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Inclusion and safety at synagogue: A congruent conversation – JNS.org

Posted By on January 28, 2022

(January 27, 2022 / JNS) The hostages were still being held at gunpoint in Colleyville, Texas, when Twitter comments on security in the synagogue began:

Before you think armed guards at synagogues are the answer, read this

There will be calls to tighten security in and around Jewish spaces, to look at guestsparticularly guests of colorwith suspicion.

Thinking about how the response to this moment will likely lead to an increase of armed security in Jewish spaces. This will make many white Jews feel safer. This will also make many BIPOC Jews unsafe

Thinking about how the response to this moment will likely lead to an increase of armed security in Jewish spaces. This will make many white Jews feel safer. This will also make many BIPOC Jews unsafe. Holding Jews of color in my heart today as they hold added layers of trauma.

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Few, if any, of these calls actually came from black Jews. The conversation seemed designed to specifically end all conversation calling for increased security in Jewish spaces by labeling anyone doing so as caring only for white Jews, and thus, racist.

I am not a black Jew, but I felt that this narrative could not be the whole story. Surely, we can make synagogues safer for all Jews. I turned to some friends, and friends of friends, who are Jews of color and asked them how they felt.

Their responses provide much food for thought and calls for action, not only on how to make the synagogue safer but what work there is for us to do way before security gets involved.

Tyler Samuels, the social-media coordinator for Hasbara Canada and a former executive member of Jews of Colour Canada, said he felt the people starting the social-media conversation were taking some black Jews, whose ideas they agreed with, and tokenizing them.

The idea of synagogue and safety is to keep Jews safe from the kind of thing we witnessed last week. I found it very detrimental to start this conversation while Jews were being held hostage, and then to bring black Jews into the conversation, saying that if we increase security or bring police, they will feel more unsafe. I disagree with that. I think those people who started that conversation, they selected some black Jews who have been outspoken against increased security.

I reject that idea. How many black Jews have died trying to get into a synagogue? I dont say this lightly, I have had horrible experiences with police. Ive been stopped, frisked and profiled, but I feel safety and security is the utmost thing. Ive told countless people, I might die because of police brutality but I will die if there is an active shooter in a synagogue. I feel people are using a theory that might happen, which is a legitimate concern, but not all black Jews agree. We are not a monolith.

A lot of Jews who are not black have taken on this mantle of speaking for us and using black Jews who agree with them and using them as tokens to push this narrative.

My question is: If security doesnt work, what should all Jews do to feel safe? I havent gotten an answer.

For Elisheva Rishon, an Orthodox black Jewish woman, the only time security is a problem for me in shul is when another Jewish person gets nervous, goes to security and points me out as a suspicious person, She recalled an incident, one of many, she says. I was once at shul, I went through the security check and as I was going through, a different Jewish security representative ran out after me and demanded I go through another check. He said he had to see what was in my pockets. I told him the security guard had already done so. He said he had to make sure that all the Jews in there were safe. I said, Im also a Jew! The people making it difficult for me to be black and Jewish is not security, its my fellow Jews.

Tova Richardo, said similarly that there needs to be security at synagogues. Im a black person who wants law enforcement/security to work for all people. I dont want to be profiled by congregants or security, but Im more likely to be profiled by a congregant than security. Its important that myself, my family or others like us are protected in synagogue.

For Noah Shufutinsky, a black Russian Jew, rapper and performer, the idea that Jews of color dont want security is both false and marginalizing. It bothers me when people push the narrative [that speaking of security in shuls is wrong/discriminatory/racist]. Its the same concept as abolish the police altogether. Obviously, having security in front of synagogues is going to make it safer. We need to end marginalization by the police, not get rid of cops completely. Honestly, Ive felt far more marginalized in Jewish spaces from people constantly questioning my Judaism than I ever did from cops in front of my synagogue.

Noah says he often had more of a connection with the police officers posted outside the synagogue, than he did with other Jews in his synagogue, due to their also being black with southern roots. The assumption that I would beautomatically marginalized by police is false.

He feels that the push is a double standard: They are pushing this agenda of abolish the police, but why is the first place they are going to do this in a synagogue where there are literally shootings and bombs threats. This is where youre going to start?

Lastly, Noah says that the conversation itself marginalizes him. People who want to remove security claim that they do it to make members of color feel safe, but I feel marginalized by thatas though I would feel safer exposed to terrorists than I would with police, as though I dont feel as scared or concerned when synagogues are unsafe. Why am I being separated from other Jews?I believe in the need for security in response to threats just like any other Jew.

So, how can we ensure the safety of all Jews in the synagogue and not alienate Jews of color with profiling or making them feel any less a part of the community?

Yirmiyahu Danzig is a Caribbean and Jerusalemite Jew who served in the Israeli Border Police. He feels that security is a must, but it would best come from the community itself.

In the years after 9/11, me or my family members were made to feel very uncomfortable when trying to enter our synagogue. I understood the motivations, but it was clear that security needed sensitivity training because our shul had a fair amount of JOC. We need to be clear about the need to protect our synagogues, but its best if the people from the community take on the role themselves.

He is currently working on implementing this for numerous synagogues. This is far preferable to bringing police into the synagogue, he says. If people in the community arent ready to volunteer and be trained, then go to a private firm willing to have proper sensitivity training. Police, for me, are a last resort.

Samuels also sees this as a good solution, saying, Ive heard that more black Jews should be involved in the synagogue and train them as guards to look for suspicious behavior, not color. I see this as a middle-of-the-road approach that can protect everyone and where everyone is comfortable, without racial profiling.

I feel that if you are a rabbi who stressed the importance of raising minority voices, it is tokenizing to use only one side and not listen to others who do not agree with this position and who do want increased security in synagogues.

As a friend of mine said: Id rather be stopped by a security guard and asked the typical questions, and say, Yes, Im Jewish, etc., and then go on into synagogue and feel safe versus not having security, going in and having an active shooter situation. This is the key difference between talking theory and taking reality. Gunmen dont care if youre black, Mizrachi, Sephardi, Ashkenazi. Youre a Jew, and they want to kill you.

It seems that the main obstacle to Jews of color feeling like they are full members of the tribe are those inside the synagogue door, not those outside of it. We do not need to endanger the community in order to make everyone feel safe. Instead, we mustmake it so that our community sees every Jew as one of us, just as the terrorists do.

Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll is an Israeli-based journalist and writer.

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Inclusion and safety at synagogue: A congruent conversation - JNS.org

‘Squirrel Hill: The Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting and the Soul of a Neighborhood’ – FOX10 News

Posted By on January 28, 2022

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'Squirrel Hill: The Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting and the Soul of a Neighborhood' - FOX10 News

Social Psychiatric Lessons Learned and Relearned in the Aftermath of the Synagogue Hostage Crisis – Psychiatric Times

Posted By on January 28, 2022

With hate on the rise once more, remember these 10 conclusions.

PSYCHIATRIC VIEWS ON THE DAILY NEWS

On January 18, 2022, the group SPIRIT (Social Psychiatrists Interested in Recovery from International Trauma) wrote an article We Refuse to Hate in response to the hostage crisis in a Synagogue outside of Dallas, Texas. Because the issues seemed so complex and new information came out afterwards, some of us thought it might be useful to summarize and convey 10 key conclusions today. Today, January 27th, is also the annual International Holocaust Remembrance Day. All Holocaust related anniversaries are to remind us Never Again! However, the rise in anti-Semitism in the world, as shown in the Texas event, indicates that psychiatry still has work to do not only in helping to reduce anti-Semitism, but also to protect scapegoated groups from hate with xenophilia.

1. Welcome the stranger with trust, but verify (as the Russian proverb goes).

2. Learn and contribute to physical and psychological safety and security strategies.

3. The Holocaust indicates how far the social psychopathology of hate can go.

4. Anti-Semitism is the canary of the xenophobia coal mine.

5. Support interfaith and cross-cultural coalitions.

6. Correct conspiracy theories about scapegoated cultural groups.

7. Address the adverse social determinants of mental health.

8. Do not be a hostage to hate, but rather a helper of harmony.

9. Guns put too much power into the wrong hands.

10. Lead by example, not argument.

Further discussion about these individual conclusions, and the social psychopathologies that they cover, are being considered for upcoming daily columns.

Dr Mofficis an award-winning psychiatrist who has specialized in the cultural and ethical aspects of psychiatry. A prolific writer and speaker, he received the one-time designation of Hero of Public Psychiatry from the Assembly of the American Psychiatric Association in 2002. He is an advocate for mental health issues relate to climate instability, burnout, Islamophobia, and anti-Semitism for a better world. He serves on the Editorial Board of Psychiatric TimesTM. Dr Seeman is professor emerita, Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Dr Gorman is a psychiatrist, the author of more than 300 peer reviewed papers, founder of Critica, and board member of the Social venture Fund for Arab Jewish Equality in Israel. Dr Reda is a practicing psychiatrist, Providence Healthcare System, Portland,Oregon.

