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In Every Corner of Palestine, There Is a Story of Dispossession – The Nation

Posted By on April 3, 2022

A Palestinian woman surveys the lands of Masafer Yatta, from which Israeli authorities are trying to expel them. (NurPhoto / Getty Images)

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Today is Land Day in Palestinea day that commemorates the moment 46 years ago when Israeli forces shot and killed six Palestinians with Israeli citizenship who dared to protest the Israeli regimes confiscation of tens of thousands of dunams of Palestinian land.

The murders took place during a moment of uprisingmuch like nowon the eve of a general strike that had been called by the Initiative for the Defense of Lands, a committee established in 1975 by Palestinian political activists, public intellectuals, lawyers, doctors, and journalists. The night before, Palestinians in various towns within the 1948 territories burned tires and closed streets to block the forces sent by Golda Meir and Yitzhak Rabin. At dawn, the army raided numerous Palestinian villages with military vehicles and tanks, wounding about 50 Palestinians, arresting 300, and killing sixRaja Abu Raya, Khader Khalaileh, Khadija Shawahna, Khair Yassin, Raafat Zuhairi, Mohsen Taha.

Despite the violent crackdownor perhaps because of itthe strike was carried out successfully, and the repression meant to deter nationalist sentiment ignited an anti-colonial mood so magnetic it connected the fragmented realities of Palestinians in 1948 territories, Jerusalem, Gaza, the West Bank, and the diaspora like never before.

Forty-six years later, people throughout the world continue to memorialize this moment, honoring the martyrdom of those who fell by protesting, planting olive trees, and reminding one another that Land Day is not mere folklore. It is not a commemoration of a tragedy that once was. It is a commemoration of something ongoing and present tense.

Since that bloody day in 1976, countless new settlements have overwhelmed stolen Palestinian land. Our towns and neighborhoods continue to be encircled by colonies and military outposts, their residents isolated from one another. The Israeli government has killed and displaced thousands of Palestiniansboth those who defended their lands and those who walked in the shadows, heads bowed, thinking they could evade the horrors of the Occupation.

Everywhere you look on the map, there is a story of dispossession. In the Naqab, Palestinian Bedouins are uprooted and replaced by pine trees. In Silwan, the Occupation forces demolish homes to fulfill a biblical fantasy. In Sheikh Jarrah, ethnic cleansing comes disguised as a real-estate dispute. In Beita, settlers build illegal outposts on hilltops, and soldiers kill for them. Out of all the loot, the Land remainsindisputablythe most valuable.

As I observe this Land Day, I can tell a dozen stories of dispossession, but today I want to write about the communities of Masafer Yatta, whose villages, tucked in the South Hebron Hills, are under imminent threat of expulsion. Current Issue

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On March 15, the people of Masafer Yatta were granted travel permits by the Israeli Occupation authorities to enter occupied Jerusalem for a hearing at the Supreme Court. Photographs of them sitting in the courtroom reminded me of my own time there. I remembered my family and neighbors trying to trace meaning in the Hebrew deliberations, some of them fluent in the language and some who didnt speak it at all. We whispered in each others ears fragments of what the judges and lawyers said, as if playing a miserable game of broken telephone.

The hearing on March 15 marked the beginning of the end to an excruciating 20-year legal battle to save eight Palestinian villages in the South Hebron Hills. Sometime in June, an Israeli judgehimself a settler in the occupied West Bankwill rule whether to expel some 1300 Palestinians from their ancestral lands, which they have inhabited and cultivated for generations.

When reading about Masafer Yatta, you will likely encounter a type of reporting that would have you believe that Palestinians are to blame for their own dispossession. A headline from The Times of Israel reads, High court to rule on expelling over 1000 Palestinians from West Bank firing zone, as if the people in Masafer Yatta had gleefully decided to build their homes in the middle of a shooting range, choosing for their children to play amid the raining bullets or for their livestock to graze between tank tracks. Yes, who among us could resist the allure?

The reality, of course, is quite different. In the early 1980s, the Israeli army designated Masafer Yatta22 villages on 30,000 dunams of Palestinian landas Firing Zone 918, declaring it off-limits to anyone but the Israeli military and those it permits to remain there (this does not apply to Jewish citizens of the state or Jews from around the world). Then, in 1999, the Occupation authorities committed the war crime of expelling the residents of 14 of those villages from the lands they had inhabited for generations, on the grounds that they had been illegally living in a firing zone. That wasnt the only incident of forced displacement. According to BTselem, since 2006, Israeli authorities have demolished 64 homes in these communities, in which 346 people, including 155 minors, lived.

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A recently uncovered 40-year-old official document found in the Israel State Archive confirmed that the regime declared military zones in that area solely to expel the native residents.

This discovery raised no eyebrows among Palestinians, however, who arrived at this conclusion decades ago. Declaring Palestinian lands to be putative military zones is one of the many methods of land-grabbing at the regimes disposal, and it happens more often than one would think. Today, 18 percent of the lands in the occupied West Bank are considered firing zones.

The Palestinians in the Hillswho not only predate said military zones but the Zionist state itselfare fighting for the remaining eight villages, often in the face of extreme harassment and danger. Residents of Masafer Yatta are the target of constant raids, arrests, settler violence, land seizures, and home demolitions. It is understood among the people of the area that these obstacles are thrown in their way to terrorize them into leaving, my friend and filmmaker Ryah Aqel explained in an article we wrote together for The Nation in early 2021.More on Masafer Yatta

We wrote the article after Aqels cousin, Harun Abu Aram, had been shot and paralyzed by the Israeli military. It is the tortuous reality of life in a targeted Palestinian village, however, that families like Aqels rarely experience just one unjust loss. In 2000, Abu Arams uncle, Khalil Mohammad, then just 14 years old, was killed by an unexploded bomb left behind by the Israeli occupation forces on the familys own grazing land.

Twenty-two years later, the possibility of falling victim to leftover Israeli explosives remains an enduring threat. Israeli occupation forces now conduct military training dangerously close to the villagers homes. It is disturbingly common to find remnants of US-made ammunition, be it bullets or tank shells, in the hills. In fact, schools in the South Hebron Hills are required to teach children how to distinguish between leftover weapons and debris, Aqel explained.

