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Okay Hand Gesture | ADL – Anti-Defamation League

Posted By on June 26, 2022

Note: For reasons explained below, particular caution must be used when evaluating this symbol.

The okay hand gesturein which the thumb and index finger touch while the other fingers of the hand are held outstretchedis an obvious and ancient gesture that has arisen in many cultures over the years with different meanings.

Today, in a usage that dates to at least as early as 17th century Great Britain, it most commonly signals understanding, consent, approval or well-being. Since the early 1800s, the gesture increasingly became associated with the word okay and its abbreviation ok. The gesture is also important in the Hindu and Buddhist worlds, as well as in yoga, where it is known as mudra or vitarka mudra, a symbol of inner perfection. The "okay" hand gesture also forms part of the basis for a number of words or concepts in American Sign Language. It appears in many other contexts as well.

Use of the okay symbol in most contexts is entirely innocuous and harmless.

In 2017, the okay hand gesture acquired a new and different significance thanks to a hoax by members of the website 4chan to falsely promote the gesture as a hate symbol, claiming that the gesture represented the letters wp, for white power. The okay gesture hoax was merely the latest in a series of similar 4chan hoaxes using various innocuous symbols; in each case, the hoaxers hoped that the media and liberals would overreact by condemning a common image as white supremacist.

In the case of the okay gesture, the hoax was so successful the symbol became a popular trolling tactic on the part of right-leaning individuals, who would often post photos to social media of themselves posing while making the okay gesture.

Ironically, some white supremacists themselves soon also participated in such trolling tactics, lending an actual credence to those who labeled the trolling gesture as racist in nature. By 2019, at least some white supremacists seem to have abandoned the ironic or satiric intent behind the original trolling campaign and used the symbol as a sincere expression of white supremacy, such as when Australian white supremacist Brenton Tarrant flashed the symbol during a March 2019 courtroom appearance soon after his arrest for allegedly murdering 50 people in a shooting spree at mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand.

The overwhelming usage of the okay hand gesture today is still its traditional purpose as a gesture signifying assent or approval. As a result, someone who uses the symbol cannot be assumed to be using the symbol in either a trolling or, especially, white supremacist context unless other contextual evidence exists to support the contention. Since 2017, many people have been falsely accused of being racist or white supremacist for using the okay gesture in its traditional and innocuous sense.

Other, similar-seeming hand gestures have also been mistakenly assumed to have white supremacist connotations as a result of the okay hoax. One of these is the so-called Circle Game, in which people attempt to trick each other into looking at an okay-like hand gesture made somewhere below the waist. Another is the hand sign of the Three Percenter movement, a wing of the anti-government extremist militia movement. Three Percenters, who are right-wing extremists but are not typically white supremacists, often make a hand gesture to symbolize their movement that uses the outstretched middle, ring, and pinky fingers to represent a Roman numeral 3. This gesture, from certain angles, can often resemble an okay hand gesture and has been misinterpreted by some as a white supremacist symbol.

Because of the traditional meaning of the okay hand gesture, as well as other usages unrelated to white supremacy, particular care must be taken not to jump to conclusions about the intent behind someone who has used the gesture.

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Okay Hand Gesture | ADL - Anti-Defamation League

Daily Briefing Jun 22: Does Netanyahu have tricks up his sleeve to form a govt now? – The Times of Israel

Posted By on June 26, 2022

Welcome to The Times of Israels Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on whats happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday.

Political correspondent Tal Schneider and religion correspondent Judah Ari Gross join host Amanda Borschel-Dan on this politically driven episode.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennetts coalition held the first in a series of votes for its own dissolution this morning. But are elections now a 100% reality? Could former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu still somehow scrape together a coalition from the existing Knesset?

Schneider gives us a quick breakdown of the procedural process that began today to dissolve the Knesset.

We talk polling. Who is in and who is out?

Gross shares what hes hearing from the ultra-Orthodox parties that have been loyal to Netanyahu this past year.

And finally, Sephardic Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef directed remarks against MK Itamar Ben Gvir in a recent sermon. Why?

Coalition to begin process of dissolving Knesset, heralding return to upheaval

Polls point to return of dreaded deadlock in next elections, unless alliances shift

A year out of power, Haredim hail governments downfall, credit divine intervention

Chief rabbi slams fool Ben Gvir for Temple Mount visits that stir up the winds

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Daily Briefing Jun 22: Does Netanyahu have tricks up his sleeve to form a govt now? - The Times of Israel

Happy as this Jew in France – JNS.org – JNS.org

Posted By on June 26, 2022

(June 26, 2022 / JNS) My love affair with French culture started young. The seeds were planted in 1950s New York by my first French teacher, Madame Allouette. A wren of a woman, she showed up for work each day dressed in a tailored gray suit, white blouse, sensible shoes, and toting a black briefcase brimming with meaningless dialogs and crafty pop quizzes. She expected the best from each rowdy kid in her airtight room, and though she was frugal with rewardsa slight smile here, a bonthereI fell in love. Fifty years and many visits to France later, I am still pursuing fluency. Why give up now?

But no matter how long I study, one question remainsand it does not concern the subjunctive. How can I be so enamored of a country with such a long history of anti-Semitism? Just as Americas legacy of slavery will always be present, the fact that France deported 76,000 Jews to Nazi death camps during World War II cannot be ignored.

A former French teacher once tried to explain the non-existence of anti-Semitism to me by saying that I failed to understand laicit. A legal principle as important to French identity as libert,fraternitandgalit, laicit formally separates church and state, making all French citizens equal under the law. To reinforce that principle, in 2004 the French parliament passed a law forbidding students to wear kippahs, Muslim veils and large crosses from schools.

However, my dilemma is not about laicit but about the refusal to see whats hiding in plain sight: To be a Jew in France today is to live the Jewish part of your life quietly, in secret.

During my last trip to Paris, in April, I had the good luck to meet celebrated French-American chef Daniel Rose, owner of the tiny La Bourse et La Viein central Paris and chef at the Michelin-starredLe Coucouin New York. A non-practicing Jew and Francophile like myself, the Chicago native moved to Paris about 20 years ago without a word of French, but with the chutzpah to open a French bistro. We met because Rose had opened a Ukrainian pop-up calledLe Borscht et La Vie, where a team of refugees cooked and served Ukrainian specialties like veal borscht and honey cake to his chic Parisian clientele during April and May.

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Ive been a refugee my whole life, explained the ex-pat, who married a French woman and is raising his two young children in Paris as mixed Jews. The Ukrainians are cooking as if their lives depend on it.

When the discussion turned to Jewish life in France, Rose said that until he lived in New York, I didnt realize what it meant to live in a Jewish city. Paris is not so culturally Jewish.

As an example, when his landlord, Pierre Richelieu, wished him a happy new year on Rosh Hashanah this year, Rose was shocked. After 15 years, he had had no idea Richelieu was Jewish, because as Pierre explained, We dont speak about it here. Nor, Rose points out, does the word Jewish appear in most of the signage at Muse Nissim de Camando, the treasure-filled mansion left to the nation by the Sephardic banking family that was deported during World War II. To truly understand what happened, visitors need to stop at the very last room, and watch a video that explains the Camandos disappearance.

Today France is home to about a half-million Jews, the third largest Jewish population in the world after Israel and the United States. But the best time to be a Jew in France was the 100 years between the French revolution and the Dreyfus affair at the end of the 19th century. During that golden period, Napoleon emancipated the Jews, allowing them to pursue prestigious professions, but at the same time forbidding Jews to act as a group in the public sphere. Nevertheless, French Jews were the most assimilated in Europe. Times were so good that the expression happy as a Jew in France became popular, as a stream of Eastern European Jews fled less happy places.

Today, the life of a practicing Jew in Paris remains complicated. My current French teacher, whose Orthodox family emigrated from Tunisia to France and then to Israel, explains that her mother no longer wears a Star of David when visiting so as not to invite trouble. Its too hard to be a Jew in France, her mother explained after moving to Israel. My teacher points out that France is second only to Russia in the number of Jews making aliyah to Israel.

Meanwhile, Flora Goldenberg, whose family has lived in the Marais section of Paris since the end of the 19th century and whose grandfather owned a famous delicatessen that closed after a terrorist attack, chooses to stay. She still lives in thePletzl, the historic Jewish center of the Marais, where she leadsJewish Walking Toursof the neighborhood.

On her tour we visited a synagogue hidden behind an unmarked door and up several flights of stairs, an elementary school where 165 Jewish children were rounded up for deportation during the war (Noubliez jamais, reminds the plaque) and a Holocaust Memorial including a wall of names, discreetly tucked behind a garden. It was surprising how much I hadnt seen on my earlier visits to the bustling, trendy neighborhood.

Goldenberg prefers not to talk about the current state of Jews in Paris.

Anti-Semitism is no worse today, she explained. Social media just reports more. As if to correct a misconception, she reminded me that 75% of French Jews survived World War II. Clearly she didnt want to discuss a complex subject with an American Jew who couldnt possibly understand the finer shades of French Jewish identity. Laicit has its limits, she said abruptly, waving goodbye.

