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Food Seen: Eat Local, Drink Local, Shop Local on the East End – Dan’s Papers

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Shop local, dine local, celebrate localthats the theme of the holiday season that is upon us here in the Hamptons and on the North Fork.

Delivery and Take-Away:No doubt youve seen the Baldor trucks bustling all over the East End, let alone the rest of Long Island. Baldor is a specialty food purveyor that delivers to restaurants, markets and individuals. Check out Baldorfood.com for a complete listing of fruits, vegetables, organics, fresh cuts, meats, poultry, seafood, dairy, bakery items and pastry often from NYC restaurants like Hearth, Seamores, Shuka, M.Wells, The Smith and Momofuko. Then again, why are East Enders ordering from New York when there are restaurants like 1770 House, Stone Creek Inn, North Fork Table & Inn and The Plaza Caf who would gladly prepare foods for take-away? Stay local, buy local.

Dish of the Week:Pan-seared jumbo diver scallops with maple risotto, brown sage butter, beets and spiced nut medley from Cowfish in Hampton Bays.

Last Minute Gifts:Buy bottles of La Fonditas housemade salsas for stocking stuffers, numbered in order of hotnesssalsa verde no. 3, salsa de pipian no. 5, salsa de chipotle no. 7, and salsa de habanero no. 8.Know someone who loves The Clam Bar? You can order mugs, tees, hats and more.

We Hear:That Bostwicks Chowder House in East Hamptonnormally a seasonal eaterywill stay open at least until New Years That Amagansetts Coche Comedor is bringing back Sunday brunch starting Sunday, December 5 That starting December 2, Nick & Tonis in East Hampton will be offering at-home dinners for twosalad and pasta ($50) and salad and entre ($60).

Did You Know:That MontauksNavy Beach is heading southto the Caribbean, that is, opening locations in St. Thomas at Yacht Haven Grande and St. Maarten at Yacht Club Isle de Sol this winter Chef Matty Boudreau of Green Hill Kitchen & Que is Long Islands crowned king of BBQ. Famed as a competitive barbecue pitmaster, Boudreau has won Dans GrillHampton for three consecutive years and regularly receives top marks in Memphis at the annual Word Championship BBQ competition in May

Fun Fact:Fish and chips, known as the national dish of Great Britain, traces its origins to Portugal, when persecuted Sephardic Jews fled to England, bringing with them pescaito fritofried fishin the late 1400s. The chips (potatoes) came along in the 1800s.

Quote of the Week:People who love to eat are always the best people.Julia Child

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Food Seen: Eat Local, Drink Local, Shop Local on the East End - Dan's Papers

Times Bares Its Anti-Hasidic Bias in Covering COVID-Era Weddings – Algemeiner

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Orthodox Jews in Brooklyn following the cancellation of a wedding with 10,000 invited guests due to coronavirus restrictions, Oct. 19, 2020. Photo: Reuters / Lev Radin / Sipa USA.

When is the religion of wedding guests worth reporting in the era of COVID-19?

For the New York Times, only if it is Hasidic Jews getting married.

$15,000 Fine After Secret Hasidic Wedding Draws Thousands of Guests, was the headline over a Times news article earlier this month. Never mind that the wedding wasnt a secret to either the guests or to Times readers and editors who appear to take pleasure in COVID-shaming Hasidic Jews, feeding a longstanding antisemitic stereotype about Jews as spreaders of disease. The Times reported that The wedding in Brooklyn, which lasted for more than four hours, was held at the Yetev Lev DSatmar synagogue in Williamsburg and celebrated the marriage of Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum, the grandson of Satmar Grand Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum. The brides name could not be determined.

Compare that to the Times treatment of two other weddings. Wedding and Party Infect 56 and Lock Down 300, was the Times headline over an article about a wedding at the North Fork Country Club in Cutchogue. The Times didnt name the participants in that wedding. With this one, the Times doesnt say whether the people getting married were Jewish, Christian, atheist, or some other religion. No religion mentioned in the headline of that article, and no religion mentioned in the article itself. No mention of the occupation of the bridegroom eitherperhaps the occupation is only worth mentioning, in the Times view, if the occupation is rabbi. The Daily Mail identified the couple as Cydnie Piscatello and James Rugnetta.

December 4, 2020 9:54 am

The Times also mentioned in passing in a recent news article that In rural Maine, a wedding with 55 guests ultimately resulted in 177 cases. But that wedding got no headline coverage in the Times, and no Times description of the religion of the participants. The New York Review of Books reported, On August 7, 2020, a Maine wedding became a super-spreader event when sixty-two guests, most not wearing masks or practicing social distancing, in defiance of state regulations, gathered indoors at the Tri-Town Baptist Church in East Millinocket and later supped and danced at a reception, also indoors, at the Big Moose Inn. Officiating was Todd Bell of Calvary Baptist Church. According to the Maine CDC, the wedding plague has triggered outbreaks at a county jail, a nursing home, and a school, causing more than 270 cases of Covid-19 and killing eight. But for the Times, the religion of COVID-era weddings is only worth mentioning when there are Hasidim involved.

In the past Ive tried to cut the Times a little slack on this issue by offering the explanation that news is what happens near a reporter or editor, and lots of Times editors and reporters live in Brooklyn adjacent to Orthodox Jews, while few live in rural Maine. Yet that explanation does not suffice. Times photographers captured umasked or masks-under-the-chin dancing in the streets of Brooklyn and Atlanta this month to mark Joe Bidens election victory. Rather than scolding the participants (who did not appear to be Orthodox Jews), the Times celebrated it with a front-of-the arts-section critics notebook piece by a dance critic describing it as a celebration of community and reclaimingyour faith in the world.

The organized Jewish community has been slow to recognize the biased coverage for what it is, but there are some encouraging recent signs that that is beginning to change. The executive director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Boston, Jeremy Burton, tweeted out a link to a Times article about a party at a Queens, NY sex club (no religion mentioned in the Times account), and commented sarcastically, 80 people at sex club in Queens. 120 at illegal club in Manhattan. 550 at Halloween party in the Bronx. Sheriff responding to 1 large event every evening since August. But sure, keep talking about how Orthodox Jews are cause of NYC COVID spread.

A writer for Tablet, Armin Rosen, tweeted, There have been frequent large gatherings of the people all over the city since early May, but it doesnt get talked about because it doesnt reinforce any useful media or political narrativeor at least the gatherings that dont involve Jews dont reinforce any useful media or political narrative.

This is not to recommend that anyone, Hasidic Jew or not, host a large in-person gathering or attend one. It is simply to observe that the Times has a standard in covering this event that is not being applied equally. When participants are Hasidic Jews, they get described as such. When participants are something else, the Times leaves it out of the story. Its enough to make a reader suspect that what really bothers the Times and its readers is less the behavior than the Hasidic Judaism.

Ira Stoll was managing editor ofThe Forwardand North American editor ofThe Jerusalem Post. His media critique, a regularAlgemeinerfeature, can be foundhere.

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Times Bares Its Anti-Hasidic Bias in Covering COVID-Era Weddings - Algemeiner

Quebec judge rules against Hasidic couple in trial over secular education – CBC.ca

Posted By on December 5, 2020

A Quebec Superior Court judge has ruled against a former Hasidic couple who claimed the Quebec government didn't do enough to ensure they receivedan adequate education.

In a decision issued Thursday, Justice Martin Castonguayopted against issuing a declaratory judgment against the province.

Such a judgment could have forcedthe governmentto take additional steps to oversee children attending religious schools.

Yohanan and Shifra Lowenalleged they received almost no secular education while growing up in Tash, anultra-Orthodox Hasidic community in Boisbriand, Que., a suburb north of Montreal.

