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No wonder Christians, Muslims and Jews fell in love with this ancient site – Haaretz

Posted By on September 19, 2021

Everyone loves Zippori. Even today you can still feel the culture, the grandeur, the power of wealth there. This hill in the Lower Galilee has seen countless incarnations during its existence and is still one of the most fascinating places in the country. Zipporis inhabitants were no great heroes. They just wanted to live well, and peacefully. They cherished art, wine, clear-cut rules and faith. No wonder Jews, Muslims and Christians fell in love with the place.

In the first century B.C.E., Zippori (aka Sepphoris, according to its ancient Greek name) was conquered by Herod the Great, and his grandson later made the site his capital. Christians believe that Joachim and Hannah, the grandparents of Jesus Marys parents lived there. The city surrendered without a fight in the Great Jewish Revolt against the Romans in 66 C.E. and was spared destruction, unlike neighboring Yodfat. Early in the third century C.E., Rabbi Yehuda Hanasi (Judah the Prince), relocated there along with the Sanhedrin (supreme Jewish council) and codified the Mishnah. According to rabbinic literature, Zippori boasted 18 synagogues at that time. Only one has been uncovered in excavations so far.

Zippori was destroyed in the fourth century by a powerful earthquake and then rebuilt. The Muslims conquered it in 634 C.E. and renamed it Saffuriya; the site was home to several leading Arab scholars. In the 12th century, the Crusaders set out from there for the decisive Battle of Hattin, where they were defeated by Saladins army.

The Arab village of Saffuriya, where about 4,000 people lived in 1948, was bombed by the Israel Air Force in July that year and captured shortly thereafter; the few residents remaining in the area were deported. The remains of houses and ancient olive trees are still clearly visible at the site.

Zippori may best be known for its fantastic and intricate 1,500-year-old mosaics, but on a visit there it is first worthwhile to see the remains of its ancient reservoir, comprised of a complex and ingenious system of aqueducts and tunnels. The large, second-century structure used for storing water is located to the left of the entrance to the Zippori National Park (which has a separate parking area) and is about a kilometer from the remains of the ancient city. It is rock-hewn, 10 meters high and 250 meters long and fairly narrow, at just four meters wide. The descent into the reservoir, with its high walls creating a long and impressive crevice, is breathtaking. It is also possible to crawl through a pitch-dark section of what is called the Six-Shaft Tunnel.

Other points of interest in Zippori include remains of a huge Roman theater, a fort, a Crusader church and several dwellings. The famous mosaic known as the Mona Lisa of the Galilee is located in Dionysus House, a Roman palace in the heart of the ancient city of Zippori but the more interesting site is the fifth-century Nile House, so called because of its depictions of the river in Egypt, which served as a public meeting area. The multiple mosaic floors inside are rife with Amazonian hunters, beasts of prey and magnificent figures from legends.

Getting there: Enter Zippori National Park in Waze; turn North from the road leading to the Nazareth interchange (Route 79)

Admission: 28 shekels for adults, 14 shekels for children; advanced reservation necessary through the Nature and Parks Authority website.

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No wonder Christians, Muslims and Jews fell in love with this ancient site - Haaretz

Ballet in the City: Jewish Contributions to the Performing Arts in 1930s Shanghai – lareviewofbooks

Posted By on September 19, 2021

JEWS IN SHANGHAI have been the subject of many memoirs and novels, especially when it comes to the more than 24,000 refugees who fled Nazi Europe during the 1930s. Kirsty Mannings The Song of Jade Lily (2018) and Rachel DeWoskins Someday We Will Fly (2019) are two recent novels that tell stories of Jewish refugees who fled to the Chinese city, one of the only places in the world that didnt require papers back then.

Other books have told of a Jewish community in Shanghai before the refugees arrived. Taras Grescoes Shanghai Grand (2016) and Jonathan Kaufmans The Last Kings of Shanghai (2020) center around Baghdadi Jewish families like the Sassoons and Kadoories, families that arrived in Shanghai a century before the onset of World War II. Without these Baghdadis, the Jews fleeing Germany and Eastern Europe would not have enjoyed the benefits of an established Jewish community, even just in the form of soup kitchens or group homes.

Judaism is not a monolithic culture, as the different communities in Shanghai before and during the war show. Besides the refugees and the Baghdadi businesspeople, Shanghai was also home to Jews in the performing arts. Very little has been written about their contributions to Shanghai before the Japanese took over most of the city in 1937.

