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Yom Kippur synagogue attack plot: Teenager and three others arrested in Germany – Euronews

Posted By on September 17, 2021

A 16-year-old boy and three other people have been arrested in Germany over an alleged Islamist plot to attack a synagogue on the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur.

Police cordoned off the synagogue in the city of Hagen, south of Dortmund, on Wednesday and an evening worship service was called off.

Herbert Reul, interior minister of North Rhine-Westphalia, said officials had received "very serious and concrete information" that there could be an attack on the synagogue during Yom Kippur.

The tip, he said, had pointed to "an Islamist-motivated threat situation" and named both the possible timing and would-be perpetrators.

The teenager, a Syrian national who lives in Hagen, was detained on Thursday morning while the three others were arrested after a raid on an apartment.

Police are still investigating whether they were involved in the alleged plan. Reul added that other searches were ongoing in Hagen, but gave no details.

The detentions took place on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in Judaism, and two years after a deadly attack in another German city on the Yom Kippur holiday.

Police were on the scene on Thursday with sniffer dogs, which found no trace of explosives. Dortmund police spokesman Gunnar Wortmann told AP: "We had information that there was a threat to a Jewish institution here in Hagen.

"Of course, we immediately adjusted the police protection measures in this regard and are also in close contact with the local Jewish community."

Two years ago on Yom Kippur, German far-right extremist Stephan Balliet attacked a synagogue in the eastern German city of Halle, killing two people.

Balliet had posted an anti-Semitic diatribe online before making his way to the place of worship, where 52 people had gathered to mark Yom Kippur.

After failing to get through the doors, he shot and killed a 40-year-old woman in the street outside and a 20-year-old man in a nearby kebab shop.

The incident was considered one of the worst anti-Semitic assaults in the country's post-war history. In December 2020 Balliet was jailed for life for the attempted murder of 68 people, Holocaust denial and incitement.

German Justice Minister Christine Lambrecht sharply condemned the foiled Hagen attack on Thursday. It is intolerable that Jews are again exposed to such a horrible threat," she said, "and that they cannot celebrate the start of their highest holiday, Yom Kippur, together."

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Yom Kippur synagogue attack plot: Teenager and three others arrested in Germany - Euronews

Facebook knew Instagram made teenage girls feel worse about themselves but that they are addicted to app – The Independent

Posted By on September 17, 2021

Instagram knew that its app was making teenage girls feel worse about their bodies, internal documents from the company allegedly reveal.

Thirty-two percent of teen girls said that when they felt bad about their bodies, Instagram made them feel worse, the researchers said in a March 2020 slide presentation posted to Facebooks internal message board, reportedly seen by The Wall Street Journal. Comparisons on Instagram can change how young women view and describe themselves.

More slides included similar messages: We make body image issues worse for one in three teen girls, said one slide from 2019. Another read: Teens blame Instagram for increases in the rate of anxiety and depression. This reaction was unprompted and consistent across all groups.

According to the findings, 13 per cent of British users and six per cent of American users believed that Instagram was a source of suicidal thoughts. Yet Instagram remains a key social media platform for young people, with over 40 per cent of the apps demographic under the age of 22.

Facebook, the parent company of Instagram, is keen for the photo app to grow. Instagram is well positioned to resonate and win with young people, one slide said, with another stating that there is a path to growth if Instagram can continue their trajectory.

The files gathered from The Wall Street Journal make several claims based on internal Facebook data: one in five teens say that Instagram makes them feel worse about themselves, and girls in the UK are influenced the most by the app; teens who struggle with mental health say Instagram makes it worse; negative emotions about having the perfect image, feeling attractive, and having enough money are likely to have started on Instagram.

This data comes from focus groups, online surveys, and diary studies from 2019 and 2020, as well as a large-scale survey of thousands of users in 2021.

Many of the problems are specific to Instagram, according to Facebooks own researchers. Social comparison is worse on Instagram, Facebook research from 2020 allegedly stated, because competitors such as TikTok and Snapchat are more grounded in performativity or facial filters rather than the topics of body image and lifestyle pushed by Instagram.

Aspects of Instagram exacerbate each other to create a perfect storm, the research stated, which was apparently reviewed by Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg.

These harmful affects are not felt by all demographics, and for most teenagers the negative social comparison created by the app is outweighed by its use to keep friends connected, the research suggested. However, Instagrams researchers also found that teens regularly wanted to use the app less but lacked the self-control to do so.

Teens told us that they dont like the amount of time they spend on the app but feel like they have to be present, internal documents said. They often feel addicted and know that what theyre seeing is bad for their mental health but feel unable to stop themselves. It was also found that selfies which have been filtered and shared in stories made users feel worse.

Researchers had suggested that Instagram should reduce exposure to celebrity content about fashion and beauty, and increase content from close friends; however, some Facebook employees pushed back against that suggestion.

Isnt that what IG is mostly about? one male employee wrote on an internal message board, saying that the (very photogenic) life of the top 0.1% is the reason why teens are on the platform.

A now-former executive also pushed back on changes: People use Instagram because its a competition. Thats the fun part.

This report follows numerous stories about Facebooks knowledge regarding the effects of its algorithms and app design. In January 2019, teenager Molly Russell committed suicide, with her father accusing the app of helping to kill his daughter. Instagram said it would ban graphic images of self-harm from the app one week later.

Facebook also shelved research that would stop the platform from encouraging political division, and has been found to be recommending Holocaust denial and other fascist content.

In addition to its main app, Instagram is currently building a version of its app for children under the age of 13, although 44 states in the US have asked the company to drop the plans.

In a blog post about The Wall Street Journals findings, Instagram said: Social media isnt inherently good or bad for people. Many find it helpful one day, and problematic the next. What seems to matter most is how people use social media, and their state of mind when they use it.

