Page 463«..1020..462463464465..470480..»

Panelists discuss the African diaspora experience | Binghamton News – Binghamton University

Posted By on February 28, 2022

Immigrants and their children negotiate between two worlds: the culture, language and traditions of their homeland and those of their adopted country. Or as Kelechi Ibe-Lamberts mother put it: When you come into this house, youre Nigerian. When you leave this house, youre American.

Now an assistant professor of health at SUNY Cortland, Ibe-Lamberts considers himself a 1.5-generation transnational Nigerian-American, having emigrated with his family from Lagos at the age of 8 to Chicago. That experience has inspired what he calls me-search: research that delves into issues and perspectives of one of Americas fastest-growing immigrant communities.

Its research about me, my experiences, my community and the people that I represent, and those who come after me that I hope will be represented as well, said Ibe-Lamberts, who researches health behaviors, disparities and outcomes among culturally diverse populations, particularly immigrants.

Ibe-Lamberts and three other scholars participated in a Feb. 23 panel discussion hosted by Binghamton Universitys Africana Studies Department and the Multicultural Resource Center for Black History Month. Called The New African Diaspora: The Intersection of Identity, Race and Culture, the event also featured Howard University Associate Professor of African Studies Msia Kibona Clark, CUNY Lehman College Assistant Professor of Sociology Dialika Sall and University of Connecticut Assistant Professor of Sociology and Africana Studies Funmilayo Showers.

The question of how you identify, and what specifically do you call yourself, has always been a complicated one, said Clark, whose research focuses on representations of pan-Africanism, African feminism and African identities in popular culture, as well as the engagement of women of African descent in cyber-activism, social media and digital spaces.

Born in Tanzania to a Tanzanian father and an African-American mother, Clark grew up in Cleveland. Her father died when she was a freshman in college, and she feared her Tanzanian identity would fade as a result.

Like Ibe-Lamberts, her experience puts her somewhere in between first-generation immigrants, who make the journey as adults, and second-generation immigrants, who are born in the new country. Often, this transnational population experiences what Ibe-Lamberts calls reverse acculturation, in which they identity with the native culture in the household and the adopted culture in the larger world.

While teaching her Introduction to Contemporary Africa class, Clark noticed students with backgrounds similar to her own, with one or more parents from the continent. For many of them, taking an Africana Studies course was part of a journey to connect with their identity. Sometimes, parents tended to strictly pass down their language, culture and traditions; other times, they raised their children without them. Divisions arose between parents and children either way.

As an undergraduate, Clark studied abroad for a year in Tanzania, which helped her connect with her roots. When she came to the Washington, DC, area in the early 2000s, the region was experiencing a significant influx of African immigrants.

In fact, Africans comprise one of the fastest-growing groups of immigrants to the United States, increasing nearly 100% from 2000 to 2010. However, this population is far from monolithic; they come from different countries and cultures, which are distinct from the African-American population.

There is diversity in being Black, Ibe-Lamberts pointed out.

Currently, were in another cultural wave of African influence in American society, which has a direct impact on how the adolescent children of immigrants navigate their identities, noted Sall, whose research focuses on second-generation West African youth in New York City. However, African influences on American culture arent new, especially if you think back on the 1960s and 70s.

A Bronx native, her research is shaped by her own experience as the daughter of Senegalese immigrants. She ended up at a largely white boarding school in New Hampshire, where she was no longer considered African but as a Black American. Identity, she found, depends on context and situation; its not just about how you view yourself, but how others see you.

The experiences of African immigrants and their children werent represented in sociological literature on Blackness and immigration. Because of this, Sall decided to pursue a doctorate and become a researcher herself to contribute to the sociological understandings of race and immigration, she said.

Between 2015 and 2018, she conducted interviews and ethnographic observations with 71 high school students in Brooklyn, the Bronx and Manhattan who were the children of West African immigrants; she also interviewed almost 50 of their peers and teachers. Shes currently developing her research into a book and following up with her interview subjects, who are now in their early 20s.

We know that adolescence is a critical moment for cognitive and identity development. Im primarily interested in how these young people make sense of their racial and ethnic identities, especially in a society where both Blackness and immigration are criminalized, she said.

Showers research, on the other hand, focuses on first-generation immigrants from West Africa who work in healthcare in the Washington, D.C., area. Originally from Freetown in Sierra Leone, she came to the United States at the age of 18 to live with her aunt, a university professor at a small liberal arts college. Like many African immigrants, her aunt began her American experience as a certified nursing assistant (CNA).

African immigrants comprise almost 5% of the total immigrant population, but 12% of the foreign-born workers in healthcare, where they often work as registered nurses (RNs) and CNAs. Back in their home country, many come from middle-class backgrounds and know little to nothing about nursing homes or care work.

Working in homes where they care for elderly individuals, many CNAs feel diminished by the nature of the work, in comparison to their prior middle-class professions. They also experience bias from clients, whether based on race or class status. Those who work in healthcare-oriented businesses owned by Africans reported more positive experiences, as did those who provide support for people with intellectual disabilities.

In hospital settings, RNs from Africa are often assumed to be CNAs by patients, another manifestation of bias. And it isnt just their Blackness; they feel marginalized because of their identities as African immigrants and end up working harder or earning extra credentials to gain professional respect.

But as in other areas, the immigrant experience is far from monolithic.

Even among the first-generation immigrants, ethnicity matters. Their regional origin matters, Showers explained. The stereotypes and meanings associated with specific countries of origin shape how Black immigrants are received, and by extension, the racial identities they develop and the survival strategies they enact.

