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Fake letter attributed to Kamala Harris warns DC synagogues they must close or be shut down – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on January 20, 2021

(JTA) Synagogues in Washington, D.C., are receiving a fake letter purported to be signed by Vice President-elect Kamala Harris warning them to close or they will go to prison.

Myself and President Joe Biden, will shut down your Synagogue of worship and place heavy fines upon your religious institution, said the letter, according to an alert distributed Tuesday to Jewish institutions by Secure Community Network, the national Jewish group that advises institutions on security.

We will be in control in two weeks and we will shut you down, says the letter, which has a postmark from Albany, New York. This is your fair warning from me. [Washington] Mayor Muriel Bowser will have the authority from myself and President Biden to shut you down and take you to prison if you decide to open your doors.

The letter writer appears to hope to exploit anger by some Jewish institutions, especially among the Orthodox, at restrictions on in-person religious services.

Recipients have alerted law enforcement about the letter, according to SCN.

At this time, SCN is not aware of any specific, credible threats as it pertains to this document, the notice said.

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Fake letter attributed to Kamala Harris warns DC synagogues they must close or be shut down - Cleveland Jewish News

Alliance Between Vigilantes and Law Enforcement: A US Tradition – The Nation

Posted By on January 20, 2021

Children standing in front of an anti-German sign posted in Edison Park, Chicago, 1917. (Chicago Sun-Times / Chicago Daily News collection / Chicago History Museum / Getty Images)

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In 1938, Seth Wheeler Jr. wrote a brief article about the American Protective League (APL)a short-lived organization of citizen volunteers who helped federal agencies root out radicalsfor The Military Engineer magazine. By then, the violent, nativist wave that crested with the first Red Scare and the US entrance into World War I had broken and receded. The APL itself had dissolved. But Wheeler, the former chief of the leagues Albany division, wanted to remind the public of the organizations historic importance.

The initials A.P.L mean little or nothing to the great majority of the people of this country, he lamented, but without it, the Department of Justices newly founded Bureau of Investigation (BOI)which we know today as the Federal Bureau of Investigationwould have been unable to operate at the scale necessary to combat the activities of over a quarter of a million members of various secret enemy organizations. It was only a matter of time, he predicted, before Uncle Sam would once again find himself imperiled by foreign wars and seditious citizens. When such a time arrived, he reassured his readers, patriotic citizens would be ready to jump in and do their bit to protect the American way of life.

When pro-Trump protesters breached security and stormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021, in order to disrupt the certification of an election they baselessly deemed fraudulent, Americans were shocked. Pundits, news anchors, and politicians from both sides of the aisle repeatedly stated that this turn of events was un-American, something that doesnt happen here, not how our democracy works. Weve never seen anything like this was the refrain.

As the late, great Gil Scott-Heron observed, amnesia is a function of being shockeda state that Americans seem to be particularly fond of. Just last September, for example, protesters armed with AR-15s and kitted out in MAGA hats and Proud Boys paraphernalia stormed the state capitol in Lansing, Mich. Groups of armed white people with far-right political sympathies are neither anamolous nor actively discouraged by law enforcement agencies, who are not only reluctant to use force against them but frequently collude with them as well.

January 6 was upsetting, infuriating, disorienting, and perhaps even frightening, but to characterize it as shocking requires a willful failure of recent and historical memory. Its precisely these sorts of organizationsnow exemplified by the Proud Boys, National Alliance, National Anarchist Movement, European Heritage Associationthat helped to consolidate the very notion of true Americanism, establish the boundaries of democratic expression and participation, and build the law enforcement agencies that are now so hesitant to interfere with their activities. In other words, both Americanism and law enforcement have right-wing vigilantism baked into them.Related Article

The early 20th century alliance between respectable-sounding extralegal organizations with members acting on their own recognizance and law enforcement arose from a combination of necessity and convention. Enforcing military conscription while stemming the tide of socialism and radicalism would have been impossible without this volunteer army of patriots, and ad hoc community policing was a well-established practice.

Before World War I, the United States national security apparatus barely existed by todays standards, and while it grew considerably during the war, it remained skeletal well into the next decade. The APL, along with a number of similar organizations, provided personnel and administrative support for the War Department. By swelling the ranks of the BOI, these patriotic organizations played a crucial role in the repression of political dissent (often conflated with ethnic difference) during and following World War I. By policing the boundaries of acceptable speech and behavior, volunteer organizations for the maintenance of law and order not only supplemented the repressive apparatus that was being established at the federal level but also deployed the language of patriotism for the purpose of expanding a national security state and eliminating challenges to the economic order.Current Issue

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Many patriotic organizations sprang up across the country as preparedness for (and, later, active participation in) the war became the central preoccupation of both the public and the government. The committee for Defense, the Boy Spies of America, the American Legion, the resurrected Ku Klux Klan, and various defense committees formed by sheriffs departments and local chambers of commerce were just some of the mechanisms that placed the defense of America, its superior morals, and its system of government in the hands of zealous citizens. The APL was not unique, but it was the largest, and unlike many of its extralegal counterparts, it enjoyed the explicit endorsement of the attorney general and a quasi-official status as a functional branch of the BOI.

