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Guildford Waterstones bookshop has the UK’s oldest synagogue buried beneath it – Surrey Live

Posted By on June 26, 2022

You never quite know what you'll find if you dig deep enough in a place as steeped in history as Surrey. In 1996, renovation work at the Waterstones bookshop on Guildford High Street revealed a beautiful medieval chamber, believed to have been buried for 700 years. Subsequent analysis from archaeologists suggested that the room was part of a Jewish synagogue from about 1180, which would make it the oldest synagogue in the UK.

According to the travel website Atlas Obscura, the chamber itself "was ornately decorated with four columns, niches, a stone bench surrounding the whole chamber, and there is also evidence of a tiled floor. This all suggests that it was a high-status site."

The stone steps leading down to the room's remains seem to show a place that kept a low profile, which would make sense because Jewish people in 12th-century Britain faced horrendous oppression. It is likely that the synagogue was abandoned when King Edward I started banishing Jews from English towns in the 1270s.

READ MORE: How Surrey village rid its 17th century reputation of being most dangerous in England

The oldest continuously used synagogue in the country is the Bevis Marks Synagogue in London, which was built in the late 1600s. To have found a synagogue in Guildford that pre-dates that site by around 500 years was a discovery of enormous historical significance.

Speaking at the time of its discovery, Rabbi Alex Goldberg, Dean of Religious Life at the University of Surrey, said: "It is significant because it looks like it's one of the oldest synagogues, or remnants of a synagogue, in western Europe. It also reveals religious history in the heart of Surrey in the 12th and 13th century."

A few historians have cast doubt on whether the chamber really was part of a synagogue. It was unusual in the 12th-century for such a building to be made from stone, leading some to surmise that it was actually a townhouse of some kind. While members of the excavation team have said that the building's most likely use was as a synagogue, it has never been conclusively proven and may never be.

Most people passing by on the high street today would see no evidence of its existence, although it is commemorated by the Waterstones branch now standing on the site. Despite its low profile, it remains one of the most important sites in the history of Judaism in the UK, and it lies right in the heart of our county town.

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Guildford Waterstones bookshop has the UK's oldest synagogue buried beneath it - Surrey Live

ACLU, Planned Parenthood to ask for emergency injunction in response to 15-week abortion ban – WESH 2 Orlando

Posted By on June 26, 2022

A state court is being asked to block a new Florida law, which bans most abortions after 15 weeks just days after the U.S. Supreme Court majority overturned a landmark case that had provided constitutional protections for women seeking abortions for almost 50 years.The American Civil Liberties Union, Planned Parenthood and other reproductive health providers on Monday are asking a Florida judge in Tallahassee to issue a temporary, emergency injunction stopping the new law passed by Florida Legislature from taking effect on Friday.The new law prohibits abortions beyond 15 weeks, except to save the pregnant woman's life or prevent physical harm, as well as in cases where the fetus has a fatal abnormality.Under current law, Florida had allowed abortions up to 24 weeks."The ban is blatantly unconstitutional under the state constitution," ACLU of Florida said in a statement.In 1980, Florida voters amended the state constitution to guarantee a broad right of privacy, which includes the right to abortion, the civil rights groups and abortion providers said in court papers.Florida voters reaffirmed the right to privacy again in 2012 by rejecting a ballot initiative that would have limited its scope and would have prohibited state courts from interpreting the Florida Constitution to provide stronger protection for abortion than the U.S. constitution, they said."Despite Florida's history of protecting the right to abortion, the Florida legislature recently engaged in a brazen attempt to override the will of the Florida people," the civil rights groups and abortion providers said.The state of Florida in court papers asked the Florida judge to reject the request, saying those who are challenging the lawsuit have failed to show they will suffer "irreparable harm" if the injunction isn't granted.The state of Florida also argued that the abortion providers and civil rights groups don't have standing to make a claim of a personal right to privacy since they are acting as third parties on behalf of their patients."In other words, doctors are not irreparably harmed simply because they cannot perform a procedure prohibited by state law," attorneys for the state of Florida said.Separately, a South Florida synagogue also is challenging the legality of Florida's new abortion law, claiming it violates religious freedom rights of Jews in addition to the state constitution's privacy protections.The lawsuit filed by the Congregation L'Dor Va-Dor of Boynton Beach contends the law violates Jewish teachings, which state abortion "is required if necessary to protect the health, mental or physical well-being of the woman" and for other reasons.The Florida law mirrors a similar measure passed in Mississippi, which a majority of the U.S. Supreme Court used to overturn the Roe v. Wade decision.

A state court is being asked to block a new Florida law, which bans most abortions after 15 weeks just days after the U.S. Supreme Court majority overturned a landmark case that had provided constitutional protections for women seeking abortions for almost 50 years.

The American Civil Liberties Union, Planned Parenthood and other reproductive health providers on Monday are asking a Florida judge in Tallahassee to issue a temporary, emergency injunction stopping the new law passed by Florida Legislature from taking effect on Friday.

The new law prohibits abortions beyond 15 weeks, except to save the pregnant woman's life or prevent physical harm, as well as in cases where the fetus has a fatal abnormality.

Under current law, Florida had allowed abortions up to 24 weeks.

"The ban is blatantly unconstitutional under the state constitution," ACLU of Florida said in a statement.

In 1980, Florida voters amended the state constitution to guarantee a broad right of privacy, which includes the right to abortion, the civil rights groups and abortion providers said in court papers.

Florida voters reaffirmed the right to privacy again in 2012 by rejecting a ballot initiative that would have limited its scope and would have prohibited state courts from interpreting the Florida Constitution to provide stronger protection for abortion than the U.S. constitution, they said.

"Despite Florida's history of protecting the right to abortion, the Florida legislature recently engaged in a brazen attempt to override the will of the Florida people," the civil rights groups and abortion providers said.

The state of Florida in court papers asked the Florida judge to reject the request, saying those who are challenging the lawsuit have failed to show they will suffer "irreparable harm" if the injunction isn't granted.

The state of Florida also argued that the abortion providers and civil rights groups don't have standing to make a claim of a personal right to privacy since they are acting as third parties on behalf of their patients.

"In other words, doctors are not irreparably harmed simply because they cannot perform a procedure prohibited by state law," attorneys for the state of Florida said.

Separately, a South Florida synagogue also is challenging the legality of Florida's new abortion law, claiming it violates religious freedom rights of Jews in addition to the state constitution's privacy protections.

