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Rockland County Village Used Anti-Semitic Zoning To Punish Orthodox Residents, Prosecutors Say – Gothamist

Posted By on December 5, 2020

A Rockland County village is facing a new federal lawsuit over what prosecutors call an institutional history of anti-Semitic zoning codes against Orthodox Jewish residents since the village formed three decades ago.

The administrators of the village of Airmont, near the ultra-Orthodox Jewish haven of Monsey, are accused of creating zoning codes that explicitly prevent residential places of worship as a by-right use, and applying village code in a way to make it impossible for Orthodox Jewish applicants to win zoning approval of home synagogues and a school, according to the lawsuit filed Wednesday in federal district court by Audrey Strauss, the Acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York.

The zoning code against residential places of worship especially targets Orthodox Jews because of their need for walkable synagogues or religious gathering spots on the Shabbat, when they are prohibited from using vehicles to travel.

The village administrators are also accused of creating an 18-month village-wide moratorium on development in 2017 that allegedly had no legitimate governmental purpose and was instead used to prevent Orthodox Jewish community members from advancing their religious land-use applications, the lawsuit said.

Airmont is also alleged to have prevented homeowners from clearing trees on their property to build sukkahs or to install mikvahs, and implemented Kafkaesque rules, unfounded fines, and arbitrary bureaucratic delays to inconvenience Orthodox Jewish applicants, the lawsuit said. One congregation has been seeking approval for a home synagogue application since March 2012.

The villages actions violate the terms of previously established judgements in two previous federal cases against Airmont, the lawsuit said, citing the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act and the Fair Housing Act.

Brian Sokoloff, the attorney for the village of Airmont, told Gothamist the village "denies all allegations of discriminatory conduct" and that the new lawsuit "rehashes false allegations from prior lawsuits."

"The village of Airmont respects and supports the right of every resident to practice their faith. The village's goal has always been and remains to make sure that the residents have places to assemble and pray that are safe and that comply with all state and local building and fire codes," Sokoloff said in a phone interview. "The village will continue to work with the Department of Justice to address any legitimate concerns."

The discriminatory actions began with the villages creation in 1991, when the Airmont Civic Association broke away from the town of Ramapo after Ramapo passed zoning code amendments to allow for home synagogues, according to the lawsuit, which described the move as born of religious animus because of increasing numbers of Jewish residents.

The Airmont Civic Association used language like a grim Hasidic belt and the need for keeping the Hasidim out of the newly created village, according to the lawsuit.

Sokoloff disputed the lawsuit's characterization of the village's creation: "The demographics of the village show a very healthy population of Orthodox Jews. And that speaks for itself," he said. "The plaintiffs argued that the village was created to exclude Orthodox and Hasidic Jews...(but) even after the incorporation of the village, Orthodox and Hasidic Jews moved in, in large numbers."

"They're rewriting history," he added.

After the village of Airmont incorporated, the federal government successfully sued for violations of the Fair Housing Act in 1995. In a 1996 injunction ruling, the village was also required to notify the federal government of any changes to its zoning code for five years, which it fought in various court challenges. In 2005 the federal government again sued over the villages prohibition on Hasidic boarding schools, which resulted in a consent decree issued in 2011 that expired in 2015.

The villages newest zoning amendments were led by Mayor Philip Gigante, who on the eve of Yom Kippur in 2017, sent the villages fire inspector to demand that his own neighbors take down their sukkah despite no violations, the lawsuit said.

As a jury found over two decades ago, the Village of Airmont was born out of a spirit of animus against a religious minority, Strauss said in a statement Wednesday. "Sadly, rather than working to overcome that shameful legacy, Airmont has flagrantly ignored the terms of a court judgment and implemented land use practices that by design and operation are again meant to infringe unlawfully on the rights of a minority religious community. Religious discrimination will not be tolerated. We will remain vigilant to ensure that the right to worship freely and without undue interference is protected for all.

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Rockland County Village Used Anti-Semitic Zoning To Punish Orthodox Residents, Prosecutors Say - Gothamist

Congregation Kol Tikvah Brings Disney-Style Fun to Parkland This Weekend – Parkland Talk – Parkland Talk

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Courtesy Congregation Kol Tikvah

By Jill Fox

If the family isnt ready to head to Disney World, Congregation Kol Tikvah is bringing the happiest place on earth to Parkland.

A drive-thru event complete with activities, characters, and animals a la Noahs Ark, was originally scheduled in November but postponed due to weather concerns.

The Magic Of Congregation Kol Tikvah is geared towards younger children through fourth grade, but all Disney lovers are welcome.

Were recognizing the challenges the community is going through, said Avi Marcovitz, Education & Youth Engagement Director, And we wanted to bring a little bit of happiness by having some activities and fun for children to create some fun memories during this time.

Being a synagogue, there will definitely be a Jewish spin on the Disney fun. Marcovitz mentioned a petting zoo for a Noahs Ark component, Aladdin for the middle eastern piece, and chocolates from Israel.

We want to put a smile on everyones face and share a little about our temple at the same time, he said.

The Magic Of Congregation Kol Tikvah will take place on Sunday, December 6, from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Its free and open to everyone, but families must sign up ahead of time at koltikvah.net.

Congregation Kol Tikvah is located at 6750 North University Drive in Parkland.

Send your news to Parklands #1 News Source,Parkland Talk.

