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Column: The last month of 2020 — Whoopee! – The Morning Sun

Posted By on December 4, 2020

Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak December;

And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor.

Eagerly I wished the morrowvainly I had sought to borrow

From my books surcease of sorrowsorrow for the lost Lenore

For the rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name Lenore

Namelessherefor evermore.

Edgar Allen Poe

Whether or not Ed found Ely, December certainly is dark and dreary. December allows us to celebrate many holidays, both religious and secular. Advent began on November 20 and is celebrated each Sunday until January 20. Advent is a season for both the celebration of the Nativity of Christ at Christmas and the return of Christ at the Second Coming. Advent is the beginning of the liturgical year in Western Christianity.

The first of the month is Giving Tuesday and World AIDS Day. The second is the International Day for Abolition of Slavery. The next is the International Day of Persons with Disabilities, followed by National Cookie Day. Saturday the 5th sees three occasions: International Volunteers Day; National Repeal Day; World Soil Day.

Finland Independence Day is on December 6. We remember Pearl Harbor Day and Civil Aviation Day on the 7th. Immaculate Conception Day and Bodhi Day on the 8th. Bodhi is Buddhas understanding about the true nature of things. Anti-Corruption Day and the International Day of Commemoration and Dignity fall on December 9th. The next day starts the nine days of Hanukkah. Hanukkah is the Jewish festival commemorating the rededication of the Second Temple in Jerusalem at the time of the Maccabean Revolt against the Seleucid Empire. It is also known as the Festival of Lights.

Human Rights Day and Jane Addams Day are on the 10th and Indiana Day the next. National Universal Health Day occurs on the 12th. The 13th sees National Cocoa Day and the National Day of the Horse. Green Monday is on the 14th, while the Bill of Rights is celebrated on the 15th.

Still there? There are more. Many look forward to National Maple Sugar Day and Wright Brothers Day on December 17 and Arabic Language Day and International Migrant Day on the 18th. Senator Hattie W. Caraway Day is on the 19th. Sunday, December 20th is Sakada Day in Hawaii and recognizes the Filipino contribution to the history, economy, culture and heritage of Hawaii. The Winter Solstice is December 21.

Each event has thousands and often many millions of devotees. These groups overlap where individuals prefer similar sets of traditions. We are free to choose our preferences. This is not always the case.

My wife and I watched Iintolerance the 1916 epic silent film directed by D. W. Griffith. Cast of thousands, elaborate scenes, complex plot. It consists of four interwoven tales that demonstrate humankind's persistent intolerance throughout the ages. In the American 1920s progressives closed the bars, pleasure domes and dance halls. This led to bootlegging, organized crime and the Great Depression. The ancient Babylonian story (539 BCE) depicts the conflict between Prince Belshazzar of Babylon and Cyrus the Great of Persia. The fall of Babylon is a result of intolerance arising from a conflict between disciples of two rival Babylonian gods -- Bel-Marduk and Ishtar.

In 1572 France Catholic rligious intolerance led to the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre of Protestant Huguenots fomented by Catholic royals. Finally in 27CE the Pharisses convince Pontius Pilate to arrest Jesus of Nazareth.

In each tale innocent people suffer because of decisions made by those in control. In America the Boy is falsely accused of murder and is saved from hanging when his friends capture the real culprit. Mountain Girl dies defending Balshazar. In France Brown Eyes loses her child. In Jeruselem Jesus is executed.

Intolence exists today. The current administration has stoked it. May January 20, 2021, bring less of it.

Ed Fisher writes a weekly column for the Morning Sun.

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Column: The last month of 2020 -- Whoopee! - The Morning Sun

Israel and Jordan aim to thaw relations with secret meeting – Axios

Posted By on December 4, 2020

Israeli Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi met secretly on Thursday with his Jordanian counterpart, Ayman Safadi. The meeting took place on the Jordanian side of the Alenbi border crossing between the countries, according to two Israeli sources.

Why it matters: This is time in several years that a meeting between Israeli and Jordanian foreign ministers has been reported.

The big picture: While Israel and Jordan have had a peace treaty in place for more than 25 years, relations between their political leaders have cooled down dramatically over the last several years.

The state of play: Among senior Israeli officials, Ashkenazi was the most forceful opponent of Netanyahus annexation plans. He raised those reservations with top U.S. officials including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, as well as with European foreign ministers.

What they are saying: Safadi has said the incoming Biden administration has made it clear to Jordan that it will take steps to renew the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. He added that President-elect Biden told King Abdullah that he is committed to the issue.

Update: After this story was published, the Jordanian foreign ministry issued a statement confirming the meeting and said Safadi told Ashkenazi that Israel must stop all measures that are undermining the peace process and two-state solution.

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Israel and Jordan aim to thaw relations with secret meeting - Axios

Chanukah Foods From Around the World – Jewish Exponent

Posted By on December 4, 2020

North American Ashkenazi Jews may associate Chanukah celebrations with potato latkes and sufganiyot, but theres nothing in the Maccabees story that says these are our only options.

For Jewish communities around the world, the tradition of eating fried foods during the Festival of Lights means holiday tables can feature fried meat, sweet and savory fritters and any kind of doughnut iteration imaginable. This year, I sampled four traditional Chanukah dishes from Italy, Spain, Latin America and India.