Many said Instagram makes things better or has no effect, but some, particularly those who were already feeling down, said Instagram may make things worse. In the research world, this isnt surprising or unexpected. Issues like negative social comparison and anxiety exist in the world, so theyre going to exist on social media too. That doesnt change the fact that we take these findings seriously, and we set up a specific effort to respond to this research and change Instagram for the better.

You can contact the Samaritans by calling them free from any phone on 116 123, email jo@samaritans.org or visit samaritans.org to find details of your nearest branch

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Facebook knew Instagram made teenage girls feel worse about themselves but that they are addicted to app - The Independent

National Hispanic Heritage Month 2021: Events in Houston – Houston On The Cheap

Posted By on September 17, 2021

Photo by sydney Rae on Unsplash

Hispanic Heritage Month is a month dedicated to honoring Hispanic Americans and recognizing how theyve contributed to the culture, history, and achievements of the United States.

Hispanic Heritage Month will be celebrated from September 15th to October 15th. Over the next month, there will be plenty of opportunities for you to celebrate Latin American culture in a variety of ways. Weve put together a list of the top Hispanic Heritage Month events in Houston for you to choose from.

In honor of the 20th anniversary of 9/11 and Latinx Heritage Month, TEATRX is presenting a production of Sonia Flew, a play about a Cuban immigrant raising two children with her Jewish husband in Minneapolis in the aftermath of 9/11. Follow the emotional journey of several generations impacted by war, displacement, and trauma. The production will be staged at MECA Houston. Face masks will be required.When: Friday, September 17th, and Sunday, September 19th, from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.Where: MECA EAST END (Formerly known as TBH) 333 S Jenson Dr. TX, 77003.How Much: $20

courtesy Miller Outdoor Theatre

Enjoy a live Latin jazz and pop performance by the Pedrito Martinez Group. To watch the show at Miller Outdoor Theatre, you can get up to four tickets for the covered seating area online, but they go fast. If youre okay with sitting on the hill picnic-style, you dont have to worry about tickets. You can also watch the event online via live stream here.When: Friday, September 17th, from 8 p.m. to 9:45 p.m.Where:6000 Hermann Park Dr, Houston, TX 77030How Much:Free

courtesy Childrens Museum Houston

Visit Childrens Museum Houston to celebrate Mexican Independence Day and give your kids a chance to learn more about Mexican culture. Kids will get to enjoy a live performance from a mariachi band, the traditional El Grito De Dolores, and a vibrant performance of Ballet Folklrico Las Amricas.When: Saturday, September 18th, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.Where: Childrens Museum Houston, 1500 Binz St, Houston, TX 77004How Much: $12 (General admission)

Mixteco Ballet Folklorico will be putting on a performance for children at Levy Park where they will celebrate music, dance, and the diversity of the Houston community.When: Saturday, September 18th, at 1 p.m.Where: Levy Park, 3801 Eastside St, Houston, TX 77098How Much: Free

Come enjoy one of the liveliest Hispanic Heritage Month events Houston has to offer courtesy of Miller Outdoor Theatre. Salsa y Salud is Texas biggest salsa dance show. The cast of over 50 dancers includes local, regional, and international talent, and the energetic dance numbers will keep the whole family entertained. To watch the show at Miller Outdoor Theatre, you can get up to four tickets for the covered seating area online, but they go fast. If youre okay with sitting on the hill picnic-style, you dont have to worry about tickets. You can also watch the event online via live stream here.When: Saturday, September 25th, from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m.Where:6000 Hermann Park Dr, Houston, TX 77030How Much:Free

courtesy Holocaust Museum Houston

Holocaust Museum Houston is celebrating Latinx heritage with a free poetry reading by Jos Olivarez from his debut book of poems, Citizen Illegal. Olivarez is the son of Mexican immigrants and has been recognized for his poetry by the Chicago Review, NPR, The Adroit Journal, the New York Public Library. He was awarded the Author and Artist in Justice Award from the Phillips Brooks House Association in 2018. Anyone may attend this event. Masks are required.When: Thursday, September 30th, from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.Where: 5401 Caroline St, Houston, TX 77004How Much: Free

courtesy Miller Outdoor Theatre

Enjoy a live musical performance from 2019 Latin GRAMMY Winner for Best New Artist, Nella. The Venezuelan artists music draws on her countrys folklore and contemporary music trends. To watch the show at Miller Outdoor Theatre, you can get up to four tickets for the covered seating area online, but they go fast. If youre okay with sitting on the hill picnic-style, you dont have to worry about tickets. You can also watch the event online via live stream here.When: Friday, October 1st, from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.Where:6000 Hermann Park Dr, Houston, TX 77030How Much:Free

courtesy Holocaust Museum Houston

Anyone is welcome to the other Hispanic Heritage Month event that the Holocaust Museum Houston is hosting: a poetry reading by 2022 Texas Poet Laureate Lupe Mendez. Mendez is originally from Galveston and won the 2019 John A. Robertson Award for Best First Book of Poetry from the Texas Institute of Letters for his book WHY I AM LIKE TEQUILA (Willow Books, 2019). He is also the founder of Tintero Projects, a group that works with up-and-coming Latinx artists and other artists of color in the Texas Gulf Coast Region. Masks are required to attend this event.When: Thursday, October 7th, from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.Where: 5401 Caroline St, Houston, TX 77004How Much: Free