The lawsuit filed by the Congregation L'Dor Va-Dor of Boynton Beach contends the law violates Jewish teachings, which state abortion "is required if necessary to protect the health, mental or physical well-being of the woman" and for other reasons.

The Florida law mirrors a similar measure passed in Mississippi, which a majority of the U.S. Supreme Court used to overturn the Roe v. Wade decision.

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ACLU, Planned Parenthood to ask for emergency injunction in response to 15-week abortion ban - WESH 2 Orlando

Burlingtons Lost Mural Is Restored to its Original Glory – Seven Days

Posted By on June 26, 2022

In 1910, a 24-year-old Lithuanian immigrant and professional sign painter named Ben Zion Black created a vibrant mural in the sanctuary of a synagogue on Hyde Street in Burlington's Old North End. For his work, the congregation paid him $200. The 22-foot-wide, 10-foot-high triptych rendered in an Eastern European folk-art style features the Ten Commandments in its center, bathed in the sun's rays and flanked by golden lions. Billowy blue-and-red curtains and stately pillars fill the side panels.

Little did Black know that his artwork, which is now displayed in the entryway of Ohavi Zedek Synagogue on North Prospect Street, would one day become an international treasure or that members of Burlington's Jewish community would spend years raising $1 million and assembling a large team to protect, move, clean and restore it.

This month, after years of painstaking work, the restoration of Black's artwork which has become known as the "Lost Mural" was finally finished. A celebration on June 28 will mark the occasion. It will honor former Vermont governor and Jewish immigrant Madeleine Kunin, who helped fundraise for the mural, and feature Nisht Geferlach Klezmer Band, Vermont's only klezmer group.

"I think a lot of people are astonished by the communal effort that went into this project," said Aaron Goldberg, retired Ohavi Zedek archivist and cofounder of the Lost Mural Project. The restored work tells a multifaceted story that encompasses culture, art, history and religion, he said.

Also notable is the mural's rarity. In Lithuania, about 500 synagogues once had hand-painted walls, Goldberg said. All but one were destroyed during the Holocaust.

Josh Perelman, chief curator and director of exhibitions and interpretation at the Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History, called the work "one of a kind" and said nothing like it exists in American synagogues, either.

The history of Burlington's Jewish community underscores the significance of the "Lost Mural." In the late 1880s, a group of about 100 Jewish settlers, most from a small Lithuanian village named ekik, settled in Burlington's Old North End. The community soon grew into a bustling neighborhood with a kosher baker, kosher butcher, grocery store, feed store and three Orthodox synagogues. One of them Chai Adam Synagogue, built in 1889 was the original site of Black's mural.

In 1939, Chai Adam closed, and the Wheel family purchased the building. They eventually turned it into a carpet store and warehouse but kept Black's painting. In 1986, the property changed hands again, and the new owners, the Offenhartz family, planned to convert it into an apartment building.

But before they did, Goldberg, a Burlington native who descended from Lithuanian immigrants, stepped in. He helped persuade the owners to preserve the mural by hiding it behind a newly built wall. First, though, photographers captured archival images with financial help from Black's daughters. Those 1986 photographs would provide critical reference material for the restoration of the mural more than three decades later.

Before it could be restored, however, the mural had to be moved. In 2012, Goldberg and childhood friend and former Trinity College of Vermont history professor Jeff Potash by then cofounders of the Lost Mural Project reached an agreement with owner Steven Offenhartz to open up the wall that covered the mural. Because of its location in an apartment that was heated all winter the work had sustained extensive damage, with paint hanging off its plaster base "like cornflakes," said Richard Kerschner, conservator emeritus at Shelburne Museum. Kerschner, who was director of preservation and conservation at the museum for more than three decades, coordinated the mural conservation efforts.

First, the mural was stabilized; conservators painstakingly glued paint back on, chip by chip, and gave it an initial cleaning. Then, in May 2015, a team of contractors extracted it from the Hyde Street building and transported it several blocks to the Ohavi Zedek entryway. Encased in steel, it weighed about 7,500 pounds.

Nearly six years passed as money was raised to complete the restoration.

From April to August of 2021, conservators Constance Silver and Jennifer Baker cleaned the mural, which hangs from suspension beams in the synagogue's ceiling. They used a gel solvent and cotton swabs to remove darkened varnish, dirt and grime from the painting's surface. Each color in the mural required that the gel be applied for a specific amount of time, Kerschner explained. The conservators sent paint samples to specialists in Maine and New York, who analyzed the layers to make sure none of the original paint was being stripped away.

The cleaning revealed shadows and depth and a new palette of rich colors. The mural was vibrant by design, Kerschner said. Because it was originally on the ceiling of a building with no electric lights, it had to be bright to make an impact.

The next phase of restoration began in January of this year and was completed earlier this month. A team of conservators from Williamstown Art Conservation Center in Massachusetts came to Burlington for several days at a time to do the work. First, they used a white spackling compound to fill in the areas where the paint had been chipped away. Then they painted the compound, layering different colors and tones to get the right match. No paint was applied on top of the original paint, though conservators used a tinted varnish over the new and existing paint to make sure the colors appear well blended.

Both the cleaning and restoration were made easier by the pandemic, Goldberg said. Congregants didn't come to in-person services at the synagogue for about two years, which gave conservators uninterrupted time and space to do their work.

The cost of the project including moving, cleaning and restoring the mural totaled just over $1 million, Goldberg said. One-third of funding came from individual donations, another third came from local businesses and the final third came from organizations, including the Vermont Arts Council, the Preservation Trust of Vermont, Vermont Humanities and the Vermont Historical Society. Local contractors and businesses also provided labor and supplies for free or at a discounted rate.

Now that the restoration is complete, the next phase is educating the public by sharing the mural as widely as possible, Goldberg said. Tours will begin this summer. When visitors come to see the work in the synagogue's entryway which is controlled for temperature, humidity and light in order to protect the mural they'll also eventually be able to view an exhibit that documents the restoration project with photos, time-lapse video and text. Goldberg also hopes to showcase artworks from different immigrant cultures to highlight their commonalities and to start a lecture series focused on the immigrant experience.

A mobile exhibit that can travel to schools, libraries and town halls will allow those who can't make it to Burlington to learn about the project, which Goldberg and Potash have documented on the project website.

"So many things could have gone wrong with the mural, but it survived through fate and circumstance," Goldberg said. "It's not just a surviving remnant. It's a surviving piece with an astonishing history."

Correction, June 23, 2022: An earlier version of this story misspelled the name of the Lithuanian village ekik.

