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Alleged Montreal synagogue vandal charged with attempted arson, uttering threats – Coast Mountain News

Posted By on January 18, 2021

A 28-year-old man has been charged with trying to commit arson and for uttering threats after a major synagogue in Montreal was defaced Wednesday with anti-Semitic graffiti.

Adam Riga, 28, of Montreal, appeared in court Thursday by video conference. He was ordered to undergo an evaluation to determine whether he is fit to be arraigned and is scheduled to return before a judge Friday.

Riga was arrested Wednesday, shortly after spray-painted swastikas were found on the doors of Shaar Hashomayim temple. Rabbi Adam Scheier wrote a letter to members stating that a security guard detained the man before he was arrested by police.

Scheier had said the suspect was carrying a gas canister when he was arrested.

According to a court document, Riga faces two charges: possession of incendiary materials a lighter and a gas canister and with threatening to burn down the synagogue.

Wednesdays incident prompted widespread outrage, including from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who condemned the vile act in the strongest terms possible.

We must always denounce anti-Semitic hate, no matter when or where it arises, Trudeau wrote on Twitter Wednesday.

Premier Francois Legault also condemned the incident.

An unacceptable anti-Semitic gesture, which must be denounced loud and clear, Legault wrote Wednesday evening on Twitter.

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Alleged Montreal synagogue vandal charged with attempted arson, uttering threats - Coast Mountain News

Lawrence rabbi threatened after newspaper delivery halted – liherald.com

Posted By on January 18, 2021

A threatening note slipped into a package of Five Towns Jewish Times newspapers that were left on the doorstep of Rabbi Kenneth Hains Lawrence home on Jan. 15 attacked Hain for aligning your behavior with the radical anti-American Democrats, and called for him to resign. The person or persons who wrote the note also claim that Hain protects people who have spewed hatred towards all Jews, including yourself.

This occurred a week after Congregation Beth Sholom in Lawrence that Hain leads was one of two synagogues in the Five Towns that sent letters to the Five Towns Jewish Times asking that the weekly Orthodox Jewish newspaper not be delivered to their shuls.

The person or persons who wrote and left the note also alluded to Five Towns Jewish Times publisher Larry Gordons apology and called the synagogues letter an attempt to ruin Gordons newspaper and his livelihood.

Hain, Rabbi Avi Miller, the synagogues president Barry Gurvitvh and chairman of the board Alan Heller, signed a letter that stated the papers front page photograph of Cedarhurst dentist Dr. Gila Jedwab in a celebratory pose outside on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C, on Jan. 6, albeit before the assault on the building, was irresponsible and reflects a disregard of our communitys values.

Young Israel of Woodmere was the other synagogue that sent a letter to the Five Towns Jewish Times requesting that the paper not be delivered for the identical reason. We strongly object to your posting of Gila Jedwab with her arms extended in a welcoming fashion during the despicable event in front of the nation's capital together with all its negative ramifications, Young Israel stated in the letter signed by Stuart Wagner, president of the synagogues board.

Rebbetzin Nancy Hain, Hains wife, reported the incident to the Jewish Alliance for Dialogue, a private group that communicates to members on Whatsapp. We will secure the photo and other info sent to the local Rabbi to give [to] police for follow up investigation, Nancy Hain posted. Will let you know when/if there is more. Thanks for the support & good wishes. This is being taken very seriously by the Shul, its security & us.

It was reported by JADE group members that The Hain family knows who delivered the package on Friday and it is being addressed internally.

On Saturday a JADE member posted: The Hain family would like to thank everyone who has reached out to them to show their support. There has been a tremendous outpouring from the community and the family is trying to make their way through all of them.

This story will expanded and updated.

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Lawrence rabbi threatened after newspaper delivery halted - liherald.com

Is There a Jewish Link to Cancer? – Atlanta Jewish Times

Posted By on January 18, 2021

As 2021 arrives, the cancer world continues to remain hopeful for breakthroughs. The good news is improved outcomes are on the rise. Considering that some cancers, such as breast and ovarian, have a Jewish genetic predisposition, a few Jewish Atlanta cancer experts from Emory Universitys Winship Cancer Institute shed light on innovative advancements and new treatments in their fields.

Breast cancer risk is higher among Jewish women, and this increased risk is largely due to the higher prevalence of BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene mutations in Ashkenazi Jews, according to Dr. Jane Lowe Meisel, an oncologist and associate professor of hematology and medical oncology at Winship.

Dr. Jane Lowe Meisel mentions that breast cancer risk is higher among Jewish women.

To the best of our knowledge, mutations in the BRCA genes are present in about 1 in 400 people in the general American population, but in about 1 in 40 Ashkenazi Jewish men and women. It is estimated that about 8 to 10 percent of Ashkenazi Jewish women diagnosed with breast cancer in the United States have a mutation in one of these two genes. Women with a mutation in BRCA1 or BRCA2 have about a 70 percent chance of developing breast cancer over a lifetime, and on average, tend to be diagnosed at younger ages than breast cancer patients who are not mutation carriers.

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Meisel recommends all Ashkenazi Jewish women with a family history of breast cancer to be proactive about considering genetic testing for BRCA1 and BRCA2, because knowledge is power. If you do not carry a mutation it doesnt mean you will never get breast cancer, but it means your risk depends on other things, too, such as certain lifestyle factors and family history, of course.

If you are found to have a mutation in BRCA1 or BRCA2, you have a higher risk of cancer, but you can also get plugged in with all the right protocols to optimize prevention, Meisel said.

We have a study ongoing as a collaboration between Emory and JScreen called PEACH (Program for the Evaluation of Ashkenazi Jewish Cancer Heritability) BRCA, looking at the value of genetic testing for BRCA1 and BRCA2 for Ashkenazi Jews who do not have a family history of cancer. The goal of this study is to learn more about the BRCA mutation rate for people with Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry and to optimize outcomes by learning the best ways to tie patients in with the right preventative care and treatments, she continued.

We have learned a great deal in recent years about risk reduction in patients with BRCA mutations both for those who have been diagnosed with cancer and for those who carry a gene mutation but have not developed a malignancy.

Dr. Jonathon Cohen is Winships director of lymphoma clinical trials research.

Dr. Jonathon Cohen is director of lymphoma clinical trials research at Winship. Some cancers tend to run in Jewish families, however with blood cancers, this doesnt appear to be quite as relevant, although we know that a family history of blood cancers like lymphoma can increase a patients likelihood of developing one. For lymphoma, there is no specific genetic screen or testing that we recommend for family members of affected patients. It is important that patients are aware of their family history so that they can discuss this with their primary care physician at a yearly physical exam.

Cohen discussed treatment options. The management of lymphomas continues to evolve with new advances coming each year, and 2020 was no exception. While traditional chemotherapy is still incorporated into the treatment for some patients, others can be managed with oral targeted agents [for example, a daily pill] that control their disease for many years. Others are candidates for a new form of immunotherapy-based treatment, including chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells, which utilize the patients own T-cells to attack their cancer. This type of therapy is available now for patients with relapsed aggressive non-Hodgkin lymphoma as well as some forms of leukemia, and it is being investigated in other cancer subtypes, he said.

At our most recent national meeting of the American Society of Hematology, there was one study reported which identified outstanding outcomes for patients with low grade non-Hodgkin lymphoma as well. Our team has been involved with the clinical development of these therapies and we have the expertise to manage patients both in the setting of clinical trials plus those patients who are receiving the treatment.

Dr. Jonathan Kaufman is interim division director of Winships Department of Hematology and Medical Oncology.

