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13-year-old dog has ‘Bark Mitzvah’ with full coming-of-age ceremony – New York Post

Posted By on September 22, 2021

A 13-year-olddogis now ready for his next stage in life now that hes had his Bark Mitzvah.

Ruth and Craig Ellenberg celebrated the milestone birthday with their beloved Havanese dog Rambo earlier this month, according to South West News Service.

The birthday party took place on Sept. 5, at the Ellenbergs home in Livingston, NJ.

Ruth and Craig completed the full coming-of-age ceremony with prayers, candlelight and bread, much like thetraditionalBar Mitzvah thats held for boys who reach their 13th year.

Rambo dressed the part in his dog-sized Kippah and Tallit, which are the hat and fringed shawl thats worn during times of worship and other holy events. The pup was also treated to a special peanut butter cake with a Mozel Tov cake topper, a custom banner, nameplate and mini Torah scroll.

Ruth, 44, told Fox News herfamilyhas joked about hosting a Bark Mitzvah for Rambo long before they actually did it.

Rambo is the only child we have together, so we [decided we] would have this party, she said. As the day got closer, it seemed like a fun idea to brighten up everyones day.

Ruth has three children of her own from a previous marriage while Craig has two.

Currently, they are empty-nesters who dote on the pampered pup while their five kids are pursuing their dreams.

The kids are all away at college, work and Marines boot camp and we love sharing fun pictures and videos of their hairy brother, Ruth said. Life is stressful enough, we all needed a happy occasion to celebrate.

She went on to say that hosting Rambos Bark Mitzvah has helped her bring her family together even though they are far apart.

According to SWNS, Ruths and Craigs daughters Lyanna, Arielle, Jenna and Carly attended Rambos Bark Mitzvah in person and through video calls while Ruths son Aidan had to miss out due to his boot camp training in Parris Island, South Carolina.

The family made sure to mail photos of Rambos Bark Mitzvah to Aidan, so he could be a part of the festivities.

Its important to bring the family together for happy occasions any way possible, especially during this difficult time caused by COVID, Ruth said. Celebrating Rambo and adding the Jewish heritage and traditions allowed all of us to step away from the stress of real-life and just enjoy family.

Rambos Bark Mitzvah was celebrated 39 years after Craig, 52, celebrated his own Bar Mitzvah.

The Ellenbergs are pleased to see the delight Rambos Bark Mitzvah has brought to the world.

The reaction from family and coworkers has been very positive. We hope that others share in the joy that Rambo brings to our days, Ruth told Fox News. Rambo is always full of love, loyalty, and brings smiles to us all.

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13-year-old dog has 'Bark Mitzvah' with full coming-of-age ceremony - New York Post

Top 5 things to do in Cincinnati this weekend: Sept. 24-26 – The Cincinnati Enquirer

Posted By on September 22, 2021

1. Kings Island's Halloween Haunt

Voted 2021's "Best Theme Park Halloween Event" in the country by USA TODAY readers, Halloween Haunt is an immersive scare-fest filled with hauntedmazes, scare zones, live entertainment and hundreds of horrifying creatures lurking through the fog, looking to make your worst nightmares a reality. In addition, coasters and other thrill rides will be operating. Haunt activities start at 6p.m. every Friday and Saturday through Oct. 30.

Since Halloween Haunt is not recommended forages under13, families with tweens and younger kids can hit the park from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.Saturdays and Sundays for HalloTween and Tricks and Treats Fall Fest. HalloTween features spooky-fun haunts for young scare-seekers without the fear of running into gruesome creatures, andFall Fest includes costume contests, crafts, games, food, activities and all the park's rides and attractions. Kings Island is located at6300 Kings Island Drive, Mason.visitkingsisland.com.

Located next to the Ohio Renaissance Festival grounds, this haunted attraction has different levels of scare-ability.The Haunted Hayride is a low-medium intensity haunt suitable for ages 8-up, where you'll take a one-mile ride through a haunted cornfield on a tractor-pulled wagon. The next level isZombie Assault, a five-minute high tech ride in a simulator bus where you try to survivethezombie apocalypse.This attractionissuitable for ages 10-up. The Forgotten Forest ramps up the fright factor during a 20-minute walk through the woods, and Psychosisfindsdisturbing scenes of horror as you wind your way through a dark, maze-like pathway trying to find a way out. These two high-intensity attractions are for ages 13-up.

Brimstone Haunt is located at 525 Brimstone Road, Harveysburg. It'sopen7 p.m. Friday and Saturdaythrough Oct. 30. $50 fast pass combo, $30 combohayride and forest; $18 hayride, $17forest, $11Psychosis, $7Zombie Assault.brimstonehaunt.com.

Friends, we are spoiled for choice this weekend when it comes to Oktoberfest celebrations. Here are a few highlights:

St. Cecilia Oktoberfesttales place 5-9 p.m. Friday and5-10 p.m. Saturday at 3105 Madison Road, Oakley. Also opening Friday isSt. Jude Oktoberfest,5924 Bridgetown Road, Bridgetown. Hours are 6:30 p.m.-midnight Friday, 4 p.m.-midnight Saturday and noon-9 p.m.Sunday.Sonder Brewing's Oktoberfestreturns this year featuring live music, games, vendors, food and lots of regional craft breweries bringing German-style beers to sample. It runs from10 a.m.-midnight Saturday at 8584 Duke Blvd., Mason. (sonderbrewing.com). The new kid on the block is Loveland Oktoberfest, running 4-10 p.m. Friday and 4-11 p.m.Saturday in downtown Loveland. Highlights include stein hoist and lederhosen competitions, weiner dog races and live music.(lmrchamberalliance.org).

