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Groups Launched to Help Jewish Couples with IVF Face Uncertain Landscape After Roe Reversal – Jewish Exponent

Posted By on July 14, 2022

American Jews undergoing fertility treatments worry that the Supreme Court decision to roll back abortion protection may affect their access to care. (Getty via JTA.org)

By Jackie Hajdenberg

Kristin had been trying to conceive for two years before learning that she had two blood-clotting conditions that increased her risk of miscarriage and could make pregnancy and childbirth dangerous, even fatal.

So she and her husband Shai moved to a contingency plan: seeking a surrogate to carry their baby. The Jewish couple assumed they would work with someone near their home state of Ohio, like Illinois or Minnesota, where surrogacy and termination laws are more lenient.

But then the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, ending abortion rights in the United States. Suddenly, Ohio prohibited abortion after just six weeks, and the prospect of new restrictions in other nearby states grew more real.

So with the support of Hasidah, a nonprofit that gives grants and guidance to Jewish families dealing with infertility, Kristin and Shai decided to seek a surrogate in Canada instead.

It just made the most sense to protect the safety of a surrogate whos doing this wonderful thing, this beautiful gift for us and making sure that her life can be protected above the life of a fetus or a clump of cells that is not even a child yet, Kristin told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. She asked that her last name be withheld for her privacy.

The familys change of plans represents just one of many scenarios that Jewish infertility-support organizations are encountering as Americans adjust to a post-Roe reality. Those organizations are largely aimed at helping to create pregnancies, not end them. But with anxiety high aboutwhether the new legal landscape could pose threats to assisted reproductive technologies, especially in vitro fertilization, the Dobbs ruling is throwing their work, and their clients, into turmoil, too.

If youre having an infertility experience, the concept of this is scary enough, said Rabbi Idit Solomon, Hasidahs CEO and founder. For them, its reality: I am in the process of doing this, what happens if?

Solomon recalled meeting with a couple from Texas beginning the surrogacy process shortly after the Dobbs decision.

The reality is, I didnt counsel them, Solomon said. I just asked them, Have you thought about going through this process? And they interrupted me: Were getting a surrogate out of state.

Hasidah is one of several groups that have emerged in recent years to help Jews fulfill the biblical mandate to be fruitful and multiply. Animated by concerns about fertility, Israel will pay for any infertile couple to have two children through IVF, no matter how many rounds it takes;the country is the worlds leader in IVF use. But in the United States, the process can cost on average $20,000 per round, making it financially burdensome for many families. Hasidah, the Jewish Fertility Foundation, Puah America and a handful of other groups defray the costs while providing support during the grueling process.

First used successfully in 1978, IVF brings eggs and sperm together in a laboratory to create embryos outside of the womb. The embryos can then be monitored for several days to assess which ones are most likely to result in a successful pregnancy. It is also possible to screen the embryos for genetic diseases so that only healthy embryos are transferred into carriers of those diseases a boon for Jewish couples from Ashkenazi backgrounds, who are more likely to be carriers of a host of genetic diseases, such as Tay-Sachs, a degenerative condition that leads to death in childhood.

In addition to being at higher risk for genetic diseases, non-Orthodox Jews may have a higher than average rate of infertility overall, research by the Jewish Fertility Foundation has found. Exactly why is not understood, but one theory is that Jewish couples tend to pursue higher education at higher rates, making them older on average when they start having children. (Orthodox Jews start having children an average of five years earlier than non-Orthodox Jews and typically have more children, according to aPew study from 2021.)

Embryos outside of a womb are not subject to restrictions under any of the state laws limiting abortion that the Dobbs decision greenlighted, according to multiple analyses by news organizations and advocacy groups. But there is worry that they could be in the future as laws are revised and as advocates for the idea that life begins at conception are empowered.

A couple of concerns stand out. Since the goal of IVF is to create as many embryos as possible, then transfer the healthiest into the womb, it often results in many more fertilized eggs than can be used. Some opponents of abortion say they want those embryos to be donated, not destroyed.

Kristin said she and her husband planned to store their embryos in Canada out of fear that a nightmare scenario could arise in the United States where she would lose autonomy over what amounts to their own DNA.

Depending on the changes in law, if you abandon [the embryos], the clinic could just put them in someone else and then you have random children walking around that you dont know about and didnt plan on creating, she said.

That scenario may be unlikely for now, but the question of what to do with unused embryos can be significant for Jews who use IVF. While Jewish law is still developing around IVF, most rabbinic opinions agree that embryo donation is problematic according to halacha, or Jewish law, because of the outside possibility that it could result in unintended incest in the future. They also tend to agree that passively allowing embryos to be destroyed, such as by not refrigerating them, is permissible.

IVF also results in multiple pregnancies more often, which are more dangerous than pregnancies of a single fetus. Sometimes, doctors will advise selectively aborting one or more fetuses to create healthier conditions for those that remain, as well as for the person who is pregnant. Because Jewish law permits and even requires ending a pregnancy when the life of the mother is at stake, reduction is a scenario where many traditional rabbinic authorities would permit abortion. But in the states where abortion has been banned or severely restricted, selective abortions may no longer be possible or easy to obtain.

The high costs of IVF financially, emotionally and physically coupled with new risks may deter some Jewish families from undergoing the process in states with many restrictions on abortion, Solomon said.

If theres that much riding on it, you dont want to be in a place where any kind of care could be questionable, she said. You want to minimize risk as much as possible.

Orthodox Jewish groups have expressed more comfort with the Dobbs ruling than non-Orthodox Jews, many of whom have argued that Jewish law supports unfettered abortion access. But even fertility groups catering to Orthodox Jews say they recognize that the landscape has changed for some of the families they work with.

Puah America, a Jewish fertility and womens health organization that works with Orthodox couples, has not made any changes as a result of the Dobbs ruling. But its rabbinic director, Elan Segelman, said he could anticipate adjustments to the groups support in the future if the right course according to Jewish law for a family conflicts with the law in their state.

Of course as American Jews and law-abiding Jews, we would never ever tell someone to do something illegal, Segelman said. But, he added, The halacha is the halacha. The question is carrying it out. It may just be more complicated, based on where the people are.

For the Jewish Fertility Foundation, based in Atlanta, the Dobbs decision comes a year after a grant allowed the group to expand its operations to two new states Alabama and Florida, both of which are among the 23 states to face restrictions on abortion as a result of Dobbs. Now it is carefully monitoring how its clients will be affected in their quest to have babies and even offering time set aside during regular group support sessions to discuss the implications of the ruling.

But the organization which is not an advocacy group and follows guidance from non-Jewish fertility support organizations such as RESOLVE says nothing has changed on the ground, and their clients will continue with their fertility treatments as usual.

We dont know whats going to happen and each state could be different, said Rachel Loftspring, an attorney and board member who was instrumental in bringing the group to her home state of Ohio several years ago. So were sharing what we know.

The Jewish groups that are supporting fertility are now being joined by specifically Jewish groups aimed at supporting abortion access.The National Council of Jewish Women and Rabbis for Repro announcedin May that they would be partnering with the National Abortion Fund to raise money to help pay for travel, abortion procedures, and the NAFs hotline.

A protester holds up a sign reading Abortion Access is a Jewish Value at a rally in front of the US Capitol Building organized by the National Council for Jewish Women on May 17. (Julia Gergely via JTA.org)

Melissa Scholten-Gutierrez, an Orthodox rabba in Atlanta who is on the advisory board of Rabbis for Repro, said her past experience as a social worker and prenatal health educator underscored for her that abortion can be an integral part of a fertility process. (Scholten-Gutierrez received her rabbinic ordination at Yeshivat Maharat, the first Orthodox yeshiva to ordain women as clergy. As rabbi is a male term, Scholten-Gutierrez refers to herself as rabba.)

She recalled counseling a woman in Colorado who found out halfway through her pregnancy that her fetus would not be viable for more than a few hours after birth. Butthe law in Colorado at the timedid not permit people using state health insurance to get an abortion that late into a pregnancy.

By people fighting for this woman we were able to get her her care and the doctor offered her the opportunity to do the abortion pro bono, Scholten-Gutierrez said. We were able to get her care and I think it did save her life.

Whats clear is that groups supporting Jewish families seeking to have babies may have a role to play in helping them navigate a more restrictive landscape.

When all of a sudden you cant have children, it just brings up questions about who you are, Solomon said. Jews in that situation, she said, dont want to go to a general group. They certainly dont want to go to a Christian group. They want to be with people that resonate with whats important to them.

For Kristin and Shai, whose mother is a Reform rabbi, working with Jewish coaches while they pursue surrogacy at a time when pregnancy has become more perilous in their own state is essential.

