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The plant power of veganuary – Jewish News

Posted By on January 11, 2022

Are you one of more than half a million people worldwide (according to last years figures) who have committed to eating only vegan food for the whole of January? Veganuary is a non-profit organisation helping people to make these changes and is heavily supported by food retailers and restaurants.

Famous vegans include Christofu Columbus, Tiny Tempeh, Quinoa Reeves Sean Bean, Tahina Turner, Nut King Cole*. Im joking, obviously, but in 2018, John Cleese made an irritable jibe on Twitter:

Question: How can you tell whether someone is vegan?

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Answer: Because they tell you again, and again, and again.

Comedian Romesh Ranganathan, himself a vegan since 2013, says the reason people have a go at vegans is because they know it is the right choice.

Indeed, even without people signing up in droves to Veganuary, there are reportedly more than 500,000 vegans in the UK who are having the last laugh. They are enjoying numerous health benefits, a wide and tasty range of products, fantastic restaurants and the knowledge that their efforts are helping to save the planet.

But you dont have to go the whole hog (forgive the pun) some people choose to do their bit by embracing flexitarianism, a mainly plant-based diet with animal products occasionally being thrown in. Whether its Meat Free Monday, Veganuary or making the change for life, we can all have a go. With Burger King having launched vegan chicken nuggets this week, there really is a plant-based option to suit every palate and to work with all budgets.

Burger King has launched vegan nuggets

A vegan diet fits in very well when observing kashrut. In fact, youve got to hand it to the Israelis that their national dish, falafel, is vegan without even trying.

My other favourite cuisine, Indian, also has plenty of vegan dishes. Is the world telling me something? I buy and cook a lot of vegan food as my husband decided he wanted to follow the regime four days a week. This has lowered his cholesterol, though he cant resist the 10 Maltesers he has for a bedtime treat.

On vegan days, we all tuck into curries, ramen, bakes and stir fries (all made by me) and I confess that one of our freezers (so Jewish) has two drawers full of vegan products. If the non-vegans want to throw some cheese on the vegan shepherds pie we can, for as Malteser man constantly reminds me its not a religion.

The UKs Jewish Vegetarian Society (JVS) was founded in the 1960s, opening a vegetarian restaurant and enjoying an extremely active calendar of events. More recently, it has created the worlds first Jewish vegan centre, running cookery classes, hosting seders, growing food and educating the community on the vegan way of life.

Redefine meat

JVS director Lara Balsam says the team has been working hard to demonstrate that there is no tension between being Jewish and being vegan. Indeed, one example of its popularity is the increase in the number of vegan meals being ordered at Limmud events.

The JVS educates on how to veganise meals and Lara will probably be very jealous to learn that I was invited to dine at Tofuvegan in Islington. Chao Zhang, its executive director, asserts that his restaurant will delight vegans and carnivores alike. I was indeed delighted. The wontons, Peking duck and twice-cooked fish were so flavoursome that it really didnt feel as if we were missing anything. No wonder theres a three-week waiting list. Chao goes where the customers are and, happily, he is opening another branch in Golders Green this March.

Tofuvegan in Islington

Fake meat products have come a long way in terms of taste and texture, but an Israeli company, Redefine Meat, is going one giant step further and making 3D vegan meat. This is big business; such big business that three-Michelin-starred chef Marco Pierre White will soon put its 3D printed plant-based steaks on his restaurant menus.

How do they do it? Using cutting-edge technology to replace the need for animals, starting with natural plant-based ingredients crafted and optimised using artificial intelligence and machine learning, brought to life with advanced manufacturing and 3D printing. Redefine Meat says it is on a journey to become the worlds largest meat company.

Redefine

Israeli ingenuity doesnt end there. Wanting to grow and provide grocery products to supermarkets without it accumulating food miles, three Israelis came up with the idea of growing fresh produce inside supermarkets. Infarm, as the company was named, now has substantial financial backing and, by 2025, its farming fridge network is expected to reach more than five million square feet across the world.

As I see it, the only problem with eating at a vegan restaurant is that even those with dietary restrictions can pretty much order anything off the menu and so have too much choice. My husband struggled to decide what to have at Comptoir V, a cute Moroccan restaurant in Kensal Rise, because the choice was so great.

Moroccan restaurant Comptoir V in Kensal Rise specialises in vegan and vegetarian cuisine

Owner Saeed Kazmi is making veganism normal by providing healthy, wholesome cuisine that nourishes the body and feeds the soul that just happens to be vegan. I left my earnest flexitarian to study the menu while I quaffed the excellent cocktails. Two hearty courses of innovative and tasty dishes later jackfruit nuggets, dynamite shrimp, Moroccan ghife bread and Spiced Island curry (sweet potato, coconut and spinach) among them meant that we could only manage to share the pancakes and caramel ice cream. Vegantastic.

* Benedict Cucumberbatch is actually a vegan

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The plant power of veganuary - Jewish News

New online translation by Sefaria may be the Jerusalem Talmuds Cinderella moment – The Times of Israel

Posted By on January 11, 2022

The Babylonian Talmuds lesser-known counterpart the Jerusalem Talmud is getting its moment in the limelight with the introduction of its first and only complete online manuscript, along with full English and French translations.

Released late last month by Sefaria, a nonprofit offering free access to Jewish texts, the Jerusalem Talmud joins its Babylonian cousin, which Sefaria previously made available online.

As a Jewish text the Talmud, an ancient collection of rabbinic interpretations on matters of faith and religious law, has never been known for its accessibility. It can take years of study before one is able to navigate the Talmuds passages without a teacher. Until the modern era, virtually only those who possessed an Orthodox Jewish education mostly men were given the scholarly tools to decipher the often-cryptic texts written in Aramaic, an ancient Levantine language.

In the digital age, it is possible to make the Talmud available to anyone with an internet connection but Sefarias initiative ups the ante by also making the texts understandable, with links, references, and translations at the click of a finger.

Incorporating a translation into English made by Heinrich Guggenheimer first published by academic press Walter de Gruyter between 1999 and 2015 Sefaria has created a digital edition of the Jerusalem Talmud incorporating all 17 print volumes, section by section, appearing with its original Aramaic counterpart. And while it may be especially vast in scope, this latest effort is merely an extension of what Sefaria is always doing: steering Jewish texts considered obscure back toward the mainstream.

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The question at the center of the effort of uploading the Jerusalem Talmud to Sefarias site with images of the original manuscript, translations into two languages, and linked cross-references is whether this access will lead to deeper, more grounded conversations among learners of the Jewish tradition of all ages, genders, and levels of knowledge.

According to Lev Israel, chief data officer of Sefaria and one of the main staff members behind the effort to put the Jerusalem Talmud online, the issue is not only about access, but also about what it means to learn from a computer rather than from a book, a manuscript, or another person.

Illustrative: This undated photo provided by Sothebys in New York shows the first-ever printing of the Talmud in Venice in the 1520s. (Sothebys via AP)

Were in the middle of this transition which has already altered our perception, and its hard to get perspective on this, says Israel. The digital text is malleable. If you have low visibility, you can increase the size. If youre blind, you can have the computer read it aloud. The Jerusalem Talmud amps this up: Were increasing access for people who had access. Its a radical accentuation of what weve been doing all along.

For Israel, making the Jerusalem Talmud available online isnt just about providing access, its also about changing the narrative around this important text within Jewish religious and academic scholarship.

I hope this changes what the Jerusalem Talmud means for future generations, he says. That the story ceases to be that its inaccessible that its a mysterious, distant type of book once its more at hand. Because it is so obscure, the Jerusalem Talmud often gets brushed under the rug.

The story of the Jerusalem Talmud is the story of the lesser stepsister. The term Talmud usually refers to the combination of the Mishnah, a written version of the oral tradition of the Torah that was written mainly in Hebrew until the 3rd century CE, and the Gemara, commentaries on the Mishnah written in Aramaic in two major ancient territories, Babylon and Palestine.

