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The Jerusalem Quartet to Join With New West Symphony Members for Exclusive Holocaust Remembrance Musical Events – Business Wire

Posted By on January 26, 2021

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The internationally renowned Jerusalem Quartet will join with principal artists from the New West Symphony and other special guests to present exclusive Holocaust Remembrance programming, culminating in a livestreamed performance Jan. 31. The online concert is part of the symphonys weeklong experiences to commemorate and honor the 6 million Jewish victims of the Holocaust and millions of other victims of Nazism.

The music of the early mid-20th century was profoundly influenced by some of classical musics greatest masters and was boldly looking toward international and folk influences even during the centurys darkest points, said New West Symphony Artistic and Music Director Michael Christie. Our Holocaust Remembrance presentations feature an array of enchanting music presented in a historical context of the early 20th century while paying tribute to the atrocities of the times.

In joining with the international community during Holocaust Remembrance Week, the New West Symphony will host a special Never Forget program on Jan. 27. The program will feature interviews with Celina Biniaz, the youngest of Schindlers List of 1,200 survivors, and Violins of Hope Los Angeles Chair Susanne Reyto, presenting a Violins of Hope documentary. The following day will feature a pre-concert talk with UCLA Senior Lecturer David Ravetch. On Saturday, Jan. 30, NWS will host a Meet the Artists program featuring an exclusive interview with the members of the Jerusalem Quartet and acclaimed pianist Daniel Vnukowski.

The weekend will culminate with the Sunday, Jan. 31, concert featuring the Jerusalem Quartet, New West musicians and guests performing an array of music illuminating vast stylistic and cultural treasures. New West Symphony performers will include concertmaster and violinist Alyssa Park, principal violist Philip Triggs, principal clarinetist Joshua Ranz and Vnukowski. Music will include works by Erwin Schulhoff, Johannes Brahms, Wladyslaw Szpilman, Mieczyslaw Weinberg and Bla Kovcs. John Williams Three Pieces from the multiple Academy Award-winning Schindlers List will be performed by Park.

Choosing a composition by Erwin Schulhoff is an effort to tell a story of a wonderful Jewish culture, which did not die in the Holocaust but rather spread around the globe and entered the world of Hollywood, cabaret and concert music, said Ori Kam, violist of the Jerusalem Quartet.

The Jan. 31 concert will be held at 3 p.m. PST. A concert passport, including the concert plus all of the weeks activities, is $25 per household and may be purchased at NewWestSymphony.org or by phone at 805-497-5880 or 866-776-8400.

The Holocaust Remembrance concert is the third mini festival in the New West Symphonys reimagined season, created in response to COVID-19-related restrictions and the symphonys strong commitment to keep the beauty and healing power of music alive during these unprecedented times. Remaining concerts in the Global Sounds, Local Cultures series include A Tour of China Feb. 28, a Persian Festival April 11, A Tour of Mexico May 2, A Tour of South Korea June 13 and America the Melting Pot July 11.

Now in its 26th season, the New West Symphony draws its players from the rich talent pool of accomplished Los Angeles-area musicians. Its mission is to inspire passion for symphonic music through live performances and education initiatives that engage and enrich its diverse audiences. For more information, visit NewWestSymphony.org; or connect on Facebook and Instagram.

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The Jerusalem Quartet to Join With New West Symphony Members for Exclusive Holocaust Remembrance Musical Events - Business Wire

Sacramento GOP call for resignation of member with ties to Proud Boys – ABC10.com KXTV

Posted By on January 26, 2021

County GOP Chairperson Betsy Mahan said Perrine intends to argue against the Executive Committee's recommendation and remain on the committee.

SACRAMENTO, Calif The Sacramento County Republican Party is calling for the resignation of Jeffrey Perrine, a recently-elected member of their Central Committee who is affiliated with the Proud Boys.

In an interview with the Sacramento Bee, Perrine said he was a member of the Proud Boys but wasn't an officer in the organization. He told the Sacramento Bee that county GOP Chairperson Betsy Mahan told him to resign from the position.

Ive been a member, but Im not a head or an officer of any kind in any organization, Perrine told The Sacramento Bee. Yeah, Im still with the Proud Boys. Im just a member. Im a part of a fraternity.

The Southern Poverty Law Center designated the Proud Boys as a hate group. The Anti-Defamation League describes the group as violent, nationalistic, Islamophobic, transphobic, and misogynistic.

"When I first had a conversation with Mr. Perrine he said he was not a member of the Sacramento Proud Boys as the Bee was reporting," Mahan told ABC10. "Later, he told the Bee he was a member of the national organization, but not the local one."

In a statement sent out on Monday, Mahan addressed the issue.

"The Executive Committee of the Sacramento County Republican Party has unanimously called for the resignation of recently elected Central Committee Member Jeffrey Perrine," she said. "This is in response to Mr. Perrines expressed desire to maintain his membership in an organization whose views and actions are inconsistent with the values of the Republican Party."

