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Houston’s History of Black-Jewish Relationships – Houston Press

Posted By on December 7, 2021

Theres no story here. Eight years ago when Allison Schottenstein was communicating with scholars and Jewish Houstonians about mid-century Black-Jewish relations, they told her she was wasting her time. Nothing there.

She was in Houston to find a topic for her University of Texas dissertation in Jewish history. Houston had desegregated quietly, nonviolently, everyone said. Houston was exceptional; there was nothing more to be said. Thomas Coles documentary, The Strange Demise of Jim Crow covered everything. She had seen it and read Coles book, too: No Color Is My Kind: The Life of Eldrewey Stearns and the Desegregation of Houston. Some people suggested a focus on late Congressman Mickey Lelands relationship with the Jewish community, about his program for Black youth to visit and work in Israel. That was a good story worth telling.

But she knew that wasnt enough for a book, even when she paired it with a piece of history from 1943; Congregation Beth Israels adoption of the controversial Basic Principles then fascinated her. Its members declared that their race was Caucasian, their nationality was American, and that they were anti-Zionist.

Schottenstein explained that members were trying to align themselves with the white elite of Houston. They proclaimed themselves Caucasian because they were concerned that Jews would be seen as a separate race, neither white nor Black. They proclaimed they did not see salvation in Palestine (pre-state Israel).

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They really have an idea about Americas the promised land, she said in an interview. Their intention, she wrote, was to preserve the image of Jews as white Americans of Jewish faith and secure their first-class citizenship in a city that divided people based on skin color. The members were criticized in Jewish publications, A rabbi in St. Louis argued that the temple was extending Jim Crow to exclude Black Jews. The controversy was even covered in Time magazine.

When Schottentstein gave a presentation about the principles to a group of rabbis, she was met with more resistance and disbelief. It cant really say that. When I showed them, they were shocked.

She kept digging. At the Houston Jewish Herald-Voice office, she read the weekly newspapers in bound volumes and on microfilm. She paid special attention to articles, editorials and letters to the editor from the 1940s to the 1980s, looking for key words such as race, race relations, interfaith, African American. Inevitably, she also scanned the announcements of births, deaths, bar mitzvahs, weddings, anniversaries, and deaths. It got so when I met someone, Id know when their child was bar mitzvahed, she said.

Through more research, and a lucky breakmeeting interfaith activist Garland Pohl, who introduced her to many people she came across local crisis points and events in Jewish-Black relations. She did the vast research a dissertation requires: visiting more than 80 archives, reading more than 50 oral histories, conducting about 75, reading books and articles whose citations take 22 pages.

A thesis that became a book.

Book cover

The book title came from suggestions in peer reviews. The title is bland with a slightly misleading subtitle. The book is about Black-Jewish relations, but its told from a Jewish point of view. As Schottenstein writes in the conclusion, she was looking through a Jewish lens over the long civil rights movement.

The through line of the book is that from the 1940s to 1980s, Houston Jews, never more than 2 percent of the population, were insecure about their place in the city, the South, and the United States, in the face of anti-Semitism. They acted and lived in a narrow safe space that widened over the years. Rabbis, Jewish activists and HISD board members who moved beyond safe positions were subject to threats, smears and election defeats. In a conservative town at a conservative time, they were afraid of being labeled Communist, attacked by the Ku Klux Klan and similar organizations, bringing on the wrath of powerful gentiles.

Rabbis kept in mind the 1958 bombing of The Temple in Atlanta and other attacks on Jewish institutions whose officials were outspoken anti-racists. But if were compared, for example, to what happens to African Americans, you know were talking about a much different situation, she said.

Schottenstein now lives in Cincinnati, teaching U.S. history at a local private high school and teaching a graduate class on the Holocaust, online, at Gratz University.

Reading this book was like learning a secret history of Houston that took place while I was growing upattending nursery school at the old Congregation Beth Yeshurun in Riverside Terrace, having my bat mitzvah at BYs new location in Meyerland, going to Kolter and Albert Sidney Johnston Junior High (no longer named for that Confederate general, its now Meyerland Performing and Visual Arts Middle School) and then Bellaire Highas well as events that took place before my time.

But of course the history wasnt secret. I was oblivious to public events. When youre young or at least when I was young, the private is what matters. Thus, I didnt know that white-haired Rabbi William Malev, who was friendly with my parents but quite the opposite when he paused his sermons to stare down at us teen gossipers during services, spoke out for integration. The former New Yorker also said that gentiles should take the lead, that segregation was an American fight, not a Jewish fight.

The late Iowa-born Rabbi Robert Kahn was tall and stately in his dark robe, speaking with the voice of God, people said. I had no idea that as associate rabbi of Beth Israel during World War II, he spoke publicly in favor of Black equality and decried the Red Cross practice of separating the blood of Black and white donors. Temple leaders admonished him: Jews should avoid explosive subjects. He resigned in 1944 and became the rabbi at a break-away temple, Emanu El, founded by Beth Israel members who disapproved of the Basic Principles. There he continued to be vocal about Black-white equality, calling segregation immoral in 1951. He also worked on interfaith and interracial programming. In the mid-1950s, during Houstons Red Scare, he was attacked via a widely-distributed circular accusing him of being the worst thing possible: a Communist.

