Page 836«..1020..835836837838..850860..»

Israel giving ‘symbolic’ number of COVID vaccines to Palestinians, other nations – Ynetnews

Posted By on February 26, 2021

Israel is giving a "symbolic" amount of surplus COVID-19 vaccines to the Palestinians and to several countries, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said on Tuesday.

The Prime Minister's Office said the vaccines would be used by the foreign recipients' medical personnel.

4

An Israeli medic administers the coronavirus vaccine to a Palestinian at the Qalandia checkpoint between the West Bank and Jerusalem, Feb. 23, 2021

(Photo: AP)

An Israeli official said Honduras was among the recipients. The Central American country said last year it intended to move its Israel embassy to Jerusalem, a diplomatic gain for Israel.

The Honduran embassy in Israel had no immediate comment.

Israel has been importing Pfizer Inc and Moderna Inc vaccines. According to the Health Ministry, it has administered at least one Pfizer dose to almost 50% of its 9 million population as well as to Palestinians in East Jerusalem.

4

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu talks with Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernndez at a 2019 meeting in Brazil

(Photo: Reuters)

But it has come under foreign criticism for not providing similarly for Palestinians in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

This month the Palestinians received an initial shipment of Moderna vaccines from Israel and have also begun administering Russia's Sputnik V vaccines in Gaza and the West Bank.

An official in Jerusalem said the matter was discussed by Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi and U.S. counterpart Antony Blinken on Monday.

Ashkenazi updated him about the amount of vaccines transferred to Gaza and the West Bank, and the vaccination of Palestinian laborers in Israel, the official said.

The statement from Netanyahu's office said the vaccines donated by Israel were a surplus built up over the last month.

4

A Palestinian resident of East Jerusalem receives the coronavirus vaccine from Israel's largest health fund, Clalit

(Photo: AFP)

Israel informed countries that asked it for donations that the vaccines it had ordered were "intended for vaccinating its population and there is no expectation of a capacity to provide significant [foreign] assistance, at least before the vaccination campaign in Israel ends," the statement said.

Netanyahu, however, reportedly showed little hesitation in agreeing to pay Russia some $1.2 million to buy vaccines for archenemy Syria as part of a recent deal to release an Israeli woman held captive in Damascus.

4

A shipment of Russia's Sputnik V vaccine arrives at the Rafah crossing in southern Gaza this week

(Photo: Reuters)

His office made no mention of any vaccines as it lauded the deal and reportedly pushed IDF censor to block coverage of the vaccine purchases.

Asked about the reported deal, Netanyahu was evasive. He said "not one Israeli vaccine" was delivered to Syria a country that harbors hostile Iranian forces. But he would not say whether Israel had paid Russia for the vaccines.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

Excerpt from:

Israel giving 'symbolic' number of COVID vaccines to Palestinians, other nations - Ynetnews

The dispute on how to handle Iran could cost us – JNS.org

Posted By on February 26, 2021

(February 24, 2021 / JNS) With talks between Iran and Western powers about the United States returning to the 2015 nuclear deal poised to relaunch, Israel finds itself in a particularly problematic situation.

A high-level meeting convened this week by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu highlights the extent of the problem. In the meeting, National Security Council head Meir Ben-Shabbat laid out an approach quite contrary to that of the Americans, and which another official present called particularly apocalyptic and extreme. Mossad director Yossi Cohen and IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi opposed Ben-Shabbats approach, arguing that Israel must avoid a public clash with Washington. IDF Military Intelligence Directorate head Maj. Gen. Tamir Hayman and Israel Atomic Energy Commission director Zeev Snir were of like mind, as were Defense Minister Director-General Amir Eshel and Zohar Palti, the head of the Defense Ministrys Political-Military Bureau.

This disagreement between experts reflects a similar split in the countrys political echelon. The prime minister is very skeptical about the possibility of reaching understandings with the Americans that will improve the original nuclear deal, whereas Defense Minister Benny Gantz and Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi believe Israel must try and talk to the administration, as well as other signatories to the deal, primarily Germany, France and Britain.

The meeting ended with operational decisions (the NSC will coordinate a professional forum focusing on the political aspects of the Iranian issue, and the Mossad and the IDF will continue to collect intelligence and prepare military options), but no strategic ones. Israel did not wind up defining what outcome it wants to see, or what its red lines will be. The only thing agreed upon was the need to work with Washington for now, if only to ensure that every effort has been made.

Subscribe to The JNS Daily Syndicateby email and never missour top stories

The awkwardness on the Israeli side, which is increasing in light of the countrys upcoming election and the intense rivalry between Netanyahu, Gantz and Ashkenazi, will make it very hard for Israel to wage an effective campaign with a U.S. administration that already seems to lack empathy for Israel. The Americans have committed to keeping Iran away from a nuclear weapon, but their open eagerness to rejoin the original nuclear deal is very disturbing, given the huge holes in it. Hints from Washington that these holes will be addressed going forward sound particularly naivethe moment the deal is renewed and the sanctions on Iran are lifted, Iran will have no incentive to agree to any concessions.

In quiet talks between the United States and Israeli defense bodies over the past few weeks, Israel floated a few aspects of the 2015 deal that, if amended, could transform the deal from bad to more than reasonable, as one official put it. Top of the list would be its expiration date, along with tighter oversight of Irans nuclear activity, limits to its ballistic-missile development and manufacturing, and limits to Iran entrenching itself in the Middle East, especially Yemen.

The way things look now, its doubtful that the Americans see eye to eye with Israel. This is concerning, but not a reason to throw up our hands. The fat lady still hasnt sung, and until she does, Israel has both time and room to exert influence. To do that, however, it needs to arrange matters at home and coalesce a clear strategy.

