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Investigation underway after reports of antisemitic banners hung on bike overpass at UC Davis – KCRA Sacramento

Posted By on August 30, 2022

UC Davis police are investigating after reports over the weekend of racist and antisemitic banners being hung across a bicycle overpass on campus. The incident happened on the Blue Ridge Road Bikeway and Highway 113 overpass. Police said that witnesses reported seeing three or four people standing on the overpass around 3 p.m. hanging signs with antisemitic messages on them. One of the witnesses told police they confronted the people holding the signs and got into an argument, but no injuries were reported. The group holding the signs later left on foot and hung their signs on the Russel Boulevard overpass, police said. UC Davis police said the incident did not rise to the level of a hate crime, but it was determined to be a hate incident of concern.UC Davis Chancellor Gary S. May said that a similar incident happened the weekend before. We are sickened that anyone would invest any time in such cowardly acts of hate and intimidation. They have no place here. We encourage our community to stand against antisemitism and racism, May said in a statement released Sunday.Jewish leaders on campus are condemning the the hate, calling it brazen and disturbing. Barry Klein, President of the Board of Directors for Hillel at Davis and Sacramento, told KCRA 3 that "It hits hard to all of us, because there's probably not a person in the Jewish community that isn't connected through family or friends of somebody who was lost in the Holocaust," Klein said.Klein also said he will be working at Hillel to educate students on how to handle these types of hate incidents. This comes as antisemitic incidents are on the rise across the country, including in California. The Anti-Defamation League has tracked incidents of antisemitism since the 1970s. According ADL data, there were 70 antisemitic incidents in northern California and 367 across the state in 2021. The statewide number is up 27% compared to 2020."While we are just a little bit over halfway done with 2022, we know that the drumbeat has been strong and steady and antisemitic incidents continue to be on the rise," ADL Central Pacific Regional Deputy Director Teresa Drenick said. "Don't be afraid to speak up, because we all have to be courageous.""I was disturbed to see the photos of banners hung from a prominent local overpass with anti-Semitic messages. Hate has no place in Davis. As Mayor, I unequivocally stand with our Jewish community in Davis, at UC Davis and beyond," Mayor Lucas Frerichs said in a statement.

UC Davis police are investigating after reports over the weekend of racist and antisemitic banners being hung across a bicycle overpass on campus.

The incident happened on the Blue Ridge Road Bikeway and Highway 113 overpass.

Police said that witnesses reported seeing three or four people standing on the overpass around 3 p.m. hanging signs with antisemitic messages on them.

One of the witnesses told police they confronted the people holding the signs and got into an argument, but no injuries were reported.

The group holding the signs later left on foot and hung their signs on the Russel Boulevard overpass, police said.

UC Davis police said the incident did not rise to the level of a hate crime, but it was determined to be a hate incident of concern.

UC Davis Chancellor Gary S. May said that a similar incident happened the weekend before.

We are sickened that anyone would invest any time in such cowardly acts of hate and intimidation. They have no place here. We encourage our community to stand against antisemitism and racism, May said in a statement released Sunday.

Jewish leaders on campus are condemning the the hate, calling it brazen and disturbing. Barry Klein, President of the Board of Directors for Hillel at Davis and Sacramento, told KCRA 3 that

"It hits hard to all of us, because there's probably not a person in the Jewish community that isn't connected through family or friends of somebody who was lost in the Holocaust," Klein said.

Klein also said he will be working at Hillel to educate students on how to handle these types of hate incidents. This comes as antisemitic incidents are on the rise across the country, including in California. The Anti-Defamation League has tracked incidents of antisemitism since the 1970s. According ADL data, there were 70 antisemitic incidents in northern California and 367 across the state in 2021. The statewide number is up 27% compared to 2020.

"While we are just a little bit over halfway done with 2022, we know that the drumbeat has been strong and steady and antisemitic incidents continue to be on the rise," ADL Central Pacific Regional Deputy Director Teresa Drenick said. "Don't be afraid to speak up, because we all have to be courageous."

"I was disturbed to see the photos of banners hung from a prominent local overpass with anti-Semitic messages. Hate has no place in Davis. As Mayor, I unequivocally stand with our Jewish community in Davis, at UC Davis and beyond," Mayor Lucas Frerichs said in a statement.

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Investigation underway after reports of antisemitic banners hung on bike overpass at UC Davis - KCRA Sacramento

Delegates from More Than 50 Countries to Take Part in Congress of Leaders of World and Traditional Religions in Kazakhstan – Astana Times

Posted By on August 30, 2022

NUR-SULTAN The Kazakh capital is entering its final stages of preparation for the seventh Congress of Leaders of World and Traditional Religions, which will be held on Sept. 14-15, reported the Foreign Ministrys press service on Aug. 27.

Approximately 100 delegations from 60 states, including representatives of Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Shintoism, Buddhism, Zoroastrianism, Hinduism and other religions are expected to attend the event. Pope Francis, Russias Chief Mufti Ravil Gaynutdin, Egypts Grand Imam of Al-Azhar Sheikh Ahmed El-Tayeb, Patriarch Theophilos III of Jerusalem, Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi David Lau, Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel Yitzhak Yosef and delegations of leading religious and international organizations are expected to attend the event.

The Head of the Catholic Church will visit Kazakhstan for the second time. The state visit of Pope Francis to the country will take place for the first time since Pope John Paul II visited Kazakhstan in 2001. Pope Francis will conduct a holy mass for Roman Catholics, including pilgrims, on Sept. 14 as part of his visit to Kazakhstan.

The participants of the congress will discuss the role of leaders of world and traditional religions in the spiritual and social development of humankind in the post-pandemic period.

The event will include four panel sessions. The first section will focus on the role of religions in fostering spiritual and moral values. The next session will cover the role of education and religious enlightenment in enhancing respectful coexistence of religions and cultures, justice and peace. The third will be devoted to the contribution of religious leaders and politicians to promoting global interreligious dialogue and peace, resisting extremism, radicalism and terrorism, especially based on religion. Finally, the fourth session will address the contribution of women to the well-being and sustainable development of society.

The accreditation of foreign journalists for the congress continues until Aug. 31.

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Delegates from More Than 50 Countries to Take Part in Congress of Leaders of World and Traditional Religions in Kazakhstan - Astana Times

Recipes for okra, the unheralded star of summer – Los Angeles Times

Posted By on August 30, 2022

I love okra. Like, in an Im in a deeply committed relationship with okra kind of way. Ive written about this before, but it bears repeating every end of August, when the weather is steadily, stagnantly hot and all you want to do it gather with friends in their outdoor patio at sunset with a cold glass of ros. That feeling always leaves me craving okra, fresh out the deep-fryer, sizzling and crunchy from a light cornmeal coating and piled high on a paper-towel-lined plate. If you come over to my place at any point during this time of year, thats what youre getting served even if we have to enjoy it at a table by my apartment complexs pool instead of a private backyard.

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My partner shares this devotion to okra, so were eating it at least three nights a week. It plays well with so many ingredients any meat, fish or other summer veggies so its always welcome at our table.

