Page 445«..1020..444445446447..450460..»

In a five year first, Israel won’t impose Purim curfew on the West Bank, Gaza – Haaretz

Posted By on March 16, 2022

Israel won't enforce a curfew in Gaza and the West Bank during the Purim holiday for the first time in five years.

Defense Minister Benny Gantz announced the decision on Wednesday, citing the fact that Purim starts on Wednesday, a day of relatively light traffic at checkpoints since most Palestinian workers have already crossed into Israel. The other reported reason is to avoid economic losses by closing the checkpoint on a business day.

The decision, made public following a security assessment, comes after the government announced a series of moves aimed at easing the lives of Palestinians from the West Bank working in Israel. Israel also plans to remove bureaucratic barriers to those seeking jobs within the country.

Over the last several years, Israel imposed a curfew on theWest Bankduring Passover, Purim and the fall holidays, barring Palestinians from crossing checkpoints except in the case of humanitarian emergencies.

Senior Israeli army officials hailed the security coordination with Palestinian security bodies as effective and greatly improved.

Since the current government was established, Gantz has taken several steps to ease conditions for the Palestinian economy. Last week the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) announced an additional 2,000 work permits in Israel for Gaza residents, raising the total current number to 12,000. In addition, a further increase of the quota to 20,000 is also being considered.

In another step to strengthen the Palestinian Authority, Israel registered4,000 Palestinians in the Palestinian population registryfor the first time in a decade. This move allows those Palestinians to hold a Palestinian ID card and move more freely around the West Bank.

The army has recently expressed concern over a deteriorating security situation in the West Bank and Jerusalem ahead of the Passover and Ramadan holidays, and following several deadly incidents between Israeli soldiers and Palestinians in the West Bank.

On Tuesdaytwo Palestinians were killed by undercover Israeli soldiers in the northern and central West Bank.

Last week, Foreign Minister Yair Lapid met with King Abdullah II of Jordan due to tensions in Jerusalem and the Hashemite Kingdoms role in managing the al-Aqsa Mosque compound. We have agreed to work together to reduce tensions and promote understanding, Lapid said following the meeting.

The Jordanian Palace said that in his conversation with Lapid, the King emphasized the importance of maintaining the status quo in the city, and stopping all unilateral actions which harm the two-state solution.

Continued here:

In a five year first, Israel won't impose Purim curfew on the West Bank, Gaza - Haaretz

USAID Deputy Administrator Isobel Coleman’s Trip to Israel, the West Bank, and Jordan | Readout | US Agency for International Development – USAID

Posted By on March 16, 2022

The below is attributable to Spokesperson Rebecca Chalif:

On March 5-11, Deputy Administrator Isobel Coleman traveled to Israel, the West Bank, and Jordan to view USAIDs development work first-hand and meet with government officials, partners, and communities.

She met with the USAID West Bank and Gaza Mission staff to discuss critical development and humanitarian issues and participated in an all-staff town hall to discuss challenges and opportunities in resuming USAIDs operations and programming after a three-year pause. She met with officials from the Government of Israel to discuss USAIDs commitment to a peaceful, sustainable two-state solution; planned development work to benefit the Palestinian people; and advancing bilateral cooperation with Israel. She also met with Ambassador Eynat Shleinthe head of Israels development agency, MASHAVto discuss the two agencies partnership, particularly in response to development challenges in Northern Central America and the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine.

Deputy Administrator Coleman held separate discussions with Alon Bar, the Political Director of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs,and Major General Rassan Alian, the head of the Israeli Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories. In these meetings, Deputy Administrator Coleman discussed USAIDs plans for new work under the Middle East Partnership for Peace Act (MEPPA) and the Agencys continued work with the Palestinian people on humanitarian issues, economic development, support for youth, as well as plans to support water and wastewater treatment in the West Bank. In a discussion with Israeli and Palestinian media, Deputy Administrator Coleman announced the first two awards of the MEPPA.

On March 8, International Womens Day, Deputy Administrator Coleman met with Palestinian businesswomen to hear about the challenges they face and how USAID is helping them sustain their businesses despite the impacts of COVID-19. She met with Palestinian Authority (PA) Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh to discuss the necessity of PA reforms for USAID to advance its support for Palestinians.

Deputy Administrator Coleman visited Caritas Baby Hospital in Bethlehem to see how USAIDs contributions have supported the response to COVID-19 in the West Bank, and she then met with members of the United Nations Ad Hoc Liaison Committee. She also toured a USAID-funded youth center in Jericho and engaged with Palestinian youth before departing to Jordan, where she met with USAID Jordan Mission staff to learn more about their work and the Missions priorities.

In Jordan, Deputy Administrator Coleman met with Government of Jordan Ministers, including H.E. Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates, Ayman Safadi; H.E. Minister of Planning and International Cooperation, Nasser Shraideh; and other officials including the advisor of the Economic Affairs at the Royal Hashemite Court, Zeina Toukan. During these meetings, Deputy Administrator Coleman discussed the strong partnership between the U.S. and Jordan and highlighted the joint commitment between our two countries to continue cooperation on a number of fronts including water security and public sector reforms and advancing economic opportunities for women and youth. Deputy Administrator Coleman had dinner with Jordanian women leaders; toured Kama, a female-owned artisanal food company that was able to expand with the support of USAID; and visited several USAID-funded projects that support the tourism industry.

On the final day of her trip, Deputy Administrator Coleman spent the morning engaged in discussions regarding Jordans water crisis and the impact on regional dynamics with USAID staff and H.E. Mohammed Al Najjar, the Minister of Water and Irrigation. Deputy Administrator Coleman visited the Al Addasya Diversion Weir and King Abdullah Canal to better understand Jordans water supply challenges and expressed USAIDs continued commitment to helping Jordan address the water security issues that face the region.