Yoav Limor is a veteran Israeli journalist and columnist for Israel Hayom.

This article first appeared inIsrael Hayom.

View original post here:

The dispute on how to handle Iran could cost us - JNS.org

This is a sign of how much trouble the GOP brand is in – KCTV Kansas City

Posted By on February 26, 2021

In a speech on Tuesday in Washington, Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney said something remarkable.

"It's very important, especially for us as Republicans, to make clear that we aren't the party of White supremacy," she said at an event at at the Reagan Institute. Of the January 6 riot at the US Capitol, Cheney added: "You certainly saw anti-Semitism. You saw the symbols of Holocaust denial. ... You saw a Confederate flag being carried through the rotunda. We, as Republicans in particular, have a duty and an obligation to stand against that, to stand against insurrection."

Consider that. Cheney, the third-ranking Republican in the House, felt compelled to make clear to her fellow Republicans that they can't be the party of White supremacy. To borrow a phrase from my childhood: No duh!

It speaks to how far the Republican brand has fallen that one of its top leaders needs to say publicly that the party has to make sure it's not associated with White supremacists. And trust me, Cheney wouldn't say something like this if she didn't have real concerns that her party is currently seen as in the same tent as White supremacists.

The damage done by Donald Trump's presidency and its culminating event -- the Capitol riot -- on this front is extensive.

This is a President who suggested, in the wake of White supremacist violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017, that there were "very fine people" on both sides of the protests. And who, when offered the chance to condemn the Proud Boys, a prominent far-right hate group, during a debate in 2020, said only "stand back and stand by."

Then there is Trump's behavior on January 6. Arrests made in the wake of that riot have shown that a number of far-right and White supremacist groups were involved. As The New York Times wrote earlier this week:

"As federal prosecutors unveil charges in the assault on the Capitol last month, they have repeatedly highlighted two militant groups the Oath Keepers and the Proud Boys as being the most organized, accusing them of planning their strategy ahead of time and in some cases helping escalate a rally into an attack ...

" ... The groups differ in their focus and tactics: The Oath Keepers are part of an anti-government militia movement that emphasizes military-style training, while the Proud Boys espouse an ideology of male and Western superiority, with members often expressing white-supremacist and anti-immigrant views."

While Trump spent most of the day refusing to speak out against the emerging violence, when he finally did address the rioters, he said this:

1. "Go home, we love you, you're very special."

2. "Go home with love & in peace. Remember this day forever!"

Which, um, doesn't add up to a condemnation of anyone involved in the riots -- including White supremacists.

It's no coincidence given Trump's seeming condoning of intolerance -- or, at the very least, his willingness to weaponize hate and bigotry for his own political purposes -- that in the first three years of his presidency the number of White nationalist groups increased by 55%, according to a study conducted by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Trump's presidency allowed these hate groups to come out from under the rocks they had been driven to. And now the work of the Republican Party is to drive them right back where they came from -- or run the risk of being associated with the hate and intolerance that these groups embrace.

That Cheney feels as though the party doesn't grasp this reality sufficiently and/or isn't acting on it appropriately speaks to the dismal state of the Republican brand. And the need for party leaders to start taking active steps ASAP to change the perception that they are in any way, shape or form tolerating the White supremacist movement.

Read the original:

This is a sign of how much trouble the GOP brand is in - KCTV Kansas City

Government urged to close loophole that allows extremists to radicalise others – Sky News

Posted By on February 26, 2021

The government has been urged to close a loophole in the law that allows extremists to operate with impunity, spreading hateful ideologies without fear of prosecution.

The Commission for Countering Extremism wants to see the introduction of a legal framework, enabling authorities to prosecute those who propagate harmful and hateful extremist views.

It said the "gaping chasm" in existing legislation meant many groups - from radical Islamists to far-right neo-Nazis - were able to spread hatred and radicalise others.

The commission - which was formed in the wake of the 2017 London Bridge attacks - said current legislation was focused on dealing with the threat of terrorism.

However, it meant that much extremist activity - so long as it did not cross a certain threshold - was not covered by the law.

It highlighted the case of the hate preacher Anjem Choudary who was thought to have motivated between 70 and 100 people to turn to terrorism over a number of years.

Choudary, described by authorities as the UK's most prolific terrorist recruiter, managed to manipulate a grey area in the law, pumping out hateful rhetoric, while not committing a specific offence.

It was only when authorities uncovered evidence that he was encouraging support for the terrorist group Islamic State that they were finally able to mount a successful prosecution.

In its review, carried out by the UK's former head of counter terrorism policing, Sir Mark Rowley, the commission said extremists were operating with impunity in a number of key areas.

Ministers are being urged to outlaw the glorification of terrorists and terrorist groups.

The commission said it had found online extremist messaging boards which glorified figures such as Osama bin Laden and the 9/11 hijackers, as well as far-right terrorists such as Anders Breivik, Brenton Tarrant and Thomas Mair.

Current legislation also means that collecting ISIS beheading videos, or forming neo-Nazi groups which praised Adolf Hitler and encouraged Holocaust denial was not illegal as long as it was not threatening, abusive or insulting.

Sir Mark said the scale and nature of the material that was freely available was "quite extraordinary".

"During the course of conducting this review, I have been shocked and horrified by the ghastliness and volume of hateful extremist materials and behaviour which is lawful in Britain," he said.

The former assistant commissioner added: "We see evidence now of increased numbers of very young people, kids 12, 13, 14 being drawn towards extremist ideologies.

"The law is aimed at hate crime, it's aimed at terrorism, there's nothing aimed at this problem and we need to approach it head on.

"With lots of careful caveats to protect legitimate freedom of expression. If we don't take this on, this problem will continue to grow."

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

The review's findings have been backed by faith leaders, including the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Chief Rabbi and the chair of Mosques and Imams National Advisory Board.

