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Christmas and Easter are American holidays aren’t they? J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on March 16, 2022

Dear Dawn: Im trying to understand my Jewish girlfriends desire to not have American holidays, which she says are Christian. I said that Im willing to do the Jewish holidays in our home along with the regular American holidays of Christmas, Easter, Thanksgiving, Fourth of July, etc. Everyone does them! When we have kids, theyll be exposed to both. She thinks that will detract from them developing a solid Jewish identity. Can you help us sort this out? Puzzled Non-Christian

Dear Puzzled: Good for you for trying to understand your partners viewpoint without rancor. Just as you state, the holidays you list are quite American. We get those days off as federal holidays.

But now take a deeper look: What is the root of each of those holidays?

While Independence Day is a government holiday, Christmas and Easter are Christian holidays instituted to celebrate some aspect of Jesus as God. Even Thanksgiving was originally conceived as a religious holiday.

You say that everyone does these holidays. But, in fact, thats not true. Only Americans celebrate the Fourth of July. As for the other three, most Americans observe them, but hundreds of thousands of Americans dont. Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism and Judaism are religions that do not.

Like many members of the dominant American Christian culture, you are perceiving these holidays as an insider. This is the way your world works and it feels surprising that others have quite different worldviews. You are the fish swimming with millions of other fish and finding the air-breathers to be odd.

You are both right and wrong.

Yes, minority traditions are odd in that they deviate from the American mainstream. But you are not opening your mind to the idea that these different ways of life are normal for those who are living them. Just as you feel no desire to start observing, say, Ramadan, most people dont want to celebrate holidays that are not theirs.

Your Jewish girlfriend wants to retain her unique way of life rather than entirely assimilating into American culture. This is information you need to consider. Is she right for you? It sounds like your disagreement did not lead to in-depth conversations to explore how each of you feels about your respective traditions.

Apparently you have begun discussing children. You should certainly sort out your conflicting views of your homes identity before you introduce kids. Children raised in the United States definitely will be exposed to Christianity. Thats a given.

Whether they will be taught about Judaism is a choice. It sounds like your girlfriend wants an unequivocally Jewish home.

Studies have shown there are three key behaviors that support a child developing a confident Jewish identity: 1, A Jewish education, typically received at home and in a synagogue community. You cant do Jewish if you dont know how. 2, Home practice. Living as a Jew makes practice familiar and easy. 3, Jewish friends. Seeing peers practicing Judaism establishes that it is normative.

Think about it this way: Your girlfriend wants her home to be a Jewish sanctuary from the non-Jewish world.

Ive seen non-Jewish spouses react in different ways. Some say that they are willing to have their home be entirely Jewish, except for and then they have a request. Others have told me that they want their home to be a refuge for their Jewish spouse, a private Jewish environment.

Think about what Ive told you and please have a heart-to-heart talk with your girlfriend. Its time to put all the cards on the table. What does each of you feel is essential to your happiness?

Dont beat yourselves up for not knowing how to approach this issue. You are both living with your own sensibilities and experiences. If you dont know what questions you should be asking, it is impossible to get answers.

When I am working with a couple, I have a series of questions that we address that allows them to ferret out unspoken (and sometimes unrealized) concerns and questions. How can you work on an issue if you cant even formulate it in your mind or articulate it to your partner? Put on your work clothes. This will take effort, but it will be worth it.

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Christmas and Easter are American holidays aren't they? J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Ode To The Beholder – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on March 16, 2022

Its often said that beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

Why is that true?

My ninth-grade students and I are currently learning Tractate Tamid. The shortest tractate in the Gemara, Tamid details the daily procedures of the service performed in the Bais HaMikdash. Most particularly, it discusses the offering of the korban tamid, the daily consistency offering. There were actually two korbanos tamid brought each day. One served as the first offering each morning and a second one served as the final offering brought every afternoon.

When we began to learn about the slaughtering of the sheep and the subsequent procedures of the tamid, some of my students commented that it was disgusting or gross.

I replied that while it is understandable for one to feel squeamish about these unfamiliar procedures, one should never refer to any part of the divine service as being gross. In fact, it behooves us to recognize the beauty of the process in which one had the ability to draw closer to his creator and attain atonement for his sins.

My students were understandably skeptical and questioned how they could see the process of slaughtering an animal and ritually sprinkling its blood as not only unappealing, but beautiful.

I asked them if, as avid sports fans, they would be excited if they were somehow able to procure the sports jersey that their favorite player had worn during a championship game. They all nodded enthusiastically, adding that they would hang it up on their wall, show it to all their friends, and send pictures of it to all their contacts.

When I asked them if they would wash the jersey first, most replied that they definitely would not. The same would be true if they had the chance to get that players sneakers. They would be enthralled to have the players smelly and sweaty sneakers that had actually adorned his feet while he was playing.

I noted that any non-sports fan would think they were insane. Why would any rational person want the sweaty and smelly jersey or sneakers of someone else, never mind hang it up on their wall?

Non-sports fans fail to see the sentimental value of such a jersey. They cannot comprehend how having that article of clothing helps the diehard fan feel deeply connected to his idol. Yet the fan is enamored and proud of the used, malodorous jersey hanging on his wall.

The reason beauty is in the eye of the beholder is that beauty is subjective. For one, our definition of beauty is heavily influenced by societal standards and definitions. What was considered beautiful decades ago is not necessarily considered beautiful today. Thats surely true of what was considered beautiful in generations past. The Gemara (Shabbos) discusses women wearing chokers around their neck to produce a double chin. At that time, food was scarce and having more weight was considered more upscale and attractive (Ah, the good old days).

In addition, some of our ideas of beauty are heavily influenced by our values. An architect can look at a building and remark how beautiful it is, while another person doesnt understand whats so special about a structure of bricks and windows.

In the same vein, we may look at a pair of tefillin and admire how beautiful they are, while a non-Jew will try to figure out whats so beautiful about leather straps connected to black leather boxes. The same holds true for a shofar, a piece of matzah, an esrog, or a mezuzah.

When something fits with our definition of value or importance, we see that object as beautiful.

In that sense, the sprinkled blood of a korban and the other details of its offering are magnificently beautiful, even if it makes us feel queasy.

Rabbi Ezriel Tauber was once traveling and schmoozing with Rabbi Shimshon Pincus. During their conversation, Rabbi Tauber mentioned that he had recently heard about a yeshiva student who found out that his mothers mother wasnt born Jewish and, therefore, he wasnt Jewish. The young man told his rebbe that he wanted to adhere to the Noahide laws, and not convert to Judaism.