Dr. Jonathan L. Kaufman, an associate professor and interim division director in Winships Department of Hematology and Medical Oncology, focuses on patient care and research in myeloma and other plasma cell disorders. He explained, Multiple myeloma is the second most common blood cancer after lymphoma. Myeloma is cancer of the plasma cells. Plasma cells reside in the bone marrow and their normal job is to make antibodies to help prevent and fight infection. We dont know why plasma cells turn into cancer, but we know that it is rarely hereditary. The cause is likely related to environmental factors and random events within the plasma cell. Outcomes for patients have improved dramatically over the past 20 years primarily due to new effective and safer therapies. We havent found a cure yet, but with technology getting better, a cure for myeloma is in our future.

Whether you have a family history, Jewish genetic link or a non-related cancer, its still a family affair, according to Katie Simon, a Winship physician assistant. My role is to manage the medical side of illness and instill confidence in my patients by addressing their needs and making them feel safe in their treatments. Family plays a large role in cancer care. And Im using family in a broader sense it involves community and friends your chosen family.

Katie Simon, a physician assistant, helps support the cancer patient and family experience.

Cohen looks toward the future. I think it is becoming increasingly clear in 2021 that there are so many ways to treat and diagnose patients, ranging from new immunotherapies to close observation. I expect the drumbeat of progress will continue in 2021 just as it has this year, he said.

Patients should continue to be participants in their care, ask questions about new therapies and clinical trials, and recognize that the relationship they have with their oncologist will likely be a long one with a number of turns along the way as together you manage this disease.

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Is There a Jewish Link to Cancer? - Atlanta Jewish Times

Among Marginalized Voices at Upcoming Theater Festival: Conservatives – Heritage.org

Posted By on January 18, 2021

Succeeding in the world of theater is tough no matter who you are. But if youre a conservative Orthodox Jew, its even tougher. Just ask Joshua Danese.

Danese is hardly new to the profession. Some three decades ago, he found success as a young, progressive, secular Jewish writer. He wrote and produced plays and occasionally acted as well. Then one day, he was inspired to write a play about Orthodox Jews.

I started doing research about them, one thing led to another, and in that journey I ended up being religious, he told me in an interview.

Josh changed his name to Yehoshua Danese, and became a rabbi in a yeshiva. He got married, and he and his wife have 11 children. Now, 30 years later, he has gotten back to writing, but as a very different man. And his current identity has made his reception in the theater world very different from what it had been when he was young and liberal.

I understand that things are stacked against me, he says, and that no one will put on a play that is politically incorrect.

But he perseveres, and now his play, When Ms. Thompson and Cynthia Met at the Beach, will be performed for the first time at thefifth annual Conservative Theatre Festival, which will take place at the Abbey Theater in Dublin, Ohio, on Jan. 29 and Jan. 30. This may be the nations only conservative theater festival.

Playwright Linda Howard Cooke harbored similar concerns about her play Unplanned. She was sure it would never see the light of a theater because of its pro-life theme.

Cooke started writing plays 10 years ago, when she was working in a small rural high school in Nebraska as a drama coach. I had a hard time finding many plays that I liked, she told me, so it was the old adage: if you want it done properly, do it yourself.

She has since had four plays published, and Unplanned will be performed for the first time at the Conservative Theatre Festival at the end of this month.

Robert Cooperman, the founder of Stage Right Theatrics, explains that he started the annual Conservative Theatre Festival because he was tired of seeing conservatives presented as bumpkins and people who needed to be educated. Now in its fifth year, the festival describes its content as original plays from marginalized voices.

The irony is hard to miss. The arts have long been a place for marginal voices. But today, theater, film, television, and literature are almost entirely in lockstep with the woke leftand marginal voices have been marginalized into silence. Moreover, the arts are increasingly used as a cudgel to beat up those who do not adhere to the prevailing worldview of the left.

The pressure for theaters to host woke contentor else feel the backlash of cancel cultureis extreme. Last year, theater producer Marie Ciscopublisheda list of Theaters Not Speaking Out She asked people to list theaters that had not made a statement against injustices toward black people.

The fact thattheaters across the countrywere struggling merely to stay alive amid canceled seasons was of no concern.

It is all the more admirable, therefore, that Cooperman is not afraid to stand as a lone voice in organizing the fifth annual Conservative Theatre Festival. And in spite of the fact that the coronavirus will restrict the audience size, the good news is that for the first time, the performances will be livestreamed, making them accessible to audiences across the country.

The plays that will be performed in this years festival are: For a Daddy by Anne Nygren Doherty; Friday Night Dead Teiresias by Mark Dinsmore; Grandmas Easter Parade by Jason Ford; If the Shoe Fits by Hope Bolinger; Unplanned by Linda Howard Cooke; and When Mrs. Thompson and Cynthia Met at the Beach, by Joshua Danese.

As we enter this next, difficult phase of the battle for the soul of the country, conservatives must re-engage in the culture. We cannot allow it to be the exclusive domain of the left.

As Andrew Klavan pointed out in his article The Crisis in the Arts: Why the Left Owns the Culture and How Conservatives Can Begin to Take It Back: The arts are one of humanitys most noble enterprises. They have been hijacked by adherents of a low and oppressive ideology. We should take them back.

Supporting conservative playwrights and conservative theater is one step in the right direction.

>>> Performances will be Jan. 29 at 7:30 p.m. and Jan. 30 at 1:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. For more information, visitconservativefestivaloh.com.

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Among Marginalized Voices at Upcoming Theater Festival: Conservatives - Heritage.org

Early elections increase indicators of an existential threat to Israel – Middle East Monitor

Posted By on January 18, 2021

With the start of the fourth early elections in Israel, the political scene is witnessing unprecedented rifts and disputes. This could result in the surfacing of an unexpected electoral turnout due to the divisions within the Israeli right and left wings, and the internal differences between party members affiliated with the various political currents. Thus, the Israelis are concerned about a possible internal fragmentation emanating from this chaotic situation.

As the countdown to the election campaign was launched, the Israeli partisan and political circles propelled a stern attack on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, describing him as a fraud ready to sell out the state in exchange for his political and personal interests. As a result, increasing pressure will be placed on him as the election campaign continues, which could lead to ending the political career of a failed, criminal, and deceitful prime minister such as the controversial and unscrupulous Netanyahu.

Recently, most of Netanyahu's supporters concluded that he is a fraud who will do anything to maintain his political and personal presence, even in exchange for selling out the state. These ideas are not only put forth by the prime minister's political opponents but also adopted by the Likud party, which constitutes a major change. Nevertheless, members of the Knesset will work to intensify and solidify this train of thought.

Netanyahu's corruption scandal Cartoon [Sabaaneh/MiddleEastMonitor]

On the other hand, the Israeli parties taking part in the fourth elections have shown that they are heading towards abandoning the primaries because they struggle to find a way through complex political paths and adapting to the "giant ego" controlling them.

In less than a month before closing the electoral lists, political party figures in Israel are slowly losing momentum in favour of rabbis and respected personalities, who have a more substantial presence in the scene than the partisan institutions and members. Even the Likud party, which has always boasted about being the "only true democratic party" in Israel, has given up the primaries based on Netanyahu's proposal.

This move means that Likud has stepped over its constitution, which stipulates that primaries must be held before each election campaign. This is the third time that the party has violated this rule because Netanyahu wants to maintain the loyalty of the party members and fears his eternal rival Gideon Sa'ar, who left Likud and founded the New Hope party while managing to attract several party leaders to join him. Thus, with the approaching date of closing the electoral lists (4 February), Likud will find it hard to practically cancel the decision to skip the primaries.

READ: Netanyahu canvasses for Arab votes in election campaign

Likud was not the first party to skip the primaries. The Israeli Labor Party also abandoned this democratic measure when party leader Amir Peretz decided that he would not run for elections to democratically keep his position. Instead, he chose in recent weeks to rally all the leaders of the left-wing to inherit the party leadership in a quick and swift electoral process, while securing support for the next presidential race.

