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A Woman of the World: Armen Ohanian, Published by Armenian Series at Fresno State – The Armenian Mirror-Spectator

Posted By on July 21, 2022

A Woman of the World: Armen Ohanian, Published by Armenian Series at Fresno State

FRESNO The Armenian Series of The Press at California State University, Fresno announces the publication of its 16th volume, A Woman of the World: Armen Ohanian, the Dancer of Shamakha, by Vartan Matiossian and Artsvi Bakhchinyan.

A Woman of the World is a fascinating chronicle of the life of dancer and author Armen Ohanian (1888-1976). She was a well-educated woman born in an Armenian family in the Caucasus and fluent in half a dozen languages truly a Woman of the World, who lived through times and places as diverse as the Russian Caucasus, the Iranian Constitutional Revolution, the Belle poque in France, the Roaring Twenties in the United States, the early Soviet Union, and ended her days in Mexico after living an eventful life cloaked in mystery. She bridged multiple cultures as an actress in the Caucasus, a theater director in Persia, a writer in France, and a translator in Mexico. Above all she was an acclaimed dancer from Asia to Africa, from Europe to America with the monikers dancer of Shamakha and the Persian dancer. Mounting on a wave of Near and Far Eastern dances sweeping the West, she belonged to a category of dancers that conceived of choreographies nurtured by their culture of origin.

Ohanian became a model for painters and sculptors, and many famous contemporaries left testimony of her in their correspondence, memoirs, and reminiscences. Her life across borders, languages, and cultures she wrote in four languages, Armenian, Russian, French, and Spanish and her works were published in no less than 14 countries highlights some of the elements that are intertwined with the concept of diaspora: transnationalism, multilingualism, multiculturalism, and a multifaceted understanding of homeland.

This collaborative project has brought into fruition two decades of research, with a preliminary book in Armenian (2007) that now has doubled in scope and wealth of information. Using an enormous variety of archival and printed sources in many languages, the authors offer in this 450-page biography new insights into Oriental dance, cultural studies, gender studies, diaspora studies, and other subjects to scholars and readers in general.

Vartan Matiossian is a historian and literary scholar with a broad range of interests in Armenian classical and modern culture. He has published extensively in Armenian, Spanish, and English, including eight books, almost two dozen translations, and several edited volumes. He is currently the executive director of the Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Church in New York.Vartan Matiossian

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A Woman of the World: Armen Ohanian, Published by Armenian Series at Fresno State - The Armenian Mirror-Spectator

New details about what is going on with the former American Hebrew Academy campus – WFMYNews2.com

Posted By on July 21, 2022

City and county leaders met with the feds to talk about their plans for the building.

GREENSBORO, N.C. In June, the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced the former American Hebrew Academy would be used as transitional housing and a school for unaccompanied immigrant children, who come into the United States illegally.

The contract for HHS to take over the campus was finalized last month, but there were no updates for the city council since it's a private deal.

There have been many questions about how it will work, when the kids will arrive, and other details.

Tuesday, the leaders got answers.

Guilford County Commissioner Chairman Skip Alston said the former American Hebrew Academy will be an influx care facility.

According to HHS, an influx care facility is a type of care provider facility that is a temporary stay that provides shelter and services for unaccompanied children during an emergency.

Alston said there are hundreds of these campuses across the United States, so it's not their first time setting up a campus like this.

"I don't see any real serious concerns," Alston said. "This is not their first rodeo, so to speak, they have 200 facilities like this across 22 different states, so they've done this before."

City leaders learned that 1,500 people will work in and out of the facility. Alston said they won't come all at one time, but as the kids arrive, so will the staff.

The children will be ages 13 to 17 and will stay at the campus roughly two to four weeks.

HHS will offer schooling, case management, legal services, recreational opportunities and mental and medical services for the children, while they are at the Greensboro facility.

The children are not allowed off of the campus unless it were to be a medical emergency.

There will also be an eight to one staff to student ratio.

"Overall, I think that it's good for our community, it's good for the children that's caught up in this situation and again our purpose is helping each other, brothers helping brothers, sisters helping sisters," Alston said.

City Council Member Nancy Hoffmann said she brought questions from the community members. She asked about things like security and traffic issues.

"Although they couldn't be specific because, of course, the federal government contracts much of this work out with individual contracting companies, but I certainly left with the impression that they understood concerns and that those would definitely be addressed appropriately and I think the we can have good expectations in terms of the plan," Hoffmann said.

HHS plans to come back with answers in the coming months.

Hoffmann said the meeting was reassuring.

"I have a strong feeling that all of this is that will be forthcoming and everything that we heard today is certainly fine," she said.

There were some questions that weren't answered.

"We asked them for some information on those other facilities, are there any community problems? Were there any criminal activities or anything that went wrong," Alston said. "They are going to be providing us with any information related to that and we asked them a lot of questions and that they couldn't answer and they agreed to get back with us."

The signs on the campus have changed, as it no longer shows the American Hebrew Academy name, but rather just lists the schools address.

More details are expected to come out in the following months.

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New details about what is going on with the former American Hebrew Academy campus - WFMYNews2.com

Walk Through Beautiful Stained Glass Windows At This Unique Museum In Mississippi – Only In Your State

Posted By on July 21, 2022

There are several unique places to visit in Mississippi, and the Hebrew Union Temple is one of them. Much more than a traditional house of worship, the temple houses a museum, which is raved about by visitors of all faiths. The museum isnt the only thing visitors rave about, though. Theres also the temples collection of stained glass windows.

Still in use today, the temple holds services twice a month. But bi-monthly services arent the only thing that attracts people to the Hebrew Union Temple.

The museum provides a history of the temples congregation from 1880 to the present. In addition to photos and artifacts, the museum houses several beautiful stained glass windows. However, the windows on display arent the only pieces of stained glass on the premises.

Absolutely stunning, the windows line the sides of the temple.

Fascinating, magnificent, and exquisite are just a few of the words used by past visitors to describe the stained glass windows.

Well, what do you think? Are you ready to see these stunning stained glass windows in person? The museum at the Hebrew Union Temple is open during select hours on weekdays. For more info, call the temple at (662) 332-4153. You can also visit the Hebrew Union Temple website.

So, what do you think? Do you agree? Is this Hebrew museum one of the most unique places to visit in Mississippi? Ever been? If so, whatd you think of the stained glass windows? What about the rest of the memorabilia on display? Tell us!

When it comes to unique places to visit in Mississippi, Greenvilles Hebrew museum is one of many! There are so many one-of-a-kind sites, including the coolest place to shop in Mississippi.