One of my favorite one-pot-ish meals to make with it is my Braised Okra And Chicken with Caramelized Lemon and Olives. Think of it as an okra-fied tagine-like dish and serve it with couscous or rice or tear into it with some hot flatbread. If you want to stay in that region of the world but want something vegetarian, try my Crunchy Roast Okra with Golden Labneh, which you could easily make vegan by swapping the yogurt for a plant-based substitute. A coating of brown sugar and smoked paprika lend the okra some smoky sweetness to contrast with the spicy chile-and-ginger-laden yogurt, but forgo the dry spice mix on the okra if you dont have everything in your pantry.

Another all-in-one winner (Ive heard this from several friends who make it repeatedly) is my Charred Okra and Corn Salad with Spicy Sausage Vinaigrette, which combines seared okra, fresh corn, burstingly ripe tomatoes and sweet Jimmy Nardellos (or regular red bell peppers) with a vinaigrette made with the rendered fat from spicy Italian sausage. Its a way to highlight all the peak summer produce you love with meat as a background player.

For a similar but fully vegetarian recipe, try my Stir-Fried Okra with Corn and Red Chiles, which comes together in less than 25 minutes. Spicy Fresno chiles perk up the okra and corn here while soy sauce, brown sugar and toasted sesame oil bring out all the umami, sweet and nutty flavors of the vegetables.

And when Ive overbought okra at the farmers market, I make a batch of Spicy Quick-Pickled Okra with any stragglers left in my fridge at the end of the week. A traditional pickling brew spiced with dried chiles, mustard seeds and garlic flavors these pickles, which keep for weeks but never last that long in my house since they go so well with wine and chips, which is a nightly affair during these last, long summer evenings.

Sephardic cooking traditions of Morocco, as well as North African tagines and Mediterranean stews, influence this braised dish of chicken and okra. Often such dishes are flavored with preserved lemons, but here, regular lemons, caramelized in the chickens rendered fat, add brightness to the sauce, thickened with tomato paste.Get the recipe.Cook time: 45 minutes.

(Silvia Razgova/For The Times)

This dish uses the high heat of the oven to rid the okra of its moisture and hydrate the brown sugar and spice rub, which cools to a crunchy, crackling shell. Its served over labneh colored gold by turmeric and flavored with chiles, garlic and ginger for a spicy contrast to the sweet, smoky okra.Get the recipe.Cook time: 50 minutes.

(Silvia Razgova/For The Times)

This dish is fantastic hot, but it still tastes great after a couple hours sitting at room temperature. The heat and spices in the sausage add a ton of flavor to the sweet corn, peppers and green, toothsome okra. Use the ripest tomato you can find for the best flavor. And if you like, add chunks of mozzarella, feta or goat cheese to the salad at the end before serving.Get the recipe.Cook time: 40 minutes.

(Ben Mims/Los Angeles Times)

Hot oil blisters okra and wicks away its slime almost instantaneously in this quick stir-fry. The okra combines with another late-summer staple, corn, and fiery red chiles, scallions and garlic. A touch of brown sugar highlights the sweetness in the corn, while soy sauce and toasted sesame oil enhance the okras umami depth.Get the recipe.Cook time: 25 minutes.

(Silvia Razgova/For The Times)

Okra works wonderfully as a pickle, the brine helping to rid some of the sliminess of the pod while allowing it to retain a hearty crunch. These pickled pods are a fun replacement for green olives in martinis for Southern-style spin.Get the recipe.Cook time: 15 minutes.

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Recipes for okra, the unheralded star of summer - Los Angeles Times

Jewish and Jew-ish pols floated as Pelosi’s eventual successor J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on August 30, 2022

Whether or not Nancy Pelosi decides to retire if the Democrats lose their House majority in the November midterms thereby costing the 18-term member of Congress her position as speaker is anybodys guess.

In speculating about the possibility, Pelosis supporters in the Bay Area Jewish community laud the 82-year-old Democratic icon in one breath, and say they are happy with the names being floated to potentially fill her seat in the next.

A recent New York Times article named state Sen. Scott Wiener, San Francisco Mayor London Breed and Pelosis daughter Christine as possibilities. Other publications have speculated, as well.

There are a lot of good options, said Gia Daniller-Katz, co-chair of the Raoul Wallenberg Jewish Democratic Club, a San Francisco political group founded in 1983. Itll definitely be sort of a passing of an era, but at the same time, we are blessed. Were blessed with a number of very talented and qualified local leaders.

Pelosi, who has been in Congress since 1987 and is up for re-election on Nov. 8, has been the House Democratic leader for 19 years.

In praising Pelosis steadfast allyship with the Jewish community Weve been well represented, Daniller-Katz said she also expressed high levels of comfort with potential Jewish replacements such as Wiener, the vice chair of the California Legislative Jewish Caucus, and Christine Pelosi.

Wiener, 52, whose district overlaps Speaker Pelosis, is widely seen as laying the groundwork for a campaign, according to the New York Times.

Like Wiener, Christine Pelosi is a San Franciscan with a strong personal connection to Judaism. But while shes a party activist, a member of the Democratic National Committees executive committee and an adviser to her mother who has written a book on campaigning, she has never run for office herself.

Christine, 56, has been married since 2008 to a film producer who is Jewish, Peter Kaufman, and in 1995 she went on a Jewish Community Relations Council trip to Israel that led a group of mostly non-Jewish leaders in exploring the complexities of Israeli-Arab relations.

In 2020, she took issue with Republican Rep. Madison Cawthorn, then a candidate for the House from North Carolina, for comments he made about trying to convert Jews; in a tweet aimed at former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, she wrote, My kids have Jewish blood running through their veins every day. @GOPLeader when are you going to stop this blatant anti-Semitism from infecting Congress?

If the race is between Scott Wiener and Christine Pelosi, the pro-Israel community is going to be in great shape, said Sam Lauter, a Democratic political strategist who is the principal at the Oakland-based BMWL and Partners. Scott has the platform to show that more visibly, more often. Christine Pelosi is absolutely a friend of our community.

Wiener told J. that the Jewish work hes most proud of was securing $3 million in state funding last year for the S.F.-based Jewish Family and Childrens Services Holocaust Center, largely through his role on the Jewish caucus.

However, he had little to say regarding Pelosis speculated-upon retirement, other than offering praise for her continued leadership.

Speaker Pelosi is one of the most effective elected officials in American history, and the pride of San Francisco. I am 100 percent Team Nancy and will be thrilled to support her for as many more years as she wants to serve, Wiener said in a statement sent to J. We need to focus on keeping Democratic majorities in Congress, and theres no one better to lead that effort than Speaker Pelosi.

Still, the New York Times piece, in pointing out that Wiener is doing a delicate political dance with an eye toward Pelosis seat, wrote, his ambitions to become San Franciscos first openly gay congressman are an open secret.

Four years ago, Pelosi announced that 2022 would be her last year as the Democratic leader, though in January she turned that pledge hazy when announcing she would run for another two-year term.

Theres intense focus on if and when thatll happen, Dan Newman, a S.F.-based political consultant said of Pelosis rumored retirement, whether or not itll happen for the following election cycle, or, one piece of the speculation is that it could happen sooner.

