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Youngstown-area teen arrested; planned to target synagogue – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on July 10, 2022

The Struthers Police Department arrested a 15-year-old last month after he threatened to kill his father and revealed plans to target a synagogue and Black people.

The police were alerted by the FBI June 17 that the teen was livestreaming when he made the threat against his father, who was asleep in the adjacent room. He was arrested at his home where two handguns and over 100 rounds of ammunition were collected as evidence.

A search warrant of the teens telephone revealed a video stating his plans, according to police reports.

He was going to kill his father and take his fathers van, and his game plan was to kill as many Black people as he can on his way to a Jewish synagogue and then shoot people at the synagogue, Struthers Detective Tommy Schneeman told the Cleveland Jewish News July 8.

The teen has been charged with making terroristic threat, domestic violence, inducing panic and threatening violence, and possessing criminal tools.

In a statement to the CJN, Andrew Lipkin, CEO of Youngstown Area Jewish Federation, said:

We are aware of the arrest of a Struthers, Ohio teen on charges of making terroristic threats, domestic violence, inducing panic, and possessing criminal tools, and that some of the threats were antisemitic in nature.

We do not believe there is a threat to the local Jewish community at this time. As always, our security team is working with local law enforcement to ensure the safety of all members of the local Jewish community, and all who work with and visit the Youngstown Area Jewish Federation and its agencies. We are grateful for our partnerships with local law enforcement, and will work with them to ensure the security of our entire Federation campus and to support their efforts to bring those responsible for antisemitic crimes to justice.

Racist and antisemitic messages and symbols and Nazi propaganda were discovered on the firearms, the teens phone and a journal turned in to the police by the teens father, the reports said.

The teen told the police he was distraught over losing his mother and the strained relationship with his father. He also stated he was a white supremacist and neo-Nazi sympathizer and despised all those associated with the Black Lives Matter movement and the LGBTQ community, reports said.

Following his arrest, the teen was transported to Mercy Health Hospital in downtown Youngstown and later Windsor-Laurelwood Behavioral Health Center in Willoughby for a mental evaluation.

He was released from the health center July 1 and transported to the Mahoning County Juvenile Justice Center.

Struthers is a suburb of Youngstown and about 80 miles from Cleveland.

This is a developing story.

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Youngstown-area teen arrested; planned to target synagogue - Cleveland Jewish News

Jacki Lovi Sundheim: Shooting victim worked with Jewish kids, couples J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on July 8, 2022

In the Jewish communities on Chicagos North Shore, Jacki Lovi Sundheim taught preschoolers, and made sure adolescents were ready for their bnai mitzvahs and couples for their wedding ceremonies.

She was murdered by a gunman Monday as she watched a Fourth of July parade in Highland Park. The 63-year-old grew up in the city and had worked for decades at a local synagogue, North Shore Congregation Israel, first as a preschool teacher and later shepherding members through weddings and bar and bat mitzvahs.

Sundheims nephew, Luke Sundheim, was at a different parade in Winnetka, Illinois, a few miles south of Highland Park, when he learned that his aunt had been killed.

Jacki was senselessly gunned down watching a parade that shes been to her entire life, hewrote on Facebook. If you knew Jacki youd know that she was one of the kindest people youd ever meet and she went out of her way to help anyone.

Sundheim was a lifelong member of North Shore Congregation Israel, a Reform synagogue in nearby Glencoe. She spent decades working for the congregation, first as a preschool later and later as the events and bnai mitzvah coordinator, according to a statement released by the synagogues leadership.

There are no words sufficient to express the depth of our grief for Jackis death, the statement continued. Jackis work, kindness and warmth touched us all.

Sundheims role with the congregation brought her into contact with a wide swath of the Jewish community in the North Shore, a stretch of affluent Chicagoland suburbs along Lake Michigan that is home to many of the regions Jews.

Stefanie Greene, a cantor who works for Hillel in Pittsburgh, said that Sundheim had coordinated her wedding at the synagogue.

She did so many things to make everything go smoothly, Greene wrote on Facebook. Most memorably for me, she smiled, fixed my train, and opened the doors for me to walk down the aisle to my beloved.

Another social media user, who goes by Helix, said that Sundheim gifted him the yad, or ritual pointer, that they used in their bar mitzvah ceremony.

It was a difficult time in my childhood and she was always there with smiles, Helix wrote.

Too close to home.Jacki Sundheim is one of the victims in the highland park shooting. She helped coordinate my bar mitzvah and gifted me the yod I used to read the Torah. It was a difficult time in my childhood and she was always there with smiles. HaShem yikom damam.

Helix @ MFF the Sabertooth Fennec (@FenHelix) July 5, 2022

Sundheim had long shown an interest in working with young people. She was part of a program at Highland Park High School where students earned school credit in exchange for caring for nursery school students and working in local grade schools, according to a yearbook from Highland Park High School, which she graduated from in 1976.

Sundheim is survived by her husband, Bruce, a global operations director at CME Group, a derivatives marketplace, and daughter Leah, who graduated from Bradley University in southern Illinois, in 2016. Sundheims sister, Tracy, is an attorney focusing on special education cases in Highland Park.

Members of the family did not immediately respond to requests for comment Tuesday, and North Shore Congregation said its staff were unavailable to speak.

We are fully focused on supporting our community right now, Todd Braman, the synagogues executive director, said in an email.

