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Pilgrimage to Tunisian island of Djerba highlights ancient Jewish heritage – Al-Monitor

Posted By on May 29, 2022

DJERBA, Tunisia Jewish pilgrims from around the world flocked to the Tunisian island of Djerba in mid-May to visit El Ghriba, the oldest synagogue in Africa, sharing festivities with an ancient Jewish community there that has stood the test of time.

Thousands of Jewish worshippers, many from France, Israel and the United States, made their way to the holy site May 19-20 for the annual pilgrimage, part of the Lag BOmer Festival that marks 33 days after the start of the Jewish Passover. Outside of Israel, El Ghriba is one of the most sacred Lag BOmer destinations, said to have been built more than 2 millennia ago when the first Jews arrived to Djerba with a stone from the Temple of Jerusalem.

Tunisian security forces were on high alert to ensure the pilgrims safe passage, manning busy intersections and vetting visitors at checkpoints in front of the synagogue.

The scene was festive around the Ghriba complex, with groups singing songs in Arabic, Hebrew and French, enjoying fresh-grilled kosher meat and sipping on Boukha, a Tunisian-Jewish fig liquor that is a staple of the island.

Inside the ornamented temple, visitors lit candles, prayed and wrote wishes on eggs to lay at the temples floor, continuing a local custom to bring good luck.

It connects you spiritually to experience the mix of cultures and traditions, Goldie Hoffman, an American Jew visiting El Ghriba for the first time with her husband, told Al-Monitor.

Its nice, even if its a bit crazy for me, Johanan, an Orthodox Jew from Switzerland, told Al-Monitor. The customs are different from what Im used to, but this pilgrimage is 100% important in keeping Jewish history and tradition alive here, he said.

High-ranking government officials also took part in the festival in a show of solidarity with the minority community. "The Jewish pilgrimage demonstrates that Tunisia remains a land of peace, tolerance, openness and coexistence, said Prime Minister Najla Bouden at the start of the ceremony.

For Tunisian-born Jews now living abroad, the festival was a special occasion to reconnect with their homeland and its people.

I was born 1 kilometer from here, Victor, a 62-year-old Tunisian-born Jew who left Djerba for France with his family as a child, told Al-Monitor. El Ghriba is special for me and important for Tunisia.

Chemi Bittan, a 47-year-old Tunisian-born Jew who also left Djerba as a child, spoke to Al-Monitor about his ties to the island over a cold bottle of Celtia, Tunisias best-selling beer. Even if we leave Djerba, Djerba doesnt leave us, he said with a smile.

While the pilgrimage was a welcome occasion for Tunisian Jews to congregate, it was also a solemn reminder of just how many have left. Since 1948, Tunisias Jewish population has dropped from 100,000 to just 1,000, owing to geopolitical tensions and, more recently, economic hardship.

Since independence, Tunisias government has taken steps to protect its Jewish citizens, but that has not always stopped antisemitic attacks. In the aftermath of the Six-Day War in 1967, rioters targeted Jews and torched synagogues in Tunis, driving many out of the capital. In 1985, a Tunisian police officer shot three Jews at a synagogue in Djerba in apparent revenge for an Israeli air raid on the PLOs headquarters outside Tunis the week before that killed at least 60 Palestinians and Tunisians. In April 2002, an extremist set off a suicide bomb at the Ghriba synagogue, killing 21 people and crippling the citys tourism industry.

People can turn against us when there are geopolitical problems, one Tunisian Jew who declined to be named told Al-Monitor. However, things are more peaceful now.

Tunisian Jews who seek to move abroad now do so less for fear of their safety than a lack of opportunity. Unemployment is high in Tunisia, especially for youth, and it can be difficult to find a spouse of the same faith or build a family in the dwindling Jewish community.

"There are not many jobs, said Ariel Houri, a Djerbian Jew who works in Djerbas central market. Many Tunisians want to leave, both Muslim and Jewish. It's not a question of religion, it's about economics."

Today, the most vibrant Jewish community is in theHara Kbira, a small quarter near Djerbas central town and marketplace, Homt Souk. The well-guarded neighborhood is unlike anywhere else in Tunisia, which is 99% Sunni Muslim. In the Hara, Jewish children in kippahs run through the streets, residents speak Hebrew alongside Tunisian Arabic, and synagogues, kosher restaurants and yeshiva schools are on every other corner.

Ariel Cohen, a 21-year-old American Jew who visited Djerba in February with his father, said he was amazed at the communitys rich, authentic culture and commitment to Jewish heritage.

"The Hara is one of the best living representations of a traditional Sephardic community Ive seen," Cohen told Al-Monitor. "I'm amazed at their depth of religious knowledge and level of classical Hebrew. They welcomed us like we are a part of the family. It was such a joy to experience their way of life."

Residents of the Hara say they generally live in harmony with their Muslim neighbors and are proud of this coexistence.