She said Perrine ran in a Central Committee race where the number of candidates was equal to the number of seats and candidates, so he didn't appear on the March 2020 ballot. While Perrine was eligible to take office during the committee's virtual meeting in January, Mahan said that he did not attend and has not been sworn in.

Mahan said any member of a political party can run for Central Committee under state law. She said Perrine intends to argue against the Executive Committee's recommendation and remain on the committee.

At the same meeting, the executive committee intends to present a resolution for approval during the meeting that denounces all groups calling for hate or violence.

"We call on all political parties to join us," Mahan said.

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Sacramento GOP call for resignation of member with ties to Proud Boys - ABC10.com KXTV

Symbols of white supremacy confront Redmond teen – OPB News

Posted By on January 26, 2021

Exterior view of the Farmer's Co-op Antique Mall in Redmond, Ore., on Dec. 18, 2020.

Emily Cureton / OPB

Editors note: This story contains descriptions of racist memorabilia and anti-Semitic items, some of which contain racial epithets.

Things with past lives filled every corner of the Farmers Co-op Antique Mall in Redmond. Decoy ducks nested among the rusty typewriters, musky clothes, and toys made for children who grew old long ago. The floorboards creaked as customers wandered through the maze of booths on a recent day. At first glance, one glass display case looked a lot like dozens of others: well-lit and full of knick knacks. But, something inside made 15-year-old Lily Gallentine do a double take.

Am I seeing that right? she remembered thinking. Then, she said, her heart began to race.

There were a bunch of different Nazi pins. There was a poster in the background, saying coon and monkey. There was a black doll in the background, which I thought was weird, that it was right there and not just with like, normal dolls, Lily said.

Before now, this store had been a refuge for the 10th grader from Redmond: Just to get out. We go to a few antique stores, poke around, and have some fun. She said she likes to see the stories behind certain things.

On the day described, Lily had been hunting for toy cars to give to her dad, who collects them. When she found the case of swastikas, the price tags were $36 each, the pins neatly lined up under an ashtray with a Blackface caricature from the now-defunct Coon Chicken Inn, a restaurant chain until 1957. More of the chains racist merchandise was on sale, like a poster marked down to $18.

Mass protests since the spring of 2020 have brought attention to racism in systems, actions and beliefs. But as Lily discovered, hate can also take the shape of material objects. Lilys mom, Andrea Utz, joined her daughter in front of the case that day. Utz said she felt stunned, then disappointed, and then just like, Ugh, here we go, again.

Again because last summer at least one person targeted the family with a racist action in their own Redmond neighborhood.

We put up a Black Lives Matter sign in our yard, and a day or two later it was stolen. It was gone, Lily said, describing how they responded by planting a new sign, this one a little closer to the house. And a day later, we were just sitting at the dinner table, and the doorbell rang.

Utz got up and answered. But, no one was there. On the porch, someone had left a watermelon the letters BLM carved into it with a permanent marker. The rind looked chiseled, because the letters had been rewritten so many times, and with such force. The newly-placed yard sign was gone.

The thought of not knowing what their intention was, or who it was, that was what was most frightening and unsettling, Lily said.

Watermelons have long been subverted as symbols of racism against Black Americans. The Deschutes County District Attorneys Office assigned an investigator to look into the incident as a possible hate crime. But neither prosecutors, nor Redmond police turned up any leads, according to District Attorney John Hummel.

Months later, Utz, who is white, was still shaken: Im not going to let my daughter, who is a person of color, walk around alone at night here, even with her friends.

The population of Redmond is 90% white a demographic rooted in Oregons legacy of systemic racism. The Oregon Constitution originally forbade Black settlers from moving to the state. Other laws prohibited Black people from owning property and making contracts. These exclusion laws were repealed almost a century ago, but more racist language in Oregons founding document wasnt removed by voters until 2002.

At the Old Farmer Co-op antique mall in Redmond, the symbols of white supremacy almost blend in.

At the Redmond Farmer's Co-op Antique Mall on Dec. 18, 2020, the case on the right offers for sale a number of Nazi symbols and caricatures promoting racist stereotypes among other kinds of memorabilia.

Emily Cureton / OPB

Well, yeah. Thats memorabilia that people buy, store owner Ike Abbas said when asked about the display. Ive been doing it for 37 years, and people enjoy it. Blacks even buy it. We got one gal in there that is Black and she sells a lot of stuff.

When pressed about the juxtaposition of swastikas with Black Americana and racist caricatures, he defended the vendors right to sell whatever they want in a space they have rented from Abbas for $55 per month.

Vendors can sell what they please, the antiques dealer said, as long as its legal, Abbas said. And we dont sell guns, just because people break in to get guns.

Selling Nazi and racist memorabilia isnt against the law in the U.S., but with national conversations about the countrys racist history ongoing, the purpose of such sales is in question particularly when the items are jumbled together with no historical context.

The only audience that is going to be into racist, Black Americana, as well as Nazi memorabilia, would presumably be a racist audience, said Mark Pitcavage, who monitors extremism for the Anti-Defamation League, a nonprofit that documents anti-Semitism and other types of bigotry.

