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A contrarian artist who took inspiration from a Hasidic rabbi and a Vietnamese general – Forward

Posted By on July 18, 2021

The French artist Christian Boltanski, who died on Bastille Day at age 76, expressed emotions through conceptual art associated with Judaism as well as universal experience.

His Ukrainian Jewish father escaped deportation during the Nazi Occupation of Paris by hiding in a space under the floorboards of the family apartment for 18 months.

Boltanskis mother, stricken by polio wrote under the pen name Annie Lauran. To protect her husband, she staged a mock quarrel with him to convince neighbors that the couple had separated.

This charade was only partially successful, as Boltanski would later recall. A Parisian neighbor complained that Vichy anti-Jewish legislation supposedly forbade Jews from owning pets, and if the Boltanski family cat continuing bothering him, he would denounce them to the authorities.

By Getty Images

In His Atelier: The artist Christian Boltanski, circa 2009.

Boltanskis nephew Christophe recounted some of this family history in the 2015 novel The Safe House.

Such tales of high drama and daily banalities were an inescapable part of Boltanskis young years, and his artwork would duly juxtapose humdrum items with overwhelming historical tragedy.

His Altar to the Chases High School (1987), now in the collection of Israels Jewish Museum, consists of 18 framed images of Jewish students who graduated from a high school in Vienna in 1931, each rephotographed from a book by the Austrian Jewish filmmaker Ruth Beckermann on the fate of Viennese Jews.

In another series of installations, entitled The Purim Festival, Boltanski abstracted and enlarged faces from a 1939 photograph of a Purim party at a European Jewish school, where the childrens delight with their costumes is poignantly overshadowed by ominous events on the horizon.

Yet far from exclusively dwelling on looming tragedy, Boltanskis art, like his 2018 retrospective at the Israel Museum, was also diverting and enthralling. In a new video work, Animitas, 300 bells were distributed over a 200 square meter area in the cliffs overlooking the Dead Sea. In another conceptual work, shelves were filled with phone books from different regions and eras of Israel, and museum visitors were invited to look up listings past and present for their friends and family.

An ongoing work compiling sound recordings of heartbeats was augmented with Jerusalem passersby having the sound of their heartbeats taped to add to the artists archive. Consciousness of past ghosts and the transitory essence of human life made Boltanski celebrate vitality while it lasted. He particularly enjoyed indulging in French cuisine washed down with Polish cherry vodka.

He was loquacious about his Jewish roots with journalists; he told the French daily Libration in 2010 that his approach to teaching art was to try to be a Hasidic rabbi. I attempt to ask questions and have people ask me questions in return.

To divulge traumas discussed throughout his childhood, he rejected literature as an artistic vehicle; he never read his mothers books, claiming that it would be impossible for him to judge her as a writer. Instead, he became a self-taught artist.

With a contrarian spirit, he would sometimes surprise interlocutors. When he arrived in Japan, one art critic explained that a colleague was staring at Boltanski because he had never before seen a Jew. Boltanski took the occasion to deny being Jewish. In a comparable way, when one American reporter quickly identified him as a Jewish artist, Boltanski objected: Not at all, Im Corsican!

As he specified during a retrospective at Pariss Pompidou Center last year, Boltanski felt that only the French Jewish documentarian Claude Lanzmann was able to make coherent artistic statements about the Holocaust.

Instead, Boltanski sought to refer to universality with his art, rather than specific events. He also shunned literary references, as he felt there were no words to describe some human ordeals.

His fathers death in 1983 made him take another look at his own Jewish roots, but he continued to prefer allusiveness and generalities in his art, rather than basing his creativity on any documents immediately linked to the Holocaust.

Even without such heartbreaking links, memories awakened by his artworks could be haunting. One installation consisted of vast piles of clothing, evoking for some museumgoers the Nazi storehouses of garments and other objects taken from murdered victims.

The ambient tragedy that informed his works suited his repeated quasi-Gnostic claim that the creator of the world must have been a malevolent or oblivious demiurge to allow so many horrors to occur. As Boltanski succinctly put it, God is an old bastard.

Yet to complement this somberness, he lightened his conceptions with an element of triviality, believing that it would be indecent and unseemly to focus directly on the Holocaust theme, despite its importance in his own life.

Boltanski read memoirs by Primo Levi, whose message, he concluded, was that even in the concentration camps, life continued.

Loving and loathing life at the same time, Boltanski contrasted his approach to conveying modern historical grief with that of weighty tragic canvases by the German painter Anselm Kiefer. Boltanski likened Kiefer to a fellow marching forward, unlike Boltanski himself, who was more like a Jew who is fleeing. [Kiefer] is strength, I am weakness.

Failing to identify with Kiefer, Bolstanski considered himself closer to the American Jewish conceptual artist Lawrence Weiner. In 2010, Boltanski told Museo Magazine that Weiner was the last Jewish artist, because he exhibits stories - theres always question and question and question in Lawrences work. And the fact that he refuses to use images and only uses words is also from the Jewish tradition.

