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Rabbi Mark Asher Goodman: The start of a new year can be both scary and exciting – GoErie.com

Posted By on August 18, 2021

Rabbi Mark Asher Goodman| Special to the Erie Times-News

Jews celebrate the new year in much the same way as college students and public school teachers: in the fall. Our new year, called Rosh Hashana, is far more similar to the beginning of the academic year than it is to the secular new year. There is anxiety and trepidation about the coming year, like it was the first day of school, because we celebrate the day by reflecting on our past deeds and anticipating the future year to come. By comparison, the American secular tradition of New Year's is a bit different: We typically drink champagne, and then make a "resolution"to eat healthy or exercise more, which most of us struggle to keep.

Rabbi Mark Asher Goodman: Things to get you through coronavirus

All of us Americans go into this fall, though, with trepidation and reflection. We reflect on what has been a hard, hard year. As of my writing, we have lost 616,594 Americans to COVID-19. The coming new year post-vaccine was supposed to be an exciting rebound, but an upswing in coronavirus cases due to the delta variant and the reality of having children under 12 unvaccinated has meant that instead of a resumption of life as "back-to-normal,"things feel strangely unsettled. Not normal. What was supposed to be a new year is, actually, the same as it was before. Uncertain.

The Jewish religious tradition believes that the month leading up to the Rosh Hashana, "Elul," is an auspicious time for self-reflection and reconnection. We are supposed to use the time to look backwards in order to move forwards. There is no "return to normal," but rather an understanding that we must look ahead and accept that we are constantly seeking a new normal.

'Don't be complacent': Erie's Holocaust observance held against backdrop of rising hate

Fear is a natural part of that cycle. But so is celebration. We say prayers hoping that God will enter us into the book of life for the new year. And we also eat apples dipped in honey, because although we are anxious, we still celebrate the sweet new year that is upon us.

New is scary. New can also be exciting. We can be nervous and celebrate the new at the same time.

Reflections is a column by religious leaders in the region. Rabbi Mark Asher Goodman serves Brith Sholom Congregation, 3207 State St.

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Rabbi Mark Asher Goodman: The start of a new year can be both scary and exciting - GoErie.com

Q & A With Rabbi Ahron Rapps – Yated.com

Posted By on August 18, 2021

Question

When someone dies, candles are lit in the house of the people sitting shivah. What is the connection between the neshomah of a person and candles?

Insight

This is a very profound question. A discussion of the neshomah is required to properly address this issue.

The posuk in Mishlei (20:27) states, Ner Hashem nishmas adam A mans soul is the lamp of Hashem. Shlomo Hamelech understood that there is a direct connection between the neshomah and a ner. The Maharal in his sefer Ner Mitzvah discusses whether one is permitted to use wax candles for the mitzvah of ner Chanukah. In the middle of this discussion, he defines the meaning of a ner.

A ner is a kli, or vessel, which contains a pesilah, wick, and shemen, oil. The physical ner together with the physical pesilah and shemen have the unique capacity to create ohr, light. The Maharal refers to ohr as something which is to be considered bilti gashmi, lacking a physical sense of existence. The speed of light is considered, in our terms, instantaneous. Such a quality defies the sense of parameters of Olam Hazeh. Zeman, time, is a creation of our world and, therefore, that which is not subject to its limitations represents something metaphysical and from a realm beyond.

The word zeman comes from the word zimun, which means development and preparation. Time is the framework through which everything in Olam Hazeh develops to its fruition. Similarly, the posuk in Mishlei (6:23) refers to the Torah as ohr. The Torah is something which is totally spiritual in nature, and its holy source is beyond our physical world. It is within this context that the unique capacity of a ner can be appreciated. It is composed of physical elements, yet it creates metaphysical ohr. The neshomah of a person possesses a similar quality.

A person is a composite of a body and a soul, a guf and a neshomah. There is no way for the spiritual neshomah to relate to and be revealed in our world without being expressed through the physical guf. The guf is considered the kli to be mekabel the neshomah. The neshomah is considered ohr, as its source is absolutely spiritual. Just as the ohr is a separate entity from the ner, so too, the ohr of the neshomah is separate from the guf, although it is basically housed in it. Thus, the neshomah is ohr and serves as the tool to create additional ohr through the actions of the guf in its avodas Hashem.

The Maharal in Chiddushei Aggados on Maseches Rosh Hashanah adds an additional insight into the comparison between the two.

The Maharal writes that the soul of a person emanates from the yesod of aish, fire. In our terms, there are four basic yesodos, or foundation elements, from which all creations are composed: afar, earth; mayim, water; ruach, wind; and aish, fire. The yesod of afar is anchored in the ground, while the yesod of aish emanates from heaven above.

The Sefas Emes writes that the reason fire flickers upward is due to the desire of all fire to reconnect with its shoresh, which is in shomayim. The inherent yearning for the soul of man to reconnect with its roots in heaven and serve its Creator is built upon this profound point. There is an additional idea that demonstrates the souls quality of ohr and aish.

Rav Tzadok Hakohein, in Resisei Laylah, writes that the yearning of the soul to reconnect with its shoresh is the basis for the process through which a person dies. When Hashem decides that a person is to die, Hashem reveals to that person a tremendous ohr, and, due to its brilliance, the neshomah shatters its connection to the guf in its quest to connect with the profound revealed light.

