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Winter storm Elpis to batter Israel this week with rain and snow – Haaretz

Posted By on January 24, 2022

Israels rainy weather is expected to turn briefly into snow with the arrival of winter storm Elpis on Wednesday, which could bring several centimeters of powder to the Golan Heights, Safed and Jerusalem, the Israel Meteorological Service said on Sunday.

Elpis is the fifth winter storm to be assigned a moniker by the newly formed East Mediterranean Storm Naming Group composed of Greece, Cyprus and Israel. The group has released a list of names to be used for upcoming regional weather events based on the American method of naming hurricanes, the IMS explained in a recent Facebook post, noting that unlike in the United States, the list includes both male and female names.

Mondays rain is expected to slack off on Tuesday, which will be cool and dry leading into occasional showers accompanied by thunderstorms along the coast overnight. Despite expected heavy snowfall over the northern and central mountains on Wednesday, the snow will likely turn to rain by the afternoon, although wind speed will continue to increase in the second half of the day, reaching up to 40-50 miles per hour in some places.

There is a risk of flooding in the coastal cities and a risk of flash floods in the Judean Desert and the Dead Sea area, the IMS warned, adding that there would be a significant drop in temperatures on Wednesday.

Although there is some danger of local flooding, the rain, which will continue through Friday, is not expected to be exceptional, although it remain unseasonably cool, the IMS predicted.

The plummeting temperatures and heavy rain have led to multiple rescues and at least one known death.

Last Sunday, emergency services weredispatched to rescuestranded motorists fromflooded streets in the Tel Aviv area. Near the West Bank settlement of Karnei Shomron, first responders rescued a man and an 11-year-old boy from the Kaneh stream.

In the greater Tel Aviv area, emergency services rescued a man and a girl who became stranded in their car as a road flooded in Kafr Qasem. South of Tel Aviv, in the vicinity of Nes Tziona and Rehovot, stranded motorists were also rescued from flooded streets. Early Sunday morning, streets in Lod, near Ben-Gurion International Airport, flooded and the police and municipal authorities decided to evacuate several homes.

The stormy weather also led to the largest rise in the water level of the Sea of Galilee since the beginning of the winter. According to the Water Authority, from January 13-16, an average of between 60 and 70 millimeters of rain fell in the Sea of Galilee drainage basin, boosting water levels in the lake by 5 centimeters (2 inches). Since October, the lake has risen 20 centimeters, but in an average rainy season as a whole, the level of the lake rises by eight times that amount.

Last month, winter storm Carmel dropped more than 100 millimeters (nearly 4 inches) of rain on parts of the country in a three-day period, briefly flooding the Tel Aviv promenade and causing damage across the country. One case of hypothermia took the life of a homeless 40-year-old Tel Aviv man.

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Winter storm Elpis to batter Israel this week with rain and snow - Haaretz

Israel is seventh most expensive country in the world, ranking shows – Haaretz

Posted By on January 24, 2022

The cost of living in Israel is the seventh highest in the world, leading expensive countries such as Singapore, Luxembourg and Hong Kong, according to a ranking based on the Numbeo crowdsourced global database for 2022.

Irans bizarre but worrying espionage campaign against Israel: LISTEN

According to this index, which included 139 countries and territories, the only six countries with a higher cost of living are Bermuda, the most expensive country according to this database, followed by Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, Barbados, and Jersey, a self-governing United Kingdom dependency.

However, Israel ranked 21st in housing rental prices. When these are added to the calculation, Israel ranks 10th in the world in terms of cost of living.

Israel ranked 13th in the world in the price of food and other basic home products. For restaurant prices, Israel was the sixth most expensive country in the world, topped only by Bermuda, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland and Denmark.

Another measure of the cost of living in Israel was the index of local purchasing power, which assesses the relative purchasing power of goods and services, where Israel came in 30th, one spot before Puerto Rico, and trailing behind countries such as South Africa and Oman.

Numbeo was established in 2009 by former Google software engineer Mladen Adamovic. The database uses crowdsourcing and is not connected to any government organization. Numbeos data is based on reports from over 600,000 people from over 10,000 cities around the world, and considers the prices of over 7.5 million goods and services.

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Israel is seventh most expensive country in the world, ranking shows - Haaretz

United Airlines flight to Israel turns back to US mid-flight after 2 passengers who assigned themselves seats in business class started a ‘riot,’…

Posted By on January 24, 2022

A United Airlines airplane is seen at the Newark Liberty International Airport in Newark, New Jersey, United States.ayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

A United Airlines flight to Tel Aviv turned back to New York due to two disruptive passengers.

The passengers refused to provide proof of allocated seats in business class, per Israeli media.

They "started a riot" about 90 minutes into the flight, according to an eyewitness account.

A United Airlines flight to Tel Aviv, Israel, turned back to New York mid-flight on Friday after two passengers caused a "riot" on the aircraft, per reports.

