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The all-consuming drive to oust Netanyahu has strangled us – Haaretz

Posted By on January 28, 2022

Suppose the court, after many years, convicts Benjamin Netanyahu on all charges. Will the witch hunt end? Assuming he hasnt already returned to being prime minister by then, Netanyahus supporters will presumably explain that its all because the courts of First Israel in other words, the Ashkenazi elites are abusing Second Israel,the disadvantaged Mizrahim.

Even without the need for a trial, consider the stunning fact that Netanyahu received champagne and cigars worth the astronomical sum of 700,000 shekels ($200,000). In a normal situation, that would have been more than enough, ethically, to justify the prime ministers removal. But here, the world just carries on.

And not just in Israel. Things are tough all over. Weve grown accustomed to the idea that only in dictatorships are citizens forced to accept the leaders whims and demands and to salute him in city squares. Theres always the hope, however, that as soon as the dictator is ousted morality will be restored.

The trouble is that in democratic states the public itself plays the role of the dictator, and authorizes the illegal and the immoral, in the face of which government norms are helpless. Shame rises, and the honest man feels alienated from his surroundings, while the corrupt man plays the role of the adored star. Instead of the bold and the beautiful, the corrupt and the heroic are applauded.

In light of all this, a little rational thought wouldnt hurt. These are our options: The first is that Netanyahus trial goes on for several more years, and in the end were right back where we started. Bibis community will oppose the justice system if it doesnt like the verdict, and the community that supports the supremacy of the law will of course be for it. The second option is the plea bargain currently being hammered out between Netanyahu and the prosecution, under which Netanyahu would admit to some of the charges. His punishment would include a finding of moral turpitude, barring him from public life for seven years. The choice, then, is between continuing to wallow in the mud and Netanyahu is known to be a champion mud swimmer and the end of this mans political career.

Netanyahu is the most dangerous person in Israeli politics. He is willing to do anything, and with great skill, to stay in power: to incite, to spread hatred, to divide whatever crosses his path. Nevertheless, I have no feelings of revenge against him. I do not have an urge to see him taunted and roughed up on his way to the prison canteen. To nurse feelings of revenge is to live in the past. The future requires new ways of thinking, liberated from the shackles of the pastand right now, we must find a way to rebuild the popular protest movements that have shifted their focus from social justice activism, anti-discrimination and anti-occupation to focusingsolely on ousting Netanyahu.

The fight against Netanyahu the man, and not what he symbolizes, is creating an absurd situation: Bibi supporters lay into the anti-Bibi camp, and who takes a hit? The Palestinians, of course. The Bibi camp hurls a blow at the rival camp, the other side ducks, and the Palestinian gets hit in the face. Throughout Israel, and in the occupied territories as well, the blows are raining down in the Negev, in the mixed Arab-Jewish cities, in Area C of the West Bank. Meanwhile, the left the joke thats called the left asks the Arab coalition members to shut up and support the ones who are giving them a thrashing, because the only important thing is keeping Bibi out.

So let me take this opportunity to reassure the anti-Bibi camp: Dont worry taking Bibi's place are a whole bunch of pseudo-Bibis filling the public arena, in Likud and in the government. If all your effort goes toward Bibi, you give the rulers legitimacy to do more terrible things. The glue that binds the coalition's far right with what passes for the left here the anti-Bibi umbrella is strangling us. Just ask the Sheikh Jarrah expellees.

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The all-consuming drive to oust Netanyahu has strangled us - Haaretz

Conversations in Hebrew that have done good – Australian Jewish News

Posted By on January 28, 2022

During the height of lockdown last year, six weekly lectures and discussions in Hebrew were recorded on a range of fascinating topics, excluding the global pandemic.

Project, Lets NOT talk about Corona conversations in Hebrew that do good, aimed to bring Israel closer to the community in Australia, at a time when visitingIsrael was not possible because of travel restrictions.

The conversations ranged from Anat Yahalom, the only female Israeli soldier severely wounded in the Yom Kippur war, to Gil Hovav, who brought his wonderful sense of humour to his presentation: Adventures of a Food Critic.

The online sessions were free and open to all Israelis and Hebrew-speakers in Australia and around the world, with more than 500 participants logging on to watch.

Supported by the Department of Hebrew and Culture of the World Zionist Organisation, as well as with the support of Zionism Victoria, the series was presented by the Zionist Federation of Australias Habayit, the home of Israeli and Hebrew culture.

To watch, go to tinyurl.com/mr2pyv32

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Conversations in Hebrew that have done good - Australian Jewish News

What’s in a name? Turning Arabic names to Hebrew does not smell sweet – The Times of Israel

Posted By on January 28, 2022

Sundays packed weekly government agenda included several high-profile issues including the establishment of an independent commission to look into the purchase of submarines and further decisions on the handling of the current wave of the coronavirus pandemic. It was also scheduled to deal with a variety of less salient but hardly less contentious questions, such as the approval of a new slate of members for the Government Names Committee (or, according to some official sources, the Government Naming Committee). This was the second time in several weeks that this item appeared on the agenda, after a lapse of over two years, during which no effort was made to replace members who had either passed away or resigned. Although far below the public radar, the composition of the Government Names Committee, just as its objectives, have been a source of ongoing contestation since the creation of the State of Israel in 1948.

