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Yom HaShoah: The value of memory

Posted By on April 23, 2014

Yad Vashem Hall of Names. Photo by David Shankbone

In the Torah, God is constantly remembering, and that remembering is followed by action. God remembers Noah and then stops the flood. God remembers the Israelites and then frees them from bondage. When we speak about the Sabbath, we say Shamor vzachor bdibur echad, that the commandments to guard and to remember the Sabbath were spoken in one Divine utterance. For God, they are two sides of one coin.

As we prepare to mark Holocaust Remembrance Day on April 28, its worth asking: What is the relationship between memory and action for us today?

Following Gods example, the rabbis teach in the Ethics of the Fathers that study should ideally lead to action, not just more teaching. Elsewhere in the Talmud, they say study that leads to action is greater than action alone.

Surely we can understand why active memory or study might be preferable to memory or study followed by inaction. But why did God so often model the behavior of remembering and then acting? And why should the rabbis have preferred action preceded by study to action alone?

In the case of the Holocaust and other tragic episodes in Jewish history, one could argue that we dont have a choice but to recall our painful past. Psychologists suggest that trauma lasts for seven generations, and if so, Jewish parents, in this generation as in previous ones, must give their children the intellectual and spiritual tools to make sense of this trauma and to understand our history. Further, when action is done with a deep foundation of memory, we can create layers of meaning that generates real transformational and systemic change.

Indeed, this seems to be understood in the American-Jewish community. In the recent Pew Research Center survey, the most common answer given for what it means to be Jewish was remembering the Holocaust (73 percent) followed by leading an ethical life (69 percent) and working for justice and equality (56 percent). For American Jews, remembering our tragic past and remolding a brighter future are the core priorities.

And now theres evidence to suggest that those two elements of what it means to be Jewish are connected, and that studying or remembering, particularly as a group, can make all the members of that group more committed to collective action. In a recent study published in the Journal of Moral Education, James Youniss found that, more than the development of reasoned arguments, community identity built around a common religious and civic sense of democracy accounted for the willing participation of morally conventional citizens in civic participation and service.

In spiritual activism, we remember our collective traumas and glories and we invoke them to refine our work. When we are triumphant, we must humble ourselves as we know we have lows to come. When we fail, we must raise our heads high as we know we will climb from this rut as well.

It is why I am inspired by one of my rabbinic colleagues, a social justice leader, who just spent a week meditating on the railroad tracks at the entrance of Auschwitz, because he felt that until he really internalized and processed the pain, anger and confusion in his heart, he could not be a proper activist.

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Yom HaShoah: The value of memory

Synagogue in Nikolaev, Ukraine – firebomb – Video

Posted By on April 23, 2014


Synagogue in Nikolaev, Ukraine - firebomb

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Synagogue in Nikolaev, Ukraine - firebomb - Video

Tampa Conservative synagogue Mekor Shalom celebrates move to new space

Posted By on April 23, 2014

Nearly 100 people of all ages filled Mekor Shalom for an event to celebrate new space for Mekor Shalom in Carrollwood.

The Hanukkat Habayit, Hebrew for dedication of sacred space, was attended by members of the Tampa Conservative synagogue as well as members of the local community.

It is incredible to think that only about eight months ago we began our congregational path toward a shul premised on two things: connection with one another; and welcoming and valuing each person for who he or she is, rather than how much they pay in dues, synagogue Board of Trustees president Chris Shulman said. These values are felt at every Shabbat service or Holiday Observance, through the warm words and inclusive practices of our Founding Spiritual Leader, Hazzan Jodi Sered-Lever, through the onegs and Kiddush luncheons thoughtfully prepared and provided by congregants, through the warmth of friends gathered together to worship, and through the kind laughter we hear when the kids attend religious school.

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These values are also expressed in our adoption of a Voluntary Financial Commitment the first shul to do so in Tampa Bay where each person or family gives as they believe they are able to afford.

At the event, Shulman introduced Hillsborough County District 2 Commissioner Victor Crist, who offered inspirational remarks and embraced Tampas newest Conservative Jewish congregation as part of the vibrant, growing area.

Sered-Lever led a brief but meaningful service characteristic of the warm and inviting environment that has already drawn over 70 households to the shul in under a year. Board Vice President Susan Marlow offered the blessing and fulfilled the mitzvah of affixing the mezuzah to the entrance of the sanctuary. Afterward, congregants and guests enjoyed a delicious meal in the atrium while socializing.

This type of environment is exactly why we joined. This is a place where people give what they can. People are here because they want to be; the sense of community is palpable, said Mekor Shalom member Dr. Amanda Smith, who attended with her husband and two daughters.

Shulman added, This congregation has answered the call. Through financial contributions and in-kind donations of religious items, office equipment and supplies, beautiful works of art, and, most of all, congregants time and services, Mekor Shalom is thriving.