Two former prime ministers, Tony Blair and David Cameron have also issued their support.

Mr Blair said the proposals required serious consideration by the government.

"The balance between protecting civil liberties whilst remaining robust in our measures to tackle extremism is essential, and yet the evidence from this review suggests that extremists are able to operate with impunity because of a void in our legislation.

"At a time when extremism, especially amongst young people, is worryingly on the rise, this is an important contribution towards navigating a path through the complexities of what should and should not be legal in today's liberal democracies."

Subscribe to the Daily podcast onApple Podcasts,Google Podcasts,Spotify,Spreaker

David Cameron said: "The fact that someone like Anjem Choudary was able to radicalise and poison the minds of so many people with such tragic consequences for so long without apparently breaking the law demonstrates that the law needs changing.

"This report includes many such examples and helps to make the case for change. The government should act on this issue to ensure that we turn the tide in the battle on hateful extremism".

The head of the commission, Sara Khan, said: "Not having a legal framework is just no longer an option. We are at a watershed moment.

"The problem is getting worse. We feel that the government does have a responsibility to address this."

The report said that it should be possible to set a "high legal bar" - linked to intent and specific serious harms - to ensure that freedom of expression is protected in any new legislation.

See original here:

Government urged to close loophole that allows extremists to radicalise others - Sky News

New Hasidic horror movie ‘The Vigil’ is set in Brooklyn and scary as hell – New York Post

Posted By on February 26, 2021

How does an outsider come to make a horror film set in the notoriously cloistered Hasidic enclave in Borough Park?

With some chutzpah, and a lot of help.

First-time writer and director Keith Thomas was determined to bring his vision a supernatural horror movie about an ultra-religious Jewish community to life. The result is The Vigil, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2019 and will be available to watch Friday in select theaters and to stream on VOD.

The story centers on Yakov (an impressive Dave Davis, of The Big Short and True Detective), a onetime Hasid who recently cut ties with the insular community after a family crisis. Struggling to make ends meet, he reluctantly accepts a quickie overnight job as a shomer someone who watches over a dead body, considered a holy act in the Jewish tradition.

Its going to be an easy $400. Or so Yakov thinks.

The night that unfolds blends traditional horror film action with deep Jewish mysticism, drawing from the world of demonology. The body belongs to Mr. Litvak, a known recluse whose wife suffers from advanced dementia. As Yakov quickly learns, the deceased was plagued with a mazik, an evil, supernatural hanger-on who is looking for a new host. When Im gone, the mazik will find another broken person, the old man warns in a terrifying vision. It will slowly consume their soul.

Thomas, 45, who is Jewish but not Orthodox, was first inspired to write a scary tale about a shomer in the early 2000s, when he was studying for a masters degree in religious education at the Hebrew Union College in Manhattan. Back then, he would stroll though the citys various ultra-Orthodox enclaves. I found these communities really fascinating, he told The Post. I felt really comfortable going to their shuls.

Indeed, he was inside a synagogue when the idea first sparked, as he overheard two older men discussing a shomer who had abandoned his post out of fear. That evocative snippet sat with me for a long time, Thomas said. I thought it was an intriguing idea.

Still, it would be many years before he was able to pursue it.

Once he had a script in hand and a few Orthodox producers attached, Thomas, who lives in Denver, knew that the right casting was key. A lot of the actors are from the community, he said, including Menashe Lustig, who starred in the critically acclaimed 2017 movie Menashe. He also hired a few Orthodox consultants who made sure the film felt true to life.

I trusted their insight I knew I needed to lean on them, said Thomas. Though he wrote the film in English, he was aided by native Yiddish speakers, who had peppered the script with the traditional Hasidic language by the time the six-week shoot began in fall 2018.

Malky Goldman plays Sarah, a friend of Yakovs. Just like her character in The Vigil, Goldman, 32, left her ultra-Orthodox upbringing in Jerusalem and became an actress, and now resides in Ditmas Park. She told The Post that Thomas was committed to making the film as authentic to the horror community as he was to the Hasidic community.

For Thomas, finding that balance was crucial, but difficult. I didnt want to denigrate the community, but I also wasnt there to just celebrate it either. I want to be true to the world and the people, he said.

He said he got his first glimpse of his films impact late one night when shooting in Williamsburg.

It was about 2:30 in the morning and we saw about 150 Orthodox men surrounding the set, said Thomas of the curious locals, most of whom had never seen a movie due to religious restrictions. Were lucky we had a lot of Yiddish speakers and rabbis on set to explain it to them.

Continue reading here:

New Hasidic horror movie 'The Vigil' is set in Brooklyn and scary as hell - New York Post

On the scene: Photos from a pandemic Purim in Brooklyn – Forward

Posted By on February 26, 2021

A ninja in moon boots. Rectangular brothers, a Rubix cube and washing machine. Many a princess. A few questionable Native American costumes, complete with feather headdress and brownface paint.

Purim fell on a warm and sunny day in New York City, after weeks of snow, and the kids were out in force in the Haredi neighborhoods of Borough Park and Crown Heights in Brooklyn, distributing mishloach manot goodie bags and collecting candy, toys and often cold, hard cash.

By Paul Stremple

A ninja shows his earnings so far in Borough Park

By Paul Stremple

Some put more effort into their costumes than others.

While many Jews celebrated this Purim online or in small, distanced celebrations for the second time since the pandemic began last March, the Haredi neighborhoods of Brooklyn did not change their celebrations much. Masks were rare, even though costumes could provide an easy excuse for them, and groups popped in and out of each others houses freely. Still, there were no major gatherings and, while the sidewalks were heavily trafficked, it was not shoulder to shoulder anywhere. Cars and trucks blasting festive music kept it moving so large crowds didnt form around them.

