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Liberation: How the diaspora is making its mark in nation building – The New Times

Posted By on July 4, 2022

In March this year, a group of Rwandans living in China, most of whom are students,contributedUSD 8,215 to connect 561 vulnerable families in Rwandato solar power through the #CanaChallenge, an initiative established by the Rwanda Development Bank (BRD) with an aim ofproviding solar energy to 10,000 familiesin remote areas.

In the same month, the Rwandan Community in Tanzania also reached out, raising USD 7,500 towards the cause, and this amount was estimated to be sufficient to light up 500 more households.

Through the recent years, the country has seen a number of such patriotic gestures by foreign-based Rwandans who support the countrys development either individually or collectively, through the respective associations that belong to the Rwanda Community Abroad (RCA), an umbrella that brings together Rwandans and friends of Rwanda in order to make the country known and provide a platform for dialogue among themselves so that they stay connected to their roots.

Foreign-based Rwandans efforts in regards to supporting their country range from mere use of social media to promote the countrys tourism industry, or fundraising campaigns for supporting the vulnerable to making contributions to the Agaciro Fund, and more.

In an interview with The New Times, Narcisse Mulinga, the Chairperson of RCA China, said they are committed to doing literally everything in their power to uphold their identity as Rwandans, regardless of being abroad.

Such is the reason they make effort to participate in the countrys socio-economic development activities in various ways.

In addition to this, he said they pick lessons from the RPA Inkotanyi who showed them what patriotism means in the past and today.

As younger ones, we have to maintain their patriotism spirit and continue building our country. We all know that, 70% of our countrys population is youth, we have to work hard to ensure continuation of our countrys development agenda and strive for unity and fight anything that can separate us, he said.

Rwandans based in the United States of America are also an example among those putting up efforts in nation building.

Their association the US-RCA has participated in several development initiatives in Rwanda, including raising funds to assist widows in Nyamata to get water tanks, making contribution to the Agaciro Fund, paying Mutuelle de Sant for vulnerable families, providing Covid-19 relief and so on.

According to Yehoyada Mbangukira, the President of the US-RCA, the organisation also participates in Rwanda Day events, in addition to holding youth events and more, as an opportunity for promoting the Rwandan brand to their friends and getting them to know how they can engage in investment opportunities in Rwanda.

Talking more about investments, there are more efforts taking place abroad, for example, in 2019, an organisation called North American Rwandan Convention was formed and it hosted Rwandan officials and American business entities in an attempt to showcase what Rwanda can offer and how it can bridge the knowledge gap to foster ongoing relationships with Rwanda in many sectors.

The same organisation is planning another event this year to bring together Rwandans and Americans to reconnect following the hiatus caused by Covid-19 shutdowns.

hkuteesa@newtimesrwanda.com

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Liberation: How the diaspora is making its mark in nation building - The New Times

Tamil Nadu CM MK Stalin urges diaspora to stay united at FeTNA’s 35th anniversary – The New Indian Express

Posted By on July 4, 2022

By Express News Service

CHENNAI:Speaking at the 35th anniversary of the Federation of Tamil Sangams of North America (FeTNA) via video-conference on Monday, Chief Minister MK Stalin urged natives of the State living abroad to set aside their differences and unite under the 'Tamil' umbrella.

He paid rich encomiums to FeTNA functionaries and members, who announced a USD 1,500 cash reward to Tamil scholars Elankumaranar and Erode Tamilanban for their service to the Tamil language. He said Tamils have migrated to more than 90 countries, but Tamil Nadu remains their "home country".

Highlighting the importance of the excavations being carried out in the state, Stalin said they are being done to learn about our roots and heritage, and the findings from Keezhadi prove Tamils were well-educated even in the 6th Century BC.

The chief minister also listed various steps taken by erstwhile DMK governments and the incumbent government to uphold the importance of Tamil and Tamils, including naming the State Tamil Nadu, remaining Madras as Chennai, getting the classical status tag for the Tamil language, erecting a 133-ft Thiruvalluvar statue, and making Tamil mandatory for all government recruitment examinations.

He also highlighted the State government's efforts to link NRI Tamils and their native villages through the 'My Village' scheme,.

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Tamil Nadu CM MK Stalin urges diaspora to stay united at FeTNA's 35th anniversary - The New Indian Express

What Is The Role Of Music In Protests : Consider This from NPR – NPR

Posted By on July 4, 2022

Protestors play music and sing during a rally in response to the death of George Floyd in 2020. Music and protest have long gone hand in hand, and the political outrage of recent years is finding expression in song. Ricardo Arduengo/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

Protestors play music and sing during a rally in response to the death of George Floyd in 2020. Music and protest have long gone hand in hand, and the political outrage of recent years is finding expression in song.

