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‘Jesus wins’ daubed on shul and Shoah monument in Greece – Jewish News

Posted By on December 7, 2020

An unidentified man spray-painted the words Jesus Wins in black on the walls of a synagogue in Greece and a nearby Holocaust monument.

The incident Thursday in Larissa, in northern Greece, was reported immediately to police but the man fled before he could be apprehended. Witnesses described the man as middle-aged, and said he was holding up a sign with Christian religious symbols.

Police are looking for the man, the Jewish Community of Larissa reported on its website.

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In 1944, Nazi occupation forces rounded up the Jews of Larissa and nearby Trikala and imprisoned them in a military garage. They and the Jews of Ioannina were sent to be murdered at Auschwitz-Birkenau. Only a handful of Larissa Jews survived, according to Yad Vashem, Israels Holocaust museum.

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'Jesus wins' daubed on shul and Shoah monument in Greece - Jewish News

California issues new stay-at-home orders after hospitalizations more than triple in the last month – Yahoo News

Posted By on December 7, 2020

The Week

Since 2007, Senator Mitch McConnell has been the leader of the Republican caucus in the Senate and by far the most effective political strategist in his party. He was the architect of the scorched-earth opposition to everything President Obama did, which paid dividends in the form of the Republican wave in 2010 and eventually Donald Trump's victory in 2016. McConnell did all he could to hold open federal court seats during Obama's terms, which allowed Trump to stuff the district and appellate courts, and the Supreme Court, with far-right partisans.But McConnell is 78 years old, a survivor of polio, and clearly has some health problems. He does not appear to be in any immediate serious medical danger, but he also will not last forever and there is nobody of his skill or temperament waiting to replace him. When he finally retires or dies, the Republican Party will be all crazy, all the time.Since 2009 and the rise of the Tea Party which appears rather quaint by modern standards, but was genuinely nutty at the time there has been a long debate about if or when the fever would break on the right. For a while after Republicans lost in 2012, I suspected there might be a conservative reform movement, but I don't think I have ever been so wildly wrong. Since then, the crazy ultra-right has become even more crazy with every passing year, and gained ever more power in the GOP.A key part of this process has been the complete irresponsibility of the dwindling number of Republican elites who have not abandoned their senses. Over and over again, they have chosen to ride the tiger of lunacy rather than tell their base unpleasant truths. John Boehner shamelessly fed the Tea Party red meat to win the 2010 elections and become Speaker of the House, only to find it near-impossible to govern because his caucus was so unruly and unwilling to make even the tiniest compromises. (He is clearly enjoying retirement a great deal more than political office.) Paul Ryan did the exact same thing in the same position. Now the Freedom Caucus is being outflanked on the Republican far right by a growing number of open QAnon conspiracy theorists.Similarly, when the "grab them by the pussy" tape came out during the 2016 campaign, a few top Republicans briefly and quietly distanced themselves from Trump, only to clam up when his poll numbers did not dive. That, of course, was only because those same elites refused to really denounce him, and because the hermetically-sealed propaganda chamber that conservatives had built over the years downplayed or ignored the story.Indeed, Trump's whole candidacy was built on exploiting the shameless lies and hysterical nonsense that Republican elites and conservative media have been telling the GOP base for years, like tax cuts pay for themselves or that Barack Obama is a secret Muslim socialist born in Kenya, and so they could not refute him. As Talking Points Memo's Josh Marshall wrote at the time, "the slow accumulation of nonsense and paranoia built into a massive trap door under the notional GOP leadership with a lever that a canny huckster like Trump could come in and pull pretty much whenever."Yet throughout this time, McConnell has been able to maintain a certain coherence to Republican political strategy, with a laser-focus on what he cares about namely, winning elections and installing conservative judges always staying on message, and fading into the background at all other times. Every other Republican at the top of the party either lacks his discipline and vision, or is a shameless attention hound more concerned with building a celebrity following (and thereafter making money) than political victory.Since Trump has lost re-election, once again almost all Republican elites are either indulging his treasonous nonsense about the election being stolen, or actually believe it. As Paul Waldman writes, Trump appears to be positioning himself for another run for president in 2024, in which case most Republicans apparently think they have to appease him or lose their seats.Now, McConnell is also disliked by the crazy ultra-right, but for a different reason. He is willing to indulge conspiracy paranoia, but he too obviously doesn't much care about it himself. He is much more notably concerned about personally avoiding the coronavirus than the average Republican elected official, for instance. As Alex Pareene writes, at bottom McConnell is a nihilistic and ruthless parliamentary tactician, not a stupid loudmouth who cares more about going on television than governance; that is why he faced a primary challenge from a Tea Party dolt in 2014 (who he beat easily).So it will be bleakly interesting to see what will happen without McConnell providing some semblance of strategic direction to the party. His logical successor, Senate Majority Whip John Thune (R-S.D.) evinces little of McConnell's amoral will-to-power, nor much Trump-style charismatic bluster. The temptation for other Republicans to attack Thune, or whoever else ends up on top in the Senate, for insufficient support of future Republican presidential nominee Peter Brimelow will be strong. One amusing possibility is that voting itself will be considered the mark of RINO sellouts. A recent Twitter flame war saw Newt Gingrich and Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Tex.) themselves the bleeding edge of the extreme right when they were first elected arguing with Lin Wood and Michelle Malkin over whether Georgia Republicans should vote in the upcoming special Senate election.I wouldn't bet too much on that happening, however. Logical consistency is not a requirement for political success, and most Republicans probably tacitly still believe that voting works, even if they can't admit it to themselves otherwise why continue to rig the process with gerrymandering and vote suppression? It's just that future Republican governments will be even more divorced from lived reality in this country than they currently are.More stories from theweek.com I'm rooting for pro-democracy Republicans As Trump rages, his appointees are rushing to tie Biden's hands, burnish their own careers New Mexico hospitals 'very quickly' headed toward rationing COVID-19 care

