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The usefulness of Jewish amnesia – Haaretz

Posted By on April 20, 2022

Only a few days ago, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba innocently asked how it could be that the Jews have so quickly forgotten that when they were once refugees fleeing an inferno, no one opened a door to rescue them.

A good question. How did we forget? It appears to be a sudden case of amnesia. If we had remembered, without a doubt we would have acted in a completely different manner toward Ukrainian refugees.

But truth to be told, this isnt an isolated case. Attacks of amnesia like these are growing in number. Only a few days earlier, MK Ayman Odeh called on Palestinian citizens of Israel not to take part in the work of the occupation and the oppression of their fellows. A hue and cry arose in the land that was no less a product of this Jewish amnesia.

If we had correctly remembered the history of our own people, we would surely have remembered that we Jews had also faced the same dilemma as that of the Palestinians serving the occupation. For 2,000 years, we were caught time and again between two warring sides where Jews were drafted to serve the enemy. French Jews found themselves fighting German Jews, Spanish Jews fighting English Jews, Turkish Jews fighting Greek Jews. Jews fighting Jews.

Shaul Tchernichovsky wrote about this in a heart-rending poem called Between the Straits (Bein Hametzarim). The two sons of Rabbi Shmuel of Salonika volunteered for the war one fighting for the Turks and the other for the Greeks. On the night of the battle they kill each other, with the poems final and deliberately incomplete line saying, And by the light of the blast, each recognized his brother

Time and again, Jewish thinkers have tried to find a way out of the tangle, to square the principles of dina dmalchuta dina (the law of the land is the law) and Thou shalt not kill. They have no solution.

Perhaps if we had better remembered our own experiences, we would have better understood Odehs conflicted heart. We then would have certainly understood the plight of the people that we, with our own hands, have imprisoned in this very Jewish dilemma. Perhaps we would have tried to help by freeing them from carrying weapons. We would have respected their sensitivities just as we respect the sensitivities of the Haredim who refuse to be drafted into the army. (Actually, one should not expect too much).

But no. Another attack of useful amnesia has struck us and released us from the burden of humanity. Let us forget all those troublesome, bothersome things. We have forgotten grace, loving-kindness and mercy. We have forgotten morals. We have forgotten our conscience. Weve forgotten the law of the stranger, the widow and the orphan. Weve forgotten Jeremiah and Amos. Weve forgotten to be Jews. What fun.

Weve also forgotten Jewish humor. Such humor was enlisted by the late comedians Shimon Dzigan and Israel Shumacher to cope with the scorching dilemma, in this story:

Two Jewish soldiers in the Russo-Japanese War meet each other at the front. What are you doing here? asks the first Jew. Do I know? answers the second. The emperor of Japan sent me, so I went. And you?

The tsar of Russia sent me, said the first Jew. He gave me a rifle and said to go kill people. I dont understand, complete strangers, why do I need to kill them? If it were my family, Id understand but just anyone?

Perhaps that will be my small contribution to the Palestinian dilemma: Listen to the wisdom of Zeev Jabotinsky: Learn to laugh. It helped us.

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The usefulness of Jewish amnesia - Haaretz

Mini-film fest to honor Gay Jewish Icon Harvey Milk this weekend in St. Louis – – St. Louis Jewish Light

Posted By on April 20, 2022

Opera Theater of St. Louis and the Webster University Film Series, along with Cinema St. Louis and the St. Louis LGBTQ Chamber of Commerce are partnering to bring St. Louisans a free, weekend-long event to honor the legacy of gay Jewish icon and San Francisco elected official Harvey Milk.

Two Award-winning films will offer different perspectives of Milks story, and a panel discussion will address how storytelling can help us honor history while shaping a new narrative.

All the events take place at the Winifred Moore Auditorium and are free, but advance registration is required.

Showtime: 7:30 p.m.

Harvey Milk was an outspoken human rights activist and one of the first openly gay U.S. politicians elected to public office; even long after his assassination in 1978, he continues to inspire disenfranchised people around the world.

One of the first feature documentaries to address gay life in America, The Times of Harvey Milk is a work of advocacy itself, bringing Milks message of hope and equality to a wider audience. This exhilarating trove of original documentary material and archival footage is as much a vivid portrait of a time and place (San Franciscos historic Castro District in the 1970s) as a testament to the legacy of a political visionary. The film won the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature in 1985. Register here.

A 90-minute discussion will begin at 6 p.m. followed by a 7:30 showing of Milk

Milks glorious and complicated life and political career were tragically cut short by a bullet in 1978. His story has been told many times over in books, film and television, and will soon be featured as an opera when OTSL stages its world premiere of MILK, June 11-25.

Still, the question remains: Does storytelling about real-life people via different media albeit taking some artistic license accurately portray history?

A discussion about this and other issues related to Milk will be moderated by Joshua Ray, aQFest St. Louis co-programmer and contributor to Cinema St. Louis film blog The Lens. He will also introduce the film.

Using flashbacks from a statement recorded late in life and archival footage for atmosphere, this film traces Milks career from his 40th birthday to his death.

He runs for office with lover Scott Smith as his campaign manager. Victory finally comes on the same day conservative Dan White wins a spot on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors.

The rest of the film sketches Milks relationship with White and the 1978 fight against a statewide initiative to bar gays and their supporters from public school jobs. The film features a star-studded cast and won two Oscars Best Actor Sean Penn as Harvey Milk and Best Original Screenplay by gay screenwriter Dustin Lance Black. Register here.

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In an article for the Bay Areas Jewish newspaper J. in 2018, Rob Gloster (zl)wrote that while Milk kept his homosexuality a secret from family members and employers for most of his life, he never hid another fundamental aspect of his persona his Jewishness.

