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Auburn basketball players baptized in Jordan River on tour of Israel – sportsspectrum.com

Posted By on August 12, 2022

Under the leadership of head coach Bruce Pearl, the Auburn mens basketball team recently returned from a preseason trip to Israel that had significance far beyond the basketball court.

In addition to playing three exhibition games and winning two against professional competition, the Tigers also took the opportunity to draw closer to God.

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My players are going to see their Judeo-Christian roots, and for those who want to get baptized in the River Jordan, they will, Pearl told The Jerusalem Post last week. Theyll walk in the garden where Jesus walked, and theyll pray at the Western Wall. And theyll experience firsthand Gods presence in the Holy Land. Just come and see it youll be changed forever.

A number of Auburn players were baptized in the same river as Jesus was almost 2,000 years ago, including junior guard Wendell Green Jr., freshman guard Tre Donaldson and junior forward Chris Moore.

Junior center Dylan Cardwell detailed the unforgettable experience on his blog.

First, we went to see the Mount of Olives, which had the most amazing view, Cardwell wrote. From there, we walked down the mountain and visited the beautiful Garden of Gethsemane, which has been preserved since the days Jesus walked the Earth. We even walked along the Via Dolorosa, which is the historic path Jesus walked before His crucifixion.

My personal favorite was visiting the Church of the Holy Sepulchre where Jesus was buried. It was an amazing sight to see. The next day, we traveled to Bethlehem where Jesus was born. It was another significant scene. Just to be able to stand where Jesus once stood was a crazy experience.

The Auburn players werent the only ones in awe. So was Pearl, who first visited Israel in 2009. He is of Jewish heritage and joined the Sports Spectrum Podcast in May 2019.

I think theres going to be other college teams who want to come over and have this competition and have this kind of historic, educational, religious, spiritual experience, he said in an interview with SEC Network. It was nothing short of amazing.

The Tigers played their first game in Israel against the under-20 national team and won convincingly, 117-56. Their second game against the Israeli All-Star Select Team was also lopsided, as they cruised to a 107-71 victory. Auburns third and final game of the exhibition tour was a hard-fought 95-86 loss to the Israel national team.

Many expect the Tigers to be a top-15 team nationally next season, and they will begin their quest to defend their SEC regular-season championship on Nov. 7 with a home game against George Mason.

RELATED STORIES: SS PODCAST: Bruce Pearl, Auburn mens basketball coach Auburn coach Bruce Pearl says Gods blessed us all year long after Final Four loss Auburn, coach Bruce Pearl put the Lord first as team competes in NCAA Tourney L.A. Chargers Hunter Henry, wife Parker get baptized in Jordan River Former Mets All-Star Darryl Strawberry gets baptized in Jordan River

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Auburn basketball players baptized in Jordan River on tour of Israel - sportsspectrum.com

Shira Brown on Moving to Israel: ‘How Could We Not?’ Detroit Jewish News – The Jewish News

Posted By on August 12, 2022

Shira (Parshan) Brown, 26, made aliyah from Southfield in 2014 at age 18. Growing up at Young Israel of Oak Park and as a student at Akiva Hebrew Day School (now Farber), Shira had a strong Zionist education.

Shira: My parents have always been pro-aliyah, but aliyah was not realistic when they bought a house and had full-time jobs and three young kids. When people talk about aliyah, they think about the ages of the kids, which was always a factor for us.

Shira: I was just wrapping up my second year in Israel and I got a phone call from my mother: Shira, we sold the house and are making aliyah. I thought I was getting pranked by the Mojo in the Morning talk show, but it was true.

They made aliyah in the summer, and I was elated! It is amazing to have a support system in Israel, and I got mine back and the best part was, I became their support system. I helped them deal with healthcare, phone bills, and setting up electricity and water, and it was amazing to know I can help them.

Shira: Akiva (Farber) did an amazing job of bringing us Israels Memorial and Independence days. They put on the complete ceremony just like it is in Israel. We even had the sirens, which made us cry.

I am very idealistic. Once, when I was reading the parshah that said Moshe, the leader of the Jewish people, couldnt go into Israel, and I thought about the fact that he led everyone, he did all the work and he motivated the Jews, but he couldnt go in. That really bothered me. After knowing this, how could we not go in?

Shira: When I first came, I decided to do Sherut Leumi (National Service). I wanted to experience the raw, hard, challenging neighborhoods, to get the real Israeli experience. I worked in a special-needs kindergarten in Ramat Gan in the mornings and, in the afternoons, I helped run a club for teens who were dealing with living in a neighborhood with drugs and a violence problem.

Shira: I create marketing strategies and campaigns for Anglo businesses in Israel and create websites for clients and businesses.

Shira: I love this question because my story shows the value of giving back. When making aliyah alone, I received a lot of support from the community and from an organization that supports Lone Soldiers and lone national service volunteers. It is hard to accept help, so I would say to myself, I will give back as soon as I can.

When my family made aliyah, I started volunteering with Lone Soldiers and National Service volunteers and created a program called Adopt a Soldier, where I set up matches between families and soldiers.

I invited our own soldier, Menachem, for Shabbat and that is how I found my match.

Shira: I made aliyah the summer of 2013, so I experienced Protective Edge in the summer of 2014, which was really challenging. But what did I learn? I learned about the humanity in Israel. Random people would ship trucks of hygiene products and food without question. It was natural because Israelis care about one another.

Before that happened, there were small examples throughout the whole year. Being alone, I was invited out for weekends and meals and taken care of by strangers.

Shira: I miss the scenery, the greenery and family. My husband and I are going on a trip this summer to Florida, New York and Detroit. The first two places are for tourism Times Square and Disney World but were going to Detroit to show him my childhood and my memories. Detroit is a close community, and I will always feel at home there.

Shira: If youre coming for idealistic reasons, try to do a program and experience being with Israelis. Try not to be in a bubble because a bubble can hurt you in the long run. Its like an immune system and when it breaks, its going to be harder.

From the beginning, you can have English-speaking friends, but network with Israelis and try to be in programs and speaking Hebrew with Israelis.

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Shira Brown on Moving to Israel: 'How Could We Not?' Detroit Jewish News - The Jewish News

The Line Separating Israel From Palestine Has Been ErasedWhat Comes Next? – The Nation

Posted By on August 12, 2022

Separate but not equal: the settlement of Modiin Illit rises behind the Apartheid Wall while a protestor waves a Palestinian flag in 2012. (Majdi Mohammed / AP)

EDITORS NOTE: This article was produced in collaboration with +972 Magazine and Local Call, two media outlets run by Palestinian and Israeli journalists. It is one of a pair of pieces exploring what the erasure of the Green Line separating Israel from the occupied Palestinian territories means for the future of the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea. You can read its complement, "Palestinian Resistance Tore Down the Green Line Long Ago," atthis link.

