Page 628«..1020..627628629630..640650..»

WWW Hubert Middle School Student selected to participate in the Anti -Defamation League No Place for Hate Back to School – Savannah-Chatham County…

Posted By on October 15, 2021

On Wednesday, October 6,the Anti Defamation League (ADL) kicked off theNo Place for Hate Back to School initiativewith Amanda Gorman. Congratulations to JaKhya Bush, Hubert Middle School 8th grade student, who was selected to participate in the interview portion with Gorman via a zoom interview.

Amanda Gormanis an Americanwriter,poet,activistand change maker. She was the first person to be namedNational Youth Poet Laureate. In 2021, she delivered her poem "The Hill We Climb" at theinauguration of U.S. President Joe Biden. Her inauguration poem generated international acclaim, and shortly thereafter, two of her books achievedbest-sellerstatus. She is a committed advocate for the environment, racial equality and gender justice. In February 2021, Gorman was highlighted inTimemagazine's100 Nextlist under the category ofPhenoms, with a profile written byLin-Manuel Miranda.

JaKhya was surprised and honored to have been selected to participate and represent her school as well as her district. She was among thousands to submit a question to ask Gorman and was the only student from SCCPSS to partake.

JaKhya wants to become a nurse and plans to attend Georgia Southern University after graduating high school. She also thanks her guidance counselor, Ms. Brundidge, for introducing her to the Anti Defamation LeagueNo Place for Hate initiative.

No Place for Hateis a self-directed program designed to engage students and staff in dialogue and active learning on the topics of bias, bullying, inclusion and allyship that matter most to our community.

Excerpt from:
WWW Hubert Middle School Student selected to participate in the Anti -Defamation League No Place for Hate Back to School - Savannah-Chatham County...

Remarks on Holocaust books by an administrator of the Carroll Independent School District in Texas draw intense fire – CBS News

Posted By on October 15, 2021

Holocaust-related remarks by an administrator of a school district in a Fort Worth, Texas suburb are drawing nationwide attention, CBS Dallas reports.

In the remarks, secretly recorded by a staffer of the Carroll Independent School District in Southlake and given to NBC News, the administrator told teachers last week that they should offer students access to a book with "opposing" views on the Holocaust if they have a book in their classroom about the Holocaust.

NBC News says the district's executive director of curriculum and instruction, Gina Peddy, made the comment while training teachers on books they're allowed to have in their classroom libraries under a Texas law known as House Bill 3979.

CBS Dallas says the law covers the teaching of "critical race theory" in classrooms in the state.

NBC News explains that the law "requires teachers to present multiple perspectives when discussing 'widely debated and currently controversial' issues.'"

In the recording, Peddy is heard saying, "Just try to remember the concepts of 3979 and make sure that if you have a book on the Holocaust, that you have one that has an opposing, that has other perspectives."

One teacher is heard asking in response, "How do you oppose the Holocaust?"

"Believe me," Peddy replies. "That's come up."

In response to the comments, Cheryl Drazin, Anti-Defamation League Central Division Vice President, told CBS Dallas in a statement that, "ADL Texoma is horrified by this trivialization of the Holocaust. There are no comparable books to 'balance' out this viewpoint. The suggestion that educators would misrepresent the Holocaust is such a way is incomprehensible."

A pair of Tarrant County, Texas Republican state lawmakers tweeted about the story Thursday night, CBS Dallas notes.

State Senator Kelly Hancock said, "School administrators should know the difference between factual historical events and fiction. Southlake just got it wrong. No legislation is suggesting the action this administrator is promoting."

And State Rep. Giovanni Capriglione said, "The Holocaust was a terrible event in human history based on ignorant hatred. It is not a currently controversial or even debatable subject its occurrence is a fact. HB3979 does not require an "opposing view" and any idea that it would, is incorrect."

The district's superintendent, Dr. Lane Ledbetter, took to Twitter in light of the firestorm:

CBS Dallas has reached out to the district for comment.

Trending News

For Breaking News & Analysis Download the Free CBS News app

See the original post here:
Remarks on Holocaust books by an administrator of the Carroll Independent School District in Texas draw intense fire - CBS News

Michigan representative wears ‘Q’ button to election audit rally – The Detroit News

Posted By on October 15, 2021

Lansing Michigan Rep. Daire Rendon, a Republican from Lake City, wore a button to a rally outside the Capitol Tuesday that featured an American flag with a gold "Q" on it, a letter that has become a symbol for a right-wing conspiracy theory movement.

Asked if the button was for the group QAnon, Rendon, chairwoman of the House Insurance Committee, responded, "That is a flag with a Q on it." As for what the "Q" referenced, she replied, "The 'Q' is the highest level of security in the federal government. ... That's what it is."

Rendon appeared to deny the button was a direct reference to QAnon, which the Southern Poverty Law Center describes as "a sprawling spiderweb of right-wing internet conspiracy theories" that "falsely claim the world is run by a secret cabal of pedophiles who worship Satan and are plotting against" former President Donald Trump.

