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There are far more dangerous people around than actors who party with Israelis – Middle East Monitor

Posted By on November 28, 2020

Egyptians are up in arms about actor and singer Mohamed Ramadan being photographed at a party in the UAE with Israeli celebrities. Israel and the UAE are all the rage these days, and he was just being used as part of a normalisation carnival. The simple fact is that there are far more dangerous people, normalisers to the core, than actors who party with Israelis.

Why, for example, are the same Egyptians who are so upset about Mohamed Ramadan apparently happy to turn a blind eye to former interim Vice President Mohamed ElBaradei and his meetings with Israeli politicians? And ignore so-called intellectuals such as Youssef Ziedan and Osama Al-Ghazali Harb when they do similar things?

If we really are against normalisation, then condemning it is obligatory, no matter who is involved, where it happens or what its context. We can't beat the "illiterate actor" but praise the "intellectuals".

In my opinion, seeing ElBaradei smiling alongside the war criminal Ehud Barak at the Richmond Forum in the US three years ago was much worse and much more serious than seeing Ramadan alongside an Israeli singer at an Abu Dhabi government event organised as part of the UAE project to serve the Zionist project in the region.

Mohamed Ramadan is someone who embodies the cultural and political illiteracy so prevalent today, but he has never claimed to be a popular leader, an icon of a political struggle, or a revolutionary leader. He is merely an expression of the vulgarity created deliberately by the current regime in Cairo. The same regime allowed him to be used in this way because of its full commitment to whatever the UAE and Israel want.

READ: Reasons for Gulf normalisation with Israel

Moreover, Ramadan does not belong to a political or revolutionary movement whose members hang on his every word. ElBaradei, however, has an army of followers who take everything he says and does as revolutionary inspiration and do not tolerate him being criticised, let alone be asked to apologise for the shameful footage of him at that Forum with the most brutal Israeli war criminals. That's the sort of image that creates the space for a thousand Mohamed Ramadans, because it is part of the foundation of normalisation with the Zionist state.

No less dangerous in promoting normalisation is what the academic and novelist Youssef Ziedan does. His fiction shifts concepts, dissolves beliefs and destroys popular immunity against acceptance of the Zionist enemy as a natural partner. If what Ramadan did was a sin, then what Ziedan does is a crime, as he presents a cultural proposition that the Zionist media has been unable to put together, in which he de-sanctifies Jerusalem in the eyes of the Arab people until they get to the stage of regarding the opponents of normalisation as ignorant saboteurs. As far as he is concerned, to reject normalisation is to accept irregularity in life. "Why no normalisation?" he asked on TV in 2016. "Should we say yes to irregularity?"

The educated Ziedan is thus the same as the actor Ramadan, in that both are aligned completely with the approach of the Egyptian regime, which came to power in a coup that was a great boost to Israel. This is the regime that feels so indebted to the colonial state inexplicably so that it sent its Ambassador in Israel to participate in the festival promoting Israeli companies based on illegal settlements to confront the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement started by the Palestinians and which is now growing all over the world.

What Mohamed Ramadan did is nothing compared with what the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman and others in the region are doing both openly and behind closed doors in the service of the Zionist dream to lead the Arab world. In short, Ramadan is simply following the way of the Egyptian regime since the 1980s which many before him have followed; and he won't be the last. Throw social media barbs at this simple actor if you like, but reserve some for those who deserve your anger even more.

Thisarticlefirst appeared in Arabic inAl-Araby Al-Jadeedon 25 November 2020

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

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There are far more dangerous people around than actors who party with Israelis - Middle East Monitor

The Tragedy of Jeremy Corbyn – Jewish Currents

Posted By on November 28, 2020

AT THE END OF OCTOBER, the years-long strife over antisemitism in the British Labour Party reached its dramatic culmination. Labour leader Keir Starmer suspended former party leader Jeremy Corbyn from Labour and even suggested that Corbyn could be expelled altogether. The reason: Corbyns reaction to the release of a report by the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), the United Kingdoms anti-discrimination watchdog, on antisemitism within the Labour Party.

Launched in May 2019, when furor over Corbyns handling of accusations of antisemitism leveled against himself and other party members had reached a fever pitch, the EHRC report concluded that there were unlawful acts of harassment and discrimination for which the Labour Party is responsible and identified serious failings in leadership and an inadequate process for handling antisemitism complaints. In response, Corbyn stated, One anti-Semite is one too many, but the scale of the problem was also dramatically overstated by our opponents inside and outside the party, as well as by much of the media. To many, this was yet another instance of Corbyns stubborn equivocation and refusal to take responsibility for what had happened under his watch. Starmer told the BBC that he suspended Corbyn because he would tolerate neither antisemitism nor the argument that denies or minimizes antisemitism in the Labour Party on the basis that its exaggerated or a factional row.

Corbyn eventually retracted his characterization of the problem as overstated, and on November 16th, after 19 days of protests from his supporters, Labours national executive council (NEC), the partys governing body, voted to reinstate him. Yet the following day, Starmer announced he would withhold the whip and bar Corbyn from sitting in Parliament as a Labour MP. Instead, for at least the next three months, Corbyn will sit as an independent lawmaker, blocked from representing the party he once led.

The spectacle of Corbyns suspension captured in miniature the dynamics that have made the issue of Labour antisemitism a persistentand persistently vexingfeature of British political life since Corbyn assumed leadership of the party in 2015. At the risk of damning the future of his political project, Corbyn has held to the narrative that Labour Party centrists, the Conservatives, and the British press concocted the antisemitism scandal to bring him down. In so doing, he has missed opportunities to quell it. And while Starmer openly denied the imbrication of the antisemitism scandal with factional fights within the Labour Partyas well as the British presss evident, unrelenting hostility to Corbynit was clear that he intended Corbyns suspension to send the message that the Corbynite left was no longer in charge.

Like many on the left, and perhaps especially left-wing Jews, I have followed news about Corbyn closely since he became Labour Party leader. Corbyns initial victory five years ago appeared to signal that after decades of neoliberalism with no alternative, socialism had once again become electorally viable in the North Atlantic. When accusations of antisemitism began to trickle in, they seemed to take the familiar form of guilt-by-association insinuations, specifically related to Corbyns proximity to Palestinian groupsfor instance, that he was an antisemite because he had referred to representatives of Hamas and Hezbollah as friends, or that he had been a member of pro-Palestine Facebook groups where some members made antisemitic posts.

