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Glimpses of Lost Tribe Jewish Communities in India and Myanmar – The New York Times

Posted By on September 22, 2021

In 2017, while I was traveling through India, a friend from the northeastern state of Assam told me about the communities of Lost Tribe Jews in the neighboring state of Mizoram. Having grown up in a Jewish family without ever fully embracing the religion of my observant parents, I was intrigued and wanted to know more.

Lost Tribe Jews, I soon learned, believe they are descended from the 10 tribes of Israel that were exiled from the ancient kingdom of Israel by Assyrians around the eighth century B.C. I decided to seek out members of the Lost Tribes and see if they would allow me to photograph their rituals and daily lives.

A few weeks later, I arrived in Aizawl, a city built atop densely forested hills. I called a contact from one of the local congregations and arranged a meeting. When two representatives arrived at my hostel, I explained my interest in their community and my wish to photograph their religious services and rituals. They seemed open to the idea but were noncommittal; they would have to talk to the other members before letting me know their decision. The next morning, they called and said that one of the congregants had passed away and invited me to photograph the funeral.

After the funeral, the members of the Shalom Tzion Synagogue welcomed me into their community with an enthusiasm I had never before encountered in any of my documentary projects and nor have I since. They had only limited contact with other Jewish people and had never met a photographer interested in their community before. There was a mutual curiosity between us, and I found myself answering many questions they had about my upbringing and what life was like in Israel, where I had worked for a number of years as a photographer and journalist.

One of the members of the congregation in Aizawl was from Chin State, in western Myanmar. He told me of a small group of Lost Tribe Jews in Kalay, a small city in the Sagaing Region of his home country. After my time in Aizawl, I decided to find my way there.

After a harrowing series of bus rides lasting more than 24 hours, I arrived in Kalay a flat, tropical city surrounded by expansive farmlands and was met by a few Lost Tribe members. I was sleep deprived and dazed by travel, but they informed me that the entire community was eagerly awaiting my arrival at their synagogue. We rode over on motorbikes.

The temple, just outside the city, was a two-story wooden building with thatched bamboo walls and a sheet-metal roof, surrounded by fields. Inside, I met with the 20 or so members of the community who promptly asked me to deliver a speech, which after spending time with the Lost Tribe communities in Mizoram and obliging similar requests wasnt entirely unexpected.

I managed to put some words together in my haggard state and was then treated to a lovely meal that had been prepared by the community in the temples backyard.

The community there which dates to the 1980s, when a group of Christians converted to Judaism was more isolated than the ones I had come to know in India. They had never before encountered a foreigner, they said, let alone someone who was both Jewish and interested in photographing their community. And yet here, again, I experienced a mutual curiosity and was granted intimate access to their lives.

The Lost Tribe Jews in northeast India and northwest Myanmar are a small minority, numbering less than 10,000, by some estimates. They are easily missed among the regions Christian and Buddhist populations.

Many of the Lost Tribe communities in northern India formed in the 1950s. British missionaries had converted most of the local population to Christianity, and some of the converts saw connections between the rituals of their old practices and those of the ancient Jews they had read about in the Old Testament.

Eventually, the belief that their ancestors were a tribe of exiled Israelites began to spread.

In the 1970s, thousands of people from the Shinlung tribe in northeast India began taking up the practices and rituals of the Jewish faith. With the help of Eliyahu Avichail, a rabbi who traveled the world in search of Lost Tribe communities, some began moving to Israel though not without facing skepticism from Israelis who questioned their motives, their sincerity and their historical ties to Judaism.

Rabbi Avichail named the group Bnei Menashe, meaning Sons of Manasseh, which was one of the 10 lost tribes.

The Jews I met in Aizawl told me that they face some discrimination in India. It is hard for them, for example, to find jobs that will allow them time off to observe the Jewish Sabbath and other holidays. Many Lost Tribe members said they no longer feel that they belong in their native countries. Almost all expressed a desire to make aliyah to immigrate to Israel, the land they believe to be their true homeland as promised to them by God.

Over the last 30 years, thousands of members of the Lost Tribe communities in northeast India have relocated to Israel partly because, in 2005, the Bnei Menashe were officially declared to have descended from the original tribe of Manasseh.

