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Tinder Swindler Claimed to Be a Diamond Magnates Heir. Now the Real Family Is Suing Him – Yahoo Entertainment

Posted By on February 28, 2022

GREECE-ISRAEL-NORWAY-FRAUD - Credit: TORE KRISTIANSEN.AFP/Getty Images

Simon Leviev, the so-called Tinder Swindler, is being sued by the diamond-rich family he claimed to be a part of as he allegedly bilked millions from young women he met on the dating app.

The lawsuit was filed in the Tel Aviv Magistrates Court in Israel on behalf of the Leviev family, whose patriarch, Lev Leviev, is a billionaire diamond magnate. The website for the Leviev familys lawyer, Guy Ophir, confirmed the suit had been filed.

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While Ophir did not immediately return Rolling Stones request for comment, a portion of the lawsuit quoted on his firms website said of Simon Leviev: He is a crook and deceiver who changed his name for criminal purposes, while identifying that he is a member of the Leviev family and taking the reputation of the complainants (from Hebrew, via Google Translate).

A rep for Simon Leviev did not immediately return Rolling Stones request for comment.

Ophir added in a statement that the lawsuit was just the first in a series of legal proceedings that the Leviev family has instructed me to take against this crook and his accomplices. He continued, In the coming days a monetary claim will also be filed against the crook and anyone who has been involved in his past and present actions. Similarly, a lawsuit will be filed against the sites that chose to join the crook and allow him to sell paid greetings while exploiting his victims. The Leviev family intends to donate the money it obtains to its other victims (from Hebrew, via Google Translate).

Simon Leviev whose story was recently documented in the Netflix true-crime doc, The Tinder Swindler was born Shimon Yehuda Hayut, and he fled Israel after being charged in 2011 with theft, forgery, and fraud. He spent nearly a decade traipsing around Europe and posing online as an heir to the Leviev diamond fortune, while convincing women to give him money he promised he would pay back, but never did.

Story continues

While he was convicted of defrauding three women in Finland in 2015 and served two years in prison, upon his release he appeared to pick up right where he started. Following a 2019 expos in the Norwegian newspaper, VG, Leviev was arrested in Greece for using a forged passport; while he was sentenced to 15 months in prison in Israel, he was released after just five, reportedly for time served and good behavior. In a recent interview with Inside Edition, Leviev died the allegations against him and claimed, I was just a single guy that wanted to meet some girls on Tinder.

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Tinder Swindler Claimed to Be a Diamond Magnates Heir. Now the Real Family Is Suing Him - Yahoo Entertainment

‘The Voice of Silence:’ Captivating and Timely Reading on the Jewish Underground in the USSR – San Diego Jewish World

Posted By on February 28, 2022

The Voice of Silence, The Story of the Jewish Underground in the USSR, Ephraim Kholmyansky, Boston: Academic Studies Press, 2021 284 pages; $22.63 (Paperback)

By Toby Klein Greenwald

In a frosty February of 1988, I took a short drive from my home in Efrat to Kibbutz Rosh Tzurim, in Gush Etzion. There was a special seder being held in honor of Tu BShvat, the New Year of the Trees, and in honor of their new residents, Anna and Alexander (Ephraim) Kholmyansky, who had recently arrived in Israel with their nine-month-old baby girl, Dora. They were warmly welcomed by the kibbutz that had adopted them from afar, and I interviewed them for the Charleston Jewish Journal.

I met them again recently at the book launch of Hidden Heroes, by Pamela Cohen, another wonderful documentation of the struggle of Soviet Jewry, that concentrates, from Cohens perspective, on what was being done across the ocean to help the struggle, and Ephraim Kholmyansky is mentioned in her book. Today, 34 years later, the Kholmyanskys live in Maale Adumim and have five children. Anna is a software advisor in Israels Central Bureau of Statistics. Ephraim worked first as the director of an ulpan under the Ministry of Education, later as adviser to olim (immigrant) scientists, in the Givot Olam oil exploration company, as an emissary of the Jewish Agency, and he was a partner in start-up companies. Baby Dora lives in Modiin, where she works in hi-tech, and has three girls.

The sages tell us that the Jewish people maintained three unique behaviors when in Egypt: Their Hebrew names, their (modest) dress, and their language: Hebrew.

In his book The Voice of Silence, The Story of the Jewish Underground in the USSR, Kholmyansky reveals to us the harrowing risks that Soviet Jews took in the 1970s and 80s to study and to teach the Hebrew language, which included teaching the traditions and history of the Jewish people and of Israel.

His introduction is a fascinating and vital history lesson that places what comes next in context. He explains that, though the February Revolution of 1917 gave a short reprieve from the years of persecution and pogroms against the Jews in Russia and the Ukraine, with the Bolshevik takeover six months later, a civil war led to atrocities against the Jews; 150,000 were murdered in pogroms. He writes, If most Jews supported the Bolsheviks, who emerged victorious in the 1920s, it was in large part because the establishment of Communist rule put an end to the pogroms.

The Jews thought that what followed would be a society based on justice and fairness. But Stalin denied recognition of the Jews as an ethnic group, he held anti-Semitic campaigns and Hebrew, he writes, was officially banned.

Half a million Jews joined the Red Army and fought the Nazis in WWII, 150,000 died in that war, and many of them also fought as partisans. Yet, the Soviet government refused to recognize the role the Jews had played in the war and also did not acknowledge the Nazi massacres of Jews; Jews were not allowed to hold memorial events at the site of mass killings.