It was not surprising that Corbyn was open to this line of attack, or that his critics would exploit it. He had spent his entire political career on the margins of British politics. A committed anti-imperialist, he was a patron of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign and a fixture at anti-war marches. Over the course of his many years of dogged opposition to American and British imperialisms, he has sometimes associated with figures involved in, or openly supportive of, militant anti-imperial struggle, from Irish Republicans to Palestinian liberationists.

During his leadership campaign, Corbyn made clear his commitment to advancing the cause of Palestine solidarity. He said he would impose a two-way arms embargo on Israel if elected prime minister, and endorsed boycotting goods made in Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank. In this context, the initial accusations against Corbyn seemed to mirror those faced by countless Palestinians and advocates for their cause. Israel-advocacy groups have long framed anti-Zionist politics or criticism of Israeli policies as forms of anti-Jewish bigotry. They have even developed an entire organizational infrastructure and legal strategy to this end in the United States, as well as in Europe and the UK.

Yet the issue soon expanded beyond Corbyn. British outlets began to surface antisemitic or otherwise offensive comments, mostly made on social media by other Labour party figures: mayors, local councilors, and members of Parliament past and present. At the same time, Jewish Labour party members who raised the alarm over antisemitism began to report that they were receiving antisemitic abuse online, which they often claimed came from Corbyns supporters. For critics of Corbyn, this all went back to the Labour leader himself. Their view, as Britains chief rabbi Ephraim Mirvis wrote in an op-ed weeks before the 2019 general election, was that a new poisonsanctioned from the tophas taken root in the Labour Party.

The public debate over the issue quickly turned rancorous. With each new gaffe or mini-scandal, Corbyn struggled to find the right words with which to apologize. Journalists and Labour MPs alike responded by lambasting Corbyn and the party over antisemitism in totalizing terms: Labour is a racist party now, Dan Hodges, a columnist for the conservative Mail on Sunday tabloid, charged in April 2017; the prospect of a Corbyn-led government would be an existential threat to Britains Jews, declared The Jewish Chronicle, Britains oldest (and right-leaning) Jewish newspaper, in a joint editorial with two other papers in July 2018. When Corbyn and his supporters responded to these and similar accusations, either by arguing that the scope of the problem was exaggerated or that they were motivated by partisan animus, it only seemed to make matters worse. In a 2018 joint letter, the Board of Deputies of British Jews (the countrys centuries-old official Jewish organization) and the Jewish Leadership Council (a newer Jewish umbrella group that coordinates communal Israel-advocacy efforts) accused Corbyn of being unable to seriously contemplate antisemitism, because he is so ideologically fixed with in a far-left worldview that is instinctively hostile to mainstream Jewish communities.

When establishment organizations like the Board of Deputies asserted their authority to speak on behalf of all British Jews in denouncing Corbyn and his party, there were few progressive Jewish voices that could meaningfully challenge them.

There are roughly 280,000 Jews in all of England and Wales (for comparison, there are more than half a million Jews in Brooklyn, New York, alone). British Jews tend to be more religiously observant and politically conservative than their American counterparts. For three decades, Margaret Thatchers home constituency was the heavily Jewish Finchley-Golders Green, and even before Corbyn, most Jews voted for the Conservatives: In an April 2015 poll, 69% of British Jews said they would vote Conservative; just 22% said they would vote Labour, at the time led by Ed Milliband, the first Jew to head the party. While new organizationssuch as the anti-occupation movement Naamod and the media venture Vashtihave sprouted up in recent years, there remains no left-wing Jewish organizational infrastructure in Britain comparable to what has recently emerged in the US. When establishment organizations like the Board of Deputies asserted their authority to speak on behalf of all British Jews in denouncing Corbyn and his party, there were few progressive Jewish voices that could meaningfully challenge them.

For several months and in many long conversations, Ive spoken with progressive British Jews to get a sense of the political reality beyond the endless left-bashing that has dominated coverage of Corbyn in the American and British press. The picture that emerged from these conversations was one of a political tragedy. The British Jewish establishment would brook no compromise with Corbyn; even now, after his suspension, the Board of Deputies continues to seek his expulsion from public life. At the same time, Corbyns resulting sense of embattlement led him to overlook pragmatic steps that might have de-escalated the conflict, at least temporarily, and to deny for too long the extent to which antisemitism had become an issue for the partysabotaging himself and his project in the process. Corbyns leadership initially augured a new era of left ascendancy. Instead, it has ended with the left badly defeated and bitterly divided.

IT IS IMPOSSIBLE to understand the Labour antisemitism crisis without situating it within the partys bitter, long-running factional strife. Enmity between Corbyns backers and much of the rest of the party conditioned both sides responses to allegations of antisemitism, giving rise to Corbyn and his supporters tendency to view such accusations firstly as politically motivated smears, and to Corbyns opponents doggedness in portraying him, and the party writ large, as irredeemably antisemitic. As Matt Seaton wrote for The New York Review of Books in 2018, the fight between Corbyn skeptics and Corbyn fans over Jews and Israel has become a ruinous proxy for what is, in its essence, a struggle between social-democrats and socialists for the soul of the party.

The opening shot in the renewed factional conflict sounded with Corbyns unexpected election as party leader, resoundingly defeating his three opponents with almost 60% of the vote. It was an unequivocal repudiation of the legacy of Tony Blair, who headed the party from 1994 to 2007, and, like his US counterpart Bill Clinton, led the party in an unabashedly free-market and foreign-interventionist direction. Corbyns victory was made possible by a change in protocol implemented by Miliband, his predecessor. Under the new rulesostensibly intended to democratize the party, though viewed by union leaders as an attempt to limit the influence of organized laboranyone who paid a fee of three pounds (roughly four US dollars) could affiliate with the Labour Party and vote in its leadership elections. Throughout the 2000s and early 2010s, Labours membership had hovered at or below 250,000 people. By the time of Corbyns election, buoyed by left-wing organizing and the anti-austerity and student movements, Labours ranks had swelled to roughly half a million registered members. It had become the largest party by membership in Western Europe.