For more information about Tampas Conservative synagogue Mekor Shalom, please visit http://www.mekorshalom.org or call 813-963-1818.

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Tampa Conservative synagogue Mekor Shalom celebrates move to new space

Jewish genetic testing offered

Posted By on April 23, 2014

Photo via shutterstock.com

Tammy Rubin wasnt thrilled at the prospect of getting blood drawn by a phlebotomist. At least there was apple juice and the prospect of life-changing knowledge afterward.

The UCLA junior was sitting at a table outside of the campus Kerckhoff Hall on April 9, where the Los Angeles Jewish Genetic Disease Prevention Project and Progenity lab offered genetic screenings for both Ashkenazic and Sephardic Jews.

It was so easy, so fun well, less fun about the shot stuff but all the phlebotomists were there cheering you on, Rubin said.

The event was in coordination with Hillel at UCLA and GeneTestNow (genetestnow.com), an organization encouraging Jews to undergo genetic screening before starting a family. The latter is an initiative of the Doris Factor Endowment Fund of the Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles and supported in part by TRIBE Media Corp., parent company of the Jewish Journal.

The same event was held a day earlier at Hillel at USC. Together, the two-day project attracted nearly 100 people, according to one of Progenitys project leaders. Participants will receive their test results offered for $25 to those with insurance after a few weeks.

Through tests like these, people can learn which genetic diseases they carry, even though they do not show its traits or symptoms. Because most Jewish genetic diseases are recessive, both parents need to be a carrier for a disease to impact the health of a child.

The discomfort of getting blood drawn, Rubin said, was more than worth it when considering the risks of not knowing whether she has the recessive genes carried by many Jews.

For Ashkenazim with roots in Central and Eastern Europe, that could mean one of 19 genetic diseases. Not just high-profile ones like Tay-Sachs disease, but also lesser-known illnesses like nemaline myopathy, a muscle disorder, and Canavan disease, a progressive, fatal neurological disease.

Debby Hirshman, a consultant who traveled from New York to help organize the events, recalled meeting a Jewish couple in Atlanta who were tragically impacted by not having a genetic test done that was comprehensive enough.

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Jewish genetic testing offered

5 Hasidic Men Indicted In Beating Of Man In Williamsburg

Posted By on April 23, 2014

TRI-STATE NEWS HEADLINES

From our newsroom to your inbox weekday mornings at 9AM.

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) Five Hasidic men are facing gang-related charges in the vicious beating of a man in Brooklyn.

As CBS 2s Lou Young reported, the members of a Jewish safety patrol in Williamsburg are accused of stopping then attacking Taj Patterson as he walked through the neighborhood on Dec. 1.

Patterson, 23, underwent surgery to his right eye to repair the damage from the assault. In an attack with racial overtones, the black victim said he was chased, held, kicked and beaten.

As1010 WINS Roger Stern reported, the fashion student saidthe men assaulted him while shouting anti-gay slurs.

Indicted Wednesday for gang assault and other serious felonies were Abraham Winkler, 39; Aharon Hollander, 28; Mayer Herskovic, 21; Joseph Fried, 25; and Pinchas Braver, 19.

The case was able to move forward Wednesday when two of the men returned from overseas, where they apparently fled to avoid prosecution, Young reported.

The suspects said at the time of the incident they were looking for vandals who were damaging cars, but there was no evidence of vandalism the night of the attack, Young reported. No one called 911 until after theconfrontationwas underway. The assailants fled when witnesses began to take photos of the beating.

NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton said the indictment sent a clear message that acts of vigilantism are unacceptable, Stern reported.

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5 Hasidic Men Indicted In Beating Of Man In Williamsburg

Five Hasidic Jews Arrested for Williamsburg Attack on Gay Man

Posted By on April 23, 2014

Taj Patterson after the attack.

The NYPD has arrested five Hasidic men in connection with the beating of a gay black man in Williamsburg last December. The attack, which was initially investigated as a hate crime, took place on Flushing Avenue at around 5 a.m., when 23-year-old Taj Patterson was walking around after a night out. Patterson says he found himself surrounded by over a dozen men, some of whom were members of the Shomrim, a neighborhood patrol made up of Hasidic volunteers. The group claims to have been investigating reports that Patterson was seen vandalizing cars, which turned out to be untrue. But, when Patterson tried to get away from them, they restrained, kicked, and punched him while shouting anti-gay slurs, including "stay down, f----t."

The assault ended once the attackers noticed that witnesses, including a bus driver who pulled over to help Patterson, were taking photos. He ended up at Woodhull with a broken eye socket, a torn retina, blood clotting, and an array of minor injuries. The suspects 19-year-old Pinchas Braver, 29-year-old Abraham Winkler, 28-year-old Aharon Hollender, 25-year-old Joseph Fried, and 21-year-old Mayer Herskovic have been indicted on gang assault charges. They face up to 25 years in prison if convicted. According to WABC, the NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force tracked some of them down in Israel, where they had fled after the attack.