Initially, I was interested in how Lost Tribe Jews were redefining what it means to be Jewish by asserting their faith and gaining acceptance by the Israeli government. The existence of these communities complicates notions of Jewish identity while emphasizing its malleability.

But as I spent time photographing and speaking with members from the Lost Tribes, I found myself moved by the sincerity with which they brought the Jewish faith into their lives.

And lately, I find myself returning to the memory of the morning I spent photographing Shabbat services at the temple in Kalay and how the congregations Hebrew prayers blended with the sounds of church bells and Buddhist chants resonating in the distance.

Daniel Tepper is a photojournalist based in New York City. You can follow his work on Instagram.

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Glimpses of Lost Tribe Jewish Communities in India and Myanmar - The New York Times

Biden backs two-state solution for Israel, Palestine at UNGA | Daily Sabah – Daily Sabah

Posted By on September 22, 2021

United States President Joe Biden, in stark contrast to his predecessor Donald Trump's staunch pro-Israel stance, backed the two-state solution on Tuesday during a speech at the 76th General Assembly of the United Nations, adding that a sovereign and democratic Palestinian state is the "best way" to ensure the Jewish state's future.

"We must seek a future of greater peace and security for all people of the Middle East," Biden said in a speech to the U.N. General Assembly.

"The commitment of the United States to Israel's security is without question and our support for an independent Jewish state is unequivocal," he said.

"But I continue to believe that a two-state solution is the best way to ensure Israel's future as a Jewish democratic state, living in peace alongside a viable, sovereign and democratic Palestinian state," he said.

"We're a long way from that goal at this moment but we should never allow ourselves to give up on the possibility of progress."

Biden also sought to rally the international community to meet the challenges of our time, telling world leaders "we cannot afford to waste any more time."

Biden spoke to a number of pressing challenges faced by the global order, from the coronavirus pandemic to the ravages of climate change, maintaining the U.S. will "do our part" to meet them, but maintaining the world would be more "successful and more impactful if all nations are working toward the full mission to which we are called."

"As a global community we are challenged by urgent and looming crises where lie enormous opportunities if, if we can summon the will and resolve to seize these opportunities," he said during the assembly.

The president also dashed authoritarian governments the world over, saying they are stifling the wills of their people and would ultimately fail to end the age of democratic governance.

"The future will belong to those who unleash the future of their people, not those who stifle it. The future will belong to those who give their people the ability to breathe free, not those who seek to suffocate their people with an iron hand," he said.

"The authoritarians of the world may seek to proclaim the end of the age of democracy, but they're wrong. The truth is the democratic world is everywhere," he added.

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Biden backs two-state solution for Israel, Palestine at UNGA | Daily Sabah - Daily Sabah

Shock and pride: Palestinians react to re-arrest of heroes – Al Jazeera English

Posted By on September 22, 2021

Ramallah, Occupied West Bank Residents of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank say they are shocked over the news of Israeli occupation forces rearresting the last two Palestinian detainees who broke out of prison earlier this month.

The two Ayham Kamamji, 35, and Munadel Infaiat, 26 were among six Palestinian prisoners who fled Gilboa prison at dawn on September 6.

The men uncovered a point in their cells toilet that led to an underground cavity, where they dug a tunnel that opened up a few metres beyond the prison wall.

Following a two-week massive manhunt, an Israeli military raid on Jenin city in the northern West Bank saw Kamamji and Infaiat turn themselves in after Israeli occupation forces surrounded them while they were taking shelter in a residential building.

The other four prisoners Mahmoud al-Ardah, Mohammad al-Ardah, Yaqoub Qadri, and Zakaria al-Zubaidi were rearrested in pairs on September 10 and 11 near Nazareth in the north.

Palestinians, who see detainees in Israeli jails as political prisoners in the struggle for liberation, widely celebrated the prison break, and viewed it as a triumph over the occupying state. News of the arrests of the last two prisoners reigned in sentiments of shock and sadness.

Al Jazeera spoke to Palestinians on the streets of Ramallah, most of whom said they expected that the last two Kamamji and Infaiat were safe, particularly as two weeks had passed since they broke out.