It may be too soon to crown the "song of the summer". NPR Music's Stephen Thompson says there's no one quality that the songs that carry that title have... it's a collective feeling, a shared vibe.

For so many Americans on this July 4th, songs of the summer and songs of protest feel one and the same.

NPR's Ann Powers is a music critic, and Shana Redmond is a professor at Columbia University, and the author of "Anthem: Social Movements And The Sound Of Solidarity In The African Diaspora." They explain the role of protest music in this moment.

In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment to help you make sense of what's going on in your community.

Email us at considerthis@npr.org.

This episode was produced by Mia Venkat and Noah Caldwell. It was edited by Jonaki Mehta and Sami Yenigun. Additional reporting from Stephen Thompson. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.

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What Is The Role Of Music In Protests : Consider This from NPR - NPR

Indian cricket team who played Ireland this week are heroes to a diaspora 8000km from home – The Irish Times

Posted By on July 4, 2022

No other sports team is as well supported away from home as the Indian cricket side. No matter where they go, Indian fans seem to at least match those of the host nation, if not outnumber them, as they did at Malahide Cricket Club in Dublin this week.

India has an estimated population of 1.4 billion, and a significant global diaspora that travels for work and education. According to the Indian embassy in Dublin, there are 45,000 people of Indian origin living in Ireland.

India long ago took a colonial British sport and ascended to the top of its global ranks, and the 11 members of the national team that played here on Tuesday are heroes to a diaspora 8,000km from home.

While still a fringe sport in Ireland, cricket unites a large and disparate immigrant community here.

Simi Singh was born in India and is a cricketer on the Irish team the only Indian-born player to represent this country.

I can remember being back in India, six, seven years old when I didnt know anything about cricket, he says. I watched movies all the time, but whenever there was a Test match, there would be nothing else shown on the TV for five days. I didnt know what was going on, but I watched.

Ireland cricketer Simi Singh: 'Indian people are more crazy about the cricketers themselves than the actual game.' Photograph: Seb Daly/Sportsfile

Singh shares an anecdote from the last time India toured these shores in 2018, one that reflects the global deification of their superstars.

We were staying in Portmarnock, both teams, and whenever we went back to the hotel there would be at least three, four hundred people waiting outside just to get a glimpse of the Indian guys.

I was trying to get into the hotel and the security guy asked me, where are you going? I told him that I was one of the players staying at the hotel and he said that all the Indian fans were using that excuse to try and get in. I had to show him my hotel room key and call our manager just to make sure I could get in.

I told him I was one of the Irish players but he didnt trust me.

The players are heroes in peoples eyes... Indian people are more crazy about the cricketers themselves than the actual game.

Sandipan Banerjee is a journalist who follows the Indian cricket team around the world. He interacts with the diaspora in every country where the sport is played and has noticed one constant ingredient in this fandom: identity.

There are people who never been to India but have Indian roots, he says. Cricket makes them feel closer to home. They can relate cricket with their home country. For those who dont stay in India, its a special moment for them to meet these players and watch them play in front of their eyes.

Before Covid, some of the fans used to invite players for dinner to their houses. Its a taste of home.

India's Ishan Kishan greets fans during the Twenty20 International cricket match between Ireland and India at Malahide cricket club in Dublin last Sunday. Photograph: Lorraine O'Sullivan/AFP via Getty Images

Tuesdays match in Malahide in which Ireland fell just short of a win against India was like a festival, a coming together of cultures where men on guitars played Galway Girl for punters queuing for masala dosa.

There are a few occasions that are like festivals for Indian people in Ireland, says Saji, a nurse living in Blanchardstown, having moved from Kerala 4 years ago. But cricket would be the biggest festival. Its a big celebration, its spiritual, he says.

Its very cultural, says Mary, who moved to Dn Laoghaire from Mumbai six years ago. There are people who are cricket fanatics and there are other people who are here for the cultural purposes thats me.

We do like other sports but not as much as cricket. People start playing in their back garden. They dont need stuff to play with them, they find a log and a ball and start playing.

A sense of reconnection with India is why Sravan, who left the south of India seven years ago, travelled from Celbridge, Co Kildare to Malahide with his 2-month-old son to take pictures of him near the team.

Its why a 22-year-old DCU student with a thick Kilkenny drawl can barely watch the game, shot with nerves for fear that his hero, Indias wicketkeeper Ishan Kishan, would get out before entertaining the crowd by blasting the ball over the boundary.

A generation of Irish-born Indian cricket fans coming from such an ingrained cricket culture bodes well for the future of the sport on this island.

This is only the first generation of the Asian kids coming through, confirms Singh. Every club has an Asian youth section.