TEL AVIV, ISRAEL-PALESTINEMore than a year after a wave of violence, rage, and resistance swept through the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea, the events of May 2021 are still very much present in the minds of Israeli Jews and Palestinians. Two hundred and eighty-six Palestinians, most of them in Gaza, and 13 Israelis were killed during the 11 most intense days, but it was not only the number of casualties that left a mark. It was also the fact that the drama unfolded all over historical Palestine: in Jerusalem, in Gaza, in the West Bank, and most important, in Israels mixed cities such as Lydd, Ramle, Acre, and elsewhere, which was almost unprecedented since 1948. The End of the Line

As one would expect, Palestinians and Israeli Jews have nearly diametrically opposed views on these events, including their causes and the lessons to be learned from them. Yet in one regard there is a peculiar consensus: The conflagrations that broke out across the country revealed that the Green Linethe demarcation drawn after the 1948 war that many hoped would serve as a border between Israel and a future Palestinian stateis no longer relevant.

For many Palestinians, this was a cause for pride. The Palestinians, commentators argued, had managed to overcome the divisions Israel imposed on them and protest simultaneously all over historical Palestinein Lydd and Ramle inside sovereign Israel, as well as in occupied East Jerusalem, the West Bank, and Gaza. The uprising was dubbed the Unity Intifada.

For many Israelis, meanwhile, especially those on the right, the protests reaffirmed their conviction that the problem is not Israels occupation of the West Bank or its siege of Gaza but rather the Palestinians refusal to accept a Jewish presence in any form in historical Israel. Much like the Palestinians, they saw the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea torn apart by violence even as it was more unified than ever as a single political unit.

It could be argued that the erasure of the Green Line is an inevitable and perhaps even positive development, as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is, first and foremost, about the war of 1948 and the Nakbathe expulsion and prevention of return of hundreds of thousands of Palestinianswith the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza in 1967 following from that. And yet, inevitable or not, this new moment certainly represents an important shift. The collapse of the Green Line, and no less important the collapse of the ability to imagine it, has set a new stage in the decades-long conflict.

Violent erasure: Israeli soldiers forcibly detain a protester in Masafer Yatta in June. One thousand Palestinians are facing imminent expulsion. (Mamoun Wazwaz / Xinhua via Getty Images)

The Green Line was never meant to be Israels permanent border with its neighbors. It came about as a result of the armistice agreements signed by Israel, Jordan, Egypt, and other Arab states after the 1948 war. The armistice line was marked on the map with a green pencil (hence the name Green Line), and it was never accepted as an international boundary. In fact, it was only the outbreak of the 1967 war that turned it into a widely accepted border, as all United Nations declarationsbeginning with Resolution 242 in November of that yeardemanded that Israel withdraw to its borders before that war, meaning to the Green Line.

It was also at this moment, precisely as the line became official, that Israels relationship to it began to shift. To understand how this process began, one must go back to the discussions held by the Israeli government during and right after the 1967 war. Current Issue

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On June 15, five days after the fighting ended, Yigal Allon, who commanded the pre-state Palmach Zionist paramilitary group and later served as a minister in the Israeli government, put forward a plan for the territories seized by Israel. This plan called on the government to immediately annex the newly occupied Jordan Valley (a 15-kilometer-wide strip west of the Jordan River), the city of Jericho, and the Old City of Jerusalem, leaving the Palestinians floating in an autonomous region in the remainder of the West Bank.

Moshe Dayan, the charismatic Israeli defense minister who was widely viewed as the architect of the war, supported Allons proposal to turn the Jordan River into Israels eastern border but had reservations about Palestinian autonomy. I propose that the regime in the West Bank be a military government, he said, noting that he did not want to take any step that will drag us into a situation where [Palestinians] can be elected to the Knesset. He had his way, and by the end of July, the Israeli lira was recognized as an official currency on both sides of the line and Palestinians were granted permission to work inside Israel. With the annexation East Jerusalem a few weeks after the war, followed by the establishment of settlements in the Jordan Valley and Kiryat Arba near Hebron, the erasure of the Green Line had begun.

Over the next two decades, successive Israeli governments would continue in this vein, slowly chipping away at both the idea and the reality of the Green Line. After Menachem Begin was elected prime minister in 1977 on a platform of establishing a Greater Israelone stretching from the river to the seahe set in motion the project of building settlements in the West Bank. (When Begin assumed office, the number of settlers was 1,900; by 1987, the number had grown to almost 50,000.) Yet he refrained from formally annexing the West Bank and Gaza, preferring instead to keep the Palestinians living there under military rule. This limbo served Israel well, allowing it to continue occupying the territory without giving Palestinians political rights.

The First Intifada in 1987 showed Israeli Jews what it meant to force millions of people to live under military occupation. With the signing of the 1993 Oslo accordswhich led to the creation of the Palestinian Authority in parts of the West Bank and were supposed to lead to the establishment of a Palestinian state on the other side of Israels pre-1967 bordersthe idea of the Green Line made its comeback in the Israeli political arena. It served the interests of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and the Jewish center to try to convince the Israeli public that separationIsraelis here, Palestinians therewas the only solution to the conflict.

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With the violence of the Second Intifada and the collapse of the Camp David talks in 2000, Israel imbued the Green Line with yet another meaning. It became a wall, a concrete and metal barrier called the Separation Wall by Israel and the Apartheid Wall by Palestinians and human rights activists. Rather than conceiving of it as a political border to solve the conflict, Israelis understood it as a line of defense against the Palestinian suicide bombing attacks of the timea tool for proving that separation from the Palestinians is possible, even without a political agreement. (Israels disengagement from Gaza in 2005 only reinforced this concept.) But that wasnt all that the newly concrete border did. Because the wall was not built along the Green Line but, in many places, ran deep into the West Bank, surrounding Palestinian villages and bifurcating Palestinian lands, it also pushed the Israeli presence deeper into the occupied territories.

Shaking on it: From left: Yitzhak Rabin, Bill Clinton, and Yasser Arafat at the signing ceremony for the Oslo Accord in 1993. (Cynthia Johnson / Getty Images)

When Benjamin Netanyahu returned to power in 2009, he sought to undo key parts of this paradigm. In fact, the central legacy of his second tenure as prime minister, from 2009 to 2021, can be summarized as an effort to re-erase the Green Linefor Israelis if not for Palestinians, who, in critical ways, were locked behind an ever more restrictive set of legal and physical barriers. He did this through two main policies: expanding settlements in the West Bank and legitimizing them internally among Israeli Jews as well as on the international stage; and, due to his vehement opposition to a Palestinian state, replacing the Oslo peace process with what he termed economic peace with the Palestinians. Economic peace, in Netanyahus eyes, meant that Israel would lift restrictions on Palestinian economic development and allow Palestinians to work in Israel in greater numbers, while the Palestinians would give up their political demands, such as an end to the occupation and the settlement enterprise.

The settlements did expand during Netanyahus time. According to the Israeli NGO Peace Now, which tracks settlement growth in the occupied territories, there were some 296,000 settlers in the West Bank in 2008, just before Netanyahu returned to power; by 2021, that number had grown to 415,000. And these numbers represent an undercount, since Peace Now does not include the Israelis living in East Jerusalem.

Yet numbers are not enough to understand just how far Netanyahu went to render the reality on the ground irreversible. Yesh Din, an Israeli human rights organization, compiled a list of 60 bills pertaining to various forms of annexation of the West Bank that were proposed from 2015 to 2019; eight were signed into law. The most prominent among them was the Expropriation Law, passed in 2017, which retroactively authorized Israeli settlement outposts on privately owned Palestinian land in the West Bank. It was later struck down by Israels High Court, but it signaled Netanyahus intentions: to completely blur the divide between sovereign Israel and the West Bank and to normalize the settlements and settlers.