And there are other consequences, other horrors. Children and their grandparents sit and watch military tanks parade at their front doors while almost all have stories of loved ones who have been injured or killed by the army or their leftover explosives. I think about Hajj Suleiman Eid al-Hathaleen, an elder of Masafer Yatta, who was intentionally run over and killed by an Israeli tow truck just two months ago. His towering presence once gave strength to the anti-occupation movement. Today his loved ones mourn him while the world barely notices.

To know that these atrocities are the result of military men and politicans simply placing their index fingers on a Palestinian area and dismembering it for the sake of political dominance and settler expansion is to live in a state of constant bewilderment and outrage. It is one that I and so many other Palestinians know well.

Approximately 30 kilometers from the Hebron Hills, my neighborhood, Sheikh Jarrah, fights its own battle against colonialism. Perhaps because I was born into it, I didnt think our reality was bizarre until I stepped out of it.

But bizarre it is: Someone from Long Island decided one day to move to Jerusalem, thousands of miles from his home, and claim my home as if by divine decree and with the support of billionaire-backed settler organizations. The eviction orders and court summons visited upon us by employees of said settler organizations are so common as to be almost mundaneas are the friendships between those employees and the city council members. Even now, Israeli parliamentarians set up make-shift tents in my neighbors front yards, performing their spectacles in time for election season.

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The Israeli regimes architecture of displacement uses many different methods but all have a single goal: to control as much land as possible while keeping as few Palestinians possible without triggering international alarm bellsbe it through manufacturing real-estate disputes; demolishing homes built without authorization; stealing lands by declaring them to be military zones, archealogic sites, environmentally protected, or state-owned; or simply by stunting the growth of Palestinian communities by isolating them and severing their social and economic ties with neighboring towns. The Zionist project has always created narratives to legalize and justify replacing the native with the settler.

The land grabs in Masafer Yatta highlight the importance of Land Day as an event that unites and mobilizes Palestinians everywhere against ongoing colonial expansion. In fact, what sparked Land Days inaugural general strike is similar to what is happening in the South Hebron Hills and what led to the recent resurgence of resistance in the Naqab.More from Mohammed El-Kurd

In early February 1976, a year after expropriating 3,000 dunams of Palestinian land in Kafr Qassem (where the Israeli army carried out a horrific massacre in 1956, killing 49 Palestinians), the Israeli military designated the farmlands of three villages military training zones. Those village were Arraba, Sakhnin, and Deir Hanna in the Northern District of the country. Much like those living in Masafer Yatta, the residents of these villages were told that entering their farmlands would be considered a criminal offense for which they would be punished. Shortly after, on February 29, the Israeli regimeled by the Wests beloved Soldier of Peace and the mastermind behind the Break the Bones policy, Yitzhak Rabinconfiscated 20,000 dunams of Palestinian lands in the Galilee, declaring them state-owned.

Those practices lit a fire under the seats of Palestinians everywhere. Palestinians protested in solidarity and struck in parallel with their compatriots in 1948-territories. Every year since, Land Day has served to remind the world of the connection Palestinians have with the land and their relentless commitment to defending it.

It is not lost on Palestinians how the regime continues to use discriminatory laws and fictitious narratives to justify ethnic cleansing. Some Palestinians have even satirized the absurdity of settler-colonial rule. God has become a refugee, sir/ Confiscate therefore even the carpet of the mosque, the great poet Rashid Hussein wrote in his 1960 poem God Is a Refugee, penned in protest of the 1960 Land Law, which classified 93 percent of the lands in historic Palestine as state-owned, and the 1950 Absentee Property Law, which allowed the state to seize the properties of Palestinian refugees dispossessed during the Nakba. You have liberated even the grazing cattle, the day you gave Abraham Mohammeds field.

Should the settler judge rule in favor of the expulsion of the communities in Masafer Yatta, the 1,300 Palestinians living there will not only be made homeless but will also be ripped from the lands they have loved and nurtured for generations. The Israeli buildings will grow taller, and the settler population will grow faster. Their hands, as Hussein wrote in his poem, will sow land mines in [our] gardens. And as their colonies cut off the circulation between our towns, they will tell us, You are nothing but the scraps of nations, living scattered among caves!

But Husseins poem offers other insights, other reminderswords that echo with particular resonance this Land Day. But [they] have forgotten, he observes, that untended coals are enough to start a fire Enough to light a path.

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In Every Corner of Palestine, There Is a Story of Dispossession - The Nation

Save Palestine From The Palestinians – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on April 3, 2022

In the name of Allah, the merciful and compassionate, Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian Authority leader, said, we would like to welcome Secretary Clinton.

Blinken, someone corrected him.

Sorry, Blinken, the 86-year-old Islamic terrorist leader said.Secretary of State Blinken had to travel thousands of miles away to find a leader even more unpopular andout of itthan the one he had left behind at the White House.

That was last year. This year, Abbas got Blinkens name right and not much else.

After 17 years (and just one election), Abbas has seen a lot of secretaries of state come and go to get their pictures taken with him and then send him a few hundred million dollars.

Last year, Abbas told Blinken that he had postponed the elections because of Israel and that the moment he gets his paws on Jerusalem, we will hold them immediately and without any delay, because ultimately what were interested in is to establish democracy throughout Palestine. This year they cant be held either because Abbas still doesnt have Jerusalem.

The last Palestinian Authority presidential election was in 2005. Abbas won. The last parliamentary election was in 2006. Hamas won. The presidential and parliamentary elections have been postponed since then but are expected to resume any time now. If not, blame Israel.

Since elections wont be happening anytime soon, arecent pollreveals that 73% of the Palestinians occupying the West Bank and Gaza want Abbas to resign.

If elections were somehow held today the Hamas presidential candidate would win 54% of the vote while Abbas would only get 38%. So you can see why there will be no elections.

61% want to tear up all agreements with Israel (since they havent kept them, that would be a technicality), 70% dont want to negotiate with Israel, and 64% dont even want to negotiate with Biden. 58% oppose the two-state solution that is the touchstone of the entire peace process.

73% believes that the Koran predicts that Israel will be destroyed, but only 32% believe it will happen in 2022.

Under these circumstances, the last thing the Biden administration wants is democracy for the quarreling foreign Jihadist tribes who invaded Israel over the last few centuries and were rebranded by the name of the European colonists known as the Philistines.