In the course of human existence, the neshomah is commanded to stay with the guf. Due to the revelation of such a dimension of ohr, however, the neshomah leaves its physical shell to become part of its shoresh. Rav Tzadok adds that similar to the smaller flame that becomes absorbed within a mighty inferno, such is the destiny of the soul. Thus, the merger between body and soul is dissolved, as the soul seeks its shoresh in shomayim.

When a person dies, the neshomah has left the guf and gone back to its shoresh. The guf is afar and has likewise been returned to its source, the ground. Seforim explain that in some sense the neshomah of the person is considered present and is also comforted with the words of nechamah that are said to the mourners. The neiros are lit and ohr is produced to acknowledge the loss of that which represents the ohr of a person, his soul, and the capacity to produce additional ohr through his actions while he was alive.

One of the words that refer to the soul is nefesh. The Vilna Gaon writes that the word nefesh, which is composed of the letters Nun, Pey and Shin, stands for ner, pesilah and shemen. Just as the ner, with its wick and oil, produces ohr, so does the soul of a person give a Yid the capacity to create spiritual light amidst the confines of our physical world.

May we soon be zoche to the time when Hashem will wipe away death and the tears that flow as a result.

Insights deals with questions on Torah, mitzvos and inyonei machshavah. Questions to be addressed may be sent to Yated Neeman, 1451 Route 88, Brick, New Jersey 08724 or emailed to editor@yated.com or ahronrapps@yeshivanet.com.

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Earth Etude for Elul 10: Too Much of a Good Thing, or When All You’ve Ever Wanted Is Really Too Much – jewishboston.com

Posted By on August 18, 2021

While its always a good thing to conserve our blessings, setting up a water barrelphysical or metaphoricto save blessings like water against a future drought, its also important to express our gratitude and to savor the blessings we have received in life. The overgrown plants in my back yard may be feeling to me like just too muchbut when I give myself a chance to focus on them, I can be aware of the miracles present in my yard on an everyday basis.

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Expressing gratitude and really savoring our blessings are two gifts we can giveourselves, as if to underline the good fortune we are enjoying, deepening the experience of having received these gifts in life and as if watering our own souls.

We live in a society plagued by a scarcity mentality, where more is always considered a good thing. What would it be like to try on a mentality of abundance, of enough-ness, and savor what we actually do have, rather than always wishing for more?

And while we are thinking of enough-ness, perhaps we can harness the inclination in our hearts for more, more, more to feel energized in joining others and taking action to fight the environmental degradation that has tipped our natural world so out of balance. Im lo achshav, aymatai?we read in Pirke Avot, If not now, when?

So how can we deal with having too much of a good thing? By setting up a rain barrel, conserving blessing to last beyond today. By savoring that blessing, and finding a way to enjoy the jungle that ensues. By letting it spur us to take action around environmental degradation. May our efforts truly be blessed!

Rabbi Judy Kummer is a board-certified chaplain working in person and remotely in her spiritual care private practice, Spiritual Support for Lifes Journey.Among the organizational work she has done, Rabbi Kummer has served as Executive Director of the Jewish Chaplaincy Council of Massachusetts for 18 years and and the Massachusetts Board of Rabbis for two years. She has worked as a chaplain at Hebrew SeniorLife and has served congregations in Washington DC, Long Island and New Jersey. She is a composer, contemporary liturgist, hiker, artist and organic gardener. She lives and gardens outside of Boston, MA.

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This post has been contributed by a third party. The opinions, facts and any media content are presented solely by the author, and JewishBoston assumes no responsibility for them. Want to add your voice to the conversation? Publish your own post here.MORE

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Earth Etude for Elul 10: Too Much of a Good Thing, or When All You've Ever Wanted Is Really Too Much - jewishboston.com

Daily Joke: Priest Is Curious about a Sheet of Paper the Chief Rabbi Gives the Pope Every Year – AmoMama

Posted By on August 18, 2021

Every year, the Chief Rabbi visited Vatican City. On getting there, he would walk to where the Pope sits and stand there. For his visits, the Chief Rabbi always carried a linen bag and would give the Pope a worn-out and dusty piece of paper.

After receiving the piece of paper from the Chief Rabbi, the Pope always raised it above his head to allow the sun's rays to shine through it. Afterward, he would slowly shake his head.

These actions from the Pope and the Chief Rabbi repeatedly happened yearly.It had been a Vatican Palace tradition for many years. But no one ever talked about it, and the contents of the paperstayed a secret for a long time.

After one of the Chief Rabbi's annual visits, a young priest stood in the shadows. He had been watching the interaction between the Pope and the Chief Rabbi since his priestly ordination and always wondered what it was about.

Since he could not find out as it was a secret, the young priest vowed to become a Pope so he could find out the contents of the dusty and worn-out piece of paper.

One day, he finallyachieved his dream and became the Pope and he looked forward to the Chief Rabbi's visit.When the Chief Rabbi arrived, he strolled to the Pope's seat and stood there.

As usual, he dipped his hand into hislinen bag and took out the old piece of paper. He then handed it to the eager Pope, who had waited for the moment for so long.

After receiving the paper from the Chief Rabbi, the Pope held it out to the sun to allow its rays to pass through. When he did, he finally realized what the piece of paper contained. It was the bill for the Last Supper.

