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A Pro-Israel Progressive Aims To Unseat Rep. Carolyn Maloney On His Third Try – Patch

Posted By on March 27, 2022

March 27, 2022

Suraj Patel, a self-described "pragmatic progressive," came within four points of beating longtime U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney in their last primary battle. In their third matchup, Patel says he aims to appeal to a broad array of Maloney voters, including centrists who think, after 30 years, she has had enough time in Washington. He's still running hard on his progressive bona fides but making it clear that he separates himself from the increasingly critical stance that left-leaning Democrats have taken on Israel.

Patel in a recent interview said he values "the unique relationship with the only ally we have in the Middle East that is supportive of civil liberties, of religious freedom," and that he rejects the "disentangling" of that relationship from progressive politics, a trend he calls "a big mistake."

Patel said he would continue the long-standing policy of supporting U.S. military aid to Israel and opposing the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement as he seeks to retire the incumbent.

The 12th District, which includes large swathes of Queens, Brooklyn and most of Manhattan's East Side, has been expanded to include parts of the Upper West Side with a significant Jewish population in the redistricting process that was subject to partisan gerrymandering.

Maloney, a moderate, strongly pro-Israel Democrat who has served 15 terms, is one of a few incumbents who have faced tough primary challenges in recent elections. In her 2020 matchup with Patel, a former staffer to President Barack Obama and an attorney, he points to 12,500 ballots that were invalidated because of signature issues, and alleges voter suppression.

Patel, 38, is now seeking to introduce himself to some 95,000 new voters who have never cast a ballot for Maloney and to constituents who may be looking for a new voice. He is one of seven candidates challenging Maloney in the June 28 Democratic primary.

His campaign's internal polling shows Maloney has the support of 37% of likely Democratic primary voters, and he has 28%. Rana Abdelhamid, a Google employee and a progressive community organizer, came in third place with nine percent in Patel's poll and recently received the endorsement of The Jewish Vote, a New York-based progressive group.

"The fact that there are multiple challengers coming from different parts of the spectrum, simply shows the need for change in this district," Patel said.

Pro-Israel with a kick

Patel, the son of Indian immigrants, said he shares a common story with many American Jews in New York who came looking for economic opportunity, freedom and acceptance. By extension, he said, he supports strong U.S.-Israel relations, because the Jewish State was founded to fulfill similar aspirations.

Patel maintained that he took a strong stance for Israel "long before I ever contemplated running for office." As a college student in 2003, he signed public a letter published by members of the Stanford Israel Alliance affirming the country's right to exist as a democratic independent state in the Middle East and disavowed the then-nascent BDS movement.

In a statement last week, Patel weighed in on recent comments made by Amnesty International's U.S. director, Paul O'Brien, who reportedly said he is opposed to Israel continuing to exist as a Jewish state. "These remarks were absurd," Patel said. "I believe in Israel's right to exist as a Jewish state."

His first trip to Israel was in 2008, after serving as an organizer on Obama's presidential campaign. He later joined the White House advance team and worked on Obama's 2012 reelection campaign. Patel traveled again to Israel in 2019 with his grandmother and a dozen other family members to celebrate Thanksgiving.

Maloney, a Presbyterian, is considered an ally of the Jewish community with a strong pro-Israel record. She was the main sponsor of the Never Again Education Act, which bolsters and expands the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's educational programming. In 2015, Maloney was among 25 Democrats who opposed the Iran nuclear deal. She also backed the Trump administration's decision to move the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and expressed support for the U.S. to publicly acknowledge Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights. And she has received the endorsements of the Democratic Majority for Israel and Pro-Israel America.

Patel's pitch to the pro-Israel community goes like this: "I would be a better champion for the U.S.-Israel relationship for the next 20 to 25 years and ensure that Israel doesn't become a one-party issue."

As for voters who still feel grateful to Maloney for her service over the years, Patel argues that she has had enough time in Congress to try to meet the new challenges facing the country and the Democratic Party, including slipping support for Israel. "If we want to ensure that support for Israel remains sacrosanct, we need new leaders who are going to be able to make that case forcefully to the next generation of Democrats," he said.