Deputy Administrator Coleman also met with UN and NGO partners supporting the Syrian humanitarian and stabilization response; was hosted by a Syrian refugee family in their home to discuss their lived experience; and attended a roundtable discussion with Syrian refugees and their Jordanian neighbors to better understand the continued challenges and difficulties caused by the ongoing Syrian conflict. She commended the Jordanian government and people for their continued hospitality and support for Syrian refugees.

See the original post:

USAID Deputy Administrator Isobel Coleman's Trip to Israel, the West Bank, and Jordan | Readout | US Agency for International Development - USAID

At Israel’s airport, Ukrainian immigrants prepare to start their lives again – Haaretz

Posted By on March 16, 2022

Kate Sohorokova stood red-faced from weeping near Terminal 1 at Ben-Gurion International Airport, oblivious to the dozens of Orthodox high-school girls who had come to give a happy welcome to the immigrants. Im just a bit tired, she explained, flanked by her baby son and young daughter, just asthe days-long journey from Ukraine to Israel was ending.

Since the war started in Ukraine, Terminal 1 at Ben-Gurion International Airport has been turned into a preliminary absorption center for olim those eligible to migrate to Israel under the Law of Return.

In one room, soldiers from the Home Front Command keep track of the flight board. In another, they assign hotel rooms. Eight hundred immigrants from Ukraine are already living in hotels, out of 12,000 beds allocated for this purpose.

On Monday, two dozen new arrivals were seen in the absorption hall, along with plastic chairs, sandwiches, a coffee corner, and a play area for children. Aliyah and Integration Ministry staff and Home Front Command personnel ran around among those waiting and tried to help, a kind of mirror image of what happened at the airport on the first days when letting in non-Jewish refugees. The immigrants sat waiting to have their names called, and begin the process of receiving citizenship. Most of them were exhausted, and one needed help after he almost fainted.

I came to find a new place for my son, hes a musician, Sohorokova, from the area of Mykolaiv in southern Ukraine, told Haaretz. Im full of life and young. I want to start over, she added. A single parent to 17-year-old Misha, she said he plays the drums and dreams of becoming a DJ. We both only started to stand on our own two feet financially over the past year. It will take time to rebuild everything, she said.

In Ukraine, Sohorokova was a fashion designer with a small independent brand, and she hopes she can find similar work in Israel. Her family stayed behind in Ukraine.

My father said hed rather die in his own home rather than on the way to the border. He feels that hes not healthy enough to make the trip. The bombings there began over the last few days and yesterday he told me it was hard for him to understand how until two weeks ago he had hopes and dreams and now hes preoccupied with finding food and surviving, she added.

This week, the number of immigrants from Ukraine and Russia who have arrived since the war began is expected to reach a new high. Some 400 immigrants came through the absorption hall on Monday, and more than 2,000 are expected to arrive this week. According to the Aliyah Ministry, 4,110 immigrants arrived as of Monday morning, 2,460 of them from Ukraine and the rest from Russia and other countries in the region.

The government views the newcomers from Ukraine and Russia as an opportunity to spur economic growth. A senior official in one of the ministries overseeing the integration of the immigrants told Haaretz that 93 percent of the women and 84 percent of the men are in the workforce. This is a crazy number in terms of productivity. If well know how to integrate them, it will be a miracle for the country.

But to ensure the expectations dont end in disappointment, the government has to prepare appropriately.

On Monday, the cabinet approved a national plan for housing the immigrants from Ukraine and Russia, and it plans to take in between 30,000 to 50,000 immigrants. The plan includes rent assistance and renovating apartments owned by the Construction and Housing Ministry. A team of director generals of various government ministries will be established to move ahead with housing solutions for the immigrants.

The Housing Ministry wants as few as possible new immigrants to remain in temporary housing and to be able to assist them in moving to cities. The intention is therefore to put together a plan for rental assistance for immigrants living with relatives and those who move to their own apartments.

A month ago, when the Russian forces geared up for the invasion, the Aliyah and Integration Ministry asked the Housing Ministry to take stock of its available properties in which the new arrivals could be housed a decision that saved precious time.

Aliyah and Integration Minister Pnina Tamano-Shata, who realizes that integrating the olim is the greatest challenge of her term, is trying not to repeat the mistakes made in integrating the immigrants from the former Soviet Union in the 1990s. According to Tamano-Shata, one thing that will prevent this is the desire of many local authorities to help integrate the newcomers.

More here:

At Israel's airport, Ukrainian immigrants prepare to start their lives again - Haaretz

When Miss Iraq met Miss Israel: War is a tragedy that has no winners – Mail and Guardian

Posted By on March 16, 2022

These are troubled and tragic times. After many years of peace, war has reared its evil head on the continent of Europe, bringing death, destruction and untold suffering to Ukraine. Is humanity on the threshold of a new era of violence, where international disputes are resolved not by civilised negotiations and respect for international law but by force of arms, regardless of what the human cost may be?

As I write, it is being reported that my home country, Iraq, was hit by a barrage of missiles fired from Iran. It brings to mind the terrible war that was fought between the two countries through most of the 1980s. I was not yet born, but from my parents and others of that generation, I grew up with a constant awareness of what happened during those years and the hundreds of thousands of lives that were lost on both sides. Since then, Iraq has experienced further devastating conflicts. I witnessed, and sometimes personally experienced, the suffering and destruction that these caused, and saw at first-hand how often those who bore the brunt were innocent civilians.