Whenever it does happen, the person filling her seat in Congress will have nowhere near the power and influence she wields. Whoever it is, Newman said, will be filling ginormous shoes.

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Jewish and Jew-ish pols floated as Pelosi's eventual successor J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

The Patient is one of the most Jewish shows on television should it have been more so? – Forward

Posted By on August 30, 2022

Steve Carell as Alan Strauss, Domhnall Gleeson as Sam Fortner in FX's "The Patient." Photo by Suzanne Tenner/FX

By PJ GrisarAugust 29, 2022

A few weeks ago, the creators of The Patient defended their decision to cast the non-Jewish Steve Carell as a Jewish therapist. Having just binged all 10 episodes of the FX thriller, I can see why.

Im not going to weigh in on who should play Jewish, except to say that Carell gives a powerful and credible performance. I will come out to declare this one of the most Jewish shows to grace this era of prestige TV.

Its more Jewish than The Shrink Next Door, which saw Carells Anchorman costars Paul Rudd and Will Ferrell honored with an aliyah.

Is it Jew-ier than The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel? I dont remember Midge saying the entire kaddish. Or imagining herself in the barracks of Auschwitz. Or, in a tense moment of recognizable coreligionist prejudice, dismissing Orthodox Judaism as a cult. Lets call it a possible tie.

Joel Fields and Joe Weisbergs show, which debuts Aug. 30 on Hulu, doesnt have a particularly Jewish premise. In it, Carell, as Dr. Alan Strauss, finds himself in a situation not unlike the one depicted in the film Misery. Only in this case, the Kathy Bates part is a young man named Sam (Domhnall Gleeson), a serial killer hoping to curb his homicidal urges by holding Alan hostage in his basement to continue therapy.

Carells character neednt have been Jewish, and initially he wasnt. Fields and Weisberg said the decision was made later to add specificity and depth to their drama. The show is excellent and tense and largely achieves that depth, but finds it in a familiar place: the arena of fathers and sons. It works, but is less interesting territory than the conflict between Jew and non-Jew that it often seems to be teasing.

While Sam and Alans sessions make up the bulk of the shows early episodes, theyre soon replaced by Alans grappling with his strained relationship with his son, Ezra (Andrew Leeds), who became Orthodox (I think Chabad, though its never specified) during college. Through Alans flashbacks, we see the effect Ezras choice had on his mother, Beth (Laura Niemi), a cantor for a Reform shul. Beth lashes out, bristling at the rules Ezras denomination has about women and insisting on singing at his Orthodox wedding, causing a scandal.

In an unforgivable show of favoritism that keeps replaying in Alans mind, Beth serves ice cream to their daughters non-Orthodox children after dinner as Ezra and his sons look on. Ezra and Alan lock eyes, their pain palpable. Incredibly, the show doesnt explain what is happening. Gentiles unhip to the amount of time kashrut requires between meat and dairy courses might well be confused or think that ice cream is somehow off limits for the Orthodox. The show doesnt care, trusting that a savvy viewer will fill in the blanks. And its right to.

For all its Jewish bona fides a soundtrack that includes Leonard Cohen, Debbie Friedman and Dodi Li, casual deployments of terms like Ben Torah and Kibud Av VEm, a dream sequence with Viktor Frankl and the Kabbalistic notion that were all broken vessels the show seems to be driving at a subtler Jewish theme to which it isnt quite ready to commit.

At the close of the first episode, Sam tells Alan he met with three different Jewish therapists, and chose him to be his captive. The line is a kind of tell. Sam, who is non-Jewish and working-class, has internalized stereotypes about Jews. If he needed an accountant, Ive no doubt hed be hunting for synagogue treasurers.

Sam doesnt seem to be an antisemite he even attempts the kaddish later on but his identification and selection of Alan as a Jew jolts their dynamic with a crueler subtext. Alan engages with epigenetic fears. He imagines himself in the gas chamber, the sunken eyes of prisoners from the little camp at Buchenwald staring at him. Its not clear if Alan is a descendant of victims or survivors, though its maybe a logical place for his mind to go as he is chained to a bed and at the mercy of a young killer.

But the borderline sensationalism of these Shoah sequences, shot in black-and-white, feels easy compared to the flashes we get of Alans own experience. Left alone for long stretches, the doctor free-associates. He recalls a patient saying she never went to a Jewish funeral. Walking through a college campus, where he teaches, hes stopped in his tracks by a flyer: March against the radical Zionist agenda, the graphic for which is an Israeli flag with a swastika in the place of the Star of David.

If the marquee traumas of Alans life include estrangement from his son, Beths death from cancer and his forced therapy sessions with Sam, there is also the sideshow stressor of being a Jew among gentiles eager to other him. It may seem like a small thing, but, as we learn from Alans own reflections, those microaggressions have major power.

When Alan imagines a session with his dead therapist, Charlie (David Alan Grier), in a book-lined room (yeshiva shel maala, perhaps) it is the small interactions that lead to breakthroughs. Alan comes to realize that even a well-meaning compliment, for example telling his daughter-in-law she made the best kosher steak, was received as a slight. Unconsciously, Alan had been signaling that Ezras path was less legitimate, too fringe being just as rigid about how one should live his life.

With Alan and Ezras relationship, Weisberg and Fields, the latter of whom is the son of a rabbi, provide a father-son dynamic easily grasped by any audience, even if the specifics of the rift might seem obscure. (All viewers really need to know is that Ezra is, in Alans words, an extreme Jew and that Alan and his wife are not that kind.) Bubbling under the surface is a more urgent story that was maybe too niche, if, at least to Jews, far more universal, a kind of Jewish Get Out.

As it is, The Patient handles Jewish content well, giving us moments that feel authentic and dont deign to explain themselves and in the final reckoning does not at all vilify Orthodox Judaism as one might fear. But the deeper Jewish questions too often feel like Easter eggs in a montage of Oedipal jousting. Alan dreaming he is at Auschwitz is one thing. Recalling a synagogue shooting or the likely fears he had of Ezra becoming visibly Jewish, would be something else entirely.

Being a Jew in America isnt as dramatic or dire as being held hostage and fearing for ones life. But sometimes it is and, more often, it can feel like it.

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The Patient is one of the most Jewish shows on television should it have been more so? - Forward

New documentary, ‘Illumination: Light of Am Yisroel on the World,’ follows the stories of Jewish heroes – JNS.org

Posted By on August 30, 2022

(August 30, 2022 / JNS) 600 million? A billion? 1.5 billion?

The new documentary Illumination: The Light of Am Yisroel on the World, released this past Tisha BAv, opens with narrator Rabbi Yoel Gold asking people on the street to guess how many Jews there are worldwide. An ordained Rabbi and former Yeshiva high school teacher, Gold has devoted the past three years to creating videos chronicling inspiring Jewish stories.

The interviewees throw out guesses ranging from 25 million to 1.5 billion, with a majority on the higher end of the spectrum. One woman doesnt venture a numerical guess. I know its a lot of them, and theyre all over the world, she tells the camera.

After letting viewers listen to a host of high estimates, Gold reveals that the true number is far smaller. There are only 15 million Jews worldwide.2% of the global population, just a speck in the population universe.

