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Zac Posen, Andy Cohen Explore Jewish Ancestry on ‘Finding Your Roots’ – Jewish Journal

Posted By on January 14, 2021

Designer Zac Posen and Watch What Happens Live host Andy Cohen learn about their Ashkenazi Jewish heritage this month on episodes of Finding Your Roots with Henry Louis Gates, Jr. Both knew little about their immigrant roots other than they originated in the Eastern European Pale of Settlement in greater Russia. But forensic genealogy research reveals several generations of ancestors and some unexpected surprises.

Posen discovers that the apparel business runs in his family: his paternal great-grandfather was a shoemaker and paternal great-grandfather was a tailor, as was his great-great-great grandfather. Cohens lineage is traced back six generations on his mothers side, and hes shown photographs of ancestors and the synagogue in their town, Bialystok in what is now Poland. It gives me goosebumps, he tells Gates. Its like youre among these ghosts that paved the way for you.

DNA tests confirm that both Posen and Cohen have 100% Ashkenazi roots, and in Cohens case, reveal a famous cousin. Hes elated to find out that he shares DNA with Scarlett Johansson, whose mother is Jewish.

Posen appears on the Jan. 12 Coming to America episode and Cohen on the Jan. 26 episode, Against All Odds.

You'll love our roundtable.

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Zac Posen, Andy Cohen Explore Jewish Ancestry on 'Finding Your Roots' - Jewish Journal

Before Sheldon Adelsons death, his relationships soured with both Netanyahu and Trump – Forward

Posted By on January 14, 2021

Image by Getty Images

Sheldon Adelson the billionaire casino magnate, philanthropist, and Republican mega-donor fractured his relationships with both Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Donald Trump in the final months of his life. His death from complications related to non-Hodgkins lymphoma was announced on Tuesday morning.

The 87-year-old Boston native and son of immigrants became synonymous with Jewish philanthropy over the course of his career, helping bankroll Jewish nonprofits across the globe. In his later years, he became particularly well-known for his contributions to Republican politicians including President Trumps 2016 election effort.

Adelson was also a close supporter of Israeli causes and last month, it was Adelsons own private jet which was used to take Jonathan Pollard, a convicted Israeli spy who had become something of a Jewish folk hero, to Israel where he was resettling with his wife.

In 2008, Adelson launched a free daily newspaper called Israel Hayom to benefit Benjamin Netanyahu who was, at the time, Israels opposition leader plotting his comeback for a second term. The publication later earned the nickname Bibiton, a combination of Netanyahus name and the word for newspaper in Hebrew, because it helped Netanyahu solidify his grip on the Israeli right-wing camp with a powerful megaphone. In 2014, Adelson went on to purchase Israeli news outlets Makor Rishon and Maariv. Miriam Adelson became the publisher of Israel Hayom in 2018.

The relationship between the Adelsons and Netanyahu soured in recent years after they became witnesses in the corruption trial, known as Case 2000. The couple testified that Netanyahu offered to use his power as prime minister and his relationship with Adelson to limit the distribution and business activities of Israel Hayom in exchange for favorable coverage in the popular newspaper Yediot Ahronot.

In recent years, Israel Hayom limited its exclusive promotion of Netanyahu and broadened it to cover some of his right-wing rivals, Naftali Bennett and Avigdor Lieberman. Adelson reportedly engaged in a shouting match with Sara Netanyahu during a private dinner at the prime ministers residence in Jerusalem after she complained about the lack of positive coverage in his newspaper. I lose 40-50 million dollars a year We regularly write in your favor and you keep shouting at me, the mogul told Mrs. Netanyahu.

Israel Hayom also served as a mouthpiece for President Donald Trump. Its editor-in-chief Boaz Bismuth who was an Adelson confidante and had frequent access to the Oval Office drove positive coverage for Trump amid the chaos and controversies during his term. During the 2016 Republican presidential primary, Adelson signaled he was fine supporting Trump as the Republican nominee. Trump is a businessman. I am a businessman. He employs a lot of people. I employed 50,000 people. Why not? he said at the time. In addition to his contributions to the campaign, Adelson donated $5 million to the Trump inaugural committee, which earned him a VIP seat on the dais at the inauguration ceremony.

Adelson was one of the driving forces behind the relocation of the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and even offered to pay part of the expenses to speed up the move. Adelson recently purchased the ambassadors official residence in the Tel Aviv suburb of Herzliya as the State Department looks for a new location in Jerusalem.

The Adelsons spent some $215 million in the 2020 election cycle in support of Trump and Republican candidates, and they served as co-chairs of Trumps Jewish outreach group, Jewish Voices for Trump. But the president didnt seem to always appreciate Adelsons contributions. Trump reportedly scolded Adelson in a phone call in early August for not spending enough on his reelection.

Adelsons life and legacy was eulogized by several political figures in both Israel and the U.S.

He was a wonderful friend to us personally and an incredible champion of the Jewish people, the Jewish state and the alliance between Israel and America, Netanyahu said. With his wife Miri he contributed endlessly to strengthening the Jewish people and the Jewish state, funding breakthroughs in medicine and science and advancing higher education. He gave anonymously to help victims of terror and countless other people in need.

President Trump issued a statement on Adelsons passing, which referenced the philanthropists efforts in the Middle East. Sheldon was also a staunch supporter of our great ally the State of Israel, Trump wrote. He tirelessly advocated for the relocation of the US embassy to Jerusalem, the recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights, and the pursuit of peace between Israel and its neighbors.

Sheldon was a generous benefactor of charitable causes, especially medical research and Jewish heritage education, former President George W. Bush said in a statement Tuesday morning.