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California issues new stay-at-home orders after hospitalizations more than triple in the last month - Yahoo News

US election result: Impact on healthcare for undocumented communities – Medical News Today

Posted By on December 7, 2020

In this perspective article, Dr. Luz Maria Garcini, Dr. Amanda Venta, and Cristina Abraham consider how the result of this years presidential election will impact access to healthcare in undocumented communities in the United States.

Disclaimer: Dr. Luz Maria Garcini is based at the University of Texas Health Science Center at the San Antonio Joe R. and Teresa Lozano Long School of Medicine, Dr. Amanda Venta is from the University of Houston, and Cristina Abraham is based at the University of Texas at San Antonio.

The opinions presented in this article are the authors and may not reflect the views of their affiliated institutions.

Last month, a record number of Americans voted to elect the next president of the United States.

While official results will not be available until the electoral college votes on December 14, 2020, the Democratic candidate and former vice president, Joe Biden, has been recognized as the unofficial winner by media outlets and many foreign governments.

The elections have been a particularly stressful time for many vulnerable communities, including millions of undocumented immigrants unable to vote. The anti-immigrant rhetoric and fearmongering over the past few years have fueled mounting uncertainty and fear among these immigrants, as well as divisiveness among people of different backgrounds.

With any incoming administration, undocumented communities face uncertainties regarding legal protections, access to services, the availability of resources and opportunities, and the ever-looming threat of deportations and family separations.

The Democratic Party have a complex history regarding immigration policies and reforms. For instance, despite the Obama administrations passage of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Act (DACA) an immigration program granting temporary protection to undocumented individuals who came to the U.S. as children the administration was criticized for their record-high deportation rates.

Furthermore, the subsequent exclusion of DACA recipients from the Affordable Care Act (ACA), a program that provides subsidies to make health insurance more affordable, left many in the community feeling abandoned and overlooked by policymakers.

Given the Democratic Partys history of counterintuitive policies and broken promises regarding immigration, the Biden administration will have to follow through with concrete actions that align with the promises made by their political platform during the presidential campaign.

So far, Democrats have proposed to prioritize immigration reform as a key goal. The president-elect has outlined a plan for his first 100 days in office, including a number of immigration policy changes, with DACA being one.

As it currently stands, DACA is an executive branch memorandum similar to an executive order announced by former U.S. president Barack Obama as a temporary stopgap to defer deportations of young people.

On his first day in office, Biden has stated his intention to make DACA permanent by sending a bill to Congress. In addition, he aims to stop family separations at the U.S.-Mexico border and reunite families previously separated under the Trump administration.

Biden has also expressed his intention to reverse several policies on immigration, including stopping policies that force asylum seekers to remain in Mexico while awaiting immigration court hearings.

