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What type of Jews do we want to be? – The Times of Israel

Posted By on December 7, 2021

Over the last few days we have been witness to two key events involving attacks on Jews that were captured with clear video footage.

The first was an attack on a busload of Jewish children in the heart of Londons shopping district, a group that was out celebrating the first night of Hanukah.

The footage, taken from within the bus, shows a group of men spitting at the bus, cursing the Jewish passengers, banging on the windows, and giving Nazi salutes. The video of the attack swiftly went viral.

The second event was the latest terrorist attack in Jerusalem. A Palestinian terrorist attempted to murder several Israelis and was soon neutralized. The footage of this attack also went viral.

In both cases Jews were the target Jews were the victims and in both cases the event was captured with footage that left little doubt about the details. What followed should be a lesson to us all.

Let me deal with the London event first. It is true there was some outrage, both the Mayor of London and the British Prime Minister made public comments condemning the antisemitic attack.

But in the media, things were different. The Guardian just ignored it, but it was the British national broadcaster that went the extra mile. The BBC actually combed the audio in the video and somehow created a story that they could hear anti-Muslim slurs coming from the passengers of the bus.

As much of what can be heard appears to be in Hebrew, it seems that they mistranslated a cry for help (Tikra lemishehu, ze dachuf call someone its urgent h/t GnasherJew). The Board of Deputies has asked for an apology but so far all the BBC has done is reduce their claim of slurs to slur.

But it is the motivation here that matters almost as much as the bad reporting. Why on earth would anyone care what victims of an attack were saying during the attack itself even more so if many of them were children? Let us not forget that this is from a BBC that has a history of translating Yahood (Jew in Arabic) as Israeli.

As former British Army Commander Col Richard Kemp pointed out yesterday the attackers only managed to insult the Jews on the bus the BBC took care of all the rest.

In the second example, the Jerusalem terror attack, anti-Israel activists soon shared edited footage that deliberately stripped out the context from the event. Gone was the attack itself all that remained was a short clip of the terrorist lying on the ground, with shots being fired, an image that suggests Israelis just go around shooting people.

Well-known anti-Israel activist Mohammed El-Kurd uploaded the edited 23-second footage with a statement simply saying that Israeli occupation forces shoot a Palestinian young man near Damascus Gate in occupied Jerusalem. Only two hours later did the Israeli MFA share the entire videothat included the initial 20 seconds showing the attack.

There is nothing accidental in the sharing of the edited footage. These people know exactly what they are doing. They are feeding their followers lies in order to demonize Israel, Zionism, and, by extension, Jews.

In both cases a viral story was spread that made the Jews the victims of these deliberate attacks look like they were either monsters or at least had somehow contributed to or provoked the attack.

In London, the Jews were passive victims. In Israel, with the security forces defending the streets, the Jews were far from passive they were actively defending lives.

But still, in both cases, Jews were being demonized. It is a lesson that many Jews, especially in the diaspora still need to learn. It is not the action of the Jewish person that dictates the narrative, but rather the motivation of those writing the story. And in far too many cases, the motivations are unhealthy ones.

I have been researching antisemitism in anti-Zionist activity for longer than I want to remember. Many of my reports exposing antisemitism have received widespread media coverage. Over the years I have learnt what news about bias and antisemitism floats in Jewish circles and, just as importantly, what does not.

Everyone gets angry when a busload of children is attacked; some get angry when distorted footage of a terrorist attack is widely shared; almost nobody gets angry when the UK does not even have the decency to vote against a UN motion that erases Jewish history in Jerusalem.

The list of things that many in our community ignore is long. It took years for dozens of hard-working activists to expose enough of the antisemitism problem in the UK Labour Party to wake up enough people for a 2018 demonstration at Parliament Square. Now that Corbyn has gone, most have gone to sleep again.

By the time the message being delivered is a more complex one about the dangers of the bias in the BBC, academia, Wikipedia or NGOs like Amnesty International, it even turns many people off. They react as if you are being unreasonable and extreme.

But where does the danger Corbynism posed come from if not from people fed on a diet of disinformation and bias from outlets such as the BBC, Wikipedia or Amnesty International? What possible sense is there in getting angry at students who harass the Israeli Ambassador at a campus event but not caring at all about the academics in the university that are feeding the students the lies that create the anger in the first place?

We only seem to react to the hate when it is already banging at our door. This is a deeply misplaced and dangerous strategy. One that almost inevitably will cost us dearly.

Antisemitism is undoubtedly on the rise, yet what we witness in Europe and the United States are only the events that explode into violence, and it is only these we seem to be willing to deal with. The undercurrent the atmosphere that is being created which leads to the explosion of violence is something we do not want to address.

And far too many of us are even willing to point the finger of blame at Israel, as if somehow if Israel just ended the occupation, all the antisemitism would just go away. It is as if 3,000+ years of history have taught us nothing.

I had two exchanges this week with parents about their children who go to Jewish schools in London. The first was a parent who told me that during a discussion about Judaism, one of their teachers compared the Maccabees to the Taliban.

The second parent told me that their child had been approached at school by a teacher who told them they had seen them at a street demonstration about Israel. The student replied in a surprised fashion that they hadnt seen the teacher to which the teacher responded no I was on the other side.

If this is the message they are receiving from their teachers in Jewish schools, what on earth will the next generation of Jews in the diaspora end up believing? In truth we are failing ourselves, our children, and our community, and when in the future the angry mob come knocking on our childrens door, they may even believe they deserve it. We are teaching our children to be victims without pride.

There is no reward for remaining passive and believing it will all blow over. It wont. Whether we are active (Israel) or passive (London) they will still demonize us. It is what antisemites do.

Corbynism was just a warning sign. U. of Bristol professor David Miller? There are 100 Millers out there teaching the next generation of leaders. Wikipedia? Ive lost count of the number of antisemitic editors that are butchering the online encyclopedia. Amnesty? Amnesty actually employs anti-Israel activists to write their reports. Journalists? May well have been taught at university by one of the David Millers. And we live in a world today where everyone is too scared to address the elephant in the room: the level of extremism and antisemitism in parts of the Muslim community.

It really is time to wake up. We need to decide just what type of Jews we want to be. Those that sit and wait and cross their fingers, or those that stand up to take action. Because next time, when enough of us are angry enough to turn up at Parliament Square, it might just be too late.

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What type of Jews do we want to be? - The Times of Israel

Meet the Israeli Jew Who the Whole Arab World is Listening To – Israel Today

Posted By on December 7, 2021

The Arabs themselves admit that Edy Cohen, our very own Israel Today correspondent in the Arab world, influences us and public opinion more than other Arab pundits.

When Cohen saw that he was listed as the second most influential voice in the Arab world by the Saudi-based news agency Arab News, he wondered, How is this possible? How does a pro-Israeli Jew gain such a following in the Arab world? His answer surprised us.

It isnt at all obvious that a person like me, a Jew, an Israeli and a Zionist would be crowned by a Saudi Arabian newspaper as the second most influential commentator in the world on Middle East and North Africa (MENA). No Jew has ever been selected in this category, Edy told us.

I have often spoken of my influence in the Arab world, not for any self-interest, but that others might join in working together to promote positive public opinion towards Israel in the Arab world. Now we have clear conformation. The Arabs themselves admit that I, Edy Cohen, influence them more than any other Arab journalist (except one).

To be clear, my influence in the Arab world revolves around exposing Israels enemies, including Hezbollah, Iran, Hamas and other organizations, and exposing antisemitism and demonization of the State of Israel in the world.

In all my pro-Israel activities, my intention is always to protect the dignity of the state, our citizens and our national symbols which are always before my eyes. Delusional as it sounds, the Arabs love and appreciate patriots (even when they are Israelis).

How do the Israeli authorities and media here at home react to your influence in the Arab world?

