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Could New York City Lose Its Last Remaining Jewish Congressman? – The New York Times

Posted By on June 26, 2022

But the rise and fall of Jewish influence is a clear, familiar arc in a city that has absorbed waves of immigrants, who grew in numbers, economic power and, eventually, political stature only to be supplanted by those who followed. It happened to the Dutch, English, Germans, Irish and Italians, and now to New Yorks Jews, who at their peak in the 1950s accounted for a quarter or more of the citys total population and gained footholds at all levels of government.

Since then, large numbers of Jews have left the city, said Daniel Soyer, a historian at Fordham University who has written about New York Jewish history, bringing the present population to just over one million. At the same time, many American Jews began to assimilate and secularize, weakening the shared identity that drove them to vote as a cohesive group and elect their own candidates; some left the Democratic Party, their longtime home.

The exception has been ultra-Orthodox communities in Brooklyn and the lower Hudson Valley. But while they have succeeded in electing their own to state and local offices, they exercise less sway at the congressional level.

Successive cycles of redistricting have not helped, forcing New York to shed congressional seats and fracturing Jewish enclaves between districts. Mr. Nadlers current seat, New Yorks 10th District, had been deliberately drawn to connect Jewish communities on the West Side of Manhattan with Orthodox ones in Brooklyns Borough Park. This year, the court mapmaker severed the two areas.

When I was in Congress, you could have a minyan in the New York delegation, said Steve Israel, a Democrat who once represented Nassau County and parts of Queens in Congress. We went from a minyan to a minority to hardly anybody.

The dwindling was gradual, and in some cases merely a matter of chance. In 1992, Bill Green, a liberal Republican from the Upper East Side, lost to a young upstart, Ms. Maloney. The same year, Representative Stephen J. Solarz saw his Brooklyn district cracked in redistricting and lost in a bid for a neighboring seat drawn to empower Hispanic voters.

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Could New York City Lose Its Last Remaining Jewish Congressman? - The New York Times

Whatever Happened to the ‘Pro-Jewish’ Left? – Tablet Magazine

Posted By on June 26, 2022

It is a truism among many observers of the current socio-political scene that politics has become a substitute religion for large numbers of Americans. Writing about the sacralization of politics, Shadi Hamid, for example, stated that on the left, the woke take religious notions such as original sin, atonement, ritual, and excommunication and repurpose them for secular ends; [while] on the right, adherents of a Trump-centric ethno-nationalism still drape themselves in some of the trappings of organized religion, but the result is a movement that often looks like a tent revival stripped of Christian witness. All this has led, some claim, to the high levels of ideological intensity, social division, and demonization in the realm of politics that once were the preserve of religious zealots. And this intensification of passions and commitmentsboth political and religiousis an important dimension of social sorting and polarization, with more Americans taking more uniformly left-leaning or right-leaning positions in both politics and religion.

The relationship of politics and religion also has shifted in an additional way. Until sometime in the last third of the 20th century, adherents of certain religious denominations gravitated to the Republican party and others to the Democrats. But both partiesand their respective political campsattracted people seriously committed to their religion. That pattern has changed in recent decades with the opening of a God gap or religiosity gap. As early as the 1980s, many in the Bible Belt and those associated with the evangelical movement went from being relatively neutral on political matters to becoming highly engaged, generally with the Republican party and conservative political positions. Recent research indicates that partially in reaction, people who were less religious gravitated toward the left side of the political spectrum.

In brief, a revolution has transformed the political allegiances of large swaths of Americans: levels of religious conviction, denominational identities, worship service attendance, and other expressions and measures of religiosity correlate with how most Americans vote in elections and identify politically in surveys. Broadly speaking, religious peoplehowever measuredtend to lean Republican politically and conservative in their ideology. Their opposite numbersthe non-religious or secularoften favor Democrats and are ideologically liberal. To take just one of many research studies, the Pew Religious Landscape Study finds numerous links between measures of religiosity and political ideology (conservative-moderate-liberal). As a general phenomenon, conservatives, far more than liberals, believe in God, see religions as important, attend religious services weekly, pray daily, see religion as a guide to morality, read scripture, and believe in heaven and in hell. Any way you slice it, conservatives today are more religious, liberals are more secular, and moderates are in-between.

Levels of religious conviction, denominational identities, worship service attendance, and other expressions and measures of religiosity correlate with how most Americans vote in elections and identify politically in surveys.

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This emerging political reality has occasioned debates about cause and effect: Have Americans changed their political views because of their religious outlook, or has political partisanship driven how American think about their religion? For years, conventional wisdom favored the former explanation: religion, it was widely assumed, is the driver of political allegiances. More recently, that assumption is being questioned.

Mounting evidence suggests that social networksthe people with whom a person associatescoupled with the political outlook widely shared in those networks, influence how large numbers of Americans relate to religion. To take one piece of research that may well be indicative of larger trends, a recent Pew study found that white Americans who viewed Trump favorably and didnotidentify as evangelicals in 2016 were much more likely than white Trump skeptics tobegin identifying asborn-again or evangelical Protestants by 2020. Another straw in the wind is the drop in church membership and service attendance, alongside a decline in religious identity, due to several factors, though more concentrated on the left than the right: Over the last decade, another report found, The decline in organized religion is indeed much bigger among Democrats (-17 points) than Republicans (-7 points).