Born a middle-class Jewish kid from New York, he hung his bar mitzvah picture on the wall at the Castro Camera shop that doubled as his campaign headquarters as he made history by being elected to San Franciscos Board of Supervisors in 1977.

Though not religious, Milk reveled in speaking Yiddish with friends and at one point considered opening a Jewish deli in San Francisco. He faithfully attended Passover seders and cooked matzah brei for his non-Jewish partners.

It was so important to his identity. There were all sorts of sentimental ways that his Jewish identity was important, said Lillian Faderman, a scholar of LGBT history and literature who wrote a biography of Milk that details his cultural connection to Judaism. I think he really believed in tikkun olamand he really tried to repair the world.

Though his Jewish identity remained essential throughout his life, Faderman told Gloster that did not include regular synagogue attendance.

He hated organized religion and from the beginning, he did not trust it, and he felt that homosexuality and religion were incompatible, she said in the interview with Gloster.

In another interview, Gloster spoke toWalter Caplan, who hosted the seder that Milk attended every year.

He didnt deny in any way his Judaism, and it was actually a cornerstone of who he was and everything that he did, Caplan said at the time. Harvey fought for the underdog, and he was a scrappy fighter and believed very much in social justice. Everywhere he saw something wrong, he wanted to fix it. I think he had the values that he got at Hebrew school and at the dinner table.

When Milk recorded three audiotapes in 1977 that included a premonition of his assassination a year later, he lashed out at rabbis and priests because they refused to support gay rights. On those tapes, one of which he gave to Caplan, he reiterated his opposition to organized religion because of what most churches are about, and not because of a disbelief in God.

In the last year of his life, Faderman writes, Milk seemed to reconnect with religion while dealing with personal challenges and tragedy including financial struggles and the suicide of a romantic partner.

Faderman says just weeks before his murder, Milk attended High Holy Day services perhaps for the first time since his boyhood at Shaar Zahav, which the year before had been established as San Franciscos first gay synagogue.

Sharyn Saslafsky, who met Milk through politics and then became a close friend, told Gloster she remembers sitting with Milk on an old maroon sofa in Castro Camera having conversations peppered with Yiddish while opera blared in the background. Like others, she recalls him as very much a cultural Jew.

I think Harvey was very proud of being both Jewish and gay. He loved what Judaism and tikkun olam was about, Saslafsky said at the time. I think the basis of who Harvey was personally and politically was really very Jewish in the sense of being active and making a difference, taking responsibility, empowering people. I look at that as very Jewish-like.

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Mini-film fest to honor Gay Jewish Icon Harvey Milk this weekend in St. Louis - - St. Louis Jewish Light

UNESCO | Building peace in the minds of men and women

Posted By on April 20, 2022

On the occasion of International Holocaust Remembrance Day, commemorated each year on 27 January, UNESCO pays tribute to the memory of the victims of the Holocaust and reaffirms its commitment to counter antisemitism, racism, and other forms of intolerance.

In 2017, UNESCO released a policy guide on Education about the Holocaust and preventing genocide, to provide effective responses and a wealth of recommendations for education stakeholders.

What is education about the Holocaust?

Education about the Holocaust is primarily the historical study of the systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of six million Jews by Nazi Germany and its collaborators.

It also provides a starting point to examine warning signs that can indicate the potential for mass atrocity. This study raises questions about human behaviour and our capacity to succumb to scapegoating or simple answers to complex problems in the face of vexing societal challenges. The Holocaust illustrates the dangers of prejudice, discrimination, antisemitism and dehumanization. It also reveals the full range of human responses - raising important considerations about societal and individual motivations and pressures that lead people to act as they do - or to not act at all.

Why teach about the Holocaust?

Education stakeholders can build on a series of rationales when engaging with this subject, in ways that can relate to a variety of contexts and histories throughout the world. The guide lists some of the main reasons why it is universally relevant to engage with such education.

Teaching and learning about the Holocaust:

What are the teaching and learning goals?

Understanding how and why the Holocaust occurred can inform broader understandings of mass violence globally, as well as highlight the value of promoting human rights, ethics, and civic engagement that bolsters human solidarity. Studying this history can prompt discussion of the societal contexts that enable exclusionary policies to divide communities and promote environments that make genocide possible. It is a powerful tool to engage learners on discussions pertaining to the emergence and the promotion of human rights; on the nature and dynamics of atrocity crimes and how they can be prevented; as well as on how to deal with traumatic pasts through education.

Such education creates multiple opportunities for learners to reflect on their role as global citizens. The guide explores for example how education about the Holocaust can advance the learning objectives sought byGlobal Citizenship Education(GCED), a pillar of the Education 2030 Agenda. It proposes topics and activities that can help develop students to be informed and critically literate; socially connected, respectful of diversity; and ethically responsible and engaged.

What are the main areas of implementation?

Every country has a distinct context and different capacities. The guide covers all the areas policy-makers should take into consideration when engaging with education about the Holocaust and, possibly, education about genocide and mass atrocities. It also provides precise guidelines for each of these areas. This comprises for example curricula and textbooks, including how the Holocaust can be integrated across different subjects, for what ages, and how to make sure textbooks and curricula are historically accurate. The guide also covers teacher training, classroom practices and appropriate pedagogies, higher learning institutions. It also provides important recommendations on how to improve interactions with the non-formal sector of education, through adult education, partnerships with museums and memorials, study-trips, and the implementation of international remembrance days.

Learn more about UNESCOs on Education about the Holocaust.