The "Q" in QAnon is also a reference to the "Q level clearance," a top-secret clearance level within the U.S. Department of Energy, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

State Rep. Mari Manoogian, a Democrat from Birmingham, suggested on Twitter that Rendon has previously worn the button.

"The first time I saw her wearing it on the floor of the House I was shocked," Manoogian posted.

QAnon imagery often appears in the crowds at Trump campaign events. On Tuesday afternoon, supporters of requiring another audit of Michigan's 2020 election held a rally on the stateCapitol lawn. Rendon was among the speakers for the gathering, which drew hundreds of people.

Some Trump backers claim that there was widespread fraud in last year's vote. However, Democrat Joe Biden defeated Trump by 154,000 votes or 3 percentage points in Michigan, an outcome that's been upheld by dozens of past audits, a series of court rulings and an investigation by the GOP-led state Senate Oversight Committee.

During her speech, Rendon questioned why others don't want to see "evidence" of election fraud in the 2020 vote. In an interview, Rendon said the evidence shows that voting machines were "accessible" and could have been hacked. Asked if that proves there was hacking, Rendon said the machines' "logs" would need to be examined.

"I haven't seen the logs or I'm not capable of reading them," Rendon said. "I'm not an IT (information technology) expert."

In December, Rendon was one of two GOP members of the Michigan House listed among the plaintiffs in an unsuccessful federal lawsuit that aimed to require state legislatures to certify the results of presidential elections.

Lavora Barnes, chairwoman of the Michigan Democratic Party, said Rendon was spiraling "further into bogus, dangerousand violent conspiracy theories about the 2020 election."

"If she is so convinced by her own bogus conspiracy theories about the 2020 election results, then she should just resign," Barnes said. "Michiganders and our democracy would certainly be better for it."

cmauger@detroitnews.com

Read this article:
Michigan representative wears 'Q' button to election audit rally - The Detroit News

The Rose Art Museum Announces 2021-2022 Ruth Ann and Nathan Perlmutter Artist-in-Residence Edgar Heap of Birds – Brandeis University

Posted By on October 15, 2021

(Waltham, Mass. October 2021) The Rose Art Museum named Hock E Aye Vi Edgar Heap of Birds (b. 1954, Cheyenne/Arapaho) its 2021-2022 Ruth Ann and Nathan Perlmutter Artist-in-Residence. Since 2002, the Perlmutter Residency has been part of the Rose Art Museums longstanding tradition of promoting artists of extraordinary talent whose works address contemporary issues of vital urgency. Rooted within the traditions of his Southern Cheyenne and Arapaho homelands, Heap of Birds paintings, drawings, prints, and sculptural and text-based public art projects provoke critical dialogues about identity, belonging, power and historical narratives of oppression and resilience.

The Rose team and I are aware that the violent dispossession, enslavement, and dispersal of multiple Indigenous communities and individuals by settler colonialism facilitated the very existence of our museum here, on this land. As we strive to repair relationships with Native peoples and the land, we commit to actively learning from, respecting, and amplifying Native voices by pursuing partnerships with Indigenous artists and communities. Inviting Edgar to the Rose is but one step in this long and necessary journey, said Dr. Gannit Ankori, the Henry and Lois Foster Director and Chief Curator.

Heap of Birds ongoing series of public interventions, titled Native Hosts, first begun in 1988, utilizes the direct typeface and design of municipal signage to draw attention to the injustices and violence often relegated to a repressed past. In present-tense statements (Today your host is . . .) Heap of Birds Native Hosts signs insist that the forced seizure of Native lands and the sovereignty of these grounds be brought into contemporary conversations. His Perlmutter Residency will commission the first Native Hosts signs on lands that now comprise the state of Massachusetts andin partnership with the Brandeis University Library and the public arts organization Now+Therewill support the installation of linked artworks across Brandeiss campus and the City of Boston.

As an organization committed to creating more openness and connection in Boston through site-specific, engaging public art experiences, Now + There acknowledges the deliberate and systemic oppression that has created the built environment where our projects occur, said Kate Gilbert, Executive Director of Now + There. We look forward to learning from and with Edgar Heap of Birds and local tribal elders to elevate the presence of past, present, and future Indigenous peoples.

Heap of Birds practice is based in community and conversation. He will begin his engagement at the Rose in dialogue with local Indigenous tribes and individuals. Following these conversations and a public forum to be hosted this winter, Heap of Birds will create a series of Native Hosts signs to honor and draw attention to the histories and continued presence of Native communities. His residency supports the permanent installation of his work at the Rose Art Museum and the Brandeis Library, as well as the opportunity for far-reaching connections and new understandings about the cultures and colonial histories that remain linked to todays struggles for justice and racial equity.

ABOUT THE PERLMUTTER AWARD

The Ruth Ann and Nathan Perlmutter Artist-in-Residence Award is part of the Roses longstanding tradition of promoting contemporary artists. Past honorees have included Caroline Woodward, Tuesday Smillie, Tony Lewis, Jennie C. Jones, Mika Rottenberg, Dana Schutz, Xavier Veilhan, and Barry McGee.