As does Francophilia, I realized with chagrin.

Los Angeles food writerHelene Siegelis the author of 40 cookbooks, including the Totally Cookbook series and Pure Chocolate. She runs the Pastry Session blog.

This article was first published by the Jewish Journal.

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Happy as this Jew in France - JNS.org - JNS.org

The time I studied Talmud with Uri Zohar – The Times of Israel

Posted By on June 26, 2022

Four decades ago, Israel learned that Uri Zohar, its best known comedian, was abandoning bohemia for the Haredi world. About that time, I was writing an article for The Jerusalem Post in which Zohars name came up. A private postal service was facing closure. Its head well call him Haim mentioned in passing during an interview that Zohar was one of his customers and a friend, which I noted in the article. A few weeks later Haim, himself Haredi, called me. He was exultant. The authorities had reconsidered and his service would not be shut down. The article had done it, he said. He couldnt thank me enough. Is there anything I can do for you? Anything.

I was not doing anybody a favor and in truth it was a very dull article. But as Haim talked, it occurred to me that there WAS something he might do for me. He and no other.

Could you arrange for me to study Talmud with Uri Zohar for half an hour?

He hesitated. I m not sure he would agree to that, but I can ask him.

I wont write about it, I assured him. Im just interested personally, not as a journalist.

Ill try, he said.

The news that Zohar was quitting comedy for religion had stunned me. He was, for me, a national treasure - funny, bawdy, hilarious. We seculars thirsted for wild humor like his to brighten our livesa diversion from all the bad actors strutting the political stage. It was as if Bob Hope - the American comedian who came to mind then - had abandoned his radio show and taken a vow of silence in a remote monastery, never to be heard from again.

Zohars move was a dissonance that baffled me. Was it real? A middle-aged man making a move like that? Why? Or was it a schtick, like Madonnas hyped-up flirtation with kabbalah, a pathetic lunge for publicity. If I could watch him close-up studying Talmud, I thought, it might tell me something.

Growing up on New Yorks Lower East Side, I had gone to Yeshiva Shlomo Kluger till 10th grade. Very little of my learning there stuck, but at least I could read a page of Talmud even if I didnt get the meaning unless the rabbi explained it.

Two days after my request to Haim, the phone rang at my desk. A deep, vaguely familiar voice said Mr. Rabinovich? This is Uri Zohar. I dont recall him asking any questions, although his tone seemed to carry one - is this journalist just looking for a scoop? I hastened to assure him that I would not be writing an article about him, but that I would like to share a study session with him if possible.

He agreed that I come the next morning at 10 a.m. to an address in Geula, a Haredi neighborhood in Jerusalem. Ground floor. Short flight of stairs. Door to the right. He himself responded to the doorbell. He had a beard, but the face was his. He led me into the salon where two men were sitting at a table, a Talmud tractate open before each. One was a former entertainer, born-again like Zohar, but his name was unfamiliar to me. The other was the Haredi teacher, an intelligent looking young man. Zohar gestured to a seat next to his. He didnt immediately offer me a volume, perhaps not to embarrass me if I could not follow. I asked for one and he readily took one down from a shelf, opened it to the page they were studying and placed his finger on the line they were at. That took me straight back to my yeshiva days when, it seemed, we were constantly asking each other what line we were at.

The subject, as best I recall, concerned someone finding a prayer book or another holy book on the Sabbath in a public space: can he pick it up and bring it into a private space, like his home, to save it from further desecration? Or not? Normally, it is forbidden to carry even a handkerchief in a public space on the Sabbath.

The room faced onto an inner courtyard. At one point, the rabbi placed an object on the sill of the open courtyard door to discuss the boundary between private and public spaces.

As the rabbis reading proceeded, Zohar and the other penitent offered questions and comments. I asked whether I could participate. I was urged to do so and did. The give-and-take was familiar, even fun. I could have continued, but after a while I begged leave to go. Zohar escorted me to the door. As I started down the short flight, I glanced back. He was still at the half-open door, as if poised for a question from me, so I thought, about continuing my studies. Neither of us said anything and I continued out the front door. I already had the answer to the question that had brought me there; to my dismay, Uri Zohar was not kidding about becoming a Haredi. He had passed from the public space to the private. He would remain there, except for scattered contacts with seculars, until he died this month, at age 86.

Uri Zohar (left) and Arik Einstein in Peeping Toms, Zohars 1972 film about an aging hippie. (YouTube screengrab)

ADDENDUM:

Despite my assurance to Haim and to Zohar himself that I would not write about the episode, I did write about it. I felt that the articles conclusion that Zohars conversion was sincere, was not something he could object to. The publicity might even enhance his personal agenda if it aimed at encouraging secular searchers to follow in his path.

In so deciding, I may have inadvertently stumbled on a Talmud-worthy conundrum. Although my pledge to Haim and Uri Zohar not to write about the episode ended up being false, it was not false when I made it. It became a lie only post-facto. Is that less egregious than an intentional, up-front lie? Or not?

Abraham Rabinovich is a historian and journalist who has published several books including "The Yom Kippur War," "The Boats of Cherbourg" and "The Battle For Jerusalem." As a reporter, his work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, the International Herald Tribune, The New Republic, and the Christian Science Monitor. Before becoming a writer full-time, he was employed as a staff journalist for Newsday and the Jerusalem Post.

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The time I studied Talmud with Uri Zohar - The Times of Israel

What Is Required To Fulfill ‘You Shall Teach Your Son Torah?’ – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on June 26, 2022

Rabbi Dayan received the following letter from one of his readers:

The Business Weekly column featured a story about a grandfather who offered to pay his son-in-law to learn with his own son to make a siyum at his bar mitzvah. I was surprised by the application of the Rema (C.M. 81:1) to this situation. I thought that the Rema was discussing a case where the grandfather was trying to get the father to do something that the father was specifically obligated to do. As the Shach there explains, a father is obligated to teach his son Torah or to hire someone to teach him Torah. There is nothing in the story that implies that this father was negligent in his obligation to provide his son with a Torah education. He presumably sends his son to yeshiva and probably spends some time with him each week reviewing, too. I would not have thought there is a specific obligation for a father to learn with his son in order to make a siyum on his bar mitzvah, so the Rema does not apply and the father-in-law would have no excuse not to fulfill the deal.

Does the author think that a father is obligated to make a siyum with his son for his bar mitzvah? Or does he hold that since a father is generally obligated to teach his son Torah, the Remas opinion will apply to any deal related to the mitzvah of teaching Torah to his son, even beyond the level of obligation?

A similar question was posed by two other readers.

Does the Remas ruling apply also in this case of a siyum?

I wondered about this when writing the article, acknowledged Rabbi Dayan. There certainly is no obligation to make a siyum at a bar mitzvah, although it is highly commendable.

The Gemara (Kiddushin 30a) addresses the extent of a fathers obligation to teach his son Torah. It cites the case of a child whose grandfather taught him Tanach, Mishnah, Gemara, halachos and aggados, but concludes that the fathers obligation suffices with teaching the written Torah.

Rambam (Hil. Talmud Torah 1:7) rules, accordingly, that a father is required to hire a teacher for all of Tanach. Kesef Mishneh understands that he is not obligated beyond this, even for free.

Tur (Y.D. #245), however, cites from Ramah (R. Meir HaLevi Abulafia) that the minimal obligation of Tanach is for someone who is unable to educate more, but one who can, is obligated (chayav) to teach his son Mishnah, Gemara, halachos and aggados.

Shulchan Aruch (Y.D. 245:6) cites the Ramah, but uses the word mitzvah instead of chayav.

Shulchan Aruch Harav (Hil. Talmud Torah 1:4) rules that a father is required to teach his son the entire Written and Oral Torah. Aruch HaShulchan (Y.D. 245:3-5, 15), though, rules that the absolute requirement is only for the Written Torah, but there is a great mitzvah to teach the remainder of Torah, and we force someone who is able to through laws of tzedaka.

We mentioned in the article that according to the Ketzos (81:4), if the father-in-law was sincere, he is liable for payment of wages even for fulfillment of an obligated mitzvah. If he claims that he was insincere, though, and just cajoling the father to fulfill his mitzvah of chinuch more fully, in my opinion the Remas ruling exempting him would still apply, even though learning Mishnayos or Gemara for a siyum is not an absolute obligation.

Conversely, we mentioned that the Nesivos (81:2) maintains that even without a claim of insincerity, there is no employer-employee commitment when hiring someone to fulfill his own obligation. It seems to me that this applies only to an absolute requirement, though, not to additional learning for a greater mitzvah.

Thus, in this case, concluded Rabbi Dayan, the deciding factor is whether the father-in-laws intention was sincere or not.

Verdict: Regarding learning for a siyum, if the father-in-law claims that he was insincere, he is exempt; otherwise, he is liable.