Pitcavage said that there can be nuances to why people collect some offensive items. He said context is key such as if something is in a museum or for sale and that the motivations of the collector are important to consider.

On tours of the Jim Crow Museum Ferris State University in Michigan, like this one led by David Pilgrim on Aug. 8, 2018, visitors are often asked to describe what they see in the objects, and then to try and explain how it is they came to see things a certain way.

Courtesy of the Jim Crow Museum

David Pilgrim remembers being about 12 years old when he got his first racist artifact at a flea market. He thinks it was a so-called mammy salt shaker, which he bought, then destroyed in front of the vendor, as an act of defiance.

Growing up a multi-racial, Black identified kid in the Deep South in the last days of Jim Crow, I thought about race a lot, Pilgrim said.

Over the decades, he kept collecting racist objects, things that you would find in someones home, in their kitchen, in their restroom, in their living room.

Pilgrim eventually became a sociologist and a professor, and started using his collection as educational tools. He said he would often start with a simple question.

When you look at this, what is it you see? he said. And it will always amaze me how people reared in the same way, often the same hometowns, will have such divergence in the way they look at an object, especially one dealing with race.

David Pilgrim speaks to a high school class at the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia in Michigan on Jan. 21, 2015. Pilgrim said the museum's mandate is to "create an environment where people can not just talk about race, race relations, and racism in intelligent ways, but that we start from an accurate understanding of the past."

Emily Cureton

Pilgrim founded the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia at Ferris State University in Michigan. He refers to the museums holdings, which include more than the 10,000 items on display, as propaganda, because when we show these racist depictions in cookie jars, in toys, in games, in everyday objects, its a very sneaky way to spread those ideas.

These depictions often stereotype Black people as subservient, foolish, evil, or less than human. And theyre still for sale.

Those Jim Crow ideas, those Jim Crow representations, those Jim Crow lies morphed into, and continue to exist in the present, Pilgrim said.

Among the newer items in the museums collection, President Barack Obama is portrayed as a monkey, a cannibal and a sexual predator.

Learning theres a market for hateful objects from both the past and the present reminded Lily, the Redmond teen, why she became an activist during the racial justice demonstrations of 2020.

I just try to remember like, Hey, this is the reason why Im going to protests and Im educating myself, and educating others, and raising my voice, Lily said.

Her family has put a new Black Lives Matter sign in their front yard, a visible marker that they havent been forced into silence. But her courage comes with a cost, too. In addition to the sign, the family installed a security camera.

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Symbols of white supremacy confront Redmond teen - OPB News

Story Jan. 22, 2021 Faculty voice: Gaming and toxicity – MSUToday – MSUToday

Posted By on January 26, 2021

Rabindra (Robby) Ratan is an associate professor and AT&T Scholar in the Department of Media and Information in the College of Communication Arts and Sciences as well as Social and Psychological Approaches to Research on Technology-Interaction Effects (SPARTIE) Lab. Last month, Ratan co-authored an op-ed in Wired titled Toxicity in Gaming Is Dangerous. Here's How to Stand Up to It.The following content is repurposed with permission.

Even if you arent one yourself, you probably know someone who is a gamer, whether its your own kids, nieces and nephews, students or friends. You might not realize this, but they have probably been exposed to or have even already been the target of severe gaming toxicity, such as sexual harassment, threats of violence, privacy violations and aggressive spamming. The perpetrators, often younger male players who are high in emotional reactivity and impulsivity, are fueled by anonymity of these environments, while other players often act as bystanders, rationalizing toxicity as a cultural norm of gaming.

According to a study of gaming toxicity from the Anti-Defamation League, over 80% of multiplayer gamers recently experienced some form of toxicity, with a majority of it related to gender, race/ethnicity, sexual orientation, religion or ability. Most players felt impacted by such toxicity, with over a tenth saying it resulted in depressive or suicidal thoughts and over 20% said it caused them to quit playing. These negative effects are especially harmful for women, who are more likely than men to be victims of gaming toxicity. In addition to the psychological harm, studies suggest that such toxicity decreases womens motivation to play video games in the future as well as to pursue technical career fields.

Despite the prevalence and harmful outcomes of gaming toxicity, only a minority of players report other players toxic behaviors. Although the games industry is pursuing initiatives to address this problem (e.g., better moderation tools, more transparency in reporting systems), real change needs to happen from the bottom-up from gamers themselves as well as the parents, teachers and friends of gamers.

Instead of silently normalizing the current bystander culture by trying to ignore toxicity, we must encourage an upstander culture of combating it. Toxicity in gaming is more rampant and psychologically harmful than most people might expect, so when you see it happening, say something to stop it. Saying something as simple as, Dont be toxic, can be quite effective.

Gaming toxicity is a worthy foe, a boss-level challenge for us all. Like a virus, the more people are exposed to it, the more it spreads. But this cultural contagiousness might also be cause for optimism. Even small, incremental reductions in such toxicity which will happen when you and the gamers you know act as upstanders can counteract the virality, reducing toxicity and allowing players to enjoy the multiple psychological, social and cognitive benefits that video games provide.