Albert M. Briggs, vice president of the Chicago firm Outdoor Advertising, founded the APL in March of 1917 as an association of volunteers, organized into local branches under the control of a national board of directors. Briggs approached the head of an overwhelmed Chicago BOI office with an offer of 75 cars and assistance in identifying German aliens and spies, then traveled to Washington, D.C., and made a similar offer to bureau chief Bruce Bielaski, who readily accepted. In 1917, the BOI had 122 agents, the Secret Service 50, and the Military and Naval Intelligence offices a few dozen between them. By contrast, the APL had 100,000 members within months of its formation, and in 1918 the organization had recruited 250,000 volunteers.

The APLs best known and most widely organized action occurred over the course of three days in September 1918. Thirty-five BOI agents, 2,000 members of the APL, several hundred police officers, and 2,350 military personnel arrested somewhere between 50,000 and 75,000 slackersmen suspected of dodging the draft mandated by the Selective Services Act. After the dragnets known as slacker raids met with widespread opprobrium, the BOI tried to distance itself from the APL and deny its active endorsement of the more egregious violations of its members. But this was disingenuous in the extreme: Members of the APL were permitted to carry badges identifying them as agents of the Secret Service, and in several cities they handled the bulk of BOI cases. In 1918, Bielaski ordered all bureau agents to fully cooperate with league members. These members were also routinely invited to participate in BOI raids.Related Article

While the Department of Justice had not empowered the APL to make arrests, operatives assumed that they had been authorized to act as official agents with all the powers of officers of the BOI. In the absence of supervision, let alone consequences, the organization proceeded to systematically violate the civil liberties of their fellow citizens. APL agents reported suspect activity, demanded proof of registration, made arrests, confiscated the assets of German Americans, broke up legal political meetings, forced people to purchase Liberty Bonds, helped to crush the occasional strike anddepending on the temperament and priorities of the operativeworked to keep alcohol and prostitutes out of military camps. According to historian Nick Fisher, they broke into buildings and stole documents, obtained personal information from post offices, illegally wire-tapped phones, forced symbolic acts of patriotism on pain of death, and monitored the activities of Germans who were all assumed to be enemy aliens.

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The imprimatur enjoyed by the APL and its many cousins was disastrous for socialists, pacifists, union members, the many new and largely Catholic immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe, African Americans, and anyone with even a glancing relationship to Germany.

At the time, Germans made up a significant portion of the 13 million foreign-born Americans counted in the 1910 census. These immigrants and their naturalized descendants were likely to speak German, read German-language newspapers, attend religious services delivered in German, and send their children to German-language schools. 9.2 million people identified German as their first language. During the war, Germans and the German language became the focus of generalized anxiety about immigration, political dissent, and economic order. Merely speaking German could result in physical violence or arrest. The official publication of the APL, Spy Glass, published lists of suspicious Germans complete with mug shots.

The violence of anti-German hysteria was not limited to persons of German heritage. Any perceived enemies of the state, usually labor radicals or political socialists, could be and were accused of working for the kaiser. The war against Germany provided a vehicle for making dissent of any kind literally un-American.

After German immigrant Robert Prager was wrapped in an American flag, beaten, and then lynched in Collinsville, Ill., in April 1918, President Wilson publicly condemned mob violence, but his condemnation of a single act of violence hardly countered the onslaught of propaganda encouraging citizen violence for the sake of the nation. Forced flag kissing and tarring-and-feathering were among the treatments reserved for undesirable citizens.

It may seem unbelievable today that the federal government would rely on patriotic volunteers to carry out its police functions, but the APL would not have struck Americans as all that odd in 1917. While the National Guard had begun to supersede local and state militias and professional police forces were increasingly prominent in major cities, early 20th century America remained reliant on community policing and provisional, nonprofessional law enforcement.

Furthermore, the APL was of a piece with the Wilson administrations official plan for organizing the draft. According to Fisher, in an effort to avoid the draft riots that punctuated recruitment efforts during the Civil War, conscription and registration devolved to local organizations made up of civic-minded volunteers. Turning the draft into a local affair would not only lessen the administrative and financial burden of the federal government; it would also put a friendly, local face on the war effort that would encourage cooperation through the leveraging of social obligations. In a world of patchy and uncoordinated record keepingwhere the testimony of relatives might commonly function as a substitute for birth certificatesthe intimate knowledge of a place and its inhabitants was a valuable asset.

As historian Christopher Capozzola has argued, the unstable but still operational distinction between vigilance and vigilantism is key to understanding the political culture of early 20th century America. This distinction, never a hard line in practice, nonetheless served to rhetorically differentiate between what would commonly be considered mob violencespontaneous, illegal, and uncontrolledand the long-standing equation of good citizenship with a political obligation to vigilance. While Wilson publicly and explicitly denounced the action of the mob as illegitimate and un-American, the difference between the actions of the mob and the activities of vigilant citizens was far from clear. At the time there was no consensus on the place of extralegal violence, the exact boundaries of legitimate and illegitimate political coercion, or even the legality of non-state actors performing policing activities.

Private police forces had a well-established presence in the United States as the primary tool for breaking strikes and protecting company property. Communities relied on a variety of practicesand practitionersto enforce both the law and local custom. The widespread, extralegal violence against African Americans was the most gruesome and consistent example of citizen enforcement of local community order. The patriotic voluntarism that became incorporated into federal police powers at the time was streaked with anti-immigrant, anti-labor, and anti-black violence.