He also proposes to stop funding for a border wall and increase oversight of immigration enforcement to ensure the humane treatment of immigrants.

The proposed immigration policy changes may have tremendous implications for the health and well-being of undocumented immigrants and mixed-status families.

First and foremost, efforts to restore the human rights of immigrants by ending and remedying family separations, providing executive oversight of federal immigration agencies, and eliminating policies that currently curtail and endanger asylum seekers stand to reduce sources of trauma and toxic stress commonly experienced by immigrants.

Additionally, facilitating access for undocumented immigrants and individuals currently protected by the DACA program to purchase health insurance in the public marketplace, as proposed by Bidens planned expansion to the Affordable Care Act, is essential to reduce health risk and prevent further harm in this vulnerable population.

Lack of health insurance and undocumented legal status are well-documented barriers to healthcare use among Latinx immigrants. These are known to have detrimental consequences for their health and well-being while increasing their reliance on emergency healthcare.

The COVID-19 pandemic has worsened existing inequities in healthcare access, negatively impacting marginalized immigrants by limiting engagement in essential health services such as testing, contact tracing, and treatment-seeking.

In an effort to mitigate and reverse the negative impact of the pandemic on undocumented populations, the incoming administration has expressed a desire to address deeply entrenched discriminatory policies.

For instance, Bidens plan to reverse the public charge rule, a policy that penalizes immigrants using Medicaid and certain other federally funded programs as grounds to deny legalization, is an important first step in ensuring equitable access to healthcare.

Currently, the public charge rule discourages undocumented immigrants from obtaining timely and necessary care out of fear that utilizing government services will negatively impact their ability for legalization in the future.

While this rule does not apply to COVID-19 testing and treatment, the provision has inevitably led to widespread confusion and a lowered usage of essential health services.

If undertaken, president-elect Bidens proposed policy changes would stand to dramatically increase immigrant access to healthcare and address some of the inequities that currently exist.

Many immigrants experience significant trauma and violence throughout the migration journey, including settling and living in the U.S. Instances of depression, anxiety, and trauma-related distress are common.

Bidens platform outlines the need to address mental health needs as part of the greater conversation around healthcare and well-being. In particular, his platform advocates for stronger efforts to enforce existing laws that promote mental health parity.

On their party platform, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) assert that every American should have access to mental health resources.

As part of this vision, they support doubling investments into community health centers in underserved regions, including increased support for mental health services.

While these policies do not mention including undocumented immigrants as potential beneficiaries, the DNCs intention to increase funding for community health centers, alongside growing recognition of undocumented communities, may ultimately result in mental health policies that facilitate access for all people regardless of their legal status.

By legitimizing and addressing undocumented immigrants complex mental health needs, safety net providers will be able to build trust and provide care to address these unmet needs. Doing this requires a targeted effort to develop and train a competent workforce.

During the next presidential administration, funding to inform and address the training requirements of healthcare and community workers will be essential in developing a workforce that can effectively address the complex health needs of a considerable yet vulnerable immigrant population.

As we move forward to the next presidential era, millions of undocumented families in the U.S. will be watching the actions of the future administration, including its adherence to the promises made.

The president-elect has stated that he intends to expand the Affordable Care Act, protect DACA recipients, stop family separations at the border, reverse the public charge rule, and limit immigration enforcement activities.

While these promises show insight into undocumented immigrants needs, questions and uncertainty remain about the feasibility and implementation of these actions.

For the Democratic Party to regain the trust of undocumented communities and abide by their promises, policymakers will need to cooperate across party lines. In essence, the well-being of undocumented immigrants must cease to be a partisan issue and be addressed as a human rights concern with moral and ethical implications.

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US election result: Impact on healthcare for undocumented communities - Medical News Today

Israeli Odelia Fitoussi elected to UN panel for persons with disabilities – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Following a year of an international diplomatic campaign jointly led by the Israeli Foreign Affairs Ministry and the Israeli Mission to the United Nations, Odelia Fitoussi was elected on Monday to represent Israel at the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD).The CRPD is the leading UN body responsible for formulating a global policy for the 182 signatory states to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Israel was one of the leading nations to take part in drafting the convention, joining it in 2012.In the election held on Monday at the UN headquarters in New York, representatives from 27 countries competed for nine slots on the committee. Israel won in the first round, receiving support from 109 countries.I feel privileged to be a member of the CRPD, said Fitoussi, the place where Israel was a partner in creating a new language for people with disabilities: a language of rights, of pride in who you are; in our uniqueness as people with disabilities who enrich society with all the good we have built.Fitoussi, 43, born with muscular dystrophy (SMA2), will become the first Israeli selected to serve on this prestigious committee.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called Fitoussi on Tuesday night to congratulate her on being elected. He wished her success and told her that the people of Israel are proud of her.Israels Ambassador to the UN Gilad Erdan congratulated Fitoussi on her victory. Odelia is a tremendous source of pride for Israel, he said.