If you are interested in learning more, check outthis podcast episodein which Ratan speaks with Rachel Kowert, another media scholar who has published extensively in this field.

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Story Jan. 22, 2021 Faculty voice: Gaming and toxicity - MSUToday - MSUToday

BET Joins Forces With Together Beat Hate For National Religious Freedom Day And Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr…. – BET

Posted By on January 24, 2021

Civil right has many avenues. Some begin with a path towards racial justice and others may begin with a journey towards religious freedom. Together they can intersect and work towards building bridges powerful enough to counteract the biases that continues to permeate our nation.

BET and [tbh] Together Beat Hate, an organization focused on creating replicable models for fighting antisemitism and other forms of prejudice, racism and hate, are joining forces to shine a light on heroes of the past and leaders of today who are using their platforms to combat hate. The partnership launches in celebration of National Religious Freedom Day (Jan. 16) and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day. (Jan. 18) by recognizing two greats in American history who dedicated their lives to fighting for religious freedom and racial equality: Rabbi Joachim Prinz and Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr.

Too often, racial, ethnic and religious groups are pitted against one another in their respective quests for equality, both in the United States and globally. These two men epitomized the notion that marginalized groups often have more in common than not and displayed that in their work.Rabbi Prinz was the right there with Dr. King as the last speaker to take the stage before his "I Have a Dream" speech at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963 proving that the respective missions of individual groups are best served when viewing the struggles of others with empathy and compassion.

Antisemitism, racism, prejudice and all forms of bias are objectively dangerous forces that exist as undercurrents of our society, and we must all leverage our spheres of influence to eradicate these forms of hate, wherever they appear, said Scott Mills, BET President.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. has said darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Through our partnership with [tbh] we will shine a light on those who serve as illuminating forces in the face of inequality, creating a better, more equitable future for us all.

We are living during a time in which various forms of hatred have once again become socially acceptable, and it is incumbent upon all of us, no matter our race, religion or background, to stand up against it, said Robert Kraft, Chairman and CEO of the Kraft Group and founder of the [tbh] movement.

I am grateful to Shari Redstone and Scott Mills for their shared vision and investment in this partnership. The BET brand and the movement of [tbh] both seek to build bridges between communities while at the same time celebrating our uniqueness. We believe in the power and importance of leading with compassion to promote voices and platforms that do not bow to hate, and we are excited to team with BET in this important work.

All of us at TBH are so honored to work with BET on this crucial initiative, especially in the challenging times our country is facing," said Josh Kraft, President of Kraft Philanthropies. "And there are no more powerful bridge builders in American history than Dr. King and Rabbi Prinz who spent their lives unifying all groups through love, hope and equality. We hope to continue celebrating these values through the TBH /BET partnership.

BET and [tbh] will work together over the next few months to celebrate leaders in various areas as the country celebrates pivotal moments in history and social movements: National Religious Freedom Day and Martin Luther King Jr. Day (January), Black History Month (February), Womens History Month (March), Sexual Assault Awareness Month (April), American Jewish Heritage Month (May) and Pride Month (June).

The partnership also encourages each individual to make a commitment to learn from diverse perspectives as a means of educating one another with compassion. Start by using social media to recognize and honor the heroes in your life who go to great lengths to fight against hate.

Follow @BET and @togetherbeathate on Instagram and use the hashtag #tbhBET to share a post about your hero throughout January where you could then be featured as a part of the campaign.

We can together beat hate.

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BET Joins Forces With Together Beat Hate For National Religious Freedom Day And Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.... - BET

Meet the Israelis reaching out to the Arab world online – Jewish News

Posted By on January 24, 2021

As Jerusalem basks in the peace deals signed in September, a surge of curiosity about Israel in parts of the Arab world is creating a buzz online.

Traffic to Arabic-language social media pages run by Israel has rise by 40 percent since its normalisation agreement with the United Arab Emirates. Before the Abraham Accords, it was 70 million views a month, but now it got much bigger, to 100 million, Yonatan Gonen tells Jewish News, adding that recent agreements with Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco have also contributed to traffic.

The head of a 10-person Israeli Foreign Ministry team that works out what Arabic-speakers in different countries would find most engaging in relation to Israel, Gonen says: The peace agreements seem to make people feel its more okay to find out about Israel, and were not only seeing more views, but the number of positive comments grew significantly too.

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The national flags of Morocco and Israel. Now people are unafraid to share our content

In fact, he reports that one in three people who view a post or story somehow engage with it, by liking, sharing or commenting far higher that the average online. And while this figure is partly fuelled by critics who write expletives or criticise Israel, some 70 percent of comments are positive.

Engagement with government-run sites tells only part of the story of the Arab interest in Israel online, according to Dr Barak Bouks, a communications expert at Bar Ilan University.