Schottenstein said she admired Kahn for his passion and being the consummate rabbi. Yet, she wrote, he and most other Houston rabbis were not ready to commit to activism. Instead of fighting to change the status quo, Schottenstein wrote, they worked within the broken system.

Congregation Brith Shalom, where our next-door neighbors belonged, was led by Rabbi Moshe Cahana, whom I saw as foreign and ethereal. I didnt know he was born in Palestine (pre-state Israel), where Arab terrorists killed his mother and grandmother, was educated at the Sorbonne, that he and two local Episcopal priests traveled to Birmingham in 1963 to join Reverend Martin Luther King, and that he returned to Alabama in 1965, answering Kings call for clergy to join protesters crossing the Pettus Bridge in Selma.

He called himself a non-Negro and said white religious groups were sinners for not speaking out against discrimination. The Cahanas received threats in response to the rabbis activism, his son told Schottenstein. She interviewed my uncle Irving Pozmantier, who was a Beth Yesh leader. He told her that hed talked to members of Cahanas congregation about their rabbis actions. We were all uneasy about it,Pozmantiertold Schottenstein. [W]hat was our role? She writes: Many southern congregantsespecially in New Orleans, Jackson, and Memphis who were threatened by white supremacistsfelt like Pozmantier and did not want to bring the wrath of the non-Jewish community down on them.

I used to get Cahana mixed up with Rabbi Hyman Judah Schachtel of Beth Israel, because they both had accents. That was the end of their similarity. Schachtel was born in England, recruited from New York, and was a celebrity rabbi, as Weiner writes in Jewish Stars in Texas: Rabbis and Their Workhobnobbing with elites. In her book Schottenstein writes that Schachtel spoke for the brotherhood of man but overlooked the treatment of the Black residents of Houston.

Schottensteins interest and awareness of inequality and racism came from her maternal grandfather, who was born in whats now southern Poland. He survived the Holocaust, and later in Cincinnati with his brothers recreated the familys European feather business. He had definitely a clear point of view about the discrimination of African Americans, Schottenstein said. He considered that Blacks in the U.S. and Jews in Nazi-occupied Europe had parallel journeys.

As an undergraduate, Schottenstein focused on Jewish and gender studies at Brandeis University near Boston. The emphasis was always on Jews in Europe and the Northern United States, she said. The South was something we really didnt talk about. In classes it was rare to talk about Black-Jewish relations.

When Southern Jewish-Black relations were discussed, the topics were Jewish segregationists and Jews who owned slaves. Her thesis was on film and literary portrayals of children with one Black and one Jewish parent. She enrolled in the University of Texas for graduate school, writing her masters thesis on Sam Perl, a lay rabbi and merchant in Brownsville who united communities on both sides of the border. It won the history departments best thesis award.

It is an odd time to be thinking about the wording of the Basic Principles, when present-day anti-Zionists see Israel as a white settler project. Beth Israel dropped the principles in 1968. Schottenstein agrees that no synagogue would promote such language today. Many Jewish institutions are making efforts to include Jews of color as rabbis, leaders, and engaged members. And, she said, Almost half of the Jews in Israel are Mizrachi JewsJews of the Middle East, North Africa, and parts of the Caucasus.

Texas has been classified as South as well as Southwest. Schottenstein has no question about where Houston belongs. Throughout the book she places Houston squarely in the South. We dont really think about Houston the same way we might think about Alabama, she said, but it definitely had a full force of segregation and so you had Jewish business people who are wanting to fit in. It had the largest school system and was the slowest to desegregate, she writes. We know a lot of places drag their feet but definitely Houston was slow, she said.

Like any historian, shes found herself longing to meet the people shes researched but who died before she learned about them. Im 100 percent in love with Mickey Leland, she says. I wish I could bring him back to life.

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The first class of The Jewish Life Enrichment Program of JSLI completed their studies – WFMZ Allentown

Posted By on December 7, 2021

NEW YORK, Dec. 6, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ --The Jewish Life Enrichment Program (J-LEaP) successfully completed its first class. As a response to the many inquiries of those wanting to pursue the rabbinate Rabbi Blane of the Jewish Spritual Leaders' Institute developed the program with the goal of guiding them on their journey as some lack the skills needed to join the JSLI Rabbinic or Cantorial school.

Five students enrolled in the first offering of 10 month adjunct course to the Rabbinic school in November 2020. Two of the students transitioned into the Rabbinic program this fall while the other three continue to refine their skills.

Rabbi Karen Becker Marcelo, a graduate of JSLI, and a 30 year retired New York City educator helmed the course. Students studied Jewish themes via a learning management system and then met to discuss the topics twice a month. Students were urged to work on Hebrew outside of class and required to attend services.

A new class is enrolling for early 2022. For more information visit the Jewish Spiritual Leaders' Institute website.

ABOUT JSLI AND SIM SHALOM

Sim Shalom is an interactive online Jewish Universalist synagogue which is liberal in thought and traditional in liturgy. Created in 2009 by Rabbi Steven Blane on Manhattan's Upper West Side, Sim Shalom offers a means of connecting the unconnected. Rabbi Blane leads accessible and short Shabbat services every Friday night using a virtual interface and additionally Sim Shalom provides online education programs, Jazz concerts, conversion and life-cycle ceremonies along with weeknight services at 7:00PM EST led by Rabbis and students of this online community.