The ongoing sensitivity over the naming of places and locations is hardly surprising: at stake is a mostly latent, although distinctly acrimonious, struggle over the history, identity, ownership, memory, and collective consciousness of the inhabitants of the land. The debate over names has always been an integral, albeit less noticeable, part of the Arab-Israel conflict. It has also become a vivid reflection of the changing nature of Israeli society. The intention to appoint a new official Names Committee without adequate representation of critical segments of the population most notably its Arab community cannot but become another bone of contention in Israels highly divided society. From this perspective, this issue has become a microcosm of the conflict. Opening up the Government Names Committee to representatives of all parts of Israels heterogeneous population can go a long way towards creating a sense of inclusion for all its many diverse residents and communities.

The preoccupation with Hebrew names for places and historic locations was always an integral part of the Zionist project. In 1925, the Jewish National Fund established a committee charged with giving Hebrew names to all new settlements. By 1948, it had added 400 such designations. Immediately after the creation of the state, a special commission was set up to find Hebrew names to replace Arabic ones in the Negev. Within a few years, it had come up with an extended list of 600 places. Finally, in 1951, the government decided to merge these two bodies and to formalize their status by establishing the Government Names Committee, authorized with the designation of names for all communities and points on the map of Israel and the replacement of Arabic names that existed before 1948 with Hebrew names.

This was no random step. David Ben-Gurion specifically explained in 1951 that the purpose of the newly-formed committee was to distance the Arab names for state reasons: just as we dont acknowledge the political ownership of the Arabs over the land, so we do not recognize their spiritual ownership or their names. The explicit brief of this exercise was therefore not merely historical and cultural; it was also consciously political. The effacement of Arab names was seen as a means of eradicating their heritage on the land, erasing their legacy, and, if possible, banishing their presence.

To drive home the point, the original brief also mandated that all the decisions of the Names Committee would be binding on the government and its allied agencies. Since 1951, successive committees, whose mandate is ostensibly renewed every five years, but whose members have often served for decades, have been responsible for assigning Hebrew names to literally thousands upon thousands of geographic points on the map (including rivers, parks, tourist attractions, highways, junctions, memorial sites, bridges, hills, and valleys), historical locations (as well as tourist attractions), and new communities. Their systematic work has changed the nomenclature of 9,000 places on the official map of Israel, although at some times, the attempt to Hebraize name places was rebuffed in order to memorialize recent historical figures (Kfar Truman and, just recently, Trump Heights) or to commemorate major historical events (the name of Kibbutz Lohamei HaGetaot was retained after lengthy debates, despite the fact that ghetto was deemed a foreign word).

The composition of the Names Committee has always been closely related to its aims. Its members have been drawn from a select list of prominent geographers, historians, archeologists, biblical scholars, philologists, and Hebrew language experts. For many years, the committee was dominated by men, even though women have become preeminent in the humanities fields so central to its task. Only in the last decade have more women been added to its ranks. Intriguingly, with this expanded representation, for the first time since its inception, more attention is now being paid to commemorating women as well (with the exception of Golda Meir and several biblical figures, very few locations carry female names).

Notably absent are representatives of key segments of Israeli society. Of the 28 names presented to the government on Sunday, 23 are representatives of the public (five more sit on the committee in their ex officio capacity as delegates of key agencies, including government ministries and the Jewish National Fund). Until two weeks ago, the bulk of the list consisted of members closely associated with the political right. Only following protestations of Meretz and Labor were some left-leaning names, such as Yishai Sarid and Dr. Yofi Tirosh, added to the list.

Much more tellingly, there was only one Druze on the list, and not even a sole Arab, though two Arab names have been reported to be added quite recently (by all accounts, Arab society, which constitutes some 20 percent of the Israeli population, should have at least five, if not more, members on the committee). Regional Cooperation Minister Essawi Freij of Meretz registered an objection in the hope of further altering the committee makeup. The Arab members are essential to assuring even minimal consideration for the retention of the names and the connotations central to their heritage. The same holds true for representatives of other communities such as Mizrahi and Ethiopian Israelis. The close correlation between representation and name maintenance (together with all that goes with it) is by now irrefutable.

