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Three Brothers Bakery in Houston Is a Story of Survival – Texas Monthly

Posted By on May 25, 2022

Texas Country Reporterturns fifty in October 2022. Each week until then, well shareclassic episodesfrom the shows history and behind-the-scenes reflections fromTCRs creator and host, Bob Phillips.

Sigmund Jucker and his two brothers landed in Houston after World War II, having survived and escaped from concentration camps in Poland with a pocketful of family recipes developed in the baking business. Once settled, they picked up where they left off, founding Three Brothers Bakery and making traditional Jewish specialties like rye bread and rugelach, along with new inventions like the Pumpecappleessentially the turducken of desserts.

We were lucky to visit Three Brothers Bakery a few years ago while Sigmund Jucker was still alive. My wife and cohost, Kelli, sat down with him for what would turn out to be his last interview. Listen to this mans words, but, more importantly, feel his passion. The lessons learned from his generation will soon be found only in the history books.

Today, Sigmund Juckers son Bobby runs the family business just like his dad and uncles did, using those same old family recipes that have been carefully guarded for generations. The bakery has managed to bounce back from four floods, a fire, and several hurricanes, and that all happened before COVID-19 devastated restaurants all over the world.

Bobby says he will always keep the family business open, not just for the sweets it produces, but to honor his family and how they have survived.

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Three Brothers Bakery in Houston Is a Story of Survival - Texas Monthly

New book: A ‘Queer, Disabled’ early Zionist illustrates ‘roads not taken’ J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on May 25, 2022

Its hard to find a poster promoting early 20th-century Zionism that doesnt depict a tanned, chiseled man toting a shovel or a gun. The posters were visual reinforcement of the Muscle Jewry valued by Max Nordau and other early Zionist leaders, who felt the land would redeem a physically depleted Jewish people and the people would renew a neglected land.

One early Zionist thinker defied this macho image, and then some: While Zionism celebrated strong and healthy bodies, Jessie Sampterspoke of herself as crippled from polio and plagued by weakness and sickness her whole life. In addition, she wrote of homoerotic longings and had same-sex relationships we would consider queer.

Those quotes are from Sarah Imhoffs new biography, The Lives of Jessie Sampter: Queer, Disabled, Zionist (Duke University Press). The book explores the life of a New York-born poet and writer (18831938) who moved to Palestine in 1919 and whose circle before and after included Henrietta Szold, who founded Hadassah; Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan, the founder of Reconstructionist Judaism; Louis Brandeis, the future U.S. Supreme Court justice and leader of the Zionist Organization of America; the writerMary Antin, and Albert Einstein.

Although Sampter never became a household name, she published 11 books and dozens of poems in English and Hebrew. She shared a home at Kibbutz Givat Brenner with the Russian Zionist Leah Berlin, and advocated on behalf of Yemenite Jews and the pre-state Jewish communitys deaf population.She never married nor bore children, although she did adopt a Yemenite Jewish daughter.Her story is worth remembering, writes Imhoff, because Sampters life itself represented an alternative vision of Zionism one that did not follow the gender norms prescribed for the ideal (male) Zionist builder or the female Zionist nurturer of the nation.

Imhoff is associate professor of Religious Studies at Indiana University, Bloomington, and author of Masculinity and the Making of American Judaism. We spoke via Zoom on May 19.

Our conversation was edited for length and clarity.

New York Jewish Week: I had never heard of Jessie Sampter. When did you come to know her and decide she was a subject to be written about?

Sarah Imhoff:My first book was about masculinity and American Judaism. I had plenty of men talking about Zionism and masculinity, and I was wondering what women, specifically American Jewish women, thought about Zionism and masculinity. I knew that Sampter was a Zionist, so I got hold of some of her files in Jerusalem. She didnt actually have that much to say about masculinity and Zionism, but I was totally captivated

Before we get to her Zionism, lets place her in New York, the kind of family she was born into and the way she grew up.

She was born in Harlem. She grew up with two parents who were German Jewish and fairly middle class. They belonged to the Ethical Culture movement with other acculturated Jews. They spoke English at home, they had a Christmas tree at home, at least sometimes. Theyre integrated into what I think of as a Jewish culture.

Even though they didnt ascribe to Judaism itself.

Jessie has this story about when she was perhaps 8 years old. Somebody said, Youre a Jew! And she replied, No, Im not! and went home crying. And then her parents told her, Well, actually, we are Jewish, but it doesnt seem like that was a major way they talked about themselves.