Yohanan, who first launched the legal action, testified that the secular education he received as a boy was particularly limited, leaving him with no knowledge of basic subjects such as science, math or geography.

He said he was ill-equipped to get a job when he left Tash and moved to Montreal with Shifra, whose legal name isClara Wasserstein, and their four children.

In his ruling, Castonguay expressed "profound empathy" for what the Lowenswent through before and after they left Tash.

But he concluded that the problems with the schools had already been addressed with a 2017 law thatgivesthe governmentgreater powersto track children in religious schools and gives school boards the authority to oversee their secular education.

The current Coalition Avenir Qubec government further strengthened the law last year, requiringthat students learn a subject in the same year as their peers in public school and take part in mandated provincial exams.

The trial shonea spotlight on the cloistered community of Tash, which was founded in 1962 by a group of Montreal Hasidic Jews seeking to escape the influences of the city. About 3,000 people now live there.

Abraham Ekstein, the head of Quebec'sJewish Association for Homeschooling, was the sole witness called bythe lawyer defending schools in Tash, which were also named in the lawsuit.

He testified that Hasidic schools "strive to maintain our culture, to transmit our culture to our children, to survive as a people."

"I'm convinced that we are going in the right direction and that children will succeed much better," he said.

In a statement Thursday, Clara Poissant-Lesprance, the lawyer for the plaintiffs, said her clients "remain concerned about the future of Hasidic children."

She said the fact that many children in Hasidic communities still attend religious schools on a full-time basis, as noted in the judgment, is a point of concern for the Lowens, "who see it as a barrier to the education of these children.

She said they will review the judgment before deciding whether to appeal.

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Quebec judge rules against Hasidic couple in trial over secular education - CBC.ca

Village officials agree to hold another hearing in January on 600-home Clovewood proposal – Times Herald-Record

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Chris McKenna|Times Herald-Record

South Blooming Grove officials agreed on Friday to continue their public hearing on the 600-home Clovewood development proposal after a comment session the previous night ended in chaos and a split decision by two boards.

The Village Board and Planning Board, which are jointly overseeing an environmental review for the controversial project, fielded comments for a little over an hour Thursday night and were asked then whether to close the hearing and move to the next stage of the review after receivingfinal written comments.

That is when the proceedings conducted entirely by Zoom with several dozen viewers derailed. Unmuted viewers demanded the hearing remain open, drowning out an attorney who was trying to poll members of the two boards. Ultimately, the vote concluded with an unusual impasse: the Village Board chose to close the hearing andtake more written comments; the Planning Board voted to continue the hearing.

On Friday, Dennis Lynch, an attorney serving as special counsel to the village for land-use matters, said village officials had agreed to schedule a final public hearing in early January on the draft environmental impact statement for the project. He had said earlier that he would suggest they hold another session "to resolve any outstanding issues."

Among the objections voiced Thursday night was that the village initially announced the hearing would be held in person at the firehouse, where it held a previous comment session in August. Officials then shifted the hearing online with a notice on the village website, prompting accusations that they had skirted their notification requirements.

"Many older residents do not use computers and would not know," Blooming Grove resident Susan Blakeney told the boards. "This meeting should have been postponed."

MORE: Village schedules virtual hearing

MORE: Developer proposes 600-home project

MORE: Three new Village Board members elected in September

The Clovewood development would be built on the site of the former Lake Anne County Club, a huge tract off Clove Road and Route 208 and next to Schunnemunk Mountain. Planners have estimated the complex ultimately could house about 3,900 residents more than the village's current population if optional accessory apartments are built in every house.

Hearing speakers on Thursday raised concerns about the potential impact on groundwater, the Satterly Creek, traffic and the area's semi-rural character. Others pointed out the project was pitched as housing for the growing Satmar Hasidic community and questioned if selling homes to a single group would violatethe federal Fair Housing Act.

After holding another hearing in January, the developer and its consultants must respond to all oral and written questions in a final environmental impact statement. The two boards would then issue a findings statement as the final step in their review.

cmckenna@th-record.com

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Village officials agree to hold another hearing in January on 600-home Clovewood proposal - Times Herald-Record

The Gov. vs. the Supreme Court | Yakov Saacks | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted By on December 5, 2020

GOVERNOR CUOMO, HASIDIC WEDDINGS & THE SUPREME COURT

THE RULING BUT MAKES NO DIFFERENCE TO ME

Rabbi Yakov Saacks, The Chai Center, Dix Hills, NY

THE RULING

Last week the Supreme Court made its voice heard in favor of the Diocese of Brooklyn and the Orthodox Agudath Israel of America, who have churches and synagogues in areas of Brooklyn and Queens, and who have at one time or another been designated as red and orange zones. In red and orange zones, the state capped attendance at houses of worship at 10 and 25 people, respectively.

The justices acted on an emergency basis, temporarily barring New York from enforcing the restrictions against the groups while their lawsuits continue. In an unsigned opinion, the court said the restrictions single out houses of worship for especially harsh treatment.

Members of this Court are not public health experts, and we should respect the judgment of those with special expertise and responsibility in this area. But even in a pandemic, the Constitution cannot be put away and forgotten. The restrictions at issue here, by effectively barring many from attending religious services, strike at the very heart of the First Amendments guarantee of religious liberty, the opinion said.

THE GOVERNOR

While I am not personally a big fan of the Governor, I do believe that he does care for his State and that he legitimately feels tremendous concern and is rightfully scared for the people under his jurisdiction. Having said the above, our Governor (like someone else from Queens we know) was not so happy when the ruling came down, and he dismissed it as irrelevant as there are currently no restrictions in place.

Instead of hearing their wisdom, he, in his unqualified manner, simply dismissed it as politics. He opined that the new Supreme Court just wants to make a political point.

Not so fast Governor.

AN INCREDIBLE RULING

The Supreme Courts ruling was anything but irrelevant. It was fundamental and especially so if he is considering another lockdown, which he has hinted at doing.

To me the most important opinion came from Justice Gorsuch where he wrote in support of the courts decision. He noted that while Cuomos executive order arbitrarily limited church attendance in COVID hotspots to 10 or 25 people, it put no such restrictions on liquor stores, bike shops, acupuncturists, accountants and other supposedly essential businesses.

Gorsuch also wrote, So, at least according to the Governor, it may be unsafe to go to church, but it is always fine to pick up another bottle of wine, shop for a new bike, or spend the afternoon exploring your distal points and meridians.

SELECTIVE DISCRIMINATION

If you were around Downstate New York for the strict Coronavirus lockdowns imposed earlier this year, you totally understand what Gorsuch meant. Many of us found ourselves heading into over-crowded box stores while nonessential smaller shops, businesses and yes, houses of worship, were involuntarily shuttered. The logic was hard to figure.

As I have written before to be selective in discrimination is wrong. The state made a mistake, the Governor overreached and now thankfully the Supreme Court has spoken.

HASIDIC WEDDINGS

As I have also written before, the well-publicized albeit secret Hasidic wedding with 7,500 attendees was wide of the mark and had no place during this pandemic. Even if you wish to postulate that a Hasidic wedding is a deeply religious experience, which it is, it still has no place when Corona is lurking about and people can and will get sick. Who will take the blame if people end up getting sick or making others sick or worse cause them to die? There is nothing religious about this. In fact, the Torah which is where every religion stems from, would tell you that such a wedding is not allowed and the perpetrators should be punished for hurting society. There was nothing holy about attending this wedding and everything unholy. Not wearing masks makes it ten times worse. Not right.