Unfortunately, and ironically, those who oppose my reporting do not come from outside, but from right here at home. There are many examples of this, like when delegations from Arab countries who come to Israel and want to meet with me, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs prevents them. This is what the Arabs themselves are telling me.

One of the best-known Israeli journalists slanders my activities among Arabs and wonders out loud Why are you Arabs following Edy Cohen???

All of my outreach activities in the Arab world I do voluntarily and out of a strong sense of mission and love of the homeland. The Arab people very much understand and appreciate this. But the Israeli establishment is fighting me. Why and for what?

Not a single Israeli official has cooperated with me in these efforts, nor have they approached me for any assistance and cooperation. All the Israeli media channels, except Channel 14, and most of the newspapers in Israel do not give me a platform or divulge my activities to the Israeli public. (ED. except Israel Today, where Edy features as a regular reporter on Arab affairs).

Despite this, I will continue to advocate for the State of Israel privately and out of pure ideology.

For these efforts I am not asking for any return; my activity speaks for itself. The recognition I receive from the audience in Israel (devoted followers), from Jews around the world, from my readers in the Arab world and from leaders in the Arab world is my daily bread.

I asked Edy why he thinks Israeli officials refuse to cooperate with his important pro-Israel work in the Arab world. I dont want to elaborate. Lets leave our dirty laundry here at home, he said. He did point out, however, that there are disagreements on issues like his support of the Kurds, while the Foreign Ministry is careful to maintain relations with Iraq and ignore the Kurdish peoples dilemma.

Learn more about Edy and his reports right here on Israel Today

Dr. Edy Cohen is a historian, media commentator and journalist holding an official Israeli press pass specializing in inter-Arab relations, the Arab-Israeli conflict, Islamist terrorism, and the history of Jewish communities in the Arab world. He earned his doctorate at Bar-Ilan University and currently serves as a researcher at the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies.

Dr. Cohengrew up as a Jew in Lebanon (!), completing his early years of education in Christian schools. In 1991, like so many other 20th-century Jews struggling to preserve their rich heritage within hostile Arab societies, Edy Cohen and his family were forced to flee lethal Arab antisemitism. Once resettled in Israel, he was able to manifest his love for Israel and commitment to Zionism openly and freely, and today Dr. Cohen is well known for his willingness to both call out antisemitism wherever it lurks and challenge any and all signs of retreat from Zionisms fundamental tenets.

As anative speaker and writer of Arabic, Dr. Cohen regularly crosses media divides,communicating directly with Arab audiences and providing them with perspectives on Israel that they would otherwise never receive.

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Meet the Israeli Jew Who the Whole Arab World is Listening To - Israel Today

From Gary Shteyngart to Emily Ratajkowski: The Jewish books you need to know this month – Forward

Posted By on December 7, 2021

Welcome to Forward Reads, your monthly tour of the Jewish literary landscape. Im a culture writer at the Forward, and I spend a lot of time combing through new releases so you can read the best books out there. This article originally ran in newsletter form. To sign up for Forward Reads and get book recommendations delivered to your inbox each month, click here.

Image by The Forward

_In her free time, 16-year-old Amelie Liu enjoys participating in Model UN, listening to the New York Times Daily podcast, and reading Sally Rooneys novels. Oh and writing her own books. The high schooler recently finished Matzo-Ball Wonton Thanksgiving, a picture book inspired by her experience making sense of her Jewish and Chinese heritage.

In the book, a young girl named Amelie is disconcerted to find her Bubbe and her Nai Nai preparing matzo ball and wonton soups for the familys Thanksgiving table. Real Thanksgiving food, she informs them, is turkey and sweet potatoes and pumpkin pie. No one has ever brought soup. Never! After taking some drastic steps to scupper the soup, Amelie learns to value her own culture and broaden her definition of real Thanksgiving food.

The message of the book is to feel pride in your cultures, the real-life Amelie told me when I reached her via Zoom at her home in Chicago. We talked about writing, reading and her highlights from Thanksgiving. Heres what she had to say._

How she started writing: My Bubbe is a playwright, so shes always telling stories. Ive grown up learning the importance of writing from her. Whenever something happens in my life she says, Write it down. Write it in your journal. Ive been writing ever since I can remember.

On working with her grandmother: She doesnt sugarcoat when it comes to my writing. Shed be like, Oh, that word isnt great. Lets revise it. Id come away with mounds and mounds of feedback from her.

What drew her to childrens books: During quarantine my Bubbe lived with us for four months, and we got into really deep discussions about identity. Another aspect of my identity is having lost my father when I was seven. In quarantine, I started to address that grief for the first time. Thats why I decided to write a childrens book: I wanted kids as young as six or seven to realize the importance of their identity, because I hadnt realized it until I was 15 and stuck in a global pandemic.

On writing from life (sort of): I didnt ruin the soup. But I do remember feeling conflicted because we do have matzo ball and wonton soup at our table. And at school wed see these stories of having turkey and mashed potatoes and cranberries, and learning that thats what a real American Thanksgiving is. I remember talking to my Bubbe and my Nai Nai, and them telling me that I should be proud of my cultures.

Her favorite Thanksgiving dishes: Every year we do brisket, and I look forward to that all the time. We also get dumplings a lot. You can never go wrong with dumplings.

Image by The Forward

When we first meet Sasha Senderovsky, the protagonist of Our Country Friends, hes speeding down a country road near his second home in upstate New York, committing several traffic violations simultaneously. Senderovsky is on the hunt for high-quality canned goods, top cuts of meat and, most importantly, booze. Friends and frenemies are arriving from the city in haste. The stores could close at any time. And no one wants to get too close. Thats right the pandemic has arrived in Senderovskys world, which means the pandemic novel has arrived in ours.

An eminently foolish Soviet Jewish writer with a more-than-passing resemblance to Shteyngart himself (among other things, the novel is a prolonged joke at its authors expense), Senderovsky offers shelter to an ill-chosen collection of old friends and new professional acquaintances without, of course, consulting his more practical wife. What follows is a maximalist, claustrophobic and laugh-out-loud funny work of Austen-esque social commentary.

Using the cliches of bourgeois lockdown life as its narrative engine, the novel pays lip service to the idea of the pandemic as a leveling experience: Even if you didnt retreat to a estate in spring 2020, you may recognize the scrubbing of groceries, the adventurous recipes and the endless schemes for self-improvement. But as new factions form and old wounds surface among the dachas dwellers, Senderovsky is forced to reckon with his own participation in American inequality. What does it mean for a man whose sense of self hinges on his hardscrabble immigrant upbringing to discover he has the money and cultural capital to shield himself from the harsh realities of the pandemic? A comedy of errors from the start, Our Country Friends matures unexpectedly into a reflection on the moral costs of making it in America.

Image by The Forward

If you had access to the internet in 2020, you probably read Jewish model Emily Ratajkowskis viral essay Buying Myself Back. A searing account of an early-career photoshoot that turned into a sexual assault, its also a reflection of the difficulty of truly controlling ones own image. That essay now forms the centerpiece of My Body, a collection thats part memoir, part industry expos, part feminist criticism. The central question: In a world that relentlessly commodifies female beauty, is Ratajkowski a victim of the system or a participant on her own terms?

On one hand, Ratajkowskis beauty brings her international fame. On the other, her work is often demeaning and occasionally dangerous: Ratajkowskis reflections on her days as a swimsuit girl are studded with tough-to-read descriptions of adult callousness towards teenage models. Even at the height of success, she feels that others look down on her, and justifiably resents watching men who have harmed her profit from her image.

Ratajkowskis writing is clean and often beautiful. But her essays often veer towards muddled. She can never decide whether taking her clothes off for the camera is a genuinely empowering experience or a grim reality of life under patriarchy; whether she wants to be respected for her body, or regardless of it. Im keeping this book on my shelf, but mostly so I can flip through Buying Myself Back without turning on the computer.

