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Chief rabbi: Better to live abroad than among secular Israelis – Ynetnews

Posted By on July 7, 2021

Israel's Sephardic Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef has urged ultra-Orthodox Jews in the Diaspora not to move to Israel if it means living in a non-Haredi area with secular Israelis who would have a negative impact on their spiritual life.

Yosef made the comments during his weekly sermon on Saturday night while accompanied by Rabbi Haim Bitan, the visiting chief rabbi of the Tunisian island of Djerba.

The rabbi said he was responding to a "Halakhic conundrum" he was posed during a visit to the Tunisian Jewish community.

"I was asked while I was there whether or not they should immigrate to Israel," said Yosef.

"I told them it depends on where they would live," the chief rabbi said.

"If they were going to live in an ultra-Orthodox neighborhood or next to Kisse Rahamim [a prestigious Bnei Brak yeshiva founded in Tunisia], then they should immigrate to Israel. But if they lived in a place like Herzliya or another one of the secular locations... they should stay where they are."

Arguing that sinning is worse than death, Yosef said that the spiritual harm done by living in a secular environment would be worse than dying and as such Jews who live in predominantly Haredi neighborhoods in the Diaspora would be better off remaining where they are.

The chief rabbi's remarks drew criticism, especially on social media, in part because they ostensibly contradict the position of sages cited in the Babylonian Talmud and Halakha that a person should always strive to live in the Land of Israel - even in a city where most people were not Jews.

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Secular and Haredi Jews praying side by side at the Western Wall in Jerusalem

(Photo: Sharon Gabay)

"It is inconceivable that the chief rabbi of Israel, whose position is paid for by the state, would express himself in a way that contradicts the Declaration of Independence and the State of Israel's vision for an ingathering of exiles," the organization said.

"The rabbi is deterring people who wish to immigrate to Israel in a manner that contradicts the ideals of Zionism," it said.

"This again raises questions about the role of the chief rabbi of Israel, and in particular about the identity of those who have held the position in recent years. It is time to appoint an attentive, inclusive and welcoming Zionist rabbi, who is connected to all parts of the nation, and someone who is receptive solely to the needs of one sector."

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Chief rabbi: Better to live abroad than among secular Israelis - Ynetnews

10 Celebrities You’d Never Guess are of Greek Descent – Greek Reporter – Greek Reporter

Posted By on July 7, 2021

Betty White is another celebrity who is shockingly Greek! Credit: Angela George/ Wikimedia Commons/CC-BY-SA-3.0

There are many celebrities that have Greek names and speak of their Greek heritage all of the time. However, there are also a bunch of famous people who are of Greek descent that might surprise you!

Lets take a look at some of the most famous celebrities that are part Greek.

Hank Azaria with a fan in New York. The actor is of Greek Jewish descent. Credit: Greg 2600/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 2.0

Hank Azaria has a Greek Jewish background, as both his maternal and paternal grandparents came from the city of Thessaloniki in northern Greece.

Before World War II, the city was home to a thriving population of Sephardic Jewish Greeks. During the Nazi Occupation of Greece, a significant portion of the citys Jews were murdered at concentration camps in Europe.

Many of those who survived fled to the US or Israel.

The Greek-American celebrity is famous for his work on TV shows such as The Simpsons, where he voices many of the shows iconic characters, and Friends.

Surprisingly, everyones favorite American sweetheart over 90, Betty White, is of Greek descent, as her maternal grandfather was Greek.

She is famous for her acting on television shows such as The Golden Girls and The Mary Tyler Moore Show.

More recently, Betty starred in Pixars Toy Story 4, which put her back in the spotlight!

Law and Order star Angie Harmon is also of Greek descent! The beautiful celebrity was born in Texas to a Greek-American mother and German and Irish-American father.

The model and actress is also known for her role as the tough, brash Italian-American detective Jane Rizzoli in the hit show Rizzoli & Isles, which ended in 2016.

Kelly Clarkson performs during opening ceremonies for the 2018 Warrior Games. Credit: DoD News/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY 2.0

Kelly Clarkson was the winner of the first season hit reality television show American Idol which launched her career as a singer, songwriter and actress. Clarkson now hosts her own daytime talk show called The Kelly Clarkson Show.

What you might not know about the celebrity is that she is of Greek, Irish, Welsh, and German descent!

Tina Fey is half-Greek. Credit: Mingle Media TV/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 2.0

Tina Fey, superstar actress and comedian known for her work on 30 Rock and Saturday Night Live, was born to a Greek mother from Piraeus.

Feys real name is Elizabeth Stamatina Fey.

Tommy Lee. Credit: Glenn Francis/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 3.0

Motley Crue drummer Tommy Lee is known for his rockstar lifestyle. What many may not know is that the musician was born in Athens to a Greek mother and American father.

His mother represented Greece in the Miss World beauty pageant in 1960.

World-famous celebrity magician Criss Angel is Greek!

Angel was born Christopher Nicholas Sarantakos in Long Island, New York. He

decided to pursue a career in magic rather than going to college and, voila, he is one of the most popular magicians of his time!

Jennifer Aniston. Credit: Angela George/Wikimedia Commons/ CC-BY-SA-3.0

You might think that everyone knows that the beautiful celebrity is Greek, however, some people are still surprised to hear it!

Jennifer Anistons father, John Aniston, was born Yiannis Anastassakis in Chania, Crete, but moved to the US as a very small child.

Like many Greek immigrants to America, he decided to shorten his name from Anastassakis to Aniston.

Aniston is also the god-daughter of the famous Greek-American actor Telly (Aristotelis) Savalas.

Credit: Instagram/Rita Wilson

Although Rita Wilson is quite vocal about her love for Greece, and visits the country quite often with her husband Tom Hanks, many may not know that the actress is Greek herself.

Wilsons mother Dorothea Tzigkou was Greek, born in Albania near the Greek border, and her father was Bulgarian and born in Greece, a member of the Pomak minority.

Elia Kazan. Credit: Public Domain

Elia Kazan, born Ilias Kazantzoglou, is known for directing the classic films A Streetcar Named Desire and On the Waterfront. He was born in Istanbul and was of Greek descent.

The legendary director released the film America America about the journey of a Greek immigrant from Asia Minor to the US, a story that mirrored his own.

Zoe Kazan. Credit: Bridget Laudien/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 4.0

His granddaughter Zoe is a screenwriter, actress and playwright, known for her role in the 2017 smash hit The Big Sick.

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10 Celebrities You'd Never Guess are of Greek Descent - Greek Reporter - Greek Reporter

Reading the complex reality of Indias Jewish communities: Tiny but still expanding – Scroll.in

Posted By on July 7, 2021

In her aching, confessional Book of Esther, the author Esther David (her original family name was Dandekar) describes attempting to make aliyah via the Law of Return, which gives Jewish people from any part of the world the right to migrate to Israel.