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The Three Generations of Ku Klux Klan – The Great Courses Daily News

Posted By on December 5, 2020

By Richard Spence, Ph.D., University of Idaho Two children wearing KKK robes and hoods stand on either side of Dr. Samuel Green, a KKK Grand Dragon, at Stone Mountain, Georgia, on July 24, 1948. (Image: Image Editor/CC BY 2.0/Public domain)Decline of the First Ku Klux Klan

There have been numerous allegations that the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) was an appendant body of Freemasonry. Also, there are claims that Confederate General Albert Pike was the mastermind behind the KKK and the Knight of the Golden Circlean older and more secret society that championed the preservation of slavery through Southern secession.

There are also arguments that the original Ku Klux Klan was born because federal military commanders and Republican governors couldnt curb the violence in the post-War south. But the first Klan wasnt organized and coherent.

Despite the lack of order, the original KKK was the inspiration behind the first anti-terror laws in the US. By 1872, there was no sign of the original KKK. But since secret societies never die, the Klans spirit also continued to live in new orders like the Red Shirts, the Knights of the White Camelia, and the Democratic rifle clubs. And thus, the second Klan was formed in 1915, which was inspired by a book, a movie, and even a murder.

This is a transcript from the video series The Real History of Secret Societies. Watch it now, on The Great Courses Plus.

In 1905, a North Carolina minister and writer named Thomas Dixon, Jr. penned a novel called The Clansman (with a C). In the novel, he depicted a romanticized picture of the Klan and invented the most iconic ritual of the KKK: the cross burning. Called the Crann Tara, or fiery cross, it was an old custom from the Scottish Highlands to summon clans to battle. Dixons novel sought to justify segregation. Despite protests that the book was grossly inaccurate and inflammatory, it became a hit and was adapted into a movie named Birth of a Nation by D.W. Griffith in 1915. The movie popularized the fantasy of a heroic Ku Klux Klan in the whole country.

Learn more about Freemasonry.

In 1903, Mary Phagan, a 13-year-old factory worker from Atlanta, Georgia, was found brutally murdered. Phagans Jewish boss, Leo Frank, was the primary suspect. Frank was a known member of a fraternal society called the Jewish Bnai Brith. He was convicted and sentenced to death. This miscarriage of justice was so shocking that Bnai Brith formed a new body called Anti-Defamation League.

In June 1915, Franks death sentence was changed to a life prison sentence. In response, a new secret society, called the Knights of Mary Phagan, abducted him from prison and lynched him.

This murder and the visual extravaganza of a Birth of a Nation inspired a failed businessman from Georgia, William J. Simmons. He belonged to several secret societies but decided it was time to establish one. He and his 15 companions went to the top of Stone Mountain near Atlanta on Thanksgiving Day 1915. They burned a cross and declared the birth of the Invisible Empire of the Ku Klux Klan. They proclaimed their aim as the betterment of man.

Learn more about masonic revolutions in America and France.

The second Klan had significant differences from the first Klan. While the first Klan was based exclusively on Confederate revanchism, the second Klan was not primarily Southern. The first Klan hated Yankees and black freedmen and had no aim of bettering humans. But the second Klan added more groups to its hate list inspired by the social militancy, moral superiority, and the xenophobia unleashed by WWI. Prohibition was also added to the principles promoted by the new Klan, although very few Klansmen avoided alcohol. By the mid-1920s, the members of the Klan had risen to millions.

Ironically, the second Klan was wiped out due to another murder. In 1925, a young woman named Madge Oberholtzer was kidnapped, brutally raped and tortured. She eventually died. The man behind this shocking incident was the Grand Dragon of the Indiana Klan, David C. Stephenson. The Indiana Klan was one of the biggest chapters in the country. Stephenson, as Grand Dragon, posed as a paragon of moral virtue. When his belief that he was untouchable proved wrong, he turned on the Klan, and aired its dirty laundry in open court and the Klans reputation sank.

The third KKK sprang up after WWI and is still active. Formed as a reaction to desegregation and the Civil Rights movement, it was only a collection of secret societies without unity and organization. In the 1980s and 90s, a wave of younger and more politically savvy leaders, like white supremacist David Duke, gave the Klan fresh energy and publicity. The same period saw younger Klansmen join forces with Skinheads and neo-Nazis, a move that probably would have horrified William Simmons and his foreign-hating brethren.

The founder of the second Ku Klux Klan was a failed businessman from Georgia, William J. Simmons. He belonged to several secret societies but decided it was time to establish one.

The second Ku Klux Klan was wiped out due to the brutal rape and murder of a young woman by Grand Dragon of the Indiana Klan, David C. Stephenson. In his trials, he revealed the secrets of Klan, which destroyed the Klans reputation.

Yes. The third Ku Klux Klan was born after the Second World War. It still exists, and it was mostly a response to desegregation and the Civil Rights movement. But like the first Klan, it never became unified.