Inevitably, the results to date mirror the skewed composition and avowedly ethnocentric goals of the place-name project. They have also caused some curious (and, at times humorous) anomalies, as, until the 2018 adoption of the nation-state law, both Hebrew and Arabic were official languages, and all road signs are to be presented in these three scripts. In 2019, the Ministry of Transportation, with the guidance of the Government Names Committee, published a definitive list of all place names in all three languages. Some Arab names, Jaffa for one, have no Arabic transcriptions. For English-speakers, others have been butchered almost beyond recognition (Hadassah appears as Hadasa, Zion as Tziyon, Sinai becomes Sinay, Jezreel is transformed into Yizrael, Jericho is often presented as Yeriho). Nazareth, mercifully, has been retained in English, but its offshoot, Upper Nazareth (now Nof HaGalil the View of Galilee) is rendered as Natsrat Ilit. Anyone touring the land is often hard put to identify where they are. Despite the pressing efforts of the Names Committee and the sign-makers, many places are still called by their original (Arabic) names (Masmiye Junction, for one; so, too, Talbiyeh and Katamon in Jerusalem).

Indeed, the elimination of over 400 Arab villages and locations comes with exceedingly heavy political baggage. For example, the precise details of the destruction of Tantura during the War of Independence, a fishing village south of Haifa known today as Hof Dor (Dor Beach) are currently the focus of considerable historical controversy. This specific instance which was repeated in multiple locations was dwarfed by the political implications of the official adoption of Judea and Samaria for the West Bank (associated with Jordan), the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt), the occupied territories, or simply the territories. The list of such discordant place names is legion, starting with Sheikh Jarrah or the Cave of Shimon the Righteous and going as far as the Temple Mount and Haram al-Sharif. The battle of names has become the verbal extension of the continuous conflict between Arabs and Jews for control of the land.

Where so much energy and passion are wrapped up in names, for different and frequently vying groups, almost all of their being is wrapped up in who determines and controls the nomenclature. It seems as if it is all in the name. It does not have to be this way. The formation of a new Names Committee can begin to change this zero-sum game: the broadening of its composition may offer as the government decided yesterday with the addition of two Arab members a vital initial step towards mutual recognition based on the awareness of the rich and diverse historical, religious and cultural mosaic living on the land and the acknowledgment of the different appellations they have for the locations in which they reside.

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What's in a name? Turning Arabic names to Hebrew does not smell sweet - The Times of Israel

Jewish pendants discovered in Sobibor Death Camp – Ynetnews

Posted By on January 28, 2022

Recent excavations at the Sobibor extermination camp in Poland unveiled three seemingly unconnected pendants depicting biblical figure Moses, as well as the Hebrew prayer Shema Yisrael, (Hear O Israel).

Two of the pendants were discovered in two sperate plazas where Jewish inmates were forced to undress before entering the camp's gas chambers, while the third one was discovered near one of the mass grave s at the camp.

Aside from the depiction of Moses and the Hebrew prayer, the three pendants appear to be quite different from one another, and were transcribed by hand.

Over the past year, researchers identified their origin in Eastern Europe: from Lviv in Ukraine, and from Poland and Czechoslovakia.

4

'Shema Yisrael' prayer on one of the pendants discovered at the Sobibor death camp

(Photo: Israel Antiquities Authority)

"little is known about the stories behind the pendants, which are heartbreaking," said Yoram Haimi from the Israel Antiquities Authority, who is co-managing the excavation in Sobibor, where some 170,000 to 250,000 Jews were murdered by the Nazi regime.

"It has been possible to identify a kind of tradition or fashion among the Jewish communities of Eastern Europe with pendants that were inscribed with Shema Yisrael on one side and a depiction of Moses and the tablets with the ten commandments, on the opposite side."

"But were they distributed in synagogues by local Jewish communities or possibly produced for individuals? Research of the pendants is ongoing and we invite the public to provide us with details on them," Haimi added.

Eli Eskozido, Director of the Israel Antiquities Authority, also referenced the discovery and the seemingly invisible connection between the three pendants.

"The personal and human aspect of the discovery of these pendants is chilling. They represent a thread running between generations of Jews actually a robust thread, thousands of years old, of prayer and faith," said Eskozido.

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Jewish pendants discovered in Sobibor Death Camp - Ynetnews

Lapid marks Holocaust Remembrance Day at camp where grandfather killed – Al-Monitor

Posted By on January 28, 2022

Israeli leaders marked International Holocaust Remembrance Day Jan. 27 with a series of events, several of them outside the country.

Knesset Speaker Mickey Levy addressed the Bundestag in Berlin, urging German lawmakers and the international community to protect democracy and educate the younger generations against hatred. It was the first time that the Knesset speaker addressed the full German parliament. Newly-elected German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Holocaust survivor Inge Auerbacher also attended the address.

Speaking in Hebrew, and with great emotions, Levy noted that here, in this historic building, the house of the German parliament, one can grasp if only slightly the ability of human beings to take advantage of democracy to defeat it. It is a place where humanity stretched the boundaries of evil a place where the loss of values turned a democratic framework into racist and discriminatory tyranny. At the end of his speech, with his voice choked by tears, Levy recited the Jewish traditional mourning prayer Kaddish, reading it out of a prayer book that belonged to a Jewish boy celebrating his bar mitzvah on Oct. 22, 1938, shortly before the Kristallnacht pogrom.

