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American Jewish University to Sell Familian Campus in Bel Air and Invest in Expanded Digital and In-Person Offerings – Jewish Journal

Posted By on February 11, 2022

American Jewish University (AJU) announced today that it will be placing its Sunny & Isadore Familian Campus in the Bel Air neighborhood of Los Angeles for sale. The University referred to the plan as a strategic investment in the future of AJU that will generate significant endowment funds for a range of academic offerings and community programs that are tailored to our worldand the Jewish communitys needstoday and tomorrow.

The Brandeis Bardin Campus in Simi Valley, home of the Brandeis Collegiate Institute and Camp Alonim, will remain under American Jewish University ownership and is not part of the sale.

According to the University, the landmark sale will allow them to invest resources into their evolving mission to elevate the Jewish journeys of individuals, organizations, and the Jewish community and will provide them the flexibility to have a presence where they determine is best moving forward.

In a statement, AJU President Dr. Jeffrey Herbst said, Over the last eight decades, American Jewish University has evolved to meet the needs of the Jewish community. In that tradition, the Board of Directors has made the bold, strategic decision to initiate the sale of our Bel Air campus, allowing us to better direct our resources to fulfilling our mission today and in the future.

We look forward to continuing our work to advance the Jewish journeys of individuals and organizations and elevate Jewish life across North America through both robust online and in-person offerings. AJU President Dr. Jeffrey Herbst

Founded in 1947 as the University of Judaism (UJ), the school merged with the Brandeis-Bardin Institute in 2007 to become American Jewish University and has played a key role in the Los Angeles Jewish community for decades. The University acquired the 35-acre Bel Air property that overlooks the Santa Monica Mountains in 1977. The Familian Campus boasts a long list of lectures and events, performances and classes that it has hosted over the years.

COVID has changed the landscape of Jewish organizational life and encouraged organizations to reinvent themselves. In the last few years, AJU has built a robust digital presence to supplement its in-person events, which the University said will continue.

AJUs online events platform, Maven, has garnered a slate of notable guests from the UAEs Assistant Minister for Culture and Public Diplomacy Omar Saif Ghobash to Los Angeles County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl; and from New York Times bestselling author Anita Diamant and Academy Award winning producer Melissa Berton to Ozarks Julia Garner and Chris Mundy.

We look forward to continuing our work to advance the Jewish journeys of individuals and organizations and elevate Jewish life across North America through both robust online and in-person offerings, said Herbst.

The Familian Campus is located at 15600 Mulholland Drive Los Angeles, CA 90077. The listing will be represented by Eastdil Secured.

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American Jewish University to Sell Familian Campus in Bel Air and Invest in Expanded Digital and In-Person Offerings - Jewish Journal

JewBelong’s edgy #EndJewHate billboards return to Bay Area J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on February 11, 2022

The New Jerseybased nonprofit JewBelong, which seeks to engage disconnected Jews and to welcome Jews by choice while ringing the alarm on antisemitism, has purchased ad space for four new eye-grabbing billboards in the Bay Area.

The hot pink digital billboards, scheduled to appear early next week, will call out rising antisemitism in an effort to capture the attention of some of the hundreds of thousands of drivers who traverse the Bay Bridge each day or who travel through San Franciscos SoMa neighborhood. The messages use stark, in-your-face, language thats more than a little bit barbed.

Were just 75 years since the gas chambers. So no, a billboard calling out Jew hate isnt an overreaction, three of the billboards will read. Does your church need armed guards? Cause our synagogue does, the fourth says.

The campaign, which will run through March 13, follows a similar effort in San Francisco last summer that saw 35 digital billboards placed downtown. The new ads will be located at the Bay Bridge approach on Second Street, 10th and Harrison streets and Brannan and Sixth streets in San Francisco, and U.S. 101 near University Avenue in Palo Alto, JewBelong announced.

Marketing professionals Archie Gottesman and Stacy Stuart who first worked on branding for the New Yorkbased storage company Manhattan Mini Storage started JewBelong in 2017 with an eye toward using social media and digital marketing to nudge disengaged Jews (whom they call DJs) and others who arent Jewish but are part of a Jewish community to feel more connected to Judaism.

Using colorful advertisements and very approachable, often cheeky language, JewBelong sets out to lower the barrier to entry into Jewish life and make less knowledgeable Jews feel at ease. Sometimes, Judaism can be more complicated than your last girlfriend, the nonprofit states on its website.

Many of the ads downplay Jewish law, portrayed as stodgy (actually, a lot of us eat cheeseburgers), or push against stereotypes about who should feel welcome in synagogues (Blonde since birth. Jewish since marriage.) Others defend Israel from attacks: Today is international stop talking crap about Israel day, one ad says, written above a group of people enjoying drinks at an Israeli cafe.

The organization has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on the billboards as part of its #EndJewHate campaign.

JewBelong does not list its donors, though tax filings show one of its major benefactors is the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation. The philanthropy, based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, donated $55,000 or about 18 percent of JewBelongs revenue in 2019.

Similar billboards have popped up in major cities around the country, including in Philadelphia, Boston, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Miami, and New York, where they were positioned over Times Square. More are planned for Toronto and Wilmington, Delaware, the organization said.

Antisemitism has become tolerated and normalized in far too many circles across North America, co-founder Gottesman said in a statement announcing the San Francisco billboards. The type of hate leveled against Jews followed by the deafening silence from supposedly good people should be abhorrent to anyone who stands for justice.

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JewBelong's edgy #EndJewHate billboards return to Bay Area J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Mushroom rabbi grows ceremonial psilocybin for Denver congregation but is that legal? – The Mercury News

Posted By on February 11, 2022

On a picturesque autumn evening in early November, the sunset belied a briskness to the Denver breeze. But inside a nondescript brick building downtown, anticipation was heating up the air.

A group of 25 people sat in a circle on the floor, each with a ramen spoon full of a brownish paste. Among them was Rabbi Ben Gorelick, a fast-talking 42-year-old with a multi-colored mohawk. On that night, Gorelicks tempo was a couple beats slower than usual as he calmly instructed those in the room to consume what was on the spoon a customized mixture of psychedelic mushroom extract and find a spot to lay on the floor as they prepared to drop in during a guided breathing exercise.

The people in the room were part of a spiritual group called The Sacred Tribe, which Gorelick founded in 2018 and which since has grown to more than 270 members. About once a month, Gorelick hosts a weekend-long retreat that creates space for people to explore the relationship to self, community and God using psilocybin mushrooms that his team grows in Denver.

This is not what a normal conservative or reform synagogue looks like, said Gorelick, adding that his approach falls in line with Kabbalah, or Jewish mysticism. The goal is not to blast people to the moon. Its to give people just enough of a threshold dose that they have that openness to connecting.