Elie Wiesel, in 1966, published his landmark book, The Jews of Silence. Yet, something was happening beneath the surface, and the Six-Day War changed everything. Jews who had been estranged from Israel and their Jewish heritage, used to being despised and insulted, suddenly made a quantum leap to a new reality. Almost overnight, they regained their sense of national identity, writes Kholmyansky. They began to challenge the Soviet regime, both clandestinely and sometimes openly. Only years later did the Iron Curtain begin to slowly open.

Kholmyansky was in kindergarten when he first learned he was Jewish, when a census taker visited their home and asked him mother their nationality. It was a terrifying shock for him, but by the 7th grade, he was making lists of prominent and successful Jews. Later he discovered, by accident, in his brothers room, a small calendar in Hebrew and Russian. There were words written there that he was not familiar with, like yishuv, kibbutz, and aliya. He felt he had discovered a treasure.

Several years later he was in a school where the Jewish question kept coming up. We talked about Jews who were active in revolutionary movements around the worldAnd one day I felt the first stirrings of an ideaif only I could go awayto a free country

But where would I go? The daily barrage of anti-Zionist invective in the newspapers finally led me to pick up a map. He was astonished at how tiny Israel was. How did people live there? What courage, he thought.

And then the Six-Day War erupted. Jews who had been estranged from Israel and their Jewish heritage, used to being despised and insulted, suddenly made a quantum leap to a new reality. Almost overnight, they regained their sense of national identityFor the first time, they felt that being Jewish was a good thing. He describes the river of faces he observed streaming toward the one Moscow synagogue that had not been shut down by the Soviets, on Simchat Torah in 1967.

Three years later, in the summer of 1970, a group of 16 refuseniks 14 of them Jewish tried to hijack a plane to freedom. Suddenly, thousands of Soviet Jews were flooding visa offices all over the countrydemanding to emigrate to Israel. His family also wanted to emigrate, but they faced a number of obstacles that prevented their aliya.

Kholmyansky plunged himself into the study and, eventually, the teaching of Hebrew. My Hebrew studies cast a new light on my whole lifeI felt the joy of learning new wordsTheir sounds resonated within my soul, enveloping it with a new serenity, like a touch of something eternal.

He taught in an immersive experience called the dibbur. He passed around copies of Russian-language brochures on the Jewish holidays, brochures that had been typed on manual typewriters or photographed and then developed in peoples bathtubs. He discovered the underground samizdat movement, comprised of aliya activists who published underground magazines about Jewish culture, history and the holidays. He was amazed at their courage. Future Speaker of the Knesset Yuli Edelstein was one of his colleagues in the teaching of Hebrew.

His request to emigrate was denied; he was now defined as a refusenik. He was fired from his job as an engineer when he applied to emigrate and had to take a job as a menial laborer, so as not to be accused of the crime of parasitism. He received encouraging letters from Israel, including from Rivka Barzilai of Kibbutz Rosh Tzurim, the kibbutz that adopted his family.

The KGB stepped up their efforts against the samizdat. The writers were careful to not write anything anti-Soviet, but he writes, the very existence of a free Jewish press was intolerable to the regime. To us, however, it was a great psychological boost.

Kholmyansky initiated the Cities Project, whose goal was to prepare teachers to teach Hebrew in the provinces beyond Moscow.

In late 1979 there were 50 Hebrew teachers in Moscow and 15 in Leningrad, he said in a phone interview. If you ask any of them, they will say it was underground. But it wasnt. The authorities knew about it and tolerated it to a certain degree. The KGB wanted to prevent the proliferation of Hebrew to other cities, and 75% of the Jews of the USSR resided in those cities, cities like Odessa and Minsk and Kiev, and that was the grand challenge I took upon myself It was much more dangerous than teaching in MoscowWe concealed our operation.

Eventually, the KGB harassment gave way to crude, brazen intimidation. He continued the Cities Project in spite of it. I couldnt let the project fail. It was my calling, my purpose in life.

The Project was fraught with dangers and risks, involving intricate subterfuges. He wrote down their data base in tiny handwriting on pieces of paper that were transferred from one person to another, with instructions to destroy it if the KGB came to search ones home. He writes that he learned that method of a mobile storage system by reading how U.S. strategic missiles were not kept in one location but moved around via underground passages, to protect them in case of a Soviet attack. When his mother, who held one of the written data bases, came home to find their apartment being searched by the KGB, she went into the bathroom and flushed the tiny pieces of paper down the toilet.

They Hebrew teachers took backpacks filled with materials to distant places, always fearing discovery. Jews from America smuggled in electronic devises that could be sold on the black market to support the project. Kholmyanskys brother, Misha, was one of the leading teachers. He also helped with the production and hiding of Hebrew teaching materials and Hebrew audio tapes. Their parents knew about their activities and supported them, even though it might mean losing their jobs.

When they wanted to meet people, messages regarding the time and place were done in code. People who were part of their network were taken in for questioning by the KGB, their homes were searched, they were threatened with losing their jobs. He worried about those who were involved. But he writes that quitting was not an option.

A friend in the project, from a different city, asked Kholmyansky to meet someone named Anna, and to send something through her. They fell in love. Anna says, today, laughing, We met in the Underground but she is referring to the metro.

Things escalated. Kholmyansky was arrested in Tallinn, capital of theEstonian Soviet Socialist Republic,on 29 August 1984. While detained, a search was done in his parents home, where he lived, and on a trumped-up charge of a gun being found obviously planted he was first put in administrative detention and later criminal charges were filed against him.

I was arrested because I was the initiator and leader of the Cities Project, he told me. The weapon was an excuse. They wanted to create a show trial. They didnt pick me arbitrarily; it was because I did something that they wanted to prevent, to eradicate.