courtesy Houston Symphony

An annual Hispanic Heritage Month event put on by the Houston Symphony, Fiesta Sinfnica is a free concert that spotlights Latin American music and classics. The multicultural program will be led by conductor Rafael Enrique Irizarry and include songs such as En Mi Viejo San Juan, pieces from West Side Story and Carmen, and the finale of Rimsky-Korsakovs Capriccio espagnol, Opus 34.When: Saturday, October 7th, at 7 p.m.Where: 615 Louisiana St, Houston, TX 77002How Much: Free (but reservations are required)

courtesy Miller Outdoor Theatre

The annual Festival Chicano is a celebration of Chicano music thats now in its 42nd year and still going strong. Its one of the oldest events of its kind. This festival is a three-day concert spanning Tejano, conjunto, mariachi, and orchestra styles, with different musical acts each night. To watch the show at Miller Outdoor Theatre, you can get up to four tickets for the covered seating area online, but they go fast. If youre okay with sitting on the hill picnic-style, you dont have to worry about tickets. You can also watch the event online via live stream here. Note: only Saturdays performance will be livestreamed.When: Thursday, October 7th-Saturday, October 9th, from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.Where:6000 Hermann Park Dr, Houston, TX 77030How Much:Free

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National Hispanic Heritage Month 2021: Events in Houston - Houston On The Cheap

A post-Yom Kippur apology: Sorry I dont have anything to write about this week. – Forward

Posted By on September 17, 2021

This is an adaptation of Looking Forward, a weekly email from our editor-in-chief sent on Friday afternoons. Sign up here to get the Forwards free newsletters delivered to your inbox. Click here for a free printable eBook of fall holiday recipes.

I have nothing to write about this week.

Over the 15 months or so that Ive been doing this newsletter, I generally start each week with a few possibilities. By Wednesday night, one solidifies either theres some big news, like Gov. Andrew Cuomos resignation or a new conflagration between Israel and Gaza; or something at the Forward to introduce, like our Bintel Brief podcast hosts or our editor-at-large; or something interesting happening closer to home my work at a food pantry, my Zoom-mitzvah pride, my struggle to become a person who makes challah and other reflections on pandemic life.

But this was a week of trying to cram five days of work into three-and-a-half workdays because of the holiday. On Wednesday night, I was in shul for Kol Nidre. Now its the morning after Yom Kippur, and Im a blank slate. Ive apologized to my friends and family, confessed my sins, nullified my vows. And, well, I got nothing.

Yet here we are, newsletter time.

I thought about writing about the mural we put up next to our driveway a few years ago, and how Im conflicted about the fact that some people see it and the Adirondack chairs we put in front of it as an invitation to loiter on our property. Actually Ive been thinking about this for awhile a meditation of sorts on the boundaries between public art and private space and when I woke up Wednesday morning to find someone had parked their bike by the mural, I thought maybe the time was ripe.

The story of the mural is pretty great, actually. Though we live in suburban Montclair, New Jersey, our house is just behind an urban-style row of restaurants. When we moved in, the strip next to the driveway was filled with tall evergreens, to block the unsightly HVACs atop those restaurants.

But in the winter of 2017-18, heavy snows destroyed those trees. The cost to replace them was $3,500, and we didnt even like them much. So we thought: what if we put up a mural instead?

The original notion was to have it made by students, so we reached out to the art teachers at Montclair High. Turns out seniors can spend their final weeks in an internship or community-service project, and two talented young women signed on. Their drawings were great, but their project-management skills were lacking, and they headed off to college without painting a stroke.

Lamenting our fate at the bagel place in that strip of stores, the husband discovered that the girlfriend of one of the employees who lived just around the corner was an artist. A few months and $500 later, we had the mural of multicolored faces and flowers, complete with Leonard Cohen quote appropriate to the imperfect wall: Theres a crack in everything. Thats how the light gets in.

I love occasionally arriving home to find a toddler and her parents looking at the mural up close, or people out for a stroll stopping to take selfies. We were thrilled when a teenage-filmmaker asked permission to use it for a scene in her horror movie.

But sometimes we find people sitting on the chairs eating lunch, and too often, we find their garbage on the river stones we paid handsomely to install. Now someone has left their bike, unlocked, for three days. Part of me is like, duh, if you build it, people will come you didnt have to put the chairs out there. Another part says, umm, get off my property people dont go sitting on chairs on peoples front lawns or porches.

The problem with writing about the mural is thats all Ive got. Four paragraphs, no Jewish angle unless you count the Cohen quote, and no conclusion I dont know where I actually come out on this invisible public-private boundary.

Another column Ive been waiting to write is about how Ive taken to reading young-adult novels instead of grown-up ones. But I ended up using the brilliant quote from one of these books about the meaning of readiness in last weeks newsletter about 9/11, so it felt like too much overlap two weeks in a row. Youll have to wait a bit longer for my controversial attack on so-called Serious Literature.

I could write about why Sukkot, which starts Monday evening, is my favorite holiday. But it feels like I should save that for next week, when Im fully immersed in all those things I love about Sukkot.

I thought, too, about the fact that the daily announcements from Montclair High School this week highlighted Hispanic Heritage Month, Suicide Prevention and Awareness Month, Constitution Day and the first day of autumn but not, you know, Rosh Hashanah or Yom Kippur (never mind Sukkot).

Montclair High, you may recall, is the place that put the terrorist Meir Kahane into these same email announcements last spring for Jewish-American Heritage Month, causing something of an uproar. But, alas, it is the day after Yom Kippur, a time of forgiveness do we really want to go there again?

Ive been a reporter and editor pretty much since I was 13 years old, but this is the first time Ive written what amounts to a weekly column. My predecessor Forward editors-in-chief proffered editorials on the political issues of the day, but thats not how I think. So I write more personally.

Essays, not editorials. Reflections, not arguments. How some experience Ive had relates to the weeks headlines. Or, perhaps more than anyone other than my parents really needs, something precocious my now-14-year-old twins have said or done.

