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America’s Jewish communities are under attack Here are 3 things Congress can do | TheHill – The Hill

Posted By on May 10, 2021

This weekend, the New York Police Department arrested 29-year-old Jordan Burnette, accused of perpetrating a three-day spree of attacks against four synagogues in New York Citys Riverdale neighborhood. He was charged with 42 criminal counts including several hate crimes.

For three straight days last month, Burnette is alleged to have smashed doors and windows at these houses of prayer and invaded their sacred spaces, leaving behind a wake of strewn prayer books.

The violence against these pillars of Jewish life came days before a new report documenting that despite almost an entire year of lockdowns and stay-at-home orders due to the COVID-19 pandemic anti-Semitism remains at near historically high levels in the United States. In fact, 2020 marked the third-highest year for incidents against Americas Jews in more than 40 years.

In the face of this, Congress must do more to protect Americas Jewish communities.

While Jews have faced discrimination in this country since its founding, it wasnt typically of a violent nature. However, during the past year alone, 2,024 anti-Semitic incidents ranging from harassment to vandalism and assault were recorded a mere 4 percent decrease from the all-time high of 2019. During COVID-19, far from dissipating, the assaults often shifted online: 114 schools, synagogues and other Jewish institutions were the targets of anti-Semitic Zoom bombing, with perpetrators using Nazi symbols, other anti-Semitic messages and verbal assaults to disrupt live video conferences and intimidate participants.

The FBIs most recent hate crimes report affirms these findings and notes that Jews remain by far the religious group most targeted for hate crimes, comprising 60 percent of them. Muslims, the second-most targeted group, faced 13 percent of such crimes.

Just two-and-a-half years ago, we witnessed the deadliest attack ever on Jews in American history, when a gunman massacred 11 people at Pittsburghs Tree of Life synagogue. Six months later, a woman was shot to death at a synagogue in Poway, Calif. The following year, two Jews were murdered at a kosher market in Jersey City; days later, five were stabbed at a Chanukah celebration in Rockland County, N.Y. And the list goes on.

In recent days, the countrys top law enforcement officials have pledged to crack down on domestic terrorism: Attorney General Merrick GarlandMerrick GarlandOne quick asylum fix: How Garland can help domestic violence survivors DOJ faces big decision on home confinement DOJ proposes crackdown on 'ghost guns' following Biden pledge MORE, during his first major speech since taking office, said he would treat it as a top priority; Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro MayorkasAlejandro MayorkasSinema urges Biden to take 'bold' action at border: 'This is a crisis' Hillicon Valley: Broadband companies funded fake net neutrality comments, investigation finds | Twitter rolls out tip feature | Google to adopt 'hybrid work week' America's Jewish communities are under attack Here are 3 things Congress can do MORE announced an internal review to address the threat of domestic violent extremism within the department, including identifying, addressing, and preventing domestic violent extremism across the country. Members of Congress have properly shown their willingness to take new steps to protect threatened minorities: Last month, following a rash of attacks against Asian-American Pacific Islanders (AAPI) and thousands of COVID-19-related incidents of AAPI discrimination, Congress passed legislation that would create a position at the Department of Justice to track and expedite the review of COVID-19 hate crimes.

Here are three ways Congress can act immediately to protect American Jews and other communities of faith:

1) Increase funding for the federal Nonprofit Security Grant Program (NSGP).Administered by the Department of Homeland Security, the NSGP provides grants of up to $150,000 apiece for houses of worship, parochial schools and other nonprofits at risk of terror attacks so they may pay for security equipment such ranging from fences, lighting and video surveillance to metal detectors and blast-resistant doors, locks and windows. Funding may also be used to train staff and volunteers and pay for contracted security personnel.

During the past 16 years, the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America (Orthodox Union) has worked with bipartisan allies in Congress to secure $599 million for the program, and individual grants have been disbursed to more than 4,000 organizations nationwide. Despite this increase, NSGP funding hasnt kept pace with the alarming rate of anti-Jewish attacks, and isnt nearly enough to help all of the organizations that have applied in recent years. Now, more than 145 members of the House, led by Reps. Bill PascrellWilliam (Bill) James PascrellAmerica's Jewish communities are under attack Here are 3 things Congress can do Democrats warn Waters censure move opens floodgates Lawmakers launch bipartisan caucus on SALT deduction MORE (D-N.J.) and John KatkoJohn Michael KatkoHillicon Valley: US, UK authorities say Russian hackers exploited Microsoft vulnerabilities | Lawmakers push for more cyber funds in annual appropriations | Google child care workers ask for transportation stipend Lawmakers push for increased cybersecurity funds in annual appropriations America's Jewish communities are under attack Here are 3 things Congress can do MORE (R-N.Y.) have written to appropriators asking to double existing funding to $360 million for 2022, and we urge this be done right away.

2) Pass the Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act of 2021 (H.R.350 and S.964). This important bipartisan legislation, introduced in the House by Reps. Brad SchneiderBradley (Brad) Scott SchneiderAmerica's Jewish communities are under attack Here are 3 things Congress can do Lawmakers demand justice for Adam Toledo: 'His hands were up. He was unarmed' Democrats see opportunity in GOP feud with business MORE (D-Ill.) and Brian FitzpatrickBrian K. FitzpatrickAmerica's Jewish communities are under attack Here are 3 things Congress can do Biden visits local Mexican restaurant to highlight relief program Police reform talks ramp up amid pressure from Biden, families MORE (R-Pa.) in January, and in the Senate by Sen. Dick DurbinDick DurbinDOJ faces big decision on home confinement America's Jewish communities are under attack Here are 3 things Congress can do Schumer 'exploring' passing immigration unilaterally if talks unravel MORE (D-Ill.), would enhance the federal governments efforts to prevent domestic terrorism by establishing offices in the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI and the Department of Justice dedicated to combating this threat; requiring federal law enforcement agencies to regularly assess this threat; and providing training and resources to assist state, local, and tribal law enforcement in addressing it. Law enforcement leaders have said the lack of such a statute has hampered their work. Congress must pass this pending legislation.

3) Expand local law enforcement capacity. Most local police departments lack sufficient resources to sufficiently patrol our communities in the face of current threats, leaving too many synagogues as well as mosques, churches and other houses of worship to scrape together the money to hire off-duty police or private security guards to protect their congregations. If governments first obligation is to keep its citizens safe, this is absurd. Congress must direct some of the millions of dollars in grants distributed by the Department of Justice to police departments to support increased patrols at houses of worship particularly during times of heavy attendance such as the Sabbath and other holidays.

Religious freedom can only be enjoyedwhen people of faith have freedom from fear. Congress can, and must, do much more to protect Americas Jews and all communities of faith.

Nathan J. Diament is executive director for public policy for the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America (the Orthodox Union)

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America's Jewish communities are under attack Here are 3 things Congress can do | TheHill - The Hill

Time for Congress to take action on hate crimes bill – Washington State Wire

Posted By on May 10, 2021

A bipartisan group of elected officials in Congress introduced legislation on April 8 designed to help fight back against hate crimes across the country. Its not hard to understand why. Hate crimes are up in Washington state and around the country. Just last month, the King County Prosecutors Office filed its tenth hate crime case this year targeting local Asian Americans. In February, a synagogue in Spokane was spray painted with swastikas, and last week, a neo-Nazi pleaded guilty in federal court in Seattle to threatening local Jewish activists and journalists. This problem is real, its current, and it has gotten worse since the start of the pandemic.