Blinken is fine with Abbas postponing the elections forever because otherwise the terror clans will do what they did the last time that Bush naively allowed elections and vote for Hamas.

And that would be inconvenient because Hamas wont pretend that they arent terrorists.

Four Israelis were murdered last week by a Muslim terrorist attack at a mall in Beersheba.

Despite the terrorists ISIS membership, a Hamas spokesmanpraisedthe executor of the heroic operation and promised more heroic operations: stabbings, ramming and shooting like the car and stabbing spree that killed a Rabbi who ran a soup kitchen and two mothers of three children. So much for the claim that Hamas will inhibit the rise of the extremists of ISIS.

Palestinian Authority media also hailed Mohammad Ghaleb Abu al-Qian, the ISIS terrorist shot and killed by anIsraeli bus driverwho chased him down on foot, as a martyr. If the PA follows its usual Pay to Slay policy in this case, it wont just be financially supporting the usual stable of PLO, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad families, but also an ISIS terrorists family.

And that will mean American taxpayers will end up subsidizing ISIS terrorism in Israel as the Biden administration explores ways to bypass the Taylor Force Acts ban on terror funding.

At a joint press conference with Prime Minister Bennett, Blinken gave a speechmostly blaming Israelfor future violence during Passover and Ramadan. That speech was followed by another ISIS attack in which two heavily armed terrorists opened fire on a bus. The Islamic terrorists were taken down by cops who had been eating nearby, but not before they killed two people.

Hamascelebratedthe valor and courage of the ISIS terrorists as did Islamic Jihad.

Hezbollah, backed by Iran,praised the ISIS attackas an important and most effective practical response to the infamous and treacherous normalization meetings that some Arab regimes are carrying out with the enemy entity referring to the anti-Iran summit in Israel with the foreign ministers of Bahrain, UAE, Morocco and Egypt. Irans pro-IRGC outlet praised it as a martyrdom operation. When it comes to Israel, Iran and ISIS are on the same side. Much as Al Qaeda and Iran were on the same side when it came to the terrorist attacks of September 11.

Blinken meanwhile used the visit to pitch Israelis on a Biden plan to remove the IRGC, Irans terror hub, from the list of foreign terrorist organizations, claiming it would be symbolic.

He failed to condemn the terrorist attack as an ISIS attack, calling it senseless violence.

At his joint press conference with Abbas, Blinken also failed to condemn terrorism or to note that ISIS, with the tacit support of his PLO hosts in Ramallah and of Hamas in Gaza was planting its flag in Israel. Instead Blinken once again condemned Jewish Israeli settler violence.

Like Undersecretary of State Victoria Nulandsprevious visit, the formula of Biden administration officials condemning Israeli settler violence while promising to strengthen the terrorists of the Palestinian Authority is as familiar as it is evil. The Palestinian Authority is an unwanted institution whose leader 73% of the people the dictator rules over want to see out of office.

And 49% want to dissolve the Palestinian Authority.

Considering the decades of failure, misery, and terrorism wrought by the failed Clinton initiative to create a Palestinian state, its long past time for everyone to turn the book on this disaster.

Neither Arab Muslims nor Israelis want Abbas or the Palestinian Authority. Only diplomats like Blinken and Nuland insist on keeping the senile tyrant of Ramallah in office until he dies.

In a final statistic, the poll asked who was most deserving of representing and leading the Palestinian people. 31% picked Hamas, 29% chose Abbas Palestinian Authority, and 33% chose none of the above. 84% believe the PA is corrupt and 70% believe Hamas is dirty.

The Palestinian people have spoken. Will Biden listen to them?

The root source of the corruption comes from the hundreds of millions of dollars that Blinken came bearing last year for the regime of a corrupt senile autocrat who didnt even know whom he was talking to. Theres more money coming this year to prop up the terrorist regime.

All in the name of a peace which doesnt exist and that the majority of Palestinians dont want.

The United States has gone from using its foreign aid to the Palestinian Authority to prop up PLO, Islamic Jihad and Hamas terrorism against Israel, to subsidizing ISIS terrorism.

Will ISIS be a final red line for the corrupt farce of a two-state solution and a peace process?

{Reposted from the authors blog}

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Save Palestine From The Palestinians - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Billion-dollar deal partners Google and Amazon in Israeli occupation of Palestine – People’s World

Posted By on April 3, 2022

Azzam Al-Kawlak, 42, next to the debris of his destroyed home in Gaza City, May 31, 2021. Azzam lost 22 relatives in the deadliest Israeli airstrike during the 11-day war. Felipe Dana|AP

We are anonymous because we fear retaliation. This text was part of a letter signed by 500 Google employees last October, in which they decried their companys direct support for the Israeli government and military.

In their letter, the signatories protested a $1.2 billion contract between Google, Amazon Web Services (AWS), and the Israeli government which provides cloud services for the Israeli military and government that allows for further surveillance of and unlawful data collection on Palestinians, and facilitates expansion of Israels illegal settlements on Palestinian land.

This is called Project Nimbus. The project was announced in 2018 and went into effect in May 2021, in the first week of the Israeli war on besieged Gaza, which killed over 250 Palestinians and wounded many more.

The Google employees were not only disturbed by the fact that, by entering into this agreement with Israel, their company became directly involved in the Israeli occupation of Palestine, but were equally outraged by the disturbing pattern of militarization that saw similar contracts by Google, Amazon, Microsoft, and other tech giants, with the U.S. military, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and other policing agencies.

In an article published in The Nation magazine in June, three respected U.S. academics have revealed the financial component of Amazons decision to get involved in such an immoral business, arguing that such military-linked contracts have become a major source of profit for Amazon. It is estimated, according to the article, that AWS alone was responsible for 63 percent of Amazons profits in 2020.

The maxim people before profit cannot be any more appropriate than in the Palestinian context, and neither Google nor Amazon can claim ignorance. The Israeli occupation of Palestine has been in place for decades, and numerous United Nations resolutions have condemned Israel for its occupation, colonial expansion, and violence against Palestinians. If all of that was not enough to dampen the enthusiasm of Google and Amazon to engage in projects that specifically aimed at protecting Israels national securityread: continued occupation of Palestinea damning report by Israels largest human rights group, Btselem, should have served as that wake-up call.

