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Frances Trump is dividing the community – Australian Jewish News

Posted By on November 16, 2021

AHEAD of Frances elections next year, ric Zemmour could become the countrys first major Jewish presidential candidate in the post-war Fifth Republic era. Recent polls have him pulling 16 per cent of the vote, placing him among the top challengers to President Emmanuel Macron.

But theres a catch: Zemmour, the far-right journalist, public intellectual and consistent provocateur, hasnt announced that he is officially running yet. And most of Frances Jews want nothing to do with him, for various reasons.

He is a far-right politician and as such a danger to the republic. He may be Jewish, but he is not the voice of the Jewish community, said Joel Mergui, president of the Consistoire, a centrist French-Jewish organisation.

Zemmour, 63, has cultivated a strong conservative following through a staunch nationalist and anti-immigrant philosophy that describes French society as under siege from Muslim and other foreign influence.

A woman walks past a poster of Eric Zemmour headlined Our Trump in Biarritz, in southwestern France, last month. Photo: AP Photo/Bob Edme

Some of his language has even led to hate speech convictions and fines in 2011 he called Muslim immigrants invaders and in 2016 said that most drug dealers are Arab or African.

Some of his critics say his own heritage belies a hypocrisy: his parents are Sephardic immigrants from Algeria.

Until now, French-Jewish leaders and organisations have not spent much energy responding to Zemmours rhetoric, but his sudden meteoric rise to the top tier of the election polls despite the fact that he remains lukewarm on a political career in interviews just months before the vote has forced them to take public stands on the would-be candidate.

His approval ratings match, and according to some polls, exceed those of Marine Le Pen, who received a third of the vote in the final round of the 2017 elections as leader of the similarly right-wing National Rally party.

And the French-Jewish opinion on Zemmour from across the political spectrum has been complicated, in large part because of his views on a number of specifically Jewish issues.

ZEMMOUR, who has published several best-selling books on politics and society, has spoken openly about his Jewish identity, saying that he goes to synagogue occasionally where he wears a kippah. Nonetheless, he appears to support the idea of banning the donning of a kippah in public, along with other religious signs.

In a debate in 2016, Zemmour described wearing a kippah as a religious selfie, saying that having one on is to impose ones religion on others. Asking Jews to wear them, he added, was akin to asking them to wear the yellow stars that the Nazis forced on them during the Holocaust.

Even more offensive to many French Jews is his defence of a controversial theory, according to which the Nazi-collaborationist Vichy government sacrificed foreign Jews living in France to save native French ones during the Holocaust. Accepted by some historians, it is hotly contested by others, who say the Vichy government also betrayed Jews with French citizenship.

Vichy protected French Jews, he said recently on CNews, a French Fox News equivalent.

Zemmour has also cast doubt on the innocence of Alfred Dreyfus, the French-Jewish army captain of German descent whose conviction on trumped-up espionage claims subsequently overturned was widely condemned as antisemitic. On a TV panel in 2020, Zemmour said even if Dreyfus was innocent, he may have been targeted for being German, not for being Jewish.

Zemmour can even irk some far-right French Jews who would figure to be some of his biggest supporters. Last year, he said on CNews that if Israel has nuclear weapons, Iran should not be denied them.

The French Jewish Defence League, a far-right group, in a statement said that although it welcomes regularly and defends Eric Zemmours courage against the Islamists, his remarks on Iran show ignorance or bad faith that discredit his assertions.

These takes, along with his broader ideology, have turned the majority of the French Jewish establishment and prominent French Jewish figures against him.

Hes not a useful idiot hes a useful Jew and the new leader of Holocaust denial in our country, wrote Francis Kalifat, the head of the CRIF umbrella group of French-Jewish communities, in an op-ed in French media.

Famed Nazi hunter Serge Klarsfeld and his son Arno wrote earlier this year in an op-ed in Le Monde that Zemmour tramples national values as well as Jewish ones, and declared that Jews must fight the far-right.

Bernard-Henri Levy, the well-known Jewish centre-left philosopher, penned an op-ed in Le Point last month in which he drew parallels between Zemmour and former US president Donald Trump, arguing both were inadequate choices for anyone who cares about Jewish values.

Five years ago, I told American Jews tempted by Trumpism: Allying with it could be suicidal. I now say the same to Jews in France tempted by the nefarious simplism of Eric Zemmour, who denies Jewish generosity, Jewish vulnerability, Jewish humanism and its foreignness, Levy wrote.

Like Trump, Zemmour has leaned into a narrative of fear driven by the concept of ethnic replacement.

There is a danger our country will die, its population being replaced by another one, its civilisation likewise replaced, he said in an October 1 interview, in which he highlighted as Trump did during his campaign the difference between himself and the career politicians facing him, such as Le Pen and Macron, Frances centrist president, who is projected to win despite holding an approval rating lower than 40 per cent.

BUT Zemmour also has his share of Jewish supporters. The Tribune Juive, one of the communitys oldest publications, recently published a series of op-eds by people who either support Zemmour or feel compelled to hit back against his Jewish establishment critics.

In one of the articles, William Fitoussi, a conservative insurance agent from Paris, called Zemmour the only politician seeking to end the inflow of millions, including the murderers of their brethren from the community.

CRIF and Levys revisiting Eric Zemmours Jewish identity is so nauseating that I couldnt believe it at first, wrote Elie Sasson, a Jewish dentist from the Paris area and columnist for the Tribune Juive in an op-ed published on October 17. They are signalling his excommunication because hes not a good leftist Jew.

Rodolphe Sebbah, a photographer from Paris, in another Tribune Juive op-ed, lambasted who he called the VIPs on the left such as Levy, who admired former president Franois Mitterrand despite his personal friendship with the high-ranking Vichy official and Nazi collaborator Ren Bousquet.

Sarah Cattan wrote in the Tribune that Zemmour has abject views that need debating, but not through his Jewish identity.

Jean-Marie Le Pen a notorious Holocaust denier and vocal antisemite who founded the National Rally party that his daughter now leads is a firm supporter of Zemmour as well.

The only difference between Eric and me, is that hes Jewish, the elder Le Pen told Le Monde in an interview published last month. Its difficult to label him a Nazi or fascist. This gives him greater liberty.

Commenting on this, Patrick Klugman, a Jewish Socialist Party lawmaker in Pariss city council, said earlier this month on RCJ radio, It is a historical fact that saddens me no end but that I cannot hide: The hero of the French far-right identifies as a Jewish person, and his Judaism is seducing the worst antisemites.