It has become clear that the coronavirus crisis and the subsequent lockdown have provided the final excuse to suspend internal democratic procedures, due to the imposed restrictions and prohibition of public gatherings. Consequently, holding a real electoral campaign has become impossible, as the political parties have been trying to avoid what they think are unnecessary expenditures that make it hard to appear in the spotlight during the economic crisis. However, this reality provides no real justification for the ongoing disputes in Israel.

In the last decade, no Israeli party has adopted an internal democratic system. Instead, the partisan leaders have adopted a new way of forming parties in a way that is similar to establishing a private company. In this case, we have a long and detailed list of political personalities in Israel who employed the same approach, starting with Avigdor Lieberman, Yair Lapid and Moshe Kahlon, Tzipi Livni, Moshe Ya'alon, Benny Gantz, Ehud Barak, Naftali Bennett, and Ayelet Shaked. All of them rose to power and then fell along the way.

Former Israeli Justice MinisterAyelet Shaked (left), seen with Jewish Home Chairman Naftali Bennett [Twitter]

Amid the current Israeli elections, no less than seven Israeli parties are competing for the votes of the centre-left alone, in addition to the Meretz and Israeli Labor Party. Thus, not long ago, the left's dream of holding open primaries to determine who should run against Netanyahu was vanquished by the private companies model. In the coming weeks, the election results will be determined by the impact and power of opinion polls, rather than through holding primaries and implementing the party mechanisms.

These developments have created a rift between the poles sharing the Israeli political arena, to the point of threatening to engage in open confrontation due to the increasing state of arrogance, eternal bragging, and the claims of each party and its leader of possessing an exclusive cure for all of Israel's problems.

A new indicator set forth by the fourth early Israeli elections shows a set of differences between the Israeli generals who have succeeded in politics in the past, and their current counterparts. This may herald the end of the era of generals in Israeli politics, following the announcement of Gabi Ashkenazi's early retirement, and the confirmation of former Army Chief Gadi Eisenkot that he will not join any party list. In addition, he disclosed the fact that Defence Minister Benny Gantz will not manage to obtain the decisive rate of votes in the elections.

Two years ago, the Blue and White party headed by former Army Chief of Staff Gantz and Lapid, who were later joined by two other chiefs of staff, Ya'alon, and Ashkenazi, was seen as the most prominent alternative to Netanyahu. But only two years later, Ashkenazi announced that he would take a break from politics, and Gantz's failed to boost his popularity according to polls.

The failure of Israeli army leaders shows how poorly the army generals understand the "DNA" of partisan politics, because the only responsibility they held was in the army, though the question is why generals such as Ariel Sharon, Yitzhak Rabin, and Ehud Barak succeeded in politics for several years.

OPINION: Netanyahu is a symptom, not the cause of Israel's political crisis

In the past, Israeli generals were partially involved in politics while performing their military duties a very unhealthy phenomenon. Today's officers are different, and rather spend all of their time in the army, so it may not be appropriate for the army commanders to jump straight into the second or first place in the party's election lists upon their retirement from the army. Because of this, it would be more appropriate for them to be in the third or fourth places.

All previous indications hold signs of an existential threat to Israel that lies mainly in a social peril that the Israelis themselves bear, because Israeli politicians, including the army generals today, worship lies, deceit and tricks, and try to hinder the political process at any cost. Hence, whoever tries to stand up to them becomes the focus of their scorn the biggest blow to Israeli society today.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

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Early elections increase indicators of an existential threat to Israel - Middle East Monitor

For the first time, a Jew of color will lead pathbreaking diversity group Be’chol Lashon – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on January 18, 2021

(JTA) As the videos of George Floyds killing galvanized a historic wave of racial justice protests this past summer, the staff of one of the countrys leading organizations promoting Jews of color knew they had to make a big change.

For two decades, Bechol Lashon had pioneered programming by and for Jews of color. Inspired by a Hanukkah gathering of diverse Jews in the San Francisco area in December 2000, it launched a summer camp for young Jews of color, a curriculum for children on the topic, a blog elevating the voices of multiracial Jews and a diversity training and consulting program.

But as the movement the group launched took hold, its leadership increasingly looked out of step. The group was founded by Diane Tobin and her late husband Gary, white parents who wanted their adopted Black child to know other Jews who were not white. They continued to helm the organization even as the number of groups representing Jews of color multiplied and Jews of color took leadership roles.

Diane Tobin, now 68, saw that Bechol Lashon wasnt leading national conversations about Jews of color anymore. So this summer, as the country reeled, she met with Marcella White Campbell, a longtime employee and Bechol Lashon camp parent who is Black, to talk about handing over the reins of the organization.

Campbell, a veteran of Silicon Valley, was announced as the groups new executive director last week, in a release timed to coincide with Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.

We felt that it was time to build on what Diane had done up to this point. Bechol Lashon was all about creating community but also about amplifying the voices of Jews of color, amplifying the visibility of Jews of color, Campbell told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. And so it seemed natural to then move on to handing leadership to Jews of color and seeing what we could do.

Campbell takes over at a moment of intense reckoning over race and inclusion for America and American Jews. She talked to JTA about the historic moment, her journey to Judaism and the work that white Jews need to do to be truly welcoming to Jews of color.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

JTA: What a time to start the job that youre starting. What were you feeling as you watched the violence at the Capitol?

Campbell: I took it very personally, actually. Both the racism and the anti-Semitism, I react to those as we should, with revulsion, but for me theres something about that happening at the Capitol. Im a student of history I bore my children with it all the time. When we went to Washington, D.C, several years ago, I dragged them to the Lincoln Memorial and made them look out at the reflecting pool and read all the words of the Gettysburg Address, because I really want them to understand that America is theirs. And that forcing America to look at these words and apply these words to everyone is how we become citizens, is how we cement our place in America, in the American story. I kept saying that to them when we were out on the Washington Mall: This is yours, you need to understand that. America is yours in the same way that its everyone elses.

So something about that crowd overrunning the Capitol it felt like a violation. And for them to be bringing those symbols of hatred into that space that I tell the kids all the time is mine, and theyre bringing those symbols in specifically to lay claim to it and exclude us on multiple levels I found it really hurtful.

Do you feel any shred of hope that this could be a positive turning point in terms of the countrys reckoning with racism?

I suppose there are many people who over the past several years have been able to discount what was going on in our country, to discount racism and anti-Semitism somehow I guess because neither of those things really apply to them. But the starkness, the symbolism of seeing these people in the seat of government and the very real threat of violence, I suppose people who werent moved by the videos of George Floyd last year cant help but ignore this.

These people were very clear about their racism and their anti-Semitism and its impossible to ignore that this is the reality for people of color and Jews and Jews of color in the United States every day. So as low as a point as that is, you cant help but go up from here, in some ways. I probably shouldnt say that [laughs]. If theres one thing Ive learned in the past year, its that you shouldnt make sweeping statements.

I was concerned after the past year that after the election, with Democrats coming back into power, that the real urgency that people were feeling last summer with reckoning with race both inside and outside the Jewish community was going to fade because there are so many problems. But I no longer feel that.

Tell me a bit about your family history, and how you ended up where you are now?

I love to lean into my family history because it very much exemplifies the various ways that Black people in America react to the American dream. My grandparents came to San Francisco from Arkansas in the early 40s. My grandfather had left Pine Bluff, Arkansas, because he was working for a construction company and was in a position of leadership as a foreman and realized he was making about 50 cents on the dollar as the white men he was working with and in some ways managing. And he went to his boss and pointed it out he always had a high opinion of himself, Im the best guy here, Im working harder than everyone else, I should at least be making as much as everyone else and the guy said no. And over the next couple of days his relatives said, You cant stay here.