We have no problems. We live together, study together and work together, said Youssef Wazan, an elder representative of the Hara Kbiras Jewish community.

In France, you could have problems wearing a kippah. But not here in Djerba, he said, adding that Tunisias government and security forces had done a good job protecting the minority group in recent years.

However, some concede that there are underlying hostilities from a small segment of the population that occasionally bubble up, especially due to conflict in Israel and Palestine.

The majority of Tunisians are open and tolerant, but a minority can have problems, said Houri.

Whatever happens in Jerusalem, we feel it in the Hara, he added.

Despite the challenges, many of Tunisias Jews are determined to stay in their homeland and cherish their Tunisian identity just as their Jewish heritage.

We are all Tunisians, Hai, a Jewish businessman from Tunis, told Al-Monitor. We were born here and we will always have our roots here. If you enter my home, you will see a huge Tunisian flag.

With this outlook, it is perhaps fitting that Djerba is linked to Lag BOmer, a holiday that has come to symbolize the resilience of the Jewish spirit.

The Jewish community is strong here in Djerba, said Wazan. We live together and we help each other including the poor and the unemployed. Thats the role of the community.

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Pilgrimage to Tunisian island of Djerba highlights ancient Jewish heritage - Al-Monitor

LeBron James attends Jewish NYC wedding and holds hands with ex-convict rabbi – The Jewish Standard

Posted By on May 29, 2022

LeBron James likely draws attention at most weddings he attends. After all, the basketball superstar turned entertainment mogul is 6-foot-9 and one of the most recognizable sports figures of all time.

But he made an especially eye-catching entrance at a Jewish wedding last Sunday, holding hands with a well-known kabbalist rabbi who served a year in an Israeli prison.

The scene took place at the New York City wedding of Jeffrey Schottenstein son of Jay Schottenstein, a billionaire who is chairman of the American Eagle Outfitters and Ariella Boker. The Schottenstein family is based in Columbus, Ohio, and has long been close with James, who grew up in Akron and won an NBA championship with the Cleveland Cavaliers.

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In 2009, James nominated Jay Schottenstein to the Time 100 list, noting the businessmans philanthropic support of a translation of the Babylonian Talmud into English, Hebrew, and French.

James also has been a fan of Jeffrey Schottensteins apparel brand TACKMA, which stands for They All Can Kiss My Ass and has been worn by stars across entertainment industries.

Both the Schottensteins and James also have connections to Yoshiyahu Yosef Pinto, a Moroccan-Israeli rabbi with a large international following, who has overseen kosher certification in Morocco.

In 2010, James reportedly sought spiritual guidance from Pinto during a big merchandising meeting that took place on a private yacht, according to TMZ. James then reportedly donated $100,000 to Pintos Shuva Israel organization, which included a yeshiva.

In 2014, Pinto was sentenced for bribing an Israeli police officer and served a year in prison. The police officers superior, who came under public scrutiny from Pintos followers, committed suicide.

Also in 2014, Pinto helped connect Michael Grimm, a former Republican congressman from New York, with some of his wealthy followers. Some of their donations as much as $300,000 were sent in illegal ways, and Grimm also wound up serving time for tax evasion.

On Sunday, James and Pinto looked as close as ever. Video uploaded to YouTube by Jewish Insider shows James holding Pintos hands and listening closely to the rabbis ear, before giving him a big hug.

Jewish Telegraphic Agency

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LeBron James attends Jewish NYC wedding and holds hands with ex-convict rabbi - The Jewish Standard

What the Popular History of the Soviet Jewry Movement Leaves Out – Jewish Currents

Posted By on May 29, 2022

Over the course of this week, weve been making the centerpiece of the Jewish Currents Soviet Issuea section comprehensively reconsidering the history of the Soviet Jewry movementavailable online. The seven articles that make up the section can now be found here. The section grew out of what was originally supposed to be a single article pitched several years ago by Tova Benjamin, a PhD candidate studying Russian and Jewish history at NYU, but it grew into a much more elaborate and multifaceted exploration of a movement that spanned three decades and three countries.

For this weeks newsletter (subscribe here!), I called up Tova to ask her about how this section came about, what she learned in the process, and what she hopes readers will take away from it. Our conversation has been edited and condensed.

David Klion: Whats the origin story of the Soviet Jewry movement section?

Tova Benjamin: Five years ago, I took a class with my advisor at NYU, the historian Gennady Estraikh. Every year he teaches a class called Israel, the United States, and the Soviet Union where he looks at those three countries as a diplomatic triangle. And he devotes a good portion of the course to the postwar history of American Jews who were lobbying and building a grassroots activist movement for freedom of immigration and religious rights for Soviet Jews, and about how Jews in the Soviet Union came to reclaim or rediscover certain aspects of their Jewish identity, especially Zionism and the Hebrew language. He said that with the opening of the archives, historians have been able to see how activists successfully made Soviet Jewish emigration and religious freedom a big problem for American and Soviet officials. That really interested me, so I ended up writing a research paper on the topic. Because of my own background growing up Chabad and with these stories about Chabad in the Soviet Union, I was initially very interested in Chabads involvement in the Soviet Jewry movement. But gradually I became much more interested in the memory of the movement in general. I was reading all this stuff these Jewish organizations were publishing about this history, reminiscing about Jewish unity and human rights, and something felt off.

