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Palestine – History | Britannica

Posted By on March 2, 2023

The Stone Age and the Copper Age

The Paleolithic Period (Old Stone Age) in Palestine was first fully examined by the British archaeologist Dorothy Garrod in her excavations of caves on the slopes of Mount Carmel in 192934. The finds showed that at that stage Palestine was culturally linked with Europe, and human remains were recovered showing that the inhabitants were of the same group as the Neanderthal inhabitants of Europe. The Mesolithic Period (Middle Stone Age) is best represented by a culture called Natufian, known from excavations at Ain Mallha and Jericho. The Natufians lived in caves, as did their Paleolithic predecessors, but there is a possibility that they were experimenting in agriculture, for the importance to them of the collection of grain is shown by the artistic care that they lavished on the carving of the hafts of their sickles and in the provision of utensils for grinding. During the subsequent Neolithic Period (New Stone Age) humans gradually undertook the domestication of animals, the cultivation of crops, the production of pottery, and the building of towns (e.g., Jericho by 7000 bce).

Excavations also have provided a picture of events in Palestine in the 5th4th millennium bce, during which the transition from the Stone Age to the Copper Age took place. It was probably in the 4th millennium that the Ghassulians immigrated to Palestine. Their origin is not known; they are called Ghassulians because the pottery and flints characteristic of their settlements first attracted attention in the excavations of Tulaylt al-Ghassl in the Jordan Valley. There was a permanent village site with several successive layers of occupation, and the site probably was associated with reasonably efficient agriculture. The phase can be called the Aeneolithic or Chalcolithic Period or the Copper Age, since copper axes were found at Tulaylt al-Ghassl, and this is confirmed by the finds at sites near Beersheba, with pottery and a flint industry allied to those of Tulaylt al-Ghassl but not identical with them. At Beersheba there was a copper-working industry, which presumably imported ore from Sinai, and there was also evidence of an ivory-working industry, both proving the growth of a class of specialist craftsmen. Discoveries near En Gedi have revealed a shrine of that period, and basketry, ivory, leather, and hundreds of copper ritual objects were found in the Naal Mishmar caves of the Judaean desert.

The region in which the Ghassulian settlements have been found is mainly in the south of Palestine, with an extension up the coastal plain and its fringes. These settlements seem to have died out and disappeared in the last centuries of the 4th millennium, about the same time that a new population immigrated, probably from the north. Thereafter the composite elements in Palestine consisted of the indigenous Neolithic-Chalcolithic population, the Ghassulians, and these latest immigrants; in time the peoples were amalgamated into what was to become the sedentary urban population of the Early Bronze Age in the 3rd millennium.

Palestines dating is henceforth linked to Egyptian dating until the time of the Hebrew monarchy; the interpretation of Egyptian dates in German Egyptologist Rolf Krausss Sothis- und Monddaten (1985; Sothic and Lunar Dates) is followed in this article.

Most of the towns that are known in historic times came into existence during the Early Bronze Age. The growth of these towns can be approximately correlated chronologically with the development of the Old Kingdom in Egypt, Early Bronze I corresponding to the late Predynastic Period and Early Bronze II being cross-dated by finds to the time of the 1st dynasty, c. 2925 bce. Evidence of the early phases of the Early Bronze Age comes mainly from Megiddo, Jericho, Tall al-Farah, Tel Bet Shean, Khirbat al-Karak, and Ai (Khirbat Ayy). All these sites are in northern or central Palestine, and it was there that the Early Bronze Age towns seem to have developed. The towns of southern Palestinefor instance, Tel Lakhish, Kiriath-sepher, and Tel asiseem only to have been established in Early Bronze III. The town dwellers, identified as the original Semitic population, can, for the sake of convenience, be called Canaanites, although the term is not attested before the middle of the 2nd millennium bce. (See Canaan.)

In the course of the 3rd millennium, therefore, walled towns began to appear throughout Palestine. There is no evidence that the next step of unification under the leadership of a single town took place in the region, as it had in Mesopotamia and Egypt; Palestines towns presumably remained independent city-states, except insofar as Egypt may at times have exercised a loose political control. By about the 23rd century bce the whole civilization had ceased to be urban. During the next phase it was pastoral and was influenced by the settlement of nomads probably from east of the Jordan River. Among the nomads, Amorites from the Syrian Desert may have predominated. It is not yet fully understood how these events are related to the creation of the Akkadian empire in Mesopotamia under Sargon of Akkad and his grandson Naram-Sin (24th and 23rd centuries bce) and to the latters destruction of the powerful kingdom of Ebla (modern Tall Mardkh) in neighbouring Syria, nor is the extent of Eblaite and Akkadian hegemony over Palestine in this period known. It does seem reasonable, however, to associate the incursion of nomads from the east with the invasions of Egypt by people from Asia that brought the Old Kingdom to an end. An initial date of 23rd22nd century bce, depending on the interpretation of the Egyptian evidence, and a final date of the 20th century bce seem probable.

The picture of Palestine at this period is thus unequivocally that of a region occupied by a number of allied tribes; although they had many features in common, there were also many differences. The most significant point is that, with the possible exception of the northern group, they made no contribution at all to town life. The different groups had tribal centres, but they were essentially seminomadic pastoralists. This description fits well that given in the Book of Joshua of the Amorites who lived in the hill country, as opposed to the Canaanites who lived in the plains and on the coastareas favourable to agriculture.