Pollo Fritto per Hanukkah (Fried Chicken for Hanukkah)

Having grown up with brisket or roasted chicken as the protein of choice at a Chanukah table, I was intrigued to find that Italian Jews traditionally celebrate the Festival of Lights with a special fried chicken recipe and wanted to give it a try.

I chose an Italian recipe from Leah Koenigs cookbook Little Book of Jewish Feasts. It combines lemon, thyme and cinnamon in a quick marinade that makes the chicken moist and tender without requiring it to sit too long (if it does, the acid from the lemon juice will make themeat tough).

I had never had fried chicken made with lemon before, but its a pretty genius inclusion. The acidity cuts through the fat and prevents the dish from being overwhelmingly oily, which is especially welcome if youve still got piles of other fried deliciousness to plow your way through. I wouldnt think to include cinnamon in a fried chicken recipe either, but it adds a nice depth of flavor.

Keftes de Prasa

These leek fritters are a Sephardic holiday staple and are often eaten at Chanukah because they are fried in oil. They originated in the Iberian peninsula but can also be found in Turkish, Greek and Middle Eastern cuisine.

I found a simple recipe by Michael Natkin on Serious Eats that called for leeks, eggs, bread crumbs, herbs and salt. At least, it seemed simple until I started washing the leeks and kept washing the leeks for what felt like two hours because they had so much grit in them. The batter comes out a little thinner than a typical latke, which threw me off as I tried to judge whether they were done, but I managed to avoid burning mostof them.

Fine, half of them.

The keftes have a light, sweet, almost nutty taste when theyre cooked, and I could easily have eaten four or five at a time. The crispy fried texture definitely screams Chanukah, although these leek pancakes are a little less starchy and filling than a latke.

Gulab Jamun

I was familiar with these fried sweets thanks to my moderate to severe obsession with Indian food, but I didnt realize until recently that they were commonly enjoyed at Chanukah by Indian Jews.

Gulab jamun is a traditional Hanukkah treat among the Bene Israel of Mumbai, as it combines the two primary holiday foods, dairy and fried, Gil Marks wrote in The Encyclopedia of Jewish Food.

The desserts are made by cooking milk and flour in oil at a low heat. When theyre golden brown, the fritters are drenched in a spiced chini pani (sugar syrup) that often contains cardamom.

You can find gulab jamun at a lot of Indian restaurants I typically buy mine from Ekta Cuisine in Fishtown. The small sweets have the consistency of a really rich cake doughnut they definitely strike that decadent, deep-fried note youd expect from a Chanukah dish. I also like pouring the leftover cardamom sugar syrup in chai tea.

Buuelos Buuelos, also known as bimuelos or bumuelos in Ladino, originated in Spain and Portugal and have become popular desserts in Latin American countries. You can find them served at Colombian or Mexican restaurants. They are commonly eaten by Sephardic Jews during Chanukah because, you guessed it, oil.

According to Ty Alhadeff, Sephardic studies research coordinator of the Stroum Center for Jewish Studies at the University of Washington, they are also eaten for biblical reasons. The first Ladino translation of the Torah published in Istanbul in 1547 read that the manna God provided to the Israelites in the desert tasted like buuelos, or fritters, in honey.

Theyre also quite simple to make at home all you need is flour, sugar, yeast, water, salt and oil for frying. I made a batch that turned out a little less fluffy and round than the picture on My Jewish Learning (that recipe is adapted from Gil Marks book The World of Jewish Desserts) but the results were still a bit lighter and breadier than sufganyot. They remind me of the fried dough you can find at carnivals dusted with cinnamon and sugar.

Although these desserts are technically Iberian and Latin American, I put a North American twist on mine by drenching them in maple syrup. No regrets.

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Bahrain minister to visit Israel, meet Netanyahu, Ashkenazi – The Times of Israel

Posted By on December 4, 2020

Scientist killing carried out from afar with remote controlled rifle Iranian report

The attack that killed the alleged architect of Irans nuclear weapons program on Friday was carried out from afar using a remote-controlled machine gun attached to a car some 500 feet away, according to a leading Iranian news site.

The semi-officials Fars news site reports that the entire operationswas conducted with no human agents present at the scene whatsoever, a significantly different description of the attack than has been presented until now.

According to the outlet, the assault took place over the course of three minutes as Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, a brigadier general in Irans Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and a key figure in the countrys military research-and-development program, traveled toward the resort town of Absard, east of Tehran.

The operation kicked off when the lead car in Fakhrizadeh security detail traveled ahead to inspect the security at his destination. At that point, a number of bullets were fired at Fakhrizadehs armored car, prompting him to exit the vehicle as he was apparently unaware that he was under attack, thinking that the sound was caused by a collision or some problem with the car, according to Fars news.

A photo released by Irans semi-official Fars News Agency shows the scene where Mohsen Fakhrizadeh was killed in Absard, a small city just east of the capital, Tehran, Iran, Nov. 27, 2020. (Fars News Agency via AP)

At that point, a remote-controlled machine gun in a Nissan that had been parked some 150 meters (492 feet) away opened fire, striking Fakhrizadeh twice, once in the side and once in the back, severing his spinal cord. Fakhrizadehs bodyguard was also hit by the gunfire. The Nissan then exploded.