Our value systems and our morals were developed by our Jewish upbringing, Kristin said. Having a Jewish organization not only will help us through the process, but help support us in understanding the best ways to go about it to protect the surrogate is really important to us.

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Groups Launched to Help Jewish Couples with IVF Face Uncertain Landscape After Roe Reversal - Jewish Exponent

Tipping Point: Israel on the Brink The Brooklyn Rail – Brooklyn Rail

Posted By on July 14, 2022

The Death of the Old Man

On June 14, 2022, A. B. Yehoshua, Israel's last of the generation of writers who began publishing after the formation of Israel in 1948, passed away. Around 250 friends and dignitaries attended his funeral at the secular cemetery on the outskirts of the kibbutz Ein Carmel.

A.B. Yehoshua, like his fellow writers Amos Oz and Yehoshua Kenaz, was born in the 1930s under the British colonial Mandate. Their childhood spent during World War II and the battles of the War of Independence, the foundation of the state, the years of enforcement of the military administration's laws on Israeli Arabs, the signing of the reparation agreement with Germany, the unchallenged rule of the socialist Mapai, the predecessor of the Labor Party with its leader, "the old man" David Ben Gurion.

For the Israeli Jewish public, Yehoshua represented a voice of the post-exile, post-independence hegemonic Israeli: as opposed to the previous generationthe "48 Generation," whose stories happened on battlefields against the British and the "Arabs" and whose heroes were busy settling in the new, mosquito drenched, barren land, Yehoshua's characters, like the one in his first collection, The Death of the Old Man from 1957, were preoccupied with their personal lives, the small stories happening within the confines of four walls; from the romantic telling of the revival of Israel to people in a state, with all its bureaucracies, private pleasures and pains, a personal moral world instead of a universalnay, national one. The world outside deteriorates and becomes violent and hostile to the lone, thinking person.

Despite his aesthetic aspirations, Yehoshua said that his work is subordinate to his political and moral agenda. He was one of the first public figures to oppose the occupation in an open letter from December 1967 titled "yes to peace and securityno to annexation," which he signed with other educators and writers. He was a member of various left political parties and called for a two-state solution.

Yehoshua became the voice of the secular Ashkenazi Israeli center (even though his lineage can be traced back to Thessaloniki and Mogador). This hegemonic force ruled Israel for its first decades. His persona was ubiquitous, and his books appeared in high school final exams.

But this force began to crumble in the late 1970s and collapsed after the assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, the failure of Oslo, and the second Intifada.

The period after the early 2000s can be equated to an inescapable drought: If young men and women throughout the history of Israel had yearned to be swept up in a wave of change, there were no demonstrations, no outcry over the incessant violence. People were retreating into themselves, their eyes averted as if they could be spared by not looking. Then, a retreat into nationalism: the sons and daughters of those who survived the Holocaust, who fled from Iraq and Algeria, Yemen, and Syria, cheering for the destruction and annihilation of those who don't have a place to escape. And the cycle of hate intensified over the years.

Witnessing this crumbling of the old order, Yehoshua wrote a two-part essay in April 2018 about giving up on the idea of a two-state solution and instead embracing a single state; the future of the Palestinians would be the single horrible state with protection for minorities to minimize their suffering. Two months later, the Israeli parliament passed The Nation-State Law, which officially defines Israel as the exclusive national homeland of the Jewish people. Since its passing, the law has increasingly been used to dispossess Palestinian citizens, exclude their language and culture from Israeli society, and further radically define Judaism as a political entity rather than a religious one.

Yehoshua's death isn't only symbolic; it's palpable. It marks the passing of the old hegemonic public intellectuals, the "old men" of letters who could be a moral compass and have the ear of the leaders and the public. He was the last pan-Israeli public intellectual before the new guardwith Man Booker Prize winner, writer David Grossman as its representativealready dismissed as Tel Aviv elite leftists.

Beyond his literary greatness, Yehoshua was one of the sharpest articulators of the elusive term "Israeliness." Yehoshua wondered all his life about her nature, criticized her weaknesses, and sought to strengthen its qualities. For Yehoshua, Judaism's future was tethered to Israeliness as a living religion, its character changing from the life of a people on its land, from pedestrian issues to moral ones. Fundamentalist religion and orthodoxy aren't suited for a nation-state because they lack the critical muscle crucial in a civil society.

Over the years, Israel has become a more religious country, where the power of religious parties and leaders has gone from strength to strength. If in the founding years of Israel, the religious parties were small and happy to sit with any government so long as they got budgets for their sector, religious leaders have taken on more prominent roles in government and beyond. Political leaders like Benjamin Netanyahu managed to capture this growing public becoming more powerful and nationalistic.

If 250 people showed up to Yehoshua's funeral, then Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky's funeralone of Israel's most prominent ultra-Orthodox rabbiswho died three months before, upward of a quarter-million people came, blocking the main arteries of Tel Aviv and its neighboring cities.

Yes, every person of those 250 attendees is much more influential, has more say, and represents a larger swath of Israeli society, from former President Ruvi Rivlin to Grossman. But those quarter of a million people who came out to show their sadness and admiration for the old rabbi show a shift in how Israel sees itself and what is vital to its citizens. Along with the advent of social media and the increasing religiosity of the Israeli public sphere, the old, secular, socialist guard has made way for a conservative, jingoistic one. It seems to me people in Israel still read, but fewer novels, less prose, more news, more self-help, and more religious texts.

Israel lost its Zionist-socialist-secular center, which was held by force and inertia for decades. Today Israel is fractured, sectorial, and sectarian; its fringes are talking in polyphonic voices over each other. Then again, if Yehoshua's death is the death of the ancient Israeli identity, one must question what made it disintegrateand how real and strong it was.

One of the clearest examples of the fracturing of Israeli society, its lack of center, is the recent government, which fell in late June. This government was the first one without Netanyahu at the helm for twelve years. Its formation came after four election cycles, a war with Hamas, and a wave of interfaith violence that swept the streets of Israel after a wave of interfaith violence.

Naftali Bennett, leader of right-wing Yamina and former spokesperson of the Judea and Samaria Council, became Prime Ministerthe first to be religious orthodox. Bennet and his partner, Yair Lapid, lead a patchwork coalition called the 'Change Coalition,' which includes parties from the hard-right toRa'am, a conservative Islamist party, and the first Arab party to be a part of an Israeli government since the Six-Day War.

The government ran on ousting Netanyahu and reinstating the political status quo. But in Israel, where the sins of occupation and expulsion are still happening, the status quo is extreme. They may have ousted a corrupt Prime Minister, but the system in place, which was here before Netanyahu, is morally and ethically corrupt. This 'Change Coalition' didn't bring much change to Israel but highlighted society's fracturing and absurdity of Israeli politics.

The coalition was teetering from the start. It's one thing to have a nationalist party like Yemina sitting with a left-wing party like Meretz, but even within the "left" side of the coalition, there are gaps: Ra'am is a conservative Islamist party that ran on an anti-LGBTQ platform, which goes against the basic tenants of a party like Meretz.

Regardless, the government managed to pass a budget, a feat in Israela national budget hasn't passed in more than three years. What's interesting about this government is that it reflects Israeli society perfectly. Israel is made up of sectors all vying for their space and power, but there's no escaping one another in such a small society. These challenges and increasing international criticism forced members of the government to deal with anything that arises because they won't have the power to brush it under the rug. That was also its downfall.

Just a few weeks before, two Arab members of the coalition, Ghaida Rinawie Zoabi from left-wing party Meretz and Mazen Ghanaim from Ra'am, voted against a directive giving Israel legal jurisdiction over Israelis living in the West Bank, a measure that has been approved every five years since 1967. Without this measure, the "legal" apparatus in the occupied territories expires, and measures extending Israeli criminal law and civil laws to Israelis living in the West Bank. Though Israel has not officially annexed the West Bank, these measures ensure that settlers receive the same protections Israelis within the Green Line do, without extending those same legal protections to Palestinians. Ironically, in a cynical move, the opposition, including Netanyahu's Likud and the settler party, voted with the two defectors against their constituents. For the right-wing, every move is kosher if it gets them closer to power again.

The coalition hangs by a thread with more defectors, left and right, announced every day. Then, the heads of the coalition decided to preemptively dissolve it. Now the scent of a fifth election cycle in four years is in the air. Its provisional date is October 25.

There is little doubt that if the elections were held soon, the front favorite would be Benjamin Netanyahu, seeking a sixth term in office, all while standing trial for corruption and bribery. His government, if sworn in, would be the most extreme right Israel has ever known. Yes, there have always been extremist elements in the Israeli political sphere, but they have always been outcasts. When Meir Kahane got elected, MP tried to impeach him, and when he spoke at the Knesset, MKs would leave the plenum in protest.