Sometimes Boltanskis admiration of what he saw as Jewish virtues bordered on the incoherent, as when he claimed to Libration: In Jewish culture, when we ask whether we should scratch our nose or our ear, we scratch both, and when Jews applied this approach to science and philosophy as well as to religion, prodigious results occurred, such as Freud and Marx.

Despite his readiness to be interviewed, Boltanskis inspiration was basically non-verbal. So trying to parse his logic in such a statement might just leave Jewish readers baffled, possibly to the point of scratching their ears or noses.

Yet as everywhere, Boltanski cherished the balance between the derisory and the tragic. To describe his own approach to conceptual art, he enjoyed quoting North Vietnams General V Nguyn Gip who led his forces against the French military at the decisive Battle of Dien Bien Phu in 1954: The more space we occupy, the less strength we have. The more strength we acquire, the less space we have.

Naturally, there were few concrete similarities between General Gip and Boltanski, who when not traveling the world to organize his art exhibits, slouched around a dilapidated studio in the scruffy Paris suburb of Malakoff, sometimes watching television for days on end with the sound turned off to muster up inspiration.

Yet likening himself to both a Vietnamese military authority and a Hasidic rabbi was typical of Boltanskis mixed self-imagery that produced so many wide-ranging works of lasting impact and value, capturing modern Jewish experience.

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A contrarian artist who took inspiration from a Hasidic rabbi and a Vietnamese general - Forward

Facebook’s Frustrated Critics Take Their Fight to Washington – BNN

Posted By on July 18, 2021

(Bloomberg) -- After years of directly pressuring Facebook Inc. and other social media companies to rid their platforms of hate speechwith limited successcivil rights groups are shifting tack: Theyre taking their fight to Washington.

Organizations such as Color of Change, the Anti-Defamation League and Common Sense Media are increasingly pushing Congress and the Biden administration to force tech companies to take more aggressive steps to moderate their sites for bigotry, misinformation, voter suppression and discrimination. Now that Democrats control the White House and a majority in the House and Senate, the groups say, they aim to force change through legislation, rather than just pleading with the companies.

Rashad Robinson, president of racial justice group Color of Change, and other civil rights groups had regularly emailed and talked with Facebook Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg and Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg in the past two years about the way the company handled misinformation, hate speech and Trumps efforts to question the validity of mail-in ballots.

Zuckerberg even hosted civil rights advocates for a dinner at his Palo Alto, California, home in November 2019. But Robinson and others said their conversations havent led Facebook to make significant changes to its business because the companys leadership failed to understand the civil rights issues at stake.

There is nothing worse than to go and beg a billionaire to stop hurting us, Robinson said.

Now, civil rights groupsand other advocates are backing a flurry of proposed laws covering a range of issues. One bill would weaken tech companies legal protections if their platforms interfere with civil rights cases or facilitate harassment, and one would force companies to maintain public advertising databases. Another bill would block companies from selling users personal information to law enforcement without court oversight.

Since January, when a mob of Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol after using social media to organize, the groups work has taken on heightened urgency. But as Robinsons staff watched footage of the troubling riot on Jan. 6, he told them the shifting balance of power in Washington gave them more powerful options for holding the company accountable beyond just sending another email to Zuckerberg and Sandberg.

A special election in Georgia a day earlier had given Democrats the Senate majority, making Robinson and other groups suddenly more optimistic that meaningful legislation and regulation were possible, and that they could play a role in shaping it.The most predictable terror attack in recent history, in the United States maybe ever, was planned out in the open on Facebook, said Lauren Krapf, counsel for the Anti-Defamation League, which is backing a number of bills. I think that there is consensus that platforms cannot self-regulate. Self-regulation is not working.

Her group was one of more than 130 that organized an effort to get Facebook to do more on its ownan advertiser boycott last year in the wake of widespread protests of racial injustices spurred by the shocking video of a police officer killing George Floyd. More than 1,000 companies paused advertising on Facebook, including Starbucks Corp., Levi Strauss & Co. and PepsiCo Inc., to protest the hate speech proliferating on the social media giants networks, according to the civil rights groups. Even celebrities lent their public support for the so-called Stop Hate for Profit campaign. The boycott took on a high profile but had scant impact on the companys advertising revenue.

In response to the boycott, Facebook said it invests in technology and employees to remove the vast majority of hateful content before its reported by users. The action capped years of complaints from civil rights groups that Facebook executives would lend a sympathetic ear to their critiquesbut resist any real changes that would help protect disadvantaged communities.

Now, a year later, theres little evidence that the companies have significantly cleaned up their content, and advocacy groups say their cause is even more exigent. Media reports illustrated how far-right communities and Trump supporters were circulating election conspiracy theories, planning the attack at the capitol and openly discussing violence on sites such as Parler, 4chan, Gab and Facebook.

Brenda Castillo, head of the National Hispanic Media Coalition, said Facebook has an accountability problem in part because Zuckerberg is the president, CEO, chairman of the board and owner of a controlling share of the companys stock.

Castillo said the problem is urgent and needs to be addressed with some structural changes like a digital agency to oversee internet companies. Not only are people dying, and people of color are dying, but our democracy is at stake.