People of Asian descent have become targets of bigotry since rhetoric around the coronavirus turned racial last spring. Anti-Asian American hate crimes in Seattle rose 33 percent from 2019 to 2020, according to the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino., Other U.S. cities saw far worse spikes in hate crime incidents. Misguided accusations about the origins of COVID-19 certainly drove some of this increase, although at times it was clear that perpetrators were just using the pandemic to express long-held feelings of hate.

The Jewish community is no stranger to current events being used as an excuse to dust off old bigotry. Antisemitism is called the oldest hatred for good reason. Whatever the problem war, disease, famine, economic depression someone always finds a way to blame the Jews. According to the FBIs most recent hate crime statistics, out of all religious-based attacks, those targeting Jews comprise about 60 percent, even as Jews constitute only 2 percent of the U.S. population. The Jewish community in Puget Sound has been a regular target of antisemitic attacks, including, tragically, the shooting of six employees of the Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle in 2006. The coronavirus pandemic has also driven an explosion in antisemitism worldwide, most recently expressing itself in anti-vaccine hate targeted at Israel.

The Asian American and Jewish communities of the Puget Sound area have proudly stood together over the course of the past year, speaking out against hate and division, sharing perspectives and comfort, and advocating for safer communities for all. But we cant successfully fight back against a problem which we dont fully understand. The Jabara-Heyer NO Hate Act, named after a Lebanese American man killed in Oklahoma and Heather Heyer, a white woman killed at the white supremacists rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, would streamline the national hate crime reporting systems used by law enforcement, create a hate crimes hotline and expand assistance and resources for victims of hate crimes, and support training for law enforcement on investigating hate crimes. It would help the FBI better understand where, why, and how these incidents occur, and how to better take action, both proactively and reactively, on this critical issue.

The NO Hate Act has been broadly endorsed by civil rights and activist groups and minority community advocates, including our two organizations American Jewish Committee and United Chinese Americans and law enforcement agencies and organizations, including a bipartisan coalition of 35 attorneys general, including Washingtons Bob Ferguson.

As the attorneys general said,

For more than two decades, thousands of city, county, college and university, state, tribal, and federal law enforcement agencies have voluntarily submitted hate crimes data to the FBI. However most law enforcement agencies did not participate or reported zero incidents. Without reliable statistics, the government cannot properly understand, investigate, and prosecute hate crimes or provide necessary resources to survivors.

The NO Hate Act died in Congress last year. It cannot be allowed to fail again. We strongly urge our congressional delegation not just to co-sponsor the bill, but to make it a priority, so that we can take one more step toward a world in which hatred, bigotry, racism, and violence are no longer welcome.

Murray Lee is the incoming board president of the American Jewish Committee Seattle. Winston Lee is the president of United Chinese Americans of Washington

Public service journalism is important today as ever. If you get something from our coverage, please consider making a donation to support our work. Thanks for reading our stuff.

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Time for Congress to take action on hate crimes bill - Washington State Wire

Police must protect us more from all this anti-Semitism – The Riverdale Press

Posted By on May 10, 2021

By SASHA KESLER

(re: Weekend vandalism targets 4 synagogues, April 29)

When I was 16, the Seattle Jewish Federation was attacked by a violent shooter on a Friday afternoon. A woman died, and four were shot mostly non-Jews, since many of the Jews already had left for Shabbat.

When I worked at that federation several years later for a summer fellowship, the pain and trauma was still palpable. Some people talked about the shooting every day. Others would leave the room any time it came up. As we approached the anniversary, the conversations became more intense and frequent, with some staff members experiencing post-traumatic episodes.

While I had experienced many anti-Semitic incidents growing up, such as being called a kike, this was the first time I felt the traumatic impact of violent modern anti-Semitism in America.

During my fellowship, I sat in numerous meetings and task forces with law enforcement as they told us about their plans to keep the Jewish community safe.

I was used to seeing law enforcement outside my synagogue during services. Like many American Jews, I saw the police as our allies in preventing anti-Semitism, and felt safer with their constant presence.

My perspective began shifting as I heard from Jewish friends of color who expressed their discomfort with the presence of armed police officers outside Jewish institutions. When entering the building, they were often questioned about their presence, and treated with skepticism.

I realized my appreciation for the presence of police officers did not match the experiences of Jews of color.

Last summer, Riverdalians of all backgrounds gathered to protest against the injustice, violence and discrimination in the institution of policing. I spoke with neighbors and friends who had always assumed the police were an instrument of safety.

For the first time, they questioned how and why George Floyd a Black man simply standing on the street could have been murdered. When the fervor of the summers protests ended, some returned to their original perspectives on policing, but many were left with a lingering realization that the system that led to George Floyds murder was inherently broken.

When I heard about the anti-Semitic vandalism of multiple synagogues in Riverdale, my heart hurt for the trauma and pain this would evoke. Jews have a long history of seeing our synagogues attacked, triggering the memory of deadly violence across the world. We continue to experience trauma with anti-Semitic shootings in Pittsburgh, Poway and Jersey City in recent years, just to name a few.

The response to what happened in Riverdale was formulaic: The New York Police Department convened synagogue and Jewish institution leaders to discuss their plans to increase patrolling. Yet despite the purported increased patrolling, another incident occurred at one of the same synagogues while the police were supposed to be watching.

If the true goal is Jewish safety, the system is not working.

Maybe this is the time we look for other responses. We look to community-led safety like we have seen in New York City in support of Asian-Americans.

We reach out to our non-Jewish friends and neighbors to be our partners in protecting our synagogues, just like hundreds of Jews volunteered to provide security across Asian-led vigils, events, and calls to action this spring with Jews for Asians.

We bring in social workers to hold space for the trauma and fear that our community members are experiencing.

We engage in community education and implement restorative justice programs to give those impacted by hate a voice in how harm can be repaired, and future harm prevented.

Our neighbors keep us safe. We keep each other safe.

We have heard and seen over and over again that police pose a threat to Black people and Black lives. We cannot say we support Black lives if our default response to all anti-Semitic incidents is to constantly increase the presence of police. I do not want the attempts to secure my safety to threaten that of others.

Jews continue to be targets for violence, but the models of policing that currently exist are by and large not impeding attacks such as this. Jewish safety and dignity are intertwined with that of all communities.

My fellow Jews, join me in building a new path and seeking collective safety for all.

The author is a special projects manager with the citys social services department.

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Police must protect us more from all this anti-Semitism - The Riverdale Press

Police believe they caught shul vandal, but what is next? – The Riverdale Press

Posted By on May 10, 2021

By ETHAN STARK-MILLER

How should a community come together in the wake of hatred and find a way to collectively heal?

Thats the question many in this corner of the Bronx are asking themselves after at least four synagogues along the Henry Hudson Parkway were targeted by a vandal last month.

The natural first step? Catch those responsible.

Thats exactly what happened early Saturday morning when officers from the 50th Precinct arrested Jordan Burnette, 29. The New York Police Departments Hate Crime Task Force believes Burnette who lives at the Whitehall in Spuyten Duyvil threw rocks and broke the windows at the synagogues and vehicles surrounding them, as well as damaging prayer books and even stealing a bicycle.

He racked up 42 charges in all, and many carry additional weight as hate crimes.

Burnette is free awaiting trial after a Bronx criminal court judge placed him on supervised release. That was after an earlier decision from a different judge ordered Burnette held on $20,000 cash bail, despite defense attorneys claims he couldnt be held on bail under current state law.

Police say Burnette was in the midst of another synagogue rampage when they nabbed him for riding a bicycle against traffic on Delafield Avenue near West 246th Street in the very early morning hours of Saturday. Police believe Burnette stole that bicycle from the Conservative Synagogue Adath Israel of Riverdale on West 250th Street, not far from where they say he doused a pile of Jewish prayer books with hand sanitizer.