According to Fars, the owner of the Nissan left the country on November 8. It was not clear if the car was remotely controlled as well or how the car got to the area of the attack.

Fakhrizadeh was taken to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Until now, reports from Iran indicated that the explosion occurred first, forcing Fakhrizadehs car to stop, and then armed agents opened fire at him and his security detail, killing them, before they fled.

Judah Ari Gross

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Bahrain minister to visit Israel, meet Netanyahu, Ashkenazi - The Times of Israel

Looking to the future from Izmirs glorious Jewish past – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on December 4, 2020

For those of us not fully cognizant of the richly sequined history of the Jewish community in Turkey, a look at some of the work currently underway on a bunch of venerable synagogues in Izmir could serve to enlighten.

There is historical evidence suggesting there were Jews living in what is now known as Turkey as far back as the fifth century BCE, although most people who know anything about the community there understandably reference the expulsion of Jews from Spain and Portugal in the late 15th century as a pivotal juncture in Jewish presence in Turkey.

Like any Jewish community across the globe, the Turkish contingent has known ups and downs, as its fortunes fluctuated according to the whim of this or that ruler. Yet by and large, the Jewish population of the Ottoman Empire, and contemporary Turkey, fared pretty well over the centuries including in Izmir, where numerous local communities were established, each with its own house of prayer and nodal point of cultural and social life.

Some of the latter are the subjects of an ongoing restoration and conservation project that has been in full flow in the Mediterranean Turkish city for some years now, under the stewardship of locally born Nissim Ben Joya, acting under the auspices of the Mordechai Kiriaty Foundation.

Ben Joya certainly has had his hands full for the past decade or so, after terminating a five-year tenure as the artistic director of a cinematheque and returning to the place he was born, a full four decades after leaving for pastures anew at the age of 19.

Serendipity, or just being in the right place at the right time, played its part in leading Ben Joya back to where it all began for him, although this time in a professional capacity.

After I announced my decision to leave the cinematheque, Judith Kiriaty [of the Mordechai Kiriaty Foundation] got in touch with me and said I was just the person she was looking for, Ben Joya recalls. I was born in Turkey and I knew the language and culture. Ben Joya also has a personal backdrop to the project, as his parents were married in one of the synagogues the Portuguese.

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It seems Kiriaty had visited Izmir sometime earlier while on a business trip, and came across the vestiges of the local Jewish communitys glorious past. The citys oldest district, Kemeralti, dates back to Roman times and is home to the densest concentration of Jewish landmarks in Turkey. At one time Izmir hosted no fewer than 34 synagogues that served, at its zenith in the 18th and 19th centuries, a local Jewish populace of some 50,000. The remains of only 13 synagogues can still be found there. The Kiriaty Foundation sponsored Izmir Project seeks to restore and conserve nine of them, which are in various stages of disrepair and repair, including some that had survived intact.

The ultimate goal of the makeover venture is to create a Jewish cultural center and museum under one expansive roof, incorporating nine synagogues after they have been restored to their former sumptuous glory. Foundation head Judith Kiriaty notes that the project core offers the opportunity to preserve a singular treasure of Judaica and Spanish-Judeo architecture, and to present it to people from Turkey and from all over the world, Jews and non-Jews alike.

This place [in Izmir] is not just a group of synagogues, it is a synagogue quarter. It is something you cant find anywhere else in the world.

There is also something of a common prayer nuance and design theme to the buildings.

The synagogues were primarily built by the descendants of Jews expelled from Spain and Portugal, Kiriaty adds. They are very special. Some are in ruins.

Mind you, the foundation did not have to start from scratch across the board.

Some of the synagogues are in a better state the ones the local community managed to preserve.

It is quite a cluster.

THE PROLIFERATION of prayer houses and the ability of Jews to maintain their time-honored practices and uphold their heritage in Izmir, says the foundation head, was largely down to the benevolence of the local authorities. That, she notes, set the Jewish population of the Ottoman Empire, and later of Turkey, apart from its European counterparts and enabled it to not only survive but also to flourish across the centuries.

That included exercising their own disciplinary and judicial processes.

The Jews were able to operate rabbinical courts and to impose penalties on wrongdoers from the community, instead of the state authorities. The Jewish community even had its own prison where people who were found guilty of certain misdemeanors were incarcerated. The Jews in Turkey had a lot more freedom than European Jews. Kiriaty says the Turkish Jews were also spared much of the tribulations endured by their European co-religionists.

They did not experience the Inquisition, they did not go through World War II and certainly not the Holocaust. The Jews of Turkey had a much better life, in general, and had much better relations with the state authorities than European Jews. Left to their own devices, the members of the local community could get on with their lives, nurture their standard of living, and preserve their cultural and religious customs and practices. The concrete evidence of that uninterrupted continuum can be found today in Izmir, and makes for impressive viewing. One can discern the richness of past Jewish life there in the aesthetic vignettes glimpsed even among the rubble of the less well-preserved edifices.

That allowed them to flourish in Izmir and left us with so many synagogues that have survived, explains Kiriaty. The Turks did not destroy them. There werent any pogroms and Jews were not persecuted.