Its actually become something of a joke with my daughter. Every time something Jewish happens, on a TV show or on Twitter or in our actual lives (see above: Montclair High announcements), shell whisper (or text): Newsletter!

I love writing it. I love the dozens of emails I get most weeks with feedback from you, our readers. But its relentless: a fresh idea every week? That Ill be proud to have under my byline? Thats made up not of reporting but of my own ideas?

Year ago, when I was deputy Metro editor of The New York Times, the author of the Big City column reported to me. She wrote not once but twice a week, a heroic pace. I remember telling her, look, if youre going to write 100 columns a year, there need to be at least 10 that were super proud of, ready to submit for a prize. Its OK if up to 10 columns wed rather forget. As long as the other 80 are, you know, good enough.

Ive thought about that mantra a million times since I started this newsletter. Now, Ill make this addendum: once a year, you can write about not having anything to write about.

Did I mention Sukkot is coming? By me, thats a weeklong festival of cooking and eating, so I thought Id share this fabulous eBook collection of some of our favorite fall recipes.

And here are some highlights from this weeks Forward.

A post-Yom Kippur apology: Sorry I dont have anything to write about this week.

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A post-Yom Kippur apology: Sorry I dont have anything to write about this week. - Forward

Jewish community faces wave of hatred after illegal gatherings – The Age

Posted By on September 17, 2021

Anti-Defamation Commission chairman Dvir Abramovich called for the publication of the material and for the perpetrators to be investigated by police.

Racism is ugly, hateful and ignorant and the public need to see these people for who they are, Dr Abramovich said. There is an epidemic of anti-Semitism in Melbourne and its a problem we cant ignore. Times of turmoil have always offered fertile ground for racism, and I am very alarmed by the scale and depth of the wave of hatred.

He also expressed concern at the emergence of anti-vax group White Rose, which has recently posted stickers in Bentleigh and Caulfield that include swastika symbols and the slogan: No Jab, No Job.

The organisation, which started in Britain and has recently emerged in Melbourne, is named after an anti-fascist group led by Hans and Sophie Scholl, who were executed by the Gestapo in 1943 for their resistance campaign against the Nazis.

The new White Rose group opposes mandatory vaccinations and lockdowns and claims the measures are similar to the rise of the authoritarian state in Germany under Adolf Hitler. Dr Abramovich said any comparison was offensive, and the stickers had deliberately been placed in the heart of the Jewish community to cause fear.

I should not have to say this, but not being allowed into a cinema or a restaurant to stop the spread of a deadly disease has no equivalence to the horrors of being segregated in ghettos, or children being shot, or mothers and fathers being gassed in Auschwitz, Dr Abramovich said.

Warning: the audio below contains strong and offensive language:

A recent investigation by The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and 60 Minutes revealed that white supremacist groups were exploiting misinformation about COVID-19 to recruit new members and seed more extremist views into mainstream politics.

The infiltration of the National Socialist Network showed leaders of the far-right group railing against lockdowns and vaccination, with some members caught attending rallies and screaming anti-Semitic abuse.

The Council of Orthodox Synagogues of Victoria has also come in for anti-Semitic attacks in recent weeks, according to president Mark Cohen, who described the abuse as unfathomable.

Its hard for us to understand where this vile sense of self-righteousness comes from. Were just aghast. Were doing the same things that everybody else is doing, there is nothing different about Jews other than having a religion that we are born into, Mr Cohen said.

Jewish historian and academic Mark Baker condemned the surge in anti-Semitism, but said online vilification was not confined to the Jewish community.

Anti-Semitism on social media also needs to be viewed in a wider context of vile abuse against other groups women, Muslims and immigrant communities, Dr Baker said.

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He also accused some members of the Jewish community of unfairly claiming they had been singled out by the Andrews government last month, when COVID response commander Jeroen Weimar apologised after mentioning that some Orthodox Jews had tested positive to coronavirus.

I think [Premier Daniel] Andrews, [COVID response commander Jeroen] Weimar and [Health Minister Martin] Foley have acted in an exemplary way towards all ethnic communities by differentiating between the wrongful actions of the few and the vast majority who abide by the rules, Dr Baker said.

A Victoria Police spokeswoman said there was no excuse for behaviour that promoted fear or hate.

We treat any report of anti-Semitism seriously, whether it happens on the street or online. We encourage anyone subjected to these crimes or who notices suspicious behaviour to contact police, she said.

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Jewish community faces wave of hatred after illegal gatherings - The Age

Why You Probably Won’t Have Racial Microaggressions At This Jewish Summer Camp – NPR

Posted By on September 17, 2021

Lilah, Shoshana, and Georgie outside of their bunk. Rachel Wisniewski hide caption

Lilah, Shoshana, and Georgie outside of their bunk.

Editor's note: We are only using the campers first names for fear of retribution against minors.

When Kenya Edelhart was in fourth grade, her teacher looked at the Star of David necklace Edelhart wore around her neck and said, "That's not funny. Religion isn't something to joke about." This was not the first or the last time that Kenya's identity as a Black Jewish person was questioned. Before she began attending Camp Be'chol Lashon in 2010the only camp in the country designed for Jewish kids of colorshe'd only ever met one other Black Jew.

In an art activity, Tewa carves an Ethiopian flag: the country she was born in. Rachel Wisniewski hide caption

Meeting other Jewish kids of color, she says, was "wholesome." "Camp was definitely the first time where it's like, 'Ok, I'm not the only one that has these problems; I'm not the only one who's being questioned. It's a wholesome feeling being around people who understand," she said

Sophia and Sylvie rest on Tewa at the pool. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

Jewish people make up two percent of the American population, while eight percent of that already small number say they belong to another racial or ethnic group, according to the Jewish Americans in 202o report from the Pew Research Center.