Btselem declared Israel an apartheid state in January 2021. The international rights group Human Rights Watch (HRW) followed suit in April, also denouncing the Israeli apartheid state. That was only a few weeks before Project Nimbus was declared. It was as if Google and Amazon were purposely declaring their support of apartheid. The fact that the project was signed during the Israeli war on Gaza speaks volumes about the two tech giants complete disregard of international law, human rights, and the very freedom of the Palestinian people. Since then Amnesty International has also weighed in, declaring Israel to be an apartheid state.

It gets worse. On March 15, hundreds of Google workers signed a petition protesting the firing of one of their colleagues, Ariel Koren, who was active in generating the October letter in protest of Project Nimbus. Koren was the product marketing manager at Google for Education and has worked for the company for six years. However, she was the kind of employee who was not welcomed by the likes of Google, as the company is now directly involved with various military and security projects.

For me, as a Jewish employee of Google, I feel a deep sense of intense moral responsibility, she said in a statement last October. When you work in a company, you have the right to be accountable and responsible for the way that your labor is actually being used, she added.

Google quickly retaliated against that apparently outrageous statement. The following month, her manager presented her with an ultimatum: move to Brazil or lose her position. Eventually, she was driven out of the company.

Koren was not the first Googleor Amazonemployee to be fired for standing up for a good cause, nor would, sadly, be the last. In this age of militarism, surveillance, unwarranted facial recognition, and censorship, speaking ones mind and daring to fight for human rights and other basic freedoms is no longer an option.

Amazons warehouses can be as bad, or even worse than a typical sweatshop. Last March, and after a brief denial, Amazon apologized for forcing its workers to pee in water bottlesand worseso that their managers may fulfill their required quotas. The apology followed direct evidence provided by the investigative journalism website The Intercept. However, the company which stands accused of numerous violations of worker rightsincluding its engagement in union bustingis not expected to reverse course any time soon, especially when so much profit is at stake.

But profits generated from market monopoly, mistreatment of workers, or other misconduct are different from profits generated from contributing directly to war crimes and crimes against humanity. Though human rights violations should be shunned everywhere, regardless of their contexts, Israels war on the Palestinian people, now with the direct help of such companies, remains one of the gravest injustices that continues to scar the consciousness of humankind. No amount of Google justification or Amazon rationalization can change the fact that they are facilitating Israeli war crimes in Palestine.

To be more precise, according to The Nation, the Google-Amazon cloud service will help Israel expand its illegal Jewish settlements by supporting data for the Israel Land Authority (ILA), the government agency that manages and allocates state land. These settlements, which are repeatedly condemned by the international community, are built on Palestinian land and are directly linked to the ongoing ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian people.

According to the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, Project Nimbus is the most lucrative tender issued by Israel in recent years. The project, which has ignited a secretive war involving top Israeli army generals, all vying for a share in the profit, has also whetted the appetite of many other international tech companies, all wanting to be part of Israels technology drive, with the ultimate aim of keeping Palestinians entrapped, occupied and oppressed.

This is precisely why the Palestinian boycott movement is absolutely critical as it targets these international companies, which are migrating to Israel in search for profits. Israel, on the contrary, should be boycotted, not enabled; and sanctioned, not rewarded. While profit generation is understandably the main goal of companies like Google and Amazon, this goal can be achieved without necessarily requiring the subjugation of a whole people, who are currently the victims of the worlds last remaining apartheid regime.

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Billion-dollar deal partners Google and Amazon in Israeli occupation of Palestine - People's World

Ukrainian Jews Rebut Russian Defense Ministry Claim That Synagogue in Historic City of Uman Was Used as Weapons Storage Site – Algemeiner

Posted By on April 2, 2022

Ukraines Jewish community has angrily refuted Russian claims that a synagogue in the historic city of Uman site of the tomb of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov, the revered founder of the Breslover Hasidim is being used as a weapons storage and transportation site by Ukrainian armed forces.

In a statement published on its Telegram channel on Tuesday, the United Jewish Community of Ukraine (UJCU) pushed back against allegations from the Russian Ministry of Defense that the synagogue had been taken over by Ukrainian nationalists.

Information about the use of synagogues in Uman by the military is not true, the statement declared. The United Jewish Community of Ukraine states that all synagogues and Jewish sites in Ukraine are used exclusively for their intended purpose, to carry out religious activities or to help members of Jewish communities and the local population.

At a Russian military briefing on Tuesday, Maj.-Gen. Igor Konashenkov the chief spokesman for the Russian Ministry of Defense displayed images of uniformed men gathered in the vicinity of one of Umans several synagogues.

Konashenkov claimed that a member of the Jewish community of Uman had alerted the Russians to the presence of the troops.

It is the Kyiv regime, in violation of international humanitarian law and simply morality, that uses such facilities as points for collecting and transporting weapons and Nazis to participate in hostilities, Konashenkov said, invoking the Kremlins propaganda line that the invasion of Ukraine is a denazification operation.

Konashenkov referred to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskys speech to the Knesset, Israels parliament, on March 20, in which the Ukrainian leader pointed out that Russian missiles had struck Uman on the first day of the war. Uman is a city visited by tens of thousands of Israelis every year, for a pilgrimage to the tomb of Nachman of Breslov. What will be left of all such places in Ukraine after this terrible war? Zelensky asked.

Konashenkov said that on March 21 the day after Zelenskys address to the Israeli legislators photographs captured the formation of two columns with nationalists on the grounds of the synagogue.

He added: I draw your attention to the fact that the property, weapons and ammunition stored in the synagogue building were first loaded by nationalists into dump trucks, and then disguised as bags with construction debris.

However, none of the four photographs displayed by Konashenkov appeared to show any movement inside the grounds of the synagogue, which is clearly demarcated by a fence encircling the building. The uniformed men shown loading a truck and boarding buses were gathered in the street outside the building an observation stressed by the UJCU, which stated: Even based on a photo published for provocative purposes, it is obvious that the gates of the synagogue are closed and no one is inside.

The UJCU added that the Rav Nachman Foundation in Uman confirms that the synagogue, the second largest in Ukraine, was closed from Rosh Hashanah which was celebrated in September 2021 and has not been used since.