Ill admit that as strangers from Los Angeles, New York, and London threw out their far-too-high estimates, my first thought was that I was about to witness a film on anti-Semitism; non-Jews have long exaggerated the global Jewish presence in their own minds, maintaining that Jews control the media, the banks and other powerful institutions. I was pleasantly surprised when I realized that the film would take a far different path.=

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Setting the scene for the remainder of the program, Gold recounts that God promised the Jewish people national recognition so they could be a source of light, inspiring others and paving the way for positive action in the world. Amplification of the Jewish presence allows the values instilled in its people by religious doctrine to suffuse broader society.

As Jews, we have a responsibility to be a model, an example and a blessing to the world, and today, with the advance of technology and social media, we can each do that in our unique way, Gold wrote in an Aug. 28 statement to JNS.

One example of a Jewish model to the broader society, Gold recounts, is the story of Aaron Feuerstein, colloquially known as the mensch of Malden Mills. On the evening of Feuersteins 70th birthday in 1995, his family-run textile Massachusetts factory, Malden Mills, burst into flames. Instead of pocketing the considerable sum of insurance money and retiring or moving the operation down South with cheaper labor, Feuerstein decided to stay put and build back even bigger. The company was not going anywhere, and neither were the jobs that his employees relied upon for their livelihoods. In a show of magnanimity, he continued to pay his workers as the Malden Mill factory was rebuilt, and he even provided them with their Christmas bonuses.

Footage of Malden Mills in flames, as shown in the new documentary, Illumination: Light of Am Yisroel on the World. Source: Screenshot.

Gold artfully intersperses his own narration with local news clips of the fire and video footage of Feuersteins employees rejoicing in tears, as well as his interview with Feuerstein to tell an uplifting and emotional story. The storys resonance is deepened by its religious roots; Feuersteins is a chronicle of heroism motivated by Judaisms core tenets of charity and just treatment of ones fellow man.

When Gold asks him what spurred him to turn down money that most would snap up in a second, Feuerstein has a two-word answer ready for him: The Torah. He insists that he saw his workers as people, not a set of hands. In a moving and candid moment of his 60 Minutes appearance shown in the film, Feuerstein emphasizes how little the material means to him when juxtaposed with moral capital. What would I do with it? he asks, referencing the insurance money he could have pocketed. Eat more? Buy another suit?

In a vulnerable moment, Gold reveals that Feuerstein passed away not long after the interview. I couldnt help but feel that Hashem sent me to Boston to do his story before he passed so that the world could know, Gold says amid his tears.

When asked about her grandfather, who lived with her at the end of his life, Marika Feuerstein told JNS that Judaism was his life. He taught her to give, no matter what that looks like; it could mean a check of $50,000 for one person and volunteering ones time at a Jewish soup kitchen for another.

Feuerstein instilled in his granddaughter the understanding that actions speak louder than wordsand his certainly did. He thought of others when he could have been thinking solely about himself.

Despite eventually losing his company, when asked if her grandfather regretted his decision and would have gone on a different path if he could have done it all over again, Marika responded with a resounding no. Never, never, never, she told JNS. It was never just about material gains for Feuerstein. He was far more concerned about the people involved.

Feuersteins story is just one of many chronicled by Gold in the film. Each one is an inspiring tale of Jewish heroism; sacrifice and selflessness in the face of an active shooter; religious conviction and strength outmaneuvering social and professional pressures; camaraderie and kindness between strangers in the aftermath of a suicide bombing in Israel.

We released it on Tisha BAv, a time where we are so aware of our exile, hoping to communicate that being dispersed amongst the nations is not so much a punishment than it is a mission, said Gold.

Gold told JNS that his aim was to tell incredible stories of Jewish heroes who in the face of social pressures, money, and even death were uncompromising in their values. He hopes that the film will serve as a reminder that every single Jew can work to be a better be light unto the nations.

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New documentary, 'Illumination: Light of Am Yisroel on the World,' follows the stories of Jewish heroes - JNS.org

Dark money for Israel that crushes leftwing candidates is giving Jews a bad reputation Messinger – Mondoweiss

Posted By on August 30, 2022

Its already a bad week for progressives in U.S. politics. Jewish Insider reports that Max Frost, the charismatic new face of young Democratic politics, negotiated his position on Israel with Democratic Majority for Israel in order to keep the rightwing lobby group from pouring money into his Florida race. Frost then walked back his earlier support for BDS and issued anodyne language about being pro-Israel and pro-Palestine to escape the wrath (the money) of the rightwingers and he won.

So Frost escaped the fate of Yuh-Line Niou, the New York progressive candidate who issued mixed messages on BDS but pretty much stuck by her pro-Palestine solidarity, and was drenched with negative messaging from the rightwing lobby, and lost last Tuesday.

All this secret Jewish money being spent manipulating elections in races all over the country is giving Jews a bad reputation, says Ruth Messinger, the civic leader and former NY City councilperson.

AIPAC announced after the [N.Y.] race was over that they were proud to have put several hundred thousand dollars in to defeat [Niou] Its that kind of after-the-fact and look-what-we-did, and were manipulating elections, in terms of one issue, that I find deeply troubling and has thrown some candidates that Im quite sure would have won their races withoutAIPACs interference particularly Donna Edwards

Where large sums of money, in this case, its Jewish money, are put in through PACs, sometimes not public, to defeat a candidate, it is quite likely that the people who lost the race end up thinking less well of Jews, end up thinking that Jews only care about the Middle East, and end up thinking that Jews are willing to put secret money into campaigns in order to defeat candidates. Thats very definitely not the reputation I want us to have across the United States or around the world.

Messinger spoke on an Americans for Peace Now webinar about AIPACs spending on August 25.

Donna Edwards is a progressive former congressperson who was defeated last month by a relative unknown in Maryland who got millions of dollars of support from the Israel lobby because Edwards has been critical of Israel.

Messinger said the same reputational damage occurred when AIPAC and Democratic Majority for Israel spent millions trying to defeat congressional candidate Summer Lee in Pittsburgh and failed.

If youre in a black district in Pittsburgh, and youre eager to get your state representative to win the Democratic primary, and you discover that, quote, unquote, the Jews are raising $3 million to defeat her then you come to see the Jews, if youre not Jewish as a kind of single issue organization. Again, not entirely, AIPACs fault, but is affecting the way people think and feel about the Jewish community.

Mik Moore, a progressive digital media political activist who co-authored an article with Messinger, said this Jewish reputational damage is being done by campaigns all over where Israel is not an issue for voters, but money has perverted the process.

So you have a series of sort of state based PACs that are putting lots of money into races where the candidates have absolutely no influence whatsoever on the Middle East, or Israel Palestine or any of these issues. And yet, you know, they are having to deal with hundreds of 1000s of dollars or millions of dollars in spending against them. And its made city council races become like about Israel, right, or a state assembly race become about Israel, when thats not why this person is running for office, its not what theyve done with their life. And the money has really perverted, you know, what that process is supposed to be about. And people see this, right, voters see this. And it does, you know, I think have an impact on people and how they perceive the community.

Moore said that Jews who care about social justice or health care or climate issues have to take on the Israel lobby because its demolishing the boldest candidates.