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Daily Joke: Priest Is Curious about a Sheet of Paper the Chief Rabbi Gives the Pope Every Year - AmoMama

I moved my family back in with my parents at the start of the pandemic. After a lovely year and a half, I’m rethinking the dream of the single-family…

Posted By on August 18, 2021

The author's two children in their grandparent's backyard. Rabbi Yael Buechler

When the pandemic began, my husband and I left New York City with our two young sons to live with my parents.

After almost a year and a half, we are finally moving out and back to the city.

Sharing a house with my parents has made me realize the benefits of multi-family living.

Rabbi Yael Buechler is the Lower School Rabbi at The Leffell School and founder of Midrash Manicures.

This is an opinion column. The thoughts expressed are those of the author.

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My husband and I recently took a day trip to our old stomping grounds in the city, where we'd lived for almost a decade before the pandemic. That caprese salad I had ordered too many times from our local caf was delicious, the birthday-cake-flavored frozen yogurt was a taste of olam haba (Hebrew for "the next world"). And, to my shock, breathing in the warm subway steam rising from the sidewalk was exhilarating.

For a moment, we wondered why we had ever left this Garden of Eden. But the answer was simple: Nothing could surpass our pandemic retreat.

Like many millennials, my husband and I chose to start our adult lives in the city, staying even after our sons were born. Then the pandemic struck. My husband is a psychologist and I'm a school rabbi, and for a few days, we attempted to work from our 1.5-bedroom apartment.

Quickly, we realized this arrangement was a non-starter: Three noise machines were no match for an energetic toddler and a preschooler. I remember the quick call to my mother that Saturday night - the minute the Sabbath ended. I didn't really ask if we could come stay at my parents' spacious suburban house; I informed her we were almost on the way. With our kids clinging to their loveys and a car packed to the brim, we fled the city on a cool March evening; for once, the traffic was relatively light.

My parents had finally emptied their nest after raising five children. Now, though, my family was slowly taking over Grandma and Saba's (Hebrew for grandfather) house.

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Since the post-war suburban boom of the 1950s, much of the American dream has revolved around owning your own home. That's a prerequisite for "making it" here. But for my young family and many others, it has been a blessing for several generations to reside under one roof. And in a world where many of us will continue to work at home - full- or part-time - post-pandemic, perhaps it's time to re-think that 20th-century dream, or at least make it more flexible. If nothing else, the pandemic has forced us to reassess what we truly value in our lives - and I'd put time with grandparents at the top of my list.

First, we all moved into my childhood bedroom, with its pink carpet, wall shrine to Barry Manilow, and '90s puffy flowered curtains. Eventually, my husband and I moved across the hall. Then I set up my husband's office in a spare bedroom, splurging on wall decorations to provide a suitable Zoom background for his client appointments.

I arranged my own workspace in another bedroom, but relocated to the basement after hearing too many "amens" from directly below me: My father, also a rabbi, conducts multiple services from his office each day. Toys - and the children who go with them - soon spread everywhere; the fact that we kept accumulating new train sets, as part of pandemic bribes, certainly didn't help.

My mother's bout with COVID in April of 2020 gave us quite a scare - she was in bed with a high fever for several weeks. Thankfully, she made a full recovery. Otherwise, we've had a pretty easy time of it during the pandemic.

Grandma cooks amazing meals for all of us, prepares art projects for the kids - she's an art therapist - comforts them when they have a booboo, and applies sunscreen before they go off to summer day camp. She'll even blow dry their hair after their baths (talk about dedication).

Making challah with Grandma for the Sabbath. Rabbi Yael Buechler

Saba likes to take the kids raspberry-picking down the road. Inspired by their Peppa Pig fascination, he even bought crumpets so they could have an authentic tea together. When they're cranky at the end of a long day, my dad offers to relax with them in his office, as they listen to Jewish music and rock in his rocking chairs. My boys always come back refreshed from these sessions, which may have something to do with the generous servings of M&Ms he supplies.

Now, though, the time has come to leave the nest. We've overstayed our welcome. My parents are clearly ready to reclaim their space, and while they'll certainly miss grandchild snuggles, they won't miss the crumbs all over their house.

My husband and I are ready to be independent again too, but we also dread losing the security blanket my parents provide: Who will make the kids scrambled eggs when they put in the request five minutes before leaving for school? Who will be the backup, nighttime storyteller when Ima (Hebrew for mom) is at her wit's end after a long workday?

I recall the first time I had to leave the nest, after graduating high school. At least then, there was some transition time - college, a year abroad in Israel, and, eventually, living in my own apartment. Even if I did have qualms about being on my own, I don't remember feeling this kind of separation angst.

Last week my younger son asked, "Ema, why are we moving to the new apartment?" I didn't think the answer "because society expects us to do so" would suffice. I turned the question on him, to which he confidently replied, "Because there's a crack in the ceiling here," pointing to a spot leftover from a leak a few years back. I responded to his creative answer in the affirmative, fighting back tears about this upcoming transition for our family.

While there will hopefully not be cracks in the ceilings of our new place, we will all feel cracks in our support system. From that moment in March of 2020, my parents have taken such care of me, my husband, and my kids. These many months at their home, now our home, have taught me the importance of surrounding my children with the most loving figures around - and we are lucky that their grandparents (including the ones we didn't live with) qualify beyond comparison.