It was, in fact, the next periodthe Middle Bronze Agethat introduced the Canaanite culture as found by the Israelites on their entry into Palestine. The Middle Bronze Age (c. 2000c. 1550 bce) provides the background for the beginning of the story of the Hebrew Bible. The archaeological evidence for the period shows new types of pottery, weapons, and burial practices. Once more an urban civilization based on agriculture was established. It is not entirely clear whether the wave of urban development after the 20th century bce was the work of a new immigrant people accustomed to town dwelling or of the local inhabitants themselves, some of whom may have adopted a sedentary lifestyle and begun, as in Mesopotamia and Syria, to establish dynasties. But where they settled, towns of the widespread Middle Bronze Age civilization of Palestine emerged. This civilization was intimately connected with that of the towns of the Phoenician-Canaanite coast. Extant Egyptian documents provide valuable information about Palestine in the period of the Egyptian 12th dynasty (19381756 bce) and argue for significant Egyptian interest and influence in Palestine at this time. (Most notable are the popular literary work known as the Story of Sinuhe, detailing the heros exile in the Palestinian region, and the 20th19th-century Execration Texts, inscriptions of Egypts enemies names on pottery, which was ceremonially broken to invoke a curse.) The culture introduced at this stage was essentially the same as the culture found by the Israelites who moved into Palestine in the 14th and 13th centuries bce.

A large repertory of new forms in pottery arose, and for the first time in Palestine the clay was turned entirely on a fast wheel. Comparisons of Palestinian early Middle Bronze pottery forms with metallic and ceramic forms at Byblos, dated by Egyptian contacts, suggest that these forms were brought to Palestine about the 19th century from coastal Syria. Bronze weapons of a distinctive type, paralleled also on the Syrian coast, have been found at Megiddo, Jericho, and Tall al-Ajjul. Town life in Palestine gradually expanded after the mid-19th century bce, but the material culture was essentially a direct development from the preceding stage. Several towns of Middle Bronze Age Palestine were defended by plaster-faced ramparts (clearly discernible at Jericho and many other sites), an imported method of fortification giving evidence of a new and alien influence superimposed on the existing Canaanite culture. These were probably introduced by the Asiatic Hyksos, possibly related to the Amorites, who secured control of northern Egypt about 1630. The Hyksos may have included elements of a grouping of people, largely Semitic, called the Habiru or Hapiru (Egyptian Apiru). (The term Habiru, meaning Outsiders, was applied to nomads, fugitives, bandits, and workers of inferior status; the word is etymologically related to Hebrew, and the relationship of the Habiru [and aforementioned Hyksos] to the Hebrews has long been debated.) The Habiru appear to have established a military aristocracy in Palestine, bringing to the towns new defenses and new prosperity (as well as many Egyptian cultural elements) without interrupting the basic character of the local culture; this was to survive the destruction of Megiddo, Jericho, and Kiriath-sepher that followed the Egyptians expulsion of the Hyksos into Palestine at the end of the Middle Bronze Age (c. 1550).

There was no sharp break between the Middle and Late Bronze Age in Palestine. Shortly before the death of Ahmose I (1514 bce), the first native pharaoh of the New Kingdom, the Egyptian armies began to conquer Palestine, probably completing their task during his successors reign. Under Queen Hatshepsut (147958) Palestine revolted against Egyptian domination, but the rebellion was put down firmly by her successor, Thutmose III, who established a stable administration, maintained through the reigns of his immediate successors. Egyptian administrative documents excavated in both Egypt and Palestine show in considerable detail how the provincial government was organized and even how it operated during the century 14501350 bce. Documents show, for example, that the land of Retenu (Syria-Palestine) was divided into three administrative districts, each under an Egyptian governor. The third district (Canaan) included all of Palestine from the Egyptian border to Byblos. This period is often known as the Amarna Age and is vividly illustrated by several hundred letters written in cuneiform script, found in Egypt at Tell el-Amarna, site of the capital of the heretic king Akhenaton. The unusual concern of the pharaohs with the affairs of Palestine was chiefly a result of the fact that control of it was necessary for the defense of Phoenicia and southern Syria, menaced by Mitanni until about 1375 and by the Hittite empire after that date.

About 1292 bce the increasingly weak rule of the last pharaohs of the 18th dynasty was replaced by the strong arm of the second and third kings of the 19th dynasty, Seti I and Ramses II (127913 bce). These kings blunted the southward thrust of the Hittites and consolidated the crumbling Egyptian empire. The exactions of foreign bureaucrats, however, combined with internal decay, had so enfeebled the Canaanite vassal princes of Palestine that it was comparatively easy for the incoming Israelites to occupy most of the hill country east of the Jordan River and in western Palestine during the closing decades of the 13th century bce. Archaeological evidence suggests that the Israelite settlement in Palestine was much more complex and disconnected than the biblical accounts indicate. During a short interlude of anarchy that followed the last weak kings of the 19th dynasty, Egyptian rule was completely extinguished, and the ephemeral victories of Ramses III in the early decades of the 12th century scarcely affected Palestinian history.

Subsequent histories of the region have relied heavily on biblical narrative. Although this narrative has been augmented to a great extent by information derived from modern archaeological excavationsand, for some historical periods, by outside written sourcesit is frequently the major, or sole, source of historical information; however, its validity has often been disputed.