I expected that they had left the country, Basman Barakat, a mini supermarket owner, told Al Jazeera, describing their rearrest as a naksa or setback in Arabic, in reference to the 1967 Middle East war.

Everyone is surprised. They needed to have planned better. We dont know what happened with them, the 40-year-old continued.

It would have been better if they had managed to see their families before being re-arrested, but they didnt they didnt get to enjoy the exit they made, added Barakat.

Similarly, Yusra Abed, 60, said she was deeply upset over the developments, and connected with the prisoners as though they were her children.

I am in shock I cried a lot. I expected that they had made it out of the country by now to Lebanon, to Gaza anything but being caught, said Abed.

I think the Palestinian people should rise up for these prisoners. If a protest is announced for them, I will be the first one there, she continued, describing the six as heroes.

They are defending Palestine. Why else would they be in prison?

Vegetable vendor Mohammad Absa, 48, pointed out the rearrest of the last two prisoners, in Jenin, made the news more shocking.

The first four were in Israeli areas any Israeli would have informed on them but that they were arrested in Jenin. Everyone is very upset, he told Al Jazeera.

Almost 15 days had passed we thought they had help and had left the country, added Absa.

Prisoners are our pride

Before breaking out of the prison, four of the six prisoners had been serving life sentences, while two were being held in detention awaiting military trial.

Those sentenced were arrested between 1996 and 2006 and had been convicted of carrying out attacks against Israeli military and civilian targets. Five of them are affiliated with the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group, while one is a senior member of the armed wing of Fatah, a group that dominates the Palestinian Authority.

The six prisoners are now being held at the Jalama Detention Center near Haifa, undergoing interrogation and facing trial. Their lawyers said they have been exposed to physical and mental abuse, and in some cases torture, by Israeli interrogators.

Kamamji and Infaiat appeared separately at the Nazareth Magistrate Court on Sunday, which extended their detention by 10 days, according to their lawyers. The other four prisoners also separately appeared before the court on Sunday, which extended their detention for the second time.

Despite the rearrest of the six, Palestinians on the ground say they remain thrilled over what the six prisoners managed to do.

Reem Shehadeh, a 20-year-old university finance student, said it is beautiful that they managed to get to Jenin in reference to Kamamji and Infaiat.

Prisoners are our pride, and what they did makes us proud, she told Al Jazeera. When they were rearrested, my family and I were all depressed, but at the end of the day, what they did is proof that liberation is assured, and hopefully they will get out in an exchange deal.

The Palestinian movement that administers the Gaza Strip, Hamas, has said in recent days that it is working on a prisoner exchange agreement that would place the six prisoners at the top of the list.

Arwa Hamayel, 50, described the prison break as a miracle.

Are they expected to spend their whole lives in prison? They raised our heads high what they did was brave, she told Al Jazeera.

Similarly, Absa, the vegetable vendor, said, Even if they were caught, they did more than what anyone could have imagined.

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Shock and pride: Palestinians react to re-arrest of heroes - Al Jazeera English

Cyclists to converge on Palestine | Community | palestineherald.com – Palestine Herald Press

Posted By on September 22, 2021

Cyclists from around the United States will arrive in Palestine this week for the Camino 205: The Texas Gravel Adventure.

Over 200 bike enthusiasts are expected to converge on Old Town Palestine Friday, Sept. 24 through Sunday, Sept. 26, to compete in one of three levels of competition.

This race was established in 2014 as a one-day event and has been taken over this year by Alex Montoya with Topview Sports. It has been extended to a weekend event, allowing participants time to explore the Palestine community.

Montoya said the competition is geared for all levels of riders, with an enjoyable option for everyone.

Participants can ride one day or two with 35, 70 and 105 mile route options each day.

All routes provide varied terrain. There are narrow primitive bridges, pot holes, animals, loose gravel and other hazards. There are short hills and some fairly steep.

There will be three rest stop locations provided through a Rest Stop Charity Contest. Water, sports drinks and basic snacks will be available at each stop.

Riders are responsible for providing their own mechanical support throughout each route. If you are not sure what you should have, please see the pre-race checklist page.