The description of his prison cells, including freezing cold punishment cells to which he was sent, is horrifying. He began a hunger strike, which he also continued after he was sentenced. When he was hospitalized in the prison hospital, his weight was 42.5kg (93.7 pounds) he is at 172cm (56) tall.

They wanted to break me, he writes, and use me as an example to intimidate all the other members of the Jewish movement. His hunger strike broke, to the best of his knowledge, all the records. He continued it for 207 days. Then they began to force-feed him, sometimes with brutal force.

Occasionally there would be a kind Russian guard who would secretly break the rules, in order to help him. Even in that cruel system, there were sometimes people who retained their humanity.

What gave him strength was his beliefs in what he was doing. Even when he was in a punishment cell, sleeping on a freezing floor with nothing to provide warmth, he felt free in his soul. He prayed. He thought. He quotes Victor Frankl, who said, Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of human freedoms to choose ones attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose ones way.

The questioning continued. It was getting harder to concentrate. I began to have vivid hallucinationsI was King David, Alexander the Great, Napoleon Bonaparte. Each new fantasy was a blessing, helping me last another hour, win another small victory.

After four and a half months of hunger striking, Ephraim was brought to court. He was ultimately exonerated on the worst charge possession of a weapon and his final sentence was, surprisingly, less than he expected; the prosecution was frustrated that it wasnt worse. Ephraim was wisely advised to not appeal the sentence, because there was the danger that he could lose the appeal and receive even more time in prison.

He was finally freed on February 2, 1986, after which I embarked upon an intensive and prolonged therapy, everything from conventional medicine to massage, acupuncture, and Chinese herbs. A number of months later, after the doctors determined he was sufficiently recovered, Ephraim and Anna married. But they still did not receive permission to emigrate.

He felt there was some change in the air, and a window of opportunity. He was joined by others in creating a group of former Prisoners of Zion, who lobbied to have remaining prisoners released, and led the founding of the group Jewish Women against Refusal.

On October 18, he writes, Anna started her own hunger strike, which lasted for twenty-four daysIt looked as though nothing had changed. She was protesting a Soviet regulation that prevents couples from leaving the country without a written financial waiver from both sets of parents. Annas father had refused to sign. I wasnt fasting in protest against my father, but against the Soviet law, she told me in 1988. She also said in our interview back then, as she glanced involuntarily at the ceiling. Im not used to being able to speak in a normal tone of voice. In Russia, our home was bugged. We had to write almost everything down.

One day, in early 1988, the eavesdropping equipment in their apartment was dismantled, and three days later they got a phone call from the visa office. Our decade-long struggle was over. On January 28, 1988, they landed at Ben Gurion Airport, where they received a glorious welcome from the members of Kibbutz Rosh Tzurim.

A slender and gentle person, it is hard to imagine that the big Russian giant saw this young Hebrew teacher as such a threat to their country, but they did.

The descriptions in The Voice of Silence of the extreme devotion, in the face of danger, by the dedicated Hebrew teachers, the horror of living in a society where there was no acceptance, by the rulers, of values like truth, honesty, fairness and true justice and the terrible conditions that Ephraim suffered for his beliefs and his actions all this makes for captivating reading. Now, it is also particularly timely reading, since Russias invasion of the Ukraine.

If there is a smart Hollywood producer who reads this here is your next film. It has everything. Action. Secrecy. Grassroots rebellion. Even a love story.

I asked Kholmyansky, Where did you find the emotional strength to do what you did?

He replied, I wanted to be a part of Am Yisrael, part of this large extended family. I never dreamed I would be up against the KGB, but it happened one step at a time. He felt that 75% of the Jewish people [in the USSR] were being lost, and we had to do something about it. I decided, I am not willing to be a victim. I want to fight. And once you begin, you continue.

The book was published by Boston: Academic Studies Press (2021) and is part of their series Jews of Russia & Eastern Europe and Their Legacy.

Hopefully, it will introduce both Jews and non-Jews, young and old, to the courage, the faith, and the sacrifices of the young underground Hebrew teachers of the USSR, whose voices are silent no more.

*

Toby Klein Greenwald is an award-winning journalist, an educational theater director and the editor-in-chief of WholeFamily.com. She and her husband live in Efrat and have children and grandchildren who live throughout the land of Israel. This article was expanded from a version that appeared in the Jerusalem Report.

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'The Voice of Silence:' Captivating and Timely Reading on the Jewish Underground in the USSR - San Diego Jewish World

New species of spiders discovered in southern Israel – Ynetnews

Posted By on February 28, 2022

A new species of desert burrow-dwelling spiders not known to the scientific community have been discovered by Israeli researchers in the southern part of the country.

The spider, which constructs silk-lined nests in burrows, was discovered by researches from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Ben Gurion University during the five-year monitoring of oil spill effects on the species. The species was discovered in the southeastern Arava valley.

The velvety black spider was named Sahastata aravaensis - based on its habitat. It belongs to the Sahastata genus of the Filistatinae family, also known as the crevice weaver family.

The spider species that was discovered is the largest of the Filistatinae family in Israel and it stands out with its velvety black color. The researchers estimate the spider's life expectancy to be four years (most spiders live about two years), most of which he spends in a vertical, silk-coded burrow.

The study that was conducted analyzed how two oil spills that occurred in 1975 and 2014 in the hyper-arid desert would affect the spider populations and concluded that the incidents pose negative and long-lasting effects.

The researchers found that the number of arachnid burrows in the areas that were contaminated was significantly lower than the number in other nearby clean areas.

In laboratory experiments, where spiders were made to choose between contaminated soil and clean one, most species chose the clean soil at the end of the first day of the experiment.