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Frances Trump is dividing the community - Australian Jewish News

The To Do List, Week of November 12, 2021 | The Hill is Home – The Hillishome

Posted By on November 16, 2021

Its dark so very early, but that just means you have to start putting up your holiday lights NOW! If youre decorating for the holiday season and want to be added to the Light Up The Hill map, send an email to info@thehillishome.com. Speaking of lighting up, add November 20 to your calendar The Capitol Hill Holiday tree lighting ceremony is happening on that day at 5:30 p.m., Eastern Market Metro Plaza.

Consider shopping for your holiday presents early. COVID-19 has messed around globally with supply chains so the earlier you get your orders in, the better. We recommend two local portals to help you with your shopping: Districtly Local and Shop in the District. By the way, our friend Leah at Hills Kitchen is now open on Mondays, through Christmas Eve.

TONIGHT! RIGHT NOW! Get to The Yards until 8:30 p.m. to catch Side Yards. Magicians, contortionists, and other performers with feats of daring will make you ooh, aaah and wow. Click here for more info.

If youre looking for an early or mid-week thing to do, why not catch a live show? If youre not totally comfortable, make sure you check the vaccination requirements at the venue through DC Music Live.

If you want to celebrate all things Britney Spears especially her freedom from her conservatorship you need to get to Wunder Garten on Saturday, November 13, 9 p.m.-1 a.m. for The Britney Ball. More information and tickets here.

On November 13, A Tour of Her Own will host Herstory Together, a one-day event of District womens history. For more details and to look over the days agenda, click here.

The Smithsonian Native Museum of the American Indians Native Cinema showcase is a great way to celebrate November, Native Heritage month. From 12-18 November, watch some of the best that Native moviemaking has to offer. Click here for more.

The Downtown Holiday Market starts on November 19 and since you can pretty much walk there from the Hill, it goes in the Plan Ahead section. From noon to 8 p.m. every day through December 23 (except for November 25 and December 6), enjoy local arts and crafts, performances, and the feeling of joy and merriment as the city transforms into a holiday wonderland. To check out the full list of makers and activities, visit downtownholidaymarket.com

The United States Botanic Garden holiday display is on view unofficially now, but the whole tableau will open officially on November 24 through January 2. The display also has different agricultural dioramas created by Applied Imagination for over 15 years. For more information, click here.

If you are one of those sweet lambs for whom Christmas cannot get here fast enough, you can now buy tickets toEnchant Christmas at Nationals Park. The dazzling light display and Christmas light maze follows the adventures of the Mischievous Elf. Enchant Christmas kicks off November 26 and tickets start at $29 per child. For more informationclick here,and to get tickets,click here.

Light Yards returns for its sixth year! Visit your favorite spots along Yards Park and enjoy the beautiful light displays. The fun starts December 1 and lasts through New Years Day, 2022.

Have you ever wanted to learn more about the past, present and future ofUnion Station? On November 3, December 1 the Union Station Redevelopment Corporation will hold a special virtual session all about this beloved and busy hub. Sign uphere. (Please note the change of date.)

The Districts Holiday Boat Parade is on December 4 from 6-9 p.m.and you are invited! The boats will parade and there will be an incredible fireworks display at the end. The show is free and no registration is required unless youd like your boat to be part of the parade; if so, click here to register.

Are you a big chess fan? The Boro at Tysons is holding an all-levels chess game called The Boros Gambit. The tricky fun will happen on November 13. For more details and tickets (if youre playing) click here.

Put it on the calendar RIGHT NOW! TheSmithsonian Arts and Industries Buildingis reopening on November 20 and there is a host of incredible activities to mark this special occasion, starting with theFUTURES REMIXEDthree-day festival, November 19-21. Follow theirInstagramfor updates andRSVP hereto the FUTURES REMIXED festival.

Want a novel way to spend the holidays? Why not book a reservation for a boat ride along the Potomac? Have togetherness, great food and dancing with a City Cruise! For more information, click here.

Tired of dating apps and getting set up on blind dates? Why not try The Matzoball! The large party and speed dating event, which is geared toward Jewish singles but everyone is invited to attend, will take place on December 24 at Decades. More info and tickets here.___________________________________________Hey there! Do you appreciate THIH? Why not send us a little something viaVenmoorPayPal? (Its either this or forcing you guys to subscribe to our Substack or Patreon.)

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The To Do List, Week of November 12, 2021 | The Hill is Home - The Hillishome

JCB failed to do checks over potential use of equipment in Palestine – The Guardian

Posted By on November 16, 2021

JCB, the British tractor firm, has been found by a UK government watchdog to have failed to carry out due diligence human rights checks over the potential use of its equipment to demolish homes in the occupied Palestinian territories (OPT).

The watchdog ruled: It is unfortunate that JCB, which is a leading British manufacturer of world-class products, did not take any steps to conduct human rights due diligence of any kind despite being aware of alleged adverse human rights impacts and that its products are potentially contributing to those impacts.

But the watchdog dismissed claims that JCB failed to use its leverage to persuade its exclusive Israeli distributor, Comasco, not to allow its equipment to be used to bulldoze homes. It said there was no conclusive evidence that the JCB equipment used in the bulldozing had been supplied by the distributor, or how JCB could influence the distributor.

The findings were published by the UK National Contact Point (UK NCP), which is charged with assessing whether firms are meeting OECD guidelines for multinational enterprises on human rights. The UK NCP is staffed by officials from the Department for International Trade, and is independent of the OECD.

The case marks an interesting test of the human rights duties of UK firms. It was brought by Lawyers for Palestinian Human Rights in December 2019 so has taken nearly two years to reach a judgment point. The lawyers claim they have a record of JCB products being involved in at least 60 out of the 266 demolitions in one year.

In its ruling, the UK NCP said: The scale of alleged adverse human rights impact and the evidence of JCB products used in demolition of houses in OPT are sufficient reasons to carry out an assessment of actual and potential human rights risks and impacts, even if JCB believed that those human rights impacts cannot be linked to the company.

The UK NCP said JCB should carry out human rights due diligence to assess actual and potential human rights impacts. It also urged JCB to set out a plan on how it will integrate and act upon the findings of its due diligence including how impacts will be addressed if adverse human rights impacts are identified in its supply chain. This process should go beyond simply identifying and managing material risks to the enterprise. As the human rights risks may change over time, due diligence should be a regular, ongoing exercise, which should be part of JCBs policy statement on human rights. It also called for a human rights policy to drawn up by the firm.