She was running away from India and her Bene Israeli community, which maintains the tradition that they are descended from 14 Jewish men and women from across the Arabian Sea who were shipwrecked on the Konkan coastline over 2,000 years ago.

That is why David says she tried to uproot myself from my surrogate motherland, and replant myself in the home of my ancestors. Her intention was to move like a pilgrimage. It would wipe out my past. Give me a new life. She tried to learn Hebrew, sang Israeli folk songs, and learned to dance the Hora (an originally Eastern European practice that has become intrinsic to contemporary Jewish culture0. But the alienation never lifted: What a heavy price one had to pay to be a Jew!

At one point, the new migrant was offered an appealing home, where the courtyard was covered with mosaic tiles in green, blue and white. There was an orange tree in the centre, laden with ripe fruit. I felt I had walked into a house from the Arabian Nights. There were no strings attached, and her social worker insisted I take it without a second thought. The finances would be worked out later. But when she was told the premises originally belonged to Palestinians who left, David refused, earning an earful: You are stupid. Too sentimental. If you want to stay here, get used to the life here.

David realised, If I wanted to live like a Jew, I could live anywhere. I did not have to live in Israel to feel more Jewish that I felt in India. For me, Israel was a discoloured mosaic floor, stained by images of violence, fire, blood, ambulances, Israel unnerved me. I was terrified of terrorist attacks, the right to kill for survival, and the constant tension. She yearned for Ahmedabad, and felt relieved as I made preparations to return.

Book of Esther was published in 2002, at the same time as Indias Jewish Heritage: Ritual, Art and Life-Cycle, edited by Shalva Weil of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, who has gone on to produce an entire shelf on the Jewish presence in India, including in 2019 alone:The Baghdadi Jews in India: Maintaining Communities, Negotiating Identities and Creating Super-Diversity and The Jews of Goa.

Though it was less than two decades ago, there was very little reliable information on Jewish India back then. Thats why Weils compilation (an Indian edition was published in 2009 by Marg) was gratefully received for its solid historiography on the subcontinents three distinct Jewish communities: Esther Davids Bene Israelis, the Black and White Cochini of Kerala, and the highly globalised Baghdadis, who rode economic, political and social winds in and out of British India, Singapore and China while transitioning fast from Orientals to Imagined Britons.

Considering all three communities made aliyah en bloc in the late 1940s and early 1950s, you might assume the lengthy annals of Jewish Indian history verge on extinguishment. But as Esther Davids new Bene Apptit: The Cuisine of Indian Jews demonstrates, thats not the case. Three separate chapters dwell on communities that effectively didnt exist even as recently as 2002, which illuminates an astonishing truth: there are many more Jewish Indians today than any point in the past 50 years, and their numbers are still expanding.

Check the evidence in Bene Apptit, where David surveys (via visits to each location) the relatively familiar cultural landscape of Cochin, Bene Israeli coastal Maharashtra, and Baghdadi Jewish Kolkata, then wings off to visit the Bene Ephraim Jews of Andhra Pradesh, the Bnei Menashe Jews of Manipur and Bnei Menashe Jews of Mizoram. All these are freshly minted Indian Jewish communities that are in the process of rediscovering under strict rabbinical supervision an orthodox Jewish identity, complete with intricate Biblical genealogical underpinnings.

Every time another batch pursues the years-long process until fruition, they petition to make aliyah, and an extensive network of agencies helps them move to Israel. In this way, thousands have gone, and many more are in line. By the mytho-historical calculus used to support their case for Jewish origins its theoretically possible albeit highly unlikely the entire Kuki, Mizo and Chin peoples, comprising several million individuals living along Indias border with Burma, could eventually qualify as Jewish Indians, along with another seven million members of the Madiga caste community from Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Karnataka.

Of course, none of this is actually in the altogether pleasant Bene Apptit. Ever since Book of Esther close to 20 years ago, Ive been an enthusiastic fan of Esther Davids enviably light touch, and eye for detail. Now aged 76, shes still got it, as in this description of Fort Kochi: The entire evening had a magical feeling, as seagulls and other birds circled above while the fish got caught in the Chinese nets. Hidden amidst the trees, along the seashore, there were birds like coppersmith barbets and green bee-eaters. We watched in amazement as the vibrant blue of a kingfishers wing stood out against the evening sky, amidst the cargo ships anchored along the coastline with the sound of their horns and flickering lights.

Despite the lovely atmospherics and many excellent recipes (I am rather keen to try her family favourite tiljur potatoes), however, another element of Davids book caught me by surprise. She does such a good job explaining the tangled background of her own Bene Israelis: they were first identified as Jewish only in the 18th century, and despite extensive re-Judaisation over generations their identity was again denied in Israel (where they had to undergo ritual reconversion). But when it comes to the Bene Ephraim and Bnei Menashe, Bene Apptit gives us zero context. Were simply told, the Jewish population of this area continue to practice Judaism, as their ancestors did.

Can that be the case? Does it make sense? Are we really supposed to believe the ancestors of scattered Kukis, Mizos and Chins, and their newly attested co-religionists in and around Andhra Pradesh, ever practised Judaism in any form whatsoever? How is it even remotely plausible that an unknown diaspora from the Levant traversed thousands of miles into the far reaches of the subcontinent, then stayed hidden for further thousands of years until an opportunity occurred to reclaim Hebrew and the Hora?

Here, the far better question to ask is, who are we to judge? It cannot be denied that every peoples across the history of the world has told itself noble lies that cannot bear up to scientific scrutiny. Examine any modern nations polity, and you will find lurking mythopoeic fantasies. These are matters of faith alone, such as for some obvious examples the absurd American credo about the greatest country in the world or the prevalent belief in both India and China that theyre civilisational states built on coherent, unbroken, age-old cultural strands.

Still, even if we agree that identity, in all its multi-faceted dimensions, is constructed and can always be reconstructed, there are particularly consequential implications when it comes to Jewishness. Part of the reason is Zionism in Israel, which has been explicitly formulated on an encompassing raft of Bible-derived claims that Palestine is the divinely ordained Jewish homeland.

Much more significant, however, is the omnipresent spectre of anti-Semitism, especially the hateful blood libel that has pursued all Jewish communities over many centuries of Christian ascendance. Again and again, for close to 2,000 years, they have faced existential and genocidal threats, and been forced to flee to hide in remote parts of the world. It is an unquestionably extraordinary dispersal: just one fascinating case is of the Lemba tribe in Zimbabwe and South Africa, where DNA testing has proven direct Jewish ancestry.