Given these seismic developments in the wider society, has there been a corresponding shift in how the politics of American Jews has aligned with their religious and ethnic commitments? Complicating this question is the knotty relationship between Jewish identity, religious commitment, and ethnic solidarity. To be a Jew, after all, is not solely about identification with a religious tradition, but also with a people, its history, culture, and values, and, since 1948, with the Jewish State of Israel. Political identities may influence Jewish religiosity or Jewish collectivity or Israel commitments, or all three. Thus the typical, political cleavages present in American society in general may not necessarily tightly map on to the many variations of Jewish commitment.

To probe these relationships, we examined survey data from the most recent national study of American Jews produced by the Pew Research Center titled Jewish Americans in 2020. Respondents were asked to identify with a political label on a spectrum ranging from very conservative to very liberal. (Though Pew offers five ideological options, we have consolidated them into three for the sake of clarity.) It quickly emerged that the familiar sorting patterns evident in American politics at large characterize a good many Jews. Jewish political liberals and conservatives have moved into two camps with distinct and exclusive ideas, behaviors, and packages of attitudes and practices, resembling and reflecting the same socio-political phenomena in the larger society, a development with serious ramifications for American Jewish life.

Consider the relationship between political ideology and Jewish religious commitments. Consistent with the larger trends in American society, on measure after measure, politically conservative Jews as a group are far more engaged with their religion than political liberals. For example, Jewish political conservatives are more than three times as likely as liberals to say that religion is very important to them (41% vs. 12%), with moderates situated between them (at 23%). This political gradienthigh-scoring conservatives, middle-range-scoring moderates, and low-scoring liberalsrecurs when we examine several other critical measures of religiosity. Almost twice as many conservatives as liberals are synagogue members (45% vs. 25%). More than three times as many attend religious services monthly (42% vs. 13%). Conservatives are far more likely than liberals to mark Shabbat in a way that makes it meaningful to you (53% vs. 33%).

Political ideology also correlates with how Jews think about the role of faith in todays society. In the 2022 American National Family Life survey, a significant gap emerged when Jews were asked whether religion causes more problems in society than it solves. Fully 69% of politically liberal Jews believe that religion is more problematic than helpful, compared to just 15% of Jewish political conservatives and 54% of political moderates. In that same survey, sharp differences emerged when respondents were asked about the role religion can play in teaching good values. Just one-third of liberal Jews (34%) believe that it is important for children to be brought up in a religion so they can learn good values. In sharp contrast, 59% of moderate Jews and 85% of politically conservative Jews feel the same way. The survey also asked if individuals must free their minds from old traditions and beliefs to understand the world today. A majority of Jewish liberals (68%) was open to rejecting tradition for the sake of modernity, compared to just a little more than one-third of Jewish conservatives (37%), with moderates once again situated in the middle at 46%.

Consistent with the larger trends in American society, on measure after measure, politically conservative Jews as a group are far more engaged with their religion than political liberals.

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Turning now to the other dimension of Jewishness, we will use the shorthand of peoplehood to denote the responsibility Jews feel to one another, meaning ethnic solidarity, a sense of family connection or some other form of collective identity and caring when Jews anywhere are facing adversity. That commitment to mutual responsibility, even more than religion, has been a glue binding Jews together, as we may infer from the fact that twice as many Jews say that being Jewish is very important to them compared to the importance they ascribe to religion (42% vs. 21%).

When asked whether being Jewish is very important to them, the majority of political conservatives answered yes, followed by a minority of moderates, and then even fewer liberals (59%, 42%, 36%). On other measures of Jewish peoplehood connections, we see even more pronounced patterns. About twice as many conservatives as liberals have mostly Jewish close friends (48% vs. 20%). Almost twice as many conservatives as liberals regard Jewish community as essential to their being Jewish (49% vs. 26%). Far larger proportions of political conservatives as compared to liberals highly value belonging to the Jewish people (67% vs. 41%), and the gap between right and left is even more pronounced with respect to feeling a great deal of responsibility to help Jews in need (50% vs. 20%). Consistent with these patterns, conservatives also do more to enact their connections. They lead liberals in making donations to Jewish charitable causes (64% report having done so in the prior year, compared to only 41% of liberals). Conservatives also are more likely to consume Jewish news (62% vs. 35%).

Given all the differences in how these political factions relate to the Jewish people, it should come as no surprise that conservatives are considerably more attached to Israel than liberals are. They are twice as likely as liberals to regard caring about Israel as essential to their being Jewish (67% vs. 33%). And the gap is even larger when respondents indicated they felt very attached to Israel (45% of conservatives and just 14% of liberals claim such a strong attachment). An even larger ratiomore than four to oneseparates conservatives and liberals when they are asked about whether they feel they have a lot in common with Israeli Jews (44% vs. 10%). Not only are conservative/liberal differences pronounced in regard to emotional connections to Israel and Israeli Jews, they surface also on questions of policy. Hardly any conservativesor moderates for that matterregard the U.S. as too supportive of Israel (6% and 8% respectively). But six times as many liberals do (40% find the U.S. too supportive of Israel).

These large gaps even appear when adherents of different political ideologies contemplate the future Jewishness of their own families. Asked about their hopes for their descendants, Jewish political conservatives are more than twice as likely as liberals to feel its very important that their current or future grandchildren identify as Jews (59% vs. 25%), and they are four times as likely to say its very important for their grandchildren to marry Jews (46% vs. 12%).