When Be'chol Lashon (the camp's parent non-profit, which means "in every language" in Hebrew) was founded 21 years ago, it was with the intention to create a safe haven for this minority. Diane Tobin was inspired to create Be'chol Lashon after adopting her son Jonah in 1997. When Tobin, who is white, took Jonah, who is Black, to Jewish community events in San Francisco, it was immediately apparent that he was the only person of color in attendance.

Ruby plays volleyball in the pool. Rachel Wisniewski hide caption

With Be'chol Lashon, Tobin hoped that other Jewish kids of color, like her son, could "have a sense of community amongst themselves so that, when they go into mainstream Jewish spaces where the majority of people are white, they know that they're not the only ones [of color]; that there's a whole community of them that support each other."

Sophia, a counselor-in-training from Denver, Colorado, goes horseback riding with assistance from a staff member of the horse ranch. Rachel Wisniewski hide caption

In a year fraught with racial injustice and rising anti-Semitism, not to mention the COVID-19 pandemic, Tobin was torn over whether or not to hold Camp Be'chol Lashon at all.

"It would've been easy not to have camp," she admitted.

Camp was held virtually last year and, this year, the campground that Be'chol Lashon typically rents closed indefinitely due to the pandemic, leaving Tobin scrambling to find a new campsite. But, at the last minute, Tobin was able to secure property for the camp at Cloverleaf Ranch, a horse ranch in Santa Rosa, California. Tobin hopes to be back at the original camp site next year but is open to other possibilities.

Kenya, Zohara, Maia, Satya, Ollie, Natalie, and Kaila say Hebrew prayers while lighting the Shabbat candles on Friday evening. Rachel Wisniewski hide caption

Kenya, Zohara, Maia, Satya, Ollie, Natalie, and Kaila say Hebrew prayers while lighting the Shabbat candles on Friday evening.

In the final week of July before camp was set to open, during a Zoom orientation for the camp's counselors, the stress of the last year finally gave way to hope. During the meeting, Tobin's daughter, Sarah Weinberg, was adamant that the camp would be an opportunity to bring kids together during one of the most tumultuous times in their lives.

"Fears and atrocities can coincide with hope and love and kindness," she said.

The confident sentiment was echoed by Shekhiynah Larks, former camper and current Program Coordinator at Be'chol Lashon. Larks, who is Black, said, "This [camp] is a week where I probably will not experience any racial microaggressions for a week."

Campers take a trail ride around the ranch. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

Unlike most other sleep-away camps, where attendees drive in from the tri-state area, Be'chol Lashon's forty campers flew in from as far as Colorado, New York, Maryland, Ohio, and Illinois. Campers range in age from 8 to 17 and are Black, Latino, Asian, and Middle Eastern.

Some campers are kids of color adopted into white Jewish families; others are mixed-race; and still others were born to parents that are also Jews of color. Many campers had never been to a sleep-away camp before and had also, like Kenya Edelhart, never met any other Jews of color outside of their own families.

Ollie films a video of Ella in the girls bunk. Rachel Wisniewski hide caption

Over the course of the week, camp attendees rode horses, practiced archery, and zip-lined across the ranch. They did arts and crafts, braided each others' hair, and learned Hebrew prayers for Shabbat services. When the chlorine in the pool was too low to permit swimming on the first day of camp, Be'chol Lashon's leadership team checked local hardware stores and Amazon in an effort to hurriedly replenish the chemical. To explain the urgency of the situation and the importance of swimming access, Larks pointed to the racial history of segregated American swimming pools. The pool mishap (which, fortunately, was resolved by day two) perfectly exemplifies the two worlds that collide at Camp Be'chol Lashon: an idyllic Americana summer experience, and the reality of being a person of color in the U.S.

Zohara, Jacob, Solomon and Abelli play basketball together before dinner. Rachel Wisniewski hide caption

These worlds continued to coexist in a program Tobin led called "Passport to Peoplehood." In the art activity, campers were given paper passport booklets that they filled out with personal statistics such as their favorite food, how many pets they owned, and how they identify their race and religion.

Shekhiynah Larks holds a lizard she found on the ranch. Rachel Wisniewski hide caption

As they decorated the fronts of their booklets with drawings of cats, horses, and stars, Larks read aloud from the book "Let's Talk About Race," by the Black Jewish author Julius Lester. The book, which teaches kids about identity and intersectionality, states, "Your race is not all that you are." The following day, a conversation between a group of teenage girls switched, within minutes, from which "type" of boys they find attractive, to how being adopted affects their mental health.

And in moments of homesickness throughout the week, the camp's counselors (former campers themselves) offered experience and comfortwiping tears, giving hugs, and teaching breathing techniques.

Josie, who is of Ethiopian descent, practices a handstand. Rachel Wisniewski hide caption

In reflecting upon this year's camp experience, Diane says, "Even as we were planning camp and the news cycle was shifting to be more negative [on issues of racial injustice and the global pandemic], I was actually surprised at how many people were willing to send their kids to camp and even to fly them [from across the country] to go to camp.

And the parents were very committed and very enthusiastic about it. And I just think that was certainly a testimony to us of how important this is."

Talia and Josie link arms on the last day of camp as they express how sad they are to say goodbye to their new friends. Rachel Wisniewski hide caption

Eleven years after she first set foot at Camp Be'chol Lashon, Edelhart stays involved and leads by example as a camp counselor. At 19, she no longer wears the necklace from elementary school. Instead, she wears a single black Star of David earring in her left ear.