You can sense a new vibe of curiosity and of support for Israel, he tells Jewish News, saying he sees the trend across a range of pages, even those of some Israeli news sites, where Arabic speakers appear to be taking the effort to read via Google Translate. Bouks says the Arab Spring brought about a mindset change in the Arab world. As activists largely organised themselves and publicised on social media, it led to a sidelining of traditional media and an unprecedented embrace of Facebook and other networks for information, which has grown ever since.

Gonens unit capitalises on this openness to social media using a range of accounts. The newest is TikTok, the video-sharing platform popular with young people. The four main platforms are Facebook, YouTube, Instagram and Twitter. As well as general Arabic-language accounts, there are special pagestargeting specific areas, such as the Gulf.

One of the most popular posts in recent weeks was a cartoon depicting Israel and various Arab states in the same boat and Iran as a shark in the surrounding waters. It tapped into a feeling that the interests of Arab states and Israel are aligned, with Iran a common threat.

Some content presents an Israeli perspective on the conflict with the Palestinians, or just dispels misunderstandings. There are a lot of conspiracy theories about Israel on social media, says Gonen. People even think that the Hatikvah has lyrics like, You need to kill Palestinians. So we published the song, simply to show what the lyrics actually are.

Many of the posts seek to give people a glimpse of the country that exists beyond the conflict, and videos of a Foreign Ministry employee talking to ordinary Israelis amid the high-rise towers of Tel Aviv get instant traction. Whats special in our activity is that were focused on putting forward what we consider the real face of Israel, says Gonen.

We talk about diversity, about coexistence between Jews and Arabs and about innovation. Its everything you wont see in the traditional Arab media, which looks at Israel just through the lens of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Were trying to extend the view that people take.

Surprisingly, one country where posts are particularly popular has no normalisation with Israel on the horizon: Iraq.

There, we saw in the past few years that we get very good and positive responses, far beyond than other countries in the Arab world, Gonen says. So we opened a special page that has information on the Jewish heritage in Iraq and about the good relations that existed between Jewish and Arab people there before the establishment of the state of Israel. And we talk about the community of Iraqi Jews in Israel and bringtheir stories.

Yonatan Gonen is seeing positive comments

The unit has existed for a decade, with significantly increased activity in the past year.It is constantly rushing to push out new material, trying to shape hearts and minds, in a way that has only recently become possible.

Gonen says: Ten years ago we just couldnt speak with such a large audience in the Arab world, in places where we dont have diplomatic connections. The gatekeepers, meaning officials and the traditional media, wouldnt allow communication directly with the public but, with social media, its nowpossible.

This dynamic means Israels Arabic-language social media output isnt just responding to diplomatic breakthroughs; Gonen thinks it may be planting seeds for future agreements.

Its not the only thing that will pave the way for other peace agreements, but its certainly part of it, he says. Weve been talking to people in Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates for quite some time, and leaders, if considering a step of peace, need to know what their people think. One way they see this is by looking on social media, so online engagement does create momentum.

Especially when it comes to Twitter, we have opinion leaders from media and politics following our accounts. They share our content and comment positively. Thats a big change.

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Meet the Israelis reaching out to the Arab world online - Jewish News

Jewish communities in New York City and across the country tighten security protocols as threats mount – SecurityInfoWatch

Posted By on January 24, 2021

As if the affirmation was truly needed. The grotesque image of a bearded Virginia man using his cell phone near the steps of the United States Capitol on January 6 sporting a sweatshirt with the words Camp Auschwitz across the top and below the infamous slogan that greeted Jewish prisoners arriving at the Nazi death camp, Work Brings Freedom while doubling down with the word Staff stamped on his back, more than emphasized the state of hate in the U.S. and its exponential rise in recent years. In fact, 2019 witnessed the highest level of anti-Semitic incidents since the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) began tracking data 40 years ago, with more than 2,100 acts of assault, vandalism and harassment reported across the United States against American Jewish communities.

Issued in May of 2020, the 2019 ADL Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents, reported that the total number of anti-Semitic incidents in 2019 increased 12% over the previous year, with a disturbing 56% increase in assaults and on average, as many as six anti-Semitic incidents in the U.S. for each day in the calendar year the highest level of antisemitic activity ever recorded by ADL. There were also five fatalities directly linked to anti-Semitic violence and another 91 individuals targeted in physical assaults. The ADL report states that every one of the 48 contiguous United States and Washington, D.C. reported incidents, with more than half of the assaults nationwide taking place in the five boroughs of New York City, including 25 in Brooklyn alone.Issued in May of 2020, the 2019 ADL Audit of Antisemitic Incidents, reported that the total number of antisemitic incidents in 2019 increased 12% over the previous year.Courtesy of Getty Images -- Credit: tzahiV

It's definitely concerning, and I think there are a few ways that I look at it differently having grown up in Amsterdam and given our history during World War II and with the Holocaust. My grandparents went through it and it was a very traumatizing experience for the whole Jewish community here, says Richard Priem, who began as the Director of Security Operations for Security for Community Security Service (CSS) and was recently promoted to Deputy National Director serving alongside CSS CEO Evan Bernstein. CSS is an organization based in New York City and serving several other U.S. cities in the strategic protection, security training and security services for the Jewish community.