CSAIR had been targeted in rock-throwing attacks the weeks before, along with the Riverdale Jewish Center on Independence Avenue, Chabad Lubavitch of Riverdale on West 246th Street, and Young Israel of Riverdale on Henry Hudson Parkway East. Additionally, the windows of three cars were smashed on West 239th Street near The Moore Family Riverdale Counseling Center run by the Jewish Board of Family and Childrens Services.

Local electeds including Councilman Eric Dinowitz, his father Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz, state Sen. Alessandra Biaggi and U.S. Rep. Jamaal Bowman, thanked the NYPD and Jewish leaders who came together to stand up to this bigotry in our community in a joint statement.

We will continue to support efforts to ensure that all residents feel safe in their own neighborhoods, they added.

CSAIR rabbi Barry Dov Katz had a clear message for his congregation following the vandalism spree.

We are a strong community, and this was a horrible attack that feels like a violation of our sacred place, he said. Still, Katz wanted his congregants to continue living proud and joyful Jewish lives.

So, thats the response to hate. To people who might want you to not be who you are. To celebrate that.

Katz hasnt been alone in finding support.

Christians, Muslims and Jews for sure in the area and beyond, have been incredibly supportive, Katz said. They reached out with offers of help and support, whatever we need. Its been really heartwarming.

One of those faith leaders lending her support is Mehnaz Afridi, who directs the Holocaust, Genocide & Interfaith Education Center at Manhattan College. Afridi quickly set up an online crowdfunding page to raise money for the targeted synagogues in hopes of offsetting the cost to repair the broken windows and doors.

I just felt like it was an opportunity for me to give something to the community, Afridi said. But also, to show that when you attack a Jew, you attack a Muslim and you attack a Christian. You attack a person with no faith. So when you attack someone, you attack all of humanity.

Afridi, who is Muslim, felt the fundraiser was a good way to help the synagogues during her faiths holiday of Ramadan, she said, especially since its a time that emphasizes social action.

Its symbolic to me that theyre windows and doors, Afridi said. Someone who is a person of faith like me, I believe that we have to open up our doors and our windows to our neighbors.

With a goal of raising $8,000 to distribute evenly among the four shuls, Afridi already raised more than a third of it. Even some of her Manhattan College students have pitched in, she said.

People who are not in this community took their time to give $5 or $10, she said. It doesnt matter what you give, but its the whole idea.

Afridi is considering a vigil or demonstration to show solidarity with the local Jewish community. Its something she has experience doing after bringing together hundreds locally when the Tree of Life synagogue was attacked in Pittsburgh three years ago, killing 11 and injuring seven others.

Jennifer Scarlott, who runs the activist group North Bronx Racial Justice, put together her own rally soon after the attacks. While the original message was speaking out against police brutality, challenging anti-Semitism was included in the overall theme. Joining her were U.S. Rep. Bowman as well as city council candidate Mino Lora.

Another neighbor, Sasha Kesler, says its important to bring the community together during times like this. However, figuring out a way to do it can be complicated especially after learning Burnette is actually a neighbor rather than an outsider.

Still, its especially important to create solidarity in a positive way, said Kesler, who works for the citys social services department.

Progressives werent the only ones rallying in support of the synagogues. A group of conservative politicians led by former Brooklyn Assemblyman Dov Hikind gathered in front of the Riverdale Jewish Center at one point. He was joined by Long Island congressman Lee Zeldon and Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa. They blamed the states reform of cash bail for the vandalism, and demanded lawmakers roll those laws back.

Hikind even described window breaking as the night of broken glass, invoking the history of Kristallnacht when Nazis vandalized Jewish businesses in 1930s Europe.

Hikind isnt free from scandal himself. Hes been criticized for using racist rhetoric and even wearing blackface to a Purim party when he was an Assemblyman. Eric Dinowitz decried this particular rally, calling it a campaign stop through his city council office.

I am outraged that members of the Republican Party would engage in such blatant opportunism under the guise of supporting the Riverdale Jewish community, Dinowitz said, in a statement through his council office spokesman. I will work with anyone willing to take on the fight against anti-Semitism. However, (last weeks) press conference was nothing more than a dishonest attempt to push a conservative agenda.

Not all Jewish leaders represent the Jewish community, Kesler said, and that goes for Hikind, especially when it comes to Jewish people of color. Still, she believes the community can rise above all of that and learn a great deal from what happened.

This is an opportunity to really come together as a community and to talk about our experiences of anti-Semitism, our experiences of violence against our Jewish institutions, Kesler said. And to think through how we can envision new ways of responding that may actually work better.

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CORRECTION: Cash bail for Jordan Burnette had originally been set at $20,000 before being later overruled by another judge. A story in the May 6 edition listed the bond amount instead.

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Police believe they caught shul vandal, but what is next? - The Riverdale Press

My journey through the Jewish South: always disappearing, never gone – Forward

Posted By on May 10, 2021

The last time my dad went to his hometown of Martinsville, Virginia, was for his mothers burial at the Jewish cemetery there two years ago. It had been nearly five decades since hed moved away from the little industrial town on the Carolina borderpart of a mass migration of the Souths small-town Jews to the regions urban centersand at least fifteen years since hed last returned. The main street where his parents had run their department store for thirty years was full of empty storefronts. The thoroughfare had once been lined with shops owned by other Jewish merchants, but Mr. Blacks music store, where my dad had gotten records as a teenager, had long ago shuttered. There was no evidence of cousin Gilmers shoe store, where my grandfather used to go smoke cigars with the other shopkeepers to catch a break from his wife, a New Jersey native who thought she could do anything better than you until the day she died.

My grandparents met through correspondence during World War II. Someone had connected the two, thinking they were relatives because they happened to share the same last name. They were pen pals; they were married. My grandmother moved down to Martinsville, where my grandfather grew up. Many years laterafter my dad relocated his parents to a nursing home near us in Atlanta, and then after Gramps passedthe rhythm of Nanas days slowed. She made a ritual of calling us up and asking, again and again: Whats new and different?

I missed the funeral. I had just moved to New Orleans to start a new job, and I had decidednow this sounds like such a slippery, no-good reasonthat the small ceremony wasnt worth missing work and driving alone all the way to Virginia. Nana was buried that day in a plain wooden casket, as is Jewish custom. The casket is meant to disintegrate into the soil, returning the body to the earth rather than preserving it in an enclosed box. Its a ritual of regeneration, and its one I find especially beautiful in the Jewish tradition.

The practice has its roots in a quote from Genesis: For you are dust, and unto dust you shall return. Ancient rabbis, insisting that the ritual of Jewish burial reflect that every human is equal in creation and in death, wrote in the Talmud that all people should be buried on plain biers, even if they could afford more lavish trimmings. This idea of democracy in deathand that death can, and must, beget lifehas brought me recently to a poem by New Orleanian writer Clint Smith. In An Evening at the Louvre, he writes:

_It would be nice to besomething in a museum one daybecause thats what Ive been toldmeans youve lived a meaningful lifebut I think I might liketo be in a gardenwhere even after I die the residueof me can help grow somethingmore beautiful than I ever was_

The residue of my grandparents lies in the cemetery of a synagogue called Ohev Zion that my great-grandfather helped found in 1927. Today, theres a will outlining what will happen to the synagogue once membership falls below ten dues-paying families. They havent hit that point yet, but theyre close. My grandmothers burial was officiated by a rabbi who came up from Greensboro, since Ohev Zion cant support a full-time rabbi anymore. It hasnt been able to in years, since around the time my dad left Martinsville. After the service, my dad gathered with Martinsvilles remaining Jews for lunch. They traded stories. There was the one about a young rabbi serving Ohev Zion years ago, who had been fresh out of seminary and was very New York, my dad told me later; the guy mysteriously fled town in the thick of night. There were the tales of traveling Jewish salesmen coming through Martinsville to hawk their wares, and the impromptu dinners to host them. What were we going to do, send them to the rib joint downtown? my dad posed. From down the lunch table, the Globmans piped up: Wed have them over the next night! There was goodwill and warmth, my dad told me, but also the sense that, soon enough, the old ladies keeping the lights on at Ohev Zion would finally pass and the synagogue would go along with them. As my dad recounted all this to me, I couldnt help but wonder how much longer Martinsville would have enough Jews to form a minyan: a gathering of at least ten people needed to say the most sacred prayers, like the mourners kaddish.