Riders are allowed to have support crews available to help them, but support vehicles must use bypass routes and cannot drive alongside riders on gravel sections.

If you are looking for a true challenge, you can test yourself against your peers over two days with the 155 mile or the Full Camino 205 options.

Local Americana band Blindpursuit is performing for the Camnio 205 crowd and the community from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on the OxBow Hollow Sawdust Stage.

Participants have an opportunity to win a pair of $1600 Cantu Cycling Wheels in this years raffle. Tickets are available the Camino registration page for $5. The winner will be drawn Saturday night. You must be present to win.

For locals who would like to participate, you must register by Thursday, Sept. 23. To register log onto http://www.thecamino205.com/registration.

Riders are encouraged to pick up their registration packet on Friday night at the start/finish site from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

Race day packet pickup will open at 6 a.m. in front of the Oxbow Bakery, which is also right in front of the start/finish. Packet pickup closes after the 35 mile group starts.

For more information log onto http://www.thecamino205.com.

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Cyclists to converge on Palestine | Community | palestineherald.com - Palestine Herald Press

Palestine rallies to support police officer with COVID-19 – Palestine Herald Press

Posted By on September 22, 2021

The outpouring of love and support for Palestine Police Office Fernando Nino continues as he fights for his life against COVID-19.

It was reported last week that Nino, who tested positive for COVID-19 on Aug. 30, was in need of a Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation machine. These machines are in high demand.

The 42-year-old was accepted into a San Antonio hospital that had an ECMO machine available on Sunday, Sept. 19 and has been transferred.

Freddy is just one of those guys that will do anything for anyone, said Chief Mark Harcrow. No matter what hes going through, hes always trying to make everyones day better. Freddy is always at the forefront of our community engagement efforts. He truly loves the people that he serves.

Harcrow continued, I cant even put into words just how much our community has come together for Freddy, his family and the Palestine Police Department. The support has just been overwhelming and it means so much to all of us.

The community began to rally for Nino, his family and friends on Thursday when law enforcement, city employees, first responders, friends and family of Nino gathered at Reagan Park to pray for him and others suffering from COVID-19.

Thursday evening the 1855 Steakhouse hosted karaoke for Nino, taking donations for his family.

On Friday, Sheriff Rudy Flores pledge to shave his head in an effort to raise $500.

I am doing this in a show of unity and support for a brother officer, Flores said.

Flores received a pledge of $500 pledge from Aaron Severn of Restoration RV and $100 adds-on from Mark Davis at Austin Bank, Irene Alvarez at Irenes Concina in Montalba, Michelle Brannon from Rusk, John Davis and Chip Wolfe.

Fernando Varela, owner of All Star Ford, pledge to match Flores donations of $1,000.

Once the initial $500 pledge was made, Flores had barber Donnie McMahan at B Neat Barbershop shave his head on Saturday.

The Palestine Policemans Association sold t-shirts as a way to raise funds for Nino at the Palestine Farmers Market on Saturday. They also took donations and had a journal for people to write well-wishes and words of inspiration in for Nino.

The outpouring of support has been overwhelming, said Officer Paul Walden, a member of the Palestine Policemans Association.

On Sunday, the congregation of Mount Olive Baptist Church in Tennessee Colony made a donation in support of Nino.

And on Monday, Heather Giles of J&K Electrical Services followed in Flores footsteps with a bid to raise $500. DeWayne Williams, owner of Elliot Chrysler Dodge not only matched it, but raised it by another $250, and in return got the honor of shaving Giles locks off.

There continue to be more and more acts of support for Nino throughout the community.

Harcrow reported that anyone who would like to help Nino and his family, can make a donation to the Chaplains of Palestine in Ninos name at Prosperity Bank.

Nino has not been vaccinated.

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Palestine rallies to support police officer with COVID-19 - Palestine Herald Press

"Maldivians will continue to fight for full recognition of Palestine as an independent State" – Raajjemv

Posted By on September 22, 2021

The people of Maldives will continue to fight for the full recognition of Palestine as an independent state, says President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih.

The president made this remark during his General Debate Statement at the 76th session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), on Tuesday.