This wasnt just a liberal human rights movement; it was an American movement in opposition to the Soviet Union happening during the Cold War. It was this massive movement, resulting in some of the largest and most concentrated Jewish political efforts from Jews in US history, but when the Soviet Union collapsed, the whole movement basically disappeared, just ended anticlimactically. After 1991, people started making these very outlandish claims about how the movement caused the Soviet Union to collapse, or helped end the Cold War. A lot of major figures in contemporary Jewish organizations came up through activism within the Soviet Jewry movement and developed very intense nostalgia for a time when, as they would put it, Jews all came together around this Jewish cause. This nostalgia feels like a reaction to Jews who oppose Israels occupation, contrasting this supposed unity over Soviet Jewry to todays splits over Zionism.

There was a lot of writing in the early 2000s about how the Soviet Jewry movement grew out of Jewish involvement in the civil rights movement, when Jews felt alienated from Black freedom movements and were searching for a Jewish cause, but the more I looked into it, the more false that seemed. With the notable exception of Abraham Joshua Heschel and Glenn Richter, almost none of these activists came out of civil rights. In 2010, Gal Beckerman wrote When They Come For Us, Well Be Gone, which cemented a lot of these popular stories about how Jews in America rescued Soviet Jews and helped end the Cold War, and in many ways that was the last word on the movement for a while. In the past ten years, there has been almost no pushback on the accepted story about the movement that shaped our parents generation and helped form the inward-looking attitude of American Jewish institutions as we know them today. And I realized that there hadnt been a popular retelling that wasnt offering a triumphant story about Jews uniting over their identity across borders and successfully emigrating to Israel, which felt like a reflexively Zionist narrative. So about four years ago, I pitched a revisionist piece to Jewish Currents that would reframe the narrative of the Soviet Jewry movement in the US as an origin story for contemporary Jewish identity politics, because of the way American activists for Soviet Jewry crafted a Jewish culture of protest to push their cause.

DK: What was the journey from that initial pitch to the section that we ended up getting in the Soviet issue four years later?

TB: Initially, [JC Editor-in-Chief] Arielle Angel accepted the pitch. She was also very interested in the Jewish identity politics angle. So I tried writing a 3,000-word piece, and right away I realized it was very unwieldy: first of all, because its a 30-year history of a movement spread between three countries that involved many different organizations and individuals across the political and Jewish spectrum, and second, because I was trying to speak to multiple audiences. The audience needed to include people who participated and remember it triumphantly; an older generation of Jewish Currents readers, who would have opposed it as a nationalist and Zionist movement; and a younger generation who had barelyor maybe neverheard of it; as well as some people whose emigration or parents emigration was aided by these activist efforts. I was trying to revise the narrative of what the movement was and also introduce it at the same time, which became very difficult. The 3,000-word piece turned into a 6,000-word piece, and then we tried to cut it back down.

Eventually, Arielle called me and said we should actually make this a whole issue, with a special advisory board of artists and academics and people who have personal relationships to these histories. I had the task of curating a whole section where my original reframing of this history would serve as an introduction. I started rethinking what the section was going to be, because I realized we would have the space to tell the global story, as opposed to a mainly American story.

DK: How did you go about finding the specific contributors to the section and figuring out the specific topics they would be addressing?

TB: We wanted each piece to stand individually on its own, but we also wanted to collectively tell a story. I knew that Hadas Binyamini was working on the links between the Soviet Jewry movement and neoconservatism around the Jackson-Vanik Amendment, and she sent us a really great pitch about that. Jonathan Dekel-Chen pitched us something more general, but also mentioned hed been doing this original research on Israel and its involvement in the movement so we helped him shape a piece that could fit. Olesya Shayduk-Immerman pitched us on something completely different than what we eventually ended up with; we found the angle for that piece in conversation with her. She ended up writing about the way these refusenik exile-to-exodus narratives themselves are made, and how asking different questions of Soviet emigrants produced surprising answers. With Anna Shternshiss piece about Soviet antisemitism, we sought it out. We realized that we needed to address what was happening in the Soviet Union, or the section would fall apart. A lot of people in the US and Israel had altruistic intentions, but they were out of touch, sometimes to a laughable or offensive extent, with what was happening in the Soviet Union. Something Im really happy about is that in the end, three of the seven pieces are about what was happening on the Soviet side: Olesyas, Annas, and Emily Tamkins piece, which looks at those dissidents in the Soviet Union who werent celebrated by American Jewish activists to the same extent as refuseniks were, but who articulated another kind of Jewish future.