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UNESCO | Building peace in the minds of men and women

Holocaust Remembrance Day event set Sunday – Oakridger

Posted By on April 20, 2022

Ronnie Bogard| Special to The Oak Ridger

The Jewish Congregation of Oak Ridge and the Oak Ridge Unitarian Universalist Church have partnered to present the annual community Holocaust Remembrance Program from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Sunday, April 24, on Zoom and in person at JCOR, 101 W. Madison Lane near the hospital.

The program will feature a candle-lighting ceremony, songs, readings, prayers, and a special closing speaker.The city of Oak Ridge has proclaimedApril 24to be Holocaust Remembrance Day for 2022.Mayor Warren Gooch will present the proclamation during the program.

Mira Kimmelman, a local Holocaust survivor who died April 17, 2019, initiated the Holocaust Remembrance Program many years ago.She is the author of "Echoes From the Holocaust: A Memoir" (1997) and "Life beyond the Holocaust: Memories & Realities" (2005).She spent many years lecturing to various community groups and classes about her experiences.

Miras children, Benno and Gene, partnered with the Tennessee Holocaust Commission to establish the Mira Kimmelman Learning From the Holocaust Contest in 2021.This year, two individuals who were winners in that essay contest will participate as Readers in the Remembrance Program.

Emily Salko from Oak Ridge High School was first-place winner in the High School Essay category, and Chloe Collins from Oakdale School in Morgan County, was a second-place winner in the Middle School category.

This year the closing speaker for the program, Robert Fortney, is a part of the next generation, who continues theGreatest Generationslegacy with the responsibility of educating others about the Holocaust.

One of Oak Ridges beloved physicians, Dr. Thomas Guy Fortney, Jr., passed away in January.What was surprising to many was to learn that he had not only fought in World War II, but he also participated in the liberation of Ohrdruf and Buchenwald concentration camps.Later in his life, he became passionate about sharing his story, first with his grandchilds classroom and then at numerous high schools and universities. His oldest son, Robert Fortney, has graciously agreed to participate in this years Remembrance Program and speak in honor of his fathers experiences and legacy.

Each year there is a Mira Kimmelman Holocaust Study Group held in the weeks prior to the Holocaust Remembrance Program.The study group is currently led by Julie Kinder-McMillan, eighth-grade English Language Arts teacher at Robertsville Middle School, and Steve Reddick, retired eighth-grade Social Studies teacher from Jefferson Middle School.The study group is designed to explore the events leading up to and including the Holocaust, along with the roles of the international community, religious groups, propaganda, and our own self-reflection in response to hate and intolerance.

Kinder-McMIllan won the Belz-Lipman Award for Excellence in Holocaust Education from the Tennessee Holocaust Commission this year.She will be presented with the Award by TennesseeHolocaust Commission Chair Larry Leibowitz at the Holocaust Remembrance Program .

The JCOR Mens Club donated yellow memorial candles for anyone attending the service to take home and light with their family after the program.The memorial candles are in memory of the 6 million Jews who perished in the Holocaust.The candle is modeled after a traditional Jewish memorial Yahrzeit candle that burns for 24 hours during periods of mourning and on the anniversary of death of a loved one.

It is now up to all of us to carry Miras legacy forward and educate ourselves and the community about the Holocaust.

Anti-Semitism, racism, and other forms of hatred continue to rise in the United States and around the world. It is now all the more important to remember the Holocaust and empower ourselves to make the world a better place for future generations.

The Holocaust Remembrance Program is sponsored by the Oak Ridge Interfaith Partnership, and the public is encouraged to attend. The Oak Ridge Interfaith Partnership is based out of ORUUC and is designed to bring people from different religious backgrounds together so that we can educate, eliminate prejudice, and build a stronger community.

If you prefer to attend virtually and have not yet received the Zoom link, you may obtain the link for the 2022 Holocaust Remembrance Program by sending an email toevents@jcor.info.

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Holocaust Remembrance Day event set Sunday - Oakridger

Holocaust survivor freed from Auschwitz writes symphonic poem that will be performed Wednesday at Carnegie Hall – CBS New York

Posted By on April 20, 2022

NEW YORK -- A full-circle moment is happening at Carnegie Hall this week for a holocaust survivor from Greece.

After being freed from Auschwitz, Michel Assael wrote a symphonic poem in memory of those killed at the concentration camp.

But as CBS2's Lisa Rozner reported Monday, it's not until now, decades later, that the public will hear his sentimental work for the first time.

READ MORE:Holocaust Remembrance Day: Survivors Share Stories Of Terror As Young Children And The Lengths To Survive

Inside the rehearsal hall on West 37th Street, Deborah Assael-Migliore was hearing the hymns of "Auschwitz," written by her father, Assael, for the first time. He was 24 years old when the Nazis sent him from Greece to the concentration camp.

"It's powerful. The first few minutes feels very unresolved and that must be the fear in the beginning of what he was trying to express," Assael-Migliore said. "His whole experience of what he told me when I was growing up, all the stories I'm hearing in his musical language."

The Nazis had Assael play the accordion in an orchestra of prisoners.

"They weren't playing music for themselves. Nazis made them to play for people who was going to the gas chambers," pianist Renan Koen said.

Koen, a music educator, is a Turkish Jew who has been organizing performances of compositions related to the holocaust since 2010. On Wednesday, she will take part in debuting Assael's more than 100-page work at Carnegie Hall.

READ MORE:Holocaust Survivor Who Was Sent To Concentration Camp As Infant Now Has Photographic Proof Of Her Experience

The concert, sponsored by the Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center of Nassau County, also honors the memory of Austrian composer Viktor Ullmann, who was killed in the gas chambers at Auschwitz.