The passengers, both Israeli, seated themselves in business class seats on the half-empty flight, according to Israeli media. United Airlines told Insider that 123 out of a maximum of 330 passengers were on board the Boeing 787-10.

When flight attendants asked the Israeli passengers for proof that they were sitting in their assigned seats, The Jerusalem Post reported that they refused to show their tickets.

Roi Lotan, who was on United flight 90, told Israeli broadcaster News 12 that the passengers became disruptive and "a riot started" about an hour and a half into the flight.

The pilot then turned back to Newark Liberty International Airport, Lotan said.

FlightAware's flight tracking website shows that the flight was diverted near the US-Canada border between Maine and New Brunswick.

The flight was diverted near the US-Canada border, per FlightAware.Google

FlightAware shows that passengers were disembarked from the plane in New York almost three hours after they initially departed for Israel.

United Airlines provided passengers with meal vouchers, hotels, and alternative flights to Tel Aviv, per Israeli media outlet Arutz Sheva.

United told Insider in a statement that the flight returned to New York due to "disruptive passengers on board."

Law enforcement officers met the aircraft after landing, the statement said. The flight was subsequently canceled.

No charges were issued against the disruptive passengers, according to the Port Authority Police Department, per CNN.

On Wednesday, Insider reported that an American Airlines passenger who refused to wear her face mask forced a flight to London from Miami to divert back to Florida roughly an hour into the 4,400-mile journey.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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United Airlines flight to Israel turns back to US mid-flight after 2 passengers who assigned themselves seats in business class started a 'riot,'...

Societal rifts a larger threat to Israel than foreign enemies, ex-IDF chief says – The Times of Israel

Posted By on January 24, 2022

Former IDF chief of staff Gadi Eisenkot is warning that Israels internal divisions are a greater threat than its foreign foes, according to excerpts from an interview published Thursday.

I think that the rifts in Israeli society, and the attacks from both sides, the decline in governance, the decline in faith in state institutions, in the courts, crime all these are the greatest threats for the countrys future, Eisenkot told the Walla news site. The full interview was slated to be published over the weekend.

Eisenkot, who headed the military from 2015 to 2019 and was thought to be mulling a future in politics, said Israels national resilience was the most important component of Israels national security, but that weakening internal cohesion was putting that attribute into jeopardy.

People are worried, not because of the Iranian threat, but because of internal weakness, loss of cohesion, inequality, friction between different communities. Entire groups of the public are not being absorbed into society, he said. We need to understand that there is no national security without societal solidarity, and there is no societal solidarity without national security.

He said national patriarch David Ben-Gurions vision of Israel as a melting pot was in dire straits.

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He highlighted the declining participation in the Israel Defense Forces in recent decades as an indicator of the breakdown. When he enlisted in the military in 1978, 88% of everyone eligible for the army enlisted, and when his son joined, in 2015, that figure had fallen to 67%, he said.

He also decried the trend toward valuing service in cyber units more highly than in frontline combat units.

The willingness to go to combat units, to kill or be killed, to go into danger, is in decline, he said, adding that youths from areas in the periphery, with less opportunity, needed to be provided with equal footing, since they are under-represented in elite technology units.

He also criticized policies toward the Palestinians, saying that a bi-national state of Jews and Palestinians would mean the end of the Zionist vision.

You dont need to be a genius to understand the meaning of millions of Palestinians mixed in with us, plus the complicated situation with Israeli Arabs, he said.

Police are seen in Lod during ethnic rioting in the mixed Jewish-Arab city in central Israel, May 12, 2021. (Yossi Aloni/Flash90)

He said Palestinian Authority Mahmoud Abbas, who is 86 years old, was nearing the end of his tenure, and proposed putting together a multi-year transition plan to improve ties with the Palestinians.

The plan would begin building a bridge to reduce hostility and strengthen trust.

He proposed a joint effort between Israel, the Palestinians, Egypt, Jordan, the US and others.

We need to change the reality of the situation, because it will lead to a single state, which will destroy the Zionist dream, he said.

Eisenkot was a soldier for 40 years and the 21st commander of the IDF, and was replaced by Aviv Kohavi in January 2019 when his four-year term ended.

As he left the army, he warned against division and politicization of the IDF. During his term, soldier Elor Azaria killed a wounded and disarmed Palestinian attacker in the West Bank and was prosecuted for it. The affair dragged up ugly divisions in Israeli society, including criticism of the army from some politicians on the right and death threats against Eisenkot.

Israels disunity and societal schisms were laid bare over the past several years during a series of inconclusive elections, in which no party was able to cobble together a stable government. The current government, a fragile but diverse array of parties from across the political spectrum, has been in power since last summer.

After leaving the military, Eisenkot worked for a number of think tanks. He was one of the most sought-after figures in the 2020 elections, and appeared to hint at one point that he was sent to enter politics, but ultimately decided not to.

A long list of IDF chiefs of staff have gone on to political careers after leaving the military, including Eisenkots predecessor, Defense Minister Benny Gantz.

