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Morocco agrees to normalize ties with Israel in exchange for U.S. recognition of Western Sahara sovereignty – Haaretz

Posted By on December 11, 2020

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thursday that Morocco and Israel have agreed to normalize relations, adding that he has signed a proclamation recognizing Moroccan sovereignty over the Western Sahara.

"Another HISTORIC breakthrough today! Our two GREAT friends Israel and the Kingdom of Morocco have agreed to full diplomatic relations a massive breakthrough for peace in the Middle East!" Trump tweeted.

In a statement to the press, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thanked Morocco's King Mohammed VI for his "historic decision" to sign the deal and promised a "very warm peace" between the two countries.

Defense Minister and Alternate Prime Minister Benny Gantz also welcomed the agreement, saying it would bolster both security and economic interests of both countries. He also thanked "the American administration, which acts tirelessly to strengthen Israel and stabilize the entire region."

According to sources familiar with the matter, Gantz and Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi learned of the agreement from American officials, not the prime minister. The Foreign Ministry later released a statement confirming this, saying that Gantz and Ashkenazi were briefed by the White House a few weeks ago.

The Moroccan royal court also said that King Mohammed VI had a phone call with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to reaffirm his commitment to a two-state solution.

King Mohammed VI later added that the deal in no way affected the kingdom's "determination to continue working for a comprehensive and just peace in the Middle East."

A senior Palestinian Authority official said the PA had "no interest to respond at this time or confront any factors in Morocco. The decision not to respond may be related to King Mohammed's chairmanship of the Arab League's Al-Quds Committee, whose agenda is to preserve the Arab-Islamic nature of Jerusalem.

Hamas responded to the deal, calling it "a political sin," while Islamic Jihad described it as "a betrayal of Palestine and Jerusalem."

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi wrote on Twitter on Thursday that he valued the agreement because it strengthens regional stability and cooperation.

Israel and Morocco have had covert relations for decades, and the latter openly accepts tourists from Israel. Following the Oslo Accords, ties solidified publically, with then-Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres attended the opening of an Israeli representation office. After the Second Intifada erupted in 2000, ties became secretive again.

"Morocco recognized the United States in 1777. It is thus fitting we recognize their sovereignty over the Western Sahara," Trump added in another tweet. "Morocco's serious, credible, and realistic autonomy proposal is the ONLY basis for a just and lasting solution for enduring peace and prosperity!"

A representative of the Polisario Front independence movement for Western Sahara said it "regrets highly" the U.S. decision to recognize Moroccan sovereignty over the territory, adding the decision was "strange but not surprising".

"This will not change an inch of the reality of the conflict and the right of the people of Western Sahara to self determination," the Polisario's Europe representative Oubi Bchraya said. The Polisario would continue its struggle.

Western Sahara was occupied by Spain until 1976. Morocco then claimed most of the territory but faced guerrilla resistance from the local population.

The United Nations maintains that the Sahrawi people have a legitimate right to self-determination, but the status of the desert region remains under dispute. In fact, in an October session of the UN Security Council, the U.S. backed renewing the mandate of UN forces in the Western Sahara.

Morocco is the fourth country since August to strike a deal aimed at normalizing relations with Israel. The others were the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Sudan.

The United Arab Emirates welcomed Morocco's decision to resume diplomatic relations and communications with Israel, crown prince of Abu Dhabi Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan wrote on twitter.

"This step, a sovereign move, contributes to strengthening our common quest for stability, prosperity, and just and lasting peace in the region".

Bahrain King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa also praised the Moroccan king's decision to establish diplomatic relations with Israel, according to state news agency BNA. The statement also welcomed U.S. recognition of Morocco's sovereignty over the Western Sahara region.

Palestinians have been critical of the normalization deals, saying Arab countries have set back the cause of peace by abandoning a longstanding demand that Israel give up land for a Palestinian state before it can receive recognition.

With Trump to leave office on January 20, the Morocco deal could be among the last his team, led by Kushner and U.S. envoy Avi Berkowitz, is able to negotiate before they give way to President-elect Joe Biden's incoming administration.

Much of the momentum behind the deal-making has been to present a united front against Iran and roll back its regional influence.

The Trump White House has tried to get Saudi Arabia to sign on to a normalization deal with Israel, believing if the Saudis agreed other Arab nations would follow, but the Saudis have signaled they are not ready.

One more Middle East breakthrough is possible. Last week Kushner and his team traveled to Saudi Arabia and Qatar seeking an end to a three-year rift between Doha and the Gulf Cooperation Council countries.

A tentative deal has been reached on this front but it was far from clear whether a final agreement to end a blockade of Qatar will be sealed. Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt have maintained a diplomatic, trade and travel embargo on Qatar since mid-2017.

While Biden is expected to move U.S. foreign policy away from Trump's "America First" posture, he has indicated he will continue the pursuit of what Trump calls "the Abraham Accords" between Israel and Arab and Muslim nations.

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Morocco agrees to normalize ties with Israel in exchange for U.S. recognition of Western Sahara sovereignty - Haaretz

Ehud Olmert to ‘Post’: Women need to take on leadership roles in Israel – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on December 11, 2020

The political awakening in recent days, in the face of what appears to be a fourth round of elections in two years, expected to take place in the coming months, gives rise to various ideas about the composition of the forces expected to arise. The impression I get is that the prominent players in the opposition have learned nothing from their failure to form a stable and strong political force that will lead to the downfall of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his gang.The past year has proven to everyone who needed that the public system in the country needs a new kind of discourse. The naive, perhaps somewhat childish, expectations of Blue and White that the coronavirus justified an agreement with Netanyahu as an expression of the sense of urgency that necessitates unconventional steps collapsed.Alternate Prime Minister Benny Gantz and Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi truly believed that Netanyahu was worried about the fate of the country and he would abide by the agreement he signed. Since a government had to be formed, Gantz and Ashkenazi worked to formulate a responsible pattern of action to combat what seemed at the time the most immediate and serious threat to the stability of life in the country. I was convinced that Gantz and Ashkenazi were wrong. They were wrong and thought that what was bothering them was the same thing that was bothering Netanyahu.However, Netanyahu was and still is only concerned with one thing himself. The health situation of the residents of Israel, the economic downturn, unemployment and the collapse of businesses all of these are not the focus of the prime ministers attention. I am saying serious things. During the decades I have been active in Israels public life center, I have argued with prime ministers and sometimes sharply criticized them. I never had any doubt that at the center of their agenda there was no personal interest. No party interest was superior to what they believed was the real interest of the State of Israel. Most of them made mistakes mistakes that occasionally caused great tragedy to many in the country. I am no different from my predecessors. I was wrong too. I have never tried to evade responsibility for my mistakes, and like the prime ministers before me I hoped the overall picture would present a balance that alongside the mistakes would also mention the achievements and successes.But, the bottom line has always been concern for what is right for the state, its security and the health of its residents.Conducting a political struggle against a dishonest person is a difficult task. Netanyahu is an indecent person. When I said this in public there were quite a few who were angry with me and condemned the blatant style I used. Today, few dont recognize that Netanyahu is a crook, a pretender, a deceiver, unscrupulous and without any obligation to the commitments he made to tell the truth, to basic fairness to his opponents and even to his partners and supporters.There is no act of fraud that Netanyahu misses in the unbridled effort he makes to save himself from the avalanche that threatens to crush him and with him his family.

