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Netflix Unveils Premiere Date and Trailer for Action Thriller Hit & Run (VIDEO) – TV Insider

Posted By on July 13, 2021

Hit & Run, the new nine-episode Netflix action thriller, is set to premiere on the streamer on Friday, August 6.

The series revolves around Segev Azulai (Lior Raz), a happily married man living in Tel Aviv whose life is turned upside down when his new American wife Danielle (Kaelen Ohm) is killed in a mysterious hit-and-run accident. Confused and stricken by grief, Segev sets about finding his wifes killers, who have fled to the U.S.

Segev enlists the help of his Israeli police detective cousin (Moran Rosenblatt), an old friend (Gal Toren) and an American ex-lover (Sanaa Lathan) who now works as an investigative reporter. As the group look into the case, Segev starts to uncover disturbing truths about his beloved wife and the secrets she kept from him.

In addition to Raz, Rosenblatt, Toren and Lathan, the series also stars Lior Ashkenazi, Gregg Henry, Igal Naor, Michael Aronov and Kevin Mambo.

Netflix has released a trailer for the series (watch below), which shows Segev traveling to the U.S. to pursue his wifes killers. This is bigger than you, a womans voice warns him as the action heats up with car chases, gun fights, and massive explosions.

Raz, who is best known for portraying Doron Kabilio in the political thriller television drama Fauda, co-created the series with Avi Issacharoff. Dawn Prestwich and Nicole Yorkin serve as showrunners with episodes directed by Mike Barker, Rotem Shamir and Neasa Hardiman. Barker is also on board as an executive producer alongside Kimberlin Belloni, Peter Principato, Itay Reiss, David Hoberman, Todd Lieberman and Laurie Zaks.

Hit & Run, premieres August 6, Netflix.

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Netflix Unveils Premiere Date and Trailer for Action Thriller Hit & Run (VIDEO) - TV Insider

The Forgotten Documentary That Will Leave A Mark On You On Netflix – Looper

Posted By on July 13, 2021

"The Last Days" was produced in part by the USC Shoah Foundation, which was founded to create compelling audio and visual testimony to ensure that the devastating realities of the Holocaust are not forgotten as well as giving the survivors of this historical atrocity the valuable opportunity to share their stories with the world.

The Shoah Foundation was founded by Steven Spielberg in 1994, after the response to "Schindler's List," his powerful film about Oskar Schindler's work to rescue Jews from concentration camps. When that Liam Neeson-starring film won the award for Best Picture at the Oscars, Spielberg pleaded in his acceptance speech, asking educators to teach the Holocaust in schools and utilize the voices of survivors (via The Guardian). In an interview with The Guardian, "The Last Days" producer June Beallor shared how "Schindler's List" was a "catalyst" for "The Last Days," explaining that in telling the story of the Holocaust, Spielberg built trust among survivors, who then felt safer and more comfortable opening up about their experiences.

"Once word got out that the Shoah Foundation existed," shared director James Moll, "the phones were ringing off the hook with survivors wanting to tell their stories."

It's worth noting that while the Holocaust is part of the past, the hatred and bigotry that caused it are just as present today. Recent years have seen a rise in antisemitism and antisemitic hate crimes throughout the United States, including violent attacks on synagogues (as reported by the Anti-Defamation League). With that in mind, it is more important than ever that a new generation of Americans understand the devastating realities of the Holocaust.

"The Last Days" is a difficult watch, but an essential one, and is now streaming on Netflix.

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The Forgotten Documentary That Will Leave A Mark On You On Netflix - Looper

Mike Gold, the Writer Who Believed Workers Could Speak for Themselves – Jacobin magazine

Posted By on July 13, 2021

One can often learn as much about the world by who we are instructed to hate as who we are invited to love. Few writers were subjected to as much Cold War public derision as Mike Gold, once the darling of 1930s red left.

Even in the introductions to books and in public retrospectives, ostensibly convened to honor him, writers brim with contempt. Alfred Kazins 1996 preface to Golds sole novel Jews Without Money refers to Gold as primitive, an injured soul, and not that bright. A political propagandist, Kazin continues, Gold could not think beyond simple words and uncomplicated feelings. In 1983, Paul Berman felt compelled to remind us Gold was no genius.

Gold was aware of such characterizations, writing in his unpublished memoir how sick he was of his representation as a beetle-brow gangster commissar taking over American literature by every manner of brutal means. Before reading a page of Gold, somehow, as a young person, I knew already that he was didactic, boorish, a promoter of formulaic orthodoxy and cartoonish masculinist militancy. Gold is Schmaltz, Kazin warns. For a while, Im embarrassed to say, I believed him.

Gold is having something of a recent resurgence, however. The thawing of the Cold War has made it permissible to talk about 1930s literature again after decades of critics and anthologies simply ignoring the period. Alan Walds recent trilogy on literary anti-fascism centered Gold as a key figure in the making of an anti-the fascist and anti-racist literary left, while Patrick Churas new biography Michael Gold: The Peoples Writer reminds us of how his weekly columns in theDaily Worker and monthly columns in theNew Masses were a major literary undertaking, as central as H. L. Menckens a generation earlier, for setting the tone and literary tastes of an era.

As the ruling classes and their taste makers seem incapable of meeting the imaginative challenges of our ecological, biopolitical, economic, and democratic crises, there may be growing acceptance that literature as Gold framed it, is less a graduate seminar and more of a class war.

We are living in another day, he wrote of the 1930s, dominated by hard, successful, ignorant men we will need a new literature to meet it. Golds literary voice, unafraid of conflict, partisanship, and class consciousness, feels less a relic of a bygone era than a contemporary intervention against a brutal economic and political system.

To understand why Gold was so hated by a generation of liberal writers such as Kazin and Berman, it helps to understand who Gold was, beyond the author of a single novel set in the Jewish ghetto of the Lower East Side in the 1910s. Gold, born in 1893 Itzok Irwin Granitch, was the child of working-class Romanian-Jewish immigrants, and grew up in the dense mesh of Lower East Side Jewish tenements of turn-of-the-century New York. While Gold became many things writer, editor, music promoter, political spokesperson for the Communist Party and the Jewish Left he could perhaps best be described as the chief architect and progenitor of proletarian literature in the United States.

His 1930 novel Jews without Money catapulted him to fame and was almost immediately translated into over a dozen languages and witnessed two dozen printings in the next decade. It was seen at the time as the ur-text of US proletarian fiction, and Gold used his sudden fame as editor of the influential Marxist journal theNew Masses to shape what working-class writing would look, smell, taste, and sound like for the next two decades.

The proletarian literary movement, or Proletcult, a portmanteau deriving from the Russian for proletarian culture, lived a brief state-sanctioned life as the official literary movement of the Soviet avant-garde from 191721. Far from what one might imagine as the Soviet orthodoxy of social realism, the proletarian literary movement was a literary and visual modernism that sought to break out of bourgeois narrative norms and give expression to shocks, violence, collectivity, and disjunctures of proletarian life.

While the formal movement ended in the Soviet Union by the 1920s, it was merely one wing of what one critic referred to as a novelists international, an international working-class literary movement marked by its rejection of nineteenth-century norms of narrative, its frank and often even grotesque representations of working-class life, its radical anti-capitalist politics, its surreal montages that speak more to the aesthetics of Nelson Algrens heroin addicts in Polish Chicago, sex-workers in Alfred Dlblins Berlin Alexanderplatz, and the barrack yards of C. L. R. Jamess Trinidad, than Soviet posters of robust, round-cheeked peasants grinning with bushels of wheat.

What made the proletarian literary movement unique was not only that it spoke of the working class. Writing by and about working people in the United States extends as far back as slave narratives published by abolitionists, as well as the rise of the realist novel during the nineteenth centurys gilded age. But most if not nearly all working-class literature from the nineteenth century was literature about working-class people, seldom by them and even more rarely, from their perspective.

Rebecca Harding Davis Life in the Iron Mills is instructive here: the narrator is an omniscient middle-class observer who leads the reader from a well-established home and into the lives of mill workers. The novella is as much about the workers as it is about middle-class apprehensions about workers their morality, their liminal racial status, and above all, the disorienting and symbolic proximity to the narrators home.