Annas was the last one we commissioned, and I think it ended up being the glue for the whole section. She really gets into the history of antisemitism in the Soviet Union, a history I dont think a lot of American Jews really understand, and that is still contentious. A lot of todays discussions about antisemitism on the left have their origins in assumptions about Communists, and especially Jews who joined the Communist Party. Annas work is based on hundreds of oral interviews, and she does a really good job of breaking down what was actually happening and balancing out these often bad faith debates. She shows that yes, there was a lot of anti-Jewish sentiment, but that wasnt actually what motivated people to leave. Meanwhile, on the US side, we see people weaponizing Soviet antisemitism to such an extent it gets compared to the Holocaust, with some even describing it as a spiritual genocide.

We also had Larry Bush, the former editor of Jewish Currents, go through the archives to show how the magazine covered the movement at the time. Jewish Currents started out as kind of a Stalinist rag. After the murder of the Yiddish poets in 1952, they published some editorials trying to reckon with what they had previously ignored about Stalin and Soviet antisemitism. They continued publishing editorials throughout the Cold War years trying to grapple with how to oppose Soviet crimes without joining the Cold Warriors, who they saw as including fellow American Jews involved in the Soviet Jewry movement. I became really fascinated with these writings, and we picked a few of them out of the archives and asked Larry to read through them, reframe them, and introduce them for us. I think thats really cool, both for older Jewish Currents readers who remember the movement, nostalgically or not, and for younger readers to see where Jewish Currents stood at the time and how the publication today relates to its own history.

DK: What did you learn that surprised you and that you didnt know when you set out to do this?

TB: In Hadass piece about how Democratic hawks co-opted the Soviet Jewry movement, I was very surprised to learn about the grassroots support for neoconservatives. From her work, I understand that historians usually think of neocons as not really having a larger base. At the time the movement started, the legacy Jewish establishment organizations were less interested in particularist politicsthat is, in supporting specifically Jewish causes. That was a push that came from activists on the ground.

I had also previously assumed that in Israel, these efforts were driven by clandestine intelligence services working behind the scenes, and not by a grassroots movement. Jonathans piece really surprised me, because he completely overturns that assumption. You actually find a similar story in all three countries, where activists start pushing Jewish communal leaders and their governments to invest in Jewish issues.

I also revised some of my own understandings of the movement, and began to see it as a bigger story about Jewish belonging in the long view of the 20th century, and how activists in the US and Israel were actually articulating competing visions of where a Jewish future could be, which ended up being the framing for the section.

DK: How has the section been received so far, and what impact are you hoping it will have?

TB: When Arielle and I were first developing my piece, the question of what it means to use your identity as a Jew in your organizing seemed really pertinent. A lot of people who study the movement say that American Jews were searching for a cause, and for a way to deal with guilt about the Holocaust, and that was funneled into the Soviet Jewry movement. I first started working on this when the Never Again movement was active, around when Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez referred to refugee camps on the Mexican border as concentration camps. There was a lot of anger from some Jewish establishment figures about her use of Holocaust comparisons, and a lot of Jewish organizers on the left felt that they could flip that on its head and use it themselves. What really interested me about the Never Again movement was how the protests were using Jewish religious rituals in a way that was very similar to the Soviet Jewry movement, with the difference being that it was less particularist and more universalist now.

With the Soviet Jewry movement, I wondered what made it so easy for anti-communists and neoconservatives to co-opt this issue and to fit it into their policy agendas? Does that delegitimize the movement, if youre operating under a banner that a Jewish terrorist like Meir Kahane can join beneath as well? I hope readers can use this history of one of the most significant Jewish political organizing efforts in the US to think about organizing today. Who did this movement serve, and to what end?

In terms of responses to the issue, its been really nice to see academics who work on this respond positively, especially the many historians whose work the section builds upon; we had felt a little nervous because its revisionist, and its pushing back on a lot of these established narratives. But people are really excited to see something thats rethinking a movement that they remember or participated in. Arielles mom considers herself very much a liberal Jew, and she was very involved in the movement and was really excited to read some of the pieces, especially the one about the Jackson-Vanik Amendment. She said something like, we were just too naive to realize what was happening at the time. I gave it to my grandma who read all the pieces, and told me that she walked away with a revised sense of a story she thought she knew. She said that reading the pieces made her want to stop donating to the AJC. Thats the outcome Id like to see, for grandmas to stop donating to the AJC.

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What the Popular History of the Soviet Jewry Movement Leaves Out - Jewish Currents

Online concert series seeks to expand traditional views of ‘Jewish music’ – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on May 29, 2022

A new online concert series will launch on June 1 highlighting celebrated Jewish musicians from around the world.