IRRELEVANT TO ME

Regardless of the important Supreme Court decision, I do not plan on taking advantage of it. I could never imagine holding an unsafe event without proper social distancing, masks and continued disinfecting until the all clear is given. I guess you could say I answer to a higher authority. So, while I deeply applaud and appreciate the Justices, for me, it is a moot point.

The way I see it, I am not only accountable to my immediate community, I am also answerable to my greater community, which if you think of it has no real borders or boundaries.

Stay safe. Be smart. Feel free to share.

Rabbi Yakov Saacks is the founder and director of The Chai Center, Dix Hills, NY. The Chai Center has been nicknamed by some as New York's most Unorthodox Orthodox Center.

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The Gov. vs. the Supreme Court | Yakov Saacks | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

Across Texas, the show of outdoor Hanukkah festivities must go on – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Most will be virtual, some will take place as part of tightly regulated events but there will be menorah lightings and more Hanukkah festivities this year in Texas, despite the coronavirus pandemic.

This year, more than ever, the light of Hanukkah is needed to increase the feeling of the triumph and eradication of evil with goodness, illness with health, sadness with joy, said Rabbi Chaim Lazaroff, program director for Chabad in Houston, adding that the events this year have been carefully chosen to adhere to best safety practices possible.

Through large outdoor menorah lightings and other public celebrations they organize every year for the eight-day Festival of Lights, Jewish communities large and small throughout the state from Lubbock to El Paso to Corpus Christi dont shy away from expressing their Jewish pride.

In Houston, the celebrations are among the largest in the state with a City Hall lighting ceremony, menorah car parade and gelt drop that involves the chocolate coins being dropped from a helicopter. Its all organized by the citys chapter of the Hasidic Chabad-Lubavitch movement, which is known for its outreach activities, especially its often sometimes outlandish public Hanukkah events.

But the limitations on public gatherings due to the pandemic has significantly changed the logistics this year in Houston and elsewhere in Texas, where Jews make up less than 1 percent of the states population of nearly 30 million.

The 25th annual City Hall lighting, for example, will only be accessible by Zoom. In place of the gelt drop, which became unfeasible under social distancing guidelines, there will be a Distanced Gelt and Gift Hunt involving a scavenger hunt for kids with prizes spaced at least 6 feet apart.

The car parade, meanwhile, featuring 71 vehicles including police, fire trucks and EMS sporting menorahs will still wind through the citys streets on Dec. 10, the first evening of the holiday.

There are 13 Chabad-Lubavitch centers in Houston alone and 35 throughout Texas. A Chabad of Texas Towns based in Houston was established recently to increase the movements involvement in small towns and rural areas that are home to Jews in the state.

But Chabad isnt the only organizer of Texas menorah lightings.

The tradition is especially important in El Paso, where the pandemic has hit hard and the citysdiverse Jewish communitystill lives in the shadow of the 2019 white supremacist shooting that killed 23 at a Walmart, said Robert French, executive director of the citys Jewish federation. The federation is coordinating Hanukkah festivities this year with the citys other Jewish organizations to include virtual lightings each night featuring a city Jewish group, as well as a socially distanced and masked public lighting on Dec. 10 at San Jacinto Park.

Our theme is from darkness to light, French said. We really need the lightings to keep our spirits lifted. We knew we had to do something for the community.

For Rabbi Deborah Goldman of Congregation Shaareth Israel in Lubbock, a city in west Texas, the synagogues virtual events will feel familiar. Goldman has been with the congregation of 41 families since 2016, but from afar she lives in Los Angeles. Shaareth Israel will participate in the Institute of Southern Jewish Lifes virtual lighting and concert event along with nearly two dozen Jewish organizations in 13 states, including Texas groups in Humble, El Paso and Corpus Christi.

In Corpus Christi, about 200 miles south of Houston, the Jewish community center will hold a socially distanced and masked event on Dec. 10 on the grounds of its building as part of the Institute of Southern Jewish Life lighting. About 200 Jews live in the city on the Gulf Coast, but Norma Levens, the centers executive director, said it was important to provide the citys Jewish community a chance to get out of the house in a safe environment even if its only a couple of dozen people.

No, were not going to have as many as we had last year, but we need a chance to interact with each other, Levens said. The first rule is, If you dont feel safe, dont come. But if you do feel safe, then this is a chance to share a unity of some sort.

Texas is experiencing some of the highest coronavirus case and hospitalization rates in the country. Retail and restaurant capacity is currently allowed up to 75 percent, and Gov. Greg Abbott has resisted calls, including from the White House task force, to tighten public restrictions.

But not all the public festivities revolve around menorah lightings. In the small eastern city of Tyler, the local Congregation Beth El will move its immensely popular Hanukkah klezmer concert online. The event has sold out for 12 straight years an impressive achievement, says Beth El Rabbi Neal Katz, since there are only 75 families in the congregation and east Texas does not have a large Jewish population.

The University of North Texas, located in Denton, about 30 miles north of Dallas, has only 400 or so Jewish students in a population of about 40,000. Melissa Duchin, the executive director of the universitys Hillel chapter, said Hanukkah usually falls when students are already home for winter break. So besides a mention at the final Shabbat service before final exams, the students are typically at home without much ado about Hanukkah.

But this is no ordinary year. The Hillel will hold its first virtual menorah lighting for students on Dec. 15, after finals are complete.

What weve seen this year, because we held events over the summer and saw it then, that its just very important to do something together as a community, Duchin said. Even if it wasnt something we couldnt do physically.

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Across Texas, the show of outdoor Hanukkah festivities must go on - The Jewish News of Northern California

Anti-Defamation League to honor health secretary Levine …

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Billy Graham

William Franklin Graham Jr. (November 7, 1918 February 21, 2018) was an American evangelist, a prominent evangelical Christian figure, and an ordained Southern Baptist minister who became well-known internationally in the late 1940s. One of his biographers has placed him "among the most influential Christian leaders" of the 20th century. As a preacher, he held large indoor and outdoor rallies with sermons that were broadcast on radio and television; some were still being re-broadcast into the 21st century. In his six decades on television, Graham hosted annual "Crusades", evangelistic campaigns that ran from 1947 until his retirement in 2005. He also hosted the radio show Hour of Decision from 1950 to 1954. He repudiated racial segregation and insisted on racial integration for his revivals and crusades, starting in 1953; he also invited Martin Luther King Jr. to preach jointly at a revival in New York City in 1957. In addition to his religious aims, he helped shape the worldview of a huge number of people who came from different backgrounds, leading them to find a relationship between the Bible and contemporary secular viewpoints. According to his website, Graham preached to live audiences of 210 million people in more than 185 countries and territories through various meetings, including BMS World Mission and Global Mission. Graham was a spiritual adviser to U.S. presidents, and he provided spiritual counsel for every president from Harry S. Truman (33rd) to Barack Obama (44th). He was particularly close to Dwight D. Eisenhower, Lyndon B. Johnson (one of Graham's closest friends), and Richard Nixon. He was also lifelong friends with another televangelist, the founding pastor of the Crystal Cathedral, Robert Schuller, whom Graham talked into starting his own television ministry. Graham operated a variety of media and publishing outlets. According to his staff, more than 3.2 million people have responded to the invitation at Billy Graham Crusades to "accept Jesus Christ as their personal savior". Graham's evangelism was appreciated by mainline Protestant and Roman Catholic denominations because he encouraged new converts to become members of these churches. As of 2008, Graham's estimated lifetime audience, including radio and television broadcasts, topped 2.2 billion. One special televised broadcast in 1996 alone may have reached a television audience of as many as 2.5 billion people worldwide. Because of his crusades, Graham preached the gospel to more people in person than anyone in the history of Christianity. Graham was on Gallup's list of most admired men and women a record 61 times. Grant Wacker writes that by the mid-1960s, he had become the "Great Legitimator": "By then his presence conferred status on presidents, acceptability on wars, shame on racial prejudice, desirability on decency, dishonor on indecency, and prestige on civic events".