The APL did not spring, sui generis, from a natural urge to repress speech and harass ethnic minorities. It was a reaction to real and viable social change and a response to a more general sense that the countrys traditionally Protestant elite was losing ground: Women were agitating for the vote; Catholic and Jewish immigrants were pouring in from Europe and they were organizing; labor shortages created by the war led to an empowered workforce with the freedom to quit bad jobs and go on strike; and while the end of Reconstruction had reestablished de facto slavery in many parts of the country, de jure racial equality prevailed. From the perspective of the ruling class, this was nothing less than apocalyptic.

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The APL and similar organizations were important tools for the maintenance of a ruling class in crisis. This was not a happy coincidence of interests but a consciously cultivated and financially supported arrangement. Its founder, Briggs, was an advertiser from a city plagued by labor trouble, radical politics, and a large immigrant population. He encouraged division heads such as Wheeler to solicit donations from wealthy individuals who stood to benefit most from the property protection afforded by the organization. Corporations facing trouble from organized labor were eager to maintain APL branches whose members, while officially protecting America from German spies, were often principally occupied with intimidating and attacking labor organizers. Fisher notes that when railroads were temporarily nationalized in 1917, they applied for permission to continue donations to the APL. While it reflected long-standing notions of active citizenship and its membership was economically diverse, it was hardly a grassroots effort.

It was during World War I that this deeply embedded but still politically flexible notion of citizen responsibility became a state project. In self-reinforcing fashion, voluntarism was, as the war went on, increasingly motivated by nationalism. Nationalism, in turn, was defined by military preparedness. As one contemporary, Randolph Bourne, pointed out, war is the health of the state. The reactionary atmosphere that characterized the years surrounding World War I was not unidirectional. Rather the wartime needs of the Wilson administration and Americans desire to maintain the moral, economic, and racial status quo legitimated and strengthened one another.Related Article

Today, we know what American means. It means flags, fealty to government, militarism, xenophobia, individualism, sanctity of private property, belief in the sacred nature of the Constitution, and a deep attachment to the notion that America is the true home of democracy. Left and centrist efforts to correct thisAmerican should mean immigrantis only proof of this consensus. What is not generally recognized is that this consensus was born of conscious coercion at a specific moment in time. In his article Two Concepts of Un-Americanism, historian Alex Goodall points out that systematic attempts to consider Americanism as a distinctive political ideology were surprisingly rare. During the 1880s, arguably a high point of labor unrest and anarchist activity that culminated in the infamous Haymarket massacre, the New York Times had on average only one article or editorial per month mentioning the word Americanism; by the 1920s there was one every third day.

And while the coordinated effort to secure a definition of American that was anti-labor, anti-immigrant, and deeply suspicious of dissenting speech drew on long-established custom and tradition, its outcome was in no way inevitable. It took enormous amounts of money, organization, and force to reach the current consensus. The decimation of radical political alternatives by the healthy wartime state, enthusiastically supported by hundreds of thousands of non-state actors, is a depressing story. But it is one that deserves, even requires, attention if we want to understand how political consensus is achieved: with enormous amounts of money, organization, and force.

Political consensus requires ongoing maintenance. The remarkable contrast between the excessive policing of the 2020 BLM protests and law enforcements seeming absence from the January 6 siege (to say nothing of the resurgence of reactionary patriotic organizations alongside the growing popularity of political socialism) indicates that official priorities have changed very little.

But it isnt all bad news. This does give Americans something to be proud of: The scale of the effort that it takes to silence dissent is a measure of how robust and diverse our political imagination and capacity for organized resistance has always been.

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Alliance Between Vigilantes and Law Enforcement: A US Tradition - The Nation

Thousands attend Hasidic wedding in Brooklyn, many from Europe and Israel – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on January 20, 2021

When the Yiddish newspaper Der Blatt set out to explain how a massive wedding for the grandson of the Satmar grand rabbi took place despite pandemic limits on gatherings, it waited until after the event to reveal all the details.

Another Orthodox news site took a different approach this week: JDN, an Israeli site, published an article before a large wedding about the secrecy involved in its planning, then replaced the article with another version that said the affair would be small and in keeping with COVID rules.

Photos and video from the wedding held Monday in Brooklyns Borough Park neighborhood made clear that the first version of the story was accurate.

The wedding is the latest example of the lack of compliance in Hasidic communities with protocols meant to stop the spread of the coronavirus. And perhaps more troubling for authorities hoping to stop these events, it is yet another example of the degree to which members of the Hasidic community are willing to keep secret violations of public health guidance that put lives in jeopardy as COVID cases rise across the country and a new more contagious variant of the disease continues to spread in the United States and around the world.

JDN, the Israeli news site that revealed the wedding plans on Monday, made clear the extent to which wedding organizers made sure to keep the event under wraps even though, according to the news site, thousands attended and hundreds came from Europe and Israel to do so.

Conditions make it very difficult to hold mass events, but the Bobov Hasidic group, one of the largest Hasidic groups in the United States, did everything to make the wedding take place on the better side, properly for the wedding of the youngest son of the grand rabbi for whom many anticipate a bright future, according to the article published Monday.

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It continued:

It is a difficult task to organize a mass wedding in such tumultuous days. Even if you have managed to find a respectable venue, the heart is not at peace, because at any given moment you are exposed to the danger of whistleblowing and the police forces will be on their way to the place and the celebration subsides. If in Israel there are concerns, in the United States of America all the more so.