Nathan Perlmutter served as national director of the Anti-Defamation League for eight years and was a vice president at Brandeis from 1969-73. Along with his wife, Ruth Ann, he championed the interfaith movement and empowered religious and racial minorities. He received the Presidential Medal of Freedom at the White House in 1987, shortly before his death. Ruth Ann Perlmutter, a sculptor, and painter received degrees from the University of Denver and Wayne State University.

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Hock E Aye Vi Edgar Heap of Birds lives and works on tribal lands in Oklahoma City and taught at the University of Oklahoma from 1988 to 2018. His work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at institutions such as MoMA PS1, New York; the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; the Fabric Workshop, Philadelphia; the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Australia; the Berkeley Art Museum, California; the National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution, New York; and the Association For Visual Arts Museum, Cape Town, South Africa. Heap of Birds has been included in numerous group exhibitions, including at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City; the Denver Art Museum, Denver; the Museum of Contemporary Art Sydney, Australia; and the Museum of Modern Art,New York; and in international biennials such as SITE Santa Fe, La Biennale di Venezia, and Documenta. He has also created major commissions for the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, and Public Art Fund, New York. He has received awards from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Rockefeller Foundation.

ABOUT THE ROSE ART MUSEUM AT BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY

The Rose Art Museum has been dedicated to exhibiting and collecting modern and contemporary art at Brandeis University since 1961. With its highly respected international collection of more than 9,000 objects, scholarly exhibitions, and multidisciplinary academic and public programs, the Rose affirms and advances the values of freedom of expression, global diversity, and social justice that are the hallmarks of Brandeis University. The Rose Art Museum recently added works by Betye Saar, Joe Overstreet, Adam Pendleton, Jenny Holzer, Renee Cox, Yoko Ono, Wang Quingsong, and Jamal Cyrus to its permanent collection. Located 20 minutes from downtown Boston, the Rose Art Museum is open to the public, and admission is always free.

For more information, visit http://www.brandeis.edu/rose, or call 508.612.5128. Follow the Rose Art Museum on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

# # # #

The rest is here:
The Rose Art Museum Announces 2021-2022 Ruth Ann and Nathan Perlmutter Artist-in-Residence Edgar Heap of Birds - Brandeis University

He Calls Himself the American Sheriff. Whose Law Is He Following? – POLITICO

Posted By on October 15, 2021

Lamb says the network takes its inspiration from Live PD, an A&E show that ran from 2016 until 2020, when it was canceled after deputies in Williamson County, Texas, were caught on camera tasing a man named Javier Ambler, and ultimately killing him. (In response to the incident, Texas passed a state law that forbids law enforcement agencies from partnering with reality television shows.) Before its cancellation, Live PD was immensely popular, capturing more viewers than any other cable program on Friday and Saturday nights. Lamb was a fixture on the show, as well as a host of a spinoff, Live PD: Wanted, which focused on catching fugitives.

The trailer for the new network features lots of shots of Lamb, his profile against a desert sunset as the camera pans slowly over the shadows of cacti. He flashes a Hollywood smile as he talks about the shine on the badge. Many of the episodes are filmed in a low-budget style and feature Lamb as a guide, introducing viewers to other sheriffs in Nevada and Arizona. Lamb says the new network is important because we just felt like it was important to give [sheriffs] their voice back. When I asked if Lamb was concerned about a repeat of what happened in Texas, Vale dismissed it saying that lots of things are out of [the sheriffs] control. One episode features deputies tasing new recruits as part of their training, and watching as they scream pain.

All of Lambs activities outside Pinal County raise the question of whether he is making money off this work. Protect America Now is new enough that its tax filings have not yet been made public, but Vale told me Lamb does not get paid by the group, outside reimbursements for expenses. (State records show, and Vale confirmed, that Lambs 2020 campaign provided a $10,000 loan to the group in August of last year.) When I asked Vale whether Lamb made a salary from the American Sheriff Network, he said Lamb was a partner of a Virginia LLC that produces the content but declined to give any other details. Vale declined to say anything else about the company or provide any details about funding, revenue or viewership. He told me Lamb does make some money from occasional appearances at gun shows and other events but likewise would not disclose the amount.

Sheriffs in almost every state operate independently with limited oversight, giving them the freedom to engage in political advocacy and appear in the media. The National Sheriffs Association, of which Lamb is a member, has a model code of ethics for sheriffs that prohibits using the office for private gain, among other things. I asked Sean Kennedy, a professor at Loyola Law School who is on the oversight commission for the Los Angeles County sheriff, about Lambs involvement with Protect America Now and other outside activities, and he said he believes Lambs behavior violates the NSAs code. Kennedy pointed to the provision about private gain, as well as one requiring equal protection of all citizens, without allowing personal opinion, party affiliations, or consideration of the status of others to alter or lessen this standard of treatment.

