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Win-win Thanksgiving food drive – The Jewish Standard

Posted By on November 13, 2020

People want to connect.

Theyre craving opportunities to see each other and be close to each other, said Rabbi David-Seth Kirshner, explaining why Closters Temple Emanu-El offers so many drive-thrus for its members.

Weve been doing them since the end of spring, he said. We needed some points to connect with people. So congregants were invited to receive challah before attending open-air Friday night services; to get apples, honey, and honey cake on Rosh Hashanah; to take ice cream from ice cream trucks many times; to wave the lulav in a parking lot on Sukkot; and now, for Thanksgiving, to give back to the community by donating food.

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Rabbi Kirshner has seen certain trends in how members have reacted to the pandemic and how it has affected their relationship to the synagogue. The people who love the shul have seen it as a touchstone for the important parts of their life, he said. Its value is incalculable. For others, for those who have been substantially hit by the pandemic, some felt that the synagogue was the first thing they needed to abdicate financially. And of course, some as happened in all synagogues lost not only their money but their lives.

Still, Rabbi Kirshner insisted that it is unacceptable to the synagogue to lose a member over covid for financial reasons. If some business got stuck, he said, the affected member(s) would not be lost to us.

The drive-thrus have drawn between 100 and 250 cars, depending on different factors, Rabbi Kirshner said, noting that the challah give-away was extremely popular, as were the ice-cream trucks. The Sukkot event where gloved staff members gave out hot cocoa along with a lulav for a ritual shake also was a big draw.

The upcoming Thanksgiving drive-thru was envisioned slightly differently. Were still in the mindset of programming, Rabbi Kirshner said, discussing the upcoming event, to be held on November 18 from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. While were challenged, we have it better than a lot of others, he added, referring to the majority of his members. Food pantries are depleted. Giving food is a good thing to do. The food collected at the drive will be divided between the Closter Food Pantry and the Center for Food Action.

To incentivize this giving, the rabbi reached out to Adam Steinberg, co-owner of Zadies Bake Shop in Fair Lawn. People who donate at least one pound of non-perishable food will receive a gift bag containing one of Zadies mini-meltaways.

He wanted to be part of this mitzvah, Rabbi Kirshner said. He said they wished they could do this for free, but theyre also victims of the pandemic. But they gave us an incredibly reduced fee. More than just helping, theyre partnering with us in helping the community.

The pandemic has affected Temple Emanu-El in a variety of ways. The synagogue now hosts bnai mitzvah every week, and allows up to 40 people, masked and socially distant, to be in the synagogue. We take their information in case they need to be contact-traced, Rabbi Kirshner said. Were having Friday night outdoors and will continue to do that. In addition, he added, the synagogue offers regular programming online almost every day. But we still need human interaction, he said. It serves an important purpose.

Mr. Steinberg of Zadies said that he is providing the shul with 225 cakes, at a substantial discount. The rabbi called and said he was doing a food drive to fill up food pantries, he said. I thought, if we can use our platform and our products to incentivize more people to contribute, why not do it? We love helping the community.

Mr. Steinberg said the pandemic definitely has affected his business. But while sales in some areas, like catering, have gone down, weve seen a lot of new faces. A lot of people have made an effort to shop local. Its definitely helping us. Were still a local establishment, a mom and pop store. Some people are coming in who we havent seen before.

The store also has started to make new products. We started making small individual cakes, paying more attention to the times were living in, Mr. Steinberg said. Were making smaller, more individualized items, realizing that people generally are not buying for company now, but for two or three people. This approach, he said, has paid off and well continue to try new products. As a side benefit, It makes people want to crawl out of their holes and take a trip. The shop allows four masked people in at a time, standing an appropriate distance apart.

Mr. Steinberg said he was flattered that Rabbi Kirshner asked him to participate in the food drive, but anytime we get any business, its an amazing thing, especially to get a call from someone you dont normally do business with.

Whats hes doing is also an amazing thing to ask people to give at a time like this. If we can be of any help, its a great thing to be a part of.