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Ehud Olmert to 'Post': Women need to take on leadership roles in Israel - The Jerusalem Post

Author Joseph A. Levy’s new book Forbidden Love is a moving story about love, friendship, and family for two New York professionals from different…

Posted By on December 11, 2020

REGO PARK, N.Y. (PRWEB) December 09, 2020

Joseph A. Levy, a former attorney and native of Cairo, Egypt currently residing in Queens, New York, has published his new book Forbidden Love: an inspiring affirmation of the power of love to bridge any real or perceived divide.

Devora Rappaport is an observant Jewish professional woman with everything going for her. But in the one thing that matters to her the most, she cannot find a husband. Finally, she meets David Cohen, an observant Jewish professional man, and they start dating, and they get engaged. Though they love each other and appear to be the perfect match for each other, there is one thing standing in the way: David is Sephardic, and Devora is Ashkenazi. They are not bothered by their different ethnicities; will their families feel the same way?

Forbidden Love is a moving story about love, friendship, and family. It is about people learning that what they have in common far outweighs any differences they may have.

Published by Page Publishing, Joseph A. Levys engrossing book is an excellent choice for avid romantic fiction readers.

Readers who wish to experience this engaging work can purchase Forbidden Love at bookstores everywhere, or online at the Apple iTunes store, Amazon, Google Play, or Barnes and Noble.

For additional information or media inquiries, contact Page Publishing at 866-315-2708.

About Page Publishing:

Page Publishing is a traditional, full-service publishing house that handles all the intricacies involved in publishing its authors books, including distribution in the worlds largest retail outlets and royalty generation. Page Publishing knows that authors need to be free to create - not mired in logistics like eBook conversion, establishing wholesale accounts, insurance, shipping, taxes, and so on. Pages accomplished writers and publishing professionals allow authors to leave behind these complex and time-consuming issues to focus on their passion: writing and creating. Learn more at http://www.pagepublishing.com.

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Author Joseph A. Levy's new book Forbidden Love is a moving story about love, friendship, and family for two New York professionals from different...

Israeli, Jordanian foreign ministers meet, with plenty of issues on their agenda – Al-Monitor

Posted By on December 11, 2020

Dec 6, 2020

Israeli Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi met Dec. 3 with his Jordanian counterpart Ayman Safadi at the Allenby Bridge border crossing.

The Jordanians are said to have asked for the meetingin order to discuss some practical matters. The list of issuesthat came up in the meeting was quite long. A statement issued by the Jordanian Foreign Ministry said the two men talked about "a number of pending concerns, including water, lifting restrictions on Jordanian exports to the West Bank, Jordanian provision of additional electricity to the Palestinian Authorityand organizing movement through border crossings in light of their closure due to the coronavirus pandemic."

The Israeli Foreign Ministry confirmed the meeting, but refused to give any more details. Still, reports claimed that Safadi raised the possibility of Israel renewing talks with the Palestinians under the auspices of the new American administration.

Reports further said that Safadi asked Ashkenazi for the Israeli take on the latest Palestinian initiativefor a regional peace summit with Jordan and with Egypt. Some see this as a sort of a Palestinian counterreaction to Israels rapprochement with Gulf states. This issue of a regional summit was raised by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas two days earlier, when he visited Amman and met with King Abdullah II.

But there was one more issue that Safadi raised with Ashkenazi that of the Temple Mount compound (Haram al-Sharif).

Under the 1994 peace agreement between the two countries, and with the agreement of the Palestinians, the site is administrated by the Waqf Muslim religious authorities, under Jordanian custodianship. As such, Amman has a special role and control over the holy place.

In the past two years, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has made several statements about Jerusalem, raising some fears in Amman about Turkeys ambitions with regardto Jerusalem and the Temple Mount. The recent normalization agreements between Israel and the Emirates and Bahrain, and Israelirapprochement efforts with Saudi Arabia, further increased Jordanian fears over maintaining its special status as custodian. Political analysts say Amman worries aboutan Israeli-Saudi dealwhere Riyadh would agree to normalization in exchange for some hold over the Temple Mount compound.

These Jordanian concerns first arose after the Aug. 13 announcement by US President Donald Trump about the normalization of ties between Israel and the Emirates. On Aug. 17, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed the issue of the Al-Aqsa Mosque; he said special arrangements will be made for Muslims from the Emirates and Bahrain to enable them to pray there safely. Israeli, Jordanian, Palestinian and Emirati representatives discussed the issue in mid-November, reaching a compromise. The Emirati tourists and pilgrims would enter the compound from the eight gates reserved for Palestinian and Jordanian worshippers.

Still, this compromise seems to have done little to reassure the Jordanians. Shortly after the Nov. 22 meeting between Netanyahu and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman,Abdullah spoke on the phone with US President-elect Joe Biden. After the phone call, the Jordanian Foreign Ministry stated it rejects any alleged attempts to alter the historical and legal status quo at the Temple Mount. MinistryspokesmanDaifallah al-Fayez said,The kingdom will continue its efforts to protect and care for the mosque, and preserve the rights of all Muslims to it in compliance with the Hashemite custodianship of Jerusalems Muslim and Christian holy sites.

In parallel, Palestinian reports accused Israel of agreeing for Saudi Arabia to establish some charity structures in Jerusalem, not unlike how Turkey has been operating in recent months in the east of the city. The reportsalso claimed that Israel would agree for there to be Saudi representatives within the Waqf administration. While none of these reports were confirmed, their mere publication attests to the level of concern in Ramallah and in Amman.

Jordan raised the issue publicly at a UN General Assembly meeting Dec. 2, where the plenum discussed annual anti-Israeli resolutions. A representative of the Jordanian delegation warned that Israel is attempting to impose a fait accompli on Al-Aqsa Mosque and Jerusalem, adding that Jerusalems holy sites will remain the focus of Jordanian care and guardianship. Israels envoy to the UN, Gilad Erdan, categorically denied these allegations.

An Israeli diplomatic source told Al-Monitor that Jerusalem is well aware of these concerns and by no means wants to further destabilize its delicate relations with Amman. On the other hand, Jerusalem has a strong desire tomake future tourists from the Gulf feel at home in Israel. Unlike Israel's peace with Jordan and with Egypt, where tourism is one-sided (the great majority of touristsare Israelis visiting both countries, not the other way around), normalization with Bahrain and the Emirates could generate waves of Arab pilgrims and tourists to Israel.

There are also some silver linings to the Israeli-Jordan talks. In April, Israeli farmers left for the last time the Tsofar agricultural enclave, which they hadcultivated for 25 years. Jordan refused to renew the lease because of the tensions between the two countries. It was a bitter negotiation episode, which lasted several months. Jordan refused to compromise, and the land was handed back. Still, with thatissue settled, some thought Amman might be willing to open a new diplomatic page with Jerusalem.

Afirst encouraging sign came Oct.8, when Israeli and Jordanian civil aviation authorities signeda new aviation agreement, enabling commercial flights to cross the airspace of both countries. Still, the Israeli diplomatic source warnedthat the road to warmerties between Amman and Jerusalem is still long. In any case, he said, nothing much is expected to happen before Jan. 20, when Biden is sworn in.

In July, France and Germany discussed withEgyptian and Jordanian representatives an initiative for relaunching the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. Once Biden is sworn in, the Europeans might bring this idea up again. Clearly, any progress on the Israel-Palestinian track would reassure Amman about Jerusalems intentions.

