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These Central Jersey restaurants are keeping the heat on for outdoor dining – My Central Jersey

Posted By on October 27, 2021

New Ristorante MV in Bernardsville booked out for two months

Since the Bernardsville restaurant's first day of business on March 4, it's been fully booked every day.

Alexander Lewis, MyCentralJersey.com

Thankfully, the COVID-19 nightmare in Central Jersey is vastly different than it was one year ago. Indoor capacity limits have returned to 100%, 65% of the state population is fully vaccinated and many diners have returned to their regular local haunts.

However, not everyone feels comfortable returning tofull dining rooms andmaskless patrons. Some feel more comfortable dining outdoors, andthese Central Jersey restaurants are keeping theheat on:

We will continue to update this list. Please let us know if your restaurant has heaters by emailing JIntersimone@MyCentralJersey.com.

22 West Tap And Grill,a sports bar and American restaurant.1601 Route 22, Bridgewater;732-627-5012,22westtapandgrill.com.

Espo's,a longtime, cozy Italian restaurant.10 2nd St., Raritan;908-685-9552,esposraritannj.com.

Green Knoll Grill,an American restaurant with sports on TVknown for its frequent weekend activities.645 Route 202, Bridgewater;908-526-7090,greenknollgrill.com.

Kuay Tiew Noodles & More,an authentic Thai restaurant.42 W. Main St., Somerville;908-393-9555,ktsomerville.com.

Lobster Alley, a counter-serve specializing in Maine lobster rolls and other seafood fare.18 W. Somerset St., Raritan;908-566-6414,mycateringsolutions.net/lobster-alley.

Osteria Morini,a modern Italian restaurant with national outposts featuring housemade pastas.107 Morristown Road, Bernardsville;908-221 0040,osteriamorini.com/bernardville-nj/.

Stone House at Stirling Ridge,an upscale restaurant and events venue on 10 acres featuring New American cuisine.50 Stirling Road, Warren;908-754-1222,stonehouseatstirlingridge.com.

Project P.U.B.,a brew pub which features a new brewery each month in a tap takeover and new food menu with items designed to be paired with that brewery's beers.41 N. Bridge St., Somerville;908-393-5211,projectpubnj.com.

Ristorante MV,a modern Italian-American restaurant in a historic stone building serving classic dishes with high-end touches. Outdoor heaters will be available on or about Nov. 1. 1 Mill St., Bernardsville;908-766-7979,ristorantemv.com.

Tapastre,an intimate bar which pairs small plates with craft beer in the same building as Project P.UB.1 W High St., Somerville;908-526-0505,tapastre.com.

The Borscht Belt,a Jewish deli run by a celebrity chef in the Stockton Market.19 Bridge St., Stockton;609-460-4051,theborschtbelt.com.

Lambertville Station,an American restaurant located in a 19th-century train station.11 Bridge St., Lambertville;609-397-4400,lambertvillestation.com.

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Towne Restaurant,a nearly half-century-old breakfast and lunch fixture serving American and Greek dishes.31 Main St., Clinton;908-735-7559,clintontownerestaurant.com.

Vagabond BBQ,an eclectic restaurant featuring barbecue from around the world.51 Bridge St., Frenchtown;908-505-0232,vagabondbbq.com.

Ani Ramen,a modern Japanese restaurant with a bar known for its creative takes on ramen.37 Easton Ave., New Brunswick;732-317-8200,aniramen.com.

Barca City Cafe and Bar,a upbeat venue for Spanish tapas and cocktails. Outdoor heating through mid-November. 47 Easton Ave., New Brunswick;732-640-1155,barcacity.com.

Feast Italian Kitchen,a modern Italian-American restaurant.3899 Route9, Old Bridge;732-970-8880,feastnj.com.

Hailey's Harp,an Irish pub featuring traditional dishes like shepherd's pie and corned beef. Heating is for two outdoor tables. 400 Main St., Metuchen;732-321-0777,haileysharpandpub.com.

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Harvest Moon Brewery & Cafe, a gastropub with an eclectic menu also making its own beers.392 George St., New Brunswick;732-249-6666,harvestmoonbrewery.com.

Mangia Toscano,a cozy and modern Italian restaurant with traditional eats as well as an onsite deli.422 Main St., Metuchen;732-744-0100,mangia-toscano.com.

Orchard Park by David Burke,a creative American restaurant run by a celebrity chef on the grounds of aFrench country estate-inspired events venue.670 Cranbury Road, East Brunswick;732-554-5714,orchardparkbydb.com.

Ani Ramen,a modern Japanese restaurant with a bar known for its creative takes on ramen.109 Walnut Ave, Cranford; 908-325-6156,aniramen.com.

Grain and Cane,a New American restaurant themed after a family's history in rice and sugar distribution.250 Connell Dr., Berkeley Heights;908-897-1920,grainandcane.com.

Limani Seafood Grill,a BYOB Greek restaurant in cozy quarters. 235 NorthAve. West, Westfield;908-233-0052,limaniseafood.com.

Paragon Tap &Table,an upscale gastropub featuring 20 beers on draft.77 Central Ave., Clark;732-931-1776,paragonnj.com.

Sheelen's Crossing,an Irish pub.200 South Ave., Fanwood;908-753-4500,sheelenscrossing.com.

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Summit House,a New American restaurant located in a vintage building.395 Springfield Ave., Summit;908-273-6000,summithousenj.com.

Sweet Waters Steak House,an old-school steakhouse.43 Elm St., Westfield;908-317-2599,sweetwatersnj.com.

Jenna Intersimone has been a staff member at the USA Today Network New Jersey since 2014, after becoming a blogger-turned-reporter following the creation of her award-winning travel blog. To get unlimited access to her stories about food, drink and fun, please subscribe or activate your digital account today. Contact: JIntersimone@Gannett.com or @JIntersimone.

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These Central Jersey restaurants are keeping the heat on for outdoor dining - My Central Jersey

Jewish Calendar Hebrew Calendar – Time and Date

Posted By on October 27, 2021

Jewish communities around the world use the Jewish or Hebrew calendar to determine the dates of religious observances and rituals. In Israel, it is also used for agricultural and civil purposes, alongside the Gregorian calendar.

Scroll of Esther.

bigstockphoto.com/Olexandr

Jewish time reckoning is lunisolar, which means that the calendar keeps in sync with the natural cycles of both the Sun and the Moon. Featuring a body of complex regulations, exceptions, and mathematical rules, it is also designed to satisfy a number of requirements conveyed in the Jewish Holy Scripture.