Like Jacob Riiss lantern shows of the urban working classes he published as How the Other Half Lives, nineteenth-century literature about class often provided a kind of surveillance over the poor, benevolent at times, and reactionary at others. Its function was to act as a layer of mediation between the poor and the ruling elite. The realist novel was imagined as a sort of literary Central Park, a well-mannered site at which all classes can converge and, it is hoped, form a lawful democratic polity.

William Dean Howells 1890 novel, A Hazard of New Fortunes, constructs this vision as a literal dinner party, at which an upper-middle-class writer hosts a dinner for the owner of his magazine, as well as the working-class immigrant translator. One gets the sense that for Howells, had the dinner been successful, democracy might have been achieved.

The proletarian arts movement intellectually and politically broke with these forms of representation of the past. Unlike working-class representation of the previous century, the movement was concerned not only with working-class authorship and working-class control over the arts, but with producing a new working-class subjectivity. In his New Masses call for proletarian literature in the United States, Gold demands that writers spend the next few years in and out of. . . industry. . . so when he writes of it he will write like an insider, not like a bourgeois intellectual observer.

Gold celebrated the working-class backgrounds of new writers he promoted, proclaiming their working-class authenticity as central to the validity of their work: Ed Falkowski who has been a miner since childhood, born of miner parents, and Martin Russak has the same background in the textile industry and T. H. Lewish is a farmer, close to the problems of the dirt farmers of the middle west.

As Gold wrote in his own 1921 manifesto, Toward a Proletarian Art, he did not view art and artists as Romantics did: iconoclastic individuals, lonely as a cloud, seeking freedom from an oppressive and conformist social order. Gold rather felt himself to be a conduit for a collective: When I think it is the tenement thinking. When I hope it is the tenement hoping. . . . What is Art? Art is the tenement pouring its soul through us.

As proletarian writer Meridel Le Sueur framed in an attack on the ideal of the writer as outsider, I do not care for the bourgeois individual that I am. When speaking of a working-class social movement, you do not join such a group, you simply belong.

Even in Golds more controversial statements, in which he denounces Marcel Proust as the master masturbator of the bourgeoisie, or states that a novel is no more mystic in its origin than a ham sandwich, he is deliberately attacking the bourgeois assumptions of literature: that it is something removed from the class position that produced it and that it represents. That Kazin and Berman deride Gold as not that bright only means that according to their standard of literary taste in which proving ones brilliance is the goal of the writer Gold has failed at the very category he was attempting to undermine from the beginning.

Golds 1929 call in theNew Masses to Go Left, Young Writers also served as a manifesto for the locus of proletarian writing during the Great Depression: the John Reed Clubs. Named after the famous US journalist of the Mexican and Bolshevik Revolutions, they served as meeting places, writing workshops, organizing centers, and perhaps most importantly for the writers who belonged to them, as venues to publish and promote their work.

Golds call for writers with a knowledge of working-class life. . . gained from first-hand contacts was not just a call for individuals who work for a living to take up the pen, but rather the formation of an entirely new collective approach to literary production. It was, as Edmund Wilson described it, a literary class war in which writers would, en masse, take up the call for Communism. Art is a weapon of class struggle was their motto, and as such, it was no longer an endeavor of lone iconoclasts but an entire social movement.

While the Reed Clubs were formally dissolved into the American Writers Congress in 1936 as part of the Communist Partys shift from working-class militancy to anti-fascism, in the seven years of their existence, they supported and produced writers such as Richard Wright, Nelson Algren, Meridel Le Sueur, John Howard Lawson, Grace Lumpkin, Jack Conroy, Tillie Olsen, Josephine Herbst, Eugene Gordon, Langston Hughes, and many others.

While some of these writers already had careers such as Hughes and Herbst, for many others, it is likely that the Reed Clubs not only shaped but discovered them. The clubs were comprised of the young, unemployed, and unpublished, in the words of Michael Denning, and were often working-class writers only connection to the wider world of literary culture.

Communism gave me a mind, Gold said of his joining the party. Richard Wright, the son of a Mississippi sharecropper, wrote in American Hunger, that the clubs were his first contact with the modern world.

The Reed Clubs not only gave us some of the most powerful voices of the 1930s, like Algren, Olsen, and Wright; they gave us the first confident working-class voices in American letters. Absent the literary class war and organizations like the Reed Clubs today, it is impossible to know how many Wrights, Algrens, and Olsens have not been heard and we will never hear from writers who, guardians of the bourgeois literary world like Kazin assume, are not that bright.

Mike Golds single novel, Jews Without Money, was understood at its publication auspiciously coinciding with the Great Depressions crisis of capitalism in 1930 as a major achievement for the proletarian arts movement. As Denning observed, it immediately went through a dozen printings in less than a year, and inaugurated an entire cycle of novels about a racialized US working class, from Richard Wrights Lawd Today! about a black Chicago postal worker, to Pietro di Donatos Christ in Concrete about an Italian immigrant construction workers to H. T. Tsiangs And China Has Hands about laundry workers of Chinese descent in New York City. As critic Paula Rabinowitz framed it, Jews was taken to be a road marker to guide the proletarian literature that followed.

Yet for a working-class manifesto, Jews is an odd book. Though Gold calls for literature on the strike, boycott, mass-meeting, imprisonment, sacrifice, agitation, martyrdom, organization, his novel has none of these things its call for revolution seems almost an afterthought.

Added to final paragraphs of the novel, its call O workers Revolution. . . the true Messiah can seem so superfluous, one conservative publisher in the 1960s simply chopped off the final two pages. While this edit was committed for political reasons, that one could cut the explicitly revolutionary politics from the novel by simply eliminating the narrators final revelation suggests a great deal about how the surface politics appear merely hitched onto the texts rear bumper.

Jews is rather an episodic novel about the young narrators working-class housepainter father and pious but fiercely class-conscious mother, as he survives scrapes with his gang of toughs and mourns his fathers slide into illness and penury. The novel appears to have no plot, other than the changing seasons, and his fathers worsening health, and toward the end, his sisters unexpected and violent death.

Jews is sometimes referred to as poetic and autobiographical as means to account for its unstructured nature. Yet unlike Jewish novels that preceded it such as Anzia Yezierskas Bread Givers and Abraham Cahans The Rise of David Levinsky, Golds narrator rejects the lure of upward mobility and assimilation earlier novels depict, even in satire.

If the novel lacks a well-laid plot, it most certainly has an arc: Jews is explicitly downwardly mobile. Between the dreams of uplift held by his father and the earnest dreams of his mother for his studies, the young Mikey chooses the streets.

The hero of the novel is not Mikey, who converts to socialism in the final two paragraphs, but rather the narrators best friend, the black-haired, swarthy, broad-nosed, impoverished Jewish adolescent, described as a gypsy and nicknamed the N word in derision by the community. Yet Mikeys dark friend was far from an outcast for Gold: He was ready to die for justice, Mikey says of his adolescent friend, proudly boasting that he hit a teacher on the nose after the teacher called Mikey a little Kike.

Mikeys dark-skinned friend defied the racist and antisemitic authority against which Mikey and his friends fought, both on the street against rival Irish and Italian, Christian gangs, as well as the official authority of the state manifested in the school system and the police. A hustler, drop out, and brawler, Mikey describes N as built like a tugboat for power, and delights as N defiantly waits on rooftops to drop bricks on a corrupt policemans head.

Jews Without Money is the first prominent Jewish novel published in the United States to not only resist Jewish assimilation entirely, but to also embrace Jews liminal racial status as a positive class marker of resistance. Gold came to the conclusion that it was self-destructive for Jews to adopt the course of other European immigrant groups who learned to be white by differentiating and segregating themselves from black people.

In an historical moment in which racial categories were understood to be self-evident and immutable, N undermines racial binaries, identifying with African Americans at a moment in which Jews were internally and externally pressured to assimilate. Unlike films such as 1927s The Jazz Singer, in which Jewish class ascension and assimilation to whiteness is explicitly embraced through blackface performance, Mikey takes on a number of working-class jobs and side hustles with N before finally converting to communism. One could say Jews replaces what is assumed to be an inevitable trajectory of Ashkenazi Jewish assimilation with an alternative path, a multiracial political revolution.