Ullman and Assael did not know each other, but organizers say it is very plausible that Assael was playing music as Ullman was walked to the gas chambers.

READ MORE:'We Can't Forget It': New Yorkers Commemorate Millions Of Jewish People Killed During Holocaust On Holocaust Remembrance Day

At Auschwitz, playing alongside Assael was Dr. Albert Menashe, who wrote a memoir about his experience, including playing as his teenage daughter was sent to the gas chambers. That memoir prompted Assael to write the symphonic poem 75 years ago.

"It's never too late and we can never forget, so we have to do it," said Dr. Joe Halio, president of the Foundation for the Advancement of Sephardic Studies.

"Every bar, every note, I studied," said Gurer Aykal, music director of the New Manhattan Sinfonietta Orchestra. "He never lost hope."

"For me, personally, I knew my father more as a bandleader, which is how he knew the entire community I grew up in, yet this is a validation of his skills as a serious composer," Assael-Migliore added. "On some level, after he wrote a certain amount of composition, he gave up composing. So for this to happen, it's like his moment. His moment is here and it's at Carnegie Hall."

A moment that cannot be put into words.

Assael's two sisters also survived the war because they were musicians performing in orchestras at concentration camps.For more info on Wednesday's performance, please click here. Use code HFA38468 at checkout for $20 tickets.

Lisa Rozner joined CBS2 in 2017.

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Holocaust survivor freed from Auschwitz writes symphonic poem that will be performed Wednesday at Carnegie Hall - CBS New York

Why these Israeli farmers became heroes after killing their crops (hint: its in the Bible) – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on April 20, 2022

MOSHAV AZARIA, Israel (JTA) Doron Towegs farmyard is as quiet, peaceful and unruffled as his voice. Apart from the occasional bleat from Gila and Simcha, two sheep kept by Toweg and his wife Ilana, the farm is perfectly still.

Its a far cry from the bustle that unfolded on a daily basis here prior to Rosh Hashanah holidays of years past, when the chatter of Thai farmhands competed with the rumble of idling tractors the kind Toweg drove in TV ads for Strauss, one of Israels largest food distributors, back when he was the companys exclusive eggplant supplier.

That came to an end in 2014, when Toweg deliberately destroyed his entire eggplant crop. He injected their irrigation lines with poison in a dramatic effort to comply with a biblical commandment requiring Jews to let their fields lie fallow every seven years.

Strauss thought Id fallen on my head, Toweg said about the distribution company after he announced his plans to comply fastidiously with the rules relating to the commandment, called shmita.

The company severed ties with him. His other customers, contractors and creditors were far from pleased, as well.

Yet the sudden spiritual turn made Toweg, a third-generation farmer in central Israel, a guru for a growing movement of Orthodox Jews in Israel and beyond who want more farmers to eschew a loophole that has allowed Jews to continue working their land and making a profit from their crops during shmita years.

Another shmita year began with Rosh Hashanah in September. In its first two weeks, Toweg estimates, 3,000 people came to the farm seeking blessings from him. The first was a man in full haredi garb holding a crumpled piece of paper with a directive by Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, perhaps the foremost rabbinic authority among haredi Jews whose funeral last month was one of the largest in Israels history.

The note instructed the man to seek out a blessing from a farmer who keeps shmita because there is no one more faithful.

Doron Toweg stands below a sign provided by Keren Hashviis, a group that supports Jewish farmers in Israel who obey shmita laws. (Deborah Danan)

As the farmers wife and the catalyst for her husbands faith, Ilana Toweg has become an unwitting miracle worker, delivering hope for scores of people who arrived at her doorstep begging her to intervene on their behalf and appeal to God to bless them with good health, a child or a spouse. Every Friday evening after lighting the Shabbat candles, Ilana spends upwards of two and a half hours reading the requests she received.

Ilana Toweg was also part of an event hosted by Jamie Geller, Orthodoxys answer to lifestyle guru Rachael Ray, that drew 4,000 women to Jerusalem in late February.

At one point, Geller surprised Ilana Toweg by inviting her up on stage to meet two Hasidic women to whom she had given a blessing back in 2014. The women, who had been struggling with infertility, gave birth to boys, including a set of twins, on the same day nine and a half months after receiving a blessing from Toweg.

I was shaking and crying and extremely emotional, Toweg said of meeting them. But, she added, smiling, theres a huge sense of responsibility knowing that anyone who asks me for a baby might now expect to give birth in nine and half months.

Celebrity chef Jamie Geller and others speak at a shmita event held by Nshei Keren Hashviis at Binyanei Hauma in Jerusalem, Feb 27, 2022. (Courtesy Yecheskel Itkin)

The event was organized by Keren Hashviis, an organization that is the engine of the shmita movement. The group is spending $66 million this year to subsidize Israeli farmers who arent producing crops. Seven years ago, during the last shmita year, the groups budget was just $27 million.

Shmita applies only to land in Israel that is owned by Jews. (Some Jewish farmers outside of Israel are engaging with shmita despite not facing any religious obligation.) Half of all that land is fallow this year, compared to a quarter seven years ago, according to Keren Hashviis North American CEO, Shia Markowitz.

The mitzvah of shmita is every Jews no matter where he lives. But since we cant all do it [on a practical level], God created another way for us to all do it together, he said. Its the ultimate unifier.

Deciding to comply with the strictures of shmita wasnt easy for Doron Toweg. Although he is not Orthodox himself, he already followed many of the agricultural-related commandments such as tithes and orlah, or waiting three years before using the fruit from a newly planted tree.