Scenes like this have become more commonplace in the American underground, as shrooms and other psychedelics have experienced increased exposure and a recent renaissance in the research of their potential medical benefits. Denver, which became the first city to decriminalize personal possession and consumption of psilocybin in 2019, has been a leader in this movement and helped inspire a wave of similar initiatives from Oakland, California,to Washington, D.C.

Denvers leaders are considering further liberalization and Colorado voters could even be asked this fall to legalize mushrooms statewide. But Gorelicks Sacred Tribe, which pushes the boundaries of whats legal as it explores the intersection of Judaism and psychedelics, is spotlighting the gap between city, state and federal law on psychedelics and illustrates a key missing piece of the 2019 vote to decriminalize.

Were not trying to get the dealership pipeline going here, Denver City Councilman Chris Hinds said. But if it is decriminalized to possess it, well, how do you get it?

On Jan. 10, police raided The Sacred Tribes cultivation facility in north Denver, where the group grew more than 35 strains of mushrooms for use at its events. Police arrested one employee and seized mushrooms and documents. This week, Denver police also arrested Gorelick on suspicion of possession with intent to manufacture or distribute a controlled substance, a first-degree felony, according to his arrest warrant affidavit.

Gorelick isnt worried about legal consequences, saying he never sold or distributed mushrooms beyond the scope of The Sacred Tribes retreats, and that, furthermore, he believes the group is protected by a religious exemption.

I dont sell elsewhere, I dont wholesale elsewhere. I have really, really rigid tracking systems for everything from spore to extract, he said.

Under the parameters of decriminalization, it remains a crime to buy or sell psilocybin, and to grow it beyond a personal amount.Still, mushroom-related arrests are rare these days, according to a recent city report that found just five arrests for psilocybin-only since Denver made enforcement of laws against possession polices lowest priority. (Psilocybin was listed in other arrests that included additional drugs, the report said.)

Simultaneously, activists have filed several ballot initiatives to legalize entheogenic plants such as psychedelic mushrooms for use in therapeutic settings statewide, meaning Colorado voters could also be asked to weigh in on the subject as soon as November.

As psilocybin and other psychedelics have achieved greater cultural acceptance, their use has proliferated in some medical circles to treat ailments such as depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. The movement is rippling through religious and spiritual circles, too, as individuals seek deeper connections to their communities and a higher power.

A lack of oversight, however, has led to bad actors in the space, including doctors who have been accused of sexual misconduct while treating individuals under the influence. Because much of this work is done underground, nefarious behavior often goes undocumented or unreported, said Joey Gallagher, the Denver-based executive director of the nonprofit Psychedelic Club, which aims to create community around and educate the public about psychedelics. Advocates said theyre concerned instances of emotional and sexual abuse of people existing in a vulnerable psychedelic state could overshadow the benefits of psychedelics such as psilocybin.

Its actually been a worrying thing, Gallagher said. The psychedelic community 100% needs to step up more on calling out inappropriate behavior.

Rabbi Gorelick, who was ordained by the Jewish Spiritual Leaders Institute in 2019, refers to The Sacred Tribe as a synagogue, but members do not need to be Jewish to join. In fact, many who attended the November event claimed no religious affiliation.

Amy Bliss was raised Catholic but rejected organized religion as a young adult. John and Lena Swedell grew up as Jehovahs Witnesses but left the church many years ago. What these folks and others who came to Denver for the weekend share in common are a curiosity about psychedelics, a desire to learn more about themselves and a willingness to connect with like-minded individuals.

The level of acceptance is radical acceptance, Bliss said. Bring who you are. And all of your faults and your, you know, impurities and ugliness and all of it. Bring it all. Its all welcome.

Since its inception, The Sacred Tribe has been growing primarily by word of mouth and through other events, such as breathing workshops, that are open to guests because they do not involve mushrooms. The group is funded through donations, Gorelick said, which go toward paying his staff and buying food for events.

To be able to join a retreat, prospective members must fill out an application, complete a medical questionnaire and some undergo an interview to ensure their goals align with the community, said Gorelick, who also co-owns a lifestyle brand called So Epic that promotes raves and electronic music concerts.

I deny roughly 15% of applications into the community typically because people are looking for access to mushrooms as opposed to an exploration of connection, he said, adding that psychedelics are just one part of The Sacred Tribe experience.

The retreat in November started with a substance-free dinner and interactive workshop on Friday night. Those taking mushrooms on Saturday returned to find the previous nights tables replaced with brightly colored cushions covering the floor and the lighting dimmed. A sculpture covered with mosaicked pieces of colored mirror spun under a spotlight, sending fractured light dancing across the wall.

After circling up on the floor for introductions and intention-setting, Gorelick invited everyone to change into comfy clothes and approach him individually to receive sacrament. Once everyone had been served, The Sacred Tribe members synchronously consumed their spoon of extract and laid down on the floor for a guided breathing exercise. Gorelick put on a playlist curated by participants earlier in the evening and two songs in, the vibe in the room started to shift.

People began writhing between deep breaths. Moans of agony and ecstasy filled the room. Things escalated with the intensity of the music, leading to screaming and sobbing. One person did cartwheels across the room, as others gravitated towards the edges of the group and looked on with wide eyes.

Just when the scene appeared to be bordering on madness, the tempo of the music slowed down, casting a calmness throughout the space. Movements became softer and more fluid. Breathing became more natural.

After breathwork, as these sessions are called, the remainder of the night was free for members exploration whether it be in a quiet space downstairs, in a room with music and visuals projected on the ceiling, or outside by the fire pit. Everyone who consumed mushroomswas required to stay the night and given the option of a second dose a few hours later. Sober members were on hand to facilitate should someone experience uncomfortable or negative emotions.

On Sunday morning, everyone was back seated on the floor for a discussion about their experiences and the takeaways they could apply to daily life.

Gallagher at the Psychedelic Club estimates the number of spiritual groups experimenting with psychedelics in this way is immense, but Gorelick is also tapping into a wider movement in the Jewish community.

Madison Margolin, co-founder and editor of psychedelics-focused publication DoubleBlind, helped create the Jewish Psychedelic Summit as a platform to talk about the intersection of religion and psychedelics. The inaugural two-day symposium, which was held virtually last May, brought together dozens of panelists from Jewish backgrounds and welcomed more than 1,100 attendees.

Discussions covered topics such as Jewish trauma and the potential of psychedelic healing, the history of psychedelics in ancient Jewish practice, and why ending the war on drugs is a Jewish imperative.

Though still niche, this approach is becoming more widespread and continually attracting folks from a variety of Jewish sects, Margolin said, in part because institutional religion as we know it, from a reform or secular perspective, is a dying creature.

For many people, their psychedelic experiences are bringing them back to a different relationship with Judaism, she said. These experiences also offer the opportunity to reflect and implement the soulful, mental and somatic effects of a trip to ones life, a practice known as integration.

I really think psychedelics are the future of Judaism in a way that theres this common ground among people from all sorts of Jewish backgrounds and psychedelic consciousness becomes a meeting place for these people, Margolin said. Judaism as a religion can be a container for psychedelic states and also offers set and setting with which to have a psychedelic experience.