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Anti-Defamation League to honor health secretary Levine ...

The Anti-Defamation League Is Not What It Seems | Boston …

Posted By on December 5, 2020

Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel gives a speech celebrating ADL's centennial in 2013.

Under the guise of fighting hate speech, the ADL has a long history of wielding its moral authority to attack Arabs, blacks, and queers.

When Minnesota RepresentativeIlhan Omar was attacked in March for invoking the anti-Semitic trope of dual loyalty in her criticisms of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the Anti-Defamation League (ADL)aJewishnon-govermental organization based in the United States, whose statedmission is to stop the defamation of the Jewish people, and to secure justice and fair treatment to allwas among the first to call on Congressional leaders to take immediate action against her.

This was a well-worn pattern: the ADLs calls to action have successfully mobilized public opinion against black leadership for decades, from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and Ocean Hill-Brownsville parents in the New York City teacherstrikes of 1968, to the Movement for Black Lives and Marc Lamont Hill. In a clear sign that the new class of elected Democrats has actually shifted some power, though, the Congressional resolution on anti-Semitism took a surprising turn. Instead of confirming the innocence of the Israel lobby, as the Democratic leadership intended, Congress was forced for the first time to repudiate Islamophobia and white supremacy alongside anti-Semitism.

The ADL is experiencing a renaissance in its visibility, influence, and fundraising power among well-meaning liberals.

The effort to punish Omar has now been followed with a renewed push for a federal Anti-Semitism Awareness Act. The bill would create federal authority to decide whether a critic of Israel is motivated by politics or anti-Semitic intent. It is a clear bid to retake control from a questioning public. It would insulate anti-Semitism charges from public debate, where efforts to equate Israel with Jewish liberation increasingly fail and where new black-Muslim-Jewish alliances against Israel are emerging. Another new resolution condemns the human rights boycott of Israel as anti-Semitism that contributes to authoritarianism in the Middle East.

The stakes are high for the ADL, because its moral authority is a moneymaker. The ADL and its fundraising foundation reported a combined total of $67 million in contributions in 2016, as Donald Trump took office and neo-Nazis marched in Charlottesville, including at least $11 million from fundraising events. (In 2013 it raised $750,000 in one night from its furniture industry partners in the fight against hateone of its favorite phrases.) Perhaps more importantly, it is a source of cashless access in politics: the ADLs role as advisor to elected officials on matters of civil rights, not limited to anti-Semitism, is both completely informal and pro forma in political offices.

The ADLs persistent power in U.S. politics has been strangely unaffected by its history, probably because that history is so little known. The Ilhan Omar debate should be shaped by at least two aspects of it. The first is that the ADL has consistently sought to undermine the left, leveling a charge akin to dual loyalty: that the American lefts calls for redistribution of power, its solidarity with global movements, and its prioritization of people over states threaten the very concept of the state. Indeed the ADL, in addition to its stated mission of shoring up U.S. support for Israel, is deeply loyal to the U.S. state. The second is that the ADL has waged a long, vigorous, and successful campaign, alongside AIPAC, specifically to characterize Arab American political organizing as dual loyalty.

At a time when it should be easier to see the ADL as a conservative knowledge production agency, a resurgence of concern with hate has only consolidated its power.

This history is particularly important because despite losing this particular battle with Omar and identifying more openly with the right (consider, for instance, the ADLs celebration of Trumps Jerusalem embassy move), the ADL is experiencing a renaissance in its visibility, influence, and fundraising power among well-meaning liberals. It is fueled by the new national interest in white supremacy, which the ADL has long surveilled and researched, and which the FBI and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) have beencharged toignorein favor of targeting Muslim communities. (The ADL advocated surveilling both.) The ADLs ubiquity in U.S. discussions of white supremacy is exceeded only by the Klans: more than two-thirds of the 46,000 articles on white supremacists or white nationalists posted in the past year have referenced the ADL. That coverage has spiked by 1500 percent in 2019 alone, based on Factiva database searches for terms white nationalist and white supremacist.

At a time when it should be easier to see the ADL as a conservative knowledge production agency, a resurgence of concern with hate has only consolidated its power.

The ADLs power to mobilize against black leadership does not rest on leveraging anxieties about anti-Semitism.It draws instead on the ADLs much broader authority it has won over anti-black, anti-immigrant, and anti-queer hate. It is a quasi-state role that the ADL developed in just a decade, throughout the1980s: the period of collective U.S. desperation about white supremacist violence preceding the one we are in.

The ADLs persistent power in U.S. politics has been strangely unaffected by its history, probably because that history is so little known.

Like other major Jewish organizations (and unlike the many Jewish leftist organizations that have existed in opposition to it), the ADL has evinced a strong allegiance with the U.S. state. It was committed to its civilizing mission of settlement, and to capitalist individualism as the framework for rights. In addition to keeping watch over threats to the stateNazism, Communism, or demands for equality that went too farthe ADL sought out or welcomed ways to participate in the administration of the state. It collaborated with the House Un-American Activities Committeein the late 1940s and 1950s; it also tried and largely failed for several decades to interest the FBI in considering it a partner in monitoring threats. (FBI files made public under Freedom of Information Act requests document some of these efforts.) It found an opening in civil rights work where, ten years after the Voting Rights Act, ongoing racial conflict and white supremacist violence produced a new wave of demands for state action.

TheADLs quasi-state role took shape from about 1979 to 1990. Not incidentally, these years were also a period of crisis for Israels image as a liberation project: decolonizing states in the United Nations charged Israel with colonialism, racism, and violations of international law, and Jewish economic and political inclusion in the United States was soured by the advent of critiques of white privilege. Public debates about white privilege began to implicate Jews in state power on the wrong side of civil rights. The Sabra and Shatila massacres of 1982 galvanized the first mass Jewish organizing against Israel and the settlements;New Jewish Agenda led that work, and also exposed and protested Jewish organizations support for Reagan.Thefirst intifada began in 1987, displacing the narrative of Israel as a benevolent democracy. Domestically, these events produced ten state Democratic party resolutions on Palestinian rights and a debate at the national DNC in July 1988.

In addition to keeping watch over threats to the state, the ADL sought out or welcomed ways to participate in the administration of it.

In 1979 the ADL began producing an annual Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents. These audits, which found that anti-Semitism was on the rise nearly every year, were soon taken up by media and policymakers as a measure of how well the United States was living up to its values of racial inclusion, and how imminently threatening were latent fascist forcescode, at different times, for Nazis, Communists, the U.S. left, and more recently Muslim extremism. These audits remain a potent force in U.S. politics, despite periodic critiques that their methodology and raw data are not made public. Critics have noted that the ADL does not distinguish between teenage pranks designed to shock, such as swastika graffiti, and attacks grounded in bias, nor between expressions of bias and material violence. In the press, the ADL also counts calls for Palestinian rights, and even criticism of the ADL itself, as anti-Semitic incidents. Presumably these are included in the annual count. News media rarely look beyond the numbers, though, as they report spikes and dramatic increases which correctly remind readers, even if the data are spurious, that white supremacy persists.

Beginning in the mid-80s, the ADL launched work on hate crimes legislation. Initially its focus was on escalating small aggressions, again mostly by teens, as a matter of state concern. Its legislative campaign, though, coincided with a surge in anti-black, anti-immigrant, and anti-gay violence and white supremacy and a sense of urgency in pushing disinterested law enforcement to deal with them. The ADL pivoted to include racial and ethnic groups in its hate crimes approach, and was finally convinced to include queers. When the first federal hate crimes law passed in 1990,the ADL had become one of just a few major advocates defining the language and politics around it.

