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Lipstadt and Eisen sign on to roster of those who minimize the Holocaust – JNS.org

Posted By on December 30, 2020

(December 28, 2020 / JNS) The acrimony between never-Trumpers and pro-Trumpers has generated some fiery accusations from both sides. As a Jew who admires what President Donald Trump has done in the interest of the United States to promote peace in the Middle East and to bring security to Israel, but who is appalled by his extravagant narcissism and capriciousness, I tolerate what many regard as extreme abuse hurled in print at Trump and his supporters. Hardened by years of courtroom battles, and the charges and counter-charges made during hotly contested litigation, I calmly read aggressively expressed opinions with which I disagree. Proof is that I even continue to subscribe to The Washington Post.

But the Post published on Dec. 23 a reprehensible and revolting opinion piece that exceeds even my high tolerance level. It is called Denying the Holocaust Threatens Democracy. So Does Denying the Election Results by Deborah Lipstadt and Norman Eisen.

Both are names well-known to American Jewry. Lipstadt is a professor of Holocaust studies who first made a reputation more than 20 years ago when she was sued in England by a notorious Holocaust denier. After an internationally publicized trial in which, to her credit, she stood fast and presented evidence proving that he had distorted history, Lipstadt was vindicated in a 349-page decision by the British judge.

Eisen is a Harvard-trained lawyer whose expertise includes legal ethics. His mother is an Auschwitz survivor. He was a law-school classmate of former President Barack Obama, who appointed him in 2011 to be U.S. Ambassador to the Czech Republic. Eisen proudly arranged a kosher kitchen in the ambassadorial residence in Prague and is a member of an Orthodox synagogue in downtown Washington.

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Touting their Jewish credentials and Holocaust expertise and experience, Lipstadt and Eisen opine that contesting the results of the presidential election parallels Holocaust denial. They graciously acknowledge that Trump is not Adolf Hitler, but claim that the comparison is correct because both Hitler and Trump adopted the propaganda technique of the big lie and serve antidemocratic political ends.

Democracy denial, they declare, is equivalent to Holocaust denial.

To say that this cheapens the memory of the 6 million who were exterminated in the Holocaust is a gross understatement. Comparing the Nazis genocide to some criticized contemporary conduct is a sophisticated form of Holocaust denial. Milder comparisons than the Lipstadt-Eisen analogy have met universal condemnation. Even Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) had to provide an implausible gloss for an extreme statement she made in June 2019 comparing American detention camps at the Mexican border to concentration camps. I would be surprised if Lipstadt and Eisen disagreed with the criticism of a Jewish Community Relations Council that Ocasio-Cortezs statement diminishes the evil intent of the Nazis to eradicate the Jewish people.

Does contesting a presidential election in a democratic society by resorting to the courts, to elected legislators, to the media and to the public amount to a crime against humanity on the scale of the Holocaust? As one who fled from Poland (as a 3-year-old carried by my parents) and who lost three grandparents in the Holocaust, I would not have believed that any rational human beingmuch less a collaboration of two distinguished Jews, one of whom has exploited her study of the Holocaust to gain international renowncould stoop so low. By publishing this rant with a blatant political bias, two otherwise renown American Jews have engaged in shameful Holocaust denial.

Nathan Lewin is a criminal-defense attorney with a Supreme Court practice who has taught at Georgetown, Harvard, University of Chicago, George Washington and Columbia law schools.

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Lipstadt and Eisen sign on to roster of those who minimize the Holocaust - JNS.org

The War Against the Haredim – City Journal

Posted By on December 30, 2020

In late 2014, I met with Naftuli Moster, a bright and charismatic graduate student at Hunter College who grew up in Brooklyns Hasidic community. He was interested in studying Hasidic parents attitudes toward secular (nonreligious) educationan area that I have long researched and written about.

I gave him the best guidance I could: how to write a survey, how to get buy-in from the community, whether to use Yiddish or English, and how to ensure that his sample was as representative as possible.

I eventually realized that his aim was not data collection. A month later, the New York Times reported that Moster was suing New York City and the state to force schools to provide more secular education. Over the last five years, Moster has managed to put in motion multiple lawsuits and countersuits, launch a spirited media campaign, and persuade New York State officials to pass new, unprecedented education guidelines regulating private education. Panicked supporters of the schools (called yeshivas) have responded by holding up the state budget in Albany and coordinating a letter-writing campaign opposing the proposed regulations.

Supporters of Mosters organization, Young Advocates for Fair Education (YAFFED), claim that secular education is a matter of basic human rights. Yeshiva education, they claim, dooms students to a life of poverty and despair. Hasidic and other ultra-Orthodox (or Haredi) opponentsrepresented formally by Parents for Educational and Religious Liberty (PEARLS)see these intrusive regulations as an unprecedented assault on their religious way of life.

Considering that 170,000 students are currently enrolled in Jewish private schools in New York110,000 of them in Hasidic schoolsthis issue carries major repercussions for both the Jewish community and the city of New York more broadly. The states actions call into question the very idea of private education in the United States, as parents educational choices may no longer matter in the face of state mandates. This has particular significance during a time of increased conflict over public education in the wake of Covid-19, as parents are stuck with public schools that wont open and are frequently turning to private alternatives. Moreover, this conflict has unfolded amid a growing strain of anti-Semitism in New York City and its suburbsmaking this an existential issue for Haredim, who feel that their way of life is under threat and, with it, perhaps their lives themselves.

Orthodox Judaism in the United States comprises two major strains: Modern Orthodoxy and Haredi (or ultra-) Orthodoxy. Modern Orthodox Jews observe Jewish law but also engage robustly with contemporary culture and society. In contrast, Haredimmeaning those who tremble before Godreject secular culture and values. They mediate their participation in secular society through numerous barriersreligious mandates, educational and occupational choices, language, and dress, among othersand thereby maintain a complex balance of engagement and separation. American Haredim make up the largest and most rapidly growing Orthodox denomination; the Orthodox Union Center for Communal Research estimates that roughly 40 percent of Haredi Jews under age 20 in New York speak Yiddish as a first language.

Ive spent my academic career trying to understand how education (boys education, in particular) helps shape American Haredi communities. Both the content and structure of boys elementary schools make religious study and practice an all-encompassing reality for students. Secular education comes in a distant second, intended only to help students eventually support themselves in jobs, function in daily life, and participate as citizens in society. (Not obligated by religious study to the same extent as boys, girls receive far more secular education; the lawsuits target boys schools only.)

Every Haredi community decides for itself how much secular education is necessary. Some yeshivas provide secular studies extensive enough to help their students perform well on New York States Regents exams. These schools usually (but not always) belong to the Yeshivish branch of ultra-Orthodoxy (think of men in fedoras and short jackets).

Hasidim, adherents of an originally populist religious movement that developed in eighteenth-century Eastern Europe (from where they adopted their distinctive frocks and fur hats), are more conservative and cloistered in several ways. They speak Yiddish as a first language; most of their schools offer less secular education; and they are (mostly) more opposed to higher education than Yeshivish Haredim.