Set and setting are two words that come up frequently in discussions about spirituality and psychedelic use. According to Matt Lowe, research director at Denver nonprofit Unlimited Sciences, set refers to the mindset a person has when they ingest psychedelics and setting refers to the environment in which they do it two things that differentiate intention-driven use from recreational.

In 2020, Unlimited Sciences began collaborating with John Hopkins Universitys Center for Psychedelic & Consciousness Research to conduct an observational study of psilocybin users to learn more about the context in which people consume the substance. The study has so far enrolled 6,800 people, who either used psilocybin in the six months prior to self-reporting survey data or planned to use it in the six months following their enrollment, and more than 900 have completed an initial survey, said Albert Garcia-Romeu, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral science.

Among respondents, the largest share (40%) reportedself-exploration as the primary reason for doing so, followed by those seeking to use psilocybin for their mental health (30%) and for therapy (10%).

Were definitely tapping into a number of people who are not only using it for guiding sessions or self-exploration for topics they find difficult, or to overcome grief, or to understand unity, Lowe said. Were seeing people use it also to guide their religious experiences, or mystical experiences or spirituality.

Theres evidence of indigenous cultures in Mesoamerica using hallucinogenic cactus, plants and fungi in healing rituals and religious ceremonies. And prior to the 1970s, researchers had been adamantly studying substances such as LSD and psilocybin in mystical and medical contexts, Lowe said. After President Richard Nixon signed the Controlled Substances Act in 1971, however, research and clinical trials came to a grinding halt.

Much like cannabis, its taken decades to reverse the stigma around psychedelics and investigate their benefits. Recent studies have yielded promising results in using psilocybin to treat depression, PTSD, anxiety among the terminally ill and even nicotine addiction. Modern research has also explored psychedelics as catalysts to religious experiences, Lowe said.

In Denver, Gorelick is preparing to administer a study in partnership with Canadian company Divergence Neurothat aims to collect biometric data about how psychedelic mushrooms affect the human body and brain, leveraging fungi grown by The Sacred Tribe.

Using a proprietary method, Gorelicks team extracts and isolates psilocybin and 14 other alkaloids that can be administered to members based on their intentions for a journey whether it be to make an internal connection, open their heart space or tackle challenges head-on, he said. Some like aeruginascin are linked to states of euphoria, Gorelick said, while others like baeocystin offer feelings of connectedness.

These assessments are, so far, based on anecdotal evidence from a group of experienced psychonauts who Gorelick has been surveying. Once a month, he provides participants with 1.5 grams and asks them to rate the effects on factors such as creativity, clarity, mind, body, spirit, visuals and more.

Most of the time, I get all the results back and theres at least enough correlation between the 29 people that shows these particular strains lend themselves to more heart connection, more somatic experience, or a more visual experience, or whatever, Gorelick said.

The upcoming study aims to pair data to that anecdotal evidence by monitoring brain wave patterns, heart rate variability, respiration, gut flora response and other factors, Gorelick said. Its expected to start later this year.

What makes his study unique is that the compounds are extracted from the fungi itself. Most medical research currently relies on synthetic psilocybin for consistent dosing, he said.

We are, as far as I know, the only people in the world who have come up with a particular process that allows us to have a consistent dosing, but based on full mushroom extract. So I can say, not only is it 20 milligrams of psilocybin, its also 3 milligrams of psilocin, 12 milligrams of baeocystin, etc., Gorelick said. So I can give that consistently every time, too.

On the morning of Jan. 10, The Sacred Tribes warehouse underwent a routine fire inspection to secure operating permits. At 4:45 p.m. that afternoon, Denver police executed a search warrant regarding a complaint from the fire department about an active mushroom and psilocybin lab, according to the probable cause affidavit.

Officers discovered grow tents inside, scales and multiple small white freezers with suspected mushroom bags sealed and stacked filling them to the top, the affidavit stated. Police confiscated suspected mushrooms, both frozen and growing, as well as paperwork, notebooks and a digital scale, according to Gorelicks arrest affidavit.

Police arrested a chemist who was contracted to design and work in the mushroom extraction lab, according to Gorelick. The Denver District Attorneys Office charged the individual with possession with intent to manufacture or distribute a controlled substance, a first-degree felony.

On Feb. 8, police arrested Gorelick after he turned himself in at the Denver Police Department, though he had yet to be formally charged as of Thursday. According to his arrest affidavit, police linked Gorelick to the raided warehouse after finding mail and two cars registered to him at the grow facility during their investigation. Gorelicks name also was on the fire permit application, the affidavit stated.

The relationship between religion and drug use has been legally contentious for decades and became even more nuanced when Congress adopted the Religious Freedom and Restoration Act, or RFRA, in 1993.

The act was passed in response to a Supreme Court ruling in Employment Division, Department of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith, a case involving two Native American men who were fired from their jobs and subsequently denied unemployment benefits for using peyote, even though it was part of their religious practice. The court decided the states law prohibiting peyote use was a law of general applicability, meaning it applied to everyone equally and would not be overturned because it interfered with religious practice in just a few instances.

According to Griffen Thorne, an attorney with the Harris Bricken law firm in Los Angeles, the ruling spawned widespread backlash and even conservative religious groups were critical of implications under the First Amendment. That led Congress to pass RFRA as a test that judges use to evaluate whether a law or government action infringes on religious liberties protected by the First Amendment.

RFRA has been applied in various contexts over the years, Thorne said, including in a 2006 case involving ayahuasca that set precedent for groups to be able to import and use controlled substances in a religious context. That essentially left the door open for other groups as well, Thorne said.

Organizations can also apply for a religious exemption with the Drug Enforcement Administration, but due to stipulations in the agencys guidelines the chances of that happening are like winning the Super Bowl, Thorne said.

A lot of people probably have legitimate religious practices that would be protected by the First Amendment, but you have a federal agency thats extremely over-aggressive in how it regulates things and laws that actually prohibit things, Thorne said, so unless those people go to court and win, theyre probably still violating the law.

Despite this ambiguity, federal law is explicit in prohibiting the cultivation of illegal substances, including psychedelic mushrooms, Thorne said. The only protections an organization might have would be at the state or local level.

A panel created to evaluate the effects of psilocybin decriminalization in Denver suggested loosening local laws further after concluding it has not since presented any significant public health or safety risk in the city. The panel recommended, among other things, that the City Council make both the communal use and the gifting of psilocybin among the lowest law enforcement priority.

Additionally, activists have filed several ballot initiatives to legalize entheogenic plants and fungi, including psilocybin, mescaline and dimethyltryptamine, or DMT, statewide, and create a regulated system for their use in therapeutic settings.Should they collect enough signatures, voters could see the measures on the November ballot.