The last step in this process camein 1985, whenthe ADL launched its anti-bias education project. What began as a local effort in Boston in response to local racial tensions around bussing and housing quickly scaled up as a national program. A World of Difference wasand remainsa K-12 curriculum that combined interest in the power of television to make social interventions in a national conversation on childrens racial attitudes arising from the urban conflicts of the 70s and 80s. Emerging research had not figured out what interventions consistently made children tolerant, particularly in light of the fact that their society constantly reinforced racial inequality. Still, the urgency of addressing racism generated enthusiasm for the ADLs effort among elected officials and funders first in Boston, and then in dozens of major cities. This momentum put the ADL in the position of writing essentially national curriculum not just on anti-Semitism, but on anti-black, anti-Asian, and anti-Arab/anti-Muslim racism.

The ADLsAudit of Anti-Semitic Incidentshas been uncriticallytaken up by media and policymakers.

In more than one instance this curriculum was implemented over the objections of black, Asian, Arab, and Muslim communities. The conflict in San Francisco illuminates the ADLs aims. In the Bay Area local community organizing had close ties to Third World anti-imperialist organizing, and Jewish challenges to Israel had a strong foothold. The Sabra and Shatila massacre and the intifada led to referenda that scared the ADL. San Francisco voted on support of Palestinians right to self-determination and statehood, and Berkeley voted on becoming a sister city of Jabalya refugee camp in Gaza. The resolutions were supported by a substantial coalition of civil rights and justice organizations, as well as Arab grocery store owners, an important business community that usually stayed out of politics. The ADL viewed the campaign to defeat the initiatives as an agency-wide commitment and allocated it an unprecedented campaign budget to contain and quarantine attempts . . . to shift public opinion against the Jewish state. AIPAC was itsmain partner in that campaign.

Perhaps hoping to tame the Bay Areas intersectional anti-racism, the ADL brought its A World of Difference program to the regional school board in 1987. Lacking the deep relationships with other groups that had blessed the Boston project, the ADL proposed gathering a coalition of community groups to collaborate on the program. It recruited a set of (Jewish-led) queer, Asian, Arab, and other anti-racist groups and incorporated the coalition as Bay Area United (BAU). By 1988 the ADLs assembled groups complained that A World of Difference presented a narrow view of bias that elevated the Nazi holocaust and minimized experiences from slavery to internment. They charged that it explained why Americans should be tolerant of Muslims that actually taught Islamophobia rather than challenging it. They objected to the ADLs refusal to discuss anti-gay violence at a moment when it was a key project of white supremacists and predominant among bias crimes, exacerbated by the AIDS crisis.

In pushing the ADL to amend the curriculum, the BAU appealed to what they assumed was a basic shared tenet of anti-discrimination: that one group representing one identity would not claim the right to speak on behalf of or control the others. ADL staff surprised them by doubling down on their right to control the whole curriculum. BAU groups were shocked that the ADL was so overtly hostile to themeven though they scribbled notes about the ADLs anti-Palestinian bias in the margins of their meeting agendas, they believed the ADL thought of itself as part of a community of civil rights groups. Throughout the conflict, the school board stayed silent. City human rights officials asked only for anti-gay violence to be included. Finally BAUs board quit, charging that the ADL had been using them as cover. This elicited no response from the ADL, but in answer to the city, the ADL agreed to include anti-gay violence. With this accommodation it won leeway to proceed with the entire program. (Much of this history is in the archives of Jewish queer activists who fought the ADL.)

The ADL has leveled near-constant charges of dual loyalty at Arabs, anti-racists, and the left in the name of defending the U.S. and Israeli states.

The ADLs victory in San Francisco also confirmed the ADL as a voice speaking beyond Jewish interests on a universalized, collectivized civil rights. Within a few years, A World of Difference had become ubiquitous in the United States as a provider of curriculum, workshops, and school and college clubs, as well asa trainer of teachers, police officers, and other enforcers of social order. In the present, this legacy has meant that the ADL can simultaneously endorse blanket surveillance of Muslims as a matter of security in the War on Terror and provide anti-Islamophobia curriculum to schoolchildren.

Perhaps the most effective aspect of the ADLs victory was to virtually displace from education those anti-racist organizations, local and national, that sought to discuss racism and white supremacy in terms of state power and dispossession. The ADL had labeled black-generated anti-racist education projects extremist and anti-Semitic in previous decades when they identified the state as playing a role in white supremacy. That analysis still struggles for oxygen in U.S. political culture. The ADLs continued role as an authority on white supremacist groups in the present points to its consolidation of control, and its sidelining of the black-led groups contending for that space in the late 80s. It is worth noting that anti-racist organizations from California to New York are still fighting with local school boards and universities over A World of Difference and other ADL curriculaand that Anti-Semitism Awareness Act proposed this year aims to empower the federal Department of Education to characterize Palestinian human rights demands as violations of American Jews civil rights.

In the same period, Arab American political groups were organizing as a U.S.constituency. Their organizing had been galvanized in the late 60s and early 70s by the Six Day War and by the FBIs Operation Boulder, the first War on Terrorstyle program of surveillance, interrogation, and deportation of Arabs and Iranians in the United States (19721975.) By the mid-1980s, several national Arab political organizations were working to carve out an Arab representational politics.Among them, the Arab American Institute had brought Arab issues and voters to the national electoral sphere in Jesse Jacksons 1984 Rainbow Coalition, and American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee was conducting anti-defamation work along much the same lines as the ADL.

The ADL set out to discredit and isolate them, joined in this effort by AIPAC and a few other groups. In 1983 the ADL circulated a blacklist of Arab American political groups, academics, and organizers (along with Jewish and a few Iranian groups) identifying them as pro-Arab sympathizers and anti-Semites. The ADLs complaint was simply that Arab Americans were changing other Americans minds about Israel.

Pro-Arab propagandists make their point well. . . . Israel is depicted as a militaristic, brutal, and oppressive nation. . . . The ultimate goal of these anti-Israel, pro-Arab propagandists is to sway Americans from their historically strong support for Israel.

The blacklist was stamped Confidential, according to Boston ADL director Leonard Zakims cover letter, because it easily could be misconstrued. It was mailed to several dozen campus Jewish leaderspresumably students and faculty, and possibly administratorswith the request that they submit information on anyone else who should be on the list. AIPAC produced a second list of enemies of Israel at the same time, written by an ADL staffer who moved between the two organizations.

The blacklists included most, if not all, Arab American representational organizations active in the United States. The lists were followed with overt and behind-the-scenes enforcement campaigns. James Zogby, director of the Arab American Institute in the 1980s, described to Congress dozens of instances when efforts to access the electoral process had been stymied by the blacklists, or by the fears of Arab political representation promulgated by the ADL:

On [one] occasion, I was invited. . . . to a White House briefing for ethnic leaders. After the meeting, an article appeared in the Jewish press claiming that two PLO supporters has [sic] been at the White House, specifically referring to me and to the representative of the National Association of Arab Americans (NAAA). I later received a call from an official in the White House who apologized but explained that as a result of this pressure, they would not be able to invite Arab Americans to future briefings. . . .

In the fall of 1983, during the mayoral race in Philadelphia, Arab Americans . . . hosted a fund-raising reception for . . . W. Wilson Goode [and] raised about $2,400 for his campaign. The next day, Goode' s opponent, John Egan, charged that Goode had accepted Arab money. In response, Goode publicly announced that he would return the checks.

Although they repeatedly have sought a meeting with Goode, and have on occasion been promised such a meeting, local community leaders have been denied even the opportunity to meet with their mayor since his election in November 1983. Arab Americans in Philadelphia are effectively disenfranchised. . . .