These contributions centered around two people: Russian Jewish composer Aaron Avshalomov and American Jewish theater producer Bernardine Szold Fritz. Their collaboration brought Chinese ballet to Shanghai, perhaps for the first time on a grand scale.

Avshalomov left Russia to study medicine in Zrich before the Bolshevik Revolution. After he completed his studies, his family, worried about the instability at home, sent him to the United States to practice there. But by the end of the 1910s, he had decided to leave medicine and the US, and pursue a career in music. He moved to Shanghai.

At the time, customs in this port city were not administered by Chinese officials, nor was it managed by French, British, or American authorities, all of which held local concessions. Because of these loose arrangements, Shanghai became a refuge for anyone seeking a new home. It attracted Russians fleeing the Bolshevik Revolution and Jews escaping pogroms. In Shanghai, Avshalomov worked with other Jewish musicians.

Bernardine Szold Fritz was a Jewish actress-turned-journalist who fled three husbands before the age of 30, arriving in Shanghai in 1929 to marry her fourth husband, an American silver broker. Born in Peoria, Illinois, she had acted at Chicagos Little Theatre before moving to New York and then Paris, where she mixed with Ernest Hemingway, Paul Robeson, Dorothy Parker, F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, and Gertrude Stein, among others.

In Shanghai, Bernardine started a salon, bringing together Chinese and foreign writers, artists, musicians, and actors. In early 1933, she invited Avshalomov and learned that he had written a ballet, The Soul of the Chin, while living in Peking in 192526. The ballet had been performed in Portland, Oregon, in the late 20s, but had yet to be produced in China. Suddenly Bernardine envisioned a new project that inspired her to think beyond her living room. She convinced Avshalomov that the two of them together could produce his ballet right there in Shanghai. Not unfamiliar with the dance world, she was friendly with Ruth Page, the American ballerina, and her partner, Harald Kreutzberg, a German pioneer in modern dance.

Avshalomovs experience in China he had already lived there for almost 15 years and Bernardines theatrical background allowed the duo to bring a ballet to Shanghai that would appeal to all arts enthusiasts, both Chinese and expat. Bernardine also tapped into her connections in Shanghais financial, political, and artistic communities. She and Avshalomov knew members of the influential Soong family, including Madame Chiang Kai-shek (or Soong Mei-ling) and Madame Sun Yat-sen (or Soong Ching-ling), both avid patrons of the arts.

The performance ran on May 21, 1933, at 9:15 p.m. at the new Grand Theatre. The list of sponsors and organizers included some of the most prominent figures in China, including the writer Lin Yutang, the painter Georgette Chen (wife of diplomat Eugene Chen), and Peking opera star Mei Lanfang, a regular of Bernardines salon. Also involved were the founder of the Shanghai Conservatory of Music, the former head of the Bank of China, and the president of Peking University, and, among the expats, the Baroness von Ungern Sternberg, the wife of the US consul general, the wife of a German shipping agent, and a Jewish woman named Theresa Renner who lived in Shanghai for 30 years and met Albert Einstein on his 1922 trip to the city.

Designed by Hungarian architect LszlHudec, the Grand Theatre sat at the northern end of the Shanghai Race Club. The Art Deco building was brand new and had not yet officially opened as a cinema. It promised state-of-the-art screens and simultaneous translation for the films that would start showing three weeks after the ballet. When Bernardine sat in the audience and looked up, she saw an illuminated ceiling shaped like a giant Art Deco scallop shell. The exterior was a masterpiece of vertical and horizontal lines.

The ballet made up only one of the three acts that evening. The performance began with a Chinese Ta Tung Orchestra playing a selection of classic Chinese themes on native instruments. Wei Chung Loh followed the orchestras medleys with a pipa solo. Avshalomov arranged the second part of the program, which included a couple of pieces performed by the Shanghai Municipal Orchestra conducted by Mario Paci. This part began with a poem, The Last Words of Tsing-Wen by Chu Man-hua. Following the poem was a short musical performance titled In Hutungs of Peiping, also by the Shanghai Municipal Orchestra. The lights then came on for a short intermission so the audience could stretch and the orchestra could set up for the ballet.