The Secret Chord Concerts is being co-developed by the Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia and the Lowell Milken Center for Music of American Jewish Experience at the Herb Alpert School of Music, part of the University of California, Los Angeles.

The free on-demand video series will feature 15- to 25-minute performances from Jewish musicians who showcase a range of styles, heritages and histories, said the Alpert School of Music in a press release.

Episodes will air on the first Wednesday of every month from June until October. They are recorded live in front of audiences at the Weitzman museum and in a recording studio at UCLA.

Our shared vision of how music reflects all aspects of the American Jewish experience, from East Coast to West, guides this joint effort, said Lorry Black, associate director of the Lowell Milken Center. Were excited to expand audiences for these outstanding musical artists and introduce new people to their incredible music.

Dan Samuels, the Weitzmans director of public programs, added that when people think of Jewish music, they tend to think of klezmer, which itself is deeper, more nuanced and less monolithic than many believe. With the expertise and support of the Lowell Milken Center, Secret Chord Concerts will spotlight the latest in Jewish music across genres, which truly reflects the diversity and complex cultural landscape not only of the Jewish community but of America.

The first concert, New Moon Rising, will focus on female performers in Jewish music. It will air live on June 1 at 3 p.m. on the Facebook pages of the Weitzman Museum and the Lowell Milken Center. It will be available on-demand after the performance on Weitzmans website and the Lowell Milken Centers YouTube page.

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Online concert series seeks to expand traditional views of 'Jewish music' - Cleveland Jewish News

NYC mayor urges Jewish New Yorkers to speak out in support of the police – Forward

Posted By on May 29, 2022

New York City Mayor Eric Adams honors Inspector Richie Taylor, the highest-ranking Orthodox NYPD officer, at the Jewish American Heritage Month reception at Gracie Mansion on May 24, 2022 Photo by Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office

By Jacob KornbluhMay 25, 2022

New York City Mayor Eric Adams reassured American Jews on Tuesday that he has their back as antisemitic incidents rise and gun violence continues to attract attention in the city. But he had one request: Speak out publicly and forcefully in support of police officers under attack.

I need you to raise your voice, Adams urged the crowd of several hundred at a Jewish American Heritage Month reception in the garden of Gracie Mansion, the mayors residence on the Upper East Side. This community knows how important law enforcement is. It is time for us to go on a major public relations campaign and tell the entire city and country that we support our police, we want our police to do their job.

Trust in the police has fallen in recent years, especially in the wake of George Floyds death at the hands of Minneapolis police officers in 2020, which made police violence, particularly against people of color, an issue of heightened national concern. Jewish New Yorkers have taken different sides on the topic. Progressive groups have argued that heavy policing would make Jews less safe, with some supporting the abolition of the police department, while Orthodox groups whose communities have borne the brunt of antisemitic attacks have called for an increased police presence to counter antisemitic violence.

We are too silent on those who are watering the tree of public safety with their blood every day for us, said Adams, a former captain in the citys police department. It is time for us, who sit in the shade of the freedom that they have given us, to raise our voice and say we need our police in our city and we stand with our police in our city.

Adams also offered words of comfort to Jews fearing for their safety. I cant place my hands on each one of your shoulders, but I get it, I get it, he said. I get it, that youre troubled about the antisemitism that is not only pervasive here in New York, but thats cascading across the entire globe.

The number of antisemitic incidents in New York increased by 24 percent last year, according to an annual report released by the Anti-Defamation League. The group tallied 416 incidents across the state, including 51 assaults against Jews, with a majority of the attacks 34 taking place in Brooklyn, which includes a significant Orthodox population. Police statistics showed there were 67 anti-Jewish incidents reported in the first three months of the year.

Describing New York City as the Tel Aviv of America, Adams said hes committed to making Jews feel protected by empowering the police force. He pointed to the significant support he received from Orthodox voting blocs in last years competitive Democratic primary for mayor. You chose me as your mayor, I received the largest support from this community, he said. So Im not going to deny you. Im not going to allow you to live in the betrayal we witness in this city.

At the event, the mayor presented a proclamation to honor Inspector Richie Taylor, the highest-ranking Orthodox Jew to serve in the citys police department, on behalf of 8.8 million New Yorkers.

The Jewish Heritage celebration also featured a performance by Hasidic pop star Shulem Lemmer who wowed the crowd with his cover of Frank Sinatras New York and Billy Joels Piano Man.

I was ready for just about anything when I came into an Eric Adams party. But a Hasidic guy singing Billy Joel was not one of them, remarked City Councilman Lincoln Restler, who is Jewish.

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

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NYC mayor urges Jewish New Yorkers to speak out in support of the police - Forward

‘It was the oldest continuously in-use synagogue in the United States’: Jewish history tour chronicles more than a century of change in Easton – The…

Posted By on May 29, 2022

Some of the stone foundation is all that remains of the first synagogue in Easton, now an empty lot on Sixth Street overgrown with high grass and weeds.