Does it matter that no such evidence exists for the 21st century Jewish Indians of Manipur, Mizoram and Andhra Pradesh? Israeli law doesnt care, and has always allowed conversion to Judaism as precursor to citizenship, although it approves only one halachic process overseen by ultra-conservative Orthodox rabbis. How does that sit with traditional Jewish communities, who faced down generations of oppression while safeguarding their religious identity? What do they think of our burgeoning cohort of Jewish Indians?

To find out more, I reached out to my friend Ben Judah, the brilliant 33-year-old New York-based British journalist and writer, whose moving engagement with his Baghdadi Jewish Indian roots has captivated my interest since we first met in Bangladesh (and then Goa) in 2017.

Judah walked me step by step through the early history of Judaism, when basically anyone could join the covenant by following the rules god is said to have communicated to Abraham (who is considered the original patriarch in Islam and Christianity as well). Even after the Roman emperor Constantine converted to Christianity in the fourth century, and the Theodosian Code enshrined harsh rules against conversion to Judaism, the door wasnt exactly barred.

Starting in the 14th century, an era of traumatic disruptions permanently affected the nature of Jewish identity, as the large communities in Spain and Portugal (aka Sephardim) were targeted by extremist Catholicism-sanctioned violence. Huge numbers (reliable estimates range up to 300,000) were murdered, and hundreds of thousands more coerced into conversion. Those who survived, as well as crypto-Jewish Marranos poured out of Iberia to seek refuge across North Africa, the Levant, and more distant points on the compass.

Some made it all the way to India, including the great Garcia da Orta.

In our conversation, Ben Judah traced a direct line from the contemporary rediscovery of lost tribes back to the agonising Sephardic experience of persecution, flight, constant mortal threat of being exposed, and an existential requirement for motivation to persevere. He used the compelling metaphor of dream time to describe the history of rabbis exhorting their flock to keep the faith: There are more of us. Hang in there. Help is on its way.

These are powerful messages, with an inherent capacity to ignite the soul. Judah who speaks Russian, and has written a superb book about Putin described what he called an epiphenomenon that has showed up in Russian history, where isolated groups of Christians, perhaps besieged, started to imagine themselves into in the story of the Bible. He urged me to look up the Subbotniks, and theres no doubt there are several marked similarities between those relatively recent entrants into Judaism and our own 21st century Indian Jewish communities, including the considerable back and forth that took place in Israel about whether they qualify to make aliyah.

As it happens, the most interesting paper written on 21st century Jewish Indians is by Anton Zykov, a Russian linguist (he specialises in Parsi dialects), whose 2018 Bnei Ephraim Community: Judaisation, Social Hierarchy and Caste Reservation is packed with fascinating insights about the interlocked gears of aspiration and identity in India and Israel.

Zykov situates the assiduous Bene (in this usage, the word is synonymous with Bnei) Ephraim pursuit of Jewish identity against the backdrop of Ambedkarite neo-Buddhism, by which conversion to another religion became one of the traditional ways for untouchables in contemporary India to leap out of the confines of the caste discrimination.

He says the game-changing event occurred in 2005, when the chief Sephardic Rabbi of Israel, Shlomo Amar took a decision to accept the claim of Indian group Bnei Menashe for their Jewish descent, which opened their way to make aliyah to Israel. The Indian government resisted this move and restricted Bnei Menashes migration for seven years, but eventually acknowledged their claim for Jewishness and allowed their departure to Israel in 2012. The example of successful claims for Jewishness by Bnei Menashe gave inspiration to Bnei Ephraim, the community of untouchables in Guntur district of Andhra Pradesh.

All this has fraught socio-political repercussions, that are further complicated by rapidly advancing ties between India and Israel that are forged upon billions of dollars of weapons purchases. The steadily expanding population of Jewish Indians potentially furnishes yet another level to the bilateral co-operation. Yet, as Zykov notes, the Indian authorities de facto recognition of Bnei Menashe as Jews created a paradox in countrys caste politics, since the Mizo, Kuki and Chin tribal group, as members of the scheduled tribes de jure considered as adivasis, continue to be entitled for the reservation, but at the same time acquire a right of immigration to Israel acknowledged by the Indian government with regard to traditional Jewish groups in the country.

It is likely, says the Russian scholar, that the acknowledgement of Bnei Ephraim, who are covered by reservations as members of the Madiga dalit caste, as Jews, will lead to even larger controversy in the nations caste politics, since unlike scheduled tribes the scheduled caste categorys definition is legally linked to Hinduism, making untouchability a Hindu phenomenon.

Impressed by Zykovs analysis, I hunted for his email address, and managed to schedule a late-night video call to his home in Moscow. The young academic (hes 33) told me that he believes the Bene Ephraim story at this point, at least is much less about Jewishness and Israel, and instead tells us about social hierarchies in India itself and how different communities quest for change.

When I asked about the Bene Ephraims hunt for Biblical rationale, Zykov reminded me that Zionism originally wasnt fixated on Palestine, and Israels founders were en masse non-religious Ashkenazi Jews (hence, the famous Uganda project or even the Crimea one. It is only later, that the version of the Zionist idea that they eventually accepted has been inevitably based on Biblical claims. This continues to be so today if you look at, for instance, the annexation plan for West Bank (which is equated to the Biblical Judea and Samaria).

Even so, said Zykov, whether Bene Ephraim are Jews on not depends on whose opinion you take, and there are many approaches both religious (from Orthodox to Conservative and Liberal) and secular (by the modern State of Israel, which has changed its criteria several times, or other countries and communities that use their own legal or social definitions). But in the end, what matters is their self-definition and how it adjusts to this or that perception of Jewishness. An important role is played here by US and Israeli organisations and individuals who can influence or even shape this self-definition.

That last point is crucial, because Jewish Indians not just at home, but also after making aliyah are confronted by terrific pressures to conform to the reductionist Eurocentric model of Jewishness that is derived nigh-exclusively from Ashkenazi customs, traditions and experiences. It is true now for the Bnei Menashe of Manipur and Mizoram who, despite their openhearted zealotry nonetheless find themselves slurred in their new homeland as Bnei Menake (The word for cleaner in Hebrew is Menake; so the Bnei Menashe, children of Menasseh, becomes Bnei Menake, children of a cleaner). And the same thing happened with Bene Israelis two generations earlier.

My family has become outwardly Israeli, but inside they were totally Indian, said Oshrit Birvadker, yet another 33-year-old, who is an ardent advocate in Israel for the Bene Israeli community (to which she belongs) and an impressive force for better understanding between her two homelands. In 2017, her comments to Narendra Modis official delegation to Israel precipitated changes in Overseas Citizenship of India regulations that could allow Israelis (who are required to do military service) to get OCI status.