From this, I learned from an early age that war is a tragedy that has no winners, regardless of which side comes out on top, and that peace is something precious that we should all be striving to achieve. Too often, however, peace has been elusive because of the hatred and intolerance that remains so sadly prevalent in the way people of different backgrounds and beliefs think about and relate to each other.

In 2017, I was honoured to represent Iraq at the Miss Universe competition and had the opportunity of meeting fellow contestants from all over the world. One of them was Miss Israel, Adar Gandelsman. Iraq and Israel were officially still in a state of war with one another, but so far as we were concerned, this made no difference, and we became friends.

I then decided to post a photo of the two of us on social media. It was not a political gesture signalling support for the Israeli government, nor was it aimed in any way to undermine the Palestinian cause. Rather, it was a sincere expression of hope and desire for peace between our two countries. That, however, was not how many other people saw it, both in my homeland and elsewhere in the world.

Before long, I was being called a traitor and receiving death threats and instead of condemning the threats and supporting my right to freedom of expression, the Iraqi government demanded that I remove the post (which I didnt do) and forced me to denounce Israeli policies. My family was also targeted by this hate campaign, and eventually were forced to leave the country.

From the way my family and I were treated, and by what I have learned since then, I have come to recognise that those calling most loudly for punitive action to be taken against Israel are not pro-peace nor are they even pro-Palestinian, but rather simply anti-Israel, and that so far as the relationship between Arabs and Israelis is concerned, this is deeply rooted in the antisemitic belief systems taught in Muslim countries and which are continually reinforced by biased media.

As a result of my experiences, I was inspired to commit myself to working for peace between Muslims and Jews, Arabs and Israelis, in the Middle East and beyond. To this end, I established the NGO Humanity Forward, and have since had the opportunity of addressing numerous global forums, including the United Nations Human Rights Council in June 2019. During that speech I denounced anti-Semitism and criticised Arab countries for failing to condemn Hamas for inciting terror and dismissing Israel as a potential ally because of ingrained antisemitic attitudes. As a result of my speech, I was called a traitor and the Iraqi parliament pledged to cancel my nationality and citizenship. In any case, it is not safe for me to return to the land of my birth, and I must now live as a political exile.

The Miss Universe experience and what happened to me thereafter have shown me that negotiating peace for Israel and Palestine is not a betrayal of the Arab cause but a vital step to end conflict and suffering for both peoples.

I knew that South Africa was a country whose people had successfully negotiated a transition from white minority rule to multiracial democracy, and that through this had emerged one of historys greatest icons of peace and reconciliation, Nelson Mandela. It therefore came as a great shock to me to read that Mandla Mandela, a grandson of this inspirational figure, had called on Miss South Africa Lalela Mswane to withdraw from last years Miss Universe competition because it was taking place in apartheid Israel. This I saw as a sad betrayal of the values and principles that Nelson Mandela had embodied, not to mention a thoroughly sexist attempt to sabotage a young womans dreams and aspirations and said as much in a widely publicised social media post. Fortunately, Mswane resisted the politically motivated campaign against her and went on to achieve a prestigious third place in the competition.

Despite the persistence of ingrained prejudices, the past two years has seen some encouraging developments in the Middle East. Most notable has been the conclusion of the Abraham Accords, whereby four Arab states the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco committed to normalising relations with Israel.It is to be hoped that these breakthroughs will pave the way to a new era of peace, reconciliation and cooperation in the region. Ultimately, it is only through a shared commitment to the values of peace, empathy and mutual respect that war and all the suffering that it entails will be consigned to history and never again be a blight on the human race.

Excerpt from:

When Miss Iraq met Miss Israel: War is a tragedy that has no winners - Mail and Guardian

Just like Israelis, the Russians love their children too – Haaretz

Posted By on March 16, 2022

Most Russians support this war. The Washington Post just published the results of a survey, according to which 58 percent of Russians support the war and only 23 percent oppose it. The Atlantic Council, a Washington-based think tank, found that Vladimir Putins personal approval rating in Russia rose 6 percent in the week ending February 27, three days after the war began, to 70 percent. Even though were talking about polls in Russia, it can be assumed that most Russians support the war and their president. One may also assume that, as Sting wrote in his 1985 song, they love their children too.

Ostensibly, this is an astounding and inexplicable finding. Russia invaded another country, sowing horrific death and destruction, without any legal or moral justification. How can one be Russian and support such horror? Any Israeli whos amazed by these findings should remember what happens when Israel goes to war. There has not yet been a war of choice that the media and public opinion did not support, at least in its initial stages, cheering it on enthusiastically, blindly and obediently.

A study by the Center for the Protection of Democracy in Israel (Keshev) of the Second Lebanon War also a violent invasion of a sovereign state determined that [E]xcept for a few exceptional instances, ... all of Israels main media covered the war in an almost entirely mobilized manner. ... The media created a general atmosphere of complete and absolute support and justification of the war, and systematically suppressed questions that arose as early as the first day of the fighting.

Israel also applauded the first Lebanon war, the more terrible one, at first, as well as every brutal invasion of the Gaza Strip. In fact, the violent Israeli operation that was not supported by the majority of the public, orchestrated by the media while running roughshod over anyone daring to express opposition, has yet to be born. Israelis have saluted every war their state pursued, just like the Russians.

Israel is not Russia. Here they dont arrest thousands of opponents every day, and the media is free. It is for precisely this reason that the small proportion of opponents to war casts a much heavier pall on our society. Its obvious that for most Israelis, their countrys justification for occupying Lebanon or invading Gaza is much greater than Russias justifications for invading Ukraine. Ostensibly, theres no comparison.