Each year, Uman typically attracts thousands of Orthodox Jews who visit the city during Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, to worship at the tomb of Rabbi Nachman.

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Ukrainian Jews Rebut Russian Defense Ministry Claim That Synagogue in Historic City of Uman Was Used as Weapons Storage Site - Algemeiner

New synagogue guidelines call for weapons, phones on Shabbat following deadly attacks – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on April 2, 2022

In the wake of the recent wave of deadly terror attacks in Israel, The World Organization of Orthodox Communities and Synagogues on Wednesday called for congregations to take precautions against possible attack. Among its recommendations: Worshippers should arrive at services armed, and a cellular phone should be left on in the building during Shabbat services.

In guidelines issued on Wednesday, the organization called on the gabbais; or beadles, who assist in running the synagogue, community leaders and worshippers to remain vigilant, and for those licensed to do so to carry weapons with them, including on Shabbat.

The synagogue gabbai must ensure a first-aid kit is permanently stationed at the synagogue. Likewise, community heads must locate the professionals trained to provide first aid so that they are on alert and able to handle the provision of care to victims when necessary. They must ensure the synagogue has organized emergency exits and inform worshippers of the exit route and how to escape in an emergency, the organization said.

These guidelines are the endeavors we are committed to in accordance with Halacha and together with prayers to our Father in Heaven. We call on synagogues to petition in prayers and supplications to the Holy One Blessed is He to say enough to our troubles. We call for proliferation in Torah study and the reading of psalms for the sake of the souls of the victims and the healing of the wounded. Additionally, there should be prayers for the welfare of IDF soldiers and members of the security forces who are on the frontlines for all of Israels citizens, the organization said.

This article first appeared in Israel Hayom.

The post New synagogue guidelines call for weapons, phones on Shabbat following deadly attacks appeared first on JNS.org.

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New synagogue guidelines call for weapons, phones on Shabbat following deadly attacks - Cleveland Jewish News

Musical coming to South Jersey combines message of Passover with recovery from addiction – Burlington County Times

Posted By on April 2, 2022

Opioid victims face Sacklers in hearing

A hearing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court has given survivors of opioid addiction and people who lost loved ones to the crisis the chance to confront members of the family behind OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma. (March 10)

AP

CINNAMINSON - When the pandemichit, millions of people were in isolation working from home, going to school from home, and worshipping from home.

For some this was a convenient situation. For others, the stress of isolation made them more susceptible tosubstance abuse and addictive behaviors.

But the reality of addiction is,itcan happen to anyone, anytime.

A musical productioncoming to South Jersey will shine a light onits impact in the Jewish community.

On April 3, nationally acclaimed theatrical production"Freedom Song" will hit stage ofTemple Sinai of Cinnaminson. Through song, dance, laughter and tears, as well as a post-discussion with the cast, "Freedom Song" is meant to openan honest conversationonthe often stigmatized topic of addiction.

"Freedom Song'' debuted in 2013 in Los Angeles, performed by iresidents of Beit T'Shuvah, aninterdenominational treatment program in the city.

As word of the music spread to other states, changes were made to the production to encourage funding that would allowthe cast toperformon the road.

Since then,Beit TShuvah has put on50 to 60 "Freedom Song'' performances each year,including two national tours.

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The Burlington County Times spoke with "Freedom Song" Musical Director Michael Kamenir and Temple Sinai Rabbi Michael Perice, who has been in recovery from opioid addiction for 10yearsto find out more about the cast, musical performances and parallels between the message of Passover and the struggles of recovery:

Q: Who are the writers and composers ofFreedom Song and what was the inspiration for the musical?

Michael Kamenir: There's a fellow who I grew up with in L.A. by the name of Craig Taubman. Taubman is very, very well known in the Jewish music world and he's also kind of a community organizer, and so forth. And at the time, he was organizing a city- wide Passover program called "Let My People Sing.'' And it was going to be all these different Jewish groups all over L.A. creating different programs for Passover. So he had gone to a number of different organizations and one of them wasBeit TShuvah to say, can you put together something for Passover?

Rabbi Mark Borovitz at the time wasthe founding rabbi of Beit T'Shuvah. He got a few people together and they started putting together stories. They came up with the idea ... that coming out of addictionhas so much to do with Passover, with coming out of slavery.

Craig had also recommended my friend Stuart K. Robinson at the time to come and help them theatricalize. So Stuartgot together with about 10 or 12 residents ... He would get together with him a few times a week and they would tell their storiesand then he weaved together with everybodythe basic script of "Freedom Song.'' Thenhe and the musical director at the time, James Fuchs, and ourthen- cantor,Rebekah Mirsky, and Stuartcomposed the music.So he was basically the original, we're gonna callit writer.But the words were really those of residents.

Now we travel with 15people including myself and our musical director, Laura Bagish, who was also in the original cast.

More: Bruce Willis stepping away from acting after aphasia diagnosis: 'A really challenging time'

Q: What is "Freedom Song" about?

MK:So I'm gonna have spoiler alert,but there's thisnice Jewish family that everybody seems to relate to. And everything's great halfway through the play. Then what we find out is that theirone daughter, the oldest daughter, isn't there.Why isn't the oldest daughter there?Well, she was kicked out of the house two years before, because she was an addict and the father couldn't deal with it. And he said, 'Don't ever come back.' Andit wasn't about tough love, it was about 'get the hell out' ...

She's come backthis week for Passover. Andthere's a huge confrontation, of course, between her and the rest of the family, andso it shows also how addiction is a family disease.It doesn't just affect the addict themselves, it affects the entire family, in one way or another.

So she's got a little sister and a little sister, obviously, is affected by the fact that her big sister went, andshe feels it was her fault that the sister went. And then there's the mother who, you know, is [ticked]off at the father because the father kicked the daughter out.So there's all this dynamic that goes onin that family, that people can really, really relate toin a big way.

And then [among the other characters] there's the addict who is in recovery, whose wife isn't in recovery. And he's been getting better for a year, but he's left her out the cold.While he's getting better, what does she do? It wasn't her problem,he had the problem. But she's now got a problem because she was with him. So it showshow addiction really is a communicable disease.We tie it, you know, in terms of [giving] people hope, that there is hope.And just seeing these people on stage also gives people hope, because these are people in recoverywho've had some gnarly stories, and everybody loves a good comeback story. Andwe've got some really, really good comeback stories, andthey're real.