Rabbi Blane is also the founder and director of the Jewish Spiritual Leaders' Institute, http://www.jsli.net, the online professional rabbinical program and of the Union of Jewish Universalist Communities, http://www.ujuc.org.

Sim Shalom, a non profit 501 (3) tax-exempt organization, nurtures a Jewish connection through its mission of innovative services, creative education and dynamic outreach to the global community. For more information visit http://www.simshalom.com or call 201-338-0165.

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Carole Kivett, JSLI, 201-338-0165, info@simshalom.com

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The first class of The Jewish Life Enrichment Program of JSLI completed their studies - WFMZ Allentown

Larry David Has Never Been More Jewish Than in this Season’s ‘Curb’ Detroit Jewish News – The Jewish News

Posted By on December 7, 2021

(JTA) Curb Your Enthusiasm has always been a Jewy show, but this season it is downright Jewish.

On the HBO sitcom, now in its 11th season, Larry David has never been shy about surfacing, and lampooning, Judaism and Jewishness. He has contemplated the dilemmas of Holocaust survival, waded into the Israeli-Palestinian conflict (via a local chicken restaurant) and gotten stranded on a ski lift with an Orthodox Jew on Shabbat.

This season, its not just the occasional matzoh ball joke or the Yiddish lesson he gave Jon Hamm in the season premiere. David is plunging into questions of Jewish pride and belief, and if he isnt exactly Abraham Joshua Heschel, he could provide a Jewish educator with a semester of lively classroom debate.

In the latest episode, for example, a Jew for Jesus joins the cast of the show that Larrys character is developing for Hulu. Although neither Larry nor his Jewish friends are remotely religious, they seem genuinely upset by the actors apostasy, and Larry gives him a rather sober warning that he shouldnt proselytize on set.

A week earlier, a member of his golf club (played by Rob Morrow) asks Larry to pray for his ailing father. Larry declines, saying prayer is useless. He also wonders why God would need, or heed, the prayer of a random atheist like himself instead of the distressed son who wants his father to live.

For anyone who has gone to Hebrew school, its a familiar challenge, usually aired by the wiseacre in the back row who the teacher suspects is perhaps the most engaged student in the classroom. And it is not just atheists posing the question, Why pray? The Israeli philosopher Yeshayahu Leibowitz, a devout Orthodox Jew,believed that worship of God must be totally devoid of instrumental considerations.

In addition to a Jewish funeral, the episode has a bonus theological theme: Middah kneged Middah, or as Morrows character puts it, what goes around comes around. Morrow warns Larry that his actions will have consequences, which actually gives Larry pause. If anything, the entire Curb enterprise is an exercise in Jewish karma. Larry is constantly being punished in ways large and small for his actions, inactions, meddling and slights. As the old theater expression has it, if Larry opens a donut shop to drive a rival out of business in act one, his own shop will burn to the ground in act three.

A prior episode was even more self-consciously Jewish: Larry attends High Holiday services only because he lost a golf bet to the rabbi, and he literally bumps into a Klansman coming out of a coffee shop. The latter sets off a string of plot twists, as he and the KKK guy trade a series of favors and obligations that will have disastrous consequences for both. Larrys salvation comes at the end, when he blares a shofar from his balcony, literally raising the alarm on antisemitism and waking his neighbors to the threat of white supremacy.

The episode suggests the failure of good intentions. Larry spills coffee on the Klansmans robe and offers to have it dry-cleaned. Good liberal Jew that he is, Larry appears genuine in his belief that empathy is a better response to hate than confrontation, and that if he turns the other cheek it might lower the temperature in a post-Trump America. Of course, it doesnt work out that way, and the last word goes to his friend Susie Green, who performs a pointed act of Jewish sabotage that gets the Klansman pummeled by his fellow racists. Give David credit for embedding within a preposterous half-hour of television a debate about vengeance and resistance that engaged the followers of Jews as different as Jesus and Jabotinsky.

Make no mistake: The Larry David character is sacrilegious and heretical, and Curb is no friend of the religious mindset. But to dismiss him as self-hating is to miss out on the unmistakably Jewish conversation at the heart of the show. Davids character is a deeply principled person: Most of the nonsense he gets himself into is the result of his enforcing unspoken social rules that others appear to be flouting, whether it is taking too many samples at the ice cream counter or dominating the conversation (poorly) at the dinner table. Larry is rude and inconsiderate, but he is seldom wrong. He is what Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik might have called a Halachic Man an actualizer of the ideals of justice and righteousness, even when the rest of the world resents it.

If you think I am overdoing it, remember that there is an actual discussion in Talmud about the right and wrong way of putting on a pair of shoes.

And just as in the Talmud, there are no easy answers in Davids moral universe: If a friend lends you his favorite, one-of-a-kind shirt, and you ruin it, what are your obligations to him? (See: Bava Metzia 96b)If a thief breaks into your house and then drowns in your swimming pool, which wasnt protected by the required fence, who is owed damages and how much? (See: Ibn Ezra on Exodus 22:1-2)

In last weeks episode, Larry even touched on consciously or not a classic debate in the Talmud: If you and a friend are stranded in the desert, and your canteen has only enough water for one of you to survive, must you share it or save your own life?

