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Statement by Minister Hussen on Canadian Jewish Heritage Month

Posted By on June 21, 2022

OTTAWA, May 1, 2022

Today marks the beginning of Canadian Jewish Heritage Month, a time to celebrate Jewish culture, faith, and history in Canada.

Canada is home to an estimated 400,000 people of Jewish heritage, making it the fourth-largest Jewish community in the world. Jewish Canadians have made and continue to make important contributions to our society, including medicine, theatre, engineering, music, architecture, academia, politics, law, the arts, and more. During this month, we also recognize the courage, determination, and resilience that members of Jewish communities have shown throughout history.

We must also recognise that Jewish communities in Canada and around the world continue to face a frightening rise in acts of antisemitism, violence, and xenophobia. This is unacceptable. We must always condemn this violence and continue to stand firmly against it.

The Government of Canada remains steadfast in the fight to combat all forms of antisemitism at home and abroad through important measures that include the appointment of the Honourable Irwin Cotler as Special Envoy on Preserving Holocaust Remembrance and Combatting Antisemitism. To continue our work to protect the memory of those murdered in the Holocaust, Budget 2022 also includes $20 million towards the construction of the new Holocaust Museum in Montral.

As Minister of Housing and Diversity and Inclusion, Iencourage all Canadians to reflect on and learn more about the inspirational role that Jewish Canadians have played and continue to play in communities across the country.

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Statement by Minister Hussen on Canadian Jewish Heritage Month

Elan Carr: Jewish American Heritage Month passes without enough fanfare …

Posted By on June 21, 2022

(June 1, 2022 / JNS) May is over. Did you know it was Jewish American Heritage Month?

If your answer is no, youre far from alone. It was easy to miss. However, the State Departments former anti-Semitism envoy is on a mission to change that, state by state.

We have had for 42 years a period of presidentially declared, bipartisan, dedication to learning about and understanding Jewish contributions to the United States. What happens? Not much, lamented Elan Carr, now a visiting fellow at the Heritage Foundation.

Carr served in the administration of Donald Trump from 2019 to 2021, focusing on combating and monitoring anti-Semitism.

Why is there no [Jewish Heritage Month] curriculum in school districts? No PSAs [public service announcements]? No messaging? asked Carr, who told JNS that while at the State Department, he started the process of developing such a programtogether with the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish American Organizations and other like-minded entitiesbefore Trumps term ended.

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He said its all part of his mission to broaden philosemitisman affection for the Jewish peopleas the accepted opposite of anti-Semitism, rather than just simply tolerance.

Carr said he has taken note that a number of organizations, including some hes worked with, have the same lines of effort, such as securing Jewish communities and assets; labeling anti-Semitism through the adoption of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA)s working definition; dealing with and countering metastatic hate on the Internet and social media; condemning anti-Semitic movements; and prosecuting hate crimes.

It occurred to me that all of these measures all inherently defensive. And while you need a good defense, you cant ever win by only playing defense. So, the question is: How do we go on the offense? he posed.

The best way is to turn the tables completely on Jew-hatred is to drive a narrative that inculcates the appreciation of and respect for the remarkable Jewish story that has brought so much to Western civilization, replied Carr, who worked with the German government on the launch of a 2021 pilot program commemorating 1,700 years of Jewish history in Germany. He said that Germans were largely unaware not just of the individual accomplishments of Jewish Germans, but how deeply Jewish contributions are woven into the very fabric of German culture and life.

Carr told JNS that he sees a good deal of the same in the United States, butwhile noting his belief that America is the most naturally philosemitic country in the world outside of Israelfeels the road to increasing philosemitism can be more easily constructed and, in some sense, is already being paved.

U.S. Special Envoy on Combating Anti-Semitism Elan S. Carr, at the Kyiv Jewish Forum in Ukraine on May 6, 2019. Credit: Boris Lozhkin/Flickr via Wikimedia Commons.

We need to double down on this

Jewish American Heritage Month was declared by President George W. Bush in 2006. Prior to that, there was a Jewish American Heritage Week dating back to its creation by President Ronald Reagan in 1981.