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The Three Generations of Ku Klux Klan - The Great Courses Daily News

My Word: Forgotten refugees and the proud Mizrahi heritage – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on December 5, 2020

You might have missed it. November was Mizrahi Heritage Month and judging by the lack of publicity surrounding the events, it will take a lot more than 30 days a year to put the topic in the spotlight.Of all the things that unnecessarily divide Israeli and Diaspora Jewry or at least Jews in English-speaking countries one of the most striking is the perception that talking (or cursing) in Yiddish is the main sign of a shared cultural heritage. Other Jewish languages and dialects such as Ladino are often overlooked. Without detracting from the beauty and value of the mamaloshen, I favor putting more emphasis on learning Hebrew the one language that should unite Jews everywhere. Not every synagogue is a shul, after all, and you dont have to speak Yiddish to preserve Yiddishkayt (Jewishness).A few years ago I witnessed an example of the extent of the problem. A radio broadcaster dismissively used the Yiddish word gornisht. What does that mean? a Sephardi colleague asked me. Nothing, I replied, and added for good measure the Yiddish for absolutely nothing: gornisht mit gornisht.Mizrahi Heritage Month celebrating the lives and legacy of Jews from Arab lands and Iran was born somewhat arbitrarily. On November 29, the date that the UN in 1947 accepted the Partition Plan that would lead to the establishment of the State of Israel, the world body now cynically marks International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People. After too many years of being ignored, Israel determined that the following day, November 30, would be dedicated to commemorating the expulsion of the hundreds of thousands of Jews from Arab lands. These are the Middle Easts most overlooked refugees. They came to Israel, overcame tremendous hardships to start build new lives in harsh conditions and helped make the country the success it is today. Growing up in London in the 1970s, I was, like most Jewish youth at the time, very involved in the campaign for Soviet Jews. The struggle for the release of Soviet Jewry in many ways served as the core around which our Jewish identity was formed. That sort of solidarity is sorely missing today, when Diaspora Jewish youth are as likely to be pitched against each other, in pro-Israel versus pro-Palestinian configurations.I dont remember how I learned that there were other Jewish communities suffering in even worse conditions. The effort to help Soviet Jews come out of the cold completely overshadowed the plight of the Jews in places like Syria and Iraq who were literally dying to get out pushed out by antisemitism, pulled by Zionism.The work on behalf of Mizrahi Jewry was of necessity more low-key. Drawing attention to a refusenik made the Soviet authorities realize there were international eyes following what they were doing and conditions might be improved as a result. The same could not be said for the Jews in Syria, for example. Here, drawing attention to a specific member of the community was likely to result in that persons disappearance.

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My Word: Forgotten refugees and the proud Mizrahi heritage - The Jerusalem Post

Feed the Body and Mind During Hanukkah – Santa Barbara Independent

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Just in time to bring a bit of brightness into a dark year, Santa Barbaras Jewish families and their friends will be firing up the menorahs at sundown on December 10 to celebrate the first night of Hanukkah, which lasts until the evening of December 18. Here are numerous ways to feed your body and mind during the eight-night Festival of Lights.

Edjudaicas Be the Light Chanukah Celebration Kit

Earlier in her career as a Jewish educator, Samantha Silverman was known to dress up like a bee and dance on top of her desk to show why the sweet nectar of honey was an appropriate treat for Rosh Hashanah. But today, the Santa Barbara teacher and entrepreneur is working a bit more inside the box, at least literally, through her company Edjudaica, which prepares educational and entertaining packages to teach about Judaism in engaging ways.

Edjudaica reimagines Jewish education, she explained. We create project-based curriculum kits designed to inspire creative thinking, nourish emotional intelligence, and deepen family engagement with Jewish traditions in the place it matters most, the home. Although COVID-19 provided the inspiration for this company, I have spent many years of my career thinking about ways to bring Jewish learning to life outside of the classroom.

Though born in Santa Cruz and raised on the West Coast, Silvermans educational path led her through Israel after high school and a graduate degree in Hebrew Bible and Second Temple Judaism while freezing my tuchus off at Yale after getting her undergrad degree in Jewish studies from UCLA. She first came to Santa Barbara in 2008, when her mom, Cyndi Silverman, took a job as the regional director of ADL; Cyndi is now the executive director of the Jewish Federation here.

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The younger Silverman has worked as a Hebrew schoolteacher at Congregation Bnai Brith and Community Shul, and as director of Camp Haverim. Thats where she was when COVID-19 hit, forcing the summer camp to go remote via boxes that Silverman packed full of educational and fun activities. I received such glowing and moving feedback from parents and campers that I knew I couldnt stop there, she said.

The kit includes eight activities for each night, including scrap-made keepsake menorahs, origami paper flames, blessing jars, marshmallow dreidels, solar ovens, and scavenger hunts. My hope is that the activities, crafts, and baking projects in this box will fill the home with laughter and joy (not to mention the delicious scent of fried dough!) and enrich families connection to their Jewish heritage during an unusual time, said Silverman. I also hope these kits will provide a bit of relief to tired parents and entertainment to stir-crazy kids!

The foodiest activity is the making of sufganiyot, or jelly doughnuts. Hanukkah celebrates the rededication of the Jewish temple in Jerusalem after the Maccabees fought for and won back their right to freely observe their religious beliefs, explained Silverman as to the significance of doughnuts in the holiday. There was only enough oil to relight the eternal light for one day, yet somehow, miraculously, the oil lasted for eight nights! In honor of this miracle of oil, we eat fried foods! That explains latkes as well.

For Silverman, theres more to the process as well. I love working with yeast recipes there is something transformational and magical about proofing, she said. It can also be temperamental and frustrating if the conditions arent just right. A bit like life!

