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UWS Synagogue Refuses to Rent Space to Republican Club for Speech by Election Denier – THE CITY

Posted By on September 21, 2022

The Society for the Advancement of Judaism, a Reconstructionist synagogue on the Upper West Side with the motto Judaism that Stands for All, has refused to rent space to the Upper West Side Republican Club for an event that would have featured former Bill Clinton advisor and current Donald Trump supporter Dick Morris. The event was scheduled to be televised on C-SPAN in late October.

While SAJ regularly rents space to schools and for private events, Board Chair Janet Brain and Rabbi Lauren Grabelle Herrmann told THE CITY in a joint statement that the Club was no longer welcome.

We were happy to rent our space to the Upper West Side Republican Club for many years, consistent with the communitys commitment towards civility and dialogue, the synagogue leaders said.

This recent request to use SAJs space was the first one by the club since before the Covid-19 pandemic, and the first request to televise their event for a national audience. The climate in our country has changed since the 2020 election and January 6, said synagogue leaders in a statement first reported by the West Side Rag.

We cannot abide any speaker in our sacred space whose words amplify and broadcast the anti-democratic ideas of the January 6 insurrectionists, or who condone or incite violence against our elected representatives, whether today or in a future election, they added.

While the statement did not name Morris, who has said that the 2020 election was absolutely stolen, West Side Republican Club President Marcia Drezon-Tepler told THE CITY that people need to leave Dick Morris name out of this and accused the synagogue of putting out misinformation.

Morris and his speaking agency did not respond to requests for comment.

Republican strategist Dick Morris

Gino Santa Maria/Shutterstock

In a statement on Monday night, Drezon-Tepler who told THE CITY that she was a lifelong Democrat who left the party because of what she said was the antisemitism of Democratic Squad Reps. Illan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Rashida Tliab said that A Jewish institution more than others should realize what it means to marginalize any group, for thats what the Nazis and others throughout the ages have done to the Jews.

Drezon-Tepler told THE CITY that the synagogues statement was misinformation, while forwarding a September email exchange where its administrative director told her group that the Executive Committee of SAJ has determined that because of recent developments with respect to the Republican Party we are no longer comfortable renting space to the West Side Republican Club. We appreciate the relationship we had until March of 2020. However, it is not one with which we are able to continue moving forward.

In response, a member of the Republican Club wrote that Its very sad that an institution that claims to be open to everyone should be so prejudiced, even racist. I was so heartened that the SAJ had housed us for so long. Now, Im deeply disappointed.

Asked about their earlier email to the West Side Republican Club, SAJ officials said that their statement to THE CITY spoke for itself.

SAJ was founded in 1922 by Dr. Rabbi Mordecai M. Kaplan, also the founder of Reconstructionist Judaism, who was the first modern Jewish thinker to articulate that Judaism was not just a religion or a culture, rather an evolving religious civilization, according to the history detailed on the synagogues web page.

The page also notes that SAJ began affirming LGBTQ+ members and interfaith families in the 1990s, and stresses its founders conviction that believers should not check our minds at the door.

SAJs decision not to rent to the Republican group comes after the Museum of Jewish Heritage declined to host a conference in May by the Tikvah Fund that included Ron DeSantis as a speaker.

The group eventually moved that event to the Chelsea Piers, where the Florida governor who signed that states Dont Say Gay law gave a speech during Pride Month in June as many local elected Democrats condemned the venue for hosting him.

Many groups are wary of inviting lightning-rod right-wingers, one of those officials, Brad Hoylman, told THE CITY this week when asked about the synagogues decision not to rent to the Republican club for the event with Morris. Understandably, he said.

Marcia Drezon-Tepler said her club is working on finalizing another venue for Morris to speak at, and lamented that SAJ no longer welcomed them.

Their logo says Judaism that stands for all, said Drezon-Tepler. Apparently it stands for all except for Republicans.

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UWS Synagogue Refuses to Rent Space to Republican Club for Speech by Election Denier - THE CITY

French Jew Brutally Murdered By Muslim Is Buried In Israel [VIDEO …

Posted By on September 21, 2022

Eyal Haddad, hyd, a Jewish resident of France who was brutally murdered by a Muslim on August 20 was brought to kever Yisrael in Israel on Thursday.

He was buried in Beer Sheva, where his family members, who are originally from Djerba, Tunisia, live.

The murderer, Mohamed Dridi, who lived in the same apartment complex as Haddad and knew him well, confessed to the murder. He first claimed that he killed Haddad over a debt of $100 but later admitted that he killed him due to his Jewishness.

The National Bureau of Vigilance Against Antisemitism (BNVCA) is demanding that the murder be investigated as an anti-Semitic hate crime, not only due to the perpetrators confession but also because of a number of his past social media posts about hating Jews and Israel, including a video of him burning an Israeli flag.

Other Jewish groups in France have been holding back from calling it an anti-Semitic crime since the police believe that the murder may have been the result of a personal argument between the two, who knew each other well.

(YWN Israel Desk Jerusalem)

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French Jew Brutally Murdered By Muslim Is Buried In Israel [VIDEO ...

Once even Jews would utter the word Jew in a whisper. Now it is up in lights – The Guardian

Posted By on September 21, 2022

It could almost be an anxiety dream: your name up in lights alongside the word Jews, resplendent on the outside of Londons Royal Court theatre. And yet Ive looked and looked again and I have not imagined it. Its there.