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Palestine - History | Britannica

United Nations in Palestine

Posted By on March 2, 2023

Story

21 April 2022

Hebron Courthouse - A Model for the Future

Hebron, 25 March 2022 Under the auspices of His Excellency President Mahmoud Abbas, the High Judicial Council, the Representative Office of Canada and the United Nations Development Programme marked the inauguration of the Hebron Courthouse and Prosecution building today. The courthouse, funded by the Government of Canada for CAD $32 million, will enhance access to justice for approximately 359,000 people from Hebron and surrounding areas.In his opening remarks, His Excellency Chief JusticeIssa Abu Sharar thanked the Government of Canada and UNDP for making this project possible. For many years the Hebron judiciary was facing a challenge of providing an appropriate environment for litigation until the construction of the Hebron courthouse was completed. The space now takes into consideration judicial and gender requirements and respects the provision of the law image, he added.The new courthouse, built to be a model for future court designs in the West Bank, houses the First Instance, Magistrate and Appeal courts, Public Prosecution Service, and the Judicial Police Services over a gross floor area of approximately 16,050 square meters. Its construction has generated approximately 66,339 workdays (530,718 working hours) for people in the Hebron and southern area of the West Bank.Lynn Hastings, United Nations Resident Coordinator, underlined that "Justice is a prerequisite for peoples trust in institutions not only from within societies but from the view of partners around the world. Without that trust, peace and security and even economic development will not flourish."The Hebron courthouse is considered the second largest court in terms of caseloads, after Ramallahs main courthouse. The project will allow the Hebron courts to handle more cases, hence increasing the efficiency of the justice system, and reducing the existing backlog. The courthouse has dealt with approximately 51,705 cases during 2021.In her remarks, the Representative of Canada in Ramallah, Ms Robin Wettlaufer, noted that this flagship initiative will increase access to justice services for Palestinians. Inclusive and safe access to justice services for all citizens is a building block for a just society. Therefore, considerations for vulnerable groups, including women, girls and juveniles, were taken into account. This includes privacy and protection features to ensure that sensitive cases, including those related to gender-based violence, are managed appropriately.Equipped to meet international architectural standards, the courthouse utilizes photovoltaic solar panels on the roof and rainwater harvesting, as well as building automation and digitalization to minimize energy consumption and maximize the efficiency and quality of services provided.The court floor plans were organised around the central courtrooms, allowing the public, judges, jury, and persons in custody to enter from separate areas, ensuring safety and security for all court users. Gender was also a fundamental consideration during the design and construction phases of the project. The new Hebron Courthouse ensures that the privacy needs of women and girls, as well as men and boys, have been appropriately taken into consideration. This has put the needs of the courthouse users at the heart of project.UNDP Special Representative of the Administrator, Yvonne Helle, thanked the Government of Canada for their partnership and highlighted that the building has an assertive civic quality and an important location. The courthouse is a place where life changing decisions are handed down. So to have a place that is accessible, modern and user-friendly is really important, she added. The ceremony, which took place at the new premises of the Hebron Courthouse on 25 March 2022, was attended by H.E. Chief Justice Issa Abu Sharar; Attorney General Akram Al Khatib, H.E. Minister of Justice Dr Mohammed al-Shalaldeh, Deputy Special Coordinator, UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, Ms Lynn Hastings, the Representative of Canada in Ramallah, Ms Robin Wettlaufer, UNDP Special Representative of the Administrator Ms Yvonne Helle, as well as members of the bar association, the judiciary, Palestinian police, and local and international community.

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United Nations in Palestine

Ohio train derailment update: Waste from East Palestine to be shipped to Grafton – WKYC.com

Posted By on March 2, 2023

Ohio train derailment update: Waste from East Palestine to be shipped to Grafton  WKYC.com

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Ohio train derailment update: Waste from East Palestine to be shipped to Grafton - WKYC.com

SNLs Trump Rants About Rihanna and Gay Buttigieg in East Palestine – Rolling Stone

Posted By on March 2, 2023

SNLs Trump Rants About Rihanna and Gay Buttigieg in East Palestine  Rolling Stone

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SNLs Trump Rants About Rihanna and Gay Buttigieg in East Palestine - Rolling Stone

Outrage on Broadway as neo-Nazi group rallies outside Parade, musical …

Posted By on February 28, 2023

The theater world recoiled Wednesday after neo-Nazis held an antisemitic demonstration outside the first Broadway preview of a revival of Parade, a musical about an American Jew who was wrongfully convicted of murder and lynched a century ago.

About 12 protesters linked to the National Socialist Movement a prominent neo-Nazi group with half-century-old roots took part in the vile Tuesday night demonstration, said Rick Miramontez, a spokesman for the musical.

The Benjamin Jacobs Theatre on West 45th street where the production "Parade" is playing. (Sam Costanza/for New York Daily News)

In video published on social media, men held up a sign in red ink declaring, LEO FRANKLY WAS A PEDO, a reference to Leo Frank, the Georgia factory manager whose life and 1915 death are dramatized in the musical.

Producers of Parade, which is due to open March 16, issued a statement Wednesday deploring the protest.

If there is any remaining doubt out there about the urgency of telling this story in this moment in history, the vileness on display last night should put it to rest, they said.

In an Instagram video, Ben Platt, the star of Parade, described the demonstration as ugly and scary, but said it provided a wonderful reminder of why we are telling this particular story.

Ben Platt attends the Los Angeles premiere of Prime Video's "The People We Hate At The Wedding" at Regency Village Theatre on November 16, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images)

Platt said the theater staff had kept the cast and patrons supersafe and secure. Cops stood guard during the protest outside the Bernard Jacobs Theatre on W. 45th St.

The leader of the National Socialist Movement, Burt Colucci, said Wednesday afternoon that members of the New York chapter of his organization had planned the protest without his knowledge, but that he endorsed their actions.