But when it came to shmita he had always relied on the rabbinic loophole known in Hebrew as a heter mechira that allows for the symbolic sale of farms to non-Jews for the duration of the sabbatical year. The loophole is similar to the one that allows Jews to sell their chametz, or food that is not kosher for Passover, to non-Jews during Passover.

Ilana Toweg had already declared that her husband would observe the next shmita year for non-religious reasons It was for completely selfish reasons. I wanted him to rest, she said when a chance encounter with a young haredi Orthodox Jew a month before Rosh Hashanah in 2014 cemented Doron Towegs resolve.

He told me, Youll give up so easily on a mitzvah that weve waited 2,000 years in exile to be able to perform? Toweg recalled. That touched something inside of me and I thought, if I wont do this mitzvah, who will?

At first, Toweg decided to allow only his open fields, totaling around 100 acres, to lie fallow, but to keep the greenhouses under the loophole formula he had used until then. Immediately after Rosh Hashanah and the start of the shmita year, he planted 20,000 eggplant saplings.

But then representatives from Keren Hashviis told him they wouldnt assist him unless he kept shmita in its entirety.

Toweg agreed, and at the organizations rabbis instruction, he turned off the water for the eggplants to allow them to die. The rabbis expected the plants to die within a week and a half, but Toweg knew better. Eggplants are sturdy vegetables that can last a while without water. More than a month later the starved plants had grown to 2 feet and showed no intention of surrendering. Uprooting the plants was impossible so the only choice left was to inject a disinfecting agent into the irrigation system. When released, the chemical would turn to gas and the plants would die.

For so long these plants had been waiting for water, and finally they hear the system being turned on but its not water, its gas. Poison, Toweg said, his voice steady. Of course theres this association with Jews who wait for water but it turns out to be gas and suddenly everyone dies. That was a difficult stage for me.

Doron Toweg is not tending his farms crops this year, in keeping with a strict interpretation of Jewish law. (Deborah Danan)

Payments from Keren Hashviis have mitigated the challenge. The group is supporting more than 3,500 farmers over 169,500 acres of land, contributing up to 45% of each farmers operating expenses and covering big-ticket items like rent and combines. The organization will help in other ways as well, for example liaising with relevant governmental bodies and negotiating with landlords to lower rents during shmita.

What it wont do is directly replace lost income. But there are other sources of support for Israeli farmers, including small subsidies from the government and donations from women, many elicited by Geller.

The celebrity chef, who did not grow up Orthodox, said she was deeply touched by the stories she heard from Israeli farmers while sourcing Israeli honey and spices for her line of foods. She launched her own campaign, Support Our Farmers, which raises funds from all Jews regardless of religious affiliation and with a mission that goes beyond facilitating shmita.

Food is an incredible way to connect people to their identity and heritage. But the next generation wont carry on farming because big business has taken over, Geller said. She noted that the average age of Israeli farmers is 65 with farmers accounting for only less than 1% of the population. (Farmers account for 2-3% of the population in other developed nations.)

Farmers Avigael and Eliezer Sapir walk across their land with celebrity chef Jamie Geller, who is supporting Israeli farmers who observe Judaisms agriculture sabbatical year. (Courtesy Margulis Lebovits)

Geller said educating and raising awareness about shmita has been a mammoth task. A marketing poll she carried out prior to the launch of her campaign found that 50% of respondents thought that shmita was synonymous with shmatta, the Yiddish word for rag.

I myself grew up in a very Jewish and Zionist home, marching in the Israel Day Parade every year. Why didnt I know about shmita? the Philadelphia native asked.

But not everyone in Israel, including within its religious leadership, agrees that strictly abiding by shmita is necessary or even preferred. Proponents of heter mechira within Israels national religious bloc what Americans might refer to as Modern Orthodox regard the 125-year-old loophole not only as legitimate but optimal. They think preserving Israels agricultural solvency as well as the livelihoods of individual famers is of paramount importance, and relying on foreign-grown produce or that grown by non-Jews is antithetical to many of religious Zionisms central tenets.

Rabbi Ari Kahn, a senior lecturer in Jewish studies at Bar-Ilan University, argues that modern-day realities can and should trump other considerations, including the most stringent interpretations of Jewish law.

The response to what is ideal depends on the reality youre dealing with. If youre dealing with a fantasy about the messianic age, then the response would be one thing. But if youre dealing with the modern state of Israel, with a large percentage of non-religious and non-Jewish people, then the ideal is heter mechira, Kahn said.

According to Markowitz, there are problems with heter mechira. At the top of the list, he said, is that there isnt any oversight ensuring that all the halachic, or Jewish legal, conditions are met.

Rabbi Shia Markovitz of Keren Hashviis poses with one of the Israeli farmers that his organization subsidizes during shmita years, when they do not farm their land. (Courtesy Keren Hashviis)

From the moment the farmer signs the heter mechira document, there is zero supervision. There is no one coming to check that Jews arent working the land [and violating] halacha, he said.

Kahn concedes that he is not aware of any supervision throughout the year on the part of the Israeli Rabbinate, but maintains that over the years many steps have been taken to fine-tune the provisos of heter mechira. For example, the Rabbinate now coordinates with the Ministry of Justice to ensure that the sales are legally binding in a civil court and not just a rabbinic one.

(A third option for observing shmita is a practice called otzar beit din in which the rabbinic court takes ownership of the land, thereby rendering it ownerless. And in some cases, farmers might get special permission to cultivate crops in hothouses that do not require planting in the ground.)

For the Towegs, there are myriad reasons to observe shmita fully and not enough to continue justifying heter mechira.

While it might be difficult for the farmers, its still possible to keep shmita properly today because there is not the risk of starvation there once was, Ilana Toweg said.