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Burlingtons Lost Mural Is Restored to its Original Glory - Seven Days

Not by Chariots or Horses | Andy Blumenthal | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted By on June 26, 2022

Another strange happening today in synagogue. We were davening the Musaf for Shabbat and I looked out the window, and out of nowhere across the way is group of people outside practicing their boxing on a hot Summer day.

So, as the people in shule are shockeling (swaying) back and forth in prayer, the people right outside the window are bobbing and weaving side to side practicing their fighting. Of course, not everyone swings to the same tune, but this was really sort of comical to watch the back and forth and side to side of the Jewish and gentile practitioners.

I couldnt help thinking that while we depend on the Almighty L-rd, they look to their own strength and skills. And I remembered from yeshiva day school many years ago, when we used to sing (Psalms 20:7-8):

Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we remember the name of the L-rd our G-d. They are brought down and fallen, but we are risen and stand upright.

Moreover, this tied so perfectly to the Torah portion this week of Shelach, where the Israelites sent a dozen spies to surveil the Promised Land, and ten of them come back with frightening reports that the cities are fortified and great and concluding (Number 13:31):

We will not be able to ascend against the people, for it is stronger than we are.

Unfortunately, they forgot that it is not by our own mortal power and thinking that we succeed, but rather it is by the will of Hashem and through his outstretched mighty arm. Only Caleb and Joshua of the spies had faith in G-d and said that we can prevail over the nations of Canaan, and we will inherit the land according to G-ds word.

In Chabads LChaim newsletter this week, in an article from the teachings of the Rebbe, it asks: What were the spies sin? They were asked to surveil the land of Canaan and they came back and reported what they saw, so what did they do wrong? The Rebbe answers that their job was to report back how to best capture the land, not if we can conquer it. Those spies not only lacked faith in Hashem but also, they committed a grave sin in slandering the Promised Land to the people of Israel. Hence, it was a huge chillul Hashem (desecration of G-ds name) in front of Bnei Israel.

These spies were immediately punished and died by a plague that G-d brought. Further, the Israelites who followed the slander and then wailed about their fate and said they wanted to return to Egypt rather than be defeated by the Canaanites were punished to wander the desert for forty years to die out, along with their generations slave mentality, so the next generation could then be fit and meritorious to enter and inherit Israel.

As I watched through the window of the synagogue, the people practicing their boxing, I remembered when I was young and learning to fight. It took an enormous amount of training, hard work, and practice, and still at the end of the day, the realization always that we are but the foot soldiers for G-d. We must be the best prepared in every way that we can (Never again!); however, it is G-d who not only leads us, but also fights for us. In the Prophets (Joshua 6), we learn that Hashem literally brought down the walls of the great city of Jericho simply by having Joshua and the Israelites march around it, blow the Shofar, and yell a great shout. So too may G-d continue to fight for us against the enemies in our time and speedily complete the final redemption.

Andy Blumenthal is a dynamic, award-winning leader who writes frequently about Jewish life, culture, and security. All opinions are his own.

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Not by Chariots or Horses | Andy Blumenthal | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

A comfortable place for different religions: San Antonios diversity is reflected in its houses of worship – San Antonio Report

Posted By on June 26, 2022

Its been almost 300 years since San Fernando Cathedral was erected at the very center of San Antonio in the mid-1700s. An engraved marker embedded in the floor of the cathedral proclaims it as the geographic center of the city. But stay in San Antonio for any length of time and it soon becomes clear that faith has been the cultural and societal center of this city since its inception.

When Spanish Catholic missionaries flocked to the South Texas region to convert native people and set up trading posts they built five missions in this one area, as if they could not stop building until the city had become synonymous with the Catholic faith.

Today, hundreds of years later, San Antonio has become a tourist destination for many reasons, but one of the main draws continues to be its historic houses of worship. Designated in 2015 as UNESCO World Heritage sites, the main attraction at each site is the chapel, a church sanctuary where in some cases Mass is still conducted every week.

The Rev. Ann Helmke, the City of San Antonios faith liaison, said faith is deeply entrenched in the citys DNA. Just one example of that is the traditional blessing ceremony at the San Fernando Cathedral for all newly elected City Council members before they are sworn into office.

They are reminded that San Antonio was founded on faith, Helmke said. Were not just about changing policy and not just about building sidewalks. Were about being the best people we can be in caring for ourselves and for each other.

At the citys tricentennial celebration in 2018, Helmke said no less than 26 different religions were represented by individual faith leaders who were invited to share blessings and pray for the city.

That diversity of religions represented at an official city event is evidence of how the city has remained religious, but has also come a long way from the culture of the 1700s when Catholic Christianity was the only religion recognized by the Spanish or Mexican government.

After Texas won its independence from Mexico and then eventually became part of the United States, new non-Catholic churches began popping up in the city.

Temple Beth-El, a synagogue founded in 1874, is one of San Antonios oldest surviving places of worship, the oldest synagogue in South Texas and a monument to the citys growing religious diversity of that time period.

But while Temple Beth-El was the first Jewish congregation in the city, it was certainly not the last. Today San Antonio has about 12 different synagogues and Jewish organizations.

According to data collected in 2020 by the Public Religion Research Institute, Bexar County has a score of 0.803 for religious diversity, which is well above the national average of 0.625. The institutes Census of American Religion found that at least 1% of Bexar Countys population identified as Jewish, 1% was Muslim and 1% Mormon.

The actual numbers may be higher than the survey shows, though, since it registered the Hindu and Buddhist population at 0%, when in fact there are several Hindu temples in San Antonio and at least five Buddhist congregations in the city.

One of the most striking examples of the Hindu presence in Bexar County is the elaborate temple built in 1989 in the hills of Helotes. A large Mormon temple, one of only four in Texas, was also built in the Stone Oak area of the city in the early 2000s.

The Muslim presence in the city also has grown in recent years with at least nine mosques, as well as other Muslim organizations springing up in the city. Khadija Aboueisha is the public affairs and civic engagement director at the local chapter of the Muslim American Society. She believes the growing presence of Muslims in the city and the interfaith work they do can help to educate the public and quell discrimination.

We collaborate with other churches or local mosques in the area to bridge that gap between other communities, Aboueisha said.

Many other faiths are represented in San Antonios diverse houses of worship, including thriving Sikh and Mennonite communities, a distinctive Quaker meetinghouse designed by a prominent architecture firm, several Greek Orthodox churches, Bahai and Unitarian Universalist congregations, and, of course, many evangelical Christian and Catholic churches.