Despite Corbyns mandate from the rank-and-file, he faced intense opposition from the partys lawmakers. As journalists Patrick Maguire and Gabriel Pogrund write in their book Left Out: The Inside Story of Labour Under Corbyn, while hundreds of thousands of members appeared to agree with Corbyns agenda, no more than two dozen Labour MPs [out of 232] did. Many remained Blairites, while others opposed Corbyn for a range of reasonsmost commonly that they believed he was too radical to win a general election.

Corbyns support from the massive influx of new members was his greatest strengthproof that there was a real constituency inside the party, as well as beyond it, for his message. But it was also his greatest weakness. Many of these supporters were either lapsed party members returning to the fold or veterans of the activist left who had never been part of Labour. In some cases, they brought with them political traditions and forms of political expression that, while long present on the edges of British politics, had never been part of the mainstream. This included conspiratorial anti-imperialism and talk of the Rothschildsa kind of vulgar antisemitism found on the fringes of the leftwhich began to appear on social media and surface during constituency party meetings.

The progressive British Jews with whom I spoke, though they did not all agree on the severity of the problem or Labour leaderships handling of it, were nearly unanimous in describing an increase in antisemitic rhetoric, especially online, over the last five years.

The progressive British Jews with whom I spoke, though they did not all agree on the severity of the problem or Labour leaderships handling of it, were nearly unanimous in describing an increase in antisemitic rhetoric, especially on Facebook and Twitter, over the last five years. One of the three instances of unlawful harassment for which the EHRC found Labour responsible, for instance, were Facebook posts made in 2018 and 2019 by Pam Bromley, an obscure former local councilor, which included statements like this one: We must remember that the Rothschilds are a powerful financial family (like the Medicis) and represent capitalism and big business even if the Nazis DID use the activities of the Rothschilds in their anti semitic [sic] propaganda. Peter Mandler, a professor of British history at the University of Cambridge, told me, If you wanted to make a big deal about antisemitism, you had a load of material.

The British media and Corbyns political opponents also seized on social media posts made by other left-wing Labour members as evidence that antisemitism was widespread in the party. There was Labour lawmaker Naz Shahs post, from 2014, about solving the IsraeliPalestinian conflict by relocating Israel into the US. (Shah apologized and has since forged a working relationship with the organized Jewish community.) In his attempt to defend Shah, former London mayor Ken Livingstone claimed that Hitler was supporting Zionism before he went mad and ended up killing 6 million Jews. Khadim Hussain, a Labour councilor and former mayor, shared a Facebook post about how your school education system only tells you about Anne Frank and the 6 million Zionists that were killed by Hitler. (Both Livingstone and Hussain later left the party.)

On the left, there was, and remains, a certain resistance to recognizing the extent of the problem. Jon Lansman, a founder of Momentum, the left-wing pressure group within the Labour Party that supports Corbyn, described this pervasive denialism in an interview with Jewish Quarterly in 2018. Weve now got quite an aggressive group on the left, including within Momentum, of peoplemany of them by the way are Jewish, or Jewish anti-Zionistswho deny the problem, describe it as just a smear, as purely opportunistic. He continued, If people are exposing a valid problem, you have to deal with it. The motivation of the person exposing the problem is irrelevant. But many of Corbyns most vocal supporters often dismissed this approach, which they believed would merely give credence to the right-wing narrative.

Even as the focus of the scandal expanded to include other Labour politicians, Corbyn remained at its center. In March 2018, the Jewish Labour MP Luciana Berger raised the issue of a mural by the graffiti artist Mear One, the removal of which Corbyn had criticized in a 2012 Facebook post. The mural depicted a group of bearded bankers, some with hooked noses and glasses, playing monopoly on the bowed backs of naked workers. To save face, Corbyns office claimed that hed argued against the murals removal on free speech grounds, but that he now recognized it was offensive and believed it is right that it was removed. But the damage was done. Stories about Corbyn and antisemitism had always depended on a degree of guilt by association, and tended to revolve around the activists with whom he shared a platform and the groups of which he had been a member, Maguire and Pogrund write of this incident in Left Out. Now, for the first time, MPs and journalists had evidence of what Corbyn himself thought.

The fallout from what became known as Muralgate was immense. In an uncommonly public intervention in parliamentary politics, the Board of Deputies of British Jews organized a protest against Corbyn and the Labour Party in Parliament Square in April 2018 under the banner #EnoughisEnough. In July, Britains three most prominent Jewish newspapers ran a joint, front-page editorial warning of the existential threat to Jewish life in this country that would be posed by a Jeremy Corbyn-led government.

Much of this rhetoric was not only bluster, but also clearly partisan. When pushed by New Yorker writer Sam Knight to clarify what he meant by existential threat, Stephen Pollard, the pugilistic conservative editor of The Jewish Chronicle and one of the most outspoken Corbyn critics in the British press, replied, They wouldnt set up camps or anything like that. But the tenor of public life would be unbearable because the very people who are the enemy of the Jews, as it were, the anti-Semites, will be empowered by having their allies in government. In other words, even Corbyns harshest critics believed he represented something considerably less than an existential threat. Yet the most conservative segments of the British Jewish community had set the tone of the discourse: No one could criticize the hysteria without being accused of abetting antisemitism.

FOR ISRAEL-ADVOCACY groups in Britain like the Board of Deputies and the JLC, Corbyn was as much an opportunity as a threat. His staunch pro-Palestinian stance, combined with his history of ill-advised remarks and intransigence when it came to acknowledging antisemitism in the party, made it easy for his critics to construe anti-Zionist politics as inherently antisemitic. British Jewish communal organizations seized this opportunity when, in the midst of the ongoing media circus, they pressured the Labour Partys NEC to adopt the controversial International Holocaust Remembrance Association (IHRA) working definition of antisemitism in full.

In Europe, the UK, and the US, Israel-advocacy groups, in partnership with Israeli government agencies, have lobbied governments to adopt the IHRA definition as part of a concerted effort to combat the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement and quash Palestine solidarity activism. Labour had already adopted the IHRA definition in 2016, but without the appended examples of antisemitic conduct, which define anti-Zionism and certain criticisms of Israel as forms of anti-Jewish bigotry. Kenneth Stern, the IHRA definitions lead author, has cautioned that its adoption by the US Education Department could suppress political speech on US campuses. The ACLU has issued a similar warning.