The biggest social media companies have rules against discrimination in advertisements, white supremacist content and falsehoods on sensitive topics such as elections and Covid-19. Facebook, YouTube and Twitter will often rely on algorithms and human reviewers to detect posts that may break their rules. They also try to apply labels to misleading posts, reduce the spread of conspiracy theories and penalize repeat offenders.

Facebook said in a statement that over the past year the company has updated its policies and processes to fight hate on its platform including by banning Holocaust denial, militarized social movements, and taking down down tens of thousands of QAnon pages, groupsand accounts.

We hold ourselves accountable through regular reports to the public on the progress were making and areas where we can improve,the company said.Google, which owns YouTube, said that after updating its hate speech policy in 2019, the company has been increasingly removing channels and comments on the video-sharing platformthat violate its rules. Late last year, Google created a Human Rights Executive Council made up of senior leaders to oversee the companys approach to civil rights.

Twitter said it plans to coordinate closely with civil rights advocacy organizations and government leaders in improving its platform. Were committed to examining and iterating on our own policies, building trust, and doing this work out in the open, the company said in a statement.Despite the companies rules, problematic content often still ripples across the platforms quickly. Sindy Benavides, head of the League of United Latin American Citizens, said Facebooks business practices are truly a matter of life and death, citing incidents like the one in 2019 when a shooter killed 23 people, targeting Latinos in El Paso, Texas. The gunmans online manifesto referenced another mass shooting targeting Muslims that had been live-streamed on Facebook.

Benavidess group is supporting three bills, including the Protecting Americans from Dangerous Algorithms Act, the Social Media Data Act and the SAFE TECH act. LULAC has also signed on to a coalition advocating for the end of what they call surveillance advertisingthe practice of tracking all kinds of user activity to sell micro-targeted ads.

Representative Tony Cardenas, a Democrat from California, said he has met several times with Sandberg and spoken with her by phone since he first joined Congress eight years ago.

Im very pleased with what theyve been telling me, Cardenas said, but Im very disappointed that its been years now and the progress that theyve made and the promisesIm not going to call them the commitments yetthe promises theyve made have not been consistent with their actions.

Cardenas and others said the content moderation that Facebook does in English far outpaces the nearly nonexistent protections from misinformation in Spanish. Benavides said the first step to addressing this problem is having more diversity, including Spanish-speaking Latinos, in the companys highest corporate ranks and on its board.

To press their case, advocates have been contacting key Democratic offices including members of the Tri-Caucuses, a group of lawmakers from minority groups; Rhode Island Representative David Cicilline, who conducted a probe of the tech industry; New Jersey Senator Cory Booker; and Virginia Senator Mark Warner, among others.

Legislative fixes have to stay within the parameters that are set by current free speech and legal liability rules, experts say. Under the First Amendment, the government cant compel tech companies to remove or leave up user-generated posts that are offensive to many but ultimately legal. Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act protects social media platforms from lawsuits over user-generated content.

Tech companies have largely opposed changes to the law because they fear the proliferation of lawsuits will force them to shut down user-generated content and stifle innovation in the space, though Zuckerberg and Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey have expressed openness to Section 230 reforms.There are several measures already introduced in Congress that civil rights advocates are supporting. Some of these include:

Even with Democrats narrowly controlling both chambers of Congress, the bills face an uphill battle. They would need to attract at least 10 Republicans to get around the Senates filibuster rules. Though Republicans have their own complaints about big tech companies, especially action taken against right-wing users for violating company policies, there is little bipartisan agreement about how to overhaul current legal protections to hold platforms like Facebook more accountable.Still, tech accountability activists are cheered by the heightened attention in Washington on the industrys business practices, from both Democrats and Republicans. And Jim Steyer, head of Common Sense Media, a nonprofit focused on kids and families, said he has personally spoken with President Joe Biden about needing stronger tech regulation.

We do not believe theyre going to change voluntarily, Steyer said of Facebook. The only way to force change is through regulatory pressure and through public shaming.

Robinson said he and other racial justice advocates understand the political realities. His group plans to continue calling on the tech companies to change while pushing for more concrete action from Congress.

Now there is a path, Robinson said. Its a tough path. Its a path cluttered with tree stumps and briar patchesbut its a path.

2021 Bloomberg L.P.

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Facebook's Frustrated Critics Take Their Fight to Washington - BNN

Israel to withhold $180 million in Palestinian funds over militant stipends – Reuters

Posted By on July 13, 2021

JERUSALEM, July 11 (Reuters) - Israel will withhold $180 million in tax revenue it collect last year on behalf of the Palestinian Authority, or about 7% of the PA's total tax revenue, to offset stipends paid to militants and their families, the Israeli cabinet said on Sunday.

Under a 2018 law, Israel calculates each year how much it believes the Palestinian Authority has paid in stipends to militants, and deducts that amount from the taxes it has collected on the Palestinians' behalf.

Taxes collected by Israel form about half of the income of the Palestinian Authority, which exercises limited self-rule in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Israel calls stipends for militants and their families a pay for slay policy that encourages violence. Palestinians hail their jailed brethren as heroes in a struggle for an independent state and their families as deserving of support.

Qadri Abu Baker, head of prisoners affairs in the Palestine Liberation Organization, called the Israeli measure a crime of terror and piracy.