Anthony Blasi, a retired sociologist who taught at UTSA and Tennessee State University, literally wrote the book on religious diversity in San Antonio, an in-depth research project titled An Urban Ecological Sociology of Religion: The Case of San Antonio, Texas. He said the emergence of many different religious groups in San Antonio can in most cases be attributed to the citys industries attracting immigrants from many parts of the world.

The Hindu temple in Helotes, for example, most likely came about because a significant number of South Asian immigrants were pursuing job opportunities in health care or technology in the past few decades, and decided to make San Antonio their home. Blasi said development was occurring on the northwest side of the city at that time and thats why the temple ended up in Helotes.

My dentist is named Patel, my cardiologist is Patel, my oncologist is a hyphenated Patel, said Blasi, explaining that an influx of immigrants from India and other nations is helping build up the community on San Antonios Northwest Side.

Blasi said San Antonios universities and military bases also played a role in bringing new cultural and religious groups to the city, which is why there are clusters of Filipino and Korean churches near the military bases.

While economic factors may have attracted different cultures and religions, Helmke says there is something unique about the way San Antonios faith communities thrive alongside each other, and it didnt happen by accident. At many critical junctures in recent history, Helmke said, San Antonio faith leaders have peacefully collaborated to bring about change.

During the civil rights movement San Antonio had no riots, she said. There were some faith leaders who came together and said, Were not fighting here, because thats not who we are.

Instead of leaving it to the young people, groups of clergy in San Antonio from different faith traditions organized their own sit-ins at the Majestic Theatre and other places, which helped the city to more peacefully integrate in the 1960s, Helmke said.

She believes that kind of inter-faith cooperative activism for justice and social causes began to define the religious communities of San Antonio from that point on.

All these things build on themselves, Helmke said. Decades of leadership that was focused on service and working together to meet the basic human needs of people. You know, for Gods sake, lets help people and lets stand up for civil rights as leaders.

In her years as the citys faith liaison Helmke said she has witnessed many acts of interfaith cooperation, like the time a Latter Day Saints congregation donated an expensive mobile bathroom unit for a Catholic Charities project.

That attitude of cooperation and religious acceptance has created an environment that Rabbi Mara Nathan at Temple Beth-El believes continues to makes it easy for diverse religious groups to establish their own faith communities in San Antonio.

Its a progressive city so its a comfortable place for a lot of different religions to flourish, Nathan said. Theres a perception that people can be themselves in a city thats more progressive and so they dont have to hide their faith.

Helmke believes that San Antonians benefit from being exposed to so many different faith traditions.

When you become curious about others and [are] learning from them, she said, you get not only the awareness of others and what you find in terms of common humanity, but then it also brings more self-awareness of who you are.

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A comfortable place for different religions: San Antonios diversity is reflected in its houses of worship - San Antonio Report

The ‘Mapping Project’ proves there is only one ‘Jewish issue’ – JNS.org

Posted By on June 26, 2022

(June 20, 2022 / JNS) Much has been written in recent days about a Boston BDS groups online map of Jewish sites across Massachusetts. The Mapping Project ostensibly revealed the monstrous connections between Massachusetts institutions and the alleged evils of Zionism and Israel, which would have been bad enough, but it also gleefully included synagogues, Jewish sites and Jewish schools at best tangentially related to the Jewish state. The takeaway was clear: Jews equal Zionists. And since Zionism is evil, the Jews are evil. And now, says the map, you know where to find them.

As many noted, this was nothing less than painting a target on the backs of Massachusetts Jews. It was a synagogue shooters perfect resource. And indeed, given the rise in anti-Semitic violence across the country and in Boston as wella rabbi was stabbed there last year by a Muslim anti-Semitethe implications of the map were obvious.

For myself, it was also deeply personal, as my own family lives in Boston, and their business has been the victim of anti-Semitic vandalism. Because they sell Israeli products, they could easily have been included on the map. When I first saw it, I sent the link to the Boston Police in hopes that some kind of legal action could be taken. I have received no reply, though I read nothing into this.

Fortunately, a large number of Massachusetts politicians and others have condemned the Mapping Project and stated clearly that the map, however it may cloak itself in anti-Israel language, is an obviously racist endeavor.

The real question, however, is how the Massachusetts Jewish communityand the American Jewish community in generalwill react. Will it remain a local matter or be elevated, as it should be, to a national scandal? And what actions will the community take in response?

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There are several obvious actions they could take: The Mapping Project and its collaborators like BDS Boston could be sued for damages by one of the targeted institutions. A civil-rights case could be brought, given that Jews are nowat long lastconsidered a protected group under the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The community could demand that the authors of the map be arrested for incitement to violence. At the very least, they could ensure that the map is taken down. Certainly, something more could be done.

I doubt very much, however, that something will be done. There is an obvious reason for this: While American Jews and especially their leadership are definitely concerned about anti-Semitism, they are also blinded by ideology. They believe that they have no enemies on the left or in the Muslim-American community, and that the danger comes solely from far-right racists and white supremacists. The nationwide wave of anti-Semitic Muslim-American violence last year appears to have done nothing to change this, and if a pogrom cannot do so, one wonders what will.

But the real problem, I think, is an issue of priorities. Put simply, the American Jewish community is distracted by issues that are, in the end, irrelevant to their well-being. This is what allows them to continue their culture of denial.

Strangely enough, this was driven home for me by a relatively minor Twitter exchange I recently witnessed. Responding to a left-wing Jewish activist, one commenter noted of a progressive Jewish organization: Their voter guide didnt mention any Jewish issues. Nothing on rising anti-Semitism or hate crimes. Nothing on security for synagogues.

The activist responded heatedly, Ending poverty is a Jewish issue. Ending homelessness is a Jewish issue. Labor justice is a Jewish issue. Im sorry your Judaism focuses on security and police, not collective liberation and justice.

This response was, I must say, typical of most of the Jews I grew up with in a very liberal Boston suburb and especially my familys very progressive synagogue. Judaism, these progressive Jews believed and I assume still believe, is synonymous with liberalism, progressivism and the struggle for social justice. To them, progressive issues are Jewish issues, period. And these issues obsess them to the point that they regard even their own safety and security as irrelevant.

When I read that brief exchange, however, what struck me the most was how utterly, completely wrong the activist was: None of those things are Jewish issues. They may be important issues, and perhaps well worth advocating for, but they are universalist issues, without relevance to the most existential concerns of the Jewish community.