Sundheim was among six people killed at the Fourth of July parade. An additional two dozen others were shot by a gunman firing from a rooftop along the parade route. The victims were ages 8 to 85. Two were identified as of Tuesday afternoon: Sundheim and Nicholas Toledo, a 76-year-old grandfather. In addition to Sundheim, Israels consul general in Chicago said Tuesday that there could be as many as three additional Jewish victims.

There are currently no indications that this was an antisemitic incident, even though the profile of the attacker might be thought to match such an incident, Yinahm Cohen, the official, told Israels Channel 12.

Police arrested suspected gunman Robert Bobby Crimo III, 22. Martin Blumenthal, director of security for the local Chabad, said Crimo entered Chabad on the last day of Passover and seemed to be sizing up the synagogue.

Nearly $150,000 has been raised onGoFundMe for funeral costs, medical bills and mental health support in response to the shooting.

The world lost a truly special person and Im both furious and incredibly sad that I wont be able to spend any more time with her, Sundheims nephew, Luke Sundheim, wrote on Facebook.

I love America, but this can not keep happening to innocent loving people.

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Jacki Lovi Sundheim: Shooting victim worked with Jewish kids, couples J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Dan Wolf, Holocaust Survivor and Owner of Chicago Jewish Deli Institution the Bagel, Has Died – Eater Chicago

Posted By on July 8, 2022

Dan Wolf, the third-generation owner of 72-year-old Jewish deli stalwart the Bagel, died on Friday, July 1, according to the restaurants general manager Richard Brantner. He was 77.

Wolfs career in hospitality began in early 1950s, shortly after after his grandparents and parents founded the Bagel. At seven years old, he was the only member of the household who spoke fluent English and thus was charged with typing up daily menus of Eastern European Jewish and Old World cuisine, Mitchell Kaufman, Wolfs spouse of 60 years, told Block Club Chicago.

Born in 1945 inside the Theresienstadt concentration camp, Wolf was a rare child survivor of the Czechoslovakian ghetto-labor camp where between 1941 and 1945, the Nazis and their collaborators executed approximately 90 percent of the 15,000 children imprisoned there. The story goes that his mother [Ruth Wolf] was told to stand in a line with [Wolf] one line was for execution, one was to go on, says Brantner. They put her in the execution line, but as it kept moving, she snuck into the other line.

When Ruth Wolf reached the front of the queue, the guard noticed the switch. I want to live with my child, she told him. The guard, for reasons unknown, ultimately let them go. Otherwise, this would not all be here, says Brantner, who has spent more than three decades working at the Bagel. Its incredible that he survived.

At age four, Wolf, along his parents Ruth and Edward Wolf and grandparents Chaim and Elsa Golenzer, immigrated to the United States. In 1950, the Golenzers and Wolfs opened the Bagel on Kedzie and Lawrence in Albany Park, founding what would become one of the best-known Jewish delis in the city.

Despite his early immersion in the restaurant business, Wolf pursued other fields as a young man and earned a degree in psychology before finally embracing his first calling hospitality. He took over the family business in 1969 and helmed the Bagel through three locations in the Chicago area, assisted by his late uncle Michael Golenzer. In 1992, the Bagel relocated to its current home at 3107 N. Broadway in Lakeview.

To all who knew him, Wolfs return to the restaurant business seemed like beshert the Yiddish word for destiny in large part due to his endlessly warm and welcoming demeanor. He assembled a fiercely loyal staff (We have employees who have been here even longer than I have, says Brantner) and offered them additional financial support when they were struggling. He also instated a policy of offering food to hungry and houseless people who lingered near the restaurant or came inside and directed his workers to follow suit.

He was just a mensch, a gentleman, says Bratner. He always had a warm smile, his door was always open for people to talk to him. He loved his work and didnt even consider it work because he loved what he did.

Wolfs influence extended beyond the restaurants walls. He was an instrumental figure in the growth and success of the Lakeview East Chamber of Commerce, establishing programs and working in several chamber roles for over 35 years, executive director Maureen Martino told Block Club. Wolf and Kaufman also supported Jewish-led nonprofits in the area, including Jewish Child & Family Services Chicago.

Despite the immense economic challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic and Wolfs death, the deli will keep serving its community with golden bowls chicken soup studded with enormous, fluffy matzo balls, mammoth corned beef sandwiches, and other Ashkenazi Jewish classics. From my understanding from [Kaufman], the Bagel will continue in honor of Dannys name because thats what he would want, says Brantner. He is truly everywhere in this restaurant and in the community.

In addition to his spouse, Wolf is survived by his aunt Haya Golenzer. A memorial service was held on Tuesday, July 5, at Shalom Memorial Funeral Home in Arlington Heights.

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Dan Wolf, Holocaust Survivor and Owner of Chicago Jewish Deli Institution the Bagel, Has Died - Eater Chicago

Jewish young adult scene thriving in Houston – Jewish Herald-Voice

Posted By on July 8, 2022

Multiple organizations connecting, engaging diverse crowds

The young adult Jewish community in Houston can best be described as diverse, engaging and inclusive.

With multiple organizations and a wide range of events to choose from, one does not need to look far to find a network of people who share similar interests and values.

From Happy Hours and Challah Bakes to music concerts or even an illusionist show, there are plenty of opportunities to socialize, be entertained and get involved in the local Jewish young adult scene.

People are eager to get back together and socialize in person, said Emily Feinstein, who is the new Jewish Federation of Greater Houston Engagement associate, helping run the Young Adult Division.

Young adult groups are an important and essential way for people to meet, whether it is for friendship, romance or strictly professional, said Feinstein.