The article went on to explain that the location of the wedding was not made clear until immediately before its start and that guests were warned not to take any photos or videos of the event.

The original version of the article was documented by Rabbi Natan Slifkin of the Rationalist Judaism blog, who often writes sharp critiques of ultra-Orthodox society. But by Tuesday, the JDN article had been replaced with a shorter one that claimed the wedding would be held in a more limited fashion.

JDN News has learned that due to the situation, the wedding will be held in a very limited manner and notes that the Rebbe is very strict in the instructions and was among the first to order the closure of the Torah institutions of the Hasidim to protect against the virus, the article said. Thousands of Bobov followers from all over the world will celebrate from their homes the joy of the great wedding, the joy of the youngest son of the Rebbe who will be married at a good and successful time. The hearts of thousands of followers are full of excitement.

Since the summer, large weddings have been cited as a source of infection in Orthodox communities and of tension between those communities and government authorities. Community members who have spoken out about the large gatherings at synagogues and wedding halls have been called mosers, a term that translates to informers but can carry the threat of physical violence.

In the protests that seized the Hasidic neighborhood of Borough Park in October, one Hasidic journalist was cornered by a mob after a local provocateur, Heshy Tischler, called him a moser.

The same JDN reporter who wrote the articles about the wedding tweeted an update Tuesday afternoon after Halberstam spoke at the first of the sheva brachot, the post-wedding celebrations.

In his remarks, the Rebbe referred to the mosers who inform the authorities about celebrations and the opening of synagogues and came out against them with great sharpness, he wrote.

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Thousands attend Hasidic wedding in Brooklyn, many from Europe and Israel - The Jerusalem Post

On Ultra-Orthodox social media, the messiah is almost here. – Forward

Posted By on January 20, 2021

After an armed insurrection at the Capitol, rampant conspiracy theories about a stolen election and social media blackouts for President Donald Trump, some WhatsApp, YouTube and Facebook users in Ultra-Orthodox, or Haredi, communities see the present moment as the darkness before the dawn that is, the golus before the coming of moshiach, the messiah.

If nothing happens and Biden and crew go along with their evil plans, Im sure it just means Mashiach will be here speedily BH, said one WhatsApp user in a pro-Trump Haredi group on Tuesday, using the abbreviation for Baruch Hashem, thank God.

We must experience 9 months of birth pangs before Mashiach, said another last Friday.

There are a few signs in the world right now that were very close to geulah; were very close to the final redemption, said Ari Goldwag, a Hasidic musician associated with the Lubavitch movement, in a Jan. 15 YouTube video. Goldwag has more than 26,000 subscribers.

Anticipation of the coming of the messiah is not new for some Haredi Jews, especially many from the Lubavitch movement who believe the sects previous spiritual leader, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, was the actual moshiach. But linking the redemption of the earth to President Trump and baseless claims about a stolen election is unique, and may illustrate the creeping influence of conservative media and its heavily evangelical overtones on Americas Haredi Jews.

Gregory Thornbury, a theologian who studies American evangelicalism, said that end of times speculation is catnip to evangelicals, because it combines biblical authority with prophecy. President Donald Trumps close relationship to far-right evangelical Christians and his courtship of televangelists like Paula White has created a natural hero in this narrative.

Trump has become a messianic figure, Thornbury said. The language they use for him is messianic.

And with 83% of Orthodox Jews indicating they planned to vote for Trump in October of 2020, that narrative has adapted itself for a Jewish audience. While Trump himself is not moshiach, some Haredi Jews believe his bans from social media and his election loss comprise the period of darkness that comes before the world will be saved.

Many Haredi Jews identify with mainstream Republican talking points, including public funding for religious schools, opposition to abortion and fewer coronavirus restrictions. But as with non-Jewish Republicans, some segments of the Haredi community have seized upon disinformation disseminated by the president, disreputable blogs and local agitators like Heshy Tischler, the organizer of rallies in Borough Park in October that turned violent.

In a population with limited English proficiency where distrust of the secular media is widespread, conservative commentary manages to maintain a powerful hold on the community.

Although the Hasidim are on their own WhatsApp chats and have their own Yiddish press and so on, theyre clearly absorbing the part of the media ecosystem thats talking about this era, this culmination with Trumpism and the excitement about Trump, said Joshua Shanes, a professor of Jewish Studies at the College of Charleston. Theyre listening to right-wing extremists on the radio and I would imagine thats going to have some kind of cultural impact on them.

Shanes added that the presence of QAnon and anti-vaccine conspiracy theories among Haredi Jews further illustrates the influence of conservative media, leading a community that shields itself so intensely from the outside world to espouse fringey conspiracy theories and parrot conservative evangelical talking points.

And indeed, the coming of the messiah and popular right-wing conspiracy theories are linked in conversations on Haredi social media.

A Facebook group called Mashiach is coming - Are you ready??? with about 1,500 members that was started in October of 2016 has been littered with unfounded claims about the danger of the coronavirus vaccine over the last month.

This situation is in fulfillment of the prophecy of times preceding the Messiahs coming, said one member of the group. We should NOT take the new Covid-19 vaccine.

Molly Boigon is an investigative reporter at the Forward. Contact her at boigon@forward.com or follow her on Twitter @MollyBoigon.