To be sure, ideology alone does not explain these pronounced patterns. Family circumstances also play a large role. Far more conservatives have Jewish family members than do liberals. More of them have two Jewish parents (77% vs. 65%). And the gap with respect to intermarriage is even wider: Just 25% of Jewish political conservatives are intermarried compared to 52% of liberals. To take one more related measure, conservatives have about three times as many Jewish children in their homes as liberals.

In sum, a large gap has opened between Jewish political conservatives and liberals (and even more so among those who identify as very liberal) on a broad range of questions measuring Jewish commitments. The question this raises is why are so many politically liberal Jews indifferent to Judaism and Jewish group solidarity?

By posing this question, it is not our intention to besmirch liberals as hopelessly lost to the Jewish people or to valorize conservatives as the saving remnant. For one thing, significant numbers of liberals continue to be committed to Judaism and Jewish collective life. For another, fully half of American Jews identify as liberals, with ever higher proportions of Jews identifying as liberal among the younger age cohorts. Writing them off makes little sense. Yet ignoring the widening chasm we have traced is counterproductive. For those concerned about the vitality of Jewish religious and communal life, the gap between adherents of the left and right is central to what we may describe as the great American Jewish resignation from identification and affiliation. And that resignation is far more prevalent on the liberal side of the spectrum than on the conservative one, hence our sharp focus on the former.

In point of fact, the liberal-conservative gap we have delineated can be traced back at least to the late 1980s, if not earlier, though it has grown steadily wider. The 1990 National Jewish Population Survey and Pews Jewish Americans in 2020 both show the same patterns in regard to varieties of Jewish involvement (as does the 2013 Pew study). Political conservatives out-score liberals on almost every measure of religious and peoplehood involvement appearing in these three surveys. Taking nine measures that appear in the 1990, 2013, and 2020 surveys, we find that levels of Jewish engagement among conservatives held steady at around 60%. In sharp contrast, the average score for liberals dropped over 30 years, going from 44% to 40% to 36% by 2020. To cite a few examples of declining participation by liberals, Yom Kippur fasting dropped from 50% in 1990 to 41% in 2020. Donating to Jewish causes went from 52% down to 41%. And when asked about having mostly Jewish close friends, nearly a third (31%) of liberals had them in 1990, whereas only one-fifth did in 2020. In other words, the conservative/liberal gap widened, not because conservatives become more Jewishly engagedthey held steadybut because liberals experienced notable drops in Jewish engagement over the years.

The liberal-conservative gap we have delineated can be traced back at least to the late 1980s, if not earlier, though it has grown steadily wider.

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Consistent with this longer-term trend, the age of survey respondents in 2020 makes a great deal of difference. Among liberals 65 and over, 50% say they feel strongly about belonging to the Jewish people. The number drops with age, reaching a mere 27% among those 18-29. We see similar age-related declines among liberals on other measures, including donating to Jewish charities (57% vs. 21%), having mostly Jewish close friends (36% vs. 12%), feeling very attached to Israel (19% vs. 10%), and feeling that being Jewish is very important in ones life (42% vs. 26%). Todays older liberals are much more engaged in Jewish life than their younger ideological allies, consistent with our finding that liberals in our time are less Jewishly engaged than those 30 years ago.

The data we have at present are insufficient to determine causal order. We do not know if liberals became more distant from Judaism and the Jewish people, or whether those who are Jewishly distant migrated to the liberal camp. But we do know that liberals identify less with Jewish religious and communal life than conservatives todayand that this process has been underway for over 30 years. The widening of the gap is not due to recent events, such as the Trump presidency or Israels decreasing popularity with Democrats and liberals. Rather, other factors have been at work, undoubtedly resembling similar patterns in American society at large.

To shed some light on these developments, we turn to some of those broader trends and the fact that as Americans have sorted and polarized, political conservatives have tended to embrace religious and communal commitments, while liberals have increasingly shied away from religious institutions, with many proclaiming themselves to be agnostic or atheist. In a recent survey (2021), Pew found that three quarters (73%) of those in the GOP believe that religious institutions are good for society, compared to only 49% of Democrats. In fact, looking at the trend data since 2010, we see stability in the positive attitudes of Republicans toward religious institutions, but a notable increase in negativity among those who identify as Democrats. Put somewhat differently, the Pew Research Center has found that the percentage of liberals who believe that churches and religious organizations positively contribute to society dropped from nearly half (49%) in 2010 to only one-third (33%) by 2019.

The widening of the gap is not due to recent events, such as the Trump presidency or Israels decreasing popularity with Democrats and liberals.

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These current attitudes stand in marked contrast to the scene in the middle of the 20th century: America then had an abundance of religiously committed liberals and liberally inclined theologians, such as Reinhold Niebuhr, Martin Luther King, William Sloane Coffin, and Abraham Joshua Heschel, to name but a few who typified the nexus of liberalism with religiosity. Certainly liberal churches still exist and some thrive, but many church-goers prefer ideological homogeneity. Its hard to think of more than a handful of national leaders in the politically liberal camp today who identify strongly with their religion. Senator Raphael Warnock of Georgia is an exception and both President Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi are Catholic and take Communion but are less overtly religious than leaders in earlier generations. Here, then, is the broader context in which politically liberal American Jews find themselves, an ideological environment not warmly disposed to religion, to put it mildly, and one that regards particularistic allegiances to white ethnic groups as anachronistic, if not a form of white supremacy. Little wonder that many Jewish liberals are distancing themselves from Jewish religiosity and communal needs.