The Hebrew calendar is a comparatively imprecise system in terms of reflecting the duration of a solar year, which is the time it takes Earth to complete a full orbit around the Sun. In comparison with the timing of the astronomical seasons, it is off by 1 day every 216 years.

A year in the Hebrew calendar can be 353, 354, 355, 383, 384, or 385 days long.

Regular common years have 12 months with a total of 354 days. Leap years have 13 months and are 384 days long. Months with uneven numbers usually have 30 days, while months with even numbers have 29 days.

In addition to these regular (kesidrah) year lengths, both common and leap years can be a day shorter (cheserah or deficient year with 353/383 days) or a day longer (shlemah or complete year with 355/385 days).

These alterations are designed to prevent Rosh Hashana and other holidays from falling on certain days of the week. In practice, a day is added to the 8th month (Marcheshvan) or subtracted from the 9th month (Kislev).

In civil contexts, a new year in the Jewish calendar begins on Rosh Hashana on Tishrei 1. However, for religious purposes, the year begins on Nisan 1.

Months in the Gregorian calendar

According to Hebrew time reckoning we are now in the 6th millennium. The Hebrew year count starts in year 3761 BCE, which the 12th-century Jewish philosopher Maimonides established as the biblical Date of Creation.

Years in the Jewish calendar are designated AM to identify them as part of the Anno Mundi epoch, indicating the age of the world according to the Bible. For example, the beginning of the year 2021 in the Gregorian calendar converts to year AM 5781 in the Jewish calendar.

Leap years in the Gregorian calendar

Like in the Islamic calendar, months in the Jewish calendar are based on the phases of the Moon. Each month begins with the appearance of a Crescent Moon after the NewMoon phase and lasts for a full lunation, a Moon cycle encompassing all phases of the Moon.

Moon phases in your city

Since the sum of 12 lunar months is about 11 days shorter than a solar year, a leap month is added every 2 to 3 years, or 7 times in a 19-year cycle. Leap months are meant to keep the calendar in step with the astronomical seasons and make sure that the religious observances occur at the correct time of year, as mentioned in the Torah.

The Jewish calendar is based on a history of time reckoning efforts dating back to ancient times. Both Israelite and Babylonian influences played an important role in its development. According to the account of Persian astronomer al-Khwarizmi (c. 780 850 CE), most of the features of its modern-day version were in place by the 9th century CE.

In parallel with the modern Islamic calendar, the timing of the months in the early forms of the Jewish calendar depended on actual sightings of the Crescent Moon. However, this practice was gradually changed, and by 1178 CE the calculation of the beginning of a new calendar month had been fully replaced by the mathematical approximation of the moment the Crescent Moon begins to appear (Molad) rather than actual sightings.

Calendar for Israel (Gregorian)

Topics: Calendar

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Jewish Calendar Hebrew Calendar - Time and Date

Some in East Jerusalem regret neglecting Hebrew, language of the occupier – Haaretz

Posted By on October 27, 2021

It may come as no surprise that for many years now the level of Hebrew teaching in East Jerusalem schools has been seriously deficient. Even though there have been attempts in recent years to expand the scope of Hebrew teaching in some schools, in many others particularly those in neighborhoods on the Palestinian side of the separation barrier the quality remains low.

In 2018, the Israeli government announced that it would invest significant funding (approximately 2 billion shekels, or $560 million, at the time) in a program aimed at reducing socioeconomic gaps inEast Jerusalem.

But the five-year economic and educational project which among other things places a strong emphasis on augmenting the study ofHebrew has raised objections by some Palestinian parents. They claimed that the objective is to encourage Israelization or de facto annexation of the eastern part of the city among students who are not even citizens of Israel. Meanwhile, Palestinian schools that are not taking part in the scheme because they do not teach the Israeli curriculum, are not receiving government budgets.

Thus, in the large number ofschoolswhere the Palestinian curriculum is being taught, particularly in the neighborhoods that lie beyond the separation barrier, the level of education in general is extremely low.

These neighborhoods, which are physically detached from Jerusalem and include Kafr Aqab and the Shoafat refugee camp consistently suffer from an inferior level of services in all realms, despite the fact that they are officially within municipal borders and their residents hold Israeli identity cards (albeit no Israeli citizenship).

Over 100,000 people nearly one out of every three Palestinians in Jerusalem dwell in this municipal no-mans land and are forced to pass through the Qalandiyah checkpoint to receive basic services, such as health.

A significant proportion of the schools in the neighborhoods beyond the barrier are operated by private organizations, contractors who in effect are not supervised by any regulatory authority. The low salaries paid by these contractors toteachersconstitute a significant problem when it comes to hiring educators. And that is besides the fact that many of those who possess official teaching certification choose not to enter the area from Israel proper due to the hardship of passing through checkpoints. Therefore, the majority of the teachers in the neighborhoods in question come in from the territories.

Thus, in the limited number of schools beyond the separation barrier where Hebrew is actually taught, the level is extremely low. Due to the dearth of Hebrew teachers, one person is sometimes compelled to teach all grades, from first through 12th. Frequently, little more than the Hebrew alphabet is taught.

In these schools, if a pupil receives four failing grades he or she will usually be held back a year, but if one of the failing grades is in Hebrew, it will typically be disregarded by the administration. The students are aware of this and often downplay the importance of studying the language, even though they are aware that it can be a key to integration in institutions of higher learning and to employment. Nevertheless, one Hebrew teacher in Kafr Aqab, who refused to reveal his name due to fears of losing his job, told Haaretz 21: Hebrew instruction in the public schools in Kafr Aqab has actually improved recently, because there is now a program that takes into account the different ages of the pupils.

Mirna, Lara and Abed al-Fatah Natsheh, three siblings who attended schools in Kafr Aqab, experienced the problems of studying Hebrew firsthand.

I began learning Hebrew in sixth grade, Mirna explains, but I did not really feel that I was behind in my studies as compared with the others, who had begun in third grade, because the teachers simply went on repeatedly teaching the same basic materials.

"Every year, the teacher would begin to teach from the beginning, as soon as she realized that a sizable share of the pupils did not know Hebrew even though it is not normal to still be teaching the letters of the alphabet to pupils in seventh grade. Whats more, the textbooks were terrible. The pupils themselves would disparage the Hebrew lessons.

"This situation changed in the high school to which I transferred; our teacher also taught at a university. He taught us articles that were age-appropriate. As for conversational Hebrew, to my regret they did not teach us any at all, so I was compelled to study at a Hebrew-language institute after completing high school. Its important for me to stress how terrible this was. The woman who taught us in elementary school was not certified to teach Hebrew; she spoke the language, thats it.