Birvadkers contacts were forwarded to me by Solomon Souza, grandson of the great Indian modernist painter FN Souza, who is proudly and simultaneously Jewish, Israeli and Goan (he is now applying for OCI status). On an animated Zoom call, she told me, For many years I knew I was Indian but the outside has been divided dichotomously, the Mizrahis against the Ashkenazis, immigrants from Europe versus immigrants from Arab and North African countries, the generation of the countrys founders versus a generation of immigrants.

Initially, says Birvadker, I felt that my place was among those Mizrahis. As a first-generation migrant to Israel, I felt we shared the same history. But all the way through I felt I havent found my place. The government may indeed see us under the same category, but the truth is that we share a different world that is unique to the culture of the subcontinent. That is when I started focusing my attention on my community, and the people directly around me.

When just out of her teens, Birvadker participated in one of the very first Know India Programmes run out of New Delhi. She says it sparked a great love story that gets better over the years. In India, I felt at home. The power of having so much in common with one billion people hit me. I came back and I decided India will guide my career. After returning, she steadily forged herself into an expert on Indias foreign and defence policy, as this is my way to be an Israeli.

Despite its small population (roughly 9 million) in territory half the size of Kerala, Israels disparate Indian diaspora has never cohered. The Bene Israel, The Cochin Jews, the Baghdadi Jews, the Bnei Menashe, and Bene Ephraim may be defined as Indians, but the distance between the various communities is large, Birvadker said. For many years I was furious at this division. I thought that if we only worked together it would improve our status, but as I grew older I understood its impossible to talk about one community just as it is impossible to talk about one India. These are individual choices.

Thinking hard about Birvadkers perceptive takes about identity both Indian and Israeli inevitably brought Hune Margulies to mind. The 63-year-old philosopher and poet (and founder-director of the Martin Buber Institute for Dialogical Ecology) is a cherished member of the Goa Writers group, to which I also belong. He was born in Argentina to Polish and Romanian refugees, made aliyah as a teenager, then moved to New York in his 20s (his doctorate is from Columbia University) before leaping to my own ancient ancestral homeland: the locality of Malar on the island of Divar in the Mandovi river.

As far as Margulies is concerned, he is now a full ethnic Malarkar writer where none of my neighbours see me as an other. How and why? It is so because ethnicity is not primordial, but largely a construction of historical interests and manipulative mythologies, he said. I am a human, and as such every human culture is mine by birthright. All ethnicities are a mixture of different cultures forged in history through historic events, some internal, some external. Geography places us all in Malar or Argentina or Poland, but it is our poetic imaginations that define whether we are Malarkars, Argentinians or Polish.

Margulies elaborated, As a son of Holocaust survivors, I am committed to the project of Jewish self-determination and Jewish self-defence. However, on a theoretical basis, I do not subscribe to the idea of ethnic or religious or racial nationalisms. As a diasporic people, the Jews that gathered in Israel were as diverse as total strangers. They spoke different languages, they ate different foods, they dressed differently, their accents, their folkloric music and dance, their familial relationships, were all different from each other.

However, given the historic facts of anti-Semitism, every practitioner of the Jewish religion experienced a similar historic reality of oppression, discrimination and genocide. Those historic facts maintained the Jewish identity as one, despite the internal contrasting ethnicities. The present day Jewish ethnic identity is a construct that owes its continuity to both religious discrimination and religious choice, and in that sense, Zionism is an historically proper response. The one problem is that Zionism should not have come at the expense of the rights of the Arab population that lived in the land.

When that happened, said Margulies, the wars that ensued resulted in refugees and other forms of displacements that were not inevitable. Martin Buber advocated the establishment of a bi-national united democratic and secular republic of Jews and Arabs, not a separate Jewish state. I subscribe to this project.

Some time ago, when the Indian edition of Shalva Weils The Jews of Goa (its cover art is by Solomon Souza) was released, Margulies and I avidly shared a copy. It has several excellent scholarly essays: I particularly appreciated Jews of Goa and the Trading World of the Indian Ocean, 1000-1650 by Pius Malekandathil of Jawaharlal Nehru University, and All Roads Lead to Goa: Messengers, Interpreters, Jewish and New Christian Informants in the Indian Ocean in the Sixteenth Century by the Paris-based Portuguese historian Dejanirah Couto. But Weils own, The Enigma of the Jews of Goa was unsettling, and I found it oddly insinuating.

This is because, after tracking the established facts of historical Jewish presence on the west coast of India, Weil makes the startling and unsupported claim that until the 20th century, it appears that concentrations of people who used to be Jews still resided in [Old Goa] bearing Jewish names and with vague memories of Jewish descent. She says that when she first visited Panjim there were houses with names of Iberian and Spanish Jewish families like Pereira and Cardozo (which are still there, but have no connection to Judaism because they belong to Goan families who converted to Catholicism in the 16th and 17th centuries).

Weil walks through the very same old Latinate neighbourhoods my family has known intimately well from the time they were built, and where I myself stroll constantly, and somehow finds Jewishness: I spoke to people, who freely admitted they had been conversos, secretly hiding their Jewish religion for generations. She concludes, In other former Portuguese colonies, such as Brazil, Macao and Nagasaki, Cape Verde and the Guinea coast, Mozambique, and elsewhere, people are reclaiming their Jewish identity. I envisage that this trend will also occur in Goa in the not-too-distant future.

When I asked Hune Margulies what he thought about this prospect, he said, Indian communities that identify as Jewish have a full right to do so. Whether they possess a Jewish gene is as relevant as the inexplicable Sephardic rejection of pastrami on rye. The only problem, as such, is that the state of Israel provides the Orthodox establishment with the sole authority to define Jewishness, and these communities are required to undergo some form of ritual conversion before being fully accepted as Jews. For those of us who reject Orthodox primacy, these communities ascription to themselves of a Jewish identity is a right no one else has the right to deny.

Those rights go both ways, and in all directions, of course, because just as the 21st century Jewish Indian communities are busily transplanting themselves in what they consider their Holy Land, my friend is doing exactly the same in mine. He says (and I love every bit of it), Malar is my home not only because there is a house in Malar where I live. I am not a part of the Hindu or Portuguese historical experiences. I am not a Christian. I am a student of Zen Buddhism, (which is also a hybrid with Indian roots). Garcia de Orta is, and isnt, part of my own Goan self-definition. But if I need to dig deeper into my belonging here, let my local lineage be that involuntarily-nomadic and legally precarious communal past. Thats good enough for me, for those attributes are of the essence to any loving definition of Jewish identity.

Vivek Menezes is a photographer, writer and co-founder and co-curator of the Goa Arts + Literature Festival.