Small-town Southern Jewish communities are dead or dying. So goes the popular narrative. Its a story my dad has claimed as his own, watching through his increasingly infrequent visits as the Jews of Martinsville dispersed when the town lost its textile and furniture factories, as Jew storesas he calls themgave way to strip malls, and his generation went off to college and never came back. Its a story Ive only known secondhand. My parents raised me within the folds of Atlanta Jewish life, where I came of age surrounded by Jews whose families had also come from small towns across the region. Jews with Delta drawls and Tennessee twangs and Lowcountry liltsmy moms side of the family hails from Charleston, South Carolinawho frequent the kosher Kroger in Toco Hills and bake the most tender brisket Ive ever tasted. Jews like my parents, who mightve been the only Jews in their schools growing up, but could send their kids (me) to Jewish day schools and sleep-away camps near home.

Now I live in New Orleans, a city thats had a vibrant Jewish community since French Colonial times; Ive enjoyed many Shabbat picnics on Bayou St. John, have an array of synagogue choices for the high holidays, and can watch Krewe de Jieux roll every Carnival season, throwing bagels spray-painted gold. As Jewish communities like mine have gravitated toward the Souths cities, the regions small-town Jewish life has diminished to a handful of older folks hanging on.

From my dad, I adopted the idea that in Martinsville, and towns like it, there is nothing left for us as Jewish peoplethat small-town synagogues in the South have become little more than museums to lost communities. Since my grandmothers funeral, Ive had an urge to go to these towns, these synagogues, in hopes of witnessing something other than decay. I wanted to question the stories Ive been told; maybe prove my dads thesis wrong. It was this motivation that led me to the Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life (ISJL), a Jackson, Mississippibased organization dedicated to providing education and programming for Jewish communities across the region. The story of Southern Jewish life is not merely a story of shuttering synagogues and diminishing numbers, they write in their mission statement. Its also a story of growing communities, vibrant congregations, and active Jewish communities of all sizes.

It was sometime around the anniversary of Nanas passing that I found the ISJL and their director of rabbinical services, Rabbi Aaron Rozovsky. When I learned that Rozovskys job consists of doing one thingtraveling across the South serving small-town synagogues that can no longer sustain a full-time rabbi themselvesI knew I had to join him on his travels.

Congregation Beth Shalom convenes in an old Christian Science church tucked into a wooded neighborhood north of Auburn University. When I arrived there on a Friday evening in January, no one had unlocked the building yet. I had been driving alone all day, tracing I-65 from Mobile to Montgomery; if Id kept on going two more hours, I couldve made it to my parents Shabbat dinner table in Atlanta just in time for my moms challah to come out of the oven. I sat in the car in the dark. The pine trees loomed overhead. I had the admittedly irrational yet familiar thought that some unknown specter, despising my Jewishness, might be lurking in the dark. But it wasnt long before the first congregants pulled up and let me inside, welcoming me to their weekly service. Soon, people were flitting around the small sanctuary, setting up a couple dozen chairs and just as many miniature Dixie cups of grape juice, readying the space for this Shabbats special guest. I felt myself relax. I settled into a seat in the back row to take in the space. The sanctuary was filled with the artifacts of shuttered synagogues from across the state. There were stained-glass windows built into the double doors at the entrance, a gift from Temple Emanu-El in Jasper, Alabama, established in 1922, closed in 2005. There was a tall wooden ark donated by an old Sephardic shul in Montgomery, Congregation Etz Ahayem, that merged with the Ashkenazi synagogue there in 2001. At the top of the ark there were gold Hebrew letters that read: Know who you stand before.

A septuagenarian Brooklynite in Merrells approached me. He introduced himself as Mike Friedman, the self-proclaimed poet laureate in residence, and gave me an on-the-spot history lesson: A former chemistry professor at the university, he moved to Auburn in 1968 and helped found Beth Shalom in 1989. This congregation is the only one in eastern Alabama and was born out of a potluck dinner for Rosh Hashanah in the early 80s when a local couple invited four friends over, telling them to extend the invitation to everyone they knew. Eighty people showed up, all surprised at the number of other members of the tribe around them; many had assumed they were one of the only Jewish families around. Mike and his wife, Harriet, had helped gather the pieces I saw in the synagogue from across Alabama: the sanctuary doors, the ark, the Torah from Demopolis. I wondered: What had all of these inherited artifacts witnessed in their former homes? What did they make of their new environs?

Susan Youngblood, co-president of Beth Shalom, weaved between the rows in the sanctuary, making sure that everyone knew their responsibilities for the night: parading the Torah around the room, blessing it before it was read, reciting prayers from the bima. She apologized to me for the small number in attendance; it was Martin Luther King Jr. weekend in a college town. Yet there were still upwards of twenty people present, from kids playing with 3D glasses that turned all lights into stars of David, to Auburn undergrads and professors, to the retired Friedmans down the row.

Rabbi Rozovsky waved to me when he walked in and quickly assumed his position at the lectern. He wore a quarter-zip sweater with a button-down and a tie, paired with his signature camouflage-patterned kippah. He is thirty-four years old, a member of the National Guard, and a recent graduate of Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati. He greeted the gathered with a bright and earnest grin, offered Shabbat Shalom, and launched into the hymn Hinei Matov. Some of the congregants around me stumbled through the Hebrew under their breath; others sang it clearly. As we moved through the traditional Friday evening blessings, I thought about the number of times a rabbi must lead a congregation to know which of myriad tunes the laypeople prefer, which of the prayers to skip over; all of the ways to measure a rapport between the leader and the led. Id been raised in synagogues with longstanding rabbinical appointments, where if the rabbi sang the first note of a song, the congregants could carry the tune seamlessly, hardly needing a leader. Later, when I played back a recording Id made of the Friday night service in Auburn, I could hardly hear anyones singing over my own.

When we reached the culminating song, Rabbi Rozovsky gestured to the bar mitzvah-to-be in the front row and posed, Come lead Adon Olam, as part of your training! The middle-schooler shook his head no. You can kick me under the bima if you want to! Still no. Hate to put you on the spot butokay, wait til May? We can wait til May. The rabbi led the song in a rousing call-and-response rendition, just slightly off-rhythm. Everyone migrated over to the oneg table. We blessed the candles and the grape juice and challah. Folks lingered over a spread of cookies and a liter of ginger ale. Susan Youngblood reminded everyone to come out to a lively Torah study the next morning.