Her sister Lara adds: The emphasis in elementary school was mainly on letters, reading and basic vocabulary. But they did not make any effort when it came to conversation. I, too, was compelled to complete my Hebrew studies at another institution, after finishing high school.

Says Abed al-Fatah, their brother: At school in Kafr Aqab, I only learned the alphabet and the most basic things, until seventh grade. Afterward, in high school, the person who taught me Hebrew was the physical education teacher, who continued to teach us the same things as in elementary school. I only became able to converse in Hebrew when I entered the job market. But not in reading and writing.

I was in shock when I came across a teacher who taught at a boys school for years and was teaching his class Hebrew in the feminine gender form, relates a veteran educator who has worked in schools on both sides of the barrier in East Jerusalem. On more than one occasion, she continues, I found teachers who were teaching Hebrew without any knowledge of the language, simply because they had to fill their quota of teaching hours.

I was a pupil who got high grades in all of my courses, including Hebrew, but when I began to study at university, I discovered that nothing of what I had learned until then was of any help to me, relates Sara Fahem, a resident of Beit Hanina who studied at what was considered a prestigious high school in East Jerusalem. That came as a big surprise to me, because I had to deal with difficulties I didnt think Id have to face. I am interested in continuing my studies and I want to do a masters degree, but Im having a very difficult time due to the language.

Israeli vs. Tawjihi matrics

Due to her desire for a higher level of education for her two elementary school children, including in the Hebrew language, Farah Ahmed enrolled them in a private school in Beit Hanina. The level was so much better there that she says she had to improve her own Hebrew so she could help her children with their homework. But the price of that choice was, literally, quite high: While tuition in the Arab public school system in Jerusalem is only 200 shekels a year, in the private schools it can reach between 3,000 and 12,000 shekels.

Aslam Sarhan, a Hebrew teacher at a school in Silwan, a neighborhood abutting the walls of Jerusalems Old City, believes that the problem also lies with the pupils themselves: Some of them are opposed to learning Hebrew since it is not part of the Tawjihi (Palestinian matriculation) examinations, or cite ideological grounds: It is the language of the occupier and should thus not be taught.

To my regret, not all of the students have sufficient awareness of the importance of Hebrew language, Sarhan explains. I have to explain this to them every so often, because otherwise they do not listen in class and they disturb other students. They have to be persuaded to learn it with all their heart not only in order to pass tests. For instance, I remind them that it will save them from having to find someone to translate documents or forms that they will need at some stage of their lives. I also emphasize that if they do not understand Hebrew, they will not be able to understand the police officers they see in the street. And of course it will also save them from having to do the preparatory year of study should they be interested in going on to an Israeli university.

Sarhan says she also comes across younger students who are willing to study the language but because of the poor instruction they receive, are forced at a later stage to relearn it. Moreover, the socioeconomic background of the students directly affects their desire and ability to advance in Hebrew, she adds.

Moshe Kaptowsky, a project consultant at the Jerusalem Development Authority who works with civil society groups and minorities, admitted to Haaretz 21 that the situation of Hebrew instruction in East Jerusalem and beyond the separation barrier is not good. He says residents of East Jerusalem learn the language mostly for pragmatic reasons. It is an identity issue, he explains, adding that the poor level of knowledge is related not only to a lack of proficient teachers and to outdated instructional methods, but also to the pupils lack of interest in learning Hebrew. In addition, in his opinion, the Tawjihi matriculation track also induces a lack of motivation to study the language, although the level of Hebrew in schools that teach according to the parallel Israeli bagrut system is not appreciably better, Kaptowsky says.

In order to solve the problem, there is a need not only for a collaborative effort on the part of the national government and the municipality, but also of a civil society that cares. Parents are an important part of this story. As for the neighborhoods beyond the barrier, the identity issue is stronger there. These people are even more detached from Israel, and that creates a sense of nobody cares about me.

The identity issue

Dr. Clila Gerassi-Tishby, executive director of the Milah Institute for Hebrew Studies, agrees that the perception of identity among East Jerusalemites in general, and individuals living beyond the barrier in particular, is more Palestinian than Israeli, and that directly affects peoples willingness to put an effort into Hebrew studies.

Back when Israel tried to force the Israeli curriculum on schools, there was extremely high opposition to it, she relates. They objected so strenuously to it that they moved their children to private schools, or did not send them to school at all. It was a sort of strike. At a certain point, Israel caved in and said, Okay, you can continue to teach the Jordanian curriculum which in the Oslo years became the official curriculum in the Palestinian Authority and is still adhered to in the majority of the schools in question. So when there is a Tawjihi, in which there is no obligation to be tested on knowledge of Hebrew, combined with the lack of civil status over the years, it has caused residents of East Jerusalem to remain a great deal more Palestinian than Israeli in terms of their identity. And of course Hebrew is also the language of the security forces and of people with whom interaction can be very negative. There was a time, prior to the first intifada, when there were Jewish Hebrew teachers in East Jerusalem, but after that, they stopped going there.

There is still a lack of Hebrew teachers [in the citys Palestinian neighborhoods]. Now, they mainly hire Arab university students from northern Israel to teach Hebrew but the majority does not undergo any formal Hebrew-instruction training. At times the pupils look unfavorably on the teachers, due to identity-related reasons.

Gerassi-Tishby says that the East Jerusalem students who come to her Milah institute after high school to improve their language skills come with a very low level, altogether basic, which isnt enough for anything. There is now a government plan in which much has been invested, which is supposed to advance education in the eastern part of the city among other things, but the subject of Hebrew also involves training teachers, writing study materials that are adapted to Palestinian society, and also fomenting a dramatic change in how the language is perceived and in the psychological barrier [to it].

Regarding the neighborhoods beyond the separation barrier, Gerassi-Tishby notes that the current situation there of a no-mans land that is not under the full responsibility of Israel or of the Palestinian Authority has indeed caused great neglect in this realm, as well.

Sahar Hader is a student of Hebrew literature at the Open University, a mother of three daughters who lives in Kafr Aqab, beyond the separation barrier. She is a participant in the Haaretz 21 initiative for promoting voices and stories from Arab society in Israel.

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Some in East Jerusalem regret neglecting Hebrew, language of the occupier - Haaretz

Meet the real good Samaritans living on a holy mountain – ISRAEL21c

Posted By on October 27, 2021

In the tiny Samaritan village of Kfar Luza on Mount Gerizim, some 37 miles north of Jerusalem, the gregarious 78-year-old Samaritan priest Husney Wasef Cohen welcomes us into his sukkah.