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Five Hasidic Jews Arrested for Williamsburg Attack on Gay Man

Four Ultra-Orthodox Jews Arrested for Attacking Gay Man in Brooklyn

Posted By on April 23, 2014

S

Four Hasidic Jews have been arrested for attacking a 22-year-old gay man in Williamsburg last December.

The New York Daily News reports that two of the four suspects had fled to Israel. All four are expected to be arraigned on Wednesday, and more suspects will likely be arrested in the coming days.

Early December 1, Taj Patterson was attacked as he walked home from a party in Williamsburg. Patterson said he was jumped by about 20 Hasidic men, who allegedly yelled anti-gay slurs"Stay down, faggot!"as they beat him.

"I'm walking down some block by myself and then the next thing I know, I'm surrounded by a group of Hasidic Jewish men and they're attacking me," Patterson told Gothamist in December. "I was alone. I was an easy target. I'm black. I'm gay, a whole slew of reasons."

Based on witnesses' accounts of their clothes, the assailants may have belonged to Williamsburg Shomrim, a Hasidic neighborhood watch group.

After the attack Patterson was taken to a local hospital, where he was treated for a broken eye socket, a torn retina, and blood clotting.

UPDATE 4:25 pm: From the New York Daily News:

Aharon Hollender, 28, Abraham Winkler, 39, Mayer Herskovic, 21, and Joseph Fried, 25, were charged with gang assault and other counts, but not with any hate crimes, sources said Wednesday.

"I would point out that the department, from the very beginning, very aggressively investigated that crime as a very serious crime with incredibly serious injuries caused to the victim," said Police Commissioner Bill Bratton.

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Four Ultra-Orthodox Jews Arrested for Attacking Gay Man in Brooklyn

4 Hasidic Jews Busted in Beating of Gay Black Man in Brooklyn

Posted By on April 23, 2014

Victim Set Upon in Williamsburg in December By Josh Nathan-Kazis

Published April 23, 2014.

The New York Police Department has arrested four Hasidic men in the December beating of a black gay man in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, according to news reports.

The NYPD confirmed to the Forward that four men were in custody, but had no information about what they were being held for.

The December 1 attack took place at 4:30 a.m. on Flushing Avenue in the Williamsburg section. The victim, Taj Patterson, 22, told investigators that he was attacked by a group of more than a dozen ultra-Orthodox men. The attack was witnessed by an MTA bus driver. Patterson required surgery to reattach his retina after the beating.

The arrests were first reported by Yeshiva World News and later confirmed by The Daily News. The New York Post reported that the Hasidic were being questioned by the NYPDs Hate Crime Task Force.

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4 Hasidic Jews Busted in Beating of Gay Black Man in Brooklyn

Five Arrested in December Assault on Gay Brooklynite

Posted By on April 23, 2014

Those accused of beating fashion student Taj Patterson reportedly used antigay slurs, but they were not charged with a hate crime.

Taj Patterson

Five men were arrested today in connection with an assault on a gay black man in Brooklyn, N.Y., last December, the New York Daily News reports.

Taj Patterson, a 22-year-old fashion student, had left a party in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn and was on his way home when he encountered a group of at least a dozen men who attacked him while shouting antigay slurs, such as Stay down, faggot. Reportedly, several of the men were members of a Hasidic Jewish sect, an ultra-Orthodox branch of Judaism.

Im walking down some block by myself and then the next thing I know, Im surrounded by a group of Hasidic Jewish men and theyre attacking me, Patterson told the Daily News in December. I was alone. I was an easy target. Im black. Im gay, a whole slew of reasons.

At least two of the men belonged to a volunteer neighborhood patrol that was checking on reports of vandalism to cars in the area, so they stopped Patterson to question him, according to the Daily News. Even though the vandalism report was unfounded, they allegedly started pummeling the victim, the paper reports. The attack left Patterson with a broken eye socket, a torn retina, blood clots, and cuts and bruises to his knee and ankles.

Those arrested were Aharon Hollender, 28; Abraham Winkler, 39; Mayer Herskovic, 21; Pinchas Braver, 19; and Joseph Fried, 25, the Daily News reports. They were charged with gang assault and other offenses but not with hate crimes, although the police originally investigated the assault as a possible hate crime. They were arraigned in Brooklyn Supreme Court this afternoon and released on bail, and they face up to 25 years in prison if convicted.

Fried, who works for the newspaper of the Satmar Hasidic sect, has been arrested previously, after having taken a photo of a sex abuse victim testifying in a courtroom in November 2012, according to the Daily News. A charge of criminal contempt stemming from that incident remains pending.

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Five Arrested in December Assault on Gay Brooklynite

Baby by Idan & Natali Ashkenazi – Video

Posted By on April 23, 2014


Baby by Idan Natali Ashkenazi
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Baby by Idan & Natali Ashkenazi - Video


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