That is what had to be proved: Most Russians, too, are convinced that there is no war more justified than their war with Ukraine. In both Israel and in Russia there is brainwashing, with the media bearing most of the responsibility, here and also there. Here the media is free, in Russia it is not, making the Israeli media much more culpable. In Israel, the media also incites and encourages war.

Perhaps looking at Russia, where the indoctrination, the intimidation and the silencing are much more egregious, can help us to see more clearly our own flaws at times of war. Most Israeli correspondents are covering the war in Ukraine in a ridiculous manner, running from refugee to refugee, far from the main action. Watch the stories of the BBCs Quentin Sommerville and see what genuine war reporting is. This is how most foreign military correspondents cover Israels wars.

Everything has already been written about the enthusiastic mobilization of Israeli media for the war effort and the self-censorship, as well as about the shameful way they cover, or dont cover, the occupation. During wartime it reaches a nadir. Military correspondents are attached to a military unit and dont see anything, except for the commanders and the soldiers they admire; there is a single narrative, trumpeted out by a media chorus. Here at home, the worship of the military is sanctified, particularly in times of war, and expression of opposition is seen as treasonous in Russia as in Israel, even if so far its only in Russia is it grounds for arrest.

Israelis and Russians love their children. So how is it that again and again they agree to send them to such needless wars, sacrificing them for such foolish objectives? Ask Yedioth Ahronoth and Channel 12 News.

Visit link:

Just like Israelis, the Russians love their children too - Haaretz

Next time Israelis talk about a world that closed its gates to refugees – Haaretz

Posted By on March 16, 2022

Never again. The world stood idly by. Like sheep to the slaughter. The world closed its gates to Jewish refugees. These and other emotion-evoking slogans will again feature in the next Holocaust Remembrance Day. Politicians, public figures and intellectuals will focus on that part of history, ignoring the disgraceful conduct of their country during these very days.

There is already a lively and emotional discussion underway regarding the Ukrainian refugee question, with people taking opposing sides, for and against welcoming them here. Israels citizens and decision makers are facing a paradoxical moral issue.

On the one hand, the world closed its gates to Jewish refugees during the Holocaust, which is why Israel cannot do something similar now.

On the other hand, with all due respect to solidarity and humane values, the state cannot absorb hundreds of thousands of non-Jews. After all, we established this country as a haven for Jews, and if we let all these Ukrainians in, what will become of us? A nation like any other nation? A state like all other states? Havent the Jewish people suffered enough?

In short, we cant take in refugees, but there is some sense of guilt because of the past, so heres the solution: Send medicine and field hospitals. Whats wrong with that? After all, we have to cleanse our conscience, otherwise we wont be able to call the world hypocritical or antisemitic. So, take note: a field hospital plus work for refugees in blue-and-white high-tech companies. But only from a distance, okay? From Germany or Poland. Look, here everyone works from home as well. Whats the problem?

One of the arguments Ive heard from the camp of those who oppose accepting refugees is that it has nothing to do with racism or, God forbid, demographics. Its simply the fact that Ukraine is in Europe, it has borders with other European countries, so its logical that those countries take in Ukrainian refugees, who are similar to them in religion and culture. Despite the reservations and excuses, Israel will not completely turn its back on the Ukrainian people, and will agree to take in 100,000 refugee immigrants who are Jewish or who have some Jewish affinity. Affinity is the key word here.

Its interesting to note that proximity, affinity and common borders are the determining parameters. I cant help recalling that Israel was responsible for 800,000 Palestinian refugees not so long ago. But why be stuck in the past if one can move on to the future?

For the last decade, our neighbor Syria, which shares a border with Israel and even some occupied territory, has been embroiled in a bloody civil war. If the argument is that neighboring countries should be the first to take in refugees, why didnt Israel take in any Syrians? After all, there is a land border, and they are absolutely culturally and genetically similar to many Israelis. And yet, in this case too it was Germany, Holland, Belgium, France and even Canada that took in Syrian citizens fleeing for their lives from the terrors of war.

And if its about affinity, never mind the Syrians they have 22 countries they could go to. But the Yarmouk camp in Syria is a Palestinian refugee camp. They were expelled in 1948 and have a direct affinity, patent proximity, and even relatives in the Galilee. Perhaps its the wrong kind of affinity?

Its somewhat ironic that the 1951 Refugee Convention was instigated by the young state of Israel a few years after it expelled hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homes, without allowing them to return.

So next time Israelis cry about a world that closed its gates to Jews during the Holocaust, I hope that people feel some shame from the double standard.

Read more:

Next time Israelis talk about a world that closed its gates to refugees - Haaretz

Paganism, Judaism and Christianity: Practices of Worship – The Great Courses Daily News

Posted By on March 16, 2022

By Bart D. Ehrman, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Christian Prayer

Christian prayer, as was the case in all the other religions, involved praising God, thanking him for what he had done and would do, asking him for help in whatever situation one was facing.

Yet, unlike pagans, one very important Christian prayer involved confessing ones sins. God had given guidelines for how to live. When one falters, one needed to admit their guilt and ask forgiveness.

As is most popularly depicted, central to all pagan religions and the historical Judaism, was the idea of sacrifice of animals and other living things. Offerings could be made to the pagan gods of almost anything, a little wine before dinner, some grain tossed onto the fire, some flowers, etc.

Most important, though, for pagan and Jewish religions was animal sacrifice as living beings were offered to the gods.

This may seem strange, but as it turns out, Christians also had that view, a view at least that was very similar, but it was crucially different in another way.

This article comes directly from content in the video series The Triumph of Christianity. Watch it now, on Wondrium.