In each instances [sic], we have found essentially the same 'blacklists' being circulated and re-circulated to congressmen, newspaper editorial boards and political campaigns, with a deliberate attempt to ruin political careers and deny Arab Americans their political rights.

As Arab communities were being disenfranchised by the ADL, they were also being subjected to intense violence. In 1986 former Michigan House member and civil rights activist John Conyers called it a national tragedy, and convened a federal hearing. The hearing was one in a series of hate crimes hearingson anti-black and anti-gay violence between 1980 and 1988. All three noted its political and dispossessive nature: directed at individuals engaged in public life, asserting black, queer, and Arab issues as rightful concerns of the larger communities in which they shared. In each case, violence was so often unaddressed by law enforcement that groups found the state complicit.

The ADL had labeled black-generated anti-racist education projects extremist and anti-Semitic.That analysis still struggles for oxygen in U.S. political culture.

The violence described in the Arab American hearing was catastrophic and heavy with messaging: bombings, murders, rape threats, and assaults on Arab and Muslim community groups had been carried out in every part of the United States. In one case a woman dating a Palestinian man was gang-raped and a Star of David carved on her chest. What set it apart from anti-black and anti-gay violence was that it aimed much more precisely at the exercise of political citizenship. Witnesses laid out how closely anti-Arab violence was integrated with the ADLs delegitimization of Arab citizenship and membership in the U.S. polity. The bombings, fires, and murders followed where the ADL and AIPAC had vilified Arab Americans, and where Arabs had been frozen out of political power structures. Arabs inability to leverage political responses to the violence against them, the FBIs failure to prosecute any case, and the success of the ADL and its partners in casting anti-Arab violence as a rational response to Arab American politics often succeeded in terrorizing the victims into submission.

In pointing out these connections, Zogby testified, I am not suggesting that AIPAC, the ADL and the JDL [Jewish Defense League] are collaborators. They do, however, share a common political agenda, and their tactics in fact converge to create a personal and a political threat to the civil rights of Arab Americans and their organizations.

The extent of the ADLs antipathy toward the left was briefly a matter of national discussion in 1993. In 1992 FBI agents noticed that some of their intelligence on the Nation of Islam had appeared in an article written by ADL staff. A few months later they raided the ADLs office. Along with classified FBI data, they also found that the ADL had a much larger collection of illegal files. A set of dossiers on activist groups had been acquired from the San Francisco Police Departments surveillance unit, which had been shut down in 1990 as unconstitutional. The files had been ordered destroyed but went secretly to the ADL. There were files from other cities police departments as well.

A second set of dossiers came from surveillance and infiltration by ADL staff and consultants. For at least three decades the ADL had targeted civil rights groups from liberals to revolutionaries: anti-Apartheid activists, legal advocates (including from the ACLU), and community groups. The ADL also surveilled ethnic representational groups, particularly Arab and black, and Jewish groups concerned about Israeli treatment of Palestinians. Among other information, they had addresses and car registrations of 4,500 members of the ADC. The ADC had been bombed and its director, Alex Odeh, murdered during the ADLs project. The FBI suspected the Jewish Defense League (JDL), but community members suspected that the ADL either facilitated or tolerated the JDLs attacks.

In total, the raid found dossiers on nearly 950 organizations and 10,000 activists. An FBI interview with ADL spy Roy Bullock indicated that that information had been shared with the South African apartheid government and the Israeli Mossad.In response to a lawsuit, the ADL held the surveillance was permissible research because it was performed by a journalist. A judge agreed.

The ADLs conception of a leftist threat had already been guiding the organization for decades; in the 1980s this idea had cohered in neoconservatism. But in civil rights circles, the ADL did not acknowledge its hostility to the left. Instead, it portrayed itself as progressive, and anti-racists to its left as rogue and misguided, if not marginal: SNCC and black liberationists had hijacked real civil rights, New Jewish Agenda were outliers who were really anti-Semites. In the 1980s, according to the ADLs spy Roy Bullock, the ADLs anxieties focused on groups critical of Israeli policies, such as anti-apartheid groups, which Bullock also categorized more simply as antidemocratic movements.

This legacy has meant that the ADL can simultaneously endorse blanket surveillance of Muslims as a matter of security in the War on Terror and provide anti-Islamophobia curriculum to schoolchildren.

In the present, the ADL has continued to militate against internationalist, intersectional anti-racism, and has used its status as the nations premier civil rights organization to do so. In a particularly painful example in 2016, the ADLs director wrote a critique of the Movement For Black Lives policy platform, using the black spiritual phrasing of the civil rights movement: he told them to set aside intersectional bonds with Palestinian resistance and instead keep our eyes on the prize. At the same time, the ADL has consistently used the language of civil rights, and its position as an authority on them, to describe Israeli state military violence as liberatory and Palestinian resistance, including non-violent civil resistance, as extremist. This habit isnt incidental: the ADL is now a vetter of content forYouTube, where videos relating to the Boyscott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movementhave been censored as hate speech. It has also reportedly joined forces with Facebook, Twitter, and Microsoft as well to engineer solutions to cyberhate, and is building a Silicon Valley command center to house these operations.

Despite the refreshing public debate about the Israel lobby in the United States, recent discussions about Ilhan Omar and anti-Semitism have been insulated from this long history. The ADL has leveled near-constant charges of dual loyalty at Arabs, anti-racists, and the left in the name of defending the U.S. and Israeli statesstates not as representations of their people, but as entities with their own aims.

The ADL is now a vetter of content forYouTube, where BDS videos have been censored as hate speech.

This history is essential. It lays bare the definition of democratic participation that permits AIPAC to fundraise and lobby for the Israeli state as a matter of political process, but calls popular movements against state violence antidemocratic and seeks to suppress them. The victory of broad-based solidarity with Omar allows us to imagine otherwise as a real possibility. To get there, we will need to shine ever more light on how we got here in the first place.

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The Anti-Defamation League Is Not What It Seems | Boston ...

Travel Fairness Now Hosts Webinar with Health Care, Consumer and Travel Experts to Improve Traveler Access to Vital Information During Covid-19 and a…

Posted By on December 5, 2020

As part of "Travel Again and Travel Better" effort, consumer group brings thought leaders and consumers together to shape a better travel experience for the future

WASHINGTON, Dec. 3, 2020 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Travel Fairness Now, a non-profit coalition of travelers advocating for greater transparency, competition and fairness in travel, will be hosting its second webinar today as part of an effort to create a better travel experience for consumers in the future. The webinar will include a discussion with Gov. Howard Dean, National Consumers League Executive Director Sally Greenberg and Los Angeles Times Contributor and former Travel Editor Catharine Hamm.

The free webinar, entitled "Consumer Access to Travel Information During COVID-19 and a Challenging Economic Environment" will be held today, Thursday, Dec. 3, from 1:30 p.m. 2:30 p.m. EST. Registration can be completed here.

"The coronavirus and a challenging economy for many American families and businesses has made the need for fast and easy consumer access to health, safety and travel information more urgent than ever," said Kurt Ebenhoch, executive director of Travel Fairness Now. "Consumers want information on hotel, car rental and airline health and safety practices, as well as affordability and alternative options, before making travel decisions."

Webinar Panelists

The webinar will include three panelists that are leading health care policy, consumer advocacy and travel experts. They include:

Gov. Howard Dean Senior Advisor at Dentons

Gov. Dean is senior advisor in the Public Policy and Regulation practice at Dentons. He is also a physician, former chairman of the Democratic National Committee, three-term Gov. of Vermont, a 2008 Democratic presidential candidate, former chairman of the National Governors' Association, Democratic Governors' Association and New England Governors' Conference, and served as a member of the Vermont State Legislature.