To place Golds racial metaphors in context, during the years of his radicalization in the 1920s, anti-immigrant sentiment saw a dramatic upsurge. Responding to the heyday of the twentieth-century racism exemplified by the reemergence of the northern Ku Klux Klan, the 1924 passage of the Johnson-Reed Act enacted national origin quotas that were intended to reduce immigration from Southern and Eastern Europe to almost zero.

Dividing the globe into East and West, European immigrants were differentiated by their assumed geographical proximity to Asia and Africa, with Jews in particular singled out as abnormally twisted and unassimilable, according to immigration scholar Mae Ngai, linking them phenotypically with African Americans and Asians. Immigrant Jews were not only unassimilable, they were bearers of dangerous, Asiatic communism.

The 1924 act was an attempt to eugenically engineer the nation to an explicitly Anglo-Saxon, pre-Jewish country. Golds celebration of revolution based on Jewish-black identification does not reject the association of Jews with blackness, but rather embraces it. It is through Golds identification with a racially marked Jewishness that he comes to his political awakening.

Jews was not Golds only foray into exploring the aesthetics and politics of race. He early understood that the problem of the twentieth century would be, as W. E. B. Du Bois framed it, the problem of the color line.

Gold was an early champion of the Communist Partys turn to both anti-racist work and revolutionary black nationalism. His first published book was a biography of John Brown, and his nom de guerre, Mike Gold, was adopted from a Jewish Civil War veteran and abolitionist who was a friend of Golds father.

Golds first full-length play, Hoboken Blues, was a surreal, expressionist exploration of both black radical politics, and a satirical rejection of racist minstrelsy. Focusing on a migrant to Harlem who flees the South after his brother is lynched, the plays hero, Sam Pickens, ultimately travels to Hoboken and in a dreamlike sequence becomes president of the city. Yet Pickens eventually wakes up to discover it had all been a dream; he is still unemployed in Harlem, and unsure whether or not Hoboken even exists.

Like a racialized version of Looking Backward, the black narrator dreams of a city where no one is hungry, where no one is lynched, where deres no money or bosses, and men are brudders and yet can do more than imagine it. Most innovative was Golds direction that there were to be no white actors in the play and that white people would be played by black actors in white face masks. Reversing the vogue for blackface performance in the 1920s memorialized in Al Jolsons Jazz Singer, it is black people who command and satirize the representation of whites.

The radicalism of Jews is not only in its political alignments. While even the novels detractors such as Kazin note the books punchy, poetic sentences and the sharp, chaotic montages, Golds critics are often so fixated on his naivety that they assume no purpose to the texts radical style. As Marshall Berman notes, modernity is more than an accretion of technology, it is also a particular way of seeing, a modality of being, a style.

Like Sergei Eisensteins dialectical image that offers two radically contradictory ideas in the same frame, Jews evokes a constant push and pull of the city, an urban maelstrom that it is at once barbaric and utopian, and its barbarism and utopian impulses are contained in a series of cross-cut, jagged images and juxtapositions. The city is as much a character in Jews as N or his parents: the Lower East Side was an immense excitement . . . it roared like the sea. It exploded like fireworks.

The Lower East Side was a gauntlet of whores meaty legs in the street, a saloon goat . . . on the sidewalk that dreamily consumed a Police Gazette, a single white butterfly a playmate caught and then crushed in his hat; a boy killed by a passing delivery wagon whose head was only found hours later attached the axle; warm and sticky summer rain that splattered on roofs like a gangsters blood; a pious rabbi from Poland who bilks his congregants as soon as he can make it to the suburbs; chromos of Buffalo Bill that loom comically and also menacingly over the savages of Mikeys little gang of Yids.

Like the way Ns racial liminality confounds and upsets assumptions about identity, so these strange, lurid, grotesque, and sometimes funny juxtapositions astonish and fragment bourgeois notions of order and rationality the city is supposed to provide. Capitalism in Jews is neither rational nor just. It is both the expressway that cuts through the neighborhood and displaces Mikeys neighbors, years before urban renewal, and it is Mikeys father vomiting from lead poisoning in his capacity as a housepainter beneath it.

Little attention has also been paid to the particularly Eastern European and Levantine Jewish elements of story-telling in the text. Gold spends a great deal of time explaining that the father in the novel is a storyteller, and his stories extend sometimes over days, defy reason, leap with fancy, and are part of an oral Yiddish tradition that spanned from Romania to Turkey to Russia. And while Jews is a realist text in one sense, it does not conform to the narrative guidelines of realist drama.

As Patrick Chura, Golds biographer, notes, Gold was an enthusiast like his father of Yiddish drama, noting the the tight, well-made problem play was not to audiences liking. . . . They demanded life in full abundance. Like Yiddish theater, Jews is above anything else abundant, nonlinear, with one story line blending into another, some dropped entirely, and an end that comes down abruptly and with no warning. For an Anglo ear, Jews has no logic; for a Yiddish inflected audience, reading Jews is like listening in on a dozen conversations among the temple alter kakers.

Golds Yiddishkeit ear extends to Jews politics on Zionism as well. While Gold displays a kind of grand Whitmanesque sympathy for all he surveys on his beloved Chrystie Street the sex workers, the gangsters, the hustlers, the ultraorthodox, the small-time miserly shop keepers he shows only unsparing contempt for Baruch Goldbarb: A Zionist leader and the owner of a big dry goods store.

Goldfarb and his associate, Zechariah Cohen, run a fraternal lodge that engages in vote-rigging, labor spying, and shady real estate schemes to gentrify the then-outer boroughs of Kensington and Borough Park. Mikeys father Herman, taken in by Cohen, ultimately falls to his near-death at Cohens unsafe worksite and is rendered disabled, despairing, and poor for the rest of his days. The implication is clear: for Golds broken Jewish nation who learned to revere is writers and men of thought, Zionism was nothing but a bourgeois scam for Herman and working-class Jews like him.

That Jews is an important novel should go without saying. But its importance is not just that it is a novel that helped launch the most significant revolutionary literary movement of the twentieth century, or a novel that attempted to redefine Jewishness at a pivotal moment in its racial and class trajectory toward a progressive, democratic direction. It is also a novel of immigrants, as Gold himself says in the opening chapters.

America is so rich and fat, he writes of his neighborhood, because it has eaten the tragedy of millions of immigrants.

While the five or so million of the United States Ashkenazi Jews are, for the most part, no longer the racialized migrants of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, the decision the novel poses is one recent immigrants face: to align with the whiteness associated with upward class mobility, or align with the multiethnic working class for a democratic, even socialist future. Jews is in some ways a chaotic and open text precisely because such trajectories are fluid, identities are in flux, all part of the great making and unmaking class and race in the United States.

Not everything about Gold is savory. There are aspects of Golds career that rightly strike contemporary audiences as difficult to embrace. He was openly homophobic in the 1930s (a position for which he later expressed a great deal of regret), and he followed the zigzags of the Soviet Unions foreign policy in most cases, except perhaps its most catastrophic: it is doubtful that Gold followed the Soviet Unions pro-Zionist line in the late 1940s. But Golds legacy is far greater than the sum of his failures or political insights.

Gold is important to recover only because he is one of dozens, hundreds of writers whose legacy and output was silenced by the Red Scare and Cold War. Golds project was to create a working-class literature written for, by, and about working-class people, and Gold understood that a working-class literature would also have to be a radical literature, and a racial literature.

And he understood that such a project required conflict with a literary establishment. It would mean a literary class war. It would mean Hemingway leaving a note in Golds office, Hemingway tells Mike Gold to go Fuck himself as Gold dragged him one too many times as a bourgeois writer; it would more seriously mean the loss of his career and income during the McCarthy years.

Yet in a contemporary world of MFA programs, Guggenheim fellowships, and NPR booklists, Partisan Review editor Joseph Freemans insult to Gold seems the highest compliment: he cared more for socialism than his career. We could use more writers of such temperament.