Rabbi Tauber then asked Rabbi Pincus what he would do if he found out he wasnt Jewish.

One might have expected that Rabbi Pincus would reply that he would want to convert immediately. However, Rabbi Pincus excitedly replied that if he wasnt Jewish, he would run to offer a korban to Hashem (which is permitted for non-Jews). Only afterwards would he hurry to a Bais Din to convert and become a Jew.

(It should be noted that Rabbi Tauber replied that he personally wouldnt waste a minute, even to offer a korban. He would run straight to Bais Din so that they could convert him immediately. As a Holocaust survivor who couldnt perform mitzvos for a number of years, he wanted to take advantage of every opportunity to do as many mitzvos as he could.)

To Rabbi Pincus a korban was the most beautiful expression of his greatest desire in the world to serve Hashem on the highest level.

Perhaps we dont feel that level of emotional excitement. But we can at least remind ourselves of the unparalleled beauty that korbanos afforded, the ability to express and feel the highest level of connection with G-d.

Could there be anything more beautiful?

May we have the opportunity to perform them again soon.

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Ode To The Beholder - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Assimilation is Not the Answer to Antisemitism – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on March 16, 2022

n itsAudit of Antisemitic Incidents,the ADL recorded over 2100 acts of assault, vandalism and harassment against Jews last year, a 12% increase from the previous year and the highest total since tracking began in 1979. An AJC survey found that 90% of Jewish Americans believe antisemitism is either somewhat or a very serious problem.So, antisemitism is rising and overwhelmingly we claim to be concerned about it. But what are we willing to do about it?

When Haman approached Achashveirosh with his diabolical, genocidal plan to exterminate the Jews, he said, there is a nation scattered abroad and dispersed among the nations. The Talmud(Megillah 13b) expands on this conversation.

When Haman targeted the Jews for annihilation, he said to Achashveirosh, Lets destroy the Jews. Achashveirosh replied, Not so fast. I am afraid of their God, lest He do to me what He did to my predecessors.

Haman relieved the King of that fear when he said,Yeshno am echad,which translates literally as there is a certain nation. The Talmud quotes Rava, who explains that Haman was telling the King something much more strategic and insightful. Notyeshno am echad, there is a certain nation, but ratheryoshnu am echad, there is a sleeping nation. Said Haman, They have been negligent of mitzvos, they are divided, fighting with one another. They are arguing amongst themselves but at the same time they are fast asleep as to what we want to do and how we threaten them.

We were on the brink of extinction as a people because we were asleep.

We were vulnerable and literally on the brink of elimination and extinction as a people because we were asleep. Our eyes were closed to what was happening around us. We didnt take the threats seriously and we didnt stand up for our right to simply exist.

Haman recognized and took advantage that there is a nation that is sleeping. All he had to do was continue to lull the Jewish people into a false sense of security, to breed complacency and apathy, and at that moment he could accomplish his goal of ridding the world of our people.

Indeed, Rabbi Soloveitchik suggested that the true miracle of Purim is that an anti-Semite rose, threatened us, and we believed him. We didnt excuse him, accept his bogus apologies or say he didnt really understand what he was saying. We didnt just reject his tropes, we confronted him, we took him at face value, and we were determined not to let him threaten our people.

Identifying an anti-Semite, taking him or her seriously and doing something about it is nothing short of a miracle.

So how did we survive? What spoiled Hamans plan? Why did we ultimately triumph over Haman such that we are here today and he is a distant memory? The answer is simple: Mordechai and Esther.

We understand Esthers heroism. She risked everything: her life, her family, her people, to go out on a limb and confront the king without permission. But what made Mordechai a hero? If you think about it, Mordechai may actually be a villain, a perpetrator in the story, responsible for initiating the decree to exterminate the Jews of Shushan and beyond.

Would it have been so terrible for him to just bow down? Just once? Not only does Mordechai refuse to bow down to Haman, he insists on antagonizing him by camping out on Hamans route so that Haman would see him every day and be bothered by the one Jew who refuses to show him honor. Mordechais behavior provokes Haman and he responds by declaring his intention to destroy not only Mordechai, but all of Mordechais people, the Jews. Even after Hamans plan has been pronounced, Mordechai continues to snub him.

When Achashveirosh remembers what Mordechai had done to save his life and sends Haman to reward him by parading around publicly, Mordechai could have declined the honor. Instead, he accepts, humiliates Haman and infuriates him further!

And this is the person we consider a hero of Purim? Why? A closer look seems to indicate that Mordechais ego put the Jewish people at risk. What was the source of Mordechais intransigence?

You might think its simple bowing down was idolatry, one of the three cardinal sins for which we must give up our lives rather than violate. Indeed, the Ibn Ezra suggests that Haman was wearing idolatrous symbols. Rashi comments that Haman had declared himself a deity. Either way, it would seem Mordechai was right not to bow down, he was simply following Jewish law and it was his peers who were wrong for bowing, even if not doing so would mean risking their lives.

But thats not the whole story. The Talmud(Sanhedrin 61b) says that the law of sacrificing your life rather than engaging in idolatry applies if in fact one is buying into the divine nature of the idol. If one is bowing simply out of fear, one is not liable.

So why didnt Mordechai simply bow down in an effort to save the Jewish people?

Yes, Mordechai would have been entitled to bow down. To save his life, he could have been apologetic for his Jewishness and submitted to a virulent anti-Semite, bowing down to Haman and his worldview that wants a world without Jews. But Mordechai understood what was at stake.

Mordechai understood the antidote: To stand firm, to stand strong, and to stand as a proud Jew, a Torah Jew.

Mordechai, a humble scholar and righteous sage witnessed the growing antisemitism of Haman and his desire to see Jews and Judaism erased and he understood the antidote. If Jews were fast asleep, excusing away even the anti-Semitic tropes of their time, the answer was not to bow down, even if it was technically allowed. The answer was exactly the opposite. To stand firm, to stand strong, and to stand as a proud Jew, a Torah Jew.

The answer was to not apologize for being a Jew, but rather to be the proudest and most tenacious Jew, and that is exactly what he did. And this is how is Mordechai is known in the Megillah: Ish Yehudi haya bShushan habira There was a Jewish man in Shushan the capital. What do you mean a Jewish man; there was only one? There was a large Jewish population in Shushan!

The Megillah is telling us that true, there were many Jews, but some were abandoning their Judaism and others were failing to stand up for it. The Jewish community was asleep; there was only oneIsh Yehudi, an unashamed, unembarrassed, unapologetic Jew.