At the end of the experiment, the researchers assessed that the new species can be used as a bioindicator of persistent soil pollution in desert habitats.

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New species of spiders discovered in southern Israel - Ynetnews

Poetry and Music | The UCSB Current – The UCSB Current

Posted By on February 28, 2022

Paco Dez is something of a musical wizard. A multi-instrumentalist, hes one of the great ambassadors of Iberian and Sephardic music. His museum in Mucientes (Valladolid), Spain, holds hundreds of instruments all of which he can play.

Dez will bring his unique gifts to UC Santa Barbara Tuesday, March 1, from 2 to 4 p.m. at Mosher Alumni Hall for Love and Other Affairs: Poetry and Music (Spain, Latin America, Latinx US, and Sephardic).

Dez will be accompanied by Anthony Geist, a professor of Spanish and of comparative literature at the University of Washington, who will introduce the 10 poems Dez will perform.

Paco is an extraordinarily talented musician who has devoted his life and work to preserving and disseminating traditional music from Spain and Portugal, said Geist, a UCSB alumnus who grew up in Santa Barbara. He is recognized internationally as one of the greatest performers of Sephardic balladry. This project is a departure from his usual concerts, in that he has read the poems closely and set them to music of his own composition.

Dez and Geist have chosen 10 poems by Spanish, Latin American and Latinx poets, as well as two traditional Sephardickantikas, Geist said.

I have translated them and will read them in the original Spanish as well as English, Geist said. All the poems concern love: love for another person, love of a landscape, nostalgia for a lost or distant love.

The audience will hear a wide array of poems by 20thcentury poets, he continued, which I will introduce and read, and Paco will sing in his captivating baritone voice. We hope they will be moved both by the original texts and the English versions, as well as by their musical interpretation.

Geist met Dez in Spain about 10 years and the two quickly became good friends. Since then Dez has been an artist in residence at UWs School of music twice. They conceived this poetry/art project over food and wine, Geist said.

Poetry carries music in its DNA, he said. In a pre-literate world all poems were sung, from Homers Odyssey up through medieval ballads and into the 20th century in certain parts of the world. Paco is reconnecting these texts to their ancestral musical origins.

The event is co-sponsored by UCSBs Department of Spanish and Portuguese, the Department of Global Studies, the Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies, the Marsha and Jay Glazer Endowed Chair in Jewish Studies, the Comparative Literature and Translation Studies Program, the Center for Portuguese Studies, and the Latin American and Iberian Studies Program.

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Poetry and Music | The UCSB Current - The UCSB Current

The Five Minute Read – Lowell Sun

Posted By on February 28, 2022

Lala Books monthly event pairs book talk with cocktails

LOWELL Lala Books has crafted a monthly gathering that brings readers together to chat about a good book while enjoying a cocktail.

The Boozy Bookclub meets at Warp & Weft, at 197 Market St., in Downtown Lowell on the fourth Thursday of every month at 6 p.m. for an hour of book talk.

Each month attendees read the same book to talk about during the gathering. For March, members will be reading The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett.

Anyone interested in participating can get the book at Lala Books, at 189 Market St., or through bookshop.org where there are also audio and e-book versions available.

To attend the gathering, register at Lala books by paying $5 to hold your space. The money is then used to buy shared appetizers. Each reader is responsible for their own bar tab.

For more information about which book is planned for each month, visit lalabookstore.com/event-calendar.

Congregation Beth Israel of the Merrimack Valley to host chef Susan Barocas

ANDOVER At 3 p.m. Sunday, March 6, Congregation Beth Israel of the Merrimack Valley will host A Perfectly Persian Purim Cooking Class with chef Susan Barocas.

In this virtual event, Barocas will offer a culinary trip to Persia and prepare dishes using the recipes, spices, herbs, fruits and vegetables that make this cuisine flavorful and memorable.

Barocas is an award-winning writer, chef, cooking instructor and entertainment coach with a passion for healthy, no-waste cooking and Jewish cuisine, especially Sephardic food, history and culture. Founding director of the Jewish Food Experience, she served as the guest chef for three of President Barack Obamas White House Passover Seders. Her writing has appeared in such outlets as the Washington Post, Lilith, Moment Magazine and The Nosher.

Register by contacting Amy at 978-474-0540 or amy@BethIsraelMV.org.

Tyngsboro Board of Health to host COVID-19 vaccine clinic

TYNGSBORO The Board of Health will host a COVID-19 vaccination clinic at Tyngsboro Middle School on Monday, March 7from 3 to 6 p.m.

Appointments are available for first, second or booster doses. Residents above the age of 5 are eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine and residents 12 and older are eligible for their booster.

For more information or to make an appointment, visit https://tinyurl.com/jnkb39t9.

Corned beef and cabbage suppers return to Groton church

GROTON After two years of COVID-19 related challenges affecting everyone, Christian Union Church at 37 West Main St. in West Groton is ready to return with suppers.

On Saturday, March 12, Christian Union Church will serve its famous corned beef and cabbage supper.

This will be take-out only and preordering is suggested. In addition to corned beef and cabbage, potato, carrots and a homemade dessert will also be available.

Meals will cost $15 and can be picked up from the church between 4:30 and 6:30 p.m. on March 12.

For more information or to order a meal, call 978-448-5480 or 978-855-2802.