And as she grew up she became what we might call a seeker exploring Eastern religions, seances, Transcendentalism, Ouija boards but whatyou prefer to describe in terms of religious recombination.

I like that as a metaphor, because it suggests that what you end up with is actually a whole thing, rather than what some refer to as a cafeteria religion, which can be a little condescending. When people think about how do I understand the world they draw on things that we could trace to different religious traditions. She doesnt go religion hopping, but has this early life of being very interested in religion, but not knowing where she fits. And then, interestingly, she comes to Zionism before she comes to Judaism, which is a relatively unusual thing.

Tell me a little bit more about that. How old is she at that point?

She is definitely there by 1914, so her mid-to-late 20s. Many people at that moment are thinking about nationalism, and not necessarily in the way that we think about nationalism. We might say peoplehood. One of the things she likes about Zionism is it imagines Jews as a people the way Mordecai Kaplan did, and she and Kaplan are often in contact.

She thinks that Jews as a people have something distinctive to contribute to the project of humanity. She would also say that every people has something distinctive to contribute to the project of humanity, but part of our goal is to figure out what that is, and each people can be its own people and then well all be stronger together. And then she thinks, well, if part of what the Jewish people has to offer is a biblical tradition, or prophetic tradition, I should explore Judaism.

And yet, shes a single woman in the early 20th century, when not a lot of Americans were willing to sail across the world and become a pioneer in a kind of backwater country. Where does she get the impulse?

Thats a great question. A Zionist friend of hers, Lotta Levensohn, calls its a malarial swamp. Sampter was trying to convince the Zionist Organization of America to send her and initially they said no, but eventually she convinced Brandeis. Thats how she narrates it, anyway. And she goes on a one-year contract where shell be writing and theyll be paying her to write, and even when she goes she is thinking that staying is her plan. She writes that she is getting married to Palestine. I think it is audacious, especially because shes disabled with what I think is post-polio syndrome. Basically right after she lands she ends up in Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem for a few weeks recuperating.

She got polio when she was 12. Describe her disability and how she presented physically either to others or to herself.

If you see a photo of her its not obvious, although shes often holding her own wrist or putting her hands behind her back. There are no action shots of her; shes almost always sitting in a chair or posed standing still. If you just looked at her at one instant, you wouldnt see disability. But if you interacted with her at any length, you probably would.

And she definitely had limitations in terms of walking, or working with her hands, and while she loved working in her garden there were limits on what she could do.

Right. And those are things that are much more pressing in Palestine than they are in New York.

And thats because the pioneers were expected to work and build the homeland with their hands and backs as muscle Jews.

That idea permeates a lot of Jewish settlement in Palestine at that time. Shes involved a little bit in the scouting movement, which is about making little muscle Jews: Were gonna go hiking, youre gonna learn to build the nation. That permeates almost all of the Zionist propaganda that you can see in the U.S. and in Europe, too.

And is she very much aware that shes in a contradiction with the classic Zionism of the day?

Yes, she is. There are moments when I see her in her writing pushing against it. Shes involved with early deaf education in Palestine, and she thinks deaf people can grow up to be real, central citizens when others didnt. Shes involved in Yemenite education, too. She insists on a democratic approach that says the Yemenite housewife is the same as the male European halutz [pioneer], and she says and these would be my words that we want a more inclusive Zionism with respect to bodies.

But she has a lot of self doubt. There are moments where shes very cognizant of not fitting in and, maybe in that moment, buys into the Zionist ideal of healthy, strong bodies.

If her physical limitations set her apart, I imagine her sexual identity would too. This is also in a community where procreation is considered a Zionist tenet.

Ive wrestled with this a lot. I wouldnt say she has a clear identity. I wouldnt, for example, call her lesbian, because she wouldnt have self-described that way. There are two things that I think make it right to think about her in queer terms. Her father died when she was young, her mother died not long after. And she created what queer theorists often think of as a chosen family. She met Leah Berlin very soon after moving to Palestine, and the two of them live together most of the time. They lived apart for a little bit and then they moved back in together and made financial decisions, like to go to Kibbutz Givat Brenner together. She adopted a Yemenite orphan named Tamar. And Leah would visit Tamar when she was a little older and away at school.

Its not like she has no biological family she writes a ton of letters to her sister Elvie but there are these kinship structures that look very much like chosen family and theyre queer kinship structures.