After playing only a few performances to rave reviews from audience and critics alike, "Pipeline" was sidelined the day after it opened in March 2020 due to the pandemic. Now thisportrait of parenthood, education and the experience of young Black men in Americareturns to the Ensemble Theatre stage. The winner of the 2018 OBIE Award for Playwriting, this drama follows Nya, an inner-city public high school teachercommitted to her students but desperate to give her only son, Omari, opportunities theyll never have. When an explosive incident at his prestigious private school threatens to get him expelled, will all her efforts be lost?

Written by acclaimed playwright Dominique Morisseau and starring Sharrell D. Luckett as Nya and Jay Wade as Omari, "Pipeline" opened earlier this week and runs through Oct. 16. Times are as follows: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday, 8 p.m. Friday, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday.Ensemble Theatre is located at1127 Vine St., Over-the-Rhine.$35-up. ensemblecincinnati.org.

It's the last Friday in the month, which means it'sFinal Friday time! At Pendleton Art Center (1310 Pendleton St., Pendleton), you'll findover 250 artist studios open to the public for art fans and collectors to view and purchase original art directly from the artists themselves. This month features an art auction on the eighth floor, and the artist of the month is Jess Sheldon in studio 512. It runs from 5. to 9 p.m.andisfree to attend, withvalet parking available for $5 at the door. pendletonartcenter.com.

A short strollfrom PAC is Art Attack Cincinnati atBraxton Brewing Co. (331 E. 13th St., Pendleton), where local artists will have artwork for sale, plus live music, a selfie machine and, of course, plenty of qualitybrews. It runs from 7 to 11 p.m. facebook.com/artattackcincinnati.

The Art Academy of Cincinnati celebrates Final Friday with a public reception from 5 to 8 p.m. forthree new exhibition openings. Metal is an exhibition of works by Keith Benjamin; Heavy Heavy, No Mistakes features recent works by AAC alum Anna Christina Sands; and Home Sweet Home is a group show by students of AAC's Exhibition Studio class. All three openings are at Chidlaw Gallery, 1212 Jackson St., Over-the-Rhine. artacademy.edu.

In East Walnut Hills, Manifest Gallery kicks off its 18th season with three unique art openings. It's Painting Biennial launches in all five galleries, featuring 58 works of painting by 40 artists in 20 states. Aquachrome is a biennial survey of watercolor, and the third opening is a solo show of paintings by Jason Bly of Wichita Falls, Texas. The openings takeplacefrom 6 to 9 p.m.at2727 Woodburn Ave. Exhibits run through Oct. 22. manifestgallery.org.

This festival brings artists and communities together to explore Jewish and Israeli cultural heritage in an approachable way. Enjoy food, art, music and cultural activities from traditional to contemporary, religious to secular, Jewish and non-Jewish. Ish Festival takes place6 to 11 p.m. Saturday and11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday at Washington Park, 1230 Elm St., Over-the-Rhine. Renowned Jewish reggae artist Matisyahu headlines Saturdaynight. Tickets to see Matisyahurun$36-$200.ishfestival.org.

Great Outdoors Weekend showcases nearly 100 outdoor events all free for the whole family to sample the best outdoor recreation and nature awareness programs throughout Greater Cincinnati. Explore hiking and biking trails, take an archaeological site tour, enjoy free pedal boat rentals, learn canoeing and camping skillsand more. See the entire listing of fun, family-friendly activities happening Saturday and Sundayat greatoutdoorsweekend.org.

This inspiring collaborative between award-winning musicians and Episcopalian church leaders features genre-bending original music that bridges jazz, hip-hop and bluegrass. Led by Nashville pianist and composer Kory Caudill, the multicultural team includes Baltimore hip-hop artist Wordsmith, Genesis and Frank Zappa drummer Chester Thompson, and several Cincinnati-area guest artists. The concert makes a stop in Cincinnati at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at Christ Church Cathedral, 318 E. Fourth St., Downtown. Tickets start at $12. eventbrite.com.

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Top 5 things to do in Cincinnati this weekend: Sept. 24-26 - The Cincinnati Enquirer

SSIMWAVE Selects Verimatrix Code Protection to Prevent Reverse Engineering of its Award-Winning Video Experience Platform – StreetInsider.com

Posted By on September 22, 2021

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Valuable Hollywood-Video IP Shielded from Threats, Helps SSIMWAVE Maintain Competitive Edge

AIX-EN-PROVENCE, France & SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Regulatory News:

Verimatrix, (Euronext Paris: VMX), the leader in powering the modern connected world with people-centered security, today announced that Ontario, Canada-based SSIMWAVE Inc. is one of its latest customers to integrate Verimatrix Code Protection technology.

IP theft is a growing threat to organizations worldwide. The Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property estimates that costs from IP losses are as high as $600 billion annually.

Verimatrix has a lengthy and successful history in the media and entertainment space, so it made sense to turn to their code protection technologies, said Peter Olijnyk, Vice President of Engineering at SSIMWAVE. When youre protecting the core foundation of your platform, Verimatrixs transparent and timely process for getting up and running not to mention in about a day or so was reassuring and provides peace of mind for SSIMWAVE and our customers.

A video quality innovator, SSIMWAVE evaluated numerous vendors and decided to integrate Verimatrix to safeguard its platform that ensures smooth video operations, distribution and optimization for streaming service providers, studios, content owners and content distributors.

As an Emmy award-winning technology provider recognized for significantly impacting television technology and engineering, SSIMWAVE knows its critical to choose the best possible security partner to protect our patented technologies against decompiling and inspection techniques frequently used by cybercriminals, Olijnyk continued. Video creators and streaming providers need to manage any degradations in video quality due to compression and other factors and SSIMWAVEs SSIMPLUS algorithm uniquely helps measure and understand that degradation and find the balance between cost savings and delivering the quality that viewers expect. In todays world of everywhere entertainment, thats highly valuable technology that demands proven protection. Verimatrixs Code Protection technology, ease of integration and customer service were excellent.

SSIMWAVE stands as the first technology provider capable of virtualizing and measuring how humans perceive video and applying its intelligence to real-world experiences. It provides fast, accurate and consistent measurements at every point from source to screen through every delivery system, on every device, using a consistent 0-100 linear scoring metric. Its this measurement that allows for the optimization that is so highly coveted.