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On Ultra-Orthodox social media, the messiah is almost here. - Forward

I Know Why Haredi Jews Joined Neo-Nazis at the Trumpist Riot – The Daily Beast

Posted By on January 20, 2021

When I found out that an old friend from my former Jewish Haredi community had participated in a violent coup to overthrow the government, I felt pain, anger and despair. But I didnt feel surprise.

For the last five years, Ive looked on in horror as more and more people from that community have been sucked into the cult of Trumpism. From embracing the tenets of white nationalism to the beatings of two Haredi whistleblowers instigated by the Haredi worlds own little Trump, Heshy Tischler, Trumpism has become an infection within the world I once called home.

That infection was raging on Jan. 6, when my friend, who Im not naming here because the only attention he deserves is from the FBI, joined buses full of Orthodox Jews from New Yorkincluding Aaron Mostofsky, the young man in the animal pelt costume seen taking a police officers shield and who was arrested days laterto join the neo-Nazis, QAnon conspiracists, and white nationalists at the days protests that became a riot. My friend had always struck me as quiet and shy. Not the kind of person who would attend any sort of political protest, let alone an armed insurrection.

Thinking about what had happened to him, I flashed back to another time in my life when Id witnessed a political riot.

I had started my journey into Haredi Judaism, studying in a yeshiva in Israel made to help secular Jews transition into the Haredi world. I was also starting my work as a writer, writing for a Haredi publication that had me covering a story about a group of settlers who had bought a large home in the disputed territory of Hebron. After the government declared the purchase illegal, a large group of settlers moved into the home, insisting that they would not allow the government to expel the families living there. Having been recently radicalized by their experience being expelled from Gaza after the evacuation of Gush Katif, many of these settlers had decided that this time they wouldnt be nonviolent. They would fight.

I happened to be there, a sympathetic observer who was quickly becoming radically right wing despite my liberal upbringing, on the day the police and army came to remove them from the home. What I witnessed, as I look back on it, was not vastly different from what we saw at the Capitol last week. When the police arrived, a full blown riot took place, with all the young men, as well as a sizable number of young women, fighting at the frontlines, and attacking their own people with everything at hand. Although they were mostly bested, I did witness a group of them surround a police officer, steal his baton, and chase him away.

That night, I discovered that some of those same young men had then gone into the hills of Hebron and attacked the Palestinians living in the city.

This memory struck me after the riot on the Capitol because I realized that my friend was another version of what I had seen in the riot in Israel. Young men, mostly in their 20s and 30s, joining an extremist movement and being its front-line soldiers.

I saw the same type when I wrote about the riots instigated by Heshy Tischler, who declared You are my soldiers! and let those young men engage in the actual beatings that hed called for. And when he was arrested for instigating those beatings, his fan account publicly shared the address of one of the victims of his beatings, leading to a lynch mob arriving at his apartment, stopped only by a row of police who stood outside.

All of them were young men. All of them were overcome with anger. And it didnt matter whether they were shy and nice in their daily lives, something about Tischler inspired and moved them to actand to commit violence.

I didnt realize it until recently, while interviewing experts on cults for an article, that this sort of vulnerable mindset is exactly how so many people end up in extremist movements.

There was another young, impressionable, radicalized young man at the riot in Israel. Me.

Only a few years earlier, I had experienced the most profound trauma of my life: A manic episode, which led to a near-death experience, a stay at a mental hospital, and a diagnosis of bipolar disorder.

I didnt realize it until recently, while interviewing experts on cults for an article, that this sort of vulnerable mindset is exactly how so many people end up in extremist movements.

Looking for answers, I had discovered what is popularly known as a Chabad house on my college campus. Chabad is a sect of Hasidism known for its missionary work among secular Jews. They have centers all over the world, with some of their most popular being on college campuses. It is this community that I eventually joined.

It was in Israel, however, when I became far more radicalized. Surrounded by teachers, rabbis, and peers who were all passionate Haredi and right wing extremists, I figured that it made sense to re-examine my politics just as I had re-examined my religious beliefs.

In other words, at this time in my life, I was not much different than the young men who stormed the capitol or the young men who fought Israeli soldiers and then rampaged through Hebron. In fact, my article about the experience was deeply sympathetic to their plight. Only a year earlier I would have been shocked at myself for writing such a piece.

But I had been lonely, afraid, and desperate for answers in a scary world for years, and so finding an entire community of people who offered respite from this pain and fear was better than therapy. It gave me an immediate feeling of belonging and purpose, and promised me answers to my most desperate questions.

Most people in my situation would die for that. Many of them would kill for it.

There is, however, a cost that comes with such communal cohesion: total loyalty to the mission and, on the flip side, punishment for any disloyalty.

There is, however, a cost that comes with such communal cohesion: total loyalty to the mission and, on the flip side, punishment for any disloyalty. It was this devils bargain that eventually convinced me to leave Haredi Judaism. While I initially became a popular commentator and writer in my community, as I started to call out problems the backlash I experienced grew astronomically. One communal dispute I was involved in led to people being chased into synagogues, spit on, and called Nazis by many in the community (and ignored or justified by the rest). When I started to speak out against the Trumpist community, I found myself suddenly a complete outsider. Articles were written about me and other liberal Orthodox Jews calling us fake Orthodox Jews. I was yelled at on the streets while walking with my children. It was in Trumpism that I saw just how far down the rabbit hole blind loyalty to a community can take someone, and I finally decided that it was no longer worth the price.