Marking the end of the Sabbath with a Jewish ritual called havdalah with Grandma and Saba. Saba is leading havdalah on Zoom. Rabbi Yael Buechler

As we prepare to move, I am struck by how the norm of single-family homes has actually served to distance generations from one another. It is my hope that the pandemic will begin to reverse this trend and make multi-family living not only acceptable, but encouraged.

There's a midrash (Jewish parable) that tells of a king who, when he went to marry off his daughter, told his future son-in-law, "I cannot say to you, 'Don't take her,' for my daughter is now your wife. However, I ask of you that wherever you go to live that you have a chamber ready for me that I may dwell with you, for I cannot leave my daughter."

We are planning that chamber for my parents - in the form of a pullout couch in our new city apartment. And we hope to offer more amenities for them down the line. In fact, a move to the 'burbs is not out of the question for us. Two-family homes have never seemed more appealing.

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I moved my family back in with my parents at the start of the pandemic. After a lovely year and a half, I'm rethinking the dream of the single-family...

Key detective in Neulander investigation charged with perjury in Philly case – Courier Post

Posted By on August 18, 2021

AP Top Stories August 13 P

Heres the latest for Friday, August 13: Taliban seizes more Afghan cities; FDA says some got extra vaccines early; Houston schools defy Texas mask ban; Extreme heat his nations capital.

AP

PHILADELPHIA - A detective who played a key role in one of South Jersey's most notorious murder cases has been charged with perjury and false swearing in a separate case here.

Martin Devlin is one of three retired Philadelphia Police Department homicide detectives accused of lying at a trial forAnthony Wright, a city man who served 25 years of a life term before DNA evidence led to his freedom.

In the South Jersey case, Devlin's work with the Camden County Prosecutor's Office led tothe arrest and conviction of Fred Neulander, a former Cherry Hill rabbi found to have paid two men to kill his wife, Carol, in November 1994.

Neulander, who turned 80 on Saturday, is currently serving a life sentence in a Trenton prison. He has a parole eligibility date in June 2030.

According to the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office, the alleged perjury and false swearing occurred "both in and out of court" during a 2016 retrial for Wright and during sworn depositions taken as part of a subsequentlawsuit against the city.

More: Neulander investigators followed long road to life term for Cherry Hill rabbi

More: Cherry Hill synagogues, Emanuel and M'kor Shalom, consider a future together

The former detectives, includingManuel Santiago and Frank Jastrzembski, were untruthful "abouttheir on-duty roles in the investigation, interrogation and wrongful conviction of an innocent man," the DA's Office said in a statement.

It said the statute of limitations "arguably" would not allow charges against the detectives for alleged similar offenses during the initial investigation into Wright in 1991 and at a 1993 trial that resulted in his conviction and life term.

Attorneys for the detectives could not be reached for commentSaturday.

Wright was 20 years old when police accused him of the rape and murder of Louise Talley, a 77-year-old Philadelphia woman.

In its statement, the DA's Office said Wright gave a "coerced false confession" after Devlin and Santiago used "unlawful tactics to coerce" him during an interrogation.

It claims the detectives, who did not record the interrogation,told Wright he could go home if he admitted his role in the crime.

Wright "repeatedly told detectives he had no involvement or knowledge of the crime, and spent hours repeatedly crying for his mother, whom he could hear outside the interrogation room screaming for him," District Attorney Larry Krasner said in announcing the charges."

"Less than 24 hours after discovering Mrs. Talleys body, detectives Santiago and Devlin coerced Wright into initialing and signing a false confession to a crime Wright did not commit, the details of which he did not know."

He allegedWright was not allowed to read the confession before he signed it.

Krasner saidJastrzembski told jurors at Wright's first trial "about the location of clothing he falsely claimed was found during a search of Wright's bedroom, but was actually found in the victim's home."

Wright's confession stated he wore the clothing during the crime, Krasner's statement said.

ButDNA testing "decades later" showed the clothing "was actually worn by Talley, not Wright," it said.

The DNA results proved Talley's attacker was Ronnie Byrd, a man who lived near the victim's home and who had since died, according toKrasner.

Wright's initial conviction was overturned but the DA's Office, then led by Seth Williams, "incredibly … re-tried him despite irrefutable science establishing Wrights innocence," Krasner said.

At the retrial and in depositions for Wright's lawsuit, "both Devlin and Santiago repeated their false, sworn claims that Wrights 1991 confession to the crime had been given willingly and transcribed word-for-word," Krasner alleged.

The retrial ended in Wright's acquittal, with the jury deliberating for less than an hour, Krasner said.

Wright's civil suit against the City of Philadelphia was resolved with a $10 million settlement.

The charges against Devlintwo counts each of perjury and false swearing are only allegations. None of the detectives have been convicted in connection with the case.

Devlin worked for 28 years at Philadelphia's police department. He then spent 15 years with the prosecutor's office in Camden County, where he led the Major Crimes Unit.

Devlin left the Camden Countyprosecutor's office as a lieutenant after reaching the mandatory retirement age of 65.

"We are aware of the indictment," the prosecutor's office said in a statement Saturday. "At this time we have no further comment."

In 2014, he was named at age 69 to help run a newly formed cold-case squad at the Camden County Police Department.