Sheldon was a true American patriot and a giant among men. He treated his employees like family. His philanthropic generosity changed countless lives, said the presidents son, Donald Trump Jr. on Twitter. The US-Israel relationship is stronger today because of him. My heart goes out to the Adelson family.

Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, whose first trip to Israel was with Adelson, remarked on the news of his passing. The best way to describe the life of Sheldon Adelson is in a single word: wow.

Yair Lapid, the Israeli opposition leader who had repeatedly run against Netanyahu, highlighted Adelsons support for Israeli institutions.

His involvement and contribution to Yad Vashem, the Taglit project and many other projects that have strengthened the heritage of the Jewish people will accompany us for many years to come, Lapid said in a Hebrew Tweet.

Last March, at the start of the coronavirus outbreak, Adelson procured approximately two million face masks produced in China at his expense to counter the shortage of the much-needed protective gear at hospitals across the U.S. About 250,000 masks were distributed to health workers by the Trump administration through a public-private partnership called Project Airbridge.

Adelson is survived by his wife, five children, and many grandchildren. A funeral will be held in Israel, the birthplace of Dr. Miriam Adelson, with plans for a memorial service held in Las Vegas to be announced at a later date.

The loss is colossal. Miriam said in a statement. Farewell, my darling, my one true love. After gaining and giving so much, you have earned this rest.

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Before Sheldon Adelsons death, his relationships soured with both Netanyahu and Trump - Forward

Celebrate MLK Day online and in person at the reopening of Maltz Museum: Valley Views – cleveland.com

Posted By on January 14, 2021

CHAGRIN FALLS, Ohio -- The Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage reopens to the public Monday, Jan. 18, with a celebration to honor the legacy of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. There will be all-day programs, free admission and virtual activities.

Timed tickets are available from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. to visit the museum in person and tour its core collections free of charge. Visitors can explore Judaica and ritual objects and observe the Jewish-American immigrant experience in separate galleries. They also can take a guided virtual tour of the Jim Crow Museum in Michigan.

David Pilgrim, founder of the Jim Crow Museum of racist memorabilia at Michigans Ferris State University will take participants on a free virtual tour of the Jim Crow Museum before his lecture. Participants can ask him questions from 3 to 4:30 p.m. via Zoom. The museum uses these objects to teach tolerance and social justice.

A one-hour workshop from 11 a.m. to noon for students in grades six to 12 provides tips on writing a personal essay that tells a powerful story for future college applications or for entering the Maltz Museums annual Stop the Hate essay contest.

Families can participate online from 1 to 2 p.m. with Punch McHamm of BravoNation reading from the book As Good as Anybody, about the friendship of King and Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel. A question-and-answer session will follow before Talespinner Childrens Theater presents an improv activity for family members of all ages and backgrounds.

All activities are free, with advance registration through maltzmuseum.org.

Stream live theater: Add a bit of dark comedy to your life Jan. 16 and 17, as Chagrin Valley Little Theatre streams its 2015 River Street Playhouse production of The Norwegians by playwright C. Denby.

The plot has things going haywire after two spurned Southern women living in Minnesota hatch a plan to get even with their exes. Contact cvlt.org for tickets to the online show.

Just what Dr. Seuss ordered: Could you use a reason to smile about now? Explore the life and art of childrens author Theodor Seuss Geisel at 1 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 21, via Zoom.

Art historian Felicia Zavarella Stadelman presents a look at Geisels artistic vision and humor that linked his political cartoons, advertisements, characters and 44 childrens books.

Register for the free program by Jan. 18 to receive the Zoom link. Contact parksynagogue.org or epetler@parksyn.org.

Online help for parents: Connecting for Kids is offering a series of virtual programs this month to help parents deal with tricky health and education issues, and to navigate treatment and outcomes.

A two-day workshop, from 1 to 2 p.m. Jan. 30 and Feb. 6, focuses on finding reliable information and problem-solving while overcoming racial and gender biases. In partnership with Euclid Public Library, it will provide a safe space for Black American parents of children in kindergarten through grade 12 to talk about challenge and work on solutions. Participants will receive an advocacy kit with course materials.

Healing and institutional racism are the subject of a four-week interactive workshop from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Jan. 20, Jan. 27, Feb. 3 and Feb. 10. Designed to be a safe space for parents and caregivers of infants and children through 12 years old, it will help to identify and stop patterns of trauma survival and develop coping skills. Participants will receive a self-care kit with course materials that can be picked up at your local library branch.

To see the programs offered by the organization and to register for any of them, contact connectingforkids.org.

Fight the blues and listen to music: If the pandemic and missed holiday plans added to your post-holiday blues, Connecting for Kids invites you to an online interactive chat from 7 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 19, to meet other families, find encouragement and use anticipation to cope with stress.

Presented in partnership with Westlake Porter Public Library, it is a free program and attendees can earn a free journal.

Also, adults can learn to use music for coping with the pandemic and caring for children from 7 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 21. Connect with other families online, listen to live music and access your creative side through songwriting. Contact connectingforkids.org.

Building inclusion in business: Kent State Universitys Academic Center and the Twinsburg and Nordonia Hills chambers of commerce are offering a Zoom workshop from noon to 1 p.m. Jan. 21 on understanding LGBTQ and barriers in the workplace.

Faculty member Mahli Xuan Mechenbier will hold a conversation about progress, the impact of gender ID in the the workplace, preferred terminology and definitions and resources. Register at amurfell@kent.edu or through one of the chamber organizations.

To post your news and events, contact Rusek at jcooperrusek@gmail.com.