($1 = 3.2776 shekels)

Reporting by Ari Rabinovitch and Ali Sawafta

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Israel to withhold $180 million in Palestinian funds over militant stipends - Reuters

Man Charged With Hate Crimes in Stabbing of Rabbi in Boston – The New York Times

Posted By on July 13, 2021

A man who stabbed a rabbi outside a Jewish school in Boston this month was charged on Thursday with hate crimes after investigators discovered that he had expressed anti-Semitic views, prosecutors said.

The rabbi, Shlomo Noginski, was wearing a skullcap and standing in front of a large menorah on the steps of the school, Shaloh House, when he was attacked on July 1 by the man, Khaled Awad, 24, prosecutors said.

After brandishing a gun, Mr. Awad demanded the keys to a school van, which Rabbi Noginski offered him, prosecutors said. Mr. Awad then displayed a knife and indicated that he wanted the rabbi to get into the van, prosecutors said.

Rabbi Noginski, 41, ran, but Mr. Awad chased him down and stabbed him nine times, prosecutors said. The rabbi survived, and told i24News after he was released from the hospital that he had been stabbed in his arm and limbs, but it could have been much worse.

I feel relatively great, and I thank God for the miracle, he told i24News in Hebrew.

Mr. Awad, who was arrested shortly after the attack, was charged on July 2 with seven counts, including assault with intent to murder and attempted armed robbery, prosecutors said.

On Thursday, prosecutors added two additional charges, both of which are considered hate crimes, they said: committing a civil rights violation causing injury and armed assault and battery with intent to intimidate, causing bodily injury.

The additional charges were brought after people who knew Mr. Awad or had lived with him told investigators that he had said that all Jews are stingy and evil and they are evil and control the world, Margaret Hegarty, a Suffolk County prosecutor, told reporters on Thursday.

Mr. Awad had also made derogatory comments about Christians, but was especially harsh on Jews, as part of who he was, Ms. Hegarty said.

The day before the attack, Mr. Awad, who lives in the neighborhood where Shaloh House is, was seen near the school, acting in a way that was odd or off-putting, which prompted someone to take a photograph of him, Rachael Rollins, the Suffolk County district attorney, told reporters.

We are standing here today because we want the Jewish community to know that we believe this was rooted in anti-Semitism, Ms. Rollins said. We are going to call that out and charge that specifically, and we want them to know they are safe.

Mr. Awad, an Egyptian who was in the United States on a student visa, has pleaded not guilty to all charges, according to his lawyer, Stephen J. Weymouth, who said the new hate crime charges were based on some very weak evidence.

Theres no evidence that any comments were made during the course of the attempted robbery, Mr. Weymouth said in an interview. There wasnt any yelling or screaming, as you would expect, I hate Jews.

Mr. Weymouth said he had asked the court to have a doctor examine Mr. Awad and the doctor had recommended that Mr. Awad be sent to Bridgewater State Hospital. Mr. Awad will be held there for the next 20 to 30 days to determine whether he is competent to stand trial and whether he has mental health issues that could have affected his ability to determine right from wrong on the day of the attack, Mr. Weymouth said.

Mr. Weymouth said that some mental health issues, which he was unable to immediately describe, may very well be the explanation here.

The stabbing came after an outbreak of anti-Semitic threats and violence across the United States this year stoked fear among Jews in small towns and major cities.

During two weeks of clashes in Israel and Gaza in May, the Anti-Defamation League collected 222 reports of anti-Semitic harassment, vandalism and violence in the United States, compared with 127 over the previous two weeks.

In one case, Jewish diners outside a sushi restaurant in Los Angeles were attacked by men shouting anti-Semitic threats. In another case, a brick shattered a window of a kosher pizzeria on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. And in Salt Lake City, a man scratched a swastika into the front door of an Orthodox synagogue.

After Rabbi Noginski was stabbed, city officials and Jewish community leaders in Boston condemned the attack and urged the police to investigate it as a hate crime.

On Thursday, Robert Trestan, the director of the Anti-Defamation Leagues New England office, said in a statement that he welcomed the filing of hate crimes and civil rights charges in the attack.

The charges are a stark reminder that anti-Semitism continues to fuel violence against the Jewish community, Mr. Trestan said. The charges represent the first step towards accountability and justice for the community.

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Man Charged With Hate Crimes in Stabbing of Rabbi in Boston - The New York Times

Israeli businessman charged with contacting foreign agent, passing info to Iran – Haaretz

Posted By on July 13, 2021

A well-known Israeli businessman was charged Monday with contact with a foreign agent and passing information to the enemy.

According to the charges, Yaakub Abu al-Kiyanpassed on information regarding Defense Minister Benny Gantz to an Iraqi agent who was in contact with Iranian agents.

Abu al-Kiyan, who was on the Telem party slate of former Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon,has been in custody for several weeks. He was arrested in early June and was not allowed to meet with a lawyer for the first 20 days of his detention.

The defendant knowingly had contacts with a foreign agent for Iran, and he has no reasonable explanation for it," the indictment alleges. "In addition, the defendant knowingly passed on information to the enemy.