Image by The Forward

For Jewish writer Rax King, nothing is more annoying than a tasteful friend. No earworm is so catchy, no trashy gossip magazine so enthralling that these people will shrug off the mantle of correct aesthetics, she writes in her debut essay collection. Co-host of the podcast Low Culture Boil and self-declared unofficial writer-in-residence at the Cheesecake Factory, King is making her name as a champion of bad taste.

Each chapter of Tacky is an exuberant defense of a cultural artifact were not supposed to wholeheartedly like, such as the American shopping mall, Americas Next Top Model and the spinach dip at, yes, the Cheesecake Factory. In the collections standout essay, she writes of watching the reality show Jersey Shore with her father, gleefully devouring each contrived drama along with pastrami and thinly-sliced rye. Tacky will probably exercise its strongest gravitational pull on people like me, 2000s children of the suburbs nostalgic for our days trawling the boardwalk in hopes of glimpsing the Jersey Shore cast. But anyone who wants to feel less guilty about their guilty pleasures will get a kick out of this manifesto.

Image by The Forward

In 1920, the same year Prohibition came into being, Polly Adler opened her first house of ill-repute, in a two-room apartment across from Columbia University. At 20 years old, Adler had already emigrated from the Pale of Settlement to the Jewish ghetto of Brownsville, survived a rape by her factorys foreman and endured an illegal abortion. Written by Pulitzer-winning historian Debby Applegate, Madam is a sweeping account of Adlers life that, as she hosts parties for culturati like Dorothy Parker, Duke Ellington and (maybe!) Franklin Delano Roosevelt, becomes a cultural history of the Jazz Age elite.

While Its subject matter is often sultry, make no mistake Madam is a doorstopper of a book. And Applegate relies heavily on bygone slang to evoke a Jazz Age mood, which can be tiring. But Adlers rejection of sanitized, bootstrapping immigrant narratives makes for a compelling and original read, showing how striving Jewish hustlers thrived (or didnt) in New Yorks sometimes glamorous, always seedy underground.

Image by The Forward

If youre not familiar with the work of the pioneering Yiddish modernist Fradl Shtok, dont feel bad almost no one is. Born in Galicia, Shtok immigrated to the United States as a young woman and quickly began publishing novels and short stories. (Her last published story, The Fur Salesman appeared in the Forward in 1942.) But in an era largely dismissive of female artists, she languished on the fringes of New Yorks blossoming Yiddish literary scene. By the 1930s, shed vanished from public view. And while different legends circulated about her death, the truth is a sad and unspectacular one: She died in 1990 in a mental hospital after decades of institutionalization. With a new collection of Shtoks fiction, Yiddish translators Allison Schachter and Jordan D. Finkin set out to give the author the recognition she was denied in her lifetime.

Set largely in the Galician provinces of the Austro-Hungarian empire, these folkloric and wonderfully unfussy stories conjure up old-country life without succumbing to nostalgia. Yes, Shtok writes of time-honored traditions; but she also details the claustrophobic environment they create for her protagonists, often young women indulging impossible dreams as they await lives of marital drudgery. By the Mill, in which a young girl fantasizes about a non-Jewish postman while bathing with the women of her village, is a particularly evocative vignette. Most of these stories are just a few pages long, making From the Jewish Provinces a book you can put down and pick up anytime you have a few minutes to disappear into Shtoks many worlds.

Image by The Forward/Rebekah Lowin...

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From Gary Shteyngart to Emily Ratajkowski: The Jewish books you need to know this month - Forward

Mexico: how to apply for Spanish nationality if you have surnames of Sephardic Jewish origin – Market Research Telecast

Posted By on December 5, 2021

Spain allows, since 2015, that some people can acquire nationality as long as they have a surname of Jewish origin, a sector that was expelled from the European country since 1942. Thus, the mexican citizens who meet a series of established requirements will be able to access dual nationality.

According to Consulate General of Spain, the Mexican who wants to apply for that nationality, the main thing is to have the surname of Sephardic origin, that is, they are originally from that country. In the North American country, there are many surnames considered as such; therefore, you can consider applying for the benefit, in case, of course, they meet the requirements.

To know the documentation and be able to carry out the request, a special platform was enabled by the Ministry of Justice. Find out below how Mexicans with Sephardic Jewish surnames can apply for Spanish nationality.

The first thing you should know is that the Ministry of Justice has set up a platform to make the query. To enter, just CLICK HERE.

It is worth mentioning that the request for this procedure is made through the electronic platform enabled by the Ministry of Justice exclusively for this purpose. Likewise, the granting of nationality requires that the condition of Sephardic originating in Spain and the special connection with the country be justified.

According to El Espaol, there are 5,220 Sephardic surnames that can obtain it (as long as they meet all the requirements). Here is the list:

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Disclaimer: This article is generated from the feed and not edited by our team.

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Mexico: how to apply for Spanish nationality if you have surnames of Sephardic Jewish origin - Market Research Telecast

Ignored by the UN, Mizrahi Jews survived pogroms and expulsions, too – The Times of Israel

Posted By on December 5, 2021

Surrounding Cairos Tahrir Square, houses confiscated from Jewish families host Egypts top foreign embassies. To this day, ambassadors from Germany, Switzerland, and the United States work or live in homes expropriatedfrom Jews after 1948, while other formerly Jewish-owned homes became the Great Library of Cairo and government offices.

The expulsion of 850,000 mostly Mizrahi (Middle Eastern) and Sephardic Jews from Arab and Muslim countries took place before, during, and after the Holocaust. As nationalist Arab leaders aligned with Nazi Germany in the name of oil and expelling the British, Jewish communities were targeted for pauperization, expulsion, and murder.

Despite the regions centrality to Jewish history, the narratives of Middle Eastern Jews have long been considered supplemental in collective Jewish memory, as well as that of the rest of the world. One of several reasons for the marginalization of their accounts is that Mizrahi Jews developed different ways of telling their stories, according to historian and journalist Edwin Black.

The Sephardic and Mizrahi communities have always been insular, Black told The Times of Israel. At the same time, in most major Jewish organizations our collective memory is an Ashkenazic collective memory.

In 2014, Black worked with Israeli and Diaspora Jewish officials to implement an annual observance on November 30 commemorating the expulsion of Jews from the region. The remembrance is called Yom HaGirush, or Day of the Expulsion, and awareness of the commemoration is slowly spreading.

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I take a more inclusive approach when it comes to looking at what happened to the Jewish people during World War II and after, said Black, who wrote the book The Farhud: Roots of the Arab-Nazi Alliance in the Holocaust. Added Black, Hitlers war against the Jews was global.

Farhud pogrom in Baghdad, Iraq, 1941 (public domain)

Jews were an enduring presence in the Middle East and North Africa before the advent of Islam and Arabian conquests, yet today fewer than 4,000 Jews live in the region. This contrasts with post-Holocaust Europe, where 1.4 million Jews currently reside. So much for the Moroccan proverb, A market without Jews is like bread without salt.

By all accounts, the infiltration of Nazi leaders and policies into the Middle East was a tipping point in the history of the regions Jews. Beginning with Iraqs notorious Farhud pogrom on June 12, 1941, Jews in Iraq and elsewhere faced intensified persecution akin to what took place in pre-Holocaust Nazi Germany as leaders such as Iraqi prime minister Rashid Ali al-Gaylani sought to emulate Hitlers tactics.

During the two-day Farhud in Baghdad and other Jewish population centers in Iraq, Jewish homes were marked so mobs could destroy them. In the process, 180 Jews were recorded as murdered. Similar to Kristallnacht in Germany and Nazi-occupied lands, shops and religious buildings were looted and set ablaze.