The Christian God does require a sacrifice, but for Christianity it comes in two rather unusual forms: Christ himself, early on in the religion, was seen to be the ultimate sacrifice to God, a human sacrifice for the sins of others.

Prior to this, Jews had sacrificed animals in the temples. The Jews who came to believe in Jesus said that Christ as the messiah was the perfect human sacrifice and since he was a perfect sacrifice, there was no longer any need for sacrifices in the temple or anywhere else.

Additionally, people themselves could make their own sacrifices, and were required to, but when people, the followers of Christ made their sacrifices, it was not to be of foodstuffs or of living animals. Christians were to sacrifice their lives as they gave of themselves for the sake of God and others.

Sometimes that meant literally sacrificing ones life, being a martyr. More often than that, it simply meant something like giving oneself in complete dedication to God, and serving him, and sacrificing your own will and desires.

When it comes to temples and priests, both pagan and Jewish religions had many. In fact, pagans who worshipped many gods, different gods in different places, had different temples that were everywhere. These were places where the gods were present in their sacred statues and where sacrifices could be made by specially appointed priests.

On the other hand, central to the Jewish religion was the temple in Jerusalem. It was considered to be the only place on earth where God actually dwelt and the only place where sacrifices could be made, again, by certain holy men or the priests. Thus, it was in a sense, similar to pagan religions.

Christians, conversely, no longer had ongoing sacrifices, and they did not believe that God dwelt in his temple in Jerusalem. By the time early Christianity really became popular, the temple had been destroyed in any event. The Christians certainly did not believe that the pagan temples were sacred spots at all. They thought that they were completely profane.

And yet, to some extent, Christians did believe in a temple and priests. God, according to their belief, dwelt in his followers hearts through the Holy Spirit. Therefore, the entire community was the temple of God for the Christians. Moreover, each person was a priest. Initially, at least, Christians didnt believe the need for somebody who was superior to them and who could give them access to God.

They had direct access to God through their prayers and personal sacrifices of dedication. Eventually, of course, church buildings came to be built, specially appointed leaders took over the role of sacrifice and theyre the ones who celebrated the Lords Supper, for example, but it was not that way at the beginning of the religion.

Therefore, in conclusion, one can say that though Christianity did share similarities with other religions, both pagan and Jewish, it was also, at the same time, unique in the way it interpreted the same beliefs.

It is only within this broadly similar religious framework that we start finding some of the key distinctive features of Christianity that did not have significant parallels within the pagan and the Jewish traditions. In other respects, Christianity was even more unlike the other contemporaneous religions of the world.

Unlike pagans, one very important prayer that the Christians had involved confessing ones sins. They believed that God had given guidelines for how to live. When one falters, one needed to admit their guilt and ask forgiveness.

When the followers of Christ made their sacrifices, it was not to be of foodstuffs or of living animals. Christians were to sacrifice their lives as they gave of themselves for the sake of God and others.

Christians did believe in a temple and priests, but in a different manner. God, according to their belief, dwelt in his followers heart through the Holy Spirit. Therefore, the entire community was the temple of God for the Christians.

Link:

Paganism, Judaism and Christianity: Practices of Worship - The Great Courses Daily News

The first bat mitzvah was 100 years ago, and has been opening doors for Jewish women ever since – Jacksonville Journal-Courier

Posted By on March 16, 2022

Eds: This story was supplied by The Conversation for AP customers. The Associated Press does not guarantee the content.

(THE CONVERSATION) March 18, 2022, marks the 100th anniversary of the first bat mitzvah ceremony in the United States.

Judith Kaplan, daughter of the influential rabbi Mordechai Kaplan, became the first woman to publicly celebrate the traditional Jewish coming-of-age ceremony. Becoming a bat mitzvah, or daughter of the commandments, signifies that a young woman has attained legal adulthood under Jewish law.

A bat mitzvah is based on the centuries-old ritual of bar mitzvah, or son of the commandments, the ceremony for 13-year-old boys. Today, it typically involves months or years of study, chanting Torah in front of the congregation and giving a reflection on the weeks reading.

Since that day in 1922, coming-of-age ceremonies for Jewish girls have gradually become more popular, especially in more liberal branches of Judaism. As someone who studies how legal and social changes intersect to advance the rights of women in religious communities, I see bat mitzvah as having a transformative impact on the rights of women in Jewish life, one that continues to reverberate in important ways today.

Growing equality

For many years, the significance of becoming a bat or bar mitzvah was very different. For boys, it marked the moment when they took on all the privileges accorded to adult men in the tradition, including the right to be counted in a minyan, the minimum number of people required for community prayers; to be honored by being called up to give blessings over the Torah reading; and to read from the Torah itself. For girls, meanwhile, it often marked a celebration of maturity, but did not necessarily bring along the rights to full and equal participation in synagogue rituals.

It is only in recent decades that the rituals enacted and the rights bestowed for boys and girls have become substantially equivalent, and only in more liberal movements.

Indeed, because of controversies over whether women should be permitted to read aloud from the Torah, Judith Kaplan was not given the honor of being called up to read from a Torah scroll part of the ordinary routine for bar mitzvah boys. Rather, she spoke after the service had formally concluded, reciting prayers and reading selections from the biblical passages out of a book.

Even today, bat mitzvah girls in some communities read passages from sacred texts after services on Friday night or Saturday morning, instead of during the standard Saturday morning service. But the bat mitzvah ritual, in varying forms, has become widespread in all movements within Judaism. It is widely practiced in Reform, Conservative and Reconstructionist communities a branch of progressive Judaism later founded by Judith Kalpans father and is increasingly popular in the Orthodox world.