Abu al-Kiyan has had close ties with a large number of Israeli politicians and is considered one of the wealthiest Arab businessmen in the country, although his investigation revealed that he has encountered financial difficulties.

The indictment alleges that an Iraqi businessman made contact with Abu al-Kiyan in 2019 and told him that individuals in Tehran wanted to meet him. Abu al-Kiyan then allegedly provided the Iraqi with information about Gantz over a period of time, but never met with the Iraqi contact due to a court order banning him from leaving Israel due to his financial and other difficulties.

On many occasions, the defendant gave [Iraqi businessman] Khaider information [that he] had learned [about] in Israel concerning the operations of Israeli security forces, the activities of Defense Minister Benny Gantz and military transactions between Israel and the United States and information the defendant learned from the media or from his connections with various people in Israel," the indictment states. "The defendant did so to increase his value in the Iranians' eyes and to receive compensation in return for the information he provided.

Abu al-Kiyan allegedly glorified himself in his conversations with Khaider, saying he was one of the decision-makers in Israel and purportedly even claimed he was a cabinet member. The indictment states that Abu al-Kiyan informed the Iraqi about Gantzs return from a diplomatic trip to the United States last October, during which an agreement with the United Arab Emirates was forged. In addition, the defendant told Khaider in one conversation that Israel was planning to carry out an attack soon, an operation that by coincidence did take place soon after," the indictment alleges.

Abu al-Kiyan and the Iraqi allegedly unsuccessfully tried to schedule a meeting with the Iranians in a third country in 2020, and there was reasonable suspicion that Iraqi worked to collecting information or other acts that could very well harm Israeli national security, according to the allegations against him. Prosecutors said that at first, Abu al-Kiyan confessed to the crimes, but later retracted his confession and said he exaggerated his account of events. But he did admit to passing on information about Gantz.

The Beer Sheva District Court lifted the gag order on the case at Haaretz's request. Last week, the court allowed the partial publication of the story following harsh criticism by a district court judge regarding the Shin Bet security service and the police. Judge Eliahu Bitan told the prosecution to "get a reality check."

In response to the indictment, the Shin Bet said that the investigation is an example of the response by Israeli security agencies to recruitment efforts by Iran and the Lebanese-based Shi'ite militia group in Israel and abroad aimed at harming senior Israeli officials and collecting intelligence information.

In recent years, Abu al-Kiyan often gave interviews to the media, and presented himself as someone who grew up in poverty, who began his professional career as a human resources person and became a building contractor and then one of the richest people in the Bedouin community.

He owns two properties in Meitar and Hura in the Negev, where he lives with one of his wives in a luxurious house with gold furniture. He has widespread connections with businessmen in the Gulf states, including the United Arab Emirates and Qatar and in recent years has conducted business meetings in the Gulf, a number of sources have said. In interviews, he has said that the company he owns also did work for the Israeli army's new training base complex in the Negev.

Moshe Ya'alon's Telem party

In 2019, Abu al-Kiyan joined the former Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon's Telem party and met a number of times with Yaalon, who was not asked to testify in the case. In the end, the party did not run for the Knesset that year. In January 2019, Yaalon called Abu al-Kiyan an outstanding member of the Bedouin community, built himself up with his own hands, works very hard and has done a great deal for the Bedouin community in particular and minorities in general.

Yaalon told Haaretz that he was surprised about the suspicions and that his relationship with Abu al-Kiyan had been short and ended at his own initiative. I was shocked to hear about the serious acts attributed to Yakub Abu al-Kiyan, he said. He had put Abu al-Kiyan on the Telem party slate after being impressed by his reputation as a businessman from the Bedouin community who worked to bridge the differences between the Jewish and Bedouin communities.

But Yaalon admitted that, after he submitted the Knesset slate, serious question marks began to arise concerning Abu al-Kiyans credibility and honesty, and I decided to cut off contact with him [as did] the Telem party that I headed, even returning the money to him that he had donated to the party. They have not been in touch since then, Yaalon said.

Abu al-Kiyan also had contact with the chairman of the Joint List party, Ayman Odeh, who attended the wedding of his son in 2018, and was in touch with Public Security Minister Omer Bar-Lev and supported him in the primary for the leadership of the Labor Party in 2017. In June 2017, Bar-Lev posted a picture of the two of them on Facebook, and wrote: From all my heart, I thank my friend Yakub Abu al-Kiyan, the chairman of the Bedouin business forum, who is supporting me for the leadership of the Labor Party.

Abu al-Kiyan was quoted in the post as saying: I believe in Bar-Lev. His word is [sacred]. He understands security, understands how important it is to ensure that Jews and Arabslive in peace and particularly helps the Bedouin population. Omer is the right person at the right time and in the right place.

Bar-Lev said in response for this article that his relations with Abu al-Kiyanwere limited to acquaintance in the context of the primary election for the leadership of the party," that they had not met since and have never spoken about security-related matters.

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Israeli businessman charged with contacting foreign agent, passing info to Iran - Haaretz

‘Aggie Rabbi’ Delivers Kosher Meals To USTS Kennedy – Texas A&M Today – Texas A&M University Today

Posted By on July 13, 2021

The USTS Kennedy.