Standing in the nearby alley, where stray cats meandered near the weather-worn remnant earlier this month, Sarah White resurrected some of its history.

When it was at this location, the English version is Temple Covenant of Peace. The Hebrew translation is Brith Shalom, said White, community engagement coordinator for the Northampton County Historical and Genealogical Society. And while this synagogue was at this location, it was here for 117 years. It was the oldest continuously in-use synagogue in the United States.

The original foundation of a synagogue is visible Thursday, May 11, 2022, on a now-empty lot in Easton. (Rick Kintzel/The Morning Call)

While the building is gone, eventually sold to a Baptist church before a 1990s fire reduced it to rubble, the lot is one of more than 20 stops on the Northampton County Historical and Genealogical Societys virtual tour of Eastons Jewish history. Launched in honor of Jewish American Heritage Month, the tour proceeds chronologically, encompassing the citys downtown between Scott Park and Sixth Street, and includes images, citations and sources.

Easton is in no way unusual in the conversations that weve been having for 300 or 400 years, White said. We really want to emphasize that history is not really history, because it never ends. . . . We very much want the public, any visitors and community members to know that your story is just as important as what you would go to a museum to read.

The tour shows how the city has changed over more than a century of expansion, development and cultural transformation for Jewish residents, illustrating the split between Reform and Conservative ideologies that fueled two separate congregations in the city for decades.

Broadly speaking, Conservative congregations are more likely to observe kosher dietary restrictions and use more Hebrew and less English in their services than those who identify as Reform. Reform Judaism highly values social justice, and while Conservative Judaism does as well, it places more emphasis on traditional Jewish law, guiding religious belief and aspects of daily life.

It was only recently that both congregations came together, citing a decline in membership. Temple Covenant of Peace, a Reform congregation, was founded in 1839. Bnai Abraham, a Conservative synagogue, came decades after, but before the turn of the century.

Easton hit a high of more than 35,000 residents in 1950, when memberships in the synagogue peaked, and dipped nu almost 10,000 in subsequent decades. A 2007 demographic study completed by the Jewish Federation of the Lehigh Valley showed 8,050 Jews live in 4,000 Jewish households across the region, meaning 2% of the Lehigh Valley is Jewish, making it the third-largest community in the state.

In August 2020, Eastons two congregations merged, bringing together about 160 families and becoming Bnai Shalom in the 1500 block of Bushkill Street.

Because of the pandemic, we have been obviously stymied in our coming together as a community, said Rabbi Melody Davis of Bnai Shalom. And now we are beginning to make those wonderful steps as a community that weve been unable to because of the pandemic.

Finally, we are now having in-person services.

Davis said one of the biggest hurdles for the congregations was selling the building that held Temple Covenant of Peace, just a few blocks away on Northampton Street, adding theres memories in the walls, and that really tore the heart out of a lot of people.

People are coming, and they are joining and its just a blessing, Melody said. Were kind of a wonderful mix of old and new, and experimentation.

And that mixture can be traced through the historical societys tour.

Before that first Sixth Street synagogue was built in the mid-1800s and modeled after synagogue in northern Italy life for Jewish residents, many of them from Germany, included no formal congregation, rabbi or house of worship, said White. Instead, a traveling rabbi would split their time between New York and the Valley.

Then the synagogue was built, a hulking brick building with red accents and a centered Star of David, she said. Around this same time, Jews from what is now Latvia, Poland, Ukraine and Lithuania began settling in the area.

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This is where, in my opinion, this gets to be fascinating because a lot of discussions that we have today about acculturation and adaptation and the tensions between the old world and the new world we see that playing out within these two segments of the Jewish community, White said, noting that German Jews were more Americanized, while the next wave was more traditional in dress, food and language, many speaking Yiddish.

The tensions that are happening between these two sects of the community, I think, really speak to a lot of the issues that were still discussing today, White said.

Breaking from the Reformed Jews at Temple Covenant of Peace, a Conservative group created Bnai Abraham in 1888. The building where they worshiped, another brick structure on South Sixth Street, has since been shuttered, and is in disrepair. The congregation had outgrown it, moving to Bushkill Street in the mid-1960s.

An synagogue built in 1906 is pictured Thursday, May 11, 2022, along Sixth Street in Easton. (Rick Kintzel/The Morning Call)

And its not too long after the Reformed congregation moves as well, White said. And, ironically, theyre right down the street from each other here and theyre just about right down the street from each other over there as well.

Although they split over ideologies, religious leaders decided to merge in order to just keep their community alive, White said.

And this is one of the things that I find so fascinating and refreshing, is that even after all of this tension and cultural conflict, that both synagogues they sit down they had always been close regardless but they sit down with each other, White explained. They dialogue and they decide how they want to move forward to ensure that, as theyve been asking themselves for 150 years, how do we adapt to continue to survive?