Until then, tension between being able to legally use psilocybin and the illegality of buying or selling it creates more grey area. Councilman Hinds found the report on decriminalizings effects promising, especially given how many law enforcement representatives, including Denver District Attorney Beth McCann, contributed to the recommendations. When Mile High City voters adopted decriminalization via Initiative 301, the measure notably did not address how locals could or should obtain psilocybin. Hinds sees gifting as a step toward resolving this Catch-22.

The committee met for more than a year and I dont know if it was fully on board with exactly how people obtain psilocybin, he said. But if the City Council agrees with the report, then at least gifting personal amounts could become decriminalized here in the near future.

But growing 35 strains appears beyond the definition of personal use, in my opinion, he added.

Still, clarity has been hard to come by even with substances that are legal, as Steve Berke, co-founder of the International Church of Cannabis in Denver, found out in 2017 when police charged him with public consumption of marijuana and a violation of the Colorado Clean Indoor Air Act.

The Church of Cannabis does not need a license for on-premise consumption because of its status as a religious nonprofit, Berke said, which enables its congregants, known as Elevationists, to smoke marijuana during private, members-only services. Despite the fact cannabis was legalized statewide several years prior to the churchs grand opening on April 20, 2017, police still came knocking. Berke went to court and was ultimately fined $50 for the two misdemeanors. (A Denver judge found another co-founder, Lee Molloy, not guilty on the same charges.)

The Church of Cannabis doesnt grow its namesake plant or sell paraphernalia, so as not to be misconstrued as a marijuana business, Berke said. (Elevationists bring their own to consume.) Still, he cautioned that any religious organization using substances needs to ensure theyre in compliance with local, state and federal law.

Religion doesnt allow you to murder people on the street or sacrifice humans, so there are still boundaries you cannot cross, Berke said. If youre doing anything with a Schedule 1 narcotic you need to be worried about the federal government. But in 2017, we knew the feds werent going after cannabis.

While The Sacred Tribes mushroom growing operation remains on hold, the group is reconvening. Gorelick postponed retreats scheduled for January following the raid but is resuming them in February sans sacrament. Still, Gorelick expects cultivation will begin again soon.

The rabbi isnt worried about legal consequences even after being detained saying the groups practices are protected by an inherent religious exemption. (The Sacred Tribe has not received a formal exemption from the DEA.) None of the mushrooms The Sacred Tribe grew were ever sold or used outside the context of its events, he said.

The Sacred Tribe stands by our religious exemption and we believe in our religious exemption, Gorelick said. I am absolutely fully confident that at the conclusion of vetting of our processes that life will go back to normal.

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Mushroom rabbi grows ceremonial psilocybin for Denver congregation but is that legal? - The Mercury News

‘Lockdown and war in the Middle East!’ Expert pinpoints reasons for antisemitism rise – Express

Posted By on February 11, 2022

The CEO of the Community Security Trust admitted that the impact of lockdown was a major reason for the shocking instigation of antisemitism in the UK along with the war in the Middle East between Israel and Palestina. In the first six months of 2021 anti-semitism hit an all-time UK high and Mark Gardner warned that there is "very much something going on". The Community Security Trust (CST), which Mr Gardner works for, recorded a staggering 2,555 hate incidents which included people shouting abuse at Jews from their cars along with 173 physical assaults.

Speaking about Nick Ferrari on LBC, he admitted that there is an element of truth to the idea that jew-hatred was exacerbated during lockdown.

He said: "I think there is an impact of the lockdown.

"Now we had two things coming together back in May and June which was a lifting of lockdown restrictions and also war in the Middle East.

"And basically, when those two things came together we saw by far the worst single month of anti-semitism that weve ever had reported to CST. So there is very much something going on.

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In 2021 crimes against Jews increased by "a third" on its 1,685 cases from 2020, making it the highest annual number of anti-judaism incidents ever recorded by the CST.

But the news comes as no surprise to the Jewish community and Mr Gardner said: "It was not a good year last year for British Jews and I think most Jewish people will be shocked but not surprised.

"So its the first time that weve had over two thousand cases of anti-Jewish race hatred reported by members of the public and police forces to CST.

"Its a third up on the year before and its a quarter more than anything that we have seen in any previous worst year, so it was not good.

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London is the UK's most densely populated Jewish city with over 200,000 Hebrews living in the capital, followed by Greater Manchester, Leeds, Greater Glasgow, Brighton and Hove and to a lesser extend Liverpool, Birmingham and Bournemouth.

Many people of Jewish background are being targeted in the streets, at universities, in schools and online and Secretary Priti Patel vowed she is doing her utmost so that culprits will be prosecuted if found guilty of anti-semitic abuse.

She said:Our Jewish community has been subject to appalling hatred.

"In addition to supporting the work of CST, I continue to support the police to ensure they have the resources to tackle these despicable incidents so that perpetrators can then be punished with the full force of the law.

Originally posted here:

'Lockdown and war in the Middle East!' Expert pinpoints reasons for antisemitism rise - Express

A jeweler’s winding path back to Judaism, and the family business J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on February 11, 2022

Though he grew up in an Orthodox home, after decades of living a secular life, Andrew Litwin revisited Judaism and dove into it. The 63-year-old San Rafael resident began studying virtually with a rabbi about 10 years ago and grew especially interested in Jewish teachings and the infinite meanings of Hebrew letters, he said.

He also began to rethink his professional life as a physician. A multitude of things started to leave me thinking about life from a 10,000-foot view about the nature of matter and energy and God and what religion teaches us, he said.

As Litwin studied, he started to draw out some of these concepts and play around with some of the Hebrew letters on the computer. He focused on the first and last letters of the Torah, bet and lamed, which spell lev, or heart.

That led Litwin toward something else hed grown up with but not pursued: making jewelry.

Litwin comes from a long line of jewelers, starting with his great-grandfather in the late-1800s. Akim Litwin made jewelry for the Russian czar and nobility, according to his great-grandson. After immigrating to America and settling in Cincinnati, the family established Litwin Jewelers in 1911. Boris Litwin Jewelers, a fourth-generation, family-owned store, still exists in Cincinnati.

Andrew Litwin retains vivid memories of watching jewelers work at their benches in the family shop. Though generally familiar with the business, Litwin had no hands-on experience with the craft.

But after his newfound attraction to Judaism and the lamed bet, he attended a jewelry-making class to learn the craft and honed his skills as a designer. He found a manufacturer in the U.S. to make his prototypes and launched his business, A. Litwin, in 2019. Then Covid hit, Litwin said. The pandemic has slowed things down. Dayenu Judaica at the Jewish Community Center of San Francisco took a few of his pieces to sell. But most jewelry shops were not expanding their inventory as the pandemic took hold and raged.

So Litwin turned to the internet.

At alitwin.com, his centerpiece collection of silver and gold pendants intertwine the bet and lamed in intricate patterns. Litwin provides a photo of each piece and detailed information about it on the website. Each of the enduring styles in my collection are paired with thought-provoking information about the Jewish teachings in some cases thousands of years old that inspire my work, he writes.