Address: Hebrew Union Congregation, 504 Main St, Greenville, MS 38701, USA

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Walk Through Beautiful Stained Glass Windows At This Unique Museum In Mississippi - Only In Your State

Trapped in Translation – Tablet Magazine

Posted By on July 21, 2022

We cant translate everything. At least not precisely. Concepts exist in certain cultures that are absent, or markedly different, in others. We all know the adage that Eskimos have 47 different words for snow. Whether or not thats true, it is clear that Inuit and Yupik cultures have a closer connection to snow than do the residents of Tahiti. It makes sense that these cultures would differentiate the many kinds of snowfall according to the many ways that those distinctions affect their daily lives. We even might be able to translate some of these snow words into English: Aqilokoq is softly falling snow, piegnartoq is snow thats perfect for sled-driving. We can know what these snow words mean. But unless and until we understand the Eskimo mindset, we cannot truly glean what they signify.

English has words deemed essential for religion: faith, liturgy, Bible, even religion itself. None of these words really exist in Hebrew. Certainly, not a single one of these Christian concepts correlates directly to anything that can be considered Jewish. Of course, Modern Hebrew has the vocabulary to translate these English phrases. And, obviously, Judaism does possess ideas and structures that share a similarity with Christian concepts like worship and Scripture. But that similarity all too often masks a vast difference. That difference prevents us from understanding what Judaism is at its essence. But before we examine those differences, lets go back and examine the origins of the English language.

The furthest back we can trace a distinct English language is to the sixth century, the earliest date for the emergence of Old English. Now, Old English has far more in common with German than any English we know today; most scholars believe it is an utterly distinct language from Modern English. Its only in the ninth century that Middle English emerges. Coming into its heyday after the Norman conquest of 1066, Middle English, as anyone whos every struggled to read Chaucer knows, resembles our English, but is still a ways away. Most people have never heard of the Great Vowel Shift that marked the transition to Modern English, but with the arrival of Shakespeares works and the King James Bible, the language we know today was coming into its own.

Because of the time it took for English to evolve into anything we recognize today, the tongue that shapes most American Jews thinking is at most 1,000 years old. Jewish traditions, in even the most cautious of counting, extend back 3,000 years. Until the Greco-Roman period, Jewish thought was expressed in Hebrew; then, Aramaic, a sister language to Hebrew that was the international parlance of its day, became a secondary vessel for transmitting Jewish tradition. By the time Old English emerged around 550 CE, the Torah and the Talmud, the two core texts of Jewish thought and practice, were effectively complete. The great frames and structures of Judaism existed before any Jew ever spoke English.

English, in contrast, was brought into existence, effectively and exclusively, by Christians. With rare exception or incursion, the island of Britain was Christian before and since the emergence of English. As polyglot language, English has its roots in many places. In terms of religious phrases, Greek and Latin, and therefore, Christian, etymologies dominate. Faith is derived from fidere, for trust, religion from religio, for cult, or mode of worship.Bible is from the Greek, ta Biblia: the Book. Leitourgia, etymon of liturgy, is likewise Attic Greek for public performance. Each of these words, and every English word connected to religion, is born of and steeped in Christian thought.

Judaism is a square peg that refuses to fit in the proverbial round hole of Christianity. Hebrew not only precedes both Christianity and English, but it is markedly different in its vocabulary and concepts. As English evolved, it of necessity coined terms to describe Christian phenomenon. Hebrew, the foundational language of Judaism, had no such need. Students of religion, a discipline that seeks to find parallels in order to appreciate distinctions, might be horrified to find that there is no Jewish word for liturgy, that there is no Jewish word for faith, that there is no Jewish word for Bible, let alone one that can barely be made to fit Scripture. There is even no real Jewish word for religion.

Even the most honest attempts to understand Judaism authentically are unconsciously undermined simply because these attempts are in English, are limited by English.

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In a moment, we will explore each of these important distinctions. But first, we should pause and reflect on the significance of this unfathomable gap between Jewish vocabulary and Christian concepts. Most modern Jews outside Israel (and certainly the audience of this work) are native English speakers. Their worldviews and expectations are formed by the contours of the English language. Sunday morning cartoons depict Bible stories, not Torah tales. Our conversations are filled with faith: Keep the faith, act in good faith, have faith in yourself. Intermediate schools teach comparative religion, subsuming Judaism into a category it doesnt neatly fit. So when most modern Jews approach Judaism, they come with questions and preconceptions that are Christian. They believe Judaism is a religion; they imagine faith in God is a prerequisite. They want to know about liturgy and worship, and learn all about the Bible (which, in the most obvious acquiescence to Christian English, they usually call the Old Testament). Even the most honest attempts to understand Judaism authentically are unconsciously undermined simply because these attempts are in English, are limited by English.

Most English speakers operate under the false linguistic assumption that Judaism and Christianity run on the same operating system. Nothing could be further from the case. Anyone who remembers back to the days of floppy discs recalls that what worked on a Mac would need to be entirely reformatted for a PC. The analogy holds here: Judaism just has a different source code from Christianity. Its program language is Am and Avodah, Torah and Talmud. And it hardly suffices to translate these terms as people, worship, Bible, and (fascinatingly) Talmud. Thats not really what these essential Jewish concepts are about. To delimit these millennia-old, remarkably robust ideas with one-word terms born of alien Christianity is simply unfair. To truly appreciate Judaism, its core concepts need to be liberated from their simplistic English definitions. Judaisms concepts, and Judaism itself, need to be appreciated for what they are, andespecially for English speakersneed to be distinguished from common Christian concepts.

Lets start with religion. It is only the fifth definition of the phrase in the Oxford English Dictionary that doesnt use the word religion as part of the definition:

Now, some might say this definition of religion describes Judaism perfectly: There is a belief, or at least covenant with, Yahweh, which is manifest in a series of commandments that both define a code of life and set a prescribed course for worship. Even though I will argue later that little of that is true, this OED understanding of religion fails to capture an essential element of Judaism: the self-conception as an Am, a people. From Torahs time through our own, there are plenty of individuals who are born Jewish yet neither believe in nor acknowledge any sort of superhuman power who defines their code of living. Regardless, many of these individuals fully consider themselves Jewish. Judaism might overlap with certain aspects of religion, but it far exceeds the boundaries of such a limiting term.