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Social Psychiatric Lessons Learned and Relearned in the Aftermath of the Synagogue Hostage Crisis - Psychiatric Times

Synagogue service times: Week of January 28 | Synagogues – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on January 28, 2022

ConservativeAgudath B'nai Israel

Meister Road at Pole Ave., Lorain

Ritual Director Mark Jaffee

440-282-3307

abitemplelorain.com

750 White Pond Dr., Akron

Rabbi Jeremy Lipton

330-864-2105

bethelakron.com

27501 Fairmount Blvd., Pepper Pike

Rabbis Stephen Weiss and Hal Rudin-Luria; Stanley J. Schachter, Rabbi Emeritus;

Cantor Aaron Shifman

216-831-6555

bnaijeshurun.org

Anshe Emeth Beth Tefilo Congregation

27500 Shaker Blvd,

Pepper Pike, OH 44124

Joshua Skoff, Senior Rabbi

Sharon Y. Marcus, Associate Rabbi

Rosette Barron Haim, Guest Rabbi

Milton B. Rube, Rabbi-in-Residence

Misha Pisman, Cantor

Gadi Galili, Ritual Director

216-371-2244; TDD # 216-371-8579

parksynagogue.org

26811 Fairmount Blvd., Beachwood

Rabbi Scott B. Roland; Cantor Beth Schlossberg; Gary Paller, Cantor Emeritus

216-765-8300

shaareytikvah.org

3246 Desota Ave., Cleveland Heights

Rabbi Michael Ungar

216-320-9667

bethelheights.org

Montefiore Maltz Chapel

One David N. Myers Parkway., Beachwood

Rabbi Akiva Feinstein; Cantor Gary Paller

216-360-9080

30799 Pinetree Road, #401, Pepper Pike

Rabbi Eddie Sukol

216-509-9969

rabbieddie@theshul.us

theshul.us

1700 S. Taylor Road, Cleveland Heights

Rabbi Boruch Hirschfeld

216-932-6064

25400 Fairmount Blvd., Beachwood

Rabbi Ari Spiegler; Rabbi Emeritus David S. Zlatin

216-556-0010

Beachwoodkehilla.org

23711 Chagrin Blvd., Beachwood

Rabbi Moshe Gancz

216-647-4884

clevelandjewishlearning.com

2437 S. Green Road, Beachwood

Rabbi Binyamin Blau; Melvin Granatstein, Rabbi Emeritus

216-381-4757

GreenRoadSynagogue.org

14270 Cedar Road, University Heights

Rabbi Raphael Davidovich

216-382-1958

hjcs.org

1771 S. Taylor Road, Cleveland Heights

Rabbi Yehuda Blum

216-321-5855

27100 Cedar Road, Beachwood

Associate Rabbi Joseph Kirsch

216-831-6500

23749 Cedar Road, Lyndhurst

Rabbi Noah Leavitt

216-382-6566

office@oz-cedarsinai.org

oz-cedarsinai.org

2004 S. Green Road, South Euclid

Rabbi Yossi Marozov

216-235-6498

5570 Harper Road, Solon

Rabbi Zushe Greenberg

440-498-9533

office@solonchabad.com

solonchabad.com

1970 S. Taylor Road, Cleveland Heights

216-321-4875

2479 S. Green Road, Beachwood

Rabbis Shalom Ber Chaikin and Shmuli Friedman

216-282-0112

info@ChabadofCleveland.com

wccrabbi@gmail.com

Hebrew Academy (HAC), 1860 S. Taylor Road

Beachwood (Stone), 2463 Green Road

Rabbis Naphtali Burnstein and Aharon Dovid Lebovics

216-382-5740

office@yigc.org

2203 S. Green Road, Beachwood

Rabbi Moshe Garfunkel

216-291-5000

Rabbi Steve Segar

216-320-1498

connect@kolhalev.net

kolhalev.net

7599 Center St., Mentor

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Synagogue service times: Week of January 28 | Synagogues - Cleveland Jewish News

7 FOOD HALLS THAT SIZZLE – Leisure Group Travel

Posted By on January 26, 2022

By Isabella Wilkes

From 2016 to 2019, the number of food halls in America has almost doubled, and this growth has continued into 2021. Food halls are unique for their wide selection of food styles and flavors from local and international cuisine. For group travel, food halls are the perfect spot to grab a meal. These seven food halls on the East Coast, some old, some new, are sure to fulfill a groups desire for a fun culinary experience.

Faneuil Hall Market place is located in a bustling promenade, bursting with more than 200,000 square feet of retail space. It also features both local and national shops. This market is also home to New Englands largest and most historic food hall: Quincy Market Food Colonnade.

As for food, there is nothing more to be desired when considering the wide array of cuisine that its 12 restaurants and pubs offer. The Salty Dog is a Faneuil original, providing the most authentic Boston seafood experience for patrons looking for a casual dining setting. Boston Chowda Co. is the place to be if you want to taste award-winning New England clam chowder with a side of lobster rolls.

Quincy Market also has plenty of restaurants that incorporate cuisine from far beyond the Boston harbor, like Ned Devines Irish Pub and Steves Greek Cuisine.

Located in NYCs Meatpacking District, Chelsea Market has its roots in the center of the citys produce capital. It imports the finest meats, fish, cheeses, and dry goods from across the nation and around the world.

This bustling market and food hall are unique in the sense you can both buy quality products from specialty vendors or choose to dine in at one of the many restaurants. There are many restaurants to choose from that are distinctly New York, like Pearl River Mart, Dickinsons Farmstand, and Creamline. But, the food offerings are as diverse as the people of NYC, offering French, Mexican, Korean, Jamaican, Italian, German, and Chinese cuisine.

Opening in March 2022, High Street Place Food Hall is a highly anticipated location built out of one of Bostons most historic buildings. World-class designers were brought from around the world to re-imagine this space as one made to explore.

For groups looking to grab a drink, High Street will have multiple bars: Bubble Bath Champagne & Wine Bar, Daiquiris & Daisies, and Newburyport Brewing Co. As for food, any cuisine you can think of is offered, from pizza at Tenderonis to tacos at North East of the Border to Jewish deli sandwiches at Mamalehs Delicatessen.

Gansevoort Liberty Market is located in the modernly designed Oculus in the Westfield World Trade Center.

Just as the location is ultra-modern, most restaurants located within the market take well-loved dishes and reimagine them with sleek presentations, like Los Panchos, K-Pop Haus, and Umai Fish. There is also plenty of traditional comfort food offered from Sal Anthonys, Momo, and Cebichelsea. Or, if youre in a rush, Gansevoort has made it easy to order take-out from any of its restaurants and combine it all into one order, eliminating the challenge of choosing a restaurant everyone will enjoy.

Since 1893, Reading Terminal Market has been providing the Philly area with the best local produce and confections. The market offers visitors everything they could need to create a memorable meal at home or have an amazing dining experience at one of the many restaurants under one roof.

Carmens Famous Italian Hoagies & Cheesesteaks is the place to go if you havent already gotten a taste of Philadelphias traditional meal. Fox & Son Fancy Corndogs and Caredas Caribbean Cuisine are perfect for groups on the go looking for walkable meals. For dessert, Profis Creperie and Bassetts Ice Cream are perfect stops to satisfy a sweet tooth.

Lexington Market is undergoing a huge structural transformation after more than 200 years of serving the Baltimore area. The East Market is open during the entire reservation, where most vendors reside. But the new South Market is set to open in 2022. This new section, redesigned in an open concept, modern fashion, will be a community space for the city with a walkable plaza that will be a hub for farmers markets and other public gatherings for years to come.

Vendors at Lexington Market range include restaurants, delis, bakeries, museums, and outlets, satisfying a groups every need in one location. Your group has the opportunity to try something new, like interesting baked potatoes at Dancing Potato, or stick to the classics at Hominy Kitchen and Parks Fried Chicken. Many of these vendors take you back in time with their neon signs and classic East Coast vibes, like Krauses Lite Fare, Perfect Gentlemen Barber Shop & Salon, or Kofmans Shoe Repair.

Soon to be the perfect mix of old and new Baltimore, Lexington Market is a must-visit on your group trip to take in the culture of Charm City.

Union Market has a culture of entrepreneurship and ingenuity, helping local businesses grow and creating a space where the community can flourish. With more than 200 years of serving the D.C. area under its belt, the market hopes to build on existing tradition while paving the road ahead for the future of food markets across the world.

The food choices are just as innovative as the markets mission. Last Call combines late-night dive bar dining with the beautiful presentation of food and drinks. Shouk is an award-winning modern Israeli street food vendor that is completely plant-based. Moreover, Michelin Star-winning Masseria transports guests to the Italian coast with its simple Italian farmstead cuisine.