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Israeli, Jordanian foreign ministers meet, with plenty of issues on their agenda - Al-Monitor

Jewish Synagogue Receives Another Threatening Call: Blotter – Patch.com

Posted By on December 7, 2020

NORTHBROOK, IL The following information comes from the Northbrook Police Department and court records as a record of incidents reported to police and those arrested on criminal charges, which represent accusations by the state that are often dropped or reduced. Updated information may be available from the Cook County Clerk of the Circuit Court. Everyone arrested is presumed to be innocent unless found guilty in court beyond a reasonable doubt.

RETAIL THEFT

Ozair S. Zian, 23, of the 8600 block of Gregory Lane, Des Plaines, is accused of Retail theft, and was arrested at 2:59 p.m. Nov. 25 at Best Buy, 1000 block of Willow Road. An officer was flagged down by an employee at Best Buy who said that they had Zian in custody for retail theft. The employee said Zian took items and then attempted to return the items for a refund. He was processed and released after posting a $150 bond. He was assigned a court date of Jan. 5, 2021.

SUPPLEMENT TO IDENTITY THEFT

Darnell E. Phillips, 54, of the 700 block of Sharon Avenue, Park City, is accused of felony aggravated identity theft, and was arrested at 12:07 p.m. Dec. 3 by Lake Forest police after they found he had an outstanding warrant from a March identity theft investigation in Northbrook. Phillips was processed on the warrant by Northbrook detectives and transported to court for bond.

SUSPICIOUS CIRCUMSTANCES

A resident of the 500 block of Anthony Trail reported at 9:37 p.m. Nov. 24 that a male, claiming to be a service representative from Comcast, stated that he needed to check the electrical connections of the residence. The complainant requested the male's identification from the company and the male stated that they were in his truck. The male then left and did not return.

A person called police at 12:14 p.m. Nov. 25 to report that while conducting business in the 3700 block of Bernay Drive the homeowner became hostile towards the complainant and grabbed their arm.

CRIMINAL DAMAGE TO VEHICLE

A person reported at 7:44 p.m. Nov. 25 that when they returned to their vehicle after work at UPS, 2500 block of Shermer Road, they observed that someone struck their vehicle, breaking a door side mirror.

BURGLARY TO VEHICLE

A person called police at 2:07 a.m. Nov. 26 to report that they heard their unlocked car door close and saw the car lights flash in the 2200 block of Farnsworth Lane. When they went to check the vehicle, they noticed that the interior was rummaged through and that a checkbook was missing.

TRESPASS TO VEHICLES

While investigating another burglary to vehicle, police came across several vehicles which were entered. Each of the reported vehicles had unlocked doors and no evidence of forced entry. Each of the vehicle owners claimed that nothing appeared to have been taken from their vehicles.

FRAUD

IDENTITY THEFT

Police took numerous reports from several people regarding correspondence that they received from the Illinois Department of Employment Security for benefits that they did not file for.

RETAIL THEFT

An employee at Mariano's, 700 block of Skokie Boulevard, called police at 2 p.m. Nov. 27 to report two males left the store without paying for numerous bottles of champagne.

TELEPHONE HARASSMENT

A representative from the Northbrook Community Synagogue, 2500 block of Jasper Court, reported at 10:33 a.m. Dec. 1 that they had received a telephone message which was of a harassing nature. The complainant stated that the message was similar to one that they had received earlier in the year.

THEFT

A customer at TJ Maxx, 40 block of Skokie Boulevard, called police at 5:51 p.m. Dec. 2 to report that they discovered that after shopping, they were missing their wallet. The complainant stated that the wallet contained several credit cards, miscellaneous items, and $6.

THREATS

A person on Meadow Road reported at 3:45 p.m. Dec. 2 that someone came to the location to drop off a payment. The complainant informed them that they no longer accepted in-person payments. The complainant stated that they then threatened to come back with a gun if they get a late fee on their account.

UNLAWFUL USE OF CREDIT CARD

An Illinois Road resident called police to report that someone made unauthorized purchases with their credit card account between Oct. 15-24.

RECENT NORTHBROOK POLICE BLOTTER REPORTS

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Jewish Synagogue Receives Another Threatening Call: Blotter - Patch.com

Somehow, Ive Become the Threat – Slate

Posted By on December 7, 2020

Protesters gather in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Borough Park to denounce lockdowns of their neighborhood due to a spike in COVID-19 cases on Oct. 7.Spencer Platt/Getty Images

In October, Blima Marcus, a nurse practitioner and ultra-Orthodox resident of Borough Park, Brooklyn, received a call from a close friend. The womans teenage son was showing COVID-19 symptomsa headache, fever, and decreased appetiteafter being exposed to a positive case of the virus at a local synagogue where he prayed daily.

She wanted to know if she should get him tested, said Marcus, 35, who works in palliative care at an oncology center but also serves in the unofficial role of medical consultant within her Orthodox Jewish community. The teenager had been continuing his regular activities, including attending synagogue. I advised her to get her son tested immediately and instruct him to strictly quarantine until he receives the results. Her friend replied incredulously: You try keeping a teenage boy home all day.

I had nothing more to say, Marcus told me recently while driving home from work on a rainy Friday afternoon. It was clear to me that she wasnt prepared to quarantine. Was she disappointed in her friend of 25 years, I asked? No, said Marcus. Why should I expect more from her than from the rest of the community?

The past few months have been tumultuous for the ultra-Orthodox enclaves of New York City, where an uptick in COVID-19 cases led to unwelcome attention from the media, secular New Yorkers, and local officials. Last month, reports of a Nov. 8 wedding in Williamsburg attended by thousands threw the ongoing tensions between insular religious communities and government officials into stark relief. Mayor Bill de Blasio announced the city would slap the Brooklyn synagogue that hosted the event with a $15,000 fine. Nonetheless, authorities failed to stop another similar wedding in the upstate New York Hasidic enclave of Kiryas Joel shortly thereafter; the nuptials proceeded despite a cease-and-desist order.

The past few months have also been a trying time for Marcus, who is now in the unfortunate position of giving advice that no one wants to hear. She has watched as her neighbors dismiss the virus and publicly defy safety measures intended to contain it. She has fought against the idea that her community has reached herd immunity, only to see it gain traction. She lives just blocks away from where Heshy Tischler, a Borough Park resident, ultra-Orthodox radio show host, and COVID-19 denialist, made national headlines in October for rallying his mostly young male followers to burn their masks and rage against de Blasio. Marcus says she felt horror when Tischler targeted Hasidic journalist Jacob Kornbluh for publicly criticizing his communitys unwillingness to follow the same safety precautions shed been advocating for. She felt even more horror when Tischlers acolytes physically attacked Kornbluth, pinning him to the ground while chanting mosera derogatory Hebrew term for an informant who betrays his own community.

I used to be so passionate about helping the community. I used to have the patience to answer the same question for the 80th time. But the work isthankless. Blima Marcus

At the same time, Marcus, who covers her hair with an understated brown wig and, when not in scrubs, covers her elbows, knees, and collarbone, too, understands why New York Citys ultra-Orthodox Jews have felt unjustly singled out for rebuke and have therefore chafed at government regulation. Back in April, after a large funeral for a local rabbi in Brooklyn drew thousands into the streets of Williamsburg, de Blasio visited the scene and called out the Jewish community. Months later, the mayor apologized for the statement, but many community memberssmarting from a second wave of shutdowns announced in early October that disproportionately affected Orthodox-dense ZIP codesfelt the harm had already been done. Gov. Andrew Cuomo insisted that the shutdown measures were not personal, stressing in a press conference that, though the COVID-19 hot spots overlap with large Orthodox Jewish communities, shutdown measures apply equally to every citizen of the state of New York. But members of the Orthodox community, who were already on edge after a series of violent anti-Semitic incidents in late 2019 (an assault on children in a Williamsburg housing project, a shooter threat at the Chabad Lubavitch World Headquarters in Crown Heights, a fatal attack at a kosher grocery store in Jersey City, and the Dec. 29 stabbings at a Hanukkah celebration in suburban Monsey) left them feeling vulnerable and targeted, thought otherwise. From a certain vantage point, you can see why a community on edge would be wary of outsiders, who hadnt been able or willing to protect them in the past, now swooping in to tell them how to behave in the face of a different threat.