YAD had close to 100 people attend a kick-off concert event with Jewish rapper Kosha Dillz at 8th Wonder Brewery in May. The group also recently held a Cocktails & a Cause event at Holocaust Museum Houston.

Upcoming events later this month include a Happy Hour at Kenny & Ziggys and a summer pool party in the Memorial area.

We hope our community will not only get a lot out of doing these events, but, as they grow up and become leaders, they can continue to network and keep our Jewish community strong, Feinstein said.

Two other Houston young adult groups J-HYPE (Jewish Houston Young Professionals) and YJP Houston (Young Jewish Professionals) continue to innovate the networking experience.

J-HYPE, which has more than 400 participants, according to founder Rabbi Johnny Ouzzan, has hosted rooftop barbecues and casino nights, as well as Torah studies and heritage trips to Israel, Poland and beyond.

We create community, connection and growth among Houstons Jewish young professionals through classes, events, educational programs, Shabbat and holiday dinners, as well as our heritage trips, Rabbi Ouzzan told the JHV.

We are devoted exclusively to Jewish young professionals in Houston in their 20s and 30s and are welcoming and inclusive to anyone and everyone, regardless of [their] background, denomination or level of observance. Everyone is family at J-HYPE, said Rabbi Ouzzan.

YJP Houston, led by Rabbi Chaim, Chanie and Chaya Lazaroff, has connected with its network at trendy events that have involved rodeo carnival games, boat cruises, axe throwing and their upcoming White Party with illusionist Ilan Smith.

YJP Houston Chabads young adults and professionals is where the new generation of young leaders go for Jewish growth, social opportunities and business networking, Rabbi Chaim told the JHV.

Powered by Chabad of Uptown, young singles and couples have a warm, friendly environment where they can meet, socialize and, at the same time, get closer to their Jewishness. Weekly classes, Shabbat dinners and other programs attract young adults of all backgrounds and affiliations.

While many J-HYPE and YJP events are strictly social, both offer a myriad of spiritual opportunities to build on ones Judaism, as well.

Shabbat dinners and Torah studies are a big part of the groups events, while many of the larger parties and networking events are built around Jewish holidays.

The two groups J-HYPE and YJP even converged for a joint event last Sukkot, bringing together close to 100 young professionals married, single and with varying levels of Jewish observance to enjoy a festive barbecue.

Another young adult group, Jewston, is run through Houston Hillel and includes recent college graduates and graduate students, ages 22-30.

Popular events include Bar Trivia, Jewish cooking and cocktail-making classes and an Israeli whiskey tasting.

Jewston enriches the lives of Jewish graduate students and young professionals so that they may enrich the Houston Jewish community, the Jewish people and the world, Alyssa Silva told the JHV. She served as assistant executive director of Houston Hillel.

Silva said Jewston is a professionally led, pluralistic, nondenominational Jewish organization, and they encourage participants who identify as LGBTQ+, Jews by choice and the non-Jewish allies and partners of the Jewish community.

Come as you are, whether you identify as Jewish or Jew-ish; we cant wait to welcome you into our community, she said.

Many Houston synagogues also feature young adult groups with various activities, giving synagogue members even more options to network and grow.

The overall goal remains to bring together young Jewish adults and keep them engaged in each other and their community.

We hope to instill a strong sense of Jewish identity among our demographic, Feinstein said. We want to create that desire for young adults to give back to their community through leadership and philanthropic efforts.

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Jewish young adult scene thriving in Houston - Jewish Herald-Voice

CCAE Theatricals to premiere musical about 5 Jewish teen diarists who perished in the Holocaust – The San Diego Union-Tribune

Posted By on July 8, 2022

Back in 2008, Jordan Beck read a book of excerpts from the diaries of five Jewish teens who died in the Holocaust. One of the diarists, Anne Frank, is a name everyone knows, but Beck was surprised hed never heard of the other four.

Now, 14 years later, Beck is ready to launch Witnesses, a world premiere musical that gives voice to five lesser-known Jewish teen diarists and Holocaust victims. Over the years, he has recruited five different songwriting teams to tell each teens individual story in song, as well as Tony Award winner Robert L. Freedman to write the book for the 90-minute musical. It opens July 15 at the California Center for the Arts, Escondido.

Witnesses is the first original musical produced by 2-year-old CCAE Theatricals, of which Beck is managing producer and J. Scott Lapp is artistic director. Beck conceived the show and co-wrote some of its songs, and Lapp is the shows stage director.

While reading the 2008 book, Beck said he felt a personal connection to David Rabinowicz, who was 12 years old when he started his war diary in Poland in May 1942. He was sent to a Nazi labor camp two years later. Beck said he was struck by how David and the other teen diarists experienced many of the same issues that teens do today, but they also wrote about having to wear Jewish stars on their clothing, losing the right to ride public transportation and facing their very uncertain future.

Today, kids get so wrapped up with the little things and they feel like life is so tough. In this show, the kids are dealing with the same stresses in life, like crushes, not getting good grades and getting into arguments with their siblings and parents. But then on top of that theyre being marginalized. What I found so inspiring was that up until the point they stopped writing, they were still holding on to hope, Beck said.

A songwriter himself, Beck initially thought Witnesses would be a 15-song cycle, with three songs for each teen. In 2011, he told songwriter Adam Gwon about the concept, and Gwon wrote the shows title song We Will All Be Witnesses. Over the next several years, Beck acquired the musical rights for the diaries. Then he hand-picked composer friends whose writing and thematic tastes he thought were best suited to write the songs for each teen.