For other great food stories that will whet your appetite , visit https://leisuregrouptravel.com/5-great-east-coast-food-markets/ and https://leisuregrouptravel.com/flavors-of-japan/

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7 FOOD HALLS THAT SIZZLE - Leisure Group Travel

Top Chef Spike Mendelsohn Is Leading the Plant-Based Renaissance – LIVEKINDLY

Posted By on January 26, 2022

On January 24, the first PLNT Burger in New York Cityand the chains first standalone locationdebuted in Union Square. We spoke with former Top Chef contestant Spike Mendelsohn about the Greek and Jewish comfort foods that built his early palate, how surfing inspired his plant-based shift, and why he champions fast food.

One of the foremost food policy chefs in America today, Mendelsohn grew up in a family of philanthropic restaurant owners. But it wasnt until he moved from St. Petersburg, Florida, to Washington D.C. to launch his own restaurant that he started to understand the political power of food. Surrounded by politicians and staffers advocating for change in their respective sectors, Mendelsohn felt inspired to apply a similarly activist attitude to what he cared most about: food systems. In 2008, he opened his Capitol Hill restaurant, Good Stuff Eatery, which quickly became a favorite hub for politicians and changemakers, including Former President Barack Obama and Former First Lady Michelle Obama.

For Mendelsohn, the restaurants political location became a springboard for joining the urgent national conversations surrounding farming, food access, and sustainability. Good Stuff sourced from local farms, planted trees in Brazils Carava River Basin with The Nature Conservancy, and donated labor and funds to Jos Andrs crisis relief organization DC Central Kitchen.

But it wasnt until 2014 that a lightbulb went off for the former Top Chef. His life was upended when he attended the Chefs Boot Camp for Policy and Change, hosted by food equity advocate Michel Nischan in Pescadero, California. Instead of quaffing wine and networking, Mendelsohn and 14 other chefs rolled up their sleeves and brainstormed creative solutions to food issues, from sustainability to food insecurity. He soon found willing mentors in not only Nischan, but also Andrs and Tom Colicchio.

Chefs are taking on a new role in the worldone that goes beyond your restaurants four walls, Mendelsohn says. The food policy boot camp makes chefs realize the voice that they have.

In 2015, Mendelsohn took on the role of chair of the D.C. Food Policy Council, which unites community leaders and government staff to further the sustainability, health, and access of D.C.s food systems. In 2019, he and Seth Goldman of Honest Tea opened their first plant-based concept, PLNT Burger, in Silver Spring, Maryland. Mendelsohns fast-food vegan burgers were instantaneously craveable, even during a pandemic. Whole Foods rapidly licensed Mendelsohn to open eight other PLNT Burger locations across the mid-Atlantic region in just two years, where the instantly identifiable classics like double cheeseburgers, spicy fried chikn sandwiches, sweet potato fries and soft serve won rave reviews. We chatted with Mendelsohn about how he created the perfect formula for a vegan fast-food restaurant that could trigger a plant-based revolution.

LIVEKINDLY: You come from a restaurant family. Your mom is Greek and your dad is Jewish. Did you grow up with home-cooked family meals from both those traditions?

Mendelsohn: My mother is a rockstar chefshes a big restaurateur and comes from Greek restaurateurs, and shes been in food her whole life. My dad was the oddball from an accounting background, and I always joke that I grew up in a Grewish family. We celebrated food of all sorts, whether it was Hanukkah, Passover, or Christmas foods, so I got the best of both worlds. My mom cooks a home-cooked meal every single day, from Greek pastitsio and moussaka and keftedes, to the Jewish foods she learned to make because of my dad, like matzo ball soup and latkes. Her latkes are the best in the world. I think thats why comfort is the thing that I love the most. I love the tasting dinner, but really, my best meals are family meals.

LIVEKINDLY: How did those childhood experiences construct your worldview of food?

Mendelsohn: Growing up like that really made me a worldly personnot only did I grow up in that environment, but our family, we were globetrotters. We werent wealthy, but we lived in Spain for a few years, and it influenced my global thought process on cuisine and even religion, because there are multiple different ways to look at both of those, and thats okay. People can have faith in what they have faith in, and my faith is surfing.

LIVEKINDLY: PLNT serves a fishless sandwich called the Save the Bay Fillet, made with Good Catch Foods crispy fish-free filet and house-made tartar sauce. Were the oceans and surfing a major influence in opening a vegan restaurant for you?

Mendelsohn: Yes, that definitely had an impact. The plastic waste in the oceans is a huge environmental issue, and through that world, Ive definitely been inspired to do a lot of what I do.I also just love the oceans and have been a water guy for a long time, and have fallen in love with surfing. Surfing is kind of spiritual in a wayits very rhythmic, because if you think about it, most of your time surfing is spent waiting in the water for a wave. It inspires me when I go surfing, to think about everything Im doing on planet earth. I come up with a lot of good ideas out there.

LIVEKINDLY: Plastic waste is devastating, but so is the methane created by food waste. How do you manage food waste at PLNT Burger?

Mendelsohn: Fast food has a reputation of being wasteful, but we have very little waste at our restaurantits pretty incredible. We keep menus small, cook to order, and do portion controls, so were very cognizant. We have waste logs that we use, and our Director of Operations Mike Colletti makes sure we order properly and train our staff. Food waste is such a buzzword, and its true that we as a society waste a lot of food, but its really distribution in America that we have to figure out, because thats how we waste a lot of food. A lot of food is being wasted before it even gets to plates.

LIVEKINDLY: Your staple menu item is the PLNT Burger, a single Beyond Meat patty with tomato, lettuce, pickles, caramelized onion, and PLNT sauce on a potato bun. Did you set out to make the vegan version of the Big Mac?

Mendelsohn: I never set out to open up a burger place that was just for vegans and vegetarians, actually. We set out to do an indulgent, greasy, delicious burger spot that just happens to be plant-basedthat opens us up for a lot more consumers, who want to make some changes but dont know how to. Burgers are a category everyone loves, and one of the highest-selling food groups in the world, so if people can start to switch up their burger intake with plant-based once in a while, its an easy entry point for the vegan lifestyle and better for you and the planet.

LIVEKINDLY: Your burgers are delicious and well-dressed, but theres nothing wrong with a super basic Beyond burger either. Are we at a turning point for the vegan burger, and also for plant-based eating?

Mendelsohn: We think so. Were going to look back on this moment in time 100 years from now, and say, Thats the moment when America started eating more plants as a whole. Were in this renaissance moment of plant-based food. People come to our PLNT Burger locations in Whole Foods and have the Beyond Burgers in their shopping baskets, and they ask us how to cook them before buying themit happens all the time, because people are still getting used to them. Theres an element of advocacy and education with our brand. Plant-based food is now crossing over into mass appeal and getting normalizedand thats where we want to live, because now were experiencing a massive change in our food system because of that shift, including in how we grow.

LIVEKINDLY: So now that were seeing this plant-based mainstreaming, will Top Chef will ever host a vegan or vegetarian season?

Mendelsohn: I just asked Tom Colicchio that question a couple weeks ago. He made me realize that they once had a vegan challenge and Natalie Portman was the guest judge, and it went really well. He didnt say that theyre ready to have a whole vegan Top Chef battle, but I think the moment is now.

LIVEKINDLY: Youve mentioned expanding PLNT Burger across the New York Tri-State region. What else is next for PLNT Burger?

Mendelsohn: Well, were bringing a new menu item that well be releasing, made from a very unique leftover: the fruiting body of the oyster mushroom. On a farm visit, someone told me that they sometimes take home the fruiting body remainders that are left over after oyster mushrooms get harvested, and that they taste just like chicken when theyre sauteed. This fruiting body is delicious and super nutrient dense, and were able to make it into a texturized chicken without processing anything. The only issue is supply, and now that were in New York City, we have to have something consistent, so were doing our chicken sandwich with Gardein. Now were going to use the fruiting body in a great innovation for another menu item well be releasing.

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Top Chef Spike Mendelsohn Is Leading the Plant-Based Renaissance - LIVEKINDLY

Wes Anderson’s The French Dispatch and the Legacy of Afro-Asia – lareviewofbooks

Posted By on January 26, 2022

BEFORE HIS INVOLVEMENT in revolutionary party politics in Vietnam, Nguyen Ai Quoc (later known as Ho Chi Minh) worked as a chef. We know relatively little about the details of Nguyen Ai Quocs life during this period, which he spent in Europe and the United States, working as a cook in Boston, London, and aboard a French steam ship. This gap in the otherwise sprawling archive of his life is mysterious, and ripe for speculation what was it like for this colonial subject to work as a cook in the heart of an empire? While he worked to provide sustenance for others, what sustained him? This is the premise of Monique Truongs 2003 The Book of Salt, a work of historical fiction set in interwar Paris and narrated from the perspective of Binh, a Vietnamese immigrant who works as the private chef of Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas. In the novel, Binh has a brief love affair with a fictionalized version of Nguyen Ai Quoc, who asks him a haunting question: What keeps you here?