"Do you want to know why I got it?" she prompted. "Because people kept telling me I wasn't Jewish!" She hopes that, in the future, kids like her won't have to explain themselves or "prove" that they're really Jewish. "Although all of the congregations that I have been a part of have been warm and welcoming," she says, "I've only truly felt at home at [Camp Be'chol Lashon]."

Kenya Edelhart wears a Star of David earring in her left ear. She's worn it every day for the past three years because people kept telling wasn't Jewish. Rachel Wisniewski hide caption

Read more from the original source:

Why You Probably Won't Have Racial Microaggressions At This Jewish Summer Camp - NPR

Commentary: The European disease that’s mutated through the Black Death and COVID – Press Herald

Posted By on September 17, 2021

As the coronavirus spread through Europe last year, cartoons and posts began going up on French social media that might as well have come straight from the 14th century. In one series, Agnes Buzyn, who is Jewish and was Frances health minister until February 2020, was depicted with grotesquely distorted features dropping poison into wells.

This trope of Jews poisoning wells to kill Christians has made the rounds in most European epidemics since the Middle Ages, but it was particularly rife during the Black Death, when it led to pogroms and massacres of Jews throughout the continent. The vile meme is just one example of a shocking, if sadly unsurprising, surge in anti-Semitism that correlates with the pandemic. Thats the disturbing conclusion of a new report by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a think tank, for the European Commission.

The authors mined French and German posts on Twitter, Facebook and Telegram between January 2020 that is, just before COVID-19 first surged in Europe and March 2021. They looked for content thats anti-Semitic according to a definition by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance. They found not just petri dishes of hatred but entire cesspools.

In both countries, anti-Semitic tropes and memes soared during the pandemic. In France, where Twitter was the preferred medium for this bigotry at least until the social network tweaked its policies the number of anti-Semitic posts increased sevenfold; in Germany, where Telegram appears to be the platform of choice, it went up by a factor of 13. The likes, shares and retweets counted in the millions, the views in the billions.

While the delivery vehicles may seem whiz-bang modern, the narratives are depressingly hoary. The well-poisoning theme is ancient. But its now morphing into storylines that try to recast SARS-CoV-2 as a zionist bioweapon by fabricating Jewish links to laboratories in China, for instance.

A German channel on Telegram with more than 34,000 followers doctored videos as alleged proof that the virus was bioengineered to hurt only gentiles. Corona is not for the Jews! the channels owner wrote. Only for the goyim! Thats what they call us! On another channel, users claimed that Virology was invented by the Eternal Jew a reference to a Nazi propaganda film.

A contradictory meme is somehow circulating in parallel. It says that that SARS-CoV-2 either doesnt exist at all or exists but is harmless, and is instead a figment invented by Jews and the gentiles they have corrupted such as Bill Gates or the Clintons in their quest to control entire populations and establish a New World Order.

This so-called NWO genre of anti-Semitism also taps into an ancient narrative, one that was most notoriously exploited by the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. This entirely fictional text, produced over a century ago in Russia and translated into many languages, pretended to document how Jews were making secret plans to rule the world by manipulating the media, finance and government.

In some of anti-Semitisms current strains, vaccination is the alleged tool chosen by the conspiracy Albert Bourla, the Jewish chief executive of Pfizer, features prominently in these libels. Some posters claim that the vaccines are meant to kill or sterilize gentiles. To get around obvious logical hurdles such as Israels pioneering role in mass inoculation, other users fantasize that the Israeli shots are only placebos.

On and on it goes, in never-ending loops of paranoia and delusion. As it always has in Europe, and elsewhere. The researchers had to restrict themselves to just a small sample of countries and social networks. But from that, we can extrapolate how much of this garbage is out there.

The studys authors felt compelled, as one does, to offer thoughts on regulatory or legal tweaks to mitigate the problem. And the social networks, for their part, should certainly think harder about how to drain their cesspools of bigotry while still hosting legitimate free speech. But the sad truth is that even as human technology keeps bounding ahead, human nature and culture lag woefully behind, often literally in the Middle Ages. If only there were a vaccine against stupidity and hatred.

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Commentary: The European disease that's mutated through the Black Death and COVID - Press Herald

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Update St. Olaf College – St. Olaf College News

Posted By on September 17, 2021

This is part of anew series of regular updatesthat Vice President for Equity and Inclusion Mara Pabn Gautier sends to the campus community.

Dear St. Olaf Community,

This week we begin the celebration of Hispanic/Latinx Heritage Month. As a proud Puerto Rican Latina, I take a special interest in connecting across Latinx communities and traditions. Did you know? Hispanic/Latinx Heritage Month started in 1968 and the dates are significant because on September 15 it is the anniversary of independence for Latin American countries such as Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua. In addition, Mexico and Chile celebrate their independence days on September 16 and September 18, respectively. We close our celebration with the last few days honoring Da de la Raza starting on October 12.

I would like to dedicate this weeks message to celebrating all the Latinx/Latino/Hispanic members of our St. Olaf community. Many of our luchas have been defined by the strength of our familias, tradiciones, and the sense of si se puede. No one can put this Spanglish love better than Richard Blanco in Como T / Like You / Like Me.

Como t, I question historys blur in my eyeseach time I face a mirror. Like a mirror, I gazeinto my palm a wrinkled map I still cant read,my lifeline an unnamed road I cant find, canttrace back to the fork in my parents trekthat cradled me here. Como t, I woke up tothis dream of a country I didnt choose, thatdidnt choose me trapped in the nightmareof its hateful glares. Como t, Im also fromthe lakes and farms, waterfalls and prairiesof another country I cant fully claim either.Como t, I am either a mirage living amongthese faces and streets that raised me here,or Im nothing, a memory forgotten by allI was taken from and cant return to again.