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Societal rifts a larger threat to Israel than foreign enemies, ex-IDF chief says - The Times of Israel

Ukraine leader urges EU to stay united against Russia during call with bloc leader – The Times of Israel

Posted By on January 24, 2022

Israel, China convene joint committee on innovation for first time since 2018

The China-Israel Joint Committee on Innovation Cooperation meets virtually, led by Foreign Minister Yair Lapid and Chinas Vice President Wang Qishan.

During the meeting, the countries sign a three-year plan to regulate cooperation and government-to-government dialogue through 2024.

The Joint Committee was established in 2014 as a comprehensive bilateral dialogue framework for senior government officials. The meeting is the fifth time the committee has convened, and the first since 2018.

The meeting is part of a series of events marking 30 years of diplomatic relations between Israel and China.

The Chinese, like Israelis, arent afraid of new ideas, said Lapid at the meetings outset. Theres a built-in curiosity in the character of our two peoples. Give us a new and exciting idea, and well gather around it, discuss it enthusiastically , and immediately examine its origin and how it can be improved.

Representatives of a number of Israeli government ministries and offices participated in the meeting, including Science, Technology and Space Minister Orit Farkash-Hacohen and senior officials from the Health, Environmental Protection, Culture, Agriculture, and Economy ministries, as well as the Innovation Authority and Patent Office.

US President Joe Biden, left, meets virtually with Chinese President Xi Jinping, on screen, from the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, Monday, Nov. 15, 2021. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

Israel and China are marking three decades of diplomatic relations characterized by a continuing political dialogue, close economic and trade relations, and diverse collaborations which link the two peoples, said a statement from the Foreign Ministry spokesmans office on Monday. The volume of trade with China has increased significantly over the 30 years of diplomatic relations and today, stands at approximately $18 billion USD. China is one of Israels most important trading partners, and the free trade agreement is expected to contribute to increasing trade volume.

Israels initiatives to strengthen ties with Beijing come as the United States, Israels closest ally, increasingly sees China as its primary military and economic rival. This reality has forced Jerusalem to seek a balance between its deep commitment toward its alliance with the US, and Chinas growing importance as a global economic and military power.

Amid a US-China trade war that has ebbed and flowed in recent years under both the Trump and Biden administrations, China has shown interest in Israeli innovations, especially in medical tech, robotics, food tech, and artificial intelligence.

Washingtons main concerns lie in potential dual-usage technologies, where various technologies would have both civilian and military applications. At the same time, Israel has regulations in place to prevent the sale of sensitive military-related technology to China (and other countries), following a 1990s deal in which Israel had to scrap the sale of advanced airborne radar systems to China amid fierce US opposition.

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Ukraine leader urges EU to stay united against Russia during call with bloc leader - The Times of Israel

Meet the Israeli diplomat at the forefront of the Abraham Accords – Jewish Insider

Posted By on January 24, 2022

Less than a month after presenting his credentials to King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, Israels ambassador to Bahrain, Eitan Naeh, is still marveling at his new surroundings. The longtime Israeli diplomat, who was famously expelled from Turkey in 2018, some days cannot believe that he represents his country in an Arab kingdom that less than two years ago had no formal ties with Israel.

I sit here in Manama and look outside to a beautiful view of the [Persian] Gulf, and I am still pinching myself, Naeh told Jewish Insider in a recent interview. I feel lucky to work in these countries.

Naeh arrived in Manama, Bahrains capital, last November, vacating his temporary posting in Abu Dhabi, where he spent nine months serving as the first diplomat to represent Israel in the United Arab Emirates. Israel signed normalization agreements with the UAE and Bahrain in September 2020, with Morocco and Sudan joining what is now known as the Abraham Accords a few months later.

From the first day I landed here, I found myself sitting in homes and living rooms with people from all over the region Iraqis, Saudis, Kuwaitis, Lebanese and Palestinians and they all told me, Enough, lets put our political disagreements aside and do business; that in its place will calm things down, Naeh told JI over Zoom from Manama.

While Naeh, who will be in Bahrain for the long term, is focused on developing economic and trade ties between the two countries, he is also well aware of the kingdoms regional and geographic value as a country that sits in the Persian Gulf just off the coast of Saudi Arabia.

We are looking at Bahrain as a gateway to the region, to the East, and from the East to Israel, he said.

Aside from the lucrative financial opportunities, including in tourism Naeh said direct flights from Tel Aviv to Manama will begin in a few months once the Omicron strain of COVID-19 subsides Israel has indicated that it would like to see Saudi Arabia, the most powerful country in the region, joining the accords.

What Ive learned since coming here is that Bahrain and Saudi enjoy a very close and amicable relationship, and I hope we will find an opportunity to cooperate with them, Naeh said. Israel is obviously open to such cooperation economic, financial, trade and investment.

Coming now from the first two countries the UAE and Bahrain that signed the Abraham Accords, he added, I would say that the idea is to build a model, a model of coexistence and a model of cooperation, where other countries in the region will begin to say, Why not us?