Q: Who is in the cast of "Freedom Song?''

MK: Of our 15people in the castwho are actually on stage, every single one of them is either inBeit TShuvahnow, which is a long-term recovery program, or arealumni, and/or staff.But also, 85% of the staff atBeit TShuvah are alumni of the program as well.

We've all had the same experience of going through the program atBeit TShuvah, which isby the waynot a 30-day program, it's a six- to nine- to 12-month program.Which makes it possible for us to do a show like this. If somebody were to come in to rehab for 30 days, you don't put them in a playand expect them to get better. Usually you have to have been atBeit TShuvah for three months before you can even come to rehearsals. You have to first kind of get your feet on the groundbefore you can take on this kind of commitment.

THE BURLINGTON COUNTY TIMES: How did the Temple Sinai Synagogue of Cinnaminson hear about the musical?

MichaelPerice: One of the commitments I made was that we werereally going tomake this an issue in our community. It wasn't just going to be I share my story and we were going to be done. We were going to do programming;we brought in guest speakers. Andafter I shared my story publicly, that's whenBeit TShuvah this program out in L.A., asynagogue-meets-rehab treatment center, like the first of its kind,they were the first to come up with this musical. They've been doing it for several years using the story of Passoverto tie into people's personal stories of addictionbecause in many ways, the analogy and the metaphor is appropriate ... it's a very fitting, musical and just was so perfect to bring it to Temple Sinai. They reached out to me, and I was like, 'Yes, we have to do this.'

Q: Why is the message in "Freedom Song" important and how does it relate to the meaning of Passover?

MP: The Jewish holiday of Passover commemoratesthe Exodus out of Egyptin the bible, we call it the Torah, the Hebrew bible. For people unfamiliar with that story, the ancient Israelites were enslaved by Egypt and here comes this figure of Moses who is this famous Jewish leader and he frees the people to liberation. And it's not an easy process. And even in that story it shows you that people who were enslaved still had fears about being liberated. Some people were scared to go forward, and it's such an appropriate analogy. Sometimes when we are oppressed by something or held down by something, you're almost scared to leave it behind. It keeps you in a state of mind that's not healthy. With addiction, it's just appropriate to talk about how do we free ourselves from the things in our lives that keep us from being the best versions of ourselves.

Q:What kind of music can the audience expect to hear?

MK:It's 99.9%original music.There's some spoken word, some rap, some lyrical music, some ballads,some Broadway show-ish kind of stuff also.But I wouldn't say any one particular type of music.

Q:Do you have to be Jewish to attend the show?Who are you hoping to come out and see the show?

MP: Absolutely not. I mean the content is going to be somewhat Jewish, but it's really going to have a [global] message, and we are absolutely encouraging everyone of all stripes to come. You do not have to be Jewish; you don't haveto have dealt with addiction. We are definitely encouragingfamiliesthat have had this issue or friends to come, but it's really open to anybody that wants to show their support or learn about this issue.

More: South Jersey things to do: Wheaton Springs, Easter fun, 'Godspell', 'Laser Zeppelin'

Q:WillTemple Sinai offer follow-up support services following the musical?

MP: We're going to have tables set up in our lobby with resources so that will be available to people. We're also going to have a Q&A after where we'll get to talk and have conversations about addiction and have people ask questions, and we might have a mental health professional on hand to answer some questions.

Q: Is Freedom Song touring nationally and will it come backto the Garden State?

MK: We say we tournationally but what happens isthat twice a year,we go outusually springand right around fall and a place will call us and say we really want for "Freedom Song'' to come to our city. So then we will say, 'OK, what day do you want?' and then we will start building usually about a 10-dayor 12-day tour around that city with otherlocations.

Q:Is there a favorite song or scene you have from the musical?

MK:It's not one of those plays that you come out of and say that person was really good or that song was really good, orit was my favorite song, because it's an experience. Whoever takes on theparts on the 12-step side, we try to, within reason, change their monologues to fit their life and their story.So it's pretty special in terms of that.

Q:What do you want the audience to take away from the show?

MP: That the stigma of addiction is harmful to those going through it. That until we change the stigma around addictionthat addiction only happens to certain people or that it only happens in certain areasthe people who are going through it are never going to get the help they deserve.

I'm of the firm belief that things like being out in the open and raising awareness changes the way people view an issue. Sharing my storyI was hoping, and I think it did to a degree, change the stigma in the Jewish world. Every little bit helps, and I think that helps people come and admit and be able to seek treatment.

Where: Temple Sinai of Cinnaminson, 2101 New Albany Road, Cinnaminson, NJ 08077

When: 2:30 p.m., Sunday, April 3

Tickets:While tickets to "Freedom Song" are free, it is requested that those interesting in attending the performance register in advance. To register visittemplesinainj.com

COVID restrictions: Masks are required for all attendees.

To learn more aboutTemple Sinai of Cinnaminson: call856-829-0658 or emailTempleSinaiNJ2101@gmail.com

To find out more about the Beit T'Shuvah addiction recovery program go to:beittshuvah.org/

Additional addiction-related links and resources:

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration:samhsa.gov

Treatment facility locator:findtreatment.samhsa.gov

Substance abuse and mental health data archives:icpsr.umich.edu/SAMHDA/

Governor's Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse:state.nj.us/treasury/gcada/

Division of Consumer Affairs, Board of Marriage and Family Therapists, Alcohol and Drug Counselor Committee:htttp://www.state.nj.us/lps/ca/medical/familytherapy.htm

National Institute on Drug Abuse:www.nida.nih.gov

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism:www.niaaa.nih.gov

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Musical coming to South Jersey combines message of Passover with recovery from addiction - Burlington County Times

Brith Shalom to honor Men’s Cub and Man of the Year – Jewish Herald-Voice

Posted By on April 2, 2022

Congregation Brith Shalom will host a Shabbat on Saturday, April 2, at 9:30 a.m., honoring its Mens Club and featuring the Mens Club Man of the Year celebration.

This years Mens Club Man of the Year is Morris Narunsky, who was born in a southern Polish concentration camp shortly after it was liberated. Most of his family, including his three brothers and one sister, were murdered during the Holocaust.