The panelists engaged in a thoughtful question-and-answer session with students on Zoom, addressing their research and their own experience as members of the African diaspora. Younger members of that diaspora face a different world, one in which culture is embraced with pride.

Sometimes I feel like I was born a generation too early, Clark reflected. The Millennials and now Generation Z are growing up with more resources in terms of staying in touch with their communities, and African communities are more established, especially in the larger cities. Theyre not little islands.

Read more:

Panelists discuss the African diaspora experience | Binghamton News - Binghamton University

University Announces New Department of Race, Diaspora, and Indigeneity – The Chicago Maroon

Posted By on February 28, 2022

In an email to the University Wednesday morning, President Paul Alivisatos and Provost Ka Yee Lee announced the creation of the new Department of Race, Diaspora, Indigeneity. The announcement follows years of student and faculty pressure for a more expansive ethnic studies program at the University.

Following a multi-year, faculty driven process, the Council of the Senate of the University of Chicago voted Tuesday to create a new Department of Race, Diaspora, and Indigeneity, Alivisatos and Lee wrote in the letter. The department hopes to produce new understanding and fresh insights into the world we live in by studying how conceptions of race have emerged in different eras and circumstances.

The announcement was hailed as a victory by the campus organizations that had long pushed the University to create a department focused on ethnic and racial studies.

In a statement to The Maroon, the Universitys Center for the Study of Race, Politics, and Culture (CSRPC) expressed excitement at the creation of the new department. The innovative design of juxtaposing race, diaspora, and indigeneityconcepts and practices that have evolved in tandem with the modern worldhas the potential to offer new paradigms for thinking across a constellation of conversant fields, the center wrote in its statement.

UChicago United, a group made up of students at the University dedicated to racial justice, tweeted out an annotated version of the email sent out by the University. Their version attributed the creation of the new department to students pressuring faculty to take action. UChicago United did not respond to The Maroons requests for comment.

While they praised the creation of the new program, organizers of #EthnicStudiesNow (ESN), a campaign led by UC United, criticized President Alivisatos and Provost Lees failure to mention student and community activism in the creation of the new department.

Five generations of students of color have marched, chanted, wheat-pasted, rallied, banner dropped, and occupied in the name of a Department whose values are aligned with the Third-World Liberation Front and other radical, multiracial student coalitions, ESN organizers wrote in a public statement. The email sent out by [Alivisatos] and [Lee]erases and co-opts the work of generations of students of color organizing and the radical lineages we descend from.

Organizers called on the administrators and faculty that will be involved in the creation of the new department to ensure a radical program of study. Without that assurance, they raised concerns over the University replicat[ing] ideological and material violences toward Black and Brown communities that have characterized the Universitys historical role in the South Side, according to their statement.

In a separate statement to The Maroon,The University of Chicago Graduate Student Union (GSU) called Tuesdays vote a much-deserved win after tireless advocacy particularly from students of color involved with #EthnicStudiesNow, UChicago United, and other allied groups.

GSU recognized ESNs longtime leadership on the issue and echoed calls for a department that would work to dismantle and struggle against [the Universitys] institutional complicity with racism and colonialism.

Continue reading here:

University Announces New Department of Race, Diaspora, and Indigeneity - The Chicago Maroon

Kyivs defense minister calls on diaspora to share whats happening in Ukraine in Italian, German and Hungarian – POLITICO Europe

Posted By on February 28, 2022

Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov called on Friday for the Ukrainian diaspora in Italy, Hungary and Germany to share information about what is happening in the country, in a bid to win over citizens of those countries and influence their governments to go further on the sanctions against Russia.

In a Facebook post, Reznikov urged those who speak the languages to share the mentioned facts in the Italian, German and Hungarian media space, as well as among journalists and officials of European countries.

Everyone who knows the appropriate languages you are our weapon, he added.

Reznikov was targeting countries that reportedly stood in the way of tougher sanctions during an emergency summit in Brussels on Thursday.

While the United States, Britain and some EU capitals have all indicated they were in favor of kicking Russia out of the SWIFT international payments system, other EU countries such as Germany, Italy and Austria have signaled they do not want to play all of their sanctions cards at this stage, thereby ignoring numerous appeals by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and his Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba to impose on Russia the harshest possible sanctions.

On Friday, former European Council President Donald Tusk slammed EU countries that blocked tougher sanctions, specifically taking aim at Germany, Hungary and Italy.

In his post, Reznikov added that all people over 60 years old would also be called to fight against Russia, extending Zelenskiys earlier mobilization order calling up 18-to-60-year-olds.

See the article here:

Kyivs defense minister calls on diaspora to share whats happening in Ukraine in Italian, German and Hungarian - POLITICO Europe

India to send supplies to Ukraine; diaspora in UK mobilises support for Operation Ganga – The New Indian Express

Posted By on February 28, 2022

By PTI

NEW DELHI: India on Monday decided to send relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation along its bordering areas arising out of tens of thousands of people attempting to flee the Russian invasion.

After a high-level meeting chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi that reviewed the efforts to bring back Indians from Ukraine, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said the relief supplies will be sent on Tuesday.

"The prime minister noted that the first consignment of relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation on Ukraine's borders would be despatched tomorrow," the MEA said in a statement.

It said the prime minister also stated that India will help people from neighbouring as well as developing countries who are stranded in Ukraine and may seek assistance.