Continued here:

Reading the complex reality of Indias Jewish communities: Tiny but still expanding - Scroll.in

Biden Meets With Families of Surfside Victims – The New York Times

Posted By on July 7, 2021

SURFSIDE, Fla. President Biden on Thursday offered impassioned remarks in a hotel ballroom filled with the families of some of those who died or remain missing under the rubble of a collapsed condominium building, according to White House officials and those in the room.

Mr. Bidens meeting with the families, which officials said lasted about three hours, came during a halt in the search for survivors amid concerns about the stability of the part of the building that remains standing.

A video of Mr. Biden posted during the event by one of the family members appeared to show the president talking in somber tones about the grief he felt from the death of his wife and daughter in a car accident that also severely injured his two young boys.

The waiting, the waiting, is unbearable, he told the families, many of whom have been waiting for more than a week for word about whether anyone might still be alive under the concrete and steel.

After the meeting, Mr. Biden described the grief and agony he heard from the family members, saying of the people in the room: Theyre going through hell.

I sat with one woman who had just lost her husband and her little baby boy, didnt know what to do, the president said. I sat with another family that lost almost the entire family, cousins, brothers, sisters. And to watch them, and theyre praying and pleading and God let there be a miracle.

Mr. Biden said that many of the family members asked what he called basic heart-wrenching questions: Would they be able to recover the bodies of their loved ones so they could bury them? If I dont get the body back, what do I do?

But at the same time, he said he was surprised by their realism and resilience.

They know that the chances are, as each day goes by, diminished slightly, the president told reporters. But at a minimum, at a minimum, they want to recover the bodies. They want to recover the bodies.

The president praised emergency workers and local and state officials, saying that the cooperation in the rescue effort was remarkable. Mr. Biden announced that the federal government would pay 100 percent of the first 30 days of the recovery costs.

He said he told the families that were here for you as one nation, as one nation. And thats the message we communicated.

A White House official said that during the closed-door session with the families, Mr. Biden walked from table to table to talk with each family seated in the room. The official said that Jill Biden, the first lady, also held individual conversations with family members.

The president was joined by Senator Marco Rubio, Senator Rick Scott, Gov. Ron DeSantis, Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuez, Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Mayor Daniella Levine Cava of Miami Dade County.

The official said that Mr. Biden stayed in the room until everyone who wanted to talk with him had the opportunity.

After the meeting with the families, Mr. Biden and Dr. Biden made a brief stop at the makeshift memorial to the victims of the collapse, walking along a chain-link fence adorned with flowers, stopping several times to look closely at photos of those who have died or remain missing.

Dr. Biden placed a large bouquet of white flowers at the base of the fence before the pair returned to the presidents motorcade.

Erick de Moura, a resident of the building who spent the night of the collapse at his girlfriends house, praised Mr. Biden as he and other survivors and victims families left the ballroom at the St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort.

For him to take his time like hes taking right now just walking around and talking to every single family, its just an amazing act and we appreciate it very much. Its comforting for us, Mr. de Moura said.

Rabbi Daniel Hadar, the head rabbi of Temple Moses Sephardic Congregation of Florida, an Orthodox synagogue in Miami Beach, said that the tone of the meeting signaled a shift from other meetings with families over the last week. Over a dozen people affiliated with the synagogue, just a couple of miles from Champlain Towers, were in the building at the time of the collapse.

There was something for the first time Im seeing: consolation, said Rabbi Hadar. Whereas in previous meetings with officials, Hadar has seen families have expressed anger and frustration with the rescue process, families expressed peace and appreciation.

I think a lot of people are either resigning themselves, or understanding that there is hope, and the best hope is to work with these guys and to hear what they have to say, Rabbi Hadar added.

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Biden Meets With Families of Surfside Victims - The New York Times

Fabian Lijtmaer’s Spiritual Jewish Art Is Something to Meditate On – Jewish Journal

Posted By on July 7, 2021

Fabian Lijtmaer believes that art isnt just something pretty for people to look at. Instead, it has the power to transform our state of mind.

Art is a way to intentionally choose colors and pieces that resonate with your soul and empower you, the Pico-Robertson-based artist told the Journal. You can use them to have more simcha, to see the world differently and remind yourself who you are. Who doesnt want to wake up and see a piece that reminds them that they are a winged lion, or a son or daughter of Avraham, or that they have the ability to cross the Sea of Reeds with Hashems help?

Lijtmaer is a painter who creates Jackson Pollock-inspired pieces that are meant to be spiritual and meditative. With titles like Shabbat Dreams and Gan Eden Consciousness, his pieces are colorful, chaotic and calming all at once. One of his paintings, Purim, contains a variety of colors, from blue to orange and green and red, that come together to evoke the exciting energy of the holiday. On the other hand, Shabbat Dreams is an all-blue universe that takes us right into dreamland.

Lijtmaer is a painter who creates Jackson Pollock-inspired pieces that are meant to be spiritual and meditative.

My paintings are soul portraits to help people access higher states of consciousness. They are hopefully pieces that create an emotional, spiritual and psychological reaction in people. Almost all of them have specific intentions. Every mark is intentional. Even though it feels very flowy, theyre very intentional pieces and each one has its own frequency and vibration.

Born in New York City, Lijtmaer, whose family is from Argentina, is of Ashkenazi Jewish descent. His family was in Europe during the Holocaust, which he thinks about constantly and on which he reflects in his work. My moms mom was on the second to last transport escaping Poland, so its really incredible that Im here right now, he said. I feel emotional when I think about the Holocaust. Its a very challenging topic for me. I immediately feel it inside of me and it hurts a lot. Ive explored it in my artwork. Using art as a way to transform pain is super valuable.

Courtesy of Fabian Lijtmaer

The artist also finds inspiration in his Argentinian roots. Something I love about the Argentinian culture is the level of passion they have for music, sports and food. Passion is such a beautiful and important component of being happy. Argentinians wear their emotions on their sleeve. Im very influenced by that passion.

Lijtmaer arrived in Los Angeles nine years ago to pursue a masters degree in Leadership and Change from Antioch University, and ended up staying after falling in love with the city and his community. My friends are beautiful and amazing. Everyone is so different and supportive of each others growth, he said.

He attends Pico Shul and Happy Minyan, the former of which displays his artwork on the walls. When hes not painting, Lijtmaer teaches at the International Childrens Academy and leads meditations with artwork and live musicians.

We have one piece of art and I lead the meditation, Lijtmaer said. You can create new worlds and levels of introspection. Each person who approaches a painting will have a different perspective or viewpoint. I want everyone to get together to celebrate the arts and imagination.

Courtesy ofFabian Lijtmaer

Lijtmaer creates his artwork in his studio in the Mid-City neighborhood of Los Angeles, 2.5 miles from Pico-Robertson. As we begin to find ourselves on the other side of the pandemic, studio visits will once again be available for people to experience his paintings. I recommend everyone to see things in person because its so powerful, he said. Its alive. It has three dimensionality.