Proof positive of the failure of religion to define Judaism is a phrase I have heard countless times in my career: Im Jewish, but not religious. Early in my rabbinate, I took this assertion as a challenge. I would ask people what they found meaningful about their Jewish life, and answers would include everything from cooking for holidays to doing the work of social justice all the way throughshockinglycoming to Shabbat services. I sometimes sensed that what people meant when they said, Im Jewish, but not religious, was that they loved Judaismthey were willingly engaging with a rabbi, after allbut that they didnt believe in God. Sometimes, I even tried to convince people that they were fully Jewish, and shouldnt let anything stand in the way of their own self-perception. Over time, however, I realized that these people didnt have a problem. The problem was the word religion itself. Its a Christian concept that simply doesnt fit Judaism.

Opening any Hebrew-English dictionary will tell you that the Hebrew word for religion is dat. In this, there is a double irony. First of all, dat is a hardly Hebrew; its an Old Iranian loan-word that first appears in the biblical book of Esther, one of the later entrants in the Jewish canon. Secondly, dat means law, edict, or practice. In the book of Esther, dat indicates in one instance the edict of the king, and in another the custom of drinking to excess. By the time of the Talmud, dat maintained this same semantic range from custom through law. It wasnt until the revival of Modern Hebrew started by Eliezer Ben-Yehuda in the 19th century that dat came to mean religion. And why did this happen? Modern Hebrew needed to compete in the international marketplace of ideas: Modern Hebrew required its own words for phrases that were widespread in other languages, most prominent among which was English. And so this loan-word of antiquity was equated with religion, translated as such in a dictionary. Hebrew needed a place holder, and dat seemed to fit the bill. But dat doesnt fit the definition of religion in any meaningful way. Hebrew really has no concept of religion whatsoever.

The chasm between English and Hebrew is equally deep when it comes to the Bible. For Christians, the Bible has always been a written document. Theres a reason its called ta Biblia: the book. By the time Christianity arrived on the scene, there were already texts of what they call the Old Testament. The Christian movement was propelled forward by the written word: Gospels authored by individuals sharing the stories of Jesus, and Epistlesliterally lettersearly authorities supposedly scripted and sent to Galicia, Thessalonia, Rome, and more. Christianity began with the written word as it foundation. The first chapter of the first Gospel cites the text of the Jewish prophet Isaiah; the last of the Gospels opens with the line, In the beginning was the word. From the beginning, Christianity had a book, the book, ta Biblia: the Bible.

Judaism has no Bibleat least not in the Christian sense of the word. The earliest name for a collection of Jewish traditions and teachings that come down to us is Torah. Over the millennia, Torah has become a most elastic word, meaning either something very specific or something incredibly broad. For our purposes here, Torah simply means teaching. This is why Torah can be something as narrow as a set of regulations regarding lepers, can indicate a five-volume literary collection falsely attributed to Moses, and also is able to signify the remarkably broad category of all legitimate Jewish learning. Torah is teaching. In the time that the collection we call Torah was created, the primary vehicle for this teaching was oral transmission. Yes, the words capturing these teachings were collected and put to parchment. But that inscription and collection happened long after the tales and laws were common cultural currency. To the Jewish mind, it matters not that these matters are written. What is important is that the words of Torah are taught, transmitted, from one generation to the next.

Religion. Bible. Scripture. Worship. The phrases fit Judaism like a hand-me-down outfit from a sibling whos a different size.

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The same is true of Scripture. Obviously, Judaism has (at least one) sacred text. The Tanakh, a term often translated as Hebrew for Bible, is in fact an acronym of three collections: Torah (here, specifically the five books of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy), Neviim/Prophets (histories from their time and reports of their words), and Ketuvim/Writings (perhaps the worlds most perfectly named miscellany of texts). Tanakh as a term originated during the time of the Rabbis whose argument and reasoning are captured in the Talmud. Even though Tanakh was coined by the Rabbis, they hardly used it as the word for what we today might call the Hebrew Bible. Instead, they employed an entirely different word: Mikra. Mikra means that which is proclaimed, or read out loud. Even though, by the Rabbinic Period, Judaisms earliest sacred text were written down, what was important to that Jewish community wasnt the fact of their inscription, but the importance of their being pronounced aloud. The Rabbis made mainstream the practice of ensuring that Jewish teaching (Torah) was publicly proclaimed (Mikra) three times every week. Was this Torah written in a scroll? Were the collections of Tanakh bound in a book? Definitely, and probably. But the existence of Torah in written form was not the important issue; that it was a book or a scroll was of secondary importance (if any at all). Mikra mattered to the Jews of antiquity because it was read aloud, performed publicly. Tanakh might look like a book, and be roughly parallel to what Christians call the Bible, but in essence an orally proclaimed Mikra is something far different from a book.

Scripture and Bible belong to the Christian realm of religion. They do not nest neatly into the Jewish worldview imagined in Hebrew. And neither does worship, one of the great expectations of religion, fit snugly within Jewish thought. Worship of the Christian God is quite distinct from the Jewish conception of Divine Service. Worship originates from the idea of attributing esteem, which we see through the usage of worshipful as honorable. From its early English usage, this honor was quickly connected to divinity: As a verb, worship became expressing reverence for God. Most contemporary English speakers roughly equate worship with praise: We see evangelicals engaging in Praise the Lord! sessions, or see Protestant prayer services replete with hymns honoring Gods good works. Now, as those Protestant hymnals robustly attestwith their ample implementation of HalleluyahHebrew does have words for both praise and worship. Halleluyah means praise God: hallelu is the Hebrew vocative, let us pray, and Yah is a short form of Gods proper name. Likewise, as many who attend Jewish services know, worship has its rough parallel in Hebrew. Toward the end of daily services, we read the prayer Aleinu lshabeach, it is upon us to attest to the goodness, of God. Prayer and worship do exist in Hebrew.

However, neither prayer nor worship are essential Jewish categories. The worship of Aleinu lshabeach is liturgical language reserved for certain small segments of the service. And while scores of Halleluyah-shouting poems of praise were created by Psalmists, and notwithstanding some of the Psalms placement in standard Jewish prayer books, these paeans are not the standard of what many call Jewish worship. The Jewish act of regular engagement with our duty to the Divine has a proper Hebrew name: Avodah. Hebrew for service, even servitude, Avodah was the descriptor of Jewish obligations during the time when the temple stood and such service was effectuated through sacrifices on the altar. As Judaism shifted from its cultic center in Jerusalem to a way of life played out in synagogues strewn across the world, Avodah remained the word for ones service, ones regular obligations to God. The proper name of our prayerbook is Seder Avodat Israel, the Order of the Service of Israel. The thrice-daily series of readings contained in these liturgies are the service Jews are meant to perform for God on a most regular basis.