He got on a bus and came out to San Francisco and he set up a narrative and a family that inspired all of us. He came and established what he called a dynasty. And excellence was paramount. Working as hard as you possibly could was paramount. He bought [a house] in Cole Valley, which even in the 50s was a very nice neighborhood, and one where they were the first Black family. When he was looking to buy a house, he basically saved every penny he ever made. Real estate agents steered him away from the neighborhood. He always said it was this white Jewish woman who basically was always getting the dregs of clients and assignments and was shut out most of the time who said, Ill take you over there, well go do this. And thats where my grandfather bought.

He just passed away on the 26th of December, were actually just finishing up shiva now, and his legacy its hard to overstate it for us. We came together in different venues to talk about him. He was not Jewish and his familys not Jewish; some of them are Baptists. So as the oldest grandchild I found myself in the position of simultaneously planning and running the cycle of Baptist and somewhat Christian mourning, without any explicit religious elements, and then turning around and starting the cycle of Jewish mourning. And part of the reason why were just in shiva now is because he was just buried after two weeks and my rabbi told me point blank: Jewish mourning doesnt start until burial. So we did both.

The funny thing about that is there was no real conflict. I chose Judaism 21 years ago, although I was pursuing conversion much earlier than that, and our family always embraced it. My sister also converted a few years after me and we have this sort of Black Jewish nucleus that we raised our kids in. My kids are 21 and 15 and my niece is 4 and theyve grown up in this Black Jewish community that I think is pretty unique.

I was inspired by [my grandfather] going into Silicon Valley startups in the early mid 2000s. I definitely had that experience of being the only [Black person in the room]. I definitely had to lean on that attitude of Youre lucky to have me in this room. [My grandfather] saw what I was doing, and what my sister was doing, as a lawyer, as an extension of that dream that he had.

Attendees at a Hanukkah party in 2000 in San Francisco that marked the launch of Bechol Lashon. (Courtesy of Bechon Lashon)

I realized once I started working for Bechol Lashon that I could really believe in this mission, that [my family] was living this mission. It feels like a privilege to work somewhere where Im actually making a difference in peoples lives but almost selfishly also the lives of my kids and my family at the same time. So its a very personal mission. I do feel that as a person of color I am uniquely positioned to make connections with other organizations headed by Jews of color and to see what kinds of coalitions we can build and where we can go with this.

How did you decide to convert to Judaism at a young age?

I wasnt raised particularly religious. There are Baptists in my family, there are Jehovahs Witnesses in my family but there was sort of one moment that really got me started. When I was 15 years old, I attended the confirmation of one of my friends who was Jewish. And in the middle of getting ready for the event, he had taken me to the synagogue and abandoned me in the sanctuary while he was running around doing other things. I had never been in a synagogue and I sort of wandered around and sat down, and I opened a prayer book and this is absolutely true it fell open to the Mourners Kaddish. And at the time, it was a few months after my grandmother who had helped to raise me had died. And we didnt have a religious tradition at home, and you know 15-year-olds, they hold themselves apart, they go hole themselves up in their room. How do you deal with grief when youre that age?

And I was really really moved by what I read. I saw the Hebrew and then the translation, and for me, even then, theres something about the way the Mourners Kaddish leans into the magnification, the sanctification of the word of God, instead of telling you, It is so sad that this person has died, we are so sad, heres what is going to happen to them next. Thats not in any way what it says. It just says, Look, were in the middle of the infinite, we dont know, but all we can do is lean into this and lean into the infinite. And I maybe didnt have that level of understanding of that at that time, but it touched me and I just said I want to be Jewish, just like that. I dragged my mom to a rabbi and the rabbi said, Please come back when you are an adult [laughs], heres some stuff to read, we are not doing this at 15. So I had to sort of wait it out.

Besides that, a really big part of discovering Judaism for me was food. In the middle of my conversion process, my daughter was a baby and I was creating a Jewish home for her, and its such a hands-on process. Raising Jewish children in a Jewish home, there are so many concrete things you do you light candles, you make bread, you share this meal once a week. And I just became really invested, by tasting Jewish foods, by sharing Jewish foods with my kids. I didnt know a lot about the Sephardic Jewish world thats a common thing that happens in America, where most people believe that Jewish people are essentially Jerry Seinfeld, live in New York, thats it. And having the experience of opening up Claudia Rodens Book of Jewish Food and to go to Morocco and go to Lebanon and just find out the wealth of Jewish experience, that was actually important for me as a person of color coming to Judaism, to realize before I even encountered Diane and Bechol Lashon the idea that Jewish people live all over the world.

Jews of color in the on-the-ground Jewish spaces, like synagogues or in family members homes for holidays, have long talked about the feeling of being other-ized, or being made to feel like they dont belong because they dont conform to the white Ashkenazi concept of the American Jew. As the wider Jewish community continues to listen to these narratives, the goal is that that experience changes what has your experience been like in these spaces, and do you feel its actually changing?

Im part of a small Reconstructionist synagogue, Or Shalom in San Francisco, and so were a pretty small organization. Jews of color and converts as a whole and this is not the synagogue where I converted you develop this bubble where you feel comfortable and everybody comes to know you and so youre just one of the people in the congregation, when youre worshipping and going to events. And whats really jarring is when you go outside that bubble you show up at a congregation where they dont know you and they assume that you arent Jewish. My husband is a white Ashkenazi Jew, with dark hair. He has never in his entire life gone into a Jewish congregation and not have people assume that he is Jewish. Not one time, around the world! [laughs] And I always say As long as Im on your arm its OK. Its sort of this umbrella of privilege that extends over me and people go, OK, shes with him. But by myself its not always and I have had some very negative experiences.

Weve been really heartened in the past year by how many organizations started contacting us. It was a phone-ringing-off-the-hook kind of thing last summer. The firehose has slowed down a little bit as we make connections with people, but it was just this groundswell realization in the Jewish world that something needs to be done and that it would be wonderful if we could do it from a Jewish perspective, talk about diversity from a Jewish perspective.

The recent Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock Senate victories in Georgia have been hailed as a milestone moment for Black-Jewish relations, especially after they each leaned into that narrative in their campaigns. Do you feel that ties between the two communities have been strained in recent years?

It can be difficult to talk about the history of Black relations and Jewish relations in part because theyre often seen through this narrative of Crown Heights, of New York in particular, of communities side by side who dont get [along] together, when the reality is so much more complicated than that.

There are times when Im called upon, people say Have you condemned Louis Farrakhan? as an example. And I dont know him? You know? And Im sure as I say to people, Im sure there are a lot of Jews who you do not agree with and who you do not feel called upon to denounce. Its very much an othering thing that implies that Jews of color have dual loyalties, which is not accurate. And how often are Jews called upon in the United States and around the world to denounce other Jews or to prove their loyalty to the country where they live? Its just pretty ironic to be put in that position.

For me I feel that understanding the diversity of the Jewish community can only help in terms of relationships with Black people outside the Jewish community, because the lens of the civil rights movement and to in no way denigrate the very real contributions of white Jews during the civil rights movement theres this sense of reaching across the aisle, or across boundaries. But in reality, because there are Jews of color, this is much more fluid. Its not just about two individual communities reaching out to one another, its greyer than that. So its hard for me to speak in absolutes and say Black-Jewish relations are worse or better. There are individual interactions and conflicts but it really does do us all a disservice, I think, to boil it all down to the fact that there are two groups of people.

Even though the term Black lives matter has become more than just one organization, the organization of the same name alienated some Jews with arguably anti-Israel language in its 2016 platform. From your perspective, after this past summer, how much tension is there still over that?