The penultimate vignette in Wes Andersons newest film, The French Dispatch, is narrated by Roebuck Wright (Jeffrey Wright), a food writer for the French dispatch of the Liberty, Kansas Evening Sun. A gay, Black American expat living in the fictional French town of Ennui-sur-Blas, Wrights character is partly inspired by James Baldwin. The film itself reads like a magazine, and each vignette focuses on a piece of writing included in the magazines final issue, which has been assembled in the wake of the death of the founding editor. Wrights vignette, titled The Private Dining Room of the Police Commissioner, occurs under the magazines Tastes and Smells section. In his narration of the featured article, Wright tells the story of a fine dining experience that is interrupted by a criminal plot to kidnap the commissioners son. The dinner itself, which was supposed to be a master class in the cuisine of police cooking, never makes it beyond the aperitif.

If the article fails to meet readerly expectations of a typical piece of food criticism, it nevertheless manages to paint an intriguing portrait of the expert chef, the enigmatic Lieutenant Nescaffier, an Asian expat whose place of origin remains unknown. (That Nguyen Ai Quoc, according to William J. Duikers 1989 biography, worked as an apprentice to a chef named Escoffier while living in London is an interesting coincidence.) Wright begins the article by describing Nescaffier as a master of his craft whose talent nearly defies description. When the article veers away from its intended subject, Nescaffier doesnt disappear from the narrative: instead, he emerges as the storys hero, rescuing the police commissioners son from his kidnappers by whipping up a dish of radishes laced with poison, which he himself eats in order to quell any suspicion. But Nescaffier survived, Wright says, thanks to the extreme fortitude bolstered and braced season upon season by the richest, most potent plates, pans, and sauce pots of his almost superhuman stomach. The section ends with a tender, intimate exchange between Wright and a recovering Nescaffier, who bond over their shared identity as foreigners. This citys full of us, isnt it? Wright chuckles.

The exchange certainly speaks, in a general sense, to the melancholic condition of exile. Of his sacrificial act, Nescaffier says, Im not brave. I just wasnt in the mood to be a disappointment to everybody, reminding viewers that what might seem like bravery is, for the perpetual foreigner, simply an act of survival. Of course, its important to note that Wright and Nescaffier are not simply foreigners living in France, like the other white American expats who write for the French dispatch; as racialized characters, they are doubly removed from the dominant social order, and Wrights outsider status is further compounded by his sexuality, for which he is imprisoned while living in Ennui.

The emergence of the category of race in this vignette points to a more specific story than one of exile in general: with Wright and Nescaffier as its key characters, the vignette recalls a rich but relatively little-known history of international collaboration between members of the African and Asian diaspora throughout the 20th century. Intellectuals, artists, and activists of both diasporas theorized cross-racial solutions to the global, overlapping tyrannies of colonialism, capitalism, and the racist systems that uphold them. They strove to challenge the notion that the struggles faced by one racialized group were somehow disconnected from those faced by the other, while simultaneously acknowledging the unique circumstances of each. For scholars like Fred Ho, Bill Mullen, and Tao Leigh Goffe as well as for Vijay Prashad, Shannon Steen, Heike Raphael-Hernandez, and other scholars the term Afro-Asia names this mode of political collaboration and cultural exchange, and signifies a way of thinking and living against and beyond Euro-American systems of domination. Expressions of Afro-Asian collaboration range from overtly political writing, like Mao Zedongs statements in support of Black Americans against US domestic racism in the 1960s, to musical productions in the form of what Tamara Roberts calls sono-racial collaboration. Notable figures who embraced this vision include Langston Hughes, whose later poetry was influenced by his travels to Central and East Asia; W. E. B. Du Bois, for whom Asia was key to developing an understanding of the color line as a global phenomenon; C. L. R. James, who considered the history of radical politics in China in his writing on Marxist theory; and American activist Grace Lee Boggs, who collaborated with C. L. R. James, as well as her husband James Boggs, in her fight for civil and human rights.

In his 2003 essay The Shadow of Shadows, English and Comparative Literature professor Brent Hayes Edwards shows how important Nguyen Ai Quoc himself was to the intellectual genealogy of Afro-Asia. While in Paris during the interwar period, Nguyen Ai Quoc wrote the bulk of what was to become his book French Colonialism on Trial, in which he critiques manifestations of French colonialism not only in Vietnam but also in Morocco and Algeria. Acknowledging that Paris has long been a site of refuge for exiles in general, Edwards also insists on the metropoliss historical significance for the intellectual, political, and cultural collaboration of the African and Asian diasporas in particular, specifically for figures like Nguyen Ai Quoc and the Senegalese anticolonial thinker and activist Lamine Senghor. If diaspora is an appropriate term to describe these circuits [of migration], Edwards writes,

it is partly because it (a Greek word, arising in Jewish exilic intellectual circles, applied to a scattering of peoples from Africa and Asia) forces us to understand a context like Paris as multiple, as heterogeneous, in a manner that makes it impossible to consider any single history of migration and exile without considering overlapping diasporas simultaneous, transnational patterns that influence one another.

If the resonances between Andersons Ennui and mid-20th-century Paris are made clear elsewhere in the films rendering of the May 1968 student protests, for example Ennui seems to recall the political and cultural climate of midcentury Paris in this respect, too.

The undeniably understated relationship between Wright and Nescaffier in the film, however, might be best understood in terms of what Goffe, Vanita Reddy, and others have theorized as the register of Afro-Asian intimacy. Drawing from the work of scholars like Lisa Lowe and Ann Laura Stoler, Afro-Asian intimacy, in Reddys terms, refers to the expression of a range of affective ties loyalties, sympathies, desires, attachments, and affiliations between and among racialized subjects that elude colonial surveillance and management. These intimate encounters and engagements often dont produce tangible evidence of their existence like a political treatise or a jazz album and often go undocumented in the official historical archive.

The Private Dining Room of the Police Commissioner dramatizes this problem when, during its final scene, the audience learns that the intimate exchange between Nescaffier and Wright almost didnt make it into the article at all. After reading a draft, the magazines editor, Arthur Howitzer Jr. (Bill Murray), complains to Wright about the fact that he only gives Nescaffier one line of dialogue. Well, I did cut something he told me. [] I could stick it back in if youd like, Wright replies, after which a flashback takes us to the scene when Wright visits Nescaffiers bedside. There, Nescaffier confesses to Wright that he is seeking something missing; missing something left behind, to which Wright replies, Maybe with good luck, well find what eluded us in the places we once called home. Even on its face, the exchange is haunted by absence, drawing its emotional import from what is left unsaid. Yet the precarious position that the exchange occupies within the published narrative also mirrors the precarious position that Afro-Asian intimacies occupy within dominant historical narratives. That the scene survives the threat of erasure and makes it into the publication after all and ultimately becomes one of the films most poignant moments is a small miracle, inviting viewers to question what else might have been omitted from the narratives theyve received, whether in the film or otherwise.

On the other hand, the film replicates the white savior trope in making Howitzer the one to rescue this moment from Wrights self-censorship. Thats the best part of the whole thing. Thats the reason for it to be written, Howitzer says after reading the omitted text. I couldnt agree less, replies Wright. This detail might remind us that Andersons whimsical, highly stylized films are rarely considered for their political content; their affected, twee aesthetics often lighten the impact of the serious subjects upon which they touch. Even when he takes up difficult histories of violence and persecution, as in his 2014 film, The Grand Budapest Hotel, he tends to tie them up with pastel-colored bows. To be fair, The French Dispatch is to some extent explicitly about the foreclosure of radical political possibility; in The New Yorkers Anthony Lane suggests as much in his reading of the vignette in which journalist Lucinda Krementz (Frances McDormand) painstakingly edits the political manifesto that student-activist Zeffirelli (Timothe Chalamet) writes in his bathtub. In The French Dispatch, Andersons cutesy aesthetics seem to contain the seeds of their own self-critique. By the same token, if The Private Dining Room of the Police Commissioner invites a political reading, it simultaneously forces us to be skeptical of that very reading especially when it concerns race.

That the film is not, in fact, set in Paris is important, too. With the action displaced to Ennui, the critical relationship to the radical histories the film evokes can only ever be tenuous at best. Yet this too may be a fruitful, if subtle, reminder of the real. The institution for which Nescaffier works, and which Wright is to thank for his invitation to dinner in the first place, is, after all, the same institution responsible for Wrights earlier imprisonment. In other words, the circumstances of Nescaffier and Wrights meeting are hardly radical, and the film gives us no reason to believe that their relationship exists, or can exist, beyond them. Perhaps, in including this fleeting gesture toward an important but seldom acknowledged historical thread, which so often went unrecorded, The French Dispatch prompts us to wonder what weve lost the very opportunity to mourn.

Mieko Anders is a PhD student in the English and Comparative Literature departmentColumbia University, where she studies Asian American and Asian diasporic Anglophone literature.

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Wes Anderson's The French Dispatch and the Legacy of Afro-Asia - lareviewofbooks

The light that failed: Why liberalism is in crisis – The New Statesman

Posted By on January 26, 2022

In a new series, named Face to Face in homage to the former New Statesman editor John Freemans celebrated television interviews of the 1960s, todays foremost thinkers, writers and politicians debate the forces reshaping the world. We begin with a written exchange between Ross Douthat, author and columnist at the New York Times, and our own John Gray. They discuss decadence and declinism, a possible religious revival, the culture wars, and the effects of the Great Awokening.