Even with all that, I was blessed not to have a Heshy Tischler or a Donald Trump in my life. These are the last ingredient that turns young men from extremists into soldiers: Standing on the sidelines while others die, they provide the sense of meaning the young men in their stead are desperately looking for, with the tradeoff being complete loyalty to their perverted causes.

In this sense, then, it should not be surprising that extremism has become such a danger among the young and young-ish men in the Haredi world. While communal leaders are effective at hiding the truth, the Haredi world is in disarray, especially among the young.

Of the 240,000 Haredi Jews living in New York, 43 percent are defined as poor and 16 percent as near-poor, and 51.8 percent of them receive SNAP food assistance. All of this is even more pronounced for 18 to 34 year olds, just as it is with America at large.

Secular education is abysmal, making all of these issues far deeper.

On top of that, many in the Haredi world feel a similar threat to their values in the United States as evangelicals do: many see progressive and liberal ideologies as existential dangers (I would hear this throughout my time in the Haredi world, from rabbis and community members alike). To many, Trumps rise was in many ways seen as their last shot at their religious conservatism staying relevant.

To put it more directly: it is increasingly clear that young Haredi men are feeling an intense loss of significance and belonging. Largely living in blue states, they are even more likely to feel this loss acutely.

A young man looking for a home, unable to find one in the one he turned his life upside down for, and increasingly feeling insignificant: Of course Trump attracted him. Trump preys on those men.

Ill never forget when my friend shared a tweet about Pizzagate in 2016. He never struck me as an extremist: In yeshiva, he was more interested in sports than in studying Torah. When I first saw him in Crown Heights, Brooklyn (the home of the Chabad movement), he told me that he had actually been feeling pretty disenchanted with the community.

As time passed, he would tell me about how hard it was for an out-of-the-box guy like him to find a wife. He didnt grow up religious, he didnt have money, and he didnt wear the outfit most Hasidic Jews wore.

Looking back, however, all of that makes it incredibly obvious that hed be open to right-wing extremism and conspiracies. A young man looking for a home, unable to find one in the one he turned his life upside down for, and increasingly feeling insignificant: Of course Trump attracted him. Trump preys on those men.

In this sense, I see the Haredi world as a microcosm of America at large, and a warning to the country as well. The communitys leaders have repeatedly failed their own people, and instead of addressing their problems have demonized anyone who dared speak out, likening them to anti-Semites and even claiming that some reformers are the root cause of anti-Semitic attacks. Like so many Republican leaders, they create problems and then point at an other to blame it on. What Republicans didnt see coming, and what Haredi leaders also didnt expect, is that when they stoke that anger and fear long enough, someone more narcissistic and evil is likely to take it to its logical conclusion.

In that sense, Trump and Tischler arent the cause of extremism in America or the Haredi world. They are the logical end result of broken societies.

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I Know Why Haredi Jews Joined Neo-Nazis at the Trumpist Riot - The Daily Beast

Fiddler Cast’s God Bless America in Yiddish – Forward

Posted By on January 20, 2021

Read this article in Yiddish

To mark the inauguration of President Joe Biden on January 20, the Folksbiene released a video on Tuesday featuring the cast of the companys hit production of Fiddler on the Roof performing God Bless America in Yiddish.

In the video, created by actor Ben Liebert (who played Motl the Tailor), more than 20 actors, including Steven Skybell (Tevye) and Mikhl Yashinskiy (Mordkhe the Innkeeper) , appear alongside the plays director, Oscar-winning actor Joel Grey.

The new musical arrangement was created by Dmitri Slepovitch, the clarinetist in the Folksbienes production of Fiddler, who accompanies the singers in the video on the piano together with the violinist Lauren Thomas, who played the role of the titular Fiddler in the musical.

The inspiration for celebrating the inauguration by releasing a Yiddish version of God Bless America came from Lisa Fishman, a longtime singer and actress with the Folksbiene. She noted that Irving Berlin, a Yiddish-speaking immigrant who created many of the most popular American songs of the 1920s-1940s, released God Bless America in 1938 during a time of rising fascism in Europe.

As we emerge from this dark chapter of division and strife and welcome in a new presidential administration, singing this iconic anthem in Yiddish the authors native tongue, is a unique way for the Fiddler family to honor our incoming leaders, to celebrate the ideals and values of our country and to pray for this beautiful and fragile yet enduring democracy. I cant think of a more appropriate time in history or group of people to share Berlins prayer with the world.

An excerpt from the video can be viewed here. Click here to see the full video.

The Yiddish version of God Bless America was created by the singer and ethnomusicologist Henry Sapoznik for Mandy Patinkins album Mame-Loshn. It has since become popular with a variety of singers and cantors, including Hasidic pop star Lipa Schmeltzer, who has incorporated it into his repertoire.

Read this article:

Fiddler Cast's God Bless America in Yiddish - Forward

How legacies of the Holocaust should inform health care – American Medical Association

Posted By on January 18, 2021

Bioethics has been significantly influenced by health professionals involvement in atrocities of the Holocaust. From abortion to xeno-transplantation, deliberation on almost every ethics topic in health care today has been influenced by Nazi medical crimes. These topics include genetics, informed consent, public health, military and civilian health policy and practice, death and dying, human subjects research and refugee care.

The January issue ofAMA Journal of Ethics(@JournalofEthics) is devoted to orienting and reorienting contemporary bioethics to legacies of the tragic history of the Holocaust.