Since his business venture is still young, Litwin has limited his collection to five sterling silver pendants and one in gold. He also designs custom wedding bands and hopes to expand his collection. There are more designs now than could ever be produced, he said.

Meanwhile, his dive into Judaism continues as he works with a study partner, concentrating on the nature of prayers.

Litwin attended Orthodox synagogue growing up in Ohio his mother had an Orthodox upbringing and tried to keep a kosher household, he said, while his father was on the other side of the spectrum. But my mother was in charge of the household.

Once Litwin left home, his religion basically fell by the wayside. He spent 10 years in Tulare County, near Sequoia National Park, working with the Indian Health Service. Living in the small town of Three Rivers, there was very little interaction with any religious affiliation, he said.

After that, Litwin moved to Columbia, South Carolina, to study preventative medicine at the University of South Carolina. It was only after someone approached him at the gym one day and asked Are you Jewish? that Litwin became reacquainted with his religion. That began my connection to the Jewish community, he said. He began to dip his toes into the local Jewish community and joined the Jewish Learning Network, a Chabad program.

Litwin relocated to the Bay Area, where his sister resides, about seven years ago.

He finds designing jewelry with Jewish meaning to be rewarding in several ways. As you design, it is meditation. Theres a spiritual aspect to it.

Hebrew letters have thousands of years of history behind them, he said. Sharing that history and wisdom through his jewelry is an indirect kind of mitzvah. Its another way of contributing to help people get in touch with their humanity and do good deeds.

Designing is fun, he added. Life is short. You have to be doing things that are fun.

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A jeweler's winding path back to Judaism, and the family business J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Neural Control Market Size And Growth | MIT, Hebrew university, Haier, Neurotechnology Sox Sphere – Sox Sphere

Posted By on February 11, 2022

New Jersey, United States,-This Neural Control Market analysis highlights company profiles, product specifications, capacities and key market shares for each industry. The three main areas discussed here are the product type, the competition section, and the end-use section. It further talks about some crucial factors that are highly influencing the growth of the market and helping to earn huge profits in the business. It also cites issues faced by key industries and significant gaps. Financial and social factors relevant to the industry will continue to be discussed to help business stakeholders in their effective decision-making. Contributions from key participants, industry representatives from across the value chain, and qualitative forecasts by market analysts are the major factors covered in this easy-to-understand Neural Control market report. Trends in the parent market are also explained here. It not only describes the serious impact of COVID-19 on the global economy, but also outlines the strategies that the industry is adopting to get out of the serious situation caused by this epidemic.

Get Full PDF Sample Copy of Report: (Including Full TOC, List of Tables & Figures, Chart) @https://www.verifiedmarketreports.com/download-sample/?rid=478395

The estimated market growth for the forecast period 2022-2029 is covered in this Neural Control market research report. The competitive landscape of companies is provided here to give the key players a clear understanding of the global competition. It discusses newly introduced technologies and customer requirements, which greatly helps the key players to get a comprehensive picture of the market situation. Market size by country and region is also presented along with end-user information. This market research is an essential factor in a companys success as it provides an effective strategy to seize the best opportunities and achieve set business goals.

Key Players Mentioned in the Neural Control Market Research Report:

MIT, Hebrew university, Haier, Neurotechnology

Neural ControlMarket Segmentation:

By the product type, the market is primarily split into:

Hardware Software

By the application, this report covers the following segments:

Hospital Research

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Neural Control Market Report Scope

Geographic Segment Covered in the Report:

TheNeural Controlreport provides information about the market area, which is further subdivided into sub-regions and countries/regions. In addition to the market share in each country and sub-region, this chapter of this report also contains information on profit opportunities. This chapter of the report mentions the market share and growth rate of each region, country and sub-region during the estimated period.

North America (USA and Canada) Europe (UK, Germany, France and the rest of Europe) Asia Pacific (China, Japan, India, and the rest of the Asia Pacific region) Latin America (Brazil, Mexico, and the rest of Latin America) Middle East and Africa (GCC and rest of the Middle East and Africa)

Key questions answered in the report:

1. Which are the five top players of the Neural Control market?

2. How will the Neural Control market change in the next five years?

3. Which product and application will take a lions share of the Neural Control market?

4. What are the drivers and restraints of the Neural Control market?

5. Which regional market will show the highest growth?

6. What will be the CAGR and size of the Neural Control market throughout the forecast period?

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Neural Control Market Size And Growth | MIT, Hebrew university, Haier, Neurotechnology Sox Sphere - Sox Sphere

From Hebrew School to the UN, NY Times Touches Up Attacks on Israel’s Legitimacy – Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America

Posted By on February 11, 2022

The New York Times has a sordid history of whitewashing animus to Israels very existence as criticism of Israel. Every country is subject to criticism, and criticism of governments is a healthy phenomena, a vital hallmark of democracy. But is there any country besides Israel whose very existence comes under frequent attack? (Amnesty Internationals scandalous apartheid report is the latest, high-profile salvo in this ongoing assault.)

Given the unique targeting of Israels legitimacy, the repeated failure of New York Times news story to accurately identify attacks on Israels right to exist is all the more striking.

Thus, The Times has repeatedly recast the anti-Israel BDS (boycott, divest, sanctions) movement as a movement to end the occupation of the West Bank, has said that BDS merely is critical of Israels policies toward the West Bank, has described it as an international group that advocates Israels withdrawal from disputed territories where Palestinians live, referred to it as an international lobbying movement that advocates Israels withdrawal from Palestinian territories, and so on.

The Times deflections on the anti-Israel movement prompted BDS leader Omar Barghouti himself to publish a letter in that same paper clarifying that BDS is about so much more than the Gray Lady lets on. BDS, Barghouti clarified, advocates for the so-called right of return, which is widely understood by all fair observers as tantamount to the destruction of the Jewish state.

But its not only BDS which is treated to the New York Times makeover. The Paper of Record equitably extends this courtesy to relatively unknown individuals who take umbrage with Israels right to exist.

Enter the Feb. 3 headline: A Jewish Teacher Criticized Israel. She Was Fired. The accompanying article fails to substantiate the headlines suggestion that teacher Jessie Sander was fired for criticizing Israel, as if she objected to a particular Israeli policy or policies. To the contrary, the article reports that the teachers objectionable blog post did not merely contain criticism of Israel, but expressed opposition tothe very existence of the Jewish state.

Her boss, Rabbi David E. Levy ofWestchester Reform Templein Scarsdale, N.Y., had come across a recentblog post she had written that renounced Zionismand sharply criticized Israel, Ms. Sander, 26, said in a lawsuit filed on Jan. 25. The rabbi had questions: Did she support Hamas? When she called herself anti-Zionist, what did that mean? . . .