Each of these two commentaries represents its own body of wisdom, with unique interpretations of the Mishnah, and each covers slightly different aspects of Jewish law. But whereas the Babylonian Talmud, which was codified around 500 CE, was circulated in complete manuscripts throughout the Middle Ages, the Jerusalem Talmud was rarer, with the only known complete manuscript dating as late as 1289 CE. So, for most of Jewish history since the destruction of the Second Temple, it was the Babylonian Talmud that was studied and consulted to decide religious matters, to such a degree that the word Talmud became synonymous with the one that emerged from Babylon.

Senior lecturer at Bar-Ilan University Dr. Moshe Simon-Shoshan. (Courtesy)

The Jerusalem Talmud was not completely forgotten but its scarcity, as well as its style, made it more difficult to apply. Its also written in a different Aramaic from the one that became familiar to yeshiva students who pored over the Babylonian Talmud. As Dr. Moshe Simon-Shoshan, a scholar of rabbinic literature and senior lecturer at Bar-Ilan University, explains, the Jerusalem Talmud is shorter, more cryptic, and less edited than the Babylonian Talmud, also known merely as the Bavli. Its harder to make sense of the text, he adds, and so that people have to be more careful in reading and interpreting the Jerusalem Talmud or Yerushalmi, as it is also known especially since the links in the text arent as clear.

I often say, says Simon-Shoshan, that you will never complain about the Bavli being unclear after you open the Yerushalmi.

Even its name is misleading. Known as the Jerusalem Talmud, it was likely written and compiled in the Galilee, incorporating texts from Caesarea and Tiberias, centers of rabbinical learning after the Bar Kochba revolt, which shifted the center of rabbinic activity and Jewish life from Judea toward the north.

And while it was not written in Jerusalem, as the name might suggest, it refers to the laws of Jewish life in the Land of Israel, at the center of which was Jerusalem known spiritually as Zion. Some scholars call it the Palestinian Talmud, while others yet call it the Talmud of the Land of Israel. And all this debate exists before one even looks into a single page of this complex Jewish source.

An additional complicating factor when considering the two Talmuds is that the Yerushalmi was codified first and may have even been available in Babylon at the time of the compilation and completion of the Bavli.

Dr. Elana Stein Hain, director of faculty and senior research fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute of North America. (Courtesy)

Dr. Elana Stein Hain, director of faculty and senior research fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute of North America, points out that while the Bavli was popularized by Jewish tradition over the past 1,500 years, the Yerushalmi is an important intermediary step to understanding the wisdom of Hazal, the Jewish sages of the Talmud.

Anyone who really wants to understand the development of Hazals thought, says Stein Hain, cant do it by skipping straight to the Bavli. The Yerushalmi is an intermediary step. It can actually give you a sense of why they developed the Bavli as they did, or how they could have developed it differently.

The Yerushalmi, Stein Hain adds, got cut off early, and so it didnt become dominant. And while, in her words, the supremacy of the Bavli will not be undone, its possible that Sefarias making the Yerushalmi available online with translations represents its Cinderella moment.

Some people have thought of the Yerushalmi as very secondary, continues Stein Hain, who is also on Sefarias board of directors. Others see it as a critical way of understanding the Bavli. I try to understand the big ideas that are in Hazal, not just the bottom line of [rabbinic law], and so the Yerushalmi gives me a whole new set of ideas.

Sefaria chief data officer Israel says that the project to bring the Jerusalem Talmud to broader readership is about improving the quality of discussions taking place at this particular moment in history.

The conversations that happen nowadays on the internet, but also in our living rooms, are really more about who can yell the loudest, who can be the most shocking, Israel says. They bear no relationship to fact. Its all about whats most persuasive and I think a lot of the work were doing is to provide resources to ground the conversation in primary sources.

Simon-Shoshan, too, sees the move to digital platforms as being groundbreaking in the way our global societies are restructuring their notions of knowledge, education, and communication.

The move to online text isnt like the move from written manuscripts to printed books, he says. Its like the move from oral traditions to written texts.

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New online translation by Sefaria may be the Jerusalem Talmuds Cinderella moment - The Times of Israel

Keeping the faith: This year, let’s learn to engage in a society of many different opinions – The Columbus Dispatch

Posted By on January 11, 2022

Rabbi Hillel Skolnik| Special to The Columbus Dispatch

It is an old joke within the Jewish community that if you put three people in a room, youll hear four opinions.

The comment works with any group size so long as the number of opinions is at least one greater than those gathered. While this attempt at humor has become clich, it is based on the fact that Jewish texts have been recording disagreements for hundreds of years.

The Talmud, a collection of rabbinic discourse that is dated to approximately the year 500, is literally a collection of disputes between the rabbis of third through fifth centuries. Sometimes these disagreements come to a conclusion and other times not.

It is now 2022, and I think it is safe to say that the reality on the ground has not changed.People, in whatever faith and values community they identify, will continue to have differences of opinion, just as the rabbis did long ago.

What has changedsignificantly and, in my opinion, not for the betteris how we act during those disagreements toward the people on the other side of the debate.

My name, Hillel, is the same as one of the most famous Jewish scholars of the times from before even the Talmud.Hillel the Elder was known to be wise, compassionate and to almost always disagree with his contemporary, Shammai.And yet, despite the fact that their opinions varied so greatly, they invariably treated each other with kindness and respect. Pupils of the two scholars still mingled, and marriages regularly took place between the two houses of study.

It would be difficult to imagine such a circumstance happening today when if often feels as though we can only talk tolet alone associate witha person who agrees with us on all accounts.People seem to walk around with a checklist of opinions to go through before deciding if it is even possible to strike up a conversation.

Agree about political party affiliation? Check.

Agree about religion and God? Check.

Agree about the effects of climate change? Check.

Agree about diet as a vegetarian vs. omnivore? Check.

Agree about who makes the best pizza in Columbus? Check.

Are there nonstarters?Without question.But is the list of nonstarters way too long? Without question.

We all lose out when we only converse with people who share our views.Society is weakened if we are only willing to stand next to a person who has passed our individualized litmus test of theiropinions.

We do not all need to agree on every single question.In fact, talking to someone with a differing view only helps to inform our own thoughts and assists in our abilities to vocalize our ideas. And every once in a while, a moment comes along that demands that we put our differences aside to stand together for something about which we agree.

Such an action can only be possible if ever find a way to talk to each other and to learn from one another. That is how change comes to our world.That is how our hyperpolarized society has a prayer of becoming a little better in this new year.

Rabbi Hillel Skolnik issenior rabbi atCongregation Tifereth Israelon the East Side.

Keeping the Faith is a column featuring the perspectives of a variety of faith leaders from the Columbus area.

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Keeping the faith: This year, let's learn to engage in a society of many different opinions - The Columbus Dispatch

Tu B’Shvat’s Evolution From Tax Day to Earth Day – Algemeiner

Posted By on January 11, 2022

Like other Jewish holidays, the festival of Tu BShvat the 15th day of the month of Shevat has undergone changes since its first mention in the Jewish legal corpus known as the Mishnah, some 1,700 years ago. There, it was described as the New Year for the Tree.

During the days when the Jewish Temple stood, Tu BShvat was essentially Tax Day an administrative date for calculating the tithing of trees. Without a temple, it evolved into a feast of fruits in the Middle Ages. In the 16th century, Rabbi Yitshak Luria of Safed and his disciples created a Tu BShvat Seder, celebrating mystical elements of the Tree of Life. Finally, in the 19th and 20th centuries, Zionists adopted the custom of planting trees in Israel on Tu BShvat.

In the past decades, Jewish movements religious and secular alike have explained Tu BShvat as a Jewish Earth Day. By celebrating trees, we reconnect with nature, and learn about Jewish traditions related to ecology and the preservation of the environment.

Like other native peoples, the Jewish people in the Land of Israel relied heavily on agriculture. The Torahs teachings that pertain to harvesting the land appear like a sound warning amid the immense environmental challenges we face in the 21st century.