With core technologies that have helped power many of the biggest names in entertainment for decades, Verimatrix is pleased to now announce integrations of our Code Protection technology into platforms that service other areas of the video user experience, said Asaf Ashkenazi, Chief Operating Officer and President at Verimatrix. We see working with leaders such as SSIMWAVE as a natural progression for our business helping protect the IP of fellow innovators within the vast media and entertainment space. Verimatrix understands the necessity of properly marrying user experience and IP integrity.

About SSIMWAVESSIMWAVE was founded in 2013 creating the Video Experience Automation category to enable assessment of video quality at scale so that video streaming services could reduce their distribution expenses and stop worrying about quality drop-offs and the high operational cost of traditional video assurance processes. The SSIMPLUS quality metric powers our VQ Dial and Video Intelligence Suite products in order for customers to enjoy the peace of mind that comes from the only end-to-end solution that is correlated to human vision. We are located in Waterloo, Canada where we serve some of the largest media and entertainment customers around the world. Visit http://www.ssimwave.com.

About VerimatrixVerimatrix (Euronext Paris: VMX) helps power the modern connected world with security made for people. We protect digital content, applications, and devices with intuitive, people-centered and frictionless security. Leading brands turn to Verimatrix to secure everything from premium movies and live streaming sports, to sensitive financial and healthcare data, to mission-critical mobile applications. We enable the trusted connections our customers depend on to deliver compelling content and experiences to millions of consumers around the world. Verimatrix helps partners get to market faster, scale easily, protect valuable revenue streams, and win new business. Visit http://www.verimatrix.com.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210921005061/en/

Verimatrix Investor Contact:Richard Vacher DetournireGeneral Manager & Chief Financial Officer+33 (0)4 42 905 905finance@verimatrix.com

Verimatrix Media Contact:Matthew Zintel+1 281 444 1590matthew.zintel@zintelpr.com

Source: Verimatrix

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SSIMWAVE Selects Verimatrix Code Protection to Prevent Reverse Engineering of its Award-Winning Video Experience Platform - StreetInsider.com

Under my lemon tree | Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted By on September 22, 2021

Its 6:45 on Yom Kippur morning and I am in my backyard.

My neighbor is hosting a minyan in his yard, which means that, for the first time in over 20 years, I might just be able to attend every Yom Kippur prayer service. And this from my lawn chair.

Im listening to the chazzan through the ficus trees and watching bumble bees as they dip in and out of the little yellow flowers blooming on my sons watermelon plant (hed hoped for a Sukkot watermelon, but its currently the size of a ping pong ball).

The watermelon. (courtesy)

Its entrancing, following the bees as they skim over leaves and vines to find the flowers. They know exactly where to go and what to do. Over and over, they find the flowers. Full of purpose, they go in and out. Pollinate. Move on.

And I think How wonderful to know ones purpose. To have such a clear part in the way the world works.

The birds are out too. On the roofs and in the trees, they call to one another and sing their songs. Some are melodic and easy to imagine as part of the prayers. Others are horribly discordant, even shrill. But I recognize that they all have a part to play.

The birds and the bees I guess thats where the expression comes from. Just a natural part of life.

Like the words of the prayers. Life.

Who will live and who will die. Who by fire and who by plague. Who by water and who by sword.

In that quiet of early morning, Im alone with my thoughts. The world seems still. The possibilities endless. And the questions unlimited.

Life. Death. Self. Community.

The lemon tree nearby is heavy with fruit. Green, for now. Next years crop will be holy, after growing during the sabbatical year.

And I think: How blessed am I to be here in my land. With my people. A nation returned and struggling to grow, to forge a modern state on its ancient rules.

The words of the prayers recall the services performed by the priests in the Temple in Jerusalem, 2,000 years ago. We say them because we cannot perform them.

They were put in place by rabbis of old to preserve us as a nation, and so they did.

I thank Ishay Ribo who recently put these ancient words into modern music. They help me connect more than Ive ever been able to do. Making the descriptions more relevant, expressing them in language that I can better understand.

I hum his tunes as I read the words.

Achat ve-achat achat u-shetayim ..

What can the sprinkling of sacrificial blood mean to us today? How can we connect to such a thing?

I realize that it means now what it meant then. We are one people.

The service of the high priest atoned not for himself or his family alone, but for the entire nation. All of us at once. Our fates are tied

Together, we lived. Or together, we died.

One goat for all of our sins.

One service for all our people.

I live here in the land of my people. In a home smaller than I might have had in the country of my birth, the United States. In a language that I have not mastered. In a culture that frustrates me at times.

And I could not be happier.

My fate is tied to my peoples.

My future exists only with theirs

It is not for me to complain and want it to be different. It is for me to build it.

My lemon tree will give its lemons. And I will announce them hefker ownerless. Because of the sabbatical year.

The lemon tree, with its green lemons. (courtesy)

But they are not ownerless. They belong to everyone.

Just as this land belongs to us. And we belong to it.

There is no more beautiful shul, no more inspiring service, no more moving sermon than the sights, the sounds, the air of the Land of Israel in Tishrei.

There is no more blessed person than she who does her errands while passing rows and rows of sukkot (built in every nook and cranny), vying with others for that last container of milk, wondering how on Earth there can be yet another day off from school and more meals to cook.

My sukkah awaits, close to, but not under, the lemon tree, ready to surround us, encompass us, protect us, remind us, as we listen to our neighbors tunes and songs some as Ashkenazi as they come, others with the Sephardic lilt that we are one. We are here, and we, like the birds and the bees, all have our parts to play. May we merit to fulfill them.