Beyond this context, we might ask whether there are aspects of current liberal attitudes that are undermining Jewish commitments. We identify four such elements that are considerably more characteristic of liberals and, by extension, Jewish liberals, than conservatives.

1. The elevation of the autonomous self and its wants. As Robert Bellah and associates richly explained nearly 40 years ago, Americans have a long history of balancing rugged individualism with community commitments. Over the past decades, the latter have faded while the former has strengthened. Wherever one turns today, we are confronted with the assertion of individual autonomy, with demands that we attend to each individuals version of truth. On the Jewish scene already two decades ago, Steven M. Cohen and Arnold Eisen in their book, The Jew Within: Self, Family, and Community in America, identified the impact of the sovereign self on the ways moderately engaged Jews enact their Jewishness. Since then, Jewish institutional life has contended with ever more insistence on the part of many that it must change to accommodate their needsor else they will leave. Jewish institutions are widely decried as insufficiently nimble to satisfy the disparateand contradictorywants of the many autonomous selves now demanding that they get their way. And pace The Jew Within, much of Jewish life for many has become privatized, enacted only in the confines of peoples minds, homes, and families. Liberals, it seems, are far more inclined than conservatives to favor unfettered autonomy.

2. The triumph of the DIY lifestyle. An outgrowth of radical autonomy, Do It Yourself Jewishness now adopts and abandons, mixes and matches. Jews are encouraged to create their own understanding of Jewishness, consistent with what they find personally meaningful. Inherited Jewish traditions are deemed outmoded. Not only is Judaism no longer seen as a package of obligations and commandments; it now is treated as endlessly plastic. While suitable for liberals, this approach does not work well for conservatives who continue to embrace tradition, law, and institutional norms. In general, conservatives (more than liberals) hold that faith and belief cannot be cherry-picked and followed only when convenient or personally meaningful.

3. The rise of identity politics. Liberal culture has come to valorize group identities based on what may be called victim status. Sexual orientation, minority group identity, gender, and disability are seen as legitimate bases for social identity and for claiming respect, if not privilege. In contrast, group identities based on ancestral culturessuch as being Jewish or of white European ethnicitiesare not similarly valued. Undoing victimization and privileging the once marginalized are the primary goals of group identification, according to current liberal thinking. By contrast, maintaining religious communities, ethnic solidarity, and Jewish group continuity appeal to conservatives but not liberals. Not surprisingly, Israel, the nation state of the Jewish people, once lauded by Democrats (and Socialists), now finds far more favor among Republicans.

4. The prioritization of universalism over particularism. Perhaps, most famously expressed by John Lennons song, the world is imagined to be a far better place without religion, countries, and possessions. Within American Jewry this orientation undergirds much of the talk aboutrepairing the world (tikkun olam). For growing numbers of American Jews, especially those on the cultural and political left, social action is central to their self-understanding as Jews. In the Pew 2020 Pew study, just shy of two-thirds of liberals viewed social justice engagement as essential to their Jewishness, while only one-quarter viewed belonging to a Jewish community as equally important and only one-third said support of Israel is essential to their Jewishness. (Conservatives ranked belonging to a Jewish community and caring about Israel higher than social justice.) Differences in priorities are unmistakable but our point here is that many in the Jewish community todayespecially among the rank-and-filetreat tikkun olam as the most important commandment of Judaism. The view is endorsed and encouraged by some rabbis to the near exclusion of other Jewish values, such as caring for fellow Jews, observing the rituals of Judaism, and supporting Jewish communal institutions. For a significant sector of the liberal Jewish population, non-sectarian and global concerns take priority over Jewish needs.

The disengagement from Jewish life by some on the left is neither novel nor especially surprising. After all, theres a long history of Jews identified with the far left who have rejected religion and feeling responsible for the Jewish people. But the masses of American Jews who identified with political liberalism thought differently. They saw no tension between their commitments to aid fellow Jews while also supporting non-sectarian causes. Nor did they indict their religion as the source of human failings. Twentieth century Jewish liberals often were leaders of federations of Jewish philanthropy, defense organizations, social service agencies, and Jewish educational and religious institutions. During the 1960s, baby boomers seeking to make their mark on American Jewish life were committed to anti-war protests and the Civil Rights movement, as well as labor unionseven as they marched to free Soviet Jewry and defend the embattled State of Israel. While in our time it is not uncommon for Jewish progressives to ridicule efforts to ensure Jewish continuity, youthful activists in the early 1970s critiqued Jewish organizations for investing too little in Jewish education and too much in Jewish health care facilities that no longer served a primarily Jewish clientele. In that era, too, the Jewish left produced the Havurah fellowships, the turn to neo-Hasidism, significant aliyah to Israel, Jewish feminism, and mass demonstrations in support of Jewish causes. Undoubtedly, some on todays Jewish left passionately share similar Jewish commitments. But the data we have cited point to the indifference of many Jewish liberals todayparticularly younger adultsto most forms of Jewish particularism, religious life, and positive identification with Israel as a Jewish state.

How might this situation change in the direction of greater involvement by political liberals in Jewish life? Its possible that American society, including political liberals, will re-embrace religious commitment and a more positive approach to cultural heritage. The pendulum may swing back: Americans may come to place more value on association, cooperative work, and volunteering. Just as trends in the wider society have pushed liberal Jews in the past to distance themselves from their religious and collective needs, a broader shift in attitudes may make Jewish particularism more attractive. Not least, rising levels of antisemitism may accelerate these changes.