But over the past few years, in order to consolidate his power, Netanyahu hasn't only failed to condemn right-wing extremism but worked to strengthen it, to endorse it, taking its place in the halls of the Knesset, to let its members, like Itamar Ben-Gvir, an MK who was convicted on terror charges, incite there. Netanyahu effectively provided the most violent elements in the Israeli society's political immunity. When they take power, they will exact revenge on the left, Arab citizens of Israel, and the Palestinians.

It's not that the Israelis are inherently right-wing or racistno public is. The public is, at its core, complacent, especially when current events turn in its favor. Under Netanyahu's reign, voices on the left have been marginalized, attacked, and muzzled. The Palestinian Authority, weakened and corrupt, hasnt been able to gain international support. Thus, the public lost its vocabulary to express how it could end the occupation and oppression of Palestinians. Like yellowing "Free Tibet" stickers, the Palestinian questionespecially after The Abraham Accords, which established "peace" between the Gulf States and Israel, especially with the threat of Iranis bound to fizzle out.

The despair isn't hidden, even with Arab leaders. When asked how his party was going to address the Palestinian conflict in government, Ra'am chairman Mansour Abbas said, "What hasn't been resolved in seventy-three years probably won't be solved in the next four."

Upon the government's demise, the press ran articles with the headline, "the experiment failed." It seems like they weren't only referring to the current coalition but to a broader civic coalition where disparate sectors of society can sit around the same table can find common ground. The national identity of Israeli society was slowly developing over its first twenty years. But it was the Six-Day War in June 1967 that pushed into warp speed, the consequences of which we are still living with today.

In the early 1960s, Israel was a leader in developing and manufacturing cement and other building materials. Too poor to rely on imports and short on the workforce, Israeli engineers calculated that it would be economical to develop building materials and techniques in a controlled setting. The national civil engineering company Solel Boneh and the Nesher Cement factory financed engineers who researched new ways to make cement stronger. The company not only single-handedly "built" Israel but was involved in projects worldwide, most notably in post-colonial African countries.

The faltering economic state of affairs in Israel changed overnightor six dayswith the astonishing and overwhelming victory in the 1967 Six-Day War. The victory led to a feverish euphoria in the country and seismic shifts in how Israel was structuredwith the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. Suddenly Israel had three times the land it had before; new roads and buildings needed to be built.

On the flip side, Israel has unprecedented access to cheap, non-unionized labor. Hiring Palestinian workers was much more affordable than buying and developing new machinery and technologies. Ironically, early Zionistsdidn't want to be overseers of Arab workers. Thus, Jewish collective institutions in the 1920s relied on "Jewish labor" to build their cities and towns. Now, it was Palestinians who were building settlements in and out of the Green Line. Throughout the 70s, Palestinians became the backbone of the Israeli building industry.

The occupation also meant that Israel doubled its size and population, causing its defense spending to skyrocket from ten percent in 1966 to thirty percent in 1973 after the debacle of the Yom Kippur War.

Settlements started to pop up in the West Bank and Gaza in the late 1970s, slowly becoming towns, slowly becoming cities. In 1987 the first Intifada erupted, a popular uprising of Palestinians, in which Israeli Jews could witness for the first time since the occupation began the rage of everyday Palestinians. No more cheap shopping in the Nablus Casbahmore checkpoint inspections for Palestinian workers entering Israel to work.

The settlement project was endorsed by the left-wing and right-wing governments, argued by some that it was a bargaining chip to be later used in a peace negotiation with the Palestinians. All that went up in smoke in the early 2000s, after the Camp David summit failure, when then Prime Minister Ehud Barak stated "there's no partner for peace," and PLO leader Yasser Arafat triggered the second Intifada.

After the second Intifada and the withdrawal from Gaza, Israeli building companies are less reliant on Palestinian workers. Instead, they import workers from China, Romania, and the Czech Republic. Nonetheless, Palestinians have smuggled into Israel proper and parts of the West Bank to find work, an act that could be a death sentence.

The maintenance and development of the settlement project have become the center of Israel's project, which most Israelis would like to admit. In order to expand the settlements, more territory is needed. Thus, seizing of land and expulsion of Palestinians has become an essential tactic. One of the most egregious recent examples is the expulsion of Palestinians from Masafer Yata, a collection of small encampments in South Hebron Hills. In May 2022, the Israeli Supreme approved paving the way for the expulsion of 1,000 residents to establish a "fire zone" for the IDF, where it could conduct practices. This would be the largest deportation of Palestinians since the 1970s.

More so, the alignment of the IDF and the settler movement has become entwined. While sending his soldiers to quash protests around Josephs Tomb near Hebron,

Roi Zweig, the Shomron Regional Brigade Commander, said In this location, the land was promised to Abraham, as is written: To your descendants I give this land and were operating today with force, as did our forefathers not like thieves in the night but as sons of kings.

He also later said that the army and settlements are one and the same. If the IDF was once a breeding ground for the secular elites, today the religious-Zionists are claiming more positions of power within the army leadership: close to 40 percent of the IDF officers come from a religious Zionist background. In essence, the settlements are exactly what the kibbutzim were for Israel in the first decades of the state.

These expulsions come along with daily violence against Palestinians and left-wing activists. On many occasions, IDF officers look on as settlers hurl stones or brandish weapons. If the casual victim of the everyday clash isnt a notable figure, like journalist Shirin Abu Aqla, their case isn't investigated, and leaders don't feel the need to give answers.

Recognizing this, in recent years, a new doctrine from some of the center-right parties in Israel has again made headlinesshrinking the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Proponents of this concept, which is based on the writing of the writer Micha Goodman, a resident of the Kfar Adumim settlement, argue that the conflict cannot be resolved and should therefore be managed more effectively.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennet, who once called the Palestinians a thorn in the butt, is a big supporter of this doctrine, along with an increasing number of leaders at the center of the political map.

The stated goals, which were lined out by Goodman in The Atlantic, were improving the quality of life of the Palestinians and maximizing the economic efficiency of the occupation. At the heart of this concept is a proposal to establish separate regimes for Israelis and Palestinians in an attempt to neutralize Palestinian resistance to the occupation. There will be no national rights for Palestinians, only civil rights.

Not only is this perception not new, but its origins can be traced back to the British Mandate and the efforts of the British Empire to suppress Palestinian opposition to British colonialism and Zionist settlement through the construction of infrastructure. The bypass roads built by the British to bypass the arteries controlled by Palestinian fighters did not reduce the Israeli-Palestinian conflict but rather laid the foundations for its escalation. There is no way to "shrink" or bypass an existential issue; there's only ignoring or suppressing it. The head-on collision will still happen down the road.

The wrongs of 1948 and War and the occupation could be argued by some to be born from complex historical confluences that were imposed upon Israel: The Holocaust, the crumbling of Britain's shameful colonial rule, Palestinian refusal to recognize the partition plan, and the invasion of the Arab nation in 1948 and 1967. However, for generations who were born after peace with Egypt, the Oslo Accords, and the Second Intifada, the reality of inequality and the reality of occupation seems to be premeditated, cruel, and immoral. Despite its standoff with Iran, Israel isn't facing an immediate existential threat. The Palestinian Authority has weakened over the past decades, and its only raison d'tre seems to be an arena for corrupt politicians.

It seems that after fifty-five years of occupation, which are three-quarters of the total years of existence of the State of Israel, we have reached the point in which the temporary has become permanent. The vision and resourcefulness of pre-67 Israel have made way for a cumbersome, bureaucratic, and cruel system of power.

Those expecting radical change to happen any time, disappointment awaits. At the end of February, the world was shocked by the images of Russian tanks blowing by Ukrainian border crossings. What made this move so horrifying wasn't only the sheer audacity of this move but also the realization that not one of the world's superpowers could do anything about it made the invasion. For the past two decades, Putin was trying, testing the limits of his powers in Chechnya, Georgia, then Crimea, until, on lousy intel, he decided this was the opportune time to launch a full-scale invasion; economic diplomatic, the price be what may. That day was a marker not only in Russian history but in the way world powers are seen by their public.

The possibility of a full-scale annexation isn't far-fetched. Given the right circumstances, like another Trump win in 2024, along with strengthening ties with the Gulf States against Iran, Israel might take over more and more areas in the West Bank, isolate Gaza even more, and make it known to Palestinians and those wishing and fighting within Israel for an agreement that no resolution is coming, that the status quo will remain, that the Israeli government will continue to conquer and divide.