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Sally Greenberg Executive Director, National Consumers League

Ms. Greenberg has testified numerous times before Congress on consumer protection issues, including on product safety, fraud and excessive fees on car rentals. From 1997-2007, she worked for Consumers Union on product liability and food safety issues, along with auto and product safety. Previously, Ms. Greenberg worked at the U.S. Department of Justice Foreign Claims Settlement Commission and prior to that, she spent a decade serving as the Eastern States Civil Rights Counsel for the Anti-Defamation League, based in Boston.

Catharine Hamm Special Contributor to the Los Angeles Times

Ms. Hamm is a special contributor to and award-winning former Travel Editor of The Los Angeles Times. Her varied media career has taken her from McPherson, Kansas, to Kansas City, Missouri, and to the California cities of San Bernardino, Salinas and Los Angeles. Ms. Hamm has twice received individual Lowell Thomas Awards, and during her tenure as editor, the Los Angeles Times' Travel section was recognized seven times.

About Travel Fairness Now

Travel Fairness Now is a non-profit coalition of travelers advocating for greater transparency, competition and fairness in travel. For more information, please visit http://www.travelfairnessnow.org.

Media Contact

Kurt Ebenhoch, Travel Fairness Now, (312) 983-2369, kurtebenhoch@comcast.net

Twitter, Facebook

SOURCE Travel Fairness Now

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Travel Fairness Now Hosts Webinar with Health Care, Consumer and Travel Experts to Improve Traveler Access to Vital Information During Covid-19 and a...

8 Things to Do This Week in DC (and Beyond) – Metro Weekly

Posted By on December 4, 2020

The Slutcracker Photo: Melissa Kooyomjian Kemp

The Slutcracker: The Movie

Once upon a time, in a town far away 2008 in Somerville, Massachusetts, to be exact a collective of quirky progressive artists decided to stage a feminist take on The Nutcracker, Tchaikovskys famed 19th century ballet. Calling their adaptation The Slutcracker, they tinkered with the classic storyline by making the focus on Claras sexual awakening and empowerment, a development aided and abetted by her favorite Christmas toy, the Dildo Prince.

Over the years the show has developed a dedicated fan base. Its popularity is likely to grow exponentially this year as the show morphs into a film available for streaming worldwide. Slutcracker: The Movie consists of archival footage from last years 12th season, edited together and set to a live recording made for the production by the Brno Philharmonic from the Czech Republic.

The loving parody remains faithful to the original, except in one key respect: The Slutcracker is not a ballet in the classical or even contemporary sense, but rather a showcase of movement diversity. Directed and choreographed by Vanessa White of Ballets Ruses, The Slutcracker features drag artists, burlesque performers, hula hoopers, belly and pole dancers performing alongside professional dancers. We cast performers of different shapes, sizes, colors, genders, abilities, ages (over 18), and talents, White says. I give a lot of wiggle room for performers to shape their characters their diverse experiences bring a richness to both the storytelling and the choreography that a director cant deliver on their own. The movie is available through Christmas. Cost is $15 for a 48-hour stream. Visit http://www.slutcracker.com.

JxJ Festival: Army of Lovers in the Holy Land

JxJ Virtual Festival

Queer music, particularly of the kitschy kind, and stories about same-sex secrets and coming out while coming of age are predominant themes among the four Rated LGBTQ feature films streaming over the next week as part of the 2020 virtual edition of JxJ. Combining the 30th Washington Jewish Film Festival and the 21st Washington Jewish Music Festival, this years multidisciplinary arts festival, organized by the Edlavitch DCJCC in partnership with Rockvilles Bender JCC and Falls Churchs Pozez JCC, presents over 50 events, including virtual conversations with the directors, stars, or subjects from many of the full-length features and documentaries streaming through the Eventive platform. The lineup also includes virtual concerts by Niki Jacobs of the contemporary Dutch klezmer ensemble Nikitov and several local Jewish musical acts, foremost among them SONiA disappear fear, the queer indie-folk/pop sensation who will perform selections from her recently released 20th set Love out Loud.

Specific LGBTQ highlights include Army of Lovers in the Holy Land, a 2019 documentary about the high-camp and kitschy dance-pop trio who had a string of European hits in the 90s and remain popular in Israel on Monday, Dec. 7, at 1 p.m.; Douze Points, Daniel Syrkins 2019 colorful satire of Eurovision focused on a gay Muslim singer from France competing in a year Israel hosts the song contest on Tuesday, Dec. 8, at 1 p.m.; Shiva Baby, Emma Seligmans comedy starring Rachel Sennot as a young woman whose lies and secret loves threaten to catch up with her while attending a shiva with her parents; and Flawless, a youthful drama starring transgender model Strashko who makes a secret pact with two fellow high school outcasts as they seek validation from their popular classmates.

JxJ runs to Dec. 10. Tickets are $11 per film rental or an All Access Pass at $90 per household. Concerts are pay-what-you-can. Visit http://www.jxjdc.org.

Gay Mens Chorus of Washington DC: The Holiday Show

Gay Mens Chorus: Virtual Holiday Show

You might think, Oh the pandemic, were shut down. Nope. We actually are busier than ever. Were busy little elves putting together the show, says Thea Kano, artistic director of the Gay Mens Chorus of Washington. The chorus has retooled its signature The Holiday Show as a virtual program. While it will include recordings of favorite numbers from past shows, as well as additional archival footage to pay tribute to the cultural organizations 40th anniversary, the bulk of the program is comprised of new songs. To make that work, Kano has had to shift from her usual role as conductor to serving in a new capacity as video editor. Each new song requires each singer to submit their audio as well as a video of them singing, and then that all gets put together, Kano says. Its no easy feat, especially for those songs featuring the full chorus, or upwards of 150 members, as each song consists of as many individual recordings.

The approximately 75-minute-long program includes new socially distanced numbers performed by members of the organizations 17th Street Dance troupe. This has been an all new experience [and] a huge learning curve for myself and for the members, Kano says. But you know whats really great? We have 180 members participating, and thats just about what we have at the in-person Holiday Show.

The more, the merrier. As the song goes, We All Need a Little Christmas we all need a little joy right now, Kano says. Im really very proud of this show and excited about it, because it really is very joyful. As Ive been going through the editing process to put together the new material, it makes me smile every time I hit play to watch it and listen to it. So were hoping our audience has the same experience.

The Gay Mens Chorus of Washingtons The Holiday Show launches with a premiere, including a live chat, on Saturday, Dec. 5, at 7 p.m. Its available as a 48-hour stream until December 20. Tickets are $25. Visit http://www.gmcw.org.

The Birchmere: Gary Hoey

December at The Birchmere

The last month of the year normally ushers in a packed schedule of holiday-themed concerts at the Birchmere, an excessive bounty of seasonal cheer offered every other night. But theres nothing normal about December 2020, a time when the legendary Alexandria music hall is practically the only venue in the area offering live music in modified, scaled-back, and socially distanced-enforced style, plus enhanced cleaning procedures.

This year, the season doesnt officially start at the Birchmere until Gary Hoey drops by for a stop on his Ho Ho Hoeys Rockin Holiday Tour (Dec. 10). Baltimore-based R&B/jazz artist Maysa Leak follows with two nights of A Very MAYSA Christmas (Dec. 19 and 20). Veteran progressive band The Seldom Scene returns to close out the holiday season and another year with an Early New Years Eve Celebration starting at 7:30 p.m. and presumably ending before the ball drops (Dec. 31).