Theyre quite young at the moment so in the next five, 10 years youll start seeing more Asians playing for Ireland.

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Indian cricket team who played Ireland this week are heroes to a diaspora 8000km from home - The Irish Times

150-year-old museum saved after looming expulsion from 13th century castle – The First News

Posted By on July 4, 2022

Founded in 1870, the Polish Museum based in Rapperswil castle overlooking lake Zurich in Switzerland, had come under threat following petitions from locals who wanted to reclaim the castle for other purposes. Roland Fischer/CC BY-SA 3.0

The oldest Polish museum abroad has been saved from closure after facing expulsion from a 13th century castle.

The 150-year-old Polish Museum based in Rapperswil castle overlooking lake Zurich in Switzerland, had come under threat following petitions from locals who wanted to reclaim the castle for other purposes.

Founded in 1870, the museum was established by Count Wadysaw Plater, an migr and insurrectionist of the November Uprising.

Public domain

Founded in 1870, the museum was established by Count Wadysaw Plater, an migr and insurrectionist of the November Uprising.Public domain

Set up with the aim of being a refuge for Poland's historic memorabilia dishonoured and plundered in the [Polish] homeland", the museum was to also promote Polish interests at a time when the country was divided between three empires and had ceased to exist on the map of Europe.

The museum quickly rose to the ranks of a Polish National Museum thanks to donations from around the world, which enlarged its collections and made it a centre of the Polish diaspora, focusing on testimonies of Polish culture and coordinating political efforts towards regaining Polish independence.

The museum quickly rose to the ranks of a Polish National Museum thanks to donations from around the world, which enlarged its collections and made it a centre of the Polish diaspora, focusing on testimonies of Polish culture and coordinating political efforts towards regaining Polish independence.polenmuseum.ch

From the beginning of its existence a library was also established at the museum, which at the turn of the 20th century, was the largest Polish library outside Poland.

At the end of the 19th century, two of Polands most important novelists Bolesaw Prus and Stefan eromski spent time working at the library and its archives, while celebrated poet and novelist Maria Konopnicka also visited.

In 1927, nine years after Poland regained independence and according to the request of Count Plater, the collections from the museum were transported by railroad to Poland.

From the beginning of its existence a library was also established at the museum, which at the turn of the 20th century, was the largest Polish library outside Poland.polenmuseum.ch

This included 3,000 works of art, 2,000 items of historical memorabilia, 20,000 engravings, 9,000 coins and medals, 92,000 books and 27,000 manuscripts.

During World War Two, 95 percent was destroyed.

In 1952, the museum started to operate in a new form, which continues to today, and began documenting the history of Polish-Swiss relations and the broader history of the Polish fight for independence up to 1989.

In 1952, the museum started to operate in a new form, which continues to today, and began documenting the history of Polish-Swiss relations and the broader history of the Polish fight for independence up to 1989.Roland Fischer/CC BY-SA 3.0

However, lack of local support for the museum remaining at the castle culminated in local authorities refusing to extend its lease, which expired on the 30th June 2022.

Deciding to help, the Polish government stepped in and bought the nearby Schwanen hotel complex, located only 150 metres from the castle.

The site of the ceremonial reading and signing of the Polish Museums founding act in 1870, the hotel was a popular meeting place for Polish emigres and of the Museums early management.

Deciding to help, the Polish government stepped in and bought the nearby Schwanen hotel complex (pictured left), located only 150 metres from the castle.Roland Fischer/CC BY-SA 3.0

During a visit to Switzerland on Friday, Polands minister for culture Piotr Gliski said that the hotel would now be the museums new HQ.

Gliski said: It is one of the oldest Polish institutions in EuropeThe Polish Museum will find its second home hereThank you very much to our Swiss partners who for many years, took care of Polish heritage.

Thank you also to the former owner of the Schwanen, for their good cooperation on this transaction.

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150-year-old museum saved after looming expulsion from 13th century castle - The First News

Meet the mind behind the hilarious mashups of Hasidic dance and hip-hop – Forward

Posted By on July 4, 2022

By Louis KeeneJune 29, 2022

Hasidic Jews dont tend to blast hardcore rap music at their festivities let alone dance the hora to it. But thats exactly what appears to be happening in a series of viral videos like this one:

Its a simple editing trick, of course in the original video, filmed in 2016 at a wedding in Israel, a live band is playing a Hasidic tune. But the near-perfect synchronization of bass and bochurs has been eliciting fresh delight with each new mashup.

In the three weeks since the Twitter account @Jewish808s posted its first clip dubbed with a song by the rapper Jeleel! the account has racked up more than 20,000 followers and its videos have been watched almost eight million times. Many of the comments include some combination of the crying-laughing emoji or the fire emoji or, simply, AYYYYY.