Naeh told JI that he hears more and more people in the region asking when such relations will be formed between their countries and Israel. It is bound to happen eventually, he said of Saudi Arabia.

The Gulf countries, certainly Bahrain, the UAE and Saudi Arabia, are very advanced and I think together with Israel, we can do wonders, Naeh stated, adding that it was important not to ignore the Arab states who first signed peace deals with Israel: Egypt and Jordan.

There is a real curiosity here about Israel, about the religion, the culture, the food, the holy sites, and the people, he said of Bahrain, though he cautioned that there remained some contentious issues, such as the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

We dont expect countries to simply become all lovey-dovey in a day, said Naeh, adding, however, that the Abraham Accords had reversed a trend.

In contrast to the past, when countries raced to show who boycotts more, who incites more, or who shows more animosity towards Israel, there are now countries in the region that are racing to invite Israeli companies to work there, he said.

In terms of the economic opportunities between Israel and Bahrain, Naeh observes that the scale of economic cooperation is quite different to the UAE. According to figures compiled by the Abraham Accords Peace Institute, trade between Israel and Bahrain stands at around $6.5 million, compared to $1.15 billion between Israel and the UAE.

However, he noted, the desire in Bahrain to build upon and strengthen growing cooperation with Israel is equally vibrant as in the UAE.

I have found a real will among people here to live in peace and coexistence, Naeh noted. There is an indigenous Jewish community here that has lived here for many years, and the only synagogue in the Gulf was in Bahrain.

Naeh said he is working with counterparts in the Gulf state to create more avenues of cooperation. I think that there is plenty in the economic sphere and of course, in people-to-people relations, politics and security, he said. It is time to move on and time to explore, and the best way forward to live together is to trade together. Thats what the Abraham Accords is all about.

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Meet the Israeli diplomat at the forefront of the Abraham Accords - Jewish Insider

Israeli firm develops body cams with facial recognition technology – The Times of Israel

Posted By on January 24, 2022

AFP Twenty years after he planned the controversial barrier between Israel and Palestinians, Dany Tirza is developing a security tool that requires no cement: body cameras with facial recognition technology.

Tirza, a former Israeli army colonel, says his company, Yozmot, Ltd., aims to produce a body-worn camera enabling police to scan crowds and detect suspects in real-time, even if their faces are obscured.

Facial recognition in law enforcement has sparked global criticism, with US tech giants backing away from providing the technology to police, citing privacy risks.

Proponents including Tirza, however, tout its ability to track down criminals or missing persons.

The policeman will know who he is facing, he said.

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Its easy

Tirza, 63, spoke to AFP from his home in the West Bank settlement of Kfar Adumim.

Israeli army soldiers stand guard at a checkpoint in Tal Rumaida in the West Bank city of Hebron, on September 21, 2016. (Wisam Hashlamoun/Flash90)

He said he partnered with Tel Aviv-based Corsight AI to develop a body-worn police camera that could instantly identify people in a crowd, even if they wear masks, make-up or camouflage, and could match them to photographs dating back decades.

Corsight CEO Rob Watts did not confirm the collaboration, but said his company was working with some 230 integrators worldwide who incorporated facial recognition software into cameras.

The technology allows clients to build databases, whether of company employees allowed into a building, ticket holders permitted into a stadium, or suspects wanted by the police, Watts said.

He said Australian and British police were already piloting the technology.

The facial recognition industry was worth about $3.7 billion in 2020, according to market research firm Mordor Intelligence, which projected growth to $11.6 billion by 2026.

Facebook, Microsoft, Amazon, and IBM have all declared temporary or permanent freezes on selling facial recognition programs to law enforcement.

France last month ordered the US-based Clearview AI to delete data on its citizens, saying the company violated privacy when it built a facial recognition database using images scraped from the internet.

Watts called Clearviews actions abhorrent and said Corsight AI did not sell to China, Russia or Myanmar because of human rights and ethics.

What we want to do is promote facial recognition as a force for good, he said.

He said Corsight had hired Tony Porter, the United Kingdoms former surveillance camera commissioner, as chief privacy officer, and that the software would blur or delete faces deemed not of interest within seconds.

Corsight AI was valued at about $55 million in a recent funding round, Watts said, estimating this would grow to $250 million by years end, and noting the technologys potential.

Why do I need a credit card? I dont, Ive got a face, he said. The consumer will very, very quickly and readily adopt facial recognition because its easy.

Controversial history

Surveillance technology developed in Israel has a checkered history.

The NSO Group, founded by Israeli military intelligence veterans, makes the Pegasus software that can spy on mobile phones.

A branch office of NSO Group near the southern town of Sapir, August 24, 2021. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner, File)

US authorities blacklisted NSO in November, and Facebook and Apple have sued the company after the spyware was discovered on devices belonging to dissidents and journalists.

NSO says Pegasus meets the Defense Ministrys export rules.

Israeli facial recognition software, too, has encountered criticism.