I approached Rabbi Rozovsky, who was chatting animatedly with a professor in the veterinary school about the breadth of Southern synagogues he serves. A century ago, Anshe Chesed in Vicksburg, Mississippi, had more than four hundred members, but today has only eight, all over the age of eighty. But not all the small-town synagogues that Rozovsky visits are disappearing. Theres Beth Ahabah in Richmond, Texas: only four years old with a membership of one hundred and fifty. And theres Beth Shalom in Auburn, where we stood, which the rabbi liked to call his bar mitzvah factory.

Like me, Rabbi Rozovsky anticipated seeing a lot of death and decline as he began traveling around to the Souths Jewish communities. When I took this job I thought I was going to do a ton of funerals, he said. But hes been surprised at the vivacity hes witnessed. Ive only done one funeral in a year and a half, he told me. By the time hes finished up in a few monthsthe traveling rabbi post tends to run for just two to three yearsthe rabbi said hell have done three or four conversions and four bnai mitzvot.

At Torah study the next morning, the congregants set out a basket of sesame bagels with cream cheese and lox. Coffee brewed in the kitchen. Rabbi Rozovsky opted for a bottle of Coke from the refrigerator and a paper plate of leftover off-brand Oreos from last nights oneg. Ten of us sat in a circle in the sanctuary, and the rabbi passed around printouts with excerpts of the weekly Torah portion. We began with the rape of Dinah and pivoted quickly toward the intricacies of ritual sacrifice. A congregant asked if, in ancient Israel, you wanted to roast a lamb for Sunday dinner, did you need to bring it to the altar in Jerusalem, or could you cook it right there in your field? The rabbi clarified, saying you could roast whatever you pleased in your field (as long as it was kosher), but all sacrifices needed to go through Jerusalem.

You know who has a society like that? Mike Friedman posed. Alabama. The local people do not have jurisdiction. I wondered if Mike was referring to the way Alabama, like many Southern states, pre-empts local governments from setting many of their own policies, like minimum-wage floors or firearms regulationsits a legacy of former slave states wielding power over their constituents. With its congregation made up of university professors, I got the sense that Beth Shalom leaned more liberal than conservative. Theyve been trying to get that changed, Mike said. But the power in Montgomery, they dont want to give it up. Just like Jerusalem had all the power.

The rabbi had a penchant for likening biblical passages to contemporary pop dramas (Dinahs story to Game of Thrones, baby Mosess choice between riches and coal to Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, any anecdote about the Jewish few against the gentile many to Braveheart, which, ironically or not, was produced by Mel Gibson). He explained what a midrash is by telling everyone about a rabbinical school assignment where he was asked to write a commentary on a Talmudic teaching about why we are forbidden to eat shellfish (It was the only time I got top of the class in seminary, he said). He peppered his teaching with Hebrew affirmations in an Israeli inflection, favoring nachon (yes, correct) with an emphasis on the ch.

I had assumed that the small town Jewish communities Id meet on my travels would lack the sort of robust Jewish education Id gained in Atlanta as a kid. My dad still stumbles through the Hebrew of Friday night blessings that were drilled into me at school growing up. But around me, many Beth Shalom members followed the text of the Torah portion closely with books perched in their laps, asking the rabbi pointed questions about the ancient census and rights to land ownership and the assimilation of Jewish girls into the Egyptian population after all the Jewish boys were killed on the pharaohs edict (the girls were useful as slaves). We veered toward an intimate discussion on how Judaism shifted from patrilineal to matrilineal descent; how Harriet Friedmans grandmother lost all her gold during a pogrom (it wasnt so long ago); how Judaism came, at times, to be defined by blood rather than by personal persuasion. Rabbi Rozovsky entertained every tangent with apparent delight.

It came time for me to go. The rabbi had an afternoon full of appointments for bar mitzvah trainings; we would convene at our next stop, Temple Bnai Israel in Columbus, Mississippi, the following evening. On the way there, I drove through stretches of dense forest. At times, the trees lining the state highway felt like a protection, a haven. At others, I imagined what might be looming in the shadows. Through a break in the trees, I spied a pickup truck parked in a driveway, a Confederate battle flag painted across the entirety of its back tailgate. I saw countless crosses planted in front lawns or built up on hillsides for all drivers to see. The only place I spotted a Star of David was in the corner of a billboard near Gordo, Alabama, that read: THE ONLY KEY TO HEAVEN IS JESUS.

The South is the only home I know, and yet I often feel a nebulous threat of anti-Semitism: a thing that tightens my throat, makes me look over my shoulder when Im alone. Sometimes, the fear feels warranted. I think of my dad as a kid, watching a Klan rally march past his parents store (he insists they werent rallying against the line of Jewish merchants, but I do wonder)and how, a hundred miles away and a couple decades later, a crowd with torches descended upon Charlottesville chanting Jews will not replace us. It can be easy to assume that anti-Semitism in the South is worse than in the rest of the country.

But then I remember recent acts of violence in the Northeast, and Harriet Friedman telling me about moving to Auburn from Washington, D.C., which had been the home of the American Nazi Party in the 1960s. For me it was torment living there, she said. They used to have arson at various synagogues in the D.C. area. So it was actually nicer here.

Despite all thisor maybe because of itwhenever I step into a synagogue, I feel immediately safe and at home. Something about showing up to a place Ive never been, where I dont know a soul, and realizing: all of us share a root system.

Rabbi Rozovsky and I pulled up in our separate cars outside Temple Bnai Israel in Columbus. The door to the sanctuary was locked. The rabbi suggested we find the nearest McDonalds. There, he ordered an Oreo McFlurry and we sat in a booth facing a strip of franchises by the highway. He told me his family hails from rural Canada, where, years ago, his grandfather drove his father three hours each way to Montreal every weekend to get a Jewish education. It became a passion of Rozovskys to serve small-town Jewish communities, with their all hands on deck spirit. Everyone feels like theyre a stakeholder, he told me. Youll have a lawyer, a doctor, an executive, but theyre there mopping or sweeping. You wouldnt see that at a big synagogue. Theres an investment. I love it. He also gets to be closer to his mother in Texas, his fiance in South Carolina, and his community in Richmond, where he lived from the ages of ten to eighteen. Before that, he came of age in Providence, Rhode Island; he considers himself a New Englander. He likes to tell the congregants that instead of yall he says yous guys.

I followed him back to the synagogue. When we arrived, the congregants were setting out a platter of cookies and a pot of coffee in one corner of the sanctuary. Ten of us gathered around a table. The congregation had requested that Rabbi Rozovsky give a presentation on the history of Reform Judaism. He dove in excitedly. As a history guy I want to go through every day of the last few millennia, but you know, we have to cut it short, he said.

Heres what he said about Jews in the South: Jews have lived here since the first white settlers arrived on the land that would become the United States. German and Spanish Jews entered the Americas through Galveston and Charleston and Savannah, establishing both Ashkenazi and Sephardic synagogues before this countrys founding. A century later, Eastern European Jews fleeing the heightening persecution in their home countries began to join those earlier arrivals, who, by then, knew no other home than the American South. Together they created flourishing Jewish communities in small towns across the region during the first half of the twentieth century. Picture peddlers whod gained enough capital selling their wares door to door to open brick-and-mortar storefronts that lined main streets in downtowns from Texas to the Carolinas; Jewish mayors in Dumas, Arkansas, and Durham, North Carolina, and Donaldsonville, Louisiana (and Martinsville, Virginia). Yet after the second World War, a generation of Jewish Southerners waved goodbye to their parents, leaving home for the opportunities that only big cities could offer.

The Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life grew out of this population shift. It began in 1986 as a response to Jews like my dad leaving the Souths small towns. First, it was a museum housed at a Jewish sleep-away camp in Mississippi: a repository for artifacts and sacred objects that needed a home when synagogues closed across the region. Yet its founders saw a need beyond historic preservation. They recognized a story that exceeded the simple narrative that Jewish communities were dead or dying. So, in 2000, they expanded their operations and began providing educational and rabbinical services to Jewish communities in thirteen states.