Asked to respond, Vale said Lamb keeps a strict division between his work as the Pinal County sheriff and his image as the American Sheriff. Vale added, All of his activities, both as sheriff and in his private time, are vetted through the [Pinal] County attorney. The attorney, Kent Volkmer, told me Lamb has consulted with him, including on Protect America Now and the American Sheriff Network, but said he does not review every single appearance Lamb makes outside his capacity as sheriff. A spokesperson for the NSA told me that, while the code of ethics is the basis of an organizational creed, sheriffs generally rely on their state laws for legal guidance. The spokesperson also took time to praise Lambs messaging skills, calling him a unicorn.

Go here to see the original:
He Calls Himself the American Sheriff. Whose Law Is He Following? - POLITICO

Bay Area Jews ask: Should our buildings be visibly Jewish? J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on October 15, 2021

Since 2019, Bay Area Jewish institutions have received close to $2 million in federal security grants to protect their buildings against attacks, but a new question has emerged for some local Jewish leaders amid concerns over antisemitism: Should our buildings be publicly identified as Jewish?

For Rabbi Yehuda Ferris, of Berkeleys Chabad of the East Bay, the question was central to his new building on University Avenue, which reopened to congregants in May.

Its always a debate. On the one hand, you dont want to be a homing device for antisemitism, said Ferris. On the other hand, we are a lighthouse and we need to be proud and open. We are here to be a light unto the nations.

Ferris Chabad center, near the Trader Joes, is visibly Jewish from the street. Theres a banner advertising the shul on the storefront and an image of a dancing Hasidic Jew. But Ferris did institute one form of concealment at his Chabad house a camouflaged mezuzah that is disguised as a security keypad to prevent vandalism.

They wouldnt see a mezuzah. It looks like a little white box with a red light on it, he said. His Chabad house a former retail shop selling healing crystals also received a $133,000 federal security grant in September, of which $70,000 will go toward installing bulletproof glass.

Concerns over attacks on Jewish organizations have increased since the Tree of Life synagogue shooting in 2018 and the Chabad of Poway attack in 2019. In the Bay Area, the Chabad of Noe Valley preschool and the Jewish-owned Mannys Cafe were hit with anti-Zionist graffiti surrounding the Israel-Hamas conflict in the spring, and a man spray-painted a swastika on Oaklands Temple Sinai a year ago.

The more were connected with our neighbors, the more secure we are.

Rafael Brinner, who heads community security for the S.F.-based Jewish Community Federation, and has helped organizations apply for security grants, said the question of easily seen Jewish signage does come up during his security consultations.

If youre in a central area where there are a lot of protests, and that sign could be a lightning rod, thats one consideration. But in general, I dont think the community should be trying to hide, said Brinner. If anything, we should be integrating into our communities that much more. The more were connected with our neighbors, the more secure we are.

Brinner does advise synagogues against posting their hours of worship on the building. If someone can find you on Google Maps, then it makes no difference whether your sign is in front of your building or not. But dont add lots of other information on your sign, he said.

Rabbi Shimon Margolin, who heads the Russian-speaking Jewish Community of SF Bay Area, a nonprofit umbrella organization, said community members are working hard to increase the security of their Richmond District building to assuage concerns over a Jewish structure becoming a target for attacks.

Me and our board and our leadership, we are determined to identify it as Jewish, said Margolin. Its very important to to be proud Jews, to stand tall, because thats the reason we came to this country.

Along with helping to carry out the Jewish principle of being a light unto the nations, Ferris said Jewish signage also serves a practical purpose. Out of sight, out of mind, out of business, he said. You need a little curb appeal.

Organizations seeking assistance with applying to next round of federal security grants can contact [emailprotected].

Original post:

Bay Area Jews ask: Should our buildings be visibly Jewish? J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

A shared heritage and a shared future – Ynetnews

Posted By on October 15, 2021

Since the renewal of diplomatic relations between Israel and Russia in 1991, the two countries have enjoyed cooperation in various fields, from security to tourism. Marking the 30th anniversary of ties, the foreign ministers of the two states exchanged diplomatic notes in these exclusive opinion pieces for Ynet's sister publication Yedioth Ahronoth (For Hebrew and Russian).

Foreign Minister and Chairman of the Yesh Atid party Yair Lapid:

This month marks thirty years since the renewal of relations between Israel and Russia. The truth is that ties between the Jewish people and the Russian people have lasted for centuries. Jews have lived in Russia for hundreds of years. There was a rich and diverse Jewish life in Russia, where Yiddish culture and the Hasidic movement developed. The Russian Empire was the cradle of modern Zionism, and from there came the immigrants of the First Aliyah.

2

Foreign Minister Yair Lapid

(Photo: Rafi Ben Hacoun)

The Jewish people both influenced, and were influenced by, Russian culture. Our common heritage includes Zionist thinkers and writers such as Pinsker, Ahad Ha'am, Bialik and many others who came from and were inspired by the Russian Empire. The creation of our national theater, Habima, was inspired by Russian theater. In our concert halls, Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninoff are played, and every child knows Tolstoy and Dostoevsky. Zionist and Israeli statesmen including Weizmann, Jabotinsky, Ben-Gurion, Golda Meir and many others not only spoke Russian but were influenced by the thinking and political practice in Russia and Europe of their time.