What happens when Jews stand up for ourselves, when we call out and confront anti-Semitic song lyrics, tropes and yes, call out antisemites themselves? By the end of the story, the Megillah tells fear of the Jew had fallen on them and so no man could stand up against them. Why? Because Mordechai, the proud, unashamed, unapologetic and fearless Jew earned the respect of his multitude of brothers, he sought the good of his people and spoke for the welfare of the next generation.

One of the critical, but too often neglected, lessons of Purim is that the answer to our enemies is not to hide, apologize, or erase our Jewishness. To the contrary, it is to swell with and share our Jewish pride. When we act with confidence and pride, we gain respect. It is no coincidence that Mordechai emerges as a leader not only of the Jewish people, but a dignitary in the Persian government.

The mitzvah of Purim is to get to a point that we cant tell between cursed is Haman and blessed is Mordechai. We are very good at the blessed is Mordechai. We look to explain, excuse, justify and see everyone as a blessing. But we need to get to a point of remembering that identifying a Haman and cursing him is as important as blessing a Mordechai. We have to call out an anti-Semite, hold them accountable, hold those whose silence makes them accomplices accountable.

This Purim, dont just dress up like Mordechai; act like Mordechai.

If you share concern about growing antisemitism, the question is: what will you do about it? Certainly we have to write letters, make phone calls, attend rallies and hold antisemites and those who fail to condemn them accountable. But there is something else we must do. I cant help but notice that assimilation and intermarriage are at record highs, even as antisemitism is as well. Clearly blending in entirely and erasing our differences altogether is not only dangerously wrong theologically, it has no correlation to being safer and more secure. It is as if just when Jews try to downplay their Jewishness, our enemies will not let us forget.

We must appeal directly to the American people, to carry ourselves with pride, but also with dignity, honesty, integrity and righteousness. If like Mordechai our neighbors come to know and respect us, they will be intolerant of leaders who dare promote anti-Semitic rhetoric or tropes. If we carry ourselves properly, those we work with, work out with, shop with, or live near will speak out and stand up to demand resolutions of condemnation and removal of voices of hate from critical committees.

This Purim, dont just dress up like Mordechai; act like Mordechai.

Be anIsh Yehudi.

(Reposted from the Rabbis site)

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Assimilation is Not the Answer to Antisemitism - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Pros And Cons Of The Chidon Ha-Tanach – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on March 16, 2022

The Chidon Ha-Tanach (International Bible Contest) is an international competition on the Tanach (Torah, Prophets, and Hagiographic Writings) for middle school and high school Jewish students sponsored by the Israeli government and held annually in Jerusalem on Yom Haatzmaut (Israel Independence Day).

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The Chidon was conceived by David Ben Gurion who, ironically, exhibited a cognitive dissonance of sorts with respect to Torah-true Judaism. On one hand, he did not believe in the G-d and the Sinaic revelation but, on the other hand, he believed Torah knowledge to be fundamental to Jewish existence. Nonetheless, he was enormously well-versed in scripture and Jewish learning, and he held regular weekly meetings at his home with the Prime Ministers Bible Study Circle, a select group of students of the Bible including many prominent Israeli biblical scholars.

The role of Judaism and the Bible in his life may perhaps be best summarized by his famous statement: Since I invoke Torah so often, let me state that I dont personally believe in the G-d it postulates . . . I am not religious, nor were the majority of the early builders of Israel believers. Yet their passion for this land stemmed from the Book of Books . . . [and the Bible is] the single most important book in my life. In one famous episode, when he appeared before the Peel Commission and was challenged to produce a land deed proving Jewish ownership of Eretz Yisrael, he held up a Bible and exclaimed: Here is your land deed! He often adopted biblical messages in public speeches and characterized the Bible as underscoring Jewish destiny.

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In 1958, Israels Society for Biblical Research, with Ben Gurions enthusiastic support, inaugurated a Chidon Ha-Tanach for adults as, ironically, a one-time special event. This first Chidon was overseen by Yechezkel Kaufmann (1889-1963), a Jewish philosopher, biblical scholar, and author of many highly-regarded scholarly works, the greatest of which is his ambitious The Religion of Israel from its Beginnings to the Babylonian Exile (1960). In this masterwork, he traces the history of religion and biblical literature and presents his thesis that Jewish monotheism did not evolve from paganism or any of the cultures surrounding the first Jews but, rather, was an entirely new religion. He was awarded the first Bialik Prize for Jewish thought (1933) and the prestigious Israel Prize, for Jewish studies (1958).

The first Bible Quiz, which was heavily text-based and extraordinarily challenging, commenced on August 4, 1958, at the International Convention Center in Jerusalem. The questions were treated as national security secrets and extraordinary measures were instituted to preserve the integrity of the contest, including the assignment of 300 police officers and sending a special contingent to guard the examinations and the 14 translators sequestered at an undisclosed hotel. The final, which was held in the open-air amphitheater at the Hebrew University, was attended by 2,400 spectators, including members of the Israel Cabinet and Knesset, diplomats, heads of religious communities, and other dignitaries.

During the tightly run proceedings, each contestant appeared on stage backed by an illuminated country flag, which demonstrated not only the internationality of the contest, but also the role of Israel as a Jewish nation taking its place amongst the family of nations, an important propaganda goal during Israels early years. Television and private radio broadcasts in Israel did not exist at the time, so the entire country tuned in to the broadcast of the event by Kol Yisrael (Israels public radio station). The Chidon became a matter of great interest and positive discussion not only in Israel, but also worldwide, although several of the first participants and others were upset to learn that the questions were limited to the Old Testament.

The two leaders among the nine male and six female finalists from 14 countries were Israels representative, Amos Hakham, and Irene Santos of Brazil. The American contestant, Mystelle Davis, the wife of a Georgia farmer, won the Bible quiz and a spot in the finals on the popular $64,000 Question television show. Hakham (1921-2012), a remarkable man at the center of an incredible and deeply moving story, was the first-prize winner. A solitary man who kept mostly to himself, he became a national hero; he was thrown into the spotlight and idolized by both the press and the public, and his name became synonymous with Bible study.

Hakham had sustained a head injury as a young child that caused a speech impediment such that his father, Noah, feared that his son would be ridiculed and, as such, declined to enroll him in school. Instead, Noah who earned a doctorate at the Jewish Theological Seminary in Vienna, became the founder of the Seminary for Teachers of the Mizrachi movement, and was a scholar in his own right personally taught him Bible. When Hakhams father died, he was forced to become the familys only breadwinner and, with no formal education and having learned no trade or craft, he took a low-paying position as a clerk with the Institute for the Blind. While devoting himself to the study of Bible on his own time, he also aided disadvantaged blind students attending regular schools in Jerusalem and helped to create a Hebrew Braille Bible.