In November, former Israeli soldiers revealed they had photographed thousands of Palestinians to build a database for a sweeping facial recognition surveillance program in the West Bank city of Hebron.

In 2020, Microsoft divested from Israeli facial recognition firm AnyVision, now renamed Oosto, over the companys alleged involvement in surveilling Palestinians.

Oosto works with law enforcement agencies and private companies worldwide, and its software is used at checkpoints where Palestinian laborers cross into Israel.

Corsight CEO Watts said his company has a number of contracts in Israel governmental contracts and agencies, but declined to elaborate, citing non-disclosure agreements.

Control

Palestinian digital rights activist Nadim Nashif said the use of facial recognition technology entrenchedIsraels control over Palestinians and added to a domination of physical spaces.

But Tirza praised its use at checkpoints, saying the main aim was to reduce friction between soldiers and residents.

Tirza was a colonel in the military in 2002 when he was tasked with designing a barrier in response to attacks during the second Palestinian intifada, or uprising.

Part towering concrete slabs, part fence, it now snakes for more than 500 kilometers (310 miles) along the Israel-West Bank border.

A section of Israels security barrier between the Jewish settlement of Modiin Illit, right, and the outskirts of the West Bank village of Bilin, near Ramallah, June 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit/File)

Palestinians say the barriers construction grabbed nearly 10 percent of the West Bank, and the International Court of Justice ruled it illegal.

But Tirza said it also reshaped the conflict.

Until it was built, a lot of people thought you cannot separate Israelis and Palestinians, he said.

Tirza said he expected to have the body camera finished within a year, and hopes to market it to US and Mexican law enforcement though he acknowledged some reluctance.

They were very interested, but everyone says we have to check the laws to see whether it goes too far, he said.But I believe it is not too far.

Excerpt from:

Israeli firm develops body cams with facial recognition technology - The Times of Israel

The Agony and the Pride of Being a Jew in America – Algemeiner

Posted By on January 24, 2022

JNS.org To be a Jew today means your life will be defined by collective moments of agony and of pride. Jewish people may be admired by some for our resilience, our dignity, our courage and our tenacity to persevere in the face of a history of relentless hatred, but we are still reviled by others. These are groups of people who for reasons that only philosophers and theologians might attempt to understand buy into grand paranoid delusions and conspiratorial theories about our people. Theories abound that Jews are responsible for everything from controlling the US and world governments to spreading COVID-19 to replacing Americans with immigrants to the genocide of another people.

It all seems so familiar to us by now. Jews are attacked for the crime of being Jews, whether in Pittsburgh, Poway, Brooklyn, Los Angeles, Jersey City, Monsey, and now, in Colleyville, Texas. Our despair as a people was heightened this Saturday upon the news of four congregants, including the rabbi, being held hostage in their synagogue by Malik Faisal Akram for nearly 11 nerve-wracking hours.

Akram called for the freeing of his metaphorical sister Aafia Siddiqui, a woman known as Lady Al-Qaeda, who threatened to kill American officials at gunpoint in Afghanistan. She is a highly educated neuroscientist who went to MIT, holds a doctorate from Brandeis University and had designed several plans to blow up parts of New York. She is known to have delusional fantasies of Americans kidnapping Muslim children and turning them into Christians.

What is so horrific, however, is that he was not alone. In 2018, the Pakistani Senate passed a resolution calling her Daughter of the Nation, and Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan has called for her release several times.

Even more disturbing is that according to noted anti-terrorism expert Steven Emerson, the Council of American Islamic Relations (CAIR), the Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA), American Muslims for Palestine (AMP) and many other groups have lionized Siddiqui, making her into a martyr and victim of human-rights abuses at the hands of the United States, even holding rallies on her behalf.

With the spotlight still on Colleyville, CAIR says they stand in solidarity with the congregants of Congregation Beth Israel. Yet at a rally just last month, CAIRs Dallas-Fort Worth chapter held a rally with AMP and ICNA to free Siddiqui.

Last November, political activist Linda Sarsour spoke on a webinar hosted by CAIR invoking intersectionality, saying: To me, she embodies a political prisoner, and I see her in the same realm that I see Imam Jamil and Leonard Peltier, and many other former Black Panther Party leaders and others who have been subjected to torture and subjected to solitary confinement, and subjected to things that no human being should be subjected to in our incarceration system.

At a September CAIR rally in front of the Texas prison where Siddiqui is being held, American- Pakistani social activist Nadrat Siddiqui said: One of the few ways that these political prisoners, which Dr. Aafia is can achieve a measure of justice that is, is really in the court of public opinion because as we see, the court, headed by the Zionist judges usually, and other judges who have a vested interest, they never give a damn about the Muslim prisoners.

During her trial, Siddiqui told the judge, she didnt want Jews on the jury if they have a Zionist or Israeli background. I have a feeling everyone here is them, subject them to genetic testing.