If elected, Patel would find allies in two other New Yorkers - Ritchie Torres and Mondaire Jones two progressive Democrats who succeeded longtime pro-Israel members in neighboring districts in 2020. Rep. Jamaal Bowman, who defeated Eliot Engel in the 16th District, took heat from his Socialist allies for a recent trip to Israel, but has also been taken to task by Jewish leaders for criticizing Israel.

The Forward, founded in 1897, is an independent, nonprofit digital newsroom hosting and driving the American Jewish conversation. Sign up for our free daily newsletter of Jewish news, culture and opinion; follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram; and click here to support Jewish journalism with a donation.

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A Pro-Israel Progressive Aims To Unseat Rep. Carolyn Maloney On His Third Try - Patch

Sometimes, its embarrassing to be secular in Israel – Haaretz

Posted By on March 27, 2022

Social media has been aboil since the death of the minister of Torah Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, leader of Israels non-Hasidic ultra-Orthodox community.

Some commenters were wrapping themselves in sackcloth and heaping metaphoric dust and ashes on their heads, their dignity shattered by genuine sorrow and anguish. Facing off against them were secular people who rejoiced, whined, moaned and played the victim.

"They shut down the Gush Dan metropolitan region on us," they complained. "Our children have once again been abandoned to remote learning and the working public has once again been forced to suffer enormous economic losses due to people who dont share the burden and have been a millstone around our necks for 74 years now."

And when a picture of Benjamin Netanyahu, who came to the deceased rabbis home in the middle of the night, was published on social media, the country rejoiced and all boundaries were crossed. Petty politics and lack of faith intertwined, and the importance and holiness of the deceased dissipated into the unholy air and was treated like dirt.

Yes, instead of discussing the leadership of Rabbi Kanievsky, one of the last great rabbinic scholars, who leaves behind a leadership vacuum that is worrisome yet also hopeful, instead of respecting his significance in the eyes of his hundreds of thousands of admirers and disciples the secular community was preoccupied by its morning espresso (which was a little late), the shutdown of commerce for a single day and, above all, with diminishing the deceased and his community of followers.

A prominent feminist activist called him a miserable racist. Haaretz columnist Uri Misgav opened his column, which called for a secular day of rage against the Haredi minority, as follows: The day of Rabbi Kanievskys funeral was a deranged, dark day. A day when the state and secularism decided to cancel themselves before the Haredim. (Haaretz in Hebrew, March 20)

Around a million ultra-Orthodox Jews lost the light of their lives, the man who to them represented the Torah itself, the very essence of their existence, last Friday. And an unreasonable number of secular people you can guess from which ethnic community and which political bloc were settling accounts, behaving pettily and getting angry.

They were angry over the Haredi communitys blind admiration for the elderly leader, who was modest to a fault, and who dragged his flock into the warm and lucrative embrace of the extreme right, which gobbles up Arabs. But they were also angry over all the unsettled accounts of the past. Over the ultra-Orthodox communitys separatism, arrogance, conservatism, draft-dodging, refusal to study the core curriculum and takeovers of secular cities (from Haifa, Tiberias and Arad to Kiryat Malakhi, Netivot and Ofakim), which are almost always accompanied by conflict and harassment, suspicion and prejudice.

Instead of aiming their poisoned arrows at the Haredi community and once again displaying their inferior, almost antisemitic stereotypes these abusive secular people, the ultimate victims in their own eyes, would have been better off directing their anger at themselves and their secular representatives in government; and in this case, particularly at the police and Public Security Minister Omer Bar-Lev.

The police and Bar-Lev succumbed to disproportionate panic, apparently due to last Aprils fatal stampede at Mount Meron. They demanded that the rabbis funeral be put off for two days to give the security forces time to prepare, ordered to shut down the Gush Dan region for an entire day and issued an unprecedentedly aggressive press statement asking people not to leave their homes on the day of the funeral.