Originally posted here:

The Five Minute Read - Lowell Sun

Kissing Children In The Synagogue – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on February 28, 2022

As a general rule, it is forbidden to kiss another person in the synagogue, especially ones children. The reason for this is that we must remember that our love for G-d must even exceed the love that we have for our children.1 Similarly, it is explained that if it were permitted to kiss ones children in the synagogue, the function of the synagogue as a place where we focus exclusively on G-d would be compromised.2 Although there is an opinion that the ban against kissing children in the synagogue only applies to ones little children,3 most authorities rule that it applies to ones children whether theyre little or grown-up adults.4

A number of authorities are of the opinion that the prohibition against kissing in the synagogue only applies to ones children and not to other people. This is because the feelings that one has for ones children are unlike those one has for other people.5 According to this approach, it is permitted to kiss someone (other than ones children) following his aliya or other synagogue honor, as is the custom in many Sephardic congregations.6 The reason for this Sephardic custom is because someone who receives an aliya is said to be imbued with an added measure of holiness. It is taught that kissing someone immediately following his aliya imparts some of this holiness to oneself.7 Others, including many Sephardic authorities, discourage kissing even in this instance.8

Nevertheless, it is permitted to kiss a little child in the synagogue if doing so is necessary to calm him down, such as if he is hurt, and the like.9 One may also kiss ones child if one feels it is necessary for him to feel important or encouraged, as the situation might warrant. So too, it is permitted to kiss ones child as a sign of praise for having done something impressive, such as asking or answering an excellent Torah question.10 This is similar to the Talmudic-era custom of kissing someone who had delivered an impressive Torah discourse. Indeed, this was practiced in the synagogue as well as in the Beit HaMikdash.11

There is a widespread custom, especially in Sephardic communities, to kiss the hand of ones parent and rabbi when greeting them. As this is an expression of honor and respect, rather than affection, it is permitted to do so in the synagogue.12 In fact, the practice of kissing the hand of an elder in the synagogue dates back to Talmudic times.13 It is interesting to note that although physical contact between men and women is generally forbidden, there were communities in the past where it was customary for women to kiss the hand of great rabbis when greeting them. This, too, was permitted on the grounds that doing so is an expression of honor and respect rather than affection.14 Kissing a great persons hand might even have the status of a ceremonial ritual, distancing it even further from any concern for inappropriate contact.15

There is an opinion that the prohibition against kissing ones children in the synagogue only applies when prayer services are taking place, and not at any other time.16 This novel approach is based on the observation that the prohibition against kissing ones children in the synagogue is found in the Shulchan Aruch under the Laws of Prayer and not under the Laws of the Synagogue. There is also a passage in the Zohar that seems to imply that the prohibition only applies when prayers are taking place. This position might better justify the custom of kissing someone, including ones own son, following an aliya. This is because the Torah reading service is not considered a prayer service.17 So, too, Rabbi Moshe Feinstein was known to kiss his grandchildren in the Beit Midrash of his yeshiva.

It seems that kissing in the synagogue is the only issue of concern. There is no mention in halachic literature of any prohibition on hugging someone in the synagogue and certainly not on shaking another persons hand and other common greetings. This might be because a kiss is the highest display of affection between two people. Therefore, we refrain from kissing in order to demonstrate that in the synagogue our highest level of affection is reserved only for G-d.

______________________________

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Kissing Children In The Synagogue - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

40% Of Americans Might Be Eligible For Dual Citizenship (And A Second Passport): Here’s What You Need To Know – Forbes

Posted By on February 28, 2022

For many years, U.S. citizenship and an Americanpassportwere the gold standard around the world. The pandemic and the recent election changed all that, resulting in a surge in demand for Americans seeking second passports and wanting to buy citizenshipespecially in Europe. Americans want freedom, and many are starting to realize how restrictive U.S. citizenship can be, says Rogelio Caceres, CEO and founder of Global RCG, a global mobility firm that helps people secure residency, employment and citizenship rights in other countries.

The desire to retire in places like Europe and more flexibility in banking were the main drivers for second passports before the pandemic. Since then, political instability and possible tax hikes have left a lot of wealthy Americans considering the idea of renouncing U.S. citizenship in the hope of never having to pay taxes. But this requires a lot of financial planning. Turns out theres an easier way. Americans can save a sizable amount on taxation by retaining their U.S. citizenship and getting a second passport that allows them to relocate abroad, says Caceres.

But if youve ever thought about getting a second passport, you know its not easyor cheap. Wealthy people worldwide are spending large sums of money to get their hands on EU passports, says Caceres. The tiny country of Malta, for example, offers citizenship to investors after a year and a half for the equivalent of a $1 million cash payment. These are paid by rich Chinese, Russians and Americans who can't claim EU citizenship by ancestry.

According to Global RCGwhich has done a demographic analysis on U.S. ancestry and a deep legal study of nationality laws of European Union countriesit might be easier than you think. Through our research, we estimated that roughly 40% of all Americans could be eligible for citizenship by ancestry in the EU, says Caceres. This is a big deal for Americans, as EU passports are the most valuable on the planet.

A view of Carvoeiro in Portugaljust one of the places where Americans might be able to claim ... [+] citizenship in Europe and get a second passport.

Caceres points out that Americans have a diverse ethnic background due to historic and massive periods of immigration. The country was built by immigrants from across the globe, of whom the vast majority originated from Europe until World War II, says Caceres. When you look at today's ethnic background of Americans, over 40% of them have European heritage. Interestingly, a sizable portion of that population can claim citizenship by descent from the country of their ancestors.

And heres some more good news: European citizenship by ancestry is not limited to European descent, says Caceres. More than 70 million Latin-Americans can also claim Spanish citizenship by descent due to their historical connection to the country.

Here, Caceres shares the lowdown on which EU citizenship you might be able to claim, based on your ancestry.

With a second passport, you can picture yourself living here: Pescola in Castelln, Spain.