By Paul Stremple

A school bus in Borough Park decked out for Purim.

On Friday morning, the streets of Borough Park were quiet, with most of the traffic coming from men returning from morning prayers clutching their tefillin bags. But as the day grew warmer, the streets filled with costumed kids. They were sometimes escorted by uncostumed parents, but more often running around in unchaperoned packs, or careening down the streets on scooters to knock on doors and exchange goodies.

By Paul Stremple

A group of kids dressed as airplane captains hang out on a bench.

By Paul Stremple

Two kids dressed up in Borough Park.

The girls tended to be dressed as princesses or brides, with long, fluffy skirts of lace or taffeta, though there was also a Pippi Longstocking and a Madeline. The boys leaned toward pirates and kings and lions; some donned beards and payot, curly sidelocks, to dress up like their dad or rabbi. The teenagers, as is so often the case with teens, put on a disaffected act, usually wearing a sequined hat at most. A few old women, asking for charity, had sizable amounts of cash in hand by midday.

By Paul Stremple

A Hasidic boy dressed up as a Hasidic man.

By Paul Stremple

A little girl delivers mishloach manot.

Effigies of Haman, the villain of the Purim story, hung from gallows could also be seen scattered through the neighborhood. A few cars had crude scarecrow-like figures hung from their trunks, and one house had a full sized gallows jutting from their roof, dangling a mannequin by its neck.

Purim is usually a rowdy holiday, centered around drinking and costumes, but Borough Park was calm; a car with a bubble machine strapped to its roof was perhaps the wildest attraction. But to the north, in Crown Heights, the atmosphere was a different story; Chabad, the Hasidic sect that dominates that neighborhood, knows how to throw down.

There, the streets were mobbed with parents, kids and teenagers alike running around, everyone shouting across the street at each other. A caravan of Chabad trucks with screens on their sides, playing videos of rabbis, followed a float with a DJ blasting pop music into the streets.

Off Kingston Avenue, the neighborhoods main thoroughfare, a teen girl dressed as a bottle of Heinz yellow mustard was serving up free cotton candy out of a fairly industrial-looking machine as a stilts walker twirled on the street. Another girl, dressed as Billie Eilish, green hair and all, strolled by; Chabad is much more outward facing and less reclusive than most Hasidic sects, and pop culture made a greater appearance in the costumes.

Because Purim fell on a Friday this year, festivities must wrap up early in order to prepare for Shabbat. Even though the virus didnt curtail the party, Purim couldnt escape this pandemic year unscathed.

Mira Fox is a fellow at the Forward. Get in touch at fox@forward.com or on Twitter @miraefox.

Paul Stremple is a documentary photographer and journalist based in New York City. See more of his work on Instagram @paulstremple.

Read more:

On the scene: Photos from a pandemic Purim in Brooklyn - Forward

Stream It Or Skip It: ‘The Vigil’ on VOD, a Freaky Horror Story About a Jewish Man and the Demons of His Faith – Decider

Posted By on February 26, 2021

New on VOD, The Vigil freshens a familiar premise by taking the familiar tropes of haunted house and/or exorcism thrillers and transplanting them into Jewish mythology. Demons of said faith arent at all common among the Pazuzus and draggers-to-hell we tend to see in movies, although I recall something about a dybbuk in A Serious Man, which frankly might be one of the most terrifying films Ive ever seen. Anyway, The Vigil director Keith Thomas seems to be exhibiting some ambition with his debut, which makes it worthy of a look, especially compared to the bevy of generic horror fodder clogging the streaming scene.

The Gist: Yacov Ronen (Dave Davis) has been struggling to acclimate into secular society. He sits in group therapy with several other former Hasidic Jews, who share their experiences and struggles as an act of support. They split hairs out of necessity: You may have left the religion, but are you moving forward? Did the fundamentalist leaders protect you from the outside world, or did they keep you from it? Yacov is unsure of himself. He cant find a job; sometimes he has to choose buying medication over meals. He says hed love to take classes on basic living so he can be normal. Sarah (Malky Goldman) clearly has been out longer, and speaks as if she was freed from a cult. She offers kindness, asks Yacov to get coffee with her sometime. She has to input her number into his phone for him. Hes still not used to it.

The group moderator has called the police before on Reb Shulem (Menashe Lustig), a Hasidic elder. He hovers outside the door after the meeting, waiting for Yacov. Reb desperately needs a shomer someone to watch over the deceased and protect the soul from any hungry lurking evil things for a recently passed Holocaust survivor. Its an overnight gig. Seems sketchy, especially after learning the first shomer bailed at the last minute, but Yacov desperately needs the money. They agree on $400, then were decked by ominous tones on the soundtrack, which tells us this wont be easy money.

The late Mr. Litvak lies beneath a sheet in the front room of his home. Yacov takes a seat nearby, responds to texts from Sarah, dozes off, has a nightmare that might be a flashback. The widow, Mrs. Litvak (Lynn Cohen), comes downstairs. Reb said she has Alzheimers, but she seems pretty lucid. She tells Yacov to get out of here before the mazzik gets him. The mazzik? Yeah, the mazzik. A demon that feeds on psychic trauma, just like what Yacov experienced with his little brother, a scene we witness in the nightmare-flashback, and maybe explains the medication and rejection of Hasidic ways.

So about this mazzik. It makes bumpity-draggy noises upstairs, breaks light bulbs, manifests in shadows. We get a long, lingering close-up on the body under the sheet, and Ill be damned if it doesnt twitch. A large spider skitters by Yacovs foot. Is that a pair of coal-black feet scraping a toenail lugubriously on the kitchen tile, or is he seeing things? He gets a drink of water, and gags on a thick, oily substance. Sometimes he moves, and his body makes that CRACKITY BONES sound, you know, the one that sounds like 2,000 arthritic knuckles all popping at once. Mrs. Litvak re-emerges to tell him she told him so. But isnt she ill? And isnt Yacov ill too? Is he gaslighting himself? Why will no one flip a damn lightswitch around here? Because itd ruin the atmosphere, silly.