Service to God is what worship is in Judaism. Our service to God is rooted in our Exodus experience: We were slaves (avadim) to Pharaoh, and were redeemed, or restored to God, that we might be servants (avadim) of the Divine. Jewish worship is one of our forms of servitude to the Divine. And while this service certainly contains some praise and some worship, its fundamental building block is entirely other: Most of our sacred service is composed of rabbinic blessings or scriptural citations. Worship and praise are about expressing honor to God; that is part, but hardly all of what passes for worship in Jewish setting. Study, history, and theology are much more a part of a Jewish service than are praise and worship.

Religion. Bible. Scripture. Worship. The phrases fit Judaism like a hand-me-down outfit from a sibling whos a different size. I could go on at greater length, explaining how faith isnt a Jewish concept, how charity didnt exist in Judaism until we encountered Christians, and howdespite what many of us were taught at templeangels are a huge part of Hebrew heritage. Actually, this last example is the perfect summary of contemporary Jewish existence. Christian culture (and the English language that expresses it) has some powerful portrayals of angels: Archangel Rafael comes to heal, cute little cherubs surround Jesus in Heaven, and fallen angel Satan is evil incarnate. Now, even though Torah and Talmud are filled with angels, melachim, or divine messengers in Hebrew, our angels infrequently function in such fashions. Furthermore, while angelology is central to Christianity, it lives on the fringe and mystical territories of Jewish life. Rather than labor at length to explain these vast differences between what we take angels to indicate in English and what melachim means in Hebrew, generations of Jewish teachersdespite knowing betterhave thrown their hands in the air and simply said, Judaism doesnt believe in angels. It is sometimes easier for English-speaking Jews to deny the truths of our tradition than to bother with the limits of translation.

This is the trap of translation: Jews tend to deny essential, or important, aspects of who we really are because of the difficulty of expressing ourselves within and against Christian language. It can be exhausting to be an English-speaking Jew. This hardly means Jewish life can only honestly be lived in Hebrew. A vibrant Jewish life is entirely possible in English, even only in English. But, in order to create such a life of meaning, we must be honest about where Judaism fits in English, and where it doesnt. Even in English, we must explain and understand crucial differences between linguistic expectations regarding what are called religions, but which we Jews understand as traditions that encompass particular practices, hierarchies of value, understandings of the Divine, folkways and foodstuffs, and, of course, our own language. It will only be when we remove ourselves from this trap of translation that we will be free to understand, to live, and to grow Jewish life in our modern world.

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Trapped in Translation - Tablet Magazine

NurExone Exosomes to Be Used in Cutting Edge Molecular Research at Hebrew University’s Burstyn-Cohen Lab – StreetInsider.com

Posted By on July 21, 2022

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Calgary, Alberta--(Newsfile Corp. - July 19, 2022) - NurExone Biologic Inc.(TSXV: NRX)(formerly, EnerSpar Corp.)(the "Company" or "NurExone"), a biopharmaceutical company developing biologically-guided exosome therapy for patients with traumatic spinal injuries and other Central Nervous System ("CNS") indications, announced the signing of a Material Transfer Agreement (the "Agreement") dated July 18th, 2022 with Yissum Research Development Company of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Ltd. ("Yissum"), the wholly-owned subsidiary and technology transfer company of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (the "Hebrew University").

The Agreement relates to the transfer of certain biological, chemical, and other tangible materials (the "Materials") to Yissum for use by Prof. Tal Burstyn-Cohen and her team at the Hebrew University. Prof Burstyn-Cohen is an experienced researcher at the Hebrew University and leader of the Burstyn-Cohen Lab which researches molecular and cellular mechanisms that underlie tissue homeostasis in health. The Materials will be used to evaluate compositions and methods to enhance the cellular uptake of particles and organelles by small molecules, in accordance with the mutually agreed research plan attached to the Agreement. Specifically, Prof. Burstyn-Cohen's work will involve the coating of exosomes with a specialized molecule and evaluating the uptake of the coated exosomes in an inflamed brain mouse model. Under the Agreement, NurExone will have an option to receive an exclusive license to the jointly owned results and related intellectual property (if any) that may arise from the research by Prof. Burstyn-Cohen, in the field of neurodegenerative diseases and CNS indications.

Results of the collaboration may be the basis of publications in scientific journals, manuscripts, book chapters or at any scientific conferences or meetings subject to NurExone's right of review in accordance with the terms of the Agreement.

According to Dr. Lior Shaltiel, CEO of NurExone, "As a pioneer of ExoTherapy, NurExone's goal is to establish leadership in the field of human mesenchymal-derived exosome production and loading of therapeutic molecules into exosomes. To advance the science, awareness and commercialization of ExoTherapy, we intend to facilitate cutting-edge exosome-based research at leading universities. We look forward to cooperating with Prof. Burstyn Cohen to assess the feasibility of her innovations."

About NurExone

NurExone Biologic Inc. is a TSXV listed pharmaceutical company that is developing a platform for biologically-guided ExoTherapy to be delivered, non-invasively, to patients who suffered traumatic spinal cord injuries. The Company's ExoTherapy will use proprietary exosomes (membrane-bound extracellular vesicles) as biologically-guided nanocarriers to deliver specialized therapeutic compounds to target anatomies. The therapeutic compounds promote a biochemical environment that induces a healing process at the target location. ExoTherapy was conceptually demonstrated in animal studies at the Technion, Israel Institute of Technology. NurExone is translating the treatment to humans, and the Company holds an exclusive worldwide license from the Technion for the development and commercialization of the exosome technology.

About YISSUM

Yissum is the technology transfer company of The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Founded in 1964, it serves as a bridge between cutting-edge academic research and a global community of entrepreneurs, investors, and industry. Yissum's mission is to benefit society by converting extraordinary innovations and transformational technologies into commercial solutions that address our most urgent global challenges. Yissum has registered over 11,000 patents globally; licensed over 1,140 technologies and has spun out more than 200 companies. Yissum's business partners span the globe and include companies such as Boston Scientific, ICL, Intel, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Novartis, and many more. For further information please visit http://www.yissum.co.il.

For more information, please contact:Dr. Lior ShaltielChief Executive Officer and Director[emailprotected]+972-52-4803034

Investor Relations[emailprotected]+1 905-347-5569

READER ADVISORY

Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this press release.

This press release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy securities in the United States, nor shall there be any sale of these securities in any jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful.

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

This press release contains certain forward-looking statements, including statements about the Company's future plans, market size and growth, research and product development, the potential to treat SCI using the Company's products, intellectual property protection and potential future collaborations and execution on its current growth initiatives. Wherever possible, words such as "may", "will", "should", "could", "expect", "plan", "intend", "anticipate", "believe", "estimate", "predict" or "potential" or the negative or other variations of these words, or similar words or phrases, have been used to identify these forward-looking statements. These statements reflect management's current beliefs and are based on information currently available to management as at the date hereof.