January 11, 2022 12:12 pm

From a general commandment to guard the Earth (Genesis 2:15) to a ban on causing animals unnecessary suffering, Jewish tradition has many relevant examples for todays world.

Take the case of shmita the sabbatical year. Its an agricultural hiatus that prohibits farmers from working the land for a whole year, once every seven years. It comes from the Torah, and is based on the importance of allowing the ground to rest six years you shall sow your land and gather its yield, but in the seventh you shall let it rest and lie fallow (Exodus 23:10-11). Fallowing allows the land to recover and store organic matter while retaining moisture. Since shmita is followed in the modern State of Israel, and the current Hebrew year is a shmita year, we wont see many trees planted this Tu BShvat.

The Talmud warns us that by generating so much unnecessary waste, we are destroying our resources. The Talmud states: He who covers an oil lamp or uncovers a kerosene lamp for no purpose violates the prohibition of bal tashit (do not destroy) since by doing, so the fuel burns more quickly. In a similar point, according to the European Commission, in 2020, European Union inhabitants generated 505 kg of municipal waste.

The meaning of Tu BShvat evolved over the past millennia to reflect the needs and challenges faced by Jews across the world in each particular period. As we approach this years Tu BShvat, it is impossible to ignore the changes in climate, and how they are affecting and will continue to affect our lives and those of future generations.

Since we will not be planting trees in Israel due to the shmita this year, we should use this opportunity to reflect on the climate crisis and reconnect with some of our oldest traditions pertaining to respecting nature.

In 2022, the central message of Tu BShvat is a perfect reminder our interaction with nature should be one of mutual respect and care. Let us partner with nature to reach a common harmony. For us, and for the generations to come.

Tu BShvat Sameac!

Marcos Roca is a member of the WJC Jewish Diplomatic Corps, the flagship program of the World Jewish Congress (WJC), under the vision and leadership of President Ronald S. Lauder. This program empowers new generations of outstanding Jewish leaders. It is a highly selective global network of more than 350 members from 60 countries.

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Tu B'Shvat's Evolution From Tax Day to Earth Day - Algemeiner

Sovereignty begins at Homesh | Jonathan Ariel | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted By on January 11, 2022

The recent demands to retroactively legalize Homesh as an appropriate Zionist response to the recent terror attack in which yeshiva student Yehuda Dimentman was killed put the young settlement issue back in the news. The term young settlements (hityashvut tzeira in Hebrew) is PR verbal laundering coined to try and give a veneer of respectability to the dozens of illegal outposts that dot the hills all over Judea and Samaria. Homesh is one of them.

Those making this demand all hail from the Mahane Leumi (Nationalist faction), the Likud-led coalition of parties that arrogantly claims a monopoly on preserving, protecting and promoting Zionism and Jewish nationalism, patriotism and sovereignty.

But nothing could be more anti-Zionist and anti-sovereignty than this demand. The cornerstone of sovereignty is the willingness and ability to impose the law of the sovereign on an area under its control. Failure to do so is an abdication of sovereignty, an admission that the sovereign is incapable of fulfilling the most basic mission of sovereignty.

Far from promoting sovereignty, the demand that the state overtly collude in flouting its laws and government decisions subverts the very notion of sovereignty and exhibits an appalling lack of comprehension of what sovereignty is all about. This brings to mind Zeev Jabotinskys famous quote, its easier to get the Jews out of exile than to get the exile out of the Jews. Jabotinsky was the founder of Beitar, out of which Herut, and later the Likud would evolve.

The fact that those who call themselves the Nationalist Faction can suggest such an anti-sovereignty move indicates just how accurate Jabotinsky was. After more than seven decades of independence, Israel remains at heart a shtetl with an army, not a sovereign society. We talk the talk of sovereignty but walk the walk of shtetlism, which permeates every aspect of public life.

Sovereignty is based on responsibility and accountability; shtetlism is all about living by ones wits. Responsibility is the realm of the sovereign, a word that cannot be used in conjunction with the shtetl.

This shtetlist culture, devoid of responsibility and accountability, manifests itself daily in all aspects of Israeli life. In abdicating its most basic responsibility, the state has gone so far as to permit no less than three separatist-tribal communities to establish de-facto rogue autonomies in areas ostensibly under its control, such that today we contend with the ultra-Orthodox autonomy, the Judea and Samaria settler autonomy, and the Bedouin autonomy.

In the settler autonomy, they, not the government, decide what will be built and where in Judea and Samaria. For years they have spread a network of illegal outposts all over Judea and Samaria. Not only has the state failed to address this challenge to its sovereignty, it has collaborated with the erosion of its sovereignty. There is no other definition for a situation where the state declares the outposts illegal but provides troops to protect them. The result: empowerment of the more radical settler autonomy elements, who dont hesitate to carry out pogroms against Palestinian villagers, and attack IDF and police forces who dare try and force them to adhere to Israeli law.

The ultra-Orthodox autonomy openly flouts a whole range of laws with which they do not agree. These include the National Service (army conscription) Law, the law that requires all schools to teach a core curriculum that includes English, mathematics and science studies to ensure that graduates will have skills that make them employable contributing citizens. In addition, they flagrantly violate building and zoning laws. The result: ultra-Orthodox cities look like refugee camps in Gaza, and their schools graduate ignoramuses in everything but Torah and Talmud, creating a generation of unemployable people destined to a life of welfare dependency. Here too, the state has emboldened this brazen challenge to its sovereignty by continuing to fund the autonomys institutions. This is shtetlism on steroids.

The Bedouin, despite being politically and economically much more marginalized than the settlers and ultra-Orthodox, have nevertheless succeeded in effectively exploiting the states shtetlist tendencies, which expressed themselves in a decades-long policy towards the Bedouin that can be described as a cocktail of appeasement and of benign and not so benign neglect.

The first stage in enabling this autonomy to develop was the blind eye turned to the wholesale flouting of the law prohibiting bigamy among the Bedouin. The rationale was to respect their supposed cultural traditions. In addition to a blind eye, the state, in typical shtetlist fashion, continues to this day to fund this blatant subversion of its sovereignty by paying child benefits to the large families generated by polygamous marriages. Instead of increasing employment via economic development, it alleviated the results of unemployment by paying child allowances, which, for a polygamous family that can easily include 15-20 kids, amounts to a tidy sum.

Realizing the state had no intention of abandoning its shtetlist ways and would continue to ignore whatever went on in the developing Bedouin autonomy as long as it stayed within its boundaries, the Bedouin autonomy embarked upon its own economic development program, based on a flourishing criminal industry. Initially focused on drug smuggling (mostly hash) across the Egyptian border, for use within the community, the state didnt give a damn. In addition, they also smuggled Palestinian brides into Israel from the West Bank, since fewer Israeli Bedouin women were willing to accept being part of a polygamous family. As soon as this industry had established itself as a major economic enterprise within the Bedouin community, it began to upgrade, to take advantage of the lucrative potential of penetrating mainstream society. They formed alliances with urban Israeli Arab and Jewish crime gangs, becoming major hash suppliers throughout the country. They also trafficked illegal economic migrants from Africa seeking work in Israel.

Still, the state continued to do nothing, which further emboldened them. Soon Jewish companies found themselves being extorted into paying for guards supplied by these gangs. Any company that did not pony up found itself the victim of theft, arson and bombings. If the owners still didnt get the message, they and their families were attacked. Despite growing public pressure, the state still acted as a shtetl, and took zero responsibility for the increasing collapse of its sovereignty in the Negev and other centers of Bedouin population.

Further empowered, things reached a point where for the past several years, those gangs entered IDF bases in the area, especially in Tzeelim, with impunity. Soldiers, forbidden to use their weapons against civilian criminals, were helpless to prevent wholesale theft of IDF weapons from these bases.

Equipped with the best weapons they could steal from the IDF and unlimited chutzpah, the gangs have morphed into dangerous militias, which operate with increasing impunity all over the country. Their protection racket evolved into a parallel tax authority, collecting huge sums from contractors, farmers and manufacturers.