Add to that the architectural sensibilities that fed off the Golden Age of Spanish art and culture, and even some Italian and basilica form influences, and you have a powerful aesthetic mix that produced particularly alluring visual results. The Bikur Holim synagogue, for example, founded in 1724 by Shalom de Chaves, is a feast for the eyes. The interior design incorporates a vibrant mix of yellow and green shades, with fine wood and marble structures and fittings, and delightfully colored frescoes above the pillars of the bima (stage), and across the frieze-like ceiling partitions. The synagogue was devastated by fire twice in the 18th century and was dutifully restored by de Chavess descendants on each occasion.

The Shalom Synagogue, thought to have opened in the 17th century, is a somewhat more sober affair. Even so, the arched recesses running along the southern wall catch the eye, as do the unusual seating arrangements with cushioned benches set against the perimeter wall. The said house of prayer, like the vast majority of other synagogues in the now largely neglected Izmir quarter near the local market, served one of the numerous Sephardic factions.

The Shalom Synagogue also provided access to an Ashkenazi synagogue adjacent to it, which fell into disrepair in the early 20th century and was considered unsalvageable. There were, in fact, several groups of Ashkenazi Jews who immigrated to the Ottoman Empire from eastern and central Europe as early as the 15th century, but later, following the mass influx of Jews fleeing persecution in Spain and Portugal, many Ashkenazi Jews adopted Sephardic styles of prayer and customs.

AS THE foundation and Ben Joya get on with the conservation and restoration work in tandem with local authorities, the structural remains of a once large and prosperous Jewish presence gradually rise out of the rubble and give voice, as it were, to the lives of tens of thousands of Jews who lived and died there, and others who, at some stage or other, relocated around the world, including to pre-state Palestine and later to Israel. There are said to be some 100,000 Jews of Turkish descent currently living here, including ethnically leaning rock musician Beri Sacharoff, who was born in Izmir and made aliyah with his family at the age of three, and world-renowned percussionist Zohar Fresco, whose parents hail from Istanbul.

The interior of the Algazi Synagogue in Izmir appears to be a little more two-dimensional than the others. After a few moments you note there is no womens gallery, wherein lies a tasty tidbit from community goings-on of yore. Local lore has it that, during a Yom Kippur prayer, the cantor winked at a woman sitting in the womens section, after which the gallery was permanently closed to prevent a repeat of such reprehensible conduct.

The importance of the Izmir Project also stretches back further into the annals of world Jewry and, in fact, serves as a showcase for a lost world.

Today you can hardly find any evidence of the beautiful synagogues of Spain and Portugal, says Kiriaty, but the architectural designs from there resonate in the synagogues in Izmir.

There were, however, some strictures placed on synagogues planners in the Kemeralti district.

They could not build structures that were higher than the mosques, Kiriaty reveals. So the synagogues are relatively small and intimate, but they are very special.

Kiriaty Foundation international relations director Uri Bar-Ner feels the value of efforts to restore and preserve the Izmir synagogue quarter, and present the end product of the project to the public, cannot be overestimated.

The Jewish world can basically be divided into three streams Ashkenazi Jewry, eastern (Mizrachi) Sephardic Jewry the Jews who lived in Arab countries and theres the heritage of Spanish Jewry, which is the least known of the three. Mores the pity, and Bar-Ner is hopeful the ongoing work in Izmir will serve to draw attention to that cultural and artistic apogee.

It is the harbinger of all the glorious Jewish achievements of the Middle Ages and thereafter.

Our vision is that, ultimately, Jews from all over the world will travel to Izmir to learn about and experience the heritage of Spanish Jewry, Bar-Ner continues. There are other Spanish synagogues in Amsterdam, London and other places but there is nowhere else like Izmir, with the concentration of Spanish synagogues, with their Judaica, music, food and Jewish ritual textiles, such as parochot. The latter refers to the curtains that covered the Holy Arks in the Izmir synagogues, some of which are stored and are currently being repaired and preserved, along with hundreds of centuries-old Jewish books and synagogue artifacts.

The Kiriaty initiative is also supported by a slew of prestigious organizations from around the world, including the Rothschild Foundation Hanadiv Europe, Foundation for Jewish Heritage Europe, US Ambassadors Fund, Association of Jewish Museums in Europe, European Council (AEPJ), World Monument Watch and World Monument Fund, the German Foreign Ministry and the European Union. Local sponsors include the Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism, the local Izmir Metropolitan authority and Municipality of Konak, Izmir Cultural Association (IZKA), and TARKEM.

This powerful and impressive coalition reflects the importance the international community attaches to the restoration of synagogues in a truly unique spot on the global Jewish map. The same could be said for the interest expressed by iconic architect Daniel Libeskind in designing the Izmir Jewish heritage visitors center. That would be quite a feather in the Izmir Projects collective cap. Libeskinds portfolio features work on the One World Trade Center the main building of the rebuilt World Trade Center in New York; the Berlin Jewish Museum; and the Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco.

Bar-Ner feels there is even more added value to be gained from the Izmir Project, emanating from the predominantly harmonious relations enjoyed by all the communities, religious groups and social strata in Izmir.

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Looking to the future from Izmirs glorious Jewish past - The Jerusalem Post

It’s time to end the farce of this government – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on December 4, 2020

It might be a case, as the English say, of turkeys voting for Christmas, but Benny Gantz and his Blue and White Party have no choice. On Wednesday they must join forces with Yair Lapid and support Yesh Atids no-confidence motion in the government and bring this misaligned and malfunctioning unity coalition to an end.