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Israeli Odelia Fitoussi elected to UN panel for persons with disabilities - The Jerusalem Post

Israel headed for early elections as Gantz-Netanyahu coalition falls apart – Axios

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Israel's governing coalition is falling apart, setting the stage for the fourth election in two years.

Driving the news: Defense Minister Benny Gantz announced tonight that his Blue and White party would vote in favor of dissolving parliament on Wednesday because Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Gantz's political rival turned coalition partner was refusing to pass a budget and reneging on their power-sharing deal.

Why it matters: Wednesday's vote is only a preliminary step, but it will set an almost irreversible course toward early elections next March.

State of play: The government needs to pass its 2020 budget by Dec. 23 to survive, but Gantz is insisting that Netanyahu also agree to pass the 2021 budget by then.

What they're saying: Gantz said he joined the power-sharing government due to the COVID-19 crisis and had no illusions about Netanyahu, whom he called a serial promise-breaker."

Whats next: Gantz did leave a small opening by saying the early elections can still be prevented if Netanyahu brings the 2021 budget up for a vote in the Cabinet in the next three weeks and guarantees it will pass the Knesset soon thereafter.

The bottom line: It will take a miracle to prevent an early election.

Go deeper: Gantz's "submarine affair" probe signals end of pact

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Israel headed for early elections as Gantz-Netanyahu coalition falls apart - Axios

Ashkenazi: Netanyahu didn’t mention budget once in his remarks – The Times of Israel

Posted By on December 5, 2020

EU stops short of advising against holiday travel over virus

As millions of European citizens gear up for the festive season, the European Unions executive commission urges member countries to keep strong anti-coronavirus restrictions in place to avoid a post-holiday surge of cases and deaths but stops short of advising against travel.

The European Commission says in non-binding recommendations that easing pandemic-containment measures this month would jeopardize the efforts that have helped slow infections across the EU in recent weeks.

According to predictions made by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, lifting all anti-coronavirus restrictions on December 21 would result in a subsequent increase in COVID-19 hospital admissions as early as the first week of January 2021.

New confirmed cases are falling steadily across Europe, where more than 300,000 people with COVID-19 have died. Until vaccines against the virus are rolled out, the EU commission is recommending prudence.

A pedestrian wearing a protective face covering to combat the spread of the coronavirus walks past the Christmas-themed window displays of shops in central London on November 27, 2020, as a second lockdown continues in England. (Tolga Akmen / AFP)

Every 17 seconds a person loses their life due to COVID-19 in Europe, EU health commissioner Stella Kyriakides says. The situation may be stabilizing, but it remains delicate. Like everything else this year, end of the year festivities will be different. This year, saving lives must come before celebrations.

EU health ministers discuss the European Commissions strategy Wednesday as European countries famous for their skiing resorts struggled to find a common approach.

The commission, however, did not discourage tourism and cross-border traveling.

Whilst travel itself is a risk factor, the generalized widespread transmission of COVID-19 across member states means that at present, intra-EU cross-border travel does not present a significant added risk, it says.

Still, the commission strongly discouraged people with coronavirus symptoms from traveling and recommended vaccination against the seasonal flu for travelers.

AP

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Ashkenazi: Netanyahu didn't mention budget once in his remarks - The Times of Israel

What Does the Jewish Last Name Epstein Mean? – Chabad.org

Posted By on December 5, 2020

At first glance, Epsteinwould seem to be related to the many Yiddish-German stein names that havelittle historical significance other than their pretty sound, such as Goldstein(gold stone), Silberstein (silver stone), Perlstein (pearl stone), et.al.

However, while these namesare less than 250 years old, the Epsteins take their family name from the townof Eppstein in central Germany, where they lived as far back as the 16thcentury.

Many people with this name,including many great Ashkenazi rabbis, tend to be Levites, tracing their lineage back to Levi, son of Jacob. Itappears that these Epsteins, then using the family name Benveniste, came to thetown from Spain, whence they fled from the Inquisition.