In the summer of 2018, the British Jewish establishment, in tandem with Corbyns opponents in his party, made adopting the definition and all 11 examples a litmus test for Corbyn and the party. Corbyn had already weathered two years of intermittent accusations, as well as the disaster of Brexit, which many in Labour believed Corbyn had mishandled by failing to oppose it strenuously enough. He had none of the requisite political capital to challenge the NECs adoption of the full IHRA definition, but he did so anyway.

At first, Corbyns office tried to hedge. They proposed adopting seven of the 11 examples into the partys code of conduct, while excluding or rewording the others to avoid suppressing speech critical of Israel. Yet this attempt to compromise provoked outrage from the organized British Jewish community. On July 16th, 2018, more than 60 British rabbis across the religious spectrum issued a joint letter condemning the Labour Party leadership for acting in the most insulting and arrogant way. It is not the Labour partys place, they argued, to rewrite a definition that many other groups and governmental bodies had approved, and which had, most importantly, been accepted by the vast majority of Jewish people in Britain and globally.

To accept the full IHRA definition would be to deal a blow to the Palestinian causea cause to which he had been devoted his entire life.

After two years of near-ceaseless media scrutiny, the consensus among many in the Labour Partyincluding some of Corbyns highest-ranking aideswas that however imperfect the full IHRA definition might be, there was no longer any choice but to approve it. It was the only hope that the antisemitism scandal might end. Yet for Corbyn, a lifelong campaigner for Palestinian rights, it was a matter of principle. And he was right: To accept the full IHRA definition would be to deal a blow to the Palestinian causea cause to which he had been devoted his entire life. At a September 2018 meeting of Labours NEC, Corbyn proposed a clarification that he hoped the party would adopt in tandem with the examples. To impress its importance upon his colleagues, he read it aloud: It cannot be considered racist to treat Israel like any other state or assess its conduct against the standards of international law. Nor should it be regarded as antisemitic to describe Israel, its policies or the circumstances around its foundation as racist because of their discriminatory impact, or to support another settlement of the Israel-Palestine conflict. Corbyns statement was not accepted. The NEC adopted the IHRA definition and all 11 examples.

The fight over the IHRA definition was emblematic of how the Labour antisemitism crisis had devolved from a series of ugly and impertinent remarks by politicians who should have known better into a full-blown political tragedy. Corbyn and the lefts initial failure to adequately address accusations of antisemitism meant that when he took a stand against the IHRA definition, he had no political room to maneuver. For his protest to have had even the slimmest chance of success, he also would have needed partners within the British Jewish community: people with public respect and Jewish bona fides who were willing to challenge the notion that opposition to the IHRA definition was beyond the pale. The problem was that there was no significant Jewish opposition to the IHRA definition with ties to the representative institutions of British Jewry. The Board of Deputies of British Jews, the Jewish Leadership Council, and even the Jewish Labour Movement (JLM)the century-old Labour Zionist organization affiliated with the partyhad all demanded that the IHRA definition be adopted in full. And they insisted in one voice that the Labour Party, and especially Jeremy Corbyn, simply had no right to argue with Jewish organizations over the definition of antisemitism, that any attempt to amend or qualify the IHRA definition was an unequivocal slight against Britains Jews.

This is not to say that no British Jews stood by Corbyn. Plenty did. And they continue to support him, often quite adamantly. But they were mostly the kinds of Jews that the institutions of British Jewry dismissed as illegitimate or fringe, Jews whod left the organized community for political or religious reasons and found a new home on the left, or who were raised outside the community altogether. Many belonged to Jewish Voice for Labour (JVL), a pro-Corbyn group founded mainly by Jewish anti-Zionists in 2017. Silenced and marginalized for decades by the British Jewish establishment, they welcomed Corbyns decision to stand up to the Board of Deputies, which they saw, rightfully, as a conservative body. Yet their support may have ultimately worked against Corbyn, as throughout the years of the antisemitism scandal, he took it as evidence that he need not capitulate. Meanwhile, JVL found their Jewishness impugned or denied. We sometimes get called kapos, we get called fake Jews, JVL member Michael Cushman told me.

The left-wing Jews who opposed the organized communitys handling of antisemitism were left in the impossible position of being both silenced and represented by organizations they fundamentally disagreed with. It was completely infuriating to be spoken for, as though the Jewish community is this homogenous, singular block of people who are all of a mind, Eleanor Penny, a writer and editor at Novara Media, told me in May. There seems to be so little room in that conversation for any kind of dissent. Those who did dissent faced ostracization from the Jewish communityand now risk being formally censured by the Labour Party. On November 10th, after Jo Bird, a Jewish Labour councilor, called for Corbyn to be reinstated, a Labour Party spokesperson said Bird would be investigated for misconduct and could face disciplinary action.

BY THE EVE of the disastrous December 2019 elections, when Boris Johnson led the Conservatives to an overwhelming majority, what was obvious about the Labour antisemitism scandal had now also become unsayable. There was no doubt that there were members of the Labour Party who engaged in conspiratorial antisemitism, vulgar anti-imperialism, and straightforwardly malicious rhetoric toward Jews. Yet it was also clear that accusations of antisemitism had been used by Corbyns opponents within his party, by the Conservatives, and by the British Jewish establishment to unfairly traduce Corbyn as a hardened antisemite, and designate the party as institutionally antisemiticas the Jewish Labour Movement declared in a Spring 2018 resolution.

By the fall of 2019, the stalwarts on the Corbynite left had also recognized that there was no way to avoid addressing in good faith accusations of antisemitism against a host of party members. But it was already too late. After long dismissing the accusations of antisemitism against members of the party as a witch-huntas a group of anti-Zionist Corbyn supporters still maintainmany have changed tack. Is there antisemitism inside the Labour Party? Yes. Is it the main problem the Labour Party faces? No. Is the Labour Party the main locus for antisemitism? No, Cushman told me. So why the concentration on Labour antisemitism rather than the much bigger problems we have with anti-Black racism and anti-Muslim racism? There is truth to this: Neither Boris Johnsons long public record of racist and insensitive remarks, nor Islamophobia in Labour or the Conservative party have received anything close to the media attention that antisemitism in the Labour Party has.