Non-holiday-themed shows include KT Tunstall, the underappreciated upbeat pop/rock Scottish singer who drops by for a two-night run (Dec. 15 and 16), the Richmond, Va.-based bluegrass/rock band Carbon Leaf, who also offers a two-night run, although tickets remain only for the first night (Dec. 17), D.C.-based blusion artist Deanna Bogart (Dec. 28), and popular neo-soul married duo Kindred the Family Soul (Dec. 30). The Birchmere is at 3701 Mount Vernon Ave., Alexandria. Ticket prices vary. Call 703-549-7500 or visit http://www.birchmere.com.

Gorillaz

Gorillaz: Song Machine Live

Two decades ago Damon Albarn teamed up with cartoonist Jamie Hewlett for what was initially conceived of as a critique of the artificiality of mainstream pop music. And then the parody act became something of a parody of itself, as Gorillaz became a stadium-filling, major label act known for a repertoire of catchy, genre-blurring, original-sounding synth-pop tunes always accompanied by videos featuring singer 2D, guitarist Noodle, bassist Murdoc Niccals, and drummer Russel Hobbs (the cartoon characters who are the nominal Gorillaz).

Recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the Most Successful Virtual Act, it was inevitable Gorillaz would resurface in a year when every band has become a virtual band. Albarn and company did so early in the pandemic, with the release of one episode at a time, all part of a new Song Machine series, with each featuring different guest artists.

In late October, the series morphed into Song Machine: Season One Strange Timez, a new studio album from the group featuring 11 tracks (or 17 in the deluxe edition) with guests Elton John, Beck, St. Vincent, The Cures Robert Smith, Peter Hook, 6LACK, ScHoolboy Q, Slaves, Goldlink, and Joan As Police Woman. Next summer, the Gorillaz plan to head out on the Song Machine Tour, starting with a few European stadiums. But the virtual band will effectively kick off the tour with virtual concerts the second full weekend of December, offering three performances across three time zones through the LIVENow platform. The North American livestream is set for Saturday, Dec. 12, at 4 p.m. Tickets are $15 per livestream, or $30 for all three. Visit http://www.GorillazLiveNow.com.

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre Photo: Nicole Tintle

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater

A gay cultural giant, lost too soon as a result of AIDS-related complications, choreographer Alvin Ailey created what became his signature masterpiece based on childhood memories of growing up Black in the South during the Great Depression. Revelations pays homage to the rich cultural heritage of the African-American on a journey from struggle to surrender to salvation that ultimately speaks to our common humanity and the power of faith and hope, according to a press release announcing the details of the first-ever virtual season of Aileys namesake company.

Ailey Forward packs into one month nine distinct virtual programs, along with supplemental discussions, available online for a one-week period after release date and free to all. The season launched Wednesday, Dec. 2, with Revelations Reimagined, a 60th anniversary celebration of the soul-stirring work, with excerpts performed by Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater dancers and special guests. On Thursday, Dec. 17, at 7:30 p.m., comes the World Premiere of Testament, a contemporary response to Revelations, illuminating its enduring impact as told by artists who have danced it led by Matthew Rushing, the companys new associate artistic director, along with current company member Clifton Brown and former company member Yusha-Marie Sorzano, plus cinematography by former Ailey student Preston Miller and an original score by composer Damien Sneed. Revelations will be further celebrated through a workshop on Saturday, Dec. 19, at 2 p.m., in which participants of all ages and experience levels will be taught some of the steps from the works Wade in the Water and Rocka My Soul in the Bosom of Abraham. It all culminates with Decades of Revelations, a retrospective featuring performance highlights from the last 60 years, some of which havent been seen publicly in decades, bowing Wednesday, Dec. 23, at 7:30 p.m.

Other notable programs include Ailey & Ellington, a showcase of the American art forms of modern dance and jazz with a focus on the three ballets that Ailey set to music by Duke Ellington on Saturday, Dec. 5, at 2 p.m.; Dancing Spirit, featuring Hope Boykin performing This Little Light of Mine from Matthew Rushings Odetta on Monday, Dec. 7, at 7:30 p.m.; and Dancing for Social Justice, a program featuring performance excerpts from Jawole Willa Jo Zollars Shelter, a passionate ballet about the deprivation of being homeless, and from Kyle Abrahams Untitled America, focused on the prison systems impact on Black families, set for release on Friday, Dec. 11, at 7:30 p.m. Visit http://www.alvinailey.org.

Folgers Birthday Tribute to Emily Dickinson: Laux Dorianne

The Folgers Emily Dickinson Birthday Tribute

One of the most famous American poets in history, Emily Dickinson is as popular now as ever, in part thanks to pop culture portrayals ranging from Apple TV+s Peabody Award-winning historical dramedy Dickinson to Madeleine Olneks biopic Wild Nights With Emily. As a result, more people are now aware of what an increasing number of scholars consider to be Dickinsons truth: That Susan Huntington Gilbert was not just her best friend who later became her sister-in-law, but also her passionate, lifelong romantic lover.

Every year, the Folger Shakespeare Library celebrates the 19th century poets birthday with a special reading on December 10 at 7:30 p.m. For 2020, the event, part of the Folgers O.B. Hardison Poetry Series, becomes a virtual affair headlined by acclaimed poet Dorianne Laux. A finalist for the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for her fifth poetry collection Only as the Day is Long, Laux will read from her work as well as Dickinsons. The program will kick off with a virtual tour of the bedroom at the Homestead in Amherst, where the reclusive Dickinson spent much of her time and is now part of the Emily Dickinson Museum. Jane Wald, the museums director, will lead the tour.

On Wednesday, Dec. 9, at 6:30 p.m., Laux will lead a one-hour virtual workshop examining Dickinsons ideas and style and her influence on model poems by contemporary women poets. The workshop is titled Perception of an Object Costs, after a Dickinson poem.

The suggested price for the Dec. 10 reading is $15, while the workshop is $75. Registration required for Zoom link. Call 202-544-7077 or visit folger.edu.

Downtown Holiday Market

Downtown Holiday Market

The popular annual holiday street fair, organized by Diverse Markets Management and presented by the DowntownDC BID and Events DC, returns despite the pandemic. More than 70 artisans and vendors are featured through an enhanced open-air set-up. Foremost among this years changes is an expanded layout encompassing the entirety of two blocked-off sections of F Street not merely the sidewalks allowing for a safer and more socially distant shopping experience.

Additionally, this years 16th Annual market features a single entryway check-in spot, on the sidewalk in front of the National Portrait Gallery, from which point shoppers are guided down a streamlined one-way and properly distanced route, where hand-sanitizing dispensers abound and masks must be worn by everyone at all times. This years retail lineup showcases the Black- and minority-owned businesses part of Made In DC, as well as other local designers.

Downtown Holiday Market

The market also features several interactive digital experiences in lieu of staged, in-person performances including installation of a central 8 by 16 foot Jumbotron broadcasting a curated mix of holiday films and musical recordings, as well as Saturday Morning Theater Shorts from the National Theatre. Also on tap: Chroma, Zak Forrests lumina projection on the National Portrait Gallery building, and the debut of a first-of-its-kind mixed-reality adventure from ArTecHouse, in which guests use the museums XR app to unveil Instagrammable surprises at various checkpoints hidden among vendors.

A handful of vendors are peppered throughout the market selling food and beverages, including Taste of Germany, Alexas Empanadas, Old Blue BBQ, the Capital Candy Jar, Bindaas, and Migues Magnificent Mini Donuts. The Holiday Market runs daily from noon to 8 p.m. through Dec. 23, except Monday, Dec. 7 and 14. Located on F Street between 7th and 9th Streets NW. Visit http://www.downtownholidaymarket.com.

Read more:

8 Things to Do This Week in DC (and Beyond) - Metro Weekly


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