In the Jewish South, I learned, necessity has often led to innovation. The ISJLs creation of Rabbi Rozovskys position is a testament to this, and so are many other tales of Jews here seeking leadership wherever they could find it. In his presentation, the rabbi shared that two decades before the first female rabbi was officially ordained in the 1970s, Congregation Beth Israel in Meridian, Mississippi, had named a woman as spiritual leader. In 1950, Beth Israels beloved Rabbi Ackerman suddenly passed away. The congregants approached his widow, Paulaa rabbis daughter herself, who knew how to lead a service, give a sermon, and conduct marriages and funeralsand appointed her their leader. Her position was harshly opposed by the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, but Beth Israels membership didnt care. This was not in New York or Los Angeles or San Francisco, Rabbi Rozovsky exclaimed. This was in Meridian, Mississippi!

As we wrapped up, Rabbi Rozovsky let the congregants know that hed be finishing his term with the ISJL in a few months time. He had plans to get married and settle down. They thanked him for his time, and insisted he stay the night in Columbus rather than trek to Jackson in the dark, but he swore he could make it back in just a few hours. Everyone began to fold up the tables and put away the snacks and turn off the lights. A white-haired lady in a long red coat approached me. She introduced herself as Emily.

Are you Jewish? she asked.

I am, I said. She told me shes a convert, and pointed to the treasurer holding a coffee cup: Hes a convert too. Emily had always been a bit of a doubter, and then one day, at the church here in Columbus where she grew up, she was reciting the creed and thought: I dont believe this. Everyone was extremely understanding, supportive. My Catholic relatives in Starkville trooped over to Memphis with me when I went through the beit din, she said. Spiritually, its been very satisfying. The temple is just like any other church. Ups and downs, advantages and disadvantages, frustrations and so forth. I wish there was a larger community here. There used to be, but they sent their children off to good schools and colleges and they went beyond that. Thats what happens.

She looked me in the eye. Jews dont proselytize, but they can certainly be attractive for a spiritual kind of anchor, she said. I always appreciate the opportunity to question and doubt.

Emily put half a dozen cookies in a Ziploc bag and handed them to me for the road, as if to say: you have a place here. I waved goodbye to her and to Rabbi Rozovsky and left.

When I returned to New Orleans, I met with Anna Tucker, the curator of the soon-to-be-opened Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience. Though the museum is a separate project from the ISJL, the two entities share board members, and the museum bills itself as an expanded vision of the institutes original repository for the sacred objects left behind when synagogues shuttered across the region. Tucker and I sat in the library of Temple Sinai on St. Charles Avenue with artifacts from Southern Jewish history sprawled on the table in front of us. She presented a wooden tzedakah box with the words social justice affixed to it, and then led me into the sanctuary to show me an identical box sitting atop a pedestal by the door, meant for charitable donations. Tucker thought the older box might have been used in this synagogue during the civil rights era. In 1949, Temple Sinai had housed the first major integrated audience in New Orleans, for a public speech delivered by Ralph Bunche; the next year, Bunche would become the first African American to win the Nobel Peace Prize, which he received for his late 1940s work as a United Nations mediator in Palestine. I imagined those small wooden boxes speaking across generations, signaling that gathering people and resources can bring change.

Back in the library, Tucker brought out a stack of postcards showing the faades of Jewish storefronts across the South, from Levy Bros. in Louisville to Richs in Atlanta. I looked for my grandparents store in Martinsville, and for my mothers parents store in Charleston, and for the stores that belonged to the ancestors of friends in Knoxville and Cary and Jasper and Swainsboro. I didnt find any. Many of those stores are likely vacant now, or torn down and remade into something else. I wondered then about tracing the legacies they created, landing me in that synagogue that day, looking back. Tucker told me that the vision for the project is to create a living museum: one that continues to collect, a place where history is built rather than explained. It should be a space to ask questions, she said.

After our meeting, I went to sit by the entrance of Audubon Park. On my phone, I pulled up the will for Ohev Zion. When the synagogue closes its doors for good, it will sell its assetsits Torah and ark and stained-glass windows. The profit from the sale will go into a trust, which will be used to ensure maintenance of the cemetery where my grandparents lie, their wooden caskets slowly decomposing, returning them to the earth.

In Judaism, when someone dies, we say, May their memory be for a blessing. Sitting in the park, under the shade of a live oaks winding branches, I considered the empty flower bed around the fountain in frontof me. In the spring, it would be bounding with blooms. May their memories be for a garden, I thought. May their stories be ones of regeneration.

This article was originally published in Oxford American and has been reposted with permission.

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My journey through the Jewish South: always disappearing, never gone - Forward

Patinkin: Welcome Kamala, to the home of the independent, the free and the ethnic – The Providence Journal

Posted By on May 10, 2021

Gina Raimondo sworn in as Commerce Secretary

Gina Raimondo, the Rhode Island governor picked by President Joe Biden to lead the Commerce Department, has been sworn in by Vice President Kamala Harris. (March 3)

AP

Madame Vice President:

Its great to see youre planning to visit Rhode Island Wednesday, with Gina.

Who, by the way, deserves the titleMadame Secretary, since she now runs Commerce, but around these parts, shes Gina.

From when she ran the state.

Rhode Island being a bit smaller than California, thats how we refer to governors.

Linc, Bruce, Joe, Gina.

Its not just out of familiarity, but a reminder.

Politicians here arent above us, but of us.

Its been that way since Roger Williams fled here from Massachusetts in 1636 because he didnt like Puritans telling him how to think.

He then started his own refuge for what the author H.P. Lovecraft called The Odd, the free and the dissenting.

Still guilty of that.

Proudly, I think.

But theres a valuable lesson herefor the times.

These divided times.

Rhode Island, Im convinced, is less divided than many places because of that founding idea.

Freedom of thought.

And creed.

It was born here.

Its why Rhode Island has both the nations oldest synagogue and the First Baptist Church inAmerica the faith's mother church.

Its where Roger Williams preached.

And they continue his irreverence, like not long ago displaying a sign out front saying, What if Jesus, Mary and Joseph were separated at the Egyptian border?

And another time: Jesus had two dads & turned out fine.

As for the oldest synagogue, thats in Newport, where George Washington, embracing Roger, made an American pledge to a people who faced prejudice: To Bigotry No Sanction, To Persecution No Assistance.

That legacy is still part of Rhode Islands DNA.

So is freedom of conscience, which is one of many reasons we have the third highest number of unaffiliated voters almost 50%.

Our political model is the states favorite icon, the 11-foot-tall statue atop the State House called The Independent Man.

Hes holding a spear, I think as a reminder to those in the chambers below who they work for.

Voters here are indeed independent.

Were a blue-collar state that once sent a house painter to Congress, but at the same timeembraced two pedigreed New England aristocrats for the U.S. Senate, Claiborne Pell and John Chafee.

And a few years later, elected Bruce Sundlun as governor a CEO with a horse farm in Virginia, but we liked his politics.

Weve liked some scoundrels too, like Buddy Cianci, reelected Providence mayor after being booted for felony assault. But he did a great job turning the city around before ending up in the big house for corruption. And he still got a third act as top-rated talk show host.

I wont deny its a quirky state, so we have non-political icons too.

Like a landmark 58-foot-long blue termite overlooking Route 95, and a regular summer campfire along Providences river, Gregorian chant in the background, with room for 10,000.