Some prominent members ofthis clan include:

RabbiIsaac Halevi Epstein of Homel (17801857), a noted Chabad chassid

RabbiKaolnymus Kalman Halevi Epstein of Krakow (17531825), chassidicscholar, author of the Maor Vashemesh

RabbiYechiel Michel Halevi Epstein (18291908), author of the AruchHashulchan, a classic work on Jewish law.

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What Does the Jewish Last Name Epstein Mean? - Chabad.org

Films From a Vanished World – The Wall Street Journal

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Technologies come and go in the film world, but rarely whole cultures. Thats one reason why movies in Yiddish prove so fascinating. They are fundamentally different from other objects of bygone days. Whereas, say, silent pictures from Denmark or Japan document the past, there remains an unbroken link between such movies and new ones produced in those countries today. Not so for Yiddish films, which are truly relics from a vanished world. Equally significant, Yiddish movies are distinguished by their extra-nationality. They were produced not in a single country, but rather on two continents an ocean apart, primarily in the U.S. and Poland.

The American debut of a collection of recently restored Yiddish films offers a precious peek into what has largely been a void for most of us. The Jewish Soul contains 10 pictures on five Blu-rays and marks another significant collaboration between the Paris-based Lobster Films, which managed the difficult reconstructions and initially released them in France, and Kino Lorber, which added bonus materials and is distributing the package stateside. (The set is also available for purchase, and several titles can be rented, digitally via the Kino Now platform at kinonow.com.)

Yiddish cinemas great tragedy was its short life. It didnt really take off until the mid-1930s, and the form was virtually extinguished by the Holocaust, though filming in America limped along till roughly 1950. There had been silent filmsThe Golem (1915), from Germany, is perhaps the best examplethat dealt with Jewish themes and characters, but the absence of spoken dialogue left them bereft of a vital aspect: the sound of Yiddish itself, the innately musical, profoundly emotional and irrepressibly funny language of Ashkenazi Jewry.

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Films From a Vanished World - The Wall Street Journal

Wife of WWII Vet Who Died of COVID Has 1 Request: Wear a Mask in Honor of Marty – NBC10 Boston

Posted By on December 5, 2020

A coronavirus outbreak at the New Hampshire Veterans Home in Tilton has claimed the lives of 15 veterans in a matter of weeks.One of them is 93-year-old WWII veteran Martin Oppenheimer, and he has quite a story.

We sat down with his wife, Ellen, to hear about Martins life and legacy.

I cant explain it to you, it was as if we were meant for each other, I dont know, Ellen said.

Ellen and Martin were married 66 years, inseparable for nearly three quarters of a century -- until the pandemic hit.

It was the hardest thing I had ever done, she said.

Safety precautions kept Ellen and her beloved Marty apart for months.

We arranged for me to see him on Zoom, he would smile at me, and I would say, I love you, and he would say the same, Ellen explained.

When Martin was just 10 years old, he and his family fled Germany to escape the Holocaust and came to America.

Were Jewish and they didnt feel secure anymore, Ellen said.

Every year on November 11th, the country unites to honor and thank our veterans for their service. NBCLX explains the history of Veterans Day and shares ideas about how to help America's vets, especially during the pandemic.

He enlisted in the U.S. Army and served at the end of World War II. He spent his career in the printing industry and dedicated his life to providing for his wife and three kids.

In an old school, Greatest Generation way, he believed in hard work, and he believed in his family, said one of his daughters, Nancy LeVinus.

When Martins dementia worsened about a year-and-a-half ago, he moved to the New Hampshire Veterans Home in Tilton.Officials said they've been taking precautions for months, but the virus still made its way inside by November, when the deadly outbreak began.

Fifteen veterans have died in three weeks in a coronavirus outbreak at a New Hampshire veterans home.

Martin was diagnosed with COVID-19 on Nov. 10. He died six days later, without Ellen by his side.

I wasnt even there to say goodbye, or hold his hand, or kiss him, or tell him how much I love him, she said softly, a wife robbed of the precious little time she had left with her husband.

And in the family's pain, there's a plea to protect others.

Just be a little considerate, it is not a big price to pay, LeVinus said.

A simple request from a heartbroken family: wear a mask in honor of Marty.