Theres definitely still tension about that, we get a lot of emails about that. Particularly when we came out in support of Black Lives Matter and we turned our entire website black for several weeks going into the summer. As an organization we had not done enough work. We had never come out and said point-blank Black lives matter as a multiracial organization, and it was important for us to do that.

[Since 2016] the phrase Black lives matter has come to mean so much more than any one group. There are people who originated it who should definitely be credited with that, but the weight and the power of those words transcends any one group of people.

Its very challenging to refocus peoples attention once theyve heard that there was this platform this one time that could definitely be seen as anti-Israel. The Jewish community that being said, weve established that there are many Jewish communities needs to be able to understand that change and to hold that change and to move forward. Many things change. Many movements change over time. Many leaders of movements change over time. And this is such a potent example of that. When we say Black lives matter, we are talking about the humanity of Black Jews. And that shouldnt be up for debate.

Whats something youre looking forward to in the new job?

One of my favorite things about our organization is our curriculum for children because in another life in Silicon Valley, one of the things I did was to develop craft kits and hands-on educational kits, and the hands-on nature of Passport to Peoplehood I find very exciting. Making recipes from Egyptian or Ethiopian Jews, it helps diversity to click in kids minds.

Im also really excited about a conversation Im having next week with Denise Davis who is one of our longtime board members, one of the cofounders of Camp Bechol Lashon. She is a doctor and a scientist and were going to talk about the history of Black America and the health system in the United States, in relationship to these vaccines, and to some of the distrust in the Black community around those. And she also wants to bring in a Jewish lens to talk about these issues.

That kind of thing is so exciting to me. At my heart Im an academic and I love to have these conversations where we just explore all of the overlap and all of the different ways we can approach these issues, and isnt it great that we can take our experience as Black Americans and as Jews and talk about something thats so relevant?

Original post:

For the first time, a Jew of color will lead pathbreaking diversity group Be'chol Lashon - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

The BroadsheetDAILY ~ 1/14/21 ~ State Extends, Expands Eviction and Foreclosure Bans Credited with Saving Thousands of Lives – ebroadsheet.com

Posted By on January 18, 2021

Lower Manhattans Local News

Four Walls for a Few Months Longer

State Extends, Expands Eviction and Foreclosure Bans Credited with Saving Thousands of Lives

Above: Belongings of a homeless person. Below: State Senator Brian Kavanagh: We are delivering real protection for countless renters and homeowners who would otherwise be at risk of losing their homes.

The State legislature has enacted, and Governor Andrew Cuomo has signed, a measure designed to provide relief for rental tenants and homeowners experiencing financial hardship as a result of ongoing pandemic coronavirus.

At a special session on December 28, the State Senates Democratic majority opened a special session to ratify the the COVID-19 Emergency Eviction and Foreclosure Prevention Act. The measure, which had been passed earlier by the State Assembly, was signed into law on the same day by Mr. Cuomo.

The law imposes a standstill on residential evictions through May 1, provided that can document a COVID-related hardship. (Renters who are unable to provide this proof are still subject to eviction.) Also frozen until May 1 are residential foreclosure proceedings. During that period, both homeowners can offer hardship declarations in court to forestall a bank seeking to seize their property.

This measure takes up where a nationwide federal ban on evictions (imposed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in September) left out. The national moratorium was originally set to expire on December 31, although Congress subsequently extended it through the end of January.

The New York State bill was spearheaded by Senator Brian Kavanagh, who chairs the Senate Housing Committee. From the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, he said, we have understood that housing security must be an essential part of our effort to protect the health and wellbeing of all New Yorkers. By enacting this comprehensive residential eviction and foreclosure moratorium, we are delivering real protection for countless renters and homeowners who would otherwise be at risk of losing their homes, adding to the unprecedented hardship that so many are facing.

The new law was hailed by housing advocates, with a spokesman for the Lower Manhattan-based Legal Aid Society saying, this critical legislation which establishes one of the strongest statewide eviction moratoriums in the country will defend hundreds of thousands of families from eviction and homelessness.

The stakes appears to be significant in more than just the obvious ways. A December report, Expiring Eviction Moratoriums and COVID-19 Incidence and Mortality, from the Social Science Research Network concluded that the earlier ban on evictions saved the lives of a large number New Yorkers between May and September. The review used statistical analysis to determine that out of the total number of tenants who would have been facing eviction if no ban had been in place, more than 10,000 would have been likely perish from COVID-19 after losing their homes.

Matthew Fenton

Whatever Floats Your Boat

During Pandemic and Revenue Shortfall, City Hall Prioritizes Plans for New Ferry

Amid a massive budget crunch that may require laying off several thousand City employees and slashing services, the administration of Mayor Bill de Blasio has nonetheless found room in municipal coffers to move ahead with plans for a new subsidized ferry that will connect Staten Island with Battery Park City, and Midtown.

Construction began in December at the Staten Island site of a new landing for the planned service, which was originally slated to begin running before the close of 2020, but has now been pushed back to the summer of this year, due to logistical complications caused by the ongoing pandemic.

Lower Manhattan Unchained

Questions about Whats In Store for Local Retail Point to Glum Answer: Not Much

Small businesses arent the only ones hurting in Lower Manhattan. Large national retailers are also shuttering their local stores in record numbers, according to a new report from the Center for an Urban Future (CUF), a public policy think tank that uses data-driven research to bring attention to overlooked issues. The analysis documents that the number of chain stores in Lower Manhattan decreased dramatically during the past 12 months, with a total of 63 national retailers shutting their doors permanently.

Vile Vexillology

Confederate Battle Flag Found Tied to Front Door of Museum of Jewish Heritage

The stars and bars standard flown by the army of the Confederate States of America, as they battled to preserve slavery during the Civil War, was found tied to the front door of Battery Park Citys Museum of Jewish Heritage (MJH) on Friday morning.

This Weeks Calendar

Thursday January 14

6PM

Landmarks & Preservation Committee

AGENDA

1) 17 Battery Place, application for renovation of existing entry and storefront including replacement of entrance infill and new louvers Resolution

Staycated

Appeals Court Upholds Order Delaying Move of Homeless Men to FiDi

On Tuesday, a five-judge panel of the New York State Supreme Courts Appellate Division affirmed an earlier ruling (issued on December 3), which has the effect of halting once again the planned transfer of more than 200 men from the Lucerne Hotel, on the Upper West Side, to the Radisson Wall Street Hotel, located at 52 William Street. This order amounts to a partial victory for both sides in the lawsuit, granting some of what opponents of the plan were seeking, while also allowing the administration of Mayor Bill de Blasio limited latitude to begin implementing its proposal on a smaller scale than originally envisioned.

What Killed All Those Fish?

The dead menhaden fish that bobbed at the surface of the water off Lower Manhattan and throughout the Hudson-Raritan Estuary and Long Island Sound during the month of December are gone now. But the concern remains. What killed the fish?

Adit Up

Architects Propose to Reclaim Park Tribeca Lost Nearly a Century Ago

Community Board 1 (CB1) is supporting a plan to create a new park in Tribeca, within the Holland Tunnel Rotary, the six-acre asphalt gyre of exit ramps that connects traffic from New Jersey to Lower Manhattans street grid.

The husband-and-wife architecture team of Dasha Khapalova and Peter Ballman are proposing to create a constellation of small, street-level parks at the corners of the complex (bounded by Hudson, Laight, and Varick Street, as well as Ericson Place) which will double as entry points for a new, submerged central plaza. This plaza is anachronously known as St. Johns Park, although it has not been a publicly accessible space since the Holland Tunnel opened, 94 years ago.

Eyes to the Sky

January 4 17, 2021

Early nightfall and late sunup beckon to stargazers before days lengthen

CLASSIFIEDS & PERSONALS

Swaps & Trades, RespectableEmployment, Lost and Found

COLLEGE ESSAY AND APPLICATION SUPPORT

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Downtown location.