You back a candidate, and then that candidate ends up spending like 50% of their time responding to attacks over the issue of Israel [which] is not the issue that they are an expert in, not the reason theyre running and frankly not the reason youre necessarily backing [them], right. This creates a dynamic where the most progressive, the boldest candidates on all these other issues become very difficult to elect because of this broader dynamic. So I think its, its impossible to avoid it entirely, and I think requires taking it on.

Hadar Susskind of Peace Now said that rightwing pro-Israel money is now an issue in every congressional district in the country and in city and county council races too.

For almost every race, this is now an issue It has become a hot button issue that is unavoidable for any candidate, it doesnt matter where you live, who your constituency is, you may literally not have a Jew in your district, and there are some districts like that in America. And yet, you know, you are still likely to be forced to choose between an AIPAC endorsement or a J Street endorsement.

I live in Montgomery County, Maryland, and our county council is dealing with what is purportedly an antisemitism resolution, but its really all about Israel.

Moore says AIPAC is spending all this money because it knows its grip on the Democratic Party is slipping as progressive Democrats enter races.

Its coming from a position of real weakness and real fear, that they no longer have the kind of sway within the Democratic Party that they did traditionally, that there is increasingly a large constituency that thinks differently about this issue than they do. And so this was done in a sense, out of desperation to sort of maintain the sort of level of influence that theyve traditionally held.

Messinger says that legislative candidates everywhere are being quizzed about their stance on BDS, the boycott campaign targeting Israel over human rights abuses.

Messinger says that Andy Levin in Michigan lost Jewish support and then lost his race to stay in Congress on August 2 because he was alleged to have supported BDS.

Without naming names, I will tell you that someone I know to be a hugely responsible person engaged in Jewish and democratic politics, told me that Andy Levin was not supported and I just want to be really clear Im about to state a non-fact told me that Andy Levin was not supported because he supported BDS. Hedoes not support BDS.

This discussion was extremely normative. While Messinger and Moore and Hadar Susskind argued that they must promote political diversity inside the Jewish community in order to combat the negative image of Jews as blindly supporting Israel, they all basically stuck up for the liberal Zionist line, We love Israel but we can criticize it.

Moore spoke of two poles in Democratic politics, AIPAC and J Street. Messinger said there is a vast universe of Jews who arent pro-AIPAC but still love Israel:

Theres a vast universe of human were pro human rights, pro social justice, Jews who care tremendously about Israel, and about the future of Israel and the future of Middle East politics, but they care about other things as well.

Can these people represent anti-Zionist Jews who think the Jewish state is a serial human-rights violator? Or IfNotNow Jews who call out Israeli apartheid. I dont think so. But then pro-Israel propagandists claim that 97 percent of the American Jewish community are aligned with Israel. So there are miles to go in this discussion

Messinger gave AIPAC credit for having convinced Congress that all Jews care about is Israel. But now Jews who work on social justice, or LGBTQ issues or health care are frustrated when the only Jewish question is where a candidate stands on BDS.

Mik Moore said that AIPAC and the conservative Jewish press have been driving the successful nationwide effort to bar BDS from the U.S. discourse:

So theres a series of attempts to legislate against the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Movement outside the electoral process So that if youre a government contractor, you can be forced to state that you do not support BDS in order to get a government contract. And this has been happening in state after state. You also see it though in more sort of informal ways in the political space. And Id say the first way that this has happened is our organizations and I would say the Jewish press has decided that any commentary on BDS or anyones position on BDS is going to get a ton of attention. And so you see in race after race, if you have a candidate that makes any comment that could be seen as even sympathetic to BDS or partial BDS, where its critical of Israel or that outright doesnt state exactly what the sort of acceptable communal position is, theres going to be a ton of negative press attention and attacks by Jewish communal leaders on on that candidate. And weve seen that and AIPAC is driving that, but its not AIPAC alone.

Though lets be clear that liberal Zionists including J Street have backed legislation that characterizes BDS as antisemitic.

Heres the video of the webinar:

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Dark money for Israel that crushes leftwing candidates is giving Jews a bad reputation Messinger - Mondoweiss

Connecting with the Past: Making Memories in Morocco with Touro – Touro College News

Posted By on August 30, 2022

Education and adventure went hand-in-hand on this exciting Touro summer trip led by Professor Simcha Fishbane. Students earned three college credits while visiting nine cities and numerous villages. We experienced varied cultures in each locale, from a tour of Rabat to a panoramic tour of Casablanca and the historic sights of Fez, including the home of the Rambam and numerous kevarim (grave sites) and shuls. I was joined by my esteemed colleagues, Touro President Dr. Alan Kadish and faculty and lecturers Dr. Israel Singer, Michael Newman and Dr. Stanley and Professor Esther Boylan.

In addition to lectures and tours, the group bonded over camel, ATV and boat rides and BBQs in the desert.

Upon arrival in Rabat, we were welcomed by Andre Azoulay, a leader of the Jewish community and senior financial advisor to King Mohammed VI. Azoulay briefed us on the status of the local Jewish community, which now consists of 1,800 Jews whose average age is 70, and approximately 40 school-age children who are mainly offspring of the Rabbis and mashgichim who live in Morocco. We later learned that Morocco is the only financially viable country in North Africa, largely because of this Jewish finance minister, who is also a regular shul-goer.

The current Jewish community members living in Morocco, such as Rabbi Sebbag and Rabbi Banon, inspired us with their religiosity, spirit and optimism, and their beautiful prayer service. They do not take lightly their role as gatekeepers to the 2000-year-old Jewish traditional life in Morocco, formerly home to over 350,000 Jews, including some of the most revered rabbis and tzaddikim.

While much of the Moroccan Jewish community relocated to Israel after the 1967 war, our excursion took us back in time to the first Jewish settlements over 2,000 years ago. Interestingly, Jews came to Morocco even before the Moslems, whose origins date much later, in the seventh and eighth centuries. We felt as though we were walking in the footsteps of our holy ancestors.

Faculty and students, young and old, were deeply impacted upon viewing the abandoned shuls, cities and schools that once brimmed over with Jews at prayer or going about their daily routine.

As we traveled from one city to the next over long rural stretches of dry, stony dusty regions occasionally peppered with withered bushes, I shared Moroccos Holocaust history. When faced with having to turn over Jews by order of the French Vichy government, the 30-year-old Moroccan sultan, Mohammed V, refused, stating, There are no Jews in Morocco, there are just Moroccan citizens. The sultan had to comply with some of the anti-Jewish laws, but Jews were not forced to wear a yellow star nor were they eliminated from professions or forced to give up their property. Not a single Jew was deported. In short, like King Christian X of Denmark, Mohammed V protected the Jews of his country.

Another vital component of our trip was connecting to the great rabbis of Morocco. Through lectures given by Dr. Stanley Boylan, including The Rambam and the Rif living in Fez, we were able to gain context and feel deeply rooted to our Jewish past. When we prayed at the grave sites of our most revered leaders, we understood their world views and the lives they led.