We had three states declare their own Jewish American Heritage Month: Nebraska, Florida and Virginia. A declaration is just the beginning, though. Next year, the idea will be to have a full-fledged messaging campaign for adults and a curriculum in the schools. The rubber meets the road at the state level when it comes to policies like law enforcement and schools. If we get the states engaged, it can be game-changer, said Carr.

Yet there is a flip side to that argument. With incidents of anti-Semitism on the rise, there can be an instinct, especially among Jews who are not visibly identifiable as such, to want to fade into the background rather than put their Jewish pride on display. This can be especially so on American college campuses, which have largely become a hotbed for anti-Israel and anti-Semitic activity, often with tacit administrative approval.

Carr said that a Jewish heritage program, properly executed can find ways to highlight the extraordinary contributions of Jews to America without displaying overt exceptionalism that can feed into anti-Semitic stereotypes.

Ive been involved in campus life for 30 years, and Ill tell you, Jews with no Jewish identity want to turn and escape from anti-Semitism. Jews who have some degree of Jewish identity want to stand up and fight. We need to double down on this. We need to stand up and be proud of who we arenot in a way that is haughty and arrogant and off-putting. This should be a matter of pride for Jews as Americans, he said.

Our whole history has been exceptional, even the bad, he continued. Even anti-Semitism is exceptional among hatred. It is breathtaking in its ubiquity, in its unquenchable thirst. What do we do with it? The Jewish answer is to understand who we are, what we mean to the world and shout it from the rooftops.

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Elan Carr: Jewish American Heritage Month passes without enough fanfare ...

New York City Mayor Eric Adams celebrates annual Jewish Heritage Month …

Posted By on June 21, 2022

(May 24, 2022 / JNS) New York City Mayor Eric Adams hosted this years annual Jewish Heritage Month reception at Gracie Mansion on Tuesday, celebrating centuries of Jewish history, achievement and community-building in New York City.

Joining the list of dignitaries and speakers was Ambassador Asaf Zamir, the Consul General of Israel in New York, the largest Jewish community in the world outside of Israel.

He spoke of the singular connection between Israel and New York City, emphasizing ties in all kinds of matters. Jewish Heritage Month should always be a uniquely Jewish event, said Zamir, because you cant tell the story of American Jewish heritage without New York City taking a starring role.

At the same time, he discussed the recent four-fold spike in anti-Semitic incidents in the region and the obligation to respond strongly to it.

This is a challenging time with anti-Semitic incidents quadrupling in this city, he noted. But weve been through worse, and we will win over this challenge together.

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New York City Mayor Eric Adams celebrates annual Jewish Heritage Month ...

Reflections on Jewish Heritage Month from Dr. Ayelet Kuper

Posted By on June 21, 2022

When Dr. Ayelet Kuper reflects on Jewish Heritage Month, she thinks about celebrating and honouring her heritage while also bringing awareness to antisemitism.

It would be disingenuous to just focus on the celebration. It wouldnt reflect the lived experiences of Jewish people, says Dr. Kuper, a general internist at Sunnybrook and the Senior Advisor on Antisemitism in the Office of Inclusion and Diversity at the University of Toronto. We need to do both. Lets celebrate what it means to be Jewish at Sunnybrook, but lets also be real about what it means to be Jewish.

Part of that reality has been increasing violence toward the Jewish community in 2021, both in Toronto and across the country. In Canada, violent incidents toward Jewish people rose to 75 in 2021 from nine in 2020, according to Jewish advocacy group BNai Brith.

Over the past year or so, it really has reached a crisis point, says Dr. Kuper. It has become almost socially acceptable to be antisemitic.

In her role as Senior Advisor on Antisemitism, Dr. Kuper provides education to medical students, residents, faculty and leaders around Jewish issues on campus, including antisemitism.

This includes examining its impact, and looking at the current, recent and historical lived experiences of Jewish faculty, staff and learners, she says, adding it includes many people who work at Sunnybrook because the hospital is fully affiliated with the University of Toronto.