In addition to the agricultural benefits of allowing the soil to rest, Toweg also notes the environmental impact of shmita. Shmita ingrains values, she said, that dovetail with sustainability practices espoused by Jewish environmental activists in recent years. But apart from saving vast amounts of water and energy, the financial constraints have compelled the Towegs into a life of reduced consumption.

Having to tighten your belt makes you think about everything you buy before you buy it, she said.

Nevertheless, Toweg said, it was the spiritual and emotional growth that kept her and her husband in the game this shmita cycle.

Its about getting proportions and remembering whats important in life, she said. You stop the rat race and suddenly you have time to focus on the spiritual and time to spend with your family.

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Why these Israeli farmers became heroes after killing their crops (hint: its in the Bible) - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Pew’s Religious Landscape Study Shows There Are US Jews and Then There Are Committed Jewish Americans – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on April 20, 2022

The Pew Research Center this week released a deep analysis of its 2014 U.S. Religious Landscape Study, which was based on telephone interviews with more than 35,000 Americans from all 50 states. In the study, Jews rated as the largest non-Christian community 1.9%, leading Muslims-0.9%; Buddhists-0.7%; Hindu-0.7%; and other faiths 1.5%.

Incidentally, the U.S. continues to be the most religious Western country, with 3.1% atheists and 4% agnostics.

The recently released data analysis treated Jews as a whole compared to Adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish. They did this with every religious group, but we will focus on Jews, for obvious reasons (hint: look up the name of our publication).

So, lets get started:

Age distribution among Jews: 18-29 22%; 30-49 27%; 50-64 26%; 65+ 26%.

Age distribution among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: 18-29 23%; 30-49 30%; 50-64 27%; 65+ 20%.

This is very encouraging, right off the bat, showing that younger people are more likely than older ones to attach a high value to their Jewish religion. This is, as it turns out, a theme.

It gets a little trickier with the division of the Generational cohort among Jews.

Generational cohort among Jews: Younger Millennial 13%; Older Millennial 13%; Generation X 23%; Baby Boomer 33%; Silent 15%; Greatest 3%.

Generational cohort among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: Younger Millennial 11%; Older Millennial 15%; Generation X 27%; Baby Boomer 32%; Silent 11%; Greatest 3%.

Next: gender composition among Americans who identify as Jews.

Gender composition among Jews: Men 52%; Women 48%.

Gender composition among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: Men 51%; Women 49%.

Its a minute difference, but Im sure it expresses itself in meaningful ways on an anecdotal basis, as in how hard is it for a committed American Jew to find a committed Jew of the opposite sex.

Racial and ethnic composition among Jews also yield more than minute differences which are likely extremely meaningful.

Racial and ethnic composition among Jews: White 90%; Black 2%; Asian 2%; Latino 4%; Other/Mixed 2%.

Racial and ethnic composition among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: White 85%; Black 5%; Asian 2%; Latino 6%; Other/Mixed 2%.

How long your family has spent in the US is also vital to your level of commitment to your Jewish heritage. It turns out the longer youre here, the less committed you become.

Immigrant status among Jews: Immigrants 12%; Second generation 22%; Third generation or higher 67%.

Immigrant status among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: Immigrants 15%; Second generation 22%; Third generation or higher 63%.

OK, this one is for the occasional antisemite reading our paper: how much money do American Jews make.

Income distribution among Jews: Less than $30,000 16%; $30,000-$49,999 15%; $50,000-$99,999 24%; $100,000 or more 44%.

Income distribution among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: Less than $30,000 24%; $30,000-$49,999 14%; $50,000-$99,999 22%; $100,000 or more 40%.

In other words, the less money US Jews have, the more likely they are to adhere to their religious faith.

Good to know.

Now, this one should be interesting: level of education.

Educational distribution among Jews: High school or less 19%; Some college 22%; College 29%; Post-graduate degree 31% (look at all these smart Jews!).

Educational distribution among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: High school or less 24%; Some college 23%; College 24%; Post-graduate degree 30%.

It looks like formal education plays a role in Jewish Americans devotion although when it comes to the really smart ones, the Jews with Masters and Ph.D., its about the same.

Lets do marital status. You probably guessed already big advantage to the religiously committed team.

Marital status among Jews: Married 56%; Living with a partner 6%; Divorced/separated 9%; Widowed 6%; Never married 23%.

Marital status among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: Married 65%; Living with a partner 2%; Divorced/separated 7%; Widowed 7%; Never married 19%.

That was quite predictable, except for the curious discrepancy in widowed spouses it seems non-committed US Jews may live a little longer

Heres another one you could probably guess on your own parenting.

Parent of children under 18 among Jews: Parent 26%; Non-parent 74%.

Parent of children under 18 among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: Parent 38%; Non-parent 62%.

Clearly, religiously-committed US Jews are more likely to procreate, which sets a statistical trend whereby the future of American Jewry belongs to religious Jews. Get on this train early, I would say.

Now we get to the faith segment of the data, which, obviously, trends in favor of religiously-committed US Jews. Lets do a couple. How much do they believe in God?

Belief in God among Jews: Absolutely certain 37%; Fairy certain 27%; Not too/Not at all certain 14%; Dont know 1%; Dont believe in God 17%; Other/Dont know if they believe in God 4%.

Belief in God among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: Absolutely certain 75%; Fairy certain 18%; Not too/Not at all certain 4%; Dont know 1%; Dont believe in God 1%; Other/Dont know if they believe in God 2%.

Like I said, a whopping difference.

Which introduces the next obvious item shul attendance.

Attendance at religious services among Jews: At least once a week 19%; Once or twice a month / a few times a year 49%; Seldom / Never 31%; Dont know 1%.