Boys education among both branches of Haredim is intense. By middle school, students often begin the day at 7:30 AM with study and prayer services and end only at 5:30 or 6:00 PM. In high school, boys continue to study until late at night9:30 PM or even later.

Religious studies typically consist of learning to read and translate biblical and mishnaic Hebrew, chumash (Bible) and Talmud, Jewish law and custom (halakha), ethical instruction, and prayer. By contrast, only core secular subjects are offered (math, language arts, civics/history, and science), and many schools do not extend these subjects past elementary school. In some Hasidic elementary schools, the subject matter is even more constrained, focusing only on math and language arts.

Some ex-Haredim, and especially ex-Hasidim (including Naftuli Moster), have left their communities following significant personal or family trauma, and an increasingly large group have written tell-all booksso many, in fact, that the ex-Hasidic memoir has become a genre. Ex-Hasidim have also been the subjects of numerous books and articles, both scholarly and popular. As unusually accessible accounts of a closed community otherwise hard to penetrate, their writing offers the only information about contemporary Hasidic life for many outsiders. This lack of understanding among the general public has helped YAFFED make its case. The rapid success of this organization (led by ex-Hasidim) is due partly to the fact that most state and city officials have no direct sources of data about these schools.

In 2015, YAFFED sent a letter to the city of New York listing 39 schools that it alleged were failing to provide a substantially equivalent education to that of public schoolsas required under New York State law. The state does not make clear what substantially equivalent means, specifying only a handful of mandatory subjects: topics such as patriotism and citizenship, the U.S. Constitution, and health and safety. YAFFEDs letter argues that the secular education offered by religious schools is too minimal to meet these requirements.

The city should have been skeptical about YAFFEDs allegations when it turned out that only 28 of the 39 schools actually existed. One address contained in YAFFEDs 2015 list was for a butcher shop. Nevertheless, in 2018, the Department of Education appeared to agree with YAFFED and released highly specific and detailed guidelines governing the mandate of substantial equivalency. The guidelines dictated exactly which courses should be taught, for how long, and by whom. For example, the guidelines require English language arts, two units of study or the equivalent with a unit of study defined as at least 180 minutes of instruction per week throughout the school year. Later re-released as regulations, not just guidelines, these mandates required yeshivas to stop offering the type of religious education that defines their mission, since the increased hours required for secular education would reshape the school day. To give weight to the new regulations, MaryEllen Elia, then the state education commissioner, warned that parents who send their children to failing schools could be prosecuted under truancy lawslaws that themselves could trigger neglect charges, leading to the removal of children from their parents.

By middle school, students often begin the day at 7:30 AM with study and prayer services and end only at 5:30 or 6:00 PM.

The regulations have not yet been enforced. In late 2019, the city released its own report on the schools targeted by YAFFED, though it was based on investigations by state officials who dont understand the primarily Yiddish instruction offered in these schools and who were, moreover, operating without guidance from the state on the meaning of substantial equivalence. The Department of Education at first declined to address the regulations, perhaps in part because it experienced rapid turnover since they were passedlosing members to retirement, resignation, and, in one case, death. (Among those resigning were Elia and her acting replacement, Beth Berlin.) In summer 2020, the Department of Education pledged to hold a series of public meetings devoted to developing a working definition of substantial equivalency and to the development of procedures and timelines, as well as reporting requirements. These meetings, which began in November 2020, willbe used to publish new guidelines inJanuary 2021.

YAFFED is far from a dispassionate source of empirical data. Though the authors of the city report speak as if from firsthand experience, the report appears based largely on hearsay, common knowledge, and misunderstanding. Richard Carranza, chancellor of the New York City Department of Education, has noted that among the 28 schools targeted by YAFFEDs report, complainants had direct information about only 11.

Even where these 11 schools are concerned, accepting the claims of ex-Hasidim regarding their former schools is like relying on a divorc for information about his ex-wife. I have collected video data of history classes being taught in schools that the report claims offer no instruction in history, as well as of students engaging in mock-government exercisespassing bills and vetoing themin a school that the report claims offers no instruction in civics. The report dwells at length on the government funds that yeshivas receive while eliding the fact that most of this money consists of reimbursements for services required by the statefor example, student record-keeping. The report also neglects the fact that because Haredi students dont attend public schools, their schools actually end up saving, rather than costing, taxpayers moneyan overall net gain to the state budget of more than $2.75 billion annually. What emerges is a kind of conspiratorial manifesto that treats the ordinary financial workings of these schools as nefarious.

YAFFEDs argument for regulating secular education in Haredi yeshivas is that yeshiva education is a form of child abusesomething so egregious that it should not be tolerated, no matter what religious beliefs underpin it. Why, then, do parents pay thousands of dollars to send their children to these schools? YAFFEDs answer: Haredi parents are too ignorant and cowed to break free from their leaders dictates. As one ex-Hasid, Shlomo Noskow, wrote in a recent article: My parents had my best interest in mind, but they acted like cogs in a system, following community norms. Hasidic Rabbis and community leaders set the norms, including school curricula. But the developing mind of a child shouldnt be restricted to religious studies, regardless of religion.

Yet the assumptions underlying Noskows claimthat religious studies stunt the mind and that only ignorance can explain parents commitment to this educational systemare astounding to anyone who has ever spent real time in a yeshiva classroom.

Haredi religious studies are exceptionally complex and stimulating. Religious studies may conjure visions of catechism memorization, ritual practice, or pulpit training. But in the Haredi context, yeshiva religious education focuses on the kinds of close textual study typical of advanced college-humanities courses and fosters many of the skills that current education research recognizes as most valuable: reasoning from evidence, resolving multiple perspectives, contextualizing information, and studying independently. Talmudic material is intricate, difficult, and highly complex, yet by my estimation, 80 percent to 90 percent of kids in the schools Ive observed (including four on YAFFEDs list of failing schools) are able to study Talmud semi-independently by the time they leave eighth grade.

YAFFED has claimed that the average yeshiva student cant speak English, has no means to get a job, and lives in poverty and poor health, forced to rely on government assistance. But it simply isnt true that the average yeshiva graduate cant speak English. And even at the bottom end of the distribution, weakness with English isnt specifically the result of poor schooling. As an outside observer, what strikes me most about secular classes in these schools is not their appalling weakness but their banal (and, in some spots, mediocre) normalcy. Some secular teachers in Hasidic yeshivas are phenomenal, while some are poor; some classes appear organized and on task, while others are all over the place; some students are way below grade level, while others are at or even above grade level. None of this is much different from many of our countrys public schools. The real reason Hasidim in some sects speak English poorly lies outside the classroom: the use of Yiddish has taken on deep religious meaning for Hasidim. This is a matter of culture rather than of education. In Hasidic sects where English is also used outside of school, students speak, read, and write well; in those that speak no English outside of school, despite their relatively similar hours of secular instruction, students struggle with basic English competency.