Throughout the tour, our Moroccan guide and author of Jews Under Moroccan Skies, Raphael Elmaleh was able to make Moroccan history come alive. Students asked about the lasting legacy of Maimonides as well as the contributions of everyday Jewish laborers, merchants, artisans and craftsmen to Moroccan society and about the mass emigration of Moroccan Jewry. Answers were not given from textbooks, but rather by visiting, seeing and experiencing.

Dr. Singer shared his analysis of the diversity of Moroccos political and religious make-up throughout the ages. He explained that as a constitutional monarch, King Mohammed VI extends a strong arm in the governance and policymaking of Morocco. Because he has dedicated resources to improve the lot of the poor and promote womens rights, he appears to be well loved by the masses. King Mohammed VI also established funds for the restoration of Jewish sites and has mandated Holocaust education. Like his grandfather Mohammed V, Mohammed VI is popular with the small Jewish population who view themselves as protected by his royal authority. Dr. Singer explained that his favorable attitude toward Jews is based on a multitude of factors including economics, especially industry and tourism, given the thousands of Jews who sojourn to Morocco each year.

King Mohammed VI regards Jews as cultured and educated and looks upon Israel as a successful country with thousands of startups and a booming tech sector. He sees Jews as critical to the relationships he wants to forge and maintain with Israel, said Singer.

According to Dr. Singer, tolerance rather than persecution accords Morocco a very high place in the Moslem world. Today, Jews enjoy full rights as Moroccan citizens.

The promotion of womens rights was evident as we visited the Amazigh (Berber) Village in the desert, where women have started a growing business of harnessing argan oil from nuts and procuring a unique, profitable and portable cosmetic industry. While the older Amazigh women produce the oil, their daughters do the marketing and sales.

Esther Boylan, professor of Jewish Studies at Touro summed up the trip as one of contrasts, striking differences and close associations. From the impoverished Amazigh villages to the opulent edifices in the imperial cities, from the stench of the tannery to the scent of the spices and gardens from the minarets to the winding allies of medinas, from the majestic mountains to the dry desert, from the holy places to hotels and palaces, Morocco taught us how the ancient and modern coalesce.

Tamar Levine, a graduating senior whos majoring in psychology at Touros Lander College for Women echoed Professor Boylans remarks: It was fascinating to experience a unique culture and society that I would not otherwise have had the opportunity to explore. It was uplifting to learn about the history of the Moroccan Jewish community. It was also a great opportunity to spend quality time with other Touro students and faculty. This trip was truly an experience of a lifetime.

As we return to the classroom in the weeks ahead, we will all surely apply the hands-on learning experience we had in Morocco to our studies as teachers, students, lifelong learners and doers. The relationships forged outside the classroom will no doubt connect us and enhance our learning. As one student stated, we began the trip as a Touro University group and ended it more like a Touro family.

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The Fictionalist Approach to Religion | Gene Veith – Patheos

Posted By on August 30, 2022

I have heard it said that one can be Jewish without believing in God. I came across an article by a rabbi who tears that notion to shreds. But the problem he cites and the issues he raises are relevant for Christiansand those who claim to be Christiansalso.

He is responding to an earlier article by Andrew Silow-Carroll, who describes the phenomenon as fictionalism. Silow-Carroll defines the term as pretending to follow a set of beliefs in order to reap the benefits of a set of actions. He quotes philosopher Philip Goff, who relates the term also to Christianity:

Religious fictionalists hold that the contentious claims of religion, such as God exists or Jesus rose from the dead are all, strictly speaking, false. They nonetheless think that religious discourse, as part of the practice in which such discourse is embedded, has a pragmatic value that justifies its use. To put it simply: God is a useful fiction.

Silow-Carroll gives the example of a Jewish professor who fasts on Yom Kippur and celebrates Passover even though he is an atheist.Its just what we Jews do, he explained. It keeps me connected to a community I value. He went on to say,When it feels like the world is falling apart, I seek refuge in religious rituals but not because I believe my prayers will be answered.

Silow-Carroll respects this position, seeing Judaism and religion in general in terms of actions, ethics, and ritual, rather than beliefs and doctrines. Fictionalists differ from humanists and new atheists because they keep God and the observances of religion, including prayer and worship, in the picture. They just think God is fictional, prayer is a useful form of meditation, and worship is beautiful.

I have heard from Catholic fictionalists, who say, Of course, I dont believe all this stuff, but I am a Catholic, and this is what Catholics do. Also liberal Protestants, including Episcopal bishops who publicly reject Christs resurrection, but soberly intone the Easter liturgy. In fact, much of liberal Protestant theology is fictionalism, denying the tenets of Christian belief while still carrying on the ministry of the churchpreaching, teaching, leading Bible studies, conducting worship services, praying, singing hymns, and offering spiritual counselingas being somehow valuable, even though they consider Christian teachings like the Trinity, the Deity of Christ, the atonement, salvation, eternal life, and the Word of God to be untrue. They dont believe the Bible, but consider it to be a good piece of fiction, even though, as C. S. Lewis shows, fiction written like the Bible would not be invented until the 1700s.

I suspect this can be found also among evangelicals and even confessional Lutherans. Pastors, I suppose, have a profession to consider, so that if they lose their faith, they have to keep on in their jobs. They become fictionalists, either teaching their whole congregation to be the same, or, probably more commonly, keeping their unbelief to themselves, but persisting in the traditional forms.

I suppose in the latter case, the members of the congregation can still receive the sacraments and hear Gods Word from a faithless preacher. At least thats what the orthodox side said in opposing the Donatist heretics. Meanwhile, some laymen might come to church to keep a spouse happy or because they enjoy the music or even because they think religion conveys psychological or social benefits, even though they dont believe in it themselves.

Rabbi Goldstein refutes Jewish fictionalism, saying, among other things, that,

if you remove God from Judaism it ceases to be recognizable as such. When we say may the Omnipresent comfort you at a funeral , or God who blessed bride and groom at a wedding, or God created the world in six days and rested on the seventh during Kiddush, or God is one every morning and evening, and on our deathbed these are all just fictions? If so, Judaism is meaningless; it becomes a system based on falsehoods. . . .

The only form of Jewish identity that has proven itself capable of surviving more than a few generations is one rooted in the complete embrace acceptance of the truth of all the factual claims made by Judaism, including belief in God and His authorship of the Torah. Throughout our long history no Jewish community has ever survived without a belief in the foundations of our faith. A pretend Judaism wont cut it. Only the real thing is worthy of us and our children and a guarantee for a bright Jewish future.

One could say the same about Christianity. A pretend Christianity wont cut it.

This syndrome would be an example of holding the form of religion but denying the power of it (2 Timothy 3:5). Simply holding onto the forms is not just a matter of denying the doctrines of the religion, as fictionalists assume. It also denies the power that those doctrines testify to and that the forms of the religion convey.

As Hamann reminds us, doctrines are not just abstract ideas, to be debated or proven or refuted or disagreed with. Rather, they are mighty realities that we neglect to our ruin.

Put another way, religion without faith is dead.

Image byGerd AltmannfromPixabay

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The Judaism And Zionism Of David Sarnoff – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on August 30, 2022

Although his formal secular education was limited to attending elementary school, David Sarnoff (1891-1971) combined expert knowledge, visionary business acumen, an entrepreneurial spirit, and a near-maniacal ambition to command a vast radio and television empire. Seizing the opportunity to control the then unfettered airwaves, he created the first coast-to-coast radio network and he transformed the world into a global village.