When news of the coming Chidon Ha-Tanach began to circulate, Hakhams neighbors, who were aware of the breadth and depth of his scholarship, urged the shy and quiet man to become a contestant and, mired in extreme poverty, he had to borrow a suit for the competition. The combination of his victory and his modest personal story made him the center of national and international attention to the point that Israeli newspapers proclaimed that he had become the most popular person in Israel.

After Hakhams great triumph, Ben Gurion took him on a national tour, and he was offered a position as a Bible teacher at the Ayanot Agricultural School. He later formally studied Bible to earn an academic degree and he went on to write eight volumes (including Psalms, Job, and Isaiah) of the seminal Daat Mikrah, a series of biblical commentary in Hebrew published by Mossad Harav Kook, which serves as a foundation of contemporary Israeli Orthodox Bible scholarship. He is credited with creating the model for a methodological, word-by-word, verse-by-verse commentary.

The success of the Chidon Ha-Tanach launched other Bible contests, including a competition sponsored by the IDF (Israel Defense Force), and numerous local and regional quizzes, usually also held on Yom Haatzmaut, reflecting the broad popularity of learning Torah even among secular Israelis. Two years after the inaugural Chidon, Israel instituted an international Bible quiz for adults marked by great publicity.

The success of this adult competition led to Israels establishment of Chidon Ha-Tanach Le Noar Yehudi, a Torah Quiz for Jewish Youth, with the first such contest held in 1963 on Yom Haatzmaut in Jerusalem with much pomp and ceremony. The change in emphasis from the adult population to Jewish high school students was seen by many as the fulfillment of the quintessence of the transmission of Judaism the Torah of Israel, in the land of Israel, for the people of Israel to the next generation. Even the secular Ben Gurion, who delivered the final questions at the first Youth Chidon during his final year as prime minister, characterized it while witnessing the annual grand military procession as the spiritual parade alongside the military parade.

The Youth Chidon Ha-Tanach, which is today run by the Jewish Agency, begins at the regional level and then nationally, with each country setting its own rules, and the national winners, about 20 finalists from about 60 countries, are invited to Jerusalem to participate in the finals of the international competition. Following the precedent set by Ben Gurion, the final questions are delivered by Israeli notables, including prime ministers. The first-place winner is awarded a full scholarship to study at Bar Ilan University, and the highest finisher from the Diaspora is awarded a scholarship to study at Machon Lev (the Jerusalem College of Technology).

The 2020 Youth Chidon, which had no live audience because of COVID, generated some controversy when the master of ceremonies, Avshalam Kur, repeatedly berated and demeaned Diasporan contestants for not making aliyah. Below are ten sample questions from the 2020 U.S. national finals (the answers are intentionally not provided):

For many years, the youth event overshadowed the adult Chidon, which was discontinued in 1981. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert sought unsuccessfully to revive it in 2007, but it was Prime Minister Netanyahu, whose son Avner beat 12,000 participants to win the Youth Chidon in 2010, who succeeded in getting it reinstituted in 2012, and many former youth competitors from different countries now participate in the adult Chidon.

Most scholars and educators see the Chidon Ha-Tanach as an important pedagogical tool that inspires broad interest in the Torah and in Torah study among Jews, including particularly among secular Jews who may not have been fortunate to have parents who enrolled them in a yeshiva. As time passes and we get ever further from Sinai, the lack of Jewish education has become a growing problem and presents a greater threat to Jewish survival than our worst enemies ever could. As all reliable and statistically credible studies show, there is a direct correlation between a lack of Jewish education and intermarriage.

As such, anything that promotes and encourages Torah study on whatever level is to be embraced and promoted. Even if the level of knowledge required to participate in the Chidon is rudimentary, as some critics argue (see below), there can be no dispute that having a stable base of fundamental biblical knowledge is a condition precedent to higher Jewish learning, such as the study of Talmud and halacha. Even given that this level of study should not constitute an end in itself, public events such as the Chidon, and Bible quizzes in general, generate interest and promotes learning that may someday lead to greater in-depth study.

Nonetheless, there are critics who object to the Chidon on the grounds that Bible study is supposed to be for its own sake. They argue that the Torah is not a book of stories and history but, rather, a guidebook for a way of life and that the competition undermines the Torah study by turning it into a sport, where scoring points becomes more important than absorbing the halachic and ethical essence of the Torah. Moreover, they contend that the contest rewards rote memorization rather than the deep understanding of G-d and his ways that can only come from a lifetime of toiling in Torah.

In this regard, I recall a favorite theme of my Rav, teacher, and friend, R. Amnon Haramati, ah, who was always highly critical of yeshivot that only taught Talmud and that deemphasized the study of the Prophets. He would observe that the prophets were generally not discussing such things as putting on tefillin, or sitting in a sukkah, or eating matzah on Passover but, rather, they were all about ethical teaching and the importance of being, above all, a mensch. The Rav explained that virtually all their prophesies of doom were not because Jews had failed to perform mitzvot but, rather, because their conduct was inconsistent with how G-d expected them to behave.

Thus, I would argue, by promoting the study of even no more than the text of the Prophets, the Chidon Ha-Tanach facilitates the extrapolation of the very values and principles that the critics maintain that the Chidon discounts. Moreover, Chidon participants learn Hebrew; a love for Eretz Yisrael, both through their studies and through their travel in Israel as part of the Chidon experience; and experience the Jewish unity that is cultivated through exposure to other Jews from around the world whom they would likely never have had the opportunity to meet.

An important issue concerning the Chidon arose after Israels victory in the Six-Day War. For thousands of years, Jews romanticized the sites in Eretz Yisrael that they could only read about but never experience directly but, after 1967, they were able to follow in the footsteps of their holy biblical ancestors and walk the land of Jerusalem, Hebron, and Judea and Samaria. Religious Zionists, always a minority in Israel and across the world, saw the 1967 victory in religious terms as a manifestation of the hand of G-d in Jewish history, as the Torah and the prophetic visions of the ultimate Jewish conquest and settlement of all of Eretz Yisrael which they had been studying for 2,000 years was coming true before their very eyes.

For most secular Jews, however, the miraculous not only became commonplace, but it also became a political issue that weakened cultural Zionism as, sadly, many began to question the right of Jews to live in their own historic land. The result was that while even secular Jews like Ben Gurion, for example had historically seen the Bible as critical to Jewish identity and existence, one of the ways that the erosion of the Zionist ethos after Six-Day War manifested itself was that many, if not most, of the Chidon competitors were Jews with no real emotional investment in either Torah or Judaism.