Listen to the experts, Ellen said. Were not taking anything away from you, were trying to give you a gift, and thats the gift of life.

There are still 46 veterans at the nursing home fighting the virus, officials said.

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Wife of WWII Vet Who Died of COVID Has 1 Request: Wear a Mask in Honor of Marty - NBC10 Boston

6 prominent Holocaust survivors have died in Europe over the past month – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on December 5, 2020

(JTA) The constant stream of breaking news about American politics and the coronavirus pandemic has hidden a sobering fact: Six prominent Holocaust survivors who had dedicated much of their lives to educating others against hatred have died in Europe over the past month.

These are their stories.

One of only 160 people from her native Greek city of Ioannina who survived the genocide, Cohen died there on Tuesday at the age of 96. She had escaped the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp and for years told high school students about her survival story in testimonies, TVXS reported.

Cohen belonged to the ancient Romaniote Jewish community, which had survived for 2,000 years before nearly eradicated by the Nazis. Ioannina was a major center of Romaniote Jews, with about 1,800 living there before the Holocaust. Cohen had two children.

Born to Romanian Jews who fled anti-Semitism for France, Cling was a linguist and English teacher who died Nov. 23 in Paris at 91.

An experienced lecturer and gifted writer, he often spoke at high schools before teenagers. Many of them easily related to Clings story because he was 15 when police took him away at his school on May 20, 1944.

Cling was sent to the Drancy internment camp with his parents and older brother, Willy. The family was deported to Auschwitz, where the Nazis murdered the parents on arrival. Willy would help Maurice survive the camp but was murdered there. Cling was moved to Dachau and liberated there by American troops. He had four children.

After walking for days in a death march from Auschwitz, Sobol, who died in Brussels on Nov. 17 at 94, found the strength to escape during an Allied air raid on the German troops guarding him and fellow prisoners. He was 18.

Before his capture, Sobol and his family had lived four years in hiding in Nazi-occupied Brussels. The Nazis murdered his parents and younger brother, but his sister survived.

For many years after the war, Sobol did not speak much about the Holocaust, but felt the need to share his story as he grew older. He would be celebrated by the local media as a conveyer of memory for his activities at schools and Holocaust commemoration events.

Sobol had two children.

In addition to testifying before young people about the Holocaust, Gattegna, who died of COVID-19 complications on Nov. 10 at 81, also helped rebuild the Jewish community in Italy after the genocide.Gattegna had led the Union of Italian Jewish Communities for 10 years until 2016.

Although he was born in 1938, I started living in 1944, he said in one interview. His early childhood was a time of fear, want and uncertainty as his family moved from one hiding place to the next in Romes suburbs, where they managed to flee before fascist gangs showed up and ransacked their home.

Gattegnahad two children.

Before his death on Nov. 6 at 86 in Moscow, Zhvanetsky was to Russians what Jackie Mason is to Americans: a standard-bearer for standup comedy.

But Zhvanetsky, who identified as Jewish when doing so was dangerous, operated in the Soviet Union under one of the 20th centurys most repressive regimes one that was famously anti-Semitic. In a disarmingly self-deprecating manner, he delivered his commentary on everyday life in Russia. It was apolitical but with traces of social criticism on the edge of what was safe to say publicly in those years.

Born in Odessa, in what is now Ukraine, Zhvanetsky was evacuated with his family to Russia before the advancing Nazi army conquered his native city, murdering his childhood friends and many relatives in the Holocaust. Zhvanetsky performed for decades until his retirement only last month. He has won many awards, including the Order of Merit for the Fatherland last year.

He had five children.

A retired police officer, politician and Holocaust commemoration activist, Sonder died Nov. 3 in Chemnitz at 94.

Soon after his return from Auschwitz to Germany, Sonder began devoting his life to rebuilding the society that created Nazism. He became a police officer just six months after U.S. troops liberated him from a death march from Auschwitz, in Poland, to Germany. His mother and 21 of his relatives were murdered in the camp.

Climbing the ranks, Sonder eventually became a commissioner for serious crimes. Following his retirement in 1985, he served as a lawmaker in the federal parliament for four years, beginning in 2009, as a representative of the Die Linke left-wing party. In 2016, he testified in the trial of SS guard Reinhold Hanning, who was convicted of crimes against humanity.

For decades, Sonder spoke about the Holocaust to high school students in eastern Germany, where the far right is seeing a resurgence. He had three children.

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