The occupation, marking its 55th year, isn't going away because both sides cannot imagine a different reality. The old guards in Israel and Palestine are still holding on to their seats of power, still relying on some American miracle to either support annexation or pressure Israel to withdraw. Both sides are sitting on the brink, imaging the next step won't be even more horrifying. And it just might be.

Cement and people come cheap at the price of expanding Israel's rule.

The Tel Aviv Central Bus Station: a maze of comings and goings. It was built already obsolete: a four-block, four-story concrete behemoth in the south of Tel Aviv was already condemned, and a new "New Central Bus Station" is already in the works.

In the bus station, worlds upon worlds tucked in windowless halls where, on Sundays, the echoing hymns of the Ethiopian Church can be heard; empty waiting halls where asylum seekers from Eritrea and Sudan sit and talk about what was, knowing not what will be; a synagogue open to all, where homeless people can find a bench and a prayer; IDF sleeping on their rucksack on the dirty floors waiting for a bus; Yeshiva kids smoke cigarettes in dark stairwells; a Russian bookstore; clothing boutiques with names like Luxus and Hi-Fashion selling disposable clothes to disposable people; a Yemenite restaurant that serves stewed beef and rice where taxi drivers fill their bellies before continuing their endless drive.

Even in the most westernized city in Israel and one of the most expensive in the world, this kaleidoscope emerges to contrast to the notion that the country resides on a pure ideological plane, that its inhabitantsJews or Palestiniansare fully enlisted to a grand historical debate. Israel is a place of close quarters, sections of society, where immigrants and children of immigrants rub shoulders against each other and against those who have been living on this land for centuries.

The reality that finds Arabs living next door to immigrants from Ethiopia, ex-Soviet countries, Morocco, Canada, who all live across from a yeshiva that's just next door to a techno club, defies the common assertion that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is just a microcosm of the clash between West and East, colonizer and colonized. What this reality does is raise more question marks, leading those who live in it and trying to make sense of down different hallways. If this building called modern Israel is already condemned, no one knows. Yet we still have a chance to open the doors to this place, to let light in these dim hallways in order to see each others faces.

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Tipping Point: Israel on the Brink The Brooklyn Rail - Brooklyn Rail

Heres a sneak peek inside new NYC charter school opening in Midland Beach – SILive.com

Posted By on July 14, 2022

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. Approximately 80 to 100 students in kindergarten and first grade will walk into a newly constructed public charter school in Midland Beach this fall.

Construction on the Staten Island Hebrew Public Charter School is almost complete, opening for the first time for the 2022-2023 school year. It will eventually add a grade each year up to fifth grade with the possibility it could add intermediate grade levels in the future.

Its the 11th campus in the Hebrew Public Charter School network, a national network of schools with a goal to lead exceptional, diverse public charter schools that teach Modern Hebrew to children of all backgrounds, while also preparing them to be successful global citizens.

It will be the fourth campus to open in New York City.

The building will open to students on Aug. 31. (Staten Island Advance/Annalise Knudson)

The school has no religious affiliation, and religion will not be taught at the school. The charter network considers itself to be diverse by design.

Were a network of diverse by design schools, said Roger Katz, assistant director of student recruitment at Hebrew Public. We work very hard to reflect the diversity of the communities we serve in our staff and our student bodies. We know that all students are going to have better academic and social emotional outcomes when theyre learning in classrooms like that.

Students will be welcomed to the school building on the first day on Aug. 31, located at 829 Father Capodanno Blvd., with four floors filled with classrooms, a cafeteria, a gymnasium, multi-purpose rooms, administrative offices and two rooftop outdoor play areas. Classrooms slated for kindergarten students also have in-class restrooms for student use.

The Advance/SILIve.com recently toured the building, which will ultimately serve more than 500 students.

Rooms will have an accent wall painted with a color from the Hebrew Public Charter School logo.

Outdoor play space is on the rooftops of the building. (Staten Island Advance/Annalise Knudson)

Sunlight streams into every classroom throughout the building providing views of the South Beach and Midland Beach boardwalks and the Atlantic Ocean, or through a skylight on the bottom floor that also acts as an art installation on the exterior of the building.

The mission of the charter school is to provide great education to diverse kids. While the school will teach Modern Hebrew, it will also help students become global citizens, which the charter describes as the ability to understand different cultures and different languages.

Students will learn Modern Hebrew daily, starting in kindergarten, through a proficiency-based approach. They will receive one instructional period of Hebrew language learning daily by engaging in meaningful interactions, developing their speaking and comprehension skills at a rapid pace.

Its really cool, because during those blocks of the school day, those 45 minutes, theyre only being spoken to in Hebrew, said Katz. And because its taught that way, students are able to build first a foundational comprehension, and I just think the most exciting thing is to watch them go from not really speaking to speaking in sentences and understand. And thats every day they get that.

Classrooms have spectacular views of the beach and boardwalk. (Staten Island Advance/Annalise Knudson)

As they advance through grade levels, speaking and listening skills continue to be developed alongside reading and writing. The language is taught by native speakers, who only speak to students in Hebrew.

As they learn the language, they also have the opportunity to learn about the culture and history of Israel.

Students will attend school Monday through Thursday, from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., with an early student dismissal every Friday at 1 p.m. to allow for staff training and professional development. After-school services will also be provided at the school.

Outdoor play space is on the rooftops of the building. (Staten Island Advance/Annalise Knudson)

Were really excited to grow in the community and offer families a wonderful educational experience in a brand new building, said Katz. And with great teachers with a wonderful organization and a wonderful board who is been deeply involved were shooting for the stars.

Families can apply to the charter school here. Similar to other charter schools, the admissions process is lottery-based. Students on Staten Island will have priority admission.

You can find more information on the charter school at its website, sihebrewpublic.org.

Each classroom has an accent color. (Staten Island Advance/Annalise Knudson)

The school has views of the ocean near the South Beach Boardwalk. (Staten Island Advance/Annalise Knudson)

Outdoor play space on the rooftop shows the Verrazzano Narrows Bridge in the distance. (Staten Island Advance/Annalise Knudson)

Kindergarten classrooms are outfitted with individual bathrooms for students. (Staten Island Advance/Annalise Knudson)

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In the Galilee, a tiny Circassian community keeps its heritage alive – JNS.org

Posted By on July 14, 2022

(July 14, 2022 / Israel21c) Hani Madaji says he dreams in Circassian, prays in Arabic, learns in Hebrew and travels in English.

As a Circassian, Madaji, 50, is proud of his people. After retiring as an officer from the Israel Defense Forces, he decided to devote himself to teaching Israelis about the Circassians, because nobody knows anything about us.

People always ask, Are you Druze? Are you Christian? What exactly are you? and I always want to explain the story of my people, said Madaji.

Every day, tourists come to Kfar Kama, one of two Circassian villages in Israel, to visit theCircassian Heritage Center. In the other Circassian village, Rihaniya, tourists visit the Circassian museum located in the Nalchik Restaurant.

Yosara Madaji, Hani Madajis mother, at her restaurant, Nalchik, where she cooks Circassian dishes. Photo by Diana Bletter.

Forced to fight

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Madaji, a resident of Rihaniya, stands next to life-sized models in traditional dress along with antique furniture and household items as he shares the story of the Circassians.

The Caucasus Mountains have always been considered the natural border between Europe and Asia, where east meets west. The Circassians were originally pagans who converted to Christianity and then, in the 15th century, to Islam. Madaji said people are often surprised to hear they are Sunni Muslims.

Hani Madaji at the Circassian Heritage Museum. Photo by Diana Bletter.

Living between Turkey and Russia, the Black Sea in the east and the Caspian Sea in the west, the Circassians faced many invaders, including the Mongols and Ottomans, for centuries.

We were always good fighters, said Madaji. We had to be.

Boys lived with their families only until they were six years old, Madaji explained. Then they were sent to live with another family, where they learned not to be spoiled, and how to fight. They were given horses to train with. In our language, Adyghe, the word for horse and brother is the same: see-shu. Thats how bonded each fighter was with his horse.

For a century, the Circassians fought off Russian invaders who wanted to colonize the Caucasus region, in a war that ended in 1864. During those last few years, Russians killed more than a million Circassians and burned down villages. The survivors fled, making their way through the Ottoman Empire and settling in Turkey, Jordan and Israel in 1878.

Photo courtesy of The Circassian Heritage Center in Kfar Kama, Israel.

Today, about 5,000 Circassians live in Israel. Since the War of Independence in 1948, Circassian men have fought in the Israeli military, and there is a mandatory draft for Circassian men to serve in the Israel Defense Forces.