Debate over Israel, including sometimes strong criticism of its policies, is not unusual at synagogues in the United States, especially those that follow the Reform movement. The Union of Reform Judaism, an umbrella group of Reform congregations,describes itselfas a movement that accepts and supports the foundational aim of Zionism: the establishment of a Jewish state in Israel, the homeland of the Jewish people.

At Westchester Reform Temple, rabbis have criticized Israel in the past.In his Rosh Hashana sermonin September, Rabbi Jonathan Blake criticized extremists, cynical political officials and wealthy patrons in Israel for promoting a grandiose vision of Jewish totalitarianism in the biblical Holy Land.

But their critiques never challenge the existence of Israel as a Jewish state, as opposed to a state whose structurefavors no ethnic or religious group.

In the blog post, published on May 20 duringlast years conflictbetween Israel and Hamas militants in Gaza, Ms. Sander and a co-author, Elana Lipkin, wrote that they embraced a position that rejects the Zionist claim to the land of Palestine.

The post continued, Zionism is not equivalent to, or a necessary component of, Jewish identity.

They also described Israeli actions against the Palestinians as genocide and accused Jewish institutions in the United States of spreading one-sided narratives and propaganda about the conflict. (Emphases added.)

Indeed, as the article made clear, her criticism of Israel wasnt the problem, as even the rabbi who fired her has criticized Israel from the pulpit. Rather, the apparent issue was Sanders stated opposition to Israels very existence. Unfortunately, many casual readers only get as far as the misleading headline which obscures Stacks information on Sanders hostility to Israels existence.

Headlines in other publications managed to accurately convey Sanders opposition to Israels existence. Haaretzs headline plainly stated: Jewish Educator Sues New York Synagogue in Claim She Was Fired For anti-Zionist Post. Similarly, The Times of Israel headline states: Jewish educator sues NY synagogue, saying she was fired for anti-Zionist beliefs. Interestingly, Jewish Currents, where anti-Zionist Peter Beinart is editor-at-large, earlier ran a headline nearly identical to The Times, but which explicitly cites Sanders anti-Zionism: A Hebrew Teachers Called Herself an Anti-Zionist. She Was Fired.

An affiliate of the Association of Reform Zionists of America (ARZA), the Westchester Reform Temple holds Zionism as a core value, making Sanders anti-Zionist sentiments the key point on which her legal case rises and, ultimately, falls. As The New York Jewish Week (via JTA) reported:

Responding to Sanders claim that she was fired for a recreational activity conducted outside of work, the AJCs Stern said that those protective employment laws are not applicable to organizations where speech and ideology are at the center of the organizations mission like a synagogue that views Zionism as a core tenet.

You cant force an ideological organization to associate with people who undermine its mission, he said.

As such, Sanders anti-Zionism is not a peripheral point; it is the salient fact of the story. Thus, beyond the headline which miscasts her animus towards Israels existence as mere criticism and the papers concealment of the fact that her case has no legal standing as the protective employment laws do not apply to a Zionist synagogue which chooses not to employ an anti-Zionist, the question remains: why, then, is this even a story? Whats news about an ideological organization which opts not to employ an ideological opponent?

From the young Hebrew teacher to the storied halls of the United Nations, The New York Times touch ups of anti-Israel sentiment are apparent. Thus Rick GladstonesJan 20 piece, U.N. Approves Israeli Measure to Condemn Holocaust Denial, paints the international bodys consistent anti-Israeli bias in much more palatable terms, referring to the United Nations,where the narrative is often perceived by Israelis to be biased in favor of Palestinians aspirations for their own state. (Emphasis added.)

This language wildly twists the Israeli narrative in a way that not only misstates and minimizes the actual concerns of the country, but that effectively isdismissive of those concerns by claiming they amount to no more than hostility to Palestinians (and, specifically, Palestinian statehood).

In fact, Israels central criticism of the United Nations, shared by other world leaders and even United Nations officials, is the bodys overwhelming anti-Israel bias, in which the Jewish state is singled out for disproportionate scrutiny and lopsided obloquy.

To restate it simply: Gladstones language inaccurately, unfairly, and rather absurdly misrepresentsopposition to anti-Israel discriminationas beingopposition toPalestinian statehood.

As Shmuel Rosner, an Israeli commentator and contributing opinion writer to the New YorkTimes,put it not long ago inhis Op-Edabout UNESCO:

The organizations shameful record makes clear that it is obsessed with Israel

Israel has, appropriately and almost unanimously, been incensed: It called Unesco shameful and anti-Semitic

Several United Nations agencies have similar anti-Israel tendencies. In fact, the entire United Nations is biased against Israel. It tends to pass one-sided resolutions when Israel is engaged in a conflict; it pays constant attention to Israel and its supposed misbehavior, while other countries, guilty of much worse, barely get mentioned for censure.

None of this is new. The United Nations hypocrisy and bias has been a constant irritation since Israel was founded.

Israel and Rosner are hardly alone in that understanding. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moontold the Security Councilin 2016 that During the past 10 years, I have argued that we must never accept bias against Israel within UN bodies. Decades of political maneuverings have created a disproportionate volume of resolutions, reports and conferences criticizing Israel. (See also: NY Times Conceals Widespread Criticism of UN Rights Body.)

The New York Times, with its own relentless assaults on Israel, represents the journalistic counterpart of the United Nations and its bottomless well of anti-Israel hostility. Without a Ban Ki-moon equivalent holding up a mirror to the papers behavior, is it any wonder that The Times so often opts for smoke and mirrors to whitewash others anti-Israel sentiment?

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From Hebrew School to the UN, NY Times Touches Up Attacks on Israel's Legitimacy - Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America

Quentin Tarantino and Israeli Wife Daniella Pick Are Having Another Baby! Kveller – Kveller.com

Posted By on February 11, 2022

Daniele Venturelli/WireImage

Abba (thats dad in Hebrew) Quentin Tarantino and his Israeli wife Daniella Pick are expanding their family! According to sources close to the family, Pick is pregnant with the couples second child.

Pick gave birth to their first child, a son named Leo, who was named after Picks maternal grandfather Ari Shem-Or (Ari means lion in Hebrew) back in February of 2020 which means little Leo is about to turn two. The award-winning director and his singer and model wife currently live in Israel together, taking the occasional trip into L.A. for work.

Pick, 38, and Tarantino, 58, have known each other for years they first briefly dated in 2009, after they met at a Jerusalem movie premiere for Tarantinos World War II revenge fantasy Inglorious Basterds. They rekindled their romance in 2016 and got married in 2018 in an intimate, but very Jewish ceremony. Since then, and especially with the onset of the pandemic, the couple has spent much of their time in Israel, where they live in a luxury apartment in Tel Aviv.

Tarantino has also been peppering his speech with Hebrew, saying todah geveret (thank you, maam) to his wife when accepting a Golden Globe, and sharing that his son calls him abba.

In a 2021 Ynet interview, Tarantino shared that he doesnt change Leos diapers (?) even though he has no problem with it (??) because Daniella wont let him (???).