Putting aside the fact that I have never written a play before, its a jolt to see that combination of words outside that particular theatre. Relations between the Royal Court and much of Britains Jewish community have been strained for several decades. In 1987, the Royal Court was set to be the home of Perdition, a play that alleged collusion, born of a supposed ideological affinity, between Zionism and nazism. In 2009, it was the venue for Seven Jewish Children, a short play that has the distinction of being the only work by a major producing theatre ever described by the Jewish Chronicles drama critic as antisemitic (a charge denied by the playwright, Caryl Churchill). And last year, word came of Rare Earth Mettle, a new work at the Court featuring a predatory billionaire capitalist with the ostentatiously Jewish name of Hershel Fink. Instantly the theatre stood accused of reheating a hoary and antisemitic stereotype.

Indeed, its the fictitious Mr Fink whom I have to thank for my playwriting debut. The firestorm touched off by that planned name (after the outcry, the character became Henry Finn) led the Courts artistic director, Vicky Featherstone, to give me a call. She did not seek to make excuses or defend herself. Instead, in that conversation and several others, she said that she and her colleagues had clearly erred. She wanted to know more about antisemitism: how it worked, how it got missed, how it seemed to lurk even among those who, like the Royal Court, prided themselves on being firmly antiracist.

She told me that she had long been in discussion with the actor Tracy-Ann Oberman about commissioning a play on antisemitism on the left. During the period when Jeremy Corbyn served as Labour leader, and as antisemitism within the party became a point of often bitter controversy, a member of the Courts board had offered a similar thought. After Hershel Fink, said Featherstone, the necessity of such a project was not in doubt. Would I take it on?

I was wary. What if this was no more than a gesture to get the theatre out of a PR hole? But Featherstone struck me as being much more in earnest than that. Besides, in recent years, Jews like me had been asking progressives to take the subject of antisemitism seriously, to listen to Jewish concerns. And now here was a progressive institution, one with great standing, doing exactly that. I at least had to give it a chance.

It also felt like the right time. The heat of those Labour wars had diminished somewhat; there was a chance to reflect on the phenomenon more widely and deeply, looking at not merely one political party in a single four-year period, but at the broader culture and long history of the UKs complex attitude to its tiny Jewish minority, numbering somewhere between 260,000 and 290,000 people.

Tracy-Anns vision had always been for a vibrant, entertaining piece of theatre, complete with music, humour and song and a dose of what you might call English irony but where the text would be verbatim: though the words would be spoken by actors, they would be drawn entirely from interviews. We wanted to listen not only to those who, admittedly, have a platform but only seldom get to talk fully and candidly about the experiences that shaped them but also to those Jews who rarely get heard. So I set about interviewing a dozen people, including a social worker, Victoria Hart, as well as the Labour MP Margaret Hodge; a doctor, Tammy Rothenberg, as well as political journalist Stephen Bush; a painter and decorator, Phillip Abrahams, as well as the novelist Howard Jacobson; a former student leader, Hannah Rose, and an expert on antisemitism, Dave Rich, as well as Tracy-Ann herself.

The result is, I hope, a mix of stories and perspectives that will never have been heard before on the London stage. Among them is the first-hand testimony of an ultra-Orthodox Hasidic Jew, recalling the day he was violently beaten on an English street. Or the odyssey of Edwin Shuker, who fled to this country in 1971 as a refugee from Saddam Husseins Iraq. Or the former MP Luciana Berger giving the most complete account yet of the journey she made from young Labour idealist to the target of a daily onslaught of racist, misogynistic and mortally threatening abuse, before losing the job she lived and breathed and loved.

Of course, not everybody will be happy with the choice of interviewees. Some will expect a stage show to operate like a survey, representative of every corner of British Jewish opinion. But no play could do that. Besides, as Bush points out, there was much less disagreement among British Jews during those bruising years of 2015 to 2019 than you might have guessed, at least if TV discussion programmes were your guide. Again and again, two opposing Jews would be brought on to debate antisemitism on the left, as if Jews were split down the middle on the matter. In fact, polling evidence suggests a striking degree of unanimity: 86% of British Jews regarded Jeremy Corbyn as antisemitic, according to a Survation study in September 2018, with just 8% disagreeing. Purely as a matter of numbers, explains Bush, the positions of pro-Corbyn Jews were overcovered in that period. There was no need to repeat that mistake.

The 12 conversations yielded all kinds of surprises. I did not ask every interviewee the same questions, except one. I wanted each of them to tell me where their grandparents or great-grandparents came from. The answers Belarus, Ukraine, Lithuania, Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Holland, Russia, Iraq and more confirmed how much British Jewry remains a community of immigrants or the descendants of immigrants. When I put that question to Hodge, it elicited a family story that forms what might be one of the most moving passages in the play. After you have heard it, you will understand why Hodges father advised her always to keep a packed suitcase by the front door and you might shudder when you remember the way that formative experience of hers was mocked when she recalled it during an especially rancorous phase in Labours civil war.

I was also struck by how even those who did not have a direct connection to the Holocaust had been shaped by it. Rothenberg speaks of inherited trauma, and several of the others talked of the psychological mark that event had made on them, the way it had left them alert to signs of danger in ways that, they felt, the wider society including self-styled progressives barely understood.

Arresting too was the way even the historic, centuries-old motifs and themes of antisemitism intruded into these Jews daily, even intimate, lives. Take, as just one example, the musty myths that surround Jews and money. Hart recalled the day when a colleague, a proudly antiracist social worker, told of her reluctance to help a Jewish woman in need: this colleague was sure the woman concerned had money, but was hiding it. I know she must be lying because theyve all got money, she declared.