Forward-looking statements involve significant risk, uncertainties and assumptions. Many factors could cause actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially from the results discussed or implied in the forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, risks related to the Company's early stage of development, lack of revenues to date, government regulation, market acceptance for its products, rapid technological change, dependence on key personnel, protection of the Company's intellectual property and dependence on the Company's strategic partners. These factors should be considered carefully and readers should not place undue reliance on the forward-looking statements. Although the forward-looking statements contained in this press release are based upon what management believes to be reasonable assumptions, the Company cannot assure readers that actual results will be consistent with these forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are made as of the date of this press release, and the Company assumes no obligation to update or revise them to reflect new events or circumstances, except as required by law.

To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/131264

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NurExone Exosomes to Be Used in Cutting Edge Molecular Research at Hebrew University's Burstyn-Cohen Lab - StreetInsider.com

Depression linked to consuming an inflammatory diet, increasing risk of frailty – EurekAlert

Posted By on July 21, 2022

A new study published in The Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences found a link between depression, diet, and the development of frailty. Frailty, defined as a recognizable state of increased vulnerability resulting from a decline in function across multiple physiological systems, affects 10-15% older adults and often co-occurs with other health conditions, like depression.Frailty, defined as a recognizable state of increased vulnerability resulting from a decline in function across multiple physiological systems, affects 10-15% older adults and often co-occurs with other health conditions, like depression. Diet is thought to be a major contributor to frailty development. While previous studies established a link between an inflammatory diet including artificial trans fats (like partially hydrogenated oil), refined carbohydrates, and saturated fats and the risk of development frailty, this is one of the first studies to try to understand the impact of depression on dietary inflammation and frailty.

Titled, Association of pro-inflammatory diet with frailty onset among adults with and without depressive symptoms: results from the Framingham Offspring Study, the study attempted to determine if individuals with depressive symptoms are more vulnerable to frailty development in response to dietary inflammation. The study utilized data from the Framingham Heart Study Offspring cohort. The 1,701 non-frail participants reported their diet and depressive symptoms at baseline and were followed for ~11 years when frailty status was reassessed. The study found an association between inflammatory diet and increased odds of frailty appeared somewhat stronger among those with depressive symptoms. The researchers hypothesize that since individuals with depressive symptoms typically have higher levels of inflammation, adding dietary inflammation on top of that accelerates the development of frailty.

Courtney L Millar, Ph.D., Post-Doctoral Fellow, Marcus Institute of Aging Research, Hebrew SeniorLife, and Harvard Medical School, is the lead author. This study found that depressive symptoms may exacerbate the development of frailty in response to consuming an inflammatory diet. This suggests that consuming a diet rich in anti-inflammatory compounds (e.g., fiber and plant-based compounds called flavonoids) may help prevent the development of frailty, Dr. Millar said.

Our exploratory data also suggests that when middle-aged and older adults consume a pro-inflammatory diet, they are more likely to newly develop depressive symptoms and frailty at the same time rather than develop either condition alone, she added.

This research follows two prior studies conducted by Dr. Millar, one published in May in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition that showed that consuming a Mediterranean-style diet may prevent the development of frailty, and one published in February in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition that showed a pro-inflammatory diet increased the risk of frailty development.

This study contributes to the understanding of the relationship between dietary inflammation, depression, and frailty, Dr. Millar said. For those with depression, it may be even more important to increase their intake of fruits and vegetables that are rich in fiber, flavonoids as well as other dietary antioxidants.

The Framingham Heart Study, Massachusetts General Hospital, and the University of South Carolina collaborated on this observational study. This study was primarily funded by the National Institute of Aging (NIA) (grant no. T32-AG023480), the Beth and Richard Applebaum Research Fund, as well as the Boston Claude D. Pepper Center OAIC (OAIC; 1P30AG031679).

Other authors included: Alyssa B. Dufour, Ph.D., Assistant Scientist II, Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research; James R. Hebert, D.Sc. Health Sciences Distinguished Professor and Director, South Carolina Statewide Cancer Prevention and Control Program, the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics and the Cancer Prevention and Control Program, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC and Department of Nutrition, Connecting Health Innovations LLC, Columbia, SC; Nitin Shivappa, M.B.B.S., M.P.H., Ph.D., Adjunct Assistant Professor, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC; Olivia I. Okereke, M.D., M.S., Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School and Department of Epidemiology, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health; Douglas P. Kiel, M.D., M.P.H., Director, Musculoskeletal Research Center and Senior Scientist, Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research; Marian T. Hannan, D.Sc., M.P.H., Co-Director, Musculoskeletal Research Center and Senior Scientist, Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research; and Shivani Sahni, Ph.D., Director, Nutrition Program and Associate Scientist, Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research.

About Hebrew SeniorLife

Hebrew SeniorLife, an affiliate of Harvard Medical School, is a national senior services leader uniquely dedicated to rethinking, researching, and redefining the possibilities of aging. Hebrew SeniorLife cares for more than 3,000 seniors a day across six campuses throughout Greater Boston. Locations include: Hebrew Rehabilitation Center-Boston and Hebrew Rehabilitation Center-NewBridge in Dedham; NewBridge on the Charles, Dedham; Orchard Cove, Canton; Simon C. Fireman Community, Randolph; Center Communities of Brookline, Brookline; and Jack Satter House, Revere. Founded in 1903, Hebrew SeniorLife also conducts influential research into aging at the Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research, which has a portfolio of more than $63 million, making it the largest gerontological research facility in the U.S. in a clinical setting. It also trains more than 1,000 geriatric care providers each year. For more information about Hebrew SeniorLife, visithttps://www.hebrewseniorlife.org or follow us on our blog, Facebook,Instagram, Twitter, andLinkedIn.

About the Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging ResearchScientists at theMarcus Instituteseek to transform the human experience of aging by conducting research that will ensure a life of health, dignity, and productivity into advanced age. The Marcus Institute carries out rigorous studies that discover the mechanisms of age-related disease and disability; lead to the prevention, treatment, and cure of disease; advance the standard of care for older people; and inform public decision-making.