The Foreign Office, consulted by the UK NCP, has frequently said demolitions amount to a breach of international humanitarian law in all but the most exceptional of circumstances.

At issue in the case is a dispute about the extent of the obligations that the OECD guidelines place on firms to ensure their products are not used in breach of international humanitarian law.

JCB argued that Comasco was not the only supplier of JCB excavators and it did not have any direct management or financial control over the firm.

It told the inquiry that the machines could have been purchased secondhand from sellers within Israel, from neighbouring countries via the internet or international auctions or brought in by sea. The inquiry accepted that the products could have been secondhand, and due to the complex supply chain, JCB could not directly influence their use.

But it urged JCB to engage with companies with whom it has a business relationship on their human rights policies, uncover any potential human rights issues and ensure there is no risk of adverse human rights impacts in its supply chain.

It added: JCBs response that as it has no control over its products once they have been sold to Comasco and that they are not responsible for the adverse human rights impact caused by their products does not reflect the spirit of the OECD guidelines on responsible business conduct.

The report pointed out that since February 2020, JCB had been aware of the UN office of the high commissioner for human rights database, which has put JCB on the list of business enterprises involved in listed activities in the occupied Palestinian territories that may have raised particular human rights impacts.

JCB says it is challenging its inclusion on that list.

JCB said: We are very pleased that the UK NCP has firmly rejected the various allegations made by the Lawyers for Palestinian Human Rights that JCB either contributes to, is responsible for, or is otherwise linked in any way to adverse human rights abuses in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, either directly or indirectly, and/or that JCB has failed to mitigate or prevent such adverse human rights impacts. In particular, the NCP conclusively found that the alleged human rights impacts cannot be linked to JCBs business operations or contractual arrangements. The process has now concluded.

The firm said it welcomed and would consider the NCP recommendation that JCB regularly conducts human rights due diligence and prepares a separate policy affirming its commitment to human rights.

The director of Lawyers for Palestinian Human Rights, Tareq Shrourou, said: JCBs board of directors and senior management must consider the real-life repercussions of its noncompliance with core human rights provisions of the OECD guidelines. A 14-year-old Palestinian girl told Save the Children in a vivid quote: My old home was a dream come true as I always dreamt of living in a house with my own bedroom. But this dream was shattered the day that the yellow bulldozers arrived. I see [those bulldozers] in my nightmares. I felt like all hope went down with my home.

The UK NCP says it will seek an update from both sides in a years time to see how its recommendations have been followed.

The headline of this article was amended on 12 November 2021 to more accurately reflect the watchdogs findings.

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JCB failed to do checks over potential use of equipment in Palestine - The Guardian

Hanukkah preview of ’52 Shabbats’: brisket, latkes and challah fritters J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on November 16, 2021

The Hanukkah season is one of delight for young and old. For my children, it was the excitement of lighting the candles, opening gifts, spinning the dreidel and singing songs. For the adults, it was time spent connecting and remembering our traditions with family and friends and, of course, eating foods associated with the holiday.

Different Jewish communities and families have other traditions, but ours has been brisket with lots of sauce to eat with potato latkes (pancakes). Pomegranate Molasses Brisket is a family favorite and adds Middle and Near Eastern flavors to an Ashkenazi standard.

Eat the latkes with the brisket and sauce, or make them a meal on their own with lots of applesauce and sour cream. I also like to serve them drizzled with zhug (Yemeni hot sauce), amba (Israeli-Iraqi fermented mango sauce) and/or harissa (North African hot sauce). All three sauces are available online or in specialty markets, or make your own with recipes from my 2011 column at tinyurl.com/make-your-own-sauces.

Challah Fritters with Sweet Tahini Sauce are another blend of Jewish traditions, riffing on the fried doughnuts and fritters of Israel and elsewhere in the Middle East and North Africa.

All three recipes are adapted for space and style from my new cookbook, 52 Shabbats: Friday Night Dinners Inspired by a Global Jewish Kitchen, which will be published next month and is now available for preorder.

In a large heavy pot, heat 2 Tbs. oil over medium-high heat. Sear the brisket on all sides until well browned, 5 to 7 minutes a side. If the piece of brisket is too big for the pan, cut the meat in half and sear it in batches. Transfer the brisket to a plate and set aside.

Add the remaining 2 Tbs. of oil to the pot. Add the onions and saut, stirring up any browned bits from bottom of the pot, until softened, 5 to 7 minutes. Add the garlic and saut until golden, 1 to 2 minutes. Add the carrots and saut for 1 minute. Add the tomatoes with their liquid, cup of pomegranate molasses, 1 Tbs. tomato paste, the brown sugar, and the remaining tsp. salt and tsp. pepper. Stir well, bring to a simmer, and add the brisket, fat side up, along with any accumulated juices from the plate.

Cover the pot and lower the heat to medium-low to keep it at a simmer. Cook for 3 to 4 hours, basting with the liquid every 30 minutes and turning the meat every 60 minutes. If the liquid begins to evaporate, add cup of water. Start testing for doneness at 3 hours. The brisket is ready when a dinner fork can slide through the meat without any resistance. Transfer the meat to a plate and let rest for at least 20 minutes before shredding or cutting it against the grain into -inch slices. (Chilling the uncut brisket and sauce separately overnight will deepen the meats flavor and make it easier to cut.)

Once the brisket is removed, stir in the lemon juice, remaining 1 Tbs. tomato paste and remaining 2 Tbs. pomegranate molasses to the pot. Simmer uncovered over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally, until the liquid is reduced by about half or until thick enough to use as a sauce, 10 to 15 minutes. Taste and adjust the seasonings by adding salt, lemon juice and/or brown sugar, if desired. The sauce should be on the tangy side of sweet and sour. Keep the sauce warm to serve immediately with the brisket, or chill it separately in an airtight container.

Serve brisket on platter with a few tablespoons of sauce over the top, and garnish with parsley and pomegranate seeds. Serve remaining sauce on the side.

If reheating, skim the fat off the chilled sauce, if desired. Reheat the sauce in a large pot over medium heat. Once its simmering, add the chilled brisket and reheat, stirring gently.

Make it in advance: Brisket can be made up to 5 days in advance and refrigerated in an airtight container. To freeze it, shred or cut the cooled meat into thin slices and store in an airtight container with the sauce for up to 3 months.

Set a wire rack over a pan, or line 2 plates with paper towels.