The introduction of bat mitzvah was a steppingstone to expanding roles for women in every part of the Jewish world. In the Conservative movement, for example, womens inclusion in bat mitzvah created tensions with their exclusion from other aspects of ritual life and leadership. Girls and women who were educated alongside boys and celebrated their bat mitzvah in similar ways later found themselves excluded from adult roles. Jewish studies scholar Anne Lapidus Lernersummed it up this way:

The bar-mitzvah ceremony marks a young mans entrance into adult Jewish responsibility and privilege the first, it is hoped, of many such occasions. But a bat-mitzvah would mark a young womans exit from participation. It would be the only time she was permitted to go up to read the haftarah selections from the Biblical books of the prophets read after the Torah portion each Sabbath.

The push to resolve this inconsistency led to an expansion of womens roles within Conservative Judaism, including the ordination of women as rabbis.

Orthodox women continue to push boundaries around bat mitzvah. Many Orthodox synagogues have special programs devoted to girls coming of age and host celebrations marked by lighting Sabbath candles and sharing their learning about sacred texts in a speech to the community. Some Orthodox communities host women-only prayer groups where girls read from the Torah, while families in other communities host ceremonies in their homes.

New directions

As the ritual of bat mitzvah became more widely accepted, adult women who had been denied opportunities to study for it as children have sought out bat mitzvah as well. They may choose adult bat mitzvah because they seek to become more involved in ritual leadership in their synagogue community, or to enhance their skills so that they can guide their children when it becomes time for them to begin training for their own bar or bat mitzvah.

Becoming an adult bat mitzvah may also provide a public forum to mark important transformations in ones Jewish identity. Project Kesher, an American nongovernmental organization that fosters Jewish womens leadership in the former Soviet Union, supports programs for adult bat mitzvah. These initiatives allow women who were forbidden to receive a Jewish education by antisemitic state policies to reclaim their identities.

Sometimes, the ritual of adult bat mitzvah celebrates a more personal journey. In a recent episode of And Just Like That, the sequel to Sex and City, the character Charlotte faces a crisis when her child does not want to participate in their Jewish coming of age ceremony. Charlotte saves the day by using the occasion to have her own bat mitzvah, to celebrate her own Jewish identity as a Jew by choice, after converting to Judaism years ago.

That TV episode also highlights another emerging innovation around the ritual of bat mitzvah: the adoption of the gender-neutral terms bnai mitzvah or b-mitzvah. In many contexts, the rituals of bar and bat mitzvah have become identical, but the names of the ritual are still sexually differentiated: bar mitzvah for boys, and bat mitzvah for girls. Some congregations, like Charlottes, have moved to using the term bnai children of the commandments or simply b-mitzvah as a term that embraces all children, including those who identify as non-binary.

So, when American Jews celebrate the 100th anniversary of bat mitzvah, they not only celebrate a momentous occasion in the life of one young girl, but an innovation that has paved the way for wider inclusion of generations of women, children and those previously excluded from a central ritual of Jewish life.

[Like what youve read? Want more? Sign up for The Conversations daily newsletter.]

The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. The Conversation is wholly responsible for the content.

See original here:

The first bat mitzvah was 100 years ago, and has been opening doors for Jewish women ever since - Jacksonville Journal-Courier

Violence And The Sacred – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on March 16, 2022

Why does Judaism include sacrifices? To be sure, they have not been part of the life of Judaism since the destruction of the Second Temple, almost two thousand years ago. But why, if they are a means to an end, did G-d choose this end? This is, of course, one of the deepest questions in Judaism, and there are many answers. Here I want to explore just one, first given by the early fifteenth-century Jewish thinker, Rabbi Joseph Albo, in his Sefer HaIkkarim.

Albos theory took as its starting point not sacrifices but two other questions. The first: Why after the Flood did G-d permit human beings to eat meat (Gen. 9:3-5). Initially, neither human beings nor animals had been meat eaters (Gen. 1:29-30). What caused G-d to, as it were, change His mind? The second: What was wrong with the first act of sacrifice, Cains offering of some of the fruits of the soil (Gen 4:305)? G-ds rejection of that offering led directly to the first murder, when Cain killed Abel. What was at stake in the difference between the offerings Cain and Abel each brought to G-d?

Albo believed that killing animals for food is inherently wrong. It involves taking the life of a sentient being to satisfy our needs. Cain also knew this to be true. He believed there was a strong kinship between humans and other animals. That is why he offered not an animal sacrifice, but a vegetable one. His error, according to Albo, is that he should have brought fruit, not vegetables the highest, not the lowest, of non-meat produce. Abel, by contrast, believed that there was a qualitative difference between people and animals. Had G-d not told the first humans: Rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air and over every living creature that moves in the ground? That is why Abel brought an animal sacrifice.

Once Cain saw that Abels sacrifice had been accepted while his own was not, he reasoned thus: If G-d, who forbids us to kill animals for food, permits and even favors killing an animal as a sacrifice, and if, as Cain believed, there is no ultimate difference between human beings and animals, then I shall offer the highest living being as a sacrifice to G-d, namely my brother Abel. According to this reasoning, says Rabbi Albo, Cain killed Abel as a human sacrifice.

That is why G-d permitted meat-eating after the Flood. Before the Flood, the world had been filled with violence. Perhaps violence is an inherent part of human nature. If humanity were to be allowed to exist at all, G-d would have to lower His demands. Let humans kill animals, He said, rather than killing human beings the one form of life that is not only G-ds creation but also in G-ds image. Hence, the otherwise almost unintelligible sequence of verses after Noah and his family emerge on dry land:

Then Noah built an altar to the L-rd and, taking some of all the clean animals and clean birds, he sacrificed burnt offerings upon it. The Lord smelled the pleasing aroma and said in His heart, Never again will I curse the ground because of man, even though every inclination of his heart is evil from childhood.