We are Israelis in everything, he said.

Preserving their culture

We are a close-knit community, Madaji said. We dont have any spiritual leaders, so the question is always, how do we preserve our culture? Through what we call Adyghe Xabze, a code of conduct that determines how we behave, that keeps our tradition and culture.

Hani Madaji under the archway leading into the Old Village of Rihaniya Photo by Diana Bletter.

We dont intermarry with anyone else, only with other Circassians. When young men and women meet one another and start to date, they must stay two meters apart until their wedding. And then, if a young woman decides to cancel the wedding, even one hour before, she can. This preserves womens honor, he explained.

Since the pool of eligible singles in Israel is so small, the communities sponsor what Madaji calls summer camp, where several hundred young Circassians from Jordan, Turkey and Holland come to Israel to get to know one another. Madaji and other local families host the young adults.

Because of the Internet, we now know there are Circassians in Dubai, Madaji said. Before then, we didnt know of our community in other places.

The town of Rihaniya, in the hills of the Upper Galilee, is quiet and orderly. Leading a tour group from the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology through the town to the mosque in the center of the old village, Madaji said, Circassians here clean the streets outside their homes. Being neat is part of our culture.

View of the Circassian village of Rehaniya below Mount Hermon in northern Israel. Photo by Yaakov Lederman/Flash90.

Madaji explained that in 1880, when 66 families arrived in Rihaniya, they constructed it with stone walls about six meters thick for defensive purposes.

As a little boy, I used to play in this area with the other kids, he reminisced, stopping by the mosque, which resembles a prayer house in the Caucasus range.

The hope of return

Directly across from the mosque is a new bomb shelter for the villagers. Above that is a permanent exhibit to commemorate the genocide of the Circassians, with photographs, maps and explanations.

Every May 21, Circassians around the world have their Day of Mourning, when they commemorate the Russians genocide of their people and their exile from their homeland.

Madaji said the majority of Circassians still hold onto the hope of returning to their land. On display throughout the town is the green Circassian flag with its 12 stars.

The mosque in Rihaniya, built like prayer houses in the Caucasus Mountains. Photo by Hani Madaji.

Like the Jews, we also have 12 tribes, he explained. And there are three arrows. Why three? Because if we were going to war, we would have a lot of arrows. Three is a symbol that we come in peace. Three is also a number of balancea three-legged chair doesnt fall over.

The Circassians have managed to preserve the Adyghe language, which doesnt sound like anything else, Madaji said. It used to be written with special figures which are today used only to mark the different tribes.

Standing at a sign before the alley leading to the mosque, Madaji pointed out some of the symbols. Each tribe has its own sign, sort of like a logo, he said.

The only Sunni Muslims who study Hebrew

While the Circassian language uses the Cyrillic alphabet, it differs from Russian, Madaji explained.

Children attend the local school until 10th grade, where they learn Hebrew, English, Arabic and Circassian, and then attend Hebrew-speaking high schools in the area, making us the only Sunni Muslims in the world who study in Hebrew, he said.

Parents speak Circassian to their children. Madaji says this practice isnt forced but very natural.

Proof of that statement was found a short while later near the schoolyard in the center of Rihaniya. How many places in the world can you hear boys and girls playing basketball and shouting and cheeringin Circassian?

Information on visiting Rihaniya can be foundhere.

Information on visiting Kfar Kama can be foundhere.

In Kfar Kama, the Circassian Heritage Center will hold its annual Circassian Festival on July 22-23 with tours and traditional dance performances.

This article was first published by Israel21c.

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In the Galilee, a tiny Circassian community keeps its heritage alive - JNS.org

Islam And Judaism On Jacob’s Struggles With God And Men OpEd – Eurasia Review

Posted By on July 14, 2022

There is a long line of biblical stories of God working through the underdog, the powerless, and the flawed.

In Genesis, Jacob, the younger tent-dwelling son, becomes the namesake of the people Israel, not his elder, warrior brother Esau. In fact, it was his mother Rebekah, not his father Isaac, who favored Jacob and successfully pressed for his advancement, despite living in a society in which mens wishes were afforded greater attention.

Other examples abound in the Bible: Gideon is the youngest son of a small family when he is chosen by the angel to be a leader (Judges 6:15); Jephthah is the son not of his fathers wife but of a harlot ( ), who had been exiled by his brothers (Judges 11:12); David was the youngest son of Jesse, a small boy compared to his tall oldest brother, when Samuel chooses him as the next leader (1 Samuel 16:612); Solomon is the son of the woman with whom David committed adultery, and he is not Davids oldest son.

Again and again, God chooses unlikely human instruments, either flipping systems of social power or making it supremely clear that the true power belongs to God alone.

Professor Meira Z. Kensky of Coe Collage in a very insightful article in the Times of Israel (November 18, 2021) alerts us to how Prophet Jacob prepared for meeting his long estranged and perhaps violent brother Esau. Then Jacob gets a totally unexpected, unanticipated, and unprepared for, hours long wrestling match with a mysterious man. The Torah states: Jacob was left alone. And a man wrestled with him until daybreak. (Genesis 32:25)

This struggle literally comes out of nowhere. Jacob prevails in the hours long struggle, but he is wounded in the thigh (verse 26). The man tries to leave, but Jacob says he will not release him until the man blesses him (verse 27). Jacobthough woundedprevails, and Jacob intends to learn what it all means.

Rather than giving him a blessing, though, the man asks Jacob his name, and then he gives Jacob a new name (Genesis 32:29He said, Your name shall no longer be Jacob, but Israel, for you havestrivenwith God and with men, and you prevailed.

This is what Professor Kensky calls a signal from the Torah to pay very close attention. This encounter is the moment where Prophet Jacob receives the name that will become the name of the Jewish nation for the next 3,500 years.

This is also the name used by both the Christian New Testament and the Muslim Quran.

It is a name which includes a shocking concept; for you havestrivenwith God and with men, and you have prevailed.

Since Jacob gets renamed Israel in this narrative, it is critical to think about what this narrative is saying about the People of Israel as a whole; as well as the Holy-land of Israel in particular. This nighttime encounter takes place at the ford of the Jabbok river, the eastern border of Canaan. The Jabbok is elsewhere marked by the Bible as a political boundary (Numbers 21:24, Deuteronomy 3:16) and becomes one of the boundaries of Israelite territory (Judges 11:13-22).

By returning to the Land of Israel and crossing this river, Jacob, representing Israel, crosses from outside into a promised land. River crossings always leave those who cross over particularly vulnerable; this reality is heightened here when the narrative strands Jacob there alone, without servants or supporters.

With Jacob representing the people of Israel, the narrative highlights how dangerous Israels return to Canaan was; how vulnerable to attack they were, and how no one was there to support them.

So when he (Prophet Abraham) turned away from them (his homelands idol worshippers) and from those whom they worshipped besides God, We gave him Isaac and Jacob and each one of them We made a prophet. (Quran 19:49) And We bestowed upon him Isaac and a grandson Jacob, and made each of them righteous. (Quran 21:72)

and of the descendants of Abraham and Israel, and of those whom We guided and chose. When the verses of the Most Merciful were recited to them, they fell down prostrating and weeping. (Quran 19:58)

In the Hebrew Bible, Prophet Abraham is the first person to be called a Hebrew (Genesis 14:13). The term Hebrew comes from the verb to go over a boundary like the Euphrates or Jordan river or to be an immigrant. The first thing God told Prophet Abraham in the Biblical account was: Leave your country, your kindred, and your fathers household, and go to the land I will show you. I will make you into a great nation, and I will bless you; I will make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. (Bible, Genesis 12:1-2)

So Prophet Abraham was what we can call the first Muslim Hebrew, as the Quran indicates: He (Abraham) was not Yahuudiyyaan, a Jew, nor Nasraaniyyaan, a Christian, but rather a Haniifaan, a submitter to God, (Quran, 3:67) i.e. a monotheistic Hebrew believer submitting (Islam) to the one imageless God who created all space and time; and who made Prophet Abraham-the-Hebrews descendants through Prophets Isaac and Jacob (Israel) into a great multitude of monotheists called the Children of Israel Bnai Israel in Hebrew and Banu Israel in Arabic.

The root of the Hebrew verb hodah [to thank, acknowledge, recognize, admit] is yad from the basic word hand. The word Yehudah has the meaning of throw your hands up in praise. When Judah was born to Leah (Genesis 29:35) she said I will yadah Yahweh. I will thank, acknowledge, recognize Gods gifts with praising upright hands. Lift up your hands to the holy place and bless the LORD (134:2) and Thus will I bless You while I live: I will lift up my hands in Your name. (Psalm 63:4) This is what Judaism advocates for Jews and all people.