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Renowned as the Father of American Television, Sarnoff was unquestionably the greatest visionary in the history of broadcasting as he virtually single-handedly developed RCA and NBC into the first great mass-communications conglomerate and singularly pushed the development of television from the initial experiments in the early 1920s to commercial feasibility. His contributions were such that while praising the exceptionally large contribution of Jews to the development of wireless in a 1931 interview with the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Guglielmo Marconi, the inventor of wireless telegraphy, singled out Sarnoff for his work in radio, characterizing it as amazing.

At a time when the standard approach to radio communications was from point-to-point (i.e., from one person to another), Sarnoff was the first person to see the potential of radio as a point-to-mass media where one broadcaster could speak to many listeners, and he transformed radio from an exclusive realm of the transportation communications industry and hobbyists into a media for the masses.

As a young man in 1916, he presented a memo to the head of the Marconi company proposing radio music boxes that could broadcast music, news, sports, lectures and entertainment into peoples homes, but his superiors considered his idea of commercial radio for entertainment purposes to be a hair-brained scheme. On June 2, 1921, he borrowed a Navy transmitter and broadcast the boxing match between the victorious Jack Dempsey and Georges Carpentier, which drew a then-incredible 300,000 boxing fans listening on their homemade radio sets and essentially launched mass commercial radio. Four years after RCA launched NBC in 1925, Sarnoff became its president.

Under Sarnoffs leadership, RCA and NBC commenced regularly scheduled electronic television transmissions and NBC became the first radio chain in the country. The first broadcast, which he introduced from the RCA pavilion at the 1939 New York Worlds Fair (see exhibit), featured a speech by President Roosevelt (the first electronic broadcast by a president) and was seen by a whopping 1,000 viewers watching on the 200 television sets owned in the New York City region at the time.

Sarnoff was commissioned as a lieutenant colonel in the Army Signal Corps Reserve (1924) and was promoted to full colonel in 1931. Called to active duty during World War II, he served as General Eisenhowers communications consultant, for which he was decorated with the Legion of Merit (1944) and was commissioned a brigadier general (1945). He was thereafter known as General Sarnoff, a title that he insisted others use to address him.

Born David Sarnow in Uzlian, a small Jewish village near Minsk in Belarussia, Sarnoff spent much of his early childhood as an outstanding Talmud student in cheder and, beginning at a very young age, he sang in the synagogue choir to help supplement his impoverished familys income. His maternal grandfather, Rabbi Privkin, was determined that his little Talmudic prodigy pursue a life in the rabbinate, so he sent young David to Korme to study with his grand-uncle, the leading rabbinical authority of the city. However, though raised in the strictest Orthodoxy, Sarnoff later decided that the constraints of rigid adherence to his faith were unduly onerous, so he turned to Reform Judaism, and his interest in religion in general became relatively unimportant. Nonetheless, he always credited his incredible drive, powers of concentration, keen analytical mind, and ability to overcome fatigue to his early years of Talmudic study.

Sarnoffs father, an itinerant trader, immigrated to the United States and worked to raise funds to bring the family to America. Two days after Sarnoff arrived in New York in 1900 knowing no English, he was selling Yiddish newspapers on the Lower East Side, an endeavor he soon expanded into his first business, a newsstand. Moreover, as a gifted cantorial singer, he continued to supplement the family income by performing as a male soprano in a neighborhood synagogue choir while attending school at night.

When his father died in 1906 of tuberculosis, however, he had to leave school to become his familys sole supporter as an office boy at the Commercial Cable Company. His lack of formal education always haunted him, but it also served to motivate him to achieve greatness: The dread of remaining an am haaretz (a euphemism for uneducated Jew or, worse, an ignoramus) was always under the surface of my consciousness. I jelled in a determination to rise above my surroundings . . .

His employer refused him three days unpaid leave for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur and fired him only a few months after he had commenced work. Adding to the familys economic problems, his voice broke just prior to performing for the High Holidays that year and his family was left with no source of income. He joined the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America as a messenger boy and taught himself how to use the telegraph key on his own time. In 1911, he installed and operated the wireless equipment on a ship hunting seals off Newfoundland and used the technology to relay the first remote medical diagnosis from the ships doctor to a radio operator ashore, and he later famously demonstrated the first use of radio on a railroad line, the Lackawanna Railroad Companys link between Binghamton and Scranton.

By 1914, he had risen to contract manager at Marconi, and in 1919, when it was absorbed by RCA, he became its commercial manager. He rose quickly through the ranks at RCA, becoming its general manager in 1921, vice president in 1922, president in 1930, and chairman of the board in 1947. However, it was while working at Marconi in 1912 that one on the greatest legends in communications history was born.

As Sarnoff tells the story, he was alone at his telegraph on April 14, 1912 which he operated for John Wannamaker, who had built a powerful radio station atop his New York store when he picked up a distress call from the Titanic that the mammoth ship had run into an iceberg and was sinking. He was acclaimed a public hero for notifying the authorities, remaining at his telegraph for the next consecutive 72 hours, coordinating the rescue effort, and receiving and transmitting the names of survivors. The story received broad coverage in the mainstream media and was prominently featured by the New York Times in Sarnoffs obituary:

His real first step on the rise to fame and considerable fortune was taken the night of April 14, 1912, the night the Titanic crashed into an iceberg in the North Atlantic and sank. Mr. Sarnoff had the monotonous job of manager of an experimental wireless station installed by John Wanamaker on the roof of his department store at Ninth Street and Broadway . . .

The young telegrapher quickly notified the authorities and the press, and for the next 72 hours, he sat constantly before his equipment, straining to make out the dots and dashes coming from the Carpathia and other rescue ships. In those days of weak signals, primitive circuits and howling atmospheric interference, it was immensely difficult to receive messages accurately. President William Howard Taft ordered all wireless stations on the Eastern Seaboard except Mr. Sarnoffs shut down to facilitate receipt of messages.

However, there is ample evidence that the entire story is a fiction perpetrated by a self-promoting Sarnoff.

First, even with the worldwide extensive coverage given to the Titanic disaster, there was not a single contemporary account in the media of Sarnoffs heroism and, in fact, he did not tell the story until an interview with American Magazine in 1923, more than a decade after the event took place. Second, the Titanic sank on Sunday night in New York City, when the Wanamakers Department store was closed. Third, the Marconi Company had actually closed the Wanamakers station to prevent it from interfering with its four more powerful coastal stations and, in fact, there was no single wireless operator or station that controlled the air traffic related to the Titanic. Fourth, the telegraph machine at Wanamakers was too small and weak to have received the Titanic signals at that distance.

According to some contemporary critics, what most likely happened was that when the news broke from newsboys hawking special editions on the street, Sarnoff ran to his telegraph station, where he did manage a squad of telegraph operators for the next three days. Many of the very purveyors of the myth have now recanted the story; for example, in a 1987 article in Radio Recall, Catherine Heinz, the former director of the Broadcast Pioneers Library in Washington, D.C., declared that her own Sarnoff 1971 obituary, which had repeated the Sarnoff-Titanic story, was false. Nonetheless, as even a cursory perusal of the internet will show, the fable persists, even though the story has been authoritatively debunked.