Spain: 75 million Americans

This number might seem surprising, given the fact that relatively few Spaniards immigrated to the original 13 states, says Caceres. The number actually represents the number of Latino Americans, Filipinos and Sephardic Jews that may be eligible to claim Spanish citizenship by ancestry. According to Caceres, Spain offers a flexible route to citizenship for the nationals of countries that are former Spanish colonies. In the case of Sephardic Jews, the process is different, since Spain reinstated the descendants of those who fled the country due to the Inquisition.

The Spanish citizenship process can take various forms:

If your parents are Spanish-born citizens, you can claim citizenship instantly.

If your grandparents are Spanish-born citizens, citizenship can be gained after one year of residence.

Latino Americans, Brazilians, Filipinos and Sephardic Jews can claim citizenship after two years of residence.

Neschwanstein Castle in the Bavarian Alps of Germany.

Germany: 43 million Americans

German citizenship by ancestry is restricted and hard to establish, but ultimately possible. German is the most common European ancestry in America, says Caceres. But obtaining German citizenship by descent is typically limited to those with a German father or mother. Having a German grandparent will not qualify you for citizenship by ancestry. That said, that ancestor might have passed down his German citizenship all the way down to your parent. (Until 1979, only a male could pass down his German citizenship to his children.)

There is another path: Jewish-Americans whose ancestors left Germany during the decades before, during and after the Nazi area might be able to claim citizenship. This path was created due to the Nazi regimes revocation of the nationalities of all German Jews in 1938, says Caceres.

An aerial view of the scenic Cliffs of Moher in Ireland.

Ireland: 33 million Americans

Millions of Irish nationals left Ireland during the potato famine and crossed the Atlantic to settle in Boston and New York. Irish citizenship is one of the most accessible and easy to obtain, says Caceres. But given that many Americans trace back their first Irish-born ancestor to a hundred years ago, not everyone can claim it.

There are different ways to claim Irish citizenship and get a second passport:

You are Irish if you have an Irish parent born in Ireland.

You have an Irish parent who wasnt born in Ireland, or you have an Irish-born grandparent.

You have an Irish-born great-grandparent.You qualify for a simplified naturalization process after three years of residence.

Limone Sul Garda cityscape on the shore of Lake Garda.

Italy: 17 million Americans

Italian-Americans have had a tremendous impact on American culture. One may claim Italian ancestry even if their ancestor left Italy 150 years ago, says Caceres. If there is a blood connection, its possible to claim Italian citizenship. But for Italian citizenship by descent, Caceres says that two key events determine your eligibility: the date when your first Italian immigrant ancestor was naturalized as a U.S. citizen, and the date of birth of his children.

You see, in the past, Italians would lose their Italian citizenship if they obtained another one. Meaning if that ancestor became a U.S. citizen, he was no longer Italian, and therefore, his newborn children would not be Italian, says Caceres. In the opposite case, if the children were born in the USA before both Italian parents became naturalized U.S. citizens, the children would be born as both Italian and American citizens. After that event, the Italian blood connection cannot be lost.

Here are the ways to become an Italian citizen by ancestry:

Your Italian blood connection is not broken and comes from your father.

Your Italian blood connection is not broken and comes from your mother. You must petition a judge in Italy.

Your Italian blood connection was broken. You must reside for three years in Italy before applying for citizenship.

In Warsaw, Poland: the royal castle and old town at sunset

Poland: 10 million Americans

Polish citizenship by ancestry is one of the most accessible in Europe, says Caceres. If you have a Polish ancestor who lived in Poland or a territory belonging to Poland in the 20th century, you can claim Polish citizenship. According to Caceres, the important date to consider is 1920, as the documents required to lodge your application will vary if your ancestor left Poland before or after that date.

You are eligible for Polish citizenship if:

Your ancestor was born in Poland (or a territory that at the time was a part of Poland) and resided there after 1920.

Your ancestor left Poland before 1920 (but your ancestors' residential address can be found in the Polish, Prussian, Russian or Austro-Hungarian registers); and maintained their Polish citizenship until the day of your birth.

An Amsterdam sunset.

Netherlands: 4 million Americans

Dutch citizenship by ancestry is quite limited, but very doable, says Caceres. First, only after 1985 have Dutch women been able to pass down their citizenship to their children. Second, your ancestor lost his Dutch citizenship when he became a naturalized U.S. citizen. So, it means you most likely need to have a male line of Dutch ancestors, and your first ancestor had to have become a naturalized U.S. citizen before fathering the next in line.

Heres what you need to know about Dutch citizenship:

If your last name is of Dutch origin, you might want to look into citizenship.

Otherwise, you can always apply for Dutch citizenship after three years of residence, which can be done quite easily for Americans due to the Friendly Nation treaty between the two countries.

The northern lights in north Norway.

Norway: 4 million Americans

Its surprising that so many Americans have Norwegian ancestry, says Caceres. If you can claim Norwegian citizenship, you have good reason to pursue it, as the countrys coffers are not full of IOUs. On the contrary, Norways wealth funds make it pretty much the healthiest country in the world in fiscal terms.

But according to Caceres, getting Norwegian citizenship by ancestry is very unlikely. Here are some of the things you need to know:

You need to make sure your ancestors were married when they gave birth.

Your ancestor lost his Norwegian citizenship when he became a naturalized U.S. citizen, so any child born after that date is not Norwegian by birth.

A child born abroad to a Norwegian parent had to spend at least two years in Norway and request to remain Norwegian before turning 22.

Given that last fact, its doubtful that your first U.S.-born ancestors retained their Norwegian citizenship. That said, if they are still alive, they could petition the Norwegian government to have it reinstated.

Budapest cityscape.