In the riots that hit Israels mixed Jewish-Arab cities, such as Jaffa, Lod, Ramle and Acre, these gangs targeted Jews and Jewish property with impunity and turned large parts of the Negev, including downtown Beer-Sheba, into a sort of Israeli wild west, where they do as they please while the sheriff hides in his office.

This must end, here and now, and these autonomies eliminated before its too late. Homesh is the place where a red line must finally be drawn and enforced because only in this way can we begin to restore the collapsing Israeli sovereignty.

For those who ask why start at Homesh, the answer is simple. Sovereignty begins with the adoption of a governmental culture based on accountability and accountability. The Nation-State law, initiated and legislated by the Nationalist Faction states that Israel is the nation-state of the Jewish people, and only Jews have national rights in it. This means that the responsibility for preserving and fortifying a governmental culture and sovereignty rests first and foremost on our shoulders. This is the essence of the difference between shtetlism and sovereignty. shtetlism deals with the distribution of petty privileges, sovereignty deals with taking responsibility and accountability.

The ironic fact that the Nationalist Faction, the self-proclaimed champion of Israeli nationalism, continues to glorify Israeli sovereignty with words while acting in a way that subverts it shows just how shtetlist a society we still are, and how much has to be done before we succeed in getting the exile out of the Jews.

Homesh is our crossroads. One way leads to the restoration of sovereignty and shedding our shtetlist ways. The second way leads to increasingly shedding our sovereignty until we truly and fully become a shtetl with no hold, and no claim to a state.

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Sovereignty begins at Homesh | Jonathan Ariel | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

What are ethical wills? They’re a beautiful gift for generations to come – The San Diego Union-Tribune

Posted By on January 11, 2022

When he began writing about ethical wills in the 1970s, former San Diego Rabbi Jack Riemer would spend much of his time explaining this ancient Jewish tradition before he could even get into the notion of writing one of your own.

Regular wills pass on your valuables, he would tell them, but ethical wills pass on your values. We are more than the sum total of our china and our savings account. Our spiritual treasures also are precious from how weve tried to live our lives to our hopes and wishes for loved ones.

Riemer would talk about their history, with roots in the Hebrew Scriptures and the Talmud. At first, they tended to be delivered orally. As writing became more commonplace, they began to be put down on paper.

Over time, however, familiarity and practice faded. Riemer himself acknowledges ethical wills werent on his radar until a congregant shared one he had written with him. It was, he remembers, marvelous.

He teamed up with the late Nathaniel Stampfer, a well-known Jewish scholar from Chicago, and the pair published a series of books describing what ethical wills were and how to prepare them. They also included samples of good ones and not so good ones.

What a difference a half-century has made.

Today, the crafting of ethical wills has become a kind of cottage industry, with workshops, websites and how-to guides offered across the country for people of all beliefs and cultures.

Law firms also have gotten on board, offering to include them with their clients estate plans.

All this is just fine with Riemer.

This is something that anyone of any faith can do, he says from his Florida home, where he has long since retired from leading synagogues. We are only pleased if others do it, too.

Riemer, whose long career included a stint at Congregation Beth El in La Jolla, says many people just assume their kids understand their values.

Sometimes, the things that meant the most to them, their kids havent really understood until they see them in writing, he adds. When we take the time to do that, Riemer says we create a really beautiful gift for generations to come.

But this new wave of teachers also is adding some modern-day massaging to the concept starting with what to call them.

A British scholar named Israel Abraham is often credited with coining the term ethical wills in his 1926 book, Hebrew Ethical Wills.

But for a more-contemporary audience, the name is awkward and confusing. Does it mean writing a last will and testament that is ethical? And, by the way, what exactly is ethical?

Nobody knows what an ethical will is, says Rachael Freed, founder of Life-Legacies, from her home in Minneapolis. When you are doing a cottage industry, you want people to know what you are doing.

Freed, a social worker by training who took several classes on writing ethical wills in the 1990s, calls what she teaches legacy writing.

At first, her program focused on women to help them find their voice. Then she expanded it to include all genders and generations, showing them how to write legacy letters that convey values, wisdom, history and blessings to future generations. And they can be given at any time during a persons life to mark everything from milestones and special occasions to simply wanting to share a life lesson with someone you love.

In her book, Your Legacy Matters, she provides a template: beginning with the context of what you are writing, the story you want to share, lessons you took from it and, finally, a blessing for your own wishes for the recipient.

Up in Seattle, Rabbi Elana Zaiman calls what she teaches forever letters, which also became the title of her book, The Forever Letter: Writing What We Believe for Those We Love.

Zaiman, who used to teach about traditional ethical wills, says the shift in name also reflected another shift.

I realized I was teaching about a different letter entirely, a different letter that needed a new name, she explains. That is how the forever letter was born. The focus of the forever letter is on connection and relationship. Specifically, deepening, healing, strengthening or uplifting relationships.

Like Freed, Zaiman advocates giving these letters while you are still living. This allows the writer and recipient a chance to have a conversation, giving them an opportunity to repair and strengthen their relationship.

She says these letters arent really ethical wills, though they were inspired by the ethical wills from medieval times by the intimacy and urgency and necessity of writing, and focusing on what we most need to say or want to say to the people we love while we still can.

Regardless of what you call them, Encinitas attorney Gabriel Katzner, of the Katzner Law Group, is among a number of firms who offer to add them as another component of the clients estate plans.

What Ive always told clients is it is a way to pass along those lessons that are important, those values that are important to you, Katzner says.

About a quarter of his clients take him up on the offer, while another half or so say they plan to do it.

In addition to advice on what to put in these writings, Riemer and the others also warn about what not to put in them.

There is a temptation to leave a guilt trip from the grave, says Riemer, who maintains that ethical wills have a place at the end of your life and not just those other times. You shouldnt do that. It does no good.

In their book, So That Your Values Live On, Riemer and Stampfer include a stinging example from a 12th century ethical will in which the father slams his son over more than 50 pages complaining about everything from how much hes done for him to his bad penmanship. He ends by asking his son to read this ethical will twice a day for the rest of his life.

Freed offers this advice: I always suggest that they use the Buddhist tenet: do no harm. And I say, Think about being dead for 50 years and somebody reads the letter that you wrote to the grandchild and it is full of anger or resentment or regret. Thats not the place for that. The place for that is your journal or on a piece of paper that you can burn up after youve written it. You dont want to be remembered that way.

When I ask her for any final thoughts, she says she wishes people would not be scared off because they feel writing one of these letters is too formidable. It can do so much good both for the writer and the receiver.

That brought to mind a story Rabbi Ron Shulman had shared with me just a few days earlier. Shulman is the senior rabbi of Congregation Beth El, where Riemer once served.

He was 13 years old and sitting in his bedroom on the night before his bar mitzvah, when his father came in and handed him a letter. I opened it up and he had written me this beautiful letter about how he felt about me. His pride and his hopes for my future and his values. In essence, he had written me his ethical will.

Shulman cherishes that letter to this day (and was inspired when he became a father to do likewise for his daughters). The words written so long ago are like a spiritual tool box that can be opened over and over to provide comfort and guidance. And that may be the greatest reason of all for why to do an ethical will or whatever name you want to call it.

Dolbee is the former religion and ethics editor of The San Diego Union-Tribune and a former president of the Religion News Association. Email: sandidolbeecolumns@gmail.com.

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What are ethical wills? They're a beautiful gift for generations to come - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Lighting the Plague of Darkness | Hebrew College Wendy Linden – Patheos

Posted By on January 11, 2022

Parashat Bo (Exodus 10:1-13:16)By Rabbi Tiferet Berenbaum | January 5, 2022

Turn it and turn it for everything is in it, we read in Pirkei Avot 5:22it being the Torah. Elsewhere in Pirkei Avot we read, Torah kneged kulam, Torah is relevant to everything. These verses are often cited when we are searching for a connection between our current realities and the Torah text. This weeks parasha, however, requires no such justification.