Foreign Minister Yair Lapid traveled this morning to Austria, where he visited the Mauthausen concentration camp where his grandfather died in April 1945. Addressing Austrian leadership, including Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer, Lapid recounted, My grandfather was sent to Auschwitz, and after that, he was sent here, to Mauthausen. When he arrived here, he was no longer a dad, he was no longer fat, he was no longer a person. He was a number. The Nazis went to great lengths to number their prisoners. My grandfather, like everyone who came to Auschwitz, had a number tattooed on his arm. Lapid ended his speech saying, Grenpa Bela, a quiet man whose family nickname was Bela the Wise, sent me here today to say on his behalf, that the Jews have not surrendered. Theyve established a strong, free, and proud Jewish state, and they sent his grandson, to represent them here today.

President Isaac Herzog did not travel abroad, but rather participated online at a Zoom-screened commemoration event organized by Paris-based UNESCO. This morning, UNESCO announced a partnership with Tiktok, for fighting Holocaust denial and distortion by redirecting people inquiring about it to a site set up together with the World Jewish Congress dedicated to the history of the Holocaust. Herzog commended UNESCO General Director Audrey Azoulay for her strong leadership and her efforts to strengthen and focus UNESCO in the areas which motivated its establishment.

With the foreign minister in Austria, Director General of the Foreign Ministry Alon Ushpiz represented him at the ceremony that took place in Israel, at the Yad Vashem World Holocaust Remembrance Center in Jerusalem. Ushpiz told the participants of the ceremony that Israel is currently seeking the presidency of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) for the year 2025. The IHRA is responsible for the nonbinding working definition of anti-Semitism used now by many countries and organizations and promoted by Israel. In 2025, this forum will mark 25 years to its establishment, and the international community will mark 80 years to the end of World War II.

Ushpiz also mentioned the Israel-sponsored resolution adopted Jan. 21 at the UN general Assembly against Holocaust denial. 114 member states supported the resolution, which was based on the IHRA definition of anti-Semitism, including the targeting of the state of Israel, conceived as a Jewish collectivity.

Israels deep involvement in the global events of Jan. 27 is rather new, though it was Israeli diplomats who originally pushed for the UN to mark it officially. The date that was chosen is the day Auschwitz death camp was liberated. Israels Ambassador to Rwanda Roni Adamserved in 2004 as director of the Department for International Organizations at the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He was the one who proposed at the time the initiation of a special session at the United Nations General Assembly to commemorate the Holocaust. Following this campaign, the UN designated a special remembrance day in 2005.

In the years before that, but also after the UN resolution, Israel focused on marking the Holocaust according to the Hebrew calendar. The official date in Israel for remembering the Holocaust and the bravery of the victims is the day the Warsaw Ghetto munity of the imprisoned Jews against the Nazis started. This is the date commemorated in schools and official ceremonies. It is just in recent years that Israeli leadership engages deeper and with much more visibility also on Jan. 27.

As the son of a Holocaust survivor, Lapid is especially engaged in campaigning against Holocaust denial, distortion or trivialization. Since taking office, he has not shied away from confronting the Polish government on a law limiting compensations for Holocaust survivors, and did not back away even when the confrontation turned into a diplomatic crisis.

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Lapid marks Holocaust Remembrance Day at camp where grandfather killed - Al-Monitor

Delivered out of Empire: Pivotal moments in the Book of Exodus, Part One by Walter Brueggemann – Church Times

Posted By on January 28, 2022

THIS small book is the first in a new series examining pivotal moments in the Old Testament. There is no greater pivotal point in the Hebrew Scriptures than the narrative of the exodus from Egypt (Exodus 1-15), selected as the subject for the first volume in this series, nor a more appropriate author than Walter Brueggemann. No scholar has done more to enable the reader to appreciate the Hebrew Scriptures.

In the preface, Brueggemann points out that this work is not a commentary, but rather a readers guide book suitable for individuals or group study. Acknowledging the complexity that lies behind the completion of the material, he offers a canonical reading of the text, highlighting the pivotal moments in the narrative. His is a liberationist reading, witnessing to the God who both opposes and defeats the powers of bondage.

The author first examines the intolerable situation of the slaves. Having long suffered in silence, the workers suddenly voice their pain (2.23), which acts as a wake-up call to YHWH. What follows confirms that such a cry cannot in the end be defeated, as contemporary history has witnessed and is witnessing. So the command of Moses to Pharaoh to let my people go is a command that lies behind every political revolution that has marked the modern world. But the transfer of loyalty from Pharaoh to YHWH has economic consequences in the way in which society functions, as later legal material makes clear.

The decisive pivotal point is reached with the failure of Pharaohs magicians to mirror the plague of gnats (8.18), forcing the Egyptians, but not Pharaoh, to recognise the finger of God. Protracted negotiations with Pharaoh follow, in which Moses asserts that not one hoof will remain. For Brueggemann, this dialogue confirms the universalism of Gods love.