While the week-long Jewish harvest and pilgrimage festival of Sukkot was celebrated a month ago in temporary outdoor huts, the Samaritan calendar had Sukkot beginning on October 20 this year, and their sukkot are built indoors.

On a frame hung from the ceiling of his living room, Cohens sukkah is elaborately decorated with almost a ton of fruits and vegetables citrus fruits, pomegranates, red and green peppers, quince, apples and even eggplants.

Samaritan priest Husney Wasef Cohen welcomes visitors into his indoor sukkah. Photo by Judith Sudilovsky

Branches from three tree species, including palm fronds, a green tree and a lilac chaste tree, lie barely visible on top of the fruit display.

The community, too, is barely visible.

Known to many because of the parable of the Good Samaritan told by Jesus in the Gospel of Luke, the Samaritans are perhaps the smallest religious group in the world.

They identify themselves as descendants of the Israelite tribes of Efraim and Menashe. While most of those tribes were exiled by the Assyrians in 722 BCE, the Samaritans have been here continuously for some 3,650 years.

Numbering in the millions at one time Cohen says 3 million they are now some 840 people divided almost evenly into two communities: one in Kfar Luza/Mount Gerizim near Nablus (Shechem, in Hebrew) and the other in the Tel Aviv suburb of Holon.

Never having left the Land of Israel, Cohen said, the Samaritans were subject to slaughter and conversion by the conquering armies of the Assyrians, Greeks, Romans, Persians, Byzantines and Muslims.

Husney Wasef Cohen showing a printed copy of the Samaritan Bible in ancient Hebrew. Photo by Judith Sudilovsky

When National Geographic came 110 years ago to report on the last of the Samaritans, they counted barely 130 souls, said Cohen.

But we are still here, he said. Now, thank God, we are [more than] 800.

People of peace

Because we Samaritans have gone through so many difficult times we believe only in peace. We are in good relations with the Jews and the Palestinians, Cohen said.

War is a catastrophe for all. There are no victors in war so we pray for there to be real peace. When blood is shed the earth does not distinguish between Samaritan blood or Jewish blood or Arab blood.

Like most Samaritans, Cohen speaks modern Arabic, Hebrew and English as well as ancient Hebrew, the Samaritan holy language in which their Bible is written.

The outside wall of the Samaritan synagogue in Kfar Luza has depictions of the 12 Tribes of Israel with their names written in ancient Hebrew. Photo by Judith Sudilovsky

Samaritan boys and girls begin studying their Bible together at the age of six. But in daily life, Samaritans on Mount Gerizim speak Arabic and those in Holon speak Hebrew.

Samaritans adhere only to the Five Books of Moses in the Torah and do not follow any rabbinical teachings or edicts. They do not celebrate post-Torah holidays such as Purim or Hanukkah.

Samaritans holding aloft their biblical scroll written in ancient Hebrew, on Mount Gerizim. Photo by Nasser Ishtayeh/Flash90

According to Samaritan beliefs, Mount Gerizim, and not Jerusalem, is where God commanded Abraham to sacrifice Isaac and also where the Tabernacle first rested when Joshua Ben Nun led the ancient Israelites into the Land of Israel.

The Kfar Luza Samaritan community used to live in Nablus but moved to their sacred Mount Gerizim in 1988 during the First Intifada because of clashes in Nablus between Israeli soldiers and Palestinian protestors. The community does not get involved in politics.

Since 1995, the Samaritans hold three identity cards: Israeli, Palestinian and Jordanian. They are the only group to do so.

Samaritans living in Holon serve in the Israeli army, but not in combat units or in the West Bank.

Because we are a really small community we cant be with clashes, said Cohens daughter Salwa, 33, a former high-tech professional who runs the Samaritan Museum with her father.

We are a very small community so we cant [risk losing anyone]. Every person in the Samaritan community is very precious for us.

Marrying within the faith

Salwa Cohen with a Samaritan Bible written in ancient Hebrew. Photo by Judith Sudilovsky

While the Samaritan community integrates into daily life both in Nablus and Holon, they are very strict about marrying only amongst themselves, noted Salwa.

To marry outside the faith means excommunication, she said.

Until recently, the biggest challenge was a shortage of girls in the community. But some two decades ago, the Samaritan elders ruled to allow some of the men to marry outsiders as long as the women agreed to become Samaritan. They brought in about two dozen brides from countries such as Ukraine and Turkey, and a few local Jewish women.

Every girl knows that of the 20 or 30 boys she knows one of them will be her husband, said Salwa, who chose to marry her cousin and is mother to three girls.

Because we dont have enough girls, the girls have many choices. You may think it is very odd but when you raise your children in this way they absorb it. But the good news is that the number of girls is growing so in five or six years I think we wont need to get any girls from outside.

The outside of the Samaritan Museum on Mount Gerizim. Photo by Judith Sudilovsky

Sukkot, Samaritan style

Inside the sukkah, Cohen who was wearing a white-and-red turban and a gray robe over a cream-colored tunic, explains that the Samaritan tradition of building the sukkah inside rather than outdoors comes from the times when locals, ranging back even to the Byzantine era, would deface the sukkah when it was built outside.

A Samaritan sukkah, laden with nearly a ton of fruits and vegetables. Photo by Judith Sudilovsky

There are other differences in how this biblical festival is celebrated by Samaritans.

While Jews bundle together willow, myrtle and palm branches along with an etrog (citron) as part of their holiday observance, the Samaritans believe the holiday mitzvah is fulfilled simply by sitting under the edge of the suspended indoor sukkah.

In the early morning of the first day of the seven-day holiday, the male members of the community, clad in white robes, ascend to the top of Mount Gerizim for the traditional holiday prayers.

Celebrants carry an ancient copy of their Torah, which they say is the oldest in the world.

On that day, the Holon Samaritans come for the pilgrimage atop the holy mountain and later share in festivities visiting friends and relatives in the village.

Everyone is welcome to his home for the holiday, Cohen said.

In the evenings, Palestinian officials and neighbors from Nablus come to greet the Samaritans. During the daytime, Israeli tour groups and Israeli representatives visit the village.

A priestly family

Abdallah Wasef Tawfiq, the High Priest of the Samaritans of Kfar Luza. Photo by Judith Sudilovsky

As the oldest male in the Cohen family who according to Samaritan tradition are direct descendants of the biblical priestly caste, the cohanim Husney Wasef Cohens oldest brother, Abdallah Wasef Tawfiq, is the High Priest of the Samaritans.