According to city records, in 201516, proficiency rates for eighth-grade English Language Learner (ELL) students enrolled in New York City public schools in District 14, which includes Williamsburgwhere many Satmar Hasidim livewas 0 percent for math and language arts. In 201617, those numbers jumped to 2.1 percent and 1.4 percent, respectively. Non-ELL public school students dont fare much better. In math, for example, proficiency rates in District 14 were 7.6 percent in 201617.

In this context, its hard to argue that parents who send children to Hasidic schools are committing child abuse. This is not to criticize public schools, which often perform the best they can, given their many constraints. But it suggests that if all the Hasidic parents in New York City moved their children to public schools, we might end up with lower proficiency rates for Hasidic kids than we have now.

YAFFEDs claims about Hasidic unemployment and poverty likewise dont hold water. They proceed from the assumption that Hasidim live in poverty because their education is so poor that they cannot get jobs to support themselves. But this is clearly not true. OJPAC (a public-action group supporting the Orthodox community) recently pulled census data for Kiryas Joel, an all-Hasidic village near New York City that is home to Satmar Hasidim, who pursue the least amount of secular education of any American Hasidim. They found employment numbers resembling the New York average. In 2017, 70 percent of residents were employed, compared with 75 percent in New York overall; the median income for year-round, full-time workers was $50,613, compared with $54,262 in New York overall; and 32 percent of year-round, full-time workers made more than $75,000, compared with 33.7 percent overall. Moreover, as the founder of OJPAC, Yossi Gestetner, recently pointed out, because the Hasidim are so young on average (82 percent of adults in Kiryas Joel are under 45), incomes should be low relative to the average, as maximum earnings tend to come later in life.

While these data capture only Kiryas Joel (its one of the only places where one can do such an analysis, since it is a completely Hasidic village), most other Hasidic communities are less insular (and offer more secular education) than Satmar, making it unlikely that they earn less on average, especially not for reasons related to education. The only school that I know of that offers no secular education conducted a survey of eighth-grade graduates currently between the ages of 30 and 35 and found that 91 percent were gainfully employed (they shared these data on the condition of anonymity).

Given the religious desire that Haredi men have to continue Talmud study throughout their lives (pushing them away from standard employment) and the extremely high birthrate in Haredi households (that justifies public assistance even when earning close to $100,000), standard metrics of poverty are often profoundly misleading. Add to that the complete absence of violent crime in their communities, and the incredibly high levels of social cohesion and trust, and what we see is not a picture of poverty and despair but one of the last truly functioning communities, in a country where people are increasingly bowling alone.

As a country, weve been here before. In the late 1800s, the U.S. government began forcing American Indian children to attend state boarding schools, against their parents wishes. The assumption was that if these children were properly educatedshorn of their long hair, given civilized clothes, forbidden from speaking their native tongues, given white names in place of their Indian nameseducators might successfully kill the Indian, and save the man. Whole cultures were lost as a result of this misguided state intervention, which the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 eventually declared to have been against the best interests of Indian children partly because it bulldozed over the unique values of Indian culture.

There are, of course, many differences between this history and the attempts to reform New Yorks Haredi yeshivas. But this history is worth recalling because it parallels the Haredi experience. They, too, refuse to change their names, language, and dress, and see government-imposed education as an attempt to undermine their religious beliefs and to change their way of life radically. The norms and mores of modern society, including many of those embedded in standard school curricula, are profoundly at odds with Haredi religious beliefs. And the raison dtre for these schools existence is a form of religious study that requires intensive, high-level, textual skills that take time and effort to acquireto a degree that would be impossible were the state to impose more hours of secular education. Government regulation of these schools would involve regulating an essential (perhaps, the essential) element of Haredi religious life.

For Hasidim, more is at stake than just schooling. This community views education as critical in establishing a religious community that will be capable of living within American society without being subsumed by it. Its easy for outsiders to ask what could be wrong with requiring students to devote more time to English, but from a Hasidic perspective the problems are obvious. Somehow, the most liberal and tolerant members of our society can see American Indians as worthy of cultural protection (albeit belatedly) but cannot accept that Hasidim might deserve similar consideration.

Critics of Haredi education buy in to a vision of public education as unquestionably normative. Yet our system of public education is relatively new, in a historical sense, and not without its own considerable flaws, which critics who have grown up in Haredi communities lack the perspective to understand. With the zeal of converts, ex-Hasidim are quick to adopt new cultural norms without any sense that they, too, are contingent. In reality, every choice that a parent makes has an opportunity cost, and no perfect choices exist: ex-Hasidim angry about the handicaps that they believe Hasidic schools have imposed on them overlook both the tangible benefits that they may have received from this education and these schools relative position within the vast American educational landscape.

In portraying the yeshivas as powerful aggressors and their students as powerless victims, YAFFED is seeking to invoke the might of the state against a vulnerable minority group. Disturbingly, it appears that the state has been receptive to the idea. As a lawyer for the New York State Education Department reportedly argued in defense of the regulations: these rules were imposed for the voiceless child who can be conscripted at their parents will.

The move against Hasidic schools comes in the context of a massive uptick in anti-Semitic hate in New York City and its environs, uniquely directed at visibly Haredi Jews. This hatred has manifested itself across a wide range of communities and contexts: from neighborhoods conspiring to keep Haredim out to daily physical attacks in Brooklyn to anti-Semitic murders and assaults in Jersey City and Monsey.

The reasons for anti-Haredi animus are complex, but coverage of Haredim in the media certainly hasnt helped. The average news consumer would not be faulted for drawing an impression of Haredim as reproducing unsustainably and destroying neighborhoods, while also being crooks, slumlords, moochers, and cheaters who live off state largesse without contributing anything.

The Covid-19 pandemic is particularly illustrative in this regard, as both the media and the mayor of New York treated Haredim with animus and prejudice, trading on the most vicious anti-Semitic stereotypes: Jews as spreaders of disease. In April, while crowds gathered in parks and other venues, Mayor Bill de Blasio specifically called out Hasidim for attending a revered leaders outdoor funeral. When asked about his mask-less attendance at a protest that violated his own guidelineswhile religious services remained shutteredhe asserted that the comparison was apples and oranges because (protests) had profound meaning and were all acting on the meaning of those protests. Evidently, religious services dont have profound meaning. While non-masked residents of non-Jewish neighborhoods were given masks by police, non-masked Hasidim were given tickets.

The Hasidic community was hit early and hard by the pandemic. Communal celebrations of the Purim holiday in mid-Marchjust before the public became fully aware of Covid-19unintentionally spread the disease far and wide weeks before the state and city began to implement shutdowns. During the early part of the pandemic, most (but not all) Haredi communities adhered to the guidelines, but as the 15-day lockdown moved into summer, many communities quietly resisted the mandates, opening synagogues and camps.