Given the craziness of our world today, Lijtmaer said he believes that meditating on art can be a healthy break for the soul.

You can literally create a breath practice for a piece of art. Take 10 seconds of your time and envision yourself in this state of peace and tranquility and then move into your day with this consciousness. Were fighting a lot of images and media messages and our mind is holy and sacred and it is being exploited. Its under attack. As a Jewish person who is spiritual and wants to bring more of Hashems consciousness to the world, I think we need to actively be part of this movement to reprogram our minds in a healthy way. Art and education are two places to start that are really powerful.

Kylie Ora Lobellis a writer for the Jewish Journal of Los Angeles, The Forward, Tablet Magazine, Aish, and Chabad.org and the author of the first childrens book for the children of Jewish converts,Jewish Just Like You.

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Fabian Lijtmaer's Spiritual Jewish Art Is Something to Meditate On - Jewish Journal

What is in the name Sheikh Jarrah? – opinion – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on July 7, 2021

A rose by any other name would smell just as sweet. But in politics and war, names are important. Is Sheikh Jarrah the same as Shimon HaTzadik? The location of the houses at issue is now conventionally called Sheikh Jarrah, but it was Shimon HaTzadik before 1948.

The neighborhood or quarter was named after Simon the Just, an ancient Jewish high priest whose tomb has been traditionally believed by Jews to be located on that lot where the houses in dispute also stand. Before 1948, Sheikh Jarrah was a quarter adjacent to but separate from the Shimon HaTzadik Quarter. And Shimon HaTzadik was referred to by that name both by Jews and by Arabs in their own pronunciation, as well as by The Palestine Post, the forerunner of The Jerusalem Post.

On the other hand, if people hear or read the name Shimon HaTzadik or Simon the Just, then they might think it is quite natural for Jews to live there, especially if they know the sites history.

And what are Arabs doing on grounds meant to honor a Jewish holy man, or on a Jewish holy site? they might ask.

Some historic and religious background is now in order. In 1876, Jewish religious bodies, Sefardi and Ashkenazi, jointly bought the grounds then called by Arabs al-Yahudiya. These Jewish bodies enhanced the tomb and built homes for poor Jews on part of the surrounding grounds while the rest was left undeveloped, yet filled with Jewish pilgrims on Lag Baomer.

During the period of British rule in Jerusalem 1917 to 1948 Jewish residents on the site were harassed during the several outbursts of Arab anti-Jewish violence, and sometimes temporarily driven out. However, Jews were living there in 1947 when the UN General Assembly recommended the UNSCOP partition plan. The vote took place on November 29 1947, in New York time, but 12:35 a.m. on November 30 in Israel. In the next few hours, Jews traveling on the roads were attacked in several places while shots were fired at a Jewish bus on Mount Scopus Road that ran alongside the Shimon HaTzadik Quarter.

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Whereas attacking Jewish traffic on the roads was the initial Arab strategy in the war that had just begun, another tactic was soon added: attacking Jewish residential neighborhoods and residences near Arab areas. In December 1947 and January 1948, Jewish homes were attacked in Jaffa and south Tel Aviv (by snipers) as well as in Haifa and in particular, Shimon HaTzadik and nearby Jewish quarters, Nahalat Shimon and Siebenbergen Houses, etc.

Moreover, British troops had prevented the Jewish Hagana force from reaching Mount Scopus and taking back the Shimon HaTzadik and Nahalat Shimon quarters a few months after the Jewish flight. And Jews could not visit Simons Tomb since Transjordan, later Jordan, violated the 1949 armistice accords by preventing Jewish access to Jewish holy places, including Simons Tomb, the Western Wall, etc.

Knowing all this, would a fair-minded person think that Jews have no right to live in Shimon HaTzadik? Understandably, Arabs in the city over the years conceptually incorporated Shimon HaTzadik into their adjacent Sheikh Jarrah Quarter.

However, this historical recounting should prove that Shimon HaTzadik and Sheikh Jarrah are not the same. Failure to explain the historical and religious background allows anti-Israel demagogues Arab and Western to justify the recent war and future wars and Hamas attacks against Israel, and to incite assaults on Diaspora Jews. Knowledge of that background might lead outside observers to acknowledge that justice, not just real estate deeds, is on the Jewish side of the dispute.

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What is in the name Sheikh Jarrah? - opinion - The Jerusalem Post

Why Developers Need to Think About a Software Bill of Materials – ITPro Today

Posted By on July 7, 2021

Modern applications often comprise many different components that come together to provide a complete service.

In recent years, to help provide transparency to users, there has been an increasing emphasis on what all those different components are. Having visibility into different components can also be helpful for security purposes, in case they have an underlying risk associated with them. Many industries have a bill of materials, and now it's an idea whose time has come to the IT industry with the software bill of materials (SBOM).

The need for an SBOM has been further accelerated by the U.S. government. On May 12, President Biden issued an executive order that requires, for cybersecurity purposes, software vendors that sell to the federal government to provide a software bill of materials for the applications and services they offer.

According to Moran Ashkenazi, chief information security officer at DevOps firm JFrog, an SBOM is more than simply a list of components.

"In reality, we need to be looking at not only the components, but where those components came from, their function, how they were assembled and the development environment in which they were assembled," Ashkenazi told ITPro Today. "With visibility into all of this data, throughout the end-to-end lifecycle of development, companies can make data-driven business decisions, such as automatically stopping development when a bug or vulnerability is discovered."

Kate Stewart, vice president at the Linux Foundation, which has multiple ongoing efforts to help with SBOMs, including SPDX and OpenChain, sees a number of ways that a software bill of materials can intersect with DevOps efforts. There could be an SBOM of the software sources, an SBOM created during a development build or an SBOM produced from forensic analysis of an executable images, she said.

"Most products today are built from open-source projects," Stewart told ITPro Today. "Being able to generate a full SBOM for a product that includes open-source component dependencies can be hard to summarize the further down the dependency tree gets traversed."

While an SBOM provides visibility into what an application is made from, sharing that information does not expose a company's intellectual property. Shiri Arad Ivtsan, director of product management at WhiteSource, said there is a big difference between knowing the third-party ingredients and knowing the ultimate recipe or execution.

Another concern some people might have is that generating the SBOM requires source code disclosure, which is not the case, she said.

"Your proprietary source code remains yours to share or to keep confidential," Ivtsan told ITPro Today. "The libraries you share in the SBOM are third-party and open-source libraries."

With the complexity of modern DevOps, developers often use many different sources across distributed teams, bringing multiple challenges to assembling an SBOM.

JFrog's Ashkenazi noted that a key challenge lies in achieving complete visibility and shared governance over a companys entire portfolio of software. In Ashkenazi's view, organizations need to have an enterprise view of their systems, and that cannot be achieved without an end-to-end solution, integrating security and central repository management in a global way.