Then G-d blessed Noah and his sons, saying to them

Everything that lives and moves will be food for you. Just as I gave you the green plants, I now give you everything

Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed; for in the image of G-d has G-d made humanity (Gen. 8:299:6).

According to Albo, the logic of the passage is clear. Noah offers an animal sacrifice in thanksgiving for having survived the Flood. G-d sees that human beings need this way of expressing themselves. They are genetically predisposed to violence (every inclination of his heart is evil from childhood). If society is to survive, humans will need to be able to direct their violence towards non-human animals, whether as food or sacrificial offerings. The crucial line to be drawn is between human and non-human. The permission to kill animals is accompanied by an absolute prohibition against killing human beings, for in the image of G-d has G-d made humanity.

It is not that G-d approves of killing animals, whether for sacrifice or food, but that to forbid this to human beings, given their genetic predisposition to bloodshed, is utopian. It is not for now but for the end of days. Until then, the least bad solution is to let people kill animals rather than murder their fellow humans. Animal sacrifices, then, are a concession to human nature, a substitute for violence directed against humankind.

The contemporary thinker who has done most to revive this understanding is French-American literary critic and philosophical anthropologist Ren Girard. The common denominator in sacrifices, he argues, is internal violence the rivalry, jealousy and dissension within the community, and that the purpose of the sacrifice is to restore harmony and reinforce the social fabric.

There is no natural end to the cycle of retaliation and revenge, according to Girard, whether in fiction or in history. Why then, if violence is embedded in human nature, are sacrifices a feature of ancient rather than modern societies? Because, he argues, there is another and more effective way of ending vengeance: our judicial system. The system does not suppress vengeance; rather, it effectively limits itself to a single act of reprisal, enacted by a sovereign authority specializing in this particular function. The decisions of the judiciary are invariably presented as the final word on vengeance.

Girards terminology is not one to which we can subscribe. Justice is not vengeance. Retribution is not revenge. Revenge is inherently I-Thou, or We-Them. It is personal. Retribution is impersonal. It is no longer Shakespeares Montagues versus Capulets, but both under, the impartial judgment of the law. But Girards substantive point is correct and essential. The only effective antidote to violence is the rule of law.

Girards theory confirms the view of Albo. Sacrifice (as with meat-eating) entered Judaism as a substitute for violence. It also helps us understand the profound insight of the Prophets those sacrifices are not ends in themselves, but part of the Torahs program to create a world redeemed from the otherwise interminable cycle of revenge. The other part of that program, and G-ds greatest desire, is a world governed by justice. That, we recall, was His first charge to Abraham, to instruct his children and his household after him to keep the way of the L-rd by doing what is right and just (Gen. 18:19).

Have we therefore moved beyond that stage in human history in which animal sacrifices have a point? Has justice become a powerful enough reality that we no longer need religious rituals to divert the violence between human beings? Sadly, the answer is no. The collapse of the Soviet Union, the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the end of the Cold War, led some thinkers to argue that we had reached the end of history. There would be no more ideologically-driven wars. Instead, the world would turn to the market economy and liberal democracy.

The reality was radically different. There were waves of ethnic conflict and violence in Bosnia, Kosovo, Chechnya, and Rwanda, followed by even bloodier conflicts throughout the Middle East, sub-Saharan Africa, and parts of Asia. Author Michael Ignatieff offered the following explanation of why this happened:

The chief moral obstacle in the path of reconciliation is the desire for revenge. Now, revenge is commonly regarded as a low and unworthy emotion, and because it is regarded as such, its deep moral hold on people is rarely understood. But revenge morally considered is a desire to keep faith with the dead, to honour their memory by taking up their cause where they left off. Revenge keeps faith between generations

This cycle of intergenerational recrimination has no logical end But it is the very impossibility of intergenerational vengeance that locks communities into the compulsion to repeat. (Ignatieff, The Warriors Honor; Ethnic War and the Modern Conscience).

Far from speaking to an age long gone and forgotten, the laws of sacrifice tell us three things as important now as then:

First, violence is still part of human nature, never more dangerous than when combined with an ethic of revenge.

Second, rather than denying its existence, we must find ways of redirecting it so that it does not claim yet more human sacrifices.

Third, the only ultimate alternative to sacrifices, animal or human, is the one first propounded millennia ago by the Prophets of ancient Israel, few more powerfully than Amos:

Even though you bring Me burnt offerings and offerings of grain,I will not accept themBut let justice roll down like a river,And righteousness like a never-failing stream.(Amos 5:2324)

See the original post:

Violence And The Sacred - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Foreign Affairs Feature: The plight of Ethiopian Jews in Israel The Daily Free Press – Daily Free Press

Posted By on March 16, 2022

Between the 1980s and early 1990s, roughly 45,000 Ethiopian Jews fled to Israel following a military coup turned Marxist revolution in 1974. After years of worsening poverty and human rights violations at the hands of Emperor Haile Sellassie, the situation evolved into a years long civil war between the Derg the military junta and various groups of both communist and anti-communist ideology.

At the time of Israels formation in 1948, Ethiopian Jews were not among those encouraged to return to what is considered the historic homeland of their faith. The article Israel: Promised land for Jews as long as theyre not black? published under the Institute of Race Relations by author Hanan Chehata describes how everything changed when Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin granted recognition to the Beta Israel, or Ethiopian Jews, in 1975.

Israels decision in 1975 to consider Ethiopian Jews worthy of Aliyah Jewish immigration to the religious homeland was presumably in reaction to increased anti-Semitism following the military juntas coup dtat. Ethnic violence left thousands dead and even more homeless, and in the early 1980s, the practice of Judaism was banned.