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What Is Required To Fulfill 'You Shall Teach Your Son Torah?' - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

The Torah supports me in an argument with my wife that I will never win – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on June 26, 2022

(JTA) For years I worked in an office where, in order to make an outside phone call, you had to dial 9 plus 1 plus your number. At least once a week, the police would show up in the lobby because someone had accidentally dialed 9-1-1. The head of HR would scold us for not being more careful, and I would think, just change the system!

In Jewish law there is a name for rules or actions that would tempt even the innocent to make a mistake or worse, a sin: lifnei iver. It comes from Leviticus 19:14: You shall not place a stumbling block before the blind. Beyond its literal meaning, the verse has been used to establish the principle that you should remove temptation from the path of those who may be morally weak.

This became a thing in my house recently, when my wife asked if I could be more careful when opening our kitchen cabinets. The cabinets are off-white, and I was leaving smudges. I replied with admirable honesty, I thought that I couldnt break a lifetime habit of the way I reach for a cabinet handle, and if I said I would try I would probably be lying. Smudges, I said, are the price we pay for beige cabinets and dainty handles. Blame the design, not me.

What ensued was what diplomats call a frank and honest discussion.

Convinced I was right, I sought an outside voice: Judge John Hodgman, the comedian who writes a satiric ethical advice column for The New York Times Magazine. I explained our impasse in an email, and Hodgman replied in the May 20 issue:

Seen from 10,000 feet, I would agree that your wifes request is unreasonable. That said, from 10,000 feet, I cant see your disgusting hands. I cant see what kind of muck you get into, or what kind of smears youre leaving as you blindly paw at the cabinet face until you hit the handle. (Maybe you cant, either. Spouses often see cleanliness differently depending on how they grew up, and some are just dirt-blind.) Even if your hands are clean of all sin, dont meet one marital crime with another. Dont lie and promise to try. Just promise to try, and tell the truth.

The comments that followed were not friendly to my cause, to put it mildly. One reader compared me to Tarzan. Another urged me to be a grown-up.

But my favorite response came from a self-described architect and former interior designer, who I felt got closest to my original point, writing, if your homes aesthetic is so fragile that its ruined by normal daily use its a serious design flaw. Everyone living in a home should feel at ease interacting with their environment, and everyone has different sensitivities and habits. The design should support them all.

In other words, home design shouldnt be a stumbling block before a guy with Tarzan hands. The urban planner Jane Jacobs advocated this sort of user-first architecture, writing, There is no logic that can be superimposed on the city; people make it, and it is to them that we must fit our plans. For example, if you want to keep mail from piling up on the dining room table, you need another little table closer to the front door (another recurring argument from what is, astoundingly, my first and still extant marriage).

Probaby the best-known demonstration of user-first design comes from so-called desire lines: the footpaths created by people who ignore the actual sidewalks around a building or park and create their own routes of least resistance. The smart planner pays attention to the routes people actually want to take, and then pours the concrete.

A close cousin of this approach is behavioral design, which tries to influence the way people use spaces and objects. Good behavioral design might, for instance, put a hand sanitizer right near the place where you are likely to pick up or spread germs. Or, in the case of my kitchen cabinets, it would make the handles big enough or inviting enough that my chances of smudging the doors is minimized.

I obsess about this topic not only because I want to win the argument with my wife, but because I think lifnei iver has important public policy implications. As Jacobs understood, good, intuitive design can turn private and public spaces into friendlier, safer places by putting users first. For decades public housing was a disaster in part because designers ignored the ways people actually congregated, relaxed and kept an eye on each other. My son the engineer helps design hospital equipment intended to keep tired, overworked doctors and nurses from pushing the wrong buttons or forgetting a crucial step.

On the flip side, sinister behavioral design might coerce someone into, say, racking up debts on an addictive gambling app, or hooking kids on vaping, as the Food and Drug Administration argued in ordering Juul to remove its e-cigarettes from the U.S. marketplace.

The latter is exactly the scenario that lifnei iver proscribes: setting a vulnerable person up for failure. In an article for Chabad.org, Yehuda Shurpin discusses the possibilities and dilemmas of applying lifnei iver to the current debate over gun safety. On the one hand, he writes, The Talmud tells us that one is forbidden to sell dangerous items including weapons, or anything commonly used to manufacture weapons, as well as their accessories to any person who may have the intent to use them to cause harm or perpetrate a crime.

On the other hand, the law is understandably complex when it comes to determining how to anticipate that intent and under what circumstances the seller is culpable. And yet, the tradition understands that the idea that guns dont kill, people do is specious: We do not want people getting hurt or dying, writes Shurpin. And restricting evil-doers access to materials that make this possible is an obvious course of action.

Whether we are talking about gun control, office phones or kitchen design, the principle is the same: People are inherently clumsy and fallible, and relying on their best intentions to solve a problem is a recipe for failure. Sometimes you have to ban the dangerous tool or change the number from 9 to, well, any. other. number.

Ultimately, I didnt consult a rabbi to solve my kitchen dilemma. ButI did answer to a higher authority: Its now my job to clean the cabinets.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of JTA or its parent company, 70 Faces Media.

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The Torah supports me in an argument with my wife that I will never win - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Ties That Bind – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on June 26, 2022

They shall make themselves tzitzis on the corners of their garments and they shall place upon the tzitzis of each corner a thread of turquoise wool. (Bamidbar 15:38)

Expounding on the intent of the mitzvah of tzitizis, our Sages say we should identify as servants of Hashem.

The Talmud (Menachos 43b) cites R Meir, who said that the punishment for not attaching white strings is greater than the punishment for not attaching techeles (blue strings). He compares it to a king of flesh and blood who ordered two of his servants to bring him a seal. Of one he requested a seal of clay, and of the other he requested a seal of gold. Both failed to bring the seals as requested. Who will have a greater punishment? R Meir says it is the one who did not bring the seal of clay.

Tosfos explains that just as a slave would have a seal on his clothing identifying him as such, the tzitzis distinguish us as servants of Hashem. When a person realizes that he is a servant of Hashem, he fulfills His mitzvos, whether he does it for love, like a faithful servant, or because he is fearful, like a servant who is not as loyal.

The Divrei Mordechai cites the Even Ezra in Bamidbar that although one prays with his tallis to fulfill the requirement in Krias Shema (they are to make themselves tzitzis on the corners of their garments ) there is a greater obligation to wear tzitzis throughout all the hours of the day so that ones servitude to Hashem should be foremost in his mind and he will not sin. During the time of prayer, there is little possibility that one will transgress.

The tzitzis alert the individual and remind him that he is a servant of Hashem who would not disobey his master. The Talmud (Menachos 44a) tells of an individual who was very conscientious about the mitzvah of tzitzis. As he readied to violate a severe Torah prohibition his tzitzis slapped him in the face and he pulled back because the four corners of tzitzis appeared to him like four witnesses.

The Sifsei Tzaddik comments that when one dons his tzitzis he should appreciate the preciousness of this mitzvah and cling to them, for they have the power to save him from sin.

The Divrei Mordechai adds here that we tie the tzitzis 39 times, equivalent to the gematria (numerical value) of the words Hashem echad Hashem is one. Thus our seal is now engraved with the name of our master, Hashem. This is an additional sign that we carry the name of Hashem with us, to maintain our Torah view and guard us from all sin.

Because of the great importance of this mitzvah, the Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim (24) states: Great is the punishment of a person who nullifies the mitzvah of tzitzis. Of him it is said (Iyov 38:13), To grasp the edges of the earth and shake the wicked from it.

* * *

Why the Tzaddik Fell Ill

The great tzaddik R Moshe Pardo once became ill on his travels outside Eretz Yisrael. He had a severe headache, which was then followed by overall weakness in his entire body. His host called the doctor, who requested R Moshe open his shirt so that he could listen to his heart. When the doctor saw R Moshes tallis katan, he was very moved, as it evoked forgotten childhood memories.

Are there still Jews who wear these garments? he asked emotionally.

R Moshe was momentarily distracted from his pain as he described to the physician the splendor of Eretz Yisrael, the world of Torah, and how many were returning to their Jewish roots. He also told the doctor about Ohr HaChaim the educational institutions he had established in Eretz Yisrael. He gently guided the physician to connect to his Jewish ancestry and gave him one of the very special pair of tefillin that he usually gifted to rich donors.

The doctor prescribed a protocol of treatment and medications for R Moshes recovery. He also promised that he would wear the tefillin every day and, at his first opportunity, would come to visit Eretz Yisrael. He expressed a strong interest in seeing the institutions that R Moshe Pardo had established.

R Moshe recovered and continued traveling, his meeting with the doctor soon forgotten.

Many years later, R Moshe received a phone call from an elderly man who wished to see him. When R Moshe Pardo welcomed the visitor he recognized the elderly physician, and immediately rose to happily welcome him.

The doctor related that he had kept his promise to R Moshe. He davened in shul every day and wore his tefillin, and he now wanted to support the educational institutions of R Moshe.

R Moshe gave the doctor a tour of the various buildings the school buildings, the library, the dormitory and the physician was overwhelmed. I thought you were speaking of a small school, and here I see castles. I have no family, and I want you to know that I have resolved at this moment that I am a Jew. I have accrued a large amount of money over my lifetime, and I would like to leave the sum to your institutions. R Moshe praised the doctors great zechus and observed how this one gesture was one of the greatest achievements of his life.