Courtesy of Yossi Lazaroff

Its not every day that Rabbi Yossi Lazaroff gets a request from a vessel at sea, but thats what happened this week to the leader of Chabad at Texas A&M University, known affectionately by many students as the Aggie Rabbi.

Lazaroff said he was contacted by Marc Cruz, the chef aboard the maritime training vessel U.S. Training Ship (USTS) Kennedy while the ship was in the Atlantic Ocean, days from docking at the Port of Galveston. At Texas A&M at Galveston, the universitys maritime-focused campus, the Texas A&M Maritime Academy trains cadets on the vessel for careers as merchant mariners, Navy sailors and other marine-related fields.

Cruz, a district executive chef at Chartwells Higher Education Dining Services, Texas A&Ms dining provider, had noticed that the ships Chief Engineer Milton Korn was not eating the meals everyone else on board was eating. Korn, a professor in the Department of Marine Engineering Technology at the Galveston Campus, was eating tuna and sardines for his meals.

When Cruz inquired as to why he was eating this way, Korn responded that he is Jewish and keeps a kosher diet. Most of the dining options on board were off limits to someone who follows a kosher diet. Kosher meals can be requested at university dining facilities, but Lazaroff said Korn was perfectly satisfied with his cans of tuna and sardines; he did not want to inconvenienceanyone. He is an educator and his main focus is to educate future engineers.

Chartwells Chef Marc Cruz, Texas A&M Professor Milton Korn and Rabbi Yossi Lazaroff.

Courtesy of Yossi Lazaroff

But Cruz would not accept such a situation. You are not eating tuna and sardines on my watch, he told Korn. Im going to contact the Aggie Rabbi. Lazaroff and Cruz have worked together over the past seven years on projects to create and enhance kosher dining at Texas A&M.

They saw this as a priority, Lazaroff said. As soon as they were made aware of the situation, they went above and beyond to accommodateeven if it was only one individual.

Feeding people is nothing new for Lazaroff either. As a Jewish student center, we prepare lots of meals for our students weekly, he said.

After the call came from the ship, Lazaroff jumped into action, preparing Matzah Ball soup and buying four large coolers to fill with kosher food. Then he headed to Houston to meet up with Cruz, and they stopped to buy the equipment and utensils needed to maintain kosher standards.

Chabads giant menorah in Rudder Plaza, brought out each year in recognition of Hannukah.

Courtesy of Yossi Lazaroff

Not all Jewish people are kosher, but for those who are, certain guidelines are followed in the types of foods eaten and how they are prepared.

Upon delivery of the food and equipment on Monday, Lazaroff tweeted mission accomplished alongside a picture of himself posing in front of the ship with Cruz and Korn.

Lazaroff said although this particular endeavor was unusual for him, serving the needs of Jewish students, faculty, staff and former students are all in a days work at Chabad at Texas A&M, a branch of the largest Jewish organization in the world with over 3,500 centers in 100 countries.

Chabad at Texas A&M is one of 260 Chabad Houses on university campuses, Lazaroff said, noting that he and his wife, Manya, moved to College Station to establish the Aggie Chabad House in June 2007. We have worked to transform the landscape of Jewish life at Texas A&M, he said.

Chabad provides in-house dining every Friday night for a weekly Shabbat dinner, and its programming ranges from holiday and social events, synagogue services, Jewish educational courses and classes, international learning and travel opportunities including internships.

And to just being there for anything a student may need, Lazaroff added. We have created a home for students to be able to stay during times of crisis, developed the ReJOYvenation mental health and wellness initiative, opened a Kosher grocery, and have taken hundreds of students to Israel over the years.

Chabad brings guest speakers to campus such as Holocaust survivor Dr. Jacob Eisenbach.

Courtesy of Yossi Lazaroff

He said having a Chabad at Texas A&M helps attract Jewish students and faculty to the university.

Knowing that there is a place that provides for their religious needs is comforting, Lazaroff said. We are an essential resource and educational facility for all students, faculty, staff and their families at Texas A&M.

The Chabad center engages with hundreds of students a year with over 2,500 student engagements this year alone. On a typical Friday night Shabbat dinner, more than 70 students come together for a four-course dinner, Lazaroff said. Our Matzah ball soup deliveries are famous and very helpful when a student is alone in their dorm and under the weather.

Today, Korn and his kosher meals, along with the cadets, staff and faculty on the USTS Kennedy are back at sea, having departed Galveston on Wednesday. Their 56-day training cruise includes port stops in St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands, back to Galveston, then theyll head to Boston, Mass., anchoring in New York City before finally concluding the journey at the ships home, the Massachusetts Maritime Academy in Buzzards Bay, Mass.

Learn more about the training cruise on the Texas A&M Maritime Academy site.

Visit Chabad online at jewishaggies.com and Chartwells at chartwellshighered.com.