There also are possibilities for some rebalancing of priorities within the American Jewish community. Reform, we expect, would have to come from inside the camp of Jewish liberals. Sobered by findings such as those we report, liberal-minded leaders may take up the challenge of rebuffing ideas and influencers undermining participation in Jewish religious and communal activities. In all likelihood, only highly respected and credible liberals committed to Jewish lifeand there still are tens of thousands of themhave a reasonable chance to reverse the Jewish commitment gap we have highlighted. They are best-positioned to make the case to their ideological allies for the compatibility of liberalism with active participation in Jewish communal and religious endeavors and reject those aspects of left-leaning thinking inimical to Jewish life.

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Whatever Happened to the 'Pro-Jewish' Left? - Tablet Magazine

"The Button Box" Explores a Muslim-Jewish Friendship With Time Travel – Jewish Journal

Posted By on June 26, 2022

In The Button Box, a new middle grade novel, a Muslim-Jewish friendship is at the center of an exciting time-travel tale.

Ava, a Sephardic Jewish girl, and her cousin and best friend Nadeem, who is Muslim, are bullied at school because of their religions. When the two girls go to their Granny Buenas home to talk to her about the incident, they discover a magical button that sends them back in time to ancient Morocco.

Its in that colorful and lively setting that they meet their ancestors and embark on a thrilling adventure. The Button Box is based on real events that took place during the convivencia period in medieval Spain, where Jews, Muslims and Christians lived together in peace.

The book was co-written by Bridget Hodder, a Sephardic Jew and the daughter and granddaughter of Holocaust survivors, and Fawzia Gilani-Williams, who is Muslim.

Fawzia and I are very much aware that as our communities face increasingly emboldened acts of violence and hatred, and Leviticus 19:16 calls upon us to not stand idly by, said Hodder. The Button Box is, in part, an answer to that call.

Hodder wrote the first draft of the book with the support of an Author Incentive Award from PJ Library and the Harold Grinspoon Foundation. But when she finished it, she felt like it was missing something.

The book needed not only a Sephardic Jewish main character, but a Muslim one as well. Bridget Hodder

It turns out the something missing was Fawzia, she said. I had always known that the history of the Sephardim in Golden Age Spain and Morocco, where the adventures in The Button Box take place, was deeply intertwined with Muslim history. But for some reason, I hadnt thought it through. The book needed not only a Sephardic Jewish main character, but a Muslim one as well.

Bridget Hodder

Gilani-Williams had previously written an interfaith picture book called, Yaffa and Fatima: Shalom, Salaam, which is about two neighbors one is Jewish and one is Muslim who are best friends.

[Gilani-Williams] was the authentic, beautiful voice Id been waiting for, said Hodder. Once we started working together, we never looked back.

It was important to Hodder to write a book thats focused on Sephardic Jewish culture because of her family background. Her grandmother was born in the Ottoman Empire, in the Jewish city of Salonica; the Greeks handed over the Jews to be exterminated by the Nazis in World War II.

Even the homes and graves of the Jews of Salonica have been razed and built over, she said. But our spirit will not die.

She hopes that readers will learn about why its appropriate to step up and defend themselves from harm in the face of bullying.

She hopes that readers will learn about why its appropriate to step up and defend themselves from harm in the face of bullying. There are also many fun aspects of Sephardic culture they can dive into in the pages of the book, including descriptions of Mediterranean, Baltic and Middle Eastern food and old sayings.

[A lesser known] Sephardic custom is quoting old sayings at any opportunity, a habit Ive inherited, said Hodder. Youll find them throughout the book, including sayings in Ladino, the Sephardic language based on archaic Spanish. Its our parallel for Yiddish.

Hodder and Gilani-Williams want to educate children in the United States about Jewish and Muslim beliefs with their book, too.

How can they stand up and counter hateful nonsense about Jewish conspiracy theories, for example, when they have no actual facts? said Hodder. With this in mind, we provided a brief general information section in the back of the book, which should give non-Jewish and non-Muslim readers some basic tools for knowing and spreading truth. We hope it ends up in classrooms.

Through exciting storytelling and a classic friendship tale, the authors strive to entertain readers while opening their eyes to new information at the same time.

The best books are always the ones where you pick up wisdom along the way, without feeling taught, said Hodder. So first and foremost, we hope readers enjoy the adventure so much that they dont realize theyre learning while they read.

The Button Box is available through Kar-Ben Publishing.

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"The Button Box" Explores a Muslim-Jewish Friendship With Time Travel - Jewish Journal

The documentarian and producer of Jewish film at the center of Jan. 6 hearings – Jewish Insider

Posted By on June 26, 2022

British filmmaker Alex Holder, whose raw footage of former President Donald Trumps inner circle and as-yet-unseen footage of the Capitol riot has attracted attention from the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack, is no stranger to having his films aired on the biggest stages. His 2016 documentary Keep Quiet, which follows far-right Hungarian politician Csand Szegedi on an improbable journey toward embracing his Jewish heritage, had its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival in Manhattan.

Holder has complied with a subpoena from the House Select Committee and will reportedly share raw footage of interviews with Trump and his family leading up to the election, as well as footage of the Capitol riot. He will appear before the committee on Thursday.

As a British filmmaker, I had no agenda coming into this. We simply wanted to better understand who the Trumps were, Holder said on Tuesday in a statement on Twitter.

Holder was initially connected to Trumps son-in-law, Jared Kushner, by Middle East envoy Jason Greenblatt.