After the tenth plague, Pharaoh surrenders and astonishingly asks for Mosess blessing (12.32), a request that goes unanswered; and, after the debacle of the Red Sea, Pharaoh is eliminated from the narrative.

It is not only the Hebrews but a mixed crowd (12.38) who depart with them which conjures up a disordered and confused array of folks without ethnic or linguistic identity, which explains the necessity for the comprehensive scope of YHWHs law (12.49). Thereby, economics is joined with theology. Later tension between inclusiveness and exclusiveness will test the people of God. But no freedom movement which is what Christianity at its best is can debate who is eligible for emancipation.

Faced with the pursuing might of Pharaohs army, the people regret their escape. In Mosess command, Fear not, another pivotal point is reached. It is a theme that runs through both Testaments. For Brueggemann, the power of God is more than equal to the power that enslaves, whatever form that enslavement takes. The gift of such grace can only result in praise: The Lord will reign for ever and ever (15.18).

Canon Anthony Phillips is a former headmaster of The Kings School, Canterbury.

Delivered out of Empire: Pivotal moments in the Book of Exodus, Part OneWalter BrueggemannWJK 13(978-0-664-26358-0)Church Times Bookshop 11.70

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Delivered out of Empire: Pivotal moments in the Book of Exodus, Part One by Walter Brueggemann - Church Times

Native St. Louisan looks back on 20+ years in Jerusalem – St. Louis Jewish Light

Posted By on January 28, 2022

Leah Hakimian is shown at a site overlooking the Golan Heights in November 2021. Hakimian is a former St. Louisan who made aliyah in 1998.

In 1998, native St. Louisan Leah Elbaum Hakimian and her husband, Yusef, left St. Louis for Israel, where they made aliyah and settled in Jerusalem. They had been living in Clayton and raising four daughters. The family was a member of Brith Sholom Kneseth Israel.

Hakimian, 81, graduated from Washington University and earned a doctorate in education from St. Louis University. During her years here, she served as principal of Solomon Schechter Day School and associate executive director of Central Agency for Jewish Education. She also was founding director in 1995 of Connections St. Louis, a community-sponsored Jewish matchmaking program.

Yusef Hakimian, a former president of the Board of Trustees at the Jewish Light, passed away in 2014. Leah continues to live in Jerusalem, where she volunteers at her synagogue and writes a column for the Jewish Week and contributes to the Jerusalem Post. She also is an active savta (grandmother); eight of her grandchildren and two great grandchildren live in Israel, as do two of her daughters. The other two are in the United States, along with two grandchildren and one great grandchild.

We caught up recently with Hakimian to see how she was faring by asking, of course, a few questions.

Youve been living in Israel for more than 20 years. Whats the best part or parts?

I really enjoy the feel good moments. When the extended Elbaum family gathers for a barbecue each year at a national park to celebrate Israel Independence Day.

We are blessed to have in Israel 60-plus children/spouses/ grandchildren/great grandchildren of mine and my late sisters, Nancy Makovsky and Ruth Shane. (Our mom was born in Jerusalem and our dad in Safed. Their memory lives on.)

Also, what continues to remain so meaningful is when I sing the words of the Hatikvah:

Our hope is not yet lost/ It is two thousand years old/ To be a free people in our land/ The land of Zion and Jerusalem.

Another great perk of living here is that at the age of 80, citizens are given a Ptor Mtor Card, meaning we are free to go to the head of the line. I have used my card at the airport, the post office, a restaurant, a department store dressing room and when waiting for an elevator. I truly miss this perk when Im out of the country.

How long did it take before you felt fully acclimated? What helped that process?

Having so much family here helped us, but I would suggest trying to learn Hebrew. In truth, it is possible to live comfortably in Jerusalem without speaking Hebrew. But to be truly acclimated, it is important to speak the language. Even after 20-plus years, I still speak Hebrew with an American accent. But so did Golda Meir, Israels fourth prime minister.

Any advice/suggestions to folks in St. Louis thinking of making aliyah? Whats the best way for them to prepare?

Carefully choose the neighborhood where you want to live.

In the most general of terms, Yusef and I both knew we wanted to live in Jerusalem and be part of a warm and active community. We didnt want to live in a high-rise.

We chose the neighborhood of French Hill and, 23 years later, Im happily living in the same home. And though I drive, I like walking: two minutes to the synagogue; three minutes to the supermarket, bank, three coffee houses and a bus stop; eight minutes to the post office and light rail stop; and 20 minutes to Hebrew University.

As it turned out, there are three other women in the neighborhood who are from St. Louis and have lived here for more than 20 years: Rachel Majerowicz Cohen, Robbie Burman Shibi and Sasha Tamarkin Sedan. Interestingly enough, we didnt know each other in St. Louis but met here in French Hill. I met Sasha when we were both doing civil guard rounds.

Besides friends, what do you miss most about St. Louis?