My father was the High Priest 40 years ago, my grandfather 80 years ago, he said.

While Tawfiq is the High Priest, the younger Cohen has largely taken on the role of emissary of the community. He often gives radio and television interviews, and on this Sukkot holiday was speaking to a group of print journalists.

Giving the priestly blessing to his visitors, the elderly Tawfiq was dressed in a striped gold and white robe.

He expressed his hope that Samaritans could serve as a bridge between Jews and Arabs, having a foothold in both worlds while maintaining their neutrality.

For more information on the Samaritan community of Kfar Luza/Mount Gerizim, click here.

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Meet the real good Samaritans living on a holy mountain - ISRAEL21c

Looking Back: ‘The Last Guys to Let You Down’ Detroit Jewish News – The Jewish News

Posted By on October 27, 2021

One of the fun things about the William Davidson Digital Archive of Detroit Jewish History is that, while searching for one subject, I find interesting articles on another topic. Case in point: The Last Guys to Let You Down in the July 29, 1994, issue of JN.

The Last Guys to Let You Down is a tongue-in-cheek reference to our local Jewish funeral directors. They are indeed the last guys to actually let you down when the time comes.

Before revealing the entertaining content of the article, perhaps I might start with a little bit about the three funeral homes or chapels in Metro Detroit that serve the Jewish community: Hebrew Memorial Chapel, Ira Kaufman Chapel and Dorfman Chapel.

The Hebrew Memorial Chapel is the oldest of the three, incorporated in 1916. The catalyst was the burial of a homeless Jew in Detroits potters field, or the citys cemetery for the poor. Shlomo Sandwiess called together a group of 10 people who formed the Hebrew Free Burial Association, a nonprofit funeral home. The chapel is still nonprofit. It has been in Oak Park since 1964. Rabbi Boruch E. Levin has been executive director since 1986.

In 1941, Ira Kaufman established the Ira Kaufman Chapel at Dexter and Edison. It moved to its location in Southfield in 1961. Iras son, Herb, then began to work at the chapel. David Techner worked at the chapel when he was in high school. He became a licensed funeral director in 1974. Today his son, and Iras great-grandson, Chad, is part of the team with Herb and David.

The last of the trilogy is the Dorfman Chapel, established in 2001 by Alan Dorfman. After working at the Hebrew Memorial Chapel for 20 years, Dorfman began the Alan H. Dorfman Funeral Direction, which focused on graveside services, in 1991. His son, Jonathan, is now co-owner of the chapel.

Now, about the The Last Guys to Let You Down. In the article, funeral directors relate stories about doing their absolute best to meet the many often strange requests of grieving families. Per the article, Halachah mandates that there should be no fancy jewelry or clothes for the deceased, but it does not expressly forbid inclusion of other items.

David Techner discussed a late husbands wife request to have his cell phone buried with him since he was never without it. Rabbi Boruch Levin and his funeral director recalled having walkie-talkies placed with the deceased. Alan Dorfman has been asked to include cigarettes (He loved to smoke) and decks of cards.

It should also be noted that all three chapels regularly perform mitzvahs above and beyond holding funerals. For example, the Kaufman Chapel helped bury unclaimed bodies from the Wayne County Morgue (June 5, 2014, JN). Hebrew Memorial partnered with BBYO to hold Driving to Distraction, an event to educate teenagers about the dangers of texting while driving (Nov. 6, 2011, JN). The Dorfman Chapel opened a non-denominational bereavement library for Detroiters after 9-11 (Dec. 12, 2001, JN).

I hope its a long time before I am, ahh, lets say, the guest of honor at a funeral. But, it is good to know that Detroit has great funeral chapels to let me down easy.

Want to learn more? Go to the DJN Foundation archives, available for free atwww.djnfoundation.org

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Looking Back: 'The Last Guys to Let You Down' Detroit Jewish News - The Jewish News

If COVID boosters are so effective, why isnt everyone getting one? – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on October 27, 2021

A Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine booster trial released last Thursday revealed some pretty spectacular data: It had a relative vaccine efficacy of 95.6% against the disease when compared with those who did not receive a booster during the period when the highly contagious Delta variant has been the prevalent strain.

In Israel, where nearly 3.9 million people have gotten the third shot, cases have declined from an average of more than 6,500 a day in September to around 1,600 in October.

The Pfizer trial shows that the booster shot will increase this groups protection against infection by 20 times, said Eran Segal, a computational biologist at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot who has been advising the government. Yes, three shots versus two means 20 times more protection.

Moreover, in most countries, including the United States, if boosters are approved at all, they are only available to limited parts of the population, such as the elderly or people at the highest risk for contracting the virus or developing severe disease.

So if COVID boosters are so effective, why isnt everyone getting one?

The Pfizer trial included more than 10,000 participants over the age of 16, divided into two groups: third shot and placebo. The median time between the second and third dose was 11 months. Within an average of 2.5 months after receiving the booster, only five people developed symptomatic COVID-19. Some 109 people who did not receive the booster got COVID.

We believe boosters have a critical role to play in addressing the ongoing public health threat of this pandemic, said Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla. We look forward to sharing these data with health authorities and working together to determine how they can be used to support the rollout of booster doses around the world.

BUT HEBREW University of Jerusalem epidemiologist and public health physician Prof. Hagai Levine said Israel should not be so quick to push its magic bullet solution on other countries, which need to make the right decisions for themselves based on both culture and their epidemiological situation.

I would not copy and paste our experience in other countries, he said, adding that Israel should be humbler. The pandemic fluctuates. This wave is decreasing in other countries without the booster shot. Giving the booster to everyone is not necessarily key.

The devil is in the details, explained Prof. Nadav Davidovitch, director of Ben-Gurion University of the Negevs School of Public Health and head of the Israeli Association of Public Health Physicians.

While Israel managed to inoculate 6.2 million Israelis with at least one dose of the vaccine, many other countries are still struggling to administer the first shot. In some places, even where vaccines are readily available, there could be fragmented healthcare systems, which means there is an uneven distribution that might need to be rectified before third shots can be considered.

Also, Israel vaccinated people much earlier than some other countries, which means it was the first to have data showing that the vaccines begin to wane between four and six months after the second shot data that has now been replicated in other countries, including the US.

In Israel, we have the unique situation: that a very large proportion of the population was vaccinated at the same time, so the impact of waning also comes at the same time, making the need for the booster shot much stronger, Levine said.