Imagining a crossover of insular communities that would otherwise never meet Haredi Orthodox Jews and fans of contemporary street rap the meme can reveal something new about both. But the main reason the joke hasnt gotten old yet, with song after remixed song scoring hundreds of retweets, is because of how convincing the videos are. It really looks like Hasidic people break-dancing and twirling to the beat of distortion-heavy, often profanity-laced rap songs.

It has to feel like its real in some way, Ori Mannheim, who runs @Jewish808s from his Tel Aviv apartment, said in an interview.

Mannheim, a 23-year-old social media consultant, created the account as a distraction after he lost a bunch of money in the cryptocurrency market. He copied the formula of other popular mashup artists: one video clip, many songs. (His handle refers to the Roland TR-808, a drum machine thats ubiquitous in hip-hop production.)

His videos, usually around 30 seconds long, follow a simple sequence: while the songs intro rolls, a few older Hasids march in a slow circle, surrounded by young men with payot and black hats, holding hands. When the bass drops, the scene cuts ahead: several young men dancing, hopping, spinning, hands raised, their high white socks and black shoes kicking up with every down-beat.

Hes far from the first to remix the Jewish mosh pit. The mashup artist Brisk God has dubbed videos of Hasids with cloud rap, lo-fi dance and house music.

Ironically, the versatility of the source material can cause him to spend hours on one video as he plugs in different songs, ending up with as many as a dozen final cuts to choose from.

The way they dance and the moves they do just fit with anything, said Brisk, who maintains anonymity online, in a Twitter message. Its actually mind-boggling.

Brisks theory of what makes the videos popular is that it shows Hasids in a new light one that makes the stoic men in conservative attire look not only relatable, but hip, too.

That may also speak to the geographical interplay at work in the videos: New York is the birthplace of hip-hop and the de facto American capital of Hasidic Jewry. The cultures are undoubtedly aware of each other to some degree, but there is little overlap.

When you see these guys not dancing, they seem very serious and disciplined, Brisk said. To see them go off and pull off some of the dance moves they are doing is really entertaining in itself.

Mannheim said 99.9% of the reaction to his videos has been positive, but he thinks its unlikely that the Hasids dancing in his video who hail from the fervently isolated Mishkenos HaRoim sect in Meah Shearim will ever see his mashups.

Its good that most of them have a kosher phone where they dont have Twitter or Instagram, so they dont really have to watch this stuff, he said.

On the other hand, some are more receptive. A social media page dedicated to Hasidic music reached out to Mannheim recently, volunteering its videos for him to repurpose, and the accounts soon began promoting each other.

Down in the comment section, Mannheim says hes noticed Arabs and Israelis bantering good-naturedly.

Heightening the memes effect is the use of lesser-known rap music that nonenthusiasts might have written off as too gritty or inappropriate, seemingly sanctioned by this blithe group of religious men looking happier than youve ever seen them.

The feeling Im trying to produce most of the time is to make people laugh, Brisk said, but I like making videos that give off some good vibes, like you had when you were a kid watching some cartoons or a movie and just totally escaped from reality and were totally 100 percent captivated.

Just like the Hasids in the video.

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Meet the mind behind the hilarious mashups of Hasidic dance and hip-hop - Forward

Orthodox women who built businesses, friendships online are being told to sign off – The Times of Israel

Posted By on July 4, 2022

JTA Shaindy Braun and her wig business had nearly 40,000 followers on Instagram, amassed over nine years, when she abruptly announced her departure from the social media platform.

I choose to leave this world of likes, followers and filters, Braun wrote last week. I will be leaving Instagram to live in the real world. I want to focus on curating my real life, filtering my thoughts and speech and sending love and likes to the important people in my life.

Then she deleted her profile, cutting off a major line of communication to clients and potential buyers of Sary Wigs, a Lakewood-based company providing human-hair wigs to Orthodox Jewish women in New Jersey and beyond.

She wasnt the only one: Moonlight Layette, a baby clothing brand, announced it would stop engaging actively on Instagram, directing customers to a WhatsApp number instead. So did Rivka Dayan, a resin artist who makes Judaica products, and others.

Their decisions might have come as a surprise to the brands followers except that many of them had also tuned into two massive gatherings in Newark last week exhorting Orthodox Jewish women to put away their phones and disconnect from social networks.

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Coming a decade after a landmark rally aimed at warning Orthodox men about the dangers of the internet, the rallies were meant to inspire women to spend more time away from their cell phones, according to its organizers. But critics in the Hasidic Orthodox community, including women who attended or listened in via a special phone line for remote participation, said pressure to attend was intense and that the message was far from uplifting.