Jews in Tunis, Tunisia, rounded up for forced labor, 1942 (public domain)

The word Farhud means violent dispossession in Arabic, the prophetic name given to the pogrom by Iraqi citizens. About 135,000 Jews lived in Iraq in 1941, but almost the entire community relocated to Israel within a decade of the pogrom.

The Farhud was a turning point because it was the first step in this Jewish communitys dispossession, said Black.

The Holocaust directly reached Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco, as well as Lebanon and Syria, through the Vichy France regime. In German and French documents, those lands were considered part of Europe for the purposes of the genocide.

For example, after the Nazis invaded Tunisia, some 5,000 Jewish men were sent to forced labor camps. In France, 160 Tunisian Jews were deported to the death camps. Despite the genocides reach into Tunisia, the country was home to the regions largest Jewish community outside Israel until the 1970s.

After Nazi Germanys defeat in 1945, the persecution of Middle Eastern Jews in no way slowed down. On the contrary, Arab and Muslim governments accelerated the persecution of their ancient Jewish communities, confiscating assets and passing restrictive measures. In Yemen, 82 Jews were murdered and the ancient Jewish quarter of Aden was burned to the ground in 1947.

Yemenite Jews near Aden on their way to Israel (public domain)

This is the uprooting of hundreds of thousands of Mizrahi Jews, torn brutally from their homes and native lands, wrote historian Nathan Weinstock in the preface to his book, A Very Long Presence: How the Arab World Lost Its Jews, originally published in French.

Yet this [expulsion] remains unknown and it has been denied for a lengthy period, wrote Weinstock.

At the United Nations in 1947, Arab leaders warned what Jews in their countries would face if a Jewish state were declared in Palestine.

The proposed solution might endanger a million Jews living in Muslim countries, said Heykal Pasha of Egypts delegation. The representative said the creation of a Jewish state would lead to antisemitism in Arab countrieseven more difficult to root out than the antisemitism which the Allies were trying to eradicate in Germany.

On the eve of the UN partition plan vote, Iraqi foreign minister Fadil Jamali warned that masses in the Arab world cannot be restrained. The Arab-Jewish relationship in the Arab countries will greatly deteriorate.

Jews lining up at the synagogue waiting to waive their Iraqi citizenship in order to emigrate to Israel, Baghdad, Iraq, March 1950. (Anu/courtesy of David Petel)

Throughout 1948, Arab and Muslim leaders openly emulated each other as well as the defeated Nazi Germany in their persecution of Jewish communities.

According to a May 1948 front page headline in The New York Times, Jews in grave danger in all Muslim lands. Nine-hundred thousand in Africa and Asia face wrath of their foes.

After the establishment of Israel, the bank accounts of Iraqi Jews were frozen so Zionist ambitions in Palestine could not be funded, while Jews suspected of Zionist activities were put in prison. In Egypt, hundreds of Jewish families were banished and dispossessed, and terrorists murdered 70 Jews in a series of bombings in Cairo.

The specific anti-Jewish measures and decrees varied by country, as was the case in Europe during the Holocaust. But documents prove the campaign was coordinated by the Arab League, which helpfully provided templates for member states to pass new anti-Jewish measures.

Jewish school set ablaze during a pogrom in Aden, Yemen, after UN partition plan vote in 1947. (public domain)

In 1948, the UNs Palestine Commission reported to the Security Council about powerful Arab interests, both inside and outside Palestine, [who] are defying the resolution of the General Assembly and are engaged in a deliberate effort to alter by force the settlement envisaged therein.

The amount of land confiscated from Jews forced to flee Arab and Muslim countries amounted to 40,000 square miles, or five times the size of Israel in 1948. Recent estimates value the pan-Arab confiscations as worth $250 billion, while an Israeli law passed in 2010 says any Israeli-Palestinian peace deal must include compensation for those assets.

Although the process of liquidating the regions Jewish communities took three decades, the predictions made by Fadil Jamali and Heykal Pasha in 1947 proved accurate. Through a combination of persecution, pauperization, and periodic mob violence, more than 99% of the regions Jews fled by the 1970s.

After Israels War of Independence, the UN set up a committee called UNRWA to support the relief and human development of Palestinian refugees. While more than 200 resolutions have been passed regarding Palestinian refugees, the UN has yet to acknowledge the Middle Eastern Jews who fled or were expelled from their homes.

Yemenite immigrants in a camp near Ein Shemer in 1950. (Pinn Hans/GPO)

Earlier this year, in Jerusalem, a statue of Yemenite Jews on their way to Israel was unveiled to commemorate the Departure and Expulsion of over 850,000 Jews [who] were forced from Arab Lands and Iran, as per the small monuments inscription.

According to Israeli journalist Ben-Dror Yemini, the expulsion of Middle Eastern Jews was a Jewish Nakba, or catastrophe, similar to how Palestinians describe Israels War of Independence.

During those same years [the 1940s], there was a long line of slaughters, of pogroms, or property confiscation and deportations against Jews in Islamic countries, wrote Yemini, who was born in Tel Aviv to Yemenite Jewish parents.

The war against the fledgling Jewish state ended in resounding defeat, wrote Yemini. But among those who paid the price were the hundreds of thousands of Jews in the Arab countries. Take note, not all were expelled; but those who werent knew, too, that their time was up.

In contrast to the virtual absence of Jews in todays Arab and Muslim world, the 160,000 Arabs who remained in Palestine after 1948 grew into todays community of 1,900,000 Arab Israeli citizens of the Jewish state.

Statue of Yemenite Jews to commemorate over 850,000 Jews who were forced from Arab Lands and Iran, erected on the Haas Promenade of Jerusalem in 2021 (Jerry Klinger/The Times of Israel)

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Ignored by the UN, Mizrahi Jews survived pogroms and expulsions, too - The Times of Israel

Five Israel-Infused Picture Books for Year-Round Reading – Jewish Journal

Posted By on December 5, 2021

As an emerging picture-book writer, Ive been immersing myself in the world of Jewish childrens literature for a while now. And Ive been especially happy to encounter multiple books that have broadened my own, grown-up appreciation for Israel.

For reasons perhaps better left to speculation elsewhere, Israel-infused kidlit doesnt appear on as many book lists as it should, in both mainstream and Jewish contexts. But given the current emphasis on diversity and inclusion within both broader cultural discussions and the Jewish-book world itself, stories set in Israelmany of which feature Jews of color, Sephardic and/or Mizrahi Jews, disabled Jews, and moreare particularly worth acknowledgment and amplification. Moreover, the latest data reveal that the plurality of the worlds Jews (6.93 of 15.2 million people) now lives in Israel. Lists that neglect Israel-infused books thus suffer from a dual flaw: They present incomplete pictures of contemporary Jewish life and identity while also foregoing valuable opportunities to enrich important, ongoing conversations.

Here are just five new or recent picture books worthy of attention in this regard, whether during Jewish Book Month (the 5782/2021 version of which concluded just as the Hanukkah holiday began), or throughout the year.

Erika Dreifus is the author of two books for adults (Quiet Americans: Stories and Birthright: Poems). She is currently seeking a home for her first picture-book manuscript. A fellow in the Sami Rohr Jewish Literary Institute, Erika teaches at Baruch College/CUNY. Visit her online at ErikaDreifus.com.

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Five Israel-Infused Picture Books for Year-Round Reading - Jewish Journal

What happened to the ideal of multireligious Arab modernity? – aeon.co

Posted By on December 5, 2021

My paternal grandfather Anis was born an Ottoman subject in 1885 but died an Arab citizen. He passed away in 1977 at the age of 92, two years into Lebanons civil war. Raised in Tripoli when all the Arab East lay under Ottoman sovereignty, and educated in American mission schools that dotted the Empire in its last century, Anis Khoury Makdisi became a distinguished professor of Arabic at the American University of Beirut. Best known for his works on Arabic literature, he was known as Ustadh Anis a teacher of generations of students of Arabic in the Middle Easts most renowned modern university. He was also a proud member of the Arabic language academies of Cairo and of Damascus, institutions that embodied a modern age of coexistence that shaped the Arab Muslims, Christians and Jews of my grandfathers generation.