He also discussed the toddlers TV viewing habits, saying that he watches the Hebrew toddler channel and English YouTube videos, that hes been introducing Leo to Snoopy, and that Leos favorite TV show is, at least as of last June, the British Fireman Sam, with Tarantino adding that the Hebrew dubbing is far superior to the original English.

Tarantino also shared how proud he was to be in the country that dealt with COVID the best in the world.

Im having a great time here, Tarantino said about living in Israel. We have fun together, I have a wife who is beautiful, incredible, a great wife and a wonderful mom. We care for each other and are one unit. To be a father is a thing that deeply moves me. Mazel tov to the growing family.

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Quentin Tarantino and Israeli Wife Daniella Pick Are Having Another Baby! Kveller - Kveller.com

Opinion: Bible in the schools? Why not the Hebrew Bible and Quran also? – Chattanooga Times Free Press

Posted By on February 11, 2022

Surely everyone can agree that no one in 2022 should be thinking about let alone saying out loud ways to torture our fellow human beings, our neighbors, our students.

Everyone it seems except the local teacher of eighth-grade students at East Hamilton Middle School who is said by the mother of a student to have taught middle-schoolers a lesson on "how to torture a Jew" in an elective Bible-as-literature class.

"[The teacher] wrote an English transliteration of the Hebrew name of G-d on the whiteboard. This name is traditionally not spoken out loud, and is traditionally only written in the Torah. She then told her students, 'If you want to know how to torture a Jew, make them say this out loud,'" the student's mother wrote on Facebook last week.

"My daughter felt extremely uncomfortable hearing a teacher instruct her peers on 'how to torture a Jew' and told me when she came home from school that she didn't feel safe in the class," the mom wrote.

The family is Jewish and are members of the Mizpah Congregation in Chattanooga. The mother, Juniper Russo, reported the Feb. 2 incident to the school system and to the Anti-Defamation League. The school system is investigating the complaint, according to a statement.

The Bible history class is taught in 29 Hamilton County public schools and is funded by the nonprofit organization, "The Bible in the Schools."

We're talking "funded by the nonprofit" to the tune of $1.8 million a year.

On its website, the organization, which was founded here in Chattanooga in 1922 by Dr. J.P. McCallie (also the founder of The McCallie School), takes credit for teaching the Bible in schools locally for a century.

The website also states its classes are "non-sectarian" and teachers are "required to teach from a viewpoint-neutral perspective and adhere to a court-approved curriculum."

Hmmm. If you want to torture (fill in the blank whites, Blacks, Jews, Muslim's, Baptists?) make them well, fill in the blank again.

As Russo wrote: "How can we say that our schools have zero tolerance for bullying if a teacher is actually instructing students on how to do it?"

Yes, it's entirely possible, perhaps probable, this teacher an employee of the school system, not the nonprofit did not mean to make anyone afraid. And frankly, sometimes some of us need to feel a prickle of discomfort to understand the real pain of being harassed or attacked. That's why talking things through in classes complete with probing questions or pointed remarks can be illuminating.

But we need to ask ourselves: If we are comfortable teaching Bible "history" or "literature" (always pictured and written about on the organization's web site is the King James version), would we equally welcome a $1.8 million contribution to our schools to teach Torah history? Or to teach The Quran as literature?

How about a $3 million donation to teach The Atheist's Bible in 29 of our 39 middle and high schools?

Who knows, maybe we could get a $5 million gift to teach the Ku Klux Klan white supremacist ideology. Don't laugh. It was real. According to History.com, thousands of children were "christened" and "participated in the KKK and its auxiliary organizations: the Junior Ku Klux Klan for teenage boys, the Tri-K-Klub for teenage girls, and 'Ku Klux Kiddies' and 'cradle clubs' for children and infants beginning in the 1920s."

Perhaps someone could explain to us how it is that our teachers are now being bullied by lawmakers not to talk to students about our founders who were slaveowners or about anything that might be construed as supporting "critical race theory," yet it's OK to write on a whiteboard a sacred name that Jewish people are told not to utter aloud and then say, "If you want to torture a Jew make him say this?"

This incident, and the rash of school library book bannings, including one in McMinn County where "Maus, a Survivor's Tale," about the author's parents' Holocaust experience, have painted Tennessee as intolerant in headlines all over the world.

It will get worse before it gets better. We're about to spend millions of our tax dollars on a Baptist college's "informed patriotism" curriculum for teaching history and civics, if Gov. Bill Lee gets his way. And he will. After all, it was our supermajority Republican lawmakers in the General Assembly who voted last year to ban the teaching of anything that might be seen as critical race theory and make white people uncomfortable about our nation's racial and slave history.

That Baptist college, Hillsdale College of Michigan, developed "The Hillsdale 1776 Curriculum" specifically to counter The New York Times' 1619 Project and critical race theory. The curriculum, which it heavily exports, is described as "a more patriotic approach to American history." By the way, our century-old Bible classes are exported, too. Bibleintheschools.com says it has requests for program replication in at least 15 states.

We can't stop other school systems from teaching Bible "history" or literature as opposed to religion history or literature in other states, but we certainly can have a bigger say on our own school system accepting 30 pieces of silver for the group to proselytize here.

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Opinion: Bible in the schools? Why not the Hebrew Bible and Quran also? - Chattanooga Times Free Press

When I use a word . . . . St Bartholomewonomastics and reputation – The BMJ

Posted By on February 11, 2022

A management suggestion that the Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry, which is part of the Queen Mary University of London (QMUL), should be renamed the QMUL Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry has not met with universal approval. The international reputation of Barts, founded nearly 900 years ago, is a major consideration in this plan. A better course of action would be to change the name of QMUL to St Bartholomews University and call the school the Barts and the London Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry at Barts University.

In ancient lore ones name was ones identity, predicting ones fate; the omen, it has been said, is in the nomen. Knowing someone elses name conferred power over them. Gods such as the Egyptian Ra and the Hebrew Yahweh had secret and awful names. And in the fairy tale Rumpelstiltskin's downfall comes about when the well bred young princess discovers, as he thought she never would, that his name was Wrinkledforeskin.

The name of St Bartholomew has been the identity of Barts Hospital since it was founded nearly 900 years ago. Bartholomew was one of the apostles, as named in the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke), although in John he is called Nathanael, since his full name was Nathanael Bartholomew, the former being his given name, the latter his patronymic. When an Augustinian canon, Rahere, fell ill on a pilgrimage to Rome, St Bartholomew told him in a vision of vacant land in Smithfield; Rahere vowed that if he survived he would build a hospital there for the poor. So, in 1123 the priory of St Bartholomew and the promised hospital were founded, staffed by monks and nuns. Some of the patients came from the nearby Newgate prison.

In 1133 Henry I granted Rahere the right to hold an annual fair, Bartholomew Fair, giving Ben Jonson the title for one of his plays (1614).