They force themselves to sit through this, being told how evil they are, how decadent they are today with their obsessions with ridiculous things and how spiritually inferior they are, one Hasidic woman told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency on the condition of anonymity because she still lives in a Hasidic community in Borough Park. And they sit there and they listen to it and they nod and they accept it all and they internalize it.

Known as an asifa or kinus (Hebrew words for gathering), the rallies drew tens of thousands of Hasidic Orthodox women to the Prudential Center in Newark last week, many transported on charter buses from Orthodox areas such as Lakewood, New Jersey, and Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Women with children in the Bais Yaakov network of schools received text messages and letters saying that the school rabbis urged them to attend; one mother told JTA that she was told her children would be expelled if she did not attend the rally, where tickets cost $54.

Text messages to the mothers of students in Hasidic schools repeatedly encouraged them to attend the June 2022 anti-technology rallies in New Jersey or Brooklyn. (Design by Jackie Hajdenberg/ JTA)

One rally was in English, while the other was in Yiddish, the dominant language spoken in many of New Yorks Hasidic communities. The events, widely referred to as nekadesh rallies using the Hebrew word meaning make holy, appealed to womens maternal instincts a winning line in a community where fertility is prized and women typically have many children and are responsible for their education.

I miss the great times that we used to have before you got the cell phone that your boss gave you, a young boy said during a speech at the Yiddish rally, according to a recording of the event. I miss your sweet smile. Do you remember our conversations, when we used to laugh at our own stories, and not because we were listening to silly jokes on the little black box?

At the English-language rally, half of the speakers were women, and at one point, the male rabbis who spoke left the arena so the women could sing together. The speakers presented the issue of social media as one where Orthodox women can choose more or less pious ways to engage with the internet. Among the speakers was Rina Tarshish, a rebbetzin and the director of a womens seminary in Israel who is widely respected in the Hasidic world.

The rally was intense at times, with attendees being told at one point that technology is a manifestation of Satans efforts to spread rot in the world, according to a Twitter thread by someone who transcribed much of the event. But the Yiddish-language rally was more strident in tone and tackled womens participation in civic life offline as well, according to people who were present. One rabbi who spoke even instructed women not to speak on the street, except in cases of emergency.

Ultra-Orthodox Jews at Citi Field in New York on May 20, 2012, for a gathering on Internet usage. (AP/VosIzNeias.com)

The event came 10 years after 40,000 Orthodox men were similarly exhorted to give up their smartphones at a major anti-internet asifa at Citi Field in New York City. Then, the message was about insulating the community from outside influences.

Ayala Fader, an anthropology professor at Fordham University who studies Hasidic communities, said what happened next helps explain the latest rallies.

Men were refusing to give up their smartphones, she said. So leadership decided to focus on women and their responsibility for rearing kids and keeping the home and really protecting the next generation.

Many Orthodox women who have found homes on social media built connections within their own extended communities. Instagram in particular has been both a tool for building businesses in a community where working outside the home can be discouraged and logistically challenging. Orthodox women have also used social media for activism, such as to share experiences with infertility, combat racism and fight antisemitism. Some, seeking to comply with expectations around modesty, have even operated women-only accounts.

Illustrative: Ultra-Orthodox boys and a family walk past a poster that says the internet brings cancer in Jerusalem, July 2, 2009. (Rishwanth Jayapaul/Flash90)

Hearing that they should set all of that aside struck some women who were invited to the rally as offensive. Compounding their frustration was the fact that attendees were prohibited from bringing cell phones, taking pictures and sharing the event on social media, and Orthodox media covered the rallies without printing pictures of the women who attended.

Women finally found an outlet where they can network and it lets you build successful businesses via the internet, said one Hasidic woman who works in digital marketing and is the sole breadwinner for her family. And now the men realize, Hey, this is terrible! Women having access to other women that are talented, successful, powerful businesswomen. So lets condense them even more, make them into mere shadows.

The rallies were organized by the Technology Awareness Group, or TAG, a nonprofit founded in 2011, shortly before the mens rally, with a mission of helping Jewish internet users avoid pornography and other harmful influences online. Shmuli Rosenberg, a marketing executive who promoted the event as well as many others targeting Orthodox Jews, said the goal was not to ask women to eschew the Internet or having a public profile.

Its far from cutting people off, he said. Its helping people find, in their own life, what will allow them to be more connected to their families and their children and themselves and feel uplifted and elevated and happy.

File: In this photo taken on Monday, January 25, 2010, an ultra-Orthodox man walks in front of an Internet cafe in downtown Jerusalem. (AP Photo/Maya Hasson)

Rosenberg said the rallies were limited to women only because the organizers wanted to offer some programming, including womens singing, that would not be possible under communal norms in a mixed-gender setting.