His film about Szegedi follows the neo-Nazi leader and deputy head of Hungarys nationalist Jobbik party as he discovers his Jewish roots, learning that his maternal grandparents were Jews. He befriends a rabbi, leaves the Jobbik party, visits Auschwitz and eventually becomes an Orthodox Jew.

Holder began filming Trump and his inner circle in September 2020 for a three-part documentary on Trumps presidential campaign.

The committee reportedly is interested in three areas from Holders raw footage: the unseen footage of the Jan. 6 riot; interviews from September 2020 to the present with Trump, former Vice President Mike Pence and several Trump family members; and footage pertaining to discussions of election fraud or election integrity surrounding the November 2020 presidential election.

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The documentarian and producer of Jewish film at the center of Jan. 6 hearings - Jewish Insider

Activist Ana Maria Archila is running for lieutenant governor of New York with the help of progressive Jews – Forward

Posted By on June 26, 2022

Ana Maria Archila at a NYC rally protesting the Supreme Court's abortion ruling on June 25, 2022 Photo by Gili Getz

By Jacob KornbluhJune 26, 2022

The Supreme Court abortion ruling on Friday drew mass nationwide protests, with Democrats hoping it would mobilize voters to the polls in the midterm elections. For Ana Maria Archila, an ally of progressive Jewish activists and candidate for lieutenant governor of New York, the call to action could be put to test in Tuesdays Democratic primaries.

Archila, 43, gained national attention in 2018 when she confronted then-Sen. Jeff Flake, a Republican from Arizona, in an elevator to protest the confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who was facing allegations of sexual assault. I knew that this is the day that we were trying to prevent when we were trying to push back against the nomination of Kavanaugh, Archila said in an interview on Friday.

She said that she knew at the time that Sens. Susan Collins, a Republican from Maine, and Joe Manchin, a Democrat from West Virginia, were misled when Kavanaugh assured them that he would not end the landmark 1973 decision to protect the right to an abortion to secure their votes.

Archila said that while the ruling was demoralizing, it is an opportunity to turn her fear into action and invited people to turn their pain into efforts to protect one another and to make sure that we show our outrage on election day.

We can see the light at the end of the tunnel that we can force our elected leaders, who always act as if the worst thing would never happen, to take our concerns seriously, she added.

Even before the Supreme Court decision was made public, Archila saw growing momentum in a close race against Antonio Delgado, the newly-appointed lieutenant governor and Gov. Kathy Hochuls running mate. She was chosen as the running mate of Jumaane Williams, the New York City Public Advocate, who is challenging Hochul from the left. In New York, lieutenant governors run on their own in primaries and as a joint ticket with the gubernatorial nominee in the general elections. While Hochul has a commanding lead over her primary rivals, progressives are hoping to score a win for the second-in-command position.

Archila was recently endorsed by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who invited her to the State of the Union as her guest in 2019.

She is also backed by Ady Barkan, a prominent Jewish liberal activist who was diagnosed with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrigs disease. Archila, who is an immigrant from Colombia, said Barkan embodies the values of the progressive tradition and suggested that her campaign theme of fighting for a more just society and building a multiracial alliance where every single community feels welcome and represented is central to the progressive Jewish tradition, a vision of interdependence.

The two met in 2010 when Barkan joined Make the Road New York, a grassroots immigration-led organization, as an attorney. Archila was co-executive director along with Andrew Friedman, who is also Jewish. Barkan and Archila became close friends and also worked together at the Center for Popular Democracy, which she headed before running for office. In our conversations, we always talked about the interconnectedness of our struggles, she said.

Barkan, who himself confronted Flake in 2017 on a plane from Washington, D.C. over the GOP tax reform bill, was also very active in the fight against Kavanaughs confirmation.

Archila recalled the attacks by former President Donald Trump, who came under fire for invoking an antisemitic dog whistle by claiming Jewish billionaire George Soros was behind the protests. Trump was also seeking to rally his base by flirting with conspiracy theories about the Democrats being behind the arrival of caravans with migrants from Central America.

That is the antisemitic, patriarchal, white supremacist ideology that Trump very effortlessly connected in his political discourse and used to agitate people, she said, adding that the deadly shooting at the Tree of life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, which occurred a few weeks after the Kavanaugh protests, was proof that these attacks could have deadly consequences.

Archila said that if she wins the Democratic primary she will partner with Hochul, who could face a tough re-election bid in the fall against Rep. Lee Zeldin, the possible Republican nominee, and boost her campaign by energizing the base and bringing them to the polls.

The Jewish Vote, formed in 2018 by leaders of Jews For Racial & Economic Justice (JFREJ), recently held a pickles to the polls rally in Brooklyn to get out the vote for Archila and other progressive candidates.

Jacob Kornbluh is the Forwards senior political reporter. Follow him on Twitter @jacobkornbluh or email kornbluh@forward.com.

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Activist Ana Maria Archila is running for lieutenant governor of New York with the help of progressive Jews - Forward

Faulty lithium batteries caused the fire that killed Jewish family in Buenos Aires – MercoPress

Posted By on June 26, 2022

Saturday, June 25th 2022 - 09:44 UTC Isaac Jabbaz (55), Sofia's husband and the father of all the children, is still hospitalized in a delicate condition

Argentine prosecutors handling the case of Thursday's fire at a building in Buenos Aires' Recoleta neighborhood where 5 members of a Jewish family were killed Friday explained that according to preliminary forensic assessments the cause of ignition was a faulty skateboard lithium battery.