I can confirm that there were definitely NSM members there, he said by phone. The New York unit took it upon themselves; I didnt find out until after the fact.

The group, once the largest neo-Nazi organization in the U.S., has been on the decline after participating in the deadly white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Miramontez, the spokesman for Parade, said he hopes the protest at the Jacobs Theatre was an isolated incident connected to the initial preview.

It was unclear if authorities had any advance notice about the demonstration. The NYPD said no arrests were made.

While Im grateful that the NYPD was present last night, were not going to just be able to police ourselves out of this, Mayor Adams said in a statement. Hate has no place in New York City, and so we must do everything in our power to stop the growing pipeline leading to it.

The protesters claimed that the show celebrates a pedophile.

The real-life, Brooklyn-raised Leo Frank was convicted in the murder of a 13-year-old who was found dead at a Georgia pencil factory. Some reports have said the girl was raped, though that point has been disputed.

Frank was killed by a lynch mob during a surge in antisemitic hate following his murder conviction. His death led to the creation of the Anti-Defamation League and a revival of the Ku Klux Klan.

In 1982, The Tennessean newspaper reported a sworn statement from a crucial witness who asserted that he had given false testimony and that Frank had not killed the girl, and that another man had.

In a Wednesday statement, the ADL said that the irony should not be lost on anyone that these antisemitic extremists decided to protest a play that details the true story of the lynching of an innocent Jewish man by an antisemitic mob, and used it as an opportunity to spread conspiracy theories and hate.

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The Broadway League pledged in a statement to continue its work to ensure that theater is a safe and welcoming experience for all.

Now more than ever, the arts play a powerful role in creating community and bringing people together, the league said in the statement. The Broadway League stands firmly against antisemitism and all forms of harassment.

Rates of antisemitic hate crimes in the city have increased sharply recently, according to Police Department data. In November, cops in Penn Station arrested two men accused of plotting an attack on a synagogue.

Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine called the protest a really stark reminder of how far into the mainstream this once ultra-fringe element has come. We should not assume that it will stop at speech. We should be prepared for it to escalate, as too often it has.

The original Broadway production of Parade ran for more than 120 performances from 1998 to 1999, winning two Tony Awards best original score and best book of a musical and scoring nine nominations.

The Actors Equity Association, a labor union representing Broadway performers, said in a statement that Parade tells an important story of what happens when antisemitism and other kinds of hatred are allowed to grow unchecked.

We are proud of our members and their colleagues who are bringing this tragedy to life onstage, said the statement, and the presence of antisemitic protesters at their place of work only underlines how important that work is.

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Outrage on Broadway as neo-Nazi group rallies outside Parade, musical ...

Planned antisemitic day of hate instead becomes day of unity, defiance for US Jews – The Times of Israel

Posted By on February 27, 2023

  1. Planned antisemitic day of hate instead becomes day of unity, defiance for US Jews  The Times of Israel
  2. Law Enforcement Warns of Potential Neo-Nazi Day of Hate  Rolling Stone
  3. Police stepping up security around Jewish communities after national threats  WLWT Cincinnati

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Planned antisemitic day of hate instead becomes day of unity, defiance for US Jews - The Times of Israel

Jessica Seinfeld Calls For Non-Jews To Join Friends At Synagogue Tomorrow For Shabbat To Counter Day Of Hate With Love And Light – Deadline

Posted By on February 27, 2023

Jessica Seinfeld Calls For Non-Jews To Join Friends At Synagogue Tomorrow For Shabbat To Counter Day Of Hate With Love And Light  Deadline

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Jessica Seinfeld Calls For Non-Jews To Join Friends At Synagogue Tomorrow For Shabbat To Counter Day Of Hate With Love And Light - Deadline

Hebrew Bible | Definition, Books, & History | Britannica

Posted By on February 27, 2023

Hebrew Bible, also called Hebrew Scriptures, Old Testament, or Tanakh, collection of writings that was first compiled and preserved as the sacred books of the Jewish people. It also constitutes a large portion of the Christian Bible, known as the Old Testament. Except for a few passages in Aramaic, appearing mainly in the apocalyptic Book of Daniel, these scriptures were written originally in Hebrew during the period from 1200 to 100 bce. The Hebrew Bible probably reached its current form about the 2nd century ce.

A brief treatment of the Hebrew Bible follows. For full treatment, see biblical literature.

In its general framework, the Hebrew Bible is the account of Gods dealing with the Jews as his chosen people, who collectively called themselves Israel. After an account of the worlds creation by God and the emergence of human civilization, the first six books narrate not only the history but the genealogy of the people of Israel to the conquest and settlement of the Promised Land under the terms of Gods covenant with Abraham, whom God promised to make the progenitor of a great nation. This covenant was subsequently renewed by Abrahams son Isaac and grandson Jacob (whose byname Israel became the collective name of his descendants and whose sons, according to legend, fathered the 13 Israelite tribes) and centuries later by Moses (from the Israelite tribe of Levi). The following seven books continue their story in the Promised Land, describing the peoples constant apostasy and breaking of the covenant, the establishment and development of the monarchy in order to counter this, and the warnings by the prophets both of impending divine punishment and exile and of Israels need to repent. The last 11 books contain poetry, theology, and some additional history.

TheHebrew Bibleis the literature of faith, not of scientific observation or historical demonstration. Gods existence as a speculative problem has no interest for the biblical writers. What is problematical for them is the human condition and destiny before God. The great biblical themes are about God, his revealed works of creation, provision, judgment, deliverance, hiscovenant, and his promises. The Hebrew Bible sees what happens to humankind in the light of Gods nature, righteousness, faithfulness, mercy, and love. The major themes about humankind relate to humanitys rebellion, estrangement, and perversion; humankinds redemption, forgiveness, and reconciliation are all viewed as the gracious works of God.