India's announcement on sending the first consignment of relief materials came hours after the Ukrainian ambassador to India, Igor Polikha, sought humanitarian assistance from India.

India also decided to send four senior ministers as the prime minister's special envoys to Ukraine's neighbouring countries to oversee the evacuation of Indians.

"The prime minister said that the entire government machinery is working round the clock to ensure that all Indian nationals there are safe and secure," the MEA said.

It said Modi pointed out that the visit of the four senior ministers as his special envoys to various nations will "energise the evacuation efforts" and that it is reflective of the priority the government attaches to it.

MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said Union minister Hardeep Puri will go to Hungary, Jyotiraditya Scindia will oversee the evacuation process in Romania and Moldova, Kiren Rijiju will travel to Slovakia and General (retd) V K Singh is leaving for Poland.

Air India's two evacuation flights came from Romanian capital Bucharest and Hungarian capital Budapest to Delhi on Monday with 489 Indian nationals who were stranded in Ukraine after the Russian military offensive, officials said.

Other private carriers such as SpiceJet, IndiGo and Air India Express have also sent their planes to the two cities for evacuation of Indians as the Ukraine airspace is closed.

India began the evacuation of its citizens from Romania and Hungary - western neighbours of Ukraine - on Saturday and the Tata Group-owned Air India has brought back 1,396 Indian nationals in six evacuation flights till now.

On Monday, the fifth Air India flight landed in Delhi from Bucharest with 249 Indian nationals, while the sixth flight arrived from Budapest here with 240 Indian nationals, officials said.

Around 14,000 Indians, mainly college students, are currently stranded in Ukraine.

SpiceJet said it will use its Boeing 737 MAX aircraft for this special flight that will depart from Delhi Monday evening.

"The aircraft will fly to Budapest from Delhi and the return flight will operate via Kutaisi, Georgia," it mentioned.

SpiceJet said it is planning to operate more evacuation flights and is in discussion with the authorities concerned.

Tata Group-owned Air India Express said it will operate a Bucharest-Mumbai flight Monday night with 182 stranded passengers.

"The flight will have a stopover in Kuwait for refuelling. It will land in Mumbai at 9:30 AM tomorrow (Tuesday)," it added.

IndiGo said it is operating two evacuation flights using A321 aircraft to bring back the Indian citizens safely following the crisis in Ukraine.

Both the flights will land in Delhi on Tuesday, it noted.

"These flights are being operated from Delhi to Bucharest, Romania and to Budapest, Hungary via Istanbul, today, as part of the Indian government's Operation Ganga mission," it mentioned.

India's largest airline said it is closely liaising with the government to offer its support for more such evacuations flights.

Later during the day, IndiGo said it will send four more planes on Tuesday to evacuate stranded Indian citizens.

"Two flights each will be operated from Delhi to Budapest, Hungary and to Rzeszow, Poland via Istanbul, respectively. These aircraft will depart Delhi on March 1," it noted.

The Indian Embassy in Ukraine stated on Monday that the weekend curfew has been lifted in Kyiv and all students are advised to make their way to the railway station for onward journey to the western parts of the country.

"Ukraine Railways putting special trains for evacuations. We sincerely request all Indian nationals/students to remain calm, peaceful and united," it mentioned.

A large crowd can be expected at the railway stations, therefore, it is advised that all Indian students remain patient, composed and not exhibit aggressive behaviour while at the railway stations, it noted.

"We expect delays in trains' schedule, even cancellation at times and long queues," it mentioned.

Indian students are requested to carry their passport, sufficient cash, ready-to-eat meals, easy accessible winter clothing and only essential items, to ensure easy mobility, it stated.

Be mindful of your belongings at all times, it advised.

"Ukrainians - both civilians and authorities - have been remarkably supportive in facilitating evacuation efforts of Indian citizens, especially considering these critical and dangerous times. You are all requested to respect this sentiment," it noted.

Indian students in the UK have mobilised their networks across Europe to facilitate the evacuation of fellow students stranded in Ukraine amid the ongoing conflict with Russia.

Thousands have been attempting to cross the border into neighbouring regions of Poland, Slovakia and Romania to be flown out on one of the Operation Ganga rescue flights, launched by the government to evacuate Indians from the conflict zone.

The National Indian Students and Alumni Union (NISAU) UK on Monday confirmed a latest batch of 40 students successfully crossing over into Romania, to be flown back to Delhi soon.

However, the student group estimates over 18,000 students remain stranded in the region as their long-distance rescue efforts continue.

"We have 24/7 helplines where we are non-stop coordinating with impacted students and advising them with the government instructions and advisories,"said Sanam Arora, NISAU UK chair and UK advisor to the Rescuing Every Distressed Indian Overseas (REDIO), launched by minister of state for external affairs Meenakshi Lekhi.

"Students are saying that they are unable to reach Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) officials on the ground for coordination; our team is helping by ensuring the right information reaches students in a timely manner,"she said.

With the use of social media groups on WhatsApp and Telegram, NISAU UK has been active since the conflict broke out last week to ensure the MEA advisories are filtered through to students desperate to evacuate.

"Students are now telling us that they are starting to run out of food, so we will be looking at how we can support on-ground efforts in getting food over to them,"added Arora.

More than 4,000 stranded students have reached out to the group of student volunteers in the UK for help so far, including their worried family members in India.

"The efforts of our volunteers are helping the MEA coordinate its efforts as otherwise there is no record of which students are where,"NISAU UK said.