Yes, Larry was talking about sharing a phone charger, but if the Sages had cell phones, what do you think theyd be talking about?

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of JTA or its parent company, 70 Faces Media.

By Andrew Silow-Carroll

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Larry David Has Never Been More Jewish Than in this Season's 'Curb' Detroit Jewish News - The Jewish News

NCJW to sponsor forums on abortion rights | The Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle – thejewishchronicle.net

Posted By on December 7, 2021

The National Council of Jewish Women Pittsburgh has signed on to participate in 73Forward, a national Jewish campaign to support abortion rights, as the U.S. Supreme Court weighs the issue and the fate of Roe v. Wade hangs in the balance.

The campaign, led by national NCJW, will work to increase access to abortion services across the U.S., as well as stimulate activism among Jews. Two forums on abortion rights are slated to take place Jan. 28-30, 2022, during a weekend dubbed Repro Shabbat.

The narrative in this country about abortion and religion belies the Jewish story, said Sara Segal, interim executive director at NCJW Pittsburgh. In Judaism, abortion is not only permitted, but sometimes required. Protecting an individuals ability to make their own health care decisions in accordance with their needs and personal beliefs is tied to religious freedom.

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Forums such as the ones hosted next month, Segel added, are opportunities for us to become stronger advocates for abortion justice.

The first virtual event The Changing Landscape of Abortion Rights, set to take place on Friday, Jan. 28, 2022 at 4 p.m. on Zoom will feature University of Pittsburgh School of Law Professor Greer Donley on the changing perspectives and aspects of abortion rights. There will be a particular focus on Pennsylvania, which, due to its politically purple profile, could become a battleground state for the issue of abortion access.

Donley told the Chronicle she was motivated to participate in the Repro Shabbat because Im Jewish and have devoted my scholarly life to reproductive justice.

I think we are looking at the strong possibility of a post-Roe world, and in that world, we will need to mobilize, Donley said. It is all but certain that the Supreme Court will allow the [recently argued] 15-week ban [in Mississippi] to stand. My prediction after listening to the oral argument is that the Court will overturn Roe.

Donley said she feels Chief Justice John Roberts wants to craft a compromise where a watered-down right to abortion still exists, but it did not seem like any other conservative justice wanted to join him as the fifth vote.

The second virtual event Jews, the First Amendment, and Abortion Rights, slated for Sunday, Jan. 30, 2022 at 2 p.m. will be led by Rachel Kranson, director of the Jewish Studies program at the University of Pittsburgh and a scholar of modern Jewish history, American Judaism, and gender and sexuality studies. Using her research, she will discuss the history of reproductive politics and the political investments of American Jews specifically how legal teams representing American Jewish organizations, including NCJW, developed arguments that defended abortion access as a religious right.

This discussion is co-sponsored by Congregation Beth Shalom, Congregation Dor Hadash and NCJW Pittsburgh.

In a number of court cases since the 1970s, American Jewish lawyers have been at the forefront of arguing that laws restricting abortion access compromised the religious freedom of American Jews, Kranson told the Chronicle. According to their arguments, abortion restrictions violated the establishment clause because they were based on particular Christian ideas about when life begins.

Jewish religious traditions, they argued, did not agree with the notion that life begins at conception, she added. These lawyers also argued that restrictions on abortion violated the free exercise clause [of the First Amendment] because there are some instances in which Jewish law would demand that a woman terminate her pregnancy, particularly in cases when that pregnancy threatened her life and health. Not being able to access an abortion when their tradition demands it would prevent American Jews from freely exercising their religion.

The Supreme Court is not expected to reach a decision on the Mississippi case argued last week until summer, Donley said.

My talk in January will have to be based on the speculation that Roe will be overturned or gutted, Donley told the Chronicle. But most reproductive justice scholars feel pretty confident in that outcome at this point the only open question is one of degree.

To register for the virtual events, visit ncjwpgh.org/events. PJC

Justin Vellucci is a freelance writer living in Pittsburgh.

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NCJW to sponsor forums on abortion rights | The Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle - thejewishchronicle.net

This Hanukkah, pondering what binds all free-thinking Jews – Los Angeles Times

Posted By on December 7, 2021

To the editor: Tod Goldberg uses the start of Hanukkah to write about his past and his Jewish upbringing. He ponders whether his religion is something he actually believes in.

Jewish people are free thinkers. Albert Einstein considered himself a cultural Jew rather than a religious one. Religion has different meanings to each and every person. I am also Jewish, 81 years of age and have seen a lot in my years.

The musical Fiddler on the Roof speaks of tradition. This is what many Jewish people follow. There are Orthodox Jews, Conservative Jews, Reform Jews and others. Each caters to what their adherents hearts wish them to follow.

What we have in common are pogroms common throughout history and glaringly brought to their horrific zenith in the slaughter of 6 million of our people during World War II. Religious or not, Jews are survivors, and lighting a candle on Hanukkah is a small price to pay for those whose lives were taken away because of their identity.

Barry Wasserman, Huntington Beach

..

To the editor: Goldbergs op-ed article about his memories of learning about Judaism was very interesting.

As a child and a younger adult, I was certain that my metaphysical wonderings, of which I had quite a few, would all be answered by the time I reached the age of 85. I had no particular reason to pick 85, but likely it seemed safely distant at the time.