The government has been in power for all of seven months and already its time to put it out of its misery. Israels citizens have been badly served throughout this period, and there is no indication of any progress in sight. Formed against the backdrop of COVID-19, this government has spectacularly failed to provide any coherent or consistent policy to combat the pandemic, sewing instead confusion, panic and indecision.

Having already called Blue and Whites bluff once over the budget Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazis threat to bring down the coalition if budget preparations did not start by the end of October Netanyahu and Finance Minister Israel Katz are preparing to do the same again. While Gantz publicly stated earlier this month he will call for early elections if the budget is not passed by the end of December, Katz announced at the end of the week that he and Netanyahu are planning on passing the budget in February.

Netanyahus calculation here is simple and has nothing to do with Israels economic well-being and everything to do with his own political interests. If the prime minister again succeeds in stringing Gantz along, come March Netanyahu will be in a better position to engineer a political crisis, bring down his own government and hold elections in June. Lets not forget: Netanyahus political calendar is focused on November 2021, and ensuring his rotation agreement with Gantz, scheduled to take place then, never happens.

By June next year, the majority of Israelis, so the assumption goes, will already be vaccinated against COVID-19, the economy will start to revive, unemployment will fall, and all the nations children will be back safely behind their desks at school. With such a feel-good atmosphere after the trauma of the pandemic, the prime minister will run a campaign falsely based on the image of Netanyahu the great leader who brought the children of Israel out of the wilderness.

And if Gantz, suddenly and against character, decides to down tools and slam the door on the government in December, the country will go to the polls in March, a few months earlier. While not ideal for Netanyahu, given its unlikely that the vaccine will be widespread by then, the country will still be in a recession, and his trial on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust will have started, the prime minister also knows there is no candidate on the Center-Left who can seriously threaten him. If anything, the more possible (although highly unlikely) threat to a future Netanyahu-led government comes from the Right in the form of Naftali Bennett.

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And yet, even though it means Gantz stepping down from the Defense Ministry, Ashkenazi quitting the Foreign Ministry and Avi Nissenkorn leaving Justice, probably never to return, Blue and White have no option but to join Yesh Atids no-confidence motion. At the very least, it will allow them the dignity of stepping down at a time of their own choosing.

SUCH IS the lack of basic trust at the highest echelons of the government that just last week, the prime minister flew to Saudi Arabia still officially an enemy country without informing his defense or foreign minister. Like the rest of the country, they became aware of it only through a Netanyahu-sanctioned leak on social media.

Gantz, meanwhile, keenly aware of Netanyahus sensitivities around the issue, last week announced the establishment of a government committee to investigate the irregular purchase process of submarines and corvettes, also known as Case 3000. This affair centers on allegations of a massive bribery scheme in the multibillion-dollar deal in 2016 with German shipbuilder Thyssenkrupp, involving a number of close associates of the prime minister.

With such an atmosphere of suspicion around the cabinet table, its no wonder the government is failing to function. Back in the 1980s, when Israel last had a national-unity government, its leaders, Yitzhak Shamir and Shimon Peres, were far from friends, but there was mutual respect and, importantly, a sense that the countrys interests took precedence over everything else.

Today, this is not the case and it is time to end the farce.

The writer is a former editor-in-chief of The Jerusalem Post.

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It's time to end the farce of this government - The Jerusalem Post

Fear of peace – Daily Pioneer

Posted By on December 4, 2020

For politicians like Netanyahu, peace delegitimises their political appeal and instead provocation, tension and violence strengthen the same

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Bibi Netanyahu is a stereotypical Israeli politician, who has served in the Israel Defence Forces (IDF). Hailing from a military family that includes elder brother Yonatan Netanyahu, who commanded the daring Operation Entebbe and became its only Israeli fatality, Benjamin himself was a team leader in the Sayeret Matkal (Special Forces Unit) and took part in multiple covert operations in Syria like Operation Gift and Operation Isotope. He was also shot in the shoulder during an anti-hijack operation. But today, Benjamin Netanyahu is also a great political survivor and the longest-serving Israeli Prime Minister (1996-1999, 2009-till date). The politician par excellence also has an unmatched CV in escaping tight spots. Foremost among them has been surviving the difficult tenures of former US Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama (both of them were not policy hawks), surviving sex tapes, indifferent colleagues, accusations of media manipulation, ongoing criminal trials for fraud and bribery, and above all, facing yet another potentially complicated relationship with the incoming American administration under Joe Biden.

But it is yet another illustrious Israeli war hero and fellow-Sayeret Matkal colleague of Netanyahus, Ehud Barak, who throws insights into the mind of the political escape-artist. Barak himself is the former Israeli Chief of the General Staff and the most decorated soldier in Israeli history. Later, he replaced Netanyahu as the Prime Minister in1999. Barak, who has worked along with Netanyahu in the military and the Knesset, claims, Netanyahu has shown that no legal regulations really interest him and given the legal entanglements surrounding his fate, he understands that he is going nowhere, and his priority will be anything that will get him out of a trial. Barak assesses that a desperate, amoral and reckless Netanyahu could create internal and external circumstances that would galvanise his political popularity and make him irreplaceable. Barak is joined by over 300 retired officers from the Israeli Army, Police, Shin Bet Security Service, Mossad and multiple former IDF Chiefs of Staff like Gabi Ashkenazi, Moshe Yaalon and the temporarily aligned Benny Gaantz. Years ago, as the leader of the Opposition,Netanyahu had led infamous protests against the then Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin (who had just signed the Oslo Peace Accord), where he walked at the head of a mock funeral procession, featuring an empty black coffin and chants of Death to Rabin. Days later, Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated by an Israeli opposed to the accord and that marked the return of extremist hardliners, among whom Netanyahu has been the most dominant player on the scene.