I have no idea if she ever had sex with Leah Berlin. But its not common for women of the time to write about sex acts, period. But she expresses what I call queer desire, whether fantasizing being married to a girl playmate or always wanting to be the soldier when she was playing. There are erotic ways that she describes a friendship with another woman.

How was she seen in Palestine or on the kibbutz? Perhaps as a spinster, or was her relationship with Leah Berlin understood as something else and just sort of tolerated?

When shes thinking about joining the kibbutz, its clear that its double or nothing: They get the pair of them or they get no one. Theyre coming together.

You referenced Tamar, the Yemenite toddler that she adopts. How unusual was that? And I think we should say this is not in the 1950s,when the Ashkenazi elite were accused of separating Yemenite kids from their birth parents.

Its not that, but there is still an undergirding of cultural assumptions about Ashkenazi culture being more civilized or better than Yemenite culture. This was not part of that same story, but it obviously has connections. But Sampter was involved in Yemenite education, like setting up a Yemenite kindergarten, so she really cared about Yemenite kids and women.

Adopting a Yemenite child was relatively unusual. Some of her friends think its a terrible idea. Even Henrietta Szold says, How are you going to take care of this kid? You can barely take care of yourself.

Speaking of Henrietta Szold, in 1915 Sampter writes a sort of Zionist textbook for Hadassah, Course in Zionism.Tell me about her relationship with Szold and the womens Zionist movement.

Her relationship with Szold began before that textbook, going back to something like 1910 or 1911. Sempter looks up to Szold and Szold also recognizes something in Sampter. They try having her be a speaker for Hadassah and I think for reasons related to her disability that just doesnt fly. Im also not sure Sampter was very charismatic. She might have in fact been a kind of difficult person. But pretty early on in her own Zionist development she is writing for Hadassah. Sampter thinks of Szold as a mentor, and even tries out being a little bit more Orthodox, but then kind of backs off a little bit later.

She died in 1938, 10 years before statehood, but already the armed struggle against the Arabs and the British in charge of Palestine had begun. You write that she was a pacifist who supported Jewish armed defense in Palestine.

She bought a gun at one point. She was like, I have no idea how to shoot it, but Im gonna put it here in case somebody needs to come in and use it. Shes a pacifist except that she believes that sometimes we might need to defend ourselves. Her position moves back and forth. She experiences some of the armed conflict in Palestine, although its clear she thinks the real bad guys are the British, who she thinks are setting up Jews and Arabs to fight it out for resources and land.

She has moments of being more interested and understanding of Arabs than some of her contemporaries. And then she also has moments of saying that the Arabs have more to learn from Jews than Jews have to learn from them. Its not quite as one sided as it is for many others. On the other hand, it is clear which side has her basic loyalty.

She had a number of well-known friends, but again, shes hardly as well known today as they are. What about her body of work might still be valuable or worth knowing about today?

Whats compelling is a little bit about her body of work and a little bit about her own story. She makes us think about the real variety of possibilities for Zionism. I think, today, Zionism has a much narrower set of meanings than it did in Sampters time. She gestures toward other possibilities.

Give me an example. How did she broaden the definition of Zionism?

I think the disability example, which includes both her own life and what she wrote, shows us that there are ways of imagining society that dont have to privilege an able-bodied, frankly male vision of society. Also, Mizrahi wasnt functional at that time, but her Zionism does really try to think about how the Yemenite Jews and Moroccan Jews fit into it. The Zionist vision that prevailed in Israel was an Ashkenazi one. Her example could be a resource for people who might want to imagine the contemporary state of Israel in different ways.

You write that after she died Sampter became a quotable philosopher, appearing in Weight Watchers inspirational books, on websites and on a roadside in India. What sort of quotes appealed to pop culture?

Most of those are actually the same quote, which is simplicity is the peak of civilization, which is weirdly in the middle of a poem. So I thought thats kind of strange. How did Weight Watchers get this thing? I traced it back to a rabbi who was doing a collection of quotes of Jewish women. I did in fact go hunting for the road sign in India. I think the internet plays a role in why so many picked up that one quote.

How else do we access her today? Are any of her books in print? Is there a monument to her?

Some folks at Givat Brenner still remember her and still tell stories about her.The rest house she helped foundis still standing, although it is no longer a rest house. I dont know if any of her books are in print. Shes not very well remembered. I think there are reasons for that. I think her being single is actually one of them. Its often families that are good at memorializing and publicizing the importance of people. And I think its because her Zionism was not actually the Zionism that got picked up as the mainstream. She doesnt fit what people imagine that group of pioneers to be.