Getting a handle on all the components used in an application can be particularly challenging with open-source components. Most organizations dont make decisions centrally, but instead allow individual developers to bring in new components on their own in a distributed way, according to Donald Fischer, CEO and co-founder of Tidelift.

For WhiteSource's Ivtsan, a big challenge is finding a tool that will generate an SBOM that is capable of properly including all the various software languages and technology stacks an organization is using.

"If you want to generate an SBOM, make sure the tool you choose supports all the software languages, both source file and packaged-based, and also new technologies like containers and serverless," Ivtsan said.

There are a number of ways that DevOps teams and IT organizations can implement processes and technologies to help create a software bill of materials.

The Linux Foundation's Stewart suggests that as a bare minimum, organizations work with one of the standards that the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) has recognized as being able to satisfy the minimum elements for SBOMs.

NTIA is working on guidance to help organizations comply with the Biden administration's executive order that requires vendors to have an SBOM. On June 2, the NTIA published an initial list of minimum requirements, which include open-source tools as well as proprietarycommercial offerings. Stewart noted that one such open-source data standard is the Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX), which enables libraries to support generation and consumption of SBOM files.

While it's important to have a data format to share what's in a software build, it's also a best practice for organizations to have an inventory of what software components are available for developer teams to build from in the first place.

A key best practice for creating an accurate and continuously up-to-date software bill of materials is to maintain a centralized catalog of known-good, proactively maintained open-source components, Tidelift's Fischer said. With an approved catalog in place, management should ensure that developers across the organization are pulling from it or are making requests to add new components when they need them.

Ashkenazi echoed the idea of having an inventory of available components in place from which to build out an SBOM.

"Organizations and developers will be best positioned to implement a software bill of materials if they start with a complete inventory of their software components and usage in the companya single source of truth," Ashkenazi said. "In addition, as organizations need to attest to the security of every step in the pipeline build process, its essential they provide immutable, signed and validated SBOM releases to ensure the integrity of software packages."

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Why Developers Need to Think About a Software Bill of Materials - ITPro Today

Rising European anti-Semitism blamed on lockdowns – KTVZ

Posted By on July 7, 2021

By Rob Picheta and Sharon Braithwaite, CNN

A Jewish man was subjected to anti-Semitic abuse in London twice in the space of one evening while traveling on public transportation, his brother has said, as videos of the altercations went viral on social media.

Footage showed a man berating a bus driver and then the person filming the video on a bus on Saturday evening, saying to the driver: Hes f**king Jewish. Youre Jewish too, and then banging on the window of the bus from the street.

Another video, filmed earlier the same evening, showed a man at a subway station singing: F**king hate the Jews, before telling other travelers: Weve got a Jew behind us.

The Metropolitan Police said an investigation is ongoing after a man was subjected to a torrent of anti-Semitic abuse on a bus in central London. The British Transport Police said it was investigating anti-Semitic behaviour on a London Underground escalator. No arrests have been made in either incident.

Videos of both incidents went viral after being uploaded to Twitter by the mans brother, who told CNN his sibling came very close to being physically attacked.

He somewhat successfully (talked) him out of it, managing to relatively de-escalate the situation, (but) not without him continuing to ferociously spew all kinds of ugly racist remarks and death threats, the mans brother told CNN.

On Twitter, he wrote: Will anything be done about this rampant antisemitism and said the incidents were so depressing.

Reports of anti-Semitic incidents have become more common in recent years in the UK, according to watchdogs and charities that monitor cases.

The Community Security Trust said it recorded 1,668 incidents in 2020, the third-highest year on record, after a record count the previous year.

Marie van der Zyl, the President of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, condemned the incidents on Monday.

It is absolutely intolerable that a Jewish passenger travelling on public transport should be subjected to disgusting racist threats and abuse in the UK in 2021 not once but twice on the same day, she said in a statement. Those responsible should be must be tracked down and prosecuted.

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Rising European anti-Semitism blamed on lockdowns - KTVZ

‘There’s no other Andrew’: Northampton teen awarded international award for dedication to Judaism – Bucks County Courier Times

Posted By on July 7, 2021

Second grader shows class how he lives with cortical visual impairment

Nine-year-old Krish Rastogi-Wilson was born with cortical visual impairment. He created a presentation to show his classmates how his world works.

Bucks County Courier Times

For Andrew Belder, connecting with his faith each morning is as easy as a phone call. But despite growing up in a Jewish family, it wasnt until his seventh birthday that he heard the spiritual call.

When his great grandfather passed away, the Northampton teen began asking questions about his connection to Judaism and what it all meant. He recalled learning about his grandparents and parents escape from the USSR and arrival in America, grounding him in an awareness of who he is and where he comes from.

Ive always had some kind of inkling to really learn more about my faith, because its not something that is taught in schools, Belder said. Since then, Ive always tried to channel that energy, channel the fact that my parents and grandparents didnt get an opportunity, and people tried to take away that opportunity from them.

Worshipping amid COVID-19: Guest Opinion: Pandemic reflections from Abrams Hebrew Academy

Now, the 19-year-old is being honored for that energy and passion through the Yisroel Fund Leadership Award, which recognizes eight international teenagers under 18-years-old who have exhibited remarkable dedication, engagement, and leadership in CTeen chapters across the globe, according to the CTeen website.

CTeen, short for Chabad Teen Network, is an organization for high schoolers to explore their Jewish faith and engage in social events and programming centered around religious customs and norms.

Belder first joined CTeen before his freshman year at Council Rock South High School, becoming gradually more involved by joining the leadership board. There, he planned events and programs, alongside five other student leaders, for the local groups 40-60 members.

One such program was the annual international Shabbaton, where around 4,000 Jewish teens meet in New York for a weekend and celebrate being proud Jews, Belder said. Through CTeen, he learned not only about his heritage, but about himself and his capabilities.

It was really inspiring to be able to meet with other Jewish kids in our surrounding community, and inspire many others and handle anti-Semitism as it came up, he said. It was just a really great way for me to channel my leadership.

Anti-Semitism: White supremacy groups actively recruiting in Bucks with propaganda spotted in these towns

Rabbi Chaim Shemtov leads the local CTeen chapter, of which Belder is a part, through the Lubavitch of Bucks County synagogue. Shemtov and Belder joined the program at the same time, which Shemtov said is symbolic: We kind of grew this together, he said.

In his four years of knowing Belder, Shemtov said it was Belders dedication and motivation outside of his faith in his swimming, running, and business clubs that made him an effective, contagious leader in CTeen.

The programming speaks for itself, that Andrew really deserved this award, Shemtov said. In my opinion, hes number one under 18. Theres no other Andrew.