Instead of closing down parts of Bnei Brak based on the path of the funeral procession just as they did when Rabbi Ovadia Yosef died, even though that funeral was attended by 700,000 to 800,000 people, almost double the number at Rabbi Kanievskys funeral the terrified police, lacking a sense of proportion, chose to paralyze Israels most important metropolitan region, impose a closure on it, and rouse the secular communitys holy wrath.

The tiniest concession, or even momentary discomfort, is enough to wake this communitys darkest instincts toward the ultra-Orthodox, who, ever since the coronavirus erupted, have become the punching bag of those who consider themselves enlightened.

Two years ago, when the pandemic began, I discussed the crisis between the secular and Haredi communities in the documentary series The Jewish Wars. I titled the episode on the outpouring of secular racism and hatred against the ultra-Orthodox for having dared to disobey the regulations and open their synagogues and study halls Haredophobia.

It had everything the burning, primeval, almost inexplicable secular hatred; the terrible ignorance about the ultra-Orthodox community, which is currently undergoing tectonic changes (a new middle class thats more influential and integrated, a growing number of people gaining education and professional careers, the improvement in womens rights, a decline in birthrates).

It also included cheap demagoguery by politicians on both the right and the left, who not only reinforce ridiculous racist positions, but also demand that the growing ultra-Orthodox community serve in the army, study the core curriculum and fall in line with the universalist secular code that brands every religious faith as primitive, misogynist and homophobic.

For a moment, like many of my colleagues, I was convinced that this outburst of hatred would disappear when the coronavirus did and that the secular community would finally realize theres a large community here with a different worldview and different priorities, just like the Palestinians, for example. But no.

Instead of Rabbi Kanievskys death eliciting a smidgen of empathy and shared sorrow, the secular tribe has once again revealed itself as spoiled and rational in the bad sense of the word. Its a tribe that cant distinguish between the important and the trivial, a tribe that's quick to blame those non-metaphorical blacks (black-clad, that is) for all its own frustrations and sicknesses. Yes, there are times when its embarrassing to be secular.

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Sometimes, its embarrassing to be secular in Israel - Haaretz

Trilateral with Israel & UAE could boost trade to $110 billion by 2030 – The New Indian Express

Posted By on March 27, 2022

Express News Service

NEW DELHI: The trilateral of India, Israel and the UAE is likely to get a boost with the upcoming visit of Israel PM Naftali Bennett to India on April 3.Israels former ambassador to India Dr Ron Malka, who was instrumental in bringing together this trilateral, is expected to be a part of the Israeli delegation that will come to India with PM Bennett. Malka is now Israels Director General at the Ministry of Economy and Industry.

The trilateral, signed in May last year, took off with an Israeli company (Ecoppia) providing the technology for producing a water-free robotic solar cleaning technology in India, for a project in the UAE. Ecoppia, which has over 2,700 MW global projects in its portfolio, claims its innovative water-free robots can help arid regions to achieve optimal productivity and save water.

The trilateral was signed in the UAE with the support of International Federation of Indo-Israel Chambers of Commerce (IFIICC). The confluence of Israeli technology, manufactured in India and imported from India to UAE for the benefit of its citizens, has potential, Malka had said during the signing of the trilateral.

The trilateral can boost the trade among the three nations to $110 billion by 2030. India with its strengths, UAE with investments and Israel with its technical know-how can bring onboard immense opportunities for innovation and technology.

This particular tripartite relationship shows tremendous potential, not only for the three nations involved, but also for multilateral cooperation with other countries, according to the MEA. During a summit February 18, the UAE and India sealed a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement to increase annual bilateral trade from $60 billion to $115 billion over the next five years.