What Movies Will It Remind You Of?: The Vigil skulks somewhere in the ether between The Exorcist and The Babadook, skewing a little more towards the latter. Is this intended to be flattery? I think so!

Performance Worth Watching: Davis makes the most of a character who seems minimalist by design. He keenly concentrates Yacovs trauma into a memorable portrayal of a man in the grip of raw fear while confronting a demon, and maybe his own demon, too.

Memorable Dialogue: Is his head turned backwards? Can you tell me, Yacov? Is his head turned around? Im not sure Yacovs psychotherapist is helping him out much here

Sex and Skin: None.

Our Take: Nope, $400 wasnt enough. Thomas makes remarkable use of one primary location and its multitude of dark, shadowy depths; in the dark, its a surreally endless place with a basement you dont want to see and an upstairs hall youll never want to visit and a rest of it that isnt much fun either. Our first decent glimpse of it is a distorted wide-angle shot communicating Yacovs disorientation, which only gets worse. Do the laws of physics apply here? I think not, especially since ghosts and demons tend to disregard them, and nourish themselves with ethereal things. It wants your pain, Mrs. Litvak says to Yacov. Well, it can have it, is what he should say. Pain sucks.

I make light of The Vigil to diffuse some of the tension it effectively inflates. Thomas tends to lean on jump scares and CRACKITY BONES sounds and the type of thrumming score that sounds like 2,000 headaches all at once, but it all works. The ambience is eerie, suggestive and provocative, and the filmmaker skillfully generates suspense to the point where the balloons gotta pop, and were gonna jump. Davis carries the considerable weight of the films terror wholly on his back; without his performance, the movie might be yet another flimsy exercise in manipulation. Thematically, Thomas roots both Mr. Litvak and Yacovs trauma within specific elements of the greater Jewish character, but never deviates into exploitation; theres no cliches about lost faith here, the film instead exploring the potential for a third option for Yacov beyond orthodoxy and strict secularism. Thomas is earnest about what he wants to say. Hes also earnest in his attempts to freak us out.

Our Call: STREAM IT. For a things-that-go-bump movie, The Vigil is smart, resourceful and surprisingly good.

John Serba is a freelance writer and film critic based in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Read more of his work at johnserbaatlarge.com or follow him on Twitter: @johnserba.

Where to stream The Vigil

Read more:

Stream It Or Skip It: 'The Vigil' on VOD, a Freaky Horror Story About a Jewish Man and the Demons of His Faith - Decider

NBC Pulls Controversial ‘Nurses’ Episode From Digital, Future Airings Amid Backlash Over Orthodox Jew Storylin – Hollywood Reporter

Posted By on February 25, 2021

11:57 AM PST 2/24/2021bySeth Abramovitch

An episode of the NBC medical drama Nurses has earned condemnation from the Simon Wiesenthal Center over a plot involving an Orthodox Jew who refuses a bone graft from a potentially "Arab" or "woman" donor.

The controversy has led NBC to pull the episode from all digital platforms and future airings.

The writers of this scene check all the boxes of ignorance and pernicious negative stereotypes right down to the name of the patient, Israel payouts [sidelocks] and all," a statement reads.In one scene, NBC has insulted and demonized religious Jews and Judaism."

The scene which aired Feb. 9 in an episode called "Achilles Heel" and was first called out by the website Jew in the City features a young Orthodox Jew named Israel laid up in a hospital bed after an accident. His father stands by his bedside, where he insists "the Creator" will heal him. A nurse counters that "medicine" is the answer to his shattered leg.

Soon a doctor informs them that Israel will require a bone graft requiring part of a cadaver's leg to be surgically inserted into his own.

"You want to put a dead leg inside of me?" Israel asks.

"A dead goyim leg from anyone. An Arab, a woman," his father says in horror.

"Or God forbid an Arab woman " the nurse interjects, sarcastically.

Israel refuses the treatment, saying, "It's God who heals what he creates." His father looks on approvingly.

There are no restrictions in Orthodox Judaism regarding transplants from cadavers.

Responding to the scene, the Simon Wiesenthal Center notes,Orthodox Jews are targeted for violent hate crimes in the city of New York. Jews are [the] number one target of hate crimes in the U.S. This is no slip of the tongue. It was a vile, cheap attack masquerading as TV drama. Whats NBC going to do about it?

Elsewhere, B'nai Brith Canada has demanded action over the episode.The disturbing stereotypes present in this episode of Nurses are deeply damaging to Jews, especially Orthodox practitioners, says Michael Mostyn, CEO of Bnai Brith Canada, in a statement. We call on the producers to act responsibly and take accountability for this outrage.

The Toronto-set Nurses is a Canadian series that was picked up by NBC in late 2020 amid a shortage of original programming due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The anti-Jewish controversy comes in the wake of another issue involving NBC, after Saturday Night Live's Michael Che recently joked,"Israel is reporting that theyve vaccinated half of their population.Im going to guess its the Jewish half."

The comment led the Anti-Defamation League to issue a statement saying it had been monitoring the "Weekend Update" segment, which had "inappropriately used Jews as the punchline" on repeat occasions.

NBC has responded to the Nurses controversy by pulling the episode from digital platforms and canceling all future airings, according to sources with knowledge of the matter. While the network is in conversation with various Jewish groups, it has no plans to issue a statement condemning the episode.