This is not the first time Marcus has found herself caught in the middle of a tense, complicated cultural battle involving medical misinformation and an us-against-them vibe taking hold in her community. I first met Marcus in April 2019, as a measles outbreak raged in Orthodox Brooklyn, culminating in the official declaration of a public health emergency in select Brooklyn ZIP codes and the shuttering of local yeshivas. Marcus had just launched the EMES InitiativeEMES, which stands for engaging in medical education with sensitivity, means truth in Hebrew. When we spoke last year, she was in the midst of editing, printing, and delivering 10,000 copies of a 40-page informational booklet about vaccines to the doorsteps of ultra-Orthodox homes across the five boroughs to combat a similar booklet disseminated by anti-vaxxer groups. She was organizing small informational sessions for ultra-Orthodox women afraid to vaccinate their children, trying to stop a neighborhood measles party, and meeting with New York City public health officials and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention members around her dining room table to talk about culturally sensitive ways to reach ultra-Orthodox people.

Back then, Marcus was energized. Today, she seems beat. As the coronavirus ravaged her community, the EMES Initiative escalated its efforts. Its now grown to include 30 or so Orthodox health care workers. But the challenge they are trying to meet feels nearly insurmountable. I have nothing left, Marcus told me on the phone a few weeks ago, as health officials tracked a slow but steady rise in positive coronavirus cases across New York City. I used to be so passionate about helping the community. I used to have the patience to answer the same question for the 80th time, I used to care about helping people make healthy choices. But the work is thankless.

Ephraim Sherman, a nurse practitioner at New York University hospital and another member of EMES, remembers sitting on the porch of his Crown Heights apartment on March 10, watching his fellow Hasidim dance through the streets in costume. It was the Jewish holiday of Purim, a day of partying and festive communal meals. At that point, New York City had not yet issued lockdown orders. Sherman stayed home from festivities that day because he had come down with a virus, which he now assumes was COVID-19. In retrospect, he said, I was watching a slow-moving bomb explode in front of my eyes.

In March and April, the coronavirus hit the Hasidic Jewish community in New York with devastating force. On March 17, the White House organized a call with 15 leading Orthodox rabbis in New York City, including prominent Hasidic leaders, to urge the community to shutter key institutions and adhere to social-distancing protocols. By March 19, even before New Yorks major hospitals were overwhelmed with critically ill COVID-19 patients, more than 500 cases of the coronavirus had been identified by one urgent care center serving ultra-Orthodox neighborhoods in Brooklyn. Hasidic media outlets were reporting on the deaths of prominent rabbis and community leaders daily. We were waking up each day to find out who died overnight, said Marcus.

People say wild things to me, on the phone, in the grocery store. People accuse me of using Nazi tactics to make people stay isolated in theirhome. NeshaAbramson

Sherman, a 34-year-old father of two, is Chabad-Lubavitch, a Hasidic sect headquartered in Crown Heights. He soon left his regular ambulatory clinic to work around the clock in makeshift COVID-19 crash units at NYU hospital. There, he witnessed death on a scale he had never seen before. His first day on the job, he recalled noticing a body that had been left unattended for hours. The person had died and no one had a moment to move the body down to the morgue, he said. Thats when I understood the gravity of what we were facing.

Sherman said that nearly everyone in his community knows someone who died from COVID-19 in the spring. Many believe that their family members died in the hospital because of neglect, he told me. Its easier to accept that your mother was sick and the hospital neglected her, rather than believe that the grandkids came over, gave Bubbe COVID, and then Bubbe died.

The conditions under which the Hasidic community experienced the first COVID-19 wave created a perfect storm, said Nesha Abramson, the director of community health outreach at Vaad Refuah, a Brooklyn-based patient advocacy center that primarily serves the local ultra-Orthodox population. Many Hasidic people died alone. Overwhelmed hospitals failed to communicate well with family members. For a community with real historical and epigenetic trauma, mistrust of systems external to the community are latent, Abramson said, referring to the Holocaust.

In Abramsons eyes, the suffering of the community in March and April contributes to a current communal dissociation from the possibility that something like this could happen again. Folks are shutting themselves off, said Abramson, who works alongside rabbis to gain community trust and compliance and has volunteered with the EMES Initiative. For many, the trauma is so intense that there is literally nothing I can say to make them hear me.

For EMES, spring 2019s measles outbreak was a kind of harbinger of things to come. Back then, Abramson worked closely with Marcus to battle overwhelming fear and misinformation about the MMR vaccine. As someone who was constantly preaching about the danger of the measles virus, I became a target for misdirected anger, said Abramson. A fellow parent at her young sons local yeshiva threatened to sue her for insisting vaccinations be mandatory for all students, she recalled. (Slate reached out to the parent, who did not respond to a request for comment.)

Now, Abramson says, the communitys reaction is far more intense and antagonistic than it was during the measles outbreak.

People say wild things to me, on the phone, in the grocery store. People accuse me of using Nazi tactics to make people stay isolated in their home, she said.

A prominent community doctor whom I initially planned to interview for this article eventually declined to talk to me; after publicly decrying his communitys lax response to COVID-19 safety measures for months, he is no longer speaking to the media, a source close to him told me, because the personal fallout this doctor has experienced for chastising his fellow community members has been severe. (Within the Orthodox community, there are several ways community leaders can quash dissent. One particularly effective method is to threaten a persons marriage prospectsor the marriage prospects of that persons children or grandchildren. The threat of poisoned matchmaking prospects, or shidduchim, as it is colloquially called, can quickly muzzle those who might otherwise be compelled to speak out on issues from child sexual abuse to COVID-19 safety protocols.)

Sherman, the Chabad-Lubavitch father who has since returned to his local ambulatory practice in Crown Heights, has not faced anything quite as scary. But he says that his efforts to pressure his fellow community members to comply with COVID-19 safety measures are often met with anger, frustration, and contempt. Somehow, he told me, Ive become the threat.

The day the city closed down Darchei Torah, theylost. Dr. Moshe Lazar

One catalyst for this anger was the local governments handling of COVID-related school closures. Dr. Moshe Lazar, a pediatrician with clinics in Borough Park and Midwood, is still deeply frustrated about this. He knows ultra-Orthodox Brooklynites are not blameless; he acknowledges that certain superspreader events at the end of summer and early fallincluding a handful of large weddings where many partygoers were unmasked and did not observe social-distancing rulescontributed to the uptick of positive COVID-19. I cant argue on the wedding situation, he told me. Our community was not ready for it, and we paid dearly. But he thinks the communitys anger is partly justified because of what happened with the schools.

Lazar worked closely with local yeshiva schools in Brooklyn and Queens to open safely in time for the new school year. But many of the institutions he helped reopen in September were then forced to close by city officials, citing a rise in positive COVID-19 tests in nine New York City ZIP codes, nearly all of which have significant Orthodox Jewish populations.