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'Aggie Rabbi' Delivers Kosher Meals To USTS Kennedy - Texas A&M Today - Texas A&M University Today

Jewish Life in the Arab World: A Talk by Rabbi Elie Abadie, Senior Rabbi of the UAE Yeshiva University News – Yu News

Posted By on July 13, 2021

By Dr. Ronnie PerelisDirector, Rabbi Arthur Schneier Program for International Affairs

On Tuesday, July 6, and Wednesday, July 7, Rabbi Elie Abadie, M.D., the Senior Rabbi of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), spoke about Jewish life in the New Arab Word: A New Chapter? in both English (July 6) and Spanish (July 7), focusing on the emerging Jewish community in the UAE.

The event was hosted by the Rabbi Arthur Schneier Program for International Affairs along with several international partners: the Institute for Jewish Experience at the American Sephardi Federation (ASF) and two Latin American Partnersthe Majn Tor veDaat Monte Sina of Mexico City and FeSeLa, the Sephardic Federation of Latin America.

Rabbi Abadie shared his personal odyssey from Syria to Lebanon to Mexico City and New York (where he studied at YU) and his return to the Arab world as the Senior Rabbi of the UAE. (At YU, he attended Yeshiva College as well as the Bernard Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies and the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary.)

Rabbi Abadie used his own story to reflect on the momentous changes in the Arab world and the possibilities for greater mutual understanding. He described his hope that in the return to the Arab world there might be a chance for Jews and Muslimsand all peopleto tap into some of the creativity and synergistic dynamism that was the hallmark of Jewish life in the Islamic world for most of Jewish history.

Both lectures covered common ground, but through the magic of language, the same ideas can be transformed as they are spoken in a new form, and in actuality each talk opened up new conversations and highlighted different areas of interest and concern.

The audience for both talks came from across the globe, including Dubai, Armenia, France, England, Israel, Holland, the United States, Mexico, Venezuela, Argentina and Panama, to name a few. Many of the Spanish speakers had direct experiences of once living in the Arab world, and this perspective enriched the conversation. People were cautiously hopeful that this indeed will be a new and positive chapter in Muslim-Jewish relations and pave the way for greater respect and cooperation and the promise of a world where the dignity of all people can shine.

We are so happy to have collaborated on this important event with our partners in Latin America and the ASF, said Dr. Ronnie Perelis, the Chief Rabbi Dr. Isaac Abraham and Yelena Rachel Chair of Sephardic Studies, who gave the introduction to both talks. There are people all over the world that are looking to YU to provide a forum for unique perspectives on Jewish life in our complex and changing world. To have hosted Rabbi Abadiea proud alum of YUwas a distinct pleasure. We look forward to continuing these international partnerships and deepening these important conversations.

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Jewish Life in the Arab World: A Talk by Rabbi Elie Abadie, Senior Rabbi of the UAE Yeshiva University News - Yu News

Boulders host Team Israel in long-awaited exhibition baseball game before Olympics – The Journal News

Posted By on July 13, 2021

Team Israel plays NY Boulders in tune-up for olympics

After a rain delay, the New York Boulders played Team Israel in a baseball exhibition game at Palisades Credit Union Park in Pomona July 12, 2021. Team Israel is preparing to play in the Tokyo Olympics.

Peter Carr, Rockland/Westchester Journal News

The rain came and went, but nothing was stopping Team Israel's pre-Olympic tune-up parade through the east coast in preparation for the 2021 Summer Games later this month.

After making a stop in Brooklyn, Team Israel swung north to Palisades Credit Union Park for an exhibition game with the New York Boulders on Monday night.

"Hats off to everybody here getting this done, it's unbelievable," White Plains native and Team Israel manager Eric Holtz said. "Great to get our work in. That's really what we need right now, just getting our work in and let our pitchers throw. Let our guys see some live at-bats and get everybody out of here healthy."

Both teams patiently waited through the two-hour rain delay before the game began, and much of the 5,000-person crowd stuck around for the first pitch while many more cars were still filing into packed parking lots.

"There was a great turnout, despite terrible rain conditions and storm warnings,"Frontier League deputy commissioner Steve Tahsler said. "There's a tremendous following and interest level, so the fact that Team Israel picked the New York Boulders, a Frontier League team, to prepare for the Olympics is really just a great honor for us, and we're excited and proud to be able to host them and help them train.

"What was most amazing was an hour after the game was supposed to start, there were still cars coming in the parking lot. That just shows the dedication and passion of the people that wanted to see this game."

Spectators arrived with Israel and American flags, and fans surrounded the locker room entrance with hopes for autographs or to catch a glimpse of Team Israel and New York Boulders players before they took the field.

The game had added meaning for local players like Jonathan de Marte, a Yorktown native and pitcher for Team Israel, and teammate Zach Penprase.

More: New York Boulders: Scoreboard and game results for 2021 season

The 28-year old pitcher was a two-time Gatorade New York Player of the Year at Lakeland High School in 2010 and 2011 and was excited to be able to be back in the local area.

The two teams were originally scheduled to play an exhibition game last summer, but the COVID-19 pandemic scrapped those plans and the Boulders' 2020 season.

With baseball back at Palisades Credit Union Park and the Frontier League's season back in full swing, both sides were able to reconvene before Team Israel flies out to Tokyo.