Even after abandoning his Orthodoxy, Sarnoff always acknowledged the existence of a governing higher power, but he rejected the idea of hashgacha pratit, the belief in a personal G-d overseeing individuals and the world. He believed that it was futile to discuss whether Jews were a race or merely a group of co-religionists and, in an illuminating 1960 interview with a reporter for The Jewish Journal, he provided an excellent definition of antisemitism and how he saw his responsibilities as a Jew:

The essential Jewish identity is worth preserving because it is an influence that conditions the formation of a better type of human being. Jewish ethics, morality, and wisdom are constructive influences. This does not mean that all Jews are angels, or that they are generally better than other peoples. As we know ourselves, there are bad Jews, just as there are bad non-Jews. The trouble is, however, that whenever they encounter a bad Jew, most non-Jews tend to draw a general conclusion and accuse all Jews of corruption . . . Every individual Jew must therefore assume responsibility for the honor of the entire Jewish people and realize clearly that improper conduct on his part may be damaging to all Jews by encouraging antisemitism.

As a Jew whose lot has fallen to be in the public eye in America, I always remember this responsibility . . . Let us hope that further progress, further enlightenment, and broader humanism will abolish these conditions and bring about a time when non-Jews will cease to make distinctions in their minds between Jews and non-Jews.

Like many people, Sarnoffs interest in Judaism was rekindled when he became severely ill towards the end of his life with a mastoid infection. He sought visits with the rabbis of Temple Emanuel, where he served as a synagogue official, and he found solace in reading the Talmudic passages of his youth in Uzlan and Korme. However, his wife, Lizette Herman, to whom he had been introduced by their matchmaking mothers in synagogue, decided not to bury him in a Jewish cemetery and, instead, he was interred in a Judeo-Christian cemetery in Westchester County.

Unlike William Paley, who sought to hide his Jewish roots, Sarnoff bristled at the slightest hint of antisemitism, always making clear who he was and where he came from. Maintaining that antisemitism was a fact of my life, he believed that his application for a Commission with the U.S. Navy during World War I was rejected because of antisemitism, and he attributed many of his problems at General Electric to antisemitism. He never hesitated to speak out publicly and firmly against anti-Jewish hate, and he refused to accept awards or speak at organizations and clubs with Jewish exclusionary policies.

Infuriated by Nazi antisemitism, Sarnoff began regular travel to Washington after Kristallnacht to meet with branches of the armed forces to plan RCAs integration into the American defense buildup and, in a meeting with FDR in 1941, he advised the president that RCA stood ready to convert its plants to serve the needs of war production. He turned his studios into a training center for civilian defense workers and the cathode rays that he had designed for television became instrumental in radar and other sensing devices used in the war effort. He also helped Jews to escape Nazi Germany to the United States.

The only aspect of the development of radio that disappointed him was having Telefunken of Germany as among RCAs first licensees, thereby giving the emerging Third Reich an early television capability: Very often, the products of science and technology that promise so much for mankind have been perverted to evil uses. Hitler and radio is a perfect case, but I firmly believe that nobody can or should try to halt progress.

In 1952, Sarnoff, then president of NBC, accepted an invitation from Eliezer Kaplan, Israels first Minister of Finance, to come to Israel to discuss building a local vacuum tube factory there. He offered his services to Ben Gurion to help Israel in general, and its military in particular, to establish its own national television broadcasting system. Emphasizing that Israeli television would facilitate the dissemination of the Zionist message and make a major contribution to the ingathering of Jewish exiles, he added that he would assist in fundraising for the ambitious project if Israel would agree to a joint venture between the Israeli military and NBC.

In a July 29, 1952, address at a special ceremony held at his honor at The Weizmann Institute, to which he was elected its first Honorary Fellow, Sarnoff stated that he was impressed by scientific advances in Israel and predicted that television service between the United States and Israel will exist within five years. In a press conference at the Ministry of Communications in Jerusalem, he opined that four strategically placed television stations in Israel could blanket the Jewish State so as to provide television reception across the entire country. Minister of Communications David Zvi Pinkas prematurely announced that the new Israeli government broadcasting center would be dedicated to Sarnoff.

The proposal was enthusiastically embraced by Shimon Peres, then the Defense Ministrys director-general, but Ben Gurion rejected the offer with a terse reply that Israelis are people of the book. We dont need television. Ben Gurions keen opposition to television was likely shaped by his initial encounter with the medium when he visited his sons family in London earlier in 1952. He was dismayed when his grandchildren didnt budge from staring mindlessly at the hypnotizing television images instead of rushing to greet and hug him. He viewed television with contempt as a philistine and anti-intellectual contrivance that would Americanize the socialist Jewish state, promote rampant consumerism, and interfere with the emerging national culture of the young country.

According to Tasha Oren, author of Demon in the Box: Jews, Arabs, Politics, and Culture in the Making of Israeli Television (2004), Israelis were also concerned that television would feminize Israeli soldiers, dumb down Israeli citizens, present anti-Zionist ideas, prevent immigrants from being absorbed into Israeli culture, and jeopardize national security. The Knesset took action to discourage Israeli citizens from even owning television sets by, among other things, imposing a draconian 300 percent tax on them.

Sarnoff ended up not being much of a prognosticator when it came to his predictions for Israeli television, which did not make its initial appearance until 1966 as a part-time educational service for schoolchildren. The first general Israeli broadcast, which aired on May 5, 1968, featured only educational programming and news in the early morning and evenings, with dead air in between. According to Oren, the 1967 Six-Day War played a seminal role in Israels decision to permit national television broadcasts. In marked contrast with the Egyptian army, Israel permitted foreign correspondents covering the war to accompany Israeli troops everywhere and, as a result, Israel became the source of all news regarding the war and the government came to understand the importance of the medium.

In 1949, Sarnoff donated the first electron microscope in Israel to the Weizmann Institute in honor of Chaim Weizmanns 70th birthday and, in 1952, he received the award of an honorary membership at the Institute for his contributions to advancing the science of electronics. Ever conscious of the Holocaust, he implored Israel to create a reservoir of scientific knowledge and talents to replace the great repository of Jewish scholarship and science destroyed by the Nazis. Exhibited here is the original parchment with a dedication from the Weizmann Institute to Sarnoff,

A longtime friend of Weizmanns, Sarnoff later became the first recipient of the Weizmann Award in the Sciences and Humanities at a dinner attended by 1,200 leaders in science, business and public affairs (1966).

Finally, in this February 24, 1963, correspondence on his RCA letterhead, Sarnoff thanks publisher Robert Speller for forwarding a copy of the book The Mission of Israel, which was compiled by Israeli journalist, UN correspondent and Chagall expert Jacob Baal-Teshuva. Essentially a homage to Israel that includes articles, speeches and statements regarding the mission and successful accomplishments of the Jewish state, contributors included five heads of state, four prime ministers, and other distinguished figures, including Jonas Salk, Robert Oppenheimer, Martin Buber . . . and Sarnoff.

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