The stories kept coming: ideas about Jews that you would find in books of medieval history some of them nearly a thousand years old barging into the lives of Jews living in Britain in 2022. It soon became clear that an issue that was frequently debated on the pages of newspapers or in TV studios or on social media, often in the terms of an abstract, theoretical discussion about language and its resonances, was all too real and all too concrete for the people who were being talked about.

Eventually, I had 12 transcripts containing about 180,000 words in front of me. I read them and reread them, marking passages and noting the recurring themes among these 12 individuals. And though I had myself thought about this subject for many years, I gradually saw it with a new clarity, one that had come from listening to those dozen people.

Antisemites carry with them an imagined version of the Jew. It might be a renaissance painting of Judas Iscariot, his purse bulging with silver, or it could be the supposed string-pullers of the house of Rothschild. It might be Shakespeares miser Shylock or Dickens miser Fagin. It might be the alien lizards imagined by David Icke or the wicked manipulators of weather, wielding their Jewish space-laser, dreamed up by the Republican congresswoman Marjorie Taylor-Greene. It might even be a capitalist predator called Hershel Fink. The fantasies about Jews adapt to each age, and can find a home on the right and left. But the presence of these fantastical, diabolic Jews in the global imagination often embedded so deep in the culture that we hardly notice them is a constant.

And the impact is felt by real Jews trying to live real lives. Their fate is to be seen through a lens clouded by centuries of myth and imaginings, and as the stories told in this play illustrate, the consequences can be painful and even bloody.

For all that, the process of making this play has not been bleak. It felt very validating, Rothenberg told me, to be listened to and to know that someone, somewhere, is taking this very seriously. For Hart: Its been cathartic to speak openly about antisemitism. The people of the left have always been my people until suddenly they were not. And thats been a lot to carry. One member of the all-Jewish cast says she has found the whole project freeing.

Indeed, several have remarked on the novelty of working on a production where so many of those involved, behind the scenes as well as on stage, are fellow Jews where they are not the only one, where they dont need to be an ambassador for all the others. Ive almost not allowed myself to be Jewish, when acting, until now, says Turkish-born actor Hemi Yeroham. He also notes how seldom stories like his of non-Ashkenazi, non-European Jews get heard: Most Jewish theatre is around Ashkenazi culture. The Mizrachi or Sephardi part of the Jewish story is almost nonexistent. Now he is playing Shuker, a man who, like him, is from a Jewish community that endured for centuries, but whose experience is scarcely discussed.

For my part, I find two sources of optimism in this venture. The first begins with the fact that the British Jewish community for many years believed that, for its own safety, it ought to keep its collective head down. As we hear in the play, even now plenty of Jews hesitate before disclosing that they are Jewish, wary of the response: they think hard before doing so, weighing up the risks. Yet here is a group of 12 Jews who have been willing to speak frankly and very personally, sharing feelings many had long buried, and to do so in public. That is confirmation of a trend that was visible during that 2015-2019 period, when Jews chose to defend themselves loudly and proudly, breaking from a past of quietism and fear. Once even Jews themselves would only utter the word Jew in a whisper. Now it is up in lights.

It is there not solely because Jews were willing to speak, but because an institution once deemed closed to Jewish concerns was ready to listen. I dont know how many minds will be changed by this show, or how many barriers will come down. But the fact that in an era of polarisation, culture wars and unbridgeable divides, this show happened at all that might just be a cause for celebration.

Jews. In Their Own Words is now previewing at the Royal Court theatre, London

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 300 words to be considered for publication, email it to us at guardian.letters@theguardian.com

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Once even Jews would utter the word Jew in a whisper. Now it is up in lights - The Guardian

Just in time for the Jewish high holidays: The Book of Jewish Knowledge – Religion News Service

Posted By on September 21, 2022

The perfect Rosh Hashana gift

Featuring well-chosen primary sources, magnificent artwork and memorable infographics provides readers with a magnificent one-volume guide to Jewish history, teachings and practices. Jonathan Sarna, Brandeis University

A comprehensive 496page coffeetablestyle book exploring theteachings, observances, and history of Judaism.

What is Judaism? What does it mean to be a Jew? What is Judaisms message to the world?

The Book of Jewish Knowledge offers 1200 answers in 1200 voices, presenting the story of Judaism via the variety of media that capture the Jewish experience: a Biblical account, a traditional Jewish practice, a painting by a Jewish artist, a Midrashic parable, a Talmudic discourse, a historical document, a poignant photograph, a gefilte fish recipe, a prayer from Psalms, a Scriptural aphorism, a Halachic (Jewish law) responsum, a Kabbalistic diagram, a philosophical essay, a 12th-century travelogue. Collectively, these present the reader with an encyclopedic overview of Jewish history, an in-depth examination of four millennia of Jewish wisdom, and an intimate tour of Jewish traditions and observances. This groundbreaking volume surveys the full scope of Jewish teaching and Jewish life, while also doing justice to the depth and beauty of Judaism. Whether this is your first book on Judaism, or if you are approaching it with a lifetime of learning and engagement, you are sure to gain a new appreciation of the range and grandeur of Jewish knowledge and experience.

The Book of Jewish Knowledge consists of five sections: Jewish History, Jewish Teaching, Jewish Practice, The Jewish Year and Lifecycle Milestones

These sections are further divided into 160 sub-sections and topics (e.g., The First Jews, The Exodus, Business Ethics, The Synagogue, Shabbat, The Passover Seder, Education, Marriage, etc. )

Contains a short biographical description of each of the 225 personalities and works cited in the book. There are works from over 100 artists and photographers and 78 full-color graphs, tables and maps.

The book can be ordered here.