Prophet Abraham and Prophetess Sarah were not only the parents of the Hebrew People to be, they were also the recruiters of hundreds of other non-Hebrew people who came along with them when they left Ur their homeland to go to the promised-land according to Rashi, the most influential Bible commentator. Genesis 14:14 mentions Abrahams 318 male retainers and the Quran refers to Prophet Abraham as a community or nation: Abraham was a nation/community [Ummah]; dutiful to God, a monotheist [hanif], not one of the polytheists. (16:120)

Altars were erected by Abraham (Genesis 12:7; 13:4; 22:9), by Isaac (Genesis 26:25), by Jacob (33:20; 35:13), and by Moses (Exodus 17:15). The word altar appears 13 times in the Book of Genesis, and we are told that someone built an altar seven times, but in only three of those times had the person given the altar a name: Genesis 12:8 Abram builds an altar to YHVH, Genesis 26:24 Isaac builds an altar to YHVH , and Genesis 33:20 Jacob builds an altar and called it El-Elohay Israel.

Prophets Abraham and Isaac build an altar to YHVH, but Prophet Jacob is different. Jacob builds an altar to the God of Israels descendants; the People of Israel. Prophet Abraham is the beginning of Hebrew and Ishmaelite Monotheism. Jacob is the beginning of the nation called the Descendants of Israel Bnai Israel in Hebrew and Banu Israel in Arabic. The Hebrew People become the Israelite People with the Exodus from Egypt.

Professor Kensky maintains that all of this reminds us that the Jacob narrative stands in for the plight of Israel: the Jewish People must negotiate what it always has meant to be a small nation surrounded by larger, more powerful nations. This means using its wits, canniness and craft, as well as seeking every opportunity to survive and come out on the other side.

At the same time, Jacob must learn that his success comes about not only because of being clever; but because of God. Jacob, standing in for all of Israel, has needed to be flexible and strategize his way through a difficult life, but ultimately he cannot by himself control his fate.

The unanticipated fraught encounter, with its ambiguity and unresolvedness forces its audienceIsraelite or contemporaryto confront the unpredictable nature of reality, and yet to trust in themselves, and also to trust that with Gods help Israel will prevail.

Prophet Jacob is best known for being courageous, cunning and crafty and we can learn a great deal from his life long spiritual struggles and their complex growth outcomes. And remember Our servants, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, (all) owners of strength (to struggle) and (gain more) of religious understanding. (Quran 38:45) Since the Jacob narrative stands in for the plight of Israel: the Jewish People must always negotiate what it means to be a small monotheistic nation surrounded by larger, more powerful nations.

This connection is also mentioned in the Quran itself, although it is only now in the light of events over the last 120 years, that we can begin to see the full meaning of the Qurans words.

Quran 17:4-8 states: 4. We conveyed to the Children of Israel in the (Hebrew) Scripture that, You will surely cause corruption on the earth twice, and you will surely reach [a degree of] great haughtiness. 5. So when the (exile) promise came for the first of them, We sent against you servants of Ours those of great military might (pagan Babylon), and they probed [even] into the homes, and it was an (exile) promise fulfilled. 6. Then We gave back to you a return victory over them (Persia defeated Babylonia and Gods non-Jewish agent Messiah King Cyrus helped Jews return to Israel). And We reinforced you with wealth and sons and made you more numerous in manpower (in your diaspora).

7. (So), If you do good, you do good for yourselves; and if you do evil, (it is) to yourselves. Then when the second (exile) promise came, (Rome) to sadden your faces, and to enter the Temple in Jerusalem (in 70 CE) as they (Babylonia) entered it the first time (in 587 BCE) and to destroy what they (Rome) had taken over with great destruction. 8. (Allah said), It is expected, (if you repent), your Lord will have mercy upon you. But if you return (to idolatry), We will return [to punishment]. And We have made Hell, for the disbelievers (in general). (Quran 17:4-8)

But in accordance with Gods words to Prophet Amos 3:7 Surely the Sovereign LORD does nothing without revealing his plan to his servants the prophets and Amos 3:2 states Only you (Israel) have I known from all the families on earth; therefore I will punish you for all your iniquities. a prison-bed (of two exiles).

When peace comes to the Near East many things will change, including how Jews think and feel. There are few, if any modern non-Orthodox Jews, who feel much loss because a hereditary, male only priesthood no longer offers animals on the sacred alter of a Temple in Jerusalem; so the Temple will never be rebuilt by us humans.

All the other defeated and exiled nations of ancient days have disappeared: only the Jews havesurvived to the present. Even the great empires of Babylonia. Persia and Rome are gone. Yet as the Quran states: We (God) told the Israelites after this (exit from Egypt) to settle in the (holy) land until Our second (Rome caused exile) promise will come true. We would then (long after the two exiles) gather them all together (in the Holy Land). (Muhammad Sarwar translation 17:104).

The five decades preceding WW1 were decades of rising nationalism in Europe, India and the Near East and it is unlikely that the origins of the Arab-Israel conflict could have been avoided. But it is not too late for the three Abrahamic religions to contribute to the peaceful end of this tragic cousins conflict.

Now in our own generation we have seen the dramatic fulfillment of Prophet Isaiahs words from God: I will bring your offspring from the East (India) and gather you from the (European) West. To the North (Russia) I will say give them up and to the South (Ethiopia) do not hold them. Bring my sons from far away, my daughters from the end of the earth. (Isaiah 43:5-6)

And soon God willing, there may be peace in the Near East for, In that day there will be a highway from Egypt to Assyria. The Assyrians will go to Egypt, and the Egyptians to Assyria. The Egyptians and Assyrians will worship together.In thatdayIsrael will joina three-partyalliance with Egyptand Assyria,a blessing uponthe heart.The LORD of Hosts will bless them saying, Blessed be Egypt My people, Assyria My handiwork, and Israel My inheritance.(Isaiah 19:23-5)

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Islam And Judaism On Jacob's Struggles With God And Men OpEd - Eurasia Review

UN Watch Mourns the Loss of Lily Safra – UN Watch

Posted By on July 14, 2022

UN Watch mourns the loss of Mrs. Lily Safra, a great friend and supporter of our organization. We extend our condolences to the entire family.

Mrs. Safra was a prominent philanthropist who sharedher commitment to caring for the less fortunate with her husband, Mr. Edmond J. Safra, one of the twentieth centurys most accomplished bankers and founder of the Edmond J. Safra Philanthropic Foundation.

Chairof the Foundation for over 20 years, Mrs. Safra supportedprojects related to education, science and medicine, religion, culture, and humanitarian relief in over 40 countries.

Shesupported numerous worthy projects in memory of her husband in the field of education, including the Edmond J. Safra Campus at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics at Harvard University, and the the creation ofEdmond J. Safra Scholarships atthe International Sephardic Education Foundation (ISEF), which she established with her husband in 1977, and which has become the largest non-profit organization promoting higher education for gifted Israelis from disadvantaged backgrounds.

Edmond and I shared the belief that in the eyes of God we are all entitled equally to dignity, and that everyone has a right to a dignified life, said Mrs. Safra. We also believed that those to whom God had given more than they needed also had the duty and great privilege to share their blessings with those who didnt have enough.

Mrs. Safra was a member of the Board of the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinsons Research and of the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health, whereMrs. Safra was instrumental in the construction of the Edmond J. Safra Family Lodge for patients and their families battling serious illness.

In 2006, Mrs. Safra established the Edmond and Lily Safra International Institute for Neuroscience in Natal, Brazil, now that countrys most highly-regarded brain research center.

Underher leadership, the Edmond J. Safra Foundation endowed the Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the largest and most ambitious neuroscience project in Israel.

Through her efforts, the construction and ongoing enhancement of the Edmond and Lily Safra Childrens Hospital at Tel Hashomer, Israel, was made possible.

A passionate art collector, Mrs. Safra was a patron of museums around the world, notably the Courtauld Institute in London and the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, home to the Edmond and Lily Safra Fine Arts Wing. She established the Edmond J. Safra Visiting Professorship at the National Gallery of Art in Washington.

Mrs. Safrawas bestowed withhonorary doctorates from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Tel Aviv University, the University of Haifa, Brandeis University, and Imperial College London.

She was aCommandeur of Frances Ordre des Arts et des Lettres and Officier de la Lgion dhonneur.

Like her philanthropy, Mrs. Safras life was dynamic and global. She spoke six languages and made her home at different times in seven countries. She was known for her elegance, independence, generosity, and eye for detail.