Dr. Kuper says Sunnybrooks legacy of being a welcoming place for Jewish people is something the hospital should be proud of, and its also why its important to recognize Jewish Heritage Month across the organization.

I think Jewish people at Sunnybrook like to know that at a time when there is an increase in violence toward the Jewish community across the city, province and country the organization is still committed to being a welcoming, inclusive place for Jewish staff, physicians and learners, she says.

And it is also an opportunity to celebrate Jewish heritage.

Despite a lot of adversity, despite deliberate exclusion from faculties of medicine and teaching hospitals, Jewish people have made incredible contributions to our faculties, to our hospitals and to health care in Toronto, and in Canada, she says.

And when she thinks of Jewish health-care professionals, she often thinks of the Jewish concept of tikkun olam that means to heal the world. Dr. Kuper says it is a fundamental Jewish value that pairs with another precept, which states that a person who saves a life has saved an entire world because every person has the potential within them to change the future.

I am proud of my colleagues who bring those core principles of Judaism to their work every day, she says.

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Reflections on Jewish Heritage Month from Dr. Ayelet Kuper

Everything You Need to Know About the New Hebrew Department – The Commentator – The Commentator

Posted By on June 21, 2022

What is the future of the Hebrew department at YU?

Students have been asking this question for weeks, if not months. A few articles last year broke the news that the Hebrew department plans to move some classes to asynchronous learning, but details of the new program were unknown. More recently, students on both campuses received emails describing the new Hebrew program and how it will look for students with different levels of Hebrew background.

The Commentator sat down with Dr. Zafrira Lidovsky-Cohen, Hebrew department chair and director of Hebrew language and literature at Stern College for Women (SCW), as well as with Dr. Aaron Koller, professor of Near Eastern studies at Yeshiva College (YC) to discuss plans for the new Hebrew program. Together, Cohen and Koller were tasked with designing a new program for the Hebrew department.

As students were previously notified, the Hebrew department is moving to an asynchronous model as of the upcoming Fall semester. Students will learn from pre-recorded classes, as opposed to sitting in a live class. Classes are fully narrated, fully explained, Cohen said. Every step, every assignment everything thats happening in the class is happening online. While there is no built-in class time, there will still be deadlines, just like in any other course.

The courses will be divided into six units throughout the semester. Each unit will contain four modules, which students may complete on their own time. However, each module will still have a deadline for completion. Students are working on their own and independently but on a schedule where they have to make time for Hebrew, Cohen shared.

While students are responsible for completing the course individually, they will not be left completely alone to learn the material by themselves. In a synchronous class, the teacher is driving the class from the front; in an asynchronous class, the teacher is driving the class from the back, Cohen said. Thus, each class will have an assigned teacher who will oversee students advancement, and there will be a maximum of twenty students per class. Cohen remarked that there will be very personalized attention to every student as needed, but students must initiate the contact. Additionally, teachers will have virtual office hours twice a week, ensuring that there will be human support all the time, according to Cohen. Theyre not learning in isolation.

The department is set to offer five different levels of Hebrew courses, as Cohen explained that The students that are coming to Yeshiva University are coming with different levels of abilities. Amongst the five levels of Hebrew that will be offered, the lower three will be asynchronous, and the upper two will be in-person. The first three levels are focused on building and enhancing Hebrew skills, whereas the two upper levels are more advanced.

Cohen explained that there is a distinction between developing ones skills and using them. As such, the upper levels will focus more on immersion in Hebrew language, and using it to enrich your cultural abilities in literature or in Bible. On Beren Campus an Advanced Bible course taught in Hebrew by Prof. Smadar Rosensweig will help fulfill the Hebrew requirement.

The upper courses focus more on cultural enrichment and immersion, with course options such as Hebrew literature and biblical Hebrew. However, Koller noted that students will also continue developing their skills. Studying Tanach in Hebrew youre both studying Tanach and improving your Hebrew, he commented. This allows for students in the advanced courses to continue developing their skills, but that is not the primary focus. By contrast, the lower levels are designed to get a pretty basic level of competence, so everything is in the service of competence, Koller added. Once youre functional in Hebrew, we can do more interesting things.