R Moshe would recount that when he fell ill, he was bothered slightly because our Sages tell us (Pesachim 8a), Those on the path to perform a mitzvah are not susceptible to harm. How was it possible that he fell ill? When he was able to reignite the spark of Yiddishkeit within the physician he comprehended the possible reason why he had taken ill far from home. I didnt realize at the time that this illness would later build Torah in the world. One can never predict the results of a days events.

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Ties That Bind - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Holding The High Line: Rapids Draw NYCFC – Last Word On Sports

Posted By on June 26, 2022

PODCAST Hello Rapids fans! This week on Holding The High Line, we catch up on last weeks news. We discuss MLS coming to Apple TV and All the Small Things that made the Denver World Cup bid fail. The guys discuss Rapids 2 player news. Matts got takes on Sam Nicholson rejoining the club. Then we do Good Thing, Bad Thing, Big Thing on the draw at New York City. We discuss how concerned you should be with Gyasi Zardes, and look ahead to Portland Timbers.

Holding The High Line is an independent soccer podcast focused on the Colorado Rapids of MLS and a member of the Beautiful Game Network. If you like the show, please consider subscribing to us on your preferred podcatcher, giving us a review, and tell other Rapids fans about us. It helps a ton. Visit bgn.fm for a bunch of other great podcasts covering soccer in North America.

We also have anewsletter. Visit ourSubstack pageto read our content and sign up for our newsletter via email.

Find us on iTunes, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Blubrry, and many other podcatchers. See the full list of podcatchers with subscription links here. For full transcripts of every episode, check out our AudioBurst page. Our artwork was produced by CR54 Designs. Juanners does our music.

We are brought to you by Ruffneck Scarves and Icarus FC. Ruffneckscarves.com is your one-stop-shop for official MLS, USL, and U.S. Soccer scarves as well as custom scarves for your group or rec league team. Icarusfc.com is the place to go for high-quality custom soccer kits for your team or group. With an any design you want, seriously motto, they are breaking the mold of boring, expensive, template kits from the big brands.

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We have partnered up with the Denver Post to sustainably grow soccer journalism in Colorado. Listeners can get a three month trial of the Denver Post digital for 99/month. Go to denverpost.com/hthl to sign up. This will give you unlimited and full access to all of the Posts online content and will support local coverage of the Rapids. Each month after the trial is $11.99/month. There is a sports-content-only option for $6.99/month.

Follow us on Twitter @rapids96podcast. You can also email the show at rapids96podcast@gmail.com. Follow our hosts individually on Twitter @LWOSMattPollard and @soccer_rabbi. Send us questions using the hashtag #AskHTHL.

Matt Pollard is the Site Manager for Last Word on Soccer and an engineer by day. A Colorado Convert, he started covering the Colorado Rapids as a credentialed member of the press in 2016, though hes watched MLS since 96. When hes not watching or writing about soccer, hes being an outdoorsman (mostly skiing and hiking) in this beautiful state or trying a new beer. For some reason, he thought that starting a podcast with Mark was a good idea and he cant figure out how to stop this madness. He also hosts Last Word SC Radio.

Mark Goodman, the artist formally known as Rapids Rabbi, moved to Colorado in 2011. Shortly thereafter he went to Dicks Sporting Goods Park, saw Lee Nguyen dribble a ball with the silky smoothness of liquid chocolate cascading into a Bar Mitzvah fountain, and promptly fell head over heels in love with domestic soccer. When not watching soccer or coaching his sons U-8 team, hes generally studying either Talmud or medieval biblical exegesis. Which explains why he watches so much MLS, probably. Having relocated to Pittsburgh in 2019, he covers the Pittsburgh Riverhounds of the USL for Pittsburgh Soccer Now.

Photo Credit: Mark Shaiken, Last Word on Soccer.

Originally posted here:

Holding The High Line: Rapids Draw NYCFC - Last Word On Sports

Palestine Under Occupation III: Mapping Israel’s Policies and Practices and their Economic Repercussions in the Occupied Palestinian Territory -…

Posted By on June 26, 2022

Key messages

Israels policies and practices constitute a matrix of control and domination: control of the land and domination of the people.

Israels matrix of control and domination has undermined the Palestinian economy, leading to its evisceration, as well as to asymmetric dependency on Israel.

Establishment of a Palestinian State and attainment of the SDGs have become almost impossible.

Israels matrix of control and domination entails grave violations of international law and deprives the Palestinians of their basic right to self determination.

A rights-based approach to the Question of Palestine, grounded in international law and human rights, has become vital.

The international community has a responsibility to support the Palestinian people in reducing economic dependency on Israel, improving their resilience, and achieving sustainable development.

Peace can only be attained through full application of international law and principles of justice, and full enjoyment of peoples in the region of their rights.

Executive summary

Since 1967, Israels policies and practices in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (oPt) have been blighting Palestinian society, economy, and environment. They are at the core of Israels overarching strategy of fragmentating the Palestinian people, to maintain domination over them and prevent and pre-empt any challenge to the Jewish character of the State of Israel. In maintaining a military occupation and preventing establishment of a viable Palestinian state in line with international law, these policies and practices and their repercussions flagrantly negate equality in rights between Israelis and Palestinians. This study shows in some detail that they constitute a matrix of control and domination:

Controlling the land. Administrative, political, and physical fragmentation of the oPt has been instrumental in entrenching Israeli control over Palestinian land and resources: the West Bank is divided into three areas A, B and C; East Jerusalem is totally segregated from the rest of the oPt; and the Gaza Strip is blockaded and isolated from the West Bank. Measures used by Israel for acquisition and direct control of land include formal annexation, declaration of land as state land, closure of large areas as military zones, seizure of absentee property, confiscation for ostensible public needs, and declaration of privately owned land as unregistered public land. In addition, Israel controls and exclusively exploits the natural resources, including water aquifers and springs, the Dead Sea and its minerals, and the maritime areas of Gaza, while denying the Palestinians the possibility of exploiting the Gaza gas field and restricting the fishery area off Gaza. Meanwhile, Israeli settlements in the West Bank serve as a means for controlling resources, limiting movement, and stunting Palestinian development.

Dominating the people. To maintain dominance over the Palestinians under its occupation, Israel employs a two-fold approach: demographic control and suppression of all forms of resistance. Israels control of the population registry allows it to impose demographic fragmentation and control, using various residency-status regulations. This is coupled with imposing restrictions on movement between the oPt and Israel and within the oPt. A clear manifestation in this respect is the revocation of residency status of Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem, which amounts to de facto expulsion, while in the rest of the West Bank, Israels strict permit regime for Palestinian movement, residency, and construction is compounded by violence and intimidation and has created a coercive environment that seeks to displace the population in area C of the West Bank. Moreover, Israel suppresses all forms of Palestinian resistance to its policies, practices and the occupation in general, including by disproportionate use of force, typified by recurrent military assaults on the Gaza strip; military orders controlling the life of the Palestinians in the West Bank; several forms of collective punishment; excessive and arbitrary arrests, detention and imprisonment that amount to institutionalized ill treatment and torture. Thus, the system of domination over the Palestinian people comprises demographic fragmentation, subjugation, suppression, and control of everyday life.

These sets of policies compliment and interact with each other to form a matrix of control and domination.

Stunted economic development is an expected result of the Israeli policies of control of the land and domination over the people. Furthermore, Israel pursues de-development of the oPt and evisceration of its economy, through a web of measures, including wilful destruction of means of production, chiefly in the Gaza Strip; an imposed customs union; a restrictive system of business permits in area C of the Wet Bank; constraints on use of natural resources; restrictions on importation of goods through almost arbitrary dual-use lists; curbs on banking and financial operations; and impediments to access to foreign markets.

After 1967, Israels strategy regarding the Palestinian economy was based on subordination and partial integration of Palestinian markets through free movement of people and goods between Israel and the oPt and allowing Palestinian labour flows into the Israeli economy. While integration of labour increased income inflows during the period 1967-1973, it weakened Palestinian productive sectors. In the late 1980s, Israel adopted a different strategy, one of movement restrictions and segregation of the Palestinian economy, which has led to de-development through extensive allocation of resources for settlements, notably after Oslo Accords.

The study has mapped Israeli policies, practices, and their eviscerating economic repercussions in an input-output matrix, showing how Israeli policies hinder productivity of each sector of the economy and prevent expansion of economic activities. De-development of the productive capacity has led to contraction of agriculture and manufacturing, with the share of agriculture in GDP decreasing from 33.2 per cent in 1972 to 8.1 per cent in 2019, and that of mining, quarrying and manufacturing languishing at less than 15 per cent. The de-development process and the deteriorating living conditions of the Palestinians have increased their need to work in Israel and to rely on commodities supplied through Israeli markets. Indeed, Israel, through the matrix of control and domination has eviscerated the Palestinian economy, locked it into a dependency relation, and subjugated it to Israeli diktat.