Yet Corbyn himself never seemed to recognize that he needed to shift his approach, even as many of his supporters did. Given opportunities for what could have been easy forms of damage control, Corbyn appeared stubbornly determined to insert his foot directly into his mouth. In a 2019 pre-election interview, the BBCs Andrew Neil asked him if he would like to apologize to the British Jewish community. It was a straightforward question, the kind for which any politician in Corbyns position would have come prepared with a concise, direct answer. With only a few wordsyes, Im sorryCorbyn might have been able to avoid bad press in a crucial stretch leading up to the election. Instead, he launched into one of his characteristically long-winded disquisitions about his commitment to fighting antisemitism and any other form of racism. Corbyns staunchest opponents had often claimed that he was unable to apologize and that this inability reflected his antisemitic beliefs. On primetime TV, Corbyn missed a chance to prove them wrong.

Criticism of Israeli policies and expressions of Palestine solidarity, while always to some degree controversial, had long been part of acceptable political discourse on the British left-of-center. That is no longer the case.

Its hard to avoid the conclusion that Corbyns maladroit media appearances led, at least in part, to his defeatand not only his personal defeat, but also the defeat of the causes to which he had dedicated his life. One of the outcomes of the last five years is that the Palestinian cause in Britain has suffered serious lasting damage, if not irreparable harm. Criticism of Israeli policies and expressions of Palestine solidarity, while always to some degree controversial, had long been part of acceptable political discourse on the British left-of-center. That is no longer the case. Talk of the occupation, settlements, and even Palestinian rights have become all but taboo. When Labour lawmaker Stephen Kinnockhardly a member of the hard leftcalled on the UK to ban products made in Israeli settlements in a September parliamentary debate, Starmer and the post-Corbyn leaders of the party rushed to the press to reassure the British Jewish establishment that Kinnock had been given a dressing down for his comments. Last Monday, The Jewish Chronicle reported that the Labour party had begun an investigation into left-wing NEC member Gemma Bolton for a social media post in which she wrote, If I run the risk of getting suspended for calling Israel an apartheid state then so be it. Suspend me. (Support for banning settlement products are common among liberal Zionists in Israel and elsewhere; the eminent Israeli human rights lawyer Michael Sfard and the Israeli human rights group Yesh Din argue that Israels occupation of the West Bank constitutes the crime against humanity of apartheid.)

As I continued reporting this story, I often thought of how things might have gone differently. What if Corbyns leadership team had anticipated that they would need political capital to pursue an adamantly pro-Palestine politics and tried to address the fears of Jewish leaders in advance? What if, instead of retreating into defensiveness, they had moved to reconcile sooner with the British Jewish communal institutions where reconciliation was possible? What if those communal institutions had faced internal opposition to launching an all-out campaign against Corbyn? What if there had been better organized Jewish anti-occupation groups capable of disrupting the dominant narrative about Corbyn and Labour without replicating the escalatory dynamics that only worsened the problem? What if opponents of Corbyn in Labour had put their partys success ahead of their opposition to Corbyns political project, or if the British media had not been hostile to Corbyn from the beginning?

And yet all of these counterfactuals seem equally implausible. Corbyn and his team appeared to have no real strategy for pursuing a boldly anti-imperialist, pro-Palestine politics or skillfully parrying the inevitable attacks from his opponents. Remarkably, Corbyn had managed to win control of the largest social-democratic party in Europe with this ham-fisted approach, and in so doing brought unabashed support for the Palestinian cause into the heart of British politics. But given the conservative leanings of many British Jewsand the marginality of the grassroots Jewish leftthere was no way of stopping the Board of Deputies, the Jewish Leadership Council, and the Jewish Labour Movement from leveling a nuclear attack on Corbyn in the name of the entire Jewish community. For Corbyns opponents in his own party, the Conservatives, and the press, Corbyn posed a real ideological threat that they could never have abided.

For many on the US left, there is a desire to find some lessons in Corbyns downfall that we might be able to incorporate into our own political analysis. Indeed, versions of this story, in which left-wing figures and movements founder on accusations of antisemitism, appear frequently in American politics. But there is a crucial difference. When right-wing pundits like Bari Weiss tried to use accusations of antisemitism to discredit leaders of the Womens March, there were left-wing Jewish groups like Jews for Racial and Economic Justice (JFREJ) and Bend the Arc that could provide the political education necessary to mediate between the Womens March co-chairs and the broader Jewish community. When Israel-advocacy groups attacked Reps. Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar for their outspoken support for Palestinian rights, there were Jewish groups like IfNotNow and Jewish Voice for Peace that stressed the distinction between anti-Zionism and antisemitism and whose members showed up as Jews to support the congresswomen. In the broadly liberal (if still broadly Zionist) American Jewish community, these progressive Jewish groups are less easily dismissed.

And yet, these dangerous dynamics persist in the US, too. In the runoff Senate election campaign in Georgia, Reverend Raphael Warnock has faced false accusations of antisemitism for likening Israels military occupation of the West Bank to apartheid South Africa. He quickly recanted his statement, and in an op-ed published by Jewish Insider, affirmed his opposition to the BDS movement and its anti-Semitic underpinnings. After Rep. Rashida Tlaib tweeted that she hoped Antony Blinken, the Biden administrations nominee for secretary of state, would not try to silence me and suppress my First Amendment right to speak out against Netanyahus racist and inhumane policiesa reference to anti-BDS measures Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had announced the week beforepublic figures such as CNNs Jake Tapper rushed to accuse the Palestinian American congresswoman of having made an antisemitic remark.

Conservative Jewish writers in the US often warn of the Corbynization of the Democratic Party, by which they mean its takeover by the left. But there is, I think, a better use for the term. Corbynization describes a different process: what happens when Israel-advocacy and Jewish establishment groups demand that left-wing figures repudiate their support for Palestinian rights or face unceasing, uncompromising attack. The attacks on Warnock and Tlaib suggest that right-wing attempts to instigate a process of Corbynization are already in motion. With a Biden administration in powerunlikely to reverse Pompeos designation of BDS as antisemitic or to back away from the IHRA definition of antisemitismit is frighteningly hard to imagine how one might stop it.

Joshua Leifer is an assistant editor at Jewish Currents.

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The Tragedy of Jeremy Corbyn - Jewish Currents

Iranian Response Would Be Destructive: Israeli Report Says Army Hasn’t Been Instructed to Prepare for Scenarios of US Strike on Iran – Al-Manar TV

Posted By on November 28, 2020

Israel Defense Website denied all the circulated rumors which claimed that the Israeli occupation army had been ordered to prepare for all the possible scenarios of a US military strike on Iran, considering that all such reports had to do with the election in US and the Zionist entity.