The Soul of the Chin was possibly the first Chinese ballet performed on a grand scale in China. While Anna Pavlova performed in Shanghai in 1922, inspiring scores of young Chinese to study ballet from the many Russian migrs that had fled to the city after the Bolshevik Revolution, I could find no mention of large-scale ballet performances of Chinese stories in Shanghai or elsewhere in China before Bernardine, Avshalomov, and their friends produced The Soul of the Chin in 1933. The event was even more remarkable because the cast of dancers was all Chinese, as were the set designers, dramaturge, and stage manager. In fact, the only foreigners on the crew were the costume designer and the person managing the lights.

The ballet was set during a war. Trumpets announced the triumph of the victorious rebel general, Go Chai. The emperor Yien Wang retreated as his palace went up in flames. By the shore of the Sai Nan Lake, General Go Chai hid in a boat to confront the emperor. The emperor was joined by Kinsei, a devoted friend and noted harpist. See, there is a boat by the lake. Take it; cross the lake, reorganize your army and fight again, Kinsei told the emperor. But the emperor didnt dare escape and instead attempted to take his own life. Kinsei saved the emperor and guided him toward the getaway boat.

Suddenly, Go Chai jumped from the boat. The emperor called him a traitor, and a sword fight ensued in which the emperor was fatally wounded. Kinsei rushed to his aid, but it was too late. General Go Chai demanded that Kinsei play the harp for him, declaring himself the new emperor. Still devoted to the fallen emperor Yien Wang, Kinsei began to play, and Go Chai became entranced by the magic of the music. As Kinsei waved his wand counting one, two, three, four Go Chai fell unconscious.

Out of nowhere, a dancing girl the released soul of Kinseis harp appeared on the lake. She cast a spell on General Go Chai and lured him into the water until it covered his head. Then, the vision of the girl evaporated and the waters became calm again.

In the final act, Kinsei strummed his harp, playing a song that depicted his loneliness. The music waves like a pale line of ascending incense smoke, fading to infinity in the shadows of night. Kinsei tumbled over his harp as Emperor Yien Wang suddenly awoke. Trying to help his friend, the emperor reached out to Kinsei. Exhausted and weak, Kinsei told the emperor that he owed his gratitude to the harp, not to Kinsei. Take it it is my gift to my beloved master. I am ready to join my ancestors. Kinsei fell over dead, and the emperor shed tears as the curtain fell.

The audience leapt to its feet in roaring applause.

Shanghai had never seen an evening like this before, with Chinese and Western performers all working together. From this performance, Bernardine and her friends started the International Arts Theater. It would go on to bring lectures, art exhibits, plays, and theater classes to arts enthusiasts in Shanghai.

Three years later, in 1936, the two friends worked together again to produce Avsholomovs The Dream of Wei Lien. This time, Avshalomov conducted the Shanghai Municipal Symphony himself, and the ballet was held at the Metropol Theater.

The story centered around Hu Wei Lien, a young woman who lived with her father and stepmother. In order to gain more wealth, the stepmother sought to betroth Wei Lien to an evil warrior named Ling Le Zah. Although Lings family was very well off, Wei Liens father worried that such a marriage would only bring sorrow to his daughter. To find strength, Wei Lien started praying each night to the goddess Kuan Yin. She didnt see how she could get out of the arranged marriage and felt she needed the support of Kuan Yin to help her survive. Yet Kuan Yin gave her different advice: Wei Lien should not marry Ling but rather find a young scholar who would honor her family and her.

The ballet was performed in three acts, in the last of which the warrior Ling went off to battle, never to be heard from again. Wei Lien met a young scholar on his way to sit for his exams in Peking, and they married. In honor of their wedding, the entire cast came out on stage for a large garden dance.

In a review of The Dream of Wei Lien, one of Shanghais newspapers reported the ballet was undoubtedly one of the finest things done in the local theatre for many months.

The following year, Japan bombed parts of Shanghai, and the war in Asia commenced. Bernardine left Shanghai for Los Angeles just before the bombing started, but Avshalomov stayed behind and was interned in Shanghai during the Japanese occupation (194145). He returned to the US in 1947. Sometime around then, he and Bernardine reunited when he gave a talk in Beverly Hills. Avshalomov spoke about the music he had composed for The Great Wall, an opera based on the story of Lady Meng Jiang, a woman searching for her husband after he was conscripted to help build the Great Wall.

Selected pieces of Avshalomovs music can be found on Spotify, and Bernardine is remembered as a footnote in several books about 1930s Shanghai. Thanks to their efforts, ballet became and has remained a popular art form in the city.