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Celebrate MLK Day online and in person at the reopening of Maltz Museum: Valley Views - cleveland.com

Art Industry News: Financiers Are Investing Piles of Cash Into Immersive Art Centers Following Mass Layoffs in the Sector + Other Stories – artnet…

Posted By on January 14, 2021

Art Industry News is a daily digest of the most consequential developments coming out of the art world and art market. Heres what you need to know on this Monday, January 11.

Louvre Sees 72 Percent Attendance Drop The most visited museum in the world was visited a whole lot less in 2020. Pariss Louvre museum welcomed 72 percent fewer visitors due to a drop in tourism and various lockdowns that forced it to close for nearly half the year. Far from the 9.6 million people it saw in 2019, the home of the Mona Lisa welcomed just 2.7 million visitors last yearand lost around 90 million ($109.3 million) in revenue. (The Art Newspaper)

US Theaters Could Reopen This Fall Infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci told performing arts experts in a virtual conference over the weekend that theaters and other venues may be able to reopen in the US sometime this fall. But, he cautioned, it will only happen if 70 to 85 percent of the population has been vaccinated by that time, and audience members will still likely be required to wear masks. The prediction was welcome news for performing arts professionals, who have been hit even harder than museums by lockdown measures. (New York Times)

Immersive Art Is Still Big in the Social-Distancing Era Investors are still interested in gambling on large-scale experiential art centers despite the coronavirus. Fotografiskawhich laid off a third of its workforce in Stockholm and saw its founders resignhas just announced plans for a fourth location in Berlin. The immersive art house Meow Wolf is launching in four more cities despite laying off half its workforce. And after a delay, the Pace CEO-backed Superblue is expected to open in Miami in March, followed by further expansions. There are tough times ahead, but if I look at the next 10 years, Im confident, says Fotografiskas board chairman Yoram Roth. (NYT)

Prosecutors Investigate Artist Claude Lvque French prosecutors are investigating Claude Lvque after sculptor Laurent Faulon came forward with allegations that the artist, who is known for his work in neon and represented France at the Venice Biennale in 2009, sexually abused him and his two brothers as minors in the 1980s. Lvques lawyer said that the artist has filed complaints for defamation, slander, and blackmail, and reserves the right to bring any action against any person directly or indirectly harming him in order to assert his rights. (Le Monde)

Moderna Vaccine Billionaire Is a Chinese Art Collector Immunologist Timothy Springer, a founding investor in the biotech firm behind one of the COVID vaccines, is an avid collector of gongshi, or Chinese scholars rocks. His collection of the objects, which are naturally sculpted by erosion over centuries, even inspired the name of one of his biopharmaceutical companies, Scholar Rock. (TAN)

Batman Comic Sets a Record at Auction Heritage Auctions in Dallas, Texas, says that a Batman comic from 1940 has already secured a $1.53 million bid ahead of its inclusion in a planned live sale on January 14. The bid for the mint-condition comic surpasses the previous record for any Batman comic. (Monopol)

Landscape Architect Carol Johnson Dies Johnson, who built one of Americas largest landscape architecture firms owned by a woman, died at age 91 from complications of Alzheimers disease. She was known for large-scale public projects that involved transforming dilapidated sites, like toxic landfills and an oil-soaked storage facilities, into lush parks. (NYT)

The Marcel Duchamp Prize Names Short List Julian Charrire, Isabelle Cornaro, Julien Creuzet, and Lili Reynaud-Dewar have been nominated for the 2021 edition of the top French art prize. The shortlisted artists will be featured in a group exhibition at the Centre Pompidou beginning October 6; the winner will be named on October 18. (Le Monde)

Confederate Flag Found Tied to Jewish Heritage Museum Vandals placed a banner depicting the Confederate flag onto New Yorks Jewish Heritage Museum last week following the violent events at the US Capitol. The museums director has filed a police report and authorities are searching for the perpetrator of the atrocious attack on our community and on our institution. (Hyperallergic)

The Lockdowns Toll on Cultural Heritage Heritage sites around the world are at increased risk amid the pandemic as vital conservation work is interrupted and they become vulnerable to looting and funding cuts. Organizations such as the International Alliance for the Protection of Heritage in Conflict Areas and the World Monuments Fund are urgently working to raise and distribute funds to address these new dangers. (TAN)

Pinaults New Paris Museum Postponed Again The opening of Franois Pinaults hotly anticipated Paris museum project, the Bourse de Commerce, has been postponed (again) due to the French lockdown. Frances cultural institutions should be able to reopen next month; a new opening date for the mega-collectors museum will be evaluated on January 20. (TAN)

Bourse de CommercePinault Collection. Photo Patrick Tournebuf/Tendance Floue for the Pinault Collection, Paris.

Bourse de CommercePinault Collection. Photo Patrick Tournebuf/Tendance Floue for the Pinault Collection, Paris.

Bourse de CommercePinault Collection by Maxime Ttard.

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Art Industry News: Financiers Are Investing Piles of Cash Into Immersive Art Centers Following Mass Layoffs in the Sector + Other Stories - artnet...

An NYPD official is suspended without pay after being connected to racists posts on a message board – ABC17News.com

Posted By on January 14, 2021

A high-ranking official with the New York Police Department has been suspended without pay and is now the subject of an internal disciplinary process after a string of racist, anti-Semitic and homophobic posts, the NYPD confirmed.

Late last year, an investigation by the City Council connected Deputy Inspector James Francis Kobel to a user under the name Clouseau. Under that identity, he routinely posted offensive messages on a public law enforcement message board attacking Black people, Muslims, the Hasidic Jewish community and others with extremely derogatory language, according to a draft report from the New York City Council Oversight and Investigations Division.