Reports from Poland have highlighted concerns for the safety of many of the Indian students who have undertaken the tough journey to escape the violence in Ukrainian cities towards the Polish border.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high level meeting in New Delhi on Monday to review the efforts under Operation Ganga to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine.

"PM said that the entire government machinery is working round the clock to ensure that all Indians there are safe & secure,"the MEA spokesperson said on Twitter.

Meanwhile, the latest advisory from the Indian Embassy in Kyiv advises stranded Indians to make their way to the railway station after the weekend curfew was lifted in the Ukrainian capital.

It calls for Indians to remain "calm, peaceful and united"and carry sufficient cash, ready to eat meals and warm clothes.

"Ukrainians both civilians and authorities have been remarkably supportive in facilitating evacuation efforts of Indian citizens, especially considering these critical and dangerous times,"it notes.

The Indian Embassy in Romania warned students against fraudulent money making attempts for a transfer from the Romanian border to the capital Bucharest.

"Pl. note that all services provided by the Embassy are free, including transport to Bucharest. Please do not pay money to anyone,"the embassy tweeted.

A seventh evacuation flight carrying 182 Indians from the Romanian capital Bucharest left for India on Monday, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said.

Following the closure of the Ukrainian airspace, India is facilitating the evacuation of its citizens stranded in the east European country through its land border crossings with Romania, Hungary and Poland.

"#OperationGanga advances to its seventh flight. 182 Indian nationals have started the journey to Mumbai from Bucharest," Jaishankar said in a tweet.

India has named its evacuation mission "Operation Ganga".

The first evacuation flight carrying 219 Indians from Bucharest landed in Mumbai on Saturday evening.

So far, 1,396 Indian nationals have been brought back from Ukraine in six evacuation flights.

More here:

India to send supplies to Ukraine; diaspora in UK mobilises support for Operation Ganga - The New Indian Express

Six members of the Greek diaspora dead after attacks in Ukraine – in-cyprus

Posted By on February 28, 2022

A total of six members of the Greek communities in Ukraine died during attacks on Saturday, and at least six were injured, including a child, the Greek Foreign Affairs Ministry said on Saturday.

Earlier on Saturday, two Greek expatriates died and six were injured during bombing by Russian aircraftin the region of the Sartana village. Later on Saturday, it was reported that another four Greek expatriates had died in bombardments in the village of Burgas,nearly 70km north of Mariupol.

It was also announced that Foreign Ministry Secretary General Themistocles Demiris conveyed by phone a strong protest to the Russian ambassador in Athens, and summoned him to the ministry on Sunday. The protest was made following the order of Foreign Affairs Minister Nikos Dendias.

Dendias had raised the issue of the protection of the Greek community in Ukraine, during a recent meeting with his Russian counterpart.

In his own message on Twitter, the minister expressed grief and abhorrence for the attacks on civilians.

Similar messages were issued by Alternate Foreign Minister Miltiadis Varvitsiotis who also said that Russia ought to understand even at this point that this war will only have losers, particularly innocent victims and Deputy Foreign Minister Andreas Katsaniotis.

Russian Embassy in Athens

The Russian Embassy in Athens expressed its deep grief over the death and injury of Greek community members in the region of Donbas on Saturday, adding that Russias special military operations in Ukraine only target military units and infrastructure exclusively.

We do not bomb inhabited areas and villages, nor any political or social infrastructure. The Russian Air and Space Forces were not operating in the region of the Sartana village today, it said in a statement. It added, the Ukrainian army and nationalist neo-Nazi orders have been known for years to attack civilians, even with heavy weapons. This is proven and officially documented.

The embassy warned that the Kiev regime is possibly using the Greek and other ethnic minorities living in Ukraine to provoke and inflame the anti-Russian reaction abroad.

(amna.gr)

See the rest here:

Six members of the Greek diaspora dead after attacks in Ukraine - in-cyprus

He is a Diplomatic Threat Kenyans in Diaspora Apprehensive About DP Rutos 10-day Visit – KahawaTungu

Posted By on February 28, 2022

Deputy President William Ruto is set to leave for the United States of America (USA) and United Kingdom (UK) for 10 days.

The second-in-command will leave the country on Sunday.

In a letter seen by this writer, Kenyans in the diaspora have expressed their reservations about Rutos visit.

Global chairman for Kenya Diaspora Alliance Dr Shem Ochoudho said they were apprehensive about what the DP represents as a leader.

Dr Ochoudho gave seven instances in which the DP had fallen short of being a good representation of a leader.

He noted that Dr Ruto was a diplomatic threat to the Kenya US relations and the larger international community.

He gave an example of when the DP caused a stir online when he claimed there the DR Congo did not have cows.

We have a market in DR Congo these people who are singers These people have a population of about 90 million but they dont own any cow, said the DP.

The matter, though put to rest now, caused a frenzy especially on Twitter with Ms Francine Muyumba, a senator in Congo, condemning the utterances.

Read:DP Ruto Kicked Out as Jubilee Deputy Party Leader, Tuju Resigns as SG

In 2014, Dr Ochoudho continued, Ruto who is seeking to succeed President Uhuru Kenyatta in August, expressed contempt for then US President Barack Obama.

The matter, the Diaspora Alliance chair said, was resolved by President Kenyattas men.

Another reason why those in diaspora are against the visit is the fact that Ruto is a person of interest in the International Criminal Court.

The DP had been charged with three crimes against humanity: murder, deportation or forcible transfer of population, and persecution, allegedly committed during the 2007-2008 post-election violence in Kenya.