Susan Blumberg-Kason is the author of a memoir and co-editor of a collection of dark short stories set in Hong Kong. She lives in Chicago and is working on a biography of Bernardine Szold Fritz.

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Ballet in the City: Jewish Contributions to the Performing Arts in 1930s Shanghai - lareviewofbooks

UNR Jewish leader: Comparing Holocaust to mask and vaccine rules ‘wrong 100% of the time’ – Reno Gazette Journal

Posted By on September 19, 2021

Wearing a replica of the Star of David patch to compare maskmandates to the Holocaust isbeyond offensive and wrong 100% of the time," according to Atty Garfinkel, who oversees Jewish student life at the University of Nevada, Reno.

At least two people attending the Washoe County School Board meeting Tuesday wore yellow stars like those the Nazis forced Jews to wear during the mass genocide of World War II.

James Benthin, who attended the meeting, said he wore a yellow starto equatepeople who don't want to get vaccinated against COVID-19 or wear masks with the treatment of Jews during the Holocaust.

More: Man at WCSD meeting compares masks and vaccines to Holocaust

To compare the inconveniences of a mask or vaccine to the murder of 11 million people is deeply offensive and goes against everything that Judaism is founded on, said Garfinkel.For five years, she has led Hillel of Northern Nevada, a UNR campus group that promotes Jewishculture and understanding.

The starworn duringTuesday's school board meeting is another example of rising anti-Semitic incidents across the country, she said.

Two years ago, UNR recorded30 bigotry and biasincidents, which included24 that were anti-Semitic.

Garfinkel said there have been similar instances comparing the Holocaust to maskmandates and vaccination requirements in the U.S., but this school board meeting was the first blatant comparison she has been made aware of in Washoe County.

"There is no comparison, and it is 100% wrong100% of the time when they compare inconveniences to fascism and murder, Garfinkle said.

She said there are people across the countrywho are attempting to use their understanding of history to justify foolishness and bias.

"What it comes down to at the end of the dayis that thebroader Jewish community believes in science, she said.

She said she understands that there are political debates about what can or should be mandated, including the COVID-19 vaccine.

"But we aren't going to debate saving lives," she said.

Siobhan McAndrew tells stories about the people of Northern Nevada and covers education in Washoe County. Read her journalism right here. Consider supporting her work by subscribing to the Reno Gazette Journal.

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UNR Jewish leader: Comparing Holocaust to mask and vaccine rules 'wrong 100% of the time' - Reno Gazette Journal

College Dems Jewish Caucus Call on VP Candidate to Resign, Accuse Her of Being Prejudiced Against Jews – Jewish Journal

Posted By on September 19, 2021

The College Democrats of America (CDA) Jewish Caucus called on a CDA official who is running to be vice president of the organization to step out of the race, alleging that her Twitter history shows her being prejudiced against Jews.

The caucus published a Medium post on September 17 stating that in 2016, CDA Vice President candidate Nourhan Mesbah, who currently serves as the CDA National Director of Inclusivity, Diversity, Equity and Accesibility (IDEA), tweeted in October 2016, i [sic] blame this [presidential] debate on the yahood. Yahood is Arabic for Jew.

This displays blatant antisemitism and also plays into centuries old tropes of Jews playing puppetmaster over the politics and media, the CDA Jewish Caucus wrote. It is an offensive and ignorant statement and still public on Twitter as of this letters publication.

They later argued that if Mesbahs defense was that she was joking with the yahood tweet, it is rooted in centuries of antisemitic canards. These false accusations and subsequent Jewish conspiracy theories became popular in the Middle Ages and resulted in thousands of Jewish people being killed in pogroms. This ties into exactly what Ms. Mesbah said about Jews being at fault for Secretary [of State Hillary] Clintons bad performance in the debate.

The caucus also noted that in the tweet Mesbah tagged Dima Jubara, who previously tweeted out a picture stating, God will kill the Jews in Arabic and has also tweeted, I say I blame the yahood at least 25 times a day. The caucus posted another screenshot appearing to show Mesbah exchanging text messages with Jubara where Jubara says God will kill the Jews in Arabic and Mesbah doesnt push back. The caucus called this unacceptable and show without a shadow of a doubt that Ms. Mesbah is an antisemite and closely associates with other antisemites.

The caucus alleged that CDA President Gabrielle Harris ignored them when they reached out to her about Mesbah, which is why they decided to take matters into their own hands. They also thanked Jewish on Campus for tipping them off on the matter.