Journal of Gerontology

Observational study

People

Association of pro-inflammatory diet with frailty onset among adults with and without depressive symptoms: results from the Framingham Offspring Study

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Depression linked to consuming an inflammatory diet, increasing risk of frailty - EurekAlert

Israel/OPT: Immediately halt forced eviction of more than 1000 West Bank residents and stop demolitions of Bedouin homes in the Negev/Naqab – Amnesty…

Posted By on July 19, 2022

The Israeli authorities must immediately halt the forcible eviction of more than 1,000 residents from Masafer Yatta, a Palestinian community in the occupied West Bank, Amnesty International said today, following weeks in which the Israeli army has repeatedly harassed people in the area, demolished homes and placed restrictions on freedom of movement. Inside Israel, the authorities must recognize the housing rights of Palestinian Bedouin citizens in the Negev/Naqab desert, who saw their village, al-Araqib, demolished again this morning, Tuesday 19 July.

In recent weeks, Masafer Yatta communities have been hit by wave after wave of demolitions according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). A campaign of intimidation by the Israeli authorities has sought to create unbearable living conditions that coerce residents into leaving. Roadblocks and other restrictions on movement have also prevented residents from celebrating the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha with their extended families in the nearby town of Yatta. On 11 May and 1 June, the Israeli army destroyed the homes of dozens of residents, with some suffering a third home demolition in the past 12 months.

With every day that accountability is delayed, more Palestinians are losing their homes, livelihoods and hopes for a life of dignity.

Around 1,150 Palestinians currently live in Masafer Yatta, of whom 569 are children, in over 200 homes, according to OCHA. Living conditions are dire, with residents almost entirely dependent on humanitarian aid. The Israeli authorities have issued orders to demolish or stop construction of almost all homes, animal shelters, cisterns, and community infrastructure in the area, on the grounds that they were built without permits, which are almost impossible to obtain.

More than 1,000 Palestinians in Masafer Yatta, including around 500 children, are bracing themselves for the potential arrival of Israeli bulldozers that would demolish their homes, solar panels and animal pens. Going ahead with this large-scale expulsion would amount to an act of forcible transfer, which is a war crime and crime against humanity, said Heba Morayef, Amnesty Internationals Regional Middle East and North Africa Director.

The imminent displacement of Palestinians from Masafer Yatta offers a stark reminder of the cruel strategy Israel has used for decades to maintain its cruel system of apartheid over Palestinians.

Amnesty International is concerned that the housing rights of Bedouin citizens in Israel are not respected, and that they are discriminated against with regard to other economic, social and cultural rights as well, a policy aimed at maintaining Israels system of oppression and domination over Palestinians. Palestinian Bedouins who are citizens of Israel have suffered the repeated demolition of their homes as a corollary of discriminatory policies that do not recognize the legality of some 35 villages in the Negev/Naqab region. For example, since 2010 the authorities have repeatedly demolished all the homes in the village of al-Araqib, subjecting some 250 people to forced evictions that have rendered them homeless, as they relocated to shacks in other villages or to relatives residences in nearby Bedouin township. Israeli government plans to regulate Bedouin construction in the Negev/Naqab have led to the forced eviction of hundreds of members of this minority, and tens of thousands more are at risk.

Instead of demolishing homes, the Israeli authorities should dismantle discriminatory planning and building policies that have put Bedouin citizens in the absurd situation of being labelled trespassers on their own lands, said Heba Morayef.

On 4 May 2022, Israels High Court of Justice (HCJ) rejected multiple petitions by residents in eight villages of Masafer Yatta that sought to halt the eviction orders. As a result, homes and animal shelters are now being demolished, forcing residents out of their ancestral land to allow for military training in the area.

In 1980, the Israeli army designated the 3,000-hectare area as firing zone 918, a restricted military zone to be used for training exercises. In November 1999, the army expelled all Masafer Yatta residents, yet an interim injunction issued by the HCJ in March 2000 allowed them back pending a final decision, and under the condition that they do not restore their homes. Since then, residents have been denied permission even to install solar panels or water cisterns.

On 16 June, the Israeli army started carrying out military training in the area, which was only temporarily paused during a three-day visit by US President Joe Biden.

The HCJ based its decision on its flawed conclusion that Israeli military orders have precedence over international law, which demonstrates the need to enforce international justice mechanisms.

The HCJs decision to uphold the Masafer Yatta expulsion highlights how Israels domestic courts are complicit in maintaining apartheid and perpetuating serious violations against Palestinians living under occupation. It shows the urgent need for an investigation by the International Criminal Court into war crimes and crimes against humanity in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT). With every day that accountability is delayed, more Palestinians are losing their homes, livelihoods and hopes for a life of dignity, said Heba Morayef.

Israel has systematically designated large areas of Palestinian land as military zones, state land, archaeological sites or national parks to maximize control over Palestinian land in both Israel and the OPT. These arbitrary classifications form key elements of Israels institutionalized regime of systematic oppression and domination of Palestinians. Moreover, a recent investigation into classified documents from 1979 revealed that Israels creation of firing zones in the OPT, which cover approximately 20% of the occupied West Bank, was for the sole purpose of eventually handing the land over to Israeli settlers.

Background

Masafer Yatta comprises 19 traditional villages and hamlets, of which eight are at imminent risk of demolition and displacement. The villages are located on the South Hebron Hills in Area C of the occupied West Bank. Area C covers 60% of the West Bank, yet the Israeli authorities retain exclusive control over planning and zoning in the region.

Across Israel and the OPT, Israels state-sanctioned, discriminatory policies and practices have forcibly displaced Palestinian communities for decades. Such policies have been deliberately designed to minimize Palestinians access to and control over strategic lands while seeking to maintain Jewish Israeli domination.

Also targeted by threats of forcible transfer are other Palestinian communities in the South Hebron Hills and the Jordan Valley, a strategic area for Israeli settlement expansion and encroaching annexation. Last July, one such community, the shepherding hamlet of Khirbet Humsa, was completely wiped off the map by Israeli bulldozers.

On the other side of the Green Line, in Israel, 35 unrecognized Palestinian Bedouin villages in the Negev/ Naqab are also at risk of demolition by the Israeli authorities in a blatant example of racial segregation. They do not feature on Israeli zoning and planning maps, and as a result, are considered illegal, with the Israeli authorities refusing to connect them to essential services including electricity and water. Ras Jrabah is one such village whose 500 residents are at risk of forcible transfer due to Israeli authorities plans to demolish it to allow for the expansion of Dimona, a town inhabited by mostly Jewish Israelis.

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Israel/OPT: Immediately halt forced eviction of more than 1000 West Bank residents and stop demolitions of Bedouin homes in the Negev/Naqab - Amnesty...

Israel’s advocates offer political cover to Biden over embarrassing trip – Mondoweiss

Posted By on July 19, 2022

Joe Bidens trip to Israel, Palestine and Saudi Arabia has been something of a fiasco back home. His fist bump with the murderous Saudi Crown Prince was widely criticized, even by mainstream media, because Biden spent a ton of political capital without much in return; oil prices went up.