My argument in the book is not that heres this really influential woman weve forgotten. Its almost, look, this woman wrote all of these things, and was really well connected, and wasnt influential. But she shows us these roads not taken.

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New book: A 'Queer, Disabled' early Zionist illustrates 'roads not taken' J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Anti-hate group speaks out against antisemitic incident in West Hollywood and Beverly Hills – Los Angeles Times

Posted By on May 25, 2022

Days after a group of people dressed in clothing reminiscent of Nazi brownshirts drove a rented box truck displaying hateful messages down Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood and Beverly Hills, a watchdog group is speaking out against the incident and says it has identified the hate group and two of its members.

According to StopAntisemitism, an organization that works to expose people and groups that engage in antisemitic behavior, the group responsible for Saturdays incident is the Goyim Defense League.

The organization also named two people who were captured on video participating in the hateful rally: Jon Minadeo II and Robert Frank Wilson.

We are horrified that innocent bystanders in Beverly Hills and West Hollywood, Jewish and otherwise, were subjected to such vile and atrocious hate, Liora Rez, executive director of StopAntisemitism, told The Times on Monday. When white supremacists like the Goyim Defense League are allowed to spread this type of vile bigotry without any pushback, then it normalizes Jew hatred and sends the message that this is tolerable.

Neither Beverly Hills police nor the Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department, which responded to the incident, have identified the group or any participants.

StopAntisemitism said it identified the two men based off of physical appearance.

The group also said the antisemitic messaging on the truck has been noted in prior incidents involving the hate group, including in March when Wilson was seen driving in San Diego in a similar truck.

The GDL has also been responsible for passing around antisemitic fliers as well as hanging signs with hate-filled rhetoric on freeway overpasses, StopAntisemitism said.

Sheriffs Sgt. Joana Warren told The Times on Sunday that investigators identified the trucks license plate and were working to identify who rented it.

A Sheriffs Department spokesperson told The Times on Monday that the incident remains under investigation and said she couldnt share any more information.

The Goyim Defense League is a loose network of individuals connected by their virulent antisemitism, according to the Anti-Defamation League. The group includes five or six primary organizers/public figures, dozens of supporters and thousands of online followers.

It was responsible for at least 74 antisemitic propaganda incidents in 2021, the Anti-Defamation League said.

According to an account of Saturdays incident by StopAntisemitism, the truck was parked in the driveway of the Beverly Hilton hotel, where Minadeo, Wilson and two other members of the hate group dressed in clothing resembling that of the brownshirts in Nazi Germany were seen parading and shouting The Nazis are coming and here comes Jew boy ... were going to make you go extinct.

Another video captures an encounter between the group and a law enforcement officer, StopAntisemitism said. A member of the hate group says Holocaust denial ... 6 million, thats an exaggeration.

The person then thanks the officer, calling him a good goy, StopAntisemitism said.

The truck bore hate-filled messages such as Ann Coulter was right about Jews and Resisting the Great Replacement = Greatest Threat?

The so-called great replacement conspiracy theory is a racist philosophy espoused by white nationalists.

FBI statistics show that Jews continue to be the most targeted minority in the U.S. and that antisemitic crimes are on the rise, Rez said.

Yet, Jews are often overlooked when discussing issues of civil rights and social justice because they are categorized as a model class minority and are inaccurately portrayed as a privileged group, she said. Hateful individuals, both among fringe groups but also in the mainstream, then use this perception as an excuse to attack Jews.

The privileged perception of Jewish people leads to antisemitism not drawing the same level of attention as discrimination against other groups, Rez said, adding that her organization is working to ensure that antisemitism is given equal attention and combatted with the same level of fervor.

The lack of fear that white supremacists have should be frightening to everyone, she said.

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Anti-hate group speaks out against antisemitic incident in West Hollywood and Beverly Hills - Los Angeles Times

Hate crimes are on the rise. Here’s what you can do to help prevent them – Colorado Public Radio

Posted By on May 25, 2022

What should I look out for in terms of red flags before someone potentially becomes violent?

Usually we notice that our loved ones are changing in some way. What we found in bystander research is that friends and family have the greatest influence and the greatest opportunity to catch it early, well before it would come onto the radar of a professional, like a mental health counselor or an educator. So we encourage that when somebody starts for the first time saying things about violence or hate, or suggesting that that's the answer to social or political issues, that we confront that by having a conversation and not shying away from it.

How should I have that conversation?