The curriculum for the first three levels will be exactly the same across both campuses. Prof. Cohen has been working incredibly hard to develop the materials for those three levels, Koller stated. Since Cohen developed the curriculum for these levels Hebrews 1010, 1020 and 1030 there is no concern that this teacher is easier, this teacher is more demanding, he explained. Its all exactly the same curriculum, the same assessment materials, the same exams. The upper courses will be slightly different across Beren and Wilf campuses, due to slightly different administration of the advanced courses.

There will be some current faculty guiding the courses, with some new faculty joining. Prof. Cohen interviewed many potential instructors and we have some really fantastic instructors coming on, Koller shared. The entire program will be supervised by Cohen, while each level will additionally be supervised by experienced faculty members.

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Photo Caption: The Hebrew department is set to change as of this Fall semester.

Photo Credit: The Commentator

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Everything You Need to Know About the New Hebrew Department - The Commentator - The Commentator

Stephen Curry Wore a Hebrew Sweatshirt at the NBA Finals – Jewish Exponent

Posted By on June 21, 2022

Stephen Curry sporting a sweatshirt with Hebrew on it during an NBA Finals postgame press conference on June 10. (Screenshot from YouTube via JTA.org)

By Jacob Gurvis

Jews looking for a rooting interest in the concluding games of this years NBA Finals might have one now, thanks to a head-turning wardrobe choice from Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry.

No, Curry isnt Jewish. But during Fridays Game 4 postgame press conference, following a Warriors victory, he did don a Hebrew sweatshirt for the cameras one that matcheshis own Hebrew tattoos.

Eagle-eyed Twitter sleuthEmma Goss, a reporter at Jewish Telegraphic Agency partnerJ. The Jewish News of Northern California, caught the hoodie. It features the phrase , which translates to love never fails a reference to the New Testament passage 1 Corinthians 13:8 (though with the Hebrew letters written in the reverse order). Its also one of Currys two Hebrew tattoos, which he shares with his wife.

The sweatshirt also features an image of Currys wrist, visibly emblazoned with the same Hebrew tattoo. Currys second Hebrew tattoo is simply his last name rendered in Hebrew: .

Currys fascination with the languagemight stem from his mother, Sonya Curry, who told reporters in 2015 that following a previous visit to Israel, she was just transformed spiritually. Sonya Curry, who also has a Hebrew tattoo, said she wanted to learn Hebrew because it is the language that Jesus spoke (more likely, he spoke Aramaic, although probably understood Hebrew), and added that she wanted to read the Torah in Hebrew.

Of course, a haphazardly translated New Testament phrase is hardly a gateway to meaningful Jewish wisdom. But the NBA Finals series between the Warriors and the Boston Celtics has other Jewish connections, too.

For Boston, that includes Hall of Fame coach and executiveRed Auerbach (who died in 2006), the son of a Russian-Jewish immigrant who is generally considered the greatest coach in the history of basketball.

For the Warriors, theres Jewish-Ukrainian immigrant and fellow Hall of Fame coachEddie Gottlieb (who died in 1979), who played a leading role in bringing the team to the Bay Area from Philadelphia.

Two of the NBAs biggest awards are named after these two Jewish basketball pioneers. The leagues Rookie of the Year award confers the Eddie Gottlieb Trophy, while the Coach of the Year receives the Red Auerbach Trophy.

Currys Warriors lead the Celtics three games to two heading into Thursday nights Game 6. If the Warriors win, it will be the teams fourth championship since 2015.

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Stephen Curry Wore a Hebrew Sweatshirt at the NBA Finals - Jewish Exponent

When the Hebrew Bible came up in the Jan. 6 hearings, it wasn’t by accident – Forward

Posted By on June 21, 2022

An image of former Vice President Mike Pence on the night of January 6, 2021 is displayed during the third hearing of Jan. 6 hearings. Photo by Getty Images

By Louis KeeneJune 17, 2022

Day 3 of the Jan. 6 special committee hearings was all about Vice President Mike Pence, and the emotional climax involved a classic story from the Hebrew Bible.