Shes already garnering lots of interest as far away as New York for Passover kits, and is launching two subscription boxes for 2021. One is called the Shabbox, which is focused on recipes, crafts, and teachings for the weekly sabbath. The other is the Aleph Bet Beginners Box, a 10-month series introducing students to two Hebrew letters per month through games, art, baking basically, said Silverman, whatever gets your hands dirty.

Order your Be the Light: A Chanukah Celebration Kit at edjudaica.com.

LATKES @ LUCKYS: Montecitos famed steakhouse is serving potato latkes with sour cream and apple sauce for $15 during Hanukkah, and its always a great place for their $16 bowl of matzo ball soup. For 20 years, it has been a privilege to provide these treats to our beloved community., said Leonard Schwartz, the restaurants longtime GM and executive chef. 1279 Coast Village Rd., Montecito; (805) 565-7540; luckys-steakhouse.com

CHALLAH & PIES @ HELENA AVENUE BAKERY: Helena Avenue Bakerys Holiday Provisions takeout menus include baked-to-order challah ($11/loaf) and pies in smore, Fuji apple, and winter citrus flavors ($28-$32). Theres also signature Parker House Rolls ($15/dozen) and a Holiday Stuffing Mix ($12), which would work for any holiday celebration. They require an order 48 hours in advance. 131 Anacapa St.; (805) 880-3383; helenaavenuebakery.com

ZACA CREEK TAVERN HAPPY HOUR KIT: The new restaurant at Zaca Creek in Buellton will be offering a Hanukkah Happy Hour kit featuring kosher bourbon, latkes, and apple butter, with delivery available throughout the Santa Ynez Valley. 1297 Jonata Park Rd., Buellton; (805) 688-2412; zaca-creek.com

MATZO IN LOS ALAMOS: Entrepreneur extraordinaire Carole Bennett whose matzo ball soup, brisket, desserts, and bridge school weve written about in past years recently moved to Los Alamos. This year, her matzo ball soup will be served at Plenty on Bell during Hanukkah. She doesnt know if Chef Jesper Johansson will give it a special name, but Bennnett pledged, It will be the only place in the entire Santa Ynez Valley that will have homemade chicken matzo ball soup! 508 Bell St., Los Alamos; (805) 344-3020; plentyonbell.com

VIRTUAL LATKE KING: Like everyone else, Santa Barbaras Latke King Doug Weinstein went virtual in 2020, taking his kitchen skills which he typically used to make latkes, brisket, and much more for Hanukkah celebrations across the region into your home with on-screen cooking classes. Held the first and third Thursdays of each month, Get Baked with Doug has featured sweet kugel, knish, challah, and chocolate babka recipes, among many others, all of which are posted online. Hell be teaching his infamous latke recipe on December 17, and sending out ingredient kits in advance. See the calendar at JewishSantaBarbara.com.

Every day, the staff of theSanta Barbara Independentworks hard to sort out truth from rumor and keep you informed of whats happening across the entire Santa Barbara community. Now theres a way to directly enable these efforts.Support theIndependentby making adirect contributionor with asubscription to Indy+.

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Feed the Body and Mind During Hanukkah - Santa Barbara Independent

The UAE Is Rejecting Doublethink on Israel Will It Last? – National Review

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Dubai, United Arab Emirates, March 2020.(Christopher Pike/Reuters)If its model for peace is successful, the UAE could positively transform the entire Middle East and the broader Muslim world.

A remarkable feature of the first months of peace between Israel and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is the way the Emiratis have warmly embraced delegations representing Israel and American-Jewish communities. UAE leaders have urged their citizens to be hospitable and have largely been heeded. Will the popular warmth continue or will it only last as long as this honeymoon period? This bears watching.

Emirati officials appear to reject the doublethink on Israelis and Jews that is prevalent in Egypt and Jordan. They were the first Arab countries to make peace with the Jewish state but, in both, the population is intensely anti-Israel and anti-Jewish. Egypt reminded us of that last week when a court announced its readiness to hear a case against singer Mohamed Ramadan. His offense? Taking a selfie in Dubai with an Israeli pop star, Omer Adam.

Ramadan is accused of insulting the Egyptian people, and he has been suspended from the syndicate of Egyptian artists. This in a country that has had full diplomatic relations with Israel since 1979 and whose officials currently enjoy trade relations, military cooperation, and intelligence sharing with the Jewish state. Indeed, for decades Egyptian society has demonized Jews. It is still a leading producer of anti-Semitic content in the Arab world. Today, Abdel Fatah al-Sisis government has, to some extent, revived Jewish heritage in Egypt by renovating synagogues and restoring Jewish cemeteries. Caricatures of Jews have also been largely (though not entirely) relegated to the margins of the entertainment industry. But the governments ostensible goodwill toward the countrys few remaining Jews contrasts starkly with other open hostility toward Israelis, as demonstrated in the Ramadan affair.

A similar dynamic persists in Jordan. Despite a 1994 peace treaty, Jordanian officials do not promote neighborly feelings toward the Jewish state or Jews. Its national curriculum endorses a two-state solution to the IsraeliPalestinian conflict, but schoolbook maps erase Israel, naming the entirety of the land west of the Jordan River Palestine. Zionism, the national movement of the Jewish people, is maligned as racist colonialism. One can buy an Arabic translation of Adolf Hitlers Mein Kampf with a book cover depicting a triumphant Hitler at just about any bookstand in downtown Amman.