I grew up thinking there are two places in the world where Jews are safe. One of them is Israel because Jews take the initiative in their own hands to protect themselves and the other one in the United States. But now that I moved here a few years ago and I've worked in this space, I've seen these numbers creep up year after year. It's disturbing and definitely alarming. As someone who's worked in the security space and has been focused on understanding the root cause of antisemitism and hate crimes, and now at CSS, protecting synagogues and Jewish communities, this all affects me very personally.

The rise of far right-wing extremist organizations such as The Three Percenters, The Oath Keepers, Proud Boys, Texas Freedom Force,and other self-described Nazis and white supremacists were among the mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol building three weeks ago, according to federal investigators. The FBI describes several of these groups as a "large but loosely organized collection of militias who believe that the federal government has been co-opted by a shadowy conspiracy that is trying to strip American citizens of their rights." Add to the mix the scourge of COVID-19 and the present pandemic is just the excuse many extremists needed to exploit their anti-Semitic agendas.

Synagogues, Jewish day schools and other institutions have been tightening their security protocols since the October 2018 shooting massacre at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh. Since then, there were three major attacks on the Jewish community in 2019: A white supremacist opened fire at the Chabad of Poway, California, on April 27, killing one. Two individuals, at least one of whom was associated with an anti-Semitic Black Hebrew Israelite sect, attacked a Jewish grocery store in Jersey City, New Jersey, on December 10, killing three. On December 28, an individual attacked a Hanukkah party at the home of a rabbi in Monsey, New York, with a knife, resulting in four injuries and one fatality.

With this rise in hate crimes in general and anti-Semitic violence in particular, organizations like CSS have been more aggressive in expanding their efforts to meet the unique security and safety needs of Jewish communities across the country, soliciting community-based volunteers and partnering with other inter-faith organizations and local law enforcement to create security strategies that will provide best-in-practice training.

In a recent op-ed in a Jewish periodical, Bernstein states: the security challenges we face are daunting, and are so massive that no one individual, organization or governmental body can tackle them alone, andgiven the manner in which extremist ideology is rearing its ugly head, with an increase in violent anti-Semitic acts as a consequence, it is incumbent upon us as a leading Jewish security body to foster partnerships that seek to produce an even bigger shield.

For Priem, the realization that the COVID-19 era has provided the spark for many extremist groups to pool their efforts to intimidate and commit acts of violence on the Jewish community makes his efforts with CSS even more critical, not only in New York but across the nation. While he wants to wait for a more complete picture from data not yet in about the relationship of the pandemic and the spread of anti-Semitic actions, he admits that the number of COVID-related conspiracy theories attacking the Jewish community is undeniable.

You have seen a high number of COVID-related realities allow for anti-Semitic incidents. For example, the fact that so many synagogues have been threatened and have had to move to the virtual space, it has subsequently produced this whole new concept of Zoom-bombing to the Jewish community where right-wing extremists and other extremists are trying to hijack these meetings. These incidents have introduced a new need for virtual meeting security based on the increase of cyber harassment, Priem says. I think it's hard to make such a hard comparison between previous years and now without having the data being finalized, but you can definitely see that, as part of this pandemic, there have been a number of new anti-Semitic conspiracy theories that have gained prominence online. You have had a number of COVID-related or indirectly COVID-related anti-Semitic incidents that have occurred, including in New Jersey a few months ago where there was someone arrested on a terrorism charge for threatening to drive out to a town that had a high proportion of the Jewish population to physically assault a member of the Jewish community because of their perceived role in spreading COVID. So, absolutely there is an interaction between the pandemic and anti-Semitism, which I think goes back to the age-old tendencies during times of crisis, whether it's a financial crisis or in this case, the health crisis, some people always find Jews a convenient scapegoat for their own hardships.Richard Priem, who began as the Director of Security Operations for Security for Community Security Service (CSS) and was recently promoted to Deputy National Director serving alongside CSS CEO Evan Bernstein. CSS is an organization based in New York City and serving several other U.S. cities in the strategic protection, security training, and security services for the Jewish community.Courtesy of CSS

The hard facts are that the lack of attention in quelling the rising tide of homegrown extremists by state and federal law enforcement agencies can be linked to a lack of strategic policy by the U.S. government. In a New York Times opinion piece, Bernstein wrote with Mitchell Silber, they acknowledge that even though Congress appropriated $90 million for the Non-Profit Security Grant Program for the fiscal year 2020 and a number of states have established similar programs., the federal government and states should significantly increase this funding, institutional security training and outreach. They added that New York States security grant program for nonprofits should serve as a model that other states should follow.

In his new role with CSS, it is Priems intention to build security awareness among the Jewish community in the vulnerable New York City area and then take that message to the masses by partnering with other cities in the U.S.; not only enforcing common-sense security measures but tactical and technical safeguards as well.