The season finale of Nurses aired Feb. 23. NBC is unlikely to order further episodes as production of its regular lineup ramps up again following the COVID-19 shutdown.

Feb. 24, 1:14 p.m. Updated to include NBC's actions.

More:
NBC Pulls Controversial 'Nurses' Episode From Digital, Future Airings Amid Backlash Over Orthodox Jew Storylin - Hollywood Reporter

Gottheimer Announces New Steps to Combat Violent Extremist Groups, Calls for Proud Boys & Other International Extremist Groups to be Officially…

Posted By on February 25, 2021

Gottheimer Announces New Steps to Combat Violent Extremist Groups, Calls for Proud Boys & Other International Extremist Groups to be Officially Designated as Terrorist Organizations

Provides Law Enforcement & Intelligence Community With More Tools to Fight Back Against Domestic Terror

NEWTON, NJ Today, Tuesday, February 23, 2021, U.S. Congressman Josh Gottheimer (NJ-5), a member of the House Homeland Security Committee, urged the U.S. Department of State to officially designate international violent extremist groups, including the Proud Boys, as terrorist organizations. Doing so will help provide law enforcement and the U.S. intelligence community the tools necessary to protect the nation from domestic terrorists and other violent extremists that threaten our freedom, democracy, and communities. Todays announcement follows the involvement of domestic terrorist groups, including the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, in the January 6, 2021 failed insurrection at the U.S. Capitol and the massive growth of violent extremist groups in New Jersey and nationwide in recent years.

The official terrorist group designation: 1) impedes fundraising and deters contributions to these groups; 2) heightens public awareness and knowledge of those linked to terrorism; 3) makes clear to U.S. allies our governments concerns about these groups; and, 4) warns the private sector of the risks of doing business and associating with them. Most importantly, it 5) disrupts terrorist networks, thereby cutting off access to financial and other resources from sympathizers, and 6) encourages those targeted to end their support for terrorism. In these and other ways, it helps provide additional tools to law enforcement and our nations intelligence community to prosecute, financially counter, and help defeat these groups.

The vigilante mob who stormed our Capitol killed one heroic officer, Brian Sicknick, injured scores of others, tore down the American flag, and desecrated the home of our democracy, Congressman Josh Gottheimer (NJ-5), a member of the House Homeland Security Committee, said today. Healing, of course, requires accountability and investigation, and we have seen the FBI and other law enforcement agencies take swift action against groups like the Oath Keepers, Proud Boys, Three Percenters, and Stop the Steal, who all participated and helped lead the insurrection.

Gottheimer continued, Im here today to announce new, concrete steps to combat violent extremist groups in New Jersey and across our nation, including providing law enforcement and the U.S. intelligence community with the tools they need to protect our community, our country, and our Capitol from future domestic terror attacks. As our state and the Administration continues to examine the threat of domestic terror groups, Im urging the federal government to officially designate the Proud Boys and other violent extremist groups as terrorist groups.

Gottheimer added, Whatever their names may be whether its from the right, like the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers, or the groups inspired by the radical Antifa ideology on the extreme left theyre all justifying violence against their opponents, and neither Democrats nor Republicans should stand for this.

Of the 200 arrests made since the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, at least ten of the insurrections are from New Jersey including one not far from here in Sussex County, who was indicted on 12-counts, including assaulting an officer. Of the 22 individuals charged with conspiracy crimes connected to the U.S. Capitol attack, 18 were known to have ties to either the Oath Keepers or the Proud Boys.

According to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), anti-Semitic incidents in New Jersey are at the highest levels ever recorded. The New Jersey Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness has labeled white supremacy as a top level terror threat.

In a letter to U.S. Secretary of State Blinken today, Gottheimer wrote, I believe that a terrorist designation for qualifying entities would help provide additional tools to law enforcement and the intelligence community to prosecute, financially counter, and defeat these groups. There is also precedent for such a determination, as the United States has in the past designated international groups with American chapters and entities.

Gottheimer was joined at todays announcement, held at Sussex County Community College (SCCC), by Sussex County Prosecutor Francis Koch, First Assistant Prosecutor Greg Mueller, Captain Jennifer Williams of the Sussex County Prosecutors Office, Sussex County Undersheriff Matthew Avenatti, and Sussex County Community College President Jon Connelly.

Watch todays announcement event HERE.

View Gottheimers letter to U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken HERE.

Gottheimers remarks as prepared for delivery are below.

Last month, for the first time since 1814, the world witnessed a deadly attack by several extremist groups on the U.S. Capitol, the beacon of our democracy, with the sole goal of overturning the will of the American people. I know. I was there that day in the House Chambers. The day before, I saw several people walking near the Capitol wearing Camp Auschwitz t-shirts and others with six million was not enough.

The vigilante mob who stormed our Capitol, killed one heroic officer, Brian Sicknick, injured scores of others, tore down the American flag, and desecrated the home of our democracy. They were nothing but lawless thugs and the very definition of extremists who sought to harm our country and attempted to shred our inalienable rights life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. In the end, they failed miserably. The Electoral College was certified; I spoke on the House floor that evening. The Capitol never closed. But they did succeed in tearing us further apart. I am here today to help bind up our nations wounds, because, as Lincoln said, A house divided against itself cannot stand.

That healing, of course, requires accountability and investigation and we have seen the FBI and other law enforcement agencies take swift action against groups like the Oath Keepers, Proud Boys, Three Percenters, and Stop the Steal, who all participated and helped lead the insurrection. In fact, and none of us are proud of this, at least ten of the insurrectionists are from New Jersey including one not far from here in Sussex County, who was indicted on 12-counts, including assaulting an officer.

By the accountability for January 6th, we must do everything in our power to protect our country going forward from any extremists, whether they are Proud Boys or ISIS-inspired, lone wolf terrorists.