Statements from Emirati officials, for now, embrace both Jews and Israelis, with Judaism honored as one of the regions indigenous faiths. The planned Abrahamic Family House will host a mosque, a synagogue, and a church in Abu Dhabi. Abu Dhabis tourism ministry has instructed hotels to provide kosher food options for guests. The photo that landed Ramadan in hot water was first tweeted affirmatively by an Emirati journalist backed by his government.

Egypt, Jordan, and the UAE are not democracies. But their rulers are sensitive to public opinion and vice versa. Government statements help shape public opinion and also reflect it. It could be that in Egypt and Jordan, state-sanctioned anti-Semitism was meant to placate the parts of society upset by their governments peace treaties with Israel. But the UAEs leaders have made a different calculation. They are actively encouraging pro-Israel and pro-Jewish thinking among their people.

Why are they doing this? They have an interest in building domestic public support for their peace policy and countering the propaganda of their Islamist enemies. They want to improve the Emirates standing abroad, especially in the United States. And they want to cultivate friendly relations with Israel, whose businessmen, technologists, and academics can help the UAE strengthen its security and diversify its economy.

UAE leaders still have their work cut out for them. A poll taken since the signing of the Abraham Accords shows that only 46 percent of Emiratis have a favorable impression of Israel, but that is not bad when compared with 31 percent of Bahrainis, 23 percent of Saudis, and 16 percent of Moroccans. Two-thirds of Israelis look favorably on the UAE.

The incoming Biden administration may see value in urging the Emiratis to maintain this course of promoting popular goodwill toward Israel and the Jews. Last month, a senior UAE official told a U.S. State Department conference that his country will lead the Middle East and that the world in countering anti-Semitism. This could prove influential in the Arab world, where anti-Jewish conspiracies abound and are widely believed. A UAE-led, Arabic-language campaign to counter Jew-hatred would promote shared U.S. and UAE interests in countering religious extremism in the Middle East.

Sadly, since his selfie went viral, Ramadan said he would not have taken the photo if had known Adam was Israeli. He bowed to the mob, unlike the beauty queen Miss Iraq Sarah Idan, who was forced to flee her home country in 2017 after posting a selfie with Miss Israel. Idan has since visited Israel and remains friends with her Israeli former competitor.

In not only making peace as a formal arrangement between governments, but also urging its people to adopt a friendly attitude toward Israel and the Jews, UAE leaders are leading a pioneering mission in the Arab world. They say that they view their country as a model for others in the Middle East. This will put the UAEs influence its so-called soft power to the test. If it succeeds, the effects could positively transform the entire Middle East and the broader Muslim world.

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The UAE Is Rejecting Doublethink on Israel Will It Last? - National Review

An immigrant to get the job done at Homeland Security | TheHill – The Hill

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Last Monday, President-elect Joe BidenJoe BidenAppeals court OKs White House diverting military funding to border wall construction Federal student loan payment suspension extended another month Pentagon: Tentative meeting between spy agencies, Biden transition set for early next week MORE chose Alejandro Mayorkas to lead the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which oversees immigration policy and border security among its vast portfolio of responsibilities.

In recent years, the department has been at the forefront of President TrumpDonald John TrumpAppeals court OKs White House diverting military funding to border wall construction Pentagon: Tentative meeting between spy agencies, Biden transition set for early next week Conservative policy director calls Section 230 repeal an 'existential threat' for tech MOREs agenda to militarize border security, separate asylum-seeking families, slash refugee admissions, end protections for DREAMers and build additional walls along the border with Mexico.

Mayorkass background signals a stark contrast with recent predecessors who have unquestioningly championed these policies. Not only is he a seasoned veteran of the department, he is also poised to become the first immigrant and Latino to lead it.

His father was a Cuban native and Sephardic Jew and his mother, a Romanian Jew, fled with her family to Cuba amid Nazi persecution in the 1940s. The family then fled to the U.S. in 1960, when Mayorkas was just a baby, as a result of the Cuban Revolution led by Fidel Castro.

In his first public statement since news of the nomination broke, Mayorkas noted that, the United States provided my family and me a place of refuge. Now, I have been nominated to be the DHS Secretary and oversee the protection of all Americans and those who flee persecution in search of a better life for themselves and their loved ones.

It is particularly revealing of his character that Mayorkas explicitly includes refugees and asylum seekers within the protection of the federal government. This kind of express compassion and humanitarian tone has been completely absent over the past four years at a time, no less, when 80 million people have been displaced by violence, war and persecution. As someone who was forced to flee Sri Lanka on the brink of civil war, and who now leads a national refugee resettlement organization, this rhetoric and representation truly feels like the dawn of a new era of possibilities.

But Mayorkass qualifications go well beyond his personal experience as an immigrant. He previously served seven years in the Obama administration: four years as the Senate-confirmed director of United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), and another three years as the deputy secretary of DHS.

Whereas DHS secretaries under the Trump administration were active and complicit in the heartless and illegal separation of migrant families, Mayorkas was responsible for implementing the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program during his tenure as director of USCIS, thereby protecting more than 700,000 DREAMers from deportation. To even the most casual follower of immigration policy, the difference is night and day.