Now, Netanyahu has been bracing for a post-Donald Trump administration. The nomination of Anthony Blinken as the Secretary of State has accelerated his worries. Blinken is a known supporter of rapprochement with Iran, as also a rare critic of the controversial move to shift the US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Netanyahu realises the inevitability of the looming change in the dynamics, as also of the very narrow window of a few weeks before Trump is eased out of the White House. Frenetic backdoor activities are in full swing to secure positions in the chessboard of the Middle East, among which was the not-so-secretive meeting between Saudi Prince Mohammad Bin Salman and Netanyahu at Neom. Beyond public posturing, political rhetoric and official denials, both Riyadh and Tel Aviv are more strategically aligned than ever before, and between them, the irreconcilable sectarian angularity of Iran is a unifying factor. The Iranians are militarily challenging the Saudis through their proxies in Yemen (Houthi rebels) and rallying against the Saudi-supported Sunni militia in the Syrian-Iraqi swathes whereas the Iran-backed Hamas in the West Bank and the co-sectarian Shia-Hezbollah in Lebanon are taking on the Israelis. Iran is the common dread and, therefore, the essential playground for accusations, intrigues and covert operations.

During a news conference at the Ministry of Defence in 2018, Netanyahu had spoken about and stood before the image of Iranian scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh. Pointing to the image, Netanyahu had chillingly warned, Remember that name, Fakhrizadeh! Last week when Fakhrizadeh was assassinated by unknown gunmen, the Iranians were unequivocal in blaming, the mercenaries of the oppressive Zionist regime, referring to Netanyahus Government. The timing was eerily ominous and Iranian President Hasan Rouhani alluded to the desperation of the very limited window of Presidential transition in the US when he said, the enemies are experiencing stressful weeks.

It has been acknowledged by the international watchdog agency, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), that while Fakhrizadeh was indeed the head of the Iranian nuclear programme, there were no alarm bells in the Iranian reactivation status as yet despite the unilateral pullout by the US from the Iran nuclear deal. Legally also, Iran was no longer bound to restrain its nuclear programme after the US had reneged on the deal, despite assurances from IAEA that Iran had fully complied with all commitments. If anything, Trump-Netanyahu had upped the ante with avoidable and provocative steps like killing the revered General Qasem Soleimani, who had played a pivotal role in destroying the dangerous edifice of the ISIL Caliphate in Iraq-Syria.

The killing of Fakhrizadeh cannot possibly make any material impact on the Iranian nuclear preparedness as it is not dependent on any individual, in any case, and the motives could only be purely political. This act looks intended to deliberately worsen the relations to draw retaliatory action from Iran, thereby prematurely stalling any thawing opportunities that are presumably forthcoming with the Biden administration. Details of Trump discussing a possible military strike against Iran just before the Presidential elections are already doing the rounds. From the same political playbook, heightened political tension between Tel Aviv and Tehran can also help shore up crucial and invaluable nationalistic fervour in favour of the much-cornered Netanyahu. For politicians like him, peace delegitimises their political appeal and instead, provocation, tension and violence, strengthen the same.

(The writer, a military veteran, is a former Lt Governor of Andaman & Nicobar Islands)

Originally posted here:

Fear of peace - Daily Pioneer

How to fight Holocaust denial in social media with the evidence of what really happened – The Conversation US

Posted By on December 4, 2020

One in four American millennials believe the Holocaust was exaggerated or entirely made up, according to a recent national survey that sought to find out what young adults know about the genocide of nearly 6 million Jews at the hands of Nazis some 80 years ago.

That startling statistic was cited as one of the main reasons that Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg decided in October to finally ban Holocaust denial across the social network. Denying the Holocaust ever happened is an enduring form of anti-Semitic propaganda that attempts to deny or minimize the atrocities committed by the Nazis against the Jews during World War II.

Following Facebooks lead, Twitter announced it, too, would remove any posts that denied the history of the Holocaust, though CEO Jack Dorsey appeared to contradict that policy at a Senate hearing weeks later.

Holocaust deniers have continued to emerge in social media, and perhaps predictably, many have migrated to less restrictive sites like Parler, where hashtags like #HolocaustNeverHappened and #HolocaustIsALie are widespread. If you want Holocaust denial, hey, Parler is going to be great for you, Bill Gates recently said of the social network.

While some tech companies address the rise in Holocaust revisionism, and others leave the door open, social networks have played an unwitting role in helping to distort the memory of these horrific events. But as a scholar who studies online extremism, I believe that same community could do more to protect Holocaust remembrance by highlighting the digitized accounts of those who lived through it.