Lily Safra was born Lily Watkinsin 1934 in Porto Alegre, Brazil. Her parents were Jewish immigrants to South America:Wolf Watkins, an engineer of Czech and British origins who had prospered in Brazil and Uruguay, and Annita Noudelman, whose family fled pogroms in Odessa for the safety of Brazil. Lilys father manufactured railroad cars, with a factory in the city of Mesquita, near Rio de Janeiro, where the main street was named Rua Mister Watkins in his honor.

Edmond and Lily Safra were marriedin 1976 in Geneva. They formed a strong bond and an enduring love.

True partners and constant sources of support for each other, Mr. and Mrs. Safra established beautiful homes in Geneva, London, Paris, New York, Monaco, and the French Riviera the latter, La Lopolda, being a former property of the king of Belgium. With their combined eye for quality, they curated a world-class art collection.

Mrs. Safra was a loving mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother, and she always took great pleasure in welcoming guests generously. Her devotion to her friends inspired the same in return.

Mrs. Safra was her husbands solace and caregiver when he began suffering the symptoms of Parkinsons disease. In the years since his passing in December 1999, she became the carrier and guardian of his legacy.

Mrs. Safra faithfully pursued her husbands support of Jewish religious life around the world, building and sustaining dozens of synagogues and schools in his memory.

In particular, she devoted herself to the construction of the Edmond J. Safra Synagogue of Manhattan and the Synagogue Edmond J. Safra of Monaco. She also took a leading role in the reconstruction and renovation of the magnificent Edmond J. Safra Synagogue of St. Petersburg, built in the late 19th century as the Grand Choral Synagogue.

May her memory be a blessing.

The following UN Watch notice was published in todays Tribune de Genve:

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UN Watch Mourns the Loss of Lily Safra - UN Watch

First NH Jewish Festival to highlight Jewish life and culture – Seacoastonline.com

Posted By on July 14, 2022

Special to Seacoastonline| Portsmouth Herald

DURHAM -This summer, New Hampshire will celebrate its diversity through a new music and cultural event, the New Hampshire Jewish Festival. The festival will offer a unique recognition of the music, traditions and foods that Jewish people celebrate and enjoy.

The festival will be held Sunday, Aug. 14 from noon to 3 p.m. outdoors at Great Island Commons, 301 Wentworth Road, New Castle.

According to organizerSeacoast Chabad Jewish Center, the festival will join the line-up of other cultural festivals in the state with a focus on highlighting Jewish life and traditions and is geared to be enjoyed by a broad audience.

Headlining the music portion of the festival will be a folk-rock duo Rogers Park Band,which specializes in Chasidic Jewish folk music. Their song lyrics, which are in both English and Hebrew, bring an upbeat message of love and joy. Additionally, the brand-new New Hampshire Klezmer Band will have its first appearance.

The festival will also include family entertainment and traditional Jewish foods, including kosher deli by the famous Chanis Kosher Deli from Worcester, Massachusetts available for purchase.Admission, musicand kids activities will be at no charge.

The goal is to bring the state together for an upbeat Jewish experience, said Rochy Slavaticki, who directs the Seacoast Chabad Jewish Center together with her husband, Rabbi Berel Slavaticki, and directs the Seacoast Hebrew School of the Arts.

What better way to come together as a community, she said. This festival is open to all, and there will be something to enjoy for everyone; there is no charge to attend.

According to the most recent community study, there are nearly 15,000 Jews in the State of New Hampshire, with over 4,000 living in the Seacoast region and 38 percent of Jewish households in the region have at least one child living at home.

The festival will highlight a message of optimism and positivity, as taught by the Rebbe Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory, the most influential rabbi in modern history. The Rebbe taught us to live positively and to recognize opportunity for growth in every situation, said Rochy Slavaticki. Were excited to share this message as our community continues to grow and blossom.

Throughout the year, the Seacoast Chabad Jewish Center offers family Shabbat and holiday celebrations, childrens programming, and adult education classes in a relaxed and friendly atmosphere. A popular annual, community-wide event is Chanukah on Ice, an outdoor menorah lighting at Strawberry Banke Museum marking the wintertime holiday of Chanukah.

For more information and to secure tickets, visit NHJewishFestival.com.

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First NH Jewish Festival to highlight Jewish life and culture - Seacoastonline.com

The Israeli university that wants to draw Jews, Arabs and Ethiopians closer together – Jewish News

Posted By on July 14, 2022

Few would argue Israel is not a demographically diverse country.

Gone are the days when one of two camps, Jewish or Arab, was considered enough to determine what kind of an Israeli citizen you are.

These days the phrase is cultural kaleidoscope, although a bit of a clich, is more appropriate to explain how this is a country that is home to a mix of ethnicities and cultures.

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Fitting, then, that the first Arab woman appointed to a senior role at one of Israels largest universities is responsible for making sure the most overlooked sections of society are better represented.

Mona Khoury-Kassabri, vice president of strategy and diversity at Hebrew University, specialises in social welfare issues areas such as school violence and bullying both in person and online and her studies have taken her from hometown of Haifa, in the north of Israel, to Toronto and Chicago.

She told Jewish News that her role is about more than simply getting as many students from minority backgrounds through the universitys doors: There is a saying: diversity is being invited to the party; inclusion is being invited to dance in the party.

We have a lot of under-represented groups, such as the Arabs, ultra-Orthodox, Ethiopian students; students who are the first generation in higher education; students with disabilities.

So we have a challenge in opening our doors to all these groups but when they come, it is not enough. You cant just bring these groups and say, now youre equal.

In this case, equality isnt the solution because we know theyre different and we know that they have more challenges than others, so bringing them in an equal basis is actually making the situation worse.

Mona Khoury-Kassabri, vice president of strategy and diversity at Hebrew University

The solution, Khoury-Kassabri said, is supporting students to make sure they spent time studying and socialising together once they are admitted.

We know that this is the first time different groups in Israeli society meet. Before this [in secondary schools], Arab students study separately, ultra-Orthodox study separately, even Jewish students mostly study in separate schools.

That is why there are interfaith groups where Jews, Muslims and Christians meet and events where students come together to talk about things other than religion. There are spaces too where Arabs help Jewish students with their Arabic assignments, and Jews reciprocate by helping to brush up their Hebrew.

The objective, Khoury-Kassabri added, is to change perceptions and demonstrate that other institutions, whole cities even, can find ways of living more harmoniously alongside each other.

She appeared to exude optimism about the younger generation in this region and draws heart from the fact that some studies suggest more and more Israeli Arabs are now preferring to call themselves Palestinians in Israel.

I think in many cases, students and families were not feeling secure to say that and now its more acceptable, she said.

People understand that saying we belong to the Palestinian nation but we are Israeli, we live in Israel, we have Israeli citizenship, it doesnt mean that we hate the country, we want to leave the country, we want to destroy the country.

No, she said, shaking her head during our conversation our Zoom.

What Arab Israelis and other marginalised groups in the country want is equality: We are fortunate that in a university to give the opportunity to give students the feeling that they belong and try to expand the ways they can feel equal and not discriminated.

What we are trying to do, at least at our university, all our efforts are so that these groups feel that the university belongs to all of us.

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The Israeli university that wants to draw Jews, Arabs and Ethiopians closer together - Jewish News

Jewish institutions must not give up their Jewish names – JNS.org

Posted By on July 14, 2022

(July 13, 2022 / JNS) Names are extremely important in all spiritual traditions, especially in Judaism.

The Torah teaches that when Avram made his covenant with God, his name was changed to Avraham to reflect his heightened spiritual awareness. When someone is extremely sick, there is a custom of giving them a new name to heal them. We believe that if you are named after someone, you carry a bit of that persons soul. The concept of names is so important that the second book of the Hebrew Bible is titled Shemot, or names. Names carry identity, and the changing of a name is a conscious change of purpose, mission and identity.

Given this, we need to ask the question of why two of the largest nonprofit Jewish organizations in Los Angeles have recently chosen to change their names and remove any reference to Judaism.

The Los Angeles Jewish Home, known for over a century as just the Jewish Home was founded in 1912 to give shelter to five Jewish men. With an annual budgetof more than $50 million, this nonprofit is home to 1,500 Jewish seniors and serves another 2,500 through health and community services. As should be expected, the vast majority of donors to this non-profit organization are Jews and Jewish organizations who want to help elders of their own faith in the last years of their lives.

But on July 1, a time when most people are away on vacation and Jewish clergy members are busy preparing for the High Holidays in September, the Jewish Home made a quiet but hugely significant change in their entire persona. They removed the word Jewish from their name. They are now known as LAJHealth.

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Their fundraisers will undoubtedly tell donors that LAJHealth is still a Jewish organization that serves Jewish elders. But then, why make such a radical change?