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Win-win Thanksgiving food drive - The Jewish Standard

Rockland crackdown on coronavirus violations led to one fine that’s still unpaid – The Journal News

Posted By on November 13, 2020

A Rockland government enforcement of coronavirus violations during the pandemic's initial stages in March and April resulted in one congregation being fined by the health commissionerout of 13 citations, according to county documents.

The one group fined Congregation Shaarei Chesed in Ramapohas not paid the $4,000 penalty from April, government spokesman John Lyon said Thursday. The county has begun legal proceedings against the North Saddle River Road congregation, Lyon said.

Rockland County Executive Ed Day talks about the county entering Phase 3 of Covid-19 recovery at the Allison-Parris Rockland County Office Building in New City June 22, 2020.(Photo: Peter Carr/The Journal News)

CORONAVIRUS:Rockland issues 13 violations among 468 complaints for public safety infractions

ENFORCEMENT: NY will take over enforcement in COVID hot spots

A Health Department inspector had cited the congregation for hosting more than 10 people in its synagogue in violation of the health commissioner's orders. Thesynagogue violated the attendance figure three times March 27, April 1, andApril 9, according to the county.

The congregation had been given60 days to pay the fine, said Lyon, a spokesman for County Executive Ed Day.

"This fine has not yet been paid," Lyon said. "It will soon be referred from the Department of Health to the Law Department so that collections can proceed."

A congregation official could not be reached for comment.

Lyon said the Health Department's involvement in combating thepandemic delayed the collection process after the deadline had not been met to pay Health Commissioner Dr. Patricia Ruppert's fine.

Ramapo policehad arrested eight men at the congregation on April 6 just days after the state government gave Rockland County officials the green light tocrack down on large gatherings.

Since the pandemic hit the state in the spring, there's been disputes and misunderstandings concerning whether county health inspectors or law enforcement should enforce the edicts of the governor and health commissioner.

Back in the spring, Day got into heated discussions criticizing Ramapo officials and police for notenforcing social distancing and limiting crowds attending funerals, weddingsand services after reading allegations of violations by residents on social media and receiving reports from inspectors.

Since October seven months after the pandemic struck the state took overenforcement of COVID-19 hot spots, as Gov. Andrew Cuomo threatenedto shut down religious gatherings and schools that violated regulations.

A total of seven violations have been issuedrecently under the commissioners Face Covering Order,Lyon said.

Rockland County is home to one of a handful of COVID cluster enforcement initiative zones that the governor enacted.

The hot spots includedareas in Rockland as Hasidic and Orthodox Jewish leaders rebuked the governor, once considered a strongally and recipient of thebloc vote, for targeting the community.

Congregation Shaarei Chesed at 92 N. Saddle River Road, Ramapo(Photo: Ramapo Police Department)

LEGAL ACTION: Rockland rabbis accuse Cuomo of discrimination for COVID-19 'red zone' enforcement

CORONAVIRUS: Yeshiva leader demands Ed Day apologize for accusing the school of operating

In March and April, Rockland County government received 468 complaints predominately inRamapo. The violationsof county and state laws carry fines of $2,000 per violation.

The Rockland Health Departmentissued 13 violationssince enforcement beganin March toreligious organizations holding services and funerals, catering halls, people holding wedding receptions, schools and restaurants.

Out of the 13 notices of violations, the county has withdrawn all but one, according to Lyon and documents obtained by The Journal News/lohud under the state Freedom of Information Law.

Lyon said the violation noticesissued by the Health Department were withdrawn after the issues were corrected upon follow up and there was no need to move forward with penalties.

He said the goal was to compel compliance with the governors restrictions, not to collect fines or take punitive action.

The enforcement in Ramapo has been contentious, with leaders in the Hasidic and ultra-Orthodox communities contending their institutions had been targeted while other people and businessesgot away with allowinglarge gatherings without facial masks and social distances.

One Monsey woman saw the county notice of charges withdrawn after being accused of allowing too many people in her backyard during a March condolence gathering following the death of her husband.Some of the mourners didn't adhere to social distancing and didn't wear face masks.

The Health Department had withdrawn a violation notice days after issuing them to Central UTA of Monsey that the private school had violated the closure ban. The school officials, with their attorneys, argued parents and staff were at the