John Gray

One of the reasons it is so good to be in conversation with you is that each of us has been interpreted as believing the opposite of what we have written. When arguing that Western societies are decadent, you have made clear this means they face stagnation and repetition, not some Weimar-like catastrophe. When I argued against Francis Fukuyama in the 1990s that history had not ended, I meant (and repeatedly wrote) that history would go on as usual. But I was seen as suggesting that a cataclysmic denouement was in the offing. We are both anti-apocalyptic writers who have been read as prophets of an end-time.

We are also at one in thinking liberal societies face serious difficulties. Where we may differ is on how far these are soluble problems. The idea of decadence implies a falling-off from some earlier and healthier state of affairs. I am sure it is true that liberal societies used to be more tolerant than they are today. There has been a dramatic shift in this regard in the UK over the past few years, and the intellectual pluralism that existed when I took my first university post in the early 1970s is unimaginable now. In the US, where I spent a lot of time from the mid-1970s through to the early 1990s, the situation looks worse. Campus sectarian warfare seems to have spread nearly everywhere.

I dont see this as a decline that can be reversed by returning to a supposedly purer form of liberal thought and practice. When some commentators call for a return to classical liberalism, they forget that it rested on the moral foundations of Jewish and Christian monotheism and the historical contingency of Western global power. Today Europe is post-Christian in its moral culture with the exception of Poland, for example, abortion and assisted dying are not deeply divisive issues. Americans are intensely divided over such questions. That too, however, makes any restoration of classical liberalism impossible. The value-consensus that underpinned it no longer exists.

At the same time, I dont believe the US or other democracies are morphing into radically different regimes. The US is not going to become a larger version of Viktor Orbns Hungary in any realistic scenario. The far right could make further advances in France and, I suspect, Germany, during the present decade. But no democracy in the developed world is likely to become a dictatorship unless there is a marked shift in the global balance of power.

Unfortunately, such a shift appears to be ongoing. I will be surprised if the thriving democracy in Taiwan, or the more besieged one that has emerged in Ukraine, is in place some years from now. It is always hazardous to extrapolate from current trends. Even so, it is hard to see how the rapid contraction of Western power that is under way can be arrested.

The argument for liberalism has become a story about prosperity and technology. Only open societies, it has been insistently asserted, can generate technological innovation and wealth creation. Though it was held as an article of faith, this was at bottom a falsifiable proposition. China has falsified it.

Chinas economic difficulties are the stuff of daily headlines there. The country has high levels of debt, an ageing population and vast environmental degradation. But it also appears to be advancing technologically at an extraordinary pace, particularly in areas that are pivotal in warfare not just in hypersonic missiles, but quantum computing. If this continues, even for a few more years, Chinas military superiority over the West (if such an entity still exists then) could become overwhelming.

This doesnt mean a third world war, unless one takes place by accident. Most likely it portends a continuation of the present state of affairs in a more exacerbated form. The West will retreat from confrontation and China, and to a lesser extent Russia, will expand their power and influence. What remains of liberal civilisation will be eroded.

The West is not nearing an end-time. It is simply in decline, a process that is normal in history and affects all civilisations: it is liberals who are succumbing to apocalyptic thinking in imagining that theirs is exempt from this universal truth.

Ross Douthat

Its a great pleasure to carry on this exchange, and a particular pleasure to be in conversation with the rare writer who has been accused of an unseemly pessimism more often than I have! Although, as you say, neither of our diagnoses of the contemporary West are exactly catastrophist: my portrait of a successful civilisation slipping into decadence, and your account of the inevitable waning of Western liberalisms time-bound and contingent global power, are both compatible with years of relative stability and comfort.

And indeed, in the context of US politics these last few years, my slow-declinist vision has come to seem fatally naive to many friends both those on the left who discern a looming fascism in Trumpism, and those on the right who are convinced that the new progressivism promises a soft-totalitarian future. In effect, by remaining merely pessimistic, not necessarily catastrophist, I have become a relative optimist. I wonder if you have had a similar experience in post-Brexit Britain.

Picking up where your missive left off, perhaps we can talk about whether anything internal to Western civilisation can arrest its process of decay the global retreat of liberalism before various forms of nationalist power. You wrote a fascinating essay a few months ago in this magazine, arguing that even as debates within Western liberalism have become more sterile and limited a recitation of the progressive catechism that is then policed by peer pressure and professional sanctions in the world beyond the US and Europe, ideas from the more dynamic (and, sometimes, destructive) phases of Western history still have great influence. That is, 19th-century European nationalism lives on in Narendra Modis India, while China still cultivates an officially Marxist identity even as its junior intelligentsia reads the Western classics and argues over Alexis de Tocqueville and Thomas Hobbes and Carl Schmitt. In this sense, any successor to the Wests global power will be a true successor not just a rebel against Euro-American hegemony but a partial heir to Western thought.

But I would note that it isnt only the Chinese who have picked up Schmitt and Marx and other past Western critics of liberal piety. In America, at least, the most interesting younger writers and thinkers have been following similar paths for the past five or ten years. They have been reviving schools that were dormant during what I consider the true hyper-liberal years (using the phrase differently than you do) meaning the late 1990s and early 2000s, when globalisation was a living faith and all political and economic questions were supposedly settled by the Third Way centrists. Now, though, the younger right is dominated by would-be populists, nationalists and integralists, and the left has self-styled socialists once again. Even the decline of intellectual pluralism that you rightly discern on college campuses reflects the influence of a kind of Protestant revivalism shedding Christian doctrine but retaining the Puritan, purifying spirit.

In this sense, while the climate within many liberal institutions is definitely more uncomfortable and stifling than in the recent past, there is also more genuine intellectual turmoil, and more attempts to reach outside the confines of circa-1999 neoliberalism, than we had in public debate ten or 20 years ago. So I wonder, do we think all this turmoil can simply be reabsorbed by the system? Can the left-wing radicalism be transmuted into rules for corporate HR departments and the rights post-liberalism be tamed into a bog-standard sort of Fox News partisanship? I tend to think it can, because decadence is not so easily overthrown; the internet tames radicalism as often as it inflames it; and nothing is stopping the steady ageing of the Western world. But Im curious if you see anything in recent ideological ferments, the socialist-populist dialectic of Bernie Sanders and Jeremy Corbyn and Trump and Orbn, that might suggest theres still life (and yes, with it, danger) in the superficially exhausted West?

John Gray

You are right in your suspicion that I have become a relative optimist in regard to post-Brexit Britain: it is uber-Remainers who have fulminated hysterically about impending cataclysm. I hoped that as a reaction against the excesses of globalisation, Brexit would bring about a tilt away from neoliberal capitalism in this country. So far, accelerated by the pandemic, this has been the case. Any party that proposes returning to post-Cold War orthodoxy a global free market and mass mobility of labour across national borders will find itself out of power.

You are also right that I see some signs of life stirring in the exhausted West. Mostly they are by-products of what liberals call populism. The upheavals of the past five years Brexit, Trump, the rise of illiberal democracy in post-communist Europe were attempts to re-politicise issues that had been excluded from mainstream debate. Immigration may have been the key issue, but the revival of religion in a political context has also been important because of its links with issues such as abortion and assisted dying. (I am pro-choice on both questions.)

The re-entry into politics of fundamental conflicts of value has some downsides. Discourse is often polarised as a result. Demagogues have wider scope. Old toxins such as anti-Semitism have reappeared, but not only on the right. (The campus anti-Semitism that is so common in the US is a virus of the progressive left.) More generally, there has been a decline in tolerance, which remains an indispensable part of what Hobbes called commodious living. Perhaps most importantly, chronic internal dissension breeds a climate of solipsism in which external threats are underestimated. Western societies may be too self-absorbed to defend themselves in the ongoing geopolitical struggle.

But no one can any longer claim that politics is anodyne. Basic questions about the organisation of society are being raised again. The notion that a particular kind of capitalism is the final phase of economic development is now widely, and rightly, rejected as risible. The primacy of class in economic inequality is being rediscovered. Critical race theory is coming to be seen as what it always was: a pastiche of vacuous dogmas lacking any of the intellectual power of the classical Marxism from which it claims to be derived. The central role of Jewish and Christian monotheism in the formation of liberal values is being addressed once more. These are signs of health, not debility.

Yet I doubt whether reconnecting with these intellectual traditions can do much to slow, still less reverse, Western decline. Discredited theories can survive and exert power for generations when they serve as rationalisations of economic interests, as woke ideology does by promoting would-be elites over-produced by inflated universities. Hyper-liberal woke beliefs are too entrenched in our institutions, and are too useful to those who espouse them, to be affected by any demonstration of their falsity.