Read Also:Kitui MCA Anastasia Mwathi Claims Two Sexually Assaulted Her After Speech Cut Short at DP Ruto Rally

The case was, however, terminated on April 5, 2016.

Further, Dr Ochoudho said, the DP is a security threat over his association with Turkish terror suspect Harun Aydin.

Aydin was arrested after DP Rutos trip to Uganda was aborted in August last year. The foreigner has since been deported.

Those in diaspora also claim that the United Democratic Alliance (UDA) leader has an insatiable appetite for public funds.

Read Also:Drama As Woman Lectures Ruto, Drums Up Support for Raila at Kenya Kwanza Rally [Video]

He is also known for sabotaging the governments war on corruption, he added.

The DP is also said to conduct campaigns riddled with hate speech.

Dr Ochoudho also accused the DP of introducing divisive class politics.

In Washington, Ruto is scheduled to meet, among others, officials of the State Department and the Pentagon as well as the US Government National Security Council Advisor.

Read Also:Kenyans in the Diaspora to Sue Air France, Govt Over Migunas Botched Return

He will also speak at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, the Center for Strategic and International Studies, and at the University of Arizonas Washington Entrepreneurship Hub, said Presidential Campaign Head of International Relations Ababu Namwamba.

In London, Ruto will meet senior UK Government officials, visit the National Counter-Terrorism Center and speak at both the Commonwealth Secretariat and the Royal Institute of International Affairs.

Email your news TIPS tonews@kahawatungu.comor WhatsApp +254708677607. You can also find us on Telegram throughwww.t.me/kahawatungu

Like Loading...

Related

The rest is here:

He is a Diplomatic Threat Kenyans in Diaspora Apprehensive About DP Rutos 10-day Visit - KahawaTungu

Black Jew Denied Israeli Citizenship Twice – Jewish Exponent

Posted By on February 28, 2022

Jared Armstrongs mother, Lou Ellen Butler, and his father, Antonio Armstrong, hold him as a baby during a simcha event celebrating his birth. (Courtesy of Jared Armstrong)

According to both him and his rabbi, Jared Armstrong is Jewish.

But according to the state of Israel, Armstrong is not Jewish enough to gain the birthright citizenship that the state promises.

The 24-year-old, who is Black and grew up in Philadelphia, is trying to make aliyah because its my right, he said. After Armstrongs two-year basketball career at Division II Slippery Rock University in western Pennsylvania ended, Hapoel Haifa, an Israeli professional basketball team, recruited him to play because of his Jewish background.

Israeli officials, though, have rejected his citizenship application twice, with the second denial coming on Feb. 9. They told Armstrong they thought he spent nine months converting to Conservative Judaism through Rabbi Michael Beals in Wilmington just because he wanted to play pro basketball in the Jewish state.

But Armstrong says he only went through the conversion process because Israels Interior Ministry wouldnt recognize his Jewish background. Armstrongs mother, Lou Ellen Butler, converted before he was born with Congregation Beth El in Philadelphia, a nondenominational synagogue. Israels Law of Return requires those making aliyah to be affiliated with a denomination.

So, Armstrong converted. Yet it still wasnt enough for officials who doubted his sincerity.Armstrong believes race is a factor.

They saw a Jew of color who wanted to play a sport, and they thought that wasnt sincere, he said.

Beals, who leads Congregation Beth Shalom in Wilmington, agrees.

His motives are insincere because hes an African American who wants to play basketball, the rabbi said, referring to the judgment from Israeli officials. Thats the only reason.

A Feb. 10 Jewish Telegraphic Agency story compared Armstrongs case to other recent immigration cases involving Jews of color.

Between December and January, the Interior Ministry denied the applications of a Ugandan man who converted with the Conservative movement and a Black Jew who had not spent adequate time in the community where he converted after he became Jewish, according to the JTA report. The second man, David Ben Moshe, got his decision overturned before being rejected again because he had been convicted of a crime in the United States.

They put a spin on why they deny you so it doesnt sound racist, Armstrong said.

According to Beals, Armstrong was born Jewish because his mother converted before she gave birth to him. And growing up, the Philadelphian was very much Jewish, he said.

He went to synagogue, observed the High Holy days and kept Shabbat; Armstrongs mother didnt allow him to play sports on Saturday.

We kept it all day until the sun went down, he said.

When Armstrong was between the ages of 10 and 12, though, his parents got divorced and he stopped going to Congregation Beth El. He never had a bar mitzvah and drifted away from the strict observance of his boyhood years.

But his sense of identity never left him; the teenager and then-collegian always knew he was Jewish in his heart and soul, as he described it.

At the same time, Armstrong was doing his best to make it as a basketball player.

He scored more than 1,000 career points in just three seasons at Christopher Dock Mennonite High School in Lansdale. Then he graduated from Virginia-based Fork Union Military Academy before spending a year in Maryland at Mount Zion Prep, recording more than 16 points per game for both teams.

After missing his freshman season at the College of Central Florida, he bounced back at Butler Community College in Kansas and then transferred to Slippery Rock. In 2018-19 and 2019-20, he averaged double-digit points and came away convinced he could play professionally.

Yet his only option was in Israel, so he applied for citizenship.

Upon rejection, he began studying with Beals, who knew Armstrongs aunt from her attendance at his services.

Armstrong went into the mikveh and spent nine months studying every aspect of Judaism over Zoom due to COVID, the rabbi said. He showed up every week, and his conversion was approved by the required Beit Din, or house of judgment, of three knowledgeable Jews, as Beals described it.