Then at some point along the way, I figured out those wonderings likely wont be answered after all. This could be what Goldberg meant by reaching the essence of any spiritual journey.

I mainly wish to comment of Goldbergs contentment in the unknowing and in remembering a memory that may not exist; [but yes,] free, in any case, to believe. I do believe that his memories exist, so theres that, but at age 72 Im still not content in the unknowing part.

So my journey hasnt reached its essential phase, but I really admire Goldbergs statement. Its like learning to be comfortable with being uncomfortable.

Linda Finn, Marina del Rey

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This Hanukkah, pondering what binds all free-thinking Jews - Los Angeles Times

People believe Omicron is a Jewish holiday, a new weed strain in Jimmy Kimmel interview – The Indian Express

Posted By on December 7, 2021

As the world is concerned over the new coronavirus variant, Omicron, American TV show host, Jimmy Kimmel took to the streets to test peoples awareness about it. His team interacted with passersby in Los Angeles for the Lie Witness News segment aired on December 2 to find out how aware they are about the new variant.

Kimmel said, When it comes to deadly virus variants, Omicron is still the new kid on the block, so we went out on the street and asked people questions about it in a new Omicron edition of Lie Witness News.

While one person believed that Omicron is a new Los Angeles Laker player, another wished her Jewish friends Happy Omicron! Yet another person was confident that it was a new Ye song. Two women said they were weed sellers and they were all ready to try out new Omicron weed strain!

Watch the video here:

Netizens were shocked over peoples lack of awareness about Omicron.It has been a fortnight since South African health experts warned the world about the novel coronavirus. The World Health Organization designated the variant B.1.1.529 a Variant of Concern, named Omicron, on November 26.

The novel variant of coronavirus has spread to more than two dozen countries, including Asian nations like Sri Lanka, India, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore and South Korea. Several countries have imposed travel restrictions and have made implementation of Covid protocol stringent.

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People believe Omicron is a Jewish holiday, a new weed strain in Jimmy Kimmel interview - The Indian Express

We Must Continue the Fight Against Jew-Hatred in Europe | Opinion – Newsweek

Posted By on December 7, 2021

When we think of antisemitism today, images of street attacks, burning synagogues and swastikas are the first things that come to mind. These senseless and hate-filled acts are the bread and butter of the Jew-hatred our people have experienced for thousands of years.

But the scars that physical attacks can leave sometimes pale in comparison to the poison that cultured people in suits and powerful positions of leadership can unleash when they set their minds to it.

Jew-hatred in "civilized" settings takes root by undermining the loyalty of, and confidence in, innocent souls. Evidence may not exist, but who needs evidence once a juicy rumor takes root?

Take the case of the European External Action Service (EEAS), the diplomatic service and combined foreign and defense ministry of the European Union. Seven years ago, the EEAS began a targeted and malicious campaign of disinformation and retaliation against a longstanding EU official for the sole crime of being Jewisha charge of dual loyalty to one's home country and to Israel that has plagued countless patriots around the world.

In what has played out like a modern-day Dreyfus Affair, an attorney and 25-year veteran of the EU government (called "Eva" here for her own protection) became the target of entirely unsubstantiated rumors that she was engaged in espionage on behalf of the State of Israel. The goal of this campaign was clear: to remove Eva from her role in the Middle East peace process. Allegations that Eva was leaking confidential information were documented and spread widely despite no evidence to support the claims.

Once Eva's colleagues had "learned" that she was a "traitor," security investigations, including hazy charges of contact with foreign agentssuch as Israeli Mossad agents, Turkish officials and persons with connections to Russian intelligencewere easy enough to believe.

Eva underwent years of merciless disciplinary processes before the allegations of espionage mysteriously disappeared (while not being formally retracted), but this was not the end of the saga. New charges of misconduct surfacedincluding absenteeism and failure to perform one's dutieswith no supporting evidence. Nevertheless, these charges served as the basis for withholding Eva's salary and, ultimately, dismissing her from the EEAS, despite her successfully demonstrating that the charges were completely unfounded. When Eva sought help from outside Jewish organizations, the EEAS ignored the numerous calls to properly investigate the situation and criticized Eva for her alleged disloyalty in raising "baseless and false" claims of antisemitism.

Meanwhile, the EU simultaneously represents itself as being at the dawn of a new era. While working toward unveiling a "strategy on combating antisemitism and fostering Jewish life," European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called antisemitism "a poison for our society." She added: "It is up to all of us to fight it. To prevent it. And to eradicate it."

Unfortunately for veteran civil servantsand so many othersthe European Commission does not hold itself to the same standards to which it purports to hold EU citizens. Centuries of pogroms, mass murders, expulsions, persecutions and the Holocaust will not be erased by a 26-page strategy communication. Entrenched, systemic Jew-hatred won't be uprooted because someone says it should be.

Fifty percent of all Europeans consider antisemitism a problem, while 44 percent of young Jewish Europeans have experienced antisemitic harassment, according to an Institute for Jewish Policy research study. Recently, the European Agency for Fundamental Rights reported that 90 percent of European Jews felt antisemitism had increased in their home country, and that one in three people have considered emigrating.