These moves did not go unnoticed by Palestinians and Israels human rights community. Steps towards de-jure annexation are evident through legal opinions and shifts in the States position (such as in petitions adjudicated in Israeli courts and publications issued by the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs), as well as in legislation, Yesh Din wrote in a 2019 report. These shifts ostensibly challenge the West Banks legal status as occupied territory, Israels authority to operate there, and Israels duty to protect the rights and property of the Palestinian population living under its occupation.

This process was not restricted to legal and legislative actions but was enabled by an increasingly potent political force in Israel. Despite its relatively small sizeno more than 10 percent of the populationthe religious Zionist community, which is the main force behind the settler movement, is overrepresented in various branches of the Israeli security forces and judiciary as well as in the realm of public opinion. According to one study, the percentage of graduates of the Israel Defense Forces field officer training course who came from the religious Zionist schooling system grew from 2.5 percent to 34.8 percent between 1990 and 2018. Three of the 15 justices on Israels High Court come from this community, and two of them actually live in West Bank settlements. One recently wrote the courts decision to green-light the expulsion of more than 1,000 Palestinians from their homes in Masafer Yatta in the South Hebron Hills.

There is a large-scale involvement of religious [people] in promoting the occupation and legitimizing it, wrote Mikhael Manekin, a well-known Israeli leftist, in Haaretz last year. Manekin, himself an Orthodox Jew who recently published a book about religious Zionism, wrote that the representatives of Religious Zionism, a leading force in the army, would make kosher any action by the IDF. It seems that those wearing a kippa are leading the ideology of ethnic supremacy.

The religious communitys growing and outsize power has paid off: The political campaign, led mainly by settlers, in support of the annexation of parts or all of the West Bank grew stronger during the fourth Netanyahu government, from 2015 to 2019, and in 2017, the Likud Central Committee passed a motion to annex the West Bank. A week before the April 2019 elections, Netanyahu promised to annex the Jordan Valley, the first Israeli prime minister to do so since 1967.

When Donald Trump presented his deal of the century in 2020, the hearts and minds of the broader Israeli public were ready. With the exception of the liberal Meretz Party, every Jewish political party in the Knesset supported the plan, which called for the annexation of all Israeli settlements in the West Bank, leaving the Palestinian territories as Bantustan-like enclaves. Trump was also the first foreign leader to recognize Israels annexation of East Jerusalem, and he moved the US Embassy to the contested Israeli capital. With its support for his plan, the majority of the Jewish Israeli public affirmed the death of the Green Line.

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The story of Netanyahus plan for economic peace is somewhat muddier: It neither greatly improved the Palestinian economy nor ushered in an era of peace, but it did increase the interdependence of the Israeli and Palestinian economies. This was especially evident after the outbreak of Covid-19 in 2020. For decades, Israel forbade Palestinian workers from staying overnight in Israel because of what it deemed security reasons. Yet as the country went into lockdown and the Palestinian Authority severely restricted movement inside the West Bank and from the West Bank into Israel, Israel forced some 30,000 Palestinian workers to remain for weeks inside Israel, preventing them from going back to their homes, because they were badly needed in the construction and agriculture sectors.

Quoting Palestinian sources, Local Call (the news site I work for) reported in 2020 that Israel even opened intentional breaches in the separation barrier to let in Palestinian workers. It is estimated that until the most recent wave of violence, in April and May of 2022, some 40,000 to 80,000 Palestinians were passing through these breaches daily to work in Israel, even though they did not receive permits from the Israeli authorities. They joined the 120,000 Palestinians who have permits from the army to work in Israel. If we add to them the more than 100,000 Jerusalemite Palestinians who work, buy, or travel in Israel, we see that at least 260,000 Palestiniansperhaps many morecross the Green Line every day from the occupied territories, including East Jerusalem.

At the same time, hundreds of thousands of settlers regularly cross the separation barrier. This seems routine to most Israelis, but it is clear that it is impossible to create a true barrier between Israel and the West Bank given such a reality. In this sense, the separation wall has lost most of its symbolic meaning for Jewish Israelis. Although the majority of them were convinced, and probably remain so, that the barrier prevents suicide bombings and other forms of violence by Palestinians, anyone who knows the situation on the ground can tell you that the main function of the barrier is psychological: It is there to mark a boundary in the Israeli Jewish consciousness more than to serve as a real physical obstacle. If one remembers that potentially tens of thousands of Palestinian citizens of Israel cross the barrier into the West Bank every week for shopping, leisure, studying, or living in Palestinian cities and villages, one begins to understand that separation does not truly exist and that the Green Line has, in practice, been erased.

Seismic shift: Israeli forces detain a man in Sheikh Jarrah, the Palestinian neighborhood that became the epicenter of widespread protests in May 2021. (Mostafa Alkharouf / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

This reality dawned on many Jewish Israelis in may 2021, when, after Israel attempted to evict Palestinians from their homes in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, Hamas fired rockets from Gaza and protests and violence erupted in other Israeli mixed cities and in the West Bank. The illusion that some Green Line, fence, or barrier separates Jews from Palestinians collapsed to a large extent.

Evidence of this new understanding was on display during the most recent wave of violence, which began in March 2022 with the deadly attack in Beer Sheva by a Palestinian citizen of Israel, a follower of the Islamic State, and continued with the attacks in Tel Aviv, Bnei Brak, and other Israeli cities. Some of the Palestinian attackers were Israeli citizens; others traveled easily from the West Bank to Israel through breaches in the separation barrier. Never has it been so evident that there is no real dividing line between Israel and the West Bank, between Jews and Palestinians.

This reality was manifested in the Israeli response to the attacks in the past two months. On the one hand, Israel carried out deadly military operations in the West Bank, mostly around Jenin Refugee Camp, killing dozens of Palestinians (more than 60 have been killed since the beginning of the year), as well as the Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, in the futile hope that the operations would prevent future attacks. The government and the army also pledged to mend the breaches in the separation barrier and replace parts of the fence with a concrete wall. On the other hand, Defense Minister Benny Gantz has promised to increase the number of entry permits granted to Palestinian laborers not only in the West Bank but also in Gaza, and the Israeli authorities have approved 4,000 new units for settlers in the West Bank. It is as if Israel is saying, Lets rebuild the Green Line and destroy it at the same time.

Before Prime Minister Naftali Bennett resigned in June, his government had intensified this contradiction. Bennett had agreed to take annexation off the table in a mutual understanding with his partners from the center-left, but he had also refused to meet with Palestinians and declared that there would be no Palestinian state under his watch. While it becomes ever more evident to many Israelis that the separation of Jews and Palestinians is impossible, there is no political will to grant equal political rights to the Palestinians in the West Bank and Jerusalemto say nothing of those living under siege in Gaza.

This tag-team attempt by Netanyahu, Bennett, and the current prime minister, Yair Lapid, to bury the two-state solution while refusing to offer equal rights to Palestinians under a single regime is likely what prompted local and international human rights groups and the United Nations special rapporteur on the occupied territories to recognize what Palestinians have been saying for a very long time: that Israel commits the crime of apartheid.