Morning Call reporter Molly Bilinski can be reached at mbilinski@mcall.com.

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'It was the oldest continuously in-use synagogue in the United States': Jewish history tour chronicles more than a century of change in Easton - The...

New coast-to-coast series brings trailblazing Jewish musicians to audiences everywhere – The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music – UCLA Herb Alpert…

Posted By on May 29, 2022

On Wednesday, June 1, the first season of Secret Chord Concerts, a new series spotlighting top Jewish musicians worldwide today, will launch.

Secret Chord Concerts is a free on-demand video series featuring 15-25 minute performances from celebrated Jewish musicians representing a broad range of styles, heritages, and histories and recorded live in front of intimate audiences in Philadelphia and Los Angeles. Season 1 episodes will air the first Wednesday of every month from June until October.

A cross-country partnership between the Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History (The Weitzman) on historic Independence Mall in Philadelphia, and the Lowell Milken Center for Music of American Jewish Experience at The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music (Lowell Milken Center) in Los Angeles, generated this new online offering. Both presenting organizations are committed to inspiring in people of all backgrounds a greater appreciation for the diversity of the American Jewish experience. This seasons episodes were filmed at The Weitzman, against the striking backdrop of Independence Hall, and in UCLAs beautiful recording studio.

The first Secret Chord Concert will air on June 1 at12:00 p.m. PT / 3:00 p.m. ET on the Facebook pages of The Weitzman, the Lowell Milken Center for Music of American Jewish Experience and the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music. The series will be available on-demand after the event on the above Facebook pages, The Weitzmans website, and on the Lowell Milken Centers YouTube page.

Ive had the idea of a Jewish Tiny Desk style series in my head for years, said Dan Samuels, The Weitzmans Director of Public Programs. When people think of Jewish music, they tend to think of klezmer, which itself is deeper, more nuanced, and less monolithic than many believe. With the expertise and support of the Lowell Milken Center, Secret Chord Concerts will spotlight the latest in Jewish music across genres, which truly reflects the diversity and complex cultural landscape not only of the Jewish community, but of America.

We couldnt be more pleased to partner with The Weitzman once again in presenting this new endeavor, said Lorry Black, Associate Director of the Lowell Milken Center. Our shared vision of how music reflects all aspects of the American Jewish experience, from East Coast to West, guides this joint effort. Were excited to expand audiences for these outstanding musical artists and introduce new people to their incredible music.

Inaugural Season Line-UpEpisode 1June 1New Moon Rising, a trio of powerhouse female voices in Jewish music. Original spiritual music with lush, powerful harmonies interwoven with violin, mandolin and guitar. The audio from which will be released as a debut album this summer. Program: The Other Side of Fear by Elana Arian, Dodi Li, by Deborah Sacks Mintz, What If by Chava Mirel, Sunrise Nigun, by Deborah Sacks Mintz, and Oseh Shalom by Elana Arian.

Details of subsequent episodes will be included when they launch.

Episode 2July 6Mostly KosherJewish cultural revival music

Episode 3August 3Neta ElkayamMoroccan-Jewish fusionCommunity partner: Jews in ALL Hues

Episode 4September 7Anthony Mordechai Tzvi Russell with the Baymele ensembleYiddish art and folk songs

Episode 5October 6*Andy StatmanNEA National Heritage Award-winning Klezmer and Bluegrass multi-instrumentalist*Wednesday, October 5 is the Jewish High Holy Day of Yom Kippur; therefore, the episode will be released on Thursday, October 6.

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New coast-to-coast series brings trailblazing Jewish musicians to audiences everywhere - The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music - UCLA Herb Alpert...

Daily Kickoff: IRGC terror designation to stay + Stevens and Levin debate – Jewish Insider

Posted By on May 29, 2022

Party Time:New York City Mayor Eric Adamshosteda vegan-friendly Jewish Heritage Month receptionat Gracie Mansion last night.

A Deal Grows in Brooklyn:A group led by Avi Philipsonwill purchasethe debt and an equity stake in the William Vale hotel in Brooklyns Williamsburg neighborhood, after a deal with Zelig Weiss to buy the property fell through.

Culprit Not Caught:Nearly a year after a swastika was etched into an elevator at the State Departments Foggy Bottom headquarters, no one has been identified as the person responsible for the incident, department spokesperson Ned Pricesaid on Tuesday.

Big Spender:FTX founder Sam Bankman-Friedsaidhe expects to spend at least $100 million during the 2024 election cycle, noting that he could put as much as $1 billion into the election.

Shady Money:Authorities in the English Channel island of Jersey arelooking intoRussian-Israeli businessman Roman Abramovichs wealth stored on the island, where a court froze Abramovichs assets, worth more than $7 billion, last month.

Case Opened:The House Ethics Committeeannouncedit is opening an investigation into allegations that Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-NC) engaged in an inappropriate relationship with a staffer and promoted a cryptocurrency in which he had an undisclosed private interest.