Parashat Bo describes the final three plagues that God wrought on the Egyptian government and its peopleplagues of locust, darkness and the death of the firstborn. With the intensity of climate change over the past decade, we have seen a number of headlines that could have been taken straight from these chapters. Yet, nothing has rivaled these past two years of the pandemic. The plague of Covid-19 has touched all of our tents in some way, and the new Delta and Omicron variants continue to plague our communities.

In the Torah, the Egyptian people suffered eight plagues before they encountered the plague of darkness:

Moses held out his arm toward the sky and thick darkness descended upon all the land of Egypt for three days.

People could not see one another, and for three days no one could get up from where he was; (Exodus 10:22-23).

Reading these verses today, we are reminded of the lockdowns and social distancing of recent years, and the darkness that many have experienced as a result. The Egyptians only had to lockdown for three (or some say seven) days. As we enter the third year of this enduring pandemic, the descending darkness calls out from the text to be explored.

Rabbi Yosef Gikatilla, a 13th Century Spanish Kabbalist, wrote:

Deep in the depths there are many kinds of pits and deep holes that are endlessly deep called sectors of Gehinnom. There, much destruction and misfortune can be found and because of the depth, the pits are completely dark. They are always dark and despondent places and as such are called laila (night) because there is no light, rather it is a place of perpetual darkness.

This description is reminiscent of the language of depression. Many people experience Seasonal Affective Disorder, a form of depression that comes with the darkness of winter, and those people pass through the dark places only temporarily. Others experience depression in the ways described by Gikatilla, as pit of perpetual darkness. But, having experienced the pandemic for almost two years (whereas Rashi said the ten plagues took only ten months!), the varying levels of depressive darkness that the Egyptians may have experienced as result of the persistent plagues is understandable and, unfortunately, relatable as well.

But there is always hope. The Talmud (Brachot 5b) tells the story of Rabbi Hiyya Bar Abba, who was sick, and Rabbi Yochanan, who came to visit him. Rabbi Yochanan asked, Are your sufferings desirable? To which Rabbi Hiyya Bar Abba replied, I welcome neither they nor their reward. Rabbi Yochanan then reached out his hand and lifted his friend up. Later, Rabbi Yochanan himself fell ill and Rabbi Hanina came to visit him. Rabbi Hanina asked, Are your sufferings desirable? To which Rabbi Yochanan replied, I welcome neither they nor their reward. Rabbi Hanina then reached out his hand and lifted Rabbi Yochanan up.

The Gemara wonders why Rabbi Yochanan, who was able to lift someone else up from their illness, was unable to lift himself out of his own illness. The answer: A prisoner cannot free themselves from prison (Talmud, Brachot 5b). We need to lift each other up and to allow ourselves to be lifted. On the plague of darkness, the verse continues, But the Israelites had light in their dwellings. (Exodus 10:23) This light serves as a key, a release from prison, a tool for uplift. The Torah reminds us that even in the darkest dark, we always have some light within.

As we continue through the dark months of winter, it is critical for us to guard the light, the joy, burning within ourselves so that we can share it with others and help drive out some of the darkness. Let us remember that the days are getting longer, and commit to finding ways to reach out and lift up others and light up one anothers lives. Check on your friends, a short call or text to share some light. Especially, let us check on the Rabbi Yochanans in our circles, those helpers, healers, and happy ones whom we might assume are doing okay. We never know who might need our hand until we reach it out.

Rabbi Tiferet Berenbaum is the Rabbi of Congregational Learning and Programming at Temple Beth Zion in Brookline, MA. She received her rabbinic ordination, as well as a Masters of Jewish Education from Hebrew College in Newton, MA, and is currently pursuing a doctorate in Educational Leadership at Lesley University in Cambridge, MA. She is a 2021 Covenant Foundation Pomegranate Prize recipient in recognition of her leadership in Jewish education.

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Lighting the Plague of Darkness | Hebrew College Wendy Linden - Patheos

Diaspora – Wikipedia

Posted By on January 11, 2022

Widely scattered population from a single original territory

A diaspora ( dye-AS-pr-) is a scattered population whose origin lies in a separate geographic locale.[2][3] Historically, the word diaspora was used[clarification needed] to refer to the mass dispersion of a population from its indigenous territories, specifically the dispersion of Jews.[4] Whilst the word was originally used to describe the forced displacement of certain peoples, "diasporas" is now generally used to describe those who identify with a "homeland", but live outside of it.[5][6][7]

Some notable diasporas are the Assyrian Diaspora which originated during and after the Arab conquest of Iraq, Syria, Turkey and Iran, and continued in the aftermath of the Assyrian genocide;[8][9] the southern Chinese and Indians who left their homelands during the 19th to 20th century; the Irish who left Ireland during and after the Great Famine;[10] the Scots who emigrated on a large scale after the Highland and Lowland Clearances;[11] the Romani from India;[12] the Italian diaspora and the Mexican diaspora; the exile and deportation of Circassians; the Palestinian diaspora following the flight or expulsion of Arabs from Palestine;[13] the Armenian Diaspora following the Armenian genocide;[14][15] the Lebanese Diaspora due to the Lebanese Civil War;[16] the fleeing of Greeks from Turkey after the fall of Constantinople,[17] the later Greek genocide,[18] and the Istanbul pogroms,[19] and the emigration of Anglo-Saxon warriors and their families after the Norman Conquest, primarily to the Byzantine Empire.[20]

Recently, scholars have distinguished between different kinds of diaspora, based on its causes such as colonialism, trade or labor migrations, or by the kind of social coherence within the diaspora community and its ties to the ancestral lands. Some diaspora communities maintain strong political ties with their homeland. Other qualities that may be typical of many diasporas are thoughts of return, keeping ties back home (country of origin) relationships with other communities in the diaspora, and lack of full integration into the host countries. Diasporas often maintain ties to the country of their historical affiliation and influence the policies of the country where they are located.

As of 2019, according to the United Nations, the Indian diaspora is the world's largest diaspora with a population of 17.5 million, followed by the Mexican diaspora with a population of 11.8 million and the Chinese diaspora with a population of 10.7 million.[21]

The term is derived from the Greek verb (diaspeir), "I scatter", "I spread about" which in turn is composed of (dia), "between, through, across" and the verb (speir), "I sow, I scatter". In Ancient Greece the term (diaspora) hence meant "scattering"[22] and was inter alia used to refer to citizens of a dominant city-state who emigrated to a conquered land with the purpose of colonization, to assimilate the territory into the empire.[23] An example of a diaspora from classical antiquity is the century-long exile of the Messenians under Spartan rule and the Ageanites as described by Thucydides in his "history of the Peloponnesian wars."

Its use began to develop from this original sense when the Hebrew Bible was translated into Greek;[24] the first mention of a diaspora created as a result of exile is found in the Septuagint, first in

and secondly in

So after the Bible's translation into Greek, the word diaspora would then have been used to refer to the Northern Kingdom exiled between 740 and 722 BC from Israel by the Assyrians,[25] as well as Jews, Benjaminites, and Levites exiled from the Southern Kingdom in 587 BC by the Babylonians, and from Roman Judea in 70 AD by the Roman Empire.[26] It subsequently came to be used to refer to the historical movements and settlement patterns of the dispersed indigenous population of Israel.[27] When relating to Judaism and capitalized without modifiers (that is simply, the Diaspora), the term refers specifically to the Jewish diaspora;[2] when uncapitalized diaspora may refer to refugee or immigrant populations of other origins or ethnicities living "away from an indigenous or established homeland".[2] The wider application of diaspora evolved from the Assyrian two-way mass deportation policy of conquered populations to deny future territorial claims on their part.[28]

According to the Oxford English Dictionary Online, the first known recorded usage of the word diaspora in the English language was in 1876 referring "extensive diaspora work (as it is termed) of evangelizing among the National Protestant Churches on the continent".[29] The term became more widely assimilated into English by the mid 1950s, with long-term expatriates in significant numbers from other particular countries or regions also being referred to as a diaspora.[citation needed] An academic field, diaspora studies, has become established relating to this sense of the word. In English, capitalized, and without modifiers (that is simply, the Diaspora), the term refers specifically to the Jewish diaspora in the context of Judaism.[30]