Please send resume and

TUTOR AVAILABLE FOR HOMEWORK SUPPORT

Stuyvesant HS student available for homework help. All grades especially math. References available upon request

SHSAT TUTORING

Stuyvesant HS graduate

available for SHSAT tutoring. $40/hr.

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NOTARY PUBLIC IN BPC

$2.00 per notarized signature.Text Paula

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NURSES AID

Caring, experienced Nurses Aide seeks PT/FT position.

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TODAY IN HISTORY

January 14

1984 Ray Kroc, American businessman and philanthropist (b. 1902)

1236 King Henry III of England marries Eleanor of Provence

1539 Spain annexes Cuba.

1911 Roald Amundsens South Pole expedition makes landfall on the eastern edge of the Ross Ice Shelf.

1943 World War II: Franklin D. Roosevelt becomes the first President of the United States to travel by airplane while in office when he flies from Miami to Morocco to meet with Winston Churchill.

1950 The first prototype of the MiG-17 makes its maiden flight.

1953 Josip Broz Tito is inaugurated as the first President of Yugoslavia.

1954 The Hudson Motor Car Company merges with Nash-Kelvinator Corporation forming the American Motors Corporation.

1967 The New York Times reports that the U.S. Army is conducting secret germ warfare experiments.

Births

83 BC Mark Antony, Roman general and politician (d. 30 BCE)

1683 Gottfried Silbermann, German instrument maker (d. 1753)

1741 Benedict Arnold, American-British general (d. 1801)

1875 Albert Schweitzer, French-Gabonese physician and philosopher, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1965)

1904 Cecil Beaton, English photographer, painter, and costume designer (d. 1980)

1952 Sydney Biddle Barrows, Mayflower Madam

Deaths

1555 Jacques Dubois, French anatomist (b. 1478)

1742 Edmond Halley, English astronomer, geophysicist, mathematician, meteorologist, and physicist (b. 1656)

View post:

The BroadsheetDAILY ~ 1/14/21 ~ State Extends, Expands Eviction and Foreclosure Bans Credited with Saving Thousands of Lives - ebroadsheet.com

For the first time, a Jew of color will lead Jewish diversity org Be’chol Lashon – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on January 18, 2021

As the videos of George Floyds killing galvanized a historic wave of racial justice protests this past summer, the staff of one of the countrys leading organizations promoting Jews of color knew they had to make a big change.

For two decades, Bechol Lashon had pioneered programming by and for Jews of color. Inspired by a Hanukkah gathering of diverse Jews in the San Francisco area in December 2000, it launched a summer camp for young Jews of color, a curriculum for children on the topic, a blog elevating the voices of multiracial Jews and a diversity training and consulting program.

But as the movement the group launched took hold, its leadership increasingly looked out of step. The group was founded by Diane Tobin and her late husband Gary, white parents who wanted their adopted Black child to know other Jews who were not white. They continued to helm the organization even as the number of groups representing Jews of color multiplied and Jews of color took leadership roles.

Diane Tobin, now 68, saw that Bechol Lashon wasnt leading national conversations about Jews of color anymore. So this summer, as the country reeled, she met with Marcella White Campbell, a longtime employee and Bechol Lashon camp parent who is Black, to talk about handing over the reins of the organization.

Campbell, a veteran of Silicon Valley, was announced as the groups new executive director last week, in a release timed to coincide with Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.

We felt that it was time to build on what Diane had done up to this point. Bechol Lashon was all about creating community but also about amplifying the voices of Jews of color, amplifying the visibility of Jews of color, Campbell told JTA. And so it seemed natural to then move on to handing leadership to Jews of color and seeing what we could do.

Campbell takes over at a moment of intense reckoning over race and inclusion for America and American Jews. She talked to JTA about the historic moment, her journey to Judaism and the work that white Jews need to do to be truly welcoming to Jews of color.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

JTA: What a time to start the job that youre starting. What were you feeling as you watched the violence at the Capitol?

Campbell: I took it very personally, actually. Both the racism and the antisemitism, I react to those as we should, with revulsion, but for me theres something about that happening at the Capitol. Im a student of history I bore my children with it all the time. When we went to Washington, D.C, several years ago, I dragged them to the Lincoln Memorial and made them look out at the reflecting pool and read all the words of the Gettysburg Address, because I really want them to understand that America is theirs. And that forcing America to look at these words and apply these words to everyone is how we become citizens, is how we cement our place in America, in the American story. I kept saying that to them when we were out on the Washington Mall: This is yours, you need to understand that. America is yours in the same way that its everyone elses.

So something about that crowd overrunning the Capitol it felt like a violation. And for them to be bringing those symbols of hatred into that space that I tell the kids all the time is mine, and theyre bringing those symbols in specifically to lay claim to it and exclude us on multiple levels I found it really hurtful.

Do you feel any shred of hope that this could be a positive turning point in terms of the countrys reckoning with racism?

I suppose there are many people who over the past several years have been able to discount what was going on in our country, to discount racism and antisemitism somehow I guess because neither of those things really apply to them. But the starkness, the symbolism of seeing these people in the seat of government and the very real threat of violence, I suppose people who werent moved by the videos of George Floyd last year cant help but ignore this.

These people were very clear about their racism and their antisemitism and its impossible to ignore that this is the reality for people of color and Jews and Jews of color in the United States every day. So as low a point as that is, you cant help but go up from here, in some ways. I was concerned after the past year that after the election, with Democrats coming back into power, the real urgency that people were feeling last summer with reckoning with race both inside and outside the Jewish community was going to fade because there are so many problems. But I no longer feel that.

Tell me a bit about your family history, and how you ended up where you are now.

I love to lean in to my family history because it very much exemplifies the various ways that Black people in America react to the American dream. My grandparents came to San Francisco from Arkansas in the early 40s. My grandfather had left Pine Bluff, Arkansas, because he was working for a construction company and was in a position of leadership as a foreman and realized he was making about 50 cents on the dollar as the white men he was working with and in some ways managing. And he went to his boss and pointed it out he always had a high opinion of himself, Im the best guy here, Im working harder than everyone else, I should at least be making as much as everyone else and the guy said no. And over the next couple of days his relatives said, You cant stay here.

He got on a bus and came out to San Francisco and he set up a narrative and a family that inspired all of us. He came and established what he called a dynasty. And excellence was paramount. Working as hard as you possibly could was paramount. He bought [a house] in Cole Valley, which even in the 50s was a very nice neighborhood, and one where they were the first Black family. When he was looking to buy a house, he basically saved every penny he ever made. Real estate agents steered him away from the neighborhood. He always said it was this white Jewish woman who basically was always getting the dregs of clients and assignments and was shut out most of the time who said, Ill take you over there, well go do this. And thats where my grandfather bought.

He just passed away on the 26th of December, were actually just finishing up shiva now, and his legacy its hard to overstate it for us. We came together in different venues to talk about him. He was not Jewish and his familys not Jewish; some of them are Baptists. So as the oldest grandchild I found myself in the position of simultaneously planning and running the cycle of Baptist and somewhat Christian mourning, without any explicit religious elements, and then turning around and starting the cycle of Jewish mourning. And part of the reason why were just in shiva now is because he was just buried after two weeks and my rabbi told me point blank: Jewish mourning doesnt start until burial. So we did both.

The funny thing about that is there was no real conflict. I chose Judaism 21 years ago, although I was pursuing conversion much earlier than that, and our family always embraced it. My sister also converted a few years after me and we have this sort of Black Jewish nucleus that we raised our kids in. My kids are 21 and 15 and my niece is 4 and theyve grown up in this Black Jewish community that I think is pretty unique.