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Under my lemon tree | Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

Cutting Edge: The endless complexities of diaspora – Limelight

Posted By on September 19, 2021

From my New York apartment I can walk to my local liquor store and find one of 170 wines from the Barossa Valley. The verdant region north-east of Adelaide is justly famous for its zigzag quilt of villages and vineyards. It is rather less well known, however, for its extraordinary music history, which includes Australias oldest choir andbrass band and a surprising wealth of pipe organs.

The most impressive of the organs is the enormous 1877 Hill & Son, formerly of the Adelaide Town Hall, now housed in Tanunda. For years its pipes sat in a miscellany of sheds around the country before the instrument was carefully restored. However the smaller ones tell equally interesting stories. For instance, in a tiny Lutheran churchwithin the yellowed fields of Moculta sits a beautiful organ hand-built by local teacher Daniel Lemke who arrived in the Barossa in 1855 with half-memories of...

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Cutting Edge: The endless complexities of diaspora - Limelight

Declaration of blood feud by Akhmed Arsanukaev triggers outrage of Chechen Diaspora in Turkey – Caucasian Knot

Posted By on September 19, 2021

The declaration by Akhmed Arsanukaev of a blood feud against four families is contrary to Vainakh traditions and elementary decency rules, members of the Chechen Diaspora in Turkey have stated.

The "Caucasian Knot" has reported that in September in Turkey, armed men attacked Akhmed Arsanukaev, a former Chechen law enforcer. On September 7, it became known that Arsanukaev announced blood feud against four families the Naurbaevs, Khalitovs, Mamakaevs and Azhievs.

The declaration of blood feud against Chechen families contradicts Chechen traditions, Russian laws and elementary decency rules, members of the Chechen Diaspora of Turkey, as well as relatives of the families named by Arsanukaev as blood feudists, told the "Caucasian Knot" correspondent.

"The power currently established in Chechnya has led to a complete degradation of our customs and traditions. They even turned the institution of blood feud into a farce," said Aslambek, a resident of Istanbul.

The Chechen society is on the emotional verge from systematic human rights violations, said Musa, a member of the Diaspora in Turkey. "We are all outraged by the latest events with the blood feud declaration. Some scoundrel comes to old people, calls the son of an elderly woman illegitimate, and says this to his father's face. Such meanness is the humiliation of every decent Chechen <...> Why do they declare blood feud to people who have done nothing?" Musa asked.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency Caucasian Knot on September 12, 2021 at 05:37 am MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

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Declaration of blood feud by Akhmed Arsanukaev triggers outrage of Chechen Diaspora in Turkey - Caucasian Knot

It is time Israel, the West admit the two-state solution is dead – Al Jazeera English

Posted By on September 19, 2021

In August, the influential US magazine Foreign Affairs carried out a survey on the two-state solution in Palestine among authorities with specialized expertise together with leading generalists in the field. It asked the question is the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict no longer viable? to which the 64 experts were supposed to indicate their agreement or disagreement and explain their stance with a brief comment.

Half disagreed that the two-state solution is dead, seven were neutral and 25 agreed with the premise.

Some of those who disagreed are currently or previously involved with Zionist-leaning think-tanks, such as the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Among them is former US ambassador to apartheid Israel, Martin Indyk, who before starting his diplomatic career, served as a deputy research director for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC).

The list also includes Dennis Ross and others who were heavily involved in the so-called peace process, an unending affair with the aim ofsecuring the Israeli apartheid state and liquidating basicPalestinian rights altogether. Obviously, those who were part of the peace process are still clinging to the illusion that it is possible to establish a Palestinian Bantustan.

Those who defended the two-state solution acknowledged that there are barriers to its fulfilment; among those, the most frequently cited one was the lack of political will on both sides. There were even suggestions that the Palestinian leadership is solely to blame, as Hamas and the Palestinian Authority lack support from the Palestinian people to make the necessary sacrifices and accept Israels apartheid and settler-colonial policies.

Interestingly, some of those who adopted the neutral position preferred to take a postmodern, relativist stand on an issue that is one of freedom, equality and justice no more, no less. Others adopted a human rights approach to the Palestinian question, refusing to take a political stance.

What being neutral on a clear-cut question of justice means can be anyones guess. Just a few decades ago, who would have dared to be neutral about the end of apartheid in South Africa?

In general, most of the supporters of the two-state solution in academia, foreign policy circles and beyond are Israeli, American or European who do not see anything wrong with a settler-colonial project. The few Palestinians who are in favour of this racist approach to the Palestinian question fail to acknowledge facts on the ground: the system between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea is a one-state reality, an apartheid state where one community has all the privileges of citizenship, while the other community is deprived of its fundamental human rights.

It is rather hard not to notice the racism and injustice involved in the apartheid reality in Palestine where the Palestinians who suffer are not only the ones who live in the 1967 occupied territories, as theForeign Affairsquestion implies.

I, myself, took part in the survey believing that it was important to make my voice as a Palestinian heard. Here is what I had to say in the limited space provided:

In addition to the fact that Israel has taken irreversible steps that have made this solution impossible namely, the expansion of the Jewish-only settlements; the annexation of more West Bank lands in addition to Jerusalem; the construction of the apartheid wall that separates Palestinian from Palestinian; the blockade of the Gaza Strip; and the passing of the racist Nation-State Law by the Knesset the two-state solution in principle does not offer the Palestinian people their basic rights under international law equality and right of return. A Bantustan-like solution is a racist solution par excellence.

For such an influential American journal to raise such a question about the two-state reality in Palestine and make sure that there are some Palestinian voices among the respondents is very indicative of the power of the Palestinians to make their voices heard in the heart of empire. It is also revealing of the fact that the international discourse on Palestine is slowly but surely moving away from talk about the peace process and the intransigence of the Palestinian leadership.

This is clearly annoying American and Israeli Zionists, with one survey respondent expressing his complete dismay at Foreign Affairs decision to even ask such a question. The defensiveness in the tone of many of the disagree responses reveals that even staunch Israel supporters are realising that the two-state solution cannot resolve the Palestinian question and it is already dead thanks to Israeli apartheid policies in Palestine.