Explanationsfor this communal reaction arenot self-evident, even to those intimately familiar with these communities. The high value Haredim place on communal prayer and gatherings certainly played a role. So, too, did political affiliation; many Haredim supported President Trump, and they read and listen to media that have downplayed both the crisis presented by Covid-19 and the necessity of measures to contain it. The communitys high rates of infection early in the pandemic also appear to have influenced Haredi perceptions, with many Haredim believing that their communities have already achieved herd immunity.

The head of a large school in Borough Park told me in an interview that his sect organized antibody testing before the holiday of Shavuot at the end of May, and that 70 percent of men and 50 percent of women tested positive. At this point, he told me, I am only wearing a mask to make other people feel good, but I had it (Covid-19) in March, and I cant get it or transmit it. But when people attack us, nobody wants to wear it anymore, just for appearances sake.

One thing is clear, however: Hasidic resistance to the government mandates does not come from ignorance or backwardness, as many believe and as some news outlets have uncritically reported, relying on some of the same informants who have spearheaded the anti-yeshiva movement. The idea that Hasidim ignore mandates becauseas Naftuli Moster was quoted in the New York Times as claiming(they) have very little knowledge of science and dont even know what a cell is, is absurd. Haredim are some of the most sophisticated consumers of medical treatment and expertise in the country, something immediately apparent when one walks into any of the top-tier research hospitals in the New York area. When researchers needed convalescent plasma, it was Haredim (supposedly ignorant of the existence of cells) who spearheaded the campaign to donate, as many of them had already been infected in the first wave. Every Hasid knows everything about Covid at this point, the head of the Borough Park school told me. IgG, IgM antibodieswere experts.

The media misrepresentations are not just mistaken but damaging. They have likely helped exacerbate the problem they purport to explain, by fueling the perception within Haredi communities not only that state and city officials dont understand or value Haredi religious traditions and practices but also that they are actively hostile to them. This perception, in turn, has helped engender resentment and resistance among Haredim.

The response by Governor Andrew Cuomo and Mayor de Blasio during the holiday of Sukkot in early October illustrates how false perceptions of the community cause real harm. Without any real understanding of the Hasidic communitys values, beliefs, or attitudes toward health and safety, public officials condescendingly called out only Orthodox Jews as responsible for rising cases in New York city, imposing arbitrary, draconian lockdown measures without regard for Haredi religious life. Instead of working with community leaders, Governor Cuomo convened a conference call to lecture them, took no real questions from them, and then hours later gave a public press conference announcing the shutdown of religious gatherings right before a major holiday, something he had just promised community leaders he would not do on the call hours earlier. In response, many community members protested, some rioted, and the overall climate enabled abhorrent Haredi demagogues to rise to prominence.

Cuomos and de Blasios approach stands in stark contrast to the government response in Haredi Lakewood, New Jersey, where Governor Phil Murphy went out of his way to work hand-in-hand with community leaders, leading to exemplary Haredi adherence to government guidelines over Sukkot.

As the new school year got under way in September, the vast majority of Hasidic schools were open legally, in-person, with varying degrees ofdistancing and masking. And while there was an initial small uptick in Covid cases, as of late December those areas were no longer considered micro-clusters by the governors cluster-action initiative. Nonetheless, throughout the course of the pandemic, numerous news outlets have singled out Hasidim for special condemnation. (Just one of many examples: theBrooklyn Eagleran an AP story on subway mask scofflaws but swapped out the APs lead picture of a sleeping man for a different AP picture of Hasidim.)

This double standard has only increased anti-Semitism targeting Haredim. Throughout the late spring and early summer, Jewish media reported numerous instances of anti-Semitism directed at gatherings of Jews (passersby shouting, for example, Youre the reason why were getting sick), but non-Jewish media gave these cases scant attention. Reporters instead camped outside Jewish schools and bus routes to check whether Jewish children might be illicitly going to school, while ignoring the medical impact of mass protests. This last fact is supremely ironic, considering the baseline assumption of Haredi education critics: apparently, those parents willing to risk both the law and Covid-19 to send their kids to school are at the same time committing child abuse because they prefer their children uneducated and ignorant. In truth, however, what this really demonstrates (to the extent that there may have been illicit schools operating) is just how central religious education is to Haredi religious life.

I dont believe that the ex-Haredim I know, including Naftuli Moster, harbor anti-Semitic views. They are sincere and well-intentioned people who have experienced serious trauma and believe passionately that they are helping the Haredi community. I likewise dont believe that any of the outside contributors to the YAFFED report are anti-Semitic. Yet it is impossible to read YAFFEDs report on Hasidic educationor many of the organizations other public pronouncementswithout recognizing the same deeply offensive rhetoric commonly parroted in media coverage of Haredim. The report begins by stating: The average young Hasidic man leaves the yeshiva system completely unprepared to work inor interact withthe world outside his community. Dire warnings of explosive population growth follow, along with accusations that the Hasidim are directly harming the average New York taxpayer. The report warns of the grave consequences for the citizens of New York City and New York State were this problem to remain unchecked. The report cites misleading statistics to make it seem as if the schools are harming the average taxpayer and makes unsubstantiated accusations of financial fraud and cheating on state exams.

The consequences of such charges are not trivial. The murders in Jersey City prompted some angry neighbors to justify the attack because of the list of crimes that Hasidim supposedly engage inmost prominently, financial swindling. The report also explicitly brands Hasidim as un-American and other: In almost every respect they demonstrate a fidelity to maintaining customs tied with their diaspora and non-American roots. Or: The behavioral rules and values of secular society are necessarily considered of a lower order and sometimes even with contempt.

The reports appalling afterword, prepared by Marcia Hamilton, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, concludes that the Haredim are guilty of educational neglect, a term that she considers akin to child neglect and abuse. She compares the Haredim with Warren Jeffs and Mormons who practice polygamy, as well as with the prophet, Lee Kaplan, who went to jail for marrying Amish minor girls whom their parents gifted him. She concludes by calling for laws that would allow parents (such as the Hasidim) to be prosecuted for educational neglect.

YAFFEDs misinformation campaign is a tragedy for one final reason: we know much less than we should about Haredi, and especially Hasidic, schoolswhich means that we have no way to help those schools that want to improve. When I visit Hasidic schools, I find that school leaders are desperate for information and tools that might help them improve their secular education. The will is frequently therebut not at the expense of the communitys religious values. In order to understand how to helpeven just to identify what help is wantedwe need to understand the culture of the communities in question, to understand the role that education plays within that culture, and to be sensitive to the religious concerns that parents and teachers have. For those who genuinely want to improve education in Haredi communities, numerous pathways exist to bring it aboutas long as improved secular education is really the goal.

Sadly, however, it seems clear that none of this was ever really about education. Education has instead served as a proxy for the antipathy that many have for how the Hasidic community lives. While I do not blame ex-Hasidim for feeling as they do, I wonder about those with no connection to this community who are so quick to believe every calumny about Hasidic education. I suspect that as long as such complaints are framed as a matter of human rights, its easy for people to convince themselves that this is not about Hasidic culture. But lets recognize this campaign for what it is: an attempt to reeducateforcibly, if necessarya minority that does not want to abandon its religious beliefs.