Holocaust denial has been a tool of anti-Semitic movements since the 1960s. Pseudo-academic groups like the Institute for Historical Review, for example, spent years working to distort the publics aging memory of the Holocaust, which took place between 1933 and 1945.

They tried to cast doubt on the feasibility of the mass executions, and even the existence of the gas chambers. They held annual conferences and gathered fellow deniers to share their beliefs that these events were conjured up by the Jewish people mostly as a means to justify the creation of the state of Israel in 1948.

For decades, most people quickly discarded those claims, because they had heard the firsthand accounts of the survivors who were sent to the camps and witnessed the daily operation of genocide and murder of family members. The allegations of the deniers could also not withstand the accounts of soldiers who liberated the camps and made the terrible discoveries of body-filled crematoriums and mass graves.

But for deniers, Holocaust revision has little to do with history. Denialism is really a pretext for delivering anti-Semitism in the form of scholarship, although few academics ever gave it such attention. So hate groups had to find other means of circulation. They found it online.

When the internet took off in the late 1990s, Holocaust deniers and countless other conspiracy theorists saw an opportunity to spread their ideas to new audiences. Anti-Semitic groups could now publish their distortions in well-visited forums, and later in faux-informational websites like Metapedia and The Occidental Observer extremist communities, in fact, that collectively receive some 350,000 visitors each month.

The internet also gave Holocaust deniers an opportunity to reach a much wider public through social media. As early as 2009, Facebook groups emerged that were dedicated to debunking the Holocaust, as #Holohoax became a popular hashtag on Twitter, which it continues to be today. Reddit also became a far-right haven for Holocaust deniers, one of whom gained national attention when he was the invited guest of a Florida congressman to the 2018 State of the Union address.

For deniers, the internet helped repackage their conspiracy into something less recognizable than hate. Ive long studied this process, which I call information laundering, tracking illegitimate forms of information, like Holocaust denial, that flow through social networks, blogs and search engines. There they intermix with mainstream ideas and slowly become washed of their radical origins.

This decadeslong campaign has resulted in the current surveys that show nearly a quarter of young adults are misinformed or skeptical about the Holocaust. Only now, few survivors are left to correct the record. That makes it even more important to spread the truth. Perhaps the internet can help.

When Gen. Dwight Eisenhower visited the Buchenwald concentration camp in 1945, after its liberation by U.S. forces, he realized how impossible it might be for people to believe the scale of Nazi atrocities. He wrote powerfully of the experience, and of his reasons for going to see it in person:

The things I saw beggar description. In one room, where they were piled up twenty or thirty naked men, killed by starvation, George Patton would not even enter. I made the visit deliberately, in order to be in position to give first-hand evidence of these things if ever, in the near future, there develops a tendency to charge these allegations merely to propaganda.

Eisenhowers words are instructions for future generations. They underscore the need to be a witness to human cruelty in order to protect the memory of, and lessons learned from, these events from those who would try to distort them.

Back online, it may not be enough for social networks to ban Holocaust denial. Similar bans in Europe havent limited the rise of anti-Semitism there. Instead, social networks could follow Eisenhowers example by answering the falsehoods of Holocaust deniers with the true stories of survivors.

The internet is already home to thousands of digitized survivor testimonies. They include oral histories that could be readily activated by social networks to refute those who deny the existence of the gas chambers with the accounts of those who stood inside them or witnessed them at work. Platforms like Facebook, Twitter and Reddit might share the firsthand stories of the Nazi persecutions, separations at the camps or rare reunions, wherever false claims arise, to counter denials with facts.

In the spirit of that counternarrative, I will place my grandmothers story here. She was a Holocaust survivor. She later wrote about her experiences in Auschwitz, where, upon arrival, she and her sister were separated from their mother and her sisters son, never to see them again. There are millions of other experiences like hers, and survivors of other genocides whose stories must be retold as well, from Armenia to Rwanda.

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Holocaust deniers have long waited for the time when there were no remaining survivors or witnesses to keep these histories alive. But the internet is a powerful archive. Social networks have an opportunity to combat hateful disinformation by posting the personal stories of these tragedies, and end the so-called debate about whether the Holocaust ever happened.

As Eisenhower well understood, history needs protecting.

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How to fight Holocaust denial in social media with the evidence of what really happened - The Conversation US

Chautauqua Institution joins Holocaust Memorial Museum for ‘The Tehran Children’ – Olean Times Herald

Posted By on December 4, 2020

MAYVILLE Chautauqua Institution and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum will jointly present an online program titled The Tehran Children: Irans Unexpected & Suppressed Connection to the Holocaust.

The two-part program is inspired by Mikhal Dekels 2019 memoir, Tehran Children: A Holocaust Refugee Odyssey. Dekel will participate in each segment of the 90-minute presentation, to stream live beginning 7 p.m. Tuesday on the Institutions CHQ Assembly video channel.

A finalist for the 2020 Chautauqua Prize, Tehran Children tells the little-known story of the of the more than one million Polish Jews who fled the Nazis by traversing the Soviet Union, and in particular nearly 1,000 children who were evacuated to Iran.

Dekels late father, Hannan Teitel, was one of these Tehran Children; the book is the culmination of her decade-long journey to understand the 13,000-mile odyssey at the core of his young adulthood an experience which he never talked about, though it informed every aspect of his being.