His generation shared more than a language and a civilisation. It believed that it could revive and lead itself into a modern Arab future. For Anis, as for so many of his compatriots, religious difference posed a sectarian conundrum, but they refused to see it as an insurmountable barrier to national solidarity. Sectarianism was one problem among many others, including ignorance, corruption and tyrannical government, all of which stood for his generation of Arab intellectuals at the turn of the century as real, but not necessarily fatal, dangers.

By the time I was born in 1968, my grandfather was an emeritus professor and a pillar of Ras Beiruts small and highly educated Protestant community. But by then, as well, the optimism of the first half of the 20th century had receded dramatically. European empires had long since cynically partitioned the Ottoman Empire and created several new states including Lebanon. The Arab East, of which the small Mediterranean country was an inseparable part, witnessed the vibrant anticolonial politics of the 1950s and 60s atrophy under a variety of repressive Arab regimes during the Cold War. Lebanon had already experienced a short civil war in 1958.

But the true calamity in the Arab East had occurred a decade before that, when Palestine was shattered by Zionists bent on establishing an exclusively Jewish state. In their drive to realise this ethnoreligious fantasy, they plunged the region into instability and war. The Zionists expelled most of the Palestinian natives from their lands and homes in 1948 and confiscated their property. In response, long-established Jewish communities across the Arab East found themselves scapegoated and imperilled. Since then, Arabs and Jews have been represented as eternal ontological foes as if their bitter contemporary political struggles rehearsed allegedly ancient religious conflicts. How intriguing then to read a poem titled A Lesson from the Zionist Movement composed by my grandfather Anis and published in March 1914 in the journal Al-Kulliyya of the Syrian Protestant College today the American University of Beirut (AUB).

The opening stanzas speak to a time when the word Zionism in Arabic (Al-sahyuniyya) had not been completely tainted by the Zionist movements later deeds. The poem acknowledges the industriousness of the Zionist colonists who had arrived in Palestine from Europe at a moment of Arab decline. The lesson my grandfather drew from the Zionist movement was two-fold: the first was that the determination and agency of Zionists to revive themselves might spur the Arabs to match them in their endeavour and enterprise. This exhortation to progress perhaps reflected my grandfathers distinctly Protestant Arab modernism, which was influenced heavily by American missionary institutions and culture.

But the urgent call for the Arabs to join the caravan of modernity also reflected a ubiquitous trope of the ecumenical Arab intellectual and cultural renaissance known as the nahda. For that same Zionist determination and here was the more important lesson my grandfather drew ultimately threatened to overwhelm the Arabs who needed to stop lamenting their glorious past and overcome their present pitiable condition. Is it any wonder that the nation of Moses has settled on our shores, ploughing the land diligently, he wrote. My grandfather saw that European Jews had galvanised a Jewish awakening and then an organised Zionist movement. Yet he also alluded to the danger that the well-funded colonists posed to the Arabs of Syria who were still asleep. He was adamant that God had blessed the Arabs with a land from which valiant men had emerged and a beautiful language that transcended religious difference. It was for the Arabs to choose whether they would ultimately give way before these zealous outsiders or realise that they had it within themselves to build a free and dignified future. If you are ultimately humiliated, he concluded addressing his own Arab people, do not say it is fate and divine decree that had concealed themselves in the passage of time.

My grandfather contributed to an incongruent early Arab archive that was still trying to make sense of Zionism and its relationship to a fading Ottoman world. There was little reason for my grandfather, or for Muslims and Christians across the Levant, to take issue with the religion of Judaism itself, or the desire for a revitalised Jewish cultural or spiritual communalism. Coexistence, after all, was deeply entrenched in the Arab East. Four centuries of Ottoman rule had not introduced a shared world between Muslims and non-Muslims. Rather, it had complicated a tradition that had been in place since the rise of Islam.

Although Islamic law privileged Muslims over non-Muslims in an empire ruled by Ottoman Muslim sultans, Christian and Jewish communities were integral parts of a diverse urban fabric. They existed in every corner of the Empire and, in the Arab East, Eastern Jews and Christians of the Empire spoke Arabic. In contrast to Europe, Jews were not singled out for persecution in the Ottoman Empire, which did not seek to make all its subjects practise the same faith or even share the same language or culture. At the Empires end, its leaders persecuted and massacred Armenians and hunted down Arab nationalists. But there was no Jewish Question in the Ottoman Empire, nor was there a corresponding racialised antisemitism.

Herzl thought the native Arabs unworthy of Palestine itself

There is a reason that Zionism emerged in Europe and not in the Ottoman world. Every major Zionist leader was European, for it was in European cities and towns that the noxious combination of nationalism and antisemitism drove some Jews to dream of establishing a separate nationalist state. There was no menacing imperative driving Ottoman, Eastern or Arab Jews toward a scheme to reconstitute multireligious Palestine into a Jewish ethnoreligious nationalist state. Inevitably, that a minority of European Jews dreamt these dreams in the high era of Western racism and colonialism shaped how they thought about fulfilling them.

Theodor Herzl, the Viennese founding father of political Zionism, eventually landed on Palestine as the location of his Jewish state not simply because in it had unfolded the great stories and symbols of the Jewish faith and history; he identified it also because he belonged to a European world in which the presence of natives was thought irrelevant to consequential history and destiny. In his Zionist tract Der Judenstaat (1896), Herzl wrote: We should there form a portion of a rampart of Europe against Asia, an outpost of civilisation as opposed to barbarism. Insofar as Herzl and other leading Zionist ideologues thought about the native Arabs at all, they considered them wholly incapable of developing themselves, and certainly unworthy of Palestine itself. They viewed them as a simple, apolitical, passive peasant population, and suggested that, through economic cooperation, these Arabs would sooner or later reconcile themselves to colonial Zionism in Palestine.

Herzls fantasies lay at the heart of a well-known story of modern Zionism, which inserted itself into a polyphonic Ottoman and Arab landscape. Less known is how many Muslim, Christian and Jewish Arabs initially grappled with Zionism, trying to make sense of it, understand it, sometimes after meeting Zionist representatives who spoke of the need for friendship and cooperation between Arabs and Jews without ever disclosing the ultimate goal of the organised European-led Zionist movement in Palestine. Like my grandfather Anis, some educated Arabs were initially impressed with the apparently modern methods of the Zionists but, like him, they were quick to understand the implications for the Arabs of Palestine. Yusuf Diya al-Khalidi, the Muslim Jerusalemite and Ottoman Arab mayor of Jerusalem, sent a letter to the chief Rabbi of France in 1899, asking him to forward it to Herzl, in which he acknowledged that the idea behind Zionism was in theory a completely natural and just idea to combat European antisemitism, but its implementation in multireligious Palestine was not. Khalidi expressed his growing concern about the colonial dimension of Zionism in Palestine.

As long as the Ottoman Empire existed, the idea of an actual Jewish state seemed remote. Zionists debated among themselves the viability, necessity, form and implications of a Jewish state in Palestine, especially as those who travelled to Palestine recognised that the reality of a large native Arab population posed an obvious conundrum to the nationalist project to establish a Jewish state. The advent of more and more Jewish colonies, sometimes built on land purchased from absentee Arab landlords, began to arouse sustained Palestinian suspicion. The more the Arabs learned about Zionism, the more alarmed they grew.