I was inspired by [my grandfather] going into Silicon Valley startups in the early mid 2000s. I definitely had that experience of being the only [Black person in the room]. I definitely had to lean on that attitude of Youre lucky to have me in this room. [My grandfather] saw what I was doing, and what my sister was doing, as a lawyer, as an extension of that dream that he had.

I realized once I started working for Bechol Lashon that I could really believe in this mission, that [my family] was living this mission. It feels like a privilege to work somewhere where Im actually making a difference in peoples lives but almost selfishly also the lives of my kids and my family at the same time. So its a very personal mission. I do feel that as a person of color I am uniquely positioned to make connections with other organizations headed by Jews of color and to see what kinds of coalitions we can build and where we can go with this.

How did you decide to convert to Judaism?

I wasnt raised particularly religious. There are Baptists in my family, there are Jehovahs Witnesses in my family but there was sort of one moment that really got me started. When I was 15 years old, I attended the confirmation of one of my friends who was Jewish. And in the middle of getting ready for the event, he had taken me to the synagogue and abandoned me in the sanctuary while he was running around doing other things. I had never been in a synagogue and I sort of wandered around and sat down, and I opened a prayer book and this is absolutely true it fell open to the Mourners Kaddish. And at the time, it was a few months after my grandmother who had helped to raise me had died. And we didnt have a religious tradition at home, and you know 15-year-olds, they hold themselves apart, they go hole themselves up in their room. How do you deal with grief when youre that age?

And I was really really moved by what I read. I saw the Hebrew and then the translation, and for me, even then, theres something about the way the Mourners Kaddish leans into the magnification, the sanctification of the word of God, instead of telling you, It is so sad that this person has died, we are so sad, heres what is going to happen to them next. Thats not in any way what it says. It just says, Look, were in the middle of the infinite, we dont know, but all we can do is lean into this and lean into the infinite. And I maybe didnt have that level of understanding of that at that time, but it touched me and I just said I want to be Jewish, just like that. I dragged my mom to a rabbi and the rabbi said, Please come back when you are an adult [laughs], heres some stuff to read, we are not doing this at 15. So I had to wait it out.

Besides that, a really big part of discovering Judaism for me was food. In the middle of my conversion process, my daughter was a baby and I was creating a Jewish home for her, and its such a hands-on process. Raising Jewish children in a Jewish home, there are so many concrete things you do you light candles, you make bread, you share this meal once a week. And I became really invested, by tasting Jewish foods, by sharing Jewish foods with my kids. I didnt know a lot about the Sephardic Jewish world thats a common thing that happens in America, where most people believe that Jewish people are essentially Jerry Seinfeld, live in New York, thats it. And having the experience of opening up Claudia Rodens Book of Jewish Food and to go to Morocco and go to Lebanon and find out the wealth of Jewish experience, that was actually important for me as a person of color coming to Judaism, to realize before I even encountered Diane and Bechol Lashon the idea that Jewish people live all over the world.

Jews of color in the on-the-ground Jewish spaces, like synagogues or in family members homes for holidays, have long talked about the feeling of being other-ized, or being made to feel like they dont belong because they dont conform to the white Ashkenazi concept of the American Jew. As the wider Jewish community continues to listen to these narratives, the goal is for this experience to change what has your experience been like in these spaces, and do you feel its actually changing?

Im part of a small Reconstructionist synagogue, Or Shalom in San Francisco, and so were a pretty small organization. Jews of color and converts as a whole and this is not the synagogue where I converted you develop this bubble where you feel comfortable and everybody comes to know you and so youre just one of the people in the congregation, when youre worshipping and going to events. And whats really jarring is when you go outside that bubble you show up at a congregation where they dont know you and they assume that you arent Jewish. My husband is a white Ashkenazi Jew, with dark hair. He has never in his entire life gone into a Jewish congregation and not have people assume that he is Jewish. Not one time, around the world! [laughs] And I always say As long as Im on your arm its OK. Its sort of this umbrella of privilege that extends over me and people go, OK, shes with him. But by myself its not always and I have had some very negative experiences.

Weve been really heartened in the past year by how many organizations started contacting us. It was a phone-ringing-off-the-hook kind of thing last summer. The firehose has slowed down a little bit as we make connections with people, but it was just this groundswell realization in the Jewish world that something needs to be done and that it would be wonderful if we could do it from a Jewish perspective, talk about diversity from a Jewish perspective.

The recent Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock Senate victories in Georgia have been hailed as a milestone moment for Black-Jewish relations, especially after they each leaned into that narrative in their campaigns. Do you feel that ties between the two communities have been strained in recent years?

It can be difficult to talk about the history of Black relations and Jewish relations in part because theyre often seen through this narrative of Crown Heights, of New York in particular, of communities side by side who dont get [along] together, when the reality is so much more complicated than that.

There are times when Im called upon, people say Have you condemned Louis Farrakhan? as an example. And I dont know him? You know? And Im sure as I say to people, Im sure there are a lot of Jews who you do not agree with and who you do not feel called upon to denounce. Its very much an othering thing that implies that Jews of color have dual loyalties, which is not accurate. And how often are Jews called upon in the United States and around the world to denounce other Jews or to prove their loyalty to the country where they live? Its pretty ironic to be put in that position.

For me I feel that understanding the diversity of the Jewish community can only help in terms of relationships with Black people outside the Jewish community, because the lens of the civil rights movement and to in no way denigrate the very real contributions of white Jews during the civil rights movement theres this sense of reaching across the aisle, or across boundaries. But in reality, because there are Jews of color, this is much more fluid. Its not just about two individual communities reaching out to one another, its greyer than that. So its hard for me to speak in absolutes and say Black-Jewish relations are worse or better. There are individual interactions and conflicts but it really does do us all a disservice, I think, to boil it all down to the fact that there are two groups of people.

Even though the term Black lives matter has become more than just one organization, the organization of the same name alienated some Jews with arguably anti-Israel language in its 2016 platform. From your perspective, after this past summer, how much tension is there still over that?

Theres definitely still tension about that, we get a lot of emails about that. Particularly when we came out in support of Black Lives Matter and we turned our entire website black for several weeks going into the summer. As an organization we had not done enough work. We had never come out and said point-blank Black lives matter as a multiracial organization, and it was important for us to do that.

[Since 2016] the phrase Black lives matter has come to mean so much more than any one group. There are people who originated it who should definitely be credited with that, but the weight and the power of those words transcends any one group of people.

Its very challenging to refocus peoples attention once theyve heard that there was this platform this one time that could definitely be seen as anti-Israel. The Jewish community that being said, weve established that there are many Jewish communities needs to be able to understand that change and to hold that change and to move forward. Many things change. Many movements change over time. Many leaders of movements change over time. And this is such a potent example of that. When we say Black lives matter, we are talking about the humanity of Black Jews. And that shouldnt be up for debate.

Whats something youre looking forward to in the new job?

One of my favorite things about our organization is our curriculum for children because in another life in Silicon Valley, one of the things I did was to develop craft kits and hands-on educational kits, and the hands-on nature of Passport to Peoplehood I find very exciting. Making recipes from Egyptian or Ethiopian Jews, it helps diversity to click in kids minds.

Im also really excited about a conversation Im having next week with Denise Davis who is one of our longtime board members, one of the cofounders of Camp Bechol Lashon. She is a doctor and a scientist and were going to talk about the history of Black America and the health system in the United States, in relationship to these vaccines, and to some of the distrust in the Black community around those. And she also wants to bring in a Jewish lens to talk about these issues.

That kind of thing is so exciting to me. At my heart Im an academic and I love to have these conversations where we just explore all of the overlap and all of the different ways we can approach these issues, and isnt it great that we can take our experience as Black Americans and as Jews and talk about something thats so relevant?