Beck wrote the lyrics and composer Gerald Sternbach the music for the songs based on Rabinowiczs diary. Gwon wrote the music and lyrics for Moshe Flinker, a Dutch Jew who was 18 when he died in the Auschwitz death camp in Poland. Matt Gould, whose musical Lempicka is now running at La Jolla Playhouse, wrote the music and lyrics for Yitskhok Rudashevski, who was 15 when he was shot to death in a Jewish ghetto in his native Lithuania in 1943. Composer Carmel Dean and lyricist Mindi Dickstein have collaborated on the songs for Romania-born va Heyman, who died in Auschwitz at age 13 in 1944. And Anna K. Jacobs wrote the songs for Renia Spiegel of Poland, who was 18 when she was executed by Nazi police who found her secret hiding place.

In 2021, Beck reached out to Freedman who won the 2014 Tony Award for the book of his Broadway musical A Gentlemans Guide to Love and Murder to ask if hed be interested in working on the project. Freedman agreed and created dialogue, monologues and ensemble moments from unused lines from the teens diaries.

What he did brilliantly is find all these little nuggets and gems from each of the diaries, a sentence here and there and weaved together dialogue, Beck said. Id compare it to (the musical) Assassins in how it takes the characters out of their time and place and has them interact. They had shared experiences but didnt know each other.

The show finally came together in a two-week workshop last fall in Escondido. To ensure authenticity, the creative team worked closely with Jewish consultant and historian Raymond Zachary as well as Natalie Iscovich, the granddaughter of a Holocaust survivor. Lapp said the workshop was a profound experience for everyone.

You always hope they are moved and respond in the fashion you hoped they would ... and when we ended one of the presentations of Witnesses, we had this overwhelming support of emotion and excitement and passion for the project that was incredibly rewarding, Lapp said.

Lapp said Witnesses may be about events that happened long ago, but the time to learn from them is now.

We have some real problems that have permeated into our society, Lapp said. We all know it and cant pretend that we dont. Its called hate. Its called bullying. Its called intolerance. Its called racism. Its called anti-Semitism. Throughout the course of the show, the audience will be posed with a question: What will you do? It is these lessons that we should walk away from the theater thinking about. We are all witnesses.

When: Opens July 15 and runs through July 30. 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays. 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays

Where: California Center for the Arts, Escondido, 340 N. Escondido Blvd., Escondido

Tickets: $35-$75

Phone: (800) 988-4253

Online: artcenter.org

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CCAE Theatricals to premiere musical about 5 Jewish teen diarists who perished in the Holocaust - The San Diego Union-Tribune

New Jewish Center in Boise will include Idahos first Mikvah – Idaho Press

Posted By on July 8, 2022

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New Jewish Center in Boise will include Idahos first Mikvah - Idaho Press

Did a social justice-focused Jewish non-profit give in to a right-wing harassment campaign by firing an anti-Zionist employee? – Mondoweiss

Posted By on July 8, 2022

It was supposed to be a dream job.

When Anna Rajagopal spoke to me about Avodah, they understood it to be a non-profit social justice group that works specifically with recent college graduates and young Jews from the ages of 21 to 26, placing them in a target city with the National Jewish Service Corps to do Tikkun Olam work, or world-healing work, specifically around social justice.

For Rajagopal, who is a young, anti-Zionist activist and Jew of color, Avodahs mission statement resonated because of its emphasis on anti-racism and inciting social change. Moved by the organizations proclaimed ethics, Rajagopal applied for a position that combined social media work with racial justice messaging.

This seemed like the perfect position for me because I got to combine my love for Judaism and my love for social justice and my love for community with my ability to engage large audiences digitally.

Then, a Right-wing troll site got involved.

In many ways an updated version of Canary Mission, Stopantisemitism.org is a blacklist site dedicated to doxxing outspoken critics of Israel and pressuring employers to fire them.

On June 25th, 2022, Stopantisemitism.org created a new profile about Rajagopal as their so-called Antisemite of the Week. Stopantisemitism included screenshots of Rajagopals Tweets,which included derogatory statements about Zionists as well as broader analysis of Israeli apartheid, Zionist settler-colonialism, and the need for decolonization:

The Stopantisemitism profile ends by encouraging its large follower base to engage in targeted harassment by pressuring Avodah to fire Rajagopal.

What happened to Rajagopal is, therefore, unsurprising even if chilling.

What is surprising is the possibility that any organization ostensibly dedicated to anti-racism or social justice work could accept the fringe, right-wing and racist fanatacism of a site like Stopantisemitism.org, which is a blatant attempt to encourage targeted harassment of Palestinians and their allies (often allies of color) for their political beliefs.

This is a matter of compounded harm. When employers and universities unthinkingly penalize employees and students for anti-Zionist views based on Stopantisemitism.orgs anti-Palestinian and antisemitic smear campaigns, theyre not only depriving often already vulnerable individuals of work and education for their political views that the site falsely spins as racist.

In such circumstances, Palestinians and their allies are also collectively harmed because Stopantisemitism.org becomes legitimized as an authority, when in point of fact it needs to be resisted and exposed as merely the latest racist attempt to silence criticism of the Israeli state.

Days after Stopantisemitisms harassment campaign of Rajagopal began, Rajagopal received a call from Avodah CEO Cheryl Cook, who said that they were letting Rajagopal go.

Rajagopal stated that when they asked for the reason, Cook said only, Because you incite violence on Twitter, thereby reinforcing one of the central claims that Stopantisemitism.org was perpetuating in its harassment campaign of Rajagopal.