In fact, some argue that the Chidon Ha-Tanach today has become a source of political and religious tension and conflict and is therefore antithetical to fostering Jewish unity in the name of Torah. For example, during the 2008 competition on Yom Haatzmaut marking Israels 60th anniversary, a leading contender was a Jew for Jesus, which resulted in a call by many Torah-observant Jews to boycott the event. A year later, the winner presented then-prime minister Netanyahu with a request that Israel become more active in the attempt to secure the release of Jonathan Pollard. Nonetheless, the Chidon remains an important pedagogical and cultural phenomenon that remains internationally popular.

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Pros And Cons Of The Chidon Ha-Tanach - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Milli Chronicle tries to bring Muslims and Jews together – ED Times

Posted By on March 16, 2022

A scope of a stable and mature relationship between Islam and Judaism, is an idea being explored by the progressive Muslims and Jews across the globe.

The differences between Jews and Muslims today, mainly arises due to the continued and ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestinians dating back to1948, marking the unfortunate 54 years of continuous conflict.

Jerusalem is respected and held in the highest regard as a holy city by the followers of Islam and Judaism. Moreover, Muslims and Jews share the rich heritage and culture together.

Director of Milli Chronicle Zahack Tanvir said, Muslims and Jews can understand each other in a much better way, as we share common heritage and history.

Amidst the blurriness in the relationship between Jews and Muslims across the world, countries, organisations, and individuals are working towards strengthening the relationship between the two religions.

Some Muslim Countries like UAE, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan normalized ties with Israel as a foundation of goodwill and progress.

On September 15, 2020, the UAE became the first Gulf nation to establish formal relations with the Jewish state, and the third Arab country ever to do so after Egypt and Jordan in 1979 and 1994 respectively.

The ongoing conflict and politics involved in this matter have led people to question each others legitimacy.

Tanvir said, Muslims need to reassess their relationship and perspective towards the Jews, sometimes with the involvement of politics people tend to hate the whole community which is wrong.

Hatred followed by the propaganda presented with the religious tag is the favourite recipe of the extremist groups all over the globe.

Politics ignites the hate in peoples minds and the same hate feeds the organisations with their personal agendas in the name of the religion, Tanvir added.

In todays age Terrorist groups use the internet to establish their audience and present the hate in a justifiable manner, Propaganda aimed at potential or actual supporters may be focused on recruitment, radicalization, and incitement to terrorism, through messages conveying pride, accomplishment, and dedication to an extremist goal.

Allowing hate to spread can potentially feed the extremist groups with the support and recruitment they need.

Every dispute today is territorial. Using Religion helps in the recruitment of low-cost and off-the-record fighters, Tanvir tweeted.

Establishing stable relationship between the two religions will not only strengthen the relationship between Jews and Muslims but is a very crucial strategy to break the extremist propaganda.

New-York based Rabbi Poupko said in a podcast hosted by Milli Chronicle, We need to work on expanding cohesions through religious tolerance.

Rabbi further said, This can be only built by like-minded people coming together and working towards building a world for future generations that is not filled with divisiveness rather with people who are focused on making this world a better place through cohesion, tolerance and understanding.

Milli Chronicle intends to continue its work towards answering the propaganda against progressive Muslim countries, and also to publish the work to counter terrorism, and to bridge the gaps between religions.

Milli Chronicle was established in 2018 as an online portal, however in 2021 Tanvir registered it in England under the banner Milli Chronicle Media. The portal features original reporting, world news, analysis, and op-ed columns. It primarily focuses onMENAaffairs.

Milli Chronicle twitter handle is @MilliChronicle, while its Directors handle is @ZahackTanvir.

Syndicated press content is not written by ED Times

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Milli Chronicle tries to bring Muslims and Jews together - ED Times

Tune in Sunday to ‘The ADL on the Front Lines’ discussion – scarsdalenews.com

Posted By on March 14, 2022

On Sunday, March 13, at 3 p.m., the Scarsdale Forums Sunday Speaker Series will present The ADL on the Front Lines, a panel discussion on activities of the Anti-Defamation League co-sponsored by the ADL, hosted by the Forums Program Committee chair Alexandra Tagami Vargo, and featuring Scott Richman, regional director of the ADLs New York/New Jersey office, with longtime Scarsdale resident John. B. Harris, a former board chair of the ADLs New York region.

The program will highlight the ADLs critical role in combating all forms of hate, bias and discrimination, with a Q&A segment. The program, which will be held via Zoom, promises to be a most interesting and worthwhile learning experience.

All those interested in attending must register on the Scarsdale Forum website to receive the login, at https://bit.ly/3v6w3oc.

We look forward to your participation.

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Tune in Sunday to 'The ADL on the Front Lines' discussion - scarsdalenews.com

Latest Out Of Ukraine And Checking In On The Affect The War Has Had On SoCal’s Eastern European Diaspora – KPCC

Posted By on March 14, 2022

Latest Out Of Ukraine And Checking In On The Affect The War Has Had On SoCals Eastern European Diaspora

Russian troops kept up pressure on Ukraines capital and air raid sirens were heard across the besieged country overnight, even as diplomatic talks between the two sides resumed today. Prospects for a speedy end to the fighting, however, appear dim.

The latest negotiations, held via video conference, were the fourth round involving higher-level officials from the two countries and the first in a week. The talks ended without a breakthrough after several hours, with Ukrainian presidential aide Mykhailo Podolyak saying the negotiators took a technical pause and planned to meet again Tuesday.

Today on the program, guest host Kyle Stokes gets the latest news out of Ukraine from Kyiv Independent reporter Asami Terajima and hears about the history of immigration from the Eastern Bloc with Sasha Razor, Belarusian scholar and researcher on the history of Russian immigration to Los Angeles.

With files from the Associated Press

Student Loan Payments Will Restart May 1 Unless They Don't

When May rolls around, more than 40 million Americans will need to resume payments on their federal student loans. That is, unless the pause on student loan interest and payments gets extended again. So far, President Biden has extended the deferment period three times, following two extensions from former President Trump. Now, with midterms around the corner, the White House is signaling another extension may be in the mix.

Politico recently reported the Education Department has instructed student loan servicers to not reach out to borrowers about payments restarting, a crucial legal step to rebooting them. Around the same time, White House chief of staff Ron Klain went on the podcast Pod Save America and suggested that an extension or some amount of debt relief was on the table. Today on AirTalk, guest host Kyle Stokes speaks with economic policy reporter for Insider Ayelet Sheffey and professor of higher education at The University of Tennessee Robert Kelchen about the potential outcomes. We also want to hear from you: how has the student loan pause affected your finances? Have you been able to save up for a large purchase youve been meaning to make? Or maybe youve focused on paying down other debts. Give us a call at 866-893-5722 and share your story with us.