While many on the Israeli center-left continue to hope that separation is still possible, the right wing understands that the abolition of the Green Line may lead Palestinians to escalate their demands for equal rights and the democratization of the land between the river and the sea. Wedded to the idea of Jewish supremacy, the right views this possibility as a direct threat and thus is intensifying its propaganda against the Palestinian citizens of Israel while trying to goad the Israeli army into expanding its violence against Palestinians in the West Bank, even going so far as to raise the prospect of a new Nakba.

In many ways, the present deadlockno Green Line yet no formal annexationworks for Israel; but in others, it only serves to increase Israeli frustration. With the dismantling of the Green Line, Israel has effectively swallowed up the Palestinians, yet it continues to be dismayed when it sees how they refuse to give up their national identity and their struggle for freedom and return. This explains, at least in part, the attacks by Israeli officers on the pallbearers at Abu Aklehs funeral: The simple act by Palestinians of raising their flag and manifesting their identity was conceived as a threat to the public order.

Unsettling: Peace Nows Settlement Watch tracks the spread of Israeli settlements (top) and the surging numbers of settlers (bottom). (Charts courtesy of Peace Now; source: ICBS)

The fact that the Green Line has ceased to function as a physical or even an imaginary barrier between Israel and the West Bank does not necessarily imply that the two-state solution is dead and that we are moving toward a one-state solutionor toward a dramatic rise in violence that may indeed culminate in Israel carrying out a new Nakba. Jewish Israeli society is still distinct from Palestinian society, and the desire for self-determination and an independent Palestinian state is still very strong among Israelis and Palestinians.

During his recent visit to Israel, the occupied Palestinian territories, and Saudi Arabia, US President Joe Biden reiterated his commitment to the idea of two states based on the 1967 bordersmeaning the Green Line. Even Lapid said that he still supports this idea for the sake of a democratic and Jewish Israel. For his part, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has warned that time might be running out for a two-state solution, but he said that it is still on the table. If Lapid is reelected in November, it is not impossible that some sort of negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians could resume after being frozen for more than a decade. These may seem like empty words, considering the facts on the ground, but words do count.

What all this means is that the two-state idea in its traditional incarnation is indeed in deep crisis but not dead. What is needed now is not to give up on the Green Line but to reimagine it in a form that is far less rigid than the one envisaged by the architects of Oslo. I am part of an Israeli-Palestinian movement, A Land for All, that is calling for two independent states, Israel and Palestine, with a soft border between them that will run along the Green Line, allowing for freedom of movement and residence for all, Jews and Palestinians, including refugees. According to this vision, the two states will join in a confederation or union, not unlike the EU model, and Jerusalem would be an open city, the capital of both states, governed by joint rule.

Others, like former Israeli politician Yossi Beilin and Palestinian lawyer Hiba Husseini, both veterans of past negotiation efforts, offer a different model of confederation. The revival of the idea of a single democratic or binational state is also part of an effort to respond to the practical erasure of the Green Line, and there could be other ideas. But one thing is certain: After 55 years of occupation, and more than a decade of intensive efforts to replace it with annexation, it is hard to deny that the Green Line does not represent the same physical and emotional reality that it did many years ago.

This is not necessarily negative. To some extent, since 1967, the Green Line has been an illusion. Palestinians and Israelis live on and fight over the whole of the land between the river and the sea, with most of them seeing the whole of it as their homeland. The conflict did not begin in 1967, as the concept of the Green Line may suggest, but long before it. The Green Line promoted the idea of separation, of hostility, the assumption that Jews and Palestinians cannot live with one another. When weparticularly my fellow Israeli Jewsfully understand that we have to share this land, our political imagination will open up. The Green Line closed it shut.

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The Line Separating Israel From Palestine Has Been ErasedWhat Comes Next? - The Nation

As Gaza ceasefire holds, Israel lifts all security restrictions – The Times of Israel

Posted By on August 12, 2022

The military on Monday announced that it was removing all security restrictions put in place during several days of fighting with Palestinian Islamic Jihad, as a ceasefire between Israel and the Gaza-based terror group held.

The Egyptian-mediated deal, which went into effect at 11:30 p.m. Sunday, ended a three-day conflict that began Friday with Israeli strikes that killed a top PIJ commander.

Palestinian terrorists fired around 1,100 rockets toward Israeli territory, while the Israel Defense Forces pummeled Islamic Jihad targets and killed another of the Iran-backed organizations top military leaders in Gaza.

In a statement Monday morning, the IDF initially announced the gradual rollback of safety precautions, including the reopening of roads near the Gaza border. Roads in the area were first shuttered last week after Israel arrested PIJs West Bank leader, prompting threats of retaliation by the terror group that helped precipitate the weekends fighting.

The IDF said residents of communities in the so-called Gaza envelope area no longer needed to remain near a bomb shelter, and regular train service between the southern cities of Ashkelon and Sderot was due to resume at noon.

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Later on Monday morning, the Eshkol Regional Council informed residents of the southern Israeli region, which was battered heavily by rockets from Gaza during Operation Breaking Dawn, of a full return to routine.

Surfers enjoy the early morning in the Mediterranean Sea off the southern coastal city of Ashkelon on August 8, 2022, following a ceasefire between the Israel and Gaza-based Palestinian Islamic Jihad. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

A statement from the council said limits on gatherings and workplaces will be lifted and that educational activities and agricultural work can resume. It added that public swimming pools can also reopen.

The military said in a later statement that all restrictions on the numbers of participants permitted at gatherings were officially removed.

Also Monday, the military liaison to the Palestinians announced that crossings between Israel and Gaza would reopen for humanitarian purposes after a security assessment.

A fuel truck enters the Gaza Strip through the Kerem Shalom crossing with Israel on August 8, 2022 (SAID KHATIB / AFP)

The reopening allowed renewed fuel shipments into Gaza, after the closures led the Strips sole power plant to drastically reduce operations. Later Monday, the local electricity company announced the power plant was again generating electricity after fuel trucks crossed from Gaza into Israel.

The Defense Ministry body, widely known by its acronym COGAT, said a meeting to consider a full reopening of the crossings will be held if calm is maintained in the south.

Citing security sources, Army Radio reported that the Erez terminal between Israel and Gaza could be reopened to Palestinian laborers as soon as Tuesday if calm is maintained. Workers were barred from entering Israel through the crossing on Monday morning.

Erez, which serves as the sole pedestrian crossing for Palestinians in the coastal enclave, was struck Sunday by mortars launched from Gaza, according to the Defense Ministry.

Damage is caused to the roof of the Erez Crossing near the border with the Gaza Strip, August 7, 2022. (Defense Ministry)

The ministry said the terminal roof was damaged as a result of a fire and shrapnel fell into the entrance hall. No one was injured as the crossing which is usually used by thousands of Palestinians to enter Israel each day for work was shuttered last week amid the threat of a Palestinian Islamic Jihad attack on the border and remained closed amid the fighting.

According to the IDF, Palestinian terrorists fired over 1,100 rockets toward Israel during the fighting, around 380 of which were intercepted by the Iron Dome missile defense system, with a success rate of 95-97 percent. The military estimated that around 200 projectiles failed to clear the border and landed inside the Strip.

Israels Iron Dome air defense system intercepts a rocket launched by Palestinian terrorists in the Gaza Strip, above the southern coastal city of Ashkelon on August 7, 2022. (Jack Guez/AFP)

In a briefing to reporters, an IDF spokesperson said the military believes 51 people were killed in Gaza during the fighting, 24 of them terrorists from Islamic Jihad.