This wasnt specifically targeting women versus men, he said. This was targeting everyone. And in our communities, it would be totally unacceptable to say that men can access the internet or information more than women.

Some women who attended, like Braun, the wigmaker, found the events inspiring.

I know, its kinda contradictory to talk about it here, online, one woman wrote on the Orthodox womens forum ImaMother. But those who were there, in a positive mind, understood that it wasnt about all or nothing.

But others said they saw in the events a dangerous tendency in Orthodox communities to set rules far beyond what is required by Jewish law. On their way out of the rallies, women were handed cards that they could give to their taxi drivers and housekeepers to explain why they cannot touch smartphones to type in their address and to ask that smartphones not be used in their homes.

Women at the June 2022 anti-internet rallies in New Jersey and Brooklyn were handed cards to be given to their taxi drivers and maids that explained why they cannot use or be near smartphones. (Courtesy photo from an unnamed source/via JTA)

Dear cleaning lady, one of the cards read, In accordance with our religion, most of our community refrains from smartphone usage. I can give you the details in writing. Please keep your smartphone out of sight inside our home.

Nothing in Jewish law, known as halacha, prohibits a woman from typing in her address on a phone or creates any obligation for non-Jews. But Rayne Lunger, a woman who grew up Hasidic and is now active on social media, said she was familiar with the impulse to observe more than the letter of the law.

She likened the call for women not to use smartphones to what has happened with expectations around skirt length. In the past, women were considered modest if their skirts covered their knees, she said, but over time, 4 inches below the knee became the norm, and now women can face criticism if their skirts do not reach at least 6 inches below the knee.

People want to be good and do the right thing, Lunger said. And theyre sometimes building stringencies on top of stringencies on top of stringencies that make no sense because they have no reference point.

Not all Hasidic Jews are wrestling with the issue of internet use in the same way. The Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic movement, for example, has embraced new technologies and uses social media in its outreach, and was not involved in any of these events.

But for women who do choose to roll back their internet usage, groups such as TAG stand ready to install kosher filters on their phones and computers.

The ultra-Orthodox mostly think that the medium is fine wherever you use it in the clean way, or kosher way, said Rivka Neriya-Ben Shahar, a professor at Sapir Academic College in Israel who studies Haredi Orthodox approaches to media. They feel very safe once they can control the content.

Like parental controls on an iPad or television, kosher filters typically block access to websites or content that is considered inappropriate in the community, such as pornography, gambling sites, or anything related to violence or drugs. They also may block secular content and, separately, can sometimes be glitchy and block content that is not actually out of bounds in the Hasidic world, including health and safety information that women need.

Exactly how many women will install filters, cede their cell phones or cut communications with their customers as a result of the recent gatherings remains to be seen. But whats clear is that the press to get New York-area Orthodox women to reconsider their internet use continues, even as the latest events themselves fade into the past.

Women are still closing their accounts, according to participants on Orthodox Instagram, and now another event has been scheduled: A replay of the asifa is set for Monday at Tiferes Bais Yaakov School in Lakewood. The schools website says its ballroom can accommodate 4,600, and tickets are $20.

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Orthodox women who built businesses, friendships online are being told to sign off - The Times of Israel

10 books to add to your reading list in July 2022 – Los Angeles Times

Posted By on July 4, 2022

On the Shelf

10 July Books For Your Reading List

If you buy books linked on our site, The Times may earn a commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support independent bookstores.

Critic Bethanne Patrick recommends 10 promising titles, fiction and nonfiction, to consider for your July list.

Beach reads, more than ever, are in the eye of the beholder. An uncommonly thoughtful and fun romance? Sure. An old-fashioned novel about land preservation in Maine, or a creepy retelling of The Island of Dr. Moreau? Why not. How about a deep dive into the life and crimes of Harvey Weinstein? Or the tribulations of a Hasidic woman with an internet-porn habit? Whatever your taste or mood, July offers something to meet you where you are or wherever you want to be.

Honey & SpiceBy Bolu BabalolaMorrow: 368 pages, $28(July 5)

This smart, sexy summer read, which hits your brain and your romance buttons in one shot, features Kiki Banjo, whose Brown Sugar radio show at a British university keeps her busy in the shadows until she agrees to a fake relationship with a new student and discovers that overexposure can be even worse than obscurity.

Fellowship PointBy Alice Elliott DarkScribner/Marysue Rucci: 592 pages, $29(July 5)

Longing for an old-fashioned 19th century novel but without the time travel? Fellowship Point earns its nearly 600 pages with a quietly complex structure, starring two octogenarian women whose long friendship is entangled with their families landholdings in coastal Maine. As they seek to save the acreage from development, Agnes Lee and Polly Wister must also confront their past choices and find some peace in the present.

Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and TomorrowBy Gabrielle ZevinKnopf: 481 pages, $28(July 5)

Zevin (The Storied Life of A. J. Fikry) conjures up a novel about game designers that has little to do with gaming and a story about fierce love between two people that has nothing to do with romance. Sam Masur and Sadie Green created their first blockbuster game, Ichigo, while still in their 20s. Now incredibly rich, they still must figure out how to live a life richly, and their bond informs every step of a narrative that feels, in fact, a lot like a game.

ShmutzBy Felicia BerlinerAtria: 272 pages, $27(July 19)

Step aside Mrs. Fletcher. Take a seat, women of Unorthodox. Its Raizls turn. Raizl Hasidic Jew, college student, internet-porn addict is supposed to study for her accounting degree and prepare for an arranged marriage; instead she stays up at night watching steamy sites on mute so as not to awake sister Gitti. Transgressive and hilarious, Raizls story questions everything we think we know about women, desire and religious faith.

The Daughter of Doctor MoreauBy Silvia Moreno-GarciaDel Rey: 320 pages, $28(July 19)

Moreno-Garcia has rewritten the gothic (Mexican Gothic), the noir (Velvet Was the Night) and now the sci-fi in this take on the 1896 H. G. Wells classic, The Island of Doctor Moreau. Carlota Moreau lives in the Yucatn with her father and his human/animal hybrids. Between the increasingly meddlesome patron Hernando Lizalde, his son Eduardo and a newly arrived hard-drinking English mayordomo, things are about to change for Carlota in surprising ways.

Invisible Storm: A Soldiers Memoir of Politics and PTSDBy Jason KanderMariner: 224 pages, $28(July 5)

PTSD can flare up months or years after the experience of trauma, as it did for Kander, a former Army officer whose first memoir, Outside the Wire, described his active-duty experiences. Invisible Storm details Kanders long depression after he pursued a political career, leading up to what he hoped would be a 2020 presidential bid. Will Kander try again for public office? He doesnt say here, but he does indicate hes working to heal, and for now, perhaps thats enough.

Hollywood Ending: Harvey Weinstein and the Culture of SilenceBy Ken AulettaPenguin Press: 480 pages, $30(July 12)

Auletta first wrote about Harvey Weinstein in the New Yorker two decades ago, portraying him then as a nasty piece of work professionally but it wasnt until the last decade, during which women came forward and their stories of sexual abuse and rape culminated in his 2017 arrest, that Auletta was able to conduct and compile the interviews that make up this comprehensive and horribly painful look at what makes monstrous behavior possible.

Normal Family: On Truth, Love, and How I Met My 35 SiblingsBy Chrysta BiltonLittle, Brown: 288 pages, $29(July 12)

This remarkable and wise book is actually two memoirs, braided together with such tendresse that readers will come to believe the ironic title in earnest. Born via turkey baster to a lesbian mother with countless connections and even more schemes, Chrysta and her younger sister didnt learn until decades later that their family secrets included one that would change everything, including their definition of family.

Crying in the Bathroom: A MemoirBy Erika L. SnchezViking: 256 pages, $27(July 12)

Shes already an award-winning poet, essayist and novelist, with an acclaimed YA book, I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter, being adapted into a film by America Ferrera. Now Snchez is a memoirist too, her smart and spiky voice enlivening connected essays on growing up brown and depressed but also obsessed with comedy. Youll yearn for a sequel before youve even turned the last page.

Dirtbag, Massachusetts: A ConfessionalBy Isaac FitzgeraldOUP: 496 pages, $30(July 19)

Is a dirtbag a place, a person or even a profession? Fitzgerald, whose stations in life have ranged from working-class deprived to boarding-school privileged to sex-worker jaded, doesnt just tell us about these things and more. He reflects on how his journey has both formed him as a man and helped to change his views of masculinity, race and identity. And while his recollections are pervaded by considerations of manliness, he never shuts out other genders or ways of being.

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10 books to add to your reading list in July 2022 - Los Angeles Times

The 8 Genders of the Talmud – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on July 4, 2022

The Jewish obligation to observe commandments is traditionally divided along male/female lines: men pray three times daily, while women dont have to; men put on tefillin, while women do not. Some womens recent efforts to observe the religious privileges theyre exempt from have made ripples in the Jewish world, and even the news.

But what if we told you that the foundation for all this was wrong? That Judaism recognized not two, but as many as eight genders? The Mishnah describes half a dozen categories that are between male and female, such as saris or ailonit the terms refer to an non-reproductive version of the male or female body, respectively and categories that refer to ambiguous or indeterminate gender.