"The cold case squad was active for about a year and was disbanded soon thereafter," county spokesman Dan Keashen said Saturday.

Neulander, whose first trial ended with a hung jury in 2001, was convicted of murder after a second trial in 2002.

Authorities alleged he hired two men Len Jenoff of Collingswood and Paul Daniels of Pennsauken who fatally beat Carol Neulander, a 52-year-old businesswoman and mother of three, in a staged robbery at her Cherry Hill home.

Both of the killers have completed prison terms for aggravated manslaughter.

Neulander arranged his wife's death so he could pursue an extramarital affair with Elaine Soncini, a well-known radio host at the time, the prosecution said.

Lee Solomon, a former Camden County Prosecutor, praised the role of Devlin and other investigators in remarks before Neulander was sentenced in January 2003.

"There is no substitute for good, hard-nosed police work," said Solomon, now a state Supreme Court justice.

He noted Neulander showed his antipathy for Devlin when the rabbi "purportedly referred to (the detective) with a derogatory term" based on his ethnicity.

Jim Walsh covers public safety, economic development and other beats for the Courier-Post, Burlington County Times and The Daily Journal.

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Senior Likud lawmaker calls on her party’s supporters to stop electing leaders with ‘white DNA’ – Haaretz

Posted By on August 18, 2021

Former Transport Minister Miri Regev called for a Mizrahi revolution in the Likud party on Thursday, complaining that the right-wing party has for too long been dominated by white Ashkenazi men at the expense of Middle Eastern and North African Jews.

In an interview published in Yedioth Ahronoth, the senior Likud lawmaker stated that the fact that members of the Mizrahi community were not adequately represented in national leadership and that there had never been a Mizrahi Prime Minister showed that something is wrong here and only the Likud could change it.

But while the Likud is a party that is mostly based on Mizrahim [and] on the periphery, its primary voters mostly vote for Ashkenazi candidates because they have been affected by the media and are unready for change.

Declaring that she intended to lead a golden revolution promoting a new Mizrahi elite, Regev said that her partys supporters will have to choose more people from the middle class and from backgrounds that represent them and warned that if the Likudniks continue to elect leaders with white DNA, another Likud will emerge, a true Mizrahi Likud that will give expression to Mizrahi voices sidelined for years.

However, despite her comments calling for a new leadership, the longtime Netanyahu loyalist indicated that she believed that such a change should wait until the former prime minister stepped down from his position at the head of the party.

I am in favor of a Mizrahi head or prime minister. I think that the Mizrahis, the Likudniks, have long chosen white people to lead them. I think in the day after Bibi Netanyahu, the Likudniks will have to make a reckoning, she continued, adding that she definitely saw herself as part of this leadership.

Asked if she thought she could win, she replied that she did not know but that Likud supporters would choose whether they want to continue to always vote for the same DNA.

In a series of tweets, Akiva Novick, a reporter for national broadcaster Kan, asked why Regev had not made such statements previously and supported such a move only after Netanyahus exit from the political scene.

Has anyone heard her criticize the Likud during her thirteen years in the party? When rich Ashkenazi men were elected over and over? Could it be that she just found a theme for the campaign against Yuli Edelstein, he mused.

Likud number two Yuli Edelstein has been reported to be considering a primary run and, according to Kan, has reportedly said that Netanyahu had made all the possible mistakes; everywhere I go, they say he needs to be replaced.

Last month, the pro-Netanyahu daily Israel Hayom ran an article declaring that knives are being drawn in Likud in which two anonymous former Likud ministers slammed the erstwhile prime ministers continued grip over the party.

The ministers described a leader who took a transactional approach, who never tried to talk, have a conversation, or show he understood how [members] felt and who left many of his supporters feeling slighted.

While there have been few public signs of displeasure with Netanyahus continued stewardship of Likud, there have been increasing indications that those high up in the ranks of the party have grown increasingly frustrated with his repeated failures to produce a stable coalition over the course of multiple elections.

After being ousted from the Prime Ministers Office this summer, Netanyahu tried to arrange for a primary to be held as fast as possible in order to preempt the emergence of any serious challengers to his leadership, but was rebuffed by party bigwigs.

The Likud party has long been popular among Mizrahi Jews, many of whom felt marginalized under the Mapai and Labor parties long rule. However, one Netanyahu confidant insultedthis important segment of the Likud base.

In a leaked recording published last March, Netanyahus fixer and former bureau chief of staff Nathan Eshel implied that the non-Ashkenazi public loves a criminal, which is why Netanyahus pending indictments werent hurting him among his electorate but were in fact helping him.

Eshel also called Regev a beast who nonetheless is effective in speaking to the non-Ashkenazi Likud voters.

Regev, usually the first to jump to Netanyahus defense, was uncharacteristically silent following the publication of the recording, later saying Eshel called to apologize and that he does not speak for anyone, "most certainly not the [then] prime minister, who also issued a condemnation.

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Senior Likud lawmaker calls on her party's supporters to stop electing leaders with 'white DNA' - Haaretz

Canada’s Awz Ventures raises $82.5 million for a joint fund with the Israeli Ministry of Defence | Ctech – CTech

Posted By on August 18, 2021

The Israeli Ministry of Defenses Directorate of Defense Research and Development's (dubbed MAFAT) joint endeavor with venture capital firm Awz Ventures is up and running.