With his rabbi and the rest of CTeen, Belder turned to his faith and became more involved in practicing Judaism. For two years now, he has wrapped tefillin black leather that Jews wear for morning prayers and even encouraged his friends to join him at their Sunday Tefillin Club.

Sam Salz, who worked alongside Belder on the CTeen leadership board this year, said he could see Belders energy in his faith and his mission to grow the organization and reach more kids.

Hes just a great dude, lots of energy, just lots of spirit, and a lot of heart, Salz said. He naturally was fit for being one of the leaders.

Mitchel Zilbershteyn, a rising sophomore at Temple University and graduate of CR South, is former and future classmates with Belder, who plans on attending Temple this fall. The two both served on the CTeen leadership board in the 2019-2020 school year.

After moving away from Bucks County and leaving the program, Zilbershteyn said hes proud of how Belder continued to lead CTeen and admires his passion and involvement in his faith.

I think its just natural curiosity for him, he said. I think he definitely did have a passion for Judaism… weve had tons of conversations with (Rabbi Shemtov), and Ive definitely seen him get more and more involved with religious aspects.

After graduating top of his high school class, Belder will start his freshman year at Temple in August, studying finance and business analytics at the colleges Fox School of Business.

When it came to deciding where to go to school, it came down to two things: staying close to family, and finding a Jewish community. But upon visiting Temple and spending Shabbat on campus, his mind was set.

I just opened the door, he said, and it was the most welcoming home.

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'There's no other Andrew': Northampton teen awarded international award for dedication to Judaism - Bucks County Courier Times

Israel to vote on renewing law that keeps out Palestinian spouses – Al Jazeera English

Posted By on July 5, 2021

Israels parliament is set to vote on Monday on whether to renew a temporary law first enacted in 2003 that bars Palestinian citizens of Israel from extending citizenship or even residency to spouses from the occupied West Bank and Gaza.

Critics, including many left-wing and Palestinian Israeli legislators, say it is a racist measure aimed at restricting the growth of Israels Palestinian minority, while supporters say it is needed for security purposes and to preserve Israels Jewish character.

The law creates an array of difficulties for Palestinian families that span the largely invisible frontiers separating Israel from the occupied territories of East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza Strip territories it seized in the 1967 war that the Palestinian leadership wants for a future state.

The vote is expected late on Monday.

The Citizenship and Entry into Israel Law was enacted as a temporary measure in 2003, at the height of the second Intifada, or uprising, when in response to Israels escalating and violent measures in the occupied territories, Palestinians launched many deadly attacks inside Israel.

Proponents of the law said Palestinians from the occupied West Bank and Gaza were susceptible to recruitment by armed groups and that security vetting alone was insufficient.

The law has been renewed even after the uprising wound down in 2005 and the number of attacks plummeted. Today, Israel allows more than 100,000 Palestinian workers from the occupied West Bank to enter on a regular basis.

It was passed in the middle of the Intifada, and now we are in a very different period in time, Yuval Shany, a legal expert at the Israel Democracy Institute, told The Associated Press.

Not only are attacks far rarer, but Israel has vastly improved its technological abilities to monitor Palestinians who enter, he said.

I dont think the security argument is very strong at this point in time.

Because of the law, Palestinian citizens of Israel have few, if any, avenues for bringing spouses from the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip into Israel. The policy affects thousands of families.

Mohammed Zaatreh, a Palestinian who carries a West Bank ID, lives in occupied East Jerusalem with his wife and daughter, both of whom have Jerusalem IDs.

Every 12 months, he has to apply for a special Israeli military permit just to live in his own home. The permit excludes him from having Israeli health insurance, most forms of employment, an Israeli drivers licence, and, he says, peace of mind.

At any moment they might tell you that you have to leave and that youre not welcome, Zaatreh told Al Jazeera.

His wife Hanadi Gheith said that if the citizenship law was scrapped, the family would have more freedom.

He could work easily, move easily, travel and live daily life more easily, she said.

Unlike when you dont have anything and youre afraid all the time, scared.

Male spouses over the age of 35 and female spouses over the age of 25, as well as some humanitarian cases, can apply for the equivalent of a tourist permit, which must be regularly renewed.

Palestinian spouses from Gaza have been completely banned since Hamas seized control there in 2007.

The law does not apply to the nearly 500,000 Jewish settlers who live in the occupied West Bank, who have full Israeli citizenship. Under Israels Law of Return, Jews who come to Israel from anywhere in the world are eligible for citizenship.

Israels Palestinian minority, which makes up 20 percent of the population, has close familial ties to Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Palestinian citizens view the law as one of several forms of discrimination they face in a country that legally defines itself as a Jewish nation-state.

This law sees every Palestinian as an enemy and as a threat, just because of his ethnic and national affiliation, said Sawsan Zaher, a lawyer with Adalah, a Palestinian rights group that has challenged the law in court.

The political message is very racist and very dangerous.

Palestinians who are unable to get permits but try to live with their spouses inside Israel are at risk of deportation. Couples that move to the occupied West Bank live under Israeli military occupation. If their children are born in the occupied West Bank, they would be subject to the same law preventing spouses from entering Israel, though there is an exception for minors.

The citizenship law also applies to Jewish Israelis who marry Palestinians from the territories, but such unions are extremely rare.

Human Rights Watch pointed to the law as an example of the widespread discrimination faced by Palestinians both inside Israel and in the territories it controls in a report earlier this year that said such practices amount to apartheid.

Israel rejects such allegations and says Jewish and Palestinian citizens have equal rights. It says a controversial 2018 law, which defines Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people, merely recognises the countrys character and does not infringe on individual rights.

And while Palestinian citizens have the right to vote, there are more than 60 laws that actively discriminate against them in various sectors such as education, housing and due process laws.

Israels dominant right-wing parties strongly support the law, and it has been renewed every year since being enacted.

But Israels new government includes opponents of the measure including a Palestinian faction, and the right-wing opposition led by former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu aiming to embarrass the government has warned it will not provide the votes needed to renew the law.

But even as Defence Minister Benny Gantz, a political centrist, recently urged the opposition to support the law on security grounds, he also evoked demographic concerns.

This law is essential for safeguarding the countrys security and Jewish and democratic character, and security considerations need to be put before all political considerations, Gantz said in a statement. Even in difficult times politically, we put Israel before everything.

But Jessica Montell from the Hamoked campaign group says the justification of the law for security reasons must be questioned.

You hear that the law is necessary for security, and also to maintain Israel as a Jewish democratic state, she told Al Jazeera.

That should be suspicious to anyone who hears the two justifications. You have to call into question whether the law is essential only for security reasons.

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Israel to vote on renewing law that keeps out Palestinian spouses - Al Jazeera English


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