Kobel was the commanding officer of the police departments Office of Equal Employment and Opportunity, which is responsible for investigating employment and harassment claims.

In November, he was relieved of his command and placed on modified duty after the City Council investigation but will now face a 30-day suspension without pay, the department said. He has also filed for retirement from the police force, the NYPD confirmed to CNN.

Deputy Inspector Kobel has served the City of New York and the NYPD honorably for nearly 29 years, Chris Monahan, President of the Captains Endowment Association said in a statement. Given the current political climate and anti-police sentiment, DI Kobel did not see it as possible to get a fair administrative trial and decided to avail himself of the opportunity to file for retirement.

Even if he goes through the disciplinary process and is dismissed, Kobel can still be eligible for his pension benefits, according to the NYPD.

CNN reached out to Kobel for comment.

Clouseau posted to Law Enforcement Rant, a public internet messaging board where police officers often vent their job grievances, between July 2019 and September 2020.

The user used disparaging language to refer to elected officials, including former President Barack Obama and Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark, who is a Black woman, the report claimed.

He allegedly used slurs to describe two NYPD officers, who are women of color. And he insulted Eric Garner, who died in 2014 after an NYPD officer put him in a chokehold, along with this mother, the report said.

He also attacked athletes in the NFL for kneeling in protest of police brutality, and perpetuated stereotypes about the Hasidic Jewish community as Covid-19 cases increased in New York in March.

Kobel has told The New York Times that he did not post on the Rant and was unfamiliar with Clouseau.

But investigators said they were able to identify him by matching information provided in the posts with publicly available personal information about Kobel.

Both Clouseau and Kobel joined the NYPD at the same time, held the rank of captain or higher in 2019 and were on the job in February 2020, the report said. The authors also wrote that the two had served in the NYPD Housing Bureau under the same former chief. And details that Clouseau shared such as when his parents died, where his in-laws live, where he proposed to his wife and how many parishioners of his church died in the 9/11 attacks corresponded to information about Kobel.

The Rant was shutdown last month.

The disturbing comments Kobel is alleged to have made came to light as law enforcement departments around the nation face scrutiny for explicit and implicit racism within their ranks and grapple with calls to increase accountability.

City Councilman and Congressman-elect Ritchie Torres, who oversaw the report, called for Kobel to resign in November.

The virulent bigotry of Deputy Inspector James Kobel has no place in the NYPD, much less in the Office of Equal Employment Opportunity, Torres said in a statement to CNN. The shocking nature of his misconduct calls for nothing less than termination.

Monahan said in a statement to CNN at the time that Kobel is a dedicated professional who adamantly denies these allegations.

Unfortunately, he has conducted thousands of internal investigations over the last several years, Monahan said. Clearly, he has angered some people along the way. In any event, he looks forward to being fully exonerated when all the facts come out.

NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea said the department interviewed Kobel the day it received the allegation.

Within the two weeks, where we are in the investigation now, we thought it was prudent to relieve the deputy inspector of his current assignment, pending the outcome, Shea said. That is a drastic step, but we thought it was the appropriate step due to the nature of his assignment, as well as the allegations and what we have learned thus far.

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An NYPD official is suspended without pay after being connected to racists posts on a message board - ABC17News.com

Ukrainian rabbi listed in ranking of top 100 influential Ukrainians – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on January 14, 2021

Ukrainian Rabbi Moshe Reuven Azman was ranked as one of the top 100 most influential people and phenomena in Ukraine, by Vesti,a Russian-language newspaper in Ukraine.

Azman made the list because of the Jewish community's aid in the fight against the novel coronavirus, including providing protective gear to medical workers, housing doctors working at a local hospital and feeding the sick and needy. He ranked 62nd on the list.

Asman, a hasidic rabbi who is one of several people claiming to be the chief rabbi of Ukraine, posted on Facebook that the Maidan has begun in the USA, referring to the widespread protests that led to the ouster of pro-Russia President Viktor Yanukovych in 2014. The people protesting against mass election fraud broke into the capital. God bless America.

The list was compiled by a number of scientists, political experts, analysts and the editorial team at Vesti, among others. Topping the list of most influential people and phenomena was, of course, COVID-19.

The listing stated that Soros fell in the ranking because of the departure of government officials that they referred to as "nestlings of Sorosov's nest," a phrase used to describe officials claimed to be funded or supported by George Soros. A number of conspiracy theories claim that Soros has control over events throughout the world, including in Ukrainian politics. These claims are often compared to antisemitic tropes that Jews "control the world."

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Vesti stated in an introduction to the ranking that candidates for the list were judged based on level of independence, resource availability and connections, contributions to the field and achievements, influence on decision-making in Ukraine, the ability to accumulate supporters and media coverage. Experts scored each candidate based on each of these parameters and Vesti's editorial team chose the top scoring candidates with "some adjustments," according to the ranking's introduction.

Sam Sokol and Cnaan Lipshiz of JTA contributed to this report.

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Ukrainian rabbi listed in ranking of top 100 influential Ukrainians - The Jerusalem Post

Decoding the extremist symbols and groups at the Capitol Hill insurrection – ABC17News.com

Posted By on January 12, 2021

Flags, signs and symbols of racist, white supremacist and extremist groups were displayed along with Trump 2020 banners and American flags at Wednesdays riot at the US Capitol.

The pictures tell part of the story of the beliefs of some of those who chose to show up on that day from passionate and peaceful Trump supporters to extremists who showed their hate with their symbols as well as their actions.

The mixing of the groups is one issue that experts who track extremism and hate have long been concerned about.