Articles include:

Listen and learn

In the journals January podcast, Matthew K. Wynia, MD, MPH, discusses the importance and challenges of teaching Holocaust history to health professions students. Dr. Wynia is a professor of medicine and public health at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. He is also the director of the University of Colorados Center for Bioethics and Humanities located on the Anschutz Medical Campus.

Listen to previous episodes of the podcast, Ethics Talk, or subscribe in iTunes or other services.

TheseAMAJournal of EthicsCME modules are each designated by the AMA for a maximum of 1AMA PRA Category 1 Credit:

Additionally, the CME module, Ethics Talk: Teaching the Holocaust, is designated by the AMA for a maximum of 0.50AMA PRA Category 1 Credit.

The offering is part of theAMA Ed Hub, an online learning platform that brings together high-quality CME, maintenance of certification, and educational contentin one placewith relevant learning activities, automated credit tracking and reporting for some states and specialty boards.

Submit manuscripts and artwork

The journals editorial focus is on commentaries and articles that offer practical advice and insights for medical students and physicians.Submit a manuscriptfor publication. The journal alsoinvitesoriginal photographs, graphics, cartoons, drawings and paintings that explore the ethical dimensions of health or health care.

A look ahead

Upcoming issues of theAMA Journal of Ethicswill focus on Racial and Ethnic Health Equity in the U.S.Sign upto receive email alerts when new issues are published.

Excerpt from:

How legacies of the Holocaust should inform health care - American Medical Association

Holocaust survivor Sam Weinreb dies at 94 | TribLIVE.com – TribLIVE

Posted By on January 18, 2021

TribLIVE's Daily and Weekly email newsletters deliver the news you want and information you need, right to your inbox.

Sam Weinreb, a Holocaust survivor who raised his family in McKeesport, passed away peacefully Friday at Hebrew Senior Life Rehabilitation Center in Roslindale, Mass. He was 94.

While he was only in his mid-teens, Weinreb somehow managed to live through some of the worst mental and physical abuse the Nazis were capable of dishing out.

Born in Bratislava, Czechoslovakia in 1926, to parents David and Freida Weinreb, Sams immediate family was murdered during the Holocaust. Just before his 13th birthday he was returning home from a bar mitzvah lesson when he found the doors locked and his family gone.

Weinreb narrowly missed the round-up of the Jews in Bratislava during which 15,000 Jews were expelled or sent to concentration camps.

He ended up escaping to Hungary where he spent the next six months living outdoors on the streets of Budapest. Most days the only food he could find was in garbage cans behind restaurants.

Can you just imagine what it is like to be only 13-years-old and not having a home to go to, not knowing where you would sleep each night, not knowing where you would get your food each day, not being able to speak the language of the country you are in, and being in constant fear? Weinreb told the Holocaust Testimony Project.

Deciding he could no longer go on living in the streets, Weinreb turned himself in to the Hungarian police. He was sent to prison where he spent the next two years before the Germans entered Hungary.

Then he was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau where anyone who couldnt keep up with the brutal work load was shot or killed in the gas chambers.

When the war ended Weinreb reconnected with his childhood sweetheart, Gloria Goldie Berger, another Holocaust survivor. They married and moved to the United States settling in McKeesport where they raised a family.

Weinreb made his living as a watchmaker and jeweler. But he dedicated much of his life to speaking at schools, universities, religious organizations and other groups about the horrors he experienced living through the Holocaust. He enjoyed speaking to young students the most.

His story was compelling and graphic, but he told it in such a matter-of-fact way that every single eighth-grader was able to hold on to the content and message, said Scott Vensel a teacher at Dorseyville Middle School in Indiana Township. He was so gentle, calm, and endearing in terms of talking with the kids afterward.

In the end, he wanted the students to hear his story, and think about their future. He was a treasure to humanity, and felt it was his duty to share his experience with the next generation.

Lauren Bairnsfather, executive director of the Holocaust Center of Pittsburgh, said Weinreb learned the importance of forgiveness.

He said, If you hold on to anger, then you are harming yourself.

Those who knew him said he will be remembered for his deep devotion to his family and his love for the Pittsburgh Pirates and Steelers.

Weinreb is survived by his two children, Stewart and Linda, and his granddaughter, Hannah.

Memorial donations may be made to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, 100 Raul Wallenberg Place, SW, Washington, D.C. 20024. (https://donate.ushmm.org)

Paul Guggenheimer is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Paul at 724-226-7706 or pguggenheimer@triblive.com.

Categories:Allegheny | Local | Top Stories

TribLIVE's Daily and Weekly email newsletters deliver the news you want and information you need, right to your inbox.

Link:

Holocaust survivor Sam Weinreb dies at 94 | TribLIVE.com - TribLIVE

The Holocaust Separated This Little Girl And Her Best Friend. Eighty Years Later, The Florida Holocaust Museum Reunited Them. – WMFE

Posted By on January 18, 2021

Ana Mara Wahrenberg and Betty Grebenschikoff were childhood friends separated by the Holocaust.80 years later, they reunited.

WMFE spoke with Betty and Florida Holocaust Museum Director Elizabeth Gelman about how the two women found each other again.

Read the full interview below.

Photo: Betty Grebenschikoff

Danielle: So Betty, tell me a little bit about this amazing reunion that youve had very recently with a woman named Ana Mara.