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Trilateral with Israel & UAE could boost trade to $110 billion by 2030 - The New Indian Express

"Israel loses less than 3% of its water, it ranks fourth in the world" | CTech – CTech

Posted By on March 27, 2022

Chana Herstik-Sichel

(Calcalist)

Mekorot's next important challenge after managing the water economy and providing it to all residents of the country, is investing in the various digital fields - from cyber companies that will identify and prevent attacks on Israel's water infrastructure to the use of artificial intelligence to manage data. This is what Chana Herstik Sichel, Mekorot's chief legal counsel, said during a talk at the Mind the Tech conference in London.

According to her, analyzing and managing millions of data points a day will help the company achieve energy efficiency and great savings. Proper management of the information flowing from the sensors on the company's sites also helps to monitor water quality continuously, purify water in cases of contamination and improve quality.

"Mekorot was established before the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948 and the reason was simple - Israel never took water for granted and water was always a top priority. Mekorot is a completely state-owned company, but is listed on the stock exchange with an annual development budget of $400 million and a financial rating of Triple A," she said.

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"Israel loses less than 3% of its water, it ranks fourth in the world" | CTech - CTech

Man shot dead at Moolamattom was relative of nurse killed in Israel shelling last year – Onmanorama

Posted By on March 27, 2022

Sanal Sabu, the bus conductor who was shot dead at Moolamattom Saturday night was the lone pillar of support for a bed-ridden father and mother.

The 34-year-old was the cousin of Soumya Santhosh, a nurse, who was killed in a shell attack in Israel on May 11, 2021.

Soumya had worked in Ashkelon for 10 years. Sanal was the son of her mother's brother.

Sanal's body will be handed over to the relatives after post-mortem.

The Keerithodu-native was a victim of an unprovoked attack carried out by Philip Martin, a native of Moolamattom, who shot him dead and fired at few other locals allegedly in a fit of rage.

Sanal, who was on a scooter was attacked by Philip and shot in the neck. The accused reportedly fired five times, including earlier at a wayside eatery.

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Man shot dead at Moolamattom was relative of nurse killed in Israel shelling last year - Onmanorama

Your agenda is to recognise Israel, we will not let it succeed: Fazl to PM Imran Khan – Geo News

Posted By on March 27, 2022

ISLAMABAD:Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman on Sunday addressed a rally after reaching the federal capital and said that he is "well aware of Prime minister Imran Khan's agenda."

"We are well aware that your agenda is to taint Islam as you want to recognise Israel," the JUI-F chief alleged.

He said that Imran Khan's "agenda" was to "close all madrassas" but said that instead, "thousands of them opened up across the country."

"Your agenda was to destroy the economy of Pakistan and we know that you are serving the same agenda that began during General Musharraf's tenure."

He said that the premier was "imposed on Pakistan as the last agent for this Western agenda so Islamic clauses contained in the Constitution of Pakistan could be eliminated."

"You used foreign money to misguide the youth of Pakistan," Fazl said, adding that the United States had installed "such agents" all over the Islamic world.

"We are now announcing our win and your defeat," Fazl sent a message to PM Imran Khan before a charged crowd.

Taking a jibe at the premier's earlier statement when he had said that he'd "surprise" the Opposition during his speech before the no-confidence motion session Fazl said that the only surprise today was the news of Shahzain Bugti parting ways with the PTI.

Earlier today, in a major blow to PM Imran Khan's, ahead of the no-trust motion, his special assistant (SAPM) on reconciliation and harmony in Balochistan and Jamhoori Watan Party leader Shahzain Bugti announced that the has parted ways with the government while announcing his resignation from the federal cabinet.

Fazl, while criticising the government's decision topass the State Bank of Pakistan (Amendment) Bill 2021, said: "Imran Khan, you have sold the sovereignty of my country by becoming a slave to the International Monetary Fund".

Fazl said that PM Imran Khan is "within the grip of the Opposition now."

"Insha Allah, the Opposition will gather at the same venue tomorrow," he said.