Ten potential investment opportunities in cloud security, quantum, aerospace, deep tech, robotics, artificial intelligence, and cybersecurity have already been identified. Awz X-Seed will initially invest an average of $3-$5 million in each portfolio company. Additionally, the best-performing companies will be considered for follow-on investment rounds by Awz Ventures growth-stage funds, alongside third-party investors. Every 18 months, Awz Ventures will raise an additional $75 million for Awz X-Seed to invest in its next cohort of 15 companies, which will take up residence in the hub for enrichment and growth.

Each portfolio company will receive different levels of assistance including office space in the Awz X-Seed hub and advanced marketing, business development, and technology mentorship services provided by the hubs in-house professional team. Portfolio companies will further benefit from Awz Ventures business development offices in Canada, the U.S., and UAE that will support the companies in expanding their global client base.

Yaron Ashkenazi the founder and managing partner of Awz Ventures said that Awz Ventures unique strategic partnership with MAFAT and Israels other security agencies will allow our hub to have the most advanced deal flow that stems from the real recognized needs within the security industry that also have multiple applications within the commercial sector. Ashkenazi added that we will address these needs and gaps in the marketplace both by investing in existing companies and by creating companies together from scratch.

Awz X-Seed will be led by Ashkenazi, as Managing Partner, and Daniel Mak, a seasoned Canadian high-tech investor and Awz Ventures General Partner, alongside two Israel-based General Partners: Roni Alsheich, former Deputy Director of the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet), and Sharon Gal, former Head of Technology Innovation at the Israel Prime Ministers Office. In addition, the hub will be advised by Awz Ventures prestigious partners and advisory committee members that include Canadas 22nd Prime Minister, The Rt. Hon. Stephen Harper, former Mossad Chief of Intelligence Haim Tomer, former Commander of Israels elite Unit 8200 Brig. Gen. (Ret.) Ehud Schneorson, and numerous global industry leaders as well as finance and investment experts.

Former Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper added, I am proud to be an advisor in residence at the Awz X-Seed hub, a ground-breaking and differentiated initiative. Together, Awz and MAFAT will uniquely evaluate and develop early-stage technologies, creating a model that is unmatched anywhere.

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Canada's Awz Ventures raises $82.5 million for a joint fund with the Israeli Ministry of Defence | Ctech - CTech

Pointing out racism in books is not an attack its a call for industry reform – The Guardian

Posted By on August 18, 2021

It started with a tweet. Kate Clanchy, author of Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me posted on her Twitter account that a reviewer on Goodreads had made up a racist quote and said it was in my book. She urged her almost 40,000 followers to flag the review that claimed she had bigoted views on race, class and body image, and had used terms such as chocolate skin and Jewish nose. Prominent authors and columnists swooped in to offer support, decrying how Clanchy could possibly be subjected to such inhumane treatment including the current president of the Society of Authors, Philip Pullman, who declared: But of all the people and of all the books to have had this happen Its hard to stay optimistic about the human race sometimes.

However, it soon emerged that terms similar to these were, in fact, in the book. Incredulous that antisemitic and anti-Black tropes could have made it into a book published as recently as 2019, I downloaded and read it. I recoiled as a Somali boy is described as having a narrow skull, while one Muslim girl is very butch-looking with a distinct moustache, and another looked brilliant because she has such a strong skull shape, which sounds more like something a eugenicist might observe than a trusted teacher. There is a troubling exchange where Clanchy is baffled by a boy who, with his jet-black hair and eyes and fine Ashkenazi nose, denies Jewish heritage. She draws her own conclusion that his family must not want to remember that theyre only seven generations down from a pogrom. After reading about Cypriot bosoms on a child and flirty hijabs, I wondered what readers would have felt about a male teacher describing childrens bodies in this way.

Growing up in 1980s Yorkshire, I was subjected to racism at school by teachers who paraded me in front of 26 nine-year-old boys who didnt believe girls could have black hair, allowing them to touch it. Reading Clanchys book, I was angered by the dehumanising language and felt a protective instinct towards the children, bristling at the idea that any teacher might look at my own mixed-race daughters with such scrutiny. I returned to the conversation unfolding on Twitter and found the academic and author Professor Sunny Singh and Chimene Suleyman, author and editor of The Good Immigrant USA, discussing how those who had called out Clanchys lie were already being condemned as abusive trolls. Its a familiar pattern: pointing out racist language is labelled aggressive and instigating a pile-on.

A flurry of readers produced further evidence of alarming language, including Dara McAnulty, the 17-year-old autistic author of the award-winning Diary of a Young Naturalist. He highlighted several pages from the book that describe two autistic children as odd, suggesting they might live in ASD land. McAnulty then left Twitter after receiving so much abuse that his mother had to try to hide it from him. Other writers produced passages that they said stereotyped working-class families with broken noses and vast tattooed arms and a young girl in poverty with a rotting nineteenth-century mouth, along with segments where the author is hurt to see a woman has now become fat. As the title of the book suggests, Clanchy attempts to challenge her own prejudices through interactions with her pupils, but this is troubling in itself: children, particularly ethnic minority ones and refugees, are not a vehicle through which to explore personal bigotries.