During the time of the dissolution of the monasteries (153641), Henry VIII closed the priory, but he eventually re-established the hospital, granting it to the City of London and endowing it with property.1

Queen Mary College was named after Mary of Teck (18671953; crowned 1911), a granddaughter of King George III and Queen Consort of George V. Barts became part of the University of London in 1900 and Queen Mary College did so in 1915. In 1989 the college merged with Westfield College, becoming first Queen Mary and Westfield College and then, in 2013, Queen Mary University London (QMUL). The college had already merged with Barts and the London in 1995 to form a school of medicine and dentistry.

Famous people who have been associated with Barts in one way or another include William Harvey (15681657), commemorated in Charterhouse Square by the William Harvey Research Institute, as are John Langdon Down (182896; John Langdon Down House) and Sir John Vane (19272004; the Sir John Vane Science Centre).2 Those commemorated at the Royal London in Whitechapel include John Abernethy (17641831; the Abernethy Building) and Sir Archibald Garrod (18571936; the Garrod Building).

Now there is a managerial proposal to rename the Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry the QMUL Faculty, making it one of three QMUL faculties, the other two being devoted to humanities and social sciences and to science and engineering.

The word patronymic comes from two Greek words, , a father, and , a name; in Hellenistic Greek the two were combined into a single word, , with the adjectival form . So a patronym or patronymic is a surname that is derived from the name of your father, or more generally from that of a forebear. Originally people did not have surnames; their names took the forms commonly seen in the Bible, for example David, son of Jesse. Later on, these patronyms were converted into surnames, in different forms depending on the country and language.

Bartholomew is a Hebrew name. Ben in Hebrew indicates son of and bar is the Aramaic equivalent. Benjamin, used as a first name or surname, means either son of my right hand or son of the south. Barmitzvah literally means son of duty or commandment. Besides the names that they use in diasporic societies in which they find themselves, Jews have Hebrew names. Mine is Yosef Kalman ben Shmuel, or Joseph Kalman, son of Samuel. Some Jews, on migrating to Israel, change their names from those by which they were known in their countries of origin. David Ben-Gurion, for example, the Polish born first prime minister of Israel, was originally David Gruen.

Baruj Benacerraf (19202011), an Argentinian of Jewish descent, won the 1980 Nobel prize for his work on the genetically determined structures of the cell surface that regulate immunological reactions.3 His surname means son of Asherov, and since Asherov is also a patronymic, son of Asher, a Hebrew name meaning blessed, Benacerraf looks like a double patronymic.

Bartholomew is a patronymic, from the name Talmai, who is mentioned in the book of Numbers (13:22) and whose name means having many furrows, in other words rich in land.

Bartholomew has several medical representatives. They include two Danish anatomists, Casper Bartholin, after whom an abscess, a cyst, a duct, and a gland are named, and his father Thomas Bartholin, who gave his name to the anus cerebri (the entrance to the aqueduct of Sylvius). Toussaint Barthlemy was a French dermatologist, whose disease is a form of tuberculosis. And the Barthel index is used to assess an individuals ability to carry out everyday tasks.

Some derivatives of Bartholomew are not so obvious. The German form of the name, Barthelmes, gives Meus, Mebius, and Mbius. So, Paul Mbius, a German physician after whom at least three different syndromes and a sign are named, was actually another medical Bartholomew.

Finally, consider the OliverMcFarlane syndrome, a genetic disorder, congenital trichomegaly, that includes long eyelashes, pigmentary degeneration of the retina, and mental and growth retardation. What relevance does that have to Bartholomew? Well, the Gaelic equivalent of Bartholomew is Pharthalin. And adding the prefix Mac (son of) gives MacFarlane, which is thus another double patronymic.

So, I was amused when I came across a paper,4 whose authors included both a Bartholomew and a MacFarlane, dealing with the accuracy of methods used to determine abnormal haemoglobins, one of which, discovered later, is, of course, haemoglobin Barts.5

People change their names for many different reasons, the most common of which is marriage. A change of name may betoken a new phase in life and good fortune. Film stars may benefit thereby. One thinks, for example, of Miss Diana Fluck, who became Diana Dors. Less spectacularly, Frances Gumm became Judy Garland and played Esther Blodgett, who became Vicki Lester.

Institutions, however, afford less successful examples. Here we have the example of the Royal Mail, which discovered that Consignia, which is what it decided to call itself in 2001, at a reported cost of 1.5 million, was not a desirable designation.6 The name was ditched just over a year later.7

It is not clear why the management at QMUL want to drop the name of Barts. Perhaps they think, in these secular times, that a Royal connection carries more potential kudos than a religious one. But perhaps they havent noticed the evidence that the more gender neutral an author's name is, the more citations their publications receive.8 And surely theyre not afraid of the possible opprobrium associated with the St Bartholomews Day Massacre of 1572, although in these days of heightened historical sensitivities, one wouldnt be surprised.

The medical wing of QMUL, represented by the name of Barts, has a much greater international reputation than QMUL. To give this context, of nine Nobel prizes associated with QMUL, six were in the category of physiology or medicine. They are:

Sir Ronald Ross (1902; discovered the life cycle of the malarial parasite);

Edgar (Lord) Adrian (1932; the function of neurons);

Sir Henry Hallett Dale (1936; discoveries relating to neurotransmission);

Sir John Vane (1982; work on prostaglandins);

Sir Peter Mansfield (2003; work on diagnostic magnetic resonance imaging);

Sir Peter John Ratcliffe (2019; discovered how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability).

The furore at the suggestion that the name of Barts and the London should be ditched in favour of QMUL clearly shows how foolish a proposal it is, given the major international reputation of Barts and the likelihood that a change of name for purely corporate reasons may be damaging.

The obvious solution is for QMUL to change its name to the St Bartholomew's University of London (Barts University). The current Barts and the London School would then become Barts and the London Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry. Everyone's reputation, including that of QMUL's other faculties, would thereby be enhanced at a stroke. Fans of the Simpsons might even cheer.

Competing interests: My associations with London hospitals include three months spent as a medical student on a Nuffield bursary at the Middlesex Hospital in 1969; I have at different times been an external examiner in clinical pharmacology and therapeutics in the London Hospital, Royal Free Hospital, St Georges Hospital, and University College Hospital London Medical Schools; I have represented the Royal College of Physicians on appointments boards at St Georges and St Bartholomews Hospital Medical Schools; I have had research collaborations with members of St Bartholomews Hospital Medical School; I am an honorary fellow of the British Pharmacological Society, several of whose members and fellows are associated with St Bartholomews Hospital, The Royal London Hospital, and other London Hospital Medical Schools.

Provenance and peer review: not commissioned; not peer reviewed.

Bailey A. Walls of Fame at Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry. Charterhouse Square, London: Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine, 2016.

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When I use a word . . . . St Bartholomewonomastics and reputation - The BMJ


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