According to the military, 16 people uninvolved in the hostilities were killed by Gazan rockets that fell short.

A further 11 people were killed who were not affiliated with terror groups, meaning that a total of 27 Gazan civilians including a number of children were killed in the fighting.

A Palestinian man inspects a cemetery which was damaged during fighting at the Jabaliya refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip, on August 8, 2022. The mans white T-shirt says the word Shalom, or Peace in Hebrew (MOHAMMED ABED / AFP)

The Gaza Health Ministry, run by Hamas, said that at least 44 Palestinians had been killed, including 15 children, and 360 people had been wounded since Friday.

Several Israelis were lightly injured by shrapnel during the fighting, or by while running for shelter when the rocket sirens sounded.

Millions were forced to shelter from barrages of rockets fired from Gaza, some of which reached as far as Tel Aviv and towns around Jerusalem.

AFP contributed to this report.

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As Gaza ceasefire holds, Israel lifts all security restrictions - The Times of Israel

Gen Z progressive says he’s ‘pro-Israel’ and ‘pro-Palestinian’ – Jewish Insider

Posted By on August 12, 2022

Maxwell Alejandro Frost, a leading Democratic candidate in the crowded race for an Orlando-area House seat in Floridas Aug. 23 primary, has gained national attention as one of the first members of Generation Z to run for Congress. If he is elected, the 25-year-old gun safety activist would likely be the youngest representative in the House next term.

From a policy standpoint, Frost is also carving out a unique lane for himself on Middle East issues. In a lengthy position paper, for example, he describes himself as both pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian, vowing to engage proactively in bringing peace to a region that so desperately needs and deserves it.

The first-time candidate has indicated that he will pursue a nuanced and somewhat more balanced approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict than one might expect of a staunch progressive who is otherwise aligned with the activist left on such trademark legislative objectives as Medicare for All and the Green New Deal.

In a candidate questionnaire solicited by Jewish Insider, however, Frost distanced himself from measures that would penalize Israel, rejecting the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement as problematic while opposing calls to condition U.S. aid to Israel. More broadly, Frost said he is committed to supporting continued military assistance that helps ensure Israel can properly defend itself.

Frost elaborated in his position paper, which was obtained by JI, that he would also advocate for robust U.S. assistance that benefits the Palestinian people and is in compliance with [the] Taylor Force Act, referring to a law that withholds aid to the Palestinian Authority on the condition that Ramallah ends payments to families of terrorists. The assistance, he wrote, serves an essential role in meeting Palestinian humanitarian needs.

Our commitment to Israeli security must run parallel to our commitment to ensuring the dignity and humanity of the Palestinian people, Frost argued.

Freshman Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY), who identifies as a pro-Israel progressive, said in an interview with JI that Frost is developing a measured, mainstream position on an issue that often generates more heat than light.

He approaches public policy with an open mind and an open heart, and that applies to issues relating to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or the American-Israeli relationship, Torres said of Frost, whose campaign he has endorsed. He has deep empathy for the plight of both Israelis and Palestinians. He strongly favors a two-state solution and strongly disfavors anything that undermines a two-state solution, whether it be the delegitimation campaign of BDS or the creation of settlements in the heart of a would-be Palestinian state.

In order to come closer to achieving a two-state solution, Frost writes in his position paper, the Palestinian side must recognize that Israel has a right to exist while putting an end to all terrorism and antisemitic rhetoric as well as the positions of Hamas and Palestinian political leadership. Israel, he adds, has steps it needs to take toward peace, including no further settlement expansion and no more evictions or demolitions of homes in the West Bank.

Keith Dvorchik, the executive director of the Jewish Federation of Greater Orlando, said he had some potential concerns about Frost when they first met to discuss such issues. In particular, Dvorchik admitted to a suspicion that Frost would possibly be close-minded because of social media activity during the May 2021 conflict with Hamas in which he had posted about at least one pro-Palestinian rally but made no mention of Israel.

I was surprised and pleased that he wasnt, Dvorchik told JI. From our first meeting, he didnt pretend to know everything and really just asked a lot of questions and wanted to learn.

Dvorchik said he had spoken with Frost during the recent escalation of violence between Israel and Palestinian Islamic Jihad and appreciated that he expressed support for Israels Iron Dome missile-defense system. Frost, he said, very much wants to visit Israel if he becomes a congressman. Theres not a question that hes a progressive candidate, Dvorchik acknowledged. However, hes very open when it comes to Israel.

Frosts campaign declined requests for an interview, but agreed to fill out the questionnaire, which touched on a range of issues concerning Middle East policy as well as the American Jewish community. He did not respond directly to four multiple-choice questions at the end of the survey, offering written responses instead.

Elsewhere, he offered insight into his support for expanding the Abraham Accords, even as he emphasized that fostering ties between Israel and the Arab world should not preclude efforts to promote further diplomacy with the Palestinians.

While the normalization of relations between Israel and many Arab nations is a great breakthrough for the region and Israel, he wrote, we should be clear eyed in our understanding that a truly comprehensive peace between Israel, Palestinians and other countries in the Arab world can only be achieved by resolving the core issues at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and ultimately leads to the creation of an independent Palestinian state that exists alongside Israel.

Frost also endorsed reentering the Iran nuclear deal, albeit one that he hopes will be longer, stronger and broader to cover not just the issue of nuclear weapons, he wrote, but the full range of destabilizing and threatening actions Iran engages in.

Frost is among 10 candidates in the race to succeed outgoing Rep. Val Demings (D-FL), who is now running for Senate, in Floridas redrawn 10th Congressional District. While Frost has led the field in fundraising, the limited publicly available polling suggests that another candidate, state Sen. Randolph Bracy, is better-positioned in the race, owing in part to his high name recognition in the district.

A survey commissioned by the Bracy campaign and conducted in late May put him at 29% among 400 likely Democratic primary voters. Frost, in second, failed to break single digits. Still, more than 50% of respondents were undecided at the time, indicating that the race is mutable. The victor will likely be favored in the general election because the district leans Democratic.

Bracy was among 15 candidates backed by Democratic Majority for Israel in January as part of its first round of House endorsements this cycle. But the pro-Israel group does not appear to have prioritized the race, and a spokesperson said on Monday that DMFI was not in a position to share anything about the matchup at this time.

For his part, Frost has pulled in a wide range of endorsements from a variety of political action committees and elected officials at the federal level, including Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) as well as Reps. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA), Mondaire Jones (D-NY) and Ro Khanna (D-CA), among others. On Wednesday, The Orlando Sentinel endorsed his campaign.

Frost, who has said he intends to complete his college degree while in Congress, previously worked as an organizer with the American Civil Liberties Union as well as several political campaigns. He has been an outspoken advocate for gun safety since the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting a decade ago. Frost announced his bid for Congress last August.

Despite his lack of experience in the foreign policy realm, Frost suggested that he is committed to engaging with Middle East issues in a substantive manner as a member of Congress. As a pro-Israel, pro-Palestinian member of Congress, he wrote in his position paper, I will do everything in my power to make sure the United States steps up to serve in this critical role.