Yet in addition to doubting Armstrongs sincerity, the Israeli government said it couldnt accept classes conducted on Zoom. During those virtual classes, Beals never doubted his students authenticity.

He was very passionate. I could look at his face, the rabbi said. Im hoping somebody will step in, overturn this and say, This is not who we are.

Armstrong is appealing the decision. He is in Israel on a visa and his family is supporting him.

Its heartbreaking because you grow up a Jew, and then youre being told youre not a Jew, he said. Only God can tell you who you are.

[emailprotected]; 215-832-0740

More here:

Black Jew Denied Israeli Citizenship Twice - Jewish Exponent

How Zelensky Gave the World a Jewish Hero – The Atlantic

Posted By on February 28, 2022

For those inclined to see history as depressingly cyclical, the war in Ukraine offers fairly strong evidence. It all feels lifted from a familiar script in which only the actors have been switchedat anti-Russian protests, a popular placard even has the 20th centurys most evil mustache Photoshopped onto Putins face. But there is one protagonist who is an unusual fit for his role: Volodymyr Zelensky.

The 44-year-old former comedian turned president has exhibited great patriotism and bravery, joining his fate with that of his countrymen on the streets of Kyiv, refusing to leave despite Western offers of an airlift. If he is now, as he put it, the No. 1 target for the Russians, it is because he is the No. 1 Ukrainian. And what is remarkable, truly mind-blowing in the long sweep of history, is that his Jewishness has not stood in the way of his being embraced as a symbol of the nation.

In the Soviet world that shaped Zelensky and his parents, Jews were perceived as the eternal outsiders, possible fifth columnists, the rootless cosmopolitans of Stalins imagination. This of course came on top of living in a place where a particularly virulent strain of anti-Semitism had always existed, a legacy of pogroms and Nazi collaboration. Just outside embattled Kyiv is Babi Yar, where 33,771 Jews were shot and thrown into a ravine over the course of two days in 1941. If Zelensky has now become synonymous with the blue-and-yellow flag of his country, it might signal an unexpected outcome of this conflict that has found Jews feeling finally, improbably, one with a land that has perpetually tried to spit them out.

Read our ongoing coverage of the Russian invasion in Ukraine

Zelensky grew up in the Russian-speaking city of Kryvyi Rih, in the eastern part of Ukraine. And like most Soviet Jews, his parents were highly educated but also limited as to where their ambitions and learning could take them. His father was a professor of mathematics and his mother had studied engineering. These were standard-issue careers for a certain class of Soviet Jews who knew they couldnt come close to any of the fields that shaped society and cultureone after another turned to the applied sciences as a way to excel.

When asked about what his actual Jewishness has meant to him, Zelensky has been blas. In an interview in 2020, he said he came from an ordinary Soviet Jewish family, adding that most Jewish families in the Soviet Union were not religious. What this hides, though, is the reality that Jewish identity didnt exist in the Soviet Union, because it couldnt. To be a Jew from the time of Stalin onward was to have a stamp in your internal passport that marked you as such (just as a Ukrainian or Latvian national identity was also indicated). There was very little opportunity for Jewish community, religious practice, or even bare-bones cultural expression. Unlike Ukrainians and Latvians who had national homelands within the Soviet empire where some degree of culture and language were permitted as long as it stuck to the Communist party line, Jews had nothing of the sort. Synagogues were mostly shut down or crawling with KGB informants. Until the late 1980s, gathering for something as innocuous as a Passover seder was practically a subversive act, and teaching Hebrew was simply not allowed.

By the time Zelensky came of age, three or four generations of Soviet Jews had experienced their Jewish identity as a hollow thing, nothing but a black mark on a passport and a sense of peoplehood born of exclusion and a second-class status. All the while, no matter how steeped in Pushkin they might be, they were never able to fully claim any other national allegiance. When the Soviet Union began buckling to pressure to let Jews emigrate in the 1970s, many took the opportunity to do so, even those mathematicians and engineers who had achieved the heights allowed to them. By the early 1990s, just after the Soviet collapse, the permitted trickle became a deluge, and about 1.5 million headed to the United States and Israel.

Read more of our coverage of the Russian invasion

Zelensky and his family were part of the few hundred thousand Jews who stayed, content to assimilate in a post-Soviet world, in which Zelensky found success, first as an actor and then as a politician. Two intersecting trends took place over the past 20 years, both of which transformed the status of Jews in Ukraine. First, the end of the Soviet Union allowed some air to enter Jewish communal life for those who remained. In the eastern-Ukrainian city of Dnipro, not far from where Zelensky grew up, there are now 10 synagogues and a gargantuan community center called Menorah, opened in 2012, that reportedly serves 40,000 people a dayeven though there are only 60,000 Jews in Dnipro. By 2019, a Pew Research Center poll found Ukraine the most accepting of Jews among all Central and Eastern European countries.

As new opportunities for Jewishness were opening up, the past decade also saw instances when Jews were on the front line of defending a democratic and free Ukraine. Prominent Jewish-identified activists participated in the 2013 Euromaidan demonstrations that forced the ouster of pro-Russia President Viktor Yanukovych in early 2014. Later that year, the Jewish governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region established and personally helped fund a militia to defend against Russian-backed separatists in the east.