The Clayton Library, now known as the St. Louis County Library Mid County Branch. Until the age of 8, I went to Hempstead School on Minerva Avenue, and my mom would take us to the library every week I think it was called the Wellston Library. Years later, as a mom, Id take my daughters to the Clayton Library.

Israel has great universities, but it does not have a great system of public libraries.

In 1889, Andrew Carnegie wrote: A library outranks any other thing a community can do to benefit its people. And between 1886 and 1919, he paid for 1,679 library buildings. In my opinion, Israel today needs an Andrew Carnegie.

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Native St. Louisan looks back on 20+ years in Jerusalem - St. Louis Jewish Light

Special Holocaust remembrance program Welcome to the City of Fort Worth – City of Fort Worth

Posted By on January 28, 2022

In 1942 Nazis gathered religious objects from synagogues across Czechoslovakia and shipped them to Prague to be cataloged.

Among those ritual items were 1,564 Torah scrolls. Three decades later, one of those sacred Hebrew scrolls came to Fort Worth. Join Hollace Ava Weiner, director of the Fort Worth Jewish Archives, and Rabbi Emeritus Ralph D. Mecklenburger of Beth-El Congregation to learn about the journey of this scroll that left the Czech village of Uhnves in 1942, spent over 20 years in a drafty warehouse and arrived at a Fort Worth synagogue in 1971 to begin its mission anew.

About Hollace Ava Weiner

Hollace Ava Weiner, a native of Washington, D.C., is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the University of Maryland. For a decade, beginning in 1986, she worked as a news reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. She left the paper in 1997 to finish a book, Jewish Stars in Texas: Rabbis and Their Work, published by Texas A&M University Press. This book was followed by four others, among them the centennial history of River Crest Country Club. Hollace contributed chapters to the book Quiet Voices: Southern Rabbis and Civil Rights; Grace & Gumption, Stories of Fort Worth Women; and to the award-winning book Texas Women and Ranching. Her chapter in the ranching book is about Fort Worth native Frances Rosenthal Kallison, the only Jewish woman in the National Cowgirl Hall of Fame. (Hollace nominated her!) As one book led to another, Hollace enrolled at UTA for a Masters Degree in history and Archives. For the past 20 years she has been volunteer director of the Fort Worth Jewish Archives, which has offices at both Beth-El Congregation and Congregation Ahavath Sholom. During the pandemic, the Star-Telegram re-hired her to write a monthly local-history column. She loves writing for hometown readers.

AboutRabbi Ralph D. Mecklenburger

Recognized as a peacemaker and mediator, in 1984 the rabbi was drawn into a clash over busing and desegregation. Years later, in 1999, an African American minister who led years of protests against the public schools agreed to meet with the School Board only if the rabbi was part of the mediation team. An advocate for equal rights, in 1991 the rabbi quietly sponsored a gay man, the director of the Aids Outreach Center, for membership in a high profile service organization. When the civic group rejected his nominee, the rabbi worked for change from within and years later was elected to its board of directors. Rabbi Ralph is everybodys rabbi, remarked a police officer assigned to the mayors office.

Within the Jewish community, Rabbi Mecklenburger mended fences, diminishing rivalries among local congregations. He established a joint worship and scholar-in-residence program over Selichot, the weekend prior to the High Holidays. He The Temple board approved associate memberships, so that congregants at the Conservative synagogue could join Beth-El with half-price dues and enroll their teens in the Temple Youth Group. When Chabad-Lubavitch established a Hasidic house of worship in Fort Worth, Beth-El loaned its rabbi a Torah. Never territorial toward other Jewish denominations, Rabbi Mecklenburger wrote in the Texas Jewish Post in 1999, We all know Orthodox Jews who have become Reform and Reform Jews who have chosen Orthodoxy. That is healthy and has served to keep disaffected Jews in the fold. . . . Pluralism is not only ethically right, it is good for us.

The rabbis pen proved prolific and provocative. When Sunday newspapers published a B.C. comic strip in 2001 that pictured a menorah melting into a crucifix, he slammed the cartoonist in an op-ed column for portraying one of the worlds major religions as extinguished. When the movie The Passion of the Christ premiered in 1998, he critiqued it for the Star-Telegram, writing that it represents the worst of Hollywood pop-culture, glorifying violence rather than the best of Christian spirituality. When presidential candidates railed against Muslim immigration to America, he countered with a newspaper column that stirred online debate.

With a gentler pen, the rabbi has written more than 400 eulogies over the past three decades, warmly describing the strengths and even the quirks of the dearly departed. Masterfully, he delivered sermons, with gravity and levity, linking current concerns to passages from Torah and Talmud. All the while, he was synthesizing his thinking and theology into a landmark book, published in 2012 and aptly titled Our Religious Brains.