Nor am I confident that religion can act as a counter-weight to woke enthusiasm. The principal Christian congregations seem to share some hyper-liberal fantasies: Pope Francis, for example, appears to share the utopian vision of a borderless world. Christianity is also growing outside the West, in China and Africa, while in nearly all of Europe it is in retreat. Is the US an exception to this trend?

The principal Western default is not that it has lost its grip on its supposed foundational principles. Even in the US, a Protestant mythology of natural rights is not going to be resurrected in a form that is politically transformative, and neither is Steven Pinker-style Enlightenment rationalism, a secular variety of fundamentalism with limited popular appeal. Centuries of historicism and relativism much of which was incubated in the Enlightenment cannot be reversed by an act of will.

The real default is a lack of realistic thinking about the Wests diminished position. Is this because our leaders take seriously their own rhetorical declarations? Or is it that Western cultures are now too fragmented and introverted to form any clear view of their place in the world?

Ross Douthat

On the specific question of Christianity, my sense is that some kind of religious revival is the only way that the stirrings of intellectual energy could take on a wider social form. I mean this both in terms of changes to everyday life, new forms of community and the higher birth rates that our ageing societies keep trying to unsuccessfully generate, and in terms of an aesthetic creativity and cultural energy thats been lost since the crack-up of mainstream Christian culture in the 1960s. Not that Christianity is the only possible source of religious renewal: there are pagan and Islamic influences at work in the West as well, which have their own fascinating potential implications. But these currents havent yet become a real religious stream. If youre looking for something on a large-enough scale to re-energise a decadent society, a Christian revival of the sort you saw in 19th-century Europe and repeatedly in Americas Great Awakenings seems like the only plausible near-term candidate.

But I dont see much evidence that such a revival is in the offing. In the US a certain kind of revivalist spirit is palpable at the moment, but only among progressives, whose Awokening resembles prior Great Awakenings in its moralising zeal, its air of utopian certainty. But it conspicuously lacks the metaphysical framework, the cultural-aesthetic imagination and the institutional structures that make for an enduring religious movement. Wokeness is more the last heresy of an attenuated Christendom than a sign of that Christendoms resilience or revival.

On both sides of the Atlantic, there is hope among my fellow conservative intellectuals that, with the judicious use of state power, the kind of cultural Christianity that endures among non-church-going but politically conservative Europeans and in a different way among American evangelicals can become the basis of a restoration of Christian culture in full. But I am doubtful that history works this way: cultural Christianity is not something sincere believers should sneer at or reject, but it is a penumbra of real faith, a fading echo of real zeal. Its not clear that you can start with the penumbra or the echo and work your way backward to the real thing. In the places where a conservative populism has taken shape, from France to Poland, church-going is either negligible or in decline, and ric Zemmours rhetorical affection for Notre-Dame is just empty nostalgia if the traditional France hes trying to conjure remains secular and sterile.

Meanwhile, the Francis pontificate, which began with a kind of dynamism, a vivid icon-ography of Christian love, has descended by stages into the fatal torpor of liberal religion first with the attempt to hollow out various controversial Church doctrines, which provoked a Catholic civil war to no great purpose but at least had some sort of reforming energy behind it; and then with the drearier spectacle of the Church bureaucracy enacting a synod on synodality, an exercise in exactly the kind of Catholic navel-gazing that Francis was elected to reject. My Church at its centre feels lifeless at the moment, which leaves the peripheries the Christianising countries of Africa and Asia as a more plausible source of renewal for the Christian faith than anything going on in Europe.

But if that global renewal is affecting the once-Christian West, its happening at the immigrant margins, somewhat invisibly to elites. This relates in certain ways to your question of why the Wests leadership class is not reckoning with the reality of relative decline.

One answer, of course, is simply that humankind cannot bear too much reality, and political leaders less than most. But another issue is that while the political and economic might of India and China, and the demographic weight of Africa, are all undeniable realities poised to reshape the world, there is not yet any kind of non-Western cultural imperialism or influence to match, say, the US cultural imperialism of Hollywood and Coca-Cola (which defined the American century at its height). Yes, India exports future CEOs and Korea exports pop music and Japan exports anime, and we all eat a kind of world cuisine in Western cities. But globally I believe the dominant arts and ideas of our time are still recycled Western ones, the global celebrities and sports heroes are still mostly American, and, indeed, as American political culture fuses with celebrity culture, this pattern has only intensified: no one right now is as famous as Donald Trump.

This is not to say that American cultural imperialism is as strong as it once was; something like the woke revolution feels fundamentally parochial and inward-looking and likely to be rejected when its carried into other cultures by our state department or multinationals (as it was rejected, thoroughly, in our disastrous Afghanistan adventure). But there is still no Chinese or Indian equivalent, as yet, of the kind of cultural-export process that Americans are accustomed to carrying out. Instead, from the Western perspective China remains opaque and mysterious, more so even than the Soviet Union at its height, rather than representing a rival world-culture poised to displace our own. Whatever happens, we have got the Marvel films, and they have not.

I wonder if you think this absence of non-Western cultural imperialism matters to the global balance of power, or if the influence of even a decadent Hollywood is just a way for Americans to maintain illusions about our real status in the world right up to the moment that China takes Taiwan, expels us from its end of the Pacific, and puts a stamp on our imperial decline. And either way, since you raise the question, from the point of view of policymaking in either Washington or Berlin and Paris, what would change if our leaders suddenly dropped their illusions, and adopted a clear view of their place in the world?

John Gray

Wokeness is more the last heresy of an attenuated Christendom than a sign of that Christendoms resilience or revival. Here we are in full agreement. Though notably lacking in forgiveness, woke is in many respects a neo-Christian movement. That may be one reason it has had so little resonance outside the West, where it is regarded with a mixture of bafflement and pitying disdain. I also share your view that much of Western Christianity has fallen into the fatal torpor of liberal religion. In the light of our very different metaphysical standpoints yours that of a Catholic believer, mine of an atheist this is an interesting convergence.

You ask about the absence of any alternative to the cultural imperialism of the West. This is a question of central importance, since it brings to light a fundamental error in much thinking (not yours) about the position of the West at the present time. Western power is fast shrinking in both geopolitical and cultural respects. However, that does not mean any new global hegemon is emerging. China will not fill the space that America occupied in the world, partly because it is not driven by anything like the universalistic value system that Western liberalism inherited from Christianity. Russia does not aim to promote a global political project as it did in Soviet times, but wants to reassert itself as a great power. Islam is a universalist faith, but too internally divided to mount a systematic challenge to what remains of Western civilisation. There will be no successor to US hegemony for the foreseeable future.

Through its economic hold over Hollywood, Silicon Valley and Western universities, China will continue to increase its cultural and political influence. India will export its culture too, partly through the success of its diaspora, one of whom Rishi Sunak may be a future UK prime minister. Commonly written off as a culture-exporter because of the chilling effect of Putins authoritarianism, Russia may expand its civilisational reach through its growing influence on its near-abroad and the elites of continental Europe. None of these developments will amount to what you describe as a rival world-culture that could displace the once-dominant civilisation of the West. The three or four centuries in which humankind lived in the Wests shadow are surely over. The emerging reality is a world that is decentred and fragmented along the lines of hard and soft power.

This suggests an answer to your final question: what would change if our leaders suddenly shed their illusions and achieved a realistic view of their position in the world? No such epiphany seems likely any time soon, but were it to occur it would mean the end of any idea that a liberal world order can somehow be restored. Rather like cultural Christianity, which you rightly characterise as the fading penumbra or echo of the real thing, Western discourse regarding the international community is an empty gesture, an expression of decadent nostalgia more than anything else.

In policy terms, a shift to realism would entail accepting that states that are still animated in some degree by Western liberal values will have to learn how to co-exist with radically different polities and cultures. The task will not be to make over the world in a Western self-image, a role in which our leaders have in any case shown themselves to be incompetent over the past 30 years. It will be to defend Western societies against the growing economic and military threats posed by their rivals and enemies. Sadly, with dangerously muddled messages emanating from the US and Nato on Taiwan and Ukraine, there is no sign of our leaders having any coherent view of the Wests vital interests or the limits of its power.

TS Eliot is not one of my favourite poets (Wallace Stevens seems to me superior in every way). But the celebrated line in the Four Quartets (1941), where Eliot writes that humankind cannot bear very much reality, applies today in politics more than in any other area of life. A clear-headed realism may be like a revival of Christianity, a form of renewal of which the West is incapable. We press on regardless.

Ross Douthat

Since I broadly agree with your diagnosis of the Western situation and what realism requires, let me conclude our generally pessimistic conversation by trying to push beyond the frame of decadence a little bit. You imagine, in effect, a truly multipolar world, divided into re-emergent civilisation-states of the kind that Samuel Huntington once prophesied, and that contemporary analysts such as Bruno Maes and Razib Khan have written vividly about of late. Each state would be culturally and politically influential in its sphere, none achieving the kind of global dominance that the European empires enjoyed 100 years ago and to which their American successor temporarily aspired.