Zelenskys political rise also took place in this context. Its uncanny in retrospect that the character he played on television in the series Servant of the Peoplethe role that foretold his actual ascendance to the presidencyis a nobody whose rise begins when a private rant is filmed and goes viral. But there is a kind of logic to this coincidence. Zelensky grabbed the attention of Ukrainians by playing out what has traditionally been the part of the Jew: the outsider. In this case, what Ukrainians saw in this lonely figure banging on the window was themselves, embattled, trying to hold on to their national identity amid growing threats to their independence. It may have been this aspect of his Jewishness and the way it came to dovetail with those Ukrainian anxieties that made him such a suddenly popular figure, winning 73 percent of the vote in his 2019 election.

In these days of war and uncertainty, the fact that a Jew has come to represent the fighting spirit of Ukraine provides its own kind of hope. Along with all that seems to be recurringthe military aggression, the assault on freedomthere is also something new: inclusion and acceptance in a place where it once seemed impossible.

More here:

How Zelensky Gave the World a Jewish Hero - The Atlantic

On Putin, the Jews and the Future of the World – Algemeiner

Posted By on February 28, 2022

JNS.org Jews and dictators normally dont get along. History is replete with examples of strongmen who reviled the Jewish communities in their midst. Many of their names spring easily to mind, like Hitler, Stalin and Mussolini, along with the Assads, Saddam Husseins and Gaddafis of the Middle East, all of whom regarded Jews as being at the heart of devilish conspiracies against their totalitarian dystopias.

More fundamentally, societies ruled by unaccountable, opaque politicians preserve themselves by finding enemies where none exist. That is another reason why Jews, easily visible and practically powerless, readily come into the frame, though other minority groups have proven vulnerable to this strategy too.

Still, not every dictator is an antisemite or Jew-hater. Arguably the first modern dictator was Oliver Cromwell, the Lord Protector of England following the overthrow of the Stuart Monarchy during the English Civil War of the 17th century. Once in power, the fiercely anti-Catholic Cromwell invaded Ireland, carrying out horrific massacres of civilians, while at home he instituted an austere puritan rule that included bans on dancing and Christmas celebrations. But as a God-fearing Protestant who revered the Hebrew Bible, Cromwell was well-disposed to Jews, inviting the community to return to England almost 400 years after they were expelled by a decree of King Edward I.

Russian dictator Vladimir Putin has all of Cromwells ruthlessness along with the ruthlessness exhibited by more contemporary autocrats and he is similarly benign in his attitude towards Jews, despite ruling over the nation that gave us the Pale of Settlement, the Black Hundreds, the fabricated Protocols of the Elders of Zion, the Doctors Plot and numerous other episodes of violent, dangerous hatred of Jews. But rather than copying that playbook, Putin has gone in the opposite direction, officially frowning upon antisemitism while nurturing close relations with both Israel and loyal Jewish leaders around Russia. Whats striking is that this approach coexists with his imperial, aggressive foreign policy, symbolized by the brutal invasion of Ukraine and the active cultivation of shrill anti-Western conspiracy theories conditions in which antisemitism normally thrives.

February 28, 2022 12:15 pm

How did this situation come about? On a personal level, Putin is certainly unaffected by the Biblical fervor that drove Oliver Cromwell to welcome Jews into his midst. Over the years, various stories have surfaced about the positive influence of Jews whom Putin befriended during his career, along with more outlandish theories holding that he himself is Jewish, but those provide a very limited and tendentious understanding of why he apparently regards Jews with favor.

Anti-Jewish Conspiracy Theories in Putins Russia, a paper published in the Fall 2019 edition of the academic journal Antisemitism Studies, offers more worthwhile insights into the transformation of what Russians used to call their Jewish policy.

Under the current political regime, spreading antisemitic conspiracy theories is out of fashion, wrote its author, Ilya Yablokov.

Surveying the three decades that followed the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, Yablokov arrived at a critical observation. During the 1990s, when Russia was in economic free-fall but liberal democracy seemed to be in the ascendant, both antisemitic discourse and hate crimes targeting Jews were rife. But in the early 2000s, with Putin already ensconced in place and authoritarian rule encroaching, the antisemitic invective of the various neo-pagans, ultranationalists and communists who littered the previous decade was replaced with a shift towards conspiracy theories focused on the West. Within 20 years, wrote Yablokov, anti-Western conspiracy theories were a popular trope used to explain events both in Russia and globally, to justify action against the political opposition, and to shift blame for the Kremlins unpopular policies.

The political utility of obsessively attacking the West along with the Kremlins own commitment to, as Yablokov puts it, preserve the image of Russia as a nation that cherishes its multi-ethnic character, obviates any need for antisemitism as a mobilizing tool in the Putin era. As Yablokov argues, that amounts to rare good news from Russia.

Yet it does not follow that Jews (unless they happen to be resident in Russia) should be on the spectrum from neutral to positive in their attitudes to Putin. Following the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945, Jews finally enjoyed an unprecedented flowering, cemented by the establishment of a Jewish democratic state and the confident participation of Diaspora Jewish communities in the political, cultural and commercial lives of their countries. Such a flowering was and remains possible only within the framework of liberal democracies like the US and Western Europe for one very good reason: Liberal democracy enables Jews to organize as a community, and to speak out without fear, without needing an authoritarian protector to lord it over them.

However, a protector is exactly what the 200,000-odd Jews who live in Russia have in Putin. Due to that, their position is far more precarious than ours in America. As Yablokov points out, while antisemitism in Russia has taken a back seat under Putin, it is still present and can be invoked should conditions suit. Moreover, Putin already has a nasty habit of citing Nazism and the Holocaust to justify his aggression against Ukraine, and he has cynically highlighted the historic antisemitism in Ukraine to bolster his delegitimization campaign against his neighbor. That rhetoric is sure to intensify, and any Jewish discomfort with Putins appropriation of the Holocaust for his war strategy will not be regarded sympathetically in the Kremlin.