Situational awareness is very important. Very basic security awareness can save lives. If you have a community that is sensitized about the threat that is out there, and are willing to invest, not just in physical protection measures such as cameras, but also in things such as a reinforced door and having a mindset where people all believe that it's important that when they go into the building that they close the door behind them. In Halle, the Yom Kippur attack in Germany, the attack failed because there were a reinforced door and people in the synagogue knew that when they go in, they close the door behind them. There was someone sitting behind the camera, the security person, who could see everything that was taking place outside. But he didn't have to worry about someone leaving the door open, because everybody in that congregation had the situational awareness to know that security is important, Priem relates.

I think educating our community on the importance of situational awareness, of preventative security, is crucial. There's a lot of things that happen before an actual attack takes place, even in some of the incidents that took place in the U.S. over the past few years we had indications that the attacker at least scouted or visited the site of the attack beforehand. These are moments where, from a pure preventative proactive security angle, if you have those measures in place if you have volunteers that are doing security, if you have private security, or if you have an arrangement with law enforcement, these are moments that you can thwart an attack before it ever takes place, concludes Priem. So, I think advocating our community, and at the same time, what we do, training volunteers across the country to protect their institutions in proactive, preventative security routines, will hopefully have the impact that an attack never takes place.

About the Author:

Steve Lasky is the Editorial Director of the Endeavor Media Security Group and is a 34-year veteran of the security industry. He can be reached atsteveo@securityinfowatch.com.

The rest is here:
Jewish communities in New York City and across the country tighten security protocols as threats mount - SecurityInfoWatch

FBI and Huntsville Police Announce Reward and Billboard Campaign to Assist in Identifying Person of Interest in Vandalism of Jewish Synagogues FBI -…

Posted By on January 24, 2021

Special Agent in Charge (SAC) Johnnie Sharp, Jr. and Huntsville Police Chief Mark McMurray today announced rewards totaling $18,000 for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the individual responsible for the vandalizations of the Etz Chayim Synagogue on April 9, 2020, and the Chabad of Huntsville on April 10, 2020. The announcement was made at a press conference held at Huntsville Police Headquarters this afternoon.

The FBI is providing a $15,000 reward for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the individual responsible.

Huntsville Area Crime Stoppers is offering a separate reward of $1,000, and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) is offering a separate reward of $2,000. These two rewards are subject to their individual rules and are not administered by the FBI.

In addition, this reward campaign will include digital billboards that will be displayed across north Alabama and southern Tennessee. The FBI would like to express its thanks to Lamar Advertising for their contribution to the digital billboard campaign.

In the early morning hours of April 9, 2020, the Etz Chayim Synagogue, located at 7707 Baily Cove Road, Huntsville, Alabama, was vandalized with anti-Semitic graffiti.

The following day, in the early morning hours of April 10, 2020, the Chabad of Huntsville, located at 1908 Parkhill Road SE, Huntsville, Alabama was vandalized with similar anti-Semitic graffiti. Surveillance camera footage indicated that the vandalisms were perpetrated by the same individual.

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FBI and Huntsville Police Announce Reward and Billboard Campaign to Assist in Identifying Person of Interest in Vandalism of Jewish Synagogues FBI -...

Woodland Park man arrested for US Capitol insurrection – FOX21News.com

Posted By on January 24, 2021

DENVER (KDVR) Robert Gieswein, 24, turned himself over to authorities in Teller CountyMonday evening, according to the Teller County Sheriffs Office. Federal prosecutors areaccusing Gieswein of participating in the insurrectionat the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

Investigators said Gieswein appears to be associated with a radical militia group known at The Three Percenters.The group has been in existence for more than a decade.The organization has been particularly active during the presidency of Donald Trump, according to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL).

Gieswein is accused of assaulting a police officer and obstructing a federal proceeding during the Capitol attack. On Sunday,FBI agents swarmed a Woodland Park propertywhere the defendant previously lived. Agents have been zeroing in on his alleged affiliation with The Three Percenters.

[The Three Percenters] have aligned themselves to be often a protector of President Trump, said Scott Levin, a regional director of the Anti-Defamation League. They have been and are often seen wearing military garb and carrying weapons.

The militia members have shown up to anti-Trump protests where theyve been accused of intimidating those who push back against the Trump agenda.

These people believe that they need to stand up at this time, and mainly they [believe they] need to stand up against the government that they see as being tyrannical, Levin said.

The groups name has roots in the American Revolutionary War. It is inspired by the false allegation that only 3% of colonists resisted British rule during the birth of the United States. Over the past year, members have organized efforts against governors and public health officials concerning COVID-19 restrictions.

These militia movements have made their way across the United States, Levin explained.

Levin said the ADL supports free speech, but he is concerned about militia members ability to intimidate, incite violence and break laws.

The Teller County Sheriffs Office reportedon Monday eveningthat Gieswein had turned himself over to authorities at the Teller County Jail. Deputies said Gieswein will be handed over to federal authorities.