Over the past 32 years, the congregation has watched the rabbis thick fringe of black hair turn gray, his son and daughter grow from grade school into adulthood, and him and his wife, Ann, become globetrotting grandparents. Beth-El, once a Classical Reform synagogue where few knew Hebrew, has turned into a Temple that teaches the Alef Bet to kindergarteners, enjoys Cantorial music, and annually sends dozens of children to camp and to Israel. With a burgeoning religious school, a growing endowment, a stable staff, and consensus within the congregation, Rabbi Mecklenburger has guided Beth-El back to the future and into its second century.

This event will be held in the Tandy Hall in the East Wing of the Central Library

Fort Worth Public Library - Central,500 W. 3rd,Fort Worth76102 View Map

32.754011,-97.3349468

500 W. 3rd, Fort Worth76102

500 W. 3rd, Fort Worth76102

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Special Holocaust remembrance program Welcome to the City of Fort Worth - City of Fort Worth

New study finds staff assumptions about race play a role in the variability of care of nursing homes residents with advanced dementia – EurekAlert

Posted By on January 28, 2022

BOSTON (January 24, 2022) A new study published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association Internal Medicine (JAMA IM) found several factors including staff assumptions about minoritized groups may play a role in the variability in the quality of care provided to U.S. nursing home residents with advanced dementia

T.he study, Nursing Home Organizational Culture and Staff Perspectives Influencing Variability in Advanced Dementia Care: The ADVANCE Study, identified organizational factors and staff perceptions at nursing homes that may drive known variability in the type of care provided nursing home residents with advanced dementia, especially in the use of more aggressive interventions like tube-feeding or hospitalizations. These aggressive interventions are considered by many to be markers of poor quality of care, as they often do not promote clinical benefits or comfort among persons with advanced dementia.

Prior research has shown Black residents (versus white residents and those in facilities in the southeastern part of the United States) get more aggressive care, including greater use of feeding tubes and hospital transfers.

Ruth Palan Lopez, Ph.D., G.N.P.-B.C., F.A.A.N., Professor and Associate Dean of Research, Jacques Mohr Chair at MGH Institute of Health Professions School of Nursing, and Susan L. Mitchell, M.D., M.P.H., Senior Scientist, Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research at Hebrew SeniorLife and Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, are the lead authors of the study. Their research was supported by the National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health Award Number R01AG058539.

The study identified several factors that nursing homes could target to improve delivery of goal-directed care to all residents. One is to improve provider knowledge and communication skills that less aggressive interventions may be more in line with the residents wishes and best evidence, said Dr. Lopez. For example, many nurses may believe that feeding tubes prolong the life of advanced dementia patients, but this is not borne out by existing studies. Nursing homes need to make sure their staff is aware that hand feeding is better for residents. Based on prior research, aggressive interventions can be less effective compared to less-intensive interventions, like feeding residents manually, while requiring more time of the nursing staff provides better care to their patients.

The most concerning finding was that staff in nursing homes had preconceptions that families of Black residents did not want to engage in advance care planning and preferred more aggressive care.

"Staff preconceptions that Blacks are less willing to engage in advance care planning and want more aggressive care speaks to the need to address systemic racial biases in nursing homes, said Dr. Mitchell, noting that nursing homes in the United States tend to be racially segregated and low-resource homes tend to have more Black residents. Achieving health equity for all nursing home residents with advanced dementia must be the driving force behind all efforts aimed at reducing disparities in their care.

Researchers conducted 169 staff interviews at 14 nursing homes in four states. They identified factors that were typical of nursing homes that provided less intensity of care including: the quality of the physical environment (e.g., good repair, non-malodorous), the availability of standardized advance care planning, greater staff engagement in shared decision-making, and staff understanding that feeding tubes do not prolong life. Aggressive intervention was considered suboptimal.

More equitable advanced dementia care, the study concluded, may be achieved by addressing several factors, including staff biases towards Black residents. Other solutions include increasing support and funding for low-resourced facilities, standardizing advance-care planning, and educating staff, patients, and their families about evidenced-based care and goal-directed decision-making in advanced dementia.

Other researchers collaborating in this study work at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Meyers Primary Care Institute, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Oregon Health & Science University School of Nursing, the University of Tennessee at Martin, Emory Center for Health in Aging and the Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing at Emory University, the Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development at Duke University School of Medicine, and the Geriatrics Research Education and Clinical Center at Veteran Affairs Medicine Center.

About MGH Institute of Health ProfessionsTeam-based care, delivered by clinicians skilled in collaboration and communication, leads to better outcomes for patients. Thats why MGH Institute of Health Professions graduate school in Boston integrates interprofessional education into its academic programs. Approximately 1,600 students at its Charlestown Navy Yard campus learn and collaborate in teams across disciplines as they pursue post-baccalaureate, masters, and doctoral degrees in genetic counseling, nursing, occupational therapy, physical therapy, physician assistant studies, speech-language pathology, health professions education, and rehabilitation sciences. The interprofessional learning model extends to hundreds of hospital, clinical, community, and educational sites in Greater Boston and beyond. The MGH Institute is the only degree-granting affiliate of Mass General Brigham, New Englands largest health provider. It has educated more than 9,000 graduates since its 1977 founding. It is fully accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education. Several programs are highly ranked by U.S. News & World Report.