Populist political parties are winning elections across the continent and reports of fear, intimidation and physical violence targeted at Jews on the streets of glittering European capitals are at a height not seen since the 1920s and 1930s.

As we await an imminent decision from the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in Eva's case, it is not only a favorable outcome that we are striving for. After all, if the CJEU fails to find the EEAS's behavior a symptom of systemic racism and Jew-hatred, have we really won? If the court takes for granted the mainstreaming of antisemitism in the EEAS's treatment of Eva, how can anyone argue that justice has been served?

Where is the justice in this world when the bar is set higher for Jews than for other minorities? For how many centuries must we continue to scream into the wind for justice? To be treated as equal humans?

How are we still fighting this same fight 75 years after the Holocaust, 100 years after the Russian Revolution, 500 years after the Spanish Inquisition and 800 years after the Crusades?

We have seen this story beforeJews punished for the sole crime of being Jewishand something must be done about it.

The tragic pattern simply must end here.

Brooke Goldstein is a human rights attorney and founder and executive director of The Lawfare Project.

The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.

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We Must Continue the Fight Against Jew-Hatred in Europe | Opinion - Newsweek

New graphic novel tells the story of Malaysia’s lost Jewish community J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on December 7, 2021

Scholars do not know exactly when Jews first came to Penang, one of the smaller states in Malaysia, located on the Southeast Asian nations western island.

The Jewish cemetery in the regions capital city of George Town, on a street formerly called Jalan YahudiJewish Waygives an estimate: its first burial was of a Mrs. Shoshan Levi, in 1835. By the turn of the 20th century, a census showed a Jewish population of 172.

But Jews no longer roam the streets of George Town, and havent in large numbers for decades. Jalan Yehudi has since been renamed for a Malay writer, Zainal Abidin, and the former synagogue around the corner has not been inhabited by Jews since it closed in 1976. Without enough Jews to fulfill a minyan, or Jewish prayer group of 10 men, the building is now a trendy coffee shop.

And in recent years, Malaysia has beenidentified by the Anti-Defamation League as among the most antisemitic nations outside of the Middle East and North Africa. Much of that hatred can be credited to its former prime minister, Mahathir Mohamad, who famously declared himself proud to be antisemitic. Israel and Malaysia do not maintain diplomatic relations andIsraelis are barred from visiting.

The only thing that does exist [in Malaysia today] are people of Jewish origin, say, people who have a Jewish ancestry somewhere in the family tree, said Zayn Gregory. But those people converted to Islam in order to intermarry into the Malay community.

Gregory, an American of mixed Jewish-Christian parentage who is himself a convert to Islam and now lives in the Malaysian city of Kuching, has recently penned a book about Penangs Jews. The Last Jews of Penang, which was published last week, is a short, all-ages graphic novel, complete with colorful watercolor illustrations of old George Town streets and synagogue scenes by artist Arif Rafhan.

It profiles the history of the once-vibrant Jewish community that occupied old George Town, explaining Jewish ways of life for readers who may have never met a Jew, and highlighting some of its famous figures like David Marshall, who would go on to become the first chief minister of Singapore (under British Commonwealth rule).

The book is sort of a requiem for the community that used to be those who are aware of the vanished community have a sense of the way in which we have been diminished by their passing. The hope is this book will bring more awareness to the rich multicultural reality of the Malaya [the name of the region until the early 1960s] that used to be, said Gregory, who is a lecturer in landscape architecture at the University of Malaysia Sarawak and a writer and translator of Malay poems.

He became fascinated about the little-known history of Jews in Malaysia through stories he read in local news outlets, and was later approached about the idea by the books publisher, Matahari Books.

Gregory converted to Islam at age 17, a decision he credits to being caught in the middle of a mixed Jewish and Christian family, not strongly identifying with either. He later made the decision to move to Malaysia with his wife, whom he had met in the United States but was born and raised in Malaysia. The country is more than 60 percent Muslim, with nearly 40 percent of people identifying with other faiths, such as Buddhism, Christianity and Hinduism.

Judaism wasnt a big part of Gregorys life before moving to Malaysia, he said. But being here, its a country where Judaism is not widely known or understood. Most people have never met a Jew in their life. And theres unfortunately a lot of misunderstanding and, you know, sort of prejudices born out of ignorance.

Doing the research and writing the book brought him closer to his Jewish roots. When he learned that there was once a Jewish community in Malaysia, that really clobbered me. I was so amazed, Gregory said. I felt like it was really an opportunity for me to share something about myself that is still very much a part of me.

Little research or significant writing has been done about the Penang Jews Gregory used mostly local newspaper and magazine articles, in addition toone study written by Australia-based researcher Raimy Che-Ross. According to that paper, the Zionist nationalist Israel Cohen paid a visit to Penang in 1920, then under British control, where he met a man named Ezekiel Aaron Manasseh, who claimed that he was until recently the only religious Jew there.

Trade interests, antisemitism in their home countries, and World War I had brought a few other Jews from Baghdad, mostly poor peddlers, who consorted with Chinese and Malay women, and lived debased lives, claimed Manasseh, who was Orthodox. It wasnt all true, as census data shows but Manasseh showed that even in a place as small and distant from a major Jewish community as Penang was over a century ago, timeless Jewish turf wars persisted.