The program is part of the Museums Sardari Project, with IranWire.com. Today, Irans leaders actively suppress and deny Holocaust history and spread antisemitic propaganda and conspiracy theories. As a result, Iranian citizens are largely unfamiliar with their countrys role during World War II.

The first segment of the Dec. 8 program will be a panel discussion exploring Irans role in this lesser-known Jewish refugee rescue and how this discovery has the power to shape identity and transform the perspective of young Iranians.

Dekel will be joined in conversation by Arash Azizi, a journalist with IranWire and former international editor of Kragozaran, an Iranian daily newspaper, and author of the new book The Shadow Commander: Soleimani, US, and Irans Global Ambitions. The discussion will be moderated by Dr. Edna Friedberg, a historian with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

The second segment will feature Dekel in conversation with Chautauqua Institution Director of Literary Arts Sony Ton-Aime on the power of the storyteller, how history and current events shape the writers identity and perspective, and, specific to Dekels life, how new knowledge has informed one Holocaust descendants identity.

Today, we think of the Iranian regimes Holocaust denial and antisemitism, but there is also a rarely told story about the Iranian people welcoming Jewish refugees during WWII, said Sara J. Bloomfield, director of the Holocaust Memorial Museum. Exploring lesser-known aspects of this history can challenge our assumptions, which is what good education does.

Originally posted here:

Chautauqua Institution joins Holocaust Memorial Museum for 'The Tehran Children' - Olean Times Herald

Twitter, Facebook to update hate speech moderation | TheHill – The Hill

Posted By on December 4, 2020

Social media giants Twitter and Facebook are working on plans to update how they handle hate speech on their platforms after mounting scrutiny from civil rights groups.

Twitter is expanding its hateful conduct policy to prohibit language that dehumanizes people on the basis of race, ethnicity, or national origin, the company announced Wednesday.

Posts with such language may be removed from Twitter if reported, and users who repeatedly break the rule may have their accounts temporarily locked or suspended.

The update expands the companys hateful conduct policy, which previously included prohibiting language that dehumanizes others on the basis of religion or caste, as well as on the basis of age, disability or disease.

Facebook is also updating how it handles hate speech online, a company spokesperson confirmed to The Hill.

The companyis overhauling its algorithm that detects hate speech as part of a project first reported by The Washington Post on Thursday.

Facebook has stopped using proactive technology to find a small subset of attacks against white people, Americans and men over the past several months. Hate speech directed at those groups will still be removed if it is reported, according to the company.

Facebook has now made updates to focus its proactive detection technologies on hate speech that is considered the most serious.

The new system, known as the WoW project, involves reengineering Facebooks systems to improve detecting and deleting hateful language considered the worst of the worst, including slurs directed at Black people, Muslims, people of more than one race, the LGBTQ community and Jews, according to the Post,citing internal documents reviewed by the newspaper.

As part of the overhaul to assess the severity of hate speech, Facebook reportedly assigned numerical scores weighted based on perceived harm, allowing the system to prioritize policing certain forms of hate speech, the Post reported.

We know that hate speech targeted towards underrepresented groups can be the most harmful, which is why we have focused our technology on finding the hate speech that users and experts tell us is the most serious, Facebook spokeswoman Sally Aldous said in a statement to The Hill. Over the past year, weve also updated our policies to catch more implicit hate speech, such as content depicting Blackface, stereotypes about Jewish people controlling the world, and banned Holocaust denial.

The project is still in its early stages, the Post reported.

Civil rights groups who have been pushing for the social media platforms to better address hate speech said the companies plans to update hate speech moderation are long overdue and may still be inadequate solutions.

This is progress, but Twitter demonstrated a consequential lack of urgency in implementing the updated policy before the most fraught election cycle in modern history, despite repeated warnings by civil rights advocates and human rights organizations, Color of Changes vice president Arisha Hatch said in a statement.

Hatch also said Twitter has adopted a non-committal and cavalier attitude toward transparency, and has failed to detail how content moderators are trained and how efficient Twitters artificial intelligence is at identifying dehumanizing content.

The jury is still out for a company with a spotty track record of policy implementation and enforcing its rules with far-right extremist users. Void of hard evidence the company will follow through, this announcement will fall into a growing category of too little, too late PR stunt offerings, Hatch added.

Hatch told the Post she did not know about Facebooks proposed overhaul, but after reviewing the documents on behalf of the newspaper she said it is confirmation of what weve been demanding for years, an enforcement regime that takes power and historical dynamics into account.

Sum of Us, an advocacy group, also said Facebooks proposed changes do not go far enough in terms of content regulation. The group also addressed Facebook'sannouncement Thursday that it will remove false claims about the coronavirus vaccine.

"Facebook is well aware of the harm it causes by allowing some of the most vile content to be promoted through its algorithms. Their latest move to more aggressively police anti-Black hate speech and false claims about COVID-19 vaccines shows that they have the ability to clean up their act if they want to, Sum of Us executive director, Emma Ruby-Sachs said in a statement.

But the platform still needs to take more responsibility across the board to regulate how quickly it allows harmful disinformation to spread, and well keep putting pressure on them until they do so, Ruby-Sachs added.

Updated at 12:23 p.m.

Excerpt from:

Twitter, Facebook to update hate speech moderation | TheHill - The Hill


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