"It means a lot to me, because I grew up not too far away from here, so I have a lot of family and friends that came out," de Marte said. "I'm not pitching tonight, and it's still amazing to see so many people that came out to see us play. Obviously, we're excited for the Olympics, but today means a lot."

There was also a pre-game ceremony to memorialize the Munich 11, in which 11 members of Israel's Olympic team were killed during the 1972 Munich Olympics.

The Boulders presented Team Israel with a plaque of friendship and solidarity, and held a moment of silence in remembrance of the tragic event.

Come game time, Team Israel trounced the Boulders with a five-run outing during the top of the third to break a 1-1 stalemate. Team Israel ended up winning, 7-1, in a shortened five-inning contest.

The Boulders return to action with a three-game mid-week series with Quebec.

Meanwhile, Team Israel's 10-day tour will continue onto Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Maryland, then back to New York in Long Island, before they fly out to Tokyo.

It's been a long wait for Team Israel, who punched its ticket to the Tokyo Olympics back in 2019, when it won the European baseball championship in Italy.

After the COVID-19 pandemic suspended sports throughout 2020 and amid the uncertainty as restrictions gradually eased up in 2021, the countdown is back on. Holtz and his crew are excited for their trip.

"We're kind of where we want to be, and every day we'll push a little bit more," Holtz said. "The last two years, with COVID, nobody thought this was going to happen. Keeping everybody together mentally and emotionally was probably the biggest thing, and we'll be ready if that day comes. Lucky for us, that day is almost here, and we're ready to go."

Follow Eugene Rapay on Twitter at@erapay5and on Instagram at @byeugenerapay.

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Boulders host Team Israel in long-awaited exhibition baseball game before Olympics - The Journal News

New national security adviser said to have seen Iran nuke deal as lesser evil – The Times of Israel

Posted By on July 13, 2021

British MPs vote to cut $5.5 billion in foreign aid

British lawmakers have voted to support a contentious cut to the United Kingdoms foreign aid budget, a move that has slashed billions from programs helping some of the worlds poorest people.

The decision came in a 333-298 House of Commons vote that saw some members of Prime Minister Boris Johnsons Conservative Party join with the opposition against the government.

Johnsons government announced in November that it would cut the share of national income set aside for foreign aid from 0.7% to 0.5%, citing the blow to Britains economy from the coronavirus pandemic.

He said the reduction, which amounts to about 4 billion pounds ($5.5 billion) this year, is temporary and aid would be restored to 0.7% of national income as soon as circumstances allow.

High-profile Conservatives, including former prime minister Theresa May, joined opposition politicians, United Nations agencies and aid groups in criticizing the budget cut.

They say it will lead to hundreds of thousands of avoidable deaths in developing nations and that it damages Britains reputation, just as it is trying to bolster its international influence in the wake of Brexit.

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New national security adviser said to have seen Iran nuke deal as lesser evil - The Times of Israel

UK chief rabbi: Chilled meat ban could make Jewish life in N. Ireland unviable – The Times of Israel

Posted By on July 13, 2021

United Kingdom Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis has warned it could become unviable for Jews to live in Northern Ireland due to an upcoming ban on the imports of chilled meats from Britain, as part of the countrys Brexit agreement with the European Union.

The ban does not include an exemption for kosher meat, which the religious head of Northern Irelands Jewish community warned could cause the community to completely die, the BBC reported Friday.

In the deal under which the UK left the EU, Northern Ireland must continue to adhere to the blocs product standards, including a ban on the import of chilled meats, such as sausage or ground meat from non-member states such as the UK.

The ban had been set to take effect on June 30, but its implementation was postponed until the end of September.

While the community of fewer than 100 Jews can import kosher chilled meat from EU member Ireland, they say it is too expensive to do so, according to the broadcaster. Meanwhile the ban will prevent them from acquiring the meat from elsewhere in the UK, due to the trade barrier created with Northern Ireland under the Brexit deal.

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The report quoted a statement from the chief rabbi describing the situation as inadvertent collateral damage arising out of current trade differences between Britain and the EU. He called for a solution for this precious and historic Jewish community, enabling them to bring in essential food provisions and items required for the observance of festivals.

He added: These are existential concerns, because there is a growing risk of communal life becoming unviable.

Illustrative: A photo of the old Belfast synagogue. (Northern Ireland Friends of Israel via JTA)

The rabbi also expressed appreciation for the UKs Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis for pledging to work with the EU on finding a solution.

David Kale, the religious leader for Northern Irelands Jewish community, said he was worried about the future, and called for a religious exemption to the ban allowing kosher meat from non-EU states to be imported.

Our religion requires us to eat kosher and, unfortunately, nobody can live without eating, he told the BBC.

Kale also said members of the Jewish community living in senior living homes or who are hospitalized rely on kosher meals on wheels that come from Britain England, Scotland and Wales.

Speaking in the House of Commons on Wednesday, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned the bans effect on importing kosher meat from Britain could cause an exodus of Jews from Northern Ireland.

We want to do everything that we can to avoid that, he said, while acknowledging the matter was far from fixed.

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UK chief rabbi: Chilled meat ban could make Jewish life in N. Ireland unviable - The Times of Israel


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