Our people knew periods of light, and periods of terrible darkness. The Jewish people and the Russian people stood on the same side of the historical barricade in the greatest, most terrible struggle for the fate of humankind during World War II. The Jewish people and the State of Israel will forever remember the decisive contribution of the Red Army to the victory over Nazi Germany, and to the liberation of the concentration and extermination camps.

My father Tommy, may his memory be for a blessing, was himself saved by a Russian plane. In the winter of 1945, my father was a small child when he and his mother were taken and led away by the Nazis in a convoy through the streets of Budapest. A Russian plane descended directly above them, causing panic and the convoy to disperse. My grandmother took advantage of the commotion and pushed my father into a small bathroom closet, saving him from death. Who knows what would have happened if that Russian plane had not flown by that day, over the streets of Budapest.

More than 1.5 million Jewish soldiers joined up to serve with the Allied armies. One of them was my uncle, Lezi Lampel, who had escaped from a labor camp and joined the Red Army. He was just one of the half a million Jews who fought in the Red Army and in the partisan battalions. Two hundred thousand of them never returned from the battlefield.

Our commitment today is twofold - to remember the past and to look ahead to the future. Today, Israel and Russia stand on the same side against anti-Semitism and against any attempt anywhere to rewrite the history of the Holocaust. This is an important message that powerfully resonates.

An immense, broad human bridge connects our two countries and two peoples. Hundreds of thousands of Russian-speaking Israelis connect to Russia and hundreds of thousands of Jews in Russia feel the connection to Israel, providing for an endless array of opportunities. They, their communities and friends help to strengthen our ties in commerce, tourism, science and culture.

I would like to thank Russian President Vladimir Putin for advancing our relations and many achievements between our two countries, and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who has been managing diplomatic relations between the State of Israel and the Russian Federation for many years. Thanks to their work, we signed a visa exemption agreement more than a decade ago, which increased the flow of tourists between our countries fivefold. Prior to the pandemic, nearly one million people traveled on close to one hundred weekly flights between Russia and Israel. We are confident that we will return to that same level once we overcome the coronavirus pandemic.

Israel and Russia share great interest in broad cooperation across the fields of medicine, hi-tech, science and research, agriculture and infrastructure. There is nothing that cannot be improved through shared innovation and reciprocity. We are in the midst of negotiations towards signing a free trade area agreement between Israel and the Eurasian Economic Union, of which Russia is a member. The agreement will allow for further significant upgrades to our economic and commercial ties to our mutual benefit.

Russia and Israel share a common interest in stability and peace in our region. From a regional and strategic perspective, Israel considers Russia an important partner.

Among others, the Iranian nuclear threat and the situation in Syria are issues that are openly and honestly discussed between us, the leaders of both countries. Here too, I would like to commend the Russian leadership for playing a large part in fostering both the understanding and coordination that our two countries have been able to achieve on important matters of national security.

All of this and much more forms a solid foundation for our relationship.

When we look at all we have achieved in three decades, we can be proud and look ahead with hope towards significant future achievements. I believe that now, more than ever, we have a historic opportunity to deepen the relationship between two peoples who already share a special bond. I am convinced that not only our past connects us, but our future as well. I intend to continue to build towards that future and an even stronger connection between Jerusalem and Moscow.

Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation Russia Sergey Lavrov:

On October 18, Russia and Israel celebrate the 30th anniversary of the renewal of full-fledged diplomatic relations the beginning of a new era of common history.

2

Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation Sergey Lavrov

(Photo: Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation Sergey Lavrov )

Turning to the pages of the past, let me recall that the USSR was the first country to recognize de jure the State of Israel back in May 1948. Of course, there were ups and downs in the chronicle of our relationship. Today, it could be assessed with confidence that Russian-Israeli mutually beneficial cooperation has stood the test of time and continues to actively develop in all directions.

Its foundation is formed by an intensive political dialogue, foremost at the highest level. Inter-parliamentary contacts are progressing, bolstered by Friendship Groups established in the legislative bodies of our countries. Inter-ministerial communications are carried out on a regular basis.

Over the past decades, a solid experience of diversified cooperation has been accumulated in such spheres as economics, science and technology, healthcare and education. More than twenty acting intergovernmental agreements reflect the richness of the bilateral agenda.

Our mutual practical cooperation has significant potential. A number of joint projects are being successfully implemented. Many initiatives have received the support of the president of the Russian Federation and the prime minister of the State of Israel. The interest of Israeli business circles in entering the Russian market continues to grow. Despite the consequences of the coronavirus pandemic, by the end of 2020 trade between Russia and Israel decreased by only 3.9 %, and in January-July this year it increased by 51.8% over the previous years period. The key coordinating mission in these common efforts is fulfilled by the Joint Russian-Israeli Commission for Trade and Economic Cooperation, founded in 1994. We are interested in the early resumption of its work in full.