The Hebrew Bibles profoundly monotheistic interpretation of human life and the universe as creations of God provides the basic structure of ideas that gave rise not only to Judaism and Christianity but also to Islam, which emerged from Jewish and Christian tradition and which views Abraham as a patriarch (see also Judaism: The ancient Middle Eastern setting).

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Hebrew Bible | Definition, Books, & History | Britannica

Jewish American Heritage Month – Wikipedia

Posted By on February 27, 2023

In April 2006, President George W. Bush announced that May 2006 would be considered Jewish American Heritage Month. The announcement followed urging by the Jewish Museum of Florida and South Florida Jewish Community for a celebration of Jewish Americans and Jewish American Heritage.

The president wanted to proclaim a month that would recognize the more than 350-year history of Jewish contributions to America and the American culture. On February 14, 2006, Congress issued House Concurrent Resolution 315 which stated:

"Resolved ... that Congress urges the President to issue each year a proclamation calling on State and local governments and the people of the United States to observe an American Jewish History Month with appropriate programs, ceremonies, and activities."

The concurrent resolution (i.e., a non-binding legislative measure that lacks the force of law, appropriate when a law is not necessarysuch as awards or recognitions) was passed unanimously, first in the United States House of Representatives in December 2005 and later in the United States Senate in February 2006.[3]

The Jewish American Heritage Month Coalition states that, "JAHM also enables the exploration of the meaning of religious pluralism, cultural diversity, and participation in American civic culture."[4]

According to Library of Congress hosted website, JewishHeritageMonth.gov, May was chosen as the month of Jewish American Heritage Month because of the successful 350th Anniversary Celebration of Jews in America marking the Jewish arrival in New Amsterdam.[5]

In 2020, the National Museum of American Jewish History successfully pivoted Jewish American Heritage Month to online programming and launched a website with the support of more than 50 organizations around the country, forging ahead even in the era of COVID-19.

JAHM has been recognized in Madison Square Garden in New York City. It has also been recognized in some Jewish museums. Additionally, some institutions, including the Library of Congress, have included shorter periods within the month for special lectures, programs, or displays, such as the Library of Congress "Jewish Heritage Week" lecture series.

A similar month exists in Florida as Florida Jewish History Month but it occurs in January.[6]

On May 10, 2010, the White House issued a press release[7] noting that on Thursday, May 27, 2010,

The month serves as an opportunity to highlight and celebrate the range and depth of Jewish American heritage and contributions to American culture, with guests representing the many walks of life that have helped weave the fabric of American history. Invitees include a range of community leaders and prominent Jewish Americans from Olympians and professional athletes to members of Congress, business leaders, scholars, military veterans, and astronauts.

At the May 27, 2010, reception, President Obama welcomed the invited guests, which included "members of the House and Senate, two justices of the Supreme Court, Olympic athletes, entrepreneurs, Rabbinical scholars", and he made special mention of Sandy Koufax, famous in the Jewish community for refusing to play baseball on Yom Kippur. He praised "the diversity of talents and accomplishments" that the Jewish community had brought to the United States since pre-Revolutionary times, saying that, "Even before we were a nation, we were a sanctuary for Jews seeking to live without the specter of violence or exile," from the time "a band of 23 Jewish refugees to a place called New Amsterdam more than 350 years ago."[8][9]

President Obama scheduled a second White House reception in honor of JAHM for May 17, 2011.[10] The Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) reported that it was "less formal than the inaugural one last year, with brief remarks and a small Marine Corps band playing klezmer music."[11] The President noted the presence, among others, of Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Elie Wiesel, and Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, newly appointed as Chair of the Democratic National Committee.[11]

In his remarks, President Obama noted that Jewish Americans "persevered despite unspeakable discrimination and adversity at times."[12] Despite the challenges these American Jews faced, the President noted their achievements in "the arts, science, the military, business and industry, and in public and community service."[12] In his remarks, he said:

This month is a chance for Americans of every faith to appreciate the contributions of the Jewish people throughout our history - often in the face of unspeakable discrimination and adversity. For hundreds of years, Jewish Americans have fought heroically in battle and inspired us to pursue peace. They've built our cities, cured our sick. They've paved the way in the sciences and the law, in our politics and in the arts. They remain our leaders, our teachers, our neighbors and our friends.Not bad for a band of believers who have been tested from the moment that they came together and professed their faith. The Jewish people have always persevered. And that's why today is about celebrating the people in this room, the thousands who came before, the generations who will shape the future of our country and the future of the world.[13]

In addition, a Marine Corps band playing klezmer music, and the "Maccabeats," a Yeshiva University a cappella group, provided entertainment.[11]

In addition to signing the proclamation[14] marking May 2015 as the annual Jewish American Heritage Month, the White House shared plans for an address by President Obama on May 22, 2015, at Adas Israel Congregation, a large Washington, D.C. synagogue.[15] The date of the visit coincides with "Solidarity Sabbath," a Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice initiative asking world leaders to show support for the fight against anti-semitism.[15]

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Jewish American Heritage Month - Wikipedia

Ashkenazi Jews Must Stop Identifying As White/European

Posted By on February 27, 2023

In an ideal world, race, skin color, and ethnic origin would have no relevance.

But that is not the world we live in. Racism is and remains alive and well throughout the globe.