It is almost poetic that an immigrant and former refugee serve as our nations highest security official given the data that demonstrates how immigrants and refugees make us significantly safer. The most direct example of this are the 530,000 foreign-born veterans living in the U.S. right now. In addition, a study that examined the top U.S. cities that received the most refugees per capita found that nine of 10 actually became considerably safer, both in terms of violent and property crime. Additional research has thoroughly busted the myth that undocumented immigrants lead to higher crime rates to the contrary, states with larger shares of undocumented immigrants tend to have lower crime rates than states with smaller shares.

That Mayorkass nomination should come amid a global pandemic is no accident either. During his tenure at DHS, he oversaw the Departments response to both Ebola and Zika. Given that the Trump administrations legacy will be defined by a vehemently anti-immigrant agenda and a failed response to the COVID-19 pandemic, it seems fitting that Bidens nominee comes tested and ready on day one to rebuild a decimated immigration infrastructure and respond to the most pressing security threat we face one that has already claimed over 266,000 American lives.

This personnel decision is well in line with the Biden transitions laser focus on tested experience and humanitarian expertise. Tony Blinken, Bidens choice for Secretary of State and a former deputy secretary of state during the Obama administration, boasts a career in foreign policy and proven experience in addressing the global refugee crisis. Blinkens connection to this work is personal as well he is the stepson of a Holocaust survivor, whose stories have certainly informed his worldview and understanding of Americas role as the worlds moral compass.

Should Mayorkas and Blinken be confirmed by the Senate, we may see the dawn of a new day for refugees, asylum seekers, immigrants and all who stand for welcoming our newest neighbors in need. There is much work to be done, but it seems the American people will have staunch allies who understand that we are at our fundamental best when we build bridges, not walls.

Krish OMara Vignarajah is the president and CEO of Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, a former senior adviser in the State Department, and former Policy Director for First Lady Michelle ObamaMichelle LeVaughn Robinson ObamaObama says he leans on daughters to create year-end playlists An immigrant to get the job done at Homeland Security Obama: 'Hopeless' to try to sell as many books as Michelle MORE.

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An immigrant to get the job done at Homeland Security | TheHill - The Hill

Brothers and Sisters in Diplomacy: The Power of Mizrahi Jews in Building Bridges – Jewish Journal

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Middle Eastern Jewish communities truly are a bridge to peace. Internally, we hear a lot of our speakers say If you had just put Mizrahi Jews at the negotiating table from day one, we would have peace in the Middle East a long time ago.

Sarah Levin, Executive Director of JIMENA (Jews Indigenous to the Middle East and North Africa) offered these reflections on the power of Mizrahi voices during a November 30 webinar that marked Israels Day of Commemoration for Jewish Countries from Arab Countries and Iran. The Facebook live event, titled Transforming Trauma: How Jewish Voices from Arab Lands and Iran Can be a Bridge to Peace, featured speakers from the United States and Israel and was hosted by Minister of Knesset Michal Cotler-Wunsh, a legal expert and human rights activist who currently serves in Israels Blue and White party.

In 2004, Israel adopted a law which designated November 30 as a day to recognize and commemorate the 850,000 Jews who were displaced from Arab and Muslim lands in the twentieth century.

In true Israeli democratic style, Cotler-Wulsh spent part of the program addressing viewers from a polling station, where she was voting on whether to disassemble the current Knesset and send Israel to a new round of elections.

Cotler-Wulsh is the daughter of Irwin Cotler, a former member of the Canadian parliament (19992015) and minister of justice (20032006).

In her remarks, Levin quoted Cotler, who has previously said that Jews in the Middle East and North Africa suffered from persecution similar to Nazi Germanys infamous Nuremberg laws, which were enacted against Jews beginning in 1935.

In 2007, Cotler co-authored a refugee policy paper titled Jewish Refugees from Arab Countries: The Case for Rights and Redress, in which he said, Simply put, any narrative on the Middle East that does not include justice for Jewish refugees is a case study in Middle Eastern revisionism. It is an assault on truth, memory and justice.

A 2009 statistical study of Israel revealed that 50.2% percent of Israeli Jews are of Sephardi or Mizrahi origin. During the event, Cotler-Wunsh described her own family background, which informed her identity and activism. Her grandfather, Moshe, left Iraq as a young boy in 1929 and immigrated to what was then Palestine. She reflected on her grandfathers professional and personal challenges to find his place in Israels then-predominantly socialist environment.

Cotler-Wunsh also commented on the recent Abraham Accords peace agreement between Israel, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and Bahrain as a historic moment in time, if we seize the moment and identify the opportunities. She also recognized Israels emerging recognition by Arab countries as a historic pivot from rejectionism to normalization.

Another speaker at the event was Ellie Cohanim, who was born in Iran and currently serves as Deputy Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism under the Trump administration. Cohanim shed light on the 2,700-year old history of the Jews of Iran (a population of 100,000 before the 1979 revolution that has since dwindled to 5,000-8,000).

My father was threatened to be reported as a Zionist spy, Cohanim said. The threat prompted her family to flee the Islamic Republic.

They (the regime) engage in an obsessive anti-Semitism, she said. It motivates them through everything that they do: state policy to deny the Holocaust, [threatening to] wipe the Jewish state of Israel off the face of the earth, or calling the [Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps] special forces the Quds Force to liberate Jerusalem from the Jews. Quds is the Arabic name for Jerusalem.