Many Jews began leaving Malaysia during World War II with the help of the British. Those who stayed mostly left by the 1970s as antisemitism became more pervasive in everyday life.

In a 1970 book, Mahathir Mohamad, the former prime minister, wrote that Jews are hook-nosed and understand money instinctively. Hewas ousted from office in 2020during his second stint as prime minister, by which time the Jewish population of Malaysia had all but vanished.

Of his antisemitism, Mohamad said in 2012, How can I be otherwise, when the Jews who so often talk of the horrors they suffered during the Holocaust show the same Nazi cruelty and hardheartedness towards not just their enemies but even towards their allies should any try to stop the senseless killing of their Palestinian enemies.

Those who fled Malaysia went to Australia, Israel and the United States; many others would go to nearby Singapore, including Marshall.

The last known ethnic Jew in Penang was David Mordecai, a well-known hotel manager whose family first came from Baghdad in 1895 and who died in 2011. He is buried inPenangs only Jewish cemetery, which has been cared for by the same Muslim family for generations.

Scholars have saidthe loud voices of politicians do not necessarily reflect the opinions of everyday Malaysians; they argue that many who reject the countrys religious nationalism have begun to reject the countrys tradition of Jew hatred.

Gregory agrees, and hopes his book will help build bridges with the faraway Jewish people that he still considers a major part of his life, and who once called Penang their home.

The many times that I have shared here with people about my own background, I have never experienced anything remotely hostile, Gregory says. Some amazement sometimes certainly the idea of a person of Jewish background becoming Muslim is just as surprising to a Muslim as it might be to a Jew.

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New graphic novel tells the story of Malaysia's lost Jewish community J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

How did Bob Dole get along with the Jews? Its complicated. – Forward

Posted By on December 7, 2021

To understand the rapport with Jews and Jewish history of Senator Bob Dole of Kansas, who has died at the age of 98, a surprising number of analyses of jokes are required, worthy of the precedent of Sigmund Freud.

In addition to a distinguished legislative career and splendid military record, Dole cultivated the reputation as a cracker-barrel jester. He published collections of wry anecdotes about politics and presidents.

So as the Chicago Tribune reported in May 1990, when an uproar ensued after Dole recommended that the U.S. should reconsider lending Israel $400 million to shelter Soviet Jewish refugees, he claimed that he was kidding.

The presumed levity was over whether Dole would split (the $400 million) between homeless, disabled American veterans and Israel. Within an hour, there was a call from the Israeli Embassy to Sen. [Warren] Rudman, who called me and said, (here Doles voice rose in mock alarm) Are you going to offer this amendment?

The Tribune suggested that Doles habit of blurting out comments, belatedly identified as jokes, may have been due to boredom after decades in the Senate.

Dole could seriously appreciate Jewish political allies like the Republican activist Esther Levens. In August 2020, when Levens, founder of the Kansas-based Unity Coalition for Israel, died, Doles Twitter account acknowledged the news with a tweet of sympathy, albeit spelling her name wrong as Levins.

Jewish voters were likewise treated to declarations of support for Israel by Dole, studded with speechwriters attempts at Hebrew transliteration. In the Dole Archive at the University of Kansas is a discourse from October 1978, labelled that the listeners were JEWISH RETIREESRESIDENTS OF CENTURY VILLAGE; TEMPLE ISRAEL; DEERFIELD BEACH, FLORIDA.

The speechwriter ambitiously expected Dole to pronounce the Hebrew phrase Lo Teduu od milchama. (They shall never again know war; Isaiah 2:4) among other Hebrew words, possibly to convince Temple Beth Israels faithful that Dole was a landsman, not a Methodist from the prairie.

Unlike these serious public references to Jewish subjects, with Jewish politicians in private, Dole could be teasingly caustic.

Senator Joe Liebermans book on the beauty of Shabbat, includes rationalization of Liebermans failing to keep the Sabbath in January 1991 in order to vote in favor of the First Gulf War. After the measure passed, Dole handed Lieberman a telephone and insisted that he speak to President George H.W. Bush. Yet Dole probably knew that for Orthodox Jews, phone conversations on Shabbat are a no-no.

In a 2007 interview, the American Jewish politician Dan Glickman noted that Dole had this kind of harsh personality, some people thought, you know, the biting, cutting-edge humor and everything else, which I think he did at times have, but I never found him vindictive.

However, Glickman was taken aback when circa 1986, he mulled over the possibility of running against Dole. One day, his office was visited by representatives of the America-Israel Public Affairs Committee. The group, including some friends, admonished him not to oppose Dole, that loyal supporter of Israel. Glickman reflected, Whether Dole sent them to do that or whether they just did this on their own, I dont know.

Doles use of cutting-edge humor in the context of politics and things Jewish could even extend to solemn occasions. In March 2000, as part of a formal presentation in the Leaders Lecture Series of the US Senate, Dole made straight-faced statements, including his opinion that Strom Thurmond, the South Carolina Dixiecrat senator, was a giant.

Then Dole proceeded to insert a Jewish joke, claiming that as a weapon against injustice, ridicule can be as effective as moral outrage. The jape was attributed to Arizona senator Barry Goldwater: On being blackballed by an anti-Semitic country club in Phoenix, Goldwater responded: Since Im only half Jewish, can I join if I only play nine holes?