The certification of the election results proved to be exactly the type of event that brought together various groups and could have led to radical ideas being shared, they say. The initial event, which was heavily promoted and encouraged by President Trump, gave all of these groups something to rally around.

This was an event designed to oppose the results of a free and fair democratic election and the transition of power that would naturally follow, Mark Pitcavage, a historian and expert in extremism with the Anti-Defamation League said.

CNN spoke with him to identify the symbols and understand the chilling messages of tyranny, white supremacy, anarchy, racism, anti-Semitism and hatred they portray.

While a noose on its own is often used as a form of racial intimidation, Pitcavage says he believes in this context the gallows were to suggest punishment for committing treason. It is suggesting that representatives and senators who vote to certify the election results, and possibly Vice President Pence, are committing treason and should be tried and hanged, he explains.

That treason rhetoric was seen on right-wing message boards in days leading up to the event.

The Three Percenters (also known as III%ers, 3%ers or Threepers) are part of the militia movement in the United States and are anti-government extremists, according to the ADL.

Like others in the militia movement, Three Percenters view themselves as defending the American people against government tyranny.

Because many adherents to the militia movement strongly support President Trump, in recent years, Three Percenters have not been as active in opposing the federal government, directing their ire at other perceived foes, including leftists/antifa, Muslims and immigrants, according to the ADL.

The groups name comes from an inaccurate claim that only three percent of the people in the colonies armed themselves and fought against the British during the Revolutionary War.

The flag seen above is their logo on the traditional Betsy Ross flag. Pitcavage says right-wing groups (mainstream or extreme), which think of themselves as patriotic, sometimes co-opt Americas first flag.

Release the Kraken flag

The flag references former Trump lawyer Sidney Powells comments that she was going to release the Kraken. Powell falsely said she had evidence that would destroy the idea that Joe Biden won the presidency.

The Kraken, a mammoth sea creature from Scandavian folklore, has turned into a meme in circles that believe the election was stolen. The Kraken, they say, is a cache of evidence that there was widespread fraud. On social media, QAnon conspiracy and fringe sites #ReleaseTheKraken has been widely shared along with false theories of fraud.

The far right has co-opted the OK sign as a trolling gesture and, for some, as a symbol of white power. The ADL added that symbol toits long-standing databaseof slogans and symbols used by extremists.

A photo from the riot at the US Capitol shows several people making the OK hand gesture.

Some of the people in the photo are also seen in a livestream from the rally, where they identify themselves as members of the Proud Boys, specifically the Arizona chapter.

The man livestreaming the event moves through the crowd at the Capitol saying support your local Proud Boys.

In the video, he goes up to a group wearing orange hats and says, They wanna know what the orange hats stand for.

One man replies that its a way to keep their group together before another chimes in: It stands for the best f*cking chapter in the best f*cking organization in the world.

Asked what that organization is, the man in an orange hat declares: The Proud Boys.

The Proud Boys has been supportive of President Trump and present in large numbers at Stop The Steal rallies in Washington, DC. The Proud Boys leader, Henry Tarrio, who goes by Enrique Tarrio, was released from police custody Tuesday oncharges related to allegedly burning a Black Lives Matter banner taken from a Black church last month during protests in the city after a Stop the Steal event. Tarrio has admitted to CNN he did burn the banner. He was ordered by a local judge to stay out of DC as he awaits trial, including during this weeks protests.

The green, white and black flag was created by some members of the 4chan online community to represent a made-up joke country named for Kek, a fictional god they also created. It has long been present at right-wing and far-right rallies.

The Kekistan flag is controversial because its design was partially derived from a Nazi-era flag; this was apparently done on purpose as a joke, Pitcavage explained. Younger right-wingers coming from the 4chan subculture (both mainstream right and extreme right) often like to display the Kekistan flag at rallies and events.

Altered Confederate and Gadsden flags were seen throughout the crowds at the Capitol. One Confederate battle flag variation included an image of assault rifle and the slogan Come and take it to convey an anti-gun control message. The phrase come and take it paraphrases the come and take them retort uttered by Spartan King Leonidas at the Battle of Thermopylae when the Persian King Xerxes told him and his people to lay down their spears in return for their lives, Pitcavage said.

The Gadsden flag, which is known to many as the Dont Tread on Me flag, is a traditional and historical patriotic flag dating to the American Revolution. The flag and symbol are also popular among Libertarians. But it also has been co-opted by right wing groups. Pitcavage explains that while some fly it as a symbol for patriotism, others use it as a symbol of resistance to perceived tyranny.

A man is seen wearing an Oath Keepers hat inside the Capitol after it was breached. The Oath Keepers is a pro-Trump, far-right, anti-government group that considers itself part of the militia movement charged to protect the country and defend the constitution. The group tries to recruit members from among active or retired military, first responders, or police.

Their leader has spouted vast conspiracy theories on his blog, accused Democrats of stealing the election, previously threatened violence if it was necessary on Election Day during an interview with far-right conspiracist Alex Jones and said his group would be armed to protect the White House if necessary, according to the ADL.

During the United States long Civil War, no Confederate battle flag came within the shadow of the US Capitol, but on Wednesday, an insurrectionist carried one right through its halls.

Photographers captured a man carrying it past the portraits of abolitionist Charles Sumner andslaveholder John Calhoun.

The flag was always a symbol of support for slavery. After World War II, it became a prominent symbol of Jim Crow and segregation, Pitcavage says not surprisingly, it is a popular symbol among white supremacists even outside the United States.

A rioter cloaks himself in an America First flag with the logo of the podcast by far-right commentator Nick Fuentes. Fuentes attended the event at the Capitol, but was photographed remaining outside the Capitol building.