Econ Troll:Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, who has been critical of the Biden administrations fiscal policy,criticizedthe White Houses antitrust focus, warning that it could lead to an economy that is more inflationary and less resilient.

Plot Twist:An Iraqi man who claimed to be a soldier waiting for directions from [his] leadership in Qatarwas arrestedon federal charges tied to a plot to kill former President George W. Bush.

Exit Strategy:Glossiers Emily Weissis stepping downas the companys CEO, and will become the executive chairwoman of the beauty brands board.

Fiddler on Film:A new documentarytakesviewers behind the scenes of the making of the classic musical Fiddler on the Roof, on the occasion of the films 50th anniversary.

Philly Schmear:The Schulson Collectiveis openinga new Jewish deli off Philadelphias Rittenhouse Square.

Turkey Talk:Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, who is visiting Israel this week,saidthat Turkeys support for Palestinians is completely independent from its thawing relations with Israel.

League of Nations:U.N. ambassadors from Benin, Burundi, the Czech Republic, El Salvador, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Malawi, Mexico, Panama, Poland, Slovakia, Tanzania and Uzbekistan arrived in Israel yesterday on a weeklong trip to Israel organized by the UJA-Federation of New York and Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Gilad Erdan.

Felled Cell:Israels Shin Bet security servicesarrestedfive members of a Hamas cell in the West Bank who had been planning to kill far-right Israeli MK Itamar Ben-Gvir and bomb Jerusalems light rail, among other attacks.

First-quarter Numbers:Israeli defense manufacturer Elbitposteda rise in revenue, but a drop in Q1 profits, attributing the trend to stock-price determined compensation; Israeli telecoms firm Bezeqsawa rise in Q1 profits.

Brutal Budgeting:Israeli Finance Minister Avigdor Liebermansaidhe expects the Knesset to approve the 2023 state budget this year despite the governing coalitions lack of a majority.

Pound Problem:The Lebanese poundhit a new low, just over a week after the countrys national elections.

Remembering:Former Maccabi USA President Bob Spivak died at 85.

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Daily Kickoff: IRGC terror designation to stay + Stevens and Levin debate - Jewish Insider

Antisemitic markings discovered at Piedmont High School J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on May 29, 2022

Antisemitic markings were found on the Piedmont High School campus earlier this week, according to a police statement issued Wednesday.

A swastika and the word Hitler were found in chalk behind the school gym, the school district said. Pictures have not been released.

The Piedmont Police Department said it was working with the school district to investigate the circumstances surrounding the markings. The department also said it would be increasing police presence at the school out of an abundance of caution, and in light of Tuesdays mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas.

The safety and security of students and staff are our highest priority, the police statement said.

Piedmont High, a relatively small public school in the affluent town, surrounded by Oakland, has a student body of about 850. It was recently ranked fifth in academic performance among San Francisco Bay Area high schools.

The Piedmont Unified School District informed parents of the incident in an email Wednesday, denouncing antisemitism and messages of hate. Superintendent Randall Booker asked parents to discuss the issues around bigotry with their children.

Eliminating anti-Semitism and its long history of hate and persecution is a collective effort, Booker wrote.

The incident follows a proclamation issued May 16 by the Piedmont City Council and Mayor Teddy Gray King recognizing Jewish American Heritage Month. Piedmonters share an obligation to condemn and combat antisemitism, the proclamation reads.

Placing a Nazi swastika on private property or in certain public places, including schools, is a hate crime punishable by jail time and fines under Californias terrorizing threats statutes.

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Antisemitic markings discovered at Piedmont High School J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Jewish Heritage Month Virtual Program – This event has already occurred – Ajax

Posted By on May 29, 2022

Jewish Heritage Month Virtual Program with featured speaker: Andy Reti, Holocaust survivor.

An educational Program for Jewish Heritage Month in Partnership with Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies (FSWC).

About Andy:

Andy Rti is a child survivor of the Holocaust. Born in 1942 in Rechnitz, Austria, he was only two years old when his mother and grandmother were forced out of their home in Hungary and into a Jewish ghetto. Andys father and grandfather had already been moved to a forced labour camp. He was liberated from the Budapest ghetto on January 18, 1945, by the Soviet Red Army. He and his mother, grandmother and grandfather survived the horrors of the war through good fortune and grit. They immigrated to Canada shortly thereafter. Andy attributes his survival to the courage, resilience and sacrifice of his mother and grandmother. He believes that every Holocaust survivors story is a love story; the love of life, family and freedom. Andy has been involved in Holocaust education since 1998. In 2001, he wroteThe Son of an Extraordinary Woman a sequel to his mothers book,An Ordinary Woman in Extraordinary Times, which was written in 1990. In 2016, the two books were combined and re-released asStronger Together.

Registration is required. Register here.

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Jewish Heritage Month Virtual Program - This event has already occurred - Ajax


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