Highlighting that the government and people of the Maldives stand firmly and resiliently with the people of Palestine, President Solih stressed that they are yet to be served justice, despite the decades of efforts from the United Nations.

Stressing on the continued violation of the inalienable rights of the people of Palestine in alarmingly increasing manners, the Maldivian president stated that generations of educated youth world wide are standing up for the rights of the Palestinian people.

Solih noted that these generations of youth are standing up in protest of the unjust and inhumane treatment of the people of Palestine and added that the rights of Palestine remain minimal or non-existent despite the many resolutions of both the UN General Assembly as well as the Security Council.

As the Head of State of a small country, I am able to stand here and speak to you all today because my country is recognized as a state. What has the world got to lose by fully recognizing Palestine as an independent State?

Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, President of the Maldives.

President Solih expressed his desire to extend the privilege of being fully recognized by the UN and their individual liberties protected, to millions of the people across Palestine, on behalf of the people of Maldives.

He went on to express desire to observe a fully recognized state of Palestine with all the benefits and opportunities that membership confers.

Further, the president also expressed concern over the long-term peace and stability of Afghanistan, as a neighbor of the wider South Asia region.

We want to ensure the safety of the people, the protection and realization of the rights of women and girls. And that steps are taken to form an inclusive and representative government for the people. Through these steps Afghanistan can demonstrate its commitment to building a peaceful, durable and thriving country

Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, President of the Maldives.

President Solih added that he believes the UN still offers the best hope for humanity and the organization still represents the pinnacle of what concerted diplomacy can achieve and continues to embody the hopes of all, irrespective of status, class or gender, who believe in peaceful dialogue to solve global problems.

Solih stated that UN is the most important global platform for deleiberation and decision-making to solve the worlds most important challenges, from famine to pandemics, to terrorism.

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"Maldivians will continue to fight for full recognition of Palestine as an independent State" - Raajjemv

Mohammed is Palestinian. Why does 23andMe think he’s Egyptian? – Wired.co.uk

Posted By on September 22, 2021

When Mohammed Ahmad took a 23andMe genetic ancestry test in 2019 he wanted to understand what his DNA said about his family history. Ahmad, aged 23, had always been fascinated with the past and particularly the history of the Middle East, where his parents were born. What Ahmad wasnt looking for, however, was a cultural identity. He already knew who he was and how hed always identify: Palestinian.

Ahmad was born and raised in the US but knows his family history well. His parents migrated after they met in Asira al-Qibliya; a village of around 2,300 people outside the city of Nablus in the West Bank. This village was home to not only his father, but his grandfather and his grandfathers father. Because of his familys deep roots in the West Bank, Ahmad was not surprised when he opened the letter from 23andMe containing his results: 100 per cent North African and Arabian.

But not too long after taking the test, the story of Ahmads genetic ancestry started to rewrite itself. Email notifications in October 2019 and June 2021 told Ahmad that updates to 23andMes system of genetic categorisation had changed his results. In the most recent update, Ahmads DNA is broken down into the following percentages: 49.4 per cent Lebanese, 38.1 per cent Egyptian, 2.7 per cent Peninsular Arabian, 3.7 per cent Iranian, Caucasian and Mesopotamian, plus small percentages from other regions.

What stuck out to Ahmad was the glaring absence of Palestine in all of these updates. As a Palestinian, your identity is always questioned, he says, I feel like finding out about our DNA and finding out that, yes, we are from this land is a big thing.

While some customers may have been satisfied with the 23andMes more granular results, some Palestinians like Ahmad are unhappy with being labelled under other countries in the Levant region (which includes Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel and Palestine) as well as states in the Arabian Peninsula (which include Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Yemen and the United Arab Emirates). I found it interesting how they name every country surrounding Palestine but Palestine, Ahmad says, It was disheartening to find out that Palestine wasnt being mentioned.

Neither Palestine or Israel is listed as a possible country of ancestry in the companys test results. At the end of the day cities like Jerusalem, Jaffa, Acre, Jericho and Hebron have had inhabitants for thousands of years, says Amber Rose, another 23andMe customer. When Amber Rose first took the test in 2019, her two largest percentages were Peninsular Arab (25 per cent) and Levantine (15 per cent). But when she decided to check her updated reports earlier in this year, Amber Rose was categorised as 37 per cent Peninsular Arab and only 0.8 per cent Levantine. I see it as purposeful erasure, she says.