America First was also a slogan President Trump used in describing his foreign policy. Its adoption was criticized by the ADL, which said it had an anti-Semitic use seeking to keep the US out of World War II.

The ADL says Fuentes is part of the groyper army, which the ADL calls a white supremacist group.

While the group and leaderships views align with those held by the white supremacist alt right, groypers attempt to normalize their ideology by aligning themselves with Christianity and traditional values ostensibly championed by the church, including marriage and family, the ADL explains. Like the alt right and other white supremacists, groypers believe they are working to defend against demographic and cultural changes that are destroying the true America a white, Christian nation.

A rioter inside the Capitol wore a Camp Auschwitz sweatshirt. The bottom of the shirt reads Work brings freedom, which is the rough translation of the words Arbeitmacht frei on the gates of the Nazi concentration camp. Auschwitz was the largest and most infamous Nazi concentration camp, where about 1.1 million people were killed during World War II.

Pitcavage says he believes the shirt came from the now-defunct website Aryanwear. The design, which has been around for about 10 years according to Pitcavage, has been popping up on differing websites in recent weeks, though it is often taken down when a complaint is made.

A social media image shows Nationalist Social Club stickers on what appears to be US Capitol Police equipment Its unclear when the photo was taken, but it was posted Wednesday in a Telegram chat the group uses, which includes a Nazi symbol as part of their name.

NSC, apparently a word play on the National Socialists or Nazi party, is a neo-Nazi group that has regional chapters in both the United States and across the globe, according to the ADL. It is unclear if the sticker on the right refers to a New England chapter, or because the group originally called itself the New England Nationalists Club.

NSC members see themselves as soldiers at war with a hostile, Jewish-controlled system that is deliberately plotting the extinction of the white race, according to the ADL. Their goal is to form an underground network of white men who are willing to fight against their perceived enemies through localized direct actions.

There are still many questions about how exactly the attack on the Capitol happened and who led the charge. But the calls for overthrowing the government and for a civil or race war have long been rallying cries in far-right circles.

The shirts worn by these men on the Capitol grounds on Wednesday show there was at least an intention to commemorate the day. They wore pre-printed shirts, referencing Trumps signature Make America Great Again slogan, alongside the words Civil war and the date of the event that turned into insurrection.

Many commenters in far-right forums have written since the attack, that this is just the beginning of that civil war that many of them have long desired.

Update note: This story has been updated with new CNN reporting on the men pictured in orange hats who say they are affiliated with the Proud boys.

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Decoding the extremist symbols and groups at the Capitol Hill insurrection - ABC17News.com

Lawmakers Fear More Violence Ahead Of Inauguration Day : Insurrection At The Capitol: Live Updates – NPR

Posted By on January 12, 2021

At a bus stop on Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest in Washington, D.C., a notice from the FBI seeks information about people pictured during the riot at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday. Al Drago/Getty Images hide caption

At a bus stop on Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest in Washington, D.C., a notice from the FBI seeks information about people pictured during the riot at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday.

The violence at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday was unprecedented in modern U.S. history but some pro-Trump extremists are promising it was just a taste of things to come.

"Many of Us will return on January 19, 2021, carrying Our weapons, in support of Our nation's resolve, towhich [sic] the world will never forget!!!" one person wrote on Parler, a site friendly to right-wing extremists. "We will come in numbers that no standing army or police agency can match."

That post was one of dozens spotted by the Alethea Group, which tracks online threats and disinformation. Various virtual fliers circulating on social media promise an "armed march" on Capitol Hill and in every state capital a few days before the inauguration. Other posts promise violence on Inauguration Day itself. One post encourages supporters to meet in D.C. specifically to prevent President-elect Joe Biden from entering the White House.

It's unclear how serious the threats of more violence are, but the continued determination of the president's most die-hard supporters to fight what they incorrectly perceive as an unfair election has some members of Congress wondering: Will the insurrection continue? And how can they stop it?

"What happened on Jan. 6, this past Wednesday, might not be the end of the insurrection, but the beginning," Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi of Illinois told NPR's Weekend Edition.

"We need to be concerned," said Krishnamoorthi, a Democrat who is a member of the House Intelligence committee. Krishnamoorthi says he didn't anticipate how large the crowd outside the Capitol would become or that "the president would incite this mob to march on the Capitol to 'go wild' and instigate the insurrection."

"But we, at this point, have to be wiser to what's possible and we have to prepare accordingly," he said. "Our democracy will be OK; we just have to defend the Constitution and our country at all costs, at this point."

The Washington Post reports that FBI agents are investigating whether some of the Capitol rioters intended not just to disrupt the certification of the Electoral College votes, but also to capture or kill lawmakers. "Tell Pelosi we're coming for that [expletive]!" one rioter screamed at law enforcement. Others chanted, "Hang Mike Pence!"

Five people died in Wednesday's violence, including a Capitol police officer. And Krishnamoorthi is just one of several lawmakers who worry about what might be coming next.

Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, warned Saturday that he was notified of a "disturbing report of a death threat" received Friday by the Iowa Democratic Party. "Threats like this & violence are UNACCEPTABLE," he tweeted.

The likelihood of more violence is one of the reasons Twitter permanently suspended President Trump's account. "Plans for future armed protests have already begun proliferating on and off-Twitter, including a proposed secondary attack on the US Capitol and state capitol buildings on January 17, 2021," Twitter wrote.

Twitter was particularly concerned by a Trump tweet indicating he wouldn't attend the inauguration. That message "may also serve as encouragement to those potentially considering violent acts that the Inauguration would be a 'safe' target."