A special role in strengthening the unifying baselines of our relations as well as ensuring their stability and continuity belongs to humanitarian contacts. We appreciate the high level of mutual understanding between the peoples of Russia and Israel, connected by a common historical memory and convergence of cultures. It is encouraging that this thread, which has no geographic boundaries, is only getting stronger in course of time.

There are millions of Russian-speaking compatriots living in Israel, including descendants both from the former Republics of the USSR and from the Russian Federation. Veterans of World War II, survivors of the siege, former prisoners of concentration camps are among them. The fate of these people is of major interest to us.

Most vigorous rejection of the attempts of historical revisionism, combatting the distortion of the genesis, course and generally recognized international legal outcomes of World War II have always united Russia and Israel. We will continue to coordinate our efforts, and specifically at the UN, to counter this shameful phenomenon.

While in some countries of Central and Eastern Europe Nazi henchmen are being brought to the level of national heroes and neo-Nazi tendencies are being revived, the memory of the decisive contribution of the heroic soldiers of the Red Army to the Victory over Nazism, the saving of Jews and other peoples from extermination, the liberation of the world from the horrors of the Holocaust is sacred in Israel. We see how Israeli colleagues at the state and public levels encourage the activities of the veterans and compatriots movements, conduct active work to educate the younger generation.

It is difficult to overestimate the significance of the law on Celebrating the Victory Day over Nazi Germany on May 9, approved by the Israeli parliament in 2017. It is particularly telling that on the 76th anniversary of the Great Victory, celebrated this year, festive events and commemorative parades along with the Immortal Regiment march were held in more than 45 Israeli cities. Thousands of Israelis of all ages as well as officials participated. This scale speaks for itself.

Cooperation in the field of education and science whether through student and academic exchanges or joint scientific research continues to move forward. Every year, students from Israel get an opportunity to receive higher education in Russian universities. All of them are sincerely welcome there.

We hope that it will be possible to restore mutual tourist flows as soon as the sanitary and epidemiological situation improves. Russia is traditionally one of the top three countries in terms of the number of visitors to Israel.

The Russian-Israeli dialogue is vigorously advancing through the foreign ministries. It is obvious that without constructive interaction of diplomats it is impossible to solve a number of international and regional problems that are of paramount importance both for ensuring the prosperous future of the peoples of Russia and Israel just as for strengthening international and regional security and stability. From this perspective, diversified contacts between the Security Councils and the defense ministries of our countries have also proven themselves well. On a regular basis it allows us to compare approaches and take into account each other's legitimate interests.

Russia is pursuing an independent multi-vector foreign policy, contemplating pragmatism, the search for compromises and the observance of balances of interests. Creation of the most favorable external conditions for our internal socio-economic development remains its backbone. We have no ideological likes and dislikes, or any taboos in relations with our foreign partners, therefore we can play an active role in the international arena and specifically through mediation in the settlement of conflicts.

We are interested in continuing consultations with our Israeli partners on security and stability issues in the Middle East. We always draw attention to the fact that comprehensive solutions to the problems of the region must necessarily take into account the security interests of Israel. This is a matter of principle.

At the same time, we are convinced that there is no alternative to the two-state solution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on a generally recognized international legal basis. We strongly support direct negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians. A comprehensive solution to all issues of the final status is possible only through it. We are ready to work with Israeli colleagues, including multilateral formats, primarily in the context of the renewal of work of the Middle East Quartet of international mediators in close cooperation with representatives of the Arab League.

I am convinced: it is in the common interest to maintain the momentum. Ahead of us are new milestones and additional opportunities not only to continue, but also to enrich the positive experience of multifaceted cooperation for the benefit of our states and peoples, in the interests of peace and stability.

See the original post here:

A shared heritage and a shared future - Ynetnews

Vision Films Adds VOD and DVD Options For Award-Winning Dance Comedy ‘Tango Shalom’ After Successful Summer Theatrical – Yahoo Finance

Posted By on October 13, 2021

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 13, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Vision Films, Inc. ("Vision") announced today that Tango Shalom, the successful dance comedy movie that has been resonating with diverse audiences across the country during its theatrical run, is now available for DVD pre-order at Amazon, will be in online retail stores, and on all the major cable, satellite, Telco and digital platforms beginning October 29 across the US and Canada.

In addition, to reach as wide an audience as possible, Vision is offering the opportunity for organizations to arrange group screenings, celebrations, watch parties, or discussion panels on the virtual screening platform Eventive.

Tango Shalom holds the bragging rights to the best 2021 exclusive opening, as well having the best PTA, the Memorial Day to Labor Day summer season and boasts the number one independent film release of the summer title. With no signs of slowing down, Tango Shalom continues to dominate film festivals across the country. It opened on September 3 in Los Angeles and New York with a limited engagement and quickly expanded to over 45 theaters throughout California, New York, Arizona, Ohio, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Florida, and Canada.

The production team included a unique confluence of consultants representing The Vatican, a Hasidic Synagogue, a Mosque, and a Sikh Temple, promoting a timeless message of acceptance and inclusion. The film's authentic and genuine message of inclusion is resonating with diverse audiences, including many different religions, political organizations that promote world peace, and the LGBTQIA community, all actively supporting and promoting the film.

Tango Shalom is directed by Gabriel Bologna, son of Rene Taylor and the late Joseph Bologna. The elder Bologna also co-wrote and produced the film with brothers Jos and Claudio Laniado of Convivencia Forever Films. Co-produced by Joel Zwick (My Big Fat Greek Wedding), Robert Meyer Burnett (Agent Cody Banks franchise), Zizi Bologna, and choreographer Jordi Caballero.

Story continues

TRAILER: https://youtu.be/R6w9qkvKca8

Tango Shalom stars Golden Globe Nominee Lainie Kazan, Academy and Emmy Award-winner Rene Taylor (Adam Sandler's The Do Over, The Producers, CBS' The Nanny, How to Be a Latin Lover), Karina Smirnoff (Dancing With The Stars), Joseph Bologna (My Favorite Year, Blame It On Rio, Big Daddy, Lovers and Other Strangers), Jos Laniado (Milcho Manchevski's Bikini Moon), Claudio Laniado (Mudbound), Bern Cohen (The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel), and Judi Beecher (Taken 3, Family is Family, La Garconne).

Synopsis: When a female Tango dancer (Karina Smirnoff) asks a Rabbi (Jos Laniado) to enter a dance competition, there's one big problemdue to his Orthodox beliefs, he's not allowed to touch her! Desperately in need of splitting the prize money to save his Hebrew school from bankruptcy, they develop a plan to enter the competition without sacrificing his faith. The bonds of family and community are tested one dazzling dance step at a time in this lighthearted fable.

Lise Romanoff, CEO and Managing Director Vision Films says, "We are so grateful to the cast and crew of Tango Shalom who worked tirelessly to get the word out about this film. It truly made the traditional theatrical run a success and there is no better time to expand the reach to everyone and anyone who couldn't get to the theater. We hope the masses will enjoy this feel good, family comedy with such a positive message!"

Director/Producer Gabriel Bologna shares, "I would bet there has never been a film that has had a theatrical run only three weeks after acquisition, let alone a successful one. There is a reason they are called "Vision." From day-one, Lise Romanoff and Kristen Bedno planned a summer theatrical run and I attribute our Labor Day Weekend turnout and summer success to Vision's innovative marketing and their support of our grassroots efforts: including interfaith organizations, synagogues, and the tango milonga community. Most exciting of all, Vision is now giving anyone and everyone access to see the film through a wide variety of platforms."

Soundtrack provided by Universal Music includes multiple Grammy Award-winning Gordon Goodwin, Latin Grammy-nominated Tango sensation Daniel Binelli, British chart-toppers Touch and Go, The Circolo S. Pietro del Vaticano Choir, as well as modern Klezmer bands Golem, The Burning Bush, and Barcelona Gypsy Klezmer Band. Score by Zoe Tiganouria and Zizi Bologna.

For more information and the full-list of awards, accolades and endorsements, please visit tangoshalommovie.com.

About Vision FilmsVision Films is a leading independent sales and VOD aggregator specializing in the licensing, marketing, and distribution of over 800 feature films, documentaries, and series from some of the most prolific independent film producers in the world. Led by Lise Romanoff, Managing Director/CEO Worldwide Distribution, Vision Films releases 2-4 films a month across Theatrical, VOD, DVD, and television platforms. visionfilms.net

Contact:Andrea McKinnon(818) 415-9442321292@email4pr.com

Cision

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/vision-films-adds-vod-and-dvd-options-for-award-winning-dance-comedy-tango-shalom-after-successful-summer-theatrical-301399295.html

SOURCE Vision Films, Inc.

Continued here:

Vision Films Adds VOD and DVD Options For Award-Winning Dance Comedy 'Tango Shalom' After Successful Summer Theatrical - Yahoo Finance

US Museum Seeks To Resolve Issue Of Immunity Of Art Collections Sent From Russia- Director – UrduPoint – UrduPoint News

Posted By on October 13, 2021

WASHINGTON (UrduPoint News / Sputnik - 13th October, 2021) The US-based Museum of Russian Icons in the state of Massachusetts is trying to resolve the issue of immunity with respect to art collections sent from Russia to the United States by pursuing a special resolution in Congress, Executive Director Kent Russell said.

Russia imposed a moratorium on sending art collections to the United States nearly a decade ago after a US court ruled in favor of the Hasidic Chabad-Lubavitch group and said Moscow should return a collection of books of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn. In response, Russia warned its state museums that any collection sent to the United States was at risk of being seized by the US authorities.

"We have been advocating for some resolution about the immunity issue that the Russian authorities believe could be possible," Russell said on Tuesday.

Russel said that US Senators from the states of Massachusetts and New Hampshire have been very helpful in the attempts to resolve the immunity issue but described the situation as being a complicated and one in which both sides struggle due to a lack of trust.

"We remain harmed by the existing situation," Russell said.

In 2013, the US District Court for the District of Columbia ordered Russia to pay a $50,000 fine every day until Moscow returned the Schneersohn collection, stored in Russia, to the Hasidic Chabad-Lubavitch group in the United States.

The Russian Foreign Ministry described the court ruling as unjustified and provocative. Moscow emphasized that the Schneerson collection had been formed in Russia and is the national heritage of the Russian people as well as that it has immunity from jurisdiction given that it is a Russian state property.

Visit link:

US Museum Seeks To Resolve Issue Of Immunity Of Art Collections Sent From Russia- Director - UrduPoint - UrduPoint News

Why are Australia and its media so fearful of debate on Israels treatment of Palestinians? – The Guardian

Posted By on October 13, 2021

Recently 700 journalists and writers signed a petition calling for fuller media coverage of the plight of the Palestinians. Reportage on the Middle East has long been contested. For Zionists the Australian media is a hot bed of biased, leftwing enmity, for Palestinians the lack of a fair hearing and accurate reporting is a given.

The petition triggered a furore as media proprietors and their editors were called out for self-censorship. There is a tacit consensus in newsrooms across the country that attempting objective reporting and honest analysis isnt worth the grief. Both implicitly and explicitly it is agreed that subjects best avoided are: daily life for Palestinians, the relentless growth of settlements in the occupied territories, the concomitant moral erosion of the Israeli polity, and the complexities at play within Palestinian and Israeli politics.

Believing it to be in the national interest to publish an evidence-based account of the challenges the media confront in reporting on the region, I commissioned John Lyons to write Dateline Jerusalem: Journalisms Toughest Assignment. Lyons is a veteran newspaper editor who spent six years as a foreign correspondent in Israel and is now head of ABC Investigations. The task was to examine the impoverished reporting on this benighted region. Twenty-three editors, senior journalists and reporters confirmed on the record, to him, that the problem was the Israel lobby.

The fact that a lobby group seeks to influence government, the media and the community is neither improper nor unsurprising. Junkets, freebies, duchessing are not new. Neither is lack of transparency. But the impact of lobby groups needs to be recognised. If the media is to keep faith with the public then it must expose how influence is exercised.

When Israels policies are criticised in the public sphere, the reflexive accusation is antisemitism. The defenders of Israel right or wrong share with antisemites a belief that the actions of the state are inextricably bound up with Jewishness. This ensures that Zionism and antisemitism remain the focus of debate and the issue of Palestinian suffering under an illegal occupation is conveniently ignored. Until we can have a public discussion, which moves beyond that deadlock, it seems inevitable that Palestinian voices will not be heard.

The conflation of anti-Zionism and antisemitism is a long-term strategy and the effect on the Australian media is obvious. It is a proven way to silence critics, ensure questions remain unanswered and media coverage muted. The intemperate and defensive responses to Dateline Jerusalem prove the point. It is clear that if one doesnt want to endure the endless orchestrated letter writing campaigns, the complaints, the phone calls up and down the management hierarchy, it is best to leave the subject of Israel well alone, which of course is not in the public interest.

Years ago I published Antony Loewensteins My Israel Question, which sought to understand the Israel lobby. The response was wildly disproportionate. One might have thought community leaders would engage Loewenstein in constructive discussion to set him straight. Instead the Australian Jewish News engaged in a relentless vilification campaign against the author and his publisher. Michael Danby, then a politician, wrote to Melbourne Universitys vice-chancellor, Glyn Davis, demanding I be sacked and the book pulped. Despite the attempted intimidation the vice-chancellor continued a 14-year steadfast commitment to MUPs editorial independence.

In a review of a new book by Edward Said, I reflected briefly on my own idealistic arrival in Israel at the age of 17, anticipating a socialist utopia and dancing the hora on the tarmac. Instead I was met by Ashkenazi Jews stamping my passport, Sephardi Jews sweeping the floors and Palestinians cleaning the toilets. It was a depressing introduction to a society mired in race and class divisions. My recollection of the experience in a book review prompted a personal visit from the Israeli ambassador demanding I refrain from airing the communitys dirty linen in public. The AJN routinely proclaims on its front page One People, One Voice encapsulating the problem in a nutshell.

Why are the local foot soldiers so fearful of debate, of clear-eyed reportage of the conditions of Palestinian life, of observations that the oft touted only democracy in the region discriminates against Israeli Arabs, of demands for Palestinian self-determination, and critiques of the military occupation that has radicalised successive generations of Palestinians?

The right to live in peace and with justice tragically continues to elude Palestinian and Israeli citizenry. It is a truism that a diversity of opinions is impossible to repress in Israel. Asking why the same diversity of views is not tolerated in Australia should be the start of an important conversation. Let the debate begin.

Louise Adler is vice-chancellors professorial fellow and curator of In the National Interest at Monash University and publisher at large for Hachette Australia

Continued here:
Why are Australia and its media so fearful of debate on Israels treatment of Palestinians? - The Guardian


Page 628«..1020..627628629630..640650..»

matomo tracker