Although cited in books about Goldwater,, including even a well-researched biography, this wisecrack appears to be a variant of another gag supposedly uttered by Groucho Marx. As the tale goes, when an anti-Semitic country club banned Groucho from swimming in its pool, he replied by asking if his half-Jewish daughter (or son, depending on the narrator) could wade in up to her/his knees.

Unfortunately, attempts at humor involving Jews by Doles political cronies could get him into hot water. One example was in May 1995, when Ed Rollins, a Republican political consultant to Doles Presidential campaign, thought it appropriate to refer to US Representatives Howard Berman and Henry Waxman, both California Democrats, as Hymie boys.

The occasion was a roast for Willie Brown, an African American speaker of the California State Assembly, who planned to run for mayor of Los Angeles. Rollins declared, If elected mayor of L.A., [Brown] could show those Hymie boys, Berman and Waxman, who were always trying to make Willie feel inferior for not being Jewish.

The Dole campaigns reiterated response to the ensuing furor was that it would stand by Rollins, although the political consultant himself, seeing that the outcry did not diminish with time, eventually chose to resign as senior adviser to Doles presidential effort.

In another glimpse at Doles apparent tolerance of antisemitism among colleagues, his close ally Carroll Campbell, governor of South Carolina, whom Dole considered as a vice presidential running mate, raised hackles by commissioning a poll in 1978 that highlighted his Democratic opponents Jewish roots and beliefs.

Greenville Mayor Max Heller, an Austrian-born Jewish refugee, was targeted by Campbell with a poll that queried voters about how they felt that Heller was (1) a Jew; (2) a foreign-born Jew; and (3) a foreign-born Jew who did not believe in Jesus Christ as the Savior.

Doles criteria of acceptability for jokes, or even serious statements, about Jews could be mystifying. In October 1996, Dole told the international convention of Bnai Brith, without a hint of humor, that physical disabilities he acquired from valiant military service in World War II gave him affinities to Jews. This implied, whether intentionally or not, that Jews are innately disabled.

Bnai Brith president Tommy Baer tactfully demurred that being Jewish was not inherently a disability, while the theologian Michael Berenbaum told The New York Times: Most Jews today dont regard being Jewish as a handicap. They regard it as a privilege; it gives them roots and depth and a mission.

In his own mercurial way, Dole was capable of speaking to a rally demanding that the Soviet Union allow an ailing Jewish scientist, Benjamin Charney, to emigrate. Yet Dole refrained from signing a Senate petition in 1987 requesting Charneys liberation, possibly because it was sponsored, and mostly signed, by Democrats.

In June 1995, Stanley Hilton, Doles former aide and Senate counsel, published a book, generally dismissed as an unflattering portrait. Hilton claimed that Dole sometimes privately expressed envy and resentment at Jews for having an unduly large amount of money, power and influence in the United States, and for bankrolling liberal Democrats campaigns.

Perhaps ultimately, as a true politician, the most essential thing for Dole about Jews or anyone else, was partisan electoral support to maintain power.

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How did Bob Dole get along with the Jews? Its complicated. - Forward

Friday Night Dinner: Tamsin Greig says she probably shouldnt have played a Jewish mother – Yahoo News

Posted By on December 7, 2021

Tamsin Greig has reflected on her role in the Channel 4 sitcom Friday Night Dinner, saying she probably shouldnt have played a Jewish matriarch.

Greig, who is a practising Christian with Jewish ancestry, played the part of Jackie Goodman in the comedy, which follows a Jewish family living in north London.

I think, given our sensitivity today about these issues, I probably shouldnt have been in that show, the actor told The Telegraph in a new interview.

We are much more conscious today than we were when that show was first aired.

She added: For instance, Cleopatra has long been on my list of roles to play but I have to step back from that now, because Cleopatra needs to be played by someone who looks like they may have come from that area of the world. Thats absolutely right. But Ill keep Lady Macbeth on the list.

Friday Night Dinner ended after six seasons in 2020 following the death of one of its stars, Paul Ritter, of a brain tumour. Ritter had played the husband of Greigs character.

The show was created by Jewish screenwriter Robert Popper but none of the cast except Tracy-Ann Oberman, who played Auntie Val was Jewish.

Paul Ritter, Tom Rosenthal, Simon Bird and Tamsin Greig in Friday Night Dinner (Channel 4)

Simon Bird and Tom Rosenthal were among the other cast members. Rosenthal told the i in 2016: I have a Jewish name and a Jewish face but Im not a Jewish person.

There are many examples of non-Jewish actors playing Jewish roles, from Rachel Brosnahan as Midge in The Marvelous Mrs Maisel and Felicity Jones as Ruth Bader Ginsburg in On the Basis of Sex to Rose Byrne as Gloria Steinem in Mrs America.

There has been a rise in campaigning for Jewish representation on screen in recent years, with stars such as Maureen Lipman and Miriam Margolyes signing a letter in 2019 accusing the musical Falsettos of jewface.

US comic Sarah Silverman also recently said on her podcast: Lately its been happening if that role is a Jewish woman, but she is courageous, or she deserves love, or has bravery, or is altruistic in any way, shes played by a non-Jew.

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Friday Night Dinner: Tamsin Greig says she probably shouldnt have played a Jewish mother - Yahoo News


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