Hungary: 4 million Americans

Hungary is another country with very accessible citizenship by ancestry. Youre more likely to be eligible if that claim comes from a male line; before 1957, Hungarian women married to foreigners lost their Hungarian citizenship, says Caceres. Also, if your ancestor left the country before 1929, his foreign-born children were not Hungarian citizens.

Heres what you need to know:

Even if youre not eligible, you can still apply for the simplified naturalization process if you can communicate in Hungarian.

Sunset in the village of Oia, Santorini

Greece: 1.5 million Americans

Greece provides citizenship by descent to pretty much anyone with Greek ancestry, says Caceres. That said, if your parents were not Greek, youll need to apply for simplified naturalization.

Heres what you need to know:

There is no residency requirement, but the bureaucratic process takes two to three years.

The beautiful fishing village of Camara de Lobos on the portugese Island of Madeira.

Portugal has become very popular with Americans looking to relocate to Europe, says Caceres. The extent of Portugal citizenship by ancestry is limited to grandparents. Even then, youll need to prove a certain connection to the community in the form of language skills or residency in Portugal.

The Vitava River and Charles Bridge in Prague.

Since 2019, Czech citizenship by descent has become much more accessible. Today, most Americans with Czech ancestors should be able to claim Czech citizenship, even if their ancestor lost their citizenship when they became naturalized U.S. citizens, says Caceres.

Heres what you need to know:

If your ancestor was born in what is now Slovakia, they can instead apply for Slovak citizenship by descent. The Slovak government is ratifying the law, which should be proclaimed in 2022.

Getting a European passport might be easier than you thinkbut it takes work.

The complexity of the case depends on the country and how far back you need to go in your ancestry tree. Here are the difficulties, according to Caceres:

Mapping your ancestry. You heard from your parents that you have X and Y ancestry? If so, you need names and dates, says Caceres.

Figuring out your eligibility and navigating the citizenship law. Do I qualify for citizenship by birth, by option or by simplified procedure, says Caceres.

Retrieving the documents. :You are going to be asked to produce a load of documentsbirth certificates, marriage certificates, death certificates, divorce certificates, U.S. naturalization documentssometime for every generation, says Caceres. It might not be that complicated if its for yourself, but for an ancestor who lived a century ago in a place youre unsure of, it can be next to impossible without professional help.

Youll need to legalize documents. Apostille, notarize? What are those? Well, every official document, such as a birth certificate, must be authenticated before being handed to the authorities. Otherwise, they might be inadmissible. Some might even need to be translated, says Caceres.

Filling in the forms. When you apply for any government services, there will be forms to fill out. It can be hard to understand them and to fill them out correctly, and it becomes trickier when theyre in a foreign language, says Caceres. Mistakes can lead to a lot of back and forth and prolong the process to years.

Closed consulates. Due to Covid, some consulates have closed or reduced their services. The process might take additional years because of that. There might be legal ways around this, says Caceres.

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40% Of Americans Might Be Eligible For Dual Citizenship (And A Second Passport): Here's What You Need To Know - Forbes

The crisis in Ukraine exposes the hypocrisy of Israel and its Zionist allies – Middle East Monitor

Posted By on February 26, 2022

In Scotland, when someone is on shaky ground or skating on thin ice they are said to be hanging by a "shoogly peg". That is exactly where Israel has found itself over the crisis in Ukraine as the hypocrisy of Tel Aviv and its Zionist allies is exposed for the whole world to see.

According to them all the US, the UK, the EU and Israel itself Ukraine's territorial integrity and sovereignty are sacrosanct. Why, though, do each and every one of them not apply the same principle to Palestine and the Palestinians? Aren't the people of that occupied land not entitled to their own territorial integrity and sovereignty without the reality of daily armed incursions by the aggressively-colonial state of Israel, a country which has never declared where its borders lie because its founding Zionist ideology demands its constant expansion into neighbouring counties, not just the land of Palestine?

Until the UN and NATO roll out a level playing field when it comes to human rights, sovereignty and respect for borders, we can expect to witness more invasions and land grabs as powerful states continue to act with impunity.

The old adage that truth is the first casualty of war is playing out before our eyes. It is hard to know what is really happening in Ukraine, with Russia Today taking an obvious pro-Moscow position, while the BBC has gone "full tonto" to use the unfortunate, testosterone-filled, macho language of Britain's Defence Minister Ben Wallace. Trustworthy sources of news are thin on the ground.

Russian President Vladimir Putin insists that his army is lending support to the breakaway republics of Donbass and Lugansk, but he would say that wouldn't he? Meanwhile, his US counterpart, Joe Biden, is accusing the Russian leader of a full-scale invasion, but he would say that, wouldn't he? With reckless calls on all sides inciting other powers to take military action, where is this heading?

READ: The crisis in Ukraine and its implications for the Arab countries

The people of Taiwan must be very worried, in case China follows Russia's example and invades the island, which Beijing believes is legitimate Chinese territory. On Thursday, fighter jets were scrambled because Chinese aircraft were in Taiwanese airspace.

The Palestinians have every right to ask why Western leaders, led by Biden, are imposing crippling sanctions on Moscow and threatening more retaliatory action if it continues with its invasion of Ukraine, but don't take similar action against Israeli colonialism. These are the same leaders, remember, who turn a blind eye to Israel's ongoing theft of Palestinian land, and its military offensives against the Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip. Israel stands accused of implementing the crime of apartheid in occupied Palestine by B'Tselem, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International; committing war crimes in Gaza; and using white phosphorous and other prohibited weapons in the heavily-populated civilian areas of the Strip. Moreover, the Zionist state has still to be held to account for bombing the Associated Press media centre in Gaza.