Anti-Semitism is a potent and deadly breed of racism, having nestled itself comfortably within the guise of anti-racism, anti-colonialism, minority rights, and social justice.

As with past anti-Semitic paroxysms, it has infiltrated the most pressing and relevant conversations of our day, transforming them from the inside out and deftly harnessing their power to cast us as the arch-villains once more.

Thats why this conversation is super important.

White Europeans have dominated the world over the past 500 years through colonialism, conquest, slavery, and genocide of indigenous populations.

They may hate being guilt tripped over the actions of their past ancestors, but history is history. It cannot be changed and it cannot be willed or wished away.

Most white people today may not be colonizers themselves, but they still benefit from the power structures put in place by their ancestors.

The effects of these structures and the crimes that created them continue to be felt by those historically and presently victimized by them including the Jews.

European civilization did a lot of good for the world by introducing industry, technology, modernity, and enlightenment, but it also slaughtered millions, introduced new diseases to races that had no immunity, and wiped out countless indigenous cultures throughout the world.

For Ashkenazi Jews (and also Sephardi Jews, but thats another topic), it was European colonialism that destroyed our Second Temple, robbed us of our homeland, renamed it so that it bore the names of our worst enemies, carried our ancestors to Europe on slave ships, and forced us into a state of exile for nearly 2000 years.

Our people were persecuted, tormented, slaughtered, and kept in a state of virtual captivity on the European continent for generations, and were driven to the point of near extinction less than 100 years ago in our grandparents lifetimes.

We still havent recovered from the damage wrought by the Holocaust, let alone everything else Europeans have done to us over the centuries.

Anti-Semitism is and remains a pervasive part of all white-majority societies, along with any society touched by European colonialism.

So the white-European identity today carries all sorts of negative connotations as a result.

And from there I proceed to my main thesis, which is that how people identify Jews especially Ashkenazi Jews really matters.

Identifying Ashkenazi Jews as white-Europeans creates many problems and ultimately leads to a misdiagnosis of who we are, our reality, and our lived experience.

There are 8 reasons why Ashkenazim should never be identified as white/European, and why other Ashkenazim need to stop identifying themselves as such.

It erases Ashkenazi Jews who are visibly of color

You, individually, might be white-passing. You might know other Ashkenazim who are white-passing, and this may lead you to the conclusion that your experience is normative.

But its not.

There are countless Ashkenazim who are visibly Middle Eastern. And I dont mean Ashkenazim who have a Sephardi or Mizrahi grandparent or two. I mean full, 100% Ashkenazi Jews whose grandparents and great-grandparents all hail from the Pale of Settlement across Eastern Europe.

That is because we are a Middle Eastern diaspora population, indigenous to the southern Levant. Ergo, there are many of us who unsurprisingly look the part.

Someone like Oded Fehr, or Idan Raichel, or Jeff Goldblum, or Sacha Baron Cohen, or 70-80% of the people in this gallery (which is fairly representative of what full Ashkenazi Jews tend to look like) will NEVER be white. No matter how hard they try to be.

Even if they were to accept the delusion that Ashkenazi Jews are not Middle Eastern, they will never be able to walk through society as anything BUT Middle Eastern.

So by identifying Ashkenazim as white Jews or Euro ethnics, you are (perhaps inadvertently, perhaps not) erasing their existence and reality.

The notion that Ashkenazi Jews are some overwhelmingly Swedish-looking collective of Orientalist Europeans LARPing as Levantines is an anti-Semitic myth no different from the lie that we killed Jesus and kidnapped white babies to bake matzah.

In truth, the phenotypic gulf between Ashkenazi Jews and other populations of the Levant (particularly Samaritans and Lebanese Christians) is minimal to non-existent. So if you wouldnt call non-Jewish Levantines white, you shouldnt be calling Ashkenazim white either.

Some of us, due to our light complexion, may pass for white/European (the same way light-skinned Amazigh, Arabs, Turks, Samaritans, Iranians, Kurds, Afghanis, Pakistanis, and Indians may also pass for white/European), but we are a totally separate entity and you have 2,000 years of white-European racism against Ashkenazi Jews as proof of that.

It erases our Middle Eastern origin, culture, and heritage

Ashkenazi Jews are a Levantine diaspora population, indigenous to the land of Israel.

That is where our ethnic identity, core culture, and civilization were born, and the traditions we carried with us in exile all either originate in that land or center on our ethnic and cultural ties to it, as well as our yearning to return home.

And those traditions that were robbed from us or which we were unable to preserve in exile (e.g. turbans, robes, hummus, pitas, hamsas, certain forms of art, jewelry, carpets, pottery, and music) are still rightfully ours, and we have every right to return to and reclaim them. Ashkenazim who partake in these customs are not appropriating anything. They are simply indigenous Levantines remembering and re-embracing their native traditions. In other words, they are decolonizing. That is a GOOD thing.

We are a Middle Eastern people. A historically exiled and colonized Middle Eastern people, but a Middle Eastern people nonetheless.

We are not part of European civilization, and we never were. As ethnic Jews, we already have a civilizational identity of our own and its Levantine.

Individual Ashkenazim (and other non-European immigrants to Europe) may have contributed to European culture and society at various points, but thats obviously not the same thing. For example, none would argue that black Africans in Europe are ackshually white-Europeans/no longer African or that African civilization is no longer their own because Andre Dumas penned the Three Musketeers or because his father, Alexandre Dumas, was an important French general.

We also do not share their history of conquest, colonization, genocide, and white supremacism, nor are we beneficiaries thereof. On the contrary, weve been continuous victims of these things for more than 2000 years.