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Mike Gold, the Writer Who Believed Workers Could Speak for Themselves - Jacobin magazine

Jewish teens who couldn’t tour Israel travel across the UK instead – Jewish News

Posted By on July 13, 2021

Jewish teens who were denied the opportunity to go on Israel tour this summer have instead travelled the length and breadth of the UK.

BBYO UK arranged its Trek UK amid continued travel restrictions due to coronavirus, with 16-year-olds touring Britains natural and cultural sites as an alternative.

The first of two groups embarked on their 10-day trip on 5 July, while the second will commence on 2 August. Highlights include the Peak District and a Beatles heritage tour in Liverpool, a Jewish Heritage walking trail of York, a Glaswegian community Shabbat programme and a lake cruise on Windermere.

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Coby Brown, 17, BBYO UK & Ireland national president said: Over the last couple of years, all youth movements have gone through tricky and troubling times. Were really lucky that BBYO are giving us the opportunity to tour and explore the country, enabling us to do things we couldnt have done otherwise, led by our older peers and madrichim. I cant wait to go on the second trip in August!

BBYO Trek on Shabbat

Natasha Shaw, executive director, commented: We aimed to build something close to the experience youd have in Israel but not in Israel. After a year and a half of cancellations and disappointments it was so important for us to create a bespoke programme for our members and theyre absolutely loving it so far.

The trip is all about having fun after a year of being locked up, bonding with friends, meeting new people, enjoying the independence of travelling around and celebrating Jewish life in the UK.

While Coronavirus prevented the 16-year-olds from spending a month in Israel after taking their GCSEs, it has not however stopped BBYO ensuring Israel education, with the youth group flying an Israeli educator to join the August trek.

The two trips have up to 20 participants each, and it costs 1,425.

BBYO Trek

Link:

Jewish teens who couldn't tour Israel travel across the UK instead - Jewish News

Memo to Tom Kean, Jr: Invite Liz Cheney, Not Kevin McCarthy, as the Special Guest to your Campaign Kickoff – InsiderNJ

Posted By on July 13, 2021

Dear Tom,

I will be endorsing you for election in 2022 to the US House of Representatives in New Jerseys 7th Congressional District, just as I did in 2020, against the incumbent Democratic Congressman, Tom Malinowski. I would note that since the hostile takeover of the GOP by the neofascist forces of Donald Trump in 2016, you and Congressman Chris Smith are the only New Jersey Republicans I have endorsed for Federal office.

You are worthy of my support. You have been an outstanding leader of the New Jersey State Senate Republican Minority, and your ethics and competency are unimpeachable.

Yet there is an even deeper reason for my continued support of you.

As a third generation American Jew, I can say unequivocally and without hyperbole that your grandfather, Congressman RobertWinthrop Kean, was the best friend that the American Jewish community has ever had in the United States Congress.

Bob Kean was an outspoken advocate for the rescue and immigration into America of European Jewish refugees during the Holocaust. He courageously undertook such advocacy against the antisemitic oppositionof Rooseveltadministration Assistant Secretary of State Breckinridge Long. Thanks to the unceasing efforts of Bob Kean, the Roosevelt administration was forced to relent and form the War Refugee Board to facilitate theimmigration ofEuropean Jewish refugees. After the war, Bob Kean became a leading voice in the House of Representatives for the creation of the State of Israel.

His son, your father, Tom Kean, the greatest New Jersey 20th Century governor, admirably carried on this tradition. During his administration, by executive order, he created both the New Jersey Israel Commission and the Holocaust Education Commission. I had the honor to work with the latter commission in crafting the legislation that mandatedthe teachingof the Holocaust in New Jerseys public schools.

I had a deeper experience with Tom Kean, however that bound me forever to him. He may not remember it, but I will never forget it.

It happened on the first New Jersey Holocaust Education Mission to Poland and Israel during the summer of 1995, on which both your father and I were participants.

We visited Auschwitz, the extermination camp where three million Jews were murdered. There is a location at the camp called the White Pond, where the ashes of 750,000 Jews were dumped. The leaders of the mission asked me to recite the Kel Mole Rachamim prayer, the Jewish memorial prayer for the deceased.

I have led numerous Jewish prayer services during my 71 years of life, but none was as difficult as that. Most of my paternal extended family who remained in the Polish towns of Pultusk and Rozan had been murdered in the Holocaust, and they were very much in my mind at that moment. Reciting thatprayer left me in a totally distraught state. I walked away to the bus with overwhelming emotional pain.

Walking right behind me was your father, Tom Kean. He came over to me and complimented me for the feeling I showed as I recited the prayer. We then discussed the Holocaust and whether it would ever be possible for Nazism to come to power in America.

Your father, Tom Kean, literally felt my pain. I will never forget that.

And I know, Tom, Jr., that you feel the same depth of commitment as your father and grandfather to Holocaust education and the survival and security of the State of Israel.

What a difference there is between Bob Kean, Tom Kean, and Tom Kean, Jr from Donald Trump! You know, Donald Trump, who told his former chief of staff, General JohnKelly, Well, Hitler did a lot of good things. https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2021/07/07/politics/donald-trump-adolf-hitler-book-claims/index.html

And in a nutshell, that is what makes it so inappropriate and politically self-destructive that you have invited House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy as your special guest for your campaign kickoff. Last year, you lost to Malinowski due to your being branded by his campaign as a Trump loyalist, in spite of the fact that you had no record whatsoever of any association with him. By inviting as your special guest Trumps leading enabler, Kevin McCarthy, you are making it much easier for Malinowski to unfairly tag you as a Trumpist again.

As Trumps weak Vidkin Quisling, Kevin McCarthy has earned an ignominious place in American history by his efforts to obstruct any bipartisan investigation into the events of theJanuary 6insurrection against the United States government, incited and inspired by Donald Trump.

Trumps action constituted the worst abuse of power and act of traitorous behavior ever committed by any American president. McCarthys entire focus has been to shield Trump from any accountability for his egregious breach of his presidential oath of office and betrayal of his nation.

Just as Henry Clay is remembered in history as The Great Compromiser, Kevin McCarthy will forevermore be remembered as The Great Obstructionist. He echoed Trumps Big Lie that the Donald was fraudulently cheated out of an election victory. McCarthy then went on to vote against the creation of an independent bipartisan commission to investigate theJanuary 6insurrection. And he supported removing Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., from House leadership due to her vote to impeach Trump and her rebuttal of his false stolen election claims.

McCarthys despicably perverse leadership is also distinguished by his efforts to protect the vile, lowlife, profoundly evil, racist,fascist, antisemitic QAnon acolyte Georgia Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene while attempting to destroy Americas leading Republican heroine, Liz Cheney. It is no wonder that he is even more toxic politically in New Jersey than Donald Trump himself.

Tom Malinowski has two of the nations most highly skilled political media people in Brad Lawrence and Steve DeMicco. You can be rest assured that they will run commercials linking Kevin McCarthy and you. The commercials will end with segmentsfrom the following New York Times film of scenes from the insurrection:

I suspect that you have made the decision to invite McCarthy on the advice of your top advisors. I also suspect that some of these advisors may be on the payroll of the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC). If so, these advisors have a serious conflict of interest. They are being paid to protect the interests of Donald Trump and not you. You should remove them from your campaign immediately.

As long as you are linked with Kevin McCarthy, you are a certain loser. He is a cancer on your campaign, but there is one dramatic action you can take to remove the cancer. You can disinvite Kevin McCarthy and invite as your special guest for the campaign kickoff, Liz Cheney.

I have had my difference with Liz Cheney on environmental issues. She is, however, an admirable smaller, smarter government classical conservative, as distinguished from Kevin McCarthy. And she has now earned a place in American history as a major profile in courage.

You will become an instant national hero if you substitute Liz Cheney for the infamous Kevin McCarthy as your campaign kickoff special guest.

Yes, you will lose the votes of MAGA-types in your district. Yet you will more than make up for this by the thousands of Democrats and Independents who will cross over to vote for you.