After their Lithuanian ghetto was liquidated, Narunskys parents each were sent to three different concentration camps. His father ended up in Dachau. When Dachau was liberated, he was sent to Feldafing displaced persons camp near Munich, Germany.

His mother heard from others where he was, and she was able to make her way there from Poland with her infant son. When Narunsky was 6 years old, his family immigrated to the United States, settling in Dallas, Texas, while the rest of his surviving family immigrated to Israel.

From his youth, Narunsky always enjoyed attending synagogue services. His family joined Agudas Achim in South Dallas, and when it closed, they joined Shearith Israel in North Dallas.

As a student, Narunsky was highly active in volunteer work. He held offices in several clubs and organizations, both in high school and in college. He graduated from UT Arlington with a Bachelor of Science in Aerospace Engineering.

Narunskys first engineering position was in San Antonio. There, he met and married Diana at Rodfei Shalom the synagogue that her family attended. His regular attendance was at the Conservative Agudas Achim.

From San Antonio, they moved to Houston, where Narunsky entered the oil and gas industry. The couple lived in Houston 22 years, then his company transferred him to Tulsa, Okla. After five years there, they returned to Houston. He is now semi-retired and offers his engineering services to oil and gas equipment manufacturers, primarily in the offshore arena, and he is active with the Houston branches of four engineering technical societies.

Narunskys love has been service through Mens Clubs. In Tulsa, at Bnai Emunah, he served as Mens Club president for two years. He and Diana joined United Orthodox Synagogues upon settling in Houston, and he became active with UOS Mens Club. Soon after, they joined Congregation Brith Shalom, where he served as Mens Club president for two years.

In addition to the many service projects in which he has participated, Narunsky is known for serving as head usher for High Holy Days services both at Bnai Emunah and at Brith Shalom. He also assumed the current responsibility of arranging ushers for Bar and Bat Mitzvah Shabbatot.

Narunsky served as president of the Southwest Region of the Federation of Jewish Mens Clubs and attended seven FJMC International Conventions. He was honored with the Maasim Tovim Award for the Southwest Region at the 2007 convention.

Although the Brith Shalom Mens Club is no longer affiliated with the FJMC, the club has conducted two of their keynote programs: Hearing Mens Voices chaired by Glenn Lowenstein; and World Wide Wrap chaired by Narunsky.

Diana and Morris have been married 52 years and have two sons. Their oldest, David, and wife, Tasha Narunsky, with granddaughter, Serena, live in Austin. Their youngest, Andrew, and wife, Veronica Narunsky, with grandson, Luke, live in Houston; and granddaughter, Alexis, lives in Colorado.

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Brith Shalom to honor Men's Cub and Man of the Year - Jewish Herald-Voice

A cup and a chair will tell a profound story at the Philly Jewish museum – WHYY

Posted By on April 2, 2022

The Jewish museum sought those objects to include them in its permanent exhibition.

As a national museum, it is our job to raise consciousness and raise alarm when these types of violent events are happening to Jews, and to many communities around the country, said curator Josh Perelman.

Perelman says the items tell more than just the story of the standoff.The teacup and chair that were involved in the hostage situation at the Texas synagogue in January are now at the Weitzman Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia. (Courtesy of the Weitzman Museum of American Jewish History)

A teacup as a symbol of hospitality, which is an endemic Jewish value dating back to biblical times, he said. The chair a symbol of liberation, which is part of the ongoing Jewish story. The flight from places where one may be in danger and the seeking of refuge in new homelands, new communities; in this particular case: refuge from an attacker.

The museum has been closed for two years due to both the pandemic and bankruptcy reorganization. It plans to open later this spring.

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A cup and a chair will tell a profound story at the Philly Jewish museum - WHYY

On vacation in Egypt, I found hope for peace in Israel J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on April 2, 2022

On March 28, top diplomats from the United States, Egypt, Morocco, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Israel gathered in Sde Boker, in the Negev Desert, for the first Israeli-Arab summit of its kind on Israeli soil. Though it did not produce any solutions to the regions most pressing challenges, including issues around the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and Irans quest for nuclear weapons, it was an important demonstration of the shifting attitudes in parts of the Arab world toward the Jewish state.

Just a few years ago, this gathering would have been impossible to imagine, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said at a press conference. He cited the Abraham Accords, the 2020 treaties normalizing relations between Israel and four Arab states, as well as the 1978 Camp David Accords as important milestones along the way. But he also acknowledged that these regional peace agreements are not a substitute for progress between Palestinians and Israelis.

At the moment, Israel is experiencing a new wave of Palestinian terrorism that has left 11 Israelis dead and may have been inspired, in part, by the Negev summit.

This is what peacemaking in the modern Middle East looks like: incremental progress followed by a violent backlash.

Last month, I traveled to Israel to visit family in the Tel Aviv area. On an impulse, my mother and I took a side trip to Egypt. We flew to Cairo on Egyptair, something that has only been possible since late last year, after Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett met with Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi in Sharm el-Sheikh. (Before then, an Egyptair affiliate ferried tourists and businesspeople between the two countries on planes that did not bear the Egyptian flag.)

Driving around the famously chaotic capital city, home to 10 million people, we saw evidence of the fraught history between Egyptians and Jews, one that goes all the way back to Biblical times.

Out of the car window, we spotted the 6th of October war memorial, which valorizes the Egyptian military for attacking Israel on Yom Kippur in 1973. There was Tahrir Square, the epicenter of Egypts Arab Spring uprising in 2011, during which protesters burned Israeli flags. (When I asked our tour guide, Rasha, what impact the revolution had on Egyptian society, she replied, Only negative impact. Tourism disappeared, unemployment went up, and the prices of goods skyrocketed. It was a disaster.)

And there, inside the Egyptian Museum, were statues of Ramses II, the ancient Egyptian king often identified as the Biblical pharaoh who oppressed the Israelites during his reign (12791213 BCE).

We also saw evidence of something more hopeful. The famous Ben Ezra synagogue in Old Cairo was closed for renovations, but two Muslim men sitting outside the gates greeted us with Shalom and excitedly showed us video of the synagogues interior on a mobile phone.