After 1904, a new wave of ardent colonists from eastern Europe and Russia rejected Arabic and sought little integration into local society. In 1911, Najib Nassar, the owner and publisher of the Arabic newspaper Al Carmel in Haifa (whom my grandfather had befriended when both were students in Beirut), wrote a short treatise on Zionism. Nassar warned his readers about the modern organisation, motivation and seriousness of the political programme of Zionism. He insisted that he would never have opposed Jewish immigration had Zionism been free of political ambition. Nassar acknowledged how Herzl had worked hard to inspire Jews from around the world to embrace Zionism, but he said that the Zionists did not truly want to Ottomanise rather they wanted to build their separate nationalist state in Palestine, and so had to be resisted urgently.

Also in 1911, Ruhi al-Khalidi, the nephew of Yusuf Diya, gave a speech in the Ottoman parliament in Istanbul praising Jews but warning that Zionism would bring an imminent breakdown of relations between Arabs and Jews. And in 1913, the Cairo-based journalist and author Jurji Zaydan visited Palestine and also saw the writing on the wall. Commenting in his ecumenical journal Al-Hilal, Zaydan repeated Nassars stark warning to the Arabs about the danger of Zionist colonisation of Palestine.

For Muslim and Christian Arabs of all stations and locales, Zionism unquestionably needed translation. Almost everything about Zionism screamed foreignness: the languages the colonists and immigrants spoke; their nationalist ideology; their dress; their settlements; and the relentless efforts of its European leaders such as the German social scientist and social Darwinist Arthur Ruppin who worked with the World Zionist Organization and the Jewish National Fund to plan the scientific colonisation of Palestine to segregate Jews from Arabs. For these reasons, educated Arabs left a significant record of observations and thoughts that often distinguished between Zionists and native Jews. In a way that colonial Zionism refused to do, Ruhi al-Khalidi and my grandfather, and many others such as the Jerusalemite educator Khalil Sakakini, could distinguish between a major religion that constituted the shared foundation of the three great monotheistic religions and a political movement that emerged out of one aspect of the Jewish experience in the bitter nationalist climes of central and eastern Europe.

Arab Jews, however, had a more difficult intellectual reckoning with the early iterations of Zionism in Palestine. Zionists spoke adamantly about representing the entirety of the Jewish people. Unlike Christian and Muslim Arabs, Arab Jews wrestled intensely with Zionism as a form of self-identification, not as a foil to their own aspiring modern rejuvenation. Some native Jews saw in the idea of Jewish revival in Palestine an important avenue of Jewish communal self-expression within the Ottoman Empire that had long valorised religious diversity. Others saw it as an alien intrusion that segregated them from their fellow Arabic-speaking Muslim and Christian compatriots.

The organisation, funding and colonial confidence among many Zionists settling in Palestine instigated a cultural and institutional struggle over who truly represented the Jewish community in Palestine and what the future of Jewish life there would be like. This intra-Jewish conflict split most of the newly arrived Ashkenazi European Zionist colonists from Sephardic Jews long settled in the Ottoman Empire and, of course, from other Middle Eastern Jews who were not Ashkenazi and not necessarily Sephardic. These lines were not uniformly rigid, for there were native Ashkenazi Arab Jews born in Palestine who refused colonial Zionism, just as many Sephardic Jews who embraced it from the beginning and who worked for or donated to various Zionist institutions. Jews debated Zionism in communal councils, schools, including those of the French-funded Alliance Isralite Universelle, in the multilingual Jewish press, and in their homes. The struggle ultimately impinged upon all Eastern Jewish communities across the Maghrib and Mashriq and into Salonika and other major cities of the Empire.

Reconciliation between Arabism and Zionism wasnt a diversionary gambit to mollify increasing Arab concern

Did Jews belong to an ecumenical nation with compatriots of different religions, or fundamentally only to a political nation with other Jews: this basic question dominated the political itinerary of Zionism in Palestine. The European Zionist leaders knew their answer and worked, especially after the inaugural World Zionist Congress in Basel in 1897, to advocate for eventual Jewish sovereignty in or over Palestine. More immediately, they strove for unimpeded (and ultimately mass) immigration of European Jews to Palestine despite native Arab wishes, and they purchased land there to establish the material basis for a Jewish state in Palestine.

For Arab Jews, the question of Zionism was not so simple. The feminist journalist Esther Azhar Moyal and her husband, the journalist Shimon Moyal, as well as Nissim Malul, another journalist, struggled with the relationship between Arabism and Zionism. Unlike the European Zionists, they spoke Arabic and valued Arab culture. Like many of their Arab Jewish compatriots in Syria and Egypt, Malul and the Moyals saw in, or convinced themselves that, Zionism was a cultural and national expression that could coexist with the multireligious reality of Ottoman Palestine. To honour their commitment to a shared world, the Moyals even named their first-born son after their friend Abdullah Nadim, a childless Egyptian nationalist writer. For them, reconciliation between Arabism and Zionism did not appear to be merely a diversionary gambit to mollify increasing Arab concern, as it was for leading European Zionists. The latter included Nahum Sokolow, who visited Beirut and Damascus in 1914 to meet prominent Arab intellectuals and public figures, and Victor Jacobson, who as a manager of the Zionist Anglo-Palestine Bank in Istanbul, sought to convince a young Arab journalist Asad Daghir of the possibility of cooperation between Arabs and Jews.

Malul, for example, wrote in 1913 that in the role of the Semitic nation we must base our nationalism in Semitism and not blur with European culture, and through Arabic we can found a real Hebrew culture. But if we bring into our culture European foundations then we will simply be committing suicide. And yet Malul committed himself to working for a European-dominated Zionism. He joined the Zionist Office in Jaffa in 1911, at the same time as he was a correspondent for the Arabic Cairo-based newspaper Al-Muqattam. Together with the Moyals, he consistently sought to rebut anti-Zionism in the Arabic press and to reassure Arab readers that Zionism was indeed compatible with Arab national aspirations. On the eve of the First World War, however, revivified Hebrew, not Arabic or Turkish, was rapidly being made the dominant language of the multilingual Jewish community in Palestine that was itself rapidly coalescing around a Jewish national identity that clearly excluded Palestinians.

Whatever their early admiration for aspects of Zionist modernity, Muslim and Christian Arabs banished them from their collective memory after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire following the First World War. The Balfour Declaration of November 1917, followed by the imposition of a British mandate in Palestine in 1920, consecrated an overtly colonial phase of Zionism. Both the British foreign secretary Arthur Balfours letter to the Zionist leader Walter Rothschild and Britains stated policy openly privileged the foreign European political project of a Jewish national home over self-determination for native Arabs. Although British colonial officials proclaimed that they held the scales of justice in balance, they systematically drove apart Arabs and Jews in Palestine. Britain rejected the possibility of a secular national Palestinian identity, and ignored or crushed every instance of Palestinian resistance that sought to demonstrate such an identity.

Colonial Zionism, meanwhile, waged an undeclared but open war on Arab Palestine. Zionists lobbied the British openly to allow unfettered Jewish immigration to Palestine irrespective of native wishes to lay the demographic foundation for their exclusive ethnoreligious nationalist state. They wanted to turn the native majority into a minority on its own land. The brutal numbers operate against us, confided Chaim Weizmann, the Russian-born leader of the Zionist movement, to Balfour in 1918. Weizmanns private letters express his racist contempt for the Arab and disdain for anti-Zionist native Jews: there were too many Palestinians in Palestine to create a Jewish state and not enough native Jews who were committed to colonial Zionism. Weizmann worried that the Arab problem might yet derail the territorial and political Zionist project in Palestine. He believed that whereas friendship and understanding between Arabs and Jews were possible, they were conditional and secondary to the Zionist conquest of Palestine, and on a complete national separation between Arabs and Jews. With British colonial protection, the Zionists built up segregated Jewish political, immigration, educational, labour, economic, land and social organisations. With each tangible proof of its success, colonial Zionism foreclosed the future of Arab Jews as a viable part of the Arab political community beginning but not ending in Palestine.