Matthew DeSarno, FBI Dallas special agent in charge of the hostage crisis on Saturday, said the hostage-taker was thought to have been singularly focused on one issue, and it was not specifically related to the Jewish community.

Excuse me?

Tell me thats why he chose a synagogue for his antics, and not a church, a mosque, a Buddhist shrine or a local 7-Eleven.

This was not only an act of terrorism. It was an act of antisemitism.

Being a Jew means being a part of a people with a long history of being singled out, as a people which dwells alone. Whether you assimilate entirely or side with the enemy leading chants of Free Palestine! on college campuses those who are determined to demonize our people and hate you for being one of us inevitably will.

Remember the words of CAIR San Francisco Bay Area executive director Zahra Billoo who said: When we talk about islamophobia, we often think of the vehement fascists but I also want us to pay attention to the polite Zionists, the ones that say, Lets just break bread together on Nov. 27 at an American Muslims for Palestine (AMP) meeting in Chicago. We need to pay attention to the Anti-Defamation League, we need to pay attention to the Jewish Federation, we need to pay attention to the Zionist synagogues, we need to pay attention to the Hillel chapters on our campuses. They are your enemies.

The agonizing reality is that no matter how polite one is no matter how humanistic, how compassionate there will be those who single us out for hatred simply because we are Jews.

But then again, we are part of a proud legacy of attempting to be a source of what is moral, what is compassionate, what is right and what is just. And that inner knowledge is a source of our continuous, albeit quiet, moments of Jewish pride.

Sarah N. Stern is founder and president of the Endowment for Middle East Truth (EMET), a pro-Israel and pro-American think tank and policy institute in Washington, DC.

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The Agony and the Pride of Being a Jew in America - Algemeiner

Ask A Jew: Star of David and Conversion – spokanefavs.com

Posted By on January 24, 2022

What questions do you have about Judaism?Submit them online, or fill out the form below.

By Hyphen Parent

My top suggestion is to reach out to your local rabbi and ask for more information about conversion. Find out more about whats involved and the commitment necessary. There are so many different things that are done as part of conversion. There are readings that are done privately. There are conversations with rabbis and other Jewish people. There are celebrations. There are services, classes, and parties. The process of conversion can be absolutely accessible to everyone in any stage of life.

That being said, the Star of David is a well-known symbol of Judaism. To wear or use one when one isnt Jewish or isnt in the active process of officially becoming Jewish is cultural appropriation. Ive written in the past about this exact topic: Ask A Jew: Wearing the Star of David.

For anyone who is interested in conversion, please research and reach out to rabbis. The process isnt lonely days locked away in boring classes away from the rest of the world. Its all about learning about Judaism, integrating Judaism into your life, and becoming a part of the Jewish community.

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Ask A Jew: Star of David and Conversion - spokanefavs.com

‘JewFace’ faces backlash: ‘What’s offensive is the idea that there’s such thing as Jewish character traits’ – Haaretz

Posted By on January 24, 2022

In an era in which Hollywood obsesses on matters of representation and diversity, and insists on casting women, Blacks, Hispanics and Asians for every possible role, and is in general walking on eggshells in an attempt not to rub up against any minority its not surprising that, of all people, it was a Jewish woman from Israel who managed to cause the latest commotion. Golda Meir most certainly would not have imagined that over 40 years after her death, her nose would manage to get Jews all riled up and induce filmmakers to quarrel so earnestly among themselves.

Criticism over the selection of British star Helen Mirren to play the role of Golda in a new film, coming on the heels of several other complaints about the casting of Jewish characters in films and television, led the issue to snowball (or would it be more appropriate to say matzo-ball). Jewish comedian Sarah Silverman coined the term "JewFace" to refer to the phenomenon of casting non-Jews in Jewish roles, framing the issue as a moral sin of the first degree, on par with the notorious blackface of ill repute.

But when well-regarded Israeli filmmakers who have directed films abroad are asked about the issue, they clearly have no idea what all the fuss is about. As far as theyre concerned, it is a load of bull. True to form, Guy Nattiv, who directed the film Golda, refuses to even discuss the subject. He already made his position clear when he selected the non-Jewish Mirren to don the famous Goldas shoes. Joseph Cedar, who cast Richard Gere to play the Jewish New Yorker big-wig in the film Norman, told Haaretz that the whole debate makes him laugh. I want to see someone claim that Geres being cast in this role commits some terrible sin against the essence of this particular Jewish role.

Meanwhile, Hagai Levi, who cast the American star Oscar Isaac to play the Jewish protagonist in his adaptation of Scenes from a Marriage, has a hard time understanding the logic behind the term JewFace. In my opinion, it is one of the most ridiculous extremes of representation culture, he says.

First, a little bit of background. It took someone famous, someone popular, with abundant copywriting talent like Silverman, to push the subject onto the agenda. That happened immediately after it became known that the non-Jewish actress Kathryn Hahn had been cast to play the late Jewish comedian Joan Rivers in a new series. Silvermans fuse blew. She made it clear in her podcast that the casting was merely another link in a chain of problematic castings, and she coined the term JewFace to describe instances in which non-Jews are sent to play roles in which Jewishness is a primary and significant element of their identity.