Scrub or peel the potatoes. Using a food processor (or hand grater), grate the potatoes, alternating with chunks of onions (this helps prevent the potatoes from browning). Empty the processors work bowl as necessary into a large bowl.

Working over a second bowl, take handfuls of the potatoes and onions and squeeze out as much liquid as you can. Place the wrung-out potatoes and onions in a large, dry bowl. Repeat with the remaining shreds. Discard liquid.

Change to the food processors steel blade. Put of the potato back in the work bowl and pulse until finely chopped. (If making by hand, chop with a knife.) Add the chopped potato and onions to the bowl with the shreds. Stir in garlic, eggs, salt and pepper. Sprinkle the flour on top and mix well. Let rest for 10 minutes. Sprinkle in more flour if the batter doesnt stick together when compressed.

Heat a 12-inch skillet over medium-high heat. Add inch oil. Take 3 to 4 Tbs. of batter and, working over a bowl (not the latke batter bowl) to catch drips, squeeze the batter with your hands to form a compact patty 2 to 3 inches in diameter.

When the oil is hot but not smoking (a shred of potato tossed into the hot oil should sizzle on contact, about 350 degrees on a deep-fry thermometer), use a spatula to slide the first 3 to 5 latkes gently into the pan. Do not crowd them. Adjust the heat as necessary. Press down to flatten with a spatula.

Fry about 4 minutes until the center of the latke has become firmer, the edges have browned, a spatula can easily be inserted underneath without tearing the latkes and the bottom is golden brown. Flip latke over and cook until the other side is browned, 3 to 4 minutes. (If a latke falls apart during the flip, use the spatula to pat it back in shape.)

Drain on the prepared rack. Bring the oil back to sizzling and repeat until all the latkes are cooked. If adding oil between batches, make sure the oil is sizzling again before cooking.

Shred the challah into -inch pieces. In a large bowl, mix together the eggs, milk, mashed bananas, sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, salt and vanilla. Add the shredded challah and stir until well combined. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 20 minutes. Stir well.

Using wet hands, roll about 1 Tbs. of batter into a ball. Press it down firmly and roll it again, squeezing to compact it into a firm ball about 1 inch in diameter. Place it on a plate. Repeat with the remaining batter. In a 12-inch wide, heavy pot, heat inch of oil over high heat to 350 degrees. For best results, use a deep-fry or candy thermometer, but the oil is ready when a bit of fritter batter bubbles as soon as it is added to the pan. Line a large plate with paper towels.

Roll the fritters between your hands to make sure they are compact, then gently roll them off your hand and into the hot oil until you have 8 to 10 in the pot, being careful not to crowd the pan. Adjust the heat as needed to maintain the proper temperature and prevent burning, and cook until the bottoms of the fritters are dark golden brown, 2 to 3 minutes. Flip the fritters with a slotted metal spoon or tongs and cook until the other side is browned, 1 to 2 minutes. Transfer the fritters to the prepared plate using tongs or slotted spoon. Add oil to pan as needed and be sure to return the oil to the proper temperature between batches. (If desired, keep the fritters warm in a 250-degree oven on an ungreased baking sheet.)

Sprinkle the fritters with confectioners sugar (if using) and serve with the sweet tahini sauce and warmed chocolate sauce (if using), on the side for dipping.

Tahini sauce: Mix together cup tahini, cup cold water, 2 Tbs. lemon juice, tsp. salt and 3 Tbs. agave syrup until very smooth (the mixture will seize up but loosen as you continue to stir). Add additional water, 1 Tbs. at a time, until the sauce is still thick but can be poured. Taste. Add more agave syrup if desired. Transfer to a serving dish and drizzle with 2 tsp. silan (date syrup, optional).

Variation: Jam-filled challah doughnut holes can be made by omitting the bananas, cinnamon, nutmeg, salt and vanilla. Instead, stir in 1 cup seedless fruit preserves or jam and proceed with the recipe instructions. Serve sprinkled with confectioners sugar and doused with warmed chocolate sauce.

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Hanukkah preview of '52 Shabbats': brisket, latkes and challah fritters J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Lebanese Muslim who posed as ultra-Orthodox Jew denies link to terror groups – The Times of Israel

Posted By on November 16, 2021

A Lebanese Muslim man who posed as an ultra-Orthodox Jew for a number of years told police this week he is not antisemitic and is not affiliated with any terror groups, according to media reports Thursday.

On Monday it was reported that a Jewish newlywed woman from Brooklyn discovered two weeks after her Orthodox wedding that her husband, Eliyah Haliwa, is not Jewish.

Haliwa confirmed to law enforcement that he is not Jewish, saying that he just wanted to join the Jewish community, and the wedding was another step in the process, Israels Channel 12 news reported on Thursday.

He denied being affiliated with a terror group, and stressed that he is not antisemitic, the network said. According to reports, Haliwa is not considered by New York authorities to pose a security threat to the local community.

Haliwa reportedly spent several years learning in a yeshiva and convincingly presented himself as an ultra-Orthodox Jew, concealing details of his origins.

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Photos published by media outlets showed him in traditional ultra-Orthodox garb during various events leading up to and including the wedding. In other pictures, he was apparently seen alongside members of his Lebanese family who do not appear to be Jewish.

The bride is from the Brooklyn Sephardic Jewish community.

Documents discovered by her family show that he has a Lebanese passport under a different name. Reports on Thursday said he also carried a US passport, but law enforcement found nothing unusual and said both passports were valid.

Channel 12 reported that authorities will now have to consider whether to file an indictment against him for impersonation.

Haliwa was also asked why he did not contact local rabbis and pursue a proper conversion to Judaism, to which he replied that he tried to do so but it did not work out, the network reported.

A source familiar with the incident told the Kikar Hashabbat website that the only person who had doubts about the groom before the wedding was a rabbis wife who gave the bride lessons on Jewish matrimony laws.

The source said the woman tried several times to speak with rabbis about her concerns but her pleas fell on deaf ears.

The groom reportedly speaks fluent Hebrew and had spent five to seven years in a yeshiva. A video provided to Kikar Hashabbat, but not published by the website, taken during an engagement party, shows the groom speaking in a style of speech common among those who learn in yeshivas, the website reported.

It was only after the wedding that someone told the father of the bride that he needs to look into the groom, the source said.

The brides brothers went to the newlyweds home and there found three passports with different names, all with photographs of the groom. Other photos showed the groom with people, apparently his family. Local rabbis then immediately arranged for the bride to leave the home and be taken to a safe location.