He made similar concessions to Israels rightwing leadership, saying nothing about the occupation or illegal settlements or the killing of Palestinian-American Shireen Abu Akleh, while he gushed over his Israeli hosts including a warm meeting with disgraced former PM Benjamin Netanyahu.

Biden could not even push to reopen the consulate serving Palestinians in Jerusalem, lest he offend the Israeli government. Rep. Rashida Tlaib called the visit ill-conceived.

But Israelis exulted over the trip, and now Biden has gotten rave reviews from the organized Jewish community.

The American Jewish Committee celebrated the advances in the Saudi-Israel relationship. So did AIPAC and the Anti-Defamation League. And the official Jewish Democratic Party organization (the JDCA) cheered the trip, with two former U.S. ambassadors applauding the growing normalization between Israel and the Saudis and saying not a word about Israels killing of Abu Akleh, during more than an hours discussion.

The White House has reflected the Israel lobby line. It has tried to salvage victory from the trip by bragging about warming Israel-Saudi relations when Jake Sullivan and I gaggled on the plane when the President flew from Israel to Saudi Arabia, that was a historic flight, Bidens press secretary said.

The trip has been tough on liberal Zionists. The scholar Dov Waxman said that the trip showed the U.S. has given up any pretense of pushing for a two-state solution. And J Street issued a statement about the trip admitting that it fell well short on any measures that would bring about Palestinian freedom. Though J Street grasped at an upside Bidens lip service to a two-state solution.

Here are some of the center-right wing celebrations of the trip.

Former ambassador Martin Indyk told the Jewish Democratic Council that the trip was a great success because Israelis were overjoyed with Bidens love for them.

Israelis have a bottomless desire to be loved by U.S. presidents. It doesnt matter how much else you do for them, its the love they want to feel.

On that same call, Dan Shapiro of the Atlantic Council said Biden bowled Israelis over with the depth and the breadth and the sweep of his relationship to the country, and the big win for Israel was normalization the emergence of a regional coalition of Israel and Arab monarchies, ala ASEAN.

Cameron Brown of AIPAC said that rightwing organization could not have asked for more from Biden.

If you had been the presidents speechwriter I think you would have been hard pressed to write a better speech [than what Biden gave upon his arrival], for the things we believe in, he said.

If you had been the presidents speechwriter I think you would have been hard pressed to write a better speech, for the things we believe in.

In that speech, Biden described the U.S.-Israel relationship as bipartisan and bone deep. Then there was the Jerusalem Declaration issued the next day by Biden and Israeli PM Yair Lapid. Brown said the denunciation of BDS as a terrible thing that both countries have to fight against I dont think we could have asked for more.

The Jerusalem Declaration was also heartwarming to center-left Zionists: Yossi Alpher at Americans for Peace Now called the Declaration a strategically pleasing feature of a visit that also included an awful lot of schmalz and kitsch designed to warm Jewish hearts.

And designed to militarize the Middle East against Iran. Shapiro and AIPACs man Brown both exulted in Israel getting arms deals with Arab countries, and advancing laser weapons systems that even the United States cannot match.

Meanwhile, Brown and Shapiro and Indyk all insulted Palestinians. As I noted, in discussing the trip, neither Shapiro nor Indyk mentioned Shireen Abu Akleh, let alone Israels impunity for killing the journalist two months ago, a source of rage to Palestinians that Biden fumblingly tried to address in a Bethlehem appearance with P.A. President Mahmoud Abbas.

While the AIPAC official said Bidens message was that Palestinians are irrelevant in the new Middle East.

The Palestinians have become increasingly less relevant. The reason that countries want to move forward with Israel is that theyre tired of waiting for the Palestinians to get on board.

Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the Florida congresswoman, also cheered the Biden trip on the JDCA call and said the message is that American politicians must not quarrel about Israel. This statement by Wasserman Schultz is pretty astounding in its arrogance about Israels political rights here:

Its important for me to stress that all the progress we have made is really dependent on our maintaining Israel as outside of American political decision-making. It hurts Israel for us to become political and to try to use it as a strategic weapon to have one side best the other.

Liberal Zionists were not so cheerful. Here is part of Dov Waxmans thread saying the U.S. has given up on a two-state solution:

If nothing else, President Bidens brief visit to Israel and Palestine confirms the fact that the US has given up any serious effort to reach a two-state solution. When Biden came into office, many hoped that he would reverse Trumps policies and renew US efforts to reach a two-state solution, before it was too late (if it isnt already too late) [Biden] has not delivered on most of its promises to the Palestinians (reopening consulate in Jerusalem and PLO office in DC, etc.).The administration preferred to keep the now defunct Bennett-Lapid government in power over pressuring it to make concessions to the Palestinians or holding it accountable for Israeli human rights violations. Now that it is 100% clear that neither a Democratic or Republican administration will prioritize reaching a two-state solution, let alone pressure Israel to make this happen, the Palestinians will reevaluate their options and growing numbers will turn towards a one-state solution

J Street tried to revive the two-state solution in its comments on the trip:

Its more than welcome for J Street to see the President reaffirm his commitment to a two-state solution with borders based on the pre-1967 Green Line with land swaps. This effectively rolls back the position taken by the Trump administration and returns the US to alignment with the rest of the world. It was also notable that Israels new Prime Minister Yair Lapid stated publicly his belief that a two-state solution is a guarantee for a strong, democratic Israel. These are words not heard from an Israeli leader in nearly 14 years.

But J Street lamented Bidens politeness. There is no reason to shy away from using the term occupation to describe what is happening on the West Bank and in Gaza.

Of course the left now uses different terms to describe what is happening: apartheid. And by refusing to give any oxygen to the liberal Zionist camp, Biden has made the left that much more relevant. The ADL said the trip has caused a spike in anti-Zionist rhetoric, and it has a point. Biden has only fostered the very process Debbie Wasserman Schultz says he beat back: politicization of Israel in the U.S.

h/t Dave Reed, Adam Horowitz, Yumna Patel, Mariam Barghouti, Michael Arria.

This movement needs a newsroom that can cover all of Palestine and the global Palestinian freedom movement.

The Israeli government and its economic, cultural, and political backers here in the U.S. have made a decades-long investment in silencing and delegitimizing Palestinian voices.

Were building a powerful challenge to those mainstream norms, and proving that listening to Palestinians is essential for moving the needle.