One clue is a message from their CEO, Ilana Springer, who said in her July 1 letter to residents family members that the change is really just an evolution of our brand. She is correct that it is an evolutionan evolution away from an organization proud of its commitment to Judaism towards a more secularized institution.

Its not just that the leaders of Jewish Home are turning their backs on a tradition of taking pride in their commitment to the Jewish community. It is that they are not alone. The subtle secularization of Jewish organizations has become widely popular over the last few years, as Jews on the boards of non-profit organizations seek to reach out, be inclusive and diversify rather than focus on the Jewish community.

In 1931, Jewish Vocational Services was founded to help Jews develop marketable skills and find employment. Many of the participants in their programs were new Jewish immigrants who had escaped persecution: Holocaust survivors, Russian refuseniks and Persian refugees. Jewish Vocational Services helped countless Jewish families settle in this country through their amazing work.

But in 2018, they changed their name from Jewish Vocational Services to JVS SoCal. They were very clear about their reasons for doing so. In the official announcement of the change, they said they wanted a fresh identity and new name that more accurately defines our mission to build better lives, one job at a time. They also redefined the abbreviation JVS; which, they said, now stood for Jobs+Vision=Success.

CEO Alan Levey was clear in a press release that with this new identity, we will continue to leverage our legacy of positive community impact while expanding our services throughout Southern California as regional leaders in workforce development. An admirable goal, but what about the Jewish community? Are Jewish donors, who thought they were helping Jewish families, now aware that their donations are helping non-Jewish groups and individuals, including some who may even be anti-Semitic and/or anti-Israel?

Can any of us imagine other groups changing the names of their institutions and removing their cultural affiliation? Would the NAACP become the National Association of People? Does anyone foresee BLM changing its name to All Lives Matter? Is LULAC, the largest and oldest Hispanic and Latino civil-rights organization in the country, going to become the League of United American Citizens? And can anyone imagine that CAIR will suddenly abandon its connection to Islam and change its name to the Council on American Relations?

Of course not. None of these organizations would ever remove their identity from their names. It seems that only 21st-century American Jews are willing to sabotage their identities, their purpose and themselves in their quest for inclusiveness.

By changing their names and removing their Jewish identity, they are taking the first steps towards becoming entirely secular, as well as sowing the seeds of their own destruction. As Michael Klein has eloquently said, it might seem like a good idea to replace the Hebrew name of a synagogue, remove the word temple or entirely excise Hebrew from the liturgy, since the synagogue could thus become more diverse and attract more people. Except, as he put it, the synagogue might eventually become a church.

In this time of growing anti-religious sentiment nationwide, it is more important than ever to stay true to our core values. We all need to be proud of our faiths and cultures, and create real diversity by embracing who we are, not by letting go of our true purposes and names. In so doing, we create a tapestry of beauty composed of the many rich traditions found in this nation.

The beauty of a rainbow is found in the distinct colors that coexist next to each other. If that distinction is eliminated, then there are no beautiful colors, only a mass of grey-brown. For our own survival and for the beauty of the world, we need to retain and enhance our Jewish identities on all fronts.

May the leaders of these organizations and others like them embrace the beauty and distinction of their heritage rather than succumb to the currently popular movement towards the homogeneity of inclusiveness.

Rabbi Michael Barclay is the leader of Temple Ner Simcha in Westlake Village, Calif., and the author of Sacred Relationships: Biblical Wisdom for Deepening Our Lives Together. He can be reached directly at: Rabbi@NerSimcha.org.

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Jewish institutions must not give up their Jewish names - JNS.org

FROM THE ARCHIVE: A century of Bay Area Jewish summer camp J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on July 14, 2022

In 1919, a group of young Jewish men from San Francisco came back from the wilds of Ben Lomond, near Santa Cruz. Theyd been at a summer camp, then a novel idea for the Jewish youth of the city. But it had been a great success.

Athletics were indulged in and Nature-study formed an important part of the camp activities, the Emanu-El (our original name) reported. Fourteen of the boys learned how to swim and there was not a single case of illness during the encampment.

So successful was the experiment, which was held under the auspices of the Young Mens Hebrew Association, that it was decided to do it again the following year and every year. It was the beginning of Jewish summer camp in Northern California.

Jewish sleepaway camp, now held to be one of the staunchest pillars of Jewish identity in America, was part of the broader summer camp movement in the U.S.

A 1928 article in this paper situated Jewish camp firmly within the American camp movement and its physical and moral properties: [I]t is universally known not to be a mere fad or desire for enjoyment, but a recreation and disciplining for the young boys and girls Not only does the camp build physically, it acts as a great teacher to the mind and seldom fails to enlarge the spiritual life of the camper.

And yet Jewish camp wasnt just American camp, but rather went a step further as an environment that combines a true Jewish atmosphere with a wholesome camp life that is dear to the heart of every American boy, as we wrote in 1925.

Jewish camps started on the East Coast, and in 1905 we carried a note about 375 young men who enjoyed camp in Long Island. But it wasnt until the second decade of the 1900s that the first camps in Northern California were held.

In 1925, there was a triumphant headline: Jewish Boys Summer Camp of Y and Bnai Brith is Big Success: Reports Received Here Indicate that Experiment is to be the Beginning of a New Movement for the Jewish Youth of San Francisco.

The camp referred to in the headline was Camp Tawonga, which grew out of that first YMHA camp and Camp Tawonga is still a stalwart member of the camp scene. In 1925, the program combined athletics, study of Jewish history, development of physical, mental and moral strength in the boy, and the inculcating of high principles of manhood and citizenship. Girls were soon to be included in the Tawonga story, starting in 1926.

In 1930 Tawonga moved to the Lake Tahoe region: Camp Tawonga, under the joint auspices of the Young Mens and Young Womens Hebrew Association and the Bnai Brith, has had a phenomenal growth in the past six years since its establishment and this new and picturesque site has been secured to furnish facilities for a much enlarged camp.

But although Tawonga (which moved to its current Tuolumne River location near Yosemite in 1964) was the first local camp, it wasnt the only one.

In 1952 we reportedthat an ambitious project, contemplating creation of an out-of-town camp to afford religious and education activities to children of Northern California Reform congregations and like advantages to adults, now is in process of consummation.

This would be Camp Saratoga, also known as the Camp for Living Judaism, later Camp Swig and now URJ Camp Newman (in 1997, Camp Swig moved much of its operation to the Santa Rosa area, and in 1998, the Saratoga property was sold).

The 1952 article noted that developer and philanthropist Benjamin Swig had bought 203 acres outside Saratoga, specifically intended as a camp for the Reform movement that provides your children with the opportunity to rediscover the excitement of the eternal truths of Judaism. (And they could hike.)

Then in 1955, the Junior Bulletin section of this paper ran an announcement. A new camp for Conservative families was opening in Ojai, emphasizing Hebrew (tuition was $200). This was Camp Ramah, which is also still hosting generations of happy kids in the mountains north of Los Angeles.

As the popularity of Jewish camps grew, they began to specialize even more, with camps (or subset weeks of camp) developed over the years for Russian emigre children, Jewish kids of color, LGBTQ Jewish kids and others. (Jewish day camps sprang up as well, often under the auspices of the JCC movement, including Tiyatah, which wasnopened during World War II when Tawonga was closed.)

But even as the sleepaway camp experience became tailored to the issues of the day, some commonalities remained. They included a desire to sustain, or even create, an American Jewishness that would persist in children past their camp years. It was camp for life, in a way. And as parents and educators hoped, camp experiences stick.

Perhaps that was because Jewish sleepaway camp was never solely about having a fun summer vacation. It was about living Jewishly, with other Jews. At the same time it was creating its own kind of wholesome American Judaism, one adapted to life in the new country.

If Judaism is merely academic, then it is not a way of life, Saratoga camp director Samuel Kaminker told our paper in an article headlined Camp Saratoga Teaches Religion as Every-Day Way of Life in 1958. And until it becomes a way of life then Jews cant make their contribution to the American civilization or to Judaism.

Or, as a freelance journalist and camp parent wrote in an opinion piece we printed in 1998, Jewish summer camp signifies nothing less than the survival of American Jewry.

Jewish children need more than traditional Hebrew schools to maintain their affinity for Judaism; they need exhilarating, experiential Jewish activities, she wrote. And thats exactly what Jewish overnight camp provides: a joyous, invigorating and uplifting few weeks of total immersion in Judaism, with memories powerful enough to last the entire year.

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FROM THE ARCHIVE: A century of Bay Area Jewish summer camp J. - The Jewish News of Northern California


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