In other countries, vaccine campaigns took longer and therefore waning across the community will also take more time.

FINALLY, there is still an issue of side effects, Davidovitch said. Although preliminary studies show the side effects of the booster are quite rare and generally not worse than the second dose, there is not necessarily enough data to be sure yet, and therefore this could also serve as a barrier to mass booster shots in some countries, he said.

Levine said while the Israeli Association of Public Health Physicians did not oppose allowing the booster shot for everyone in Israel when the decision was made, there was not necessarily proof that it was needed for everyone.

Israel was in a rush to get the booster shots started as the infection rate rose, he said. As such, the country did not use serological tests as a consideration before administering the booster to make a more informed decision about which parts of the population might need the third shot more than others.

If countries have more time and their epidemiological situation is different, they may consider using serological testing as a tool, Levine said. They may also be able to have a more tailored approach to the booster shot.

For example, while the vulnerable population the elderly and people with underlying medical conditions clearly requires a booster, he said, younger, healthier people may not need the shot.

How many people died in Israel from COVID-19 who are young, healthy and received two Pfizer doses? Levine asked. Very, very few.

The need to give a booster shot to people under 18 has not been proven yet, which is why the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency are waiting for more data, he said.

My take is that if you do not need [the booster], wait, said Prof. Cyrille Cohen, head of the immunology lab at Bar-Ilan University.

He admitted that boosters are a little bit of a game of chicken and egg. If a country needs it, it should start administering the booster. But if not, it should wait until it is necessary so that it can buy itself more time. After all, there is no indication of how long the third dose will last.

In the United Kingdom, for example, with Delta mutation AY4.2, no restrictions and early vaccination, it seems the booster should have been rolled out earlier.

They waited too long, Cohen said.

Will all countries eventually need the shot?

It is likely, Davidovitch said.

I am confident that each country that does not give the booster is going to see a resurgence of cases, he concluded.

Read more here:

If COVID boosters are so effective, why isnt everyone getting one? - The Jerusalem Post

Five Things Facebook Has to Worry About After Whistleblower Disclosures – VOA News

Posted By on October 27, 2021

WASHINGTON

The past several weeks have been difficult for the social media behemoth Facebook, with a series of whistleblower revelations demonstrating that the company knew its signature platform was exacerbating all manner of social ills around the globe, from human trafficking to sectarian violence.

The tide shows no sign of receding. New revelations this week have demonstrated that the companys supposed commitment to freedom of expression takes a back seat to its bottom line when repressive governments, like Vietnams, demand that dissent be silenced. They showed that Facebook knew its algorithms were steering users toward extreme content, such as QAnon conspiracy theories and phony anti-vaccine claims, but took few steps to remedy the problem.

In statements to various media outlets, the company has defended itself, saying it dedicates enormous resources to assuring safety on its platform and asserting that much of the information provided to journalists and government officials has been taken out of context.

In a conference call to discuss the company's quarterly earnings on Monday, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg claimed that recent media coverage is painting a misleading picture of his company.

Good faith criticism helps us get better, Zuckerberg said. But my view is that what we are seeing is a coordinated effort to selectively use leaked documents to paint a false picture of our company. The reality is that we have an open culture, where we encourage discussion and research about our work so we can make progress on many complex issues that are not specific to just us.

The revelations, as well as unrelated business challenges, mean that Facebook, which also owns Instagram and the messaging service WhatsApp, has a lot of things to worry about in the coming weeks and months. Here are five of the biggest.

A potential SEC investigation

Whistleblower Frances Haugen, a former product manager with the company, delivered thousands of pages of documents to lawmakers and journalists last month, prompting the wave of stories about the companys practices. But the documents also went to the Securities and Exchange Commission, raising the possibility of a federal investigation of the company.

Haugen claims the documents provide evidence that the company withheld information that might have affected investors decisions about purchasing Facebooks stock. Among other things, she says that the documents show that Facebook knew that its number of actual users -- a key measurement of its ability to deliver the advertising it depends on for its profits -- was lower than it was reporting.

The SEC has not indicated whether or not it will pursue an investigation into the company, and a securities fraud charge would be difficult to prove, requiring evidence that executives actively and knowingly misled investors. But even an investigation could be harmful to the companys already bruised corporate image.

In a statement provided to various media, a company spokesperson said, We make extensive disclosures in our S.E.C. filings about the challenges we face, including user engagement, estimating duplicate and false accounts, and keeping our platform safe from people who want to use it to harm others . . . All of these issues are known and debated extensively in the industry, among academics and in the media. We are confident that our disclosures give investors the information they need to make informed decisions.

Antitrust suit

Facebook is already being sued by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which claims that between the companys main site, Instagram, and WhatsApp, Facebook exercises monopoly power in the social media market. The agency is demanding that the three platforms be split up.

Facebook has publicly claimed it does not have monopoly power, but internal documents made available by Haugen demonstrate that the company knows it is overwhelmingly dominant in some areas, potentially handing the FTC additional ammunition as it attempts to persuade a federal judge to break up the company.

Legislative action

Congress doesnt agree on much these days, but Haugens testimony in a hearing last month sparked bipartisan anger at Facebook and Instagram, especially over revelations that the latter has long been aware that its platform is harmful to the mental health of many teenage users, particularly young girls.

Several pieces of legislation have since been introduced, including a proposal to create an app ratings board that would set age and content ratings for applications on internet-enabled devices.

Others seek to make social media companies like Facebook liable for harm done by false information circulating on the platform, or to force the company to offer stronger privacy protections and to give users the right to control the spread of content about themselves.

Ramya Krishnan, a staff attorney at the Knight First Amendment Institute and a lecturer in law at Columbia Law School, is one of many academics who have been pushing for lawmakers to require Facebook and other social media platforms to allow researchers and journalists better access to data about their audiences and their engagement.

We've seen increased interest among lawmakers and regulators in expanding the space for research and journalism focused on the platform, reflecting the understanding that in order to effectively regulate the platforms we need to better understand the effect that they are having on society and democracy, she told VOA.

Internal dissent

One of the most striking things about the documents released this week is the amount of anger inside Facebook over the companys public image. The disclosures include reams of internal messages and other communications in which Facebook employees complain about the companys unwillingness to police content on the site.

Im struggling to match my values to my employment here, one employee wrote in response to the assault on the U.S. Capitol on January 6, which was partly organized on Facebook. I came here hoping to effect change and improve society, but all Ive seen is atrophy and abdication of responsibility.

The documents show that the company is losing employees -- particularly those charged with combating hate speech and misinformation -- because they dont believe their efforts have the support of management.