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Gen Z progressive says he's 'pro-Israel' and 'pro-Palestinian' - Jewish Insider

Israel and the Occupied Territories – Political solutions needed to halt cycles of violence – occupied Palestinian territory – ReliefWeb

Posted By on August 12, 2022

Geneva (ICRC) Each new round of violence in the Gaza Strip and Israel sparks a crisis of hope, as the fighting revives and creates new trauma on both sides. Only political steps can solve the seemingly intractable cycles and the humanitarian crises that accompany them. Those steps must be intensified. A statement from Fabrizio Carboni, ICRCs Near and Middle East Director.

The impact on the mental health and psychosocial well-being of people living through the latest fighting is one of the most significant consequences of each new round of this protracted armed conflict. In conflict zones, one in five people experiences mental health problems after the conflict has ended.For the last 14 months, and since the end of the 10-day escalation of May 2021, people on both sides of the Gaza fence were left with a sense of edginess and uncertainty. It feels like everyone is sitting in some great waiting room, in between escalations, before the inevitable next tragedy comes.

This time last year, I was in Gaza. I stood next to a pile of rubble that Jamal and his family had once called home before the May 2021 escalation. Homeless and fearful, they then faced an uncertain future, adding their names to the countless lives consumed by the consequences of the most prolonged military occupation in modern history.

Over the years, fatigue and frustration have set in, particularly among the younger generation. Their profound sense of hopelessness and inability to see a better future greatly concerns me, as we all count on them to chart a better course. With the shift of international attention to Ukraine, lingering legacies of COVID-19, pressures of climate change, and the ripple effects of high inflation on the daily cost of living in communities, we are collectively doing little to lighten their load.

International Humanitarian Law (IHL) provides guardrails for the legal and humanitarian consequences of conflict. If all parties worked within the framework of IHL, everyone would gain. The goal is to ensure that civilian suffering during the escalation is kept to a minimum. We continue to engage with all sides on this important issue.

The ICRC welcomes the ceasefire, but even if it endures -and I very much hope that it does- people's need for assistance and support remain. Eight in ten people in Gaza were already reliant on some form of humanitarian aid. This aid and support are important, and they can help prevent a total collapse in the short term. Nevertheless, only political solutions can bring sustainable improvement.

I want to thank the volunteers of the Palestine Red Crescent Society and Magen David Adom, who have been at the forefront of responding to urgent humanitarian needs even when they themselves were affected by the hostilities. Our priority alongside National Society partners is to continue assessing the most urgent humanitarian needs, support essential service providers and help affected people to begin the difficult, for some almost impossible, process of rebuilding their lives.

For more information, please contact:Suhair Zakkout (Gaza): szakkout@icrc.org M. +972 599 255 381Tali Shamir (Tel Aviv): tshamir@icrc.org M. +972524160917Imene Trabelsi (Beirut): itrabelsi@icrc.org M. +961 3 13 83 53Jason Straziuso (Geneva): jstraziuso@icrc.org M. +41 79 949 3512

Follow the ICRC on Facebook and Twitter

Notes for editors:

The ICRC has been present in Israel and the occupied territories since 1967. We promote compliance with IHL and work to mitigate the impact of violence, conflict and occupation on civilians through protection activities and assistance programmes. The ICRC visits detainees in Israeli and Palestinian places of detention and works to maintain family links through the Family Visit Programme. We also support livelihood projects and help improve access to essential services like water and electricity in Gaza. Above all, we stand up for people affected by conflict and promote their rights and dignity. The ICRC has offices in Tel Aviv, the West Bank and Gaza and supports the work of the Palestine Red Crescent Society and Magen David Adom in Israel.

More on the ICRC's mental health programmes in Gaza:In recent months, the ICRC has worked in Gaza with the Municipality, the Civil Defense & the Military Medical Services to provide mental health support to people with physical disabilities and to increase the capacity of these structures to provide psychosocial support to emergency first responders. At the same time, the ICRC is supporting the Barzilai Hospital in the south of Israel to improve their capacities in providing mental health attention to the population and health staff.

The ICRC has also sustained its partnership with the Ministry of Health to support the mental and psychosocial wellbeing of around 5,000 residents in the Gaza Strip, including but not limited to medical staff and self-isolating COVID-19 patients, as well as their caregivers.

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Israel and the Occupied Territories - Political solutions needed to halt cycles of violence - occupied Palestinian territory - ReliefWeb

Defence minister in Israel to discuss bilateral relations – Cyprus Mail

Posted By on August 12, 2022

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Defence minister in Israel to discuss bilateral relations - Cyprus Mail

I read a secret transcript of Hasidic sex advice. Ive read worse. – Forward

Posted By on August 12, 2022

In the movie "Unorthodox," the bride dreads having sex with her husband and ends up fleeing the Hasidic community.

Senior Contributing EditorRob EshmanAugust 09, 2022

All first-time Hasidic grooms prepare for their wedding night by getting blow-by-blow instructions from a rabbi. But one young man did something unique: He recorded their conversation.

The 25-minute Yiddish recording, made in Williamsburg around 2017, found its way to Frieda Vizel, a formerly Hasidic tour guide of the area. Vizel translated the lesson to English, changing just enough details to preserve the anonymity of the groom and his teacher.

Instead of seeing Hasidic sex as abusive or as perfect and pure, this is just the experience in a very raw form, said Vizel in a phone interview.

To me, the raw form was a revelation.

My knowledge of Hasidic sex begins and ends with the TV shows Shtisel and Unorthodox.

You have a hole inside you, leading to a hallway, leading to a little door, Esty, the young woman in Unorthodox, is told by a bride teacher in advance of her wedding night. When the man enters the hallway with his

No! Esty interjects, horrified and scene. Estys experiences in the marital bed turn out to be physically painful and emotionally miserable. Ultimately and not just because she dreads having sex with her husband she ends up fleeing the Hasidic community.

But the real lesson taught pre-wedding night, as translated by Vizel, struck me as far more sensitive. It is still a man Hasid-splaining a womans feelings to another man. But the groom teacher began well before the actual sex which was the first pleasant surprise. He detailed what the groom should do in the yichud room, where traditional brides and grooms go for a bit after the wedding ceremony.

You say to her, Mazel tov, Libby! shaking her hand with both of yours. Okay?

He told the groom what blessing the couple must recite.

As soon as you finish this with Amen, let go of her hand, embrace her. Give her a good kiss here and here. Okay? On the cheek. Not on the mouth. Okay. And as soon as you are done kissing her, you let go of her and you say: Wow! Libby, your gown is BEAUTIFUL! It came out so gorgeous! It came out so stunning! Very, very nice!

Theres usually no sex in the yichud room another urban myth busted. Instead, the teacher instructed his pupil to slow down and talk to his bride.

Libby, how was your day? the teacher told the groom to ask. When did you come to the wedding hall? When did you say the afternoon prayers? Were you able to sleep last night? But you wont ask everything because she is going to be asking you back: Yossi, How was your day? Youll say how your day went, and so itll go one after the other.

After the festive meal, the teacher said, Yossi is to escort Libby through the womens side of the celebration to the mens side, where she stops.

When you get to the mens side, tell your bride, Libby, be well! Enjoy the wedding, I will see you later!

The lesson picked up in the apartment after the wedding.

Say to her, Libby, please come. Let me help you take off your gown because I want you to be more comfortable. Then you go into the kitchen, eat a little, chat a little. Then you go get ready to go to sleep. Youll recite the Shema and take a shower.