The truth, I believe, is that, in our current moment, there is only one Jewish issue: the empowerment of the Jewish people. Everything else must fall before it. Because if the Jewish people, in America and elsewhere, are not empowered, then they can do nothing. They cannot even secure their own bodies and their own existence. They certainly cannot advocate for those universal issues upon which they place so much importance. Indeed, they cannot even ensure that they will exist long enough to undertake such advocacy.

Altruism is nothing to be ashamed of, as Rabbi Hillel noted: If I am for none but myself, what am I? If American Jews are sympathetic to left-wing or progressive ideals, they should fight for them. But they should never forget that those ideals are, in the end, tangential. They must be, at best, secondary priorities. And American Jews must also understand that, by placing these ideals above the most absolute and essential ideal, the most absolute and essential struggle, they have allowed monsters to paint targets on their backs, and other monsters, perhaps, will act accordingly.

Benjamin Kerstein is a writer and editor living in Tel Aviv. Read more of his writing on Substack and his website. Follow him on Twitter @benj_kerstein.

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The 'Mapping Project' proves there is only one 'Jewish issue' - JNS.org

Magic mushrooms are all the rage. But are they Jewish? – The Guardian

Posted By on June 26, 2022

On 10 January, just as the sun was setting behind the Rocky Mountains, uniformed narcotics officers raided an industrial storage facility in Denvers north end, in a commercial strip between a coffee wholesaler and a plumbing supply store. There, they found scales, petri dishes, grow tents and multiple white miniature freezer units, jam-packed with several pounds of magic mushrooms.

The facility was linked to Benjamin Gorelick, a rabbi who leads the Sacred Tribe, a multi-faith membership-based non-profit, which Gorelick calls a synagogue. The Sacred Tribe counts about 270 members and Jewishness is not a precondition of membership. (According to its website, they even welcome rascally atheists.) The Sacred Tribe celebrates the Jewish high holidays, hosts breath-work seminars, and routinely congregates for a sacred sacrament, in which the mushrooms feature.

Gorelick, 43, was raised Jewish, in New Mexico. He left the south-west (and religion) behind in his late teens, decamping to Alaska to teach mountaineering. In the mountains, he reconnected with his spirituality. He sought a deeper connection to his community and to God. In 2018, he began rabbinical training. He was ordained in 2019. In photos, Gorelick sports a spiky blue mohawk hairdo, bisecting his skull like a punk rock dorsal fin. His fingernails are painted sparkly silver and black. Definitely and, one gets the sense, rather deliberately not your bubbies rabbi.

While training, Gorelick also had his first psychedelic experience. That was the first time when I felt, in my body, God and oneness, he tells the Guardian, speaking from his home in Broomfield, Colorado, about 15 miles north of Denver. The Sacred Tribe is his way of facilitating such experiences with others. The group is donations-based, and he maintains that 90% of its members have never given him so much as a thin penny for anything, including access to psychedelic drugs.

Gorelick (who asks to be called Rabbi Ben) has been charged with felony possession of a Schedule I controlled substance with intent to distribute. The Denver district attorney sees him as a narcotics manufacturer. Rabbi Ben insists that his sacraments are (or ought to be) protected by the first amendments religious protections. At an upcoming court hearing this Monday, he faces a minimum of eight and maximum of 32 years in state prison. We didnt commit a crime, Gorelick insists. This is part of 2,300 years of Judaism.

In the US, religious groups have secured the right to use psychedelic drugs, under the first amendments protection of religious freedom. A unanimous 2006 supreme court ruled that a New Mexican Christian church, the Unio do Vegetal (UDV), could legally host ceremonies featuring DMT-containing ayahuasca. In How To Change Your Mind, his bestselling 2018 chronicle of the current psychedelic renaissance, Michael Pollan called the ruling a watershed event. It made crystal clear that the government was in no position to impinge on sincere exercise of religion.

Hes practicing in the lane of what seems like sincere religious belief to me, says Danny Peterson, a DC-based attorney advising on Gorelicks case. The question is not whether Bens actions constitute violations of controlled substance laws. They do. The question is: is the government committing a new crime by enforcing these laws against him? And they are.

Gorelicks fellow travelers seem similarly sincere. Yehuda, 24, flew to Denver to partake in the Sacred Tribes psychedelic sacraments. (Yehuda is a pseudonym.) He was raised Jewish and had nurtured an interest in Jewish mysticism, including the Kabbalah. He had never taken a psychedelic before congregating with Gorelick and other members of the Sacred Tribe. The reason that I was motivated to do it, he says, was because it was being done as a Jewish religious ceremony.

Some of the Tribes members are more Kabbalah-curious. Sofia (also a pseudonym), 33, identifies as culturally Lutheran and theologically Unitarian, and works at a multi-faith community center. She, too, was attracted to Gorelicks exploration of the Kabbalah by psychedelic means. She sees Gorelicks psychedelic exploration as falling squarely within the first amendments religious protections. She drank wine when she was 10, at her first communion a Christian sacrament that contravenes drinking age laws. I see that as very analogous, she says.

Some outside of Gorelicks direct orbit wince at the idea that psychedelic drugs are part of some age-old Jewish practice. Its just not the case, says Rick Strassman, research pharmacologist and author of DMT and the Soul of Prophecy. The only intoxicants mentioned specifically in the Hebrew Bible are strong wine and liquor. Thats it.

Still, the entwined histories of psychedelia and Judaism run wild with speculation. Strassmans own research compares biblical mysticism to psychedelic states. He theorizes that certain prophetic visions like Ezekiels description of a many-faced cherub, its wings bedecked with whirligig wheels are attributable to endogenous DMT, produced naturally in the human body. Others theorize that the burning bush, which commanded Moses to liberate the Israelites from Egypt, was made of acacia, a DMT-containing shrub. Still others wonder how Moses could have inhaled enough vaporized acacia to trip out, without dying of asphyxiation.

On a Facebook page for the Jewish Entheogenic Society, a discussion group organized by the Bay Area rabbi Zac Kamenetz, some question Gorelicks interpretation of Jewish texts and their validity. Even in a religion as decentralized and diverse as Judaism, Gorelicks approach seems non-doctrinaire. There are many, many paths, Kamenetz says. But for the past 2,000 years, weve liked to show our sources.

The American community of Jewish psychedelic enthusiasts is pretty tight-knit. And Gorelick had, until recently, a minimal presence in that community. Natalie Ginsberg, a policy lead at the Multidisciplinary Association of Psychedelic Studies (Maps) and co-founder of the Jewish Psychedelics Summit, had never heard of Rabbi Benjamin Gorelick until his arrest. I was a bit surprised, she says, That I had never come into contact, or heard from him, or worked with him.