Advertiser boycott

Last year the Anti-Defamation League organized a campaign to pressure companies to pause their advertising on Facebook in protest over its failure to eliminate hateful rhetoric on the platform. In a statement given to VOA, Jonathan A. Greenblatt, the groups CEO, said it is preparing to do so again.

Mark Zuckerberg would have you believe that Facebook is doing all it can to address the amplification of hate and disinformation, Greenblatt said. Now we know the truth: He was aware it was happening and chose to ignore internal researchers recommendations and did nothing about it. So we will do something about it, because literally, lives have been lost and people are being silenced and killed as a direct result of Facebooks negligence.

He continued, We are in talks to decide what the best course of action is to bring about real change at Facebook, whether it's with policymakers, responsible shareholders, or advertisers, he said. But make no mistake: We've successfully taken on Facebook's hate and misinformation machine before, and we aren't afraid to do it again. It's time to rein in this rogue company and its harmful products.

Original post:
Five Things Facebook Has to Worry About After Whistleblower Disclosures - VOA News

They Joined an Anti-Government Militia With Their Government Emails – Rolling Stone

Posted By on October 27, 2021

What kind of person signs up for an antigovernment militia with a government-issued email address? The answer is surprising, revealing and, as one extremism expert puts it, really alarming.

The purported membership of the Oath Keeper membership rolls obtained in a hack and leaked to the transparency group Distributed Denial of Secrets include more than 38,000 names. The vast majority of alleged members are enrolled in a way that leaves them somewhat anonymous: Their registrations are associated with a gmail or other private email address.

But a review by Rolling Stone identified nearly 40 memberships linked to public-sector work emails, from domains like nasa.gov, dmv.virginia.gov, and city.pittsburgh.pa.us. Rolling Stone then matched these individuals to public-source information from LinkedIn accounts, government websites, public salary databases, etc. to compile a list of everyday Americans who appear to have been dues paying members of the notorious right-wing organization.

Think of them as the Oath Keepers next door. Their ranks include more than a handful of law enforcement officers. But, in full, they cut across a broader cross section of society, including employees of the Treasury Department, Los Alamos National Laboratory, the Veterans Administration, as well as local government workers ranging from fire fighters to auto mechanics to public school employees.

This is an organization that recruits from law enforcement and military. That is kind of their cause, says Alex Friedfeld, an investigative researcher at the Center on Extremism, housed at the Anti-Defamation League. Yet civilians are signing up not folks who you would normally think would be part of the target demographic. What this shows, he says, is how the Oath Keeper ideology, and the broader militia-movement ideology, has permeated through society.

Making exceptions for individuals who hold, or have held, high-ranking jobs of public trust, Rolling Stone is not individually identifying these purported Oath Keepers by name. But these records underscore how the militia group has gone mainstream.

The Oath Keepers ideology is steeped in conspiracy theories. The militia asks its members to defend America from federal tyranny, and swear to defy unconstitutional orders, which they imagine with feverish foresight. (For example: We will NOT obey any order to blockade American cities, thus turning them into giant concentration camps.) Membership in the organization is not illegal. But militia activities by Oath Keeper members have long been suspect. The Oath Keepers are infamous for vigilantism including showing up toting guns in moments of social unrest. More than 20 Oath Keepers have been charged for participating in the siege of the U.S. Capitol on January 6th that sought to block President Joe Biden from assuming office.

The Oath Keepers organization has not responded to questions about the hack or its data. The leaked records, which date back as far as 2009, do not indicate which memberships are current although some individuals are listed as life members. (Oath Keeper memberships today cost $50 a year, or $1,000 for life.) The leaked rolls have been reported on by media outlets including USAToday, the Daily Dot, ProPublica and Oregon Public Broadcasting, as well as by Rolling Stone. This reporting has identified dozens of members of the military and law enforcement, as well as Republicans in elected office, as Oath Keeper members. A number of these individuals have gone on record confirming their affiliations.

At least one individual who appears to have signed up for the Oath Keepers using his public work credentials made no secret of his ideology. Robin Cole is the former Sheriff of Pine County Minnesota, north of Minneapolis. The leaked records show him joining in 2013, when he was sheriff about the same time he sent an open letter to constituents pledging not to enforce any new federal or state gun restrictions, decrying them as an erosion of freedom and a moral sin. Reached by telephone, Cole confirmed his identity but hung up after this reporter began asking about his inclusion on the alleged Oath Keeper rolls. The Pine County Sheriffs Department reached on the telephone number listed with Coles apparent membership declined to comment for this story.

Several less-high ranking officers also appeared to sign up for the Oath Keepers with their government-issue email addresses. They include an officer in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, police department; a recently retired police detective from Wyoming; a former member of the sheriffs department from Hamilton County, Tennessee; and a former member of the Texas State Guard, who noted on his purported membership that he was, Extremely worried about the current state of government and the disdain for the US Constitution and general US and WORLD Rule of LAW.

Leaving aside law enforcement members, the list becomes professionally diverse. There are current and former firefighters from Seattle; Columbus, Ohio; Huntsville, Alabama; and Lexington, Kentucky. The list includes a supervisor with the federal Department of Homeland Security, and a county-level homeland security director in Tennessee.

The other federal employees on the purported Oath Keeper rolls are a grab bag. They include a research engineer at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, a communications professional from NASA, an FAA air traffic systems specialist from Arizona, a staff member at the Treasurys Department of Public Debt in West Virginia, a physician at the Veterans Administration in Alabama, and a retired Air Marshall from Las Vegas.

State workers are similarly eclectic including a supervisor at Californias Department of Water Resources, an assistant supervisor in the Kentucky Department of Corrections, an instructor at a state rehabilitation center in Virginia, and a criminal investigator with the Louisiana Department of Justice.

At the local level, the purported Oath Keeper list includes a school resource officer from central Indiana; individuals with school-district emails from central North Carolina and the Florida panhandle; a former recreation services employee from Wasilla, Alaska; an auto mechanic in Cincinnati, Ohio; a superintendent of solid waste management in Maryland, and civilian employees in the police departments of Huntsville, Alabama, and Washington D.C.

Rolling Stone emailed each of the public employees at their work addresses seeking comment. Nobody wrote back. (A few are now defunct and could not be delivered.)

Friedfeld, the extremism investigator, says the Oath Keepers recruiting rhetoric sometimes draws in people with a limited understanding of the groups militant M.O. On the surface, the way these guys talk of patriotism and constitutionality, can seem reasonable, he says. And there are some people, Friedfeld adds, who sign up initially and then learn a little bit more about whats actually happening and go, Oh, no. Im out.