Based on mapping Israeli policies and practices and their economic repercussions, the study suggests three sets of policy options for the Palestinian Authority and the international community to mitigate the impact of Israeli occupation on the Palestinian economy. These policy options are classified according to their targets: improve access of Palestinians to their resources and infrastructure; reduce dependency of the Palestinian economy on Israel; and support tenacity and resilience of the Palestinian people in the oPt.

However, effectiveness of any policies remains questionable while Israel continues to violate the rights of the Palestinians to their resources, infrastructure, and markets. Israeli strategies and policies towards the oPt have constituted violations of international humanitarian law and international human-rights law and persist at the expense of the individual and collective rights of the Palestinian people. Israel has been violating the principle of inadmissibility of annexation of an occupied territory.

Furthermore, it is becoming increasingly evident that it is also violating the Law of Occupation; namely, the principle of temporality of a belligerent occupation. Indeed, Israeli policies and practices, including those eviscerating the Palestinian economy, are inconsistent with the Charter of the United Nations and the principal concepts of international law: the right of peoples to selfdetermination and the prohibition of acquiring territory by force.

Thus, an international-law and rights-based approach to the Question of Palestine has become vital. Such an approach would be grounded on human rights, including the right to self-determination, the right to development, and the right of return of Palestine refugees, while requiring the international community to shoulder the responsibility for imposing a rights-based framework by making Israel accountable, ending its impunity, and forcing it to abide by international law.

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Palestine Under Occupation III: Mapping Israel's Policies and Practices and their Economic Repercussions in the Occupied Palestinian Territory -...

Podcast Ep 60: The history of wheat in Palestine – The Electronic Intifada

Posted By on June 26, 2022

On episode 60, Nora speaks with Mohammed Abujayyab, a small-scale farmer and food security activist, about Palestines agricultural economy under Israeli occupation.

The price of bread in the Gaza Strip has risen several times over the past few months, partly due to the supply chain situation in Ukraine as Palestinians, like much of the world, import flour from that country.

Gazas economy ministry has also blamed the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority. The PA has not exempted Gazas merchants from taxes imposed on wheat and flour imports.

That has also led to a rise in flour prices in Gaza.

The problem is compounded by Israels ongoing blockade, which severely restricts Gazas imports and exports of agricultural products, and by Israels continuous theft of land in some of Gazas most fertile areas near the Israel boundary.

You can imagine how very few lands are available for [wheat crop farming], Abujayyab explains.

He notes that two-thirds of the flour imported into Gaza is provided by UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestine refugees.

Israels control of the Gaza economy has made the coastal enclave a dumping ground for the extra crops that Israel has, Abujayyab tells us.

So Palestinians tend to go towards planting cash crops, especially vegetables, flowers, strawberries, watermelon, these things that eventually have a sort of cash outcome compared to something like planting wheat that would require multiple stages of production.

And most of the time, farmers are not involved in [the] supply chain, he adds.

Originally from Gaza, Abujayyab is the co-founder of Om Sleiman Farm in Bilin in the West Bank. He also works with the Al-Barakeh wheat mill in Jordan, which aims to build food security in the region through traditional grain planting, harvesting and processing practices.

He describes the effects Israeli settler-colonialism has had on Palestines traditional agricultural economy, as well as the changes in diet and nutrition due to loss of ancient grains and dependence on food aid.

The evolution of the type of bread that weve eaten has changed in the past 80 years, based on different flours that we have gotten as aid that is very different in comparison to the [traditional] flour, Abujayyab says.

Before Palestine came under European control and was subjected to colonization, Palestinian bread flour was a mix of high-protein wheat that was usually augmented with barley or other grains.

Wheat had lower yields compared to the fields in operation today, he explains, but it also had a very balanced ecological impact on the surroundings and created a very strong social bond that made villages act collectively, defend their land collectively and see each other in that common social loom that was woven by the collective agricultural system.

The collective agricultural system was dismantled by Britain, which ran Palestine between the 1920s and 1940s. Israels colonial project in Palestine has further destroyed traditional farmland and farming practices.

Video production by Tamara Nassar

Theme music by Sharif Zakout

Subscribe to The Electronic Intifada Podcast on Apple Podcasts (search for The Electronic Intifada) and on Spotify. Support our podcast by rating us, sharing and leaving a review, and you can also donate to fund our work.

Lightly edited for clarity.

Nora Barrows-Friedman: Welcome back to The Electronic Intifada Podcast, Im Nora Barrows-Friedman. Today were going to be talking about the agriculture and food economy in Gaza. Recently, the price of bread in the Gaza Strip has risen several times in the last month, with the ministry of economy in Gaza accusing the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank of not exempting Gaza merchants from taxes imposed on wheat and importing flour like the merchants in the West Bank, which led to a rise in flour prices in Gaza from 97 shekels to 120, or about 36 US dollars.

There is a fear amongst bakery owners that the prices of flour will continue to rise due to the situation in Ukraine as Palestinians, like much of the world, import flour from Russia and Ukraine. Joining us to talk about the agriculture economy under occupation and settler-colonial land theft is Muhammad Abujayyab. He is a small-scale farmer and food sovereignty activist originally from Gaza and living in Utah. Hes the co-founder of Om Sleiman Farm in Bilin in the West Bank. Mohammed is also working with Al-Barakeh wheat mill in Jordan. Mohammed, its so good to have you with us on The Electronic Intifada Podcast.

Mohammed Abujayyab: Thank you, Nora, for having me.

Nora Barrows-Friedman: So, you were back in Gaza after many years, just a few months ago. Lets start by having you talk about the current state of the food economy and the wheat reserves and how its all operating in Gaza after, you know, 14 years of Israeli blockade, and what did you see when you were there?

Mohammed Abujayyab: Yeah, so I was there in January and the whole economy, especially like with, with the most important foodstuff being bread, you know, for Palestinians, as you would know, like Palestinians consume probably one of the highest levels of bread like around 100 kg, kilograms a year, per capita, and that puts them at a point where they would need a lot of flour and wheat compared to the amount of lands that are available to them to plant that amount. And particularly in Gaza, the amount of flour that is needed is probably two-thirds supplied by the UNRWA flour, where most people get their flour through the rations that are distributed regularly through UNRWA. So around 25 percent of the wheat consumption that happens in the Palestinian Authority areas and so on goes to Gaza Strip.

And that is broken down roughly by almost 10, 10,000 tons a monthly from the UNRWA and the rest goes to local mills that import wheat through through places like Kerem Abu Salem [crossing], and thats where the taxes are levied on them by Palestinian Authority that is centrered in Ramallah. And most of these taxes dont make it back to the Gaza Strip. So the in the recent period of time, especially after the corona period, and after when, you know, Ramadan has come around, when the war in Ukraine came around, where Ukraine is a place where a lot of the Arab countries are dependent on imports from Ukraine like Egypt, Lebanon, Libya, Yemen, and so on. And Palestinian Authority actually, areas, ends up importing 90 to 95 percent of the flour that is consumed that basically makes the bread that we have. We can probably talk more about the makeup of that flour and so on because the flour and wheat that was planted at one point in Palestine is very different from the flour that is imported or the flour that is brought in by the UNRWA.

So youll end up basically with these bakeries selling this bundle of bread that ends up so the price of bread for that bundle in Gaza Strip, for example, was two and a half shekels for a period of time then became three, then the size of the bundle shrank a little bit and then the price so its either the bundle that shrinks or the price goes up to sort of compensate for these changes. But really, the problem seems to be compound, its not only that we dont have enough land to plant, you know, enough wheat or enough grains in Gaza Strip and the West Bank combined actually. So mind you, the Gaza strip has very tiny space. Like if we look at the statistics given by agricultural administrators on the planted area in Palestine, which three quarters of it ended up being perennial because of multiple, as well, political reasons.

But basically, the area that ends up being annually cropped that could be dedicated for something like planting wheat and so on, is roughly 340 kilometer squared, which is almost the size of the Jerusalem area, a little bit smaller than the size of Gaza Strip. Gaza Strip has like a very tiny portion of that land, which is put at around 190,000 dunams, after the Israelis have evacuated some of the settlements there. And that land is roughly 1/5 or 1/6 of the lands that were basically planted by the same size of the same population pre-48 in Palestine. So you can imagine how very few lands are available for this. So Palestinians tend to go towards planting cash crops, and, you know, cash crops, especially vegetables, flowers, strawberries, watermelon, you know, these things that are that eventually have a sort of cash, you know, outcome compared to something like planting wheat and so on, that requires multiple stages of going through a process and going through milling and going through baking.

And most of the time, farmers are not involved in that, you know, supply chain. So they tend to prefer that, but at the same time, because the entire Gaza Strips economy has been attached to Israels economy that actually operates in the same way. If you look at the way the distribution of cropping lands and vegetables and flowers and so on, in Israel, youll find it very similar to what is happening in the Palestinian areas with the opposite distribution. So most of the lands, 80 percent or so of the lands in Israel are dedicated for annual agriculture. So there is space for cropping, for annual cropping of these lands within 48. But if were going just, you know, rolling back the conversation to the Gaza Strip, so yeah, we ended up with a situation where theres very limited access to land, but as well, there is another angle that is social, you know, that is attached to that half of the population of Gaza Strip is refugees, and they mostly dont have access to these, to the cropping plains in Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahia.