It is for this reason that we call on Ms. Mesbah to not only drop out of the race to be the next CDA Vice President, but to also resign as IDEA director, the caucus wrote.This shouldnt need to be said but wecannothave a Vice President or IDEA director who is prejudiced against Jews because antisemitism is anything but inclusive.

Blake Flayton, Co-Founder of the New Zionists Congress and Journal columnist, called on the College Democrats to do something about this. Right now, before the voting starts. This terrible news will not go away even if you fail to address it.

Israeli activist Hen Mazzig also tweeted, Just because you say something extremely hateful about Jews but say Jew in Arabic (Yahood) doesnt make it any less disgusting. How is it even possible this bigot is still in leadership?

Arizona State Representative Alma Hernandez, a Democrat, tweeted that such behavior should not be tolerated. Whether its young Democrats college Democrats you name it.

The CDA and Mesbah did not respond to the Journals requests for comment by publication time. Voting for the CDA election began on September 18 and ends on September 20.

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College Dems Jewish Caucus Call on VP Candidate to Resign, Accuse Her of Being Prejudiced Against Jews - Jewish Journal

Jewish anti-Zionist to plead his case for asylum in the UK – Al Jazeera English

Posted By on September 19, 2021

A 21-year-old Jewish anti-Zionist, who fled Israel in 2017, is pleading his case for asylum in the UK.

The hearing, scheduled for September 20 at a First-tier tribunal in Manchester, will address his appeal against the rejection he received in December last year from the UK Home Office.

The rabbinical student, who has been granted anonymity order from the court on security concerns, andhis lawyers believe his personal views, including his refusal to join the Israeli army, would expose him to persecution if he was to return to Israel.

His lawyers said he could be deemed a deserter and liable to serve a prison sentence of up to 15 years for [military] desertion.

The student has said he vehemently opposes Zionism and Israels existence due to religious and political reasons views that are generally not welcomed by authorities or the wider Zionist Israeli public.

Anti-Zionist Orthodox Jews believe they should not be permitted to return to the land of Palestine en masse until the coming of the messiah.

What the Zionist movement has done is sinful because it has returned Jews to the Holy Land against Gods will and in the process has forcibly displaced the indigenous Palestinian people and stolen their land, he said in his witness statement which will be used as evidence for the courts decision.

The Zionists have engaged in theft and mass killing to create their Zionist state. They have rebelled against God in the gravest way. I am afraid of being forcibly conscripted into the military which would go against everything that I stand for the State of Israel practices apartheid and is routinely involved in war crimes against the Palestinian people. I cannot serve in such an immoral army that carries out such atrocities on a daily basis.

He was arrested and beaten up in 2015, aged 17, by the Israeli police during a protest by the Orthodox Jewish community in Jerusalem against forced military conscription.

According to his lawyers, during the protests and while in police custody, the teen was handcuffed, pushed to the floor and dragged around by the handcuffs, spat at and beaten with a stick.

He was also sprayed with skunk water a foul-smelling chemical compound created by the Israeli military and used for crowd control.

He left for the UK in 2017 on a tourist visa after receiving a conscription letter and has not returned since, his lawyers added.

The Home Office rejected his initial asylum claim on the ground that he could have avoided military service on mental grounds.

But his lawyers argue the appeal must be looked at in a political framework andit is simply not possible to properly consider our clients case without addressing apartheid, which is a legal concept codified in the 2002 Rome Statute and the International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid.

His lawyer, Fahad Ansari, told Al Jazeera that the court must look at the case in the framework of Israel being an apartheid state and not in a vacuum.

It would be unconscionable for them to say that he should be sent back and be forced to serve in a military that practices apartheid, said Ansari before adding that protesting against Zionism is so fundamental to his Jewish identity and his political views that he also risks being persecuted by authorities again.

By law, Israel has made it mandatory for its citizens to serve in the military at 18.

Men have to serve just under three years while women serve two years.

Exemption from the military can be granted on specific grounds citing mental health problems or claiming pacifism that is apolitical.

Those who outwardly state their opposition to the occupation as a reason are sentenced to repeated prison terms until declared unfit to serve by the Israeli army.

While Palestinians and most Orthodox Jews are exempt, during the past few years a heated debate and clashes with police on the ground over Haredi conscription have come to the fore as Israels secular majority argue the community should be drafted.