The day the city closed down Darchei Torah, they lost, said Lazar, referring to a prominent boys yeshiva in Queens that the Department of Health shuttered in mid-September after an uptick of positive COVID-19 cases. He said the mainstream Orthodox yeshivas, like Darchei Torah and its sister school, Torah Academy for Girls, worked closely over the summer with the Department of Health to safely open schools in the fall. Social distancing, masks, no lunch in the lunchroom they complied with all of it, said Lazar.

He believes that the way de Blasio and Cuomo announced new lockdown measures in Octoberwith last-minute emails to school principals and inconsistent messaging about why the schools had to shutter when others in the city did notcost city and state officials the trust and goodwill of the Orthodox mainstream. They steamrolled Jewish schools and made everyone feel like garbage, when we had worked for months to cooperate closely with the DOH, Lazar said. To contain a pandemic, the government officials need to test, trace, and contain, he said. Not test and then immediately punish the community by shutting down schools. (In an Oct. 5 press briefing, de Blasio shared that between Sept. 25 and Oct. 5, 1,351 COVID-19 tests conducted in more than 35 schools in the nine ZIP codes of highest concern had produced only two positive tests. In an interview with the New York Times, the mayor conceded, We have seen very little coronavirus activity in our schools. Despite that acknowledgment, schools in the nine red zone ZIP codes were forced to shutter long before the citywide shutdown of public schools in late November.)

Since those lockdowns, several reports in Jewish news outlets have indicated that Orthodox community officials are actively discouraging members from testing their children for COVID-19 in order to avoid further school shutdowns. Once you punish, it diminishes any incentive to test, which makes tracing and containing the virus that much harder, said Lazar. The governor and mayor effectively put a target on the Orthodox communities back, he said. The narrative no longer [felt] like all New Yorkers versus the pandemicto many Orthodox Jews, it feels like us versus them.

That feeling of being targeted plays out in other ways as well. Ive been screamed at You people, you Jews, Dalia Shusterman, a Hasidic mother of four from Crown Heights told me of going out without a mask. Even when Im outside and not near anyone, people jump back from me with their hands in the air like theyd seen the plague. And so, she remains resolute: She will not buy or wear a mask. If youre ever the slave to public opinion, youll never be happy.

Its a control issue, another young Hasidic mother who lives in Crown Heights told me.

Nearly one year after Marcus and EMES pivoted from focusing on measles to this deadly new virus, new positive cases of COVID-19 continue to rise across New York City, with a seven-month statewide high of 5,972 recorded last week.

Within the five boroughs, Orthodox-dense clusters now account for less of the increase, and the yeshivas are open again, at least for the moment, even as many New York City public schools are not. In Williamsburg, a handful of local Jewish agencies are paying community members to distribute masks several hours per week and hang up posters, some in Yiddish, publicizing safety and social-distancing protocols. But according to Marcus, compliance among her fellow community members is poor, even as positive cases creep back up.

I love my landsmen, but I will never ever understand them, she posted on Facebook two weeks ago, after a young mother in her community died from COVID-19 in late November. Even as the community reeled from the enormity of the loss, Marcus says she continues to face ridicule for wearing a mask.

The last time we talked, Marcus was weary but still at it. She is in touch with other members of the EMES task force every day, exchanging WhatsApp messages about lockdown updates and orchestrating Yiddish robocalls to encourage masks. She has reached out to certain city health officials who were particularly helpful during the measles crisis, people who had been proactive in asking for her thoughts on culturally sensitive ways to approach the ultra-Orthodox community. This time around, though, she says those same officials have been largely unresponsive to her messages. (In a September COVID-19 briefing, de Blasio claimed outreach to the Orthodox community has been nonstop. I would be curious to know who exactly they are in touch with, said Marcus, an edge to her voice.)

On the horizon is what Marcus and her EMES colleagues know will be the formidable challenge of introducing a vaccine to a wary community. Early in the coronavirus crisis, Marcus remembers thinking that the virus might actually be the reality that anti-vaxxers need. Maybe, just maybe, she thought, the pandemic might finally drive home the risks of what happens when we dont vaccinate. But she never anticipated the way mistrust and misinformation would overtake her neighbors. I should have seen it coming, she said.

During the measles crisis, we fought to get people to take a well-researched vaccine that has been around for decades, said Abramson. Now were going to expect folks to accept a new vaccine on the back of this sort of community trauma? While news of a potential COVID-19 vaccine has been a ray of hope in an otherwise bleak landscape for many of us, Abramson said the headlines made her feel more sad and scared than Ive ever been throughout corona.

As winter encroaches, Marcus and EMES are fighting several battles at once. They want more financial support from the city and state to fight misinformation. They want more support from leaders within their own community. They desperately want to find a way to convince the men and women they pray with, whose children they send their own children to school with, to take COVID seriously, and not take a guy like Heshy Tischler seriously at all. But with the trauma of the first surge, the citys bungled response, the political climate, and an entrenched distrust of secular restrictions, many of the people they are trying to influence now feel beyond their reach.

I cant go on living in fear, a young Orthodox woman who lost her father-in-law to COVID in March recently told me, explaining that she tested positive for COVID-19 antibodies and therefore thinks she is inoculated against reinfection. She is not interested in wearing a mask or taking other precautions, and she believes that God, whom Jews refer to as Hashem, has a plan. Not everything is in our control, she said. Hashem has something to do with it.

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‘Beautiful in its own way’: Conversions to Judaism amid the pandemic – Jewish Insider

Posted By on December 7, 2020

Rabbi Adam Mintz, a Modern Orthodox rabbi based on Manhattans Upper West Side, has performed conversions each year for the past three decades, meeting in-person with hundreds of individuals undergoing the transformative process. Despite restrictions in response to the COVID-19 pandemic including the halting of in-person religious services and the temporary closing of his mikvah Mintz is busier than ever. You would think, he told Jewish Insider, that conversions would be put on hold, that people wouldnt approach me to start studying for the process.

Exactly the opposite, Mintz said. Ive never had more people interested in conversion than I have over the past eight months.

Across the country in Los Angeles, at the non-denominational synagogue IKAR, Rabbi Keilah Lebell noticed the same pattern.

Pre-COVID, I would hear from someone interested in conversion maybe once every two months, she told JI. But as soon as COVID hit, I started receiving calls from people wanting to convert or at least to explore their Jewish heritage, no longer every other month, but every other week.

The cause for the uptick, which comes despite the fact that the Jewish community does not typically seek out potential converts, remains uncertain, but Lebell posited that for some it came down to two push factors: newfound time in quarantine to pursue the big questions and a longing for a higher purpose amid the pandemic both motivations Rabbi Sarah Krinsky at Adas Israel Congregation in Washington D.C., also observed.

This is a time when I think people are really desperate for spirituality, Lebell said. For some kind of spiritual structure, for inspiration, for comfort, for a sense of belonging when were all so separate from one another.

Lorelei Laird had been married to a Jewish man for nine years when she decided to learn more about her husbands faith. As she met over Zoom with Lebell, whom she has yet to meet in person, Laird said she found more and more aspects of Judaism that spoke to her, in part due to the uniqueness of this past year.

What I want is some moral leadership, Laird told JI. 2020 was full of nakedly immoral behavior on all sides, and it made me want some sort of authority saying, Its okay to care about whats right. Laird converted in early September, just in time for the High Holy Days.

Despite the limitations inherent to online Jewish learning, beit dins (three-person rabbinic courts required for conversions) over Zoom and restricted mikvah experiences, the eight mid-pandemic converts who spoke with JI all described having felt the intimacy, warmth and overpowering joy many associate with the process.