The tragedy of Arab Jews was that their Arabness was instrumentalised by colonial Zionism

Malul began to work for the Zionist National Committee following the establishment of the pro-Zionist British mandate that lasted until 1948. The Zionist leadership in Palestine sought to collect information on the Arabs of Palestine and to propagandise among them. Like an increasing number of other Arab Jews, Malul cast his lot irrevocably with colonial Zionism. As individuals, they may have been socially intimate with other Arabs of different faiths, and even loved Arabic. Yet they also embraced the central historical premise of a collective colonial Zionism: that Palestine was the national land of the Jewish people. They located themselves in a political and racial hierarchy that consistently placed Ashkenazi European Jews on top, followed by the ambivalently incorporated Sephardic and other Middle Eastern Jews, and finally the non-Jewish native population that had no real place within the Zionist project.

During the 1930s and 40s, the Zionist paramilitary Irgun bombed markets, public buildings and cinemas in a campaign of terror. Its most notorious act was the massacre of Palestinian civilians at Deir Yassin in April 1948. The Irgun created a unit made of Arab and Arabic-speaking Eastern Jews to infiltrate and terrorise the Arabs of Palestine. Colonial Zionism used Arab Jews to study, observe, inform on, manage and eventually help to dominate their former compatriots. And yet colonial Zionism, paradoxically, was premised on the total rejection of Jewish Arab being.

The tragedy of Arab Jews was that their Arabness was instrumentalised by colonial Zionism, which denied the legitimacy of their Arab Jewish identity. They were made and made themselves settler-colonials in a sea of contradictory circumstances. After the Nakba (the disaster of Palestinian displacement) of 1948, the Ashkenazi-dominated state sought to de-Arabise the mass of Arab Jewish immigrants who arrived in the newly created state of Israel. David Ben-Gurion, the first prime minister of Israel, shuddered at the thought that Arab Jews would turn the new state into another Levantine country populated by what he and many other European colonists saw as inferior primitive Eastern Jews. We are alien to them and they are alien to us, Ben-Gurion said of these Jews whom he also considered too close to Arab culture, and Jews only in the sense that they are not non-Jews.

Although colonial Zionism demanded the historically novel nationalist separation of Arab and Jew, its leaders publicly proclaimed that there was every possibility of rapprochement with the Arabs outside of Palestine so long as they acquiesced to the abandonment of Palestine and the Palestinians. Weizmann, for example, hoped to come to terms with the Hedjaz Arabs, who are more interesting than the local baystryuks [from , Russian for bastard]. As the scale and political ambition of Zionist colonisation in Palestine became more apparent, however, so did the question of Palestine become a core element of modern Arab identity.

In 1919, the desperate Hashemite Prince Faysal was willing to sign a treaty of friendship between Arabs and Jews in London apparently drafted by Weizmann. Faysal was perhaps taken in by Weizmanns assurances that no harm would come to the local Palestinian population. More likely, he wanted the Zionists to support his political ambitions in neighbouring Syria. A year later, the fantasy of this kind of friendship, unmoored as it was from the reality in Palestine and from the overwhelming sentiment expressed by Syrians more broadly in opposition to colonial Zionism, was shattered by Arab-Jewish clashes in Jerusalem precipitated by Zionist colonisation. By the time the great anticolonial revolt against the British mandate in Palestine erupted in 1936, Arab attempts to distinguish Jews from Zionists were increasingly overwhelmed by facts on the ground. The relentless Zionist insistence that a diverse Jewish people constituted a singular ethnoreligious political community made such a distinction both utterly vital and immensely difficult to sustain. Violent anti-Jewish Arab reactions to violent colonial Zionism and Western imperialism exacerbated a new and growing chasm between Arabs and Jews. History masqueraded as destiny.

My grandfather was travelling in the United States in 1948 when the Nakba occurred. It is not clear if Ustadh Anis remembered his poem of decades earlier; the memoir in which he recounts his trip does not mention it. Instead, he recalled his bewilderment at the extent of Zionist propaganda in the US over the question of Palestine. While en route back to Lebanon, he was dismayed to hear about the assassination of the Swedish UN mediator Count Folke Bernadotte by the Zionists. For almost all Arabs of that moment, whether they were Muslim or Christian, Sunni or Shii, poor or rich whether they lived in Morocco, Syria, Iraq, Yemen or Saudi Arabia Zionism had become anathema to the same extent that the Palestinian cause (al qadiyya al-filastiniyya) became a unifying idea.

The success of Zionism threatened the foundations of secular Arab unity and identity

My grandfather, for example, noted in his classic Literary Trends in the Modern Arab World (first published in the early 1950s), that Palestine constitutes a general Arab national cause and as such Arabic literature in every part of the Arab world expresses deep sympathy for Palestine and is preoccupied by her fate. For the minority of Jewish Arabs who remained in the Arab world after 1948, the identification Palestine was immensely complicated by Zionist efforts to cajole them to return to Palestine, by propaganda, and by anti-Jewish scapegoating and violence in places such as Iraq. But it remained evident a fragile thread to a past and possible future of solidarity that transcends ethnoreligious nationalism.

This Arab consciousness of the calamity of Zionism stemmed not from inveterate religious hatred on the part of Arabs against Jews, but rather from a profound shared sense of an unbearable and still ongoing injustice that demands restitution. After 1948, Arab leaders could not contemplate an open alliance with Zionism as Prince Faysal had done 30 years earlier. Some Arab intellectuals such as Constantine Zurayk frankly admitted the modernity of the Zionist project in Palestine, but saw it as a sinister system that had to be studied and defeated.

The success of Zionism threatened the foundations of secular Arab unity and identity because it privileged an ethnoreligious nationalism in a region rich in religious pluralism. This did not stop secret collusion between Arab leaders such as Faysals brother King Abdullah of Jordan and the Zionists, nor eventually, under massive US pressure and after several more wars broke the back of Arab armies, peace treaties between fiercely antidemocratic Arab potentates dependent upon the US and nakedly racist Israeli leaders. My grandfather Aniss death in 1977 occurred in the same year as the Egyptian president Anwar Sadats hugely controversial trip to Jerusalem, where he was met by Israels prime minister (and unrepentant former Irgun member) Menachem Begin who rejected completely Palestinian self-determination. When Sadat was assassinated a few years later in Cairo, celebratory gunfire erupted in Beirut where my grandfather had lived and died.

Arabs had long coexisted with compatriots of the Jewish faith; but that was fundamentally different from acquiescing to, let alone being compelled to accept, an ethnoreligious state violently built on what had always been, and what remains, a multireligious land. Like virtually all other Arabs, my grandfather Anis recognised the enormity of the injustice perpetrated in Palestine in 1948 but he also wondered if the Arabs were then sufficiently prepared, or in a position, to successfully reverse this injustice. He wrote that Palestine has been torn from their hands. Now they struggle to regain portions of it. Should we issue a call to arms, or say that time will ultimately rule in favour of justice because time is the fairest of judges?

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What happened to the ideal of multireligious Arab modernity? - aeon.co

National Museum Of American Jewish History Renamed "The Weitzman" In Recognition Of Significant Gifts From Entrepreneur And Philanthropist…

Posted By on December 5, 2021

PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 2, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Luxury shoe designer Stuart Weitzman has made a transformative gift to the National Museum of American Jewish History (NMAJH), in recognition of which, the Museum has been renamed the Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History, or "The Weitzman".

Stuart Weitzman Makes Significant Gift to National Museum of American Jewish History

This gift builds on many years of prior support from Weitzman for the landmark institution on historic Independence Mall in Philadelphia and, importantly, seeds the Museum's endowment.

"I have been inspired by the NMAJH since my first visit in 2012," Weitzman said. "I was drawn to their iconic artifacts that demonstrate the very foundations of religious freedom in America. We are truly thrilled to be able to make this gift to the Museum and humbled that this support will help to ensure that stories of American Jewish history are told and preserved for generations to come."