Gorelicks arrest has thrust him into the spotlight. He has retained Grasslands, a Denver-based cannabis marketing agency, to manage his communications. Hes set up online petitions and crowdfunding campaigns. Hes being positioned as the Mushroom Rabbi: a victim of religious persecution and a spokesperson for Jewish psychedelia. A GoFundMe to Help R Ben Defend Religious Use of Psychedelics says that the Sacred Tribes regular operations have been put on hold, a claim which is highly suspect. Yehuda, for one, took part in a psychedelic sacrament in March, after the grow-up raid. Gorelick clarifies that ceremonies have not stopped. But membership, and active participation, has declined.

Gorelicks legal team does not seem bothered by his image as a newcomer, or even a bit of a pariah, in the Jewish psychedelic community. His version of certain rituals isnt really relevant to the legal question, Peterson maintains. It doesnt matter if people dont like the way he talks about it. Or his haircut.

But nobody is grousing about Gorelicks hairdo. His credentials bear more serious scrutiny. Gorelick trained at the Jewish Spiritual Leaders Institute, a one-year, online cyber-synagogue, whose graduates are not recognized by many major organizations, such as Central Conference of American Rabbis (CCAR). In an email statement, a spokesperson for the CCAR says, The depth and breadth of a rigorous rabbinic education is not possible in just a year.

Sidestepping more traditional, Torah-based teachings, Gorelicks interests are almost purely mystical, and Kabbalistic. Called a mysterious and sacred science by the 19th-century French-Jewish philosopher Adolphe Franck, Kabbalah was long regarded as an advanced course of study, undertaken only by those with an exhaustive knowledge of the Torah. Kabbalah was revived in America in the 1960s, alongside the first wave of psychedelia, and the reignited western interest in Buddhism, Hinduism, occultism and emerging New Age practices.

In 1968, theologian Arthur Green pseudonymously published Notes From The Jewish Underground: Psychedelics and Kabbalah, which analyzed the awesome implications of drug use for religious thinking. More recently, clinicians at Johns Hopkins and NYU have put Greens heady thesis to the test. In 2017, they dosed two dozen clergy (including rabbis) with psilocybin. They were studying the relationship between psychedelics and mystical experiences, which, according to veteran Hopkins researcher Bill Richards, seem to be at the origin of most religions. Still, in such studies psychedelics are seen as a chemical precursor to experiences that were traditionally spurred by periods of intense meditation, fasting and prayer a spiritual catalyst, or performance-enhancing drug.

Given the alleged links between psychedelic use and Jewish mysticism, its a bit of a mystery why a challenge like this has not arisen before. Gorelick is candid on this point. He may not be the first rabbi to use psychedelics. But he was the first to get caught. We always knew someone would come knocking at our door.

Certainly, such first amendment defenses tend to emerge, well, defensively. The supreme court decision on ayahuasca came after 30 gallons of the psychoactive brew were seized by US customs agents. Historic as such rulings are, some activists regard them as a bit old hat, especially in light of broader decriminalization efforts. It can be harmful if people are not working in coordination with the bigger movement, says Maps Ginsberg. Implying that certain use should be protected over other use? Thats where I see problems.

But Gorelick can seem like a casualty of that existing decriminalization patchwork. In 2019, Denver became the first US city to effectively decriminalize psilocybin. The law itself is a bit peculiar: while the drug remains illegal under federal law, local police were prohibited from allocating resources to prosecute use or possession. Still, selling shrooms remains a felony. Such piecemeal approaches produce legislative inanities: how are people supposed to procure the psychedelic mushrooms, which are permissible to carry and consume?

In November, Coloradans will vote on a ballot measure legalizing psilocybin, while also providing a framework for licensed psychedelic healing centres. (A similar measure was successfully passed in Oregon in 2020.) We are including retroactivity in our measure, says Kevin Matthews, an activist leading the charge. Any individual who would not have been in violation of whats included in the measure, can actually actively petition to have the record sealed.

So, in a few months, Gorelicks case could be old news. Yet hes still pursuing his explicitly religious crusade. Theyre trying to create a secular, medicinal, therapeutic structure with the ballot initiative thats coming out this fall, Gorelick says, But its not the place where were looking to have protection.

Gorelicks team thinks his case and cut-and-dried enough to be reduced to a misdemeanor, or be thrown out of court altogether. He is, as Peterson, Gorelicks co-counsel, terms it, a church of one, even if his credentials or approaches may raise a few eyebrows. Of course, a religious exemption can be opportunistic, even if its totally sincere. Decriminalization, legalization all these other paths are important, says Peterson. But right now, none of those keep Rabbi Benjamin out of prison.

Those who are working to expand legal psychedelic use for everyone, regardless of faith or affiliation, do not want to see Gorelick imprisoned, even if they take issue with his tactics. As someone who cares deeply about Jewish psychedelia, I dont want to see anyone in jail, Ginsberg says. I do believe we actually have a history of use.

In early June, I meet up with Gorelick in New York, a few weeks before his court date. Seated on a luxe leather sofa in the lobby of a midtown hotel, his once-defiant mohawk has grown shaggier, tufting out from under a kippah, as if wilting under the pressure of his current legal woes.

Hes in Manhattan, he says, to attend a Shavout dinner with a group of Hasidic Jews. Shavout is a traditional holiday celebrating the harvest, which, in some orthodox circles, also marks the occasion of the Torahs revelation to Moses. These particular orthodox Hasids followers of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov, a 19th-century Kabbalah revivalist had been conducting their own experiments with psychedelics to explore the faiths more mystical, further-out dimensions. Gorelick was not there to grace them with audience with the Mushroom Rabbi. He came to learn from them, and their traditions. I kind of invited myself, he admits.

Even as others pressure Gorelick to show his work to point out where in Torah, or in Kabbalah, or anywhere in rabbinic teachings, mind-expanding drugs are justified, or even explicitly mentioned hes confident in his legal standing and in the future of Jewish psychedelia. By showing people what is possible in the psychedelic space, he explains, it makes it more conceivable to achieve these insights in daily life.

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Magic mushrooms are all the rage. But are they Jewish? - The Guardian

Churches across Los Angeles react to the end of Roe vs. Wade – Los Angeles Times

Posted By on June 26, 2022

For Pastor Netz Gmez and the 1,500 members of his Houses of Light church in Northridge, the Supreme Courts ruling to overturn Roe vs. Wade was an answer to their prayers and decades of hard work.