In all cases, the term diaspora carries a sense of displacement. The population so described finds itself for whatever reason separated from its national territory, and usually, its people have a hope, or at least a desire, to return to their homeland at some point if the "homeland" still exists in any meaningful sense. Some writers[who?] have noted that diaspora may result in a loss of nostalgia for a single home as people "re-root" in a series of meaningful displacements. In this sense, individuals may have multiple homes throughout their diaspora, with different reasons for maintaining some form of attachment to each. Diasporic cultural development often assumes a different course from that of the population in the original place of settlement. Over time, remotely separated communities tend to vary in culture, traditions, language, and other factors. The last vestiges of cultural affiliation in a diaspora is often found in community resistance to language change and in the maintenance of traditional religious practice.[citation needed]

William Safran in an article published in 1991,[31] set out six rules to distinguish diasporas from migrant communities. These included criteria that the group maintains a myth or collective memory of their homeland; they regard their ancestral homeland as their true home, to which they will eventually return; being committed to the restoration or maintenance of that homeland, and they relate "personally or vicariously" to the homeland to a point where it shapes their identity. While Safran's definitions were influenced by the idea of the Jewish diaspora, he recognised the expanding use of the term.

Rogers Brubaker (2005) also notes that the use of the term diaspora has been widening. He suggests that one element of this expansion in use "involves the application of the term diaspora to an ever-broadening set of cases: essentially to any and every nameable population category that is to some extent dispersed in space". Brubaker has used the WorldCat database to show that 17 out of the 18 books on diaspora published between 1900 and 1910 were on the Jewish diaspora. The majority of works in the 1960s were also about the Jewish diaspora, but in 2002 only two out of 20 books sampled (out of a total of 253) were about the Jewish case, with a total of eight different diasporas covered.

Brubaker outlines the original use of the term diaspora as follows:

Most early discussions of the diaspora were firmly rooted in a conceptual 'homeland'; they were concerned with a paradigmatic case, or a small number of core cases. The paradigmatic case was, of course, the Jewish diaspora; some dictionary definitions of diaspora, until recently, did not simply illustrate but defined the word with reference to that case.

Brubaker argues that the initial expansion of the use of the phrase extended it to other, similar cases, such as the Armenian and Greek diasporas. More recently, it has been applied to emigrant groups that continue their involvement in their homeland from overseas, such as the category of long-distance nationalists identified by Benedict Anderson. Brubaker notes that (as examples): Albanians, Basques, Hindu Indians, Irish, Japanese, Kashmiri, Koreans, Kurds, Palestinians, and Tamils have been conceptualized as diasporas in this sense. Furthermore, "labor migrants who maintain (to some degree) emotional and social ties with a homeland" have also been described as diasporas.

In further cases of the use of the term, "the reference to the conceptual homeland to the 'classical' diasporas has become more attenuated still, to the point of being lost altogether". Here, Brubaker cites "transethnic and transborder linguistic categories...such as Francophone, Anglophone and Lusophone 'communities'", along with Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Confucian, Huguenot, Muslim and Catholic 'diasporas'. Brubaker notes that, as of 2005[update], there were also academic books or articles on the Dixie, white, liberal, gay, queer and digital diasporas.

Some observers have labeled evacuation from New Orleans and the Gulf Coast in the wake of Hurricane Katrina the New Orleans diaspora, since a significant number of evacuees have not been able to return, yet maintain aspirations to do so.[40][41] Agnieszka Weinar (2010) notes the widening use of the term, arguing that recently, "a growing body of literature succeeded in reformulating the definition, framing diaspora as almost any population on the move and no longer referring to the specific context of their existence". It has even been noted that as charismatic Christianity becomes increasingly globalized, many Christians conceive of themselves as a diaspora, and form an imaginary that mimics salient features of ethnic diasporas.[42]

Professional communities of individuals no longer in their homeland can also be considered diaspora. For example, science diasporas are communities of scientists who conduct their research away from their homeland.[43] In an article published in 1996, Khachig Tllyan[44] argues that the media have used the term corporate diaspora in a rather arbitrary and inaccurate fashion, for example as applied to mid-level, mid-career executives who have been forced to find new places at a time of corporate upheaval (10) The use of corporate diaspora reflects the increasing popularity of the diaspora notion to describe a wide range of phenomena related to contemporary migration, displacement and transnational mobility. While corporate diaspora seems to avoid or contradict connotations of violence, coercion, and unnatural uprooting historically associated with the notion of diaspora, its scholarly use may heuristically describe the ways in which corporations function alongside diasporas. In this way, corporate diaspora might foreground the racial histories of diasporic formations without losing sight of the cultural logic of late capitalism in which corporations orchestrate the transnational circulation of people, images, ideologies and capital.

One of the largest diasporas of modern times is that of Sub-Saharan Africans, which dates back several centuries. During the Atlantic slave trade, 10.7 million people from West Africa survived transportation to arrive in the Americas as slaves.[45] Currently, migrant[vague] Africans can only enter thirteen African countries without advanced visas. In pursuing a unified future, the African Union (AU) will[when?] allow people to move freely between the 54 countries of the AU under a visa free passport and encourage migrants to return to Africa.[46]

From the 8th through the 19th centuries, the Arab slave trade dispersed millions of Africans to Asia and the islands of the Indian Ocean.[47] The Islamic slave trade also has resulted in the creation of communities of African descent in India, most notably the Siddi, Makrani and Sri Lanka Kaffirs. [48]

In the early 500s AD incursions by the kingdom of Aksum in Himyar led to the formation of African diasporic communities. [49]

The largest Asian diaspora, and in the world, is the Indian diaspora. The overseas Indian community, estimated at over 17.5 million, is spread across many regions in the world, on every continent. It constitutes a diverse, heterogeneous and eclectic global community representing different regions, languages, cultures, and faiths (see Desi).[50] Similarly, the Romani, numbering roughly 12 million in Europe[51] trace their origins to the Indian subcontinent, and their presence in Europe is first attested to in the Middle Ages.[52][53]

The earliest known Asian diaspora of note is the Jewish diaspora. With roots in the Babylonian Captivity and later migration under Hellenism, the majority of the diaspora can be attributed to the Roman conquest, expulsion, and enslavement of the Jewish population of Judea,[54] whose descendants became the Ashkenazim, Sephardim, and Mizrahim of today,[55][56] roughly numbering 15 million of which 8 million still live in the diaspora,[57] though the number was much higher before Zionist immigration to what is now Israel and the murder of 6 million Jews in the Holocaust.

Chinese emigration (also known as the Chinese Diaspora; see also Overseas Chinese)[58] first occurred thousands of years ago. The mass emigration that occurred from the 19th century to 1949 was caused mainly by wars and starvation in mainland China, as well as political corruption. Most migrants were illiterate or poorly educated peasants, called by the now-recognized racial slur coolies (Chinese: , literally "hard labor"), who migrated to developing countries in need of labor, such as the Americas, Australia, South Africa, Southeast Asia, Malaya and other places.

At least three waves of Nepalese diaspora can be identified. The earliest wave dates back to hundreds of years as early marriage and high birthrates propelled Hindu settlement eastward across Nepal, then into Sikkim and Bhutan. A backlash developed in the 1980s as Bhutan's political elites realized that Bhutanese Buddhists were at risk of becoming a minority in their own country. At least 60,000 ethnic Nepalese from Bhutan have been resettled in the United States.[59] A second wave was driven by British recruitment of mercenary soldiers beginning around 1815 and resettlement after retirement in the British Isles and Southeast Asia. The third wave began in the 1970s as land shortages intensified and the pool of educated labor greatly exceeded job openings in Nepal. Job-related emigration created Nepalese enclaves in India, the wealthier countries of the Middle East, Europe, and North America. Current estimates of the number of Nepalese living outside Nepal range well up into the millions.