And unfortunately, we have a lot of stories that sort of play back sort of things and social things and interactions that we have faced and seen as refugees coming into the Gaza Strip and people who live there saying like, Hey, stay away from us, or in a sort of, in a sort of way, the sort of classes and that breeds, you know, under conditions of occupation, settler-colonialism, and thats not necessarily what would pan out or what would happen basically under normal conditions, but when you know when these things happen, like mass expulsion, expelling of Palestinians happen, you know, other things that sidebars of like social stratification and so on, get created.

So you end up with basically most descendants of these fellahin folks that have actually traditionally grown foodstuff like wheat and so on in Palestine, traditionally weve grown 60 percent of our crops were field crops, like wheat and barley, millet, sorghum and so on. Yeah, so you end up basically in the Gaza Strip, we have no access to these lands and so on. And the economic situation and attachment to Israel being either a dumping ground for the extra crops that Israel has, or basically a supply chain the other way around, if theres any gap in the production in Israel, they would basically pull it back from Gaza Strip. So yeah, you end up basically having to import 95 percent of the flour, like Palestinian economy requires 650,000 pounds roughly of flour that gets mostly imported, 25 percent of that is consumed in Gaza Strip.

And as I said, two-thirds of that is provided by UNRWA as flour. So the other are the rest of the chunks and you could actually take your sack of flour to a bakery in Gaza Strip and get like these little coupons and so on that you can buy in exchange for bread from these bakeries. But were talking about bread that we ended up even the bread, the evolution of the type of bread that weve eaten has changed in the past 80 years, based on different flours that we have gotten as aid that is very different in comparison to the flour, and the wheat that was planted that was high-protein wheat that usually was augmented with other things, like wheat that was augmented with barley or other things.

And that was part of the ecosystem of how things were growing. If we had a chance maybe we can talk more about how that sort of these crops come together to make bread and how their, you know, their role in the ecology grows for crops like grains, like wheat and barley and millet and so on. So I hope that gives like an overview of how, you know, how we end up basically consuming this we call it kamaj or pita bread, whatever it is that is very, very different than the taboon or the saj that we used to consume pre, you know, pre-48 with a very different nutritional profile, with mainly soft wheat being the main component, which is mostly a pastry flour, actually, bread flour has very low protein, it tends to be lower. And 90 percent of the, sorry, actually 75 percent of that is imported as flour, so its milled somewhere else and is brought in.

And the agriculture ministry says or basically puts the reason for that being that we dont have silos to actually store wheat, because flour sack stores very differently than wheat, it has a shorter period of time to store and sort of the old purpose wheat where you have to remove the bran other things could store longer, but the value, the nutritional value drops. So we ended up basically with a bigger part of the supply chain being done somewhere else and then we are and a bigger chunk of the prices will be pegged somewhere else instead of having mills locally that could actually bring in part of the supply chain and actually reduce the costs potentially.

Nora Barrows-Friedman: Give us a kind of a snapshot of what Palestines wheat industry, the agriculture economy looked like before 1948. Where were the, you know, the most arable lands, fertile lands for the wheat crops and you know how yeah, talk a little bit more about how thats changed.

Mohammed Abujayyab: Yeah, absolutely. Like one of the surprising facts for some people because theres a lot of these statistics and so on. Sometimes theyre utilized for political reasons and so on by Israelis and so on. The lands roughly that were planted pre-48 are almost the same as the lands that are planted today like around 400, 320,000 hectares, and these lands and this is very important in every settler-colonial sort of project to actually realize and see whether in the US here or in Palestine, that the seller-colonialists most of them when they come like whether it being Zionists in Palestine or Europeans to the US. Most of them didnt have the capacity to deal with an empty Palestine or an empty wilderness in the US. Most of them have the capacity to take over agricultural lands and utilize it for future agriculture.

And this is, you know, this is what comes the reality, like when you look or basically see the size of the land that were talking about, theyre almost exactly the same. And if we look at the projects that Israel has attempted to actually expand lands, or change the ecosystem, weve seen disasters, economic, like ecosystem, ecological disasters, like the drying of the Hula marshes, like the the huge cost of making the desert bloom, quote, unquote, that actually these practices that have never actually worked out or panned out and the old, the old forestation and the consequences of fires that came because of all these forestation projects. So cropping and farming in Palestine, and like in 1948, 50 percent of Palestinians were working in agriculture, in a way or another. And a lot, its distributed mostly, like my family comes from the coastal plains north to Gaza, from a village called Yusor.

Adjacent to Asdoud, a little town, now its a port on the Mediterranean. Thats a chunk basically, of like people that and most of the refugees were displaced from these areas. And actually, were talking about the beginning of June. So were, while were recording this in the beginning of June, its very important to remember actually, the wheat harvest came around this period of time. So when these lands were taken over, the wheat harvest was either done and stored, or still standing, waiting to be harvested. And these are things that often are overlooked in the inception of Israel, that period of time, it was dependent on not only Palestinian lands, but Palestinian crops, Palestinian crops that were already planted like even wheat for a period of time, like in the 50s, or Israel, like the like foreign currencies came into Israel. Almost only 15 percent was through Israel, like the local economy, and the rest came from foreign money being sent through the US and other entities.

And that 15 percent, a big chunk of it, was because of oranges, the Jaffa oranges, or the olives. So Israels economy is dependent as a result of the cropping systems and the policies that were created. But basically 60 percent of these lands pre-48 were field crops, half of them were wheat, most of the time, and the other half was barley. And its important because barley now makes up almost 1 percent of the crops that are planted in Palestine. Barley is a very important crop in the Palestinian context or the regional context as a crop that has the capacity to reduce the salination in the soil, that has the capacity to survive in lesser ideal environments, whether, you know, in terms of lower rains and so on. Another crop that completely disappeared in Palestinian foodstuff was millet where millet was one of the important crops, summer crops that were planted, it has a shorter period of time and so on.

But weve planted it for thousands of years and now completely disappeared because it has almost no cash value when you sell it, right, but it has very important value it and sort of like sorghum, zorghha. We call it what we call corn, the white corn were very important summer crops that sort of, you know, so that distribution even the grains, the grains that we planted, the distribution there wasnt a monoculture. It was different crops like if it was a good rainy year youll have a good wheat crop, if you have a bad rain year youll have a good barley crop and then the summer as well youll have these other crops that would augment and, you know, make things like karadeesh, these type of breads that we have, were still eating, but were planting very few amounts of.

So yeah, vegetables made 5 to 6 percent, roughly of the lands that were planted. And its important that crops like sesame and other things that we now, like after a period of time, since 48, the amount of land, I would say oil crop, olive oil became a replacement for sesame oil. Well, sesame was actually the very the number one oil crop used in Palestine. This is why we call it tahini, you know, which is the feminine version of tahin, which is flour. So it goes hand in hand in how important it is, but like, and this actually, the transition because most of these lands that were talking about, the cropping lands, and so on, including, if I look at statistics, statistics of the village that my familys from, most of the lands crops, were edible crops. And most of the villages where the land was held together in a mashaa system.

And that came to change in 1858, where public laws came in by the Ottomans. And but even by the 1930s, you know, when the British were around and so on, most of the villages were still or the lands in the villages were held in this common social system, the mashaa system where like everybody owns the land and village. And then theres these shares that get distributed differently. And people get these pieces of land in separate parts to actually create a sort of balance of what kind of lands you get every couple of years. And it gets redistributed every like periodically.

So that actually created, and actually most of the literature, not surprisingly, criticizes this mashaa system. And even amazing researchers like Shokri Arraf, and so on, they actually criticize the mashaa system. And they blame it for degrading, quote unquote, the lands that are planted. But if you look at the other facts, where basically the fellahin like the whole agricultural system for fellahin was a closed-loop system where it has very little, if any, inputs, and has zero inputs roughly. And basically, yes, it had lower yields compared to if we compare it to the fields today, but had no inputs, had very balanced ecological impact on the surroundings and created a very strong social bond that made villages act collectively, defend their land collectively and see, you know, each other in that common social loom that was sort of weaved by that mashaa system. When the British came and so on, they had the surveillance capacity to sort of fragment and break apart these lands.

And actually, since 1858, the Tabu laws by the Ottomans were created all through to the British, youll see the increase of other types of cropping like trees and like, you know, that was essentially or like when crops like oranges and Jaffa oranges became popular, because not only settlers, Zionist settlers, were buying chunks of lands to plant with these orchards and its, it was very hard to find in a village somebody to sell you a part of land, but like when the lands were broken and were categorized, a lot of the trusts that were basically theyre not public, and theyre not private, theyre held in common, the British sort of broke it in a more simplistic system, like these are private lands, and these are lands that could be sold. And then thats where a lot of these lands, a lot is a very qualifiable word, and so on but basically a good chunk of these lands were being bought by Zionists, and orchards were created, where a lot of capital was needed to be put into these orchards and that money was, you know, or these crops were to be sold somewhere else.