Email language sent from Cook to an individual (likely reaching out as a result of Stopantisemitisms campaign) assures the complainant that After looking more closely into the statements made by Anna, we have decided were not aligned with Avodahs mission. Anna was hired in a part-time summer role, but we dont believe their publicly-shared values align with ours, and we are parting ways.

It appears that a supposedly social-justice aligned organization immediately folded to the whims of a racist right-wing troll site and gave third-party complainants far more responsive communication than its own employee single-handedly facing down a torrent of politicized racist harassment.

After firing Rajagopal, Avodah released a Twitter thread that predictably sought to distance the organization from any complicity in its enabling of Stopantisemitism.orgs harassment campaign.

But the organizations own actions arguably legitimized and prompted an escalation in this very harassment.

Rajagopal stated that some of the most horrific dimensions of this harassment, which included sexually harassing messages being sent to their family, in fact transpired after harassers were emboldened by Avodahs firing.

We did not and do not make decisions in response to actions or demands of any external group and we did not and do not make personnel decisions based on an individuals politics related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, reads one reflection from Avodahs Twitter thread.

Avodah has received criticism in the past for refusing to speak out against Israels oppression of the Palestinian people or to support BDS.

Cooks own Avodah profile states that the current Avodah CEO was involved with organizations such as the liberal Zionist New Israel Fund.

Of course, a past affiliation does not always automatically determine a current organizations political line.

But if Avodah truly does not make personnel decisions based on an individuals politics related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, then why would they fire an anti-Zionist employee so soon after a smear campaign launched by a Zionist troll site? And if Avodah wants to invoke a right to set its own standards of conduct as a private organization, why was Rajagopal reportedly told that their online activism would not be an issue?

One possible answer that has been posed by Rajagopal and anti-Zionist Rabbi Brant Rosen in a recent blog post expressing solidarity with Rajagopal is that Avodah CEO Cheryl Cook is currently running for public office.

This is certainly feasible. Yet Cook is not running for Congress, but New York State Office; the presence of pro-BDS Senators such as Julia Salazar suggests that being associated with criticisms of Israeli state policy is not such a political liability at this level.

A more likely possibility may be funding: a cached version of Avodahs Supporters page reveals a list of Zionist organizations and individuals that includes film director Steven Spielberg, who donated a percentage of the $1 million he received from Israels Genesis Prize to Avodah. The Dorot Foundation and UJA Federation New York are also listed among the supporters.

We may never know the precise reason that Avodah fired Rajagopal.

But if the organization did so under the belief that caving to Stopantisemitism.orgs harassment campaign would spare them from further scrutiny, the opposite has proved true: anti-Zionist activists have been criticizing Avodahs actions on Twitter.

On a broader level, Avodah may have ironically tied itself to Stopantisemitism.org in its very attempt to achieve distance.

For Rajagopal, who has lost the most, Stopantisemitism and Avodah will be linked forever.

Over the last year, weve made a conscious commitment to our readers and the entire Palestinian freedom movement:to build a newsroom for all of Palestine.

As we welcome our two new Palestine-based staff, Faris Giacaman and Mariam Barghouti, will you contribute to make sure Mondoweiss can back their work 100%?

Between now and July 3rd, a generous donor has pledged to match all gifts, up to $50,000.

This summer fundraising campaign is going to make a huge difference in how we cover the next big uprisings, the place of Palestinian rights in U.S. politics, and the grassroots movement building an unstoppable campaign for justice.

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Did a social justice-focused Jewish non-profit give in to a right-wing harassment campaign by firing an anti-Zionist employee? - Mondoweiss

When the IRS Targeted Jewish Activists – Jewish Journal

Posted By on July 8, 2022

The allegation that the Trump administration may have used the Internal Revenue Service against two of the presidents high-profile opponents has sparked much debate. For the American Jewish community, its a reminder of a disturbing episode that took place during the Holocaust era.

The Jewish target of U.S. government wrath in the 1940s was the Bergson Group, a political action committee led by Peter Bergson (Hillel Kook), a Zionist emissary from Palestine. The group used newspaper advertisements, rallies, and lobbying to press the Roosevelt administration to rescue Jews from the Nazis.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt was unhappyto put it mildlyabout those protests. One senior White House aide reported that FDR was much displeased when the Bergson Group brought 400 rabbis to Washington to plead for rescue. First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt told Bergson himself that the president was very upset about one of the groups newspaper ads, which FDR felt was hitting below the belt because it accused him of turning a blind eye to the Nazi massacres.

The State Department, too, was annoyed by Bergsons campaign for rescue. Assistant Secretary of State Breckinridge Long privately complained that the groups newspaper ads made it very difficult for the Department. Longs deputy, Robert Alexander, absurdly claimed that the slogan used in one Bergson ad, ActionNot Pity, had actually been invented by the Nazis as part of a conspiracy to embarrass the Allies.

Beginning in 1942, the Roosevelt administration sent both the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Internal Revenue Service after Bergson. They were looking for evidence of criminal activity, but their motivation was political. An internal FBI memo that I obtained under the Freedom of Information Act bluntly explained the reason for U.S. government action against Bergson: This man has been in the hair of [Secretary of State] Cordell Hull.

Beginning in 1942, the Roosevelt administration sent both the FBI and the IRS after Bergson. They were looking for evidence of criminal activity, but their motivation was political.

FBI agents gathered background information from what they called persons in New York City who are familiar with Israelite matters. They also eavesdropped on the Bergsonites telephone conversations, opened their mail, went through their trash, and planted informants in the group to steal documents from Bergsons office. The FBI hoped to find proof the Bergson Group was secretly assisting the Irgun Zvai Leumi, the underground militia in Palestinethat was headed by Menachem Begin. They found no such evidence.