It came during nearly two-and-a-half hours of testimony from Pences lawyer, Greg Jacob, when U.S. Rep. Pete Aguilar of California asked how Jacobs faith had guided him during that fateful day. The lawyer described fleeing to a secure location with the vice president as a mob chanting hang Mike Pence stormed the Capitol.

While they were in the bunker, Jacob said, he pulled out his Bible and turned to the story of Daniel in the Lions Den.

Daniel 6 was where I went, he said, and in Daniel 6,Daniel has become the second in command of Babylon, a pagan nation that he completely faithfully serves. He refuses an order from the king that he cannot follow, and he does his duty consistent with his oath to God. And I felt that thats what had played out that day.

Thats a pretty good summary of the background to the story. The metaphor stops working after that King Darius quickly realizes his error and begs the prophets forgiveness, unlike Trump, who continued to disparage Pence and insist the election was rigged.

Pence is an Evangelical Christian, and the committee has used that to reinforce an image of the vice president as a moral leader who helped protect American democracy. Jacobs nationally televised recollection of the day of the insurrection began with the vice president leading a prayer.

Aguilar, a Democrat from the Inland Empire, followed Jacobs testimony about the Book of Daniel with a clip from Marc Short, Pences chief of staff, who recalled sending the vice president a text message with a Bible verse after the drama died down.

At 3:50 in the morning, when we finally adjourned and headed our ways, Short said in the video clip, I remember texting the vice president a passage from Second Timothy, Chapter 4, Verse 7, about, I fought the good fight. I finished the race. I have kept the faith.

Aguilar underlined this for emphasis.

He started his day with a prayer and ended his day with a Bible verse, he said of Pence. Ive fought the good fight. I finished the race. Ive kept the faith.

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When the Hebrew Bible came up in the Jan. 6 hearings, it wasn't by accident - Forward

Ukraines Zelensky to take questions at Hebrew University event next week – The Times of Israel

Posted By on June 21, 2022

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will speak to Jerusalems Hebrew University in a live address next week, the university said on Thursday, as Kyiv continues to appeal for support from Israel and other western nations.

Zelensky will speak to the university community on Wednesday, June 22, at 4:15 p.m, Hebrew University said.

The speech will be broadcast live on the universitys Facebook and YouTube pages. The Ukrainian-language speech will have simultaneous English translation.

After the speech, Zelensky will take questions from students and faculty.

Zelensky spoke to the Knesset via video in March in a speech that was criticized by some lawmakers for comparing Ukraines war experience to the Holocaust.

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Jerusalem and Kyiv have had regular contact since the start of the war, although the relationship has sometimes been tense. Israel has sent Ukraine aid since soon after Russias invasion began, but has held back from sending weapons, as Jerusalem has tried to preserve its ties with Moscow.

Ukraines ambassador to Israel, Yevgen Korniychuk, criticized Israel last week for refusing to provide defensive weapons and for not accepting wounded Ukrainian soldiers for rehabilitation. Ukraine has also consistently called for more military aid from other countries in recent weeks, as its military gets battered by Russian weaponry, taking heavy casualties.

Zelensky had another significant show of international support on Thursday, as Germany, France, Italy and Romania visited Kyiv.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Thursday during the visit that Zelensky will take part in this months Group of Seven summit, giving him another large platform to appeal for help.

Scholz thanked Zelensky for accepting my invitation to participate in the G7 summit being held June 26 to 28 in the German Alpine resort of Schloss Elmau.

Zelensky, who is not believed to have left Ukraine since the start of the war on February 24, was expected to join the leaders by video-link.

The G7 group of advanced, liberal economies includes the United States, France, Canada, Japan, Germany, Italy and the UK.

Scholz arrived with French President Emmanuel Macron and Italian premier Mario Draghi in Ukraine by train early Thursday and headed to Irpin, scene of fierce battles early in Russias invasion.

Scholz called the wreckage he witnessed terrible and senseless.

An entire city in which there was no military infrastructure whatsoever was destroyed, he told reporters. That tells us a lot about the brutality of the Russian war of aggression which is only aimed at destroying and conquering.