The alternative is clear: one state for all inhabitants of historic Palestine, regardless of race, ethnicity and religion; a state a la post-apartheid South Africa, one that is not based on the oppression of one community by another. A true solution to the Palestinian question cannot be reached by entertaining racist ideas about the separation of peoples. Only the restoration of Palestines multicultural identity, one that is inclusive, secular and democratic can lead to lasting peace between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea and beyond.

The views expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeeras editorial stance.

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It is time Israel, the West admit the two-state solution is dead - Al Jazeera English

From tribalism to cohesion, and the Israeli cultural war – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on September 19, 2021

Political Zionism has achieved its goals more successfully than any other national movement of the last century. In objective, measurable terms, the State of Israel is a dazzling success.

Still, Israelis are far from satisfied with the way in which their national life is conducted. A persistent asperity hovers over our lives. The source of the difficulty the cup of poison we drink each day is the sense that we are in the midst of a culture war between the major tribes that constitute Israeli society: the secular, the Arabs, the Haredim, and the religious.

The gloves have come off in the Israeli cultural war, and this is clearly reflected in the various indices included in the Jewish People Policy Institutes 2021 Annual Assessment, which it about to be submitted to the Israeli government as it does every year. The current discord relates to various aspects of Israeli daily life, but at its root is the disagreement between the tribes regarding the states overarching goals, and about the correct interpretation of the entire Zionist enterprise:

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The haredim, on the other hand, attach no importance to political Zionism. They are not interested in a revolution that would cut us off from the past. They seek the opposite: continuity. For the Chazon Ish, the great haredi leader of the 1950s, the State of Israel and Jewish sovereignty were not a goal, but only an instrument for rebuilding the Torah civilization destroyed in the Holocaust. The State of Israel delivers nothing new to Jewish identity.

Religious Zionism, for its part, attributes religious value to the establishment of the state. For Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, the groups preeminent visionary, the return to Zion is not a continuation of exile in the Land of Israel (the haredi position), nor is it a new beginning detached from tradition (the secular ideological position), but a new floor above Jewish existence in exile, the first stage of a redemptive process.

The fourth community, Israels Arab citizens, would prefer the state to have a universal egalitarian democratic character, which would replace its current definition: Jewish and democratic.

Although my main interest here is with Israeli society, it is important to emphasize the existence of a fifth group: Jewish people, members of the family, who are not part of Israeli society.

These are citizens of other countries, but who have the legal right to immigrate to Israel per the Law of Return. The State of Israel has even assumed a number of obligations toward them, as stated in the Basic Law: Israel the Nation-State of the Jewish People. They disagree among themselves over the meaning to ascribe to the Jewish nation-state where they are not citizens. Their views span the spectrum of all four Israeli identity groups.

Tribalism takes a heavy toll on us: it weakens solidarity between the different segments of society, erodes our internal cohesion, and undermines national resilience. This danger takes on a new meaning when the legitimacy of Zionism itself, as a national movement, is under attack in various parts of the world. It is troubling to see how anti-Zionist positions are gaining momentum and taken for granted by some progressive segments of American society.

In response, we must pull together and rise above the ideological divisions in order to formulate a common denominator that will proudly continue the Zionist march into the next generation.

Indeed, the controversy over vision should not be ignored, but it should not become the main story. Rather, we must act to strengthen the commonalities between us, on two levels: first, Israeli cohesion: forging areas of national consensus between all Israeli citizens, even on controversial issues, with a commitment to mutual tolerance. Each of us must forgo his or her maximalist positions and respect the sensitivities of the other.

The second level is Jewish cohesion, which entails reinforcing the bridge between Israel and Diaspora Jewry, while broadening the agenda of a shared peoplehood based on a common identity, despite specific disagreements over concrete issues. But is this even possible?

As regards Israeli cohesion, the data show that the conditions that will allow us to change our self-perception about the collective we and replace the destructive tribal discourse with a discourse of solidarity are becoming more and more fulfilled.

The worst of Israeli discord is behind us, and promising explorations of a pan-Israeli partnership are beginning. The groups do not surrender their dreams, but living together softens the stings of disagreement, and the common good is becoming clearer to many Israelis.

Indeed, the very existence of the current coalition, which spans right and left and includes an Arab party, is a positive and innovative development. It demonstrates a mature concept that views compromise and cooperation between movements and people with different visions as both a practical and moral value. This is the start of a process of rapprochement between the tribes a process whose future lies ahead.

Secularisms struggle against Jewish tradition has long since reached its peak. Many secular people feel uneasy or even distressed by their artificial break from the Jewish past, and are striving to make contemporary use of the treasures of experience, memory, and meaning of Jewish existence across the generations.

Most Jews in Israel happily embrace practices and features of their tradition: Jewish rituals, the Jewish calendar, Jewish symbols, and more. On Yom Kippur, Israeli roads are all but empty of cars; nearly everyone attends a Passover seder; 80% of Israeli Jews report that they believe in the existence of God. These facts and many others do not indicate a return to religion, but rather an end to the revolt against Jewish tradition. Secular people feel at home connecting with the customs of past generations, which are important in forming their identity as Jews as individuals and as members of a people. An Israeli Judaism has been created here (as described by Shmuel Rosner and Camil Fuchs in their 2019 book, #IsraeliJudaism: Portrait of a Cultural Revolution).

Overall, there is a growing recognition among Israels secular public that an Israeli society without connection to the Jewish past, impoverished of the culture of previous generations, will also have no future. The identification of Judaism with religion, which secularists do not accept, is being replaced by the identification of Judaism as a cultural source, without which the unique Jewish identity might fade away.

The change is also detectable among the haredim. It is true that haredi rhetoric remains extreme, and espouses segregation and the preservation of a separate and distinct haredi existence behind the walls of holiness. Most haredi males still lack a basic general education and choose Torah study as their primary, or even sole, lifelong occupation. They still do not shoulder a significant share of the national burden military, societal, or economic and are enmeshed in a love-hate ambivalence with the Zionist project.