The Rohr Jewish Learning Institute (JLI)

Serving learning centers in over 2,000 communities and on the internet JLI is the worlds preeminent provider of adult education. JLIs mission is to make Jewish learning accessible and personally meaningful to every Jew, regardless of background or affiliation. JLIs insightful curricula utilizes cutting-edge pedagogic techniques, embracing the multiple intelligence model and utilizing multimedia and an array of approaches to engage, educate, and inspire all kinds of minds in a dynamic Jewish learning experience. The courses are translated into nine languages, offer continuing educational credits for multiple professions and are taught by JLI trained and certified instructors.

The Book of Jewish Knowledge, Publisher.: The Rohr Jewish Learning Institute, Publication date: Sept. 30, 2022 496 pgs., Reg. Ed., $79 ISBN: 978-1-63668-011-8 Slipcase Gift Ed. $99 ISBN: 978-1-63668-012-5 Editor in Chief: Rabbi Yanki Tauber, Creative Director / Designer: Baruch Gorkin

Endorsements

The Book of Jewish Knowledge is a stellar achievement. It makes available an ambitiously broad, almost dizzying, array of subjects, representing Jewish knowledge and civilization in the widest sense. Its choices are judicious, and its presentations are balanced. Most importantly, its combination of scholarly and traditional discussions and sources provide an invaluable treasure of Judaism to all, irrespective of background and affiliation.

Rabbi Professor Jeffrey R. Woolf

BAR ILAN UNIVERSITY, RAMAT GAN, ISRAEL

Featuring well-chosen primary sources, magnificent artwork, and memorable infographics, JLIs Book of Jewish Knowledge provides readers with a magnificent one-volume guide to Jewish history, teachings, and practices.

Jonathan D. Sarna

PROFESSOR OF AMERICAN JEWISH HISTORY

BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY

A beautifully written and illustrated presentation of Judaism, its traditions, history, and way of life.

Lawrence H. Schiffman

PROFESSOR OF HEBREW AND JUDAIC STUDIES, NYU

The Book of Jewish Knowledge attempts the impossible, and does it remarkably well! While no single volume can fully capture or convey the wisdom of the Jewish Peoples eternal story, this book is a wonderful way to enter that story, with insight, pride, and genuine love of G-d, Torah, and the Jewish People.

Rabbi Brad Hirschfield

PRESIDENT OF THE NATIONAL JEWISH CENTER

FOR LEARNING AND LEADERSHIP

###

Contact:Stuart SchneeStuart Schnee PR1-973-796-2753[emailprotected]

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Religion News Service or Religion News Foundation.

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Just in time for the Jewish high holidays: The Book of Jewish Knowledge - Religion News Service

Study exposes the continuing rise of Jew-hatred on Twitter – JNS.org

Posted By on September 21, 2022

(September 18, 2022 / JNS) Between 2019 and 2020, more than two million Twitter posts regarding Jews or Israel were anti-Semitic, according to a study from the Institute for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism (ISCA) at Indiana University.

In 2019, 849,253 tweets6.9 percent of all conversations about Jews on Twitterwere anti-Semitic. That proportion rose in 2020 to 10.7 percent, meaning 1,531,912 anti-Semitic tweets were posted, 4,197 per day or one every 20 seconds, in conversations that include the word Jews.

ISCA said the content was mostly related to conspiracy theories about Jewish world domination, the Middle East conflict and the Holocaust

We need to do more research to identify the sources of anti-Semitic propaganda. Some of it comes from neo-Nazi groups, anti-Zionist organizations and Iranian-sponsored activities, the institute said.

Denying the Jewish people a right to self-determination was also a common theme found by ISCA in anti-Semitic Twitter conversations about Jews and Israel. The words Palestinian and apartheid were often in the Twitter conversations.

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ISCA said instances of such content increased from 2019 to 2020 despite claims from Twitter that they were cracking down on anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial.

Social media has become the largest medium for anti-Semitic narratives, which can radicalize individuals and lead to violence, and push Jews out of these spaces, the researchers explained in the report. We plan to continue increasing the size of the dataset and the variety of content within it so that it can serve as a gold standard for automated detection of anti-Semitic tweets The results contribute to our understanding of online hate speech against Jews.

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Study exposes the continuing rise of Jew-hatred on Twitter - JNS.org

This Professor Accused CUNY of Anti-Semitism. It Hired an Anti-Israel Official To Investigate. – Washington Free Beacon

Posted By on September 21, 2022

When professor Jeffrey Lax reported pervasive discrimination against Jews, including harassment of Jewish faculty members like himself, the City University of New York placed the investigation in the lap of Saly Abd Alla, an official in the school's discrimination office but hardly an ally of the Jewish people.

Abd Alla came to CUNY from the Council on American-Islamic Relations, where she worked as a civil rights director alongside officials who have promoted anti-Israel agitprop and defended Jew-hating terror groups including Hamas.

CUNYs decision to appoint Abd Alla to the case has sparked fierce backlash in the pro-Israel community, with critics saying it is not possible for a former CAIR official to fairly adjudicate claims of anti-Semitism. The selection comes amid a rising tide of anti-Semitic incidents on Americas college campus, some of which has sparked unprecedented investigations by the Department of Education. This includes Jewish students allegedly being booted from a group for sexual assault survivors at the University of Vermont and similar incidents at the University of Southern California in which students were cyber bullied for publicly expressing their Jewish and pro-Israel identities.

Lax, a professor at CUNYs Kingsborough Community College, says in his complaint that CUNYs leadership, including Kingsborough president Claudia Schrader, failed to act on the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commissions recent confirmation of pervasive discrimination against Jews on CUNYs campus. Pro-Israel faculty members and those who identify as Zionist have repeatedly reported being targeted for their beliefs.