Scholz pledged international solidarity so the citizens of Ukraine will be able to rebuild their country.

The leaders of the major EU powers vowed to help Ukraine defeat Russia and to rebuild its shattered cities during the trip.

France has been alongside Ukraine since day one. We stand with the Ukrainians without ambiguity. Ukraine must resist and win, Macron said.

Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi (2L) French President Emmanuel Macron (3L) and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz (R) visit Irpin on June 16, 2022. (Ludovic Marin/Pool/AFP)

Surrounded by the wreckage left by Ukraines successful but hard-fought defense of its capital in the early stages of the 113-day-old conflict, Draghi said: We will rebuild everything.

They destroyed kindergartens, they destroyed playgrounds. Everything will be rebuilt, he said.

It is the first time the three have visited Kyiv since Russias February 24 invasion.

Ukraine has applied to join the European Union and, although no one in Brussels expects it to be a quick process, the leaders of the blocs most powerful countries were expected to bring Zelensky a positive message. EU leaders are preparing to make a decision June 23-24 on Ukraines request to become a candidate for EU membership.

Kyiv is also pleading with its western allies to step up supplies of weapons to its forces, which are outgunned by Russian artillery on the frontline in the east of the country.

Moscow was dismissive of the European visit, and of the arms supplies.

Supporting Ukraine by further pumping Ukraine with weapons, warned Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov would be absolutely useless and will cause further damage to the country.

Fighting in eastern Ukraine is focused on the industrial city of Severodonetsk, and Russians forces appear close to consolidating control after weeks of intense battles.

Police members inspect a crater caused by a Russian rocket attack in Pokrovsk, Donetsk region, Ukraine, June 15, 2022. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky)

In Brussels, Ukrainian defense minister Oleksiy Reznikov and other officials met with around 50 countries of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group at NATO headquarters asking for a surge in weapons and ammunition.

Ukraine is really in a very critical situation and therefore, its an urgent need to step up, NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg told journalists ahead of two days of talks.

Russian President Vladimir Putin meanwhile underscored that he was not as isolated internationally as his foes would wish with a call with Chinas leader Xi Jinping, their second reported call since Russia attacked Ukraine.

China has refused to condemn Moscows invasion of Ukraine and has been accused of providing diplomatic cover for Russia by criticizing Western sanctions and arms sales to Kyiv.

The United Nations warned a hunger crisis that has been worsened by the war in Ukraine, traditionally a breadbasket to the world, could swell already record global displacement numbers.

Addressing the food insecurity crisis is of paramount importance to prevent a larger number of people moving, the UN refugee chief Filippo Grandi told reporters.

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On Juneteenth, Jewish communities are reckoning with their own attitudes on race – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on June 21, 2022

(JTA) At Washington Hebrew Congregation in D.C., a weekend full of educational programming is on the agenda for Juneteenth.

Guests at Fridays Kabbalat Shabbat will enjoy a dinner provided by a local Caribbean catering company featuring menu items like jerk chicken, green beans, and fried plantains. After services on Saturday morning, the synagogue will send a group to the Moral March on Washington. On Sunday, there will be a screening of the film Who We Are: A Chronicle of Racism in America.

In Greensboro, North Carolina, Temple Emanuel will tell the story of one of its white congregants who was involved in desegregating local businesses during the Woolworth lunch counter sit-ins of the Civil Rights Movement. In Georgia, the Atlanta Jews of Color Council and Kol Panim will co-host a musical Shabbat at the Distillery of Modern Art.

These communities join the many others celebrating Juneteenth in Jewish spaces for the second year of its recognition as a federal holiday. The holiday, which falls on Sunday, June 19, commemorates the day in 1865 when enslaved Black people in Texas learned of their emancipation, two years after the Emancipation Proclamation.

For many Jewish institutions, Juneteenth is not just an opportunity for solidarity with the Black community, but a moment to grapple with racism in their own spaces. Many of these communities celebrations and commemorations will be led by their own members who are both Black and Jewish.