When Kaitlin Carragher entered a mikvah in New York City open now, with strict COVID-19 restrictions on Nov. 25 after several months of Zoom sessions with Mintz, she didnt expect the emotion of it to impact her as strongly as it did.

Being able to call myself Jewish for the first time hit me in a way I hadnt anticipated, Carragher, who was raised Catholic and decided to convert in part because of her Jewish fiance, told JI. A friend asked me afterwards, How was it? How do you feel? I said I feel very full.

For Katie Berland, whose conversion was overseen by rabbis at Adas Israel in October, the experience was beautiful in its own way.

Walking into the mikvah, Berland, who took Ruth as her Hebrew name (in the wake of the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who had also been an Adas member), told JI, its supposed to be this beautiful, free-flowing, meaningful moment, but heres this masked figure [with a face shield], who I know who it is but I cant see her eyes or her smile, staring at me as Im saying the prayers. The awkwardness of the health protocols notwithstanding, as she walked out of the mikvah, Berland shed tears of joy: It was so beautiful, the chapter was closing.

But echoing the tears shed at the end of her virtual beit din, the moment was bittersweet for Berland: Something, she felt, was missing.

It was so beautiful to see their faces, it felt like a completion of something, she said of her virtual beit din. But I couldnt feel it. I couldnt hug the rabbis who had taught me so much, I couldnt hug my sponsoring rabbi. I couldnt say thank you in person.

Maxwell Thompson, another recent convert who belongs to Adas, felt similarly.

After [the beit din], they were reading off the document that they had signed, he said, and I just wanted so badly to hug all of them, to embrace them, and say thank you for starting this journey for me.

Still, across Lebells many virtual beit dins over the past months, the rabbi saw they were just as powerful as those she had attended in person pre-pandemic.

Its a life-changing moment when you essentially declare aloud I am now a Jew, and usually peoples voices crack at that moment and that still happened over Zoom, she said. Of course, peoples ovens are going off in the middle of it and peoples kids are running in and out. Theres that at-home element of it, which almost makes it more intimate.

While some aspects of the usual conversion experience lost some of the specialness, in the words of Joshua DeMoss, an Adas member still going through the conversion process, other aspects became more fulfilling and accessible than they might have been otherwise for some participants.

Laird noted that the shift to virtual engagement enabled her to attend daily morning services more easily and frequently, avoiding her 45-minute commute to IKAR. And the closeness of her relationship with her sponsoring rabbi only increased online. I am a person who is a little bit more comfortable on the Internet than in real life with people, and the pandemic has been fantastic for that, she explained.

Another positive feature of virtual services? The mute button. A number of recent converts noted the convenience of being able to ask a partner about confusing aspects of the High Holy Day services as they were occurring.

Having my husband around was helpful with how many times do you need to bow, little things like that things that if we were in person, you could look around the congregation and see what other people are up to, but I didnt have that resource, Laird said.

Still, what several converts noticed as distinctly lacking from their virtual class experience was a sense of community the routine of entering a physical space each week, seeing the same now-familiar faces and sharing coffee and cookies before learning together, said DeMoss, whose Judaism 101 course moved online in its final two weeks.

Whats missing is the, you know, Im here for a class and then I walk by this room and I see this going on, or Before shul I would meet someone in the beit midrash, Krinsky said. Things that you cant schedule or put on a calendar, or if you do, it requires being a lot more explicit about things that never were.

As the converts and the rabbis who worked with them look toward a post-pandemic future, for many, its full of blissful anticipation of finally attending synagogue services and activities in person. But for some, the circumstances of their first steps into the faith have created a heightened anxiety about being accepted as rightfully Jewish. In Lebells words, Theres a bunch of new Jews in the world who still have only ever experienced Judaism online.

I still kind of wonder how Im going to feel [in shul], Ari Langman, a recent convert at IKAR, told JI. One of the things that has bothered me the most is the feeling of not necessarily being seen as a Jew by people who maybe dont see converts that way.

Berland, one of the new members at Adas, voiced a similar fear.

Once things start to return to normalcy and people actually do start going back to services, I feel like people who went through their conversion experience may need a little bit more flexibility and understanding, she said, adding that she hopes longtime congregants will be accepting of that adjustment period.

Ultimately, as a number of those who have recently converted or are working toward conversion pointed out, the experience as a whole can only exist in the context of community, and community often requires a physical gathering space. In the future, those gathering spaces will be available once again, lending mid-pandemic converts an opportunity to fully immerse themselves in the daily Jewish world they have already entered.

I cant wait to go back to synagogue, Im actually waiting with bated breath, Thompson said. For me, the conversion process was really about being in that Jewish space, surrounded by people who love you and embrace you.

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'Beautiful in its own way': Conversions to Judaism amid the pandemic - Jewish Insider

Hot-Desk Judaism has arrived. | Sally Berkovic | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted By on December 7, 2020

Hot-Desk Jews are the future. Flexible, cost-efficient, non-hierarchical and collaborative, the hot-desk work space offers opportunities for varied experiences, cultural exchange and heightened personal autonomy. So too, what Ive termed Hot-Desk Judaism. As elements of Jewish life start to be envisioned post-Corona, this model is going to seep even deeper into our Jewish lives, and its proponents, who defy traditional age-categorization, are Hot-Desk Jews who appreciate these six advantages.

While elements of Hot-Desk Judaism have been operating for years, including independent minyanim and emerging alternative rituals for life-cycle events, these isolated activities need the larger structures of communal life to exist. This of course is the conundrum: Hot-Desk Judaism flourishes in opposition to staid, unresponsive communal structures that refuse to acknowledge the need to change. Hot-Desk Judaism is nurtured by entrepreneurial individuals with the nous and networks to initiate grassroots activities.

This goes to the core of defining Jewish communal life and how it will be sustained. Its clearer in religious circles, where certain institutions are needed to make halachic life happen such as the mikvah, the school and the synagogue, together with the relevant personnel. Charitable giving is generous and a slew of organizations caring for vulnerable people are all part of this communal infrastructure. But even in the Orthodox community where its assumed that the lines of authority are clear, its much more subtle. For example, the response to Corona has increased tensions in an already fracturing Orthodox community. With marked exceptions, those in the ultra-Orthodox community have defied government guidelines regarding masks and social distance, while those in the Modern Orthodox community have abided by the rules. Rabbis responded to Corona challenges through the prism of Jewish law, and whatever changes emerge post-Corona, the Shulchan Aruch, the set table, or Code of Jewish Law, will primarily continue to guide behavior in the Orthodox world.

However, what is needed now is a complementary codification for Hot-Desk Judaism a Shulchan Cham [hot table] if you will. Perhaps a contradiction in terms, as the very nature of Hot-Desk Judaism is its flexibility, however if it is not rooted in the Jewish canon and Jewish traditions, it is doomed. Hot-Desk Judaism offers multiple paths to Jewish engagement, and my goodness, we really need them, but without a code of behavior, I fear that Hot-Desk Judaism will ultimately fail.

We need it to flourish.

Sally Berkovic is the author of Under My Hat, now available on Amazon.com and abebooks.co.uk A mix of memoir, sociology, history, and acute observations focusing on Orthodoxy and feminism, this 2019 edition includes a new, 75-page introductory essay reviewing the extraordinary changes in Orthodox womens lives since the book was first published in 1997. Her writings are on her site http://www.sallyberkovic.com

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Hot-Desk Judaism has arrived. | Sally Berkovic | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

Work, history and dialogue keep Jews, Muslims happy together in sunny Marseille – The Times of Israel

Posted By on December 7, 2020

MARSEILLE, France Although punctuality isnt a dominant trait among most Jewish leaders (and non-leaders) who agree to sit down with The Times of Israel, Michel Cohen Tenoudji, the president of the Jewish community of Marseille, apologized through his black cloth mask as he barreled into his simple office on the second floor of the Great Synagogue compound a few minutes late. He was unable to let the interview run overtime, he said, because a local Muslim leader would be visiting him directly afterward.