In Siam, regional power struggles among several kingdoms in the region led to a large diaspora of ethnic Lao between the 1700s1800s by Siamese rulers to settle large areas of the Siamese kingdom's northeast region, where Lao ethnicity is still a major factor in 2012. During this period, Siam decimated the Lao capital, capturing, torturing, and killing the Lao king Anuwongse.

European history contains numerous diaspora-like events. In ancient times, the trading and colonising activities of the Greek tribes from the Balkans and Asia Minor spread people of Greek culture, religion and language around the Mediterranean and Black Sea basins, establishing Greek city-states in Magna Graecia (Sicily, southern Italy), northern Libya, eastern Spain, the south of France, and the Black Sea coasts. Greeks founded more than 400 colonies.[60] Tyre and Carthage also colonised the Mediterranean.

Alexander the Great's the conquest of the Achaemenid Empire marked the beginning of the Hellenistic period, characterized by a new wave of Greek colonization in Asia and Africa, with Greek ruling-classes established in Egypt, southwest Asia and northwest India.[61] Subsequent waves of colonization and migration during the Middle Ages added to the older settlements or created new ones, thus replenishing the Greek diaspora and making it one of the most long-standing and widespread in the world.

The Migration-Period relocations, which included several phases, are just one set of many in history. The first phase Migration-Period displacement (between CE 300 and 500) included relocation of the Goths (Ostrogoths and Visigoths), Vandals, Franks, various other Germanic peoples (Burgundians, Lombards, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Suebi, Alemanni, Varangians and Normans), Alans and numerous Slavic tribes. The second phase, between CE 500 and 900, saw Slavic, Turkic, and other tribes on the move, resettling in Eastern Europe and gradually leaving it predominantly Slavic, and affecting Anatolia and the Caucasus as the first Turkic tribes (Avars, Huns, Khazars, Pechenegs), as well as Bulgars, and possibly Magyars arrived. The last phase of the migrations saw the coming of the Hungarian Magyars. The Viking expansion out of Scandinavia into southern and eastern Europe, Iceland and Greenland. The recent application of the word "diaspora" to the Viking lexicon highlights their cultural profile distinct from their predatory reputation in the regions they settled, especially in the North Atlantic.[62] The more positive connotations associated with the social science term helping to view the movement of the Scandinavian peoples in the Viking Age in a new way.[63]

Such colonizing migrations cannot be considered indefinitely as diasporas; over very long periods, eventually, the migrants assimilate into the settled area so completely that it becomes their new mental homeland. Thus the modern Magyars of Hungary do not feel that they belong in the Western Siberia that the Hungarian Magyars left 12 centuries ago; and the English descendants of the Angles, Saxons and Jutes do not yearn to reoccupy the plains of Northwest Germany.

In 1492 a Spanish-financed expedition headed by Christopher Columbus arrived in the Americas, after which European exploration and colonization rapidly expanded. Historian James Axtell estimates that 240,000 people left Europe for the Americas in the 16th century.[64] Emigration continued. In the 19th century alone over 50 million Europeans migrated to North and South America.[65]Other Europeans moved to Siberia, Africa, and Australasia.

A specific 19th-century example is the Irish diaspora, beginning in the mid-19th century and brought about by An Gorta Mr or "the Great Hunger" of the Irish Famine. An estimated 45% to 85% of Ireland's population emigrated to areas including Britain, the United States of America, Canada, Argentina, Australia, and New Zealand. The size of the Irish diaspora is demonstrated by the number of people around the world who claim Irish ancestry; some sources put the figure at 80 to 100 million.

From the 1860s the Circassian people, originally from Europe, were dispersed through Anatolia, Australia, the Balkans, the Levant, North America, and West Europe, leaving less than 10% of their population in the homeland parts of historical Circassia (in the modern-day Russian portion of the Caucasus).[66]

The Scottish Diaspora includes large populations of Highlanders moving to the United States and Canada after the Highland Clearances; as well as the Lowlanders, becoming the Ulster Scots in Ireland and the Scotch-Irish in America.

In the United States of America, approximately 4.3 million people moved outside their home states in 2010, according to IRS tax-exemption data.[67] In a 2011 TEDx presentation, Detroit native Garlin Gilchrist referenced the formation of distinct "Detroit diaspora" communities in Seattle and in Washington, D.C.,[68] while layoffs in the auto industry also led to substantial blue-collar migration from Michigan to Wyoming c. 2005.[69] In response to a statewide exodus of talent, the State of Michigan continues to host "MichAGAIN" career-recruiting events in places throughout the United States with significant Michigan-diaspora populations.[70]

In the People's Republic of China, millions of migrant workers have sought greater opportunity in the country's booming coastal metropolises,[when?] though this trend has slowed with the further development of China's interior.[71] Migrant social structures in Chinese megacities are often based on place of origin, such as a shared hometown or province, and recruiters and foremen commonly select entire work-crews from the same village.[72] In two separate June 2011 incidents, Sichuanese migrant workers organized violent protests against alleged police misconduct and migrant-labor abuse near the southern manufacturing hub of Guangzhou.[73]

Much of Siberia's population has its origins in internal migration voluntary or otherwise from European Russia since the 16th century.

The twentieth century saw huge population movements. Some involved large-scale transfers of people by government action. Some migrations occurred to avoid conflict and warfare. Other diasporas formed as a consequence of political developments, such as the end of colonialism.

As World War II (1939-1945) unfolded, Nazi German authorities deported and killed millions of Jews; they also enslaved or murdered millions of other people, including Ukrainians, Russians and other Slavs. Some Jews fled from persecution to unoccupied parts of western Europe or to the Americas before borders closed. Later, other eastern European refugees moved west, away from Soviet expansion[74] and from the Iron Curtain regimes established as World War II ended. Hundreds of thousands of these anti-Soviet political refugees and displaced persons ended up in western Europe, Australia, Canada, and the United States of America.

After World War II, the Soviet Union and Communist-controlled Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Yugoslavia expelled millions of ethnic Germans, most them descendants of immigrants who had settled in those areas centuries previously. This was allegedly in reaction to German Nazi invasions and to pan-German attempts at annexation.[citation needed] Most of the refugees moved to the West, including western Europe, and with tens of thousands seeking refuge in the United States.

Spain sent many political activists into exile during the rule of Franco's military regime from 1936 to his death in 1975.[75]

Prior to World War II and the re-establishment of Israel in 1948, a series of anti-Jewish pogroms broke out in the Arab world and caused many to flee, mostly to Palestine/Israel. The 19471949 Palestine war likewise saw at least 750,000 Palestinians expelled or forced to flee from the newly forming Israel.[76] Many Palestinians continue to live in refugee camps in the Middle East, while others have resettled in other countries.

The 1947 Partition in the Indian subcontinent resulted in the migration of millions of people between India, Pakistan and present-day Bangladesh. Many were murdered in the religious violence of the period, with estimates of fatalities up to 2 million people.[77] Thousands of former subjects of the British Raj went to the UK from the Indian subcontinent after India and Pakistan became independent in 1947.[citation needed]

From the late 19th century, and formally from 1910, Japan made Korea a Japanese colony. Millions of Chinese fled to western provinces not occupied by Japan (that is, in particular, Szechuan/Szechwan and Yunnan in the Southwest and Shensi and Kansu in the Northwest) and to Southeast Asia.[citation needed] More than 100,000 Koreans moved across the Amur River into the Russian Far East (and later into the Soviet Union) away from the Japanese.[78]

During and after the Cold War-era, huge populations of refugees migrated from conflict, especially from then-developing countries.

Upheaval in the Middle East and Central Asia, some of which related to power struggles between the United States and the Soviet Union, produced new refugee populations that developed into global diasporas.