After the shower, more talking.

Libby, do you want me to be comfortable? the teacher instructed his student to say. When you are comfortable, I am comfortable. Please, make yourself comfortable, the wig, whatever, but just be comfortable.

The rebbe continued with advice for conversation: What do you think of the wedding music? What do you think of the pianist? What do you think of the singer? You talk about the wedding.

After a minute, youll take your hand and put it on her shoulder, wrap it around her. And you tell her: You know Libby, I was in here in the apartment today, and you did such a beautiful job. And as you say the word such you embrace her with both arms. And you are going to give her a few deep kisses on her cheek; here two-three, there two-three. But now, FOR SURE, she returns the embrace.

There was, in this instruction, a lot of what a therapist would call checking in. The grooms teacher knew his pupil would be nervous. As Vizel pointed out to me, while Hasidic men may get pointers from their siblings or peers, its not like they have any hands-on experience. And the point the teacher kept pressing was: Speak with her. Listen to her. Take your time.

It was all very un-Unorthodox, where the man swung himself on top of the shaking bride without a how-do-you-do.

And you talk to her very sweetly, the teacher continued. Tell her how much you love her, and how beautiful she is, and how beautiful she looked at the wedding, you can talk to her! Tell her how beautifully she set up the apartment, and how beautiful it is set up inside, in the cabinets. Youll take your arm off her, youll give her a piece of cake, give her something to drink, give her a chocolate. You eat, you schmooze. What do you talk about? You talk more about the wedding.

Up to this point, it was all, How to be with a partner, and not, What to do in bed and is that such terrible relationship advice for any two people?

Eventually, after kissing the mezuzah and undressing without looking the two are to lie down in bed. The teachers description of what to do there started out, again, very un-Unorthodox, a kind of choreography. One step leads to another and before you know it, youre dancing.

So what youll do is, youll touch only her face, he said. Stroke her face. Her face, her forehead. You can give her a kiss on her forehead. And you kiss her, and you stroke her face, and tell her how delicious it is, tell her how much you waited for her, tell her how much you love her, tell her how beautiful she is.

Tell her how much you enjoy her. Tell her how delicious it is to be lying next to her.

And tell her that you only want one thing: that she should be happy. That this is your single mission in life.

How long will you lie with her? However long you want! A half-hour, an hour, an hour and a half. I dont care. However long you want. Okay?

Now. When you feel ready, you want to go, you want to do it, what do you do?

At this point in the transcript, theres an ellipsis.

Vizel herself was married at 18 years old in the Hasidic tradition, and, like all brides, first met with a bride teacher. The sex descriptions in the recording brought back traumatic memories, she said, without going into detail.

It was, she said, a very intense emotional experience.

So Vizel couldnt bring herself to include the actual sex instructions which, she said, was like a medical guide. You spread her legs and you lift this and Vizel added some far more graphic terminology Youre done. Thats all.

She did pick up the translation immediately after.

The moment you feel that it is finished, the teacher said, you must jump out of bed. Jump out of bed. OK.

This is because the Jewish laws of family purity dictate that any physical touch between husband and wife is forbidden after their first sexual encounter until 12 days later. Vizel explained that the groom must check the sheets for her blood, the presence of which requires a 12-day separation.

If the sex and its immediate aftermath described by the groom teacher are far from what we think of as romantic or satisfying, Vizel said the entire translation offers some sort of corrective.

The groom teacher, she said, has the challenge of making sure that a couple gets off on the right start. You know, they can figure out sex, they can figure out whats allowed later. It will be fine as long as they dont have this terrible wedding night where theyre traumatized by not knowing if they did it right.

She said many husbands will continue to consult with the groom teacher after the first night, and the brides with their teacher, a kallah teacher.

Vizel translated the instructions because, judging by the questions her tour participants ask, people are fascinated by the sex lives of Hasids. I read it intently, because, well, so am I. Its a culture at once so close and so foreign, us but not us.

Its also a culture, judging by this transcript, that popular culture tends to caricature. The grooms teacher transcript shows another side, bound, maybe warped, by an antique and male-centric set of rules, but still far more nuanced than I was led to expect.

Its an effort to try to get people to really give each other a real chance. That was my experience. Its awkward and painful and beautiful, Vizel said. And its much more complicated.

Rob Eshman is Senior Contributing Editor of the Forward. Follow him on Instagram @foodaism and Twitter @foodaism or email eshman@forward.com.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward. Discover more perspective in Opinion.

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I read a secret transcript of Hasidic sex advice. Ive read worse. - Forward

South Blooming Grove finishes review of 600-home Clovewood project – Times Herald-Record

Posted By on August 12, 2022

The former Lake Anne Country Club under construction

Drone video of the former Lake Anne Country Club under construction

John Meore and Peter Carr, Times Herald-Record

SOUTH BLOOMING GROVE - No one has shot a hole of golf at the former Lake Anne Country Club for more than 20 years. The ramshackle rental homes have long been vacant. Investors who bought the giant tract for $15 million in 2006 have pursued one goal since then: to build homes there.

They will soon get their wish.

Plans for a 600-home development next to Schunnemunk Mountain came closer to approval on Tuesday when two South Blooming Grove boards concluded a four-year environmental review they led for the Clovewood project. With their approval of a 24-page summary of their findings, only a few steps remain for construction to begin at a 708-acre site that already has been cleared.

"I am so thrilled," Mayor George Kalaj said after the Village Board and Planning Board unanimously approved the findings statement during a Zoom meeting. "It was very important that we move this forward."

The project means big growth for a village that had nearly 4,000 residents in 2020 and has become a largely Satmar Hasidic community in the last few years. Planners estimate the 600 four-bedroom homes alone will house roughly 3,100 people, based on the larger family sizes in the nearby Satmar village of Kiryas Joel. The estimate rises to about 3,800 if the buyers add an accessory apartment to every home, according to the environmental review.

Clovewood:Developer proposes 600-home project at former Lake Anne Country Club

Bankruptcy:Lake Anne buyers go to court to stave off foreclosure

Turnover:South Blooming Grove undergoes rapid change with steady home sales

The project site takes up nearly a quarter of the village's 5-square-mile territory, but more than half of the property is spared from development in the plans. The 600 houses are set to be built on 347 acres, along with six playgrounds and four community centers.

One of the most pressing questions about the project was how so large a housing development would find enough drinking water in an area that has had longstanding groundwater struggles. Planners have answered that in the environmental review by saying the six on-site wells they plan to use can furnish up to 785,520 gallons per day, far more than the 260,000 average daily gallons they estimate 600 houses would use.

The property, and the visions for its future use, had a long, colorful history before getting to this stage.

Lake Anne Country Club was a former bungalow colony with a golf course and dozens of rental homes. Marvin Greene, the businessman who owned the property since 1952, hatched a series of wide-ranging redevelopment schemes over the years that never came to fruition, including plans for a Chinese theme park, a landfill, a 500-room hotel and a high-stakes bingo operation run by a Native American tribe.

In a tragic twist, the 88-year-old Greene was beaten to death by two men in a robbery in 2000.