About Hebrew SeniorLife

Hebrew SeniorLife, an affiliate of Harvard Medical School, is a national senior services leader uniquely dedicated to rethinking, researching, and redefining the possibilities of aging. Hebrew SeniorLife cares for more than 3,000 seniors a day across six campuses throughout Greater Boston. Locations include: Hebrew Rehabilitation Center-Boston and Hebrew Rehabilitation Center-NewBridge in Dedham; NewBridge on the Charles, Dedham; Orchard Cove, Canton; Simon C. Fireman Community, Randolph; Center Communities of Brookline, Brookline; and Jack Satter House, Revere. Founded in 1903, Hebrew SeniorLife also conducts influential research into aging at the Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research, which has a portfolio of more than $63 million, making it the largest gerontological research facility in the U.S. in a clinical setting. It also trains more than 1,000 geriatric care providers each year. For more information about Hebrew SeniorLife, visithttps://www.hebrewseniorlife.org or follow us on our blog, Facebook,Instagram, Twitter, andLinkedIn.

About the Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging ResearchScientists at theMarcus Instituteseek to transform the human experience of aging by conducting research that will ensure a life of health, dignity, and productivity into advanced age. The Marcus Institute carries out rigorous studies that discover the mechanisms of age-related disease and disability; lead to the prevention, treatment, and cure of disease; advance the standard of care for older people; and inform public decision-making.

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JAMA Internal Medicine

Nursing Home Organizational Culture and Staff Perspectives Influencing Variability in Advanced Dementia Care: The ADVANCE Study,

24-Jan-2022

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New study finds staff assumptions about race play a role in the variability of care of nursing homes residents with advanced dementia - EurekAlert

Texas man accused of selling gun to take hostages at …

Posted By on January 28, 2022

Congregation Beth Israel Rabbi Charlie Cytron-Walker, facing the camera, hugs a man after a healing service on Jan. 17, two days after he and three others were taken hostage at his Colleyville, Texas, synagogue. Yffy Yossifor/Star-Telegram/via AP hide caption

Congregation Beth Israel Rabbi Charlie Cytron-Walker, facing the camera, hugs a man after a healing service on Jan. 17, two days after he and three others were taken hostage at his Colleyville, Texas, synagogue.

DALLAS A Texas man has been charged with a federal gun crime after authorities say he sold a gun to a man who held four hostages inside a Texas synagogue earlier this month before being fatally shot by the FBI, the Justice Department said Wednesday.

Henry "Michael" Williams, 32, was charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm after authorities say he sold the weapon that Malik Faisal Akram used when he entered Congregation Beth Israel in Colleyville, Texas, on Jan. 15 and held the synagogue's rabbi and three others hostage for hours.

The attorney listed for Williams in court records did not immediately respond Wednesday to a phone message and email seeking comment.

Akram, a 44-year-old British citizen, held hostages in the Dallas-area suburb while demanding the release of a federal prisoner. The standoff ended after more than 10 hours when the temple's rabbi threw a chair at Akram and fled with the other two remaining hostages just as an FBI tactical team was moving in. None of the hostages were injured.

Prosecutors say Williams sold Akram a semi-automatic pistol on Jan. 13 two days before the hostage-taking. The pistol was recovered from the scene.

Akram paid $150 for the gun, according to charging documents. The documents state Williams was convicted in 2005 of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and attempted possession of a controlled substance in 2013.

Williams allegedly acknowledged to FBI agents that he was aware he was not allowed to have a firearm and knew selling the gun to Akram was illegal.

He initially told investigators one day after Akram was killed that he recalled meeting a man with a British accent but didn't remember his name. During a separate interview the following week, authorities said, Williams was shown a photo of Akram and this time confirmed that he sold Akram the weapon at an intersection in South Dallas.

Williams told investigators that Akram told him he intended to use the gun to intimidate someone who owed an outstanding debt, according to authorities.

Dallas police arrested Williams on an outstanding warrant Monday, and he told federal investigators that he sold the gun to Akram after being read his rights, according to charging documents.

Earlier Wednesday, British police said they arrested another two men in the investigation into the hostage-taking incident.

The counter-terrorism force Policing North West said the two men were arrested in the northern English city of Manchester. They were being held for questioning and have not yet been charged.

The police force did not disclose details about the two men. British police do not release names and details of detainees until they are charged.

Akram was originally from the town of Blackburn in northwest England.

The hostages said Akram cited antisemitic stereotypes, and authorities said Akram was demanding the release of Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani neuroscientist convicted of trying to kill U.S. troops in Afghanistan and who is serving a lengthy sentence in a prison near Colleyville.

British media reported that Akram was investigated by MI5, the domestic security service, in the second half of 2020, but was deemed not to be a credible threat at the time.

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Texas man accused of selling gun to take hostages at ...


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