This seems plausible as a portrait of the world between now and, lets say, 2040: an America consumed with its own internal divisions, a Europe dealing with the pressures of migration amid its continuing decline, an India and China and Russia carving out larger spheres of influence at the Wests expense.

But then I wonder about what sort of pressures build up within this multipolar world. On the one hand there are the pressures of renewed civilisational competition, which was the great engine of European development during its centuries of competing empires. Under multipolar conditions a revival of the chauvinistic impulse in science and technology one of the things weve been missing in our post-Cold War stagnation might once again give us the race to space, the race to genetic engineering, the race towards nuclear fusion, and more. These competitions could carry us to dark places as well as happy ones, but either way we would no longer be gripped so intensely by stagnation and ennui.

There are then also the pressures of what you might call internal selection effects. At the moment the rich world is defined by institutional sclerosis and demographic senescence, but the kind of institutions, movements and families that take shape and flourish amid these conditions will, by definition, be selected for their resilience and creativity, their inoculation against decadence. When Im asked to imagine a true religious or cultural revival within the Western world, not just the woke simulacrum, I usually envision it forming on this kind of generational timescale where the deeper future of the 21st century is reshaped by the children and grandchildren of the people who are actually having kids right now, who are trying to live lives against decadence, and whose reward may be to be dramatically more influential in a future that belongs, after all, to the people who show up for it.

And that note of relative optimism does get at the key difference between us. One of the great themes in your work, good atheist that you are, is the folly of imagining a providential masterplan for human history, a long arc of progress that were destined to transcribe. I agree with you about the hubris of trying to discern that arc exactly, let alone trying to bring utopia into existence overnight. But as a Christian I do think there is a plan, however clouded the glass through which we strain to see it. As a simple observer of the species Homo sapiens, that most extraordinary of all the animals, I dont really believe we have risen so far, achieved so much, to simply sink into a deadened virtualism, an endless cycle of futility. No, decadence is deep but impermanent: the stars still beckon, the divine still waits.

And since you ended with Eliot I will as well, but on a somewhat more optimistic note reflecting optimism of the will, at least, if not the intellect: For us, there is only the trying. The rest is not our business.

John Gray is an NS contributing writer. Ross Douthat is a New York Times columnist and the author of The Decadent Society: How We Became the Victims of Our Own Success (Simon & Schuster) and The Deep Places: A Memoir of Illness and Discovery (Convergent)

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The light that failed: Why liberalism is in crisis - The New Statesman

A history of the region, told through B’nai B’rith – thejewishchronicle.net

Posted By on January 26, 2022

Bnai Brith began in 1843. By the end of the decade, it had enough lodges in enough places to justify a hierarchy. It created two District Grand Lodges. No. 1 in New York covered eastern lodges, and No. 2 in Cincinnati covered western ones.

Pittsburgh sat between them. Its nascent, fractured Jewish community had about 35 people, not counting peddlers and small-town merchants. Its one tiny congregation was splitting in half, and its cemetery stayed stubbornly independent of the congregation.

District Grand Lodge No. 3 was established in Philadelphia in 1856. It came to encompass four states with not much in common aside from occupying the miles between New York and Cincinnati: Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

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Western Pennsylvania and West Virginia added little until 1862, when Jericho Lodge No. 44 was established in Pittsburgh. The locations of the 43 previous lodges show just how slow Pittsburgh was to develop communal institutions: Cleveland, Detroit, Evansville, Louisville, Milwaukee, Memphis, St. Louis, and even three in California.

Over the next century, almost every Jewish community in our region would start a lodge. Curious to understand the full scope, I made a list. I found at least 92 lodges across Western Pennsylvania and West Virginia, not including womens and BBYO chapters.

Going down the list, seeing where and when each lodge pops into existence, you can watch Bnai Brith spread in six waves. Its a communal history, told in miniature.

Before the warsThe first wave came between 1866 and 1871. Seven new lodges were formed two in Pittsburgh, and the rest throughout northwestern Pennsylvania. The discovery of oil in Titusville in 1859 was drawing thousands to that area. Jews came, too. Titusville (Simeon Lodge No. 81) briefly had the third largest Jewish population in Pennsylvania.

Then, oil went bust. The towns shrank, and the lodges closed.

The second wave: 22 lodges between 1901 and 1910. These can be credited to Dr. J. Leonard Levy of Rodef Shalom Congregation and Louis Sulzbacher of Braddock.

Dr. Levy was the voice. There was great concern in those years about the fate of the Country Jew, those small-town Jewish merchants living in the heart of Christendom without any communal resources. Levy called Bnai Brith applied Judaism, and saw it as a way to encourage liberal Judaism in small towns without Reform congregations.

Sulzbacher was the feet. He went into the towns to organize people. Working with Levy, he helped form new lodges in Braddock, McKeesport, Washington, Johnstown, Homestead, New Castle, Erie, Sharon, Donora, New Kensington and other places.

But the growth was unstable. A third of those lodges dissolved within a decade, lacking support within their own communities. Exceptions were Braddock (No. 516), McKeesport (No. 573), Washington (No. 576), New Castle (No. 609) and Erie (No. 620).

The third wave came at the end of Dr. Levys tenure13 lodges in 1915 and 1916. Richard Rauh and Edward Hemple revisited towns with lapsed lodges and started new lodges, especially throughout West Virginia. They also came up with the idea of the regional lodge. Monongahela Lodge No. 776 united Monessen, Donora and Charleroi. Beaver Valley Lodge No 777 did the same in Beaver Falls, New Brighton and Rochester.

They presented Bnai Brith as a solution to the ideological divide within many small Jewish communities. It was difficult to create a synagogue structure acceptable to both traditional and liberal elements within any given town, and yet few communities could support two congregations. Bnai Brith was a less fraught way of coming together.

Only three new lodges were chartered in the 1920s. Just as many closed in 1921, when the three main Pittsburgh lodges were consolidated into Pittsburgh Lodge No. 44.

But the 1920s brought expansion, nationally. Bnai Brith created opportunities for kids (BBG and AZA), college students (Hillel), and women (Bnai Brith Women).

The hierarchical system District Lodges, regional councils, local lodges and auxiliary chapters served this region well. It connected dozens of small towns to the city and to other small towns. That vast, communitywide infrastructure, alongside Bnai Briths escalating fight against Nazism, encouraged the fourth wave. Nathan Katz and Judge Samuel Weiss helped established 16 new lodges between 1935 and 1941.

Several were second attempts (Meadville Lodge No. 1193), and one was a third attempt (Allegheny Valley Lodge No. 1233 in New Kensington). Others emerged from growing Jewish communities that were starting to become distinct from the slightly larger communities nearby: Coraopolis (No. 1322) from Aliquippa and Ambridge, Canonsburg (No. 1323) from Washington. The rest were formed in some of the smallest Jewish communities in the region: Kane (likely No. 1321), Midland (No. 1367), the Tri-Town lodge covering Scottdale, Connellsville and Mount Pleasant (No. 1362), and the Kiski Valley Lodge with members from Vandergrift, Leechburg and Apollo (No. 1343).

And afterThe fifth wave followed World War II. Propelled by rebuilding efforts in Europe and new building efforts in Israel, Judge Weiss, Max Applebaum and Herman Fineberg launched a campaign to add 2,500 new Bnai Brith members throughout the region.

In pursuit, they created 12 lodges between 1947 and 1949. For many, I couldnt find a lodge number, suggesting they may have been informal groups that never actually chartered. Some were notably short-lived. The Brownsville Lodge lasted about a year.

The team also revisited existing lodges. Renaming was a big trend. At least 15 small-town lodges took new names, usually to memorialize a late community leader or a local boy killed in action. You may recognize the names: Isadore Sobel (Erie), Norman Carnick (Meadville), Herman Cooper (Wheeling), Nathan H. Zeffe (Butler), Warren Roy Laufe (Greensburg), Major Milton Weisman (Coraopolis), and Eleazer Katz (Jeannette).

Bnai Brith experimented with new ways to organize people. A Lawyers Lodge was created in the late 1940s, but it appears to have drifted inexorably into obscurity.

Expansion propelled these five waves. The Jewish community was growing, but more importantly it was spreading. Small towns accounted for 40% of the regional population. At least 60 towns started lodges. Bnai Brith eventually created the Western Pennsylvania Council and Northwestern Pennsylvania Council to manage the sprawl.

Consolidation drove the final wave. Of the eight lodges created between 1954 and 1964, six were in the city and suburbs. Altoona and Johnstown had the other two.

Lodges were named for Weiss, Applebaum and Fineberg. Unlike the post-war naming wave, these lodges honored living leaders within the growing Pittsburgh Council.

Henry Goldstein was a key figure in this era. He started a lodge in 1975 for his late brother Eli. It appears to have been the last new Bnai Brith lodge in the region.

Several towns kept lodges active for decades, merging with nearby lodges when necessary. Consolidation hit the city in the 1980s and consumed District 3 in the 1990s. PJC

Eric Lidji is the director of the Rauh Jewish Archives at the Heinz History Center. He can be reached at rjarchives@heinzhistorycenter.org or 412-454-6406.