I certainly hope that this event will be the start of a conversation, not just the end, said Josh Maxey, head of the Jews of color group at Washington Hebrew.

Two years ago, Washington Hebrew launched a roundtable program to address racial inequity. But Maxey knew that Jews of color needed a place for fellowship, and so the affinity group was founded in August 2021.

Its really a chance for other Jews of color to come together to celebrate each other and to be themselves and not feel like we have to hide aspects of our identity, Maxey said. Sometimes its difficult to walk into Jewish spaces and be the only person that looks like you.

Amid a national reckoning over racism in the United States in the wake of the 2020 murder of George Floyd, Jewish communities are turning the focus on themselves. And many are finding the ways their actions fail to match their rhetoric of inclusion.

At the Reconstructing Judaism convention in March, attendees of an anti-racist workshop co-led by Rabbi Sandra Lawson, director of racial diversity, equity, and inclusion for the movement, learned about how harmful it is to ask a person of color when they converted, or, during Shabbat services, if they know what theyre doing.

Nate Looney, director of community safety and belonging at the Jewish Federations of North America, said this is something he deals with when deciding whether to go to synagogue.

As much as being observant is important to me, my peace of mind is better guarded if I stay home and observe Shabbat at home, versus going to this new random synagogue and being faced with all the questions that Im going to get, Looney said.

My heart goes out to Jews of color that are struggling with their Judaism and going into these spaces to seek refuge and then are met with this exoticism or curiosity, he added.

In April, Lawson launched the beta version of a tool for synagogues to assess their racial justice and equity work.

Synagogues have also had to reckon with their attitudes toward security, especially in the wake of antisemitic violence that included the hostage situation at Congregation Beth Israel in Colleyville, Texas in January. While white Jews might welcome police and armed guards at their synagogues, Jews of color do not feel that same sense of security in their presence, given the disproportionate amount of police violence directed at Black and brown people in the United States.

Looney, a farmer by trade, is now leading an examination of armed security for the Jewish Federations equity, diversity and inclusion efforts.

Its really important to ensure that individual communities are engaging in these conversations about safety and security, that theyre seeking out the Jews of color in their community to engage them in those conversations as well, Looney said.

Marchers in the 48th Annual Juneteenth Day Festival in Milwaukee, Wisc., June 19, 2019. (Dylan Buell/Getty Images for VIBE)

Many of the Jewish Juneteenth programs across the country will touch upon these year-round issues for Black Americans. But theyll also focus on how Black Jews have always been part of the Jewish community by centering Black Jewish voices. At the Marlene Meyerson JCC Manhattan, ritual leaders Rabbi Isaama Goldstein-Stoll and Marques Hollie the Jewsician will lead a rooftop music session, followed by a vegetarian potluck dinner. In Elmira, New York, Congregation Kol Ami will host guest speaker Mookey Van Orden, a Jewish day school alum, teacher, theater director and activist who will give a presentation on how to be a Jewish anti-racist.

Black Jews arent an oddity or something thats just cropped up since the murder of George Floyd, Looney said. Weve always been a part of the community and have been either hidden or ignored.

Theres often a conversation when it comes to talking about the Black community around saying the Jewish community and the Black community, he added. I think its important for us to shift that conversation some to recognizing that its not two separate things, and that there can be overlap.

Recently, that overlap became tragically evident after a shooting in a Buffalo grocery store left 13 people dead, 11 of whom were Black. The shooter had been influenced by the antisemitic and racist Great Replacement conspiracy theory, which, among other things, suggests Jews are behind a plot to replace white people with a tide of immigrants and Black and brown people.

In some ways, the parallels between Jewish history and Black history are clear. The central story of the Jewish people the exodus from Egyptian bondage echoed with enslaved African-Americans and their descendants, to the extent that Juneteenth seders have become part of Black Jews commemoration of the day. In 2018, Jews for Racial & Economic Justice began hosting an annual Juneteenth seder, creating a haggadah and seder plate that blends the symbols from Passover with traditional foods from the American South such as beets, okra and sweet potatoes.