Thats why Im here today to announce new, concrete steps to combat violent extremist groups in New Jersey and across our nation, including providing law enforcement and the U.S. intelligence community with the tools they need to protect our community, our country, and our Capitol from future domestic terror attacks.

As our state and the Administration continues to examine the threat of domestic terror groups, Im urging the federal government to officially designate the Proud Boys and other violent extremist groups as terrorist groups.

Today, domestic-based extremists, including white supremacist groups, export their repulsive ideologies abroad, and, in turn, these international terror groups force their ideology on our country and threaten our homeland. This is a new, burgeoning threat that must be dealt with immediately. We know that American citizens have traveled abroad to train with international white supremacist and other extremist groups, and we must take every action to stop them.

These groups here are homegrown, but can also have international ties and, based on the increasing risk and threats here in New Jersey and nationwide, its time to label these extremists as full-fledged domestic terrorist groups.

The official terrorist group designation which under existing law can be placed on qualifying entities not only shines a much-needed light on the threat, but also opens up new authorities to help combat their extremism. The terrorist designation impedes fundraising and deters contributions to these groups, heightens public awareness and knowledge of those linked to terrorism; makes clear to U.S. allies our alarming concerns about these groups, and warns the private sector of the risks of doing business and associating with them. Most importantly, it disrupts terrorist networks, thereby cutting off access to financial and other resources from sympathizers, and encourages those targeted to end their support for terrorism. In these and other ways, it helps provide additional tools to our law enforcement and to our nations intelligence community to prosecute, financially counter, and help defeat these groups.

There is already precedent for such a determination, since the United States has in the past designated international groups with American chapters and entities, just like the Proud Boys has.

The Proud Boys group has already been classified as a hate group by civil rights organizations such as the Southern Poverty Law Center. According to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), the Proud Boys is a group with a global presence, including several international chapters in Britain, Norway, and Australia. Canada has already designated them as a foreign terrorist group. In addition, federal prosecutors have already warned that Proud Boys members could plan further attacks on the federal government.

Now, its time to make sure these groups that threaten the security of our communities and nation are specially designated as the terrorist groups that they are.

I know that everyone has seen lots of footage of the January Sixth attacks on the Capitol, but what you may not know is how much of a threat these extremist groups fully posed that day, and how much of a risk these groups are both here in New Jersey and nationwide.

On January Sixth, hundreds stormed the Capitol and more than two hundred have been arrested thus far.

Those who stormed the Capitol that day included some of the worst of the worst. But the hard, hard core was made up of particularly sinister groups which have been actively recruiting in our state for years, including the Proud Boys, the Oath Keepers, Three Percenters, and others.

These included anti-government extremists like the Oath Keepers a group the FBI describes as a large but loosely organized collection of militia who believe that the federal government has been co-opted by a shadowy conspiracy that is trying to strip American citizens of their rights. Though the Oath Keepers will accept anyone of their members, they prey on current and former military, law enforcement, and first responders. The New Jersey Department of Homeland Security has already designated the Oath Keepers, Proud Boys, Three Percenters, and other groups as threats to our state.

According to the ADL, the Proud Boys who were also heavily involved in the attack on January Sixth bear many of the hallmarks of a gang, and its members have taken part in multiple acts of brutal violence and intimidation. Last October, Congressman Tom Malinowski and I led our New Jersey House colleagues in urging the FBI to counter the presence of the Proud Boys and other hate groups in our state. As we wrote at the time, We believe we need a much more robust Federal response to the growing threat of violence posed by white nationalists, neo-Nazis, domestic terrorists, and other militias.

In fact, of the twenty-two people charged with conspiracy crimes connected to the attack on the U.S. Capitol, eighteen were known to have ties to either the Oath Keepers or the Proud Boys. One of the members of the Oath Keepers who has been charged sent text messages in which he described killing and mutilating people who held opposing views, and referred to his political adversaries as savages, maggots, and cockroaches.

Another Capitol assailant, a member of a militia extremist group called the Texas Freedom Force, even threatened to kill his family if they turned him in. Just this past week, federal authorities alleged a broader conspiracy by Oath Keepers to attack the Capitol on January Sixth, charging six more Oath Keepers for conspiring to obstruct Congress certification of the election that day.

January Sixth was just one single day, but many factors have brought us to this point. Hate, extremism, and violent acts of hate and discrimination have disturbingly risen in recent years.

In my own personal experience, there were supporters of mine who had swastikas painted in front of their house. Ive had swastikas on my own campaign lawn signs. Here in Northern New Jersey, weve seen swastikas drawn repeatedly in our schools, and on one of our great Jersey diners here in Sussex County: Airport Diner, which I hope can reopen again once we recover from the pandemic.

Weve seen the growth of hate here in New Jersey against people of all backgrounds: African American, Jewish, Irish Catholic, Muslim, Asian American such as the anti-Asian American vandalism against a restaurant here in Fifth District.

And we know all too well that social media can be filled with hate, disinformation, conspiracies, and propaganda, and that this danger can spread like wildfire.

Whatever their names may be whether its from the right, like the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers, or the groups inspired by the radical Antifa ideology on the extreme left theyre all justifying violence against their opponents, and neither Democrats nor Republicans should stand for this.

In New Jersey, weve seen a massive growth in white supremacy and hate acts, not just online, but in signs and protests, as well as gangs and violence. Anti-Semitic, anti-Muslim, and racially charged incidents in New Jersey are now at the highest levels ever recorded, according to

the ADL.

Our New Jersey Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness has also made clear the threat that homegrown violent extremists, or lone-wolf terrorists, are to New Jersey. Theyve taken the unprecedented step to raise the white supremacist threat level to high, and, as the Director of New Jerseys Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness, Jared Maples, recently said, Jersey was the very first government entity in the United States to label white supremacy as a top level terror threat.