Although plans for more armed demonstrations are generally in their early stages, the potential for violence is very real, Alethea Group says. "We're in a tinderbox situation right now," Alethea Group's vice president of analysis, Cindy Otis, told NPR. "Communities online that either participated in Wednesday's violence or supported it are threatening that it was only the beginning of what they have long claimed is an inevitable civil war or revolution."

Otis, a former CIA analyst, says that extremist groups were likely encouraged by seeing how relatively easy it seemed to be to overtake the Capitol building and how close participants were able to get to political officials whom they see as enemies.

"One would hope that a siege on the Capitol building planned and organized in public view would inspire more preparation by the relevant agencies," she added.

Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of the Anti-Defamation League, told CNN that the group was seeing online "chatter" from white supremacists online who feel "emboldened" by the current moment. "We fully expect that this violence could actually get worse before it gets better," he said.

Some state legislatures are also concerned about the potential for violence. In the wake of the Capitol insurrection, Florida lawmakers have proposed a measure that would increase penalties for people arrested during a violent protest.

"If you injure a police officer during that period of time, you will go to jail for at least six months," Florida House of Representatives Speaker Chris Sprowls told Fox News. "If you are arrested during an aggravated riot situation, you will spend the night in jail."

Despite heightened security concerns, Biden still plans to be inaugurated on the steps of the Capitol on Jan. 20. "We are confident in our security partners who have spent months planning and preparing for the inauguration, and we are continuing to work with them to ensure the utmost safety and security of the president-elect," a senior Biden inauguration official told The Washington Post.

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Lawmakers Fear More Violence Ahead Of Inauguration Day : Insurrection At The Capitol: Live Updates - NPR

Local filmmakers new documentary A Long Journey: The Hidden Jews of the Southwest to air on KPBS – Del Mar Times

Posted By on January 10, 2021

Oceanside filmmaker Isaac Artensteins new documentary, A Long Journey: The Hidden Jews of the Southwest chronicles the journey of the Sephardic Jews of New Mexico and the Southwest as well as the northern Mexican border town Ciudad Juarez. The documentary, which will air on KPBS on Monday, Jan. 11 at 7 p.m., examines how they found their ancient roots and returned to the Jewish faith.

Little is written in American history books about the secret or crypto Jews of the Southwest, and many people do not know much about them. Some of the ancestors of present day New Mexicans, for example, were Conversos or secret Jews who came to New Mexico when it was being colonized by Spain. During the time of the inquisition, the Conversos were Jews who pretended to convert to Catholicism to avoid being killed. Some of the conversos really did convert, but many continued practicing their Sephardic Jewish traditions in secret in their new land for generations, sometimes without even knowing why.

There is the story of Tim Herrera, a cowboy, New Mexican cattle rancher, and proud Jew. Although not everyone in his mostly Catholic family approved, he rediscovered his Sephardic Jewish roots and converted to Judaism as did his wife and children. He embraced his faith and roots so strongly that he is currently in the process of moving to Israel as he wants to bring his experience as a rancher to the Holy Land and raise cattle there. Herrera is one of various Sephardic New Mexicans who have embraced Judaism, a theme the documentary explores.

Artenstein and his crew traveled throughout New Mexico and southwest Texas to explore the world of the descendants of the crypto Jews and how many of them are exploring their family trees and coming back to Judaism, not always an easy feat. First, they have to research their ancestors and find the documentation that shows that they are descendants of Sephardic Jews. In fact, the Jewish Federation of New Mexico is one of the leaders in confirming a Sephardic background. Next, some have to contend with families who, like Herreras family, are dismayed that they are leaving the Catholic Church.

While filming, Artenstein and his crew met and interviewed many interesting characters starting with cowboy Herrera. There is the scholar Ron D. Hart, who wrote the companion book for the film. There is the artist Charlie Carrillo, a Santero (one who draws saints or retablos) whose work is inspired by Spanish Jewish and Catholic imagery. Although Carrillo is Catholic, he is proud of the Sephardic roots many New Mexicans have. There is Blanca Carrasco, who speaks honestly about grappling with not feeling accepted by some of the congregants at her previous synagogue and her road to Judaism.One of the most charismatic of all the people interviewed is Stephen Leon, the Rabbi Emeritus of Congregation BNai Zion in El Paso, Texas. A warm and jovial Ashkenazi Jew from New Jersey, he has made it his lifes mission to serve the Sephardic community of El Paso and also Ciudad Juarez across the border. He helped many in their conversion and assimilation.

This documentary is also worthy because it can be the catalyst for different discussions, including the history and traditions of Sephardic Jews in the Southwest. In the United States, much more is known about Ashkenazi Jews.

Cowboy Tim Herrera on horseback.

(Courtesy)

Finally, up until last year, the Spanish government was offering Spanish citizenship to those who could prove they had Sephardic blood. There was a rush of Jews from around the world that coveted Spanish citizenship who applied to the program. Many researched their ancestry to prove they had Sephardic blood and were able to obtain the citizenship. Some of this is discussed in the film.

The photography in the documentary is stunning, especially the aerial views. It gives the viewer a sense of the cultural and national landscape, especially New Mexico. Artenstein worked with his other long-time collaborator, his director of cinematography, Sergio Ulloa.

Artenstein is also known for his films Tijuana Jews and To the Ends of the Earth, A Portrait of Jewish San Diego. His website is http://www.cinewest.net.