On Twitter, Clanchy stopped denying the phrases existed and began to urge they be read in context. Professor Singh, Suleyman and I responded to her and Pullman with measured criticism, only to be ignored. A sinister realisation dawned as they closed ranks and appeared to reply to white critics only, snaking around our comments and questions as though we were invisible. Clanchy remarked that she was frightened to reply evoking another dangerous trope used against people of colour, that we are to be feared. White authors who had previously supported Clanchy quietly deleted their tweets and slunk away.

This apparent closing of ranks is indicative of the UK publishing industry at large. In 2017 a poll concluded that more than 90% of the industry identifies as white, which might go some way to explaining how the book made it past several people without anyone picking up its issues. So whats the solution? Increasingly, publishers are using sensitivity readers, which is a good idea but a short-term fix: authors and publishers need to do their own homework, yes, but also listen and learn when marginalised writers take pains to highlight offensive content.

A group of white women authors pointedly demeaned Singh, Suleyman and me as activists who were attacking Clanchy. Pullman suggested we were looking for offence and likened us to Isis and the Taliban, a comment which came as the three of us were already under a coordinated racist attack from the alt-right which targeted our emails and social media.

Clanchy has since apologised for overreacting to critical reader reviews. She wrote on Twitter: I know I got many things wrong, and welcome the chance to write better, more lovingly.

Contrary to many assertions, brown and Black authors dont enjoy flagging up racist language. Wed rather be writing academic papers, researching books, watching Love Island or playing hide and seek with our kids. But racism isnt something we can shrug off. We see or hear it and immediately feel the heat of humiliation, the prickle of injustice on our skin. Anger rings in our ears, followed by fear of repercussion for speaking out.

Cancel culture is a term bounced around by people afraid of accountability. But freedom of speech does not mean freedom from consequences. We had every right to critique a publicly available book on a public forum, not least because the author had drawn attention to the racist language in it herself. Singh, Suleyman and I did not want to cancel Clanchy or her book, as evidenced by the educational links continuously shared by Singh that pointed towards writing about other cultures, and my own pleas to our detractors to understand why the language was so distressing. None of us disputed the fine work Clanchy has done with her pupils poetry. None of us had any hand in Picadors decision to rewrite the book, nor do we feel that the book should be rewritten. No one is policing imaginations or telling authors what they should or shouldnt write about. But we owe each other due diligence before we set out to write.

Publishers have churned out books about race and identity over the last two years, an endeavour that is meaningless if the problem lies deep within publishing itself. Writers, agents, editors, publishers and literary festival organisers need to accept that there is a lot of learning to do about genuine diversity and inclusion, and that empty platitudes and diversity schemes mean nothing if were punished for speaking out. Readers are not a homogeneous white, middle-class, able-bodied group of people, and nor are writers. We come from all areas of life, and for books to represent that, publishing has to do so first.

This article was amended on 16 August 2021. An earlier version stated that the term Jewish noses was used in Kate Clanchys book. The actual phrase used was Ashkenazi nose, so the article should instead have referred to a similar term; this has been corrected. In addition, the precise terms used in the Goodreads review referred to in the article have been clarified.

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Pointing out racism in books is not an attack its a call for industry reform - The Guardian

A Twitter account puts the ghosts of Manhattans former synagogues on the map – The Times of Israel

Posted By on August 18, 2021

New York Jewish Week via JTA Writer Luc Sante calls them the ghosts of Manhattan. Those are the souls of the poor and marginal people, now dead, whose presence can be felt like a shade in the history of now affluent US neighborhoods, where they push invisibly behind it to erect their memorials in the collective unconscious.

Santes poltergeists came to mind after I stumbled on a strange little Twitter account called This Used to Be a Synagogue (@OldShulSpots). Once a day or so the account delivers a photograph of some nondescript street view in Manhattan, with a tweet stating the address and name of the congregation that used to sit on the site.

That nail salon at 90 Clinton St.? That used to be Linath Hazedeck Anshei Sadlikoff. The deli at E. 104th St.? Something called Maczikei Torath Kodesh.

I felt that if I stared at the photos long enough the color would fade and Id see spectral images of Jewish ancestors entering these long-gone places after dodging horse-drawn carts, or steering boxy automobiles with high fenders and wide running boards.

Even the teeth-cracking names in the old Ashkenazi spellings hinted at something both ancient and familiar, like a cave drawing or the empty mezuzah cases you see in medieval ghettoes.

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For a time the account didnt explain much about who was behind it. I assumed it was a white-haired amateur historian of the Lower East Side or a Jewish conceptual artist who was making a point about gentrification.

So I sent a direct message and soon heard back from the creator, who identified herself as Amy Shreeve and agreed to chat on the phone. Shreeve explained that she started the account as an academic project in something called commemorative geography, which is the study of memory and location. She said that she was a history major and had accessed a public database from the Ackman & Ziff Family Genealogy Institute at the Center for Jewish History in Manhattan.

The database listed over 1,000 names and addresses of past and present Manhattan synagogues and Jewish organizations. Shreeve created a big spreadsheet and then geocoded a Twitter bot using Google APIs and Python (I admit she lost me at this point), scheduling the bot to automatically post Google Streetview photographs of the places where synagogues and Jewish organizations used to be.

She said she was originally curious about naming patterns and mapping out where people came from and really interested in thinking about the geography of Eastern Europe and see how people organized in New York based on where they originally came from.