But, I know this is not who this nation is. This is not who we are. And we cannot and we will not let our nation or our politics be held hostage by domestic terror groups seeking to undermine our country.

Thats why Ive been at the forefront of combating these issues: from working closely with state and local officials like the FBI in New Jersey and our own Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness to stay vigilant; to leading the charge to make sure to make sure hate groups, foreign terrorist organizations, and extremists cannot spread propaganda on our social media platforms which has resulted in Twitter banning Hamas and Hezbollah affiliated content; to the House passing my bipartisan legislation last summer to make sure we know when these groups pop up online; and working with my colleagues to stand up to groups from ISIS to Q-Anon.

My announcement today is only a part of what our country needs to combat these issues. Last Congress, I announced my bipartisan Freezing Assets of Suspected Terrorists and Enemy Recruits or FASTER Act for law enforcement to freeze the assets of domestic terrorists facing federal charges for insurrection and seditious conspiracy like those who stormed the Capitol.

Im pleased that my bipartisan legislation will be part of a package of bills that the Financial Services Committee will have a hearing on this Thursday to address, as part of our Committees continued investigation into how domestic terrorism is financed.

Ive also introduced the Online Terrorism Prevention Act to require regular disclosure of designated Foreign Terrorist Organizations on social media, and to impose financial and criminal penalties for social media companies that fail to eliminate terrorist content from their platforms.

And just last month, Republican Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick and I led a bipartisan initiative urging the new Administration to restore the DHS Office of Community Partnerships (OCP), so that our country has a designated lead on efforts to counter violent extremism nationwide.

To be clear, there is plenty that both sides can disagree on and will continue to disagree on but we also need to unite against all forms of hate and stand up to these violent extremist organizations.

We must continue to stand vigilant against all threats, both foreign and domestic. With all of these initiatives, Im confident that we will give law enforcement and the U.S. intelligence community the tools necessary to protect us from violent extremists that threaten our freedom, our democracy, and our communities.

At a time when our nation is more polarized than ever, we must all work together at every level; both nationally and here in our own backyards to combat hate and extremism, especially in our political system. We must stay strong against the partisanship, turmoil, and vitriol that has plagued our nation.

Continue reading here:
Gottheimer Announces New Steps to Combat Violent Extremist Groups, Calls for Proud Boys & Other International Extremist Groups to be Officially...

CSUN Amado Lecture to Explore Issues of Gender and Disability in Jewish Stories – CSUN Today

Posted By on February 25, 2021

Julia Watts Belser

In biblical stories about Noah, his ark, the individuals who survive the flood and those left behind, Jewish tradition reckons with questions of human hubris and survival.

California State University, Northridges eighth annual Maurice Amado Foundation Lecture in Jewish Ethics on Wednesday, March 10, will explore ancient Jewish texts, along with testimony from contemporary disability communities, to grapple with the issues surrounding climate change and the question: Whose lives does society deem worth saving?

The mornings speaker will be Julia Watts Belser, an associate professor of Jewish studies in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies at Georgetown University, who directs an initiative on disability and climate change.

Dr. Belsers expertise is just what we need to help us think about how to adapt to the current climate emergency, using the resources of Jewish traditions, said associate professor Jennifer Thompson, CSUNs Maurice Amado Professor of Applied Jewish Ethics and Civic Engagement.Over the past several millennia, Jews in many different parts of the world have faced equally dire situations and have managed to survive as a people and adapt to their new circumstances. The creative and intellectual resources that Jews have produced as they have done so will be tremendously valuable for all of humanity as we find new ways to live together sustainably.

The Amado Lecture is scheduled to take place at 9:30 a.m. on March 10 via Zoom. The lecture is free and open to the public, but registration is required. To register or for more information about the lecture, visit https://www.csun.edu/humanities/jewish-studies/events/eighth-annual-maurice-amado-foundation-lecture-jewish-ethics-.

Belser also is a senior research fellow at the Berkley Center for Religious, Peace, and World Affairs at Georgetown University and serves as a core faculty member in that universitys Disability Studies Program. Her work brings ancient texts into conversation with disability studies, queer theory, feminist thought and environmental ethics. She is the author of Rabbinic Tales of Destruction: Gender, Sex, and Disability in the Ruins of Jerusalem and Power, Ethics, and Ecology: Rabbinic Responses to Drought and Disaster.

Belser is a rabbi and a longtime advocate for disability and gender justice. She writes queer feminist Jewish theology, and she brings disability arts and culture into conversation with Jewish tradition. She co-authored an international Health Handbook for Women with Disabilities, which was developed in collaboration with disability activists from 42 countries and has been translated into 14 languages. The handbook is designed to help challenge the root causes of poverty, gender violence and disability discrimination.

The Amado Lectures are part of the mission of the CSUN Jewish Studies Interdisciplinary Programs endowed professorship, which was created to promote teaching and scholarship that draws on Sephardic, Ashkenazi and other Jewish traditions.

CSUN offers both a major and minor in Jewish studies. The program explores the rich heritage of the Jewish people. Using the methods of different academic disciplines, it examines the experiences of Jews in the many lands in which they have lived over the past 4,000 years, as well as contemporary Jewish life in Israel, Europe, Asia and the Americas.

College of Humanities, Gender and Disability in Jewish Stories, Jewish Studies, Jewish Studies Interdisciplinary Program, Julia Watts Belser, Maurice Amado Foundation Lecture in Jewish Ethics, People with Disabilities

View post:

CSUN Amado Lecture to Explore Issues of Gender and Disability in Jewish Stories - CSUN Today


Page 836«..1020..835836837838..850860..»

matomo tracker