Haliwa had reportedly given a convincing story as to why he was cut off from his family and had been affiliated with the Chabad Lubavitch branch in Texas for several years.

However, according to the Yeshiva World News site, there were indications that his story didnt add up, including a family tree he produced that was riddled with glaring inaccuracies, according to the report. Among the Ashkenazi names listed was Meir Lansky, the name of a 1920s New York Jewish mobster.

Haliwa had also claimed to be working for the National Security Agency.

The head of the Chabad house in Texas A&M University, who was at the wedding, released a statement explaining his acquaintance with Eliyah Haliwa, saying he first began visiting Chabad in 2018.

Rabbi Yossi Lazaroff said Haliwa had met the women on a Jewish dating website and falsely presented himself to her as observant.

When asked by the woman and her family, I informed them that his conduct did not reflect that of a fully observant Jew, Lazaroff said.

He said that it is the responsibility of the officiating rabbi at a Jewish wedding to determine the Jewish status of the couple.

When Rabbi Ezra Zafrani, a respected Syrian rabbi in Lakewood, NJ, asked me if Eliyah was Jewish, I explicitly informed him that I did not know and that whoever was officiating would need to independently confirm his Jewish status, the Lazaroff wrote.

He said he and his wife attended the wedding because they were invited. Lazaroff added they knew Haliwa had no family who would be there and attended on the understanding that the officiating rabbis had done their due diligence to confirm the grooms Jewish status.

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Invitae Unveils Plans to Expand Cancer Testing Portfolio – Precision Oncology News

Posted By on November 16, 2021

NEW YORK Invitae plans to add a variety of germline and somatic testing capabilities to its oncology testing pipeline and launch in vitro diagnostic kits to meet growing demand for local cancer testing capabilities in Europe, Asia, and the US.

During a call to discuss the firm's third quarter financials, Vishal Sikri, president of oncology at Invitae, provided more details about the company's forthcoming test launches and diagnostic development plans in oncology, which have been bolstered by the acquisition of ArcherDx last year.

By the end of the year, the company plans to launch expanded DNA-based research-use test kits that assess microsatellite instability and tumor mutation burden, he said. Tests for these biomarkers are in high demand since oncologists can use them to prescribe refractory cancer patients the immunotherapy pembrolizumab (Merck's Keytruda) in a tissue-agnostic fashion.

2022 promises to be a particularly busy year for Invitae's oncology segment, according to Sikri. The company will add polygenic risk scores, or PRS,to its germline genetic cancer risk test offerings and advance a single test that can gauge both germline cancer risk variants and somatic variants for guiding therapy decisions.

Longer term, Invitae has ambitions to offer its own early cancer detection test, Sikri said, though it will spend much of next year figuring out whether it will develop such a test internally or buy it.

Combining capabilities

While cancer patients are more likely to receive somatic tumor testing than germline testing, Invitae published a study last year showing that germline testing uncovered clinically actionable variants in 8 percent of patients that had not been picked up by earlier tumor sequencing.

As a result of this and other studies, genetic testing labs are considering new testing solutions. Invitae competitor Myriad Genetics, for example, said earlier this year it was working with Intermountain Healthcare to develop a combined offering that includes Myriad's myRisk Hereditary Cancer test and myChoice CDx, as well as Intermountain's TheraMap tumor profiling test. Once launched, oncologists will be able to receive results from all three tests in one report.

When Invitae bolsters its hereditary cancer test offerings with a PRS, it will again compete with Myriad, which for the past three years has been selling an 86-SNP polygenic risk score to inform the breast cancer risk of European and Ashkenazi Jewish women. This year, Myriad launched a new version of its 35-gene myRisk hereditary cancer test that provides a 140-SNP PRS score to all breast cancer patients regardless of ancestry.

In 2022, Invitae will also offer a series of lab-developed tests, including its Personalized Cancer Monitoring (PCM) test, which became available in June through an early-access program. Although the benefit of PCM has initially been demonstrated for monitoring progression of lung cancer, the company has plans to advance it as a pan-cancer monitoring test, Sikri said.

Invitae is also developing a tumor profiling LDT that assesses DNA, RNA, and protein biomarkers. That test will be similar to the distributed Stratafide test that Invitae garnered through the ArcherDxacquisition but it will have a different brand name.

Pent-up demand for local testing

Though Invitae has historically offered LDTs, it is now also able to launch IVD kits, aided by ArcherDx's expertise with the Stratafide test. According to Sikri, Invitae will start launching CE-IVD marked kits for profiling blood and tumor tissue in European and Asian markets next year, and work on advancing LDTs and kitted comprehensive tumor profiling tests in the US.

Specifically, the company plans to launch its first CE-IVD-marked kits the FusionPlex Dx and the LiquidPlex ctDNA test in select EU markets in the first quarter of 2022. "Both tests will enable any facility with sequencing technology and our solutions to accurately profile solid tumors and blood samples for therapy selection," Sikri said. "This is a major step toward satisfying the pent-up demand for local and regional genomic testing capabilities, particularly among EU countries and leading academic cancer centers."

In Japan, the company will also introduce kitted IVD solutions that will help "labs running the tests get higher reimbursement and therefore increase adoption," Sikri added.

These efforts are aimed at growing Invitae's presence in non-US cancer diagnostics markets. During Q3 of this year, testing outside the US comprised 21 percent of total billable test volume, according to Invitae CFO Roxi Wen. Moreover, the year-over-year quarterly increase in billable tests the firm saw was higher outside the US than in the US, she said.

In parallel with growing its ex-US business, the company plans to also work with US regulators to launch kitted, decentralized cancer testing solutions in its home market.

In August, Invitae had to write off a $262.5 million liability because it did not expect to obtain FDA approval of the Stratafide test by March 31, 2022, a regulatory milestone baked into the ArcherDx acquisition. During the call, Sikri said the company is "on track" with regulatory discussions on Stratafide, PCM, and other tests. "Based on the feedback from the FDA, we believe we have a good roadmap for FDA approval for our IVD products, including a path forward as an IVD for our PCM test," he said.

In the US, more cancer centers and regional health systems are looking to conduct tumor profiling in-house or locally in order to expedite turnaround time and lower costs. Illumina, for example, reported strong demand within its cancer IVD testing business in Q3. Specifically, its research-use comprehensive genomic profiling test, TruSight Oncology 500, recorded a record quarter with more than 340 customers installing the assay in their labs.