Betty: She was my very best girlfriend when I was six years old, up until I was nine. In Berlin, Germany. We did everything together. We played in each others homes, we went to a Jewish community school together, we had dancing lessons together, we were always together, we got in trouble together.

I mean, whatever it was, we did it together.

And I had an older sister, but she had her own friends.

And so we were, we were just best buddies all the time. And then things became very difficult for German Jews and other Jews as well. And there were all kinds of rules and regulations. And I realized now that the reason we played so often in each others homes, was because we could not go to playgrounds, or parks or swimming pools, or theaters anymore.

So, but we didnt know that because our parents were trying to shield us from all the terrible things that were going on with antisemitism in Germany at the time.

So eventually, when I was nine, and she also we were the same age, my father managed to get us tickets to get to Shanghai, China, to escape the terrorist acts that were going on in Germany. And Shanghai at the time was one of the few free ports where stateless Jews could go. And in that way, about 18,000 Jewish refugees managed to get to Shanghai and escape the Nazis.

So Ana Mara and I met in the schoolyard. Our parents brought us there, to say goodbye to each other, and we cried and we carried on and we didnt want to leave each other. And we promised each other to stay together to by writing to each other and always remembering each other. So we left and she stayed. And I never heard another word, nothing.

I thought she was dead. I mean, I had, I had no idea where she was.

I checked the databases in different places in the Holocaust Museum in Washington. Didnt find her. About two months ago, we got a phone call from the Shoah Foundation, the USC Shoah Foundation that they think they found somebody called Ana MaraWahrenberg, not Anne Marie, one word, but Ana Mara. And could that possibly be my friend?

And it turned out that she was. They had gone to Chile.

Danielle: Beth, can you tell me a little bit about just how you worked to help kind of connect Betty and Ana Mara after that initial, you know, you know, phone call or communication that hey, I think you know, we found Ana Mara. Can you just tell me a little bit of, you know, the work on your end to make this happen?

Beth:Well, what is really wonderful is that we have a marvelous partnership with the USC Shoah Foundation, so it wasnt strangers. We werent strangers talking to each other.

We all staff from both institutions, worked very hard to get this, to get some communication set up to make sure that we could continue talking to these two amazing women and we looped in the museum in Chile, the Museo Interactivo Judeo de Chile. I hope Im pronouncing that correctly, who have also become partners in this. And what is happening is that we are all going to be co-hosting a virtual event this spring, a program all about Betty and Ana Mara.

And we are working with the Chilean museum to come up with some sort of exhibition, whether that will be online or an actual tangible exhibition.

We are working very hard, collaboratively with all the institutions. I think this story really emphasizes how critical it is for Holocaust institutions to not only continue to take in and share testimony from Holocaust survivors, but work together because what comes out of these partnerships is incredibly rich.

And what is amazing in our world today is the technology that we have to be able to share these stories.

Danielle:And Betty, I want to give you the last word. What does it feel like to be reconnected with AnaMara and you know, do you ladies have plans to reunite in person after COVID is over and its safe to travel again?

Betty: Oh, absolutely.

Its, its the whole thing to me is like someone has given me a gift. Its, it makes my whole life perfect.

Ive had many ups and downs in my life and this is such an up, such a wonderful way to to round out my 90th decade and it is just absolutely amazing to me that this happened. And I could not be happier to meet my old time friend again.

I just, Im hoping Ana Mara and I speak on the phone quite a bit these days and on email and Im doing it in German because she doesnt speak English and I dont speak Spanish.

So Im learning, relearning my German all over again and shes helping me with that. And we are hoping to stay well enough and stay, stay on our feet so that we can meet hopefully in person somewhere in the fall. But I do want to give her a hug and she feels the same way.

Listen to the full interview by clicking on the clip at the top of the page.

Read more:

The Holocaust Separated This Little Girl And Her Best Friend. Eighty Years Later, The Florida Holocaust Museum Reunited Them. - WMFE

Here’s a course in anti-Zionist musicology – Slipped Disc

Posted By on January 18, 2021

Oxford University Press has a book out by Assaf Shelleg, Assistant Professor of Musicology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

The noun stain in the title Theological Stains: Art Music and the Zionist Project reveals the authors political slant.

The rest of the blurb is typical of present-day musicological propaganda. Read it and weep:

ABSTRACTTheological Stains traces the growth of art music in Israel from the mid-twentieth century to the turn of the twenty-first. In a riveting and provocative account, Assaf Shelleg explores the theological grammar of Zionism and its impact on the art music written by emigrant and native composers grappling with biblical redemptive promises and diasporic patrimonies. Unveiling the network that bred territorial nationalism and Hebrew culture, Shelleg shows how this mechanism infiltrated composers work as much as it triggered less desirable responses from composers who sought to realize to the nonterritorial diasporic options Zionism has renounced. In the process, compositional aesthetics was stained by the states nationalization of the theological, by diasporism that refused redemption, and by Jewish musical traditions that permeated inaudibly into compositions written throughout the second half of the twentieth century. Accompanying this rich and dramatic story are equivalent developments in modern Hebrew literature and poetry alongside vast and previously unstudied archival sources. The book is also lavishly illuminated with 135 music examples that render it an incisive guide to fundamental chapters in modern and late modern art music.

The rest is here:
Here's a course in anti-Zionist musicology - Slipped Disc


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