So there was more of a system that turned well as a fallah system or a village system should have sort of space making or placemaking, you know, that continuous you continue to be in a place and continue to take care of it. These orchards became a sort of turning soil and fertility into liquidity, into cash. And these this is a summary of like settler-colonial farming systems in the US. So you find like in the prairies when you had meters worth of topsoil, and they were depleted to like, point five for 1 percent of organic matter now. So, so you know, this is these are the sort of social and maybe land base and were talking about areas that were coastal plains or areas and Marj Ibn-Amer in the Galilee area in the mid-north, or areas that often get forgotten that were cropped in Beir Saba. And this is actually the importance of the Gaza Strip of being an intersection between two very important areas, which is like Beir Saba, and Gaza. And sort of, youll be surprised if you turn the map of Palestine upside down and actually read it through south onwards instead of the center, centric sort of Jerusalem being in the middle, al-Quds of being in the middle.

Its important, we tend to see Palestine from the center and more centric views. But you will see a very different history social and economic and ecological once you turn them upside down, actually read it from Beir Saba onwards. So a good amount of the cropping in wheat crop is going to happen in Saba, you actually see that in now if you go to Jordan, a good amount of people that do farming and soil in Jordan are from Saba originally, from Beir Saba, but then, you know, and yes, some of them like Saaideh and other people that are in Gaza Strip, they still work in farming and have very old traditions of farming, but farming that lives at the intersection of value and farming life. And youll find that more common in Jordan as well like so so youll see that sort of geographic continuity, even foods like that are bought and sold that you will see the bread that is made on the ashes, youll find it being made and Jordan, youll find it made in the southern Gaza Strip, youll find it made in the Sinai too. So I feel like this is the sort of overview of the agricultural social context for farming.

Nora Barrows-Friedman: Thanks, Mohammed. Yeah, its fascinating. And, you know, people always talk about food sovereignty and, you know, but, but what does food sovereignty mean when the most fertile lands have been stolen? When farmers in Gaza, you know, their crops are shrinking all the time, because of, you know, Israels encroachment on their lands, the so-called, you know, buffer zone keeps expanding. And the economy is in a stranglehold by what Israel allows Gaza farmers and agricultural producers to export, if they can even do that at all. What is your definition of food sovereignty when it comes to Gaza in particular, but also for Palestinians in the West Bank, who have, you know, similar restrictions, but possibly more land? What does it mean? What does food sovereignty even look like? How do we even begin to talk about that?

Mohammed Abujayyab: Yeah, unfortunately, when were talking about food sovereignty and so on, a lot of peoples minds or thoughts around it, especially in the US, have been framed around the food sustainability movement, in a sense, and most of the food sustainability movement is really a white settler-colonial construct that probably is similar to the, you know, making the desert bloom or you know, forestation projects in Palestine. So we sort of want to steer away from this, maybe sometimes defining something by saying what it is not is very important. So when we steer a little bit away from that, were talking about basically the capacity to decide on what foods are important to you and plant these foods and consume these foods in ways that are socially, economically and ecologically viable for your context. And thats whats important to sort of see in the context of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.

And honestly, this is the harder like when I visited, just to give a context as part of my work in Palestine has been 2015, 2016, working in Om Sleiman Farm in Bilin, and starting it, when I visited back to the Gaza Strip I had a frame of in my mind was like, Okay, were gonna take the model that we have on hand and sort of try to find through that blueprint, you know, context for the work in Gaza Strip. And weve been searching for basically an ideal, you know, ecological, social and economic intersection where we can actually operate, you know, maybe a consumer co-op was a good starting point for us in Gaza Strip. But what astonished me when I went after 10 years of updating regularly, going back to visit family and so on, but I wasnt able to. And when I was there, I just realized that, especially the Gaza Strip, like at the moment that it is today, it is basically creating this very different sort of blueprint, or prototype.

A pseudo-sovereign prototype [it] is called because it has this sense post-2007, post the separation of Palestinian politics, in a sense between, Gaza and the West Bank, Gaza was afforded I know it is seen in a negative light, most of the time, and most of, you know, most of the time, were talking about like, bringing unity together. But unfortunately, sometimes unity or like bringing things together means settling for a lower bar in a very important liberation experiment that youre going through. And I feel like the separation post-2007 afforded Gaza the space to actually reimagine and see things related to politics with economy and things like food sovereignty. And you touch that and feel that in a very different way. And I feel like I would love to see politics going in the future in Palestine, but I would love to see sort of a Gaza first kind of politics to actually reimagine the sort of ecosystem that we can operate within politically and economically, by actually taking that blueprint in reverse and actually applying it in other spaces. So an example of this was I had a chance with a friend to sit with Dr. Mohammad al-Agha who was the agriculture minister between 2006 and 2012. So it was basically a period when the unity government was formed, and another government was formed afterwards. And then basically, the separation had been continued, basically pushing towards the dimension that he was working on as an agricultural minister.

And you will see you see from the approach and the strategy that they put in place what I would call a Gaza first sort of approach, a sort of resistance in mind, sort of approaches that are basically continuously being attached to the Israeli ecosystem and agriculture. So you, actually, even when you drive down Salah al-Din, the main road in Gaza and so on, you see big chunks of that street being replaced with olive trees and palm trees, where they had eucalyptus in the past, basically. And that was what is really useful, even the British probably planted at one point when they came to Palestine, and I feel like whenever you see eucalyptus you see foreigners in a lot of places including Palestine, including in the US when I drove to LA and so on, like wow

Nora Barrows-Friedman: We have a whole eucalyptus grove right outside my window that was planted by the European settlers about, you know, what, 150 years ago that are still here and completely destroying the native landscape. Yeah, thats what happens.

Mohammed Abujayyab: So you basically see, even touch and feel, like different systems and ecosystem and what they want to start with and like you talk more about things like smaller scale like watermelon economy for example, when most of watermelons and theres a long history of watermelon, Israelis planted a lot of watermelons and then decided it consumes too much water and citrus is the same way, theyre reducing their you know, amount that amount they plant and then Palestinians kick in when, you know, when theres a reduction in Israeli production. So its like a back and forth but most of the time, because Israel has a lot of subsidies and, you know, farmers enjoy a lot of stuff, especially in water terms in Israel, like Palestinians cannot compete with, you know, these cheaper conditions of production.

So we end up the watermelon that ends up in Gaza Strip or West Bank ends up being produced in bigger watermelon farms in Israel. So it was like one of the experiments and other experiments followed, onions and other things where basically they sort of created this plan of like, hey, lets, lets see how can we replace the entirety of this, you know, crop that were importing by replacing other crops, like tomatoes and things that we have a surplus of. And since then, you know, and these, of course, like, talks about all the other intermediary, like there were smear campaigns saying, Oh, these watermelons that are planted here, theyre fed with sewage water, or theyre fed, you know, like where, where theyre trying to like merchants that benefit from bringing these watermelons from Israel, they want to affect the Palestinian sort of consumer behavior.

But since 2006, 2007, I believe, until today, this has completely changed the sort of coordination that happened at the very top level, like from the ministry, with farmers, and actually address market need, was a very successful approach and actually addressed certain needs like a cash crop and where farmers would need that cash to continue operating. And that wasnt the only policy that we see actually, in real effect, like we see the fisheries that are new fisheries. And because when, you know, the limitation of the fishing space and so on, that Palestinians have faced, their fisheries that were created and so on to actually replace some of that demand or, you know, answer to some of that demand. And theyre operating until today, very successfully. We see almost Gaza Strip in 2019 was able to, to produce, I think, 4,200 tons of olive oil that basically completely covered the need in Gaza Strip.

And that was almost 25 percent. And now theyre at 25 percent of the production of olive oil in the entirety of the Palestinian areas. Like, thats to me, thats astonishing, because Gaza Strip just is 6 percent in land mass, 6 percent of the Palestinian Authority areas. And its a highly populated area too, so to actually be able to produce almost 45 percent of 20 to 25 percent of the total Palestinian production is astonishing. And that is actually a direct outcome of strategies. The direct strategy was basically to plant a million olive trees in the Gaza Strip and plant almost three million palm trees for date production in Gaza Strip. And youll see actually these patterns and this is why Im saying the patterns, the palm tree, for example, growth in the West Bank follows the patterns that happen in Israel.

So thats like the pre-2007 politics in the Palestinian Authority areas. So youll find most of them planting medjool dates, for example, for export. But in Gaza Strip, youll find most of the palm trees that are planted, theyre targeting the ajweh market. So like making this paste, this paste from the date, so its targeting actually the internal manufacturing market, and eventually, that would be exported, but you would manufacture the idea is to create or pull most of the supply chain internally to employ most people that you could, you know, employ and then end up with a product that you can sell outside, you know, or export. So the mentality or the idea instead of just exporting the crop, and this has been like the sort of the vegetable market where basically youre literally exporting water and that increases or participates in increasing the salinity of soil and so on and sending it outside, but then, but if you actually use these crops and like extend the supply chain internally its a very different outcome than youre looking at.