In 2020, an online petition was started on Change.org titled Recognise Palestinians 23andMe. The petition author argues that 23andMe has cast Palestinians as genetically stateless by excluding the region from its reports. It ends: We are Palestinians. We exist. We are still here and we will never go away or be erased from history. Over 2,400 people have signed the online petition.

Updates, such as the ones that have affected Ahmad and Amber Rose's results, came after 23andMe entered more results into its database, allowing the company to narrow down its customers ancestral ties. But the companys updates have failed to represent people like Ahmad who have Palestinian ancestry. Samantha Esselmann, a 23andMe product scientist, says that there are two main reasons for this: firstly, Palestinians did not form their own distinct genetic cluster, and secondly, even if they did, the changing borders of Palestine and Israel made accurate labelling of that cluster too difficult.

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Mohammed is Palestinian. Why does 23andMe think he's Egyptian? - Wired.co.uk

Why I’m supporting Palestinian olive farmers this Sukkot – Mondoweiss

Posted By on September 22, 2021

Today marks the start of the Jewish holiday of Sukkot, a weeklong harvest festival. As a child, I absolutely relished this holiday, enjoying the novelty meals with my family in the sukkah, a temporary hut we built outside in ritual reference to the practices of farmers during the harvest seasons of a bygone past. As a teen, I privately started to believe that autumn had really begun once my family and I sat down underneath the open roof. As an adult, now, I seek ways to understand this ritual, the sukkah, as a space for harvesting justice.

This is why this Sukkot I am turning my efforts to support Palestinian olive farmers in the West Bank. The olive trees in Palestine date back to the Bronze Age and are an integral aspect of the culture and economy. Palestinians not only depend on the fruit for their livelihoods but the olive tree also symbolizes resistance and resilience. Olive trees are a tangible link to a history that transcends imperialism and occupation.

The olive trees in Palestine are among some of the worlds oldest species of olives, and symbolically represent the relationship between indigenous Palestinians and their land in the face of Israeli apartheid. According to the Good Shepherd Collective, more than 10 million trees are cultivated across the West Bank, farmed by some 80,000 to 100,000 families, many of whom rely on the olive harvest as their familys primary or supplemental source of income. These farmers are subject to ongoing violence from settlers and the Israeli military who destroy, burn, or appropriate trees (sometimes for so-called security purposes). Farmers often face violence and arrests when accessing their fields.

Whats more, settlers often attack Palestinians during Jewish holidays, including Sukkot.

The olive harvest, which should be a time of productivity to set the farmers up for the year to come, has become a dangerous enterprise.

For Jewish anti-zionists outside of Palestine, methods of supporting Palestinians in their fight against structural oppression include challenging mainstream Jewish institutions that aid in the dispossession and erasure of Palestinians in Palestine.

I dont recall if I ever dropped money into the ubiquitous blue Jewish National Fund tzedakah boxes as a regular part of my Sukkot ritual in childhood. Yet, donating money to the JNF and planting trees in the Holy Land are extremely common practices in Jewish communities around the world, including in my own childhood home. The money from those little blue boxes funds the planting of invasive pine trees on top of Palestinian villages destroyed in 1948 during the founding of Israel, or the Nakba.

Every year droves of tourists flock to these sites to plant trees in honor of loved ones, unaware that theyre participating in a project to erase history. A recent fire in the Jerusalem hills exposed acres worth of hidden agricultural terraces that had once been used by Palestinian farmers to mitigate the challenges of farming in a hilly landscape, planted over in an effort to erase the history of the land. Supporting Palestinians as they harvest olive trees directly undermines these efforts to conceal their history and presence on the land.

This is why this year I am not only building a sukkah at home, but starting a new ritual of building a sukkat shalom, a dwelling of peace, for Palestinian farmers under threat.