You will also lose the large funding from the NRCC. You will be able to make up for this in large part by anti-Trump fundraising sources. Certainly, you will have sufficient funds to get your message out and your new, anti-Trumpist message will be much more compelling than anything Tom Malinowski can develop.

In short, it will be tough, but you will win by jettisoning McCarthy and the Trump enablers from your campaign. You will become a national leader in the battle to rescue the Republican Party from the neofascist Trumpism that now controls it.

There is one other thing regarding the legacy of Bob Kean that you will be able to accomplish. In addition to removing the stench of Trumpism, you can help restore the glory of the Eisenhower legacy that has been eliminated from the contemporary Republicanism.

Your grandfather, Bob Kean was a staunch backer of Ike. Last month, the C-Span survey of historians again ranked Ike as our fifth greatest president.

https://www.insidernj.com/bern-shanley-new-jerseys-prime-connection-eisenhower-legacy/

This rating is richly deserved. Ikes accomplishments were towering and historic, including 1) his negotiated ending of the Korean War in 1953; 2) his refusal to intervene in the French colonial war in Vietnam in 1954; 3) hisenactment in 1956 of the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act.which created our present Interstate Highways System, which made possible the growth and flourishing of American suburbia; 4) his enforcement of desegregation of schools in Little Rock in 1957; 5) his enactment of the first civil rights legislation since Reconstruction in 1957 and 1960; and 6) his farewell speech, in which he warned of themilitary-industrial complex.

Ikewas botha great president and supreme war hero. I am an Eisenhower Republican, one of the few left in our country. Because of that, there is no place in todays Republican Party for me. And nor do I want one, for a Jew proud of his heritage can never be comfortable in a neofascist party.

Dwight David Eisenhower could never be nominated for president by todays Republican Party. Neither could another great Republican President, Ronald Reagan, who ranked ninth in the C-Span survey.

Instead, todays neofascist Republican Party prefers to the physically fit and heroic Ike and Reagan a fat, gluttonous, orange haired Donald Trump, a corrupt, crooked business fraud and failure, a bigoted, racist low-life, an ignoramus of history, and a cheap and ugly Sonny Liston-like political thug.

My friend, Tom Kean, Jr., the Republican Party is your historic birthright.Bob Kean was close with Ike, and your father was close with Ronald Reagan. This is a legacy of greatness, and you can now add to it. If you join forces with Liz Cheney and reject the political toxicity of Kevin McCarthy, you will gain a place in history in the struggle of the Republican Party to regain its soul.

Alan J. Steinberg served as Regional Administrator of Region 2 EPA during the administration of former President George W. Bush and as Executive Director of the New Jersey Meadowlands Commission.

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Memo to Tom Kean, Jr: Invite Liz Cheney, Not Kevin McCarthy, as the Special Guest to your Campaign Kickoff - InsiderNJ

Tokyo Olympics: All the Jewish athletes to watch – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on July 13, 2021

The 2020 Tokyo Olympics are finally happening, a full year after they were planned. And yes, theyre still being called the 2020 Olympics, even though theyre happening in 2021.

The Jewish athletes competing this year andthere are many are the products of inspiring journeys. Theres the fencer looking for redemption, Israels first Olympic surfer, one of the greatest canoe paddlers of all time, a teen track star para-athlete, and so many more.

The games run July 23 through Aug. 8; the Paralympics will be held Aug. 24 to Sept. 5.

Here are many of the inspiring Jewish athletes to root for.

Basketball, USA

Is Sue Bird one of the greatest Jewish athletes of all time? Perhaps.

The basketball legend has won gold medals with the U.S. womens basketball team in the last four yes, four Olympics.(The team has not lost at the games since 1992.) Bird, now 40, is back for her fifth, and likely last, Olympics.

The child of a Jewish father and non-Jewish mother, Bird was born and raised in Syosset, Long Island. Shes been a basketball star since her debut for the University of Connecticut in 1998 and selection as the WNBAs No. 1 overall draft pick in 2002 by the Seattle Storm. In her nearly 20 years as a pro, Bird has won four WNBA championships (includinglast year in the Covid-19 bubble) and is a 12-time All-Star.

Bird also gained Israeli citizenship in 2006 in a basketball-motivated decision, so she could play for European teams. Her citizenship also allowed her to connect to her Jewish identity.

It was cool because what I found was in this effort to create an opportunity in my basketball career, I was able to learn a lot about a culture that I probably wouldnt have tapped into otherwise,Bird told the Washington Jewish Museum.

Read more on Sue Bird here.

The womens basketball tournament begins on July 26; the U.S. plays its first game on July 27 against Nigeria. The gold medal game is Aug. 8.

Rhythmic Gymnastics, Israel

Israels best chance at winning a medal is 22-year-old Linoy Ashram. The Mizrahi and Sephardi gymnast (her father is Yemeni Jewish and her mother is Greek Jewish) is set to compete in her first Olympics after winningin the individual rhythmic category at the European Championships in 2020the first athlete to take the gold medal in decades who was not from a former Soviet country or Bulgaria.

Ashram has many firsts for her country: Shes the first rhythmic gymnast from Israel to win an individual all-around medal at the World Championships, the first to win gold in the World Cup series and the first to win a European All-Around title. Can she be the first to win gold in gymnastics at the Olympics? Well find out early next month.

Read more on Linoy Ashram here.

The rhythmic gymnastics competition takes place Aug. 6-8.

Tennis, Argentina

Diego Schwartzman is the highest-ranked Jewish tennis player in the world. Last year he broke into the top 10 for the first time,becomingthe shortest top 8 playersince 5-foot-6 Harold Solomon, also Jewish, in 1981. The Argentines listed height of 5-7 iscalledone of the more generous measurements in professional sports helikely standsaround 5-4 (the U.S. Open lists himat 5-5). Watching him go shot to shot with players that are over a foot taller is nothing short of remarkable.

Nicknamed El Peque, or Shorty, the 28-year-old is set to play in his first Olympics. (For tennis, qualifications are based on world rankings, with the top 56 players becoming eligible.)

Schwartzman is open about and proud of his Jewish identity.Last year hewrote movingly on his familys Holocaust history, and how his great-grandfather escaped a train car headed for a concentration camp and ended up in Argentina.

I am Jewish and in Argentina, we have many Jewish [people] there, and all the people there know me,he told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency in 2017.

Read more on Diego Schwartzman here.

The mens tennis tournament begins on July 24.

Beach volleyball, USA

Alix Klineman had played indoor volleyball for Stanford in college and professionally following her graduation in 2011. But in 2016, she failed to make the U.S. Olympic Volleyball Team and vowed to find another way to compete at the games. So she switched to beach volleyball. Unlike indoor volleyball, which has teams with rosters selected by coaches, beach volleyball is a two-person sport dependent on your own results with a partner.

I looked at the beach as a new opportunity and a chance to chase my dreams without anybody having to give me approval or put me on a roster,she said in 2019. The biggest thing was pursuing the Olympics and getting a new shot at that.

Klineman teamed with two-time Olympian April Ross she had been partnered with three-time gold medalist Kerri Walsh Jennings and they quickly rose in the rankings. They are entering the Tokyo Games with a world ranking of No. 2, with a more than solid chance of winning gold.

Klineman, 31, was raised in Southern California in a Jewish family. In 2015, she wasinducted into the SoCal Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.

Read more on Alix Klineman here.

The womens beach volleyball tournament begins on July 24.

Surfing, Israel

Anat Lelior is Israels first and only Olympic surfer. Surfing is new to the Olympics, andonly 20 men and 20 women will be competingthis summer. Lelior, 21, qualified as the highest-ranked female surfer from Europe (Israel competes in European leagues). Lelior, who hails from Tel Aviv and served in the Israeli military, started surfing at 5, and by 12 she had won the Israeli national championships.

I know people arent aware of surfing in Israel, and the fact that I get to be the one to show people that were capable of more than they think, thats just amazing, Leliortold Surfline. But more than that, I want to show kids, women, everyone from everywhere, that they can do anything they want. Theres no limits. I mean, look at me. I had no idea that this would happen, and now Im going to the freaking Olympics.