The website added that the drills carried out by the Israeli army were part of the military routine, noted that the US President Donald Trump and the Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu planned to use such rumors for electoral purposes.

The Zionist air force does not have the war jets which can carry the bombs needed to destroy Irans underground nuclear sites, according to the website which doubted the efficiency of such strikes even of they were carried out.

Israel Defense Website pointed out Trump needs the Congress approval to launch military strikes on Iran, adding that the US voters would not forgive him over committing such a fault.

The report also discussed Irans response to any US strike, highlighting the huge rocketry capabilities of the Islamic Republic.

The Iranian forces and Hezbollah will wage a huge missile attack on Israel and the US military bases in the Guld countries, causing heavy losses, according to the report which added that hundreds of Israelis would dies in such a confrontation.

The report finally wondered whether the Zionist entity could face such a military challenge, reiterating that the rumors about Iran strike have a mere political purpose.

Source: Israeli media

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Iranian Response Would Be Destructive: Israeli Report Says Army Hasn't Been Instructed to Prepare for Scenarios of US Strike on Iran - Al-Manar TV

Cuomo: Massive Orthodox wedding in Brooklyn ‘disrespectful’ – Associated Press

Posted By on November 25, 2020

NEW YORK (AP) A Brooklyn synagogue should be investigated over reports that it hosted a secret wedding with thousands of unmasked guests earlier this month, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Sunday.

If that happened, it was a blatant disregard of the law, Cuomo said during a briefing in New York City. Its illegal. It was also disrespectful of the people of New York.

The New York Post reported that guests, mostly unmasked, crammed inside the Yetev Lev temple in Williamsburg for the Nov. 8 wedding of Yoel Teitelbaum, a grandson of Satmar Grand Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum, in blatant violation of coronavirus restrictions that ban large indoor gatherings. The synagogue has a capacity of 7,000 people.

Organizers kept the wedding secret after state officials canceled an earlier Satmar wedding, the Post reported, citing a Yiddish newspaper, Der Blatt.

If it turns out that because we stopped that wedding the reaction was, Well well have a secret wedding, that would be really shocking and totally deceitful, Cuomo said. Its illegal and the city should do a robust investigation, he added.

A spokesperson for New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said the city is investigating.

The city is conducting an investigation into the incident and will hold those accountable to the fullest extent of the law, spokesperson Avery Cohen said.

Businesses and houses of worship that flout bans on large gatherings risk fines of $15,000.

A man who answered the phone at the Yetev Lev synagogue on Sunday said officials there had no comment.

Compliance with coronavirus restrictions in some of New Yorks Orthodox Jewish communities has been an issue since the pandemic started last spring.

Protests erupted in the Borough Park section of Brooklyn last month after Cuomo announced a crackdown in several Orthodox neighborhoods as virus cases increased. Many members of Orthodox communities complained that they were being singled out.

Cuomo and de Blasio have warned all New Yorkers that even small gatherings during the holidays could fuel a spike in coronavirus infections.

The problem is that this is a dangerous period because you have increased social activity by definition, Cuomo said.

Virus rates will likely rise between now and New Years Day, Cuomo said.

Cuomo said there were 2,562 people hospitalized with COVID-19 across the state on Saturday, 119 more than the previous day. There were 30 deaths, he said.

___

This story has been corrected to show that the groom who reportedly was married in a large ceremony in Brooklyn was the grandson, not the brother, of the grand rabbi.

___

This story was first published on Nov. 22, 2020. It was updated on Nov. 23, 2020 to correct that the leader of the religious group that organized the celebration is the Grand Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum, not Grand Rabbi Aaron Teitelman.

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Cuomo: Massive Orthodox wedding in Brooklyn 'disrespectful' - Associated Press

Cuomo: Disrespectful’ of Thousands to Attend Secret Orthodox Wedding in Brooklyn – NBC New York

Posted By on November 25, 2020

What to Know

A Brooklyn synagogue should be investigated over reports that it hosted a secret wedding with thousands of unmasked guests earlier this month, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Sunday.

If that happened, it was a blatant disregard of the law, Cuomo said during a briefing in New York City. Its illegal. It was also disrespectful of the people of New York.

The New York Post reported that guests, mostly unmasked, crammed inside the Yetev Lev temple in Williamsburg for the Nov. 8 wedding of Yoel Teitelbaum, a grandson of Satmar Grand Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum, in blatant violation of coronavirus restrictions that ban large indoor gatherings. The synagogue has a capacity of 7,000 people.

Organizers kept the wedding secret after state officials canceled an earlier Satmar wedding, the Post reported, citing a Yiddish newspaper, Der Blatt.

If it turns out that because we stopped that wedding the reaction was, Well well have a secret wedding, that would be really shocking and totally deceitful, Cuomo said. Its illegal and the city should do a robust investigation, he added.

A spokesman for New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said the city is investigating. During an interview on NY1 Monday evening, the mayor said that the synagogue that held the secret wedding will be fined $15,000 and more consequences could be coming soon.

"We know there was a wedding, we know it was too big. We don't have an exact figure, but whatever it was, it was too big," de Blasio said. "There appeared to be a real effort to conceal it, which is absolutely unacceptable."

A man who answered the phone at the synagogue on Sunday said officials there had no comment.

Compliance with coronavirus restrictions in some of New Yorks Orthodox Jewish communities has been an issue since the pandemic started last spring.

The COVID-19 hotspots in New York City are largely Orthodox Jewish strongholds, and some community members are complaining of being singled out for enforcement.

Protests eruptedin the Borough Park section of Brooklyn last month after Cuomo announced a crackdown in several Orthodox neighborhoods as virus cases increased. Many members of Orthodox communities complained that they were being singled out.

Cuomo warned all New Yorkers to avoid social gatherings during the holidays. The problem is that this is a dangerous period because you have increased social activity by definition, he said.

Virus rates will likely rise between now and New Years Day, Cuomo said.

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Cuomo: Disrespectful' of Thousands to Attend Secret Orthodox Wedding in Brooklyn - NBC New York

Congregation Or Tzion adopts voluntary ‘Gift of the Heart’ membership model – Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Posted By on November 25, 2020

In the midst of a difficult year, Congregation Or Tzion offered its congregants a new way to give, and its membership responded gratefully.