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Your agenda is to recognise Israel, we will not let it succeed: Fazl to PM Imran Khan - Geo News

Travel to Israel, the West Bank, Morocco, and Algeria, March 26-30, 2022 – United States Department of State – Department of State

Posted By on March 27, 2022

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken travels to Israel, the West Bank, Morocco, and Algeria March 26-30 to consult with partners on a range of regional and global priorities, including the Russian governments war on Ukraine, Irans destabilizing activities, the Abraham Accords and normalization agreements with Israel, Israeli-Palestinian relations, and preserving the possibility of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, among other topics.

The Secretary started his trip in Israel and the West Bank. He met with Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, Foreign Minister and Alternate Prime Minister Yair Lapid, Defense Minister Benny Gantz, and Israeli President Isaac Herzog. The Secretary underscored the unwavering U.S. commitment to Israels security, engaged on Israeli-Palestinian issues, and discussed regional and global challenges with his counterparts in the Israeli government. The Secretary also met with President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah as well as with representatives of Palestinian civil society. In these meetings, the Secretary emphasized the importance of strengthening U.S.-Palestinian relations, and advancing freedom, security and prosperity for the Palestinian people.

In Morocco, he will meet with Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita and other senior government officials to exchange views on regional issues and bilateral cooperation, as well as advancing human rights and fundamental freedoms. The Secretary will also meet with exceptional Moroccan alumnae of U.S.-sponsored exchange programs.

While in Rabat, the Secretary will also meet Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyanto discuss regional security and international developments.

The Secretary will then travel to Algiers, Algeria for meetings with President Abdelmadjid Tebboune and Foreign Minister Ramtane Lamamra to discuss regional security and stability, commercial cooperation, advancing human rights and fundamental freedoms, and other areas of mutual concern. The Secretary will also officially inaugurate the United States as the Country of Honor at the Algiers International Trade Fair, the largest trade show of its kind in Africa. He will meet with U.S. business representatives in Algeria to discuss deepening economic ties and promoting U.S.-Algeria trade and investment.

During the course of his trip, the Secretary will emphasize to all of the foreign leaders he meets that the United States stands in solidarity with the government and people of Ukraine in the face of the Kremlins aggression. We will continue to work closely with our allies and partners to impose further costs on Putin and his enablers if Putin does not change course.

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Travel to Israel, the West Bank, Morocco, and Algeria, March 26-30, 2022 - United States Department of State - Department of State

Against Backdrop of Ukraine Crisis and Continuing Antisemitic Hate Crimes, Senator Anna Kaplan Brings Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Renowned "Courage…

Posted By on March 27, 2022

Courage to Remember is the Simon Wiesenthal Center's 40-panel traveling exhibition on the Nazi Holocaust, which has been seen on six continents by millions of people and has proven to be an effective educational resource on this vital history. The exhibition will be on display in the Legislative Office Building till Friday, March 25th.

A recent study shows New Yorkers aged 18-39 have shockingly poor awareness and understanding of the events of the Holocaust; with58% unable to name a concentration camp, 19% believing that Jews caused the Holocaust, and 28% believing the Holocaust is a myth or has been exaggerated

Billby Senator Anna Kaplan and Assemblywoman Nily Rozic would ensure that New York schools are teaching students about the Holocaust as required under existing law

ALBANY, NY (March 22nd, 2022) Against the backdrop of the horrific invasion of Ukraine and continuing antisemitic attacks across the U.S., NYS Senator Anna Kaplan, a leading advocate for increased Holocaust education in New York States schools, brought the Simon Wiesenthal Centers (SWC) Courage to Remember exhibition on the Holocaust to the New York State Capitol.

Courage to Remember is the SWCs 40-panel traveling exhibition on the Nazi Holocaust, which has been seen on six continents by millions of people and continues to be displayed in cities across the United States and across the globe. The exhibition will be on display in the Legislative Office Building in Albany through Friday, March 25th.

Senator Anna M. Kaplan said "the lessons of the Holocaust are more important today than ever before, as we all watch in horror as a peaceful European nation is invaded under false pretenses, and cynically using Holocaust misinformation as an excuse to do so. It's critical that we know our history, that we learn from it, and that we ensure that "never again" isn't just a saying, but something we work to deliver. That's why I asked the Simon Wiesenthal Center to bring the "Courage to Remember" exhibition to Albany, so that everyone here can take it in and learn about this vital history, and so that we can continue to have this important dialogue around the issue of Holocaust education and how we're failing to properly teach this history here in New York."