"Can you imagine if a college had assigned David Duke to investigate discrimination against black people? That is the equivalent of what this is," Lax told Newsmax on Monday. "This has been a cancer at CUNY for a long time, the anti-Semitism."

The Anti-Defamation League reports that CAIRs leadership uses "inflammatory anti-Zionist rhetoric that on a number of occasions has veered into antisemitic tropes related to Jewish influence over the media or political affairs, or has descended into the vilification of Zionists, which includes the majority of American Jews."

"Antipathy towards Israel," the ADL says, "has been a CAIR staple since the group was founded in 1994." This includes "CAIR Executive Director Nihad Awads repeated statements in support of Hamas."

Lax, in information provided to the Free Beacon, said he was first contacted by Abd Alla earlier this month and informed she would be handling his discrimination case.

Lax responded to Abd Alla in an email outlining his concerns about her relationship with CAIR and its support for anti-Semitic causes like the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement, which wages economic warfare on Israel.

"Central to my claim is that I am being discriminated against and retaliated against because I am a Zionist Jew," Lax wrote. "I want to be very open, and transparent from the very beginning about a concern that I have: I notice that you are the former Civil Rights Director of CAIR MN. As you know, CAIR is an aggressive anti-Zionist movementand avocal supporter of BDS. CAIR has also lobbied against the existence of the100-year-oldJewish Civil Rights organizationthe Anti-Defamation League (ADL) andhas supported and defended comments from Ilhan Omar and Linda Sarsour that most Jews believe to be deeply antisemitic."

Lax questioned whether Abd Alla "could investigate such claims without bias."

Lax says that Abd Alla has yet to respond to this Sept. 12 email. He also wrote to Abd Allas supervisor, vice chancellor Doriane Gloria, asking for a response. Gloria told him last week that she had received his message and would respond this week, though that has yet to come, according to Lax.

A CUNY spokesman told the Free Beacon that Abd Alla will have no problem fairly investigating Laxs claims of anti-Semitism.

"CUNY is committed to cultivating a diverse and inclusive community, free from antisemitism and all forms of hate, and safe for all individuals," the spokesman said."All CUNY chief diversity officers are professionals and trained to ensure the university and its campuses comply with workplace rules and carry out when needed fair and impartial investigations of workplace discrimination."

The Simon Wiesenthal Center, a group that combats anti-Semitism, lashed out at CUNY on Twitter, accusing the school of losing its moral compass.

"CUNY hire[d] someone from CAIR to investigate anti-Semitism [and] anti-Zionist?" the center tweeted. "CAIR officials have mainstreamed Jew-hatred. CUNY has lost its moral compass."

CAIR was listed by the Wiesenthal Center as one of its top 10 promoters of anti-Semitism as recently as 2021.

Inna Vernikov, Republican minority whip on the New York City Council, also criticized CUNY's decision. "CUNY assigning a former CAIRNational rep to investigate allegations of Antisemitism, is like asking a sexual abuser to investigate the sexual harassment/rape allegations of a victim of such abuse," she tweeted.

Rep. Lee Zeldin (R., N.Y.) said in a statement Tuesday that CUNY is guilty of displaying "disgusting antipathy for the students, faculty, and staff who have been the victims of antisemitism on campus."

"This is just the latest example," Zeldin said. "If you are appointing someone who held a leadership role in a known antisemitic organization to lead an investigation into antisemitism, there may as well not be an investigation at all. Through its words and actions, the schools leadership has allowed and encouraged an environment where Jewish students, faculty, and staff do not feel valued and often feel outright attacked."

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This Professor Accused CUNY of Anti-Semitism. It Hired an Anti-Israel Official To Investigate. - Washington Free Beacon

Michael Twitty explores intersection of Jewish and Black food in newest book – Southern Kitchen

Posted By on September 21, 2022

"'Koshersoul: The Faith and Food Journey of an African American Jew,' is recovery food," writes Michael Twitty in the preface to his latest book. That book, written during the post-Obama years, was meant as a balm for high political tensions, for the seemingly never-ending culture wars.

"Each twenty-four-hour media cycle saw an uptick of red-meat policies to punish marginalized, oppressed, and outlier communities," wrote Twitty, who is Black, Jewish, gay and an immensely talented writer.

"Koshersoul" tells the story of the Jewish and African diasporas and the cultural melding those forced journeys created. Many of those enduring food traditions serve as a reminder that the hope of a celebratory meal was sometimes a matter of survival. "That they, and we, have all survived yet again is another testimony to whatever magic lies in our traditions," Twitty writes.

This interview has been edited for length.

Southern Kitchen: Can you give some perspective on how large the intersection of Black and Jewish food is?

These two diasporas have made it to every inhabitable continent, by choice or by force. Not only that, lived in some of the same countries at the same times, and therefore have had to deal with being outsiders in those cultures. If you are people who are in exile, people who are othered, your food has to strengthen your identity. Your food has to tell stories about where your people came from. Your food has to be a form of resistance. And both African-Atlantic and Jewish foodways are part of that.

Both of these cultures are also extremely absorbent. They know how to bring other cultural and culinary elements in and make them part of the culture in such a way that you don't know when the other begins and where ours ends.

At some point in time, you had African Americans in the Deep South who cooked in the homes of Jews, particularly Ashkenazi Jews, who eagerly wanted the cooking to be fused together because assimilation was very important. It was also very fairly cordial. It was a coming together and having dialogue. A lot of the Jewish families that I interviewed in the Deep South had very positive associations and did not think that their way of eating okra soup, red rice, fried chicken, challah that was made to pull apart like biscuits, black eyed pea kishka, matzo ball gumbo, they did not think this was weird. They, in fact, thought that the deli food from New York was exotic.