So food sovereignty to me looks like these efforts, looks like in Palestine we really we talk a lot about or criticize the Fayyad economy that was created post the second intifada. I wish we could talk more about the Agha economy, you know, its a very different economy, a very different perspective, you know, of how the decisions and policies can be made. And you can actually control and figure out how to deal within a hostile surrounding, you know, even blockade cannot stop you from actually operating. And I can talk on and on, actually part of the things that I am always keeping around and so on, is this like strategy I kind of flesh it out every time I talk about this. But basically a strategy of that 2010 to 2020 strategy that theyve created.

Nora Barrows-Friedman: Thats from the ministry of agriculture?

Mohammed Abujayyab: Yeah, that was from the ministry of agriculture. And Dr. al-Agha was part of the head of the committee that created it. And when you go through and we talk, talking about laying resistance agriculture, talking about, you know, seeing agriculture, from different perspectives, you know, even creating, like the station of organic production, for compost, and so on to reduce the need of Israeli inputs, and so on, because a huge part of the Palestinian agriculture is dependent on the technology, you know, and its funny that because always settlers, when the settler-colonists say like, they depend a lot on technology in a sense.

And like the US selling that Green Revolution sort of technology, and Israelis selling the, you know, fertilizers, theyre selling the and, and yes, they do create, or increase the yields that we get, but at the same time, you are, youre left with a bunch of environmental crises that you need to deal with. And you can see that actually in agriculture in settlements in the West Bank, where they feel less inclined to deal with environmental problems, and so on. So they, you know, the nitrification of the water table, and other things become more severe in these contexts. So yeah, food sovereignty really looks like efforts, like Dr. al-Agha has actually worked on.

And, yeah, I believe a lot of the smaller efforts that whether weve seen in the west of Ramallah, I feel like theres a small group of, like, highly active group of people that try to work together and actually build from the bottom up a sort of an economy that could eventually become co-ops that work together. And, you know, operate, to answer for the market needs and actually compete in the market against, you know, crops and like heavily subsidized Israeli crops. But at the same time, you see the top down approach on the Gaza side, like when, you know, Dr. al-Agha was around and so on, and I honestly find both approaches viable and, you know, really see a future in both directions, hopefully.

Nora Barrows-Friedman: Last year, during the attacks on Gaza, in May 2021, we saw Palestinians all over Palestine inside 48, and in the West Bank and Gaza, and across the diaspora really, rising up in what was called a Unity Intifada. And youve we talked about this off air, about, you know, kind of bringing that energy and that strategy into a viable, Palestine-based, Palestine, you know, centered and Palestinian-run agricultural economy. You work with a wheat mill in Jordan, for example, can you talk about what, you know, what like a Palestine a unity economy could look like, in order, you know, in order to grow the Palestinian economy in a way that Israel cant control or shut down, and what that could look like?

Mohammed Abujayyab: Right, yeah, I thank you for asking this question. Its a very important part of what we dream, you know to accomplish, eventually, the work that is in Jordan is basically the milling effort. But its more of a social initiative, lets say, that is trying to act in one face as a social initiative that educates and talks and reproduces the traditions that we have, instead of leaving that tradition to the market to produce. And the other end is an agribusiness that tries to situate itself in a sort of in a supply chain, where it actually could, through these social objectives and so on, as well like get to a result where people can plant more wheat and consume more of their locally-produced wheat while shaping and reshaping sort of that idea.

And basically, what got us or at least some of the work that Om Sleiman and I was participating in and got us working in Jordan on were like, if the idea of solidarity cannot flow in easily a sort of, like, idea of solidarity for resistance and so on, doesnt easily today flow in from outside to inside, we might as well start working on these prototypes and blueprints of liberation sort of blueprints that embed themselves in economic forums and businesses and, you know, in ways that we actually operate and do these things in other countries. We could, as Palestinians, present ourselves in our work in Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt, other places, where these become the seeds for a future, you know, so theyre, you know, what I mean, like that liberation work can be exported in that sense. And thats the work in Jordan like creating of a blueprint that we could take and go somewhere. Im hoping, Im really hoping that the next station for us is somewhere in 48. Where a Palestinian in Nasra or Haifa or Yaffa, for like that we can, that we can put together a sort of enough resources to, for planting wheat, for milling our own wheat, and maybe for selling that wheat eventually in the West Bank, or Gaza, or in 48 areas.

So this is what it really looks like. And this is where the ideas of food sovereignty are thought of when organizations come to Gaza and talk about self-sufficiency and food sovereignty or go to West Bank and talk about these things, they completely cut out Palestinians in 48 and their need for resources and their need for participation in that ecosystem. Because as Palestinians like we have there is trade that is happening, most of the agricultural products are either imported or exported to Israel. Why isnt wheat, you know, planted and imported and exported? Or like, you know, making it through from 48 areas to Gaza and West Bank? Theres a ton of plans that are possible to actually plan and provide a good chunk of the wheat that is needed. And that sort of answer to the historic because there is this fragmentation politically that is happening and so on.

And they feel like if we werent inspired by the Unity Intifada, and so on, to actually create these unity economies, like I dont want to think, you know, I dont want an organization to come to Gaza and just have these piecemeal solutions to the problem of wheat by basically saying, oh, lets plant more of the lands that we plant as vegetables and plant them with wheat. I would like them Id like to hear you know them saying, Oh, well develop a market in Gaza Strip and well develop and move resources and lands into the hands of Palestinians in 48. And this is important to highlight like the settler-colonial agriculture is settler-colonialism. So at the base of it is its based in geography and in land. And one of its main objectives is to keep these lands in the hands of the farmers that usually have a specific profile. In Israel, its like Zionist, you know, Jewish, white European farmers that, you know, should continue doing the farming and in the lands that they have a hold of.

And in the US, its like white European settlers. And so youll find most of the subsidies that go to agriculture and so on, their real objective at the core is to keep agricultural lands in the hands of settler farmers. So one of the main and very important objectives is to actually make a shift in land ownership because Palestinians in 48 are faced with displacement as much as Palestinians, you know that were expelled to Gaza, or to the West Bank, or outside of Palestine, but they were displaced internally and so a lot of the agricultural lands and so on, theyre no longer in their hands, but we could develop. And there could be strategies that could look like Land Back in Palestine too and in 48 areas where basically Palestinian farmers can, or Palestinians can create agribusinesses that could plant wheat, barley, millet, and like our traditional foodstuffs, they could create flour through milling, thats the second layer of investments and investing in the process in the supply chain.

Where this becomes, you know, a source for the markets, because we already go walking in Gaza, like some of the areas and so on, if you go to a fancy store, like the Carrefour, youll find actually Haifa mill flours that came from Haifa grain mills. Like, you know, its not something I would like that to be, you know, to become, I would like to see flour that was milled by Palestinians in 48. And so we have to bring in all conversations and resources that are poured into the food sovereignty conversation in Gaza and the West Bank, so we have to bring Palestinians in 48 to be part of the conversation. So that actually extends and creates the resilience and an ecosystem that we need in the future. And that becomes more natural to talk about when were talking about it in the Palestine context, because we will eventually whether in Gaza or the West Bank or other areas well be consuming wheat that is planted in ancestral lands. So that the ecosystems look a lot more natural and realistic to me, although today in the environment of like, organizations and activists and so on, its completely overlooked.

Nora Barrows-Friedman: Mohammed Abujayyab, you are a farmer and activist speaking to us from Utah where you live and work, but originally from Gaza. If people want to learn more about the work that you do with Om Sleiman Farms in the West Bank and the wheat mill in Jordan, whats the best way to do that?

Mohammed Abujayyab: They can always reach out to Om Sleiman Farm, whether on Facebook or send us an email or Instagram, whatever your choice is Im still part of the board on Om Sleiman Farm, or you can reach out to Al-Barakeh Wheat, which is a project in Jordan, currently functioning and run by Zikra Initiative folks. You know, just mention that you want to get in touch and there will be folks that will forward these, you know these conversations, because we are like, honestly, we are, and Ive mentioned this in previous conversations, were very under-resourced when it comes to this work, but the work of creating and recreating agricultural businesses that reimagine and recreate the culture around old food and with doing that, not ignoring the ecological, economic and the social aspects of it. So we will and we are like doing projects that require help, require investment, require uplifting in many ways. So, I hope if a few people listen to this that actually they will find it in themselves to actually reach out and ask how they could help and I will find you a ton of work to do if youre interested.

Nora Barrows-Friedman: Well have all the links on the podcast post that accompanies this episode. Mohammed Abujayyab, thank you so much for all that you do and for being with us on The Electronic Intifada Podcast.

Mohammed Abujayyab: Thank you so much, Nora. And thank you to The Electronic Intifada for all they do.

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Podcast Ep 60: The history of wheat in Palestine - The Electronic Intifada


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