Attendance at religious services among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: At least once a week 47%; Once or twice a month / a few times a year 41%; Seldom / Never 12%; Dont know 1%.

OK, two more, which are a little obscure but at the same time very telling.

First, what US Jews are filled with awe about Creation? Here goes:

Frequency of feeling wonder about the universe among Jews: At least once a week 42%; Once or twice a month 18%; several times a year 15%; seldom / never 23%; Dont know 1%.

Frequency of feeling wonder about the universe among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: At least once a week 53%; Once or twice a month 16%; several times a year 10%; seldom / never 21%; Dont know 1%.

I dont have anything clever to say about the above score, other than to confess that I probably get my feelings of wonder about the universe once a month, always on a Monday, at 9 AM.

Finally, and this should be good, morality.

Belief in absolute standards for right and wrong among Jews: There are clear standards for what is right and wrong 21%; Right or wrong depends on the situation 76%; neither/both equally 2%; Dont know 1%.

And the winner is, although with a disappointing score for people who believe in the Ten Commandments and all that:

Belief in absolute standards for right and wrong among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: There are clear standards for what is right and wrong 29%; Right or wrong depends on the situation 66%; neither / both equally 4%; Dont know 1%.

Yes, dear reader, religiously-committed US Jews are almost as morally relativistic as their non-religious brothers and sisters, and if I were their teacher, I would have failed the whole bunch of them. The recognition of Right and Wrong should be a fundamental value for religious Jews: whatever the Torah says to do is Right, what it says not to do is Wrong. There are, obviously, methods of mitigating the harshness this may introduce into our lives (such as selling your storage of a thousand tons of wheat rather than destroying them), but moral relativism is simply not acceptable.

Let me conclude with another zinger: do Jews believe in Hell? Here you go:

Belief in Hell among Jews: Believe 22%; Dont believe 70%; Other / dont know 7%.

Belief in Hell among adults who say religion is very important who are Jewish: Believe 40%; Dont believe 51%; Other / dont know 9%.

Have a wonderful intermediary Passover week and a fantastic last holiday.

Original post:

Pew's Religious Landscape Study Shows There Are US Jews and Then There Are Committed Jewish Americans - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Russia preparing to celebrate Victory Day: What could this mean for Ukraine? – NewsNation Now

Posted By on April 20, 2022

(The Hill) In Russia, Victory Day is one of the most popular and important holidays, typically celebrated with military parades, festivals and fireworks across the country to celebrate the Russian triumph over Nazi Germany in World War II.

Victory Day this year comes amid a devastating war Russia is waging with its neighbor Ukraine.

Some fear that Russia could hasten for a notable victory to capitalize on the holiday, especially with Russian President Vladimir Putin preparing for a new offensive in the eastern region of Ukraine.

Experts have warned thatPutin could blitz for a victory in the east ahead of the May 9 holiday to distract from the heavy losses of Russian troops and equipment in Ukraine.

Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, in one of the largest modern military operations in the world. Adolf Hitler sent more than 3 million troops into the nation as part of Operation Barbarossa.

Although Operation Barbarossa ultimately failed, Nazi Germany repeatedly launched failed offensives against the Soviet Union. The Nazi regimes largest casualties were in eastern Europe, but the Soviet Union lost more than 24 million people in World War II, suffering the most losses of any country involved in the war.

The Soviet Union and allied forces eventually encircled Berlin, ending the war.

Victory in Europe Day (V-E Day) was proclaimed on May 8, 1945, but Russia celebrates it the day after on May 9.

The end of the Great Patriotic War in Russia remains one of the largest World War II celebrations in the world, complete with parades, concerts, events, fireworks, festivals and speeches.

World War II had a profound effect on Russia, driving up patriotic fervor and anti-Nazi public sentiment.

Putin capitalized on Russian patriotism and anti-Nazism when he invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, claiming he was denazifying the country, despite Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskys Jewish heritage.

This month, Russia retreated from the Kyiv region in the northern part of Ukraine and has reportedly regrouped in the east for a new offensive to achieve a more limited objective:capturing the Donbas regionin Ukraines industrial heartland.

Dmytro Gurin, a Ukrainian member ofParliament,told The Hillhe believes Russia will try to destroy Ukraine through a large-scale destruction of cities and people, pointing to the devastation in the port city of Mariupol.

Gurin said Russia might take major action around Victory Day.

They need to show something for their population, he said.

The General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine warned in aMarch 24 Facebook postthat Russia wants to end the war by May 9.

There is a constant propaganda work being carried out among the personnel of the Russian Federations armed forces, which imposes the idea that the war must be ended by May 9, 2022, the post read, citing sources within the Russian army.

However, whether Russia actually notches a notable victory might not matter to Putin, author and scholar Faith Hillistold The Washington Post.

I think for Putin, theres not going to be a defeat, even if theres a defeat, Hillis told The Post. Theres no room for a defeat in his mindset. Its going to be spun as a victory no matter what happens.

As a sitting president and former KGB officer, Putin usually gives an address on Victory Day. In addition, a large celebration and military parade is typically held in Moscows Red Square.

For the 77th anniversary, Moscow is preparing for 12,500 people, 190 vehicles and 76 aircraft,according to the Defence Blog.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said earlier this month that Russia will celebrate the holiday as usual.

We will celebrate it the way we always do it. This is the holiest holiday in our country. It has been and will remain the holiest holiday for all Russians, Peksov said on April 6, according to the Defence Blog.