More here:

For the first time, a Jew of color will lead Jewish diversity org Be'chol Lashon - The Jewish News of Northern California

Being a Black Jewish woman in America on Jan. 6 – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on January 18, 2021

The first day I moved back to my college campus, I, a Black Jewish woman, watched the news as the U.S. Capitol building was overtaken bywhite supremacists and Nazis. For a brief moment that day, my heart had fluttered with excitement about the news of a Black man and an Ashkenazi Jewish man representing Georgia in the Senate for the first time in history.

Even though I grew up in Oakland, I come from Southern folks who fled the pervasive racism of the Confederacy. Sens. Warnock and Ossoff represent the legacy, pain and triumph of hardworking, multiracial coalitions in the South demanding equality. I hoped, even if just imagined, that my ancestors would let out a sigh of relief, twinkles of pride would glisten in their eyes, and we would sense that we finally made them proud.

Yet, the news coverage quickly shifted to another unbelievable picture, one filled with no cheers of progress and long-deserved representation. The Capitol was captured, and all I could do was continue to unpack my suitcase. I saw images of white men wearing gigantic animal horns upon their heads, paint smeared on their faces as if they viewed themselves as warriors. A noose hung, and a Confederate flag waved in the air. My social media feed became plastered with individuals wearing shirts printed with antisemitic phrases.

I got up to stick my little mezuzah on the doorpost of my new room, adding to my Magen David necklace around my neck, impressive Afro and skirt that goes past my knees. I recited the travelers prayer before the plane took me to the side of the country where individuals claiming to be patriots brought violence and terror to my nation.

I thought that if any minority committed even a fraction of these acts, they would have not even made it to the steps security would have taken them down. But I wasnt surprised or shocked. America was watching America being shown who it truly is. I was simply witnessing the underbelly of this country being exposed to the entire world.

I spent the rest of the day and the following scrolling through social media to distract and occupy my mind during a numbing quarantine. I eventually came across friends and accounts posting about the importance of language when describing what occurred on Jan. 6, how this insurrection threatened marginalized Americans and how to donate to various social advocacy organizations and individuals in need.

As a Jewish woman, I wondered why the only people acknowledging the blatant antisemitism demonstrated on the steps of our Capitol were other Jewish people. Jewish content creators, activists and everyday individuals were posting about the traumatizing experience of seeing Nazis parading in the revered halls of our Capitol. I became deeply upset that the Jewish community was being ignored, disregarded or, at the very least, not considered during these acts of terror.

As I watch the aftermath, I am still angry that individuals and accounts on social media speak about violence and discrimination in America without mentioning the real harm days like Jan. 6 represent for Jewish people. I understand that Jewish people in this country do not neatly fit into the People of Color versus white binary or any one political affiliation. We are an incredibly diverse community with many different skin colors, cultures and stories.

Yet Americans tend to reduce us to being white and having experienced one traumatic event in Europe, which is taught in schools here and there. These perceptions contribute to the erasure of our identities as Jewish people and the discrimination we have experienced for thousands of years.

To speak plainly, everyone is an activist for equal rights until they have to support Jewish people. Nazis attack us and have always attacked us first and foremost. Jewish stories deserve to be taken seriously by social advocacy movements, and we deserve to live in peace.

I sit in a Black, observant, Jewish, female body that loves Israel, and I prepare for the world to attack me every day. I want the Jewish community to be listened to, I want Jews of color to be heard, and I want to not fear for my life each waking moment.

I say Am Yisrael chaiwith the greatest pride, Black skin and a honey voice.

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Being a Black Jewish woman in America on Jan. 6 - The Jewish News of Northern California

New South Philly Shop Pays Homage to Traditional Jewish ‘Appetizing Stores,’ Features Artisanal Smoked Fish – Jewish Exponent

Posted By on January 18, 2021

Evan Biederman holds a Biedermans brunch board | Courtesy Lauren Biederman

Lauren Biederman started working in the restaurant industry when she was 15.

After bussing tables and hosting, she moved to serving and bartending, later taking courses in wine and earning several certificates. In 2017, the Killington, Vermont, native moved to Philadelphia, where she worked at Osteria and Zahav.

And a little over 10 years since her first restaurant gig, she wants her new store, Biedermans Specialty Foods, to be Philadelphias premiere destination for artisanal smoked fish.

Biedermans Specialty Foods is modeled on appetizing shops, the stores selling cold appetizers characteristic of Eastern European Ashkenazi cuisine, that Biederman grew up frequenting with family in New York.

My grandmother was born in Philadelphia, actually, and moved to New York City, she said. My whole family lives either in Brooklyn or in Connecticut. So, every time we go down there thats kind of what we eat. My dad shows up to Thanksgiving with two kilos of salmon, and always bagels and cheeses and cheesecakes from New York. It was kind of just the tradition of the family.

While Biederman oversees the day-to-day operations of the business, her family has been instrumental in getting it going. Her father, now in New Hampshire, helped with planning. Her younger brother, Evan Biederman, a recent college graduate, is one of her employees. Two older brothers have offered their expertise as contractors.

Biedermans fish, which ranges from classic smoked salmon, herring and whitefish to vodka-cured gravlax, will be sourced from a variety of smokehouses. One of her main suppliers is Samaki Smoked Fish in New York state, and she is also working on orders from purveyors in Ireland, Scotland, Alaska and Canada.

In addition to smoked fish, the shop at 824 Christian St. will offer maple syrup, cheese, tomato sauce and produce from Vermont. Biederman is receiving orders of butter from France and local items like bagels from Kaplans New Model Bakery and pastries from vegan Jewish baking pop-up Lil Yentas.

Its more of a curation of things that I would like to see, Biederman said.

Biederman has crowdsourced ideas from the Bella Vista Neighbors Association, asking members about their favorite kinds of fish and what they would like to see in stock. Biedermans has sold takeout brunch boards with bagels, cream cheese, smoked fish, olives and pastries to test the waters before the official opening on Jan. 15.

Those are very helpful, to have input, she said.

Although not all of the items at Biedermans will be kosher, there will be plenty of kosher options, and the dietary status of all items will be clearly marked.

All of the fish that comes from Samaki is going to be kosher certified. We will not have any meat in-house ever, she said. We are getting most of our baked goods from kosher bakeries.Due to the pandemic, the shop will offer takeout and online ordering only when it opens. Biederman hopes to offer cafe-style seating outdoors, and later indoors, once it is safe to do so.Eugene Mopsik was walking to the Italian Market with his daughter on Christian Street one weekend in December when he saw the sign for the new appetizing shop. Intrigued, he ducked in and struck up a conversation with Biederman.

When he learned about her business idea, the New York transplant was reminded of the smoked fish shops he frequented with his father on the Lower East Side as a boy, and of the smoked fish he sampled during his world travels as a freelance photographer.At one point, I said to Lauren, Do you need an old Jewish guy in the shop? he said.

He had knife skills from his time working at an Orthodox summer camp kitchen as a high school and college student, and Biederman welcomed him aboard. Now, he helps out slicing fish and produce.I was looking for something to keep me a little busier. I have some nonprofit board work that I do, but something in the food service industry was an exciting opportunity for me, Mopsik said.

So far, one of his favorite items is the pastrami-smoked salmon from Samaki. The fish is rubbed with pepper, coriander, paprika, mustard and other spices, which creates a blackened flavorful coating.

Its fabulous, he said. Its beautiful to look at, it slices nice, its just got wonderful flavor.[emailprotected]; 215-832-0729

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New South Philly Shop Pays Homage to Traditional Jewish 'Appetizing Stores,' Features Artisanal Smoked Fish - Jewish Exponent


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