Moshe Krakowski is director of the Azrieli Masters Program and an associate professor at Yeshiva University.

This is an updated version of the article that originally ran in City Journals Autumn 2020 print issue.

Top Photo: American Haredim make up the largest and most rapidly growing Orthodox denomination. (JOE KOHEN/AP PHOTO)

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The War Against the Haredim - City Journal

How To Overcome COVID Vaccine Hesitancy: Try Truth From Trusted Messengers : Shots – Health News – NPR

Posted By on December 30, 2020

A Hasidic man and medical workers cross paths near the Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, N.Y., in November. When public health messaging comes from community leaders, it's much more likely to be adopted, research on diverse groups finds. Spencer Platt/Getty Images hide caption

A Hasidic man and medical workers cross paths near the Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, N.Y., in November. When public health messaging comes from community leaders, it's much more likely to be adopted, research on diverse groups finds.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services booked an unusual guest interviewer for one of its public health events this fall: Shulem Lemmer, the first Hasidic singer to sign with a major record label.

Lemmer has no particular expertise in public health, but he grew up in Brooklyn, home to many ultraorthodox Jews like himself. He's seen as a trusted messenger in parts of the Hasidic community that, despite suffering a disproportionate number of hospitalizations and deaths from COVID-19, have on some occasions resisted New York's pandemic restrictions.

In the end, the interview never aired HHS changed its mind about having entertainers explain COVID-19. Still, public health experts say the idea of enlisting respected and well-known leaders to help explain the health message is exactly the right way to disarm and persuade skeptics and more crucial than ever this winter as cases and deaths from the coronavirus surge all across the U.S .

'Waving journal studies and talking points won't work"

"As we continue to talk to people about the virus, "waving journal studies and talking points won't work in many communities," says Robert Blendon, professor emeritus of public health, policy and political analysis at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

That's particularly true, Blendon notes, in ethnic and racial communities "that have a history of being demonized, lied to, or exploited in the U.S. when it comes to their health."

Dr. Warren Reuben, director of Alabama's Tuskegee University National Center for Bioethics in Research and Health, notes the lasting and continuing impact of generations of racism and racial disparities in health care that were underscored by the Tuskegee experiments on Black men in the 1930s, but didn't start or end there.

"Black and brown communities are being disproportionately impacted by COVID-19. We don't want to see a widening of the disparity because the vaccines don't have representation from people of color."

Dr. Leon McDougle, Ohio State University

"That history evokes fear in Blacks that translates into many being fearful of clinical trials and has them anxious about the coronavirus vaccines," Reuben says.

Persistent racism in health care is one reason the National Medical Association announced that it will be vetting vaccine data itself and publishing its conclusions.

"The times have called for this," says Dr. Leon McDougle, the NMA's president, who himself has signed up to be a clinical trial participant with NIH's COVID-19 Prevention Network. The network is conducting late-stage clinical trials on vaccines to prevent COVID-19, as well as on monoclonal antibodies for treatment.

Clergy consultants help get the word out

To increase participation by communities of color, the network has also created a faith initiative, which includes "faith ambassadors" and more than 30 clergy-consultants from the Black, Latinx and American Indian/Alaska Native communities to help get the word out.

"Black and brown communities are being disproportionately impacted by COVID-19," McDougle notes. "We don't want to see a widening of the disparity because the vaccines don't have representation from people of color."

According to a recent U.S. survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation, "about a quarter (27%) of the public remains vaccine hesitant, saying they probably or definitely would not get a COVID-19 vaccine even if it were available for free and deemed safe by scientists." That number jumped to 35% among Black Americans surveyed.

Dr. Georges Benjamin, the long-time executive director of the American Public Health Association, says today's public health workers would do well to borrow a strategy that helped stem the AIDS epidemic: tailoring the message to different constituencies. In that case, the health message first focused on safe sex in the gay community, he notes, and then, a couple of years later, added messaging on the risk of IV drug use as the virus moved into the heterosexual community.

Showing 'cultural humility' is vital to gaining trust

Crucially, to gain the trust of many different groups in the U.S., public health messengers must also demonstrate not just cultural awareness, but "cultural humility" says Eliseo J. Prez-Stable, director of NIH's National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities. Even well-intended programs sometimes miss the mark.

For example, a smoking cessation campaign Prez-Stable worked on years ago in the Latino community focused on the health of male smokers, but wasn't successful, he says, until the messaging changed to stress the health benefits for the smoker's wife and children if the men stopped smoking.

To make a public health message persuasive, personal stories from someone who is most like you are critically important, agrees Tom Frieden, a former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who now heads the global health initiative Resolve to Save Lives. To cut through skepticism, he says, public health campaigns need "trusted messengers and trusted messages."

Frieden points to Tips from Former Smokers, a CDC campaign he helped launch in 2012, that shared the personal stories of illness and death from tobacco users, as well stories of those who had quit successfully.

The multifaceted campaign is credited with helping a million smokers quit, and includes tailored online stories and videos from people who are African American, Native American, Asian American, Latino, LGBT, as well as one from veterans and another from people who grapple with mental illness.

"What we have to do is insure that the informal work force is inclusive of all of these communities," says Loyce Pace, the president and executive director of the Global Health Council, and a member of President-elect Joe Biden's COVID-19 task force.

"The best approach is for the states to find out who to reach out to in each tribe in order to gain the community's trust."

Dr. Mary Owen, director or the Center of American Indian and Minority Health, University of Minnesota

NIH aims to do just that with a new $12 million initiative launched in September the Community Engagement Alliance Against COVID-19 Disparities, that is hiring "messengers who live, work, and worship in the same communities" says Prez-Stable. These workers are leading outreach and engagement efforts in ethnic and racial minority communities disproportionately affected by the virus.

Dr. Mary Owen, director of the Center of American Indian and Minority Health at the University of Minnesota, says the impact of the coronavirus on Indian communities "is so devastating that it is absolutely critical that we do this right," and points to high uptake of the flu vaccine among Native Americans as the example that it can be done.

Owen, a member of the Tlingit nation, says a successful strategy for the COVID-19 vaccine must recognize that there are 574 distinct tribes, each with its own leaders and influencers. The best approach, she says, "is for the states to find out who to reach out to in each tribe in order to gain the community's trust."

Of course, not all Native people distrust the government, Owen notes, "but even a few folks not getting the vaccine is impactful in a population as small as ours."

Rita Carren, vice president for health at UnidosUS in Washington, D.C., notes that in many U.S. Latino communities her group works with, lay people who have been trained as community health workers promotoras de salud are trusted and already helping to dispel misinformation and misconceptions about COVID-19 and the vaccine needed to fight it.