Like memory, at times I wish I could erasethe music of my name in Spanish, at timesI cherish it, and despise my other syllablesclashing in English. Como t, I want to speakof myself in two languages at once. Despitemy tongues, no word defines me. Like words,I read my footprints like my past, erased bywaves of circumstance, my future uncertainas wind. Like the wind, como tu, I carry songs,howls, whispers, thunders growl. Like thunder,Im a foreign-borne cloud thats drifted here,Im lightning, and the balm of rain. Como tu,our blood rains for the dirty thirst of this land.Like thirst, like hunger, we ache with the needto save ourselves, and our country from itself.

Student HighlightWorking with students is always fun, energizing, and one of my favorite parts of the work. Therefore, starting this year I will be working closely with two students on all things diversity, equity, and inclusion. I would like to give a special thank you to the Pedersons family for their endowment, which supports these new roles. It was very humbling to receive so many applications for these positions. It is always hard to choose from a pool of outstanding and passionate students, but I am excited to introduce the two Oles I will be working with. Drumroll please I would like to welcome our inaugurating students, A.D. Banse and Anja Dulin. A.D. is a junior majoring in Political Science with concentrations in Statistics and Data Science and Management Studies. He will be the Student Research Assistant for Equity and Inclusion. Anja is a senior majoring in Biology and Race and Ethnic Studies. She will be the Student Administrative and Special Project Assistant for Equity and Inclusion. Welcome to the team! I am beyond excited for our work together this year.

Presente! I had the chance to interview Presente!s new co-chair, Andrea Diaz 22. Andrea was always a ray of light when I was working at the Taylor Center, and Im excited to connect with her once again. Heres what she shared:

Tell me a little bit about yourself.I am a senior majoring in Social Work with a concentration in Family Studies. I am originally from the south side of Chicago. This year, I am one of Presentes co-chairs. Presente! is a multicultural organization that strives to promote awareness about Latin American culture on the St. Olaf campus.

Why did you choose to be part of Presente!s leadership?The reason why I decided to be part of Presente!s leadership team is because the organization has been a huge part of my journey while at St. Olaf. I have met some of the most amazing people while being part of this organization. I decided since it was going to be my last year, I would like to be more involved in the planning process of events. The rest of the executive team has also made this process very easy. We cannot wait to see everyone at the events.

Why is it important to have a month dedicated to Latinx history and heritage?Having a month dedicated to LatinX history and heritage is important because it gives students who identify as LatinX an opportunity to reflect and celebrate their cultural roots. This month is not only for individuals that identify as LatinX but for those who do not identify, it gives them the opportunity to learn about the culture and ways individuals have contributed to society. Anyone is welcome to come to Presente events; we want to share our culture with everyone.

What are some of the biggest issues, in your opinion, you believe many Latinx youth are facing today? How can they become part of the change?I think some issues that many LatinX youth are facing today is breaking down those barriers and stigma that have been embedded in our culture. For example, machismo, denial of mental health issues within the family setting, intergenerational poverty, immigration policies, deportation, separation, navigating white spaces, etc. For the most part, we should be doing research about the history of these issues. Youth can be part of change by having these conversations with close family and friends. LatinX youth can learn to navigate these conversations. These topics can be very difficult to discuss, but we should open the space to have difficult conversations.

Anti-semitism in Higher EducationAs we experience an uptick in anti-semitism across higher education and we are faced with our own actions, I want to recognize the impact that these incidents can have on the well-being of our students, staff, and faculty. Also, I recognize that we need to invest in more education about what anti-semitism is and how it is currently showing up on campuses. Inside Higher Ed published a very educational and powerful piece, Its Time We Taught Anti-Semitism, that shows why if we dont start re-educating, we will continue to see a rise in anti-semitism.

If you experience or are witness to a bias incident, please report the incident to our Bias Response Team here. Our main goal is to provide support and resources to victims and work in partnership to build accountability. If you are in need of support, below are resources you can access:

Council on Diversity, Equity, and InclusionThe Council on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion would like to thank Norma Charlton for the years she served as a staff representative. Norma is the Taylor Center Assistant Director for Equity and Intercultural Engagement. She has served on the Council since 2018 and has been a valuable and powerful voice. Her wisdom and experience has been an integral part of the Councils work. Norma, you will be deeply missed and I cant wait for the new partnerships we will create. Thank you, Norma!

The Council would like to welcome Eric Eischens! Eric is a custodian on our campus, a Co-Creating an Inclusive Community facilitator, and an enthusiastic ally and advocate for diversity, equity, and inclusion. Eric will join the Council this month, and we are excited to learn from him and with him. Welcome, Eric!

Places to Be!The Northfield Public Library invites you to celebrate and show support for the Latinx/Latino/Hispanic community at the 4th Annual Hispanic Heritage Celebration on Saturday, September 18 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Central Park, 421 E 4th St. You will have the opportunity to experience the richness, vibrancy, and diversity of Hispanic heritage and learn Latin dances, create art, and discover the power of words.

The Task Force to Confront Structural Racism UpdateThe Task Force to Confront Structural Racism at St. Olaf College (TFCSR) will host its first meeting of the year on Tuesday, September 21, from 45 p.m. on Zoom.All students, staff, and faculty are invited to attend to learn more about the work of the Task Force. This group is unique in that it is not affiliated with a college department or office, and it is by design a coalition of staff, faculty, and students who have equal power to shape the groups priorities and actions. Please take a look at the Task Forces precepts at this link, and join them on Tuesday as they discuss plans for the upcoming year. Their draft agenda is available at this link.