Yet beneath the surface, tectonic changes are simmering, signaling the beginnings of haredi societys connection to Israeliness itself on all fronts: in the employment sphere, about half of haredi men and over two-thirds of haredi women work. What was once regarded as a society of learners has in recent years become a society of learners and workers. Despite some rabbis vehement cries that higher education is a worse holocaust than Auschwitz, haredi men and women in the thousands study in academic institutions.

Although they are far from internalizing liberal values, the Rubicon has been crossed: haredim are partners in national decision-making, and most of them identify, de facto, with the Zionist enterprise.

Despite the opposition of the rabbis, they are using the Internet, the information superhighway, thus opening themselves to previously unknown possibilities of personal choice, which leads to the democratization of their lives, even if limited at this stage. These beginnings indicate that the change has the potential to continue and allow the haredi voice to integrate more harmoniously into the Israeli identity space. A fusion between the haredim and the rest of the Israeli public should not be expected the holy walls will not collapse but some degree of mixing will exist.

As for religious Zionism: the Six Day War, which enabled Jews to return to the territories of the mythological House of David, was perceived by members of this group as clear proof that our generation is the generation of redemption. Anticipating a redemptive process, religious Zionists turned to its realization with messianic fervor. This was the ideological engine that led religious Zionists to settle in the territories of Judea and Samaria, and to take leadership roles in Israels public systems.

Although the settlement enterprise in Judea-Samaria continues to this day, the primary motivating force behind it is no longer religious-messianic in nature, but based today on national, security, and economic considerations. The threat inherent in a redemptive agenda that does not look history or reality squarely in the eye has greatly diminished in recent years.

In general, it can be said that although religious Zionists for the most part share a uniformly right-wing worldview, they derive their positions and priorities from their assessment of actual reality, like any other group. This allows for a normal discourse even if there are divergent interpretations of reality between religious Zionists and other Israelis.

Finally, Israels Arab citizens: Although three-quarters of Arab Israelis do not agree that Israel has a right to be defined as the state of the Jewish people, there is a promising trend among them toward integration in Israeli society. The vast majority are optimistic or somewhat optimistic about Israels future, and most are also proud or somewhat proud to be Israeli. Their integration in the education and employment spheres is an intensifying process.

Interestingly, nearly all Arab Israelis support the position that if a Palestinian nation-state is established alongside Israel, it would be appropriate to recognize Israel as the national home of the Jewish people.

On the whole, those willing to dim the volume of the extremist voices that have taken over the Israeli echo chamber and listen to the mainstream voices of each of the four sectors of Israeli society will find reason to be optimistic about a shared Israeli future. The facts show that the sense of social and identity rupture is unjustified. On the contrary, the current overall direction is toward a softening of discord. The internal discourse of each sector is in the process of moderating toward the center. The centrifugal forces that distance Israelis from each other are decelerating and becoming less destructive.

It is true that there is no solution on the horizon that would free us from the dispute over the territories. This is a dark cloud hovering in our national sky, with no real possibility of being resolved in the foreseeable future. But Israels energies must not be held captive by this issue.

Israeli cohesion is, very likely, the best remedy we can offer for reinforcing our relationship with our brethren overseas: Jewish cohesion. The increasing difficulty in relations between Israel and the Diaspora is also related to an ideological controversy. But just as Israeli cohesion can be based on a successful partnership between us in everyday life even in the absence of a consensus on vision, so too can Jewish cohesion be based on partnership in achieving realistic goals with those segments of Diaspora Jewry that are critical of us from an ideological perspective.

As noted, there is no intention here to obscure the importance of the controversy over vision within Israel or outside it. Rather, this is a call to refrain from basing our relationship solely on the lack of consensus. Partnership in everyday life is no less important, sometimes even more so, than ideological arm wrestling.

The process of moving toward the center, and toward compromise, is a fact that many in sectoral politics, in the media, and in the world of ideas are working hard to conceal. We need a leadership that will change our self-perception the central story in which we live. That leadership will need to reveal the key voices in each of the sectors and celebrate the participatory potential inherent in them.

In his famous four tribes speech at the beginning of his tenure, President Rivlin asked: Do we have a shared civil language, a shared ethos? An effort is required of all of us now to advance a socio-cultural enterprise that will transform that question mark into a resounding exclamation point. The change of leadership at Beit HaNassi (the Presidents House) Isaac Herzogs assumption of the distinguished representational office is a sterling opportunity to rethink the narrative that frames our national life. The personality, experience, and status of the new president place him in a historically rare position to lead the work of healing the rifts that divide us. So may it be.

The writer is president of the Jewish People Policy Institute and a professor of law at Bar-Ilan University.

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From tribalism to cohesion, and the Israeli cultural war - The Jerusalem Post

If you are going to spell it ‘antisemitism,’ then you should remove the hyphen from ‘anti-Zionism’ – Connecticut Jewish Ledger

Posted By on September 19, 2021

By Kenneth Marcus

(JTA) Deborah Lipstadt, recently named by President Joe Biden as the U.S. Special Envoy To Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism, wont just combat anti-Semitism but may well eliminate it.

And that would be a mistake.

To be clear, the Emory University historian is a fierce opponent of Jew-hatred and Holocaust denial, having vanquished the Holocaust denier David Irving in a British court, among other triumphs over bigotry.

But over the past few years, Lipstadt has led a campaign to eliminate the hyphen in the word anti-Semitism, preferring antisemitism.

Why do hyphens matter? Lipstadt argues that anti-Semitism is misleading because it denotes hatred of Semites, not Jews. She notes that the German historian who coined the term anti-Semitism was a far-right polemicist who sought to blame Jews for the Semitic characteristics that allegedly incited anti-Jewish bigotry.