So youre a student? I asked.

At the University of Texas, in Austin.

Graduate school, I presume?

No, Im an undergraduate. My major is rhetoric and history.

Wait, I asked. How old are you?

I just turned 20, Shreeve said. It was just last week, so I am not used to saying that.

The Buddhist Association of New York, at 85 Hester St. on the Lower East Side, is in a building that once housed the Linas Hazedek Anshe Sakolker congregation. (@OldShulSpots via Google/ via JTA)

So forget the white hair. And to cut to the chase here, you can also forget the Jewish part. Shreeve describes herself as a descendant of Mormon pioneer immigrants on her fathers side and Irish famine immigrants on her mothers.

This is honestly weirdly random even for me personally, she said. I have no family connections. Im just a big fan of Jewish history.

And why is that?

Because I am a huge fan of Yiddish, she said. I needed to take a language class. When I heard that my school in Austin was teaching a language with less than 2 million speakers, I thought it was a rare and unique opportunity to learn a niche language.

Her professor was Itzik Gottesman, whom it turns out I knew when he was an editor at the Yiddish Forward and is a notable figure in New York Yiddish circles. Shreeve had read an article that Gottesman had written about how synagogues in Brooklyn had become churches, gymnasia and YMCAs. For a separate geography course, she decided to combine mapping with what she learned in Yiddish class.

(Gottesman referred to Shreeve in an email as a star student.)

On her own website, Shreeve explains the impetus behind the project.

People following this bot get regular reminders that New York City used to be different. Different people lived and gathered there and had a different way of life

People following this bot get regular reminders that New York City used to be different. Different people lived and gathered there and had a different way of life, she writes. This bot encourages people to explore their own cities and wonder What used to be here? Who gathered here?

I find the site addictive. Every address can lead you down a rabbit hole, discovering along the way layers upon layers of New York Jewish history. And it is not just ghosts in empty sockets: Occasionally there are signs of the original synagogues. At 317 E. 8th St. in the East Village downtown, you can still see the tall sanctuary windows and Star of David motif that now provide a funky historical motif for a condo owners living room. The Anshei Kalusz (people of Kalusz, Ukraine) Lechetz Yosha building was sold to a developer by its Orthodox congregation in 2000 following a battle with a rabbi and medical marijuana activist who had hoped it would become a nondenominational worship space for artists and other creatives. It was the last synagogue in the once-gritty Alphabet City neighborhood.

At 317 E. 8th St. in the East Village, you can still see the tall sanctuary windows and Star of David from what had been the Anshei Kalusz Lechetz Yosha congregation. (@OldShulSpots via Google/ via JTA)

At 58-60 Rivington St., plaques representing the Ten Commandments and two roaring lions of Judah mark what had once been the Warschuer (Warsaw) Congregation, which itself had supplanted a congregation from Iasi, Romania. The original congregation had hired a young architect to design the current building in 1903. That architect, Emery Roth, would go on to build various New York landmarks, including the Ritz Hotel Tower and The Beresford. Some 10,000 people attended the synagogues dedication.

After the Warschuers inherited the building in what appears to have been a hostile takeover, it became a favorite for local celebrities, including the Gershwins, Sen. Jacob Javits and the comedian George Burns. Or at least that was the shul they didnt go to.

The neighborhood changed, and by 1973 the building was derelict. It was bought by the artist and metalworker Hale Garland in 1979 and apparently still functions as an artists studio.

Happily, some of the addresses arent ghosts at all. There is still a synagogue at 137 E. 29th Street. Congregation Talmud Torah Adereth El says it has held services at the same location (albeit not the same building) since 1863 the longest continuous service at the same site in the city. New Yorks oldest congregation, Shearith Israel, the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue, was established in 1654, but it has only been in the same location since 1897.

And 308 E. 55th St., once known as Chevra Bnei Leive and founded in 1906, is now Congregation Or Olam, which became a Conservative synagogue in 1966.

And yet most of the tweets feature gas stations, apartment buildings, housing developments and churches where Jewish communities flourished, struggled and eventually moved on, replaced by other groups and institutions that represent the citys never-ending process of regeneration.

At 58-60 Rivington St., plaques representing the Ten Commandments and two roaring lions of Judah mark what had once been the Warschuer (Warsaw) Congregation. (@OldShulSpots via Google/ via JTA)

If there is a connection for Shreeve between old Jewish New York and present-day Austin, it is in the experience of immigrants.

The demographics of New York are different [than Austin], but you still see how immigrants totally change the landscape, she said. Comparing the history of the Jewish people and Hispanics and immigrants at large, you see how history does have a tendency to repeat itself.

Shreeve has 1,016 entries in her database and said she expects the project to wind up soon. She hopes to find records for the other boroughs, especially Brooklyn, although a notoriously inept remapping of Brooklyns streets in the mid-1800s might make that project impossible.

She also hopes to get to New York one day, perhaps when the pandemic is really over.

Looking at a map is not the same as walking the streets and seeing that what is currently a movie theater or a parking lot once housed minyans or charity organizations, she said. I want people to reflect on the space, and to think of the immigrant stories and religion stories that came from there.

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A Twitter account puts the ghosts of Manhattans former synagogues on the map - The Times of Israel


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