The origin of the fire was the lithium batteries of a skateboard that was in the living room, prosecutor Sebastin Fedullo said. The batteries began to emit flames causing the fire, but at no time did they explode, according to expert reports. In addition to the five victims, 31 other people were rushed to various hospitals due to the large amounts of smoke they had inhaled.

Sometimes an effect is generated as if it were a flare, which produces a flame that then it spreads, he added. It could have been due to overloading, exposure to the sun or internal failure, but that will be determined by the experts, at a later stage, Fedullo argued.

Sofia Kabudi (53) and her children Rafi Jabbaz (3), Orly Jabbaz (7), Esther Jabbaz (9), and Camila Jabbaz (17) died from carbon monoxide inhalation, according to the autopsies. Isaac Jabbaz (55), Sofia's husband and the father of all the children, was among those hospitalized. He was said to be in a delicate condition.

The fire started at 5.50 a.m. on Thursday on the seventh floor, when the family was sleeping, and quickly spread to the upper floor, so occupants of the entire building needed to be evacuated.

So far, an inspection of the whole structure was carried out by the City Government's emergency services personnel, who have already said that there was no risk either to the damaged apartments or to the rest of the building, Recoleta Firefighter Station Chief Juan Carlos Giordano told reporters.

Presidential spokeswoman Gabriela Cerruti expressed the desolation of the national government in the face of the fire and sent condolences to the families of the victims.

Jewish welfare association AMIA also sent its condolences to the loved ones of the people who died in the terrible fire that took place early this morning in the building on Ecuador Street and longed for the prompt recovery of those injured in this tragedy that saddens the whole society.

Also, as investigators said on Thursday, the fire that broke out in the apartment on the seventh floor of the building on Ecuador Street was caused by a lithium battery from a skateboard.

The remains of the five victims were also given funeral services Friday, which were attended by hundreds of members of the Jewish community before the burial at the Bene Emeth cemetery in Lomas de Zamora in the southern outskirts of the Argentine capital.

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Faulty lithium batteries caused the fire that killed Jewish family in Buenos Aires - MercoPress

The Report of the Jews’ Death ‘Has Been Grossly Exaggerated’ – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on June 26, 2022

Recently, Russian President Vladimir Putin misquoted Mark Twain about the Russian presidents cancer: The rumors about my death were greatly exaggerated, Putin was quoted as saying about his cancer byFortuneandThe Guardian. Mark Twain had actually said about an illness: The report of my death has been grossly exaggerated. The same assessment by Mark Twain also applies to the Jews and the great American authors view of them, as in his remarkable article, Concerning the Jews,publishedbyHarpers Magazinein March, 1898:

If the statistics are right, the Jews constitute but one per cent. of the human race. It suggests a nebulous dim puff of star-dust lost in the blaze of the Milky Way. Properly the Jew ought hardly to be heard of; but he is heard of, has always been heard of. He is as prominent on the planet as any other people, and his commercial importance is extravagantly out of proportion to the smallness of his bulk. His contributions to the worlds list of great names in literature, science, art, music, finance, medicine, and abstruse learning are also away out of proportion to the weakness of his numbers.

He has made a marvellous fight in this world, in all the ages; and has done it with his hands tied behind him. He could be vain of himself, and be excused for it. The Egyptian, the Babylonian, and the Persian rose, filled the planet with sound and splendor, then faded to dream-stuff and passed away; the Greek and the Roman followed, and made a vast noise, and they are gone; other peoples have sprung up and held their torch high for a time, but it burned out, and they sit in twilight now, or have vanished.

The Jew saw them all, beat them all, and is now what he always was, exhibiting no decadence, no infirmities of age, no weakening of his parts, no slowing of his energies, no dulling of his alert and aggressive mind. All things are mortal but the Jew; all other forces pass, but he remains. What is the secret of his immortality?

{Reposted from the Gatestone Institute website}

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The Report of the Jews' Death 'Has Been Grossly Exaggerated' - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

New judge on the bench – Australian Jewish News

Posted By on June 26, 2022

A CAREER counsellors advice paved the way for a law career that will this week see Judge Peter Rozen welcomed to the bench at the County Court of Victoria.

Speaking to The AJN, the Jewish judge recalled a visit by a career guidance counsellor when he was in secondary school.

After asking him about his future calling and hearing from him that he was passionate about the English language and its construction the counsellor made a recommendation. She suggested law, said Rozen. The senior high school student heeded her advice.

After completing legal studies, Rozen, now 59, worked as a solicitor at law firm Maurice Blackburn, specialising in workers compensation cases, before being admitted as a barrister and solicitor of the Supreme Court of Victoria in 1988. He signed the Victorian Bar Roll in 1998 and was appointed Queens Counsel in 2019.

That year, Rozen was appointed senior counsel assisting the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety, a role he found very interesting and very demanding. In 2021, he served as counsel assisting in the St Basils nursing home inquest.

Rozen was also counsel assisting the Royal Commission into the 2009 Black Saturday bushfires, and performed a similar role in the inquiry into the Hazelwood mine fire at Morwell.

For 12 years, he was a part-time teacher at the University of Melbourne Law School.

Rozen has specialised in occupational health and safety (OHS) and in employment law.

He has co-authored a textbook, Health and Safety Law in Victoria, now in its fourth edition, which details the Victorian OHS legislation and places it in the context of similar laws in other jurisdictions.