The idea that Ashkenazi Jews should be thought of as white people/ethnic Europeans is fundamentally oppressive, and essentially tantamount to whitewashing and cultural erasure. It is colonization of our identity.

On the subject of culture, many have argued that were not Middle Eastern anymore because our diaspora culture (diaspora being the key word here) is European-influenced, and because its too different from Arab, Sephardic, and Mizrahi culture. These are actual arguments that Ive heard. From other Zionists, no less. And they are complete nonsense.

For one, as mentioned previously, only our diaspora culture is significantly European-influenced. Our root culture (i.e. pre-diaspora Jewish culture), which is still rightfully ours, is Middle Eastern. Diaspora is only one slice of our history and heritage. It doesnt define us as a whole.

Furthermore, European-influenced does not mean not Middle Eastern. Although Ashkenazi diaspora culture was clearly impacted and filtered somewhat by exile to an alien climate, it is still Middle Eastern at its core.

Second, many non-European cultures especially those impacted by European colonialism (like ours was) have European influences. For example, African-Americans are very Westernized in terms of culture, and most have no memory of where in Africa their ancestors came from as all records were destroyed by white slavers. Yet no one would ever deny them the right to identify as 100% African. Nor should they. Why should it be any different for us?

Ashkenazim identifying as Middle Eastern does not erase our history of exile in Europe. All it does is recognize exile and diaspora for what they are: exile and diaspora. It acknowledges our indigenous Middle Eastern ethnic origins and puts them front and center, as is our right. Non-Ashkenazim (and non-Jews) who are so concerned about us silencing our own history in Europe should take a seat. We are the ones who decide how we identify and talk about our history. No one else gets to do that. Only we do.

Third, there isnt one pure Middle Eastern culture shared by everybody in the region (except us, apparently). Theres always been European influence, especially in the Levant.

Fourth, using Mizrahi, Sephardi, Arab, or Persian culture as some kind of yardstick falsely presents the latter groups as standard-bearers of Middle Eastern culture a sort of litmus test by which all others should be measured. It also acts as though Mizrahim and Sephardim were not themselves influenced by foreign cultures (especially southern Europeans, Arabs, and Persians). Lastly, it betrays an Arab-normative view of the Middle East which fails to account for the diversity of the region.

It is a given that our root culture let alone our diaspora culture will be different from Arab culture, and that is because were not Arabs. We never were. We are Jews a Levantine people whose homeland is thousands of miles away from the Arabian Gulf.

Not all Middle Eastern cultures are the same. For example, Kurds and Saudis are both Middle Eastern peoples, but they have very little in common with each other.

That we were exiled into Europe and acquired ancient Greek/Italian admixture (which is still less than half of our overall genome) in the process does not make us white-Europeans either. There are plenty of non-white/non-European populations that carry European admixture, and for the same reasons we do: European colonialism.

African-Americans have significant European (primarily English and French) ancestry, as do many Native American tribes. South Americans are mixed with Spanish, Portuguese, and possibly French and Italian as well. Non-Jewish Levantines carry Greek and Roman ancestry (albeit not quite as much as we do), in addition to English, Germanic, and French (from the Crusaders). Turks have significant Greek, Roman, and East European ancestry.

And yes, many people from these same populations could easily pass as white: Helen Thomas (Lebanese), Ralph Nader (Lebanese), Rami Malek (Egyptian Copt), Justin Amash (Palestinian), Bashar Assad (Syrian), Ahed Tamimi (Palestinian), Linda Sarsour (Palestinian).

Thats without getting into the vast numbers of Samaritans, Iranians, Afghans, Berbers and others who can pass as white, despite these populations having very little, if any, European admixture.

None of this makes them white, and I imagine very few people would argue that it does. But in our case, these things are used as insurmountable proof that we are white and thus foreign to the Middle East.

Terms like white Jews/European Jews are tossed around regularly (and inaccurately) to suggest that we are not ethnically pure enough to be linked to our own ancestors.

Its a horrifying and transparently anti-Semitic double standard aimed at disenfranchising us from our own heritage and erasing our ethnic Levantine identity. It is, as mentioned above, a colonization of our identity.

And when we allow this to happen, we allow ourselves to be deemed appropriators when we partake in Middle Eastern traditions (even including those that are, in fact, rightfully ours), accused of whitewashing if we land non-Jewish Middle Eastern roles (see: the half-Ashkenazi Jake Gyllenhaal as Prince of Persia), and even mocked for identifying as Jews at all (the notion that Ashkenazim are fake Jews being a well-worn trope).

At this point, I wont be surprised if Ashkenazi Jewish actors are accused of whitewashing if they ever land a role as, say King David, or Jesus, or even Moses. Is that what we want to happen?

If not, then we need to let the world know that we are Middle Eastern. We may have lived among Europeans for a time (and even contributed to their society at times), but we are not them. And they are not us.

It enables the argument that we dont belong in Israel

The implication of saying were white goes far beyond forcing us to account for the legacy of European colonialism, which is not ours.

The minute we classify as white, we allow ourselves to be seen and treated as foreign colonizers in the Middle East. Ashkenazi Jews who identify as white Europeans, and refuse to own their Middle Eastern identity, are opening *themselves* up to delegitimization.

Arguments about Israels Mizrahi majority can only take you so far. We cant keep using Sephardim and Mizrahim as shields. We need to own who we are, and to tell the Palestinian (and the Lebanese, and the Syrian, and the Mizrahi, and the Sephardi) that we are every bit as indigenous to the region as they are. Not one iota less.