In 2013, Stuart Weitzman was the first person featured in the Museum's "Dreamers and Doers Speaker Series," which tells the stories of Jewish individuals who embody an entrepreneurial, philanthropic, and uniquely American spirit. In 2018, his support enabled the Museum to highlight its "First Families" Gallery which details the lives of early Jewish settlers in colonial era America.

This gift also effectively concludes the quiet phase of the Museum's capital campaign, assuring the Museum's future as the preeminent national institution exploring and celebrating the intersection of American ideals and Jewish values in the birthplace of American democracy on Philadelphia's historic Independence Mall.

"The Weitzman NMAJH now has the strong financial footing to continue exploring and interpreting the American Jewish experience, and we are the only museum in the nation dedicated to that mission," said the Museum's Board Co-Chair, Sharon Tobin Kestenbaum. "At a time when so many issues divide us as Americans, this gift ensures that our Museum can be a welcoming beacon for all visitors to explore and celebrate how Jews and our nation's diverse communities have contributed to our country. Through exhibitions and programs supported by our now-growing endowment, thanks to Stuart Weitzman, we are in a strong position to do this important work."

The Weitzman gift will enable the Museum to purchase its James Polshek-designed building from philanthropist Mitchell Morgan and his family. Morgan is a former Trustee who generously provided the funds to allow NMAJH to emerge from its Chapter 11 Reorganization. The Morgan Family, along with a number of the Museum's other benefactors have also forgiven significant loans to complete the institution's emergence from Chapter 11.

"Stuart Weitzman exemplifies the American Dream," said Dr. Misha Galperin, the Museum's CEO. "He created a business that reached the highest echelon and is now building on his success to serve future generations. He exemplifies what it means to give back with generosity that follows in the Jewish and American traditions of philanthropy. With this historic gift, Stuart has helped secure our museum's future."

"We as the Museum's leaders are grateful for this commitment from Weitzman. We look forward to highlighting the Jewish contribution to America, the stories of aspiration, innovation, and leadership. Stories of American Jews you've heard ofAlbert Einstein, Estee Lauder, Jonas Salk, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Steven Spielberg, Sandy Koufaxand stories of those you haven't," said Phil Darivoff, Chairperson Emeritus & Trustee. "The United States has given American Jews the freedom and opportunity to create, contribute, and change the world. Today's news makes me confident that our treasured Museum is on track to continue educating and inspiring future generations."

Stuart Weitzman grew up apprenticing under his father, Seymour Weitzman, at the Mr. Seymour shoe factory in Haverhill, Massachusetts. In 1986, he launched his namesake company, which went on to become a leader in the world of designer shoes. Weitzman's designs, recognized for combining fashion and function, are frequently found on Hollywood red carpets. In 2018, Weitzman retired after more than five decades in the footwear industry.

He remembers his time in Philadelphia very fondly. His deep connection to the city began when he was an undergraduate at The University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. Currently, he lectures and holds classes there; and in 2019, the University named its School of Design after Weitzman.

In addition to Weitzman's support of Jewish causes, educational institutions, and medical research, he is currently working with Sephardic Jews from around the world to build a museum celebrating Spanish-Jewish history in Spain, the country in which his footwear has been produced for over 50 years.

Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, the Museum has been operating virtually with a robust online programming schedule that attracted millions of participants. With a clear financial path forward, it is now preparing for a 2022 reopening and working on the strategic plan for the next 10 years.

On Monday, December 6 at 6 pm ET, the Museum will host a "Miracle on the Mall" celebration honoring the key supporters who made this moment possible, including Weitzman, who will participate virtually.

"It really does feel like a miracle," said Lyn M. Ross, Museum Trustee, Honorary Chair, and co-founder, who, along with her husband George Ross z"l, has been the institution's greatest champion throughout the decades. The building, which is named for the Rosses, will retain that designation as the Museum itself takes on the Weitzman name.

"Stuart is truly fulfilling the mitzvah of tzedakah," said Board Co-Chair Joseph S. Zuritsky, referring to the Hebrew word meaning righteousness, of which philanthropy is an important component. "He is creating a legacy that will ensure that our American stories of Jewish identity and heritage will be celebrated for generations to come."

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Stuart Weitzman

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ABOUT THE WEITZMAN NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN JEWISH HISTORY

Established in 1976, and situated on Philadelphia's Independence Mall, the Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History is the only museum in the nation dedicated exclusively to exploring and interpreting the American Jewish experience. The Weitzman NMAJH presents educational programs and experiences that preserve, explore, and celebrate the history of Jews in America. Its purpose is to connect Jews more closely to their heritage and to inspire in people of all backgrounds a greater appreciation for the diversity of the American Jewish experience and the freedoms to which Americans aspire.https://nmajh.org

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Larry David has never been more Jewish than in this seasons Curb – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on December 5, 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.

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Larry David has never been more Jewish than in this seasons Curb - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Guest column: Lifting us to a place of miracles, brightness and hope – Victoria Advocate

Posted By on December 5, 2021

Tonight, we will light the sixth candle of the Hannukah Menorah. Its a season of joy, illumination, resolve and family celebrations. Its the time of year that takes me down memory lane to my childhood, when my siblings and I were immersed for eight straight days in the Hannukah spirit with a passion that still warms my heart today. We attended the Menorah lighting on 5th Avenue, near Central Park, in New York City as Mayor Ed Koch shared words of encouragement, we prayed with traditional melodies at the Brooklyn Synagogue of Rabbi Menachem Schneerson of blessed memory, and my mom took us to FAO Schwarz to purchase toys with our Chanukah Gelt; it was marvelous.

Its eight days that uplift us out of the normal chaos and grime of day-to-day life and takes us to a place of miracles, brightness, hope and holiness. Its a time that etches in our mind that fighting for a better tomorrow is always worthwhile.

Chanukahs commemoration is twofold. It celebrates the victory of Judah the Maccabee over the Syrian Greek army who sought to force Jewry to assimilate to Greek culture. It also commemorates the procurement of one small jug of untainted oil needed for the Holy Temple candelabra. They only had enough oil for one night and it lasted, miraculously, for eight. One can ask: why do the ancient sages of the Talmud make such a big deal about finding pure oil, isnt it possible, even probable, that despite their greatest efforts to defile all the oil the Greeks missed one jug?

The Hassidic Masters teach that the miracle of Hannukah wasnt just finding the pure oil, but the fact that the Jews searched for it. After a grueling three years of urban warfare, a Temple in ruins, mourning the loss of so many Jewish brothers and sisters, Judah and the surviving warriors couldve chosen to relax a bit and acquire fresh pressed olive oil in a few days, or even a few weeks, and rededicate the Temple then. They didnt. They understood then and it still rings true today that the survival of good people is dependent on their belief in, and unwavering commitment to, making the world a better place now. The forces of darkness do not take breaks, they arent chilled; they are on fire, working tirelessly, day and night, to pervert society and to divide humanity. Darkness is the absence of light, so the only way to eliminate darkness is to be a beacon of light, to outshine the forces of evil and, like Judah the Maccabee, to value the urgency and step up today to ensure the brightness of tomorrow. Its easy to surrender to a dark reality, this is how it is; we need to live with it, but its rewarding to the soul to be the antidote to this ailment and be the miracle, be the light, be the societal change of goodness.

In the words of Nelson Mandela A bright future beckons. The onus is on us, through hard work, honesty, and integrity, to reach for the stars.

Happy Hannukah!

Rabbi Chaim Bruk is co-CEO and spiritual leader of Chabad Lubavitch of Montana. He can be reached at rabbi@jewishmontana.com.

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Guest column: Lifting us to a place of miracles, brightness and hope - Victoria Advocate


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