In Southeast Asia, many Vietnamese people emigrated to France and later millions to the United States, Australia and Canada after the Cold War-related Vietnam War of 19551975. Later, 30,000 French colons from Cambodia were displaced after being expelled by the 1975-1979 Khmer Rouge regime under Pol Pot.[citation needed] A small, predominantly Muslim ethnic group, the Cham people, long residing in Cambodia, were nearly eradicated.[79]The mass exodus of Vietnamese people from Vietnam from 1975 onwards led to the popularisation of the term "boat people".[80]

In Southwest China, many Tibetan people emigrated to India, following the 14th Dalai Lama after the failure of his 1959 Tibetan uprising. This wave lasted until the 1960s, and another wave followed when Tibet opened up to trade and tourism in the 1980s. It is estimated[by whom?] that about 200,000 Tibetans live now dispersed worldwide, half of them in India, Nepal and Bhutan. In lieu of lost citizenship papers, the Central Tibetan Administration offers Green Book identity documents to Tibetan refugees.

Sri Lankan Tamils have historically migrated to find work, notably during the British colonial period (1796-1948). Since the beginning of the Sri Lankan Civil War in 1983, more than 800,000 Tamils have been displaced within Sri Lanka as a local diaspora, and over a half-million Tamils have emigrated as the Tamil diaspora to destinations such as India, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the UK, and Europe.

The Afghan diaspora resulted from the 1979 invasion of Afghanistan by the former Soviet Union; both official and unofficial records[citation needed] indicate that the war displaced over 6 million people, resulting in the creation of the second-largest refugee population worldwide as of 2018[update] (2.6 million in 2018).[81]

Many[quantify] Iranians fled the 1979 Iranian Revolution which culminated in the fall of the USA/British-ensconced Shah.

In Africa, a new series of diasporas formed following the end of colonial rule. In some cases, as countries became independent, numerous minority descendants of Europeans emigrated; others stayed in the lands which had been family homes for generations. Uganda expelled 80,000 South Asians in 1972 and took over their businesses and properties. The 1990-1994 Rwandan Civil War between rival social/ethnic groups (Hutu and Tutsi) turned deadly and produced a mass efflux of refugees.

In Latin America, following the 1959 Cuban Revolution and the introduction of communism, over a million people have left Cuba.[82]

A new Jamaican diaspora formed around the start of the 21st century. More than 1 million Dominicans live abroad, a majority living in the US.[83]

A million Colombian refugees have left Colombia since 1965 to escape that country's violence and civil wars.

In South America, thousands of Argentine and Uruguay refugees fled to Europe during periods of military rule in the 1970s and 1980s.

In Central America, Nicaraguans, Salvadorans, Guatemalans, and Hondurans have fled[when?] conflict and poor economic conditions.

Hundreds of thousands of people fled from the Rwandan genocide in 1994 and moved into neighboring countries.

Between 4 and 6 million have emigrated from Zimbabwe beginning in the 1990s especially since 2000, greatly increasing the Zimbabwean diaspora due to a protracted socioeconomic crisis, forming large communities in South Africa, the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and smaller communities in the United States, New Zealand and Ireland, where their skills have been in high demand.[84] The long war in Congo, in which numerous nations have been involved, has also spawned millions of refugees.

A South Korean diaspora movement during the 1990s caused the homeland fertility rate to drop when a large amount of the middle class emigrated, as the rest of the population continued to age. To counteract the change in these demographics, the South Korean government initiated a diaspora-engagement policy in 1997.[85]

Following the Iraq War, nearly 3million Iraqis had been displaced as of 2011, with 1.3million within Iraq and 1.6 million in neighboring countries, mainly Jordan and Syria.[86] The Syrian Civil War has forced further migration, with at least 4 million displaced as per UN estimates.[87]

Following the presidency of Hugo Chvez and the establishment of his Bolivarian Revolution, over 1.6 million Venezuelans emigrated from Venezuela in what has been called the Bolivarian diaspora.[88][89][90] The analysis of a study by the Central University of Venezuela titled Venezuelan Community Abroad. A New Method of Exile by El Universal states that the Bolivarian diaspora in Venezuela has been caused by the "deterioration of both the economy and the social fabric, rampant crime, uncertainty and lack of hope for a change in leadership in the near future".[88]

There are numerous web-based news portals and forum sites dedicated to specific diaspora communities, often organized on the basis of an origin characteristic and a current location characteristic.[91] The location-based networking features of mobile applications such as China's WeChat have also created de facto online diaspora communities when used outside of their home markets.[92] Now, large companies from the emerging countries are looking at leveraging diaspora communities to enter the more mature market.[93]

Gran Torino, a 2008 drama starring Clint Eastwood, was the first mainstream American film to feature the Hmong American diaspora.[94]

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Diaspora - Wikipedia

The Diaspora – Jewish Virtual Library

Posted By on January 11, 2022

The Jewish state comes to an end in 70 AD, when the Romans begin to actively drive Jews from the home they had lived in for over a millennium. But the Jewish Diaspora ("diaspora" ="dispersion, scattering") had begun long before the Romans had even dreamed of Judaea. When the Assyrians conquered Israel in 722, the Hebrew inhabitants were scattered all over the Middle East; these early victims of the dispersion disappeared utterly from the pages of history. However, when Nebuchadnezzar deported the Judaeans in 597 and 586 BC, he allowed them to remain in a unified community in Babylon. Another group of Judaeans fled to Egypt, where they settled in the Nile delta. So from 597 onwards, there were three distinct groups of Hebrews: a group in Babylon and other parts of the Middle East, a group in Judaea, and another group in Egypt. Thus, 597 is considered the beginning date of the Jewish Diaspora. While Cyrus the Persian allowed the Judaeans to return to their homeland in 538 BC, most chose to remain in Babylon. A large number of Jews in Egypt became mercenaries in Upper Egypt on an island called the Elephantine. All of these Jews retained their religion, identity, and social customs; both under the Persians and the Greeks, they were allowed to run their lives under their own laws. Some converted to other religions; still others combined the Yahweh cult with local cults; but the majority clung to the Hebraic religion and its new-found core document, the Torah.

In 63 BC, Judaea became a protectorate of Rome. Coming under the administration of a governor, Judaea was allowed a king; the governor's business was to regulate trade and maximize tax revenue. While the Jews despised the Greeks, the Romans were a nightmare. Governorships were bought at high prices; the governors would attempt to squeeze as much revenue as possible from their regions and pocket as much as they could. Even with a Jewish king, the Judaeans revolted in 70 AD, a desperate revolt that ended tragically. In 73 AD, the last of the revolutionaries were holed up in a mountain fort called Masada; the Romans had besieged the fort for two years, and the 1,000 men, women, and children inside were beginning to starve. In desperation, the Jewish revolutionaries killed themselves rather than surrender to the Romans. The Romans then destroyed Jerusalem, annexed Judaea as a Roman province, and systematically drove the Jews from Palestine. After 73 AD, Hebrew history would only be the history of the Diaspora as the Jews and their world view spread over Africa, Asia, and Europe.

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The Diaspora - Jewish Virtual Library

Plenipotentiary for contact with Jewish diaspora dismissed The First News – The First News

Posted By on January 11, 2022

News & Politics

(PAP) mf/md January 10, 2022

Polands foreign minister has sacked the government plenipotentiary for contacts with the Jewish diaspora following his criticism of the government in a press interview.

On Monday, the spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Lukasz Jasina, tweeted that Zbigniew Rau had taken the decision to dismiss Jaroslaw Marek Nowak from his position on 8 January.

Nowak appears to have angered the foreign minister with his interview for the UK's 'Jewish News' weekly newspaper.

He called the amendment to the Act on the Institute of National Remembrance - which was to prevent Poland from being attributed co-responsibility for the Holocaust - "one of the stupidest amendments ever to appear in the law."

He also said that Poland "at some point" would have to address the issue of restitution of Jewish property.

"There are a number of ideas being discussed in Poland right now," he added. "Maybe it will be a very symbolic compensation like it was in the Czech Republic or Hungary, maybe it will be something else."

The government has so far ruled out financial compensation.

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Plenipotentiary for contact with Jewish diaspora dismissed The First News - The First News


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