The Challenges Of Screening Young Children For Dyslexia Without Misidentifying English Learners

The state of California has made no secret recently about its desire to better fund research on dyslexia and to screen young kids to determine their risk of developing it. Governor Gavin Newsom committed $10 million to its study at UCSF in his most recent budget, and there is currently a bill in the state senate that would require kindergarteners, first-graders and second-graders to be screened annually to determine if they might require additional help learning to read. Researchers at UCSFs Dyslexia Center are already in the process of developing and piloting these screening tools in multiple languages. But as Zaidee Stavely reports in a recent article she wrote for the publication EdSource, there are researchers, teachers and advocates of students learning to learn in English who say that a universal tool could misidentify and English learning child as being at high risk of dyslexia when, in fact, it may be attributable to the fact that the student is learning to learn in a new language.

Today on AirTalk, guest host Kyle Stokes talks with Stanford University Education Professor Rebecca Silverman, who is a consulting faculty member for UCSFs Multitudes project that is developing one multilingual screening tool that could be used statewide, and San Jose State University Associate Professor of Teacher Education Allison Briceo, who trains teachers how to teach early literacy to bilingual students, about what a screening tool would and would not diagnose, how it would be used in schools and the challenges of designing a tool like this so that it is both effective and does not over-identify English learners as at risk of dyslexia.

COVID-19 AMA: Californias School Mask Mandate Ends, Deltacron, Hospitalizations Hit Lowest Level Since Summer, And More

In our continuing series looking at the latest medical research and news on COVID-19, Larry Mantle speaks with Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, infectious disease specialist and professor of medicine at the UCSF Medical Center.

Topics today include:

As Tom Brady Comes Out Of Retirement Mere Weeks After Announcement, We Want To Know Why Its So Hard To Stop Working

Tom Bradys retirement lasted 40 days. Brady said Sunday hes returning to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for his 23rd NFL season. The seven-time Super Bowl champion announced his decision on Twitter and Instagram, saying he has unfinished business. The news stole the spotlight from the NCAAs Selection Sunday. Brady is far from the only professional athlete to walk back on their retirement. He joins greats like Michael Jordan, Brett Favre and even Los Angeles own Eric Weddle, who came out of retirement and helped the Rams to a Super Bowl victory this year (before announcing he would again retire after being injured during that game). Bradys quick turn around got us wondering why is it so difficult to stop working? Our career is an enormous part of our identity and it can be hard to walk away. We want to hear from you! What were the challenges you faced during retirement? Did you feel a lack of purpose? Did it impact your mental health? Share your experience by calling 866-893-5722 or emailing atcomments@kpcc.org.

With files from the Associated Press

Adult Friendships Matter, But Theyre Not Always Easy To FindOr Hold Onto

Trying to make and maintain friendships as an adult can be hard; trying to do it during a global pandemic is a whole other feat. The past two years have disrupted our lives in many ways, including our close friendships. Between lockdowns, canceled events, and social distancing, many of us found ourselves physically apart from our closest friends when we needed them most. Some of us gradually drifted away from friends we had once been close to, while other friends became lifelines of support during times of grief and loss. Friendship experts see the pandemic as a time that has tested our closest bonds, reminding us that its normal for friendships to end. They also emphasize the importance of being seen by a close few, not just for our self-esteem but also for our mental wellbeing. Like a good diet or regular exercise routine, studies show that a healthy friendship can reduce levels of stress and even boost our cognitive health. As the restrictions of the pandemic lift and we begin to attend public events and re-enter social spaces, how do we go about building new friendships? And for the pre-pandemic friendships we already have, how do we strengthen their bond?

Today on AirTalk, guest host Kyle Stokes speaks with a leading expert on friendships and author of the book Frientimacy How to Deepen Friendships for Lifelong Health and Happiness, Shasta Nelson about how the pandemic tested our friendships and some ways we can restore them.

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Latest Out Of Ukraine And Checking In On The Affect The War Has Had On SoCal's Eastern European Diaspora - KPCC

Creating Space For The Cannabis And Psychedelic Diaspora To Honor Women – Forbes

Posted By on March 14, 2022

We're honoring women this month!

I was raised by a single mom who instilled in me the idea that knowledge is cumulative like a tower of many stones stacked on top of each other and that there is something to be learned from every experience no matter how heavy it might be to carry. Today is International Womens Day, and March is Womens History Month. This year, Im creating space for voices from the cannabis and psychedelic diaspora to express appreciation for the women in our community, and to pay respect to those who are no longer with us but whose contributions live on whose stones are the ones we lay ours upon.

Sara Rotman

Sara Rotman, CEO and Founder of Wellfounded Botanicals

Founded by farmer and former luxury brand builder Sara Rotman, after experiencing a life-threatening battle with Crohns disease, Wellfounded Botanicals is a new woman and Latinx-owned cannabis brand dedicated to promoting plant-based wellness.

The success of the Wellfounded brand and Busy Bees Organics cannabis farm in which we grow our products rests entirely on the shoulders of the women at Wellfounded. We dont hire or assign team members because of their gender, but it just so happens that weve found the best people in the business, and they happen to be women. They have taught me so much about grace, perseverance, and how to thrive in a world which can be unfavorable to women. Im particularly proud of my legal team, Susan Petrovich and Amy Steinfeld, as well as our Chief Compliance Officer Carmela Beck and our EVP, Director of Brand, Kimberly Brower. Im lucky to be surrounded by women who inspire and support me and the Wellfounded brand - they remind me to maintain my integrity and commitment, agnostic of my gender.

Steven Jung, Chief Operating Officer of PAX

Before joining leading cannabis brand PAX, Steven Jung served as President and Chief Operating Officer of Weedmaps, the leading tech company serving the cannabis

Steven Jung

industry. Jung brings an extensive career in operations, and began his career in operations leadership as a Captain in the United States Army where he held both strategic and tactical roles.

"I'm inspired by Stephanie Shepard who, after being incarcerated for cannabis, is now helping others find freedom and reentry support through Last Prisoner Project. Our country's approach to drug policy has caused irreparable and disparate harm no one should be in prison because of this plant. I'm incredibly grateful to Stephanie, and others like her, who are sharing their stories and doing this mission critical work to address decades of injustice and create opportunities for people in cannabis."

TaJanna Mallory, CEO of CannAssistants

Founded by TaJanna Mallory, CannAssistants is a virtual assistant agency that provides administrative support to mid-size cannabis companies, founders, and

TaJanna Mallory

business executives. At the core of her work, Mallory believes the foundation of every strong organization is a steady and seamless support staff that excels in daily operations and exceeds client expectations.