Although these terms seem to provide the refreshing view that a binary view of gender in Judaism is relatively recent, a closer look shows that Mishnaic rabbis were apt to privilege maleness in the case of indeterminate or multiple genders. But contemporary scholars like Rabbi Elliot Kukla are repurposing that halakhic discourse to provide a road map for our recognition of non-binary people in todays Judaism. Gender-neutral restrooms start to look like small potatoes.

November 9, 2015

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The 8 Genders of the Talmud - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Is It Proper To Go On Vacation To A Place With No Minyan? – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on July 4, 2022

SUMMER VACATION SERIES

Edited by Aryeh Werth

Is it proper to go on vacation to a place with no minyan? What about achildrens day trip where there will be no minyan?

For many people the concept of a vacation is time away from the usual routine. Now if the destination includes a local synagogue with minyanim that is great. However, what if the particular locale has no synagogue, but is a tourist destination with greatsightseeing, should one not go?

The Talmud (Berachot 31a) relates the following. The custom of Rabbi Akiva was when he prayed with the congregation, he used to cut it short and finish in order to not cause inconvenience to the congregation [who would wait for him to conclude his Amidah before they would begin the chazarat hashatz.] But when he prayed alone: If one left him in one corner he would later find him in the opposite corner on account of his many bowings and prostrations.

Now true, its beyond our imagination to comprehend the power of Rabbi Akivas tefillah to pierce the heavens as compared to ours, even when we are part of a congregation. Notwithstanding, we see that at times he did not pray with a minyan.

The Jerusalem Talmud (end of Tractate Kiddushin) teaches: In the future time [when all will be judged] a person will be called to give an account for all that his eyes saw [that was permissible] and he did not partake thereof. In that regard I heard from Rabbi Avigdor Miller, ztl, that one is duty bound to see the wonders of Hashem in everything that he encounters. Additionally, for us to forbid people who work hard the pleasure of rest and change of scenery is in and of itself forbidding. And if one asks, should travel on an airplane be forbidden, the answer of most gedolim is surely not.

Insofar a childrens day trip, if it is being sponsored by a Jewish day camp or the such, I am positive there are usually sufficient staff available for a minyan. There is enough guilt in our community, lets not turn a vacation into a guilt-trip.

Rabbi Yaakov Klass is Rav of Khal Bnei Matisyahu in Flatbush; Torah Editor of The Jewish Press; and Presidium Chairman, Rabbinical Alliance of America/Igud HaRabbonim.

* * *

The ideal is to vacation in places where ones spiritual level can be maintained. Almost every city in the world worth visiting has a shul with daily minyanim. Think of the effect on children when, in a foreign country or strange city, they join with other Jews, daven, and see before their eyes the wide reach of Torah and the great variety of Jews. For children, it will enrich the bond of Jewish nationhood in a way that no lecture or speech ever can. I remember visiting France as a child and feeling out of sorts in shul until they started singing Vayehi binsoa haaron in the same melody we sang at home. I felt an immediate connection to my fellow Jews. (I learned some French as well when the rabbi asked the congregation, in French, to stop talking.)

That being said, there are places that some people consider worth visiting where minyanim are not readily available. That engenders a discussion of the precise obligation of tefillah btzibur. The Shulchan Aruch (Orach Chaim 90:9) uses the term yishtadeil one should try to daven in shul with the community. That means it is not an absolute obligation, and certainly where there is no shul in the vicinity. It also means that it is improper to daven at home with a small minyan when there is a minyan in shul, something that people often take for granted today.

Nevertheless, Chazal extolled the virtues and reward of those who daven in shul every day, and it should not be lightly ignored. If one is in a place without a minyan, the Mechaber says that he should try to daven at the same time the community elsewhere is davening, so at least then his tefillah is somehow linked to the communitys tefillah.

So, it is proper, and it is even more proper and beneficial to seek out minyanim on the road so our spiritual level and love of our fellow Jews are enhanced.

Rabbi Steven Pruzansky is Israel Region Vice-President for the Coalition for Jewish Values and author of Repentance for Life now available from Kodesh Press.

* * *

Of course, it is desirable to daven with a minyan. Unfortunately, there are times, not only when one is on vacation but also in business or on an airplane that one finds oneself in situations that a minyan cannot be secured. In that case you just daven byichidut.

However, if one has an obligation to say Kaddish, every effort should be made to be sure that one has a minyan wherever they travel.

Rabbi Mordechai Weiss lives in Efrat Israel and previously served as an elementary and high school principal in New Jersey and Connecticut. He was also the founder and rav of Young Israel of Margate, New Jersey.His email is ravmordechai@aol.com.

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Is It Proper To Go On Vacation To A Place With No Minyan? - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com


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