Social media can be one of the worst places to have a conversation about ideologies, because it easily becomes divisive. A face-to-face conversation would be best, since there can be some dialogue.

If someone says something that I have never heard them say before, like something racist, as uncomfortable as that would be, I would want to say, I've never heard you talk like that. Why are these things appealing to you? What's changed with you? Actually express concern about them, that something is off and they're becoming angry and blaming people, which is really a warning sign.

If, instead, you come with the opposite opinion, or try to use facts to dispute someones beliefs, sometimes it ends up having the effect of making you impossible to talk to. They think you're the other, or shaming them, and they will pull away, and then maybe they wont express these things to you, but they can continue to get more strident.

What if Im worried about getting someone in trouble by calling the police?

There's federal research that found that in any given attack, there are three people, usually friends and family, who had real information about what their loved one was going to do, but they probably didn't know what to do with it.

The top reason that people don't report the information is that they're afraid to get their loved one in trouble and they don't want to overreact, or for the loved one to get mad at them. This is especially true with teens and young people; they don't want to get their friend in trouble, or they don't want to get in trouble with them.

Luckily, in Colorado we have Safe2Tell. That works well for these kinds of concerns, about a kid who may have a gun on campus or has insinuated that they will hurt somebody. But the problem is, very much like what happened in Buffalo and even at the King Soopers in Boulder in 2021, once these kids graduate from high school, they don't necessarily fall on anyone's radar.

Are there times when intervention has really worked?

This is really where Colorado excels. Ever since the Columbine massacre in 1999, with the creation of things like Safe2Tell, along with collaboration between mental health and law enforcement for people in crisis, we are very quick at thwarting attacks when there's evidence of a plan, a target, weapons but those are all right on that edge of attack, and sometimes that's just within days or hours of something happening.

We have thousands of calls that go through Safe2Tell in a given year, and you don't hear about all of the suicides and guns on campus and attacks that were thwarted because it's their private business.

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Hate crimes are on the rise. Here's what you can do to help prevent them - Colorado Public Radio

Vaccine scientist Hotez to give virtual talk sponsored by UB – UB Now: News and views for UB faculty and staff – University at Buffalo

Posted By on May 25, 2022

Peter J. Hotez, prominent vaccine scientist, self-described science explainer and misinformation antagonist, will discuss The COVID-19 Vaccines: Science vs. Anti-science in a virtual talk at noon on June 9 presented by UB.

Free and open to the public, the Grand Rounds talk is sponsored by the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB through its Medical Education and Educational Research Institute, in collaboration with the Division of Behavioral Medicine in the Department of Medicine.

Register online.

As U.S. deaths from COVID-19 have passed the grim milestone of 1 million, and with global deaths estimated to exceed 6 million, Hotezs talk will focus on the factors that led to a tragedy of this scale.

He will discuss:

Hotez is dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, where he is professor of pediatrics and molecular virology and microbiology. He is the Texas Childrens Hospital Endowed Chair of Tropical Pediatrics and co-director of Texas Childrens Center for Vaccine Development.

The Jacobs School is especially pleased to be hosting Dr. Hotez, who has dedicated himself to improving the health of the most vulnerable and to promoting science-based decision-making for the public, says Allison Brashear, vice president for health sciences and dean of the Jacobs School.

In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, issues surrounding scientific literacy have become increasingly critical; for example, resulting in our Medical Education and Educational Research Institute designing and implementing new curriculum to strengthen the scientific literacy skills of our students and residents to better prepare them to critically appraise, explain and apply findings from research to patient care.

Hotez and his colleague, Maria Elena Bottazzi, have been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize this year for their work to develop and distribute a low-cost COVID-19 vaccine to the people of the world without patent limitation.

Hotez co-leads teams focused on developing new vaccines that arent deemed financially viable for pharmaceutical companies, and that are for conditions/diseases that primarily sicken the poor. They are currently working on vaccines against hookworm infection, schistosomiasis, leishmaniasis, Chagas disease and SARS/MERS/SARS-2 coronavirus diseases that affect hundreds of millions of children and adults worldwide.

A recipient this year of the American Medical Associations Scientific Achievement Award, Hotez has authored more than 600 scientific publications and five books written primarily for lay audiences.

As the father of an adult daughter with autism and author of the book Vaccines Did Not Cause Rachels Autism: My Journey as a Vaccine Scientist, Pediatrician and Autism Dad, Hotez is a passionate champion for the benefits of vaccination and a national leader in the fight against the growing anti-vaccination movement.

In 2021, he was recognized with scientific leadership awards from the Association of American Medical Colleges and the AMA, in addition to receiving the Anti-Defamation Leagues Popkin Award for combating anti-Semitism.

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Vaccine scientist Hotez to give virtual talk sponsored by UB - UB Now: News and views for UB faculty and staff - University at Buffalo

SDCC cancels investiture of chancellor due to uproar over Alice Walker speech – The San Diego Union-Tribune

Posted By on May 25, 2022

The San Diego Community College District on Monday canceled its upcoming investiture ceremony for Chancellor Carlos Cortez due to a controversy over the controversial positions of keynote speaker Alice Walker, author of the Pulitzer Prize winning book, The Color Purple.

The investiture, a public celebration of a new chancellor taking office, was scheduled to take place at Petco Park on May 31. The district said that about 1,000 people had made reservations to attend the ceremony.

Over the past few weeks, concerns have been expressed about the political beliefs and writings of the investiture keynote speaker, Alice Walker, Cortez said in a statement. At the same time, others have expressed their support of Ms. Walker. As a district that celebrates inclusion, we believe the best way forward would be to cancel the event altogether.

I apologize for the pain caused to any member of our community. The investiture scheduled for May 31 will not be held.

Cortez, reached late Monday at a family event in Florida, declined to discuss the matter with the Union-Tribune.

Some members of the districts faculty and figures in San Diegos Jewish community have objected to the Walker booking, saying that she had publicly supported a fellow writer who made false, demeaning remarks about Jewish people.

They were referring to David Icke, an author and conspiracy theorist. He wrote And the Truth Shall Set You Free, a 1995 book that says, in one passage, I strongly believe that a small Jewish clique which has contempt for the mass of Jewish people worked with non-Jews to create the First World War, the Russian Revolution, and the Second World War.

They then dominated the Versailles Peace Conference and created the circumstances which made the Second World War inevitable. They financed Hitler to power in 1933 and made the funds available for his rearmament.

Inna Glaz Kanevsky, a psychology professor at San Diego Mesa College, which is part of the district, told Cortez in an email in early May: To date, I still have not seen you make any acknowledgement of Ms. Alice Walker(s) vocal and proud endorsement of antisemitic conspiracy theories, including a poem she wrote and posted on her website.

That poem is violently antisemitic in its own right, rooted in the ideas that led to countless pogroms, synagogue shootings, and acts of vandalism.

This, by the way, is not about her criticism of Israel and support of Palestinians. Her antisemitism is entangled in her advocacy, but is a separate issue nevertheless and an issue you still refuse to address publicly.

Walker, who is 78, has steadfastly and publicly denied that she is antisemitic.

The cancellation of the investiture represents a stark turnaround for the district, which said in a statement in early May, "(She) is a Pulitzer prize-winning author and her participation is consistent with the Districts support of the free exchange of ideas and opinions.

This does not mean the District agrees with every statement made by her now or in the past. Walker is a source of inspiration for many in the community. This includes chancellor Carlos Cortez, who says Walker played a key role in his decision to focus his academic studies on African American feminist political history.

The cancelation drew praise Monday from Peter Levi of the Anti-Defamation League.

The ADL commends Chancellor Cortez for cancelling the investiture, said Levi, who is representing San Diego County on an interim basis. A speaker should bring people together, not divide and alienate a community.

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SDCC cancels investiture of chancellor due to uproar over Alice Walker speech - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Weinberg Foundation to give $250K in grants to help Buffalo community after shooting – Maryland Daily Record

Posted By on May 25, 2022

In response to the shooting at a supermarket in the predominantly Black community of Kingsley in Buffalo, New York, the Weinberg Foundation has announced a total of $250,000 in emergency grants to organizations that are assisting victims and community members impacted by this tragedy.

On May 14, a self-described white nationalist entered a supermarket in the Kingsley neighborhood, injuring 13 people and killing 10 of them; 11 of the victims were Black. Before the attack, the shooter posted a manifesto which espoused both racist and antisemitic views and explained that he chose this store and zip code due to the high percentage of Black people living there. This act of domestic terrorism is appalling, and we mourn the lives lost and the trauma inflicted on so many.

The Weinberg Foundations emergency funding package consists of the following grants:

The Weinberg Foundations response to other recent emergencies and disasters includes $1 million in response to Russias invasion of Ukraine; $18 million in COVID emergency funding to existing grantees; $250,000 in response to the 2021 US multi-state tornado outbreak; $100,000 to support those affected by the 2021 collapse of the Champlain Towers condo building in Florida; $200,000 in response to the 2020 wildfires in Northern California; $1.2 million in response to the 2018 Tree of Life Synagogue mass shooting; and $500,000 each in the wake of 2017 hurricanes Irma (in Florida) and Harvey (in Texas). The Foundation has also supported Israel in times of crisis, including $500,000 in emergency relief during the 2012 missile attacks in Israel and $700,000 for services supporting those affected by the Gaza conflict in 2014.

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Weinberg Foundation to give $250K in grants to help Buffalo community after shooting - Maryland Daily Record

The Supremacy Of Torah – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on May 22, 2022

The posuk describes the pursuit of Torah study as being, Yikara hi mipninim More precious than pearls. Homiletically, the Gemara interprets this posuk to mean, Mkohein godol hanichnas lifnei ulifnim, that the study of Torah is more precious than the High Priest who enters the Holy of Holies. This is an extraordinary statement. We must understand that the Kodesh Kodoshim, the Holy of Holies, is the holiest place on earth. It is entered only on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the year, and only by the Kohein Gadol, who is arguably the holiest person on earth. And yet, the Gemara categorically tells us that when one sits down to study Torah, it is a greater activity than the Kohein Gadol entering the Holy of Holies on the Day of Atonement.

We should not be surprised, however, when hearing such grandiose descriptions about Torah study for the Gemara in Megillah also teaches us, Gedolah Talmud Torah yoseir meihatzolos nefoshos Greater is Torah study even more than saving a life. Now, dont misunderstand this Talmudic dictum. If you are sitting and learning Gemara and you see someone drowning and you say to yourself, I cant be bothered to save that person Its bitul Torah, its taking time away from Torah study, you are a chosid shoteh, a pious fool, and youre guilty of felonious behavior. What it does mean is that in raw merit, time spent in learning Torah has more Eternal value than saving a life.

This is why Mordechai was demoted in the pecking order of the leadership of the Anshei Knesses HaGedolah from the rank of four to the rank of five when he got involved in the political intrigue to save Klal Yisrael during the days of Purim. For, although he saved the Jewish people, he would have had even more merit if he had been able to learn instead. Think how incredible that is. You have two people who spent their Sunday night from 8 to 9 p.m. One administered the Heimlich maneuver and saved a person from choking and another person attended the Daf Yomi. In the scales of merit, it is the latter person who comes out on top.

That should give us a whole new perspective on how to prioritize our time. Or, as the Chofetz Chaim, ztl, zya, put it, if you saw somebody having a massive heart attack and you didnt react on time to call Hatzalah and he died before your very eyes, you would rue that day for the rest of your life. So thats the way you should feel, and more, when you have a whole Sunday ahead of you without anything pressing to do and you dont spend any of that precious time on the study of Torah. If you would rue the inability to save the life, then your inability to spend time learning Torah, which is even more precious than saving a life, should certainly distress you to no end.

As we count sefira, and declare nightly our longing and our appreciation of the national treasure of Torah which has been given only to us, may we concretize our sefira declaration by making more use of our daily time for the greatest of all occupations, and the very purpose of the creation of the world, which is Torah study. In that merit, may Hashem bless us all with long life, good health, and all Torah blessings.

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The Supremacy Of Torah - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Thanking G-d For Who You Are And Who You Are Not – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on May 22, 2022

We recite a number of blessings each morning to thank G-d for the daily renewal of the world as well as for our senses and faculties. One of these blessing thanks G-d for creating us as Jews and giving us the opportunity to perform the mitzvot of the Torah. According to the Shulchan Aruch, the wording of this blessing is Baruch Ata Hashemshelo asani oved kochavim umazalot (Blessed are you Hashem for not having made me one who worships the stars and zodiacs).1 Common custom, however, is simply to recite shelo asani goy (for not having made me a gentile).2

There is much discussion regarding the proper wording of this blessing. According to the Talmud and a number of later authorities, it appears that the original wording of this blessing may have been sheasani Yisrael (for having made me a Jew).3 Other sources vehemently disagree and argue that any suggestion that the blessing should be sheasani Yisrael is based on textual forgeries, mistaken amendments, and censorship by non-Jewish authorities.4

There is also a view that the blessing should be for not having made me a foreigner (shelo asani nochri).5 Today, however, universal custom is to recite for not having made me a gentile (shelo asani goy). Indeed, the halachic authorities strongly censure one who makes changes to the accepted wording of the blessing.6 It is reported, however, that the Chofetz Chaim would recite shelo asani oved kochavim umazalot as per the ruling of the Shulchan Aruch.7

There are a number of approaches on how converts should conduct themselves with regard to this blessing. Some authorities suggest that a convert should recite for having made me a convert (sheasani ger).8 Other authorities suggest that a convert should recite shehichnisani tachat kanfei hashechina (for having brought me under the wings of the Divine Presence).9

Nevertheless, a number of authorities rule that a convert may recite for not making me a Gentile (shelo asani goy) just like everyone else, and common custom is in accordance with this view. This is because when a non-Jew converts to Judaism, his soul goes through a complete transformation and renewal. Indeed, it is explained that the morning blessings correspond to the state and condition of ones soul when it returns to the body upon awakening each morning. Since the soul of one who converts is transformed into a Jewish soul upon conversion, it follows, therefore, that a convert is perfectly entitled to recite this blessing just like everyone else.10

Furthermore, it is taught that a convert is considered to be a newly born person. This further supports the view that converts should recite shelo asani goy.11 There is also an interpretation that the shelo asani goy recitation of a convert is actually a praise to G-d for having given him the opportunity to become Jewish and perform mitzvot.12 There is an opinion that converts should omit this blessing entirely and not recite any of the variations just discussed. Common custom, however, is not according to this view.13 Converts recite all the other morning blessings as normal.

There are different opinions as to how female converts should conduct themselves with regard to this blessing, as well as the other morning blessings that are worded in masculine form. Most authorities rule that women should recite shelo asani goy just as men do,14 while others rule that women should feminize the wording with shelo asani goya, and the like.15 There is also a view that since there is a dispute over how women should word these blessings, they should recite them according to their custom, but without including G-ds name.16

It might be that it was Moshe Rabbeinu who instituted the blessing shelo asani goy. It is taught in the Yalkut Reuveni that when Moshe heard the first two of the Ten Commandments Anochi Hashem Elokecha and Lo yiheyeh lecha elohim acheirim, he instinctively recited the blessing shelo asani goy. So too, when we recite the blessing of shelo asani goy, we thank G-d for making us a member of the nation that is charged and honored with the ability to observe the mitzvot of the Torah. Contrary to popular misconception, this blessing is not intended to offend or insult any other race or religion. It is intended to demonstrate our gratitude for being Jewish and being given the opportunity to practice the mitzvot of the Torah.

_________________

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Thanking G-d For Who You Are And Who You Are Not - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Shabbat Behar: Valuing the Land J-Wire – J-Wire Jewish Australian News Service

Posted By on May 22, 2022

May 19, 2022 by Jeremy Rosen

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When you come to the land that I am giving you, the land must be given a rest period, a Shabbat to God.

From this, the law of the Seventh Year Release, theShmitah, sounds much like medieval crop rotation and good agricultural practice. However, calling it a God-like rest adds a spiritual dimension in addition to the physical.

In addition, the Torah goes on to discuss people who fall on tough times and the importance of helping them. This includes lending money without charging interest to help people stand on their own two feet and not be dependent on charity.

To us nowadays the idea of a Sabbatical is to take time off to nurture our minds, to study, to step back and take perspective.

We may argue that these laws are no longer applicable, so why bother with them?We do not know the reasons for the laws. For thousands of years, our commentators in every generation have tried to find them. But we cannot know for certain. What we can do is find relevance and purpose that will give us some guidance for life in the period in which we live. We can look for recurring themes as a hint at what is more important and see these as messages.

On the one hand, we learn to have respect for the land, nurture it, and appreciate it. And from this, we can deduce how important it is to nurture human beings too. In both cases, there will be good times and bad times. Times when we need to go beyond our immediate selfish needs and cope with famines, natural catastrophes, and human suffering. To think of others.

The Talmud asks why these laws are related specifically to Mount Sinai. Werent all of the laws given there? There is a Talmudic principle that when a law is taken out of context or repeated it asserts a universal principle. Laws are necessary, for every society and everyone. But if we only take them as laws rather than the ideas and spirit behind them, we will miss the point. And here the point is that land and people need to be taken care of and all laws aim at achieving these goals, the physical material, and the spiritual.

We have had a visceral connection to our land, and our communities for over three thousand years. The land is very important. It is our mother in metaphorical terms. But people matter more.

Leviticus Chapter 25 to26:2

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Shabbat Behar: Valuing the Land J-Wire - J-Wire Jewish Australian News Service


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