Four years after his death, Blooming Grove officials discussed buying the massive property and turning it into a town park. But Greene's family instead sold it to a dozen investors who later said in a bankruptcy court filing that they wanted to build multi-family housing for the growing Satmar community. The same year the land was sold, residents voted to incorporate the village of South Blooming Grove in an effort to tighten control over future development.

The full property the investors bought covers 852 acres and includes a 158-acre parcel that is outside village borders in the town of Blooming Grove and is not part of the Clovewood plans, according to Orange County property records.

Greene's family, which had lent the buyers $10 million of the $15 million purchase price, began foreclosure proceedings in 2011 when the investors - known as Keen Equities - defaulted on the mortgage payments. Keen Equities halted the foreclosure by filing for bankruptcy in 2013, declaring that it owed the Greenes $6.5 million in principal and interest. The bankruptcy case is still open, with Keen making regular payments to the Greenes under a court-approved schedule.

No formal development plans were submitted until 2014, when Keen proposed 620 homes - 512 single-family lots and 54 duplex lots. That proposal evolved into the 600-home Clovewood project that began in earnest with the submission of a draft environmental impact statement in 2018.

South Blooming Grove's population was shifting by then with a steady influx of Satmar families, largely from nearby Kiryas Joel and from Brooklyn. That turnover led to swift political change, with voters electing all new municipal leaders in 2020 and 2021 and the new mayor replacing the entire planning board. It was those two new boards that ushered the Clovewood environmental review to a close by approving a final environmental impact statement last month and the findings statement this week.

Speaking after this week's vote, Simon Gelb, the project's planner, alluded to the long planning process and gave "special thanks" to the two new boards that completed the environmental review. He recalled first meeting with village officials to discuss the plans in 2013.

"I am grateful for everyone's involvement in this project since its inception," Gelb said.

The Clovewood development will have entrances on Clove Road and Route 208 and be connected to two roads in the adjacent Capitol Hill neighborhood, according to the review. Sewage will be treated by a new plant that will be able to handle up to 280,000 gallons per day. The plans feature two housing types of 2,500 square feet and 3,750 square feet.

Chris McKenna covers government and politics for the Times Herald-Record and USA Today Network. Reach him at cmckenna@th-record.com

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South Blooming Grove finishes review of 600-home Clovewood project - Times Herald-Record

Jewish perspectives on abortion diverse, often oversimplified | News, Sports, Jobs – Williamsport Sun-Gazette

Posted By on August 12, 2022

At only 2.5% of the American population, the Jewish view on abortion is probably irrelevant. The abortion debate in this country has been driven largely by the Evangelical Christian community. However, that does not stop people from misrepresenting the Jewish point of view.

Only recently there was an interesting position put forward by a member of the Jewish faith that a fetus is nothing more than tissue in a womans body which can be disregarded at will. It is argued that there is no right to life until birth of a fully formed baby.

Nothing could be further from the truth. Judaism, like many denominations within Christianity, is very diverse. Once upon a time, a judge demanded that I be in trial on a Jewish holiday. I told him that I could not be, because I was not permitted to work on that holiday. He then proceeded to tell me about a friend of his who was Jewish and would work on that day. I had a friendly relationship with the judge and I asked him if it was correct that he was born Catholic in a small town. He answered yes. I said to him: Well, Judge I am Catholic just like you. He understood and he gave me the day off.

We have within the Jewish faith those who are sometimes referred to as Haredi (black hat) or ultra-Orthodox, certain sects of Hasidic, and at the other end of the spectrum, there are those who embrace a New Age philosophy.

The National Council of Jewish Women is dominated by a group who attempt to interpret Judaism as permitting abortion on demand, with the unborn having no rights.

For Judaism the debate as to when life begins is irrelevant. The issue is not when life begins, but rather what form of protection is the unborn entitled to? In Judaism, life does not begin at conception and an individual does not have legal rights to inheritance and to the other advantages of personhood until they are born. However, that does mean that the fetus is not entitled to any protection or that it is tissue that may be disregarded at the whim of the woman carrying the fetus.

The most clearly enunciated view of abortion in Judaism is that when the fetus becomes a rodef, a pursuer, the woman is entitled to protection. In other words, if the womans life is in danger, she is entitled to protection including abortion.

This is not inconsistent with the view that feticide is prohibited by Jewish law.

Pregnancy, a baby and raising a family are core components within Judaism, not lightly to be set aside.

There is some misrepresentation as to the position of the Torah with respect to two people fighting and a woman incidentally being struck, thereby causing a miscarriage.

Money has to be paid for the miscarriage, because the right of the fetus to be born alive has been eliminated. However, the person whose negligence caused the miscarriage is not put to death. That is perfectly consistent with Jewish law which prohibits the death sentence for unintentional killing. It has been written that a Sanhedrin which pronounce one death penalty every 70 years was considered bloodthirsty.

It has been stated, quite accurately, that Judaism teaches that the body is ultimately the property of God and merely on loan to human beings. Jewish law prohibits suicide, tattoos and wounding ones self. This clearly indicates that individuals do not maintain the unabridged right to make any choice they wish concerning their body. The body is the temple of the divine.

Therefore, while it is mandatory for a woman to have an abortion if her life is imperiled by the fetus, the so-called right to choose is not unfettered. Even the most orthodox denominations within Judaism are cautious with respect to laying down absolutely firm standards as to when an abortion should be prohibited.

The decision to abort, within Judaism, should never be taken lightly. It is a serious religious and spiritual matter and abortion is never countenanced as a form of birth control. Those who distort Jewish texts, learning and legal decisions to preach that Judaism is a religion of unrestricted abortion are doing a disservice to themselves, the religion and those who treasure the Jewish way of life.

Genesis in specific in commanding that people be fruitful and multiple. In fact, it is the first Mitzva; requirement or obligation.

The question is sometimes asked what about abortion rights in Israel? In Israel, in order to terminate a pregnancy, an Israeli woman appears before a three-person committee. Typically, the request is granted. There are no specific laws indicating when an abortion may be performed, and even if the request is denied by the committee, the woman can seek an abortion at a private clinic.

So diverse are the views of abortion in Judaism that Chabad, one of Hasidic groups which is enormously popular, explains that there is a difference between aborting in the first 72 hours, when it can still be classed as preventing conception and the first 40 days, before limbs and organs form. There is even a distinction in connection with the first 3 months and until 7 months, when the fetus is considered viable. In the case of rape, Chabad takes the position that abortion may be permitted by preventing conception if medication is ingested within 72 hours and, in some circumstances, abortion is permitted up to 40 days after conception.

There is an interesting story in the Talmud, the authoritative interpretive work of the Jewish Bible, that a lamp is lit for the unborn child above its head. The Talmud goes on to say that there are no days in which a person experiences more bliss than during the days in the mothers womb. While there, the child is taught the entire Torah. but as soon as he emerges, the angels strike him on the mouth, causing the child to forget the entire Torah. This is the reason for the saying below the nose, above the lip.

Therefore, a Jew is supposed to spend his or her life relearning the Torah.

While there are those who like to classify Judaism as either pro-life or pro-choice, the Jewish people in general take a much more nuanced and thoughtful view. One suspects that America may eventually come to this realization and approach itself.

Clifford A. Rieders is a board-certified trial advocate in Williamsport

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Jewish perspectives on abortion diverse, often oversimplified | News, Sports, Jobs - Williamsport Sun-Gazette


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