Without a hint of irony, though, the shameless government in Tel Aviv announced this week that, "Israel supports Ukraine's territorial integrity and sovereignty." The hypocrisy is breathtaking.

Israel's involvement in Ukraine goes beyond mere rhetoric. It has never been too fussy about who it sells weapons to, but this could come back to haunt the Zionist state; the neo-Nazi Azov battalion, which has been on the front line in Ukraine's war with pro-Russia separatists, is armed to the teeth with Israeli weapons. The battalion is one of many volunteer brigades to fight alongside the Ukrainian army in the east of the country, and has a reputation for brutality.

There are private concerns in the corridors of power that if the fighting against the separatists comes to an end, then the next big threat to the Ukrainian government and the state itself will be the far-right extremists in the Azov battalion. Their openly neo-Nazi leanings are there for everyone to see. Many of the Azov fighters are anti-Semitic, Holocaust-deniers and admirers of Adolf Hitler, but we already know that Israel is more tolerant of the odious views of those who buy its weapons than, say, promoters of peace and anti-war supporters like the former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn in Britain.

The current Labour Leader Sir Keir Starmer is leading a witch hunt against party members who are pro-Palestine and anti-Israel, but has no qualms about backing Ukraine, neo-Nazi warts and all, just like his warmongering rival, Prime Minister Boris Johnson. They have both adopted pro-Ukraine postures this week, and yet have not only kept quiet about apartheid Israel's ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians, but also declared their active support for the Zionist state.

READ: Putin's aggression would be impossible without the US creating a world safe for autocracy

When we look at the West's complicity over the humanitarian disasters in Yemen, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya and Palestine, it's no surprise that Starmer and Johnson have toed the Washington line like the dutiful lapdogs that they are. All of the aforementioned Muslim countries are victims of NATO aggression directly or indirectly; and all are victims of US imperialism.

This isn't about taking sides or picking Putin over Biden; I am no fan of either. It's about peace, which, from where I'm standing, looks to be a million miles away from both the White House and the Kremlin.

Clearly, the US has not lost its appetite for war, despite its humiliating defeat at the hands of the Taliban in Afghanistan last year. Indeed, the American economy thrives on conflicts around the world. The US has around 750 military bases in 80 countries, and Biden is happy to surround Russia with NATO bases and NATO-aligned countries. Putin has grown increasingly agitated about this, and has made his feelings known. Back in December, the Russian leader initiated talks with America to diffuse the situation. The response from Washington was to kick sand in Putin's face, the least diplomatic course of action when dealing with a leader whose ego is the size of Red Square. But maybe Biden planned it this way.

In the meantime, Palestinians can only look on in despair and wonder what it will take for the West to stop, pause and consider their territorial rights and sovereignty with the same compassion shown to the people of Ukraine. If, as former Prime Minister Theresa May said in Westminster the other day, it is important to stand up to Russia in "defence of democracy", then surely that noble principle should be applied everywhere, Israeli-occupied Palestine included. It is hypocritical to do otherwise.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

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The crisis in Ukraine exposes the hypocrisy of Israel and its Zionist allies - Middle East Monitor

Last Chance: Lowest Prices of the Year Ends at Midnight! – VINnews

Posted By on February 26, 2022

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Jewish history is repeating itself in Ukraine. This time, we must fight Putin back – Forward

Posted By on February 26, 2022

In 1911, my grandpa Jake was born in the small Hungarian village of Torun in the Carpathian Mountains. While he was still a child, the village became a part of Czechoslovakia, and after World War II, it fell within the borders of Ukraine.

My grandpa was just a little boy when World War I broke out. His father was drafted into the Austro-Hungarian army. My grandpa and his mom fled to her parents home in Synevyr. Grandpa Jake later told my aunt that he remembered seeing Russian soldiers lead men out of Synevyr with ropes around their necks, never to be heard from again.

Thankfully for me, my grandpa and other family members were able to immigrate to the United States in 1920. In 1939, my grandfathers brother Leon traveled back to Europe to visit family that had been left behind.

Uncle Leon wrote that when he got off the bus in Torun, he immediately recognized that everyone was my mishpacha because this one was wearing one of my old sweaters and that one was wearing my old trousers, and another had one of my hats.

During his visit, Hitler invaded Czechoslovakia, and my Uncle Leon almost fell into the hands of the Nazis. His family was able to artfully redirect a local official, and thanks to Uncle Leons own quick thinking during an ensuing encounter with a German soldier, he was able to leave Czechoslovakia.

His grandfather my great-great grandfather wasnt so lucky. He and dozens and dozens of my distant cousins were unable to leave Europe. Most all of them were murdered during the Shoah.

What we are witnessing now, we have seen before.

In 1938, Hitler began his occupation of Czechoslovakia by first annexing the Sudetenland, claiming it as ancestral German territory. Russian president Vladimir Putin similarly set the stage for his invasion of Ukraine by backing the territorial claims of separatists in the countrys southeastern regions.

Because of yesterdays events, the lives of more than 40 million Ukrainians including 50,000 Jews, among them President Volodymyr Zelenskyy are endangered.

In the days to come, we will learn more about this unfolding situation. As Jews, we have a special obligation to support members of our mishpacha, our own family. The Talmud teaches that kol Yisrael arevim zeh bazeh all Jews are responsible for one another. (Shevuot 39a).

We have seen this before and we know, sadly, that such brazen acts of aggression do not end well.

Will we raise our voices? Will we come to their aid? Or will we watch quietly as innocents are led away with ropes around their necks?

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

Nazis killed my family in Ukraine. Now, we fight Putin

Excerpt from:

Jewish history is repeating itself in Ukraine. This time, we must fight Putin back - Forward


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