She joins several authorities who have eliminated the hyphen in response to those who, either for political reasons or in error, misuse the term to minimize its anti-Jewish character. [The Associated Press and the Jewish Telegraphic Agency are among the news organizations that have recently agreed to the change.]

The issue generates surprising controversy. In Palgraves new collection of essays, Key Concepts in the Study of Antisemitism, some authors eschew the hyphen, arguing that it lends credence to offensive arguments about Jews racial otherness. Others, however, prefer the hyphen either because of common usage or to emphasize that the term originates in a tradition that viewed Jews and Arabs as sharing a common Oriental heritage. This caused the editors to throw up their hands in frustration. Unable to choose, they permit both spellings, skittering back and forth in a way they acknowledge may be disconcerting.

Lipstadt is right that anti-Semitism has misleadingly conflated Jews and Semites since it was first coined in the 19th century. But she is wrong to think eliminating the hyphen will solve anything.

In German, Antisemitismus has been hyphen-less for over a century. This has not averted the confusion that worries Lipstadt. Nor did it eliminate Jew-hatred in that country.

The problem lies not in the hyphen but in the term itself, which was invented by Jew-haters who thought its pseudo-scientific sound would give social acceptability to their prejudice. Scholars and linguists, however, have yet to devise a suitable alternative. Jew-hatred, anti-Judaism and Judaeophobia have their partisans, but each term has problems. Until a better term arrives, we are stuck with anti-Semitism. Hyphen removal is no panacea.

The dilemma worsens when the hyphen is removed from anti-Semitism but not its handmaiden, anti-Zionism. Much commentary surrounds the contested relationship between these concepts.

Some say that anti-Semitism refers to discrimination against Jews as Jews, while anti-Zionism means opposition to Zionists as Zionists. They are wrong about both. Anti-Semitism opposes Jews based on false stereotypes and gross fantasies. It hates Jews not as Jews but as monsters whose villainy is concocted by the haters. In the same way, anti-Zionism hates Zionists not as Zionists but as figments of the haters imaginations.

Zionism can be many things: a political ideology, the yearning of a people for return to a land, the Diasporas support for Israels security. But it never means the murderous, world-dominating conspiracy that its opponents fantasize about. The hyphen in anti-Zionists wrongly suggests that such people oppose what Zionism really is, as opposed to what they imagine it to be.

Historian James Loeffler argues that anti-Zionism, as a concept and a construct, deserves the same historical analysis as anti-Semitism. Anti-Zionism, as opposition to Jewish national aspirations, arises from many strands within the Jewish and Arab worlds. As a distinct ideology, however, antizionism (the spelling is mine) was forged in Soviet propaganda, in the context of the Cold War and the rise of post-colonialism, as a reaction to Israels orientation toward the United States and the West. This ideology of hate fuses age-old anti-Semitic stereotypes, European conspiracy theories, left-wing anti-nationalism and post-Cold War geopolitics.

This new ideology, which has gained considerable steam since the Second Intifada and the United Nations 2001 Durban anti-racism conference, should not be conflated with the political movements including the opposition to Zionism that arose among Jews themselves that preceded it. If ever there is a place to remove the hyphen, it is here: Antizionism today is no mere opposition to Zionism. It reflects instead an independent form of hate with its own history and logic.

At the Louis D. Brandeis Center, we frequently defend Jewish students and professors who are stigmatized, excluded or attacked for their sympathies toward the State of Israel. If their antagonists were merely critics of Zionism as a political movement, then this might be a mere political dispute, albeit one conducted with unusually nasty tactics.

In fact, students are targeted because Zionism is an overt element of their identity as Jews. This Zionophobia, as some prefer to call it, can only be understood on its own terms as a distinctive form of prejudice. This notion is lost when anti-Zionism is hyphenated but antisemitism is not. Thus between anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism, there should be two hyphens or none.

Most commentators have praised Lipstadts nomination, given her international reputation. A few critics oppose based on her perceived partisanship. As a former Republican appointee, I am willing to go out on a limb: Confirm Lipstadt, but let her fight anti-Semitism. If she wants to go hyphenless, she must fight antizionism, too.

Kenneth Marcus is a former Assistant U.S. Secretary of Education for Civil Rights and author of The Definition of Anti-Semitism. He is founder and chair of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law.

NOTE: The Connecticut Jewish Ledger subscribes to Deborah Lipstadts view of the hyphenated term anti-Semitism and has eliminated the hyphen from the publications use of the word for several years now.

Main Photo: Protesters in Stockholm, Sweden, hold a sign reading Anti-Zionism is not antisemitism. Stop Israel, Jan. 10, 2009.(Robin/Flickr Commons)

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If you are going to spell it 'antisemitism,' then you should remove the hyphen from 'anti-Zionism' - Connecticut Jewish Ledger

Why Was the Jewish Response to Durban a Failure? – Algemeiner

Posted By on September 19, 2021

JNS.org Exactly 20 years ago, the egregious proceedings of the Durban Conference illustrated how the international community, and in particular the United Nations had legitimized antisemitism. A conference whose purpose was to oppose racism was essentially hijacked by the Palestinians and their allies, who were eager to revive the United Nations since-rejected libel about Zionism being racism. In an international community in which diversity and various expressions of national identity and self-determination were celebrated, only the Jews were told that the movement dedicated to their rights and self-determination was illegitimate.

The labeling of Israel as an apartheid state is an outrageous libel that gained new momentum after Durban and became a totem of the success of intersectionality, an ideology that became best known for its willingness to analogize the Palestinian war to destroy the one Jewish state on the planet with the struggle for civil rights in the United States and against racism everywhere. Intersectionality and critical race theory, to which its closely related, were initially seen as far-left ideas with little impact on the real world. But from the perspective of 2021, its clear that what was embraced at Durban has led directly to the current situation in which these toxic concepts have not only become embraced by the chattering classes, mainstream media and even leaders of the Democratic Party, but also effectively given an unprecedented permission slip for antisemitism.