I am personally supporting the Good Shepherd Collectives olive tree planting campaign to help farmers in the South Hebron Hills access resources needed for a fruitful harvest. I will also be joining a virtual tour of the area with Eyewitness Palestine, which provides an excellent opportunity to witness firsthand the realities in the West Bank. As a holiday rich with symbolism representing nature, the harvest, and the protection in the wilderness, Sukkot is a potent celebration to take action. Join in and help create a sukkat shalom for Palestinian farmers during this critical time of year.

So where are the Palestinian voices in mainstream media?

Mondoweiss covers the full picture of the struggle for justice in Palestine. Read by tens of thousands of people each month, our truth-telling journalism is an essential counterweight to the propaganda that passes for news in mainstream and legacy media.

Our news and analysis is available to everyone which is why we need your support. Please contribute so that we can continue to raise the voices of those who advocate for the rights of Palestinians to live in dignity and peace.

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Why I'm supporting Palestinian olive farmers this Sukkot - Mondoweiss

Museum Of Jewish Heritage To Examine Superheroes And The ‘Jewish Multiverse’ – Broadway World

Posted By on September 22, 2021

The Museum of Jewish Heritage - A Living Memorial to the Holocaust and the Society of Illustrators will co-present a special panel on Jewish culture's influence within the wildly popular world of comics, which continues to fascinate readers, film and television audiences, and consumers, including the tens of thousands of fans who yearly descend on New York's Comic Con event, set to return next month.

"The Jewish Multiverse: Judaism and Superheroes" will feature prominent comic book writers Chris Claremont, (Marvel's Uncanny X-Men) and Marguerite Bennett (DC Bombshells, Batwoman), as well as editor Danny Fingeroth (Marvel's Spiderman Comics Line). They will be joined in conversation by journalist Abraham Riesman, author of True Believer: The Rise and Fall of Stan Lee, to explore the role Jews have played in superhero culture, both as characters and creators.

"We look forward to highlighting the great work of some very talented Jewish creators and to examining our representation in the world of superhero culture," says Jack Kliger, President & CEO of the Museum of Jewish Heritage - A Living Memorial to the Holocaust.

This discussion is an online event that will take place on Thursday, September 30 at 7:00 PM (ET). Tickets are free, with a suggested donation of $10. For more information or to register, visit: https://mjhnyc.org/events/the-jewish-multiverse-judaism-and-superheroes/

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Museum Of Jewish Heritage To Examine Superheroes And The 'Jewish Multiverse' - Broadway World

Torah stolen by Nazis for post-Holocaust Jewish museum back in use in Prague – The Times of Israel

Posted By on September 22, 2021

JTA A Torah scroll that the Nazis stole from for their planned museum on Judaism in Prague will return to use there on Simchat Torah, a holiday that falls later this month and celebrates the seminal Jewish text.

Memorial Scrolls Trust, a London-based nonprofit that preserves Torah scrolls and other scripture, on Sunday said it will transfer scroll no. 1052, as it is cataloged there, to the use of Ec Chaim, a Progressive Jewish congregation in the Czech capital, ahead of the holiday that begins on Sept. 27.

In 1942, the Nazis seized the scroll, which was written in 1890 in Brno, a city situated about 100 miles southeast of Prague. They had the scroll shipped to the Central Jewish Museum, an institution that they wanted to use to showcase thousands of liturgical objects they had stolen from Jewish communities they pillaged. That museum has become the Jewish Museum of Prague, which is owned by the local Jewish community.

On Sept. 27, the Ec Chaim congregation, which is a member of the European Union for Progressive Judaism, plans to celebrate the scrolls return with a party at its synagogue, in the presence of congregants and dignitaries, including Leslie Bergman of the United Kingdom, a former president of the European Union for Progressive Judaism.

Separately, the Hungarian Jewish Museum and Archives and the National Library of Israel have bought from an auction house a collection of records from Jewish communities in Hungary.

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The seven documents, ledgers, registers and other communal papers dated 1851-1948, had been put on the block by an auction house, the National Library said in a statement earlier this month. It did not name the auction house, which sold the documents to the buyers after protests by activists working to preserve Jewish heritage.

A spokesman for the National Library, Zachary Rothbart, declined to say how much was paid for the documents. The National Library had no indication that the documents had been stolen, he added.

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Torah stolen by Nazis for post-Holocaust Jewish museum back in use in Prague - The Times of Israel


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