We are thanking God that this injustice has finally been rectified, and that states have the right to decide how they want to proceed with abortion rights, said the pastor, a Mexico native who started the church in his living room 22 years ago and has steadily immersed himself deeper into U.S. politics. But we are really thanking God because we have prayed so much for the end of abortion. Abortion is injustice. Killing babies is injustice.

It was one of the broad range of responses to the courts momentous ruling that has divided members of the same faith across Southern California, including sometimes within the same congregation.

For some among the Christian faithful particularly many Catholics and evangelicals the ruling that allows states to decide whether and in what circumstances abortions will be legal, if at all, represents a long-hoped for step toward saving precious, unborn life. For others its an incomprehensible attack on womens fundamental right to decide whats best for their lives and their families.

On Sunday, 30 miles to the south and east of Houses of Light, Rev. Alfredo Feregrino, associate rector of All Saints Episcopal Church in Pasadena, said that he immediately knew he needed to rewrite his sermon when he learned of the Friday ruling from a flurry of text messages and emails.

People attend a vigil Friday evening at All Saints Episcopal Church in Pasadena.

(Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

The church hosted a vigil Friday night with Planned Parenthood Pasadena and San Gabriel Valley to grieve the loss of the constitutional right that was established in 1973 and reaffirmed in 1992, and had hung a red banner declaring Abortion is Healthcare outside the church for weeks.

In a sermon Sunday morning inside a chapel adorned with rainbow flags, Feregrino said the decision would have the most severe effects on people living in poverty, those with low incomes, and people with inconsistent access to healthcare. If this decision were truly about protecting babies, he said, there would be months and months of parental leave for everyone, free diapers and formula, universal preschool and other support for parents.

The congregation clapped and cried out in assent.

In the hours after the Supreme Courts decision to overturn Roe vs. Wade, Archbishop Jos H. Gmez of Los Angeles who leads 5 million Catholics in 288 parishes in the L.A. area, and who has played an influential role in the abortion debate, released a statement applauding the ruling.

For nearly fifty years, America has enforced an unjust law that has permitted some to decide whether others can live or die; this policy has resulted in the deaths of tens of millions of preborn children, generations that were denied the right to even be born, he said.

Despite these strong words, the court ruling didnt explicitly come up during the homily at Sundays service at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in downtown Los Angeles, blocks from where protesters had gathered over the past three days. Gmez declined to comment further on the churchs stance toward the ruling.

Some of his congregants comments reflected the divisions inside the Catholic church. Polls have shown that lay Catholics opinions on abortion are more nuanced than those of their leadership. According to the Pew Research Center, 76% of Catholics say abortion should be illegal in some cases, but legal in others while just one-in-ten say it should be illegal in all cases with no exceptions.

Some at Our Lady of the Angels said they supported the ruling. Standing outside the gates of the Cathedral following Mass, 70-year-old Vicky, who declined to give her last name, said that life and death should be in the hands of God.

Others disagreed. Eric Ruino, a nursing student at Johns Hopkins University, said he supports people having the right to have an abortion.

Its cool that the Vatican has its thoughts and its changed over the years, but in terms of where we are now and are as a society and what we do, I think having that overturned is just having us going backwards, he said.

Rafael Hernandez, a Catholic who attended the Cathedrals noon service and supports abortion rights, said it is important to establish your own identity and opinions regardless of the religion you practice.

Im Catholic, but a lot of the times Im against things the Catholic Church has done. But my faith is separate to that, he said. I come to church to hear the readings and listen, not to judge those around me.

Michelle Lindsay, 50, felt conflicted over the high courts decision.

Personally, I would never have an abortion. But I dont believe I should make that choice for somebody else, she said. I should never have to put my views on someone else, just like I dont want anyone to put their views on me.

In L.A.s West Adams neighborhood, the Rev. ST Williams Jr., pastor of the 97-year-old St. Paul Evangelical Lutheran Church, a historically African American church, said that the ruling set us back as a nation, a people and a culture.

Williams, who shepherds a congregation of 375 families of Black Americans, as well as Caribbean, African and Latino parishioners, many of them immigrants, said the nation already was on edge because of COVID-19, mass shootings and inflation.

Telling people they no longer have a right to choose will not allow for proper family planning and will affect those who can least afford to have children.

Its a sad day as a Lutheran Church minister because it will cause a lot of chaos and calamity, he said of the ruling. Youre not allowing people to be who they want to be.

Pastor Steve Lee, the head pastor of Gereja Injili Indonesia Los Angeles of Azusa, also known as the Indonesian Evangelical Church of Azusa, said that for him, the overturning of Roe vs. Wade was personal.

Twenty years earlier, Lee and his wife received news from a genetic counselor about their pregnancy: Their daughter, the couples first child, would be born with Down syndrome.

Lee and his wife carried the child to term. Six months later, their daughter was born without Down syndrome.

What struck us, as we looked back, was the idea that some in society view a Down syndrome child as less than a person, that it is undeserving of life, Lee said. All life should be treated with dignity.

Lee understands there will be celebrating for some and anguish for others. What hes most afraid of, however, is the growing schism among Americans of opposing views.

Thoughtful Christians also see the greater division, which is expected, but there is greater violence and hatred that has become the norm, he said. The vitriol that is and continues to come will only spark more violence and destruction of life.

Although the politics of abortion and religion have centered on Christians of various stripes, representatives of other faiths spent the weekend weighing the implications of the courts action.

Rabbi David Wolpe of the conservative synagogue Sinai Temple in Westwood said, ultimately Jewish law is unequivocal that it is not murder to have an abortion, but it is also clear that a fetus is a potential life.

(Christina House/Los Angeles Times)

In a sermon delivered Saturday morning, Rabbi David Wolpe of the conservative synagogue Sinai Temple in Westwood acknowledged that speaking about the Supreme Court decision from the pulpit was difficult, and that he expected people would disagree with his message. Ultimately, he said, Jewish law is unequivocal that it is not murder to have an abortion, but it is also clear that a fetus is a potential life.

Wolpe supports a womans right to decide whether she wants to have an abortion no matter where in the United States she lives, but he also said he wont vilify those who disagree with him.

I make, and I hope you do, a presumption of goodness with those who disagree with me, he told the worshipers. I dont think on one side people are careless about life, or that on the other side people dont care about women.

I think this is a deep, divisive issue.