Following the establishment of Israel, nearly all of Egypts Jews were forced to leave the country, according to Samy Arie, a third-generation Egyptian Jew who showed us around Shaar Hashamayim, a synagogue built at the beginning of the 20th century that is still in use on High Holidays. Today, there are more synagogues in Cairo (13) than there are Jews. Its a sad story, Arie said.

And yet: One takeaway from my short time in Egypt is that no matter how acrimonious relations between two nations have been over the decades (or millennia), there is always a path toward reconciliation and peace. This was true for Egypt and Israel. It was true for Jordan and Israel. And it is true for the Palestinians and Israel. But charting that path is tricky, even perilous, and therefore must be prioritized at the next Negev summit, but ideally before.

Originally posted here:

On vacation in Egypt, I found hope for peace in Israel J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

My family was murdered in Austria during the Holocaust. Now theyre offering me citizenship. Should I accept? – Forward

Posted By on April 2, 2022

My mother and I discovered my grandmother Erikas faded birth certificate on a trip to Austria in 2019. It was in an administrative office building adjacent to the Stadttempel synagogue, the only synagogue built before 1938 that was not burned by the Nazis and only because it was too close to the Nazi headquarters in The Hotel Metropol, 150 meters away.

I felt conflicted when, six months later, my brother told my mother, sister and me that descendants of Jews who had lived in Austria between the years 1933 and 1955, could now obtain citizenship through an amendment to the Austria Nationality Act. I wondered if I would be desecrating the memory of my Nana Erika and her murdered family members by becoming a citizen of the nation that destroyed them. It is an existential question for Jews: how do we best honor the lives of those six million lost?

If I hadnt taken that trip to my grandmothers birthplace the woman I was named after I may not have been conflicted at all. I would have applied for citizenship simply because it could be useful: I want to live in Europe within the next 10 years and getting an Austrian passport would make that goal much easier to attain. In considering my own family history, I hoped to decide whether I truly wanted to become a citizen of Austria.

Theres no straightforward way for me to comprehend Nana Erikas young adulthood: what it would be like to have to leave everything and everyone I know behind because I was being hunted by evil men intent on murdering me. Nana Erika was only 20 when she traveled with her brother Erwin on a boat to Ellis Island in 1938, shortly before Kristallnacht. Their parents appeals for American visas were rejected, and her mother and father were deported and shot to death in a field in possibly Russia we will never know for sure the exact location where they were murdered.

The majority of Nana Erikas extended family died in concentration camps. American Jews born multiple generations after the Holocaust like myself have the privilege of not understanding this brutal reality, and I dont think my grandmother would have wanted us to. An unlikely optimist, Nana Erika often repeated a mantra: Most people are good.

Courtesy of Erik Sommer

The authors grandmother Nana Erika took this photo of the Statue of Liberty upon arriving at Ellis Island in New York in 1938. On the back she wrote: just an hour but what a difference in our lives. Erika and her brother were the only members of their family to survive the Holocaust.

The dilemma Nana Erika and other Holocaust survivors faced was how to ensure their descendants remained vigilant against the dangers of antisemitism and group prejudice, without psychologically scarring them. It is unfair to judge the modern citizens of Austria for the crimes of their ancestors maybe the best way to honor Nana Erika and her faith in the good in people meant accepting this new passport, and choosing connection over trauma.

In the spirit of Nana Erikas optimism, I hoped to better understand my familys history in Vienna on that 2019 trip. I expected to feel a connection to the city the grand opera house Nana Erika adored, the beautiful synagogue tucked away in the Jewish quarter, and at her apartment. But being there in person, I didnt feel like I was returning to my roots at all. Austria embodied everything that had been taken from my family before my grandmother escaped to the United States.

I felt most viscerally the cruelty Austria had shown my family when I saw Nana Erikas former apartment building the apartment she had grown up in had been given to a non-Jewish family after her parents were deported. When my grandmother returned in the 1990s and asked to purchase her fathers clock still hanging on the wall, now owned by the non-Jewish family along with the rest of Nana Erikas familys furniture, the new owner of the apartment said she was saving it for her own son.

Courtesy of Erik Sommer

The exterior of the authors grandmothers former apartment building in Vienna, summer 2019.

Nana Erika only received measly sums of reparations in the years after her family was annihilated, in Austrias notably meager attempt to wipe its hands clean of guilt.

Furthermore, Austria continues to harbor antisemitism, all too often resulting in violence against innocent Jews perpetrated by far-right extremists. The government itself was run by a coalition including the far-right Freedom Party of Austria between 2017 and 2019 (it was dissolved due to a corruption scandal), a party that propelled itself to power through the scapegoating of Middle Eastern immigrants. The Freedom Party has justified closing Austrian borders to war refugees by blaming them for societal problems, in a manner that shows little reverence for a lesson that should have been learned from the Holocaust: human beings have an ethical responsibility to show compassion and empathy to those unjustly persecuted, even when doing so requires bravery.

Humanitys worst impulses do not fade with time. It seems ever more important to recall the day of Mar. 15, 1938, when Hitler declared to a cheering crowd in Viennas decadent Heldenplatz Square that he had been ordained by God to spread the dogma of the Third Reich throughout Europe. As I write this, thousands of Ukrainians sleep in the subway as bombs drop on their cities at the hands of another despot, a man whose greed for empire remains divorced from any semblance of morality.

Its in these sorts of historical moments that Jews can decide what their identity means to them, how they will honor the ancient tenets of our faith and tribe of welcoming the stranger and valuing the dignity of all beings. How will we react to hundreds of thousands of immigrants fleeing from war, whether they be from Eastern Europe or the Middle East? Or when our own former U.S. president propagates white identity politics to galvanize constituents and sow distrust into their perceptions of democratic institutions?

I believe that how I choose to act in the face of these injustices through my speech, through my vote, through the way I treat wrongly persecuted individuals is the best way to honor my Jewish heritage, my Jewish identity and Nana Erika.

I have not yet decided formally, but I am likely going to reject the offer of Austrian citizenship. I believe ones vigilance against demagoguery and bigotry more profoundly honors the lives of my family and others who perished in the Holocaust than ownership of any passport.

To contact the author, email editorial@forward.com.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

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My family was murdered in Austria during the Holocaust. Now theyre offering me citizenship. Should I accept? - Forward


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