Roche, which markets Foundation Medicine's FoundationOne CDx test as an LDT, has also recognized the demand for distributed cancer genetic testing panels. The company recently launched the research-use Avenio Tumor Tissue Comprehensive Genomic Profiling Kit based on the genes and biomarkers included in the FoundationOne CDx and will sell the test to laboratories interested in installing in-house tumor profiling capabilities in Europe, North America, Asia, and South America.

Wen noted that Invitae expects its revenues next year to benefit from new IVD and LDT test launches for therapy selection and cancer monitoring, which have higher pricing than other tests in its women's health portfolio, for example.

Sales of Invitae's planned IVD kit launches may also be bolstered by the fact that more cancer centers and health systems are interested in installing in-house tumor profiling tests because the reimbursement environment for such assays has improved in recent years. A recent draft local coverage determination from Medicare contractor National Government Services, for example, has given cancer centers in New York, and in New England and certain Midwest states, reason to hope that they may start to get better payment for in-house next-generation sequencing cancer profiling.

Still, with Invitae now entering the highly crowded tumor profiling space, market analysts and investors are wondering how it will compete on price. Invitae CEO Sean George said during the call that Invitae's pricing strategy for cancer tumor profiling will be similar to its approach in the germline testing space.

In that market, Invitae introduced a tiered pricing system in 2015 that offered one rate for insurers with which its tests are in network or out of network, and capped the self-pay price for patients to a few hundred dollars. This pricing strategy allowed the company to broaden test access to patients who didn't meet insurers' coverage criteria, take market share from competitors like Myriad, and grow its presence in germline genetic testing.

"It's worth noting that where a price exists, Invitae has always taken that price," George told analysts on the call. "Where we have used price to grow volume or grow markets is where there are no reimbursed criteria for a given service that we think is really valuable for extending the life of our customers who otherwise the system in our industry wasn't going to serve."

Invitae's pricing approach will be similar in the tumor profiling space, George said, noting that these tests enjoy high payor pricing in the US. "Really high pricing offered by [the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services] and anybody else we will take," he said "And then, for the remaining 28 million cancer patient around the globe, who don't have reimbursement coverage, that's where our cost advantage and our distribution can really come into play, whether serving at the individual or the government level."

Early cancer detection: build or buy?

Over the long term, Invitae has its sights on launching an early-detection cancer screening test, which like cancer tumor profiling is a crowded and rapidly growing market. At the moment, it is not yet clear if the firm will develop an early cancer detection test in house or acquire it. "We're currently doing our own work on what our technologies would look like in the trials and validations and, of course, looking at the buy scenario as well," George said.

Illumina subsidiary Grail and others have conducted very large studies, involving thousands of patients, to demonstrate the ability of their liquid biopsy tests to detect early cancer signals. But Sikri said it's not necessarily the company's goal to invest in a 10,000-patient study, as other companies in the space have done.

"Most of the action for next year is going to be in risk assessment, therapy selection, [cancer] monitoring, and really taking our product portfolio from start to finish for our oncology patients," George added.

More:

Invitae Unveils Plans to Expand Cancer Testing Portfolio - Precision Oncology News

If you blow-dry your hair, you have a Jewish woman to thank – St. Louis Jewish Light

Posted By on November 14, 2021

Im patiently waiting to go to brunch.

Im waiting because my wife Leigh is blow-drying her hair. I only mention that, because she just came inside from outside, and said, Its too cold to be outside with wet hair, and now, Im waiting.

As I often do, I try to connect anything I see to Jewishness. Its like fishing. Ill cast my line and see if I get a bite. Usually, I dont get a nibble, when I use the Google machine, but today I got a strike when I literally searched Jewish, Blow-Dryer and lo and behold I discovered the story of Rose Evansky.

Rose Evansky was a pioneer in the use of the hand-held blow dryer and iscredited as the inventor of blow-dry styling. She died in 2016, at the age of 94.

Born Rose Lerner in 1922 in Worms, Germany, she was a Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany, who unleashed the revolutionary blow-dry style onto the world from her shop in Mayfair, London then the cultural capital of hairstyling. One day, Ms. Evansky eyed a barber drying the front of a mans hair with a brush and a hand-held dryer. She thought: Why not for women?

Not long after, the technique made headlines. By brush of luck one day in 1962, the British editor ofVoguehappened to dropby Evanskys shop. Aghast at Ms. Evanskys technique, the editor rang the fashion editor ofThe Evening Standardlater that night the newspaper unleashed the blow wave onto the world.

Ms. Evansky, whose father was imprisoned at Dachau in 1938, and who, speaking only German and Yiddish, escaped Nazi Germany by way of Kindertransport, championed herso-called Mayfair styleone characterized by freedom and movement.

As for her own hair (naturally air-dried) she cut it herself. As she once toldWmagazine, Why would I let anyone else when I can do it myself?

Continued here:

If you blow-dry your hair, you have a Jewish woman to thank - St. Louis Jewish Light

When just a few dozen people are a threat to the purity of the Jewish people – Haaretz

Posted By on November 14, 2021

Theres something amusing about the demographic sting operation conducted by Ethiopian Israeli Saraka Siom that brought in 61 new immigrants from Ethiopia, most of whom lack any trace of Jewish ancestry. But the Population and Immigration Authority didnt find it so funny, deeming the operation a planned conspiracy that exploited the system.

In Israel, demographics isnt a laughing matter. The widespread feeling is that these 61 people didnt merely infiltrate into the country, like Sudanese and Eritrean asylum seekers, but actually tried to infiltrate into the Jewish people. Even though 61 individuals are negligible on the scale of a nation, it seems as if each and every one of them constituted a threat to the purity of the Jewish people.

And indeed, the agency sounding alarm bells about the danger of bringing in Falashmura who are waiting for clarification of their Jewish roots is none other than the National Security Council. In a classified document that was signed by Nimrod Guez, the head of the NSCs Middle East and Africa desk, and sent to both the Prime Ministers Office and the Aliyah and Integration Ministry, the NSC warned about a long list of threats.

Bringing in thousands of people without clarifying [their Jewish roots] is a dangerous, unnecessary, precedent-setting demographic mistake, the document said. It also warned of an influx of non-Jews who are exploiting Israels economic situation and the involvement of people with different agendas ... in light of the fact that a great deal of remuneration from the state budget is at stake. The NSC also recommended keeping discussions of the issue classified.