Since then, there have been three official follow-up conferences hosted by the United Nations with much the same focus. The most recent, scheduled for Sept. 22 in New York City, is being boycotted by the United States and at least a dozen other countries. But while that is commendable, as Anne Bayefsky pointed out earlier this year, the Biden administration has also rejoined the UN Human Rights Council, a key prop of the Durban canards, and done virtually nothing to try to halt the Durban reboot even if it isnt attending.

This problem and its various implications will be addressed in an important conference, Fight Racism, Not Jews: The UNs Durban Deceit, that deserves a wide online audience

But with the passage of two decades, the questions I think deserve an answer are why the response from the organized Jewish world to this outrageous calumny has been so feeble. How is it possible that the identification of Jews with racism and apartheid has been met with what are, for the most part, perfunctory protests?

How is it that the Jewish world has confronted the apartheid Israel lie that Durban helped put on the ideological map with the sort of complacence and minimal activist response that has essentially given it a pass?

Is this merely a failure of public relations, or does it indicate a more profound inability to comprehend the danger that comes from allowing these ideas to go unchallenged or, even worse, treated as reasonable arguments?

And equally important, do those tasked with defending the Jews against rising antisemitism understand the consequences of their failure?

Part of the problem stems from one of the great strengths that is also a potential weakness for Jewish groups and those tasked with defending Israel and Zionism. Judaism contains a balance of universalism and parochial concerns; however, to much of the Jewish community, the former has assumed a far greater importance.

Some of that manifests itself in natural and laudable impulses to demonstrate solidarity with minority groups and the cause of civil rights. But it has also led to a willingness to turn a blind eye to trends that are associated with such causes, but which are actually toxic to both the public square and to Jewish security.

And it is precisely because of their diffidence in opposing anything that was somehow connected rightly or wrongly with anti-racism that the apartheid libel and the intersectional arguments that underpin it came to be regarded as not so much a frontal attack on Jewish security but merely an over-enthusiastic application of good principles. This willingness to not merely downplay the justice of Zionism and the injustice of the war being waged against Jewish self-determination is itself lamentable. But when added to the inclination of many liberals to regard anti-Zionism as a legitimate point of view that deserves a hearing despite its inherently prejudicial nature, this has continued to undermine the response not just to the spirit of Durban and the apartheid Israel lie; it has materially aided the assault on Israel in various UN forums, as well as academic and political venues where intersectionalism has found a foothold.

Liberal Jewish groups that dominate American Jewish life were at one and the same time too busy pursuing domestic agendas and virtue-signaling their disagreements with the policies of various Israeli governments to understand that what was happening under the auspices of the United Nations wasnt just a meaningless exercise in Third World politics or internationalist propaganda. Rather, it was an idea that had the power to delegitimize not just Israels existence, but the rights of Jews everywhere, as those connected to the Jewish state ultimately found themselves in the sights of movements determined to treat all those connected to Israel as equally at fault and guilty of oppression.

Expressions of support for Jewish rights and full-throated opposition to the antisemitism that had been taken up by supporters of the Palestinians was regarded by many well-meaning Jewish groups as somehow too assertive or parochial. Such stands were also damned as insufficiently concerned about the plight of Palestinians regardless of how often the latter had rejected Israels offers of an independent state and peace.

While the United Nations has long since lost the luster that its idealistic origins gave it, much of the organized Jewish world, like various foreign-policy establishments in Western countries, regards multilateralism and diplomacy as an end in and of itself, regardless of whether it advances or actually sets back the causes of freedom and opposition to genuine racism.

Layered into this problem is a tendency among many Jewish groups and many Jews to view antisemitism only through the prism of their historical memories and contemporary partisan prisms. This leads groups like the Anti-Defamation League to see Jew-hatred as primarily a problem of the far-right, while either ignoring or minimizing the way antisemitism has always found a home on the left. The efforts of the Palestinians and their Third World and Islamic allies to use not merely the language of the left to delegitimize Israels existence but the structures of international organizations to pursue their goals is largely off the radar screens of Jewish defense groups. These groups have been too focused on looking for enemies among the extremists of the far-right while regarding anti-Israeli and anti-Zionist invective from the left as less threatening.

To point this out is not to deny that anti-Semitism also exists on the right, and that it can pose a genuine danger. But the almost exclusive focus on the right motivated in part by the partisan priorities of some of those tasked with fighting antisemitism led to a degree of complacency about the spirit of Durban, the antisemitism of the United Nations, and intersectionalism that caused it to metastasize in the last decade almost without the antisemitism monitors noticing.

It is also true that Israeli diplomacy has largely abandoned the field in international organizations both because its diplomats focus on other crucial matters and because the Jewish state has become inured to the influence of a United Nations that remains dead set against it.

The consequences of this failure are readily apparent in 2021. Other than a few groups that have taken up this task, the organized Jewish world has largely failed to recognize that allowing these slanders to become entrenched in international discourse can have a catastrophic impact on Jewish security. This is partly a matter of underestimating the influence of UN agencies. But intersectional ideology has taken hold of academia and, like most toxic ideas that begin on college campuses, migrated to the rest of society. The delegitimization of Jewish nationalism and Jewish nationalism alone has created a reality in which antisemitism has received a permission slip from intellectuals, activists, and opinion-influencers in the media in a way that would have been unthinkable two decades ago. And rather than crying stop, liberal groups like the ADL and the Jewish Council on Public Affairs are cheerleading for these dangerous notions.

Its time the organized Jewish world started treating this problem and its connections to an increasingly popular variant of left-wing antisemitism in the United States seriously. The failure of major Jewish groups isnt just a disgrace; it is creating a dangerous environment in which they have effectively cleared a path for those who hate Israel and the Jews.

Jonathan S. Tobin is editor in chief of JNSJewish News Syndicate. Follow him on Twitter @jonathans_tobin.

Originally posted here:

Why Was the Jewish Response to Durban a Failure? - Algemeiner


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