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Local filmmakers new documentary A Long Journey: The Hidden Jews of the Southwest to air on KPBS - Del Mar Times

The Hidden Meanings of Ladino Music and Poetry – Jewish Journal

Posted By on January 10, 2021

Fifteen years ago, when I was living in Los Angeles, I never imagined that the provocative questions I had about the hidden meanings of Ladino music and poetry would take me to working and teaching at Cambridge University, where I find myself today.

My own Sephardi background and ancestry from northern Morocco were always present, propelling me in my journey. As a performer of Ladino music in the Los Angeles area, I directed a choir founded by members of the Sephardic Havurah from Sephardic Temple Tiferet Israel. I spent my Shabbat dinners with a group of Canadian and Israeli Moroccans, and I went to synagogue in what was an almost private shtibl recreating a Moroccan synagogue on the corner of Olympic and La Cienega. It was clear to me that no matter where in the world a small Moroccan community formed, the transmission of its culture and identity remained strong.

My experiences and perceptions drastically changed when I was awarded a Senior Fulbright Research Fellowship to Tangier to study the Judeo-Spanish music of Northern Morocco in an obscure language that nobody talked about Haketia, or Moroccan Judeo-Spanish.

Since then, collecting, researching and performing the music of the Jews of Morocco has consumed my waking hours. Suddenly, I was able to hear the songs of my maternal ancestors, which had been almost completely forgotten after they emigrated to South America in the nineteenth century. I reconnected to an ancient part of my own history, which prompted a slew of questions: How does one enter the unspoken messages of a communitys subconscious through its music? How can I, as a researcher and performer, transmit the depth and beauty of this millenary communitys sounds especially when the news cycle and political concerns dominate the discourse?

I began my research by investigating the songs that Moroccan Jews sung to their children while putting them to sleep, the soft humming of a woman preparing Shabbat dinner and the melodies sung around the Shabbat table or during Havdalah. These are the songs that generations carry with them across their migrations, forming the sonic backbone of Moroccan Jewish communities in Madrid, Toronto, Caracas and Paris.

In contrast to the celebratory public music that Jews sing at Muslim and Jewish weddings and on national television and radio, these private repertoires tell another story. They are usually stories of belief in tsaddikim, humorous or satiric stories from the communitys history or fictional depictions of violent episodes following a breach of the strict boundaries around womens sexuality and marital faithfulness. These songs tell the inner story of who the Jews are for the Jews not who they are for their Muslim friends and neighbors.

These songs tell the inner story of who the Jews are for the Jews.

During the ten years I lived in Morocco, certain pieces of my life went into fast forward: I married a Jewish music producer from Casablanca, finished a Ph.D. at the Sorbonne in Paris, had three children, started a sound archive (KHOYA: Jewish Morocco Sound Archive), founded a Jewish film festival and sang for ambassadors, counselors to the palace, ministers and diplomats, artists, filmmakers and national festivals of diversity.

And what I discovered in those ten years was that music in Morocco is split along gendered lines. Only men or non-marriageable women sing the public sphere repertoires in the public sphere whereas the reputable matriarchs of the generation transmit music in the private sphere. This tradition brings the message of Jewish transmission and continuity squarely onto the laps of women singers. They sing about sexual boundaries, fertility and love of God. I have been fortunate enough to witness a grandmother sing a wedding song to her grandson while wrapping a ribbon around a dollop of henna on his palm on the morning of his Bar Mitzvah; and I have watched an aunt sing a humorous song about a difficult mother-in-law to a young bride on the night of her mikveh immersion.

In these intimate moments of transition between life cycle periods, womens singing infuses the younger generation with the bracha, or baraka in Moroccos Arabic (blessing), they need to protect and bless their lives. Surprisingly (or not), the communitys soundtrack has a varied playlist: Hebrew liturgical music as well as Judeo-Spanish, Judeo-Arabic and Judeo-Amazigh humorous and moralistic songs. Moroccan Jews listen, sing and dance to a splendid porousness of classic Moroccan Andalusian; popular chaabi music; French, Spanish, Israeli, Latin American, American and British pop; and the songs of dith Piaf, Abdel Wahab, Enrico Macias, Sarita Montiel and John Lennon confirming that a very Jewish cosmopolitanism and multilingualism is ever present.

A few months after receiving my Ph.D. in Arts, Literature and Civilization, I applied to a research position at Cambridge University to form part of a team of researchers working on the musical encounters across the strait of Gibraltar. I proposed focusing on the use of the Jewish voice in the regions musical and cultural diplomacy. I got the job and have been in Cambridge since 2018. Fittingly, my college affiliation is with Peterhouse, Cambridges oldest college, founded in 1287 on a Jewish merchants land only three years before the expulsion of the Jews from England. Tradition, ritual, knowledge and Judaism continue to intermingle in my Cambridge life.

In the Spring of 2021, I will build the pilot project for the KHOYA archive, an online exhibit of Jewish Saharan womens songs for birth funded by Cambridge Universitys Arts and Humanities Impact Fund. The exhibit will demonstrate how womens songs of the private sphere are at the heart of deep ancestral identity transmission. Other womens songs, which I recently released on Spotify, do the same, they include:

Fifteen years ago, I thought that the synagogue held the deepest part of Jewish transmission in Morocco. But today, I know it to be the songs from home. I can only imagine what the next fifteen years will bring in my quest for the musical heart of our people.

Dr. Vanessa Paloma Elbaz is a Research Associate at the Faculty of Music of the University of Cambridge. She has a Ph.D. from the Center for Middle Eastern and Mediterranean Studies of Sorbonne Paris Cit University and was a Senior Fulbright Research Fellow to Morocco. She has been described by the New York Times as a kind of one-woman roving museum of her own.

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The Hidden Meanings of Ladino Music and Poetry - Jewish Journal


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