Opportunities for Development on Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Anti-RacismIn my house, we have a tradition during Hispanic/Latinx Heritage Month. My oldest daughter and I choose a book written by and about Latinx authors and read it together. She is 11 years old, so it has been fun to slowly increase the complexity of culture. Last year we read Esperanza Rising. This year we chose When We Make It. The book will be released on September 21 and it is about a first-generation Puerto Rican eighth grader who can see with clarity the truth, pain, and beauty of the world both inside and outside her Bushwick apartment.

In our Latinx community there have been discerning points of view in using the term Latinx. This is a great example of diversity within diversity and the power young people can have to change culture. Read about it in To Be Or Not to Be Latinx? For Some Hispanics, That Is the Question.

ACM Antiracism Training Series. Registration is open for the Fall 2021 antiracism workshop scheduled for Thursday, September 23, at 4 p.m. (CT). Participants can register for the workshop here. The title of the series is Cultures Collide. In this day and age, the ability to appreciate, accept, and maybe even internalize different cultures is vital. As individuals, we experience our place or indeed the world around us in our own unique way. So, when cultures collide within us, each of us is equipped differently to handle the situation. Nevertheless, the options to reconcile the differences in cultures are often limited we either fight the collisions or we find a way to be flexible. This talk will explore how and when these cultural collisions happen, the stakes of not being a culturally competent leader, and practical lessons to maintain your authentic self when working with people from different cultural backgrounds. The presenter will be Adirupa Sengupta, Group Chief Executive of Common Purpose.

Sincerely,

Mara

Dr. Mara C. Pabn GautierVice President for Equity and Inclusion

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Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Update St. Olaf College - St. Olaf College News

How to spot signs of cyberbullying | Lifestyles | washtimesherald.com – Washington Times Herald

Posted By on September 17, 2021

Despite its relative infancy, the internet has become so prevalent in daily life that its hard to imagine a time when it wasnt so widely available. Yet that time wasnt so long ago. In fact, many adults who are now entering or in middle-age made it through their secondary educations without the internet. Thats not so for todays students, and that divide can sometimes make it difficult for parents to spot signs that their children are victims of cyberbullying.

Cyberbullying refers to the use of electronic communication to bully a person, typically by sending intimidating and/or threatening messages. These messages may be sent in various ways, including through apps or via social media platforms. According to StopBullying.gov, a website managed by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, research has shown that a quick and consistent response to bullying is an effective way to convey that such behavior is unacceptable. But parents first must learn to recognize signs of cyberbullying, which is not always as easy to spot as other bullying behaviors.

The Anti-Defamation League notes that hateful words and rumors are often a component of cyberbullying. In such instances, that abuse can follow young people home, giving them the idea that the bullying is inescapable. In decades past, bullying victims could at least see their homes as safe havens. Thats no longer the case, which is why its vital that parents learn to recognize the signs of cyberbullying.

Young people may exhibit their own unique symptoms if theyre being victimized by cyberbullies. In addition, the ADL notes that parents can look for these signs and then take immediate action if they suspect their children are being cyberbullied.

A child becomes upset, sad or angry during or after being online or using their phone.

A child withdraws from family or friends.

A child expresses reluctance or refuses to participate in activities previously enjoyed.

A child has an unexplained decline in grades.

A child refuses to go to school or expresses anger or dissatisfaction with a specific class or school in general.

A child increasingly reports symptoms of illness for which he or she wants to stay at home.

A child shows signs of depression or sadness.

The ADL urges parents who see any of these signs to respond to them immediately. Take a gentle, supportive tone during any discussions with children, making sure to express your concerns while also listening to the child when he or she explains what is so upsetting.

Parents who have confirmed or suspect their child is a victim of cyberbullying should contact their childrens school immediately. More information about how to respond to cyberbullying and prevent its recurrence is available at http://www.StopBullying.gov.

We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

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How to spot signs of cyberbullying | Lifestyles | washtimesherald.com - Washington Times Herald

Swastikas and Hail Hitler drawn on bathroom wall at Cobb high school – WSB Atlanta

Posted By on September 17, 2021

COBB COUNTY, Ga. Jewish leaders are demanding action after students at Pope High School discovered swastikas and a reference to Hitler.

The racist graffiti was written on a bathroom wall at the school.

This is a hate crime. It shouldve been denounced. The email that came out from administration barely even touched on it, said Calanit Amir, a parent of two Pope High School students. Thats not a stupid prank. This is a hate crime. This is a rise in antisemitism. It is here. It is prevalent.

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Last Friday, Pope principal Tom Flugum told families:

Several students have defaced our beautiful school with hateful graffiti and also damaged our facilities. As we investigate, I want to assure you that we will hold those responsible accountable to our district policies and applicable state laws.

Flugum added:

Disturbing acts like what occurred this week have no place in our district or at our school and will not be tolerated.

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Rabbi Larry Sernovitz at Temple Kol Emeth believes administrators shouldve taken a tough stance.

In our public-school institutions, we need to come down strong on this, and we need to say this is only not acceptable, but this is a hate crime. Thats what the districts letter did not read, said Sernovitz.

Sernovitz met with Flugum before the letter went out. He also met with Pope students on campus.

Sernovitz told Channel 2 Cobb County Bureau Chief Chris Jose it was a student who first told him about the racist images last Thursday.

Heil Hitler is a sign in Nazi Germany that it was time to exterminate the Jews, said Sernovitz. There needs to be some sensitivity training. We need to help them understand why this was wrong, because even it was students who didnt understand the gravity of it, they learned it from somewhere.

The southern division of the Anti-Defamation League is also demanding action.

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The school and the district need to name the hate and name the pain and address it. They need to make a commitment to anti-bias education, said Dr. Allison Padilla-Goodman. It is the school and districts responsibility to address this head on, and to make sure students understand and learn from this issue.

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Swastikas and Hail Hitler drawn on bathroom wall at Cobb high school - WSB Atlanta


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