In September 2017, Israels High Court of Justice struck down the law exempting Ultra-Orthodox Jews from service while they study in yeshivas a Jewish educational institute saying it would take effect within a year.

In August 2021, the government presented a compromise proposal surrounding the issue, that would permit full exemption for yeshiva students at 21, but the age would later increase and still require them to perform civic duty and two years in the reserves.

The plan would still need to be discussed and approved by the Knesset.

The Israeli police routinely chase down individuals in the Orthodox community who dodge military service and attempt to conscript them.

Police have also routinely used force against them during anti-conscription protests, conducted mass arrest raids on their homes, and are often exposed to abuse in custody, according to reports.

Describing the states attitude towards the Orthodox community particularly at protests military refuser and rights activist Sahar Vardi said relative to Jews, its the most violence police response we see.

Vardi told Al Jazeera that many in the Orthodox community practice a non-cooperation method with the state, rather than requesting exemption.

They ignore the military completely, and become deserters (someone who has been absent for more than 21 days), said Vardi.

The standard is they would get sentenced for half the time they deserted. He added that they are held in military jails used for soldiers.

The UK-based lawyer Ansari said that expert evidence confirms that [his client] would not be treated as exempt but as a military deserter because he failed to report for service and left the country.

Since the student did not take part in the normal recruitment process for the military, his lawyers believe he would be arrested upon his return, even if he were eligible for an exemption.

Ansari said a positive ruling, however, could set a precedent for future asylum requestsfrom not just Israeli Jews but also Palestinians.

It would help Palestinian asylum seekers frame their cases in a more accurate way in the future where their suffering is viewed in the context of Israeli apartheid, he said.

Its time the UK judiciary made findings about apartheid in Israel; considering all the evidence, this will be difficult for them to avoid.

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Jewish anti-Zionist to plead his case for asylum in the UK - Al Jazeera English

Pope recounts when he inadvertently gave communion to old Jewish woman – Reuters

Posted By on September 19, 2021

Pope Francis speaks to the media on board an Alitalia aircraft enroute from Bratislava's Milan Rastislav Stefanik International airport in Bratislava, Slovakia, back to Rome, September 15, 2021. Tiziana Fabi/Pool via REUTERS

ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE, Sept 15 (Reuters) - Pope Francis on Wednesday related how he once inadvertently gave communion to an elderly Jewish woman, who only afterwards told him about her religion.

"I once went to say a Mass in a home for the elderly," he told a reporter who had asked him if he had ever denied communion to anyone.

He said he had not and then told a story about when he was a priest in his native Argentina.

"(At the home for the elderly) I said 'those who want to take communion raise your hand' and they all did, all the old men and old women wanted it," he said.

"Later this woman said to me, 'thank you, thank you, father, I'm Jewish.' I responded: 'so is what I just gave you' but let's move on," he said, laughing.

Catholics believe the communion bread is the body of Jesus Christ, who was Jewish.

Reporting by Philip Pullella, editing by Pritha Sarkar

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Pope recounts when he inadvertently gave communion to old Jewish woman - Reuters

Survey: 22% of adult Jewish gamers face antisemitism while playing J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on September 19, 2021

More than one in five Jewish adults who play online multiplayer games faced antisemitism while playing, according to a new survey from the Anti-Defamation League.

Thesurvey, published Wednesday, found that harassment and bigotry are common across the 97 million Americans who play multiplayer games. Among adult gamers surveyed, 83% said they have been harassed while playing. Sixty percent of gamers aged 13-17 who were surveyed said the same.

Among adults, nearly half of women said they were harassed, as did 42% of Black gamers and more than one-in-three Asian and LGBTQ+ gamers. A quarter of Muslim gamers also said they were harassed. More than seven-in-10 adults reported what the ADL calls severe abuse, including physical threats, stalking, and sustained harassment.

Among teems, Black, female and Asian gamers also reported the highest rates of harassment in their age group, though harassment is less common across the board among teens.

Only 7% of Jewish teen gamers said they were harassed for their identity. But 10% of teen gamers, and 8% of adult gamers, said theyve been exposed to white supremacist extremism online. Among teens, 17% said they didnt feel like talking to family or friends after being harassed, and 10% said they did worse in school because they were harassed.

Among both teens and adults, two-thirds said they sometimes or always hide their identity as a result of being targeted by hate.

The survey was conducted in June in collaboration with Nowzoo, a gaming and esports analytics firm. It includes 1,664 adult respondents and 542 teen respondents. Depending on the group, it has a margin of error of between 2% to 3%.