The mid-October interview came just days after a Paris schoolteacher was targeted and beheaded in a terrorist attack a gruesome retribution for having shown the class a controversial cartoon featuring the Prophet Mohammed.

Asked if hed discuss the attack with the visiting Muslim leader, the 60-year-old Cohen Tenoudji, who since 2017 has been president of the Consistoire the government-recognized body representing Marseilles Jewish community let slip that he would.

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The local Muslim leader, who asked to remain unnamed for this article, intended to denounce the attack and all forms of terror, Cohen Tenoudji said. The two would also discuss some ambitious interfaith initiatives they were working on.

President of Marseilles Jewish community Michel Cohen Tenoudji in his office at the Great Synagogue, October 21, 2020. (Yaakov Schwartz/ Times of Israel)

In the two weeks following The Times of Israels meeting with Cohen Tenoudji, there was a stabbing and beheading attack that saw three killed in Nice, just 200 kilometers (124 miles) east of Marseille, and a massive shooting attack in Vienna with four civilians and 23 injured.

Meanwhile, the residents of the easygoing Mediterranean seaside melting pot Frances second-largest city seemed mostly unaffected by the political and religious unrest which for years has roiled the rest of the continent.

Since World War II, Marseille has grown increasingly diverse. This change accelerated in the 1960s and 70s with an influx of Muslims and Jews from Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria following the states declarations of independence from French rule in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

Noailles is a hub for Middle Eastern and African immigrants in Marseille. At its center is an open-air bazaar with stalls similar to those found in the shuk markets of Israel. October 2020. (Yaakov Schwartz/ Times of Israel)

Today, Muslims are estimated to make up 20 to 25 percent of Marseilles population of 860,000. There are also between 70,000 and 80,000 Jews living in the city, mostly of North African descent, making it the third-largest Jewish community in Europe after Paris and London, with a concentration of Jews rivaling New York or Miami.

Ahead of the meeting with community head Cohen Tenoudji, The Times of Israel walked down Rue Saint-Suffren, a dismal midtown stretch that houses numerous kosher shops, restaurants, and a Jewish school. This reporter stopped a man in the black and white clothing characteristic of ultra-Orthodox Jews.

A sign points to Judai-Cite, or the Rue Saint-Suffren, a center for Jewish commerce in Marseille, October 2020. (Yaakov Schwartz/ Times of Israel)

Speaking in basic Hebrew (the vast majority of Jews in Marseille speak only French), The Times of Israel asked whether the observant Jew would feel safe wearing his kippa in other parts of the city. Of course, he immediately said. Pressed on whether he would wear the Jewish headgear in Noailles a heavily Muslim part of town with an open-air bazaar that may have been uprooted and plopped down from anywhere in the Middle East, including Jerusalems Mahane Yehuda the man barely hesitated. Sure, he said, thoughtfully. Why not?

Other locals, Jewish and non-Jewish, also seemed to take Marseilles religious coexistence for granted. One member of the Jewish community who works for the city said that he believes the neighborly relations between Jews and Muslims carried over from the Maghreb, where the two groups lived together for centuries.

Rue Saint-Suffren is a center for Jewish commerce in Marseille. It can be lively or nearly empty, depending on the time. October 2020. (Yaakov Schwartz/ Times of Israel)

In addition, he said, Muslims in Marseille are well-accepted and dont face as much racism and antagonism from the locals as in other French cities, making them less inclined to vent their frustrations on the citys Jewish residents.

He also pointed out that unlike many big cities outside of Israel, Jews were not concentrated into one social and economic stratum. You were as likely to find a Jew driving a bus, teaching in a public school, or wearing a police uniform as working in a law firm or performing surgery, he said, echoing a refrain from French Jewish director Yvan Attals 2016 film The Jews that this reporter would hear many times over in Marseille. Theyre everywhere, he said.

While touring the Great Synagogue just before the meeting with Cohen Tenoudji, a Jewish community employee who served as guide affirmed the citys unique Jewish community, as well as the warm relations it shares with its Muslim neighbors.

Exterior of the Great Synagogue of Marseille, October 21, 2020. (Yaakov Schwartz/ Times of Israel)

Its true, said the employee, who asked not to be named since he was speaking personally and not as a community representative. But were just waiting for the terror to reach here. Someone from outside will eventually see that were living the cool life here in Marseille, that we arent too scared and dont have such high security, and there will be a shooting attack or a suicide bombing. If you ask me, its only a matter of time.

Asked what that would mean for the citys atmosphere of coexistence, he thought for a moment and shrugged. I guess things would go back to normal after a few months, he said. Theyre not going to change the way we think here.

He led the way into Cohen Tenoudjis office, where this reporter adjusted his face mask and settled in to wait for the busy man.

The following interview has been edited for length and clarity.

The Times of Israel: So, how many Jews are there in Marseille?

Michel Cohen Tenoudji: There are 70,000 that we know about, but we think were around 100,000 because there are a lot of people who have a Jewish mother, but they are not closely linked with the institutions or the Jewish world. Every day we discover hidden Jews who didnt even know themselves that they were Jewish. Sometimes they just know that they have something Jewish in their family or genealogy, and thats it.

President of the Marseille Jewish community, Michel Cohen Tenoudji. (Courtesy)

Ive seen this happen in Central and Eastern Europe because of circumstances after WWII and the rise of the Iron Curtain, but here in Marseille most of the Jews came from North Africa decades after the war. What kind of background do these hidden Jews here have?

After WWII, Jewish people from Algeria and Morocco came to France, and there was a lot of assimilation. Because many Jewish women also married non-Jewish people, for the children half of their family is not Jewish but they themselves are Jewish according to the Torah.

As far as Jewish denomination, how do most of the Jews here identify?

Most of the community is traditional, and maybe 10 percent would be considered Orthodox. French Jews are very open-minded, so we all live together easily. In Marseille most Jews identify with the Consistoire and follow the French Chief Rabbi Haim Korsia.

For all life cycle events, bureaucracy, red tape, weddings, death no matter what denomination you are, any Jew can use the Consistoires services. We are the official organ for the Jewish people in France, so we answer all questions and concerns about Judaism no matter who is asking.

There are some Reform and Conservative Jews here, but they are very few and they have only one synagogue in Marseille. We at the Consistoire dont have much of a connection with the Progressive community, but I think that as Jews were just lucky that everybody gets along. Our Chief Rabbi Ruben Ohana and Dayan [head of the rabbinical court] Shmouel Melloul do their best to bring all the communities together no Jew in Marseille is too far down the road if they need us.

Rue Saint-Suffren is a center for Jewish commerce in Marseille. It can be lively or nearly empty, depending on the time. October 2020. (Yaakov Schwartz/ Times of Israel)

And how are Jewish-Muslim relations in Marseille?

Like the rest of the country, Marseille has seen some anti-Semitic acts from Islamist people, but with far less intensity and frequency. We think this is proof of our good relationship. We have an association called Marseille Esprance, or Hope of Marseille, which gathers all the religious leaders from the town, and organizes activities, debates, discussions or events. I myself have visited the Muslim community many times to show our support, whether its for the opening of a new mosque, for the Eid holiday, or for Ramadan. And we in turn welcome the Muslim leaders in our Great Synagogue each year for Rosh Hashanah.