The authorities second goal was to find a link between Bergson and the Communist Party. One FBI memo approvingly quoted a rival Jewish organizations description of the Bergsonites as a group of thoroughly disreputable Communist Zionists. In a private letter, FBI director J. Edgar Hoover referred to the playwright Ben Hecht and six other leading Bergson activists as fellow travelers. But the FBIs spying on Bergson did not turn up any evidence of a Communist link, either.

At the same time, the IRS launched a full-scale inquiry into the Bergson Groups finances, seeking to revoke its tax-exempt status. For nearly a year, IRS agents repeatedly visited the groups New York City headquarters, once for a stretch where they stayed from morning until night for more than two weeks.

Louis and Jack Yampolsky, a father-and-son accounting team that handled Bergsons finances pro bono, had to dig out and reconcile every piece of financial information in the groups records. There were no photocopy machines in those days, so we had to hand-copy every disbursement and every receipt that was given for every donation, Jack Yampolsky told me in an interview some years ago. And because the Bergson Group had enormous grassroots appeal, it received literally thousands of one-dollar or two-dollar donations from people all over the country.

In the end, the IRS investigators were unable to find evidence of any wrongdoing. In fact, as the IRS team became familiar with the groups work, they came to sympathize with it, and when they finished, [they] made a contribution between themevery one of them gave a few dollars, Bergson later told Prof. David S. Wyman.

The sympathy expressed by the IRS agents contrasted sharply with the sentiments expressed in some of the FBI documents which I obtained. One FBI report about Bergson activist Maurice Rosenblatt derisively referred to the leftwing Coordinating Committee for Democratic Action, in which Rosenblatt was active, as this Semitic Committee. The FBI memo complained that Rosenblatt and his colleagues were trying to smear Nazi sympathizers in New York City.

When there is a genuine threat, governments sometimes have to do things like eavesdrop, Jack Yampolsky conceded. But in our case, they were doing it for political reasons, and antisemitism also played a role. The fact that we vocally disagreed with U.S. government policy regarding the Holocaust and Jewish statehood was not a valid reason for the Roosevelt administration to enlist the FBI and the IRS in a war against the Bergson group.

Dr. Medoff is founding director of The David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies and author of more than 20 books about Jewish history and the Holocaust. His latest is America and the Holocaust: A Documentary History, published by the Jewish Publication Society & University of Nebraska Press.

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When the IRS Targeted Jewish Activists - Jewish Journal

Owner of Toronto Kosher Store Reports Death Threats from BDS Activists – Algemeiner

Posted By on July 8, 2022

The lives of a Canadian Jewish kosher store owner and his family were threatened following an anti-Israel protest outside Jewish-owned businesses in the Toronto suburb of Thornhill.

Shabbat Shalom b*tches, the protestors shouted while waving Palestinian flags last Friday, which was also Canada Day.

During the demonstration, the owner of Taste of Israel who has not been named was told by one of the protestors that the group knew his address and would show up at his house. The same protestor also maintained that her gripe was against Zionists, not Jews.

On Sunday, he received a phone call from someone who said, We are coming to kill you.

Canadian Jewish leaders have since expressed concern about what transpired.

This is not anti-Zionism its a blatant act of antisemitic hate which must be condemned by everyone, tweeted Canadian MP Melissa Lantsman on Friday. You dont come to a Jewish neighborhood and yell anti-Semitic tropes if it isnt about hating Jews.

Also commenting on Twitter, StopAntisemitism, an online antisemitism watchdog said the protest was sickening and represented pure and unadulterated Jew hatred.

Canadas Jewish community, has experienced record highs of antisemitic hate crimes for six consecutive years, with almost eight incidents occurring per day in 2021.

MP Lantsman said incidents like last Fridays should also be classified as a hate crime so open Jew hatred in our streets ends, today.

The York Regional Police arrested one of the offenders before clarifying on Tuesday that was unaware of any other offenses having occurred.

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Owner of Toronto Kosher Store Reports Death Threats from BDS Activists - Algemeiner

A lovin tribute to one of the unsung Jewish heroes of rock n roll – Forward

Posted By on July 8, 2022

The Lovin' Spoonful pose on a street in the 1960s. Clockwise from bottom: drummer Joe Butler, bassist Steve Boone, co-founder and lead guitarist Zal Yanovsky and co-founder and singer John Sebastian. Photo by Getty Images

By Dan EpsteinJuly 07, 2022

Despite their seven Top 10 hits including 1966s chart-topping hot pavement anthem Summer in the City and their (belated) induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, the Lovin Spoonful are all too often left out of the great American bands of the 1960s conversation.

During their musical and commercial peak, the Greenwich Village-formed quartet were an absolute phenomenon. Their self-described good time music a sunny, electrified, groundbreaking mutation of jug band, folk, country, blues and rock n roll idioms inspired and influenced such contemporary luminaries as The Kinks, Cream and the Grateful Dead.

When the Spoonful arrived in London in April 1966, The Beatles, Brian Jones and Jeff Beck were among the legendary British musicians who greeted them as peers. They appeared in and provided the soundtrack for Woody Allens Whats Up, Tiger Lily? while also soundtracking Francis Ford Coppolas Youre a Big Boy Now, and they were nearly cast as the leads of the TV show that turned out to be The Monkees. But due to fatigue, infighting, artistic differences, business hassles and an unfortunate brush with the law, the band flamed out after a chart run of barely two years.