What moments in recent history inspired you to write this book?

I spent the last full year working on this project waking up to synagogue shootings and harm done to my people in everyday life, in situations that didn't need to be escalated. And also strife between the two communities because now we've injected a certain type of old school American cross-ethnic, cross-people competition, you know, distrust in allyship.

On the other side of things, I've recently encountered, in trying to call for dialogue, some people just like, "Nope, you're offering an olive branch." And I'm like, conversation is not surrender.

These projects that I do, "The Cooking Gene," "Koshersoul," and others to come in the future, they're really about trying to create informed conversations that put us in a better place. The bottom line is, between the pandemic, between the political scene, between so many other elements, we really had a huge setback as a society, and I think we need to come to grips with it. So "Koshersoul" to me is the chicken soup, the recovery meal, after the hangover.

I think collectively the world needs therapy. And particularly American culture, we're really bad at reckoning with what has happened to us on an emotional level.

When we talk about food bringing us together, we have to be about the work of actually having people understand why they have the food, who and where the food comes from, and having empathy and compassion.

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I remember many years ago, I learned about the Conflict Kitchen in Pittsburgh, about how they would use the food of North Korea or Iran or other places to teach that the people there are human beings. They have children; they have lives. I try to use food the same way, to remind people that Black and Jewish foodways and stories, together or apart, do communicate the heritage, the stories and the history and, because they do, you have an amazing opportunity.

I was very intrigued by the parallels between Yiddish kitchen rituals and West African kitchen rituals. Can you talk more about that?

I was thinking of chopping and beating. There's this whole soundtrack to the kitchen and how they operate them, and also the sensibility of spirit in the kitchen. (In Yiddishkeit), there are prayers that you say over certain foods, because those foods have a spiritual and religious importance. The idea that in the old school Black kitchens, and even still to this day, the idea that by singing a spiritual or hymn, that helps you time the food. So there is a sonic, aural and tactile part of magic that goes into making these foods with the explicit idea that these things are there to benefit the family, to strengthen the family's resolve to get up another day.

People can't forget for these two communities, one day they got up and it was the Holocaust. One day they got up and it was Red Summer. One day they got up and it was enslavement. One day they got up and it was another battle for civil rights or for equality, freedom of religion, all of that. So, I mean, I come from survivors.

What else do you want people to know about the book?

It's so important to support authors like myself if you want if you like stories like this, if you want people to read about these outlier stories and food and get these recipes, you got to support it. Please buy this book, buy it for friends. Remind your library to buy a copy. It's so important when a book first comes out to put your full love and support behind it. Because it's the time period when publishers and other people are looking at what's selling. And that's not just for the wallet. That is for the sake of knowledge in general. Because if it's a proven success, it means that other people's projects and work will be invested in that will tell more stories that people don't get to hear.

Green beans are significant in both African American and Jewish foodways. Seasonally, they make a welcome addition to the table as a side dish. Classic Southern dishes are green beans cooked with smoked meat or potatoes, or they can flavor stews like the Sephardic dish fassoulia, where meat, onions and green beans make a meal.

This green bean salad works well for Shabbat and holidays, when cooking isnt an option. Here, roasted or steamed green beans treated with acids and oils work together to make it a more palatable vegetable when chilled for a day or two.

Serves 46

1 pounds fresh green beans, snapped and trimmed1 teaspoon sea salt2 quarts water1 bowl ice water

Dressing and Garnish4 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil4 tablespoons fresh lemon juice teaspoon kosher salt2 cloves garlic, sliced into thin slivers2 tablespoons fresh, roughly chopped flat-leaf parsley2 tablespoons thinly sliced scallions teaspoon organic sugar (optional)4 tablespoons total cubed red, yellow and orange bell peppers (use a bag of baby bells, if possible)

Place green beans in a large pot of boiling water well seasoned with sea salt.

Cook 5 minutes, then immediately drain in a colander and plunge into the ice bath until the beans are just barely warm.

Prepare the dressing while the green beans are in the ice bath. In a small bowl, whisk together the olive oil, lemon juice, salt, garlic, parsley, scallions and optional sugar. Place the green beans in a nonreactive mixing bowl, add the chopped peppers, splash on the dressing, mix well for a minute or two, and then allow the green beans to marinate in the dressing for an hour or so. Toss well before serving.

Variation: Instead of lemon juice, use balsamic vinegar.

Mackensy Lunsford is the food and culture storyteller for USA TODAY Network's South region and the editor of Southern Kitchen.

Reach me: mlunsford@southernkitchen.com

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Michael Twitty explores intersection of Jewish and Black food in newest book - Southern Kitchen

NY mayor says federal intervention welcome to help fight hate crimes against Jews – JNS.org

Posted By on September 21, 2022

(September 20, 2022 / JNS) New York Mayor Eric Adams said Monday that he would welcome federal intervention to help fight the citys wave of anti-Semitic hate crimes.

Adams held a roundtable discussion at City Hall with a number of Jewish media outlets. He addressed the citys broken justice system, caused by recent state legislation whereby perpetrators of hate crimes, along with most other felonies and misdemeanors, are quickly released after arrest without the need to post bail.

Last week, Congressman Ritchie Torres, a Democrat representing the Bronx, wrote to the U.S. Department of Justice asking it to investigate what he called New York Citys failure to prosecute anti-Semitic hate crimes.

We do need federal assistance. I would love for the federal government to come in and look at some of these hate crime casesand gun casesbecause federal prosecutions can circumvent some of the laws that are on the books now, Adams told JNS in response to a query about Torress letter.