Like Cotler-Wulsh, Cohanim praised the Abraham Accords and emerging opportunities for education and dialogue between Arab states and the West. In October, the State Department signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Bahrains King Hamad Global Centre for Peaceful Coexistence to eradicate anti-Semitism and promote respect and peaceful coexistence between Arab and Jewish people through education and programs.

Cohanim, who works with Elan Carr, Special Envoy to Combat Anti-Semitism, said she saw firsthand the power of Mizrahi Jews in Arab diplomacy during Israels recent outreach to Bahrain. We have a cultural understanding, she said. We have so much in common; we understand each other and its really been like cousins getting reunited after a forced exile.

Cotler-Wunsh also stressed the importance of people-to-people connections in the region, stating that she will soon propose a bill in Israels parliament that will ensure that every child in the Jewish state will learn Arabic.

During the webinar, Hen Mazzig, a Senior Fellow at the Tel Aviv Institute and a prominent Mizrahi advocate and social media activist (as well as a regular contributor to the Jewish Journal) discussed how his family came to Israel in the early 1950s from Iraq and Tunisia.

Whether Jews fled North Africa or Iran, Mazzig said, Mizrahi Jews have one cohesive story. We were oppressed by the same oppressors.

He expounded on the concept of justice for Mizrahi refugees by referring to his grandmother, who lives in Israel. We dont expect to go back to Iraq or Tunisiawe just want to be acknowledged, and once we get this acknowledgement, well have justice. For his grandmother, Mazzig said, justice means her story will be acknowledged.

Although he feels the world is more open to hearing Mizrahi voices, Mazzig still takes issue with the American Jewish community: Everyone wants to speak today about Jews of Color, but it seems like no one wants to speak about the largest group of Jews of Color in the world, which are Mizrahi and Sephardi Jews.

Mazzig joined Cotler-Wulsh and Cohanim in recognizing an inherent connection between Jews and Arabs in the Middle East. We share the same culture, same approach to life as our brothers and sisters in the Middle Eastit would be amazing to have a museum for Jewish heritage in the Middle East and North Africanot in Tel Aviv, but in Dubai, he said.

We share the same culture, same approach to life as our brothers and sisters in the Middle East. Hen Mazzig

Levin discussed how one of her grandfathers was a Holocaust survivor and the other was a Sephardic Jew whose parents immigrated to the United States from Turkey.

In my home, both Ashkenazi and Sephardic cultures were embraced, but in a public sphere, my Sephardic heritage was really never reflected back to me, she said. I always wanted my Papus (grandfather in Greek and Ladino) heritage to be as recognized and integral as my other grandfather who survived the Holocaust. The only place where this happened was in Israel.

Levin referenced the film, The Forgotten Refugees, a short 2005 documentary produced by JIMENA that highlights the plight of Jews who fled countries such as Iraq, Iran, Yemen and Libya in the twentieth century.

Levin also issued a call to action for Jewish communal leaders, asserting that they are not able to effectively advocate for the rights of Mizrahi Jews until they know their stories. We know in North America, their stories are not known.

To that end, JIMENA offers an array of educational materials to leaders and classrooms alike, including a Mizrahi-focused curriculum for Jewish day schools called Journey to the Mizrach, an oral history program that captures the stories of Mizrahim and an outreach initiative that teaches the history of Jews from the Middle East and North Africa in Arabic (known as the JIMENA Arabic Program). The organization also advocates for the recognition of Mizrahi Jews at the United Nations and the U.S. Congress.

Arabic language and Arab culture come naturally to many Mizrahi Jews, noted Jewish Journal editor-in-chief David Suissa. My mother speaks Arabic, and I was raised with the Arabic language in Casablanca [in addition to French], Suissa remarked during the webinar. When you come to one of our family weddings, the music [includes] Arabic. As much as my heart and soul is with Israel, its very hard for me to forget the deep, deep connection that I have with Morocco.

My ancestors lived there for centuries, and theres so much to be said for the atmosphere and the geography, Suissa continued. I call it the Judaism of the sun, the Judaism of dreamers; we see deserts and beaches and the music and culture.

Suissa acknowledged that its important not to idealize the Jewish experience in Morocco. He also recognized past discrimination against Sephardim and Mizrahim in Israel but was pleased that Mizrahi culture in Israel seems to have moved beyond food and music to influence intellectual and political integration. He cited Fleur Hassan-Nahoum, the Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem who was raised to two Moroccan parents in Gibraltar and who is a founding member of the UAE-Israel Business Council. In October, Hassan-Nahoum led a delegation of Israeli officials and entrepreneurs to tour the UAE and Bahrain. She also launched the inaugural meeting of the Gulf-Israel Womens Forum that brought together Emirati and Israeli women.

Suissa said hed like to see more Mizrahi politicians in Israel, especially those who can sit at the table with Arab leaders and speak their language.

Sam Yebri, a candidate for Los Angeles City Council and co-founder and president of 30 Years After, an Iranian-American Jewish civic action organization (of which I am a co-founder), also stressed the role of Mizrahi Jews in combating the pernicious lie that Jews are not indigenous to the land of Israel.

Leveraging our heritage is a valuable opportunity for community relations work, said Yebri, who fled Iran with his family when he was one. To tell Israels story more authentically, more richly, we can build bridges with other immigrant and refugee communities, whether in America, internationally or in Israel.