Aliyah Minister Pnina Tamano-Shata was right to say that this document isnt a security assessment but a purely political stance. So the following questions must be asked:

Is the question of who is a Jew an issue of national security? Is it the NSCs job to guard the borders of the Jewish bloodline? And if so, why is it that we have no problem with Nimrod Guez but cant stand Benzi Gopstein? How is the NSC any better than Gopsteins Jewish supremacist Lehava organization?

Without getting into the question of why white non-Jews who infiltrate dont rouse the same feelings of danger that Black ones do, this entire feeling of demographic danger is pathological. You dont have to be a genius psychologist to diagnose Israel as suffering from demographic post-traumatic stress, or to understand its source. The whole package of Holocaust remembrance, certainly familiar to everyone who has passed through the Israeli school system, includes black-and-white photographs of the victims alongside sepia prints of countless lists of Jews.

Just recall then-Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus speech on Holocaust Remembrance Day in 2013, in which he effectively pointed out the Nazis demographic victory. More than 6 million Jews live in Israel today, for the first time since the states establishment, he said. You, citizens of Israel, are the reflection of our victory.

Its easy to identify with this logic. They sought to destroy us, but we defeated them. We survived; weve even made up for the number of people killed.

Nevertheless, theres something warped about this preoccupation with Jewish demographics. The problem lies in the way Jews have embraced the view of themselves as a race thats in danger of extinction and deserves to be permanently included in a preservation program.

Many Jewish organizations keep close track of the number of Jews worldwide. Prominent among them is the Jewish People Policy Institute, which, as part of its efforts to ensure the thriving of the Jewish People and the Jewish civilization, produces an estimate of our demographic inventory every year.

Such estimates would save anyone seeking to destroy us a vast amount of work, because they numerically track everyone whom the Nazis sought to destroy Jews, half-Jews and Jews who converted to other religions.

Nevertheless, when for the sake of Jewish purity it has become impossible to grant asylum to refugees or even, heaven forbid, accept a certain percentage of infiltrators something every normal country in the world does perhaps we ought to reconsider the Jewish peoples situation.

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When just a few dozen people are a threat to the purity of the Jewish people - Haaretz

Jews need to be united on a united Jerusalem – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on November 14, 2021

The World Jewish Congresss esteemed president, Ronald Lauder, spoke about the need for unity among the Jewish people at WJCs Theodor Herzl Awards Gala on Tuesday at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

We are at a crossroads that is dangerous for the Jewish people, Lauder warned at the event, justifiably.

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As a son of survivors myself and a member of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council, I am deeply concerned about the future of the Jewish people, amid rampant antisemitism, chasms in the American-Jewish community and pressure on the Jewish state that the Holocaust proved so necessary.

Throughout the history of the Jewish people, in good times and bad, one issue that has united Jews across every spectrum has been the fate of Jerusalem. Even at times when the Jewish people have been extraordinarily divided, united Jerusalem has united us. This must be seen as one of those times.

At a Jerusalem press conference last weekend, Bennett and Lapid both ruled out surrendering to such a demand. But Biden wants his campaign promise on the matter to be fulfilled at all costs, to the point that he could potentially make such a move unilaterally and illegally, against Israels will.

This is the time for the entire American-Jewish community to unite to keep Jerusalem united, because Bidens move is about a lot more than the consulate.

The Abraham Accords came from then-president Donald Trump making clear that there is no daylight between Israel and the US. He emphasized that lack of daylight with every step he took, from renouncing the dangerous Iranian nuclear deal, to recognizing Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights to formally recognizing united Jerusalem as Israels capital and moving the US Embassy.

Reopening the US consulate for the PA would be a destructive step on the way to undoing other moves courageously undertaken by Trump for Israel, Americas closest and most loyal ally. It would be a sign that the Biden administration is purposely creating daylight with Israel again.

It is understandable that the Biden administration would want to harm the Abraham Accords, which were an unprecedented accomplishment initiated by the presidents predecessor from a rival party. But it would be completely short-sighted and would distance Middle East peace after significant progress was finally made.

This move would isolate Israel in the international community and return to the intransigent Palestinian leadership the veto power that enabled them to quash all peace overtures by Democratic and Republican presidents and secretaries of state in the past. It would also harm chances of formally expanding the Abraham Accords to other countries, most notably Saudi Arabia, which was active behind the scenes in efforts to advance Middle East peace during the Trump administration.

The diverse Israeli government, which is divided on most issues, is united in favor of expanding the Abraham Accords, so failing to do so by refocusing diplomatic energies on the Palestinians again would be a tremendous missed opportunity.

Israel desperately wants to reach out to the Biden administration, to Democrats and to self-proclaimed progressive American Jews. As part of that effort, Lapid and Finance Minister Avigdor Liberman said this week that they want to immediately proceed with a plan to change the status quo at the Western Wall, which would ignite tension.

Lapid listed several reasons why implementing the Kotel plan was important to him, including improving relations with Diaspora Jews. But the truth is that changing the status quo at the Kotel would divide both Diaspora and Israeli Jews at a time when we can least afford disunity.

Israel must refrain from taking such a divisive step at such a sensitive time.

Like the Israeli government, the American-Jewish community needs to understand what is at stake and present a unified front around keeping Jerusalem united and properly advancing peace in the Middle East.

The writer is co-president of the Religious Zionists of America, chairman of the Center for Righteousness and Integrity and a committee member of the Jewish Agency. He was appointed by former US president Donald Trump as a member of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council. The views expressed are his own. Martinoliner@gmail.com

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Jews need to be united on a united Jerusalem - The Jerusalem Post

Meet the Jewish founder of the worlds only bobblehead museum – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on November 14, 2021

A crochet museum in Joshua Tree, California features countless crochet animals that appear in airport ads worldwide. The National Mustard Museum in Wisconsin was founded by a Jewish condiment aficionado.

In February 2019, another niche museum opened around 90 miles east of the mustard mecca: the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum, located in Milwaukee.

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Bobbleheads date back to the late 1700s, Sklar explained in an interview with the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. A famous painting of Queen Charlotte a replica of which hangs in the bobblehead museum shows two figurines behind the monarch, with heads that bobble.

Fast forward to 2021, when the museum has unveiled its first-ever Hanukkah items: a Bobble Menorah that features nine bobbling flames (sans real fire, of course) and comes in three color patterns, and a Bobble Dreidel on a gelt-shaped base.

We spoke to Sklar about how a unique collection turned into a one-of-a-kind museum, how he uses bobbleheads for a good cause and, of course, which famous Jews have their own bobbleheads.