And in a time when the importance of representation is seen as so essential and so front and center, why does ours constantly get breached even today in the thick of it? Silverman fired. She noted that on more than one occasion the entry of the non-Jew into the shoes of the Jewish character meant a great deal of makeup, in an effort to highlight physical attributes that are considered Jewish, such as a prominent nose, and that it at times also comes with the stereotypical adoption of a New York-Yiddish pronunciation. One example of overt JewFace casting that she cited was Felicity Jones, who portrayed Ruth Bader Ginsburg in the film On the Basis of Sex, and Tracy Ullman, who played Betty Friedan in the film Mrs. America. It isnt that these actresses did something bad, says Silverman, but that this casting method is screwed up. Right now, representation fucking matters, Silverman added. It has to also finally matter for Jews as well. Especially Jewish women.

The Golda shoot took place shortly afterward in London. The photos released to the press from the set showed Mirren wearing particularly heavy makeup, meant to transform her face to closely resemble that of Israels fourth prime minister. Among other things, the makeup crew invested a great deal of effort in turning Mirrens compact nose into Goldas tuber-like proboscis.

Genitals and gentiles

The Jewish-British actress Maureen Lipman (The Piano) declared this to be yet another case of JewFace. It was wrong to send the non-Jewish Mirren to play Meir because the Jewishness of this character is so integral, Lipman explained a few weeks ago in an interview with the Jewish Chronicle. Although she complimented Mirren, saying that she would certainly be marvelous in the role, she nevertheless said that a Jewish actress should have been cast here. It would never be allowed for Ben Kingsley to play Nelson Mandela. You just couldnt even go there. (Although its worth recalling that Kingsley did play Mahatma Gandhi, even winning an Oscar for his portrayal).

It is now clear to all (except for the creators of satire programs in Israel) that blackface is an unpardonable sin, and that the appearance of Al Jolson in blackface in The Jazz Singer was a racist and offensive act. But because the official guidebook has not yet been written to determine which roles are open to which actors and how one can avoid politically problematic casting, actors in Hollywood are compelled to be hit over and over again with criticism for insensitive casting. Eddie Redmayne portrayed a transgender character in the film The Danish Girl, but later admitted that it was a mistake. Scarlett Johansson was supposed to play a trans man in the film Rub & Tug, but withdrew as a result of the criticism that the casting drew. Both she and Tilda Swinton were accused of whitewashing after the two played roles of Asian characters (in The Ghost in the Shell and Doctor Strange respectively). Even Gal Gadot was put through the wringer when it was announced that she, Jewish Israeli that she is, was about to play Cleopatra, the Egyptian queen.

So everyone by now understands that stealing cinematic roles of minorities in society and casting white and cis-gender stars to play these roles instead of actors who belong to these minority groups is a problematic matter. But what about JewFace? Is there really something offensive in a non-Jew playing a Jew? Is there really a need in Hollywood, the film industry that was built by Jewish immigrants, to bolster the status of members of the Mosaic faith? And are Israeli directors like Nattiv, Cedar and Levi, who are casting non-Jews to play Jewish characters perhaps unconsciously harming the characters that they themselves created and dealing a blow to global Jewish dignity in general?

Who is a Jew?

In the round of media appearances we did after the film came out, there were a few interviewers who asked why we had not cast a Jew to play Norman, who is a Jewish New Yorker, as well as the character of the New York rabbi played by Steve Buscemi, says Cedar. I couldnt even understand the question, where it was coming from, because as far as Im concerned if there is anything offensive or insulting, it is the idea that there is such a thing as Jewish character traits that an actor cannot take on, like skin color. After all, insofar as the question of whether Judaism is religion or race, the only ones claiming that it is a race are the Nazis. And if you have to take up the question here of Who is a Jew, the casting agents will end up having to undergo training at the Rabbinate.

Cedar, who has had two of his films nominated for an Oscar (Beaufort and Footnote), explains that two types of political considerations can influence the casting: those related to representation when you take a white actor and paint his face black so that he can play a Black role, which is offensive to representation of the Black individual and those that relate to opportunities. There are people whose skin color or ethnic group to which they belong greatly limit their employment opportunities. So anyone whose appearance limits his work possibilities can come to the casting institution with charges about an attempt to send in someone who is white and popular at the box office, out of financial considerations, to play a role that could have gone to them, he says. But what does this have to do with the issue of representation of Jews? Nothing. When I cast Buscemi to play a rabbi, what injustice is being done to Jewish representation on the screen? On the other hand, do I really want to restrict things, so that Jews play only Jews? The result would be the opposite of equal opportunity. Think about it: The biggest parts played by the greatest Jewish actors were roles of non-Jews. So whose interest would be served here?

The argument is that when you are talking about roles in which Jewishness is an inherent and substantive component, Jewish actors have more tools to connect to those roles.