The Civil Rights Movement was the high water mark for an alliance of Jews and Blacks who saw common cause. Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel famously marched from Selma to Montgomery with Martin Luther King Jr.; two Jewish activists, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner, and the Black civil rights worker James Chaney were murdered by members of the Ku Klux Klan when they were registering Mississippis Black citizens to vote as part of 1964s Freedom Summer.

Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (center) marches with Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel (far right) from Selma, Alabama to Montgomery, March 21, 1965. (Getty)

In the Jewish world today though, the challenge is not just interfaith or interracial work to end racism elsewhere, but also dealing with racism in Jewish community spaces, Black Jewish leaders say. Hosting a Juneteenth seder is an opportunity to recognize these issues using a familiar Jewish lens.

Were retelling the story of coming into freedom, Looney said. And oftentimes within the United States, the messaging to Black Americans is that you should forget about slavery. But as Jews of color, its part of our tradition to remember being a part of slavery and being out of slavery. So what does it mean to hold on to something that was 5,000 years ago, but forget about something that was 300 years ago?

Josh Maxey from Washington Hebrew said his synagogues Juneteenth programming serves two purposes: Its not only bringing the Jews of color together, but also just educating the community about what Juneteenth is and why its important.

We have to be comfortable with being uncomfortable in those conversations, he added. And thats really the only way that things will change.

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On Juneteenth, Jewish communities are reckoning with their own attitudes on race - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Governor Hutchinson’s Weekly Address | Strengthening Arkansas’s Relationship with Israel – Governor Asa Hutchinson

Posted By on June 21, 2022

For Immediate Release 06.17.2022 Governor Hutchinsons Weekly Address | Strengthening Arkansass Relationship with Israel

Governor Hutchinson'sweeklyradioaddresscan be found in MP3 format and downloadedHERE.

LITTLE ROCKI signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Israel Innovation Authority this week, and today Id like to talk about what this means to Arkansas.

On Tuesday, my economic development team gathered with Dr. Ami Appelbaum, Chairman of the Innovation Authority, and Livia Link, Consul General of Israel. We gathered at the Melrose Hotel in Washington for thesigning ceremony.

Dr. Appelbaum and I signed copies of the agreement in English and in Hebrew.

This agreement affirms the mutual interest of Arkansas and Israel to share ideas and to work together to produce technology that will benefit our nations and the world.

In the official language of the MOU, the purpose of this agreement is to promote activities to foster mutual cooperation in the innovation and development of technology.

I met Dr. Appelbaum last year when I was in Israel for the Prime Ministers Smart Mobility Summit. This MOU is a logical next step to strengthen our robust relationship with one of the United States most important allies. It affirms the deep friendship and mutual respect between Arkansas and Israel.

Our relationship with the Jewish community dates to 1823 when businessman Abraham Block and his family were the first Jewish family to take up residence in Arkansas. Mr. Block and his sons opened businesses in four Arkansas counties, in New Orleans, and in Texas. The Blocks home in Washington is a museum in Historic Washington State Park.

I have had the privilege of expressing our support of Israel by signing bills that allow Arkansas to invest in Israel bonds and that prohibit state and local governments from conducting business with companies that boycott Israel.

As Israels ambassador said at the bill signing that day in August 2017, we were sending a message that Arkansas stands against hate and against anti-Semitism, and that Arkansas stands with Israel.

This agreement is a natural progression of our relationship with Israel.

My friendships within the Arkansas Jewish community have led to many personally enriching opportunities, such as participating in the annual Menorah lighting ceremony in Little Rock. I was equally enriched by the brief time we spent with our friends from Israel on Tuesday.

As I prepared to sign the Hebrew version of the MOU, I suggested that I was going to use my Hebrew name, which brought some laughter. The joke, of course, is that Asa is a Hebrew name.

Now that we have signed the MOU, we will explore whats next in this mutually beneficial partnership between two leaders in innovation and technology as we embark on the next stage of our long relationship.

CONTACT:Press Shop (press@governor.arkansas.gov)

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Governor Hutchinson's Weekly Address | Strengthening Arkansas's Relationship with Israel - Governor Asa Hutchinson


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