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Israel's advocates offer political cover to Biden over embarrassing trip - Mondoweiss

Joc Pederson joins Team Israel for 2023 World Baseball Classic J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on July 19, 2022

Palo Alto High School graduate Joc Pederson, the San Francisco Giants outfielder starting in Tuesdays Major League Baseball All-Star Game, will compete for Team Israel in the 2023 World Baseball Classic, the team announced Sunday on Twitter.

The competition starts next March, and Israel will compete in Miami in Pool D, a bruising division consisting of some of the sports strongest national teams: the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico and Venezuela, plus a qualifying team yet to be determined.

It's Official! Israels manager for the WBC Ian Kinsler confirmed Sunday that @MLB All-Star @yungjoc650 Pederson has committed to play for #TeamIsrael at the 2023 @WBCBaseball! #blueandwhite_baseball pic.twitter.com/kgNo8ZJUYa

Israel Baseball (@ILBaseball) July 17, 2022

Pederson, currently in his first season with the Giants, will add a big bat to Team Israel. On track for one of the best seasons in his nine-year career, the Jewish slugger is batting .252, with a .517 slugging percentage and 17 home runs, one shy of his total for all of last season.

Pederson first competed for Israel in the 2013 WBC qualifier, prior to making his MLB debut in 2014. There, Israel was defeated by Spain, failing to advance to the main round of the competition.

In the 2017 WBC, Team Israel for the first time qualified for the tournaments main draw, but Pederson wasnt on the roster. Peter Kurz, then president of the Israel Association of Baseball, said at the time that Pederson instead opted to pursue a regular season starting role for the Los Angeles Dodgers. Pederson missed out on an Israeli squad that surprised the baseball world, winning its first four games before being eliminated in the second round. Three of the wins came against South Korea, Chinese Taipei and Cuba No. 3, No. 4 and No. 5 in the world, respectively, at that time.

Israel currently is No. 20 in the World Baseball Softball Conference rankings, below all of the teams in its pool: No. 6 Venezuela, No. 7 Dominican Republic and No. 16 Puerto Rico. (The D.R. was No. 1 in the previous rankings.)

This years All-Star Game in Los Angeles features 11 players from the D.R. and eight from Puerto Rico. So far, Pederson is the only All-Star committed to playing for Israel.

Ian Kinsler, a four-time MLB all-star who won the 2017 WBC as a player on Team USA, will manage Team Israel next March. He obtained Israeli citizenship in 2020 and played for Team Israel at the last Olympics in Tokyo, where it finished fifth in baseball.

I was very excited when I was asked to manage Team Israel at the WBC and it didnt take long for me to accept the position, Kinsler said on the website Israel Baseball. I enjoyed my time playing in the tournament and now that I know Israel baseball well from my time in the Olympics, I am convinced that we will have a very competitive squad that will go far.

Pederson is competing in his second All-Star game, alongside fellow Jew Max Fried of the Atlanta Braves. Fried is among the frontrunners for this years National League Cy Young Award, given to the leagues best pitcher.

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Joc Pederson joins Team Israel for 2023 World Baseball Classic J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

The identity crisis of Israel’s left-wing parties – Ynetnews

Posted By on July 19, 2022

Ahead of U.S. President Joe Biden visit to Israel, the B'Tselem human rights organization put up billboards in Bethlehem and Ramallah in the West Bank, which read, Mr. President, this is apartheid.

Biden never made it to Ramallah and did not appear to have noticed the signs when he was in Bethlehem. One thing is clear, however, if we wish to know why the left-wing Meretz party has barely been making it past the electoral threshold in recent elections, it's because the faction's identity has become mixed up with far-left groups and their ideology.

4 View gallery

Anti-Israel billboards in West Bank paid by B'Tselem

(Photo: AFP)

Not all Meretz members are pleased with the diminishing influence of Zionist traditions on the party, but it seems to late to turn back now.

The Meretz of today differs from the one that stood at the helm of the struggle for peace between Israelis and Palestinians. The party was part of the government that signed the Oslo Accords, as well as the one which participated in the Taba Summit (talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, held from 21 to 27 January 2001 in the Sinai).

It was the party with members who helped draft the Geneva Accord, which tried to present a peace alternative based not only on two states, but on two states for two nations. This accord represents the commitment of the Jewish people to the state and the right of the Palestinian people to have a state.

The accord was a major achievement, since the Palestinian establishment has always opposed Jewish people's right to self-determination. Should a peace agreement be signed one day, it will be based more around the Geneva Accords than on any other initiative for peace.

Yossi Sarid headed Meretz at that time and all the way until 2006. When he left, the party has undergone a major ideological change, along with the entire political Left in Israel. From fighting for peace to putting up signs that accuse Israel of being an apartheid state.

Whoever backs putting Israelis on trial in the International Court of Justice, whoever goes to college campuses abroad and presents Israel as an illegitimate state isnt fighting for peace. Whoever is doing that is fighting against Israel and its right to exist.

Meretz is the Israeli Left, and the Israeli Left is Meretz. Yes, there are some on the Left who declare themselves as anti-Zionists, and vote for the predominantly-Arab Joint List. There are also those on the Left who vote for the Labor Party, which appears hellbent on becoming just as out-of-touch as Meretz.

Still, Meretz is the party of the Left, it just isnt clear what kind of Left we are talking about. At the moment, Meretz appears to be split between the one that support Zionist traditions and the one siding with groups like B'Tselem.

The party used to have people like Haim Oron and Ran Cohen,who were exemplary Zionists. Tamar Zandberg, who this week announced her retirement from politics, and Ori Zacky, also belong in the Zionist camp. But their influence is diminishing. The need to stand by far-right organizations is dragging Meretz down in the public eyes and opinion polls.

To make matters worse, Zehava Galon, the founding executive director of B'Tselem, and Meretz MK Yair Golan announced their intention to run in the party primaries ahead of the November 1 elections.

It would be unfair to imply that Galon holds the same views as current B'Tselem Direcotr Hagai El-Ad, who turned the organization's work into a demonization campaign against Israel. Still, she is unlikely to stop the partys plunge into the far-left abyss.

4 View gallery

Zehava Galon and Yair Golan

(Photo: Yoav Dudkevitch, Kobe Koankes)

Golan, however, leans more center-left compared to Galon. He even went against Breaking the Silence," one of the main organizations leading anti-Israel campaigns. At the same time, Golan has in the past made statements that make even Galon seem tame.

Its tragic since the country needs a social and political Left to present solutions similar to the one presented in the Geneva Accord. Meretz, however, is heading in another direction. Israel needs a Zionist left-wing. Meretz insists on being something else.

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The identity crisis of Israel's left-wing parties - Ynetnews


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