As Jews living in the West, we owe it to ourselves and our fellow citizens to oppose Putins imperial project with every fiber of our beings. This is one occasion when we cannot look to Israel for guidance, because the Jewish state has its own set of interests to balance with the Russians; the hardnosed realpolitik that has often characterized Israeli foreign policy is no less appropriate in this context after all. But Diaspora communities know full well the benefits of the liberal democratic order that Russia and its ally China have dedicated themselves to destroying. As we enter a new phase of great power conflict, we must treasure that knowledge in both heart and mind, and act upon it.

Ben Cohen is a New York City-based journalist and author who writes a weekly column on Jewish and international affairs for JNS.

Read the rest here:

On Putin, the Jews and the Future of the World - Algemeiner

British Comedian: Jews Don’t Count But They Should – jewishboston.com

Posted By on February 28, 2022

David Baddiel is not a household name in America. But that may soon change for the British comedian and actor, whose one-word Twitter bio plainly states: Jew. Baddiel has close to 750,000 followers and has emerged as a surprising defender of his fellow Jews. His most recent example of Jewish advocacy is a short, quick read of a book straightforwardly titled Jews Dont Count.

Never miss the best stories and events! Get JewishBoston This Week.

The book was published in the UK in February 2021, a year after Jeremy Corbyn was replaced as the leader of the British Labor Party. Corbyns stormy five years as his partys leader was marked by repeated accusations of antisemitism. However, Baddiel observes that sensational headlines about antisemitism are often disproportionate to the tiny Jewish minority in the country highlighted. In the case of Great Britain, Jews make up less than half a percent of the population.

Baddiel was recently in virtual conversation with Jeremy Burton, executive director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Boston. Burton opened the conversation by recounting that he felt self-conscious reading Baddiels provocatively titled book in public. Baddiel related that a woman reported she was reading his book on the tube and endured antisemitic abuse. In the book, I talk about the spilling over of antisemitic abuse from whatever boundaries people try and keep it in, he said. In terms of the notion that you can protect against Israel and somehow exclude antisemitism is very clearly undermined by the fact that when people read a book with just the word Jews in it, they will get abuse for that. Baddiel added that the books German publisher was wary of stirring up more historical pain and changed the title to End the Jews? for its German printing.

Baddiel is an unlikely spokesman for the Jewish people. A self-proclaimed atheist, he said, I dont have, which a lot of Jews do, a deep emotional connection with Israel. But I dont feel the need to condemn Israel in the mad way that every single person who is on the progressive side of things feels the need to do before they open their mouths about anything to do with Jews.

Baddiel, who also describes himself as a progressive, often takes the left to task. He feels uniquely positioned to do so, given his non-Zionist and non-religious leanings. He writes that being outside the traditional Jewish mainstream gives him credibility that enables him to reach more people. Theres a lot of conversation to be had about antisemitism that is not about [Israel]. Having said that, I did put an extra chapter in the American edition of my book because it [came out] just at the time when the last Gaza incursion happened [last summer], he explained.

Baddiels theses are nuanced. In the book and his conversation with Burton, he makes the case that antisemitism is unequivocal racism. America has hived off the word racism to mean essentially just the discrimination suffered by people of color. And, in fact, it seems to be mainly Black people because I hear that Asian Americans wont describe discrimination against them as racism either. And that is not the case here [in Britain]. People will enfold discrimination against almost any ethnicity to mean racism. And that is correct. Anything that is an accident of birth for which someone is happy to discriminate against you, and at the extreme level, kill you forthat is racism. The color of your skin is as unchangeable for the racist as the fact of my Jewishness.

Baddiel observes that Jews are mostly excluded from conversations about minorities. He says as much in his writings, his radio shows and even in his standup comedy. There has been an intensification of concern about identity and representationwhat we broadly call identity politics, or some people would call woke issues. And its not only about race but also sexuality and how we can include minorities and not allow aggression against minorities. Its about vulnerable things like improving the situation with minorities across the board. But in the last 20 years, you see in Britain and America that Jews are not in that conversation as far as I can make out.

To that end, Baddiel said he wrote Jews Dont Count to find parity in treating all minorities, including Jews. He notes that the word Yid, which he refers to as the Y word in writing and conversation, should be treated like any other hate word. He recalled that in 2008, he was at a soccer match with his brother when a man in the crowd began chanting Yid over and over. Others joined in and added obscenities. Baddiel wasnt surprised at the vitriol, which he said was common at soccer matches in England. What Im concerned about is theres been a massive intensification in how people deal with [the racism]. The [soccer] clubs are tasked with spotting racism. It says in the program, Anyone chanting any form of racist abuse will be banned for life. Not only were these people not stopped, but they also were not even challenged and banned for life. My brother and I tried hard to get this person. He would have been on CCTV and could have been identified. But no one was interested.

Baddiel said several people on the left have been pondering his questions about Jews as a minority and antisemitism as racism. One reader wrote to him that antisemitism is racism that sneaks past you. In response, Baddiel asserts that the book is a critique and an analysis. It is not a manifesto. It does not have a series of answers, but in its way, it provides answers.

Never miss the best stories and events! Get JewishBoston This Week.

Here is the original post:

British Comedian: Jews Don't Count But They Should - jewishboston.com


Page 463«..1020..462463464465..470480..»

matomo tracker