Regardless, the move raised valid questions that remain subject to debate and controversy. Was this rescue mission really inspired by a religious desire to bring Judaisms followers to the promised land or was it a more nefarious scheme to import Jews in order to shift the demographics of Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories in favour of Jewish settlers over Palestinians? was one such inquiry. Today, approximately 38% of Ethiopian Israelis live in central Israel including the disputed West Bank territory with another 24% living in the southern part of the country.

In 1984, the Israeli Army partnered with the United States CIA to secretly airlift thousands of Ethiopian Jews into Israel from refugee camps in neighboring Sudan, the operation ceasing only after being made public. Although the opportunity for religious asylum played a large role in the decision of the many thousands who left, the author notes that political turmoil as well as drought and famine were additional factors.

While these refugees undoubtedly left behind worse conditions, struggles of a different kind awaited them upon arrival in Israel. In the 2004 book Jews in Israel: Contemporary Social and Cultural Patterns, Steven Kaplan and Hagar Salamon argue, having lived primarily in Ethiopia as subsistence farmers and rural craftsmen, most Ethiopians arrived in Israel with few skills that were marketable in Israels modern and modernizing economy.

Additionally, many developed health conditions caused by the grueling experience of escaping from Ethiopia to Sudanese refugee camps. Diseases included malaria, Hepatitis B, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS. In the latter case, health officials tried to find a balance between taking necessary precautions, educating the Ethiopian community, and avoiding stigmatizing the entire community. However, when in 1996 it was first discovered that Israeli hospitals were systematically discarding the blood donated by those of Ethiopian descent, thousands took to the streets in protest.

Healthcare isnt the only field where Ethiopian Jews have been met with stigma and institutional barriers. In volume 15 of Israel Studies, published in 2010, the authors reveal that this community remains one of the most struggling, with almost half of Ethiopian families in Israel dependent on welfare support as their only source of income and the average salary below the poverty line. Only 32% of male and 10% of female Ethiopian immigrants were employed at the time, of which 63% was in unskilled labor.

Furthering the racial divide, many Ethiopian Jewish children are enrolled in Israels state religious school system which instructs students in a form of Judaism that is quite different from their own traditions. Amharic, not Hebrew, is the Ethiopian Jewish mother tongue, and interpretations of the Torah, or Written Law, can vary. In addition, the celebration of Hanukkah, the wearing of the prayer shawl, called tzitzit and the sounding of a rams horn, or shofar, on Rosh Hashanah typical for Jews elsewhere are not among the practices of Ethiopian Jews.

These ritual differences, in addition to their ethnic background, leave many in the community experiencing an identity crisis of feeling othered in the very place they are supposed to belong in most.

The everyday racism experienced by Ethiopian Jews seems not unlike that of other Black communities in majority white nations elsewhere, much of which is often reflected through art. Within her music, Ethiopian rapper and spoken word artist Orit Tashoma, includes poignant commentary on Israeli society.

In the first verse of her song Abundance in Poverty, Tashomas lyrics read There are enough dirty cops looking for Ethiopians. The lines that follow, They want the politically correct / Well I havent got anything to give to someone who isnt ready to take the truth, likely refer to the criticism she receives for addressing the oppression and brutality many Ethiopian Jews experience at the hands of the Israeli police. Several protests over the issue have occurred in the last decade, including one in May 2015 following the release of footage showing a police officer beating a soldier of Ethiopian descent.

Moreover, the phrase Two bunk beds in one room is repeated throughout the lyrics perhaps a nod toward the 49% of Ethiopian families in Israel who live in a household with two or more people per room.

Despite facing doubt of their legitimacy as part of the Jewish faith and experiencing systemic racism within Israeli society, the Ethiopian Jewish experience has largely been overshadowed by other issues such as the relationship between Israel and Palestine. Despite the lack of coverage, the experience of Ethiopian Jews continues to call into question what it means to be Jewish.

Does race matter in determining Jewish ethnicity? What about Jewish religion? Since Ethiopian Jews are effectively excluded from the wider ethnic and religious Jewish community in Israel, does the distinction even matter?

Having been conceived as a place for Jews around the world to call home, Israels immigration policies revolve mainly around The Law of Return. Anyone who is Jewish, or the spouse of someone who is Jewish, possesses the right to settle in the country, assuming they are not deemed a public threat. A 1970 amendment to the law defined Jew as someone who was born of a Jewish mother or has become converted to Judaism and who is not a member of another religion. Race, in other words, should not matter.

Over time, government programs similar to affirmative action have been developed in order to lessen the impact of structural racism on those of Ethiopian descent. Enhanced financial assistance in the form of grants for tuition, student housing, auxiliary tutoring, and living stipends, has increased the number of Ethiopian Jews pursuing a university degree in Israel. Additionally, the Ministry of Aliyah and Integration advertises several absorption programs, including Hebrew studies and tax benefits, on its website.

While such resources are undoubtedly a step in the right direction, the Israeli government and society today need to remember that their individual actions speak louder than the words written into law. As the subject of constant international accusations of human rights violations, addressing the plight of the Ethiopian Jewish community is an opportunity for the country to heal its reputation in one regard. Otherwise, the rest of the world is left only with the right to question the integrity of Israels promise inextricably linked with its political motives even more.

Foreign Affairs Feature is a collaboration project between The Daily Free Press and the International Relations Review.

See original here:

Foreign Affairs Feature: The plight of Ethiopian Jews in Israel The Daily Free Press - Daily Free Press


Page 445«..1020..444445446447..450460..»

matomo tracker