This interview has been edited and condensed.

JTA: With any collection like this, the first question has to be: How did you get into bobbleheads?

Sklar: My dad collected baseball cards, and he got me into collecting when I was growing up. Brad was working for a minor league baseball team in the early 2000s, and they gave away a bobblehead for the first time in 2003. We decided the bobblehead was sort of cool, and the [Milwaukee] Brewers and Bucks and local soccer and hockey teams were giving out bobbleheads. So we started to circle the bobblehead dates on the calendar, since we were already going to several games a year anyway as big sports fans. The collection sort of grew from that.

How did this interest turn into the worlds only bobblehead museum?

The collection grew out of traveling. We went on a journey to try to go to all the Major League Baseball stadiums, and as we traveled wed go to different museums in local places. Several times wed either go to the stores in the area of the stadium, or antique malls, and just pick up some bobbleheads from the area to bring back.

Before we knew it, we were doing some buying, trading and selling on eBay, in our free time. Then in 2013 we set out to produce a bobblehead for the first time, of a friend of ours who was a manager for the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee sports teams, and also a Special Olympian. We thought it would be a cool way to honor him. During that process we realized there was a need in the market, an opportunity to produce bobbleheads people or things that otherwise havent had bobbleheads produced and market them.

At the time, our collection was numbering in the 3,000 range. I dont even know how we got that many. We were running out of room for them. Its a lot easier to store 3,000 baseball cards you can get one box and store them. But 3,000 bobbleheads take up a lot more room. We started brainstorming, and realized, hey, theres no museum in the world dedicated to bobbleheads. Theres museums dedicated to mustard and spam, and a bunch of other random things. So we started to do market research on the museum side, and in November 2014 was when we announced the idea for the museum.

Tell me about the collection. How many bobbleheads do you have now, and what are some of the highlights?

We have 7,000 unique bobbleheads on display in the museum. The collection itself is now numbering in the 10,000-11,000 range. Were getting in new bobbleheads pretty much daily. There are teams sending them in, organizations, people across the country. Its really everything from sports to pop culture, politics, music, movies, TV, comics. Really anything and everything that can be turned into a bobblehead, including the menorah and the dreidel.

Do you have a personal favorite bobblehead?

The one of [our friend] Michael is sort of the one that sparked the whole idea for the museum, so thats my sentimental favorite. Hes also Jewish. We didnt meet because of being Jewish, we just saw him around campus when we started going to school and got to know him. Then we got to know his family, and found out we went to the same congregation.

What has the reception been to the museum? How did the pandemic impact your work?

Weve been blown away by the reception. Weve had visitors from all 50 states and I think 25 different countries.

We opened on February 1, 2019, and then closed for about 14-and-a-half months in March 2020 because of the pandemic. Luckily we were able to produce a ton of bobbleheads during that time. In the beginning of April was the first Dr. [Anthony] Fauci bobblehead. That one became our best-selling bobblehead within like a week. Now weve raised over $300,000 for Protect the Heroes, which is administered by the American Hospital Association to get resources to first responders. So we were able to keep busy, keep everybody employed that works for us, and also do something for a good cause during the pandemic.

With some unique collections, there can be subcultures that develop within particular groups the cult-like popularity of the band Phish among Jews comes to mind. Is there any bobblehead subculture that youve seen?

There definitely are various bobblehead subcultures. Theres definitely people out there who collect Jewish figures and bobbleheads. Or usually its their favorite team or player. There are definitely Grateful Dead [bobbleheads] quite a few different bobbleheads, and people try to collect all of them. There are people who are political, they want all the presidential- or historical-related.

The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle did a story, and we sent them pictures of the different Jews that have been depicted in bobbleheads. Sandy Koufax, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a member of KISS, a wide variety of people. Its sort of fun to see, theres more [Jews] than we had anticipated when we were going through the list.

How do you decide who to make?

Every day were coming up with new ideas. Staying in tune with the news, social media and trending topics is definitely helpful. But then we have a long list of general ideas. Like, there hasnt been a turkey bobblehead in a long time, and we have a series of bobbleheads where holiday characters are sitting on a shelf. So we have a turkey on a shelf coming out for Thanksgiving. Things like that, well identify sometimes years in advance. A lot of them take some time to come to fruition. But its more, what do we think people will enjoy or buy? And we go from there.

How did you decide to create the Hanukkah bobbles? What is your goal with the products?

It was probably around this time last year, sort of close to Hanukkah, and we were thinking, there hasnt really been anything Hanukkah-related when it comes to bobbleheads. And I mentioned to my aunt who lives in Omaha, she works at the [Jewish Community Center] in childcare there, and she really liked the idea and mentioned it to a few other family members and they thought it was pretty cool. So we had a rendering made, and we went through some different iterations of the design, and thought, yeah, this would be pretty cool.

You go to Target or different stores, and you see a little small display of Hanukkah-related merchandise and then aisles of Christmas stuff. We could definitely help increase that assortment. Theyre not going to be at Target or Walmart this year, but it could be something that in future years could be added to that assortment for a broader audience to see and to purchase.

Are there any other Jewish holidays that you think would be particularly conducive for a bobble?

Yeah, I think my aunt actually sent a list. There were some characters like Judah Maccabee. We could do Purim. Were sort of waiting to see how the Hanukkah bobbleheads go. Theres also some other fun things that we could turn into bobbles. A bobble hamantaschen just came to mind. But I dont know, it might get people to try to eat it or something. Well put a warning on the package.

A lot of your products and launches are connected to charities. Why is it important to you to use the bobbleheads to support these causes? Does your Jewish identity have any impact on that?

I think it probably does have something to do with my upbringing. Being taught to give back, and taught about tzedakah [charity]. And weve seen other bobblehead companies start to do the same thing, and they hadnt done it in the past, so I think weve actually inspired other people. Were not doing it to boost the sales, but weve seen that when it has that good cause, it can definitely help boost the sales and boost the excitement around it as well. But were really doing it to give back to causes and to get people engaged.

Is the Hanukkah launch connected to a charity?

We havent connected this one to anything as of yet, but weve done things after the fact as well. Bernie Sanders, we did the inauguration bobblehead with his mittens, and we didnt realize it was going to take off like crazy. We ended up making a five-figure donation to Meals on Wheels Vermont, which is the cause that he donated to from the proceeds of the mittens. Theres a good chance well do something after the fact.

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Meet the Jewish founder of the worlds only bobblehead museum - The Jerusalem Post


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