Unique local cuisine, as well, like Dels lemonade slush or the countrys only official state appetizer calamari, which you may recall was mentioned when our convention delegation endorsed Joe Biden. Our draggers bring a lot of that back to our docks.

And you wont find a richer Little Italy than the one in Providence, on Atwells Avenue.

Which brings us back to why, in divided times, Rhode Island is less divided.

RI Political Scene: Removing 'Plantations' from the state name is easier said than done

Were a lively cultural mlange, where Italians, Portuguese, Latinos, Irish, African Americans and yes, New England Yankees too, all celebrate the richness of other cultures. And I better not leave out Native Americans, Armenians, Cape Verdeans and many others.

We do have political divides. Trump may have lost here, but he got more votes than many past Republican candidates.

He even took some heavily Democratic towns, like Johnston, which has a traditional Italo-American heritage.

But thats why you dont see a key source of divisiveness here: white supremacy.

Pockets of conservatism, yes.

White supremacy?

Weve been vibrantly ethnic for so long it wouldnt occur to people here to think ethnic groups are replacing us.

That trains come through.

And it's done so in the healthiest of ways, which should be a model for other states.

Patinkin Column: How dare they! DC seeks to undercut RI as smallest state

The odd, the dissenting, the free, the ethnic.

MadameVice President, welcome to how America was meant to be.

mpatinki@providencejournal.com

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Patinkin: Welcome Kamala, to the home of the independent, the free and the ethnic - The Providence Journal

Community ‘Living in Fear’ After Release of Alleged Attacker of Four Riverdale Synagogues, Says Algemeiner Editor-in-Chief – Algemeiner

Posted By on May 10, 2021

Algemeiner Editor-in-Chief Dovid Efune appears on i24 News. Photo: Screenshot.

Jewish families in New Yorks Riverdale neighborhood have been forced to live in fear after the pre-trial release of the alleged perpetrator behind a string of antisemitic rock-throwing attacks on four local synaoguges, Algemeiner editor-in-chief Dovid Efune said during an interview with i24 News on Wednesday.

The community sought reassurance from the police department and local officials. They were activated. They caught the guy, but shortly afterwards he was released onto the street. And that is really frustrating for the community, Efune said.

Jordan Burnette, 29, was arrested Saturday on 42 charges in connection with the spree of attacks in the Bronx borough of New York, in which over several days he smashed doors and windows at the Riverdale Jewish Center (RJC), Chabad Lubavitch of Riverdale, Young Israel of Riverdale and Conservative Synagogue Adath Israel of Riverdale (CSAIR).

During a Sunday hearing, he was first ordered held on $20,000 bail by a Bronx Criminal Court judge, who said that even under New York states recent bail reform law, the shattering of glass windows could qualify as a violent felony and would justify setting bail.

May 9, 2021 3:05 pm

But at a later hearing, another judge ruled that the charges did not qualify for bail under the 2020 law, and granted Burnette supervised release which the head of a leading initiative that helps secure Jewish institutions called no supervision at all.

You have an entire community of thousands and thousands of people, including many children and families, that now have to live in fear as a result of the fact that this as described by the police violent and dangerous individual is still walking the streets, Efune said in the Wednesday interview.

Its outrageous, and really a travesty of justice and a failure in the justice system that cannot protect innocent citizens, and really does more to protect the accused perpetrator, than the children that are under threat, he said.

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Community 'Living in Fear' After Release of Alleged Attacker of Four Riverdale Synagogues, Says Algemeiner Editor-in-Chief - Algemeiner

Amid Pandemic, India’s Jews Try to Stay Safe While Offering Relief to the Hardest Hit – Jewish Journal

Posted By on May 10, 2021

(JTA) Nissim Pingle, the head of Mumbais Jewish community center, hasnt left his home since March.

Thats when COVID-19 began to overtake India. A second wave of infections has overwhelmed its health system and is producing a daily death toll of at least 4,000. The country is on track to have the worlds highest death toll by far, as stories pile up of people succumbing to the disease because they cannot access oxygen or hospital beds.

Indias approximately 7,000 Jews, most of whom live in Mumbai, generally belong to the privileged minority with the means to self-isolate. But even within the community, Indias widely celebrated multigenerational households have increased anxiety about the viruss onslaught.

Pingles parents live with him, his wife and their two young sons. So as cases began to rise, he closed up the family home as a bulwark against the pattern he saw playing out around him.

Younger family members contract the virus, sometimes without symptoms, and transmit it to the elderly people in the household, who are much more vulnerable, he said.

Now Pingle, 41, is working to turn the JCC he runs, which usually hosts community events,into the base of operations for the aid effort to India by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, which assists with disaster relief worldwide. The JDC, which funds the JCCs work, is having three ventilators, each costing about $10,000, shipped from Israel to Indian hospitals, according to Pingle.

Its part of a global effort by Jews in India and beyond to combat what is quickly emerging as a humanitarian crisis of unprecedented proportions. The majority of Indians live on less than $3.10 a day, according to the World Bank, and the absence of basic sanitary conditions in some places, the prevalence of multigenerational households and a lockdown preventing many wage earners from working mean that many Indians are in deep need, even if they and their families survive COVID-19.

We are Indians first, said Yael Jirhad, an occupational consultant from Mumbai. It is heartbreaking.

Jirhads husband, Ralphy, is part of a Rotary Club effort in which members transport food and other essentials to needy residents of the city.

The Mumbai Chabad House, run by Rabbi Israel Kozlovsky and his wife, Chaya, is raising money with donors from around the world who have funded Jewish outreach in the city to deliver food and other essential items to non-Jews living there and in nearby villages, where families largely depend on salaries earned in the city but now on hold due to the lockdown.

Israels Foreign Ministry has begun dispatching thousands of oxygen generators to India, among other medical gear items. And ISRAid, an Israeli nonprofit, is also helping in the most affected areas with support from the American Jewish Committee.

On Thursday, UJA Federation-New York, the largest Jewish federation in the United States, announced that it would send $200,000 in relief funds to India.

The contributions represent a drop in the bucket of whats needed: India is reaching new highs in cases and deaths daily, while its vaccination campaign has slowed. Grim pictures of mass cremations have become impossible to miss in global news coverage. The United States has cut off travel from the country.

While the Jewish community has fared better than many others, there are signs that the crisis is also having an effect on Indian Jews.

The number of people from the Jewish community who asked the JDC for financial support or material aid increased by about 35% over 2019, according to a JDC official. About 160 community members are currently receiving support.

Chabad is seeing a similar increase in requests for help by Jews, Kozlovsky said.

For many Indian Jews, the effects have been more psychological.

Jewish community life in Mumbai has ground to a halt since March. The city has seven active synagogues and three Jewish schools, although two of those have more non-Jewish students than Jewish ones. Mumbai also has a Jewish nursing home, Pingles Evelyn Peters JCC and several Jewish cemeteries.

The Jirhads, whose two sons are living abroad, are the only residents of their home in Mumbai, where the average household has five members. Living away from their children and other relatives is at times difficult, Yael said, especially in a society where family is all important.

But during the pandemic it has allowed the Jirhads to volunteer where help is most wanted without fearing that they would thus infect others in their household.

The family of Herzel Simon, a member of the congregation of the Chabad-affiliated synagogue in Mumbai, has been particularly careful not to contract the virus because they live with his father, who had a medical procedure in January, making him especially susceptible to complications of the disease.

But Simon, 46, nonetheless caught the local variant of the bug, which scientists say is especially contagious. Simon displayed no symptoms, and the infection was discovered only after a blood test showed he had antibodies. His father has not displayed symptoms, but Simon said the experience made him worry about his fathers health.