"They live in the community and relate to the community in terms of language and experiences," Carren says.

Some communities have built the infrastructure for vaccine education over the past 10 months by already going beyond standard messaging. The Bay Area Regional Health Inequities Initiative, for example, based in Oakland, Calif., is a consortium of eleven local health departments in the culturally and racially diverse region who are working with more than 200 community partner organizations to focus on health and economic opportunity.

"BARHII was formed to address the durable, decade-wide gap in life expectancy that exists between communities in the Bay Area," explains Melissa Jones, executive director of the organization.

"That gap is the result of systemic factors, not individual choices," she says, "so BARHII and our members focus on systemic solutions: safe and secure housing, universal basic income, medical bias, well-paying jobs for all residents, and climate resilience in the face of extreme heat and wildfires."

The COVID-19 pandemic, she says, "has been a sobering demonstration of how Black and brown communities in particular are excluded from economic and social supports, and how centering their needs and concerns is essential in maintaining public health."

The standard CDC guidance to isolate in your own room and bathroom if you have COVID-19 symptoms won't work if your home is small and crowded, notes Jones, or if you are an essential worker living paycheck to paycheck or self-employed, so don't get sick-pay or if you don't have a home.

In neighborhoods that are largely Latino, BARHII's member health departments hired Spanish speaking community workers to get the word out, Jones says, rather than have case workers speak through a translator.

That helped them gain enough trust so that many community members who were asked to isolate themselves after contracting the virus or enter quarantine because they were exposed accepted the agency's help in finding temporary housing, food, and economic relief to make up for lost wages for that period.

All those interventions help stop the spread of the virus and stop the pandemic.

"Spanish speakers," Jones says, "use correct idioms, may know the person they are working with from the community, and understand specific fears such as worries that filling out forms for the vaccine could risk deportation for themselves if they are undocumented or for undocumented family members living with them."

McDougle and others note that while resistance to immunization must be addressed, most people all across the U.S. are actually eager to be vaccinated and help stop the pandemic.

"We know many in our community already have their sleeves rolled up," he says, and it can feel patronizing for anyone to assume otherwise.

Avrohom Weinstock, the chief of staff of Agudath Israel of America, an Orthodox Jewish umbrella group, says the ultraorthodox community "has always cared deeply about health whether it is forming and managing Hatzalah, a massive volunteer ambulance corps, or emerging as the largest donors of [convalescent] plasma, which has been used to treat the virus."

In early October, for example, says Weinstock, the organization helped give out 400,000 masks in the New York City area, and they were all gone within hours.

"The community has a lot of questions about the vaccine, based on a great deal of reading and community discussion. This is all very new," says Weinstock. "But if their own doctors can assure them it's safe and effective, then they are as motivated as any other group to be vaccinated and put the pandemic behind us."

Perhaps not surprisingly there is one trusted messenger in the U.S. who, community health leaders say, crosses many constituencies. Unsolicited, both the NMA's McDougle and Unidos' Carren invoke the name of Anthony Fauci director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and newly appointed chief medical adviser to President-elect Biden as someone deeply trusted in their communities.

Fran Kritz is a health policy reporter based in Washington, D.C., who has contributed to The Washington Post and Kaiser Health News. Find her on Twitter: @fkritz

See original here:

How To Overcome COVID Vaccine Hesitancy: Try Truth From Trusted Messengers : Shots - Health News - NPR

Why ‘Unorthodox’ scared Shira Haas and how she got over it – Los Angeles Times

Posted By on December 30, 2020

Hello! Im Yvonne Villarreal. Welcome to another edition of the companion newsletter to our recently launched The Envelope: The Podcast, where my cohost Mark Olsen and I bring you highlights from each weeks episode throughout awards season.

The Golden Globes drew criticism last week when it was reported that Lee Isaac Chungs Minari, one of this years most acclaimed American films, would be classified as a foreign-language film because its dialogue is primarily in Korean. The move means the film, a festival darling that tells the story of a Korean American family that moves to an Arkansas farm in the 1980s, will not compete in best picture categories. Stars Steven Yeun and Yeri Han will still be eligible in the leading drama actor categories.

You might remember a similar outcry erupted last year when Lulu Wangs The Farewell, which features mostly Mandarin dialogue, faced the same classification, igniting conversations about language and American-ness.

I have not seen a more American film than #Minari this year, Wang tweeted. Its a story about an immigrant family, IN America, pursuing the American dream. We really need to change these antiquated rules that characterizes American as only English-speaking.

According to the Golden Globes website, the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. stipulates that contenders in the best drama, comedy or musical categories must feature at least 50% English dialogue.

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On this weeks podcast, I spoke with the star of another celebrated project filmed largely in a language other than English, but with a foot firmly planted in the U.S.: Shira Haas, Emmy nominated for her role in Netflixs largely Yiddish-language limited series Unorthodox.

In the four-part series, Haas plays Esty Shapiro, a young woman raised in a Hasidic community in Brooklyn who flees an unfulfilling arranged marriage and her strict religious community to pursue a life in Berlin. Inspired by Deborah Feldmans memoir of the same name, Unorthodox was released in late March, just as the COVID-19 pandemic was taking its hold.

When I first got the script, I was so scared, Haas said. I thought to myself: How can I will I relate to a character and to a woman who is very different from me? I come from a different background, Im different from her. How will it be? And then I started reading it, and I suddenly forgot in a way where shes coming from It is a story about a specific community and about rituals and you cant ignore it, of course, but it is a universal story. I totally saw myself within Esty. This urge of finding yourself. Were all aiming to do that.

Alena Yiv, left, and Shira Haas in the film Asia.

(Gum Films)

Unorthodox wasnt the only performance from Haas that had folks talking this year. She also starred in the Israeli mother/daughter drama Asia, as a teenager living with a degenerative motor disease. The film had an online premiere at the 2020 Tribeca Film Festival, where Haas won best actress in an international narrative feature.

Thanks for reading/listening/subscribing. We have lots more to come. Upcoming guests include Kemp Powers for One Night In Miami and Soul, Radha Blank for The Forty-Year-Old Version and Hugh Grant for The Undoing.

Listen to the podcast here, and subscribe to The Envelope: The Podcast on Apple Podcasts or your podcast app of choice.

Read the original here:

Why 'Unorthodox' scared Shira Haas and how she got over it - Los Angeles Times

Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi will not run in Gantz’s party – Haaretz.com

Posted By on December 30, 2020

Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi announced on Wednesdays that he will not run with Benny Gantz's Kahol Lavan party in the upcoming election.

Ashkenazi said he is "taking time off to consider his options," and thanked Gantz for their partnership. Ashkenazi stressed that Kahol Lavan offered an alternative to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but decided to have an impact from within his government out of "national responsibility."

He added that "moving the discourse away from annexation" is what opened the window of opportunity for peace agreements.

Sources close to Ashkenazi said that he does not completely rule out the possibility that he will run on a different slate.