Read more on Anat Lelior here.

The surfing competition is subject to change depending on wave conditions at Tsurigasaki Surfing Beach. The womens competition is tentatively scheduled for July 25-28.

Baseball, Israel

The Cinderella story continues.

In 2017, Israels national baseball team which included several American Jewish players who became Israeli citizens to represent the country surprised observers by placing sixth at the World Baseball Classic, an international tournament of the worlds best teams, with wins over top squads from South Korea, Chinese Taipei, the Netherlands and Cuba. Israel was far from a top-10 powerhouse at the time, not even ranked in the top 10 teams in Europe. That made sense, as few Israelis play the sport.

Along the way, the team ginned up enthusiasm for baseball in Israel and gave some under-the-radar Jewish players, many who had spent several years in the minor leagues, new chances to shine. Oh, and there was that endearing mascot alife-sized Mensch on a Bench.

In 2019, Team Israel won the European Baseball Championship to qualify for the Olympics. The current roster is anchored by de facto captain Danny Valencia who has Cuban and Jewish heritage and hit 96 home runs over eight Major League Baseball seasons andIan Kinsler, a former four-time MLB All-Star who made it to Israel on one of the last flights before Covid-19 shutdowns last year to earn his Israeli citizenship.

One Bay Area native is on the team, Joey Wagman of Danville.

Only six teams are in play (the field also includes South Korea, Japan, Mexico, the Dominican Republic and the United States), so Team Israel has a chance of snagging a medal.

Read more on Ian Kinsler here and on Bay Area players with connections to the team here.

The baseball tournament runs July 28-Aug. 7. Israels first game is against the United States.

Canoe slalom, Australia

Jessica Foxis known as the greatest paddler of all time: She has 10 World Championship medals, including seven gold medals, and seven overall World Cup titles. Her parents,Richard FoxandMyriam Jerusalmi, also were Olympic canoeists Myriam, a French-Jewish athlete, won bronze at the 1996 Atlanta Games.Mom is now coaching her daughter.

Born in Marseille, France, Fox moved to Australia at 4, so her dad could take up a coaching position with the Australian Olympic team.

Both my parents competing in the Olympic Games is something pretty special, shesaid. It definitely inspired me to get to this position. Winning a medal is something that you dream [of] and Im proud to follow in my mothers footsteps.

Fox, 27, won silverin the K-1 slalom competition at the 2012 London Olympics and bronze in the 2016 Rio Games. This year, for the first time, women will also be competing in C-1 slalom so Fox, ranked No. 1 in the world, is favored to win not just one but two gold medals.

In 2012, Fox became the the second Australian Jewish athlete to ever win an Olympic medal.

Read more on Jessica Fox here.

The womens K-1 slalom competition is July 25-27. C-1 slalom is July 28-29.

Fencing, USA

Eli Dershwitzis returning to the Olympics for redemption.

At the 2016 Rio Games, the Jewish saber fencer lost in the opening round. In 2021, hes ranked No. 2 in the world and hoping to medal.

Dershwitz, who started fencing at 9, would win back-to-back NCAA championships for Harvard in 2017 and 2018. In Tokyo, hewill aimto become the fifth U.S. man to win a medal in saber fencing. No American man has ever won gold in the category.

Born and raised in Sherborn, Massachusetts, to a Jewish family, Dershwitzs maternalgrandparents are Holocaust survivors. He has a twin sister, Sally, who worked on the frontlines caring for patients during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Dershwitz grew up attending a Conservative synagogue in Natick, Massachusetts, andtold Hillel Internationalbefore the Rio Games that he considers himself a proud member of the Jewish community.

The Jewish community has been very supportive throughout my journey to the Olympics, and I look forward to representing them on the world stage, hesaidin 2016.

Read more on Eli Dershwitz here.

The mens saber fencing individual competition takes place on July 24; the mens saber team competition is on July 28.

Racewalking, Australia

Jemima Montagwas perhaps destined for Jewish athletic greatness. Her parents, Ray and Amanda, met at the 1989 Maccabiah Games the Olympics for Jewish athletes held in Israel where Amanda was competing in the heptathlon and Ray was a cricketer. They hit it off on the flight home to Australia.

Growing up, the Montags encouraged their daughters (Jemima is one of three) to try everything, from long jump to shot put to ballet. But for Montag, race walking just clicked.

I found that my combination of endurance, hypermobile joints and fiery competitiveness were a great trio for racewalking, shesaid.

Montag soon became one of the best racewalkers in Australia, but after the World Youth Championships in 2015, she decided to step away from the sport. A family ski trip to Japan in 2017 reignited her competitive spirit. Her sister joked shed love to return to the country for the Olympics, and her mom encouraged her to go for it. A year later, at the 2018 Commonwealth Games a tournament of the Commonwealth nations, or the former territories under British control Montag won gold in the 20km event.

Montag credits her Holocaust survivor grandparents for her work ethic and resilience. When a training session or race feels tough, she thinks about them andreminds herselfthat grit and perseverance are in my DNA.

Read more about Jemima Montag here.

The womens 20km race walk will take place on Aug. 6.

Judo, Israel

At the 2016 Rio Olympics,Or Ori Sassonwon bronze in the mens heavyweight judo competition and became a national hero overnight not just for his skill but also his sportsmanship after one of his opponents, from Egypt,refused to shake his hand following a match.

Every boy and girl saw not only a great athlete but a man with values, then-Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Sasson in a phone call that was broadcast live on Israeli TV. You showed the true face of Israel, its beautiful face.

Sasson spent the pandemic year delay competing on Israels version of The Masked Singer his costume was a falafel sandwich and finished third.Watch one of his performances here.

This year, the Kurdish Jewish Sasson now 30 and likely in his last Olympics is set to compete in the heavyweight competition and in the team competition, an addition to the Olympics judo lineup. Judo has been the pride of Israels Olympic fortunes, winning five of the nations nine overall medals. (See more on one of Sassons teammates below.)

Read more about Ori Sasson here.

The mens 100+ kg competition is on July 30. The team competition is on July 31.

Judo, Israel

Sagi Mukimade headlines when he befriended an Iranian judoka, Saeid Mollaei, who was forced to throw a match to avoid competing against an Israeli athlete. Mollaei fled Iran as a dissident and received refugee status in Germany.The story of their friendship is now being made into a TV show.

But Muki,29, is an Olympic medal contender in his own right. The half-middleweight judoka is a two-time Israeli national champion,a2019 world champion, and the 2017 and 2018 European champion. He was expected to medal at the 2016 Rio Games but was hampered by an injury.

Born and raised in Netanya, Israel, to a Yemeni Jewish family, he started focusing on judo when he was 8 years old.

The mens under-81 kg competition is on July 27.

Marathon, Israel

Maru Teferi, who was born in northwestern Ethiopia and immigrated to Israel with his Jewish family when he was 14, is the Israeli record holder in six distances, including the half marathon and the marathon. His fastest marathon time of 2:07:20, run right before the pandemic in February 2020 is just 6 minutes off the world record.

Now hes set to compete in his second Olympics. This time hell be joined by his wife, Selamawit Selam Dagnachew Teferi. Theyll be the first married couple to represent Israel at the Olympics.

Teferi, 28, met now-wife Selam while training in Ethiopia in 2012. Selam, 27, is not Jewish, but she moved to Israel in 2017 after the couple married and became an Israeli citizen. That made her eligible to represent Israel at the Olympics.

Even in our wildest dreams, we didnt think this would be possible, Selamsaid.

Read more about Maru Teferi here.

The mens marathon will take place on the last day of the Olympics, Aug. 8. To watch Selam, the womens 5,000m competition begins July 30; the finals are Aug. 2. The womens 10,000m is on Aug. 7.

Paralympics track and field, USA

Ezra Frech is only 16 years old, but hes already made a name for himself as a para-athlete. The Los Angeles native competes in the high jump, long jump and the 100m race.

Due to a congenital abnormality, Frech was born with only one finger on his left hand, and he was missing his left knee and shinbone.At 2 he had surgery to remove the curved part of his leg, and had a toe attached to his left hand. By 9 hewas on Ellentalking about his athletics and advocating for adaptive sports, and at the 2019 World Para Athletics Championships, he was the youngest athlete in the world to compete at 14.