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A history of the region, told through B'nai B'rith - thejewishchronicle.net

Why is the Palestinian Authority cracking down on opposition? – Al Jazeera English

Posted By on January 26, 2022

Ramallah, occupied West Bank The Palestinian Authority (PA) has intensified its crackdown on political opponents in the Israeli-occupied West Bank over the past months, analysts say.

The PA run by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas Fatah party has since November obstructed welcome events held upon the release of Palestinian prisoners affiliated with other political parties, particularly the Gaza-based resistance groups, Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ).

Perhaps more controversially, funeral processions for Palestinians killed by Israel whom Palestinians sacredly refer to as martyrs have also been disrupted by PA security forces in an effort to suppress public displays of support for rival parties.

On several occasions, PA security forces turned violent, including the firing of tear gas at crowds, carrying out preemptive arrests of event participants, forceful confiscation of Hamas, PIJ and supporters of Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) party flags, and firing live ammunition into the air.

Last month, a young Palestinian man, 24-year-old Amir al-Leddawi, died due to injuries he sustained when his vehicle flipped over, which his family says happened as he was being chased by a PA security force vehicle after he participated in a procession to celebrate the release of 61-year-old Hamas leader Shaker Amara in Jericho.

PA officials said they launched an investigation into the youths death the results of which are yet to be announced.

Yousif al-Zumur, head of the investigation committee formed in Jerichos Aqabat Jabr refugee camp where al-Leddawis family resides told Al Jazeera that the investigation will be completed by January 30, after which the results will be announced publicly.

In late November, during the funeral of 14-year-old Amjad Abu Sultan who was shot dead by Israeli forces in the village of Beit Jala, west Bethlehem, undercover security forces in plainclothes raided the procession and forcefully prevented mourners from carrying Hamas, PIJ and PFLP flags by confiscating and breaking them.

The PFLP responded in a statement saying the PA and its security services should assume their responsibilities in ending their irresponsible campaigns, threats and systematic incitement against political parties, opponents and activists, while Hamas said this only serves the [Israeli] occupation and its policies of persecuting resistance in the West Bank.

The number of raids on welcome processions for freed prisoners notably increased days after the funeral of Wasfi Qabha, a Hamas leader and former minister in Jenin city in the northern occupied West Bank in mid-November. Dozens of armed men appeared publicly during his funeral with the banners of Hamas and to a lesser extent, PIJ raised.

Political analyst Hani al-Masry believes that this seemingly new trend of obstructing funeral and prisoner release processions can be traced to the decline in the PAs popularity, owing to the failure of its political project to form a state for the 4.5 million Palestinians living in the 1967-occupied territories of East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

The PA fears the growth of other factions, as well as the decline in its standing, and [potential] collapse, al-Masry, who is the director of Masarat The Palestinian Center for Policy Research and Strategic Studies in Ramallah, told Al Jazeera.

Pointing to soaring popularity for Hamas and PIJ in the occupied West Bank since May, al-Masri said the two armed movements preach resistance while the PA preaches negotiations and peaceful resistance, as we saw in President Abbas pledges to [Israeli Defence Minister] Benny Gantz.

Therefore, any influence by Hamas, PIJ, and the PFLP puts the PA and its survival to the test, he continued.

Popular support for Hamas dramatically increased during the 11-day Israeli bombardment of the besieged Gaza Strip, following Israels attempts to forcibly displace Palestinians in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood of occupied East Jerusalem, and the widespread confrontations with Israeli forces that ensued across historic Palestine. During popular protests, one of the most widespread chants hailed Mohammad al-Deif the commander of Hamass military wing, the al-Qassam Brigades.

A December 14 poll by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research showed that if President Abbas were to compete with the head of the Hamas political bureau, Ismail Haniyeh, the latter would win by 58 percent compared with 35 percent for the former. The poll also suggests that 71 percent of Palestinians disapprove of Abbass performance. According to the poll, if Hamas were to compete in legislative elections, it would win by 38 percent, compared with 35 percent for Fatah.

The charged atmosphere in the West Bank has also translated into the arrests of Palestinian activists.

Lawyers for Justice, a legal firm that represents political detainees, documented 112 arrests in November and December, out of a total of 340 in 2021. The groups director, Muhannad Karajah, said, in the past two months, the pace of arrests multiplied.

We documented cases of detention or summoning and interrogation over participation in Wasfi Qabhas funeral or in celebrations of freed prisoners, he told Al Jazeera.

In one case in Qalqiliya, security services summoned 20 people to warn them against participating in prisoner release celebrations. Students from Birzeit and An-Najah universities were detained for organising celebrations to commemorate the launch of the Hamas movement, he continued.

PIJ leader Khader Adnan witnessed several prisoner release events where the PA attempted to prevent the raising of Hamas and PIJ banners.

I was in the town of Tammun in Tubas when security forces attacked the convoy of released prisoner Azmi Bani Ouda. They cut off the convoys path and pursued those who carried Islamic Jihad banners, Adnan told Al Jazeera.

In another incident he witnessed in Tulkarm, security forces cornered the convoy of Muhammad al-Arif, a member of Hamas released from prison. Security forces fired tear gas at the crowd when the latter reached the reception hall and brought out a couple of Hamas banners.

Adnan said there were no armed groups in either events, nor were there any skirmishes or verbal altercations with the security forces.

He said he believes that the matter is not limited to Hamas the PAs main rival in the occupied West Bank.

The armed political movement, Hamas, has been the de facto ruler in the besieged Gaza Strip since 2007 after it defeated Fatah in parliamentary elections. Fatah was driven out of the Strip as it attempted a preemptive coup which resulted in several weeks of violent fighting. The two parties have ruled the occupied Gaza Strip and West Bank respectively ever since, with internal division plaguing Palestinian politics.

At the funeral of the martyr Amjad Abu Sultan in Bethlehem, the banners of the PFLP, Hamas and Islamic Jihad were confiscated, suggesting that the PA does not want any presence of resistance factions in the West Bank, Adnan said.

We have been prevented from participating in national activities at universities for years, he continued, and pointed out that members of Islamic Jihad and Hamas are not allowed to work in government institutions for punitive security reasons.

Khaled al-Hajj, a Hamas leader in Jenin who witnessed several similar obstructions by security forces, agrees. He noted that the issue of prisoners is a sensitive topic for the Palestinian people, who are used to honouring and celebrating their release.

The public was surprised by this coup against Palestinian traditions; their processions were attacked and sprayed with tear gas. This is a dangerous matter that must be stopped. Otherwise, it might lead to unexpected reactions, he told Al Jazeera.

The security services are worried, especially since a chant recently spread in the West Bank hailing Mohammad al-Deif as a hero, added al-Hajj.

On December 13, security forces raided a funeral procession for a Palestinian man, Jamil Kayyal, who had been shot dead during an armed confrontation with Israeli forces in Nablus.

Although Kayyal was affiliated with Fatah, PA officers fired tear gas at mourners after armed men fired shots into the air at the funeral.

The PA justified the incident, saying it is unacceptable that gunmen fire shots posing a risk to the lives of those in the procession, including members of the security forces, Talal Dwaikat, spokesperson for the Palestinian security services, told the official Palestinian news agency.

Political analyst Nihad Abu Ghosh believes that the PAs violence is not limited to Palestinian opposition factions, giving an example of the PAs response to mass demonstrations against the killing of Palestinian activist Nizar Banat during his arrest by security forces in June 2021.

He said it is a sign of weakness and shows that the PA fears for its survival. The PA does this to block the path for these protests or movements to grow; they could turn into broader protest phenomenons that could eventually topple the PA, said Abu Ghosh.

The PA is acting in this manner out of panic, in a way that shows that it is in a real crisis, he continued, pointing out its deep financial woes and inability to protect Palestinians.

The PA was formed as an interim, five-year governing body in 1994 as part of the Oslo Accords signed between Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) under Yasser Arafat, which were meant to lead to a Palestinian state. Abbas, chairman of Fatah and the PLO, succeeded Arafat in 2005 and has remained in office since then, despite his mandate ending in 2009.

Today, the PA has limited control in Palestinian city centres in the occupied West Bank, and is heavily criticised for maintaining its policy of security coordination with Israel which includes sharing intelligence information about activists and publicly stating it is helping Israel thwart attacks. It is also been unable to pay its civil servants salaries in full.

Shawan Jabarin, director of the Ramallah-based Al-Haq rights group, believes that attacking people celebrating the release of prisoners from Israeli jails is a violation of freedom of expression.

He noted that event obstructions involve a degree of discrimination.

If there is a general tendency to prevent such celebrations, this should apply to everyone. It is unreasonable to allow some to celebrate, while forbidding others based on their political identity, he told Al Jazeera.

In all cases, this does not serve the Palestinian national cause.

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Why is the Palestinian Authority cracking down on opposition? - Al Jazeera English


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