A stereotype exists on the screen only if the screenplay and the filmmakers create it, says Cedar. If I, as a creator for whom Jewish identity is very significant in [my] life, wrote a story that accurately depicts the Jewish identity of its protagonist, I can also cast in that role an Indian actor if I see fit. If I decide that this Indian is doing it the best that is my right. That is my artistic freedom. I want to see someone claim that the casting of Gere in a Jewish New Yorker role transgresses the essence of this character. Does anyone else understand this character more than I do? That is my choice. The thought that an actor can only portray someone from the realm into which he was born very much reduces the artistry of acting.

In general, the idea of JewFace is in my opinion offensive toward the significance of blackface in American history. Because blackface is a symbol of white exploitation of black entertainment. The history there is truly offensive. And therefore by borrowing this term for the sake of Jews, who do not have any external mark or sign that identifies them, is a cheapening of the offensive idea that stood at the basis of blackface, says Cedar.

When a choice is unsuitable

The British comic David Baddiel, author of the book Jews Dont Count, takes the opposite position. In an interview with Variety in mid-January he explained that the question of whether Mirren can play the Golda Meir role or not, is not especially important. What is more important is that the casting did not spark any protest as did other inauthentic castings, and cited, as an example, that of Scarlett Johansson for a transgender role. The point is the unsuitability, he explained. If the same criticism is also valid for other minorities and if in so doing we are attempting to make the world a more just place, one that offers a more egalitarian platform to minorities then why shouldnt it also be valid for Jews? And what does that say about Jews?

Baddiel dismisses the position according to which Jews are not worthy of a similar attitude as that given to other minorities, because they enjoy over-representation in the entertainment world and because Jews are those who established Hollywood. It is antisemitic to say that Jews control the entertainment business or that they are found everywhere in the entertainment business, he says. Another interviewee in the same Variety article, Professor Nathan Abrams of Bangor University in Wales, argues that Jewish actors, like other minorities, suffer from under-representation on the screen. Clear discrimination exists in the casting of Jews for major roles, he says, adding that this apparently stems from an unconscious bias of casting agents.

In the Jewish state, conversely, this argument seems like something belonging to some faraway province. In Israel, Jews do not feel like they are in a minority, and Jewish actors do not have to fight to be offered Jewish roles. In Israel, JewFace sounds more like the face of the neighbor. That may be the reason why when Hagai Levi set out to cast his American miniseries Scenes from a Marriage, he did not stop for even a moment to consider the religious affiliation of the actors that he auditioned. The hero in the series is not merely Jewish, but has a religious past, for whom his Judaism is a significant part of the story which, according to the Silverman logic, holds great potential for JewFace. But at no moment did this even cross my mind, Levi clarifies.

In my opinion, JewFace is one of the most ridiculous extremes of representation culture, he says. Its like Penelope Cruz, being accused in the film The 355 that she played a Hispanic character, even though she is only Spanish. Its ridiculous. In order to demand this thing you have to be a repressed minority, so if you are Black or transgender you really are a minority that is being repressed, there is discrimination, you are under attack. But Jews? With all due respect, that isnt the situation. Look, part of the rationale of this story in America has to do with the employment issue: All of these representation formulas are perhaps idiotic, but at the end of the day they bring about a situation in which more Blacks and Hispanics are working, so its a good thing. But Jews? I dont think they have a problem in this matter. It doesnt seem to me that they are suffering from discrimination in this industry.

It may be that the Jews living abroad are more familiar with antisemitism up close, feel it intimately, come up against it in the street, and therefore more easily identify with the persecuted minority mindset in whose name all the JewFace talk was conceived. However that does not justify this madness, Levi insists. It may be that I would feel uncomfortable in a case in which the writer is a non-Jew and the director is a non-Jew and everyone is non-Jews, and there is someone portraying a Jew and he is a non-Jew as well. In such a production, perhaps you do have to take a Jewish actor. But thats because if you are creating some world, you had better be familiar with it. Its as if I wouldnt make a movie whose heroes are Blacks because I am not familiar enough with that world. And when I want to make a Palestinian story I would bring in a Palestinian actor, because he knows that world better than I do, he understands it better. Indeed, a few years ago when Cedar and Levi created the series Our Boys with Tawfik Abu Wael, Palestinians portrayed Palestinians, and Israeli Jews portrayed Israelis.

Perhaps it is easier to understand the JewFace storm if you stop for a minute and look around here. Levi raises a local dilemma that might resonate in certain respects with the issue. Is it possible for a Palestinian to play an Israeli Jew in Israel? Yes, of course. But the opposite is problematic, he says. Because there is a minority that is repressed, and there is a majority that is privileged, and I assume that we would feel uncomfortable if a Jew would come in today and portray an Arab. But when an Arab actor comes and plays a Jew, who cares?

See the article here:

'JewFace' faces backlash: 'What's offensive is the idea that there's such thing as Jewish character traits' - Haaretz


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