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Russia preparing to celebrate Victory Day: What could this mean for Ukraine? - NewsNation Now

Passover 2022: What is Passover, Passover greetings, and Passover dates 2022 – The Scotsman

Posted By on April 20, 2022

Passover is an important festival in the Jewish calendar, with celebrations set to begin from Friday April 15th. The celebrations will last for several days in Jewish communities around the world.

So how is Passover celebrated among Jewish communities and what are the origins of the festival? Heres what you need to know.

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What is Passover?

The Feast of Passover, which is known as Pesach in Hebrew, commemorates the liberation of the Children of Israel, who were led out of Egypt by Moses. Jews have celebrated Passover since around 1300 BC according to the Book of Exodus.

The Children of Israel had been slaves in Egypt for 210 years, and God promised that he would release them from slavery. However, this was not before Pharaoh had refused their release and God had visited ten plagues on Egypt to demonstrate his power - (Exodus 3: 19-20).

Sometimes called The Festival of Freedom, Passover is a celebration of freedom. Its also a pilgrim festival, and is one of the three occasions in the year when Jews were to go to the Temple in Jerusalem, according to the commandments of the Torah.

Passover can also be called the Festival of Spring, and was an agricultural festival marking the beginning of the cycle of production and harvest during the time the Jews lived in ancient Palestine. It symbolises hope and new life, alongside the importance of starting afresh.

How to celebrate Passover

Every year, the Feast of Passover is celebrated in order to commemorate the liberation of the Children of Israel. The celebrations last for seven or eight days, depending on where you live.

In Israel, Passover lasts for seven days, with the first and seventh days observed as full days of rest, known as yom tov. The middle five days are intermediate holidays, known as hol ha-moed.

Outside of Israel, Passover lasts for eight days. The first two and last two days are observed as full days of rest. Although the Torah says to celebrate Passover for seven days, in the past Jews in the Diaspora lived too far away from Israel to receive word as to when to begin their observances, so an additional day of celebration was added in order to be on the safe side.

Passover dates 2022

Passover 2022 will begin on the evening of Friday April 15th, and ends on the evening of Saturday April 23rd.

Passover's dates are determined according to the Hebrew calendar, which is based on the lunar cycle. It starts in the middle of the month of Nisan, when the moon is full, typically falling in March or April of the modern calendar. As a result, Passover often falls very close to Easter.

Passover greetings

In English, you can simply wish someone Happy Passover. You can also greet someone on Passover in Hebrew with Chag Sameach or Chag Pesach Sameach, which means Happy Passover Holidays. Both can be used to wish someone you know a Happy Passover.

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Passover 2022: What is Passover, Passover greetings, and Passover dates 2022 - The Scotsman

‘Living history’: meet the Mosul residents rebuilding their city – Art Newspaper

Posted By on April 20, 2022

For 25-year-old Noor Ammar and 26-year-old Aveen Imad, Unescos Revive the Spirit of Mosul project is something they can really get their hands on. The historic Iraqi city, which was unique for its diverse mix of Jewish, Christian and Muslim residents living side by side rather than in separate quarters, was severely damaged by aerial bombardment by the Iraqi army and its allies as they sought to flush out Isis in 2014-17. Unescos major EU-funded programme to restore Ottoman-era houses damaged during the liberation of Mosul is now bearing fruit, with the completion of 44 houses last month and another 75 due by the end of theyear.

Ammar and Imad are among 119 local women and 670 men who are being trained in traditional stone masonry techniques using Mosul marblea kind of gypsum alabaster native to the areaas part of a larger effort by Unesco to encourage community participation in heritage conservation. A separate training partnership in Mosul with the International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property is focused on young architects and civil engineers. Elsewhere in Iraq, the EU Madad Fund involves Syrian refugees and displaced Iraqis in the rehabilitation of the Erbil Citadel, the ancient mound crowned by Ottoman buildings that is a Unesco World Heritage site.

Ammar and Imad have been learning the delicate art of colouring and repairing damaged alabaster. They began working on old city sites in February after four months of training. This is not a usual profession for a woman, says Ammar, who has a degree in history from the University of Mosul. Imad, a Christian from the nearby town of Bartella with a degree in business administration, concurs. But after sitting at home for so many years during the occupation by Isis, were really glad to be working on such an important project that helps restore what was destroyed, she says.

Mosuls Jewish, Christian and Muslim residents lived side by side rather in separate quarters. Hadani Ditmars.

Four years after Unesco launched its ambitious Mosul reconstruction initiative, the pair say there is now a bigger job market for those trained in heritage conservation techniques than for university graduates. Theres so much work, Ammar says, both with NGOs and the Iraqi government, now that the rebuilding has begun in earnest.

Although the trainees currently receive only a stipend of $20 a day to cover lunch and transportation, they can earn upwards of $500 a month once they complete the Unesco programme. Conservation is a sought-after skill, Imad says, and one that will guarantee future employment.

Unescos vocational initiatives in Mosul are not only restoring monuments and infrastructure but also reviving dying art forms and traditional crafts. Before I started this training, I never knew this kind of artisanal work still existed, Imad says. It was just stories I heard from my grandfather. She hopes their efforts will also contribute to the growth of cultural tourism in Mosul, as Unesco continues to restore houses along two heritage trails linking them with landmarks like the Al-Nuri mosque.

As the old city houses come back to life, their spacious courtyards and cool alabaster basements have already attracted NGOs to work in Mosul, and many are renting properties from Moslawi families. Markets have reopened and the Al-Ekhlas school, a burnt-out shell only two years ago, is being rebuilt as a child-centred learning facility.

I have a degree in history, Ammar says, but this is like working with living history. Im proud to be part of rebuilding my city.

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'Living history': meet the Mosul residents rebuilding their city - Art Newspaper


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