Ashkenazi's move was not just motivated by the party'slikely collapsein the upcoming March election, but also by tensions with Gantz about his leadership style, which he saw as uninclusive. He also expected Gantz to step aside and allow him to take the reins of the party in the next election.

Most of the lawmakers that are still part of Kahol Lavan do not expect that it will run in the March election on its own slate and that most members will quit the party by the time the parties must submit their final slates.

Ashkenazi's departure follows that of Justice Minister Avi Nissenkorn, who announced Tuesday that he is leaving the party.

Gantzdemanded that Nissenkorn resign from his role as justice minister, and is expected to take over the role himself.

Nissenkorn announced that he would be joining forces with Tel Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai, who is expected to announce his new party Tuesday evening.

Earlier Wednesday, former Israeli military chief Gadi Eisenkot announced that he will not be running in the upcoming election.

Eisenkot considered entering politics, and a long list of party leaders have reached out to the former chief of staff recent weeks including Gideon Saar, who was one of the sponsors ofthe lawthat would keep him out of the cabinet for now.

An election pollpublished in early December gave a party led by Eisenkot 15 Knesset seats that would also weaken the right-wing bloc.

Read more here:

Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi will not run in Gantz's party - Haaretz.com

MK Cotler-Wunsh quits Blue and White, says shes committed to continue serving – The Times of Israel

Posted By on December 30, 2020

MK Michal Cotler-Wunsh announced on Tuesday that she will not run as a candidate for Blue and White in the March elections, as the apparent disintegration of the party continued.

It is the role of responsible, honest leadership to identify, realize and represent the public in order to restore trust and renew hope, Cotler-Wunsh said in a statement. I am committed to continue serving, with courage and humility.

Cotler-Wunsh was only sworn into the Knesset in June, under the so-called Norwegian law that enables ministers to give up their positions as Knesset members in order to enable a different member of their party slate to take their spot in parliament.

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Her announcement came as Blue and White chairman Benny Gantz mulls his political future, with party officials reportedly giving him several more days to make a final decision on whether he intends to continue leading the party, merge with other parties, or quit politics altogether.

Alternate Prime Minister Defense Benny Gantz visits the Jerusalem Municipality on November 10, 2020. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

TV reports on Friday said Gantz remains committed to leading his nosediving party, though he may not have many colleagues with whom to run, as multiple members of the centrist alliance are planning to jump ship or quit politics as the slate hemorrhages support in the polls.

On Sunday, Gantz informed MKs Asaf Zamir and Miki Haimovich that they will not be included on the partys list for the March 2021 election due to their decision to vote against extending the budget deadline last week, ultimately causing the fall of the government.

Zamir and Haimovich were two of the three Blue and White MKs the third was Ram Shefa to vote against the budget extension, felling the bill by 49-47 votes. Their votes set the course for the dissolution of the government a day later, triggering elections the fourth in two years that will be held on March 23.

Senior lawmakers in the party, including Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi, Justice Minister Avi Nissenkorn and Science and Technology Minister Izhar Shay have decided that they will not remain with a Gantz-led Blue and White, Channel 12 reported. The party won 33 seats in Marchs elections, but is polling at only 5-6 seats now, and many analysts believe it will fail to win any seats at all in the upcoming elections.

Blue and White MKs Avi Nissenkorn (L) and Gabi Ashkenazi during a faction meeting at the Knesset on November 25, 2019. (Hadas Parush/Flash90)

A large number of other lawmakers in the party are also looking elsewhere, TV reports said, inquiring into the possibility of joining parties across the political spectrum, from Yair Lapids Yesh Atid in the center to Gideon Saars New Hope and Naftali Bennetts Yamina on the right, though it is unclear whether any of these three parties is interested in taking them.

A damning report by the Uvda investigative TV show on Thursday night further dented Gantzs already waning support, suggesting the Blue and White leader kept his campaign advisers in the dark for months during the 2019 elections that his cellphone containing highly personal information had been hacked by Iran, but spoke openly about it to other confidants, with the information eventually getting to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus campaign and the media.

The report further said that Blue and White spent NIS 500,000 in public funds at the CGI intel firm to keep quiet on Gantzs alleged extramarital affairs. It dropped heavy hints of an alleged sexual relationship between Gantz and two women, including the partys Omer Yankelevich, but stopped short of saying it outright.

Blue and White leader Benny Gantz (left) and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sign their unity government agreement on April 20, 2020 (courtesy)

Gantz entered politics two years ago, vowing to replace Netanyahu, then merged his nascent Israel Resilience party with Yesh Atid to form Blue and White, and narrowly failed in three elections to form a coalition without Netanyahus Likud. While Gantz campaigned on the promise that he would not serve in a government with Netanyahu so long as the prime minister faces corruption charges, he agreed to do just that in late March, and formed a unity government with Netanyahu in May. Furious, Yesh Atid and a second minor faction broke away from Blue and White and went into the opposition.

Netanyahu and Gantz reached an agreement that was supposed to see Gantz replace Netanyahu as prime minister in November 2021, but a loophole in the agreement saw the coalition collapse due to Netanyahus refusal to pass an annual budget.

Israel is consequently now gearing up for a fourth election after the Knesset dissolved this week. Butpolls have made clear that Gantz has lost the support of almost all of the voters who got behind him in the past three elections.

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MK Cotler-Wunsh quits Blue and White, says shes committed to continue serving - The Times of Israel

TV report: Gantz, Ashkenazi considering departing politics – The Times of Israel

Posted By on December 29, 2020

Israel, Morocco sign deals, will open mutual liaison offices within weeks

Liaison offices between Israel and Morocco will reopen within the next few weeks in Rabat and Tel Aviv, respectively, after being closed roughly 20 years ago, officials from the countries say.

Senior Adviser to US President Donald Trump Jared Kushner praises the efforts of Morocco and Israel to normalize ties, saying huge strides were made with a number of bilateral and trilateral agreements that will be signed in the coming days. Six of them will be signed today.

Israeli National Security Adviser Meir Ben-Shabbat, the son of Morocco-born parents, says first in Arabic and then in Hebrew that normalized ties with Rabat have more than just diplomatic value to the hundreds of thousands of Israelis of Moroccan descent.

Kushner jokes that while many Israelis have traveled to the United Arab Emirates after the signing of a normalization deal, he expects that Morocco will give it a run for its money, given the deep cultural ties between the two countries.

Senior White House adviser Jared Kushner speaks in Rabat alongside Israeli and Moroccan officials, December 22, 2020 (Judah Ari Gross)

Ben-Shabbat says the agreements that are being signed between the two countries deal with tourism, agriculture and other issues.

One agreement being signed now means visas wont be needed for diplomatic passports. A second is to sort out civil aviation regulations. A third is on cooperation on water resource research and development. Afourth is on cooperation on finance and investment.