Everywhere you go, people dont think youre capable of what an able-bodied person can do, Frechsaid. Ill go to my high school track meet and they dont expect the one-legged kid to go out and win the competition. When I was younger it got to me, but now its a motivation and excites me that I have a chance to prove people wrong, to shock them and turn some heads.

His mom,Bahar Soomekh, is a Persian Jewish actress. She fled Iran with her family in 1979. His dad, Clayton Frech, left his job in 2013 to foundAngel City Sportsto bring adaptive sports opportunities to Los Angeles.

Frech saidhis goal in Tokyo is to win multiple medals. He has no shortage of confidence it will happen.

You can quote me on this: I will be a multi medalist when I walk away from Tokyo, he said. We can look back after the Games and Ill say I called it.

Read more about Ezra Frech here.

Marathon, Israel

Israel has another marathoner in Maor Tiyouri.Like Teferi, this is Tiyouris second Olympics, but qualifying this time was much more challenging for the 30-year-old runner. For the womens marathon competition, the Olympic standard the time needed to qualify for the games dropped 15 minutes, from 2 hours, 45 minutes to 2:29:30. For Tiyouri, that meant running 13 minutes faster than her personal best.

When they changed it back in 2018 I was devastated because it seemed like such a huge jump at the time and I didnt fully believe then that I could quite get it in time for Tokyo, Tiyouritold Alma. I knew I had to raise my game if I wanted to be on that starting line. And she made it running 2:29:03 in April.

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Tokyo Olympics: All the Jewish athletes to watch - The Jewish News of Northern California

‘My Unorthodox Life’: ex-Hasidic TV trend gets reality treatment J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on July 11, 2021

The Jewish community has obsessed over the slow-toned narrative beats of haredi life on Shtisel, and criticized the escape-from-ultra-Orthodox-Brooklyn plotline of Unorthodox.

At the same time, the unscripted/reality show trend continues to barrel through television culture. Now My Unorthodox Life a new, unscripted show that will drop July 14 on Netflix strikes at the nexus between these two worlds.

The show is about a mother-of-four, Julia Haart (formerly named Talia Hendler), who left her ultra-Orthodox community in Monsey, New York, and within seven years became CEO and co-owner of Elite World Group and creative director of its fashion division.

Julia shares small pieces of the journey she has made from dressing modestly and wearing sheitels (wigs for Orthodox wives) to donning on-brand heart-shaped sunglasses, miniskirts, jumpsuits and hot pants. Her revealing fashion proclaims her self-reinvention and displays her newfound freedom as she ambitiously runs her businesses and tries to influence her childrens lives.

I was covered my entire life, so every low-cut top, every miniskirt is an emblem of freedom, she says in the first episode.

The unscripted production is slick and theres an interesting core story: Julias goal to liberate and empower people in a way that she thinks allows them to be the most authentic and free versions of themselves.

At Elite, a talent media conglomerate, Julia encourages clients to become influencers and start their own brands, to revolutionize the modeling industry and to expand career life.

What Julia has managed to achieve career-wise in about seven years in her 40s is impressive. The show illustrates her self-confidence and ambition in a manner that may seem unbelievable to those of us who have spent seven years working hard and yet not becoming a key player in a global company.

I had no money. No margin for failure, Julia says in a release distributed by Netflix. I had to succeed for my sake and the sake of my children. And I did.

In many ways, My Unorthodox Life is a typical reality show in the ways that it manipulates the audience, such as by using ominous music to indicate a dramatic scene.

But some scenes seem inauthentic and over-orchestrated.

One example of a scene that seems particularly unnecessary is when Elites chief operating officer RobertJulias second in command and her constant companionhas to babysit Julias sisters kids.

Elsewhere, dramatic moments fail to deliver: Will weather prevent the Haarts from taking their helicopter to the airport before their Paris Fashion Week trip? (Is this a real problem that rich people have?) When a young, married couple gets fertility tests, what will they discover? (Nothing, really.) And what happens when one of Imas bags goes missing and she doesnt have an Hermes outfit for the Hermes show? (Julia on the show: You cant wear Louis Vuitton to an Hermes show. Me to an empty room: Of course not.)

Julia is the consummate meddling mom who rails against fundamentalism as an excuse to orchestrate life for the people she loves. Shes ambitious and devoted to her business, sometimes at the expense of spending time with her husband. She entraps Robert into meeting with a matchmaker, even though he said hes not ready to be dating.

She talks about not wanting to hurt or embarrass family members with her memoir, but wrote some incredibly graphic scenes about her sex life and gave them to her kids to read.

She wants others to experience freedom the way she defines it. For example, her youngest son, Aron, self-identifies as a black hatter and wants to remain in Monseys world of Torah, but she wants him to be part of the outside world. And when a young woman is on the verge of leaving her religious community, she wants her to find empowerment through makeup and wardrobe makeovers.

While I can appreciate her embrace of a world she was denied, the imposition of her freedom on others struck me as its own version of oppression.

What the Monsey community would pronounce as profane is sacred freedom to Julia; she doesnt compromise or censor herself. She advises her daughter and son-in-law to role play and change up positions to keep things sexually exciting. She recommends women use vibrators because self-knowledge includes knowing what brings you pleasure. She drops f-words galore.

Were not in Monsey anymore.

When Julia meets with her book editor, she says her memoir isnt really about Judaism, but about fundamentalism, and is therefore relatable to people from any fundamentalist upbringing, any lifestyle where women are less than.

While some ultra-Orthodox Jews might object to being tabbed fundamentalist (if they ever happened across this show, which they might not), theres no denying the seriousness of one of Julias declarations to the camera: If I hadnt left the day I did, I would have killed myself.

Most TV and big-screen depictions of ultra-Orthodox communities focus on their restrictions and resulting conflicts.

But My Unorthodox Life deviates from this Orthodoxy as oppression script in its depiction of a relatively healthy co-parenting situation after Julias departure. Though he stays in the community, her ex-husband understands what his family members need and comes to terms with it. The worlds are separate, and the ex-spouses each live within their own comfort zones, with the kids landing at various points on the religious spectrum between them.

I was covered my entire life, so every low-cut top, every miniskirt is an emblem of freedom.

Daughter Batsheva whose style and vocal inflections render her a little bit Alexis Rose (Schitts Creek) and who is identified in the press kit as a TikToker wants to dress modern, but her husband, Ben, tells her he needs some time to come to terms with it religiously. Son Shlomo has just started dating, and has trouble removing his dates bra (Congrats, Shlomo). Daughter Miriam, who is bisexual and an app creator, seems the most comfortable within her mothers new world, especially when it comes to her prolific dating life.

I dont think I should stop doing what I want based on what society thinks is too much, Miriam says after a makeout session at a party with a girl shes dating. Im just trying to be myself and thats whats most important.

The overlay of Judaic touchpoints in the shows narrative is both baked-in and, at points, superficial.

For instance, when Paris Fashion Week overlaps with Sukkot, aside from an outdoor meal in a sukkah in a 12th-century castle rental, theres no conflict for anyone whos present, even Julias religious sister and family. Perhaps thats because money makes all observance possible anywhere, or maybe its a reflection of how Julia relates to Judaism: acknowledging its presence, but giving it no control or real influence on what she says or does. But by the end of the series, Judaism gets a bit of PR redemption. Thats the nice thing about Judaism in general, Julias ex tells his son in a conversation about his Jewish observance. Its not one-size-fits-all.

In one scene an overly dramatic funeral-at-sea for a friends insecurities Julia invokes the ritual of tashlich, in which bread pieces (representing sin) are symbolically cast into a body of water.

In this moment, Julia takes something she found meaningful during her upbringing (amid the oppression) and brings it into her current life.

Those of us who grew up with a deep Jewish education may not call on those moments in daily life, and very likely do not have insecurities funerals in a Jewish framework. But moments like these in My Unorthodox Life remind us that we can use the things weve learned as tools to shape meaning for ourselves, and others, in whatever world we live.