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Churches across Los Angeles react to the end of Roe vs. Wade - Los Angeles Times

The City and B’nai B’rith Housing Celebrate The Residences Off Baker – Boston.gov

Posted By on June 26, 2022

60 Units to be Built in West Roxbury to Serve Low-Income Families

Building on a commitment to create and preserve affordable housing in Boston, officials from the City of Boston, Bnai Brith Housing, local elected officials, and West Roxbury residents celebrated the groundbreaking for The Residences Off Baker, a 60-unit mixed-income, family and workforce, transit-oriented development on Friday, June 10.

As the costofhousinghas become more and more outofreach for families, we recognize the need to take urgent action to keep families in their homes and build a city for everyone, saidMayor Michelle Wu. Today's groundbreaking shows whats possible when we collaborate across different sectors and levelsofgovernment to create much-needed affordablehousingin our neighborhoods.

When completed, the development will contain 60 unitsofhousingfocused on accommodating families and workers. Forty-five unitsofthe 60 residences will be available to households earning less than 60 percentofthe Area Median Income (AMI), with 15 units restricted to households earning less than 30 percentofAMI, including units dedicated to households transitioning outofhomelessness.

Were proud to work with the West Roxbury neighborhood to make this high-quality affordablehousinga reality in a neighborhood that will benefit from it, saidSusan Gittelman, Executive DirectorofBnai BrithHousing.

The Boston-based nonprofit Bnai BrithHousing, which creates and manages below-markethousingfor seniors and others, acquired the land for The Residences Off Baker at 1208 VFW Parkway for this development, which will be the first affordable residences constructed in West Roxbury since 2013.

"There is a tremendous need for this newhousingin the neighborhood, and we are excited about the prospectofcollaborating with B'nai B'rithHousingfor years to come," saidDr. Peter Folan, HeadofSchool, Catholic Memorial.

The Residences Off Baker will include energy-efficient heating and cooling systems, as well as Energy Star-rated appliances, and will have environmentally friendly design features throughout. The Residences Off Baker is located near shopping centers and a varietyofcultural and outdoor amenities, including nearby Millennium Park and the West Roxbury MBTA Commuter Line commuter rail stop. The new building will include an elevator for accessibility, central air conditioning, an on-site laundry facility, a large community space for programming on the first floor, and a courtyard with green space for the neighborhood to enjoy.

"The Residences Off Baker is another exampleofhow leveraging HUD's HOME dollars with city and state resources can fulfill a criticalhousingproduction need for our community," saidHUD New England Regional Administrator Juana Matias. "This project reaffirms our shared commitment to building an inclusive community where people can live and work free from the burdenofrisinghousingcosts like rent and travel to work. We look forward to the developmentofthis property that will provide the residentsofWest Roxbury with stable, affordablehousing, and we thank our local partner for this productive collaboration."

Financing for The Residences Off Baker was made possible in part by $3.7 million from the CityofBostons MayorsOfficeofHousing, $5.8 million from the states DepartmentofHousingand Community Development, and $9.2 million from MassHousing. Eastern Bank provided a $20 million construction loan and Boston Financial was the low-incomehousingtax credit investor providing $14 million.

Building on Mayor Wus belief thathousingmust be the foundation for our recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic, the City recently announced $106 million to expand opportunities for homeownership for Boston residents, studies to assess the current Linkage fee and inclusionary development levels; will audit City-owned property; and recently announced a rent stabilization advisory group, led by MayorsOfficeofHousing. Additionally, she testified this week at the State House on Transfer Fee Legislation that would give Boston the ability to implement if passed a transfer feeofup to two percentofthe purchase priceofany private real estate sale over $2 million in the CityofBoston, as a means to generate additional funding for affordablehousing.Mayor Wushousingsecurity legislative package is focused on expanding upon the work that Boston has done to address the region's affordablehousingcrisis and displacement risks for tenants by proposing new and strengthening current tools to leverage Boston's prosperity and create sustainable wealth opportunities that make Boston a more inclusive and equitable city. Thehousingsecurity bills submitted seek to help tenants, particularly the elderly, remain in their homes, and create additional funding for affordablehousingdevelopments like the Residences Off Baker.

About the MayorsOfficeofHousing(MOH)The MayorsOfficeofHousingis responsible forhousingpeople experiencing homelessness, creating and preserving affordablehousing, and ensuring that renters and homeowners can obtain, maintain, and remain in safe, stablehousing. The department develops and implements the CityofBostonshousingcreation and homelessness prevention plans and collaborates with local and national partners to find new solutions and build morehousingaffordable to all, particularly those with lower incomes. For more information, please visit theMOH website.

About Bnai BrithHousing(BBH)Bnai BrithHousing(BBH) is a regional nonprofithousingdeveloper whose mission is to ease thehousingcrisis in the Greater Boston area. We work with cities and towns to create economically viable, affordablehousingoptions which respond to the needs and aspirationsofeach community. Ourhousing, both rental and homeownership, is for young families and older adults, regardlessofreligion or background. For more information, visit theBBH website.

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The City and B'nai B'rith Housing Celebrate The Residences Off Baker - Boston.gov

Israel: Smotrich Says He Will Do Anything To Establish Netanyahu-led Government – I24NEWS – i24NEWS

Posted By on June 26, 2022

'I am ready to create a...bridge to Ayelet Shaked and my right-wing rivals so that a government can be formed'

Religious Zionism party head Bezalel Smotrich said Sunday that he is doing everything he can to establish an alternative government headed by opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu, preventing the dissolution of the parliament (Knesset) and a fifth-round of elections.

"I am ready to create a... bridge to (Interior Minister) Ayelet Shaked and my right-wing rivals so that a government can be formed that will serve the citizens of Israel without dragging us into unnecessary elections," he said.

"The face of (Raam leader) Mansour Abbas has disappeared in recent weeks. We are not sitting with supporters of terrorism in the coalition. We were the first to recognize that (Prime Minister Naftali) Bennett was turning left even before the elections. We said goodbye to him and tried to make ourselves heard," he continued.

Last week, Bennett announced the impending dissolution of the Knesset, meaning that Foreign Minister Yair Lapid would become interim prime minister.

"We recognized the great danger to the State of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state, which is to rely on supporters of terrorism, Smotrich said.

Thank God we were able to stop the danger, and I am happy about that. From day one, I pointed out the lie of this cover-up policy. We drew a red line and prevented the right-wing from doing this terrible mistake, and we will stand there tall, strong, and determined to prevent these mistakes from happening again.

A close associate of Netanyahu said on Sunday that Abbas would be welcome in a possible Likud-led coalition if the government gets a majority without the support of the Islamist party.

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Israel: Smotrich Says He Will Do Anything To Establish Netanyahu-led Government - I24NEWS - i24NEWS


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