Judah Ari Gross in Rabat

Read more:

TV report: Gantz, Ashkenazi considering departing politics - The Times of Israel

Common and rare variant prediction and penetrance of IBD in a large, multi-ethnic, health system-based biobank cohort – DocWire News

Posted By on December 29, 2020

This article was originally published here

Gastroenterology. 2020 Dec 24:S0016-5085(20)35575-X. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2020.12.034. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Polygenic risk scores (PRS) may soon be used to predict inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) risk in prevention efforts. We leveraged exome-sequence and SNP array data from 29,358 individuals in the multi-ethnic, randomly-ascertained health system-based BioMe biobank to define effects of common and rare IBD variants on disease prediction and pathophysiology.

METHODS: PRS were calculated from European, African-American, and Ashkenazi Jewish (AJ) reference case-control studies, and a meta-GWAS run using all three association datasets. PRS were then combined using regression to assess which combination of scores best predicted IBD status in European, AJ, Hispanic, and African American cohorts in BioMe. Additionally, rare variants were assessed in genes associated with very early onset IBD (VEO-IBD), by estimating genetic penetrance in each BioMe population.

RESULTS: Combining risk scores based on association data from distinct ancestral populations improved IBD prediction for every population in BioMe and significantly improved prediction among European ancestry UK Biobank individuals. Lower predictive power for non-Europeans was observed, reflecting in part substantially lower African IBD case-control reference sizes. We replicated associations for two VEO-IBD genes, ADAM17 and LRBA, with high dominant model penetrance in BioMe. Autosomal recessive LRBA risk alleles are associated with severe, early-onset autoimmunity; we show that heterozygous carriage of an African-predominant LRBA protein-altering allele is associated with significantly decreased LRBA and CTLA-4 expression with T cell activation.

CONCLUSIONS: Greater genetic diversity in African populations improves prediction across populations, and generalizes some VEO-IBD genes. Increasing African-American IBD case-collections should be prioritized to reduce health disparities and enhance pathophysiologic insight.

PMID:33359885 | DOI:10.1053/j.gastro.2020.12.034

Originally posted here:

Common and rare variant prediction and penetrance of IBD in a large, multi-ethnic, health system-based biobank cohort - DocWire News

Hanover police need help identifying possible menorah vandals – The Union Leader

Posted By on December 27, 2020

The police investigation into the vandalism of a menorah display at Dartmouth College continues to gain steam while New Hampshire Jewish leaders see a continued problem of anti-Semitism.

Hanover police Lt. Scott Rathburn said two young men have been identified through a witness statement and surveillance video taken by cameras set up by a downtown store.

We believe the two people you see, one is carrying a thin, long item, which could be a pellet gun, Rathburn said.

Last week, the large electric menorah near the Dartmouth Common in front of Dartmouth Chabad House had seven of its nine lights shot out with a BB gun. Chabad Rabbi Moshe Leib Gray said some of the lights had been shot multiple times.

Jewish Federation of New Hampshire board member Dina Michael Chaitowitz said her organization was outraged and saddened by the incident, saying it is in keeping with a growing acceptance of anti-Semitism in New Hampshire.

The hateful and destructive anti-Semitic incident was deeply disturbing, not only because it is indicative of rising anti-Semitism indeed, rising intolerance in general in our society, but because it occurred at a time when the world needs light and during a holiday (Chanukah) that celebrates the dispelling of darkness, Chaitowitz said.

Chaitowitz cited statistics compiled by the Anti-Defamation League that shows a rise in anti-Semitism in the region and throughout the country.

The Anti-Defamation League reports that assault, harassment and vandalism against Jews are at near-historic levels in the United States, Chaitowitz said. It is important to remember just how recent the deadly attacks at the synagogues in Pittsburgh and Poway were.

The ADL reports that cases of anti-Semitic and other hate incidents continue to increase in New Hampshire.

White supremacist propaganda in the Granite State increased in 2020, from 43 incidents so far in 2020 compared with 29 in 2019 and three in 2018. The total hate incidents in New Hampshire is at 50 incidents in 2020, compared with 2019s 34. Reported hate crimes have gone from 13 in 2018 to 16 in 2019.

Rathburn said the Hanover Police investigation has so far listed the incident as possibly bias-based, though it is impossible to know yet if this was a hate attack.

Its hard to say when you cant have the person tell you what the motivation was, Rathburn said.

Rathburn said there are reports of other BB gun damage at buildings near the Chabad House that took place around the same time as the menorah incident.

Anyone with information is asked to call Hanover police at 643-2222.{/div}

See the rest here:
Hanover police need help identifying possible menorah vandals - The Union Leader

Boycott urged on firms that assist Israel’s occupation – Triple Pundit

Posted By on December 27, 2020

A UN human rights expert has called for a boycott of multinational companies that are investing to further Israels occupation of Palestinian territory.

Addressing the UN General Assembly, special rapporteur Richard Falk listed various companies involved in the establishment and maintenance of settlements on Palestinian land that the UN, US and EU consider illegal.

In a statement released after presenting his report last month, Falk said the companies should be boycotted until they bring their operations into line with international human rights and humanitarian law and standards.

But his comments drew criticism from US diplomats and pro-Israel groups for distorting the facts on the ground and for promoting anti-semitism.

Falk, professor emeritus of international law at Princeton University, said the companies involvement must be challenged because all Israeli settlements in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, have been established in clear violation of international law. The settlements, he added, now make up more than 40% of the West Bank.

He singled out numerous companies including Caterpillar, Hewlett Packard, Motorola and G4S and said they could face criminal or civil liability for their actions in the West Bank. He went on to suggest the International Court of Justice at the Hague be asked to issue an advisory opinion on the matter.

But his comments were denounced by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which seeks to stop the defamation of the Jewish people. ADL director Abraham Foxman said: While the issue of human rights violations experienced by Palestinians is a legitimate area of concern, Richard Falk has repeatedly abused his position as special rapporteur to unleash unrestrained hatred and disdain for Israel.

This malevolence permeates his official reports and, at times, his personal statements, which include the use of anti-semitic imagery and comparisons of Israeli actions to those of the Nazis.

Meanwhile, British Labour MP Lisa Nandy, who chairs the All Party Parliamentary Group on International Corporate Responsibility, has attacked G4S for helping Israel to break the Geneva Convention by providing equipment and services to Israeli prisons, some of which house Palestinian prisoners transferred from the West Bank.

Writing in the New Statesman, she said Israeli Prison Service figures released in June showed that 85% of Palestinian prisoners, including children, were detained inside Israel in violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which prohibits their transfer there. Of 4,706 prisoners, 285 were held in administrative detention, without charge or trial.

The lack of adequate family contact for children, she added, also violates article 37 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

In addition, G4S has installed a central command room in Ofer Prison on the West Bank, which houses a centre where prisoners are tried under military law.

In reply, G4S says it will exit from all the contracts it holds in the West Bank at the earliest opportunity, while stressing that it has not violated any international laws.

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Boycott urged on firms that assist Israel's occupation - Triple Pundit


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