One prominent Texas public employee, contacted by Rolling Stone, cant figure out how he ended up on the alleged Oath Keeper rolls in the first place. The state comptrollers office has a criminal division that investigates tax fraud. Institutionally pro-government, its mission is to ensure that Texas isnt cheated out of lawful revenue. Jim Harris, now the criminal divisions Chief of Police, appears on the leaked membership list as having joined in 2013, using an email with the bureaus internet domain at the time, cpa.state.tx.us.

Harris didnt respond directly to Rolling Stone, but Chris Bryan, a spokesperson for the comptrollers office, says Harris denies participating in the group, or ever paying dues: Chief Harris is not a member of the organization, and doesnt recall ever being a member of the organization, Bryan says, adding: His position is that he may have put his email address on a form at some point 10 years ago, but has never been a member of the organization.

Yet many other Americans appear to join the Oath Keepers with their eyes wide open. The NASA employee, for example, added a note about how he might be useful to the militia, bragging of: Firearms training, general preparedness, wilderness first aid [and] general combat training. The Pittsburgh police officer appended a note highlighting his experience as a firearms instructor, and adding that he would spread the word to my students.

Its really alarming, Freidfeld says. Seemingly ordinary people are signing up for the Oath Keepers because they think that tyranny is coming. Theyve adopted a conspiratorial worldview, he says, that the federal government has been co-opted by forces that are planning to do bad things to them or their family or their communities.

These folks want to stand up, Friedfeld adds, but they dont see any avenues for action in politics, community organizing, or other facets of civil life. They think the solution is joining with this militant group to protect their way of life.

Link:
They Joined an Anti-Government Militia With Their Government Emails - Rolling Stone

The US is tying the hands of a UN agency for Palestine refugees – Open Democracy

Posted By on October 27, 2021

Palestinian refugees are under constant attack from the Israeli government and pro-Israel lobby groups. And as the agency representing and protecting their refugee status and right of return, the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), has been a priority target for Israel and its allies. Campaigns by Israel and pro-Israel advocacy groups to delegitimise the agency are not new, yet, one of the most significant threats in recent times is unfolding without anywhere near the attention it merits.

On 14 July, the US Department of States Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration signed a 2021-22 Framework for Cooperation with the UNRWA. Seemingly, it is an agreement in which the US will agree to provide funding to the agency as long as some conditions, outlined in the document, are met.

The reestablishment of US funding to the UNRWA comes after a full cessation in 2018 during the Trump administration, allegedly as part of organised attempts to delegitimise the refugee status of more than seven million Palestinians.

In 2019, the US and Israel were the only UN member states to vote against renewing UNRWAs mandate.

The resumption of funding was welcomed by some as an improvement on the scorched-earth policy of the Trump years. However, while funds are desperately needed, the US-UNRWA agreement is significantly and critically flawed, as is laid out in a new report by the Palestinian Return Centre. The report claimed that within the document is another veiled move to delegitimise, depoliticise and dehistoricise the Palestinian refugee cause.

The agreement threatens and undermines the UNRWAs work for Palestinian refugees, violating several of the agencys core principles, including neutrality and independence.

Read this article:

The US is tying the hands of a UN agency for Palestine refugees - Open Democracy

BADIN/PALESTINE NEWS: Church to host Trunk or Treat, blood drive – The Stanly News & Press | The Stanly News & Press – Stanly News & Press

Posted By on October 27, 2021

Halloween Happenings

Palestine UMC will host a Trunk and Treat immediately after the Sunday morning worship service at 36414 Palestine Road, Albemarle.

Badin VFD Trunk and Treat has been cancelled this year.

Palestine UMC

Jo Grey

The church will sponsor a Red Cross Blood Drive at 1 p.m. Sunday in the church Fellowship Hall.

The UMC Charge Conference is at Bethel UMC on Nov. 17 at 7 p.m.

Many other announcements can be found on the Facebook page.

Town Business

Leaf collection begins Monday with pick up on the following streets: Lake, Elm, Poplar and Hickory. Collection will continues street by street through Nov. 10 unless weather becomes a problem. The schedule of streets for each days pickup is posted on http://www.badin.org or Badins Facebook page.

Remember how piles of leaves become traffic hazards over time? Please consider timing and placement when tackling this seasonal chore.

Limb and brush pickup is planned for Nov. 2. Please have debris curbside before 8 a.m.

Town Council holds a regular meeting Nov. 9 at 7 p.m. at the Badin Conference Center on Falls Road. Visitors are welcome.

Family Event

All are welcome to Badin Bash at the Village Green on Falls Road 3-5 p.m. Nov. 6.

There will be bounce houses, face painting, music, fire trucks and first responder vehicles, hot dogs and more offer safe and free family time entertainment.

Bring lawn chairs and blankets for a family picnic. Badin churches are sponsoring this activity.

Better Badin, Inc.

The next monthly meeting of this volunteer group is Nov. 8 at 6:30 p.m. at Loafers and Legends.

Plans are underway for the annual Badin Tree Lighting on Nov. 30.

Thanksgiving Dinner

Badin residents are invited to the Annual Badin Community Thanksgiving Dinner on Nov. 13 at Ikes Community Center, 507 Roosevelt St.

Turkey and all the home-cooked trimmings will be served from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. by Palestines Love Thy Neighbor group.

Movies on the Green

Cooler weather is perfect for a free outdoor showing of a 1980s juvenile adventure film, The Goonies (PG), set to begin at sundown on Nov. 13 on the green across from Town Hall.

Beverages will be available for sale.

Christmas Concert

Better Badin welcomes back to town the Glorious Sounds of Christmas, Encore with David Mills, an Albemarle native, and the Charlotte Festive Brass at Badin Baptist Church on Nov. 28.

Seating is limited for the 4 p.m. concert. Tickets are available for $25 from Better Badin members or at Loafers and Legends, or Eventbrite.

The church sanctuary is handicapped accessible.

Badin Presbyterian

Everyone is invited to the church on Spruce Street for Sunday worship at 10 a.m.

In a recent Facebook post, Pastor Dan Wray commended a group of Badin Presbyterian children for raising $369 for Stanly Community Christian Ministry.

Badin News is by Jo Grey. Email Jo.greync@gmail.com.

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BADIN/PALESTINE NEWS: Church to host Trunk or Treat, blood drive - The Stanly News & Press | The Stanly News & Press - Stanly News & Press


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