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'My Unorthodox Life': ex-Hasidic TV trend gets reality treatment J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Developer claims anti-Hasidic bias in lawsuits over thwarted warehouse project – Times Herald-Record

Posted By on July 11, 2021

NEW WINDSOR A four-year controversy over a proposed warehouse development that neighbors fiercely opposehas now spawned its fourth court case.

The latest lawsuit was filed last week in state Supreme Court in Goshen by the owner of the 120-acre property at Route 207 and Toleman Road and the developer who planned to build Stewart Hill Industrial Park, a project consisting of nearly 500,000 square feet of mostly warehouse space.

The plaintiffs are asking the court to overturn the town's recent rezoning of their property, which would restrict it to residential development. They were making their second attempt to get Planning Board approval for their project after a judge voided their 2019 approval in a lawsuit brought by the neighbors.

Rejection: Board denies moratorium waiver for warehouse developer

Overturned: Court invalidates approval for New Windsor warehouse plans

Approval: Developer gets conditional OK for warehouse project

Included in both the new lawsuit and a similar case the developer brought against the New Windsor Town Board in federal court in February are his claimthat town officials began working with the neighbors to thwart the project after learning of his ties to the Hasidic community of Kiryas Joel.

The developer is Zigmund Brach, who is currently building the 181-home Smith Farm project in Monroe and 482-home Forest Edge in Kiryas Joel. His evidence for possible anti-Hasidic motivation was an email from a resident to fellow warehouse opponents and apparently forwarded to town officials that urges them to Google Brach's name for information about his "past real estate dealings in Kiryas Joel."

Neighbors have fought the warehouse proposal since 2017, arguing it didn't belong in a largely residential area and would lower home property values and have other negative effects for more than 70 nearby homes. They won a round of the litigation in 2020 when a judge agreed the project didn't conform to the town's zoning.

Brach and the property owner, Henry Van Leeuwen, have both appealed the decision and submitted a revised development plan in response to the ruling. They also sued the Town Board in December after it imposed a development moratorium and refused to grant Stewart Hill a waiver so the Planning Board could review the new plans.

A judge sided with Brach and Van Leeuwen on the waiver denial in May, but the decision was moot by then. The town had finished updating its Comprehensive Plan and zoning and lifted the moratorium. Among the zoning changes was one switching the bulk of the Stewart Hill property to residential developmentinstead of offices and light industry.

Van Leeuwen is a longtime New Windsor resident and local business owner who served on the town Planning Board for decades. He stepped down in 2017, shortly before the application was made to that board for the warehouse project.

The court papers say he is 81 and had been trying for years to sell or develop his land off Toleman Road and Route 207 in order to "settle his estate."

Attorneys for Brach and Van Leeuwen claim that town officials "entered into a conspiracy" with neighbors of the development site to stop the project after Brach disclosed his interest in the property as part of the lawsuit the neighbors brought. They argue the rezoning of his property was unjustified and amounted to illegal "spot zoning."

More than $600,000 had been spent on the Stewart Hill plans by the time the moratorium was imposed. Brach cleared 16 acres of the property in 2020 but was stopped from removing more trees by a court injunction because of the neighbors' pending lawsuit.

cmckenna@th-record.com

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Developer claims anti-Hasidic bias in lawsuits over thwarted warehouse project - Times Herald-Record

The Vigil to release on July 9 – The Tribune India

Posted By on July 11, 2021

PictureWorks has acquired the rights of The Vigil, a horror film starring Dave Davis, Menashe Lustig and Malky Goldman for its digital release in India on Amazon Prime Video on July 9.

Written and directed by Keith Thomas, the film is about a man named Yakov (Dave Davis), who is hired by his old Rabbi to watch over the body of a recently deceased community member and has to survive a night tormented by a demon. Rooted in Jewish culture and mysticism, The Vigil is a supernatural horror film set in a unique world: The Hasidic community of Boro Park, Brooklyn.

Talking about their latest movie acquisition, a spokesperson at PictureWorks said, We at PictureWorks thrive to bring forth first-class films to the Indian audiences. From start to end, The Vigil gives its viewers a fresh and interesting perspective. With an incredibly promising premise, we are sure that the Indian audiences and especially the true fans of horror genre will thoroughly enjoy the experience of watching this new film on Amazon Prime Video.

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The Vigil to release on July 9 - The Tribune India

The Vigil movie review: Amazon scores one of the most underrated horror films in years, sleepless nights await – Hindustan Times

Posted By on July 11, 2021

One of the best Blumhouse features in years is also the most lowkey. The Vigil, a horror film stamped with a refreshingly unique cultural identity, arrives on Amazon Prime Video after a bafflingly ill-timed theatrical run earlier this year, followed by a pay-per-view debut some weeks later. Third times the charm.

The Vigil is basically a foreign language film, based on the Orthodox Jews in New York City. This is an even more insular story about the Jewish community than James Grey's Two Lovers, or the Safdies Uncut Gems. To conjure claustrophobia, director Keith Thomas relies less on the haunted house setting and more on the inherent discomfort of being born inside a fringe group.

Watch The Vigil trailer here

We meet our protagonist, Yakov, in a deftly directed opening scene that sets up his inner conflict, and also kicks the plot into motion. Yakov is somewhat of a lapsed Hasidic Jew a tragic incident in his recent past, it is hinted, sparked a crisis of faith in him. Strapped for cash and barely able to summon the confidence to talk to a girl he has his eye on, Yakov accepts an emergency offer for a rather unsettling gig.

An old acquaintance basically guilt-trips him into accepting the job of a shomer someone who must keep vigil over the body of a recently deceased person overnight, protecting it from evil spirits by occasionally reciting holy verses, but mostly, giving their departed souls company. Typically, a shomer would be someone from the deceaseds own family, but we are told that Mr Litvak -- the dead guy -- was a bit of a loner. All hes left behind is a house of horrors and a creepy old wife.

Almost immediately after Yakov arrives at the house, Mrs Litvak issues a chilling warning leave before it is too late. Brushing her words aside as the ravings of a senile woman, he settles in for the nightlaylist at the ready, a woman to text, and a dead body right next to him. Things begin to get weird.

At first, the scare tactics are basic. Lights begin to flicker, stuff goes creak and crash in the dark, but Yakov soon realises that something isnt right. Barely invested in the job, he tries to convince Mrs Litvak to leave with him, and wait for the others to arrive in the morning, as theyd promised. But she refuses. She tells him that shes been marked by the Mazzik a malevolent spirit from Jewish mythology and that chances are, by now, he has too. The Mazzik targets only the broken, and terrorises them by taking a disturbing deep-dive into their already brittle psyches.

Not only is The Vigil one of the finest horror films in recent years, it is one of the few scary movies to explore Jewish culture, period. The last, if I recall correctly, was the fairly solid (but unimaginatively titled) Sam Raimi production, The Possession, inspired by the creepy urban myth of the haunted Dybbuk Box.

But while that film was a straight-up schlock-fest, The Vigil, in a surprising turn of events, turns out to be a potent drama about Jewish trauma an inherited infliction that no one from the community, even fence-sitters like Yakov, can evade. Mr Litvaks Holocaust past is revealed, and the films broad allegory about the passing on of generational pain begins to take shape. The Vigil works as a horror movie not only in the traditional sense, but like the best films in the genre, it evokes terror by invading your subconscious, and resisting the urge to bombard you with jump scares.

Also read: His House movie review: Netflixs unsettling haunted house film unleashes real horrors

Christianity seemingly had this market cornered, but Keith Thomas debut feature, steeped as it is in a richly detailed milieu crammed with ancient rituals, is one for the ages. To overcome the horrors of the past, it says, one must first be willing to confront them. And to enjoy real horror films, one must first be willing to watch them.

The Vigil

Director - Keith Thomas

Cast - Dave Davis, Menashe Lustig, Fred Melamed, Lynn Cohen

Follow @htshowbiz for more

The author tweets @RohanNaahar

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The Vigil movie review: Amazon scores one of the most underrated horror films in years, sleepless nights await - Hindustan Times


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