Lt. Governor Brian Benjamin said Disinformation and antisemitism are alive and well on our streets, so we must continue to send New Yorkers and the rest of the world the message: hate has no place here.Not against our Jewish siblings.Not against our Asian siblings.Not against any New Yorkerbecause hate is not who we are as a people.Thank you to Senator Anna Kaplan and the Simon Wiesenthal Center for bringing Courage to Change here to remind us remind that, though the horror of the Holocaust is unique, the root causes that led to it are things we are still fighting today.

Rabbi Abraham Cooper, Associate Dean, Director Global Social Action at the Simon Wiesenthal Center, said too many adults dont know how to impart the core lessons of the Holocaust. Our kids are bombarded on Tik Tok, in online games with pro-Nazi, antisemitic messaging. We are all subject to Holocaust denial from the Iranian regime. Holocaust distortion from Putins propaganda machine. And the co-opting of Holocaust imagery by some anti-vaxxers. We are here today as the world watches evil unleashed against innocent children, their parents, and we see cities reduced to rubble. In order to persevere today and plan for the future we need the courage to remember our history, and thats what this exhibition is all about, and its why we must do a better job of teaching this history to our next generation.

Senator Toby Ann Stavisky said "Philosopher George Santayana famously wrote those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. We are seeing this in our country as antisemitic and anti-Asian violence surge, and we are seeing it overseas as tragedy unfolds in Ukraine and Putins excuse is denazification. I firmly believe that education is the response. Having the courage to remember is the first step toward silencing Holocaust deniers. I thank Senator Kaplan and the Simon Wiesenthal Center for bringing this impactful exhibit to our State Capital."

The exhibition is being brought to Albany days after the NYPD reported a 400% spike in antisemitic hate crimes in NYC over the month of February. The Courage to Remember exhibition not only serves as a memorial for the past, but also reenforces what could transpire if the evils wrought by tyrants are left unchecked.

This exhibition has additional significance amid the ongoing crisis in Ukraine. As a pretext for Russia's invasion, President Vladimir Putin has falsely weaponized the Nazi Holocaust as a ploy to invade a peaceful neighbor and unleashed one of the worst humanitarian disasters of this century. The Russian invasion has also damaged the Babi Yar Holocaust memorial, houses of worship, kindergartens, and schools.

During the press event, speaking on behalf of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, Rabbi Cooper endorsed the efforts by Senator Kaplan to deepen and expand Holocaust education in the State. Senator Kaplan has been fighting to pass S.121a/A.472a, which would provide desperately needed oversight of how the history of the Holocaust is being taught in schools around the State of New York.

A recent studyby the nonprofit Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (Claims Conference) revealed disturbing findings about Holocaust knowledge among New Yorkers ages 18-39, including that 58% cannot name a single concentration camp, 19% believe that Jews caused the Holocaust, and 28% believe the Holocaust is a myth or has been exaggerated. In each of these three metrics, New York had the worst score of any state in the US.

Rabbi Abraham Cooper concluded The Courage to Remember exhibition puts a human face on the overwhelming tragedy of the Holocaust, while the events in Ukraine shed new light on the dangers of Holocaust distortion, which is a rapidly growing new variant of antisemitism. Furthermore the Courage to Remember exhibition reinforces the importance of Holocaust education to combat efforts to erase history.

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Against Backdrop of Ukraine Crisis and Continuing Antisemitic Hate Crimes, Senator Anna Kaplan Brings Simon Wiesenthal Center's Renowned "Courage...

Respect doesnt always mean inclusion (letter to the editor) – SILive.com

Posted By on March 27, 2022

It seems that many people feel that the Staten Island St. Patricks Day Parade organizers are not with it or old fashioned for not including the LGBTQ community to be recognized in the parade.