I've been fascinated by the resilience that I've seen among women, especially in the past two years. In the cannabis industry, there's always going to be a fight until prohibition ends. I've watched women in this industry like Amber Senter and Chaney Turner, continue the fight for the greater cannabis community while still running their own businesses. "Pivot" is a word that has been exhausted since the pandemic. More than a pivot, I've witnessed women find new and creative ways to crush their obstacles while continuing to fight for the things they are passionate about.

Susie Plascencia

Susie Plascencia, Brand Partner at Humo

A Spanish word for smoke, humo is the unmistakable result of cannabis when ignited. Humo Brand Partner, entrepreneur and cannabis advocate Susie Plascencia leads the pioneering, Mexican American owned craft cannabis companys commitment to providing meaningful representation in an industry that has caused disproportionate harm to Latino communities. Plascencia is especially passionate about Latina representation in the cannabis industry.

Womens History Month is especially important in the cannabis industry because its a time to recognize and celebrate the many contributions of those who are often underrepresented in positions of professional leadership. As a woman led company, Humo is so proud to align with queer and Chicana led nonprofit, The Social Impact Center. We understand that repairing the harm caused to communities by the War on Drugs begins with meaningful action and by supporting their transformative programs and criminal record expungement clinics, we know were doing our part to foster a more equitable industry while supporting women in cannabis. Im also personally a supporter of the great work of Women Grow, Supernova Women and Latinas in Cannabis, a nationally recognized online community I founded after seeing a need for Latina representation and empowerment in cannabis.

Jeffrey D. Welsh, Partner, Vicente Sederberg, LLP

Jeffrey Welsh

Jeffrey Welsh is a partner at Vicente Sederberg LLP where he focuses his practice on advising companies, brands, entertainment and media properties, other law firms, and investors on how to navigate the California cannabis marketplace.

I've been incredibly blessed to have many inspiring female mentors throughout the course of my life, starting with my Mom, who instilled work ethic, drive, and unconditional love into the fabric of my being. My team at Vicente Sederberg is comprised of many thought leaders who I work with on a daily basis, including Cassia Furman, Shawn Hauser, Sahar Ayinehsazian, Andrea Golan, and Emily Hackman, to name a few! Throughout the industry at large, I am incredibly thankful to be colleagues and friends with Zoe Wilder, a tireless advocate for the plant and a tremendous ambassador to our industry. I am so thankful for all of the incredible women in my life! Love you, Mom!

Angela White

Angela White, Equity for Industry Program Manager at Success Centers

Success Centers Angela White focuses on developing sustainable career and entrepreneurial paths previously less accessible to communities impacted by inequality and the War on Drugs.

Its always an honor for me to acknowledge all of the super sisters in cannabis who volunteer their time and talents to the equity community, and have made this work possible for the Equity for Industry Program. Our mission is to empower marginalized community members through education, employment and art programs, so they may develop a positive self-image as well as a sense of hope and purpose for their future. Grateful to all of the women in the industry who have helped us with this important mission! Shout out to Jessica Strange, Marie Montmarquet, Tiffany McBride, Alisha Johnson, Jasmine Hall, Liz Gehl, Dale Sky Jones, Summer Jenkins, Julia Jacobson, Reese Benton, Cindy De La Vega, Nicole Howell Esq, Rhiannon Woo and Merril Gilbert, Suzy Jones, Jennifer Lujan, Christina DaPaci, Hannah Stitt, Esq, and Paige Penbrook Esq. There are many more of you that may not be on this list but you are all deeply respected and appreciated.

Shelby Hartman, Co-Founder & CEO of DoubleBlind

Shelby Hartman

Journalist Shelby Hartman was meditating when she had a vision to start a magazine focused on psychedelics. A media company and education platform at the forefront of the rapidly growing psychedelic movement, DoubleBlind reports on some of the most important issues of our time all presented in visually compelling, rigorous long-form features, poetry, art, and photo essays.

Much like in other industries, for decades, men in psychedelics have been platformed disproportionately, relative to women. I, by no means, want to diminish the incredible contributions that men have made to the psychedelic field, but, alongside them, there have often been women who have simply gotten less acclaim. Women such as Kathleen Harrison, Ann Shulgin, Bia Labate, and Amanda Feilding, not to mention the countless women, Indigenous and non-Indigenous, who have been holding space for others to heal for generations. I'm excited to see that changing, as well as to see all of the incredibly inspiring women who have begun to work in psychedelics in more recent decades: Natalie Ginsberg, Liana Gillooly, Lauren Taus, Charlotte James, Melissa Lavasani, my dear cofounder Madison Margolin...I'm almost reluctant to name names, because there's so many more, too many to name. I'm hopeful that this growing devotion to platforming women in psychedelics is a part of a larger movement towards inclusivity within the field, including making sure psychedelic businesses are prioritizing equity and access as well as Indigenous reciprocity. I do believe that if any industry is poised to reimagine what equitable and inclusive businesses look like, it's the psychedelic industry.

[Disclosure: I am the co-founder and Chairperson of the Board for the non-profit Last Prisoner Project]

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Creating Space For The Cannabis And Psychedelic Diaspora To Honor Women - Forbes

Another Greek Diaspora in Danger – The National Herald

Posted By on March 14, 2022

If you consider that the Russians are the coreligionists of the Greeks, the treatment of the Greek communities along the northern rim of the Black Sea for the past one hundred or so years is disheartening. Russias invasion of Ukraine is only the most recent example. The suffering of the Greek-origin populations in the southeastern tip of the country is all over the Greek media outlets. Their heavily accented Greek describes yet another serious challenge to the well-being of the Greeks of the Black Sea region.

Originally, Greeks, mostly from the Pontus region, moved to what was then the southern part of the Russian Empire to escape the depredations of the Ottomans. Catherine the Great encouraged Greeks to settle in the Crimea, and populate those newly conquered regions. There had been Greek colonies there in the Classical and the Byzantine eras as well.

With trade opening up in the nineteenth century many Greek merchants also settled in the area. The port cities of Mariupol, Taganrog and Odessa had flourishing Greek communities in the nineteenth century. And it was in Odessa that the Philiki Etaireia was formed in 1814 and began preparing the way for the Greek revolution of 1821.

Things began going awry for the descendants of the Greek settlers during and after the Bolshevik revolution of 1917 and the communist take-over. Thousands of Greeks left, but others remained, especially in Mariupol and its surrounding villages which became part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. With the collapse of communism in 1991, the number of persons of Greek origin in the new nation of Ukraine amounted to just under 91,500 according to official figures, but this number did not include many persons of Greek ancestry who had become assimilated into Ukrainian society.