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Survey: 22% of adult Jewish gamers face antisemitism while playing J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Imam who quoted text commanding Muslims to kill Jews acquitted – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on September 19, 2021

A senior imam in France who in a sermon recited a religious text commanding Muslims to kill Jews has been acquitted of incitement to antisemitic hate charges.Mohamed Tatai, the rector of the Great Mosque of Toulouse, had no desire to incite hatred in his sermon from 2017, the Correctional Tribunal of Toulouse ruled Tuesday. The sermon came days after news broke that the United States would recognize Jerusalem as Israels capital.

Jewish community leaders, who broke relations with Tatai and his mosque following the discovery of his sermon, protested the ruling. Tatai leads an interfaith dialogue group called the Circle for Civil Dialogue.

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Franck Teboul, the president of the Toulouse chapter of the CRIF umbrella group of French Jewish communities, said it was reminiscent of a recent decision in France not to try the killer of a Paris Jewish woman who during the 2017 slaying of Sarah Halimi spewed antisemitic slurs and shouted about Allah. A court ruled that Kabili Traore was too high on marijuana to make him responsible for his actions.

Even when you kill a Jew youre not convicted but considered crazy, Teboul told France Bleu. So you tell thousands at a mosque to kill Jews and hide behind a centuries-old text to avoid conviction.

Muslim community leaders praised the courts acquittal.

Abdallah Zekri, the president of the Observatory for the Fight Against Islamophobia, and a community leader appointed by the Great Mosque of Paris, said the verdict cuts against radical fundamentalists who expected Tatai would be convicted to tell their followers: Look how theyre treating a moderate Muslim, France Bleu quoted him as saying.

Zekri defended Tatai, saying hes always maintained good relations with the Jewish and Catholic communities.

Tatai, who has not resigned his communal posts, has received some backing from prominent members of the Muslim community.

In the sermon, which was filmed, he said that the Prophet Muhammad told us about the final and decisive battle: Judgement Day will not come until the Muslims fight the Jews. The Jews will hide behind the stones and the trees, and the stones and the trees will say: Oh Muslim, oh servant of Allah, there is a Jew hiding behind me, come and kill him except for the Gharqad tree, which is one of the trees of the Jews.

He also predicted Israels demise and said the 2016 funeral of Israeli President Shimon Peres was in fact Israels funeral.

Dalil Boubakeur, rector of the Great Mosque of Paris and the president of the French Council of the Muslim Faith, protested the controversy over Tatais sermon rather than the sermon itself.

Acting as Tatais spokesperson, Boubaker said Tatasi apologizes to anyone who was accidentally offended by the pulling out of context of the sermon. Neither imam explained what they believe to be the correct context.

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Imam who quoted text commanding Muslims to kill Jews acquitted - The Jerusalem Post

Feds say man driven by hatred of Jews pleaded guilty to all charges after deadly 2019 assault on California synagogue – CNN

Posted By on September 19, 2021

"The defendant entered a synagogue with the intent to kill all those inside because of his hatred for Jewish people, and days earlier used fire in an attempt to destroy another sacred house of worship because of his hatred for Muslims," Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said in a statement.

John T. Earnest of Rancho Penasquitos pleaded guilty to a 113-count hate crimes indictment, the statement said. Prosecutors said the plea agreement includes a recommended sentence of life in prison plus 30 years.

In addition to the synagogue attack on April 27, 2019, Earnest admitted he tried to set fire to the Dar-ul-Arqam mosque in Escondido, California, on March 24, 2019, the Justice Department said.

Prosecutors said they found a manifesto allegedly written by Earnest, in which he penned anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim statements, including "I can only kill so many Jews" and "I only wish I killed more."

Armed with a Smith & Wesson M&P 15 assault rifle, Earnest, who was 19 at the time, killed 60-year-old Lori Gilbert Kaye, who was at the synagogue to honor her late mother, and injured three others, including the rabbi and an 8-year-old girl.

They were among more than four dozen people inside the synagogue at the time.

In July, Earnest reached a plea agreement on the state charges, accepting life in prison without parole on the murder and attempted murder charges. The agreement spared him from the death penalty.

CNN's Cheri Mossburg contributed to this report.