I look at the Jewish community and I see that there are Hasidic, Orthodox and Reformed Jews. I am not Jewish, but having worked with people who said that they were reformed Jews, it means that they do not get involved in going to temple every week, along with getting involved only with the major Jewish holidays such as Passover, Yom Kippur and, of course, Hanukkah.

The Catholic religion does not have different classifications. Same-sex relations are against the beliefs of the Catholic church.

Catholics are taught to respect other peoples lifestyles, but at the same time not to enable and promote lifestyles that are contrary to the beliefs of the Catholic church.

Yes, other communities have now permitted LGBTQ organizations to be in their parades.

The question for the Staten Island parade organizers is: Do you go with the flow or do you keep your beliefs and religion in tow?

The question I have for the LGBTQ community: Are you asking to be in the parade to honor St. Patrick or to advance your presence in the community?

To me, this is not discrimination, but merely two different lifestyles that have to be respected. Respect does not always mean inclusion.

(John McHugh is a Pleasant Plains resident.)

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Respect doesnt always mean inclusion (letter to the editor) - SILive.com

Check out RAGBRAI’s newly announced pass-through and meeting towns with details, highlights – Des Moines Register

Posted By on March 27, 2022

Watch as the RAGBRAI 2022 route is announced

RAGBRAI announced the main towns on the route for its 2022 edition, which will run from July 24-30, in a celebration Friday at the Iowa Events Center.

Kelsey Kremer, Des Moines Register

The hometown of the man who set the world record for the longest bout of hiccups. The National Hobo Museum. A Catholic shrine that claims to be the world's largest grotto (nine of them, actually). A rural village,billingitself as the "Hometown to the World," where Hasidic rabbis mingle withimmigrants from around the globe.

These are among the only-in-Iowa wonders among the newly announced pass-through and meet-up towns along the route of49th edition of theRegister's Annual Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa..

Unveiled Sunday, they join the RAGBRAI XLIX starting, ending and overnight towns announced in January: Sergeant Bluff,Ida Grove, Pocahontas, Emmetsburg, Mason City, Charles City,West Union and Lansing.

The 462-mile, July 24-30 ride, with12,945 feet of climb, will be the firstsince 1984 to feature a 100-mile Century Day, instead of anoptional added-mileage loop.

The RAGBRAI route is still subject to revision pending an inspection ride by RAGBRAI officials and guests in June. Detailed route maps will be released in June or July.

Here is a look at each day.

More: What to know about the towns on RAGBRAI 2022, from Sergeant Bluff to Lansing

Miles:53.2

Feet of climb:2,545

Themes:Air Force 75th Anniversary Celebration, Mile of Silence

Pass-through towns

Meeting town:

Miles:71.2 miles

Feet of climb:1,694

Themes:College Jersey Day, PeopleforBikes Day

Pass-through towns

Meeting town

Miles:56.4

Feet of climb:756

Theme:Dream Team 25th Anniversary

Pass-through towns

Meeting town

More: New to RAGBRAI? Here's everything rookies need to know before riding across Iowa

Miles:105

Feet of climb:1,699

Themes:John Karras Day,RAGBRAI Jersey Day

Pass-through towns

Meeting town

Miles:47.9

Feet of climb:1,260

Themes:Charlie Harper Day, Crazy Socks Day

Pass-through town

Meeting town

Miles:63

Feet of Climb:2,025

Theme:Iowa State Patrol Appreciation Day

Pass-through towns

Meeting town

Miles:65.4

Feet of Climb:2,966

Theme:Tire Dip in the Mississippi River.

Pass-through towns

Meeting town

Day 1 will feel a little like 2006. RAGBRAI will go through the same pass-through towns as that year,when the day also started in Sergeant Bluff and ended in Ida Grove.