Mariupol and its surroundings are part of the Donetsk administrative region where the Russians are the dominant ethnicity. In 2014, with Russias backing they formed the Donetsk Peoples Republic which since then has hovered precariously between Russia and Ukraine. The Greeks, by most accounts, tried to stay out of the conflict. But they were forced to react during the current hostilities when the Russian army began heavy shelling on Mariupol. This led the recent exodus of the Greek population.

If this exodus becomes irreversible a unique and rich aspect of the Greek diaspora will be lost. The Greeks of Mariupol and its environs created their own version of the Greek language. Especially in the provinces, the Greek dialect is known Rumika which itself has five subdialects. Linguists debate the extent to which Rumika is derived from Pontic Greek or also from dialects spoken in Northern Greece. But at least one village is said to speak what is recognizably Pontic Greek. There was also another, different dialect that survived in the region, the Urum which was a form of Turkish spoken by the Greeks who moved out of the Ottoman Empire. The script that is used by Rumik speakers is mostly Cyrillic and they used it not only to communicate but also to express themselves culturally. In the 1930s there was a theater in which plays in Rumik were performed, and there were also magazines that published prose and especially poetry in that dialect.

Rumik was suppressed in the late 1930s which was an era of Russian nationalist measures, but it survived, and it even experienced a revival following the collapse of communism. The freedom of ethnic expression that the post-communist era brought enabled the Mariupol Greeks to seek help from Greece to maintain their culture. Inevitably perhaps, they decided that language instruction in the community schools should focus on modern, standard Greek rather than try and arbitrate among the Rumik sub-dialects.

The efforts to promote the Greek language received an important boost with the establishment of the Department of Greek Philology and Translation at Mariupol State University. Its purpose is the teaching, dissemination and spreading of the Greek language and Greek culture among Ukrainians and the ethnic Greeks of that country. In 2005, the Cyprus-based Anastasios G. Leventis Foundation established the Konstantinos Leventis Library of Hellenistic Studies at the university. The library houses 18,000 volumes, reference books, and books on education, science, and literature in several languages as well as a range of electronic resources. It is one of the largest Greek-language related libraries in the whole of Eastern Europe.

That this Hellenic cultural treasure exists in a city that is under attack is alarming. But much more frightening is the ongoing threat to the lives of the Greeks of the region, along with all its other inhabitants. Greek diaspora communities have historically survived through adaptation and resourcefulness. Hopefully, the Greek presence in the Mariupol region will survive the current situation as it has so many other challenges in its long history.

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Another Greek Diaspora in Danger - The National Herald

African Diaspora Forum calls on people to leave authorities to deal with illegal immigrants – SABC News

Posted By on March 14, 2022

The African Diaspora Forum has called on people to leave relevant authorities to deal with the issue of illegal immigrants, instead of taking the law into their own hands.

This follows the clashes, which erupted between supporters of the Dudula Movement and foreign national traders in Alexandra, north of Johannesburg this week.

The movement insists foreign nationals should be deported and their businesses taken over by South Africans.

A group of people organised themselves and took to the streets of Johannesburg purportedly to reclaim their space. In order to achieve this goal, the group, under the banner Operation Dudula has been focusing on undocumented foreign nationals, saying they should leave the country.

Chairperson of Operation Dudula, Dan Radebe says they are also calling on businesses to prioritise South African nationals.

If the government did something in the first place, we wouldnt be having illegal immigrants being employed by these companies. For this to take place, where was the Labour Department, which is part of government. It demonstrates that they dont want to do anything.

They have been to various places in the city, including Rossetenville and Soweto in recent weeks, calling for all undocumented foreign nationals to stop trading and leave the country. Their operation has prompted other communities to give rise to similar movements. Some residents in Alexandra, north of Johannesburg, went to Pan Africa, removing foreign national traders. However, the traders did not take kindly to the move, which resulted in clashes.

Itumeleng Mabu from the Dudula Movement in Alex says this is about the economy and not xenophobia.

And they are violent, we dont have any weapons on us as you can see. They have weapons, they have stones. They sell at R3 while we sell at R5 so who are people going to buy from, and theyre violent. We are trying to find a peaceful closure to this so we can work together this is not a matter of black and black or discrimination. With these people, our crime stats are actually going high, there are so many cases that are not solved because they are not documented. Look at that boy, he has stones, which means he is willing to fight. We are not chasing anyone, but we also need space and at a price, we all need to agree on.

Volatile area

Chairperson of the African Diaspora Forum, Dr Vusimuzi Sibanda, says Alexandra has always been a volatile area when it comes to anti-foreigner protests. However, he says he has noticed too many loopholes and criminal elements.

Alex has always been a boiling hot point in terms of when xenophobic attacks are concerned. What we have established is that there is a difference between the Dudula Movement and Operation Dudula because we want to sit down with the groups in order to resolve these issues by trying to remove the element of people taking the law into their own hands, going to people, who they perceive and think that they are illegal immigrants. We see that there are elements of criminality and people hiding saying they are fighting illegal immigration. People may not take the law onto themselves, closing shops, or become Home Affairs officials. If they suspect anything they must report to the relevant authorities.

Johannesburg Member of the Mayoral Community on Community Safety, David Tembe, who visited the area on Friday, says no one should act outside the law.

Any person, who breaks the law, should be arrested. Our stance is, if a person is trading there, they should be trading legally. Then we have no problem, but if they trade illegally, then we have a problem. When you go into the inner city, the majority of the people that are trading there are not South African, they are foreigners. Who is authorized to ask for an ID, its law officers. Dudula is not a legal entity that falls under SAPS.

Illegal immigrants

Deputy Tourism Minister, Fish Mahlasela says there has to be a way to deal with deporting illegal immigrants without denting the countrys image. Mahlasela says the tourism and hospitality industry is dominated by migrant workers, and there needs to be a balance.

Currently the sector is dominated by migrant workers, we dont encourage illegal migrants, but it is a problem that needs to be addressed. But we need to do it in a manner that doesnt create problems for South Africa and therefore we need to tread with sensitivity. The violence does create a very serious negative image for South Africa.

Meanwhile, a multi-disciplinary team consisting of SAPS, JMPD, Immigration and Labour, conducted an operation in Alexandra, during which about 300 undocumented foreign nationals were detained.

Dudula Movement I Calm restored in Alex as five arrested: Vusumuzi Sibanda:

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African Diaspora Forum calls on people to leave authorities to deal with illegal immigrants - SABC News


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