Weve had a meeting with both the Eastern District and Southern District [U.S. Attorneys Offices] to talk with them about it. We believe that theres going to be some opportunities to get them engaged. The new head of the ATF [the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives] has been extremely helpful, the mayor said, referring to Steve Dettlebach, a Jew who took over the ATF in July.

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Adams pointed to the need for help from a variety of sectors, both within government and outside it.

Im always honest about the help we need. I need my judges to hold people in jail. I need my prosecutors to prosecute cases. And I need my lawmakers to stop making some of these laws that are really allowing dangerous people to continue to do dangerous things in our city, said Adams.

He noted the assistance the New York Police Department has been receiving from community patrol organizations, including those in Jewish communities throughout the city.

[The Jewish] community, you have been amazing around the safety patrols. We want to duplicate that. I dont know of another community that has done it as well as you have, he said. We want to now have other communities build those infrastructures, because the more the good guys and ladies are on the street, the more the bad guys are going to be detected.

Adams built strong ties to the citys Jewish community during his work as a police captain, a state senator in the heavily-Jewish Crown Heights neighborhood and as Brooklyn borough president. He secured the largest number of endorsements from haredi communities in his run for mayor.

Notably, Adams named three Orthodox Jewish officials to his senior staff. Political activist Joel Eisdorfer is a senior adviser, while veteran political consultant Menashe Shapiro is Adamss deputy chief of staff. Fred Kreizman, who served as deputy commissioner for community outreach in the administration of former Mayor Michael Bloomberg, now oversees the citys community affairs unit as commissioner.

New York Mayor Eric Adam speaks to the press, Sept. 19, 2022. Source: Twitter.

Adams encouraged the journalists in attendance, almost all of whom represented the visibly Jewish Orthodox communities under attack, to deliver a message to their leadership that they need to use their power as a substantial voting bloc to pressure lawmakers.

I believe you need to send a clear message to those who are making these laws that this is not acceptable. We have turned into a country that spends all our energy on protecting people who commit crimes. What about the people who are the victims of crimes? the mayor asked.

All the laws that are passed are based on making sure we protect those who are doing the crime. And so, lift your voices, write the district attorney, write the lawmakers, your city council person, and ask them where do you stand on these issues, Adams advised, while encouraging the Jewish media to continue writing about what he decried as a broken criminal justice system.

Members of his staff, including Eisdorfer, were recently in Israel for a series of meetings, in part to lay the groundwork for Adamss first visit as mayor. While he didnt reveal on Monday when he intends to travel to the Jewish state, he told JNS that the relationship between the city and Israel is strong.

I look forward to my next trip to Israel. I have enjoyed every time I go to Israel and I learn something new, said Adams, whose office helped to launch a climate tech center in his city in conjunction with Jerusalem Venture Partners. We have been working closely with Israel-based tech companies and there are great ideas coming from Israel that were looking to incorporate here in the city.

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NY mayor says federal intervention welcome to help fight hate crimes against Jews - JNS.org

Guest columnist Eliyho Matz: Two gentiles, two Jews and Roosevelt A response to Ken Burns’ ‘The U.S. and the Holocaust’ – GazetteNET

Posted By on September 21, 2022

The massacre of European Jews occurred during World War II in Europe. To historians, the question has always been, how was this possible? And more important, from an American perspective, it is: What was Americas response to that event?

When I arrived at the University of Massachusetts in the mid-1970s, I found an answer. My history professor David S. Wyman, himself a gentile, was busily engaged in trying to figure out and analyze the American response to the Nazi extermination of European Jewry between 1942 and 1945. His project had begun at least 10 years earlier, and in the end it took 16 years to complete, culminating in his book The Abandonment of the Jews in 1984. I was his research assistant in this project for its final seven years.

Under Wyman, our investigation was to figure out and focus on an examination of the American government response. From the outset for me, the question was did President Roosevelt understand the Holocaust: What did FDR know, and when did he know? When I questioned Wyman on this, his response to me was that, to date, he had not found any document to pinpoint an answer.

So I did my work; my job was set out for me. Ultimately I did find the document I had sought, which I published in the magazine Midstream in September 1980. That document consequently became a major factor in Wymans book, and resulted in his being very critical of Roosevelt and very critical of the FDR administration response to the Holocaust.

On Dec. 8, 1942, at a meeting in the White House with a group of prominent American Jewish leaders, President Roosevelt told this Jewish leadership, in the White House, the details of the Holocaust. However, his words were left there, and over the next years it became tragically apparent that he would choose not to lift a finger to do something, to respond or take any direct action.

To my mind, two quintessential issues immediately arise. First, what were Roosevelts sources? Second, why did Roosevelt prefer not to act? These two issues have been gnawing at me for the past 45 years. As of yet, I have not seen a single historian who has dealt with these two issues.

Ever since Wymans book The Abandonment of the Jews appeared in 1984, American historians have had to deal with Wymans accusations. Most American historians did not really know what to do with such a book, so they started criticizing it.

Now fast-forward to September 2022; we have another gentile, a well-known film maker, who is presenting to America his twisted, distorted and unhistorical version of the Holocaust. Contrary to Burns presentation, the history of Americas response to the Holocaust is not an issue of responding to a refugee crisis or to antisemitism; rather, it is and should be about the response of the FDR administration to the knowledge and facts of the massacre of European Jews, which was clearly known to them from the middle of 1942. The American response to the Holocaust is complex and multi-layered.