The magics in the music and the musics in me, Spoonful frontman John Sebastian sang on 1965s Do You Believe in Magic, the bands first hit. But much of the musical magic onstage and in the studio was actually provided by Zalman Zal Yanovsky, a Canadian Jew of Russian-Polish extraction who also happened to be the Spoonfuls immensely talented and intensely charismatic lead guitarist.

With his perpetually gurning visage and overgrown Prince Valiant locks, Zal came off like the missing link between Harpo Marx and The Ramones. But beyond his larger-than-life magnetism and penchant for onstage clownery (both of which are still delightfully apparent in clips from The Ed Sullivan Show and the 1965 concert film The Big T.N.T. Show), Yanovsky was also an incredibly dexterous and creative player. He could fingerpick like a wizened Piedmont bluesman one minute, then make his Guild Thunderbird moan like a pedal steel or sing like a French horn the next.

Unfortunately, Yanovskys personality was as mercurial as his playing. His penchant for mayhem would have impressed Keith Moon he once terrorized some unsuspecting background singers by rolling a fake hand grenade into their recording session and had a mortifying tendency to act out in crowd situations, like the time he almost ruined the Spoonfuls London after-party by pelting John Lennon with olives.

Following a self-inflicted ejection from the band in the summer of 1967, he recorded one hilariously self-indulgent and deeply uncommercial album (Alive and Well in Argentina) before all but vanishing from the music business. Yanovskys impulsive rejection of fame and fortune turned him into something of a cult hero, but his unexpected reemergence as a restaurateur and philanthropist in Kingston, Ontario gave his story a much different (and ultimately far more uplifting) trajectory than that of other M.I.A. musical icons like Pink Floyds Syd Barrett and Sly Stone.

An inveterate shtickmeister, Yanovsky rarely gave straight answers to interview questions in his Spoonful days, and the bitterness he carried with him over his experiences in the music business caused him to prevaricate or clam up entirely whenever he was asked about the band in his later years. Thus, even though hed become a well-known and deeply beloved figure in Kingston thanks to his restaurant Chez Piggy, its associated bakery Pan Chancho, and his involvement in various local causes Yanovsky was still something of an enigma when he died from a heart attack in December 2002 at the age of 57. But nearly 20 years after his death, a biography finally has finally arrived to give us a clearer idea of what Zal Yanovsky was all about.

Written by Simon Wordsworth, and featuring a foreword from Yanovskys daughter Zoe, Zal! An Oral History of Zalman Yanovsky pieces together his wild and whimsical existence from the multicolored shards he left in his wake. Wordsworth, an ardent Lovin Spoonful fan who has co-written two previous books on the band, draws upon both archival and recent interviews with many of the people who lived, loved, worked, played and otherwise crossed paths with Yanovsky in his early life as well as in the music and culinary worlds along with a veritable feast of photos spanning his life and career.

The picture that emerges from Wordsworths painstakingly researched bio is one of an exuberant, complex and occasionally self-destructive man whose irreverent wit and fiercely independent streak rendered him endearing and frustrating in equal measure. Zal (pronounced Zaul) inherited both his humor and his unconventional approach to life from his father Avrom Yanovsky, a Russian-born artist who worked as a cartoonist for various ethnic newspapers and leftist magazines, as well as the Communist Party of Canada (of which he was a lifelong member) and the City of Toronto Pest Control Board.

His mother Nechema was a Polish-born schoolteacher who specialized in Yiddish history and language, and during summers she and Avrom would send their only child to Camp Naivelt, a left-wing secular Jewish camp in Brampton, Ontario, where his endless mischief was the constant talk of the counselors. Though he was never observant, Zals upbringing nonetheless instilled a sense of Jewish pride and identity that never left him, even at the height of his fame. Not only did he refuse to anglicize his name for showbiz purposes, he also regularly dropped Yiddish words into interviews with teen magazines, which was highly unusual behavior for a 1960s pop star.

Zals mother doted on him to a suffocating extent school friends recall her interrupting his recess time to force-feed him bagels but her death from cancer when he was 13 deeply traumatized him. Thereafter, he lost interest in school, largely devoting himself to music and petty crime. At 17, his father sent Zal to live with a Zionist uncle and his family at the Degania Bet kibbutz in Israel, an arrangement that only lasted about 10 months. Whether or not the story he often told in his Spoonful days about getting booted for driving a tractor through a wall was actually true, it was clear to all involved that he was far more interested in playing music than devoting his outsized energies to the kibbutz.

Upon his return from Israel, Zal began haunting the coffeehouse scene in Torontos Yorkville district. Living primarily by his wits, he busked on streetcorners and often crashed in an all-night laundromat; he met his first wife, actress Jackie Burroughs, when she found him sleeping in one of the dryers. He formed a close bond with singer Denny Doherty, who in 1963 asked Zal to join his folk group The Halifax Three.

From there, the pair formed The Mugwumps, a folk-rock group featuring Cass Elliot. That didnt last long Denny and Cass would soon join songwriter John Phillips and his wife Michelle in The Mamas & the Papas it was through Cass that Zal met a young New York harmonica player and singer-songwriter named John Sebastian. Hitting it off while watching The Beatles first appearance on Ed Sullivan together at Casss apartment, Zal and John quickly became inseparable friends and jamming buddies, eventually forming The Lovin Spoonful with bassist Steve Boone and drummer Joe Butler.