Exile in Europe and colonization did not transform us into Europeans. We are still ethnic Jews, and therefore still Levantine. We should not be deprived of our indigenous Middle Eastern ethnic identity and the rights entailed therein for the fact that we were taken away from our homeland against our will. To argue that is to argue we should be punished further for the crimes that were committed against us, and is a crass exercise in victim-blaming.

So long as we keep thinking of ourselves as white, the Palestinian Arab will have every right to look at us as colonizers. Remember, its not our skin color that necessarily bothers the Palestinian for there are plenty of Palestinians who are quite white-skinned themselves (Linda Sarsour, Ahed Tamimi) its the connotation that comes with it.

So if they see us as white, its not our skin tone, its the connotation of being white Europeans and therefore unwelcome colonizers in the Middle East. Thats the narrative we all need to change, and change right now.

It encourages progressives to ignore anti-Semitism

When we identify as white, we deny our own marginalization and victimization under white supremacy and shut ourselves out of the conversation on race, which absolutely does pertain to and affect us. We deprive ourselves of the resources and solidarity we need to combat anti-Jewish racism while giving progressives (including the countless anti-Semites that have infiltrated the left) a license to ignore us completely and shout us down when issues of anti-Semitism arise. Because if were really a group of privileged white people (as many have claimed), why would they care at all what we have to say?

They wont.

Because were allowing them to see us as just another group of whites crying about their privilege and presenting themselves as the victims, just as non-Jewish whites always do. We are giving them permission to gaslight us into silence. Is that what you want?

Make no mistake, the insistence that we are white is why progressives refuse to take anti-Semitism seriously. They dont see us as genuine ethnic minorities, but instead as white people with funny hats and lots of money. If we want that to change, we must shed this false consciousness weve developed about ourselves.

We are not white people and our whiteness is entirely illusory, designed to keep us complacent, oblivious and, above all, useful just like the court Jews of old.

It perpetuates anti-Semitism in the mainstream and facilitates its growth

For a deeper and more comprehensive understanding of this subject, its important to look at the mainstream media as well as the media consuming public and analyze its attitude towards Jews, Jewish culture, and Jewish representation.

The American media tends to infantilize most peoples of color (a problem in its own right, but outside the scope of this article). But not Jews. We are instead treated as court jesters or as stand-ins/substitutes for white people. I imagine this is why they are so invested in calling us white. They get to have all of the joys of bashing white people, but the wounds appear on OUR bodies, not theirs thereby keeping the existing power structure intact (i.e. white people on top, and Jews at or near the very bottom) while maintaining the pretense of challenging it.

It also means they can make us completely invisible whenever they want, either by treating us as a subcategory of white-European (which were not) or by ignoring us all together. After all, white people dont need extra representation, and they dont need protection or any other special considerations. This means we are the only non-white group whose mockery and vilification is seen as acceptable even progressive.

All the while, were expected to suffer in silence. Because Jews complaining about this treatment is nothing more than white tears, of course.

Were not only cast as white people, but as SUPER white people. The whitest of the whites. Were being set up to take all of the blows on white societys behalf, while the justice and equality we still seek (as a minority group) eludes us.

And what better way to vilify us to silence us and ensure we have no power nor any say or agency in the way we are treated than to forcibly situate us in the bete noire of the day: whites.

The parallels with past anti-Semitic epochs could not be more striking.

In medieval Europe, it was non-Christians. In Muslim lands, it was non-Muslims. In Enlightenment Europe, it was religious institutions and barbaric non-Westerners. In the 19th and 20th century, it was non-whites. Today, it is white people.

In medieval Europe, we were the non-Christian bete noire, in league with Satan himself. In Islamic lands, we were the very same non-Muslims who rejected Muhammad. In Enlightenment Europe, we were that backward Asiatic people who opposed progress and were incapable of grasping science. In the 20th century, we were the non-white race polluting Western society and undermining its very foundations.

Today, we are white people. Not only white people, but the most privileged white people of them all. The ultimate beneficiaries of white privilege, if not the ones in charge of it all and the brains behind the entire system (see: anything written by Nation of Islam).

No matter the circumstances or the time period, we are constantly cast as the epitome of all that is bad. And today is clearly no different.

The only way to circumvent this fate is to tackle anti-Semitism and show the progressive that were not white either, and that we are marginalized as well. By calling us white, they are upholding the very forces that seek to keep us in a permanent state of subordination.

And by calling ourselves white, we perpetuate our own subordination.

It ignores our marginalization under white supremacy

The belief that Ashkenazi Jews have white privilege is a popular one, but nevertheless false. We were never accepted as white throughout history. The entire concept of Jewish whiteness is, in fact, very recent and in todays climate, perpetuated primarily by anti-Semites.

There are many who will quickly (and justifiably) point out that most Jews dont have to worry about deadly encounters with police, or being followed around in stores, or the school-to-prison pipeline.

This is absolutely true.

It is also true for East Asians, South Asians, Arabs, and just about anyone who isnt black, Hispanic, or Native American.

But heres what we do have to worry about

* Airport profiling and detainment

* Institutional and public scapegoating

* Orientalism and conspiracy theories

* White supremacist and racist violence

* Under-representation and typecasting in media

* Biased criminal justice system and other institutions, especially universities

* Cultural marginalization in general

* The very real and present fear that this country may one day become inhospitable to us, forcing us to flee

* Being one of the most hated ethnic groups *on Earth*, not just in America

Does that sound like white privilege to you?

Continue reading here:

Ashkenazi Jews Must Stop Identifying As White/European


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