There were two prominent Jewish figures, both mentioned by Burns, who were involved in this American response: a Reform rabbi, Stephen Wise; and an ardent Zionist and freedom-fighter, a Jew from British Palestine named Hillel Kook, better known in America as Peter Bergson.

Both these men were complex individuals. During the Holocaust, Rabbi Wise, shadowing FDR, worked hard to convince Americas Jews that the solution to the ongoing massacre of European Jewry was the future Jewish state after the defeat of Nazi Germany. In contrast, Peter Bergson worked to convince Americans and the Roosevelt administration that America needed to respond to the Holocaust and to take immediate, direct action to save Jews first and declare Israeli independence afterward. I know this from personal experience, as I worked for Bergson for 10 years.

Are Americas historians, Holocaust museums and current American Jewish leaders embarrassed over the American response to the Holocaust, causing them such confusion and frustration that they are unable to deal with this subject fully and honestly? I have to wonder. Such seems to be the case with the upcoming PBS presentation of the Ken Burns Potemkin documentary.

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Guest columnist Eliyho Matz: Two gentiles, two Jews and Roosevelt A response to Ken Burns' 'The U.S. and the Holocaust' - GazetteNET

Return of the Love Rabbi: Netflix has already expressed interested in a reality show based on new Montreal film – The Suburban Newspaper

Posted By on September 21, 2022

On Netflix I have thoroughly enjoyed the first two seasons of Indian Matchmaking, a standout reality show. Many times I wondered when a Jewish matchmaking version would debut.

Well, Director Evan Beloff has come very close with Meet, Pray Love: The Return of the Love Rabbi, which premiered Sept. 18 at the Rohr Chabad of NDG. It will be on CBC this Saturday, Sept. 24 (8 pm) and streaming on CBC Gem.

Watch the trailer.

I got an advance copy and enjoyed every minute of it. In fact, I watched it multiple times. Rabbi Yisroel Bernath of the Rohr Chabad NDG is the veritable star, along with four singles looking for love:

The ever so charismatic Cantor Daniel Benlolo plays the role of a commentator.

As Beloff notes, this is not a reality show about love; this is the reality!

But this is very much like a reality show. The people at Netflix were so impressed they did in fact offer Rabbi Bernath an opportunity to be part of their planned Jewish Matchmaking Show. He declined.

In this documentary, Evan did not stage any scenes, Rabbi Bernath said. Nothing is forced. It is real and authentic. That is not how Netflix works. I am a rabbi, not an actor. I have too much integrity to let a network create a script for something like this.

I told the rabbi and Beloff how I finished watching this 43 minute documentary wanting to see more. They may approach Bell Medias Crave TV. There is also the possibility of a web-based series like YidLife Crisis or an expanded version for festivals.

The scenario stems from COVID-19 having upended the dating scene, whereas social interaction, love and dating were brought to a standstill. Stuck in forced hibernation, stress and uncertainty only compounded the loneliness of isolation. Enter Rabbi Bernath, better known as Montreals Love Rabbi and a renowned matchmaker. Recently liberated from a quarantine after contracting coronavirus (in April of 2020), Rabbi Bernath has a new drive for online matchmaking for anybody whos interested. After all, during a pandemic is the perfect opportunity for singles to meet, without having to worry about the physical aspects!

Rabbi Bernath is faced with singles who test his mettle as a matchmaker, shake his idea of love and challenge his faith in humanity. Fast forward to when couples can meet again in person; its time for the matchmaker to meet his match. Return of the Love Rabbi focuses on Rabbi Bernaths innovative efforts to connect the unmarried on their quest for love. Beginning during the pandemic with Zoom dating and progressing over time as vaccinated singles hit the dating trail again, this offbeat documentary tells the story of one mans efforts to show the world its possible to fall in love not despite the pandemic, but because of it.

So how did Beloff find these four people? Rabbi Bernath runs J Montreal, a matchingmaking site for Jewish singles. Almost three years ago, when this project began, he sent a message to the nearly 3,000 Montrealers registered to indicate if they might be interested in being part of the documentary. Of those who came forward, Beloff finally narrowed the list down to four.

While each of the four individuals profiled are just fantastic, Jonathan and Rachel both stand out. I know them both. It is absolutely hard to believe that Jonathans bits are not scripted for the young man is completely off the wall. Ditto for his mom. Scenes with him recorded at the Orange Julep had me choking with laughter. Rachel has worked with me for years saving homeless cats. She is always fabulous to speak to, so charismatic and funny. That comes through loud and clear in her scenes.

The Torah strictly forbids homosexual sex, and orthodox rabbis have consistently upheld that prohibition through the ages. When Beloff asked the rabbi to film a scene with Natalie, the rabbi had no idea she was seeking a same sex relationship. In fact, he only discovered this when he saw the final product. Labels are for shirts, he says. I do not look at anyone differently for what they do at home. Would I set up a same sex couple? No! Can I accept Natalies choice? Absolutely!

When we meet Faigy, one wonders why there is not a lineup of men at her door. The 30ish young lady has a bubbly smile, infectious smile and seems ready to meet her match. We see her marveling at her change from curly to straight hair.

Jonathan, says Beloff, was a filmmaker's dream.

Added the rabbi: From the talks myself and Evan had with Jonathan, you cant imagine what we did not put on!

And Jonathan had already been profiled in a 2018 film on CBC with Rabbi Bernath called Kosher Love: How Do Young Jews Marry With Modern Life? You can watch it all here.

For more details on the Love Rabbi log on to https://loverabbimovie.com/ or http://www.theloverabbi.com.

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Return of the Love Rabbi: Netflix has already expressed interested in a reality show based on new Montreal film - The Suburban Newspaper


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