Staying home, even with the knowledge that a crisis rages around them, has had some silver linings for Pingle and his family. His elder son, 12-year-old Aviv, has more time to study for his bar mitzvah with Pingles 73-year-old father, Joshua, who for many years served as cantor at his local synagogue.

Like most Indian Jews, we are certainly better protected than the general population in India. But for my parents, isolation has been difficult because they really dont go out of the house much at all, Pingle said.

Yet it has made us even closer than before. And if we feel like we need to go to synagogue, we can always visit my fathers room. He has so many books there it looks like a shul.

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Amid Pandemic, India's Jews Try to Stay Safe While Offering Relief to the Hardest Hit - Jewish Journal

Q&A: The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg On Rising Antisemitism In Ohio – ideastream

Posted By on May 10, 2021

Ohio saw a record number of antisemitic incidents in 2020, according to a recent report by the Anti-Defamation League of Cleveland. There were 43 incidents last year, compared to 25 in 2019 a 72 percent increase.

The report comes as the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum prepares to hold its annual fundraising event Tuesday for its supporters in Cleveland. This year, because of the ongoing pandemic, it will be virtual and open to all Ohioans. The museums guest speaker is Jeffrey Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Atlantic magazine and a frequent writer on antisemitism. He spoke with ideastreams Amy Eddings on Morning Edition.

You wrote about foreign affairs for The Atlantic for nine years before becoming editor-in-chief and youve written a lot about the rise of antisemitism in Europe. Can you position this latest ADL report against international and national trends?

Well, yes, in the sense that anytime there is global anxiety, economic dislocation, technological change, political disruption, antisemitism usually emerges. Add into that the Trump years, the rise of global populism populism has never been a friendly movement to Jews. So, you have a lot of different things that create a climate in which all forms of prejudice but also the oldest form of prejudice, antisemitism, which is now probably 2,300, 2,400 years old, can flourish.

Youre speaking at a fundraising event for the U.S. Holocaust Museum. Id like to ask you how important the Holocaust Museum is to you, to your sense of Jewish identity.

You know, its interesting, I was just thinking about this. The Holocaust Museum becomes more important as time goes on because unfortunately, and this is just, you know, this is just actuarial tables speaking now, the last World War II veterans, the last Holocaust survivors, are slowly but surely fading from the scene. So, its even more important now that those memories and those experiences be memorialized and catalogued. And especially in an age of disinformation.

Holocaust denial has always been with us, as long as, almost as long as, the Holocaust has been with us. It becomes even more important to make vigorous attempts to educate and to illuminate and enlighten when you no longer have people among you who actually went through the thing. And so, you know, I think its always been an important institution. But I think its actual true importance we havent even fully seen yet.

In your 2006 book, Prisoners: A Story of Friendship and Terror, you wrote about your experience with the Israeli Army. You were in the army, guarding Palestinian rebels in a prison camp around 1989, 1990. You wrote about trying to get to know and understand some of the people you were guarding. And you said the conversations tended toward, Youre totally wrong. No, youre totally wrong. And it makes me think of this political situation in the United States. Does it for you?

Yeah, youre on to something. America in the last 10, 15 years, has become more like the Middle East. More tribalized, more Balkanized, different parties and groups driven by irrational fervor.

How do we back-pedal out of this?

Ha. One of the things you do is whats going on right now, you lower the temperature. And you try to model restraint. And you hope that your political leaders will model restraint. Thats whats interesting about the last four years, to me. You had a set of people who spoke differently about their political enemies than people who did in previous presidencies. Thats Democratic presidencies and Republican presidencies alike, that said that our political foes are our adversaries, but they are not traitors, they are not enemies of the people, theyre not whatever language you want to use.

And so, what you have to do is put genies back into bottles, but we know that thats not the easiest thing to do. Once people see the power of language, the power of extreme language, its very hard to convince somebody that they should hold back. And thats one of the unfortunate things we learned, is that you can get away with it.

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Q&A: The Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg On Rising Antisemitism In Ohio - ideastream

Man accused of encouraging terrorism said Nazis should have finished the job in Holocaust, court hears – The Independent

Posted By on May 10, 2021

An alleged neo-Nazi said the only issue with the Holocaust was that we did not finish the job and that the entire Jewish race should have been killed, a court has heard.

Andrew Dymock, 23, is accused of 15 offences including encouraging terrorism using websites, propaganda posters, social media posts and articles he is accused of creating.

Prosecutors allege that he set up and operated the website and social media accounts for a neo-Nazi group called System Resistance Network (SRN) in 2017 and 2018.

One article uploaded to its website in October 2017 was called The Truth about the Holocaust, the Old Bailey heard on Friday.

It argued that Holocaust denial is irrelevant, because the total destruction of Jewish people was not achieved.

The only guilt felt by the Germanic race in regard to the Holocaust should be that we did not finish the job, the article said.

It contained numerous conspiracy theories regarding supposed Jewish control of banks and governments, calling Jews a cancer on this earth that must be eradicated in its entirety.

Prosecutor Jocelyn Ledward told jurors that Mr Dymock had written and posted the article onto the SRN website.

The article is clear in its encouragement of the eradication of Jewish people, she added. Such encouragement constitutes encouragement to commit acts of terrorism.

Jurors were also shown other material allegedly written by Mr Dymock that included slurs towards black people, Muslims, gay people and other groups.

A tweet posted from the SRN account on Remembrance Day in 2017 said: Today we remember those who gave their lives for f*****s, Jewish global dominance, multiculturalism, mass migration, and state-based tyrannical oppression of their folk.

The charges against Mr Dymock include encouraging terrorism with the entire content of the SRN website, as well as with articles including one calling for a glorious race war where white people would wake up and bring slaughter to Europa, cleansing it of the unclean filth that pollutes her lands.

Andrew Dymock is charged with 15 offences

(PA)

Other charges relate to propaganda posters he allegedly created, including some calling for terror attacks and for people to rape police officers.

Jurors were played a propaganda video promoting SRN, which showed people posing with the groups flag along with those of US terrorist group Atomwaffen Division and the Nazi Party.

Participants with their faces hidden by SS skull symbols were seen placing a swastika-carved pumpkin outside a Welsh police station and burning EU, LGBT+, Israel and US flags.

Mr Dymock denies all offences and told police that he researched different ideologies while studying international politics and strategic studies at Aberystwyth University in Wales.

Im doing my dissertation on the rise of nationalism and why, and how, ranging from moderate to extreme, he added. I kind of thought I might as well start preparing for my third year in advance.

The court heard that during interviews, he told officers that any far-right imagery he had was because he liked the art.

Ms Ledward said the defendant claimed to follow the Vedic religion, saying that any usage by myself of the swastika would be in Vedic religious terms, rather than Nazi political terms.

When asked about a photograph of an individual performing a Nazi salute on one of his devices, he said it was a Roman salute and clearly a joke.

When asked to explain the joke, he said that it was difficult for people of very different generations to explain sensitive humour and any attempt he might make to explain his sense of humour to the officers would not be understood by them, Ms Ledward told jurors.

Mr Dymock, of Bath, also told police that other people, including his ex-boyfriend and friends, could have accessed his laptop.

He denies five charges of encouraging terrorism, two of funding terrorism, stirring up racial hatred and hatred based on sexual orientation, four counts of disseminating terrorist publications, possessing a terrorist document and possessing racially inflammatory material. The trial continues.

See the article here:

Man accused of encouraging terrorism said Nazis should have finished the job in Holocaust, court hears - The Independent


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