Pass-through town Anthon was home to Charles Osborne,who held theGuinness World Record for the longest continual hiccup attack, which lasted 68 years. Osborne started hiccupping in 1922 while attempting to weigh a hog before slaughtering it, according to the "Guinness Book of World Records." He never found a cure, but led a normal life, married twice and fathered eight children. Osborne's hiccups finally went away in 1990, one year before he died at age 97.

More: Paul Hassman, Iowa wrestling champ, RAGBRAI rider, dies at 108

Look closelyat the cornfieldsaround Schaller and you may see the makings of buttery popcorn. Schalleris the self-proclaimed "Popcorn Capital of the World," and popcorn brands Bango and Jolly Time used to have facilities there. Jolly Time Popcorn is headquartered in nearby Sioux City and still has growers in the Schaller area. Schaller celebrates magical poppable corn with its Popcorn Days festival each July.

Rolfe is the westernmost point on the Three Rivers Trail, a 32-mile gravel rail-trail route from Rolfe to Eagle Grove.

For the third time in the last 12 years RAGBRAI will roll by the Shrine of the Grotto of Redemption in West Bend. The Rev.Paul Matthias Dobberstein began building the Roman Catholic shrine in 1912. He died in1954 and never lived to see its completion in 1964. The nine grottos depict scenes from Jesus' life.

Every year 50,000 people visit the shrine in the town of fewer than 700 residents.The grotto also has nonreligious appeal. Countless types of rocks and more than 250 types of semiprecious stones from amethysts to drusy quartz cover the grottos.

Theres nothing like it in the world,Marketing Director Andy Milam told the Des Moines Register last year.You may find a little grotto built on the side of a church but not one the size of a city block.

Fly over the Grotto of the Redemption in West Bend, Iowa

Get a birds-eye video of the Grotto of the Redemption in West Bend, Iowa. The largest man-made Grotto in the world, the Grotto contains the largest collection of precious stones and gems found anywhere in one location.

Rodney White and Michael Zamora/The Register

On the route areWhittemore andKlemme, members of the increasingly small fraternity offirst-time RAGBRAI pass-through towns.Algona was an overnight town in 1977, 1990, 1999, 2005, 2010 and 2017, but has never been a pass-through town.

Britt is home to the National Hobo Museum, which preserves the history, artifacts and stories of hoboing in the historic Chief movie theater on Main Street. The museum was assembled inthe 1970s '80s and today is run by the Britt Hobo Days Association, a nonprofit that hosts the National Hobo Convention and the Hobo Days Festival each August.

This will be the Century Day, and the RAGBRAI route, usuallyopen from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.,will be open for an extra hour, until 7 p.m.

RAGBRAI is working on plans to assist riders who cannot ride the full distance. Organizers anticipate more riders will use the SAG (support and gear) wagons on Day 4 than typical days.

"We know that we're probably going to have a lot of sagging that day," RAGBRAI Director Matt Phippen said in January."But it's a tribute to (co-founder John)Karras. There's people who want that brought back."

More: RECAP: Watch the RAGBRAI 2022 route announcement show

Fossil hunters tourists can search for 365 million-year-old fossilsjust west ofRockford. During the Devonian Period, warm, shallow seas covered Iowa. Most of the fossils found at the Fossil and Prairie Park Preserve are frommarine invertebrates like brachiopods, gastropods, corals, crinoids, bryozoans and cephalopods.

This will beRAGBRAI's second trip to Hawkeye. The only other visit came when it was a pass-through town in 1996.

Postville, "The Hometown of the World," is known for its diverse population, with migrants from a dozen countries drawn by jobs at itstwo meatpacking plants. The Agri Star plant is one of the largestkosher meat packing plants in the world, and among the town's transplants is a cadre ofHasidic rabbis who certify its products.

Philip Joens coversbreaking news and RAGBRAI for the Des Moines Register. He has ridden parts of 16 RAGBRAIs and completed the river-to-river trek five times. He can be reached at 515-443-3347 at pjoens@registermedia.com or on Twitter @Philip_Joens.

Excerpt from:

Check out RAGBRAI's newly announced pass-through and meeting towns with details, highlights - Des Moines Register


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