Everything just sort of fell into place, said Frank Jacobson, president of Or Tzions board of directors. I think its because people feel valued. People feel like, I can pay what I can afford to pay, whats meaningful to me, and the congregation accepts me for who I am.

Or Tzions new membership model asks members to give an Annual Gift of the Heart Contribution, where congregants pay whatever they think their membership is worth. Any amount, even a small one, is enough to be a full member, entitled to High Holidays seats, religious school enrollment and more.

The program was first introduced in the spring as a direct response to the COVID-19 pandemic. After synagogues closed in March, Or Tzion sent out a survey asking members how they had been impacted, in part to find out if financial hardship was going to make it difficult for congregants to renew their memberships. Of the 206 who responded, around half indicated that they had been negatively impacted.

Synagogue leadership decided that now was the time to switch to voluntary dues, as a way to lessen the burden on struggling families.

We had no idea whether it would work or not, Jacobson said. But what we also knew is that if we kept the same membership model that we had, we were likely to be losing members.

The board of directors began considering an annual commitment or voluntary dues model in 2018 and again in 2019, but it wasnt until the pandemic struck that the decision became urgent.

Originally, Jacobson said, the synagogue intended to wait for a calmer time to try the new model. Yet when the change finally came, it was in the midst of challenges not only for the community and the country, but for the congregation itself. The board of directors decided to make the switch at the end of April, a few weeks into what became a months-long shutdown, and a few weeks before Rabbi Micah Caplan died unexpectedly in June.

In spite of the turbulence, members of Or Tzion rallied.

That was the beauty of all this, Jacobson said. Our congregants decided that we had to come together, we had to mourn the loss of our rabbi ... They hung with us.

A cornerstone of the annual commitment model is transparency and strong communication, and Or Tzion made informing members a core component of the new system. With an operating budget of $1.1 million, staff calculated that the synagogue would be able to maintain its services and programs if each household whether a single older adult or a family of four made a sustaining contribution of $2,882.

In its guide to membership and the Annual Gift of the Heart Contribution, Or Tzion also suggests a minimum contribution based on the size of the household and enrollment status in religious school, ranging from $1,000 for a single membership to $3,600 for a family membership with children enrolled in the Roz Goodell Religious School.

When congregants began making their commitments in June and July, Jacobson was amazed by the amount people gave, he said: Some increased their contribution by as much as 10%.

Of course, Or Tzion doesnt expect every household to be able to afford to make a sustaining contribution or even the suggested minimum, and a gift of any size is enough to become a member. What matters is that theyre part of the congregation.

Theyre a member of Congregation Or Tzion how wonderful is that? Jacobson said. No one is evaluated by what they give, everybody is accepted. And everybody whos a member has the vote at the annual congregation meeting. Thats the way it works.

The voluntary dues or annual commitment model of membership is becoming increasingly popular among Reform and Conservative synagogues across the country. Reports by the UJA-Federation of New York identified 26 synagogues in the U.S. with voluntary due structures in 2015, and 57 in 2017. Two were in Arizona: The New Shul in Scottsdale and Congregation Bet Shalom in Tucson.

While the model is working well for Or Tzion so far, Jacobson cautioned that it requires careful planning and a strong commitment from synagogue leadership.

It may not be for everybody. Its really very dependent upon everybodys DNA, if you will, Jacobson said. It just happened to work for us at the right time, with the right leadership.

He credits the synagogue staff and the membership committee with paving the way for a smooth transition, crafting the message and providing the information to ensure that members were on board with the decision. Or Tzion also made a FAQ page on its website to explain the new membership structure to congregants.

There were a variety of questions, really excellent questions, Jacobson said. Does this mean I get the full benefit? Do I get tickets for the High Holidays? Does this really mean my kids can go to religious school? Do I get all the life cycle events? Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes ... you are a full member in that regard.

This fiscal year, with the new model in place, membership grew from 393 to around 450. Some members who had left rejoined; some members parents or adult children contributed during the High Holidays and became members through the new model.

Overall, Jacobson is pleased with the results.

Not only did we exceed our budget expectations, we exceeded the membership expectations, he said. We really felt that we made the right decision, the congregation responded very positively to the program, and thats what were continuing to do. JN

Originally posted here:

Congregation Or Tzion adopts voluntary 'Gift of the Heart' membership model - Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Campaign launched to save historic Cliftonville synagogue – The Isle of Thanet News

Posted By on November 25, 2020

Campaigners Lucy Lyons, Francesca Ter-berg, Kate Gillespie and Jan Ryan. Photo_ Nathan Jones

By Jodie Nesling

A resident-led campaign is fighting to save a stunning Cliftonville synagogue from developers after owners placed the building up for auction.

The resplendent building has formed an integral part of Thanets rich Jewish history but was recently put up on the market after years of closure.

Campaigner Francesca Ter-berg says they believe the building could once again thrive as an arts and heritage centre and became interested in the site after walking past.

She said: I was volunteering at a nearby food bank in Sweyn Road (Rosslyn Court) during lockdown and walked past it. I thought wow I must go and have a look in there. Im not religious but I grew up going to synagogues and because I play Jewish music, I have performed at concerts including Holocaust Memorial Day and other events especially in East London.

After making contact with charity owners, Margate Hebrew Congregation, Francesca was invited to have a look inside and was awe-struck by the beauty of the building. She said: Its in brilliant condition and would make an incredible music venue. There is so much potential for events and a museum and archive section too, she said

The synagogue is currently on the market with London auctioneer, Savills at a guide price of 300,000 and is set to go under the hammer on December 16.

Campaigners, who have since set up as The Cliftonville Cultural Space CIC, say they need to raise the full amount.

But treasurer of the Margate Hebrew Congregation Jeremy Jacobs says despite conversations with the group as it stands the synagogue will be sold.

He said: Its not unusual for this to happen. It has served its purpose and we have tried to keep the building going but have struggled to attract members.

We have a responsibility to the charity commission to sell the building. The (Jewish) demographic has shifted dramatically and is now more London-centric than ever. It will be going to auction in December unfortunately there are many people with big mouths and closed wallets. We needed this five years ago.

Mr Jacobs confirmed a meeting with trustees will seek to change their charity objectives and that they will be continuing to support other Jewish charities.