Excerpt from:

Feds say man driven by hatred of Jews pleaded guilty to all charges after deadly 2019 assault on California synagogue - CNN

After man gets 20 years for threats, Toledo Jewish community breathes sigh of relief – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on September 19, 2021

The Toledo Jewish community is breathing a sigh of relief after an Ohio man who planned to provide material support to ISIS and attack two Toledo-area synagogues was sentenced to 20 years in prison Sept. 13.

Damon M. Joseph, 23, of Holland Village in Lucas County, whose alias is Abdullah Ali Yusuf, pleaded guilty May 18 to attempting to provide material support to the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), and attempting to commit a hate crime.

The Jewish Federation of Greater Toledo said in a statement to the Cleveland Jewish News that Josephs intention to bring terror, injury and death to the community brought fear and angst that lingers to this day.

The sentence reflects the communitys rejection of his hate and punishes him appropriately, the statement said. Hate crimes are intended to intimidate and strike fear in our community and are antithetical to values adopted at our nations founding.

The arrest was made on Dec. 7, 2018, only a few weeks after a shooting at Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh which killed 11 people on Oct. 27, 2018.

With the recency of that attack, as well as the current rise of antisemitism in Ohio and across the region, James Pasch, regional director of the Anti-Defamation Leagues Cleveland office, said Josephs threats are a clear reminder of the need to remain continually vigilant and strident in the fight against antisemitism.

His actions and goals were unconscionable, Pasch told the CJN on Sept. 15. And we thank law enforcement and the U.S. Attorneys Office for working together to stop an attack from occurring.

According to court documents, Joseph originally drew the attention of law enforcement in late 2018 by posting photographs of weapons and various messages in support of ISIS on his social media accounts, as well as a photograph originally distributed by the media wing of ISIS.

According to a release by the U.S. Department of Justice, Joseph had researched when the Jewish sabbath would be in order to ensure more people would be present.

He planned to attack Temple Shomer Emunim and Congregation Bnai Israel, which share a campus with the Jewish Federation of Greater Toledo and the Jewish Community Center in Sylvania, a suburb of Toledo.

Joseph was represented by lawyers Neil McElroy and Peter G. Rost, attorneys in Toledo. Rost had previously told the CJN the plea arrangement discussed in court would sentence Joseph to 20 years in prison.

Given that there was an agreed upon sentence, the government and Joseph agreed 20 years was a fair sentence, McElroy told the CJN on Sept. 14.

He said the only variable going into the sentence was whether the judge would agree to impose the sentence, so there was no surprise on Josephs part.

Unlike other sentences, when defendants may be surprised or the public may be surprised, Mr. Joseph had ample time to come to grips with the sentence that would be imposed, McElroy said.

Beginning in September 2018, Joseph engaged in a series of online conversations with several undercover FBI agents where he repeatedly expressed his support for ISIS.

The FBIs Joint Terrorism Task Force, comprised of over 50 federal, state and local law enforcement agencies, investigated the case for weeks.

Shortly after gaining the attention of law enforcement, Joseph stated to an undercover agent that he wanted to participate in an attack on behalf of the terror group. On Dec. 2, 2018, Joseph forwarded a document to the agent that laid out his plans for such an attack on Jews who support the state of Israel. Joseph then stated that he did not necessarily see this as a martyrdom operation, but instead planned to escape alive and potentially combat with law enforcement.

The defendant planned to cause significant harm to members of the Toledo, Ohio, Jewish community by carrying out a violent federal hate crime, Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Departments Civil Rights Division said in a statement Sept. 13. This sentence should send a strong message that those who target people with violence because of their religion, will be held to account. The Department of Justices Civil Rights Division will continue to vigorously investigate and prosecute individuals who use violence to attack our religious communities.

On Dec. 4, 2018, Joseph met with an undercover FBI agent and discussed conducting a mass shooting at a synagogue. Joseph identified two synagogues in the Greater Toledo area as potential targets and discussed the types of weapons he believed would inflict mass casualties, including AR-1s and AK-47s.

Joseph met with an undercover agent to discuss more specifics of his plans, such as his desire to kill a rabbi. Later that day, the undercover agent told Joseph that he had purchased rifles for the attack.

The two met again Dec. 7, 2018 at a predetermined location, where Joseph took possession of a black duffel bag containing two semi-automatic rifles, which had been rendered inoperable by law enforcement officers so that they posed no danger to the public. Joseph was then arrested.

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After man gets 20 years for threats, Toledo Jewish community breathes sigh of relief - Cleveland Jewish News


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