The new judge is among four appointments to the County and Coroners Courts, including former deputy state coroner Caitlin English, who becomes a County Court judge, while former coroner Jacqueline Hawkins becomes a magistrate and Deputy State Coroner, and barrister Catherine Fitzgerald becomes Coroner.

Attorney-General Jaclyn Symes congratulated the new appointees.

I commend these well-deserved appointments and look forward to their continued strong contribution to the County and Coroners Courts of Victoria. These appointments bring broad and extensive experience from their respective legal careers and will be excellent additions to the Victorian court system.

A customary welcome sitting for new Judge Peter Rozen was held in on Thursday, hosted by Kathy Wilson, a council member of the Law Institute of Victoria.

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New judge on the bench - Australian Jewish News

Synagogue windows blaze with color and surreal style – Times Union

Posted By on June 26, 2022

SCHENECTADY The eight synagogue windows glow with rich colors that flow across the congregation as the sunlight moves across the sky.

Look closer and it's clear that Congregation Gates of Heaven's windows are not mere glass. Each is divided into round, rectangular and pebble sized cells, each one a deep hue. Eight windows depict Jewish holidays and Bible stories. The Rosh Hashanah window's apples are a ruby color so real, a tiny sparrow flutters outside pecking at it, trying to nibble. The Creation Window features planets, oceans and fish flowing in the cosmos. And there are windows made of fragments of sapphire, azure, indigo and cobalt blue to represent a night sky dotted with gold and silver stars.

Artist Charles Van Atten, a Schenectady native and alum of Boston's Museum of Fine Arts School, created the windows in 1962 at a time when the great Pablo Picasso was a household name, like Chevy or Superman. (His influence can be detected in beautiful abstractions like a swarm of smoke that looks like a smoky cloud curling around a golden hive in the Rosh Hashanah window). And plastics were still viewedas a space age material with artistic potential.

Van Atten was a well-known colorist who used mosaic plasti-glass in the Gates windows to make the colors deeper than normally seen in stained glass. The designs are composed of cells, like inlays, an inch thick. Instead of painting onto stained glass, Van Atten poured colorants into each cell then added pulverized stained glass. Van Atten proudly described the material as "made from the finest resins and glass fibers, colorants, granulated stained glass and specially constructed 3-D design cells ... to provide an atmosphere of brilliant distinction.

He added that a key advantage of the material is that the colors and designs can be seen from outside the building, not just inside the sanctuary. That was important to the congregants who donated the windows, Henry and Sally Schaffer.

"They wanted someone walking or driving along outside to be able to see and enjoy the illuminated windows. They wanted the beauty to be a gift to the entire community, not just worshippers inside the sanctuary," Rabbi Matt Cutler explained.

In fact, the colors are as brilliant today as they probably were when newly minted. Gates operations director Josh Cooper-Ginsburg, clearly loves the colorful array. And Cooper-Ginsburg, who is a millennial and gay, also appreciates his synagogue flying the vivid colors of the LGBTQ rainbow flag.

"It's not just a symbol. Here, it's an actual welcome," he said, recalling a recent worship service when several converts to Judaism were welcomed into the congregation. All of them were LGBTQ community members.

He adds that sometimes it can be a struggle to fill the pews, even with COVID distancing adding spaces to the seating. But he's hopeful that more Gen Zers and millennials longing for a spiritual home or comrades in their fight for social justice will discover Gates of Heaven.

The Gates congregation dates back to 1854 and met in homes and several buildings before moving into the synagogue just off Eastern Parkway in 1956. The windows were installed in 1964, less than 20 years after World War II and the Holocaust. Some of the windows seem to reflect how the fragility of life as well as hope for the future. The Redemption window features a huge menorah under an olive tree where menacing, silver swords are slowly transforming into plowshares.

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Synagogue windows blaze with color and surreal style - Times Union

I was the first Sunday school teacher of the Synagogue – TB Joshua’s widow | The ICIR – ICIR

Posted By on June 26, 2022

THE wife of the late Prophet Temitope Joshua, Mrs Evelyn Joshua, has said that her first role in the Synagogue Church of all Nations (SCOAN) was as a Sunday School teacher.

Evelyn made these remarks during the one-year anniversary of her husbands death on June 5, 2022.

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She said the late prophet thought her several things, noting that he was a man of prayer and it was that that led her to him.

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When we started the church, we sat on mats, we sat on wooden chairs. I became the first Sunday school teacher in the church and here we are today, she said.

The widow, who now heads the church, noted that she became a vegetarian because of him and fought for love and attention, adding that two women, Madam Victoria Akinola and Mrs Felicia Olowofela, helped her adapt to him, according to the News Express YouTube channel.

After Joshuas death suddenly seven days to his 58th birthday, SCOAN was closed for six months and resumed service on December 5, 2021, with limited attendance.

A succession crisis had ensued between the Joshua family, led by Evelyn, and some close followers of the founder who argued they should fill the vacant leadership position by virtue of how Joshua had held them dear in the administration of the church.

Eventually, Evelyn triumphed via a court suit FHC/L/CP/1109/2021 and court judgment, which pronounced her chairperson of the churchs Board of Trustees.

Experienced Business reporter seeking the truth and upholding justice. Covered capital markets, aviation, maritime, road and rail, as well as economy. Email tips to jolaoluwa@icirnigeria.org

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I was the first Sunday school teacher of the Synagogue - TB Joshua's widow | The ICIR - ICIR


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