At the time of its construction in 1928 Margates Jewish community was buoyant with many hotels opened to cater for holiday makers.

But there were still many obstacles to overcome before the first stone was laid.

A report in a local newspaper recorded that at the end of the war the community were very much depleted both financially and physically and the question had arisen as to selling the congregation effects.

Since 1910 the congregation had increased substantially with plans to build a synagogue but the Great War in 1914 changed everything as a sharp decline in numbers made their situation financially untenable.

Following an appeal to the Jewish Press benefactor Joseph Jacobs cleared the congregations 200 debt which allowed Jewish soldiers to worship in Margate before heading to France many did not return.

At the stone laying ceremony in 1928 which was held at the Grand Hotel the importance of the visitor economy was cited with tourists from London expected to support the fundraising initiative for the continued building work when they came to worship.

Now, some 70 years later an eclectic community is once again uniting to raise funds to provide an important cultural centre while maintaining the integrity of its Jewish past.

Francesca said: We want to continue its mission of attracting visitors to Margate and breathe life into the area.

A crowdfunder page is due to be launched imminently. Find the campaign on social media under @saveourshulmargate.

To contact the campaign email savecliftonvillesynagogue@gmail.com

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Campaign launched to save historic Cliftonville synagogue - The Isle of Thanet News

Miracle in the Synagogue – Israel Today

Posted By on November 25, 2020

As every morning, Omer Haim (27, pictured left) came from Rehovot to the courtyard of a school near his house to pray in the open area in compliance with Coronavirus guidelines. Among those present was Raz Yitzhaki (pictured right), an EMT volunteer with Magan David Adom emergency medical services (MDA). At the end of the prayer, as the participants tidied up the courtyard, Omer lost consciousness and collapsed on the floor. Those who saw what happened quickly called to Raz, 21, who immediately began medical treatment, performed CPR on Omer and reported the event to MDA.

Raz, while performing CPR, sent a worshiper to the school gate to direct the ambulance and bring a defibrillator, and together with MDA teams, gave electric shocks that saved Omers life and restored his pulse. At the end of a nerve-wracking and strenuous resuscitation, his condition stabilized, and the MDA team evacuated him to the hospital for further treatment and recovery.

Raz Yitzhaki, the MDA EMT:

After the prayer, I heard cries for help, I ran to the scene and saw Omer unconscious. He just collapsed on the ground. I immediately called MDA and started CPR. When the ambulance arrived, they gave him two electric shocks and we continued with compressions. To our great joy, his pulse returned and after a few minutes, he started breathing on his own. Meeting Omer today for the first time since the event while standing on his feet is very exciting, its an amazing feeling. It is very important that every citizen in Israel knows basic CPR, it is simple and can save lives.

Regarding the difficult event and the miracle that happened, Omer Haim said:

I felt good that morning, I arrived at the prayer, as usual, after which I just collapsed on the floor. Luckily, two worshipers were behind me and called for Razs help. But Im very emotional about the miracle that happened to me and Razs amazing help. I feel like I was reborn, I received a gift from heaven and a great miracle happened here. I thank Raz and the MDA team who saved my life. I thank the Creator of the world who sent me a messenger and helped me in my distress.

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Miracle in the Synagogue - Israel Today

Wembley shul set to relocate after more than 60 years – Jewish News

Posted By on November 25, 2020

Wembley United Synagogue is set to vacate its building after more than 60 years, as it confirmed the purchase of a new property.

The community, which was established 92 years ago, confirmed plans to move to a new site within two years, with its financial representative having delivered the very good news to members earlier in November.

The synagogues best option, as outlined in its annual report included the selling of the entire synagogue site and out of the proceeds of the sale, find another site nearby for a smallish synagogue. The report said it is something like two years away from completing the downsizing.

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Writing to members on 12 November, Charles Vites, Financial Representative of Wembley United Synagogue, confirmed the purchase of a new building, and said If all goes well, we should be able to move into the new shul in 2022.

He told Jewish: We have purchased a site near our synagogue which we will develop into a small shul, in our own good time.

Earlier this month I wrote to all members of Wembley Synagogue and they are aware of our plans. When the time is right, we will sell the present site. However, we confidently expect to be here at the next High Holidays and later.

We are in no hurry. We are fortunate to have the time and resources to get this right. We are confident that Wembley Synagogue will be around for a very long time to come yet. As long as there remain Jews who wish to pray in Wembley, we will be there for them.

This comes after Noam Primary Schools lease for Wembley shuls building came to an end in December 2019, meaning it lost a source of rental income which had immediate financial implications. Wembley has been declining in congregation size for years as families move to growing communities such as Borehamwood, Stanmore and Edgware.

Rabbi Shlomo Odze, the United Synagogues Community Development Manager, said: We have been delighted to support the Wembley community to explore possibilities for their new home and help them purchase a new building which we know will be more comfortable and more suitable for their needs.

The United Synagogue will continue to provide services for the community in the area for many years to come. We wish the community well as they embark on the development project and will be with them every step of the way.

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Wembley shul set to relocate after more than 60 years - Jewish News

B’nai Emunah Synagogue Rabbi Hospitalized With COVID-19 – News On 6

Posted By on November 25, 2020

The rabbi at Bnai Emunah Synagogue has been hospitalized with COVID-19 and now the congregation is asking for donations to aid in his recovery.

Congregation Bnai Emunah located near East 17th Street and South Peoria Avenue, posted on Facebook Wednesday saying they are asking for prayers, well wishes, and thoughts of strength as their own Rabbi Dan Kaimanbattles what they say is a severe case of COVID-19. They said that he has a long road of recovery ahead of him and this is only the beginning since he will likely be in the hospital for several more days.

To help those in need who have suffered from the virus, the synagogue is setting up a COVID-19 recovery fund to help Kaiman and others who need help getting back to their normal routines during their healing after hospitalization.

To donate to the recovery fund,you can do so by calling Bnai Emunah at (918) 583-7121 or mailing a donation to 1719 South Owasso, Tulsa Oklahoma, 74120. The post says notes of encouragement can also be sent to that address if you would like to send a letter. to the post says notes of encouragement can also be sent to that address if you would like to send a letter.

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B'nai Emunah Synagogue Rabbi Hospitalized With COVID-19 - News On 6


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