These types of moments are strong messages that we send to our own local communities, as well as people far away. More than that, Marseille itself is a multicultural melting pot where many diverse people are used to living together. It is really lucky to live in such a peaceful place.

The Marseille port, October 2020. (Yaakov Schwartz/ Times of Israel)

What parts of this relationship can be improved?

We could still be more active together, and unite to fight for common goals. For example, we could stand together against the growing right-wing nationalism in Europe, which is a threat to all of us.

Does the shared cultural history of the Jews and Muslims coming from the Maghreb influence their relationship in Marseille more than in other French cities?

Without a doubt! With the massive waves of immigration from North Africa, all these communities came together in Marseille. They were used to living together, and they kept their way of living, their habits and that tradition is still alive now.

A wedding takes place at the Great Synagogue of Marseille, October 21, 2020. (Yaakov Schwartz/ Times of Israel)

What sort of challenges does the Jewish community face today?

We have numerous challenges. The Consistoire, the main institution of the Jewish community of Marseille, is first of all concerned with making the practice of Judaism possible to everybody. We are there for the religious part, kashrut, circumcisions, weddings, and we take care of the cemeteries. Were like a city hall for the Jews. We are here for all the concerns about Jewish life and regular life from birth to death.

In addition to that, part of our basic mission is handling politics and community relations its like our community is a little town within the town. For example, nowadays with COVID-19, we have our job cut out for us doing what we need to do to make religious life possible even with all the restrictions and laws that were proclaimed by the government. So we work with the government to make Jewish life possible in France, respecting all the French laws while respecting halacha (Jewish law) and the Jewish way of life.

One of many small harbors in Marseille, October 2020. (Yaakov Schwartz/ Times of Israel)

Can you give me some examples of what the consistoire is doing to make Jewish life possible during the health crisis?

For example, during the first wave in March and April, we closed our synagogues before the government enacted restrictions. But contagion in the first crisis was much lower in Marseille than in the rest of France. So we made the decision to reopen synagogues before the rest of the country.

The government didnt think about Jewish life during COVID, so we did, because we have to

We are taking care of the local specificities of the Jewish community, and this is our main mission. We manage the Jewish community like a little independent community. We created hygienic protocols and measures specific to the synagogues, specific to the mikvah [ritual bath], specific to circumcision. As Jews, we made these specific measures because the government didnt think about Jewish life during COVID, so we did, because we have to.

The Marseille waterfront, October 2020. (Yaakov Schwartz/ Times of Israel)

Do you have any mechanisms in place to keep track of the COVID statistics in the Jewish community?

Statistically we cant know, because there are no ethnic statistics in the hospital. We dont know whos Jewish or not its not like in the United States, you cant fill out such a form indicating whether youre Jewish or not Jewish. But while Marseille is a big city in France, for its Jews it is also like a small town, so in the Consistoire we know how many Jewish people have died from the disease in Marseille. As the newspapers are saying, we can see that the number of Jews dying from COVID is no greater than that of the rest of the population and other communities in France.

Do you know how many Jewish people died of COVID in Marseille?

We know, but we cant say the figure. But after Purim [in March] that holiday was the last party where there was maybe transmission. But after that, we stopped everything. Thanks to all the measures we spoke about earlier, we dont have a lot of transmission here, because the Jewish community is being very careful about following them. At the beginning of the crisis in March, even the government even other governments around the world didnt really know how to deal with it, so we did our best. But we learned from our mistakes, and so we took action very quickly at the beginning of the second wave. So this is why we now have lower levels of transmission.

Original post:

Work, history and dialogue keep Jews, Muslims happy together in sunny Marseille - The Times of Israel

THIS WEEK: Fort Bend County legislators to discuss upcoming Texas Legislature – Houston Chronicle

Posted By on December 7, 2020

With the Texas Legislature scheduled to meet in January, area representatives and senators are gearing up for the session.

From 8:30 to 10 a.m. Tuesday, Dec. 8, the Fort Bend County Business Collaborative will host a slew of politicians to discuss the agenda for the upcoming Legislature.

The event will be held via Zoom. To register go to https://tinyurl.com/FBCLegislative.

Invited to be part of the presentation are State Sens. Borris Miles, Joan Huffman and Lois Kohlhorst; and State Reps. Gary Cates, Ron Reynolds, Phil Stephenson and Jacy Jetton.

The forum will be moderated by Jeff Wiley, president/CEO of the Fort Bend Economic Development Council, and Marvin Marcell, governmental affairs consultant.

The event is being held in conjunction with the Central Fort Bend, Fulshear-Katy Area, Katy Area, Needville Area chambers of commerce.

For more information contact Rachelle Kanak at rkanak@fbedc.org.

Among the items identified or the 2021 Legislative Agenda for the coming session is the states redistricting; elimination of unfunded state mandates; economic development issues; healthcare; infrastructure; and education. To view the agenda, go to https://tinyurl.com/y3f4km3l.

Hanukkah, the Jewish festival also known as the Festival of Lights, will start on Thursday, Dec. 10, and continue through Friday, Dec. 18.

The annual festival commemorates the rededication of the Second Temple in Jerusalem at the time of the Maccabean Revolt against the Seleucid Empire in 165 BCE.

Hanukkah is observed for eight days and nights on the 25th day of Kislev in the Hebrew calendar, which means the Festival of Lights may occur from late November to late December.

There are numerous synagogues in the greater Houston region. For more information or to locate a synagogue go to http://www.houstonjewish.org.

The Fort Bend ISD board of trustees is scheduled to meet at 6 p.m. Monday, Dec. 7, with a full agenda to address.

Among the items on the agenda is a public hearing on the districts 2019-20 Financial Integrity Rating System of Texas rating. The board will also get an update on efforts to support students during the COVID-19 pandemic.

A livestream of the meeting will be available at https://tinyurl.com/y2role9n. To view the full agenda go to https://tinyurl.com/y6bjss4o.

The Katy Area Chamber of Commerce will host a seminar on Understanding the business life cycle from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 8. The event will be held at the Katy Chamber office at 814 E. Avenue, Suite H, in Katy.

Shane Theriot of Edwards Jones and Greg Hess, ActionCoach, are scheduled to lead the discussion.

Tickets are $40 for non members and $25 for members.

To register go to https://tinyurl.com/y5xj2chy.

For more information contact Ashley DeWispelaere at 281-391-7423 or email ashley@katychamber.com.

The Fulshear-Katy Area Chamber of Commerce membership meeting will be held starting at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 9. The event will be held at Parkway Fellowship, 27043 FM 1093 in Richmond.

The guest speaker is Mike McGown, senior pastor at Parkway Fellowship, speaking on Faith in Your Business.

There is no charge for the event.

For more information go to https://tinyurl.com/y44exn74, call 832-600-3221 or email don@fulshearkaty.com.

The Fulshear-Katy Area Chamber of Commerce will host a pair of rope-cutting ceremonies to welcome area businesses into the chamber.

Success on the Spectrum Richmond will host its ceremony from noon to 1 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 10, at 1803 Richmond Parkway, Suite 600, in Richmond.

The Toasted Yolk will be welcomed from 11 a.m. to noon Friday, Dec. 11. The event will be held at 6727 FM 1463, Suite 150, in Katy.

For more information go to https://tinyurl.com/y44exn74, call 832-600-3221 or email fulshearkaty@gmail.com.

rkent@hcnonline.com

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