Yanovskys high-wattage personality made him the perfect onstage foil for the mild-mannered Sebastian. The latter wrote and sang the majority of the bands original material, but the former made massive contributions of his own, via both his instrumental abilities and his enthusiasm for pushing the studio boundaries. (Thats Zal whacking a garbage can with a drumstick on Summer in the City, and gargling into the microphone for the solo break on their cover of Piano Reds Bald Headed Lena.) And whenever the two men would intricately weave their guitars together, as on Lovin You, the opening track from their third album, 1966s Hums of the Lovin Spoonful, it sounded like a live broadcast from heavens front porch.

But dark clouds were gathering even before Hums was recorded. In May 1966, Yanovsky and Boone were busted for possession of marijuana in San Francisco, and the local police imagining that the musicians could lead them to the Mr. Big of the citys drug scene threatened to have Yanovsky deported to Canada if he and Boone didnt cooperate with their investigation. Faced with the immediate demise of their band, and lacking competent legal guidance, the pair agreed to introduce an undercover officer to their circle of San Francisco friends, with predictably disastrous results.

Word soon spread that The Lovin Spoonful were finks, and though this made no difference to the teenyboppers who continued to scream throughout their concerts, the Spoonful were officially personae non gratae in underground circles from then on. A band with their level of popularity and influence should have been a no-brainer for inclusion in 1967s landmark Monterey International Pop Festival, but their newfound reputation as narcs made it impossible.

Though the bust has often been cited as the reason for Yanovskys departure from the band, Wordsworth makes it clear that his profound dissatisfaction with the Spoonfuls musical direction was the actual issue. Yanovsky thought Summer in the City a song sufficiently evocative and hard-rocking to inspire Eric Clapton to write the music for Creams Tales of Brave Ulysses pointed the way forward, but Sebastian was more interested in writing gentle paeans to domestic bliss like Rain on the Roof and Darling Be Home Soon. Unhappy, but by his own admission making far too much money to quit, Yanovsky increasingly derailed the bands live performances and generally made his bandmates miserable.

Finally given the boot in June 1967, Yanovsky perversely continued to make his presence known, popping up at Spoonful rehearsals and performances (sometimes as a heckler), and even making a wild-eyed and shirtless appearance at the bands first photo shoot with his replacement, former Modern Folk Quartet guitarist Jerry Yester. Oddly, there was no ill will between Yanovsky and Yester. In fact, the two briefly became production partners, working together on Zals ill-fated solo album as well as recordings by Tim Buckley and (weirdly enough) Pat Boone. Boone, sing it like youre singing it out of your asshole, was one of Zals more memorable instructions to the famously conservative singer.

Shortly after his Spoonful exit, Frank Zappa asked Yanovsky to join the Mothers of Invention, but he declined citing his disinterest in playing someone elses music. But when his Spoonful money started to run out, he signed on as lead guitarist in the touring band of emerging country singer-songwriter Kris Kristofferson.

He was the only guy I ever had to fire, Kristofferson later recalled with some amusement, and he told me that Id have to fire him one day or hed tear it all down around us.

Zals fourth show with Kristofferson, at the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival, resulted in a surprise performance with John Sebastian, who was also on the bill. Though their joyous reunion wouldnt result in any long-term future collaborations, it did allow the two men to begin rebuilding what both clearly viewed as a beautiful and important friendship. By the time of Yanovskys death, theyd reconciled to the point where they were visiting each other a couple of times a year.

Yanovskys life changed significantly for the better in the early 1970s, when he moved back to Canada and met Rose Richardson, who would become his second wife. Richardsons calm earth mother energy gave Yanovsky the emotional grounding he desperately needed, and he settled in contentedly to life on her farm. In 1979, the couple channeled their shared love of food and travel into the opening of Chez Piggy, a restaurant whose success and international reputation for adventurous high-end cuisine led to the economic revival of downtown Kingston, and further established Yanovsky and Richardson as pillars of the community.

Though by all accounts a talented and inventive chef, Yanovskys outgoing personality made him better suited to a front of the house position, and for many customers the chance to bask in his Falstaffian glow was as much of a draw as the establishments food. When Yanovsky died, the local papers hailed him as the King of Kingston.

Yanovsky clearly found peace and happiness as Roses husband and Chez Piggys co-proprietor, and Zal! An Oral History of Zalman Yanovsky all sales of which benefit the Zal and Rose Yanovsky Breakfast Fund, a charity founded by the couple to provide healthy food for hungry schoolchildren in the Kingston area does commendable justice to that period of his life, while also digging deeply and colorfully into his formative years and his misadventures in the music business.

The books lone major drawback is the way Wordsworth organizes his wealth of material. Each chapter leads off with several pages of Wordsworths historical and contextual commentary, then finishes with several pages of quotations in an oral history format, adding chronological detail to the period hes just covered. The results can be repetitive and, especially in the chapters that span lengthy periods of time, force the reader to flip back and forth between the pages in order to connect the quotations with Wordsworths narrative; blending the two elements together would have made for a much smoother reading experience.

Still, little about Yanovskys own life was ever smooth, so one could certainly make the argument that Wordsworths off-kilter presentation fits his subject well. And ultimately, Zal! is filled with so much wonderful information, so many hilarious stories, and so many eye-popping visuals, its still an absolute must-read for anyone who was ever a fan of the man or his music, or just wants to learn more about one of the great Jewish heroes of 1960s rock and roll.

Dan Epstein is the Forwards contributing music critic. His books include Stars and Strikes: Baseball and America in the Bicentennial Summer of 76.

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A lovin tribute to one of the unsung Jewish heroes of rock n roll - Forward


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