Yebri also stressed the importance of preserving Iranian Jewish heritage, which, he said, is a source of endless inspiration and meaning for all Jews. To capture Iranian Jewish voices, 30 Years After has launched The BenEvri Project, an oral history project that gathers and archives the stories of Iranian Jews in the United States.

The Iranian Jewish experience is a story of perseverance, he said. Who better than Iranian Jews to shed a light on the true nature of the Iranian regime, but also on the goodness of the Iranian people who are yearning to be free?

Joining the event live from Israel, Nira Levari, Director of Documenting at the Babylonian Jewry Heritage Center, a museum in Or-Yehuda, and Yaara Zered, an Israeli journalist, spoke in Hebrew about the imperative for building Jewish unity through honoring the diversity of the Jewish people.

Seth Frantzman, Oped editor and Middle East affairs analyst at The Jerusalem Post concluded the webinar by offering thoughts on looking forward to building bridges. Frantzman, who has covered wars against the Islamic State in Iraq and Hamas in Gaza, as well as reported from Turkey, Jordan and Egypt, discussed how during several past visits to Arab countries, some local Arab populations expressed support for Israeli Jews, including Kurds whom he met in Northern Iraq and who openly embraced the Jewish state.

For Frantzman, recognizing Mizrahim is a multiple-front struggle one that must address a lack of recognition from within the Jewish community itself, as well as the medias role in excluding Black Jewish voices in Israel. The media has made no attempt to include voices from the region, like Ethiopian Jews from Israel, when mentioning Black Jews, he said.

Frantzman expressed concern for the threats posed by radical states such as Iran and Turkey, but felt hopeful that the Abraham Accords have koshered the image of Israel for the region.

Tabby Refael is a Los Angeles-based writer, speaker and activist.

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Brothers and Sisters in Diplomacy: The Power of Mizrahi Jews in Building Bridges - Jewish Journal

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

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Today, Rappaport, Rappoport, Rapoport andRapaport are all common Jewish family names, found both among Ashkenazi andSephardi Jews. The name was borne with pride by successive generations ofrabbinic leaders and their families since the 15th century. Although shroudedin mystery, there are certain facts we know for sure about this name:

We are still, however, leftscratching our heads regarding the provenance of the Rap or Rappa half of thename (which also appears to be an independent name).

Online research revealsthat some have linked it to the word rabbi, implying that contemporaryRappaports are descendants of the rabbi of Porto. However, it is more likelythat it is an unrelated term, possibly the German word for raven, which issupported by the fact that certain prestigious members of this family had araven included on their coat of arms.

Some famous Rappaportsinclude:

RabbiYitzchak Rappaport (16851755), who was born to Polish parents and grew up tobecome the chief (Sephardic) rabbi of the Holy Land

RabbiChaim Rappaport (?1771), rabbi of Lvov (Lemberg), a close disciple andcolleague of the Baal Shem Tov

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

Golijov: Falling Out of Time review meditation on grief is an allusive patchwork – The Guardian

Posted By on December 5, 2020

In the early years of this century, the Argentinian Osvaldo Golijov was one of the most sought-after composers around. In works such as the choral St Mark Passion and his opera Ainadamar his eclectic style, with ingredients including pop, klezmer, new tango and Sephardic chant, and paying little attention to stylistic boundaries, was accessibly packaged and attracted a wide audience. But its a long time now since Golijov completed a major work, and over the last 10 years in particular, his career has been characterised by a series of unfulfilled deadlines and abandoned commissions. The problem has less been a case of creative block, it seems, for he continued to compose, than a dissatisfaction with what he produced.

But the 80-minute Falling Out of Time, first performed last autumn, marks Golijovs return to some kind of fluency, and is undeniably a substantial; he calls it a tone poem in voices. Its based on David Grossmans 2014 novel of the same name, about a grieving father who sets out on a hopeless journey to reconnect with his dead child, which was written as a response to the death of Grossmans own son, killed while serving with Israeli forces in Lebanon. Golijov has parsed Grossmans poetic text into 13 numbers with a clear dramatic trajectory, and shared the settings between three singers (Nora Fischer, Biella da Costa and Wu Tong on the recording, which is taken from early performances) who play characters from the novel.

This extended meditation on loss and grief, is conveyed on a musical fabric that adds jazz, blues and elements of central Asian music to Golijovs usual stylistic amalgam, and uses the multinational instrumentalists of the Silkroad Ensemble string quintet, trumpet and percussion alongside guitar, pipa, kamancheh (a bowed Iranian instrument) and sheng (a Chinese reed instrument) to create an allusive patchwork of colours and textures, though these resources are generally used with great restraint. Unsurprisingly, given the subject matter, there are very few moments of light relief, or real contrast, so the impression the cycle leaves is rather diffuse and generalised; Falling Out of Time, Golijovs work, that is, rather than Grossmans, never packs the emotional punch one expects.

For a very different brand of contemporary music theres the latest release in BR Klassiks Musica Viva series, which is devoted to works by Rebecca Saunders. Two single-movement concertos, Still for violin, and Alba for trumpet, played by the exceptional soloists for whom they were written, Carolin Widmann and Marco Blaauw, frame Aether, an extended duo for bass clarinets. All three works show Saunders extraordinary command of instrumental detail, which seems to burrow into the very core of every sound, and scrutinise it meticulously.

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Golijov: Falling Out of Time review meditation on grief is an allusive patchwork - The Guardian


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