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Woodland Park man arrested for US Capitol insurrection - FOX21News.com

FBI and Huntsville police announce reward in Identifying person of interest in vandalism of Jewish Synagogues – WVTM13

Posted By on January 24, 2021

CARLA: NEW THIS MORNING, NEARLY $20,000 IN REWARD MONEY IS BEING OFFERED FOR INFORMATION ABOUT LAST YEARS ANTI-SEMIT VANDALISM IN HUNTSVILLE. THIS IS ONE OF TWO SYNAGOGUES THAT WERE DEFACED LAST SPRING. THE FBI HAS SINCE IDENTIFIED A PERSON OF INTEREST FROM SURVEILLANCE FOOTAGE. THAT PERSON APPEARS TO HAVE A PROSTHETIC LEFT LEG AND WALKS WITH A LIMP. THEY ADD THE SUSPECT MAY HAV BEEN DRIVING A LIGHT-COLORED TOYOTA PRIUS. ANY TIPS CAN BE SUBM

FBI and Huntsville police announce reward in Identifying person of interest in vandalism of Jewish Synagogues

FBI and Huntsville Police Chief Mark McMurray announced rewards totaling $18,000

Updated: 6:35 AM CST Jan 22, 2021

Special Agent in Charge (SAC) Johnnie Sharp, Jr., and Huntsville Police Chief Mark McMurray announced rewards totaling $18,000 for information which leads to the arrest and conviction of the individual responsible for the vandalizations of the Etz Chayim Synagogue on April 9, 2020, and the Chabad of Huntsville on April 10, 2020. The announcement was made at a press conference held at Huntsville Police Headquarters on Thursday, January 21.The FBI is providing a $15,000 reward for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the individual responsible.Huntsville Area Crime Stoppers is offering a separate reward of $1,000, and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) is offering a separate reward of $2,000. These two rewards are subject to their individual rules and are not administered by the FBI.In addition, this reward campaign will include digital billboards that will be displayed across north Alabama and southern Tennessee. The FBI would like to express its thanks to Lamar Advertising for their contribution to the digital billboard campaign. In the early morning hours of April 9, 2020, the Etz Chayim Synagogue, located at 7707 Baily Cove Road, Huntsville, Alabama, was vandalized with anti-Semitic graffiti. The following day, in the early morning hours of April 10, 2020, the Chabad of Huntsville, located at 1908 Parkhill Road SE, Huntsville, Alabama was vandalized with similar anti-Semitic graffiti. Surveillance camera footage indicated that the vandalisms were perpetrated by the same individual. The individual walked with a pronounced, distinct limp and appeared to have a prosthetic left leg. The individual may have been driving an early model Toyota Prius, light in color.Prior to the vandalizations, on April 4, 2020, the individual was seen walking on residential streets near the Chabad of Huntsville in the Blossomwood neighborhood. Investigators are asking that anyone with information regarding the possible identity of this individual or these incidents, please contact the FBIs Birmingham Division, Huntsville Resident Agency at (256) 539-1711 or the Huntsville Police Department at (256) 427-7009. Tips can also be submitted online at tips.fbi.gov.

Special Agent in Charge (SAC) Johnnie Sharp, Jr., and Huntsville Police Chief Mark McMurray announced rewards totaling $18,000 for information which leads to the arrest and conviction of the individual responsible for the vandalizations of the Etz Chayim Synagogue on April 9, 2020, and the Chabad of Huntsville on April 10, 2020. The announcement was made at a press conference held at Huntsville Police Headquarters on Thursday, January 21.

The FBI is providing a $15,000 reward for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the individual responsible.

Huntsville Area Crime Stoppers is offering a separate reward of $1,000, and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) is offering a separate reward of $2,000. These two rewards are subject to their individual rules and are not administered by the FBI.

In addition, this reward campaign will include digital billboards that will be displayed across north Alabama and southern Tennessee. The FBI would like to express its thanks to Lamar Advertising for their contribution to the digital billboard campaign.

In the early morning hours of April 9, 2020, the Etz Chayim Synagogue, located at 7707 Baily Cove Road, Huntsville, Alabama, was vandalized with anti-Semitic graffiti.

The following day, in the early morning hours of April 10, 2020, the Chabad of Huntsville, located at 1908 Parkhill Road SE, Huntsville, Alabama was vandalized with similar anti-Semitic graffiti. Surveillance camera footage indicated that the vandalisms were perpetrated by the same individual.

The individual walked with a pronounced, distinct limp and appeared to have a prosthetic left leg. The individual may have been driving an early model Toyota Prius, light in color.

Prior to the vandalizations, on April 4, 2020, the individual was seen walking on residential streets near the Chabad of Huntsville in the Blossomwood neighborhood.

Investigators are asking that anyone with information regarding the possible identity of this individual or these incidents, please contact the FBIs Birmingham Division, Huntsville Resident Agency at (256) 539-1711 or the Huntsville Police Department at (256) 427-7009. Tips can also be submitted online at tips.fbi.gov.

Original post:
FBI and Huntsville police announce reward in Identifying person of interest in vandalism of Jewish Synagogues - WVTM13


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