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Conversation with the Rabbi of Paris – "He who hates Jews considers himself a victim" – The Weston Forum

Posted By on September 22, 2021

Delphine Horvilleur is one of three rabbis in France. She is critical of religious feminism and is particularly disturbed by left-wing identity politics.

Sarah Bynes (magazine)

Posted today at 8:00 am

Judaism, feminist, rabbinic: Delphine Horvilleur does not want to be reduced to any of these terms.

Photo: Leah Crespi/Figarophoto/Live

In the Marais district of Paris, mornings are as cool as summer, and the tables in front of the Caf des Artistes are a little damp. The dolphin Horvelor spurs tea and smiles here and there at the passersby. In the Jewish fourth circle, the world is small, and everyone knows each other. An old lady comes to the round table. Thank you madam. I am a huge fan of your work. What a great new book. What is meant is Vivre avec nos morts, Horvilleurs book on solace, which was recently published. Shortly thereafter, Horvilleurs husband, Ariel Weil, mayor of downtown Paris, stopped by, with whom she had three children. He is on his way to work and brings his wife a small paper bag that she puts on the table next to her. It was just published and it was already a bestseller, Horvilleur says, happily patting the bag containing the new book.

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Conversation with the Rabbi of Paris - "He who hates Jews considers himself a victim" - The Weston Forum

Educational Alliance Executive Becomes New Head of Manhattan JCC – Bowery Boogie

Posted By on September 22, 2021

From the Lower East Side to the Upper West Side.

Rabbi Joanna Samuels, the sitting executive director of the Manny Cantor Center at the Educational Alliance, is set to become the new chief executive director of the Marlene Meyerson JCC Manhattan. Her new gig begins early next year, marking a significant transition at one of the worlds largest Jewish Community Centers.

Samuels replacesRabbi Joy Levitt, who announced her plans to retire last April after fifteen years at the top.

The JCC is a vital, healthy, and dynamic institution, and it is a privilege to lead it, said Samuels, a founding executive of the Manny Cantor Center, in a statement.

Samuels hopes to further bolster the JCCs commitment to diverse viewpoints, while offering a space for belonging and shared experience.

The exchange of ideas is part of how we move forward, said Samuels.We can agree on some things and disagree on others, while still retaining a sense that we are a people, she said.

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Educational Alliance Executive Becomes New Head of Manhattan JCC - Bowery Boogie

For Mallorcas Jews, their first public sukkah is a triumph over the Spanish Inquisition – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on September 22, 2021

(JTA) Before the Spanish Inquisition, the island of Mallorca had a sizeable Jewish community. Every fall, the island became dotted with the leaf-roofed huts that Jews are commanded to erect during the holiday of Sukkot.

But that all changed under the Inquisitions campaign of persecution that began in 1488 (four years before it started on Spains mainland) and was only officially abolished centuries later in 1834.

This year, however, the islands tiny Jewish community in the capital Palma is determined to reintroduce its Sukkot tradition with a public statement.

Ahead of the holiday this week, the Jewish community along with the municipality of Palma have erected what organizers are calling the islands first public sukkah since the Inquisition, situated in the citys former Jewish Quarter.

Its one of several firsts for the Jews of Mallorca, and its especially meaningful because it restores something from this communitys past, said Dani Rotstein, founder of Limud Mallorca and secretary of the Jewish Community of the Balearic Islands. Atourism and video production professional from New Jersey, he has led efforts to promote Mallorcas Jewish community since he moved there in 2014.

To be fair, Palma has seen its share of sukkahs since the Inquisition. The city and the island, which is a popular vacation destination off of Spains eastern shores, for decades has had a small but active Jewish community of about 100 members, plus several Jewish expats. They are celebrating the 50th anniversary since British expats founded the community in 1971. Palma also has a synagogue, a small Jewish museum and a resident rabbi.

But this years weeklong holiday of Sukkot, which begins Monday night, will mark the first time that a sukkah will be built on public grounds with funding from the local municipality. It was erected at the Can Oms mansion, the seat of the citys department of culture and other municipal bodies. Jews and non-Jews will be able to enjoy cultural programming from Limmud Mallorca, including lectures in the sukkah and tours of the area, over the course of two weeks.

The public sukkah is part of a European-wide initiative European Days of Jewish Culture, a series of events celebrating Jewish heritage in dozens of cities in Europe each year in September and October.

Members of the Jewish community of Mallorca, Spain, attend a Tu bShvat picnic, Feb. 10, 2019. (Cnaan Liphshiz)

This development is the latest in a series of moves by Rotstein and others designed to commemorate the pre-Inquisition presence of Jews in Mallorca, who became known as chuetas, the local name for anusim or those who were forcibly converted to Christianity during the Inquisition.

On Rosh Hashanah, local Jews hosted a festive service and musical concert to celebrate the new Jewish year, with the cooperation of a local Catalan cultural center, in its garden located in the old Jewish quarter.

It was symbolic to participants because of a painful chapter in the history of Mallorcas Jewish community. In 1677, local crypto-Jews, who risked their lives by practicing their faith while pretending to be Christian, held a Yom Kippur service in secret in a garden outside the city walls.

Local Jews say that when Spanish rulers learned about the service, they salted the gardens soil to ensure that nothing could ever grow there again, and doubled down on eradicating Jewish celebrations from the island.

In recent years, authorities have made an effort to acknowledge and atone for such atrocities.

In 2018, local authorities unveiled a memorial plaque at the Palma square where 37 crypto-Jews were publicly burned in what was once known locally as the bonfire of the Jews.

In 2015, the city helped build a small Jewish museum in what used to be the Jewish quarter. The area, featuring sandstone facades and quiet, cobbled streets, used to be a thriving and heavily Jewish shopping and business area, with many tanneries, shoe shops and butcher shops. Today few if any Jews live there, and most visitors are tourists.

Also in 2015, the parliaments of Spain and Portugal passed laws that give descendants of Sephardic Jews the right to citizenship. Millions of dollars in public funds are being invested in preserving and developing Jewish heritage sites in those countries.

Many chueta families continued to practice Judaism in secret. Even those who did not keep up their Jewish practice at the time were treated with suspicion and excluded in many ways from the rest of society.

Some Jewish traditions remained in chueta families, such as the lighting of candles on Shabbat, covering mirrors during mourning and the spring cleanings associated with Passover. But overtime the islands Jewish population dwindled.

But, ironically, societys exclusion of chuetas proved to be the key to Judaisms revival in Mallorca, historians say: because they were not allowed to intermarry freely with the Christian population, chuetas married among themselves. This helped preserve a distinct chueta identity well into the 1970s, when the dictatorship of Fransisco Franco finally collapsed, opening Spanish society to the rest of Europe.

When that happened, Mallorca had thousands of people who defined themselves as chuetas, a minority that numbers about 20,000 today.

In recent years, chuetas who returned to Judaism and converted have taken the communitys reins. In 2018, two chuetas were elected to the communitys four-person executive board. And in June, the community received, for the first time since the Inquisition, a rabbi who was born in Palma to a chueta family, Nissan Ben Avraham.

This process, as well as the public events for Rosh Hashanah and Sukkot, are a victory, Iska Valls, a chueta returnee to Judaism and the wife of Toni Pinya, one of the Jewish communitys chueta board members, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

Its a victory [over] the Inquisition and proof that we are like a phoenix, rising once more from the ashes, she said.

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For Mallorcas Jews, their first public sukkah is a triumph over the Spanish Inquisition - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Amsterdam inaugurates a monument to the Jewish and Roma victims of the Holocaust – Market Research Telecast

Posted By on September 22, 2021

The Netherlands has from this Sunday in Amsterdam with a monument in memory of the Dutch victims of the Holocaust. Designed in the shape of a maze, it has 102,220 bricks bearing the names and dates of birth of an equal number of Jews and members of the Roma community. They have no grave because their bodies were thrown into mass graves, or burned, in concentration camps during World War II. The monument has taken 15 years to be built due to differences in the location in the capital and a better use of the budget for other purposes. The delays have inflated the cost, which has gone from 7 to 14.6 million euros, and King William has inaugurated it in an emotional ceremony that has been attended by several survivors. Other European cities, such as Paris, Berlin or Vienna have similar constructions.

The Dutch actor, Jeroen Krabb, famous, among others, for films such as The fugitive (1993), has been the master of ceremonies. From a Jewish family by maternal line, of those relatives only his mother survived, and he has stressed that this is a way of remembering thousands of people whose memory would otherwise disappear for lack of someone to remember them. And it is that between the bricks appear names fixed in the collective memory, such as that of Annelies Marie (Anne) Frank, the author of the famous newspaper, who died in Bergen-Belsen along with her sister, Margot. That of Etty Hillesum, author of another newspaper, unpublished until 1981, and who perished in Auschwitz. Or George Maduro, a law student of Sephardic Jewish origin who participated in the resistance and died in Dachau at the age of 28. After the war, his parents donated the capital necessary to build Madurodam, a miniature version of the Netherlands that is one of the most visited museums. There are, however, many anonymous victims without relatives after the war and who now have a place here, said the Dutchman Jacques Grishaver, president of the Auschwitz Committee. The author of the design is the architect Daniel Libeskind, an American of Polish origin, and the bricks can be sponsored for 50 euros. So far, about 80,000 have been adopted. There is also a wall where the names of other victims that may appear will be added. Hes twenty now.

Until 1961, Jews and Roma killed by the Nazis were not named in the Netherlands so as not to distinguish between population groups. The victims of the war were discussed in general terms. In the ceremony that commemorates them every May 4, the two groups have been mentioned for a long time, along with members of the resistance and the Dutch military who fell in World War II and other armed conflicts. Acting Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte pointed out in his speech that the cold treatment of the survivors upon their return to the Netherlands is one of the dark pages of our history. Their suffering was not taken into account, and anti-Semitism still lurks today: this monument tells us that we must be vigilant, he added. Femke Halsema, mayor of Amsterdam has in turn acknowledged that the Consistory failed the Jewish residents during the occupation, in his speech.

The ceremony went smoothly, and both the king and a representation of the attendees have placed a stone in front of the main wall of the monument. According to Jewish custom, it is a way of showing that you have been at the grave of a loved one. The place is located in an old Jewish quarter of the Dutch capital, and to avoid possible incidents, Halsema had asked the neighbors not to look out of the windows or follow the act from the street.

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Amsterdam inaugurates a monument to the Jewish and Roma victims of the Holocaust - Market Research Telecast

For Mallorcas Jews, first public sukkah is triumph over Spanish Inquisition – The Times of Israel

Posted By on September 22, 2021

JTA Before the Spanish Inquisition, the island of Mallorca had a sizeable Jewish community. Every fall, the island became dotted with the leaf-roofed huts that Jews are commanded to erect during the holiday of Sukkot.

But that all changed under the Inquisitions campaign of persecution that began in 1488 (four years before it started on Spains mainland) and was only officially abolished centuries later in 1834.

This year, however, the islands tiny Jewish community in the capital Palma was determined to reintroduce its Sukkot tradition with a public statement.

Ahead of the holiday this week, the Jewish community along with the municipality of Palma erected what organizers are calling the islands first public sukkah since the Inquisition, situated in the citys former Jewish Quarter.

Its one of several firsts for the Jews of Mallorca, and its especially meaningful because it restores something from this communitys past, said Dani Rotstein, founder of Limud Mallorca and secretary of the Jewish Community of the Balearic Islands.

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A tourism and video production professional from New Jersey, he has led efforts to promote Mallorcas Jewish community since he moved there in 2014.

Dani Rotstein, pointing, explains to German tourists about a church that used to be a synagogue in Palma de Mallorca, February 11, 2019. (Cnaan Liphshiz/ JTA)

To be fair, Palma has seen its share of sukkahs since the Inquisition. The city and the island, which is a popular vacation destination off of Spains eastern shores, for decades has had a small but active Jewish community of about 100 members, plus several Jewish expats. They are celebrating the 50th anniversary since British expats founded the community in 1971. Palma also has a synagogue, a small Jewish museum and a resident rabbi.

But this years weeklong holiday of Sukkot, which began Monday night, marks the first time that a sukkah is built on public grounds with funding from the local municipality. It was erected at the Can Oms mansion, the seat of the citys department of culture and other municipal bodies. Jews and non-Jews will be able to enjoy cultural programming from Limmud Mallorca, including lectures in the sukkah and tours of the area, over the course of two weeks.

The public sukkah is part of a European-wide initiative European Days of Jewish Culture, a series of events celebrating Jewish heritage in dozens of cities in Europe each year in September and October.

This development is the latest in a series of moves by Rotstein and others designed to commemorate the pre-Inquisition presence of Jews in Mallorca, who became known as chuetas, the local name for anusim or those who were forcibly converted to Christianity during the Inquisition.

A leather shop that used to be a synagogue in Palma de Mallorca, Spain. (Cnaan Liphshiz via JTA)

On Rosh Hashanah, local Jews hosted a festive service and musical concert to celebrate the new Jewish year, with the cooperation of a local Catalan cultural center, in its garden located in the old Jewish quarter.

It was symbolic to participants because of a painful chapter in the history of Mallorcas Jewish community. In 1677, local crypto-Jews, who risked their lives by practicing their faith while pretending to be Christian, held a Yom Kippur service in secret in a garden outside the city walls.

Local Jews say that when Spanish rulers learned about the service, they salted the gardens soil to ensure that nothing could ever grow there again, and doubled down on eradicating Jewish celebrations from the island.

A tourists and locals walk in the Balearic Islands capital of Palma de Mallorca, Spain, July 29, 2020 (AP Photo/Joan Mateu

In recent years, authorities have made an effort to acknowledge and atone for such atrocities.

In 2018, local authorities unveiled a memorial plaque at the Palma square where 37 crypto-Jews were publicly burned in what was once known locally as the bonfire of the Jews.

In 2015, the city helped build a small Jewish museum in what used to be the Jewish quarter. The area, featuring sandstone facades and quiet, cobbled streets, used to be a thriving and heavily Jewish shopping and business area, with many tanneries, shoemakers and butcher shops. Today few if any Jews live there, and most visitors are tourists.

Also in 2015, the parliaments of Spain and Portugal passed laws that give descendants of Sephardic Jews the right to citizenship. Millions of dollars in public funds are being invested in preserving and developing Jewish heritage sites in those countries.

Illustrative: Members of the Jewish community of Mallorca, Spain, attend a Tu bShvat picnic, February 10, 2019. (Cnaan Liphshiz)

Many chueta families continued to practice Judaism in secret. Even those who did not keep up their Jewish practice at the time were treated with suspicion and excluded in many ways from the rest of society.

Some Jewish traditions remained in chueta families, such as the lighting of candles on Shabbat, covering mirrors during mourning and the spring cleanings associated with Passover. But over time the islands Jewish population dwindled.

Ironically, societys exclusion of chuetas proved to be the key to Judaisms revival in Mallorca, historians say: because they were not allowed to intermarry freely with the Christian population, chuetas married among themselves. This helped preserve a distinct chueta identity well into the 1970s, when the dictatorship of Fransisco Franco finally collapsed, opening Spanish society to the rest of Europe.

When that happened, Mallorca had thousands of people who defined themselves as chuetas, a minority that numbers about 20,000 today.

In recent years, chuetas who returned to Judaism and converted have taken the communitys reins. In 2018, two chuetas were elected to the communitys four-person executive board. And in June, the community received, for the first time since the Inquisition, a rabbi who was born in Palma to a chueta family, Nissan Ben Avraham.

This process, as well as the public events for Rosh Hashanah and Sukkot, are a victory, Iska Valls, a chueta returnee to Judaism and the wife of Toni Pinya, one of the Jewish communitys chueta board members, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

Its a victory [over] the Inquisition and proof that we are like a phoenix, rising once more from the ashes, she said.

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For Mallorcas Jews, first public sukkah is triumph over Spanish Inquisition - The Times of Israel

Olivia Wilde Boyfriend: All About Her Relationship Status – The Artistree

Posted By on September 22, 2021

In todays article, we will be discussing in detail Olivia Wilde Relationship Status. Olivia Wilde is a popular Hollywood actress. Besides being an actress, she is also a filmmaker. Her acclaimed roles include Remy Thirteen Hadley on the television series House (2007-2012), and The Incredible Burt Wonderstone (2013) as well as Tron: Legacy (2010), Cowboys & Aliens (2011), and The Lazarus Effect (2015). Her Broadway debut was in 1984, where she played Julia. She managed to bag the Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature in the year 2019. This was for her much critically appreciated teen comedy titled Booksmart.

Olivia Wilde was born on 10th March 1984 and is currently thirty-seven years old. As a child, she lived in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, DC, and spent summers at Ardmore in Ireland. She used to attend the private school at Georgetown Day School in Washington, DC. She also went to the boarding school at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. When she was still in school, she made a tribute to the writers and authors that belonged to her family by changing her own name. Even though she was accepted to Bard College, she declined the offer. She had decided that acting was what she wanted to do and decided to follow her dreams. She started going to The Gaiety School of Acting to fulfill her acting dreams. This school was situated in Dublin. Keep Reading to know all about Olivia Wilde Relationship.

Also, Check Out Betty White Family: All About her Age, Marriage & Net Worth

Olivia Wilde is currently in a relationship with Harry Styles. The love affair between Olivia Wilde and Harry Styles began on the set of Dont Worry Darling, where they met. Florence Pugh, Chris Pine, Gemma Chan, KiKi Layne, and Nick Kroll also star in the psychological thriller. When Styles managers wedding took place in January 2021, the two were photographed holding hands in California. She began dating Styles two months after she split from her fianc Jason Sudeikis and three months after he joined her film. The couple, who have been together for over a decade, have two children: son Otis and daughter Daisy.

After making their relationship public, the couple returned to Styles home in Los Angeles. Although Styles didnt interfere with Wilde and Sudeikis relationship, in the beginning, the new couple still tried to keep their relationship quiet. Following the completion of filming in February 2021, Olivia Wilde and Styles spent some time together in London. During their London trip, the pair were spotted at local pubs. Apparently, she is really smitten by Harry Styles. Honestly, can we blame her ladies? Who is not smitten by Harry Styles?

Also, Check Out Taylor Swift: Age, Height and Net Worth

Olivia Wildes mother is Leslie Cockburn, an American producer, and journalist on 60 Minutes. Andrew Cockburn, her father, is also a journalist and the son of Claud Cockburn, a British writer, and journalist. Even though he was born in London, he spent most of his life in Ireland, and that is where he was raised. The actresss family owned a house in Guilford, which is in Vermont, but that was only for a while. Her siblings include an older sister and a younger brother who are five years older and nine years younger than her respectively. Her grandfather Claud Cockburn, his sons Alexander and Patrick Cockburn, and her aunt Sarah Caudwell were also journalists. The famous Christopher Hitchens, who is an American critic, was once the Cockburn familys tenant in Washington DC. Apart from that, he also babysitter Olivia Wilde sometimes.

During the height of the British Empire, Olivia Wildes paternal Scottish ancestors lived in locations such as Peking (where her grandfather was born), Calcutta, Bombay, Cairo, and Tasmania. The family of Wildes father includes George Cockburn, the man responsible for burning Washington, D.C., to the ground while fighting in the War of 1812. She also has 1/64th Sephardic Jewish descent through her great-great-great-great-grandfather, Ralph Bernal (17831854), a British Whig politician and actor.

Olivia Wilde married Italian filmmaker and musician Tao Ruspoli when she was 19 years old, a member of the aristocratic Ruspoli family. In February 2011, she announced that she and Ruspoli had separated, and their divorce was confirmed the next month itself. That is all about Olivia Wilde Relationship and everything you need to know about it.

Also, Check Out Robert Downey Jr Sons: All About Family, Career and Life

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Olivia Wilde Boyfriend: All About Her Relationship Status - The Artistree

Close to crumbling, the tomb of an ancient prophet is saved in Kurdish Iraq – Forward

Posted By on September 22, 2021

For nearly 30 centuries the tomb of the prophet Nahum was an important pilgrimage site for Jews in what is today Kurdish Iraq.

But after the founding of Israel in 1948, all its Jewish caretakers began leaving the region, and in more recent years, the Islamic State embarked on its campaign to destroy holy sites across Iraq, coming within five miles of Nahums tomb before it was turned back by airstrikes. By 2016, the tomb a sprawling complex that includes the remnants of a synagogue and study rooms was nearing complete collapse.

To me, it looked like it was beyond rescue. It was in such terrible condition, said Cheryl Benard, an American whose non-profit organized the effort to reconstruct the tomb. We really only had a couple of months to do something about this site, because it likely wouldnt last another winter.

Now the project to restore the tomb the only one in the region to retain its Jewish character is near completion. Benards Virginia-based ARCH International the Alliance for the Restoration of Cultural Heritage plans to open it to visitors within the next few months, with exhibits about the history of the shrine and Iraqs Jewish community.

Those involved with the rescue of the Tomb of Nahum call it a remarkable international effort, a collaboration of both Jews and non-Jews to reconstruct the history of the shrine, and to restore it in keeping with Jewish tradition.

It happened, Benard said, because people care about preserving their history, something that became clear to her during her 20 years as a political scientist working in war zones,

I was struck by how important cultural heritage sites and monuments were to people, even when they had lots of other things to worry about, Benard said. These monuments and sites represent hope, identity, pride or all of those things.

Nahum the Alqoshite so called because hes from the town of Alqosh is believed to have lived in the 7th century BCE. One of the Hebrew bibles 12 minor prophets, Nahum is also known as The Burden of Nineveh because he prophesied the destruction of the city, then capital of the great Assyrian Empire, and likely one of the largest cities in the world in its day.

The ruins of Nineveh have long since been rebuilt into what is today the Iraqi city of Mosul, about an hours drive south of Alqosh. Since ancient times, dozens of empires and factions, from the Sassanid Persians to the Islamic State, have come and gone through the region.

By Kathryn Costello

The Village of Alqosh.

Its residents still identify as ethnic Assyrians using the name of the very empire Nahum prophesied against and continue to speak a dialect of Aramaic, the lingua franca of the ancient Near East.

Its an outlier in a region largely divided between Kurds, Arabs and Turkmen peoples.

Many villages in Northern Iraq, such as Zakho, had longstanding Jewish communities at the turn of the 20th century.

Jews were an integral part of the fabric of that region for thousands of years, said Adam Tiffen, ARCHs treasurer, who is Jewish. In fact our faith comes from that region, Abraham was from Ur, the Talmud was written in Babylon.

By Kathryn Costello

Christian murals in the village of Alqosh, where Aramaic is still the main spoken language.

Nonetheless, the village would fill up with Jews every spring, as it became a pilgrimage site for the harvest festival of Shavuot.

An entire complex grew up around the tomb for the Jewish pilgrims who would spend the holiday there. A smaller adjacent tomb is also traditionally believed to be the final resting place of Nahums sister, Sara. The current structure dates as far back as the 12th century AD though thats almost 2,000 years after the purported lifetime of the prophet.

Those pilgrimages came to an end in 1948 as, like elsewhere in the Middle East, Iraq was depopulated of its Jews following the establishment of the state of Israel.

However, such was local Jewrys reverence for their prophet, that upon their arrival in Israel a community of Kurdish Jews settled in the town of Elkosh, which is in an area others had pointed to as the possible birthplace of Nahum.

When the last of Kurdistans Jews left, Nahums tomb was left in the care of a local Christian.

As much a part of the Christian bible as the Hebrew, the tomb inspired similar reverence among Christians. But the agricultural town of Alqosh, with less than 5,000 residents, had little ability to maintain it.

The sorry state of the tomb first came to the attention of Tiffen and Benard, ARCHs founder, in 2016, when Iraq was at the height of its war with the Islamic State, or ISIS. Benard was in the area working with another NGO, bringing medical supplies to the Kurdish peshmerga forces which were battling ISIS in Alqoshs neighboring villages.

It was mentioned to us that in Alqosh there was this shrine, the only prophet that hadnt been blown up by ISIS, because they havent gotten to Alqosh yet, said Benard, who grew up in post World War II Germany, where she said she witnessed first hand how communities banded together to reconstruct heritage sites damaged by war.

ISIS already had a history of dynamiting historic and holy sites, such as the tomb of the Prophet Jonah in Mosul. It based this destruction in its strictly Salafist interpretation Islam, which holds that even physical shrines to Islamic holy figures, let alone those associated with other religions, could lead the faithful to shirk or polytheism.

Though ISIS came perilously close to Alqosh before military maneuvers turned its fighters back, the Tomb of Nahum was still far from safe.

The elements were proving just as dangerous.

To save Nahums tomb, ARCH knew they needed experts who were both knowledgeable about historical construction and traditional synagogue architecture.

They found Yaacov Shaffer and Meir Ronen, two Israeli engineers who specialize in historic conservation, have worked with synagogues before and could diagnose the sites weaknesses and advise on a plan to save it.

But sending them to Iraq on their Israeli passports raised many security questions.

It would have been easier to bring engineers from any place other than Israel, Tiffen said. But we wanted to start out the project with sensitivity and work with people who had some understanding of and experience working on Jewish cultural heritage sites.

After getting the go ahead from Israels interior ministry the pair set off from Jerusalem, transiting through Istanbul to Erbil, the capital of Iraqs Kurdish regional government, where they soon learned that many things in the Kurdistan region would be different than they expected.

I appreciate them so much for their leap of faith, really, because they didnt know what they were getting into and what the situation would be like in Iraq, and in Northern Iraq, Benard recalled. They just came, they trusted us, and within a couple of hours, they had relaxed, were feeling fine and already they were telling everybody who asked them that they were from Israel, and getting really nice reactions to that.

Shaffer and Ronen remember that one of the biggest surprises was the size of the site not just a single room for prayer but several rooms and study halls.

Everyone had said to us synagogue or tomb but its a really big site, not just a small monument. Its very labyrinthine, Shaffer said.

Courtesy of Kathryn Costello

Stabilization efforts on the interior of the tomb while the restoration was completed.

In Israel, we dont really find the same materials. Okay, the stone is stone, but all the mortar and refilling between the stones is not the same, Shaffer explained.

As they studied the complex the engineers also took note of what had already collapsed compared to what remained standing.

We also learn from the failures of the building, Shaffer said.

Shaffer and Ronen said the trip was important to them as engineers who specialize in historic Jewish architecture, but also as Jews.

Both of us learned in high school about the Prophet Nahum, Ronen said. It was very impressive to be there. Its such an important Jewish tomb.

Many claim that three other Hebrew prophets Jonah, Daniel And Ezekiel are also buried in Iraq (though others point to sites from Israel to Iran and as far as Uzbekistan and Morocco, as the final resting place of some of the same prophets.)

Courtesy of ARCH International

Hebrew inscriptions are present all throughout the tomb.

Its very important for us to save heritage, Ronen said. Here, we saved our own, but also for others as well. It doesnt matter the religion, it is important to save. We will work on churches and other monuments too.

Ronen saw that attitude reciprocated in Alqosh in the Christian caretaker of the tomb.

Who keeps this shrine and holds the key for all this time? A citizen of this city for forty something years cleans the tomb with his family. Theyre not Jewish, but it shows that to respect another religion or culture, you dont need to be from the same religion, Ronen said.

Other elders in Alqosh told the two how they remembered celebrating holidays together with the Jewish community when they were children.

Its really amazing, in that land with all its war and armies, one time it was a beautiful land with a beautiful relationship between the Jews and other local citizens, Ronen added.

After Shaffer and Ronens preliminary analysis of the site, further assessments and the restoration work itself was completed by GemaArt, a Prague-based firm which had previously worked on nearly a dozen synagogues and Jewish sites in the Czech Republic.

ARCHs team also made several trips to Israel to meet with Sephardic rabbis and Iraqi Jewish leaders to make sure their work on the tomb would respect local tradition.

Tiffen even met with Israels former Sephardic chief rabbi, Shlomo Amar, to discuss the project.

He blessed the plan, with the only prohibition that we not disturb the grave itself, which we didnt, Tiffen recalled.

And Israels Kurdish Jewish community helped. Though the ARCH team had a good understanding of the Tomb of Nahums architecture, they didnt know much about what it had looked like on the inside.

By the time they got to it, the site had been picked clean of almost everything moveable, from ritual objects to light fixtures. While its possible that some of it was taken by Kurdish Jews when they fled Iraq, its likely that most objects were looted by antiquities traffickers who have ravaged Iraq of its cultural heritage for decades.

Stories and memories shared by Israeli Kurdish Jews added pieces to the puzzle. We were hoping that they would have information and photos about what the shrine looked like, Benard said. Also, we wanted to learn more about the traditions, because ironically, you know, our initial information about the traditions of the shrine all came from, like, Christian onlookers.

Benard and Tiffen travelled to Jerusalems Iraqi market, a part of the Mahane Yehuda Bazaar, in the hopes of finding someone who remembered the old days at the tomb.

We talked our way around the various stalls and got connected with some elders who were from Zakho or other places nearby and started filling in the details a little bit, Benard said.

They found a few people who were at best children the last time they saw the tomb, but the pair gleaned some insightful anecdotes.

Courtesy of ARCH International

Hebrew inscriptions over the entrance to one of the complexs rooms.

One elderly rabbi recalled how his mother once even tried to blackmail the prophet.

His brother, who was six or so years old, had not spoken yet. The family went to the tomb trying to seek the prophets to help, Benard said. Their mother told the prophets that they were going to stay in the shrine. They were moving in, and they were going to stay there until their child spoke.

According to the rabbi, her plan worked: his brother spoke and later became a successful dentist.

Benard hopes that when the project is complete it will include an exhibition at the site to relate such stories.

We would love to have a sort of an installation where people can listen to oral histories of Jewish people who are now in Israel, speaking about what they remember about their time in northern Iraq, she said.

While in Jerusalem, her team was also impressed by the interest of young Kurdish Jews to return to the region.

It was really astonishing to me, how the community remained connected to a place in which most of them have never been, and those that had been there hadnt been there for 50-plus years, Tiffen said.

They really would like to go back and see the place that their parents or their grandparents talked about, Benard added.

While larger Iraq-Israel relations still range from non-existent to fraught, she thinks it may yet be a real possibility, at least in the semi-independent Kurdistan region, which has historically had warmer relations with Israel.

The Kurdish authorities have no problem with that, Benard said But I think everybody needs to feel a lot more comfortable with the situation and the security aspects of it before that kind of tourism is likely to occur.

In the interim, would-be pilgrims can explore the tomb virtually on ARCHs website.

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Close to crumbling, the tomb of an ancient prophet is saved in Kurdish Iraq - Forward

The Lerner screens a film about a Goshen family’s efforts to rescue Jews in the Holocaust – South Bend Tribune

Posted By on September 22, 2021

Tribune Staff Report| South Bend Tribune

ELKHART The Lerner Theatre presents a screening of Vital Passage at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 23 at 410 S. Main St.

The documentary tells the Holocaust rescue story undertaken by Goshens Plaut family, which came to light with the discovery of a lockbox hidden in the basement of the former Plauts Dry Goods store.

The papers inside revealed that in the late 1930s, David Plaut and his son Sidney witnessed firsthand the mounting persecution of Jews in Germany.

They decided to sponsor and relocate 28 Jewish refugees to immigrate to the United States. This documentary chronicles their nine-year quest as they risked their business and livelihood to provide a vital passage for Jews escaping the Holocaust.

The film was made by Sidney Plauts grandson, Steve Gruber, and Goshen College Communication Department (FireCore Media).

Admission is free, but tickets must be reserved.

For more information, call 574-293-4469 or visit thelerner.com or fivecoremedia.com/vitalpassage.

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The Lerner screens a film about a Goshen family's efforts to rescue Jews in the Holocaust - South Bend Tribune

Clackamas County commissioner Mark Shull condemned after sharing post comparing COVID-19 restrictions to Holo – oregonlive.com

Posted By on September 22, 2021

Clackamas County commissioner Mark Shull is once again drawing condemnation after sharing a meme Sunday on his Facebook account that appeared to compare COVID-19 health restrictions to the Holocaust.

The post, which has since been taken down, references restrictions placed on Jewish people in Nazi Germany during World War II, including the requirement to wear a yellow star on their clothing while outside. It asks, Anyone see the parallel?

The other four elected members of the Clackamas County Board of Commissioners issued a statement Tuesday decrying Shull for comparing COVID-19 health restrictions to the horrific crimes and atrocities the Jewish community faced during the Holocaust.

We want to be clear that our County and we as commissioners, condemn antisemitism, racism and bigotry, the statement said. Mark Shulls post does not reflect the values of Clackamas County or this Board.

The Jewish Federation of Greater Portland also called the comparison appalling, offensive and an affront to the memory of all who perished during the Holocaust.

The group urged Shull to issue an apology for making such a comparison.

Shull defended his actions during a Tuesday board of commissioners policy session. He said the post was sent to him by community members that were concerned about potentially losing their jobs if they did not get vaccinated. He said the post was meant as commentary on what can happen when people dont speak up about restrictions on civil liberties and said that there was nothing in the post that compares vaccine mandates with the Holocaust.

His post came less than a month after a Clackamas County employee was charged with a bias crime for painting a swastika on the sidewalk at a memorial for a Black man who died after being held at the countys jail.

This is not the first time Shull has drawn backlash for his inflammatory comments.

In June, Shull compared COVID-19 vaccine passports to Jim Crow laws that legalized racial segregation. That prompted county board chair, Tootie Smith, and the other three commissioners to vote in consensus to restrict Shulls ability to serve as a liaison to various boards and committees.

In January, Shulls history of xenophobic social media posts, as well as comments about Islam, Muslim people, transgender people and the Black Lives Matter movement, prompted a board-imposed censure and widespread calls for him to resign.

Shull blamed the calls for his resignation on cancel culture.

The Recall Mike Shull campaign, which began after Shulls comments in January, renewed its call for Shull to resign in a statement Tuesday.

The disgusting and offensive use of the Holocaust to advance his political agenda is yet another confirmation of why Mark Shull is unfit to lead this county, said local labor activist Ira Erbs, a child of Holocaust survivors and a campaign leader. It is past time for Shull to step down, and if he fails to do so, we intend to ask the voters to replace him.

Cris Waller, an organizer with the campaign, said they are still gathering pledges from people to sign the recall petition. Once the petition is officially filed, they only have 90 days to collect the slightly over 30,000 signatures needed for a recall vote.

We are working with a large coalition of individuals from all walks of life to ensure that Shulls harm to our communities will end, Waller said.

-- Jaimie Ding

jding@oregonian.com; 503-221-4395; @j_dingdingding

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Clackamas County commissioner Mark Shull condemned after sharing post comparing COVID-19 restrictions to Holo - oregonlive.com

French Holocaust survivor talks about her life during the Nazi occupation and her journey to Central Pa. – FOX43.com

Posted By on September 22, 2021

Lobel's mother gave her up to an orphanage in order to save her life. Unfortunately, Lobel's mother, father, and sister had a different fate.

LITITZ, Pa. Rosette Lobel was born to Jewish parents in Paris in 1939 just before World War II began.

She doesn't remember much about her childhood, but at the young age of three, she knew her life would never be the same.

"I remember my mother giving me to somebody and she was begging me not to cry, you know, and I knew I was going away from her, I remember that," said Lobel.

Rosette's mother gave her up to an orphanage in order to save her life. Unfortunately, Rosette's mother, father and sister had a different fate.

"My mother, my father, and my sister were killed by the Nazis in the concentration camps," said Lobel.

After living at the orphanage for a couple of years, Rosette lived with three other families.

At the age of 10, she found out she was being sent to the U.S, where her mother's family lived.

"We came to Brooklyn," said Lobel.

Rosette grew up in New York, got married at the age of 19 and worked in the beauty and fashion industry.

She says she tried her best to forget all that she went through and live a normal life.

"I was traveling, I was having kids, I just wanted to put it all out of my mind," said Lobel.

But she knew that not talking about it would mean that people would forget.

She started going to synagogues and schools to talk about her experience.

"To me, it's the most important thing to talk to children, because I don't know if they teach the Holocaust here."

About five years ago, she moved to Lititz, Pennsylvania to be closer to her daughter.

Rosette believes that her family is proud of the life she's been able to make despite so much tragedy.

"I talk to them and I say, I hope I did the right thing. You know, that you approve of what I do, I try to do good things," said Lobel.

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French Holocaust survivor talks about her life during the Nazi occupation and her journey to Central Pa. - FOX43.com


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