Page 407«..1020..406407408409..420430..»

‘It was paradise at the time’: the little-known story of the Jews of Indonesia – Haaretz

Posted By on April 25, 2022

We were all starving; the hunger was horrendous. Sometimes we collected banana skins to roast and eat. We were like skeletons.

Benjamin David, an 84-year-old Australian-Iraqi Jew, could be recalling Holocaust scenes. He is not. But his own nightmare, which played out simultaneously on the opposite side of the world in Europe, has left a bitter legacy.

Talking from his home in Sydney, Australia, David is reliving childhood memories of the years he spent in Japanese internment camps on the Southeast Asian archipelago of Indonesia then known as the Dutch East Indies.

He was just 4 when he and his family were forced into a camp, along with other Jews, after the Japanese invaded the then-Dutch colony in 1942. He still bears the physical and psychological scars of deprivation and brutality.

Stories of repression, disease, starvation, torture, segregation, resilience, faith and death are largely unknown but are starting to emerge.

After the war I had nightmares for about 20 years. David closes his eyes and tilts his head back. My nightmares were about the Japs knocking at our door, taking us to the camp and I saw a lot people hung.

He recalls his incomprehension at witnessing, as a young child, five Indonesian men hanged for stealing or smuggling just before the war ended. His mother pulled him away, saying, Theyre only dolls. He did not learn the brutal truth until he was married and had a daughter.

Davids parents had migrated to Indonesia, where he was born, from Burma (now Myanmar) in 1933 to escape conflict. His maternal grandfather had left Iraq in about 1926 for Rangoon, where he met his future wife (whose parents were Iraqi).

Of some wonder is how Davids indomitable mother, and other Sephardi women, still managed to observe the Sabbath and Jewish holy days while interned to the bemusement of their Japanese captors.

Solomon Elias, now 94, was about 13 when the Japanese invaded the archipelago. As a young teen, he qualified for the mens camps and recalls the starvation, endemic disease and forced hard labour digging dirt and carrying it in bamboo baskets. It was meaningless work to break our bodies and spirits. And when the Japanese spoke to us, we didnt understand so they beat us with bamboo sticks, recounts Elias, who also moved to Australia after the war and settled in Queensland.

The Jewish population of the Dutch East Indies is believed to have exceeded 2,500 in the late 1930s, growing substantially as European refugees fled Hitler.

Rotem Kowner, an Israeli professor of Japanese history and culture at the Department of Asian Studies at the University of Haifa, says the Japanese repression of Jews was different from the Nazi genocide. They were not targeted for being Jewish, he explains; instead they were rounded up simply for being outsiders.

Although most foreigners were sent to internment camps after the Japanese invaded the colony in March 1942, Iraqi Jews retained their freedom for some months. It was in 1943, when visiting SS officers learned that the Iraqi Jews were not detained, that they demanded their incarceration. Until then, the local Jewish community had proved a conundrum for the Japanese due to their lack of knowledge about the Jewish community in general.

After being rounded up, the Jews were segregated and apportioned the worst treatment of anyone in the camps. However, Kowner insists the Japanese treatment of the Jews was not comparable to that of the Nazis: The Japanese did not massacre Jews (as Jews), nor did they torture them collectively (as Jews).

Paradise lost

How this little-known, tight-knit Sephardi community came to settle in the-then colonial Dutch East Indies is a subject of cultural intrigue, exile and high drama. It is also the subject of my upcoming book, which emanated from my foreign correspondence in Indonesia, including a story on Dutch-Indonesian-Jewish descendants. This, in turn, led to the story of the Sephardi Jews whose lives converged, then scattered, in the maelstrom of history.

The Iraqi Jews of Indonesia had fled Baghdad in the early 1900s during waves of persecution, riots and instability. Roughly 600 of them eventually migrated to the port of Surabaya, East Java, following the Asian trading routes including the spice and opium trades.

They had arrived from countries such as Singapore, India, Malaysia, Hong Kong and Burma in search of a safe haven and serendipitously found a paradise. For a while, anyway.

Despite settling in a majority-Muslim nation where Judaism is not among the six officially recognized religions, the Iraqi Jews blended in fairly smoothly. That they were multilingual speaking Arabic, Malay, Dutch, Bahasa Indonesia and Javanese worked to their advantage as they sought access to all stratas of society.

They were not the only Jews on the archipelago. As previously reported in Haaretz, Dutch Jews had arrived in the region as early as the 17th century, when they worked as clerks and traders as part of the Dutch East India Company.

In the 1900s, the major port city of Surabaya was a tropical refuge where the Iraqi Jews practised their faith with impunity under Dutch colonial rule and savored a relatively privileged, carefree lifestyle. Indonesia was socially less stratified than the British colonies and the Jews enjoyed the same benefits as the Dutch: membership in country clubs, free Dutch educations, house servants, cooks, gardeners and drivers.

Indonesia was a paradise at that time. Living was so easy. When my parents left [after the war], they cried, David recalls.

A resourceful bunch, the Sephardim worked mainly as traders, fruit wholesalers, teachers, optometrists, and as importers and exporters.

The nexus of community life revolved around the synagogue the first on the island which was built in 1923. A larger version replaced it in 1939, just as the world descended into chaos. (The synagogue was ultimately closed by Muslim fundamentalists in 2009 in protest at the Israeli armys Operation Cast Lead in Gaza.) It was later demolished and its Dutch-Jewish caretaker allegedly sold the land in 2013, to the ire of the community president and a local Jewish lawyer who challenged him in court but lost the case.

After liberation, Jewish survivors returned to Surabaya to find their possessions and homes expropriated by the Indonesians and with the violent 1945-1949 Battle for Independence in full swing. Communal life dried up and many left for Singapore, Australia, Israel and the United States.

A revival saw vibrant Sephardi life return and peak for several years in the early 1950s. But the political and social landscape became untenable when newly independent Indonesia nationalized Dutch enterprise and the Dutch were forced to return to the Netherlands.

The Iraqi Jews, who were dependent on the Dutch for work, found opportunities had vanished.

About the same time, Indonesian anti-Israel sentiment escalated over the nascent Jewish states involvement in the Suez Crisis of 1956. Once again, they were forced to seek new, safe shores.

Hundreds arrived in Australia in the late 1950s, only to be confronted by antisemitism and the restrictive White Australia Policy. The authorities often determined that dark-skinned Sephardi Jews were ineligible for immigration, unless they could prove otherwise.

By 2014, there were fewer than 100 Iraqi Jews in Surabaya and today there are about 10, if that. Many descendants have converted, intermarried and assimilated, mainly for protection against Islamic intolerance and extremism.

The total number of Jews in Indonesia today is believed to be about 400, out of a population of 273 million. But their dynamic legacy remains in various landmarks and in Surabayas anomalous Jewish cemetery. Their lives are part of accounts of sprawling families and of the acceptance and hostility they found in Indonesian and Australian society, past and present.

Lesson from the past

Interest in Indonesian Jewry intensified in January after the first Holocaust Museum in Southeast Asia opened in far-flung Minahasa, at the tip of the Indonesian island of North Sulawesi, 2,500 kilometers (1,550 miles) east of Surabaya.

The islands deputy governor said at the time the museum provided a lesson from the past that must be understood. But the museum the concept of Indonesian and Dutch-Jewish descendant Rabbi Yaakov Baruch provoked an uproar among some Indonesian Muslim leaders and Baruch was inundated with death threats.

Opposition from Islamic leaders, calling for the museums demolition, cited potential communal tensions and conflicting pro-Palestine interests. Though tensions have eased, the furor took Baruch by surprise.

I didnt know it would make such a big impact, Baruch says. There is a lot of Holocaust denial and antisemitism here. Threats via social media warned they will come to kill me because my blood is halal.

An hour from the center of Manado, the capital of North Sulawesi, the Shaar Hashamayim museum abuts an eponymously named synagogue now the only one in the country where the tiny but determined Jewish community practices in a Christian-dominated region. About a quarter of the congregants are of Dutch-Jewish ancestry; the others are Christian converts.

Based on the flags and banners, the locals here are enamoured of Judaism and Israel. Against Indonesias fragile religious balance, its an implausible place to see Israeli flags, Stars of David and Mossad stickers on cars and taxis, the worlds largest menorah and a shop named Purim selling Judaic items.

Manado officials have long made clear that Jews are welcome in their city. The local government paid for a makeover of the Shaar Hashamayim synagogue (originally a gift from a devout Dutch-Christian couple in 2004), and in 2008 spent $150,000 on the 19-meter (62-foot) menorah perched on a mountaintop overlooking the city. The synagogue underwent further renovations in 2019, thanks to an anonymous donor and congregants goodwill.

Amid the recent fracas, a local Christian militia group vowed to protect Jewish interests, Baruch says.

The museums opening on International Holocaust Remembrance Day was also a poignant tribute to Jewish survivors of Japanese war camps.

Deborah Cassrels is currently writing a book on the Iraqi Jews of Indonesia.

More:

'It was paradise at the time': the little-known story of the Jews of Indonesia - Haaretz

New exhibit opens on history of Jews and cannabis – New York Post

Posted By on April 25, 2022

A Big Apple research institute has launched a joint effort tracing the roots of marijuana back to the Bible.

The upcoming exhibition at theYIVO Institute for Jewish Research near Union Square examines the historic relationship between The Chosen People and cannabis.

Highlights of the display will include objects repurposed for cannabis consumption, such as a menorah-shaped bong, and the Tokin Jew seder plate.

It was the bong that first sparked the interest of Eddy Portnoy, the exhibits curator. He asked the pipes maker, Grav, to donate one to the institute as an artifact of Jewish culture.

I thought to myself theres probably more out there like this, Portnoy said. I began to do research and not only did I find a lot more artifacts but I discovered this whole history of Jews and cannabis that had really been unknown to me and probably a lot of other people.

That history goes back to the Old Testament in a passage in the book of Exodus about an altar for burning incense with herbs including kaneh bosem, which is thought to be cannabis, he said.

The exhibit will even feature a kind of purchase order for pot, dating to the 1200s. The document, which was found in a Cairo synagogue in the 1800s, shows the letter writer asking for textiles and hashish in exchange for silver, Portnoy said.

That document, and others from the cache, will be reproduced for the exhibit, including a poem poking fun at people who smoke hashish saying, They eat everything in sight.

Its this weird sort of early 15th-century reference to the munchies, Portnoy said.

The exhibit also talks about notable Jewish figures in the cannabis canon, including Israeli scientist Raphael Mechoulam, who was the first to isolate THC the compound that provides marijuanas high and CBD which is believed to have medicinal properties and Jack Herer, the so-called Emperor of Hemp, who fought to legalize weed.

YIVOs exhibit opens on May 5 and kicks off with a panel discussion moderated by Portnoy. The exhibition is called Am Yisrael High, a play on the slogan Am Yisrael Chai, which means, The people of Israel live.

The exhibit takes the subject seriously and a lot of research was done, but because its cannabis there was the possibility to have a little bit of fun with it, Portnoy said.

Here is the original post:

New exhibit opens on history of Jews and cannabis - New York Post

Germany’s Largest Newspaper: Jew-Hating Muslims Should Be Treated like Nazis – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on April 25, 2022

Bild am Sonntag, the Sunday edition of Bild, the best-selling European newspaper, declared today that the hatred of Jews by radical Muslims is a shame for this country.

The editorial, written by the editor in chief Johannes Boje, followed what the newspaper described as an aggressive antisemitic agitation against people of the Jewish faith in the middle of Germany (Wieder offener Judenhass auf Deutschlands Straben) According to Saturday nights report, some 600 people marched through Kreuzberg and Neukolln with Palestinian flags, openly denying Israels right to exist. They roared aggressively, child killer Israel and attacked journalists.

A Bild reporter was surrounded by around a hundred people, insulted in an anti-Semitic manner as a dirty Jew and kicked. The Berlin police had to protect him and escort him out of the demonstration.

Drecksjuden (filthy Jews) and Scheibjuden ([expletive] Jews) echo through German streets by hundreds of people, Muslims who immigrated to Germany themselves or their families. In the middle of Berlin, in the middle of Germany, the editorial began. Its a shame for our country! Didnt we all swear: Never again? Large parts of the left did not want to imagine that migrants and their children could hate people. They were consistently and per se considered better people. And those who think so far from reality are in politics today and often in the news as well.

Unfortunately, its the other way around: Jews have long since left Germany. The state and some media allow what should never have been allowed. Never again is nothing but a nice-sounding lie for a cheap Sunday speech.

Interior Minister Nancy Faeser Tweeted: There is no place for antisemitism in our society. That is simply wrong. There is always room for this on the streets of this country. Faeser omitted which people are clearly the perpetrators these days. Just dont destroy your own worldview

Tagesschau, still Germanys largest news program, is also silent on this. When young Muslims covered Swedish neighborhoods with rubble and ash a few days ago (after right-wing extremists had provoked them), many reports in Germany tended to conceal who the perpetrators were, to distort the situation.

And some people in Germany are secretly happy when they see the new hatred of Jews: some on the left also hate Israel, and many right-wing extremists do so anyway.

This is how the new Jew-haters in Germany feel comfortable and safe. This country is their country, Neukolln and other quarters belong to them entirely. Clans control the streets there from their S-Class and BMW SUVs. It is not the police who decide there whether a demonstration ends or not. Walking in these neighborhoods with a yarmulke? Inconceivable.

At the same time, rampaging, Jew-hating Muslims should be treated like their contemptible Nazi friends among the right-wing extremists: ostracized, despised, under constant police and secret service surveillance. Controlled by the state, courted by exit programs. And also threatened: Anyone who goes to anti-Jewish demonstrations must not be allowed to become German; if you hate Jews, you have to get out of this country, you dont come here.

All decent people in Germany would be happy about that, not least the many, many Muslims who live sensibly, diligently, law-abiding in Germany and who do not understand why the state does not take proper action against criminals.

Berlin police announced on Sunday morning that there were arrests during the demonstration, but have yet to offer any details about the offenses.

Read the original here:

Germany's Largest Newspaper: Jew-Hating Muslims Should Be Treated like Nazis - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Remembering the only Jew on the first Freedom Ride 75 years ago – Forward

Posted By on April 25, 2022

Igal Roodenko, fifth from left in striped suit, carrying black suitcase and holding coat, with other members of the Journey of Reconciliation in front of the offices of NAACP lawyer Spottswood Robinson in Richmond, Va., on April 14, 1947. Courtesy of the Fellowship of Reconciliation

By Robin WashingtonApril 21, 2022

In a lifetime of activism and countless speeches to groups large and small, Igal Roodenko left behind a healthy number of photos of himself upon his death in 1991. Most show his shaggy hair and beard and casual, if not worn, attire. For decades, the world was only aware of one where he was wearing a suit. On Saturday, a newly discovered image will make it two though its the same suit in both.

The occasion was the first Freedom Ride, of whites and Blacks challenging segregation on Southern buses and trains. The two-week trip, dubbed the Journey of Reconciliation, concluded exactly 75 years ago.

Igal Roodenko, the Jewish, atheist, pacifist, former Zionist and longtime leader of the War Resisters League, in the late 1980s. Courtesy of War Resisters League

If that math sounds off, its because that first ride wasnt in the 1960s, as much of the public believes, but 1947, long before the Civil Rights Movement had taken hold. Likewise, the Jewish participation on it was not the same as it would be once the movement was in full force. On the 1947 ride, Roodenko was the only Jew.

Born in 1917 and raised on Manhattans Lower East Side, Roodenko was the child of immigrants from Ukraine. His father, an ardent Zionist, first immigrated to Palestine before leaving again for the United States.

Roodenko followed his fathers politics and beliefs in a home steeped in Zionism and socialism (one has to assume the Forward was a staple in the household) as well as atheism. Intending on a career helping to make things grow in the desert of an Israel still yet imagined, he entered Cornell University in 1934 to study botany and quickly found it bored him. He stuck it out, however, and met other radical students who nurtured his growing pacifism.

He gave botany a shot with the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Georgia before turning to social action for good, first for the American Emergency Committee for Zionist Affairs in New York City, and then the AFL- CIO when World War II came along with a draft notice. Well-aware of Hitler and Nazism, he faced his ultimate test as a Jew.

The World War II experience for a lot of pacifists was a very difficult one, first because the war against Hitler was probably as justified a war as anyone can probably deal with, he said in a 1974 oral history.

So those of us who were pacifists in spite of all the good reasons for not being pacifists had to do an enormous amount of soul-searching and re-thinking of how do we justify non-participation in a crusade against such a manifest evil in the world?

Ultimately, Roodenko decided that no matter the cause, he could not take a human life, and sought conscientious-objector status. As an atheist Jew, making the case that his pacifism was based on faith was a tough sell to the draft board; the designation at that time was largely reserved for members of the Christian peace churches, such as the Quakers and Mennonites..

He succeeded, however, and was granted a spot at a civilian work camp only to walk away from it, deeming the work both meaningless and still part of the war effort. That meant federal prison, and he reported for a three-year sentence in Minnesota as the war drew to a close. He joined a hunger strike with other activist prisoners, and was paroled in December 1946.

It was just in time to make history. Earlier that year, the Supreme Court had outlawed segregation in interstate (but not intrastate) transportation. It ruled in favor of Irene Morgan, a Black woman who, already sitting in the back of a bus traveling between Virginia and Maryland, refused to give up her seat to white passengers. Representing her was then-NAACP lawyer Thurgood Marshall, who argued that Morgans arrest was a violation of the Interstate Commerce Clause as an undue burden on commerce that would force passengers to move from seat to seat as the bus traveled through segregated and non-segregated states.

The high court agreed. But the Southern states refused to enforce the ruling. An interracial group of activists from the pacifist Fellowship of Reconciliation and the fledgling Congress of Racial Equality seized on the idea of a ride through the South, in which Black and white travelers holding interstate tickets would violate the now-superceded state segregation laws. Roodenko unhesitatingly joined the group for the April 1947 trip through the Upper South.

Thats where the suit and tie come in. Knowing they were upsetting the norms of the South, the riders committed themselves to remaining nonviolent and comporting themselves like gentlemen. That respectability was captured in a photo of nine of the 16 riders in front of the Richmond, Virginia, offices of an NAACP lawyer, Spottswood Robinson. Until recently, it was thought to be the only image of the riders on the trip.

On the buses, they did not travel as one obvious group. A Black and white pair would sit up front, directly behind the driver. Another pair would sit in back, in the Black section. Another rider would sit by himself, among his racial group, ready to sway public opinion if needed. He would also carry the bail money.

The riders had already endured several arrests by the time they planned to leave Chapel Hill, N.C., on April 14. A Black and white pair sitting up front, Andrew Johnson and Joe Felmet, were arrested. Their vacated seats were taken by Roodenko and Bayard Rustin, who later would become a pivotal figure in the Civil Rights Movement. They, too, were arrested and the activity caught the attention of a group of white cab drivers who were incensed by their integrationist actions and punched one of the riders.

The riders were saved by a supportive white minister, who drove them to his home with the cab drivers in chase, one cab ending up on the ministers lawn. With threats persisting, including an anonymous call to Get those damn ns out of town, they left that night with a police escort to the next town.

Over the trips remaining days, the riders amassed more arrests but faced no further violence. When it concluded on April 23, they deemed it a success and looked to the NAACP to make good on a loose promise to represent them in court. They even wrote a song about it:

You dont have to ride Jim Crow!You dont have to ride Jim Crow!Go quiet-like if you face arrestNAACP will make the test.You dont have to ride Jim Crow!

Yet the NAACP ultimately did not take their case, and the Chapel Hill convictions stood. Johnson paid the fine and Roodenko, Rustin and Felmet reported to prison.

As a Jew, Roodenko was singled out for special treatment, with Rustin recalling the judge lecturing him:

Now Mr. Rodenky purposely mispronouncing his name, I presume youre Jewish, and Igal says, Yes, Im Jewish. He says, Well, its about time you white Jews from New York learned that you cant come down here bringing your nigras with you to upset the customs of the South. Now, just to teach you a lesson, I have your Black boy 30 days on the chain gang, now I give you 90.

Felmet, to whom the judge attempted to give an even longer sentence of six months for being a white Southerner who should have known better, recalled their lawyer telling the judge that the maximum sentence was 30 days. With North Carolina prisons segregated, Rustin reported to the Black facility and Felmet and Roodenko to one for whites, all three sentenced to hard labor on a chain gang. Their food was mostly beans cooked in pork grease.

That created a problem for Igal because he was an ethical vegetarian, Felmet recalled.

It would hardly be the only adversity hed faced. By then, Roodenko was already a leader of the pacifist War Resisters League, serving on its executive committee from 1947 to 1977 and as its chair from 1968 to 1972. He later became active in the interracial gay group, Men of All Colors Together.

Having abandoned botany, Roodenko made his living as a printer, once attracting Jackie Kennedy as a customer for a volume of her husbands writings. He fulfilled the order but, true to his uncompromising animal rights ethics, refused her request to bind it in leather.

His activism never ceased, and in 1991, the day before planning a pacifist mission to Greece and Turkey, he died after a heart attack. His yahrzeit is April 28.

And that second photo? It was discovered earlier this year in the Swarthmore College Peace Collection by Louis Battalen, a researcher working on a book about Roodenkos fellow pacifist and friend, Juantia Nelson. It will be unveiled Saturday at an online forum sponsored by the Freedom Rides Museum in Montgomery, Alabama, and the Fellowship of Reconciliation.

Without giving anything away, the photo is one more opportunity to see a lifelong activist and advocate for human, and animal, rights in a suit apparel that may disguise, but in no way diminishes, his radical struggles for justice.

Robin Washington is the Forwards editor-at-large and producer of the public television documentary about the 1947 Freedom Ride, You Dont Have to Ride Jim Crow! He will be part of an online forum co-sponsored by the Fellowship of Reconciliation and the Freedom Rides Museum at 3 p.m. CT on Saturday, April 23 that may be viewed at https://bit.ly/1947freedomride

Pre-registration is not required.

Continued here:

Remembering the only Jew on the first Freedom Ride 75 years ago - Forward

Report: Jewish Convert to Christianity to Lead March of the Living – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on April 25, 2022

According to a press release from the Friends of Zion Museum, Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion has asked Evangelical leader Mike Evans to co-lead the March of the Living with him on Wednesday.

It should be noted that Mayor Lion will not lead the march, only the Jerusalem delegation to the march, which will include himself, members of the Jerusalem City Council, the management of the municipalitys professionals, managers and employees of municipal corporations, municipal employees, representatives of the Histadrut labor union, the management teams of Hadassah Ein Kerem and Shaare Zedek Medical Centers, and, apparently, Mike Evans.

Evans is the son of a Jewish mother, Jeana Levin, whose parents had emigrated from the Soviet Union, and an abusive, antisemitic alcoholic Christian father, Robert Evans. In his origin story, Mike Evans relates how, at age 11, after his father had nearly choked him to death when he tried to protect his mother, Jesus promised he had great plans for him.

When I became conscious after my father strangled me and left me for dead and I had vomited all over myself at the age of 11, I shook my fist at God in anger and screamed in the dark, Why was I born? I was angry because I was alive. In my mind, my mother was being abused because of me. My father would always call her a Jewish whore when he would beat her and say that I was not his son. He believed she had an affair with a Jewish man and my father never called me son, never said he loved me, and never affirmed me. He only abused me violently from the age of four.

But when I asked why was I born, I knew the answer. I couldnt defend one Jew against a Jew-hater. My lifes call was to defend all the Jews and that gave me great hope. He considers himself a Jew who believes in Jesus.

Evans, 74, who last January was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for his lifetime of work combating antisemitism, is a New York Times bestselling author with 108 published books. He is the first Evangelical preacher asked to lead the March of the Living or co-lead the Jerusalem delegation to the march.

A friend of former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu since the early 1980s, Evans told a press conference in Jerusalem after the Likuds parliamentary defeat in 2021: Bibi Netanyahu is the only man in the world who unites evangelicals. He compared PM Naftali Bennett and his coalition members to rabid dogs out to crucify Netanyahu and warned that ousting Netanyahu could cost Israel its support among the Evangelicals in the US.

His groups press release says Evans comes to the March of the Living from Ukraine, where he has been helping Holocaust survivors get out of Ukraine and back to Israel. He said he recently received a phone call from MK Sharren Haskel (New Hope) asking him if he could get a Holocaust survivor family of seven out of a Russian-controlled town. Amazingly, Evans succeeded, the press release says.

Last week, the press release continues, Evans rescued a Holocaust survivor named Shelia from Kharkov and she arrived in Israel just before the March of the Living. Evans said that when he saw Sheila, she said to him, I was born in war and I thought I would die at war. But I put my faith in God and you came for me.

Evans PR says he has gone into Ukraine three times in the last five weeks with more than 60 tons of food for the Jewish community and churches. Evans son, Michael David Evans, who just delivered food to that war zone in eastern Ukraine, will join his father in the March of the Living.

When I went to Wiki for Evans biography, I discovered that some editor had planted in the opening paragraph an unsupported statement saying: Michael Evans and the Jerusalem Prayer Team are not an actual Non-Profit and do not possess a 501(3C) nonprofit tax code. They are not accredited by the Better Business Bureau and have been flagged by Charity Watch as a do not donate and advising to choose an accredited 501(3C) Actual Non-Profit. He is the head of international for-profit organizations in the U.S. and the Netherlands. Evans is a Christian Zionist. However, on the Charity Watch website, I found no reference to the Jerusalem Prayer Team or the Friends of Zion Museum.

So, Mike Evans has enemies.

Read more from the original source:

Report: Jewish Convert to Christianity to Lead March of the Living - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Muna El-Kurd: Jews are Zionist Dogs, and ‘Palestine’ Should Be Ethnically Cleansed of Them – Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in…

Posted By on April 25, 2022

Thank you to CAMERA Arabic for the translation and analysis.

On April 23, video of a conversation involving Muna El-Kurd was posted on an Instagram account, during which El-Kurd begins by urging someone named Fathi not to suggest that there are Jews (not Zionists, not Israelis, but Jews) in solidarity with Palestinians. Fathi responded that yes, there is a Jew from the left-wing there. At this point, El-Kurd angrily interjects:

There is no left-wing! It is all right-wing, it is all settlers, and it is all Zionist dogs. If someone wants to be in solidarity with me, he should get out of Palestine, [then] be in solidarity with me. (Translated by CAMERA Arabic)

This statement, at best, is an open call for Palestine to be ethnically cleansed of Jews. This would include all of Israel, considering that she openly declares that Palestine is from its sea to its river. Considering that polls show that as many as 95% of American Jews have favorable views of Israel, the embodiment of Zionism, it seems Muna has some rather dehumanizing terminology for diaspora Jews, too. Referring to Jews as dogs is a common antisemitic term, particularly among Palestinians and even among antisemites at the United Nations. Chants of Jews are our dogs are heard fairly regularly at demonstrations. No matter what way you slice it, Munas words are deplorable and overtly bigoted.

The statement also exposes the emptiness of the supposed principles of individuals like El-Kurd. While openly calling for the ethnic cleansing of Jews, her social media accounts are replete with cries to #EndEthnicCleansing. Its yet another example of how much of anti-Israel activism is not about principled human rights, but about the destruction of the Jewish state and the denial of Jewish self-determination.

An Instagram post from Muna El-Kurd showing the red general prohibition symbol over a visibly Jewish person.

What makes this all the more disturbing is that this is the woman the media has fawned over for the last year. TIME named both her and her twin brother Mohammed among its list of the 100 most influential people in 2021, claiming they challenged existing narratives about Palestinian resistancehumanizing the experiences of their neighbors. Charismatic and bold, they became the most recognizable voices of those threatened with losing their homes in Sheikh Jarrah. In July 2021, The Times published a glowing profile of the two that, as CAMERA-UK wrote, resembles a Palestinian Solidarity Campaign (PSC) press release. The Financial Times claimed Muna and her brothers calls for justice echo the same values of equality that fuel global campaigns such as Black Lives Matter.

Apparently, the value of equality includes referring to Jews as dogs and calling for them to be ethnically cleansed.

The media cannot claim they could not have known about El-Kurds extremism. Social media posts from long before her 2021 rise to fame displayed open antisemitism and frequent praise for infamous terrorists like Dalal al-Mughrabi, who led the Coastal Road Massacre terrorist attack, murdering 38 Israelis, including 13 children.

But this story is not just about media outlets riding catchy, profitable narratives at the expense of actual journalistic investigation. Its also a story about the radical Jewish left and the role theyve played in normalizing this extremism.

A Jewish Voice for Peace Twitter post containing a video of Muna El-Kurd and calling on people to support Palestinians against Israeli ethnic cleansing

Just a couple of months ago, Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) shared a video of El-Kurd calling on people to support Palestinians defending their homes against Israeli ethnic cleansing. Expect crickets from JVP in response to El-Kurds call to ethnically cleanse Jews. After all, in El-Kurds world, groups like JVP are, as the old descriptor goes, useful idiots. According to her, there is no such thing as a leftist Jew; just settlers and Zionist dogs. So much for JVPs ideas of joint struggle now that El-Kurd has declared it impossible.

See the original post:

Muna El-Kurd: Jews are Zionist Dogs, and 'Palestine' Should Be Ethnically Cleansed of Them - Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in...

Max Stock Limited Announces Immediate Report Regarding the Resignation of the Director Mr. Oren Elezra – 69News WFMZ-TV

Posted By on April 25, 2022

CAESAREA, Israel, April 25, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Max Stock Limited (TASE: MAXO) ("the Company", "Max Stock") today announcedthat Mr. Oren Elezra, ID no. 037708419, who has served as one of the Company's directors since November 23, 2020, resigned and will no longer serve on the Company's board of directors. Mr. Elezra will be serving as a Business and Strategic Consultant for the Company.

About Max Stock

Max Stock is Israel's leading extreme value retailer, currently present in 55 locations throughout Israel. Max Stock offers a broad assortment of quality products for customers' everyday needs at affordable prices, helping customers "Dream Big, Pay Small".For more information, please visit https://ir.maxstock.co.il

This is an English translation of segments of a Hebrew immediate report that was published on April 25, 2022 (Ref. No: 2022-01-041760) (hereinafter: the "Hebrew Version"). This English version is only for convenience purposes. This is not an official translation and has no binding force. In the event of any discrepancy between the Hebrew Version and this translation, the Hebrew Version shall prevail.

Company Contacts:

Talia Sessler,

Chief Corporate Development and IR Officer

talia@maxstock.co.il

Ifat Nir Katz,

General Counsel and Corporate Secretary

ifat@maxstock.co.il

View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/max-stock-limited-announces-immediate-report-regarding-the-resignation-of-the-director-mr-oren-elezra-301532002.html

SOURCE Max Stock Limited

Read the original:

Max Stock Limited Announces Immediate Report Regarding the Resignation of the Director Mr. Oren Elezra - 69News WFMZ-TV

Most popular boy names in the 80s in New York – PIX11

Posted By on April 25, 2022

(STACKER) Known for the emergence of MTV, the rise of neon, and the invention of the mixtape, the 1980s were certainly a rockin era in American history. New economic policies were introduced, the news network CNN launched, and, much less enjoyable, Wall Street crashed on the infamous Black Mondaythe worst one-day decline in American stock market history. Sandra Day OConnor was nominated by President Ronald Reagan as the first female Supreme Court justice, the Cold War saw the beginning of the end as the Berlin Wall began to fall, and millions watched in horror as the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded on live television.

Among all the big hair, Rubix cubes, and shoulder pads, however, there were still plenty of babies being born during this defining time. And with celebrities like Michael J. Fox and Robert Palmer reaching their peak fame during the 80s, its no surprise that many parents chose to name their kids after them.

To see just how popular these names were,Stackercompiled a list of the most popular baby names for boys in the 80s in New York using data from theSocial Security Administration. Names are ranked by number of babies born.

Just like scrunchies and PAC MAN, Americans can still hold onto some of the best aspects of the 80s, including baby names (some things never get old). So whether youre welcoming a new little one into the world this year or just curious, these are the 100 most popular baby names of the 1980s in New York.

Jesse is a name of Hebrew origin meaning the Lord exists.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 4,660 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 944 (#217 most common name, -79.7% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #49 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 85,897

Keith is a name of Celtic origin meaning wood, forest.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 4,712 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 392 (#415 most common name, -91.7% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #63 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 52,625

Vincent is a name of Latin origin meaning to conquer.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 4,740 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 3,060 (#73 most common name, -35.4% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #92 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 31,900

Bryan is a name of Irish origin meaning noble.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 5,107 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 1,781 (#124 most common name, -65.1% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #51 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 80,488

Luis is a name of German origin meaning famous warrior.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 5,208 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 1,817 (#122 most common name, -65.1% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #83 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 37,123

Aaron is a name of Hebrew origin meaning high mountain.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 5,844 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 4,895 (#38 most common name, -16.2% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #32 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 138,343

Edward is a name of English origin meaning prosperous.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 5,919 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 1,835 (#121 most common name, -69.0% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #57 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 60,790

Kenneth is a name of Gaelic origin meaning handsome.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 5,939 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 1,152 (#173 most common name, -80.6% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #46 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 89,113

Jeremy is a name of English origin meaning appointed by God.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 6,530 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 2,477 (#85 most common name, -62.1% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #28 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 153,418

Kyle is a name of Scottish origin meaning narrow strait.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 6,630 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 2,155 (#98 most common name, -67.5% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #30 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 141,910

Alexander is a name of Greek origin meaning defender of man.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 6,745 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 9,802 (#11 most common name, +45.3% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #50 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 81,932

Benjamin is a name of Hebrew origin meaning son of my days.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 7,099 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 8,160 (#19 most common name, +14.9% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #31 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 141,341

Scott is a name of Scotland origin meaning a Scotsman.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 7,185 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 417 (#400 most common name, -94.2% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #38 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 108,165

Jose is a name of Spanish origin meaning God will increase.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 7,445 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 1,950 (#115 most common name, -73.8% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #48 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 86,349

Charles is a name of Germanic origin meaning free man.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 7,525 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 3,957 (#50 most common name, -47.4% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #33 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 131,861

Brandon is a name of English origin meaning beacon hill or crow.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 7,616 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 3,942 (#52 most common name, -48.2% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #17 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 232,173

Peter is a name of Greek origin meaning rock.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 8,100 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 1,647 (#132 most common name, -79.7% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #61 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 56,663

Gregory is a name of Latin origin meaning watchful, alert.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 8,506 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 705 (#281 most common name, -91.7% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #45 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 93,649

Stephen is a name of Greek origin meaning wreath, crown.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 8,521 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 949 (#216 most common name, -88.9% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #36 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 113,597

Patrick is a name of Latin origin meaning nobleman.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 8,592 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 2,004 (#109 most common name, -76.7% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #37 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 111,365

Paul is a name of Latin origin meaning humble.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 8,864 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 1,330 (#159 most common name, -85.0% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #40 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 104,339

Mark is a name of Latin origin meaning God of war.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 9,289 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 1,623 (#134 most common name, -82.5% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #34 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 129,371

Sean is a name of Irish origin meaning God is gracious.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 9,540 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 1,959 (#113 most common name, -79.5% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #41 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 103,828

Jeffrey is a name of English origin meaning pledge of peace.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 10,562 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 1,070 (#194 most common name, -89.9% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #29 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 144,781

Timothy is a name of Greek origin meaning honouring God.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 10,958 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 1,615 (#135 most common name, -85.3% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #26 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 172,811

Adam is a name of Hebrew origin meaning earth.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 12,498 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 4,188 (#48 most common name, -66.5% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #22 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 195,049

Richard is a name of German origin meaning dominant ruler.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 13,058 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 1,756 (#126 most common name, -86.6% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #27 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 154,710

Eric is a name of Norse origin meaning sole ruler.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 13,883 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 2,338 (#91 (tie) most common name, -83.2% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #21 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 204,199

Steven is a name of Greek origin meaning crown.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 14,088 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 2,338 (#91 (tie) most common name, -83.4% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #25 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 177,405

Ryan is a name of Irish origin meaning little king or illustrious.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 14,681 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 9,238 (#13 most common name, -37.1% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #14 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 278,848

Justin is a name of Latin origin meaning righteous.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 14,717 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 5,415 (#33 most common name, -63.2% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #12 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 289,755

Kevin is a name of Irish origin meaning noble.

New York Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 15,208 Number of babies from 2010 to 2019: 3,913 (#53 most common name, -74.3% compared to the 80s)

National Rank: #23 Number of babies from 1980 to 1989: 188,638

Read the original post:

Most popular boy names in the 80s in New York - PIX11

The Omer period and the search for a superhero messiah | Opinion – South Florida Sun Sentinel

Posted By on April 25, 2022

In the course of many years of exile, the days between Passover and Shavuot (the feast of weeks), have, on many occasions in the history of our people, been a period of distress and sadness. The massacres of Jews in the days of the Crusades took place at this period of the year and miseries befell us in Palestine.

Usually overlooked, Passover was observed as an agricultural feast as the season of the month of ripeness, when the barley sown in the winter had become ripe. The produce was to be reaped on Shavuot, the Harvest Festival. According to tradition, a great plague raged among the disciples of Rabbi Akiba during this time and only ceased on the 18th of Iyar, which is Lag BaOmer, the 33 rd day of the Omer.

In the second world war, when six million of our people died a martyrs death in the gas chambers of Nazi occupied Europe, the revolt of the ghettoes took place in the month of Nissan during this period.

As a result of such tragedy, two Jewish writers and illustrators, immigrants of the old world, dreamed of a messiah figure that would save them and bring peace to the world. The result was the creation of Superman, first published in 1938.

The Passover adventure is the tale of Moses who was raised among people as an alien with a secret identity. He matures to become a liberator and champion of the oppressed with the aid of miraculous superpowers pictured described by the plagues brought upon the Egyptians. Sound familiar?

Superman as opposed to the old world of pain and suffering, was to reflect the Jews in a free American society. Superman is not explicitly identified as Jewish, but the reader should be able to see how Jewish themes are central to his character. As an undocumented alien he comes from Krypton, a planet about to explode symbolizing the destruction of the Jews in the great Holocaust. Baby Superman was named Kal-El. Spoken with a Hebrew pronunciation it sounds like the Hebrew words for all is God. His name changed from Kal-El to Clark Kent and his move from Smallville to the big city of Metropolis mirrored Jewish immigration patterns. American Jews and super heroes share the same urban environment, the streets of the cities.

Could the name of the planet Krypton be decoded as a Crypto Jew who practices Judaism in secret? It is the combination of Supermans invincibleness and the nebbishness of Clark Kent that makes him a Jewish character.

The Golem of the 16th century, another messiah figure was another protector of Jews in times of peril. He was large and powerful, made of clay who was humanoid in appearance but was not really human. The legend of the Golem was defensive. In the midst of anti-Semitic oppression, the Golem is a mythology of survival not conquest. His speech impediment resembles both Moses and Clark Kent. The animated Golem was motivated by truth which was inscribed on his forehead to serve the cause of truth and justice. Supermans goal was the same except for the motto the American Way which was added in the 1940s during wartime. Superman transcended his precarious upbringing to become a major symbol of mainstream American culture.

He adapts a universal outlook inherited from the Jewish tradition. He is the ultimate assimilationist fantasy. Like the Golem, Supermans creators used power not as a villain, but as a hero to heal the world. Some Christians view him as Messianic. Its an interesting coincidence that both Moses and Jesus are the only ones who speak to God directly. When the character of Superman was created, Israel was seen as a vulnerable small nation but now as a country of strength.

In present times, the character of Superman is becoming unrecognizable. The new owners of Superman have changed his motto from the American Way to a better tomorrow. This is because they feel he is not relevant today. He now stands for leftist positions such as eliminating prisons, de-militarization of police, cancel culture and protesting our national anthem. This new motto is an acknowledgement that present times are bad and that we can only hope that tomorrow is better. Im glad the original creators are not around to see it.

Happy Lag Ba Omer and Shavuot!

Rabbi Alan Sherman believes that the messianic idea is the fulfillment of human potential.

Read the original here:

The Omer period and the search for a superhero messiah | Opinion - South Florida Sun Sentinel

How To Find The Best Assisted Living Facility – Forbes

Posted By on April 25, 2022

Finding a new home can be daunting, especially when caregiving is part of the equation. However, there are ways to find the best assisted living community to meet your familys needs.

In general, you should look for outstanding care, accessible community design and vibrant community life, says Rhonda Glyman, executive director of NewBridge on the Charles Assisted Living, a facility of Hebrew SeniorLife in the Boston area.

She encourages seniors and their loved ones to visit multiple facilities and pay attention to what they see.

Go take a look, she says. Are staff and residents smiling? Do they look happy? What does the environment look like?

As you visit different communities, here are specific factors to consider.

Assisted living facilities offer a variety of services that can include:

You might notice something missing from that list.

Medical care isnt part of the usual portfolio of care, says Helen Chen, M.D., chief medical officer at Hebrew SeniorLife.

However, assisted living staff can monitor residents and help coordinate services with outside health care providers. Its important to explore how the facility handles these interactions.

Ask the caregivers, What are your relationships with the health care community? advises Dr. Chen. Do you have clinicians who come here and do office visits? What is provided within the facility?

Find out if the assisted living community is associated with a specific medical facility. Sometimes residents are required to go to that practice. Additionally, investigate what policies are in place should emergency care be needed.

Accommodations vary among assisted living facilities. Different options may be available within one community as well. Kitchenettes, private rooms and larger apartments are common, and residents typically choose one over the other based on their lifestyle preferences and budget. Its also important to consider:

No matter what personal living space meets your needs, pay attention to the common areas and ease of getting around. Good lighting, clear areas to walk both indoors and outdoors, and comfortable places to sit help keep residents safe and engaged.

Accessibility is a key element to be looking for, says Dr. Chen. You want amenities that are centrally located so residents can easily come to programs and dining and its easy to get back and forth and meet with their friends. That social engagement helps improve their quality of life.

Assisted living is designed to meet both the physical and emotional needs of residents. Most facilities create a care plan for each resident based on their individual needs, interests and desires.

We focus on the person, so the care plan isnt just clinical, says Glyman. Its how we can help you learn, grow and find purpose.

When youre searching for assisted living, consider what life-enhancing services and activities are available. Amenities can include:

Examine dining services as well. Do menus vary, and can residents make requests? What hours are dining facilities open? The path to a persons heart is often through the stomach.

People and personalities make a community, so ask about staff training, policies and background checks. Its also important to trust your gut.

Come and see and decide for yourself. You get a vibe, says Dr. Chen. Ask a lot of questions. Facilities that arent transparent about policies make me nervous. If youre entrusting your loved one to this place, you need to make sure they answer your questions, because thats the relationship youll be having with the director, leadership and frontline staff for many years.

Find Trusted Senior Caregivers On Care.com

Care.com helps you find local caregivers ready to help with meal prep, bathing, companionship, transportation and more.

Get started on Care.com

Dont overlook the agencies that register, license or certify assisted living communities. A department of the state will issue and renew licenses for these facilities. Make sure the community you select is in good standing and properly accredited.

Assisted living doesnt come cheap. According to AHCA and NCAL, the median rate for assisted living is $4,000 a month, or $48,000 a year. These costs vary by state.

Most residents use some form of private paylike long-term care insurance or their personal savingsto cover assisted living expenses. Medicare doesnt cover long-term care services, so it doesnt pay for assisted living.

People in lower income brackets may be able to use Medicaid to help pay for assisted living, though state Medicaid programs vary. Medicaid can also cover certain home and community-based services like personal care and supportive services. Since this care is provided in assisted living communities, Medicaid may help pay for part of the cost. However, Medicaid doesnt pay for room and board.

If youre trying to determine how to pay for assisted living care, talk to your financial advisor or state Medicaid board. Assisted living employees can share resources to help you make smart choices, too.

Your health. Your decisions. Our support.

Get the Forbes Health newsletter for helpful tips, news, product reviews and offers from a name you can trust.

Thanks & Welcome to the Forbes Health Community!

{{ newsletterState.emailErrorMsg }}

Continue reading here:

How To Find The Best Assisted Living Facility - Forbes


Page 407«..1020..406407408409..420430..»

matomo tracker