL was one of 28 called into Jewish community centers and schools in 17 states on Monday. ADL CEO Jonathan A. Greenblatt said, One threat or evacuation is one too many, and yet weve now seen more than 20 incidents in a single day not just to ADL, but to childrens schools and community centers and more than 90 incidents since the start of this year.

Greenblatt added, The level of threats and incidents is astounding, and must not stand. We will do everything in our power to combat this wave of anti-Semitism.

SF ADL directorVlad Khaykin noted that he has seen a rising threat level duringthe past few weeks. He said that there had been 50 bomb threats to Jewish community centers in 2017 and 90 threats against Jewish institutions.

AWR Hawkins is the Second Amendment columnist for Breitbart News and host of Bullets with AWR Hawkins, a Breitbart News podcast. He is also the political analyst for Armed American Radio. Follow him on Twitter: @AWRHawkins. Reach him directly at awrhawkins@breitbart.com.

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San Francisco Market Street Reopens Following Anti-Defamation League Bomb Threat - Breitbart News

Scarsdale Attorney Files Amicus Brief for ADL Challenging Trump Travel Ban – Scarsdale Daily Voice

Posted By on March 1, 2017

SCARSDALE, N.Y. Many Jewish groups have taken a stand against President Donald J. Trumps immigration ban, but one, the Anti-Defamation League has taken it a step further, says Scarsdale attorney John Harris.

Harris is the primary author of an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief that was filed on behalf of the ADL with the U.S. Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit, in New York in early February.

In it, the ADL lays outs its reasons for supporting the attorneys general for the states of Washington and Minnesota in their challenge of Trumps policies on immigrants and refugees.

Harris is a partner with the Manhattan law firm of Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz.Trump, a real estate mogul and former reality TV star, maintains a home in Bedford.

The ADLs CEO, Jonathan A. Greenblatt, said the brief urges the court to block enforcement of the order on the basis that it would almost certainly cause irreparable harm to countless people.

When America has closed its doors and allowed its core values to be compromised, the country later looked back in shame, Greenblatt said.

Harris said the brief strays a bit from the usual by citing history and social sciences rather than leaning heavily on the law, and legal cases.

The brief traces Americas history as a nation dedicated to ideals of equality, liberty, and justice, noting that throughout U.S. history, and often with respect to immigration, its ideals have been tested.

Our country is at its best when it honors its commitments to its core values, said Harris, who chairs the ADLs Legal Affairs Committee. This nation has been and should be a beacon of hope for refugees from war-torn countries and for victims of persecution. Many of these refugees have contributed immeasurably to the fabric of America.

In instances where the country strayed from its core principals, it has had to apologize to individuals and their descendants who had suffered, and posthumously to those who have tragically lost their lives as a result, said Greenblatt, adding: This case reminds us to fulfill the promise of learning from our mistakes.

The ADL brief points to three specific examples of where America stumbled:

In each of these incidents, Harris said, we wound up succumbing to fear and prejudice.

Enforcing the executive orders banning immigrants from seven Muslim countries and refugees from war-torn places such as Syriameans that the nation again risks sacrificing its core values, Greenblatt said.

It would be a sacrifice, he concluded, that history has repeatedly proven has profound consequences both to the persons who suffer as a result and to the still-vibrant vision of the shining city on the hill.

Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz, PC prepared the brief on behalf of ADL and the law firm Procopio, Cory, Hargreaves & Savitch, LLP served as local counsel in the 9th Circuit.

Harris areas of expertise are litigation, securities fraud and white collar defense and legal ethics and professional responsibility.

He has spent more than 25 years representing clients in high-stakes civil matters and white collar criminal cases.

Harris chairs the Professional Responsibility Committee of the New York City Bar Association and is a former member of the New York City Bars Committee on Professional and Judicial Ethics. He also is a mediator for the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

The Anti-Defamation League, founded in 1913, is the world's leading organization fighting anti-Semitism through programs and services that counteract hatred, prejudice, and bigotry.

Trump, who owns the $19.5 million Seven Springs estate in Bedford, also owns Trump National Golf Club Hudson Valley in Stormville and Trump National Westchester in Briarcliff Manor. The Trump name also adorns Trump Tower At City Center in White Plains, Trump Plaza in New Rochelle, Trump Park Residences in Yorktown and the Donald J. Trump State Park on the Westchester/Putnam border.

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Scarsdale Attorney Files Amicus Brief for ADL Challenging Trump Travel Ban - Scarsdale Daily Voice

Murphy to speak at Hamden synagogue's peace and justice service – New Haven Register

Posted By on February 28, 2017

HAMDEN >> U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., will be the guest speaker Friday as the honoree at this years Robert E. Goldburg Peace and Justice Service, held by Congregation Mishkan Israel.

Rabbi Herbert Brockman said of Murphy, We want to honor him as he honors us his insistence on justice and concern for all the people in Connecticut is exemplary and we believe reflects the best of our values as a people and as a nation.

The service is named for a former rabbi of Mishkan Israel, who launched the annual service in 1967. Past speakers have included Harrison Salisbury, Robert Jay Lifton, Daniel Ellsberg, Julian Bond and the Rev. William Sloane Coffin. Goldburg retired in 1982.

The service at the synagogue at 785 Ridge Road will begin at 7 p.m. All are welcome to attend. For more information, call 203-288-3877.

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Chabad rabbi banned from Lithuania's main synagogue | Jewish … – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on February 28, 2017

(JTA) In an escalation of the internal feud dividing Lithuanian Jews, the Chabad movements senior emissary to the country was banned from the capital citys main synagogue.

Rabbi Sholem Ber Krinsky, who has lived in Vilnius for 22 years, was informed in an email Monday from the chairman of the Vilnius Jewish Religious Community that he could notset foot inside the Vilnius Choral Synagogue until he commits in writing to follow the synagogues rules and order.

The move follows a brief period of reconciliation following reports inNovember that guards hired by the community prevented Krinsky from entering the same synagogue.

You do not pay attention to my oral and written request to comply with the orders and rules ofour synagogue, Shmuel Levin, the community chairman, wrote in theemail to Krinsky, which the website Defending History about Lituanian Jewry published Monday.

As of Tuesday, Levin said, youre being banned from entering the synagogue for breaking its rules, namely showing disrespect to the rabbi of the synagogue.

The email did not specify how Krinsky is accused of breaking the establishments rules.

According to the account on Defending History, the move is connected to a service on Friday in wich a community member said publicly that community bosses gave orders that Krinsky should not be allowed to approach the synagogues bimah, or pulpit.

Krinsky was involved in a similar dispute in 2004, when afistfightbroke out in the synagogue between hissupporters and those of Chaim Burshtein, who was hired by the community. The dispute in Vilnius was one of several that unfolded during those years in Eastern Europe between emissaries of Chabad and non-Chabad rabbis.

Chabad critics oppose what they see as the movements fundamentalism or believe the work of Chabad rabbis in their communities is needlessly dividing congregations that are barely large enough to function. However, in recent years public expressions of this sentiment have subsided, leading to greater cooperation and better relations amongcongregations.

Burshtein and Krinskyeventuallyreached a modus vivendi.

But the Jewish Community of Lithuania, or LZB,firedBurshtein in 2015 amid hisobjectionsto the governments plan to build on an area thatused to be a Jewish cemetery. He accused Faina Kukliansky, the communitys president, of excessive authoritarianism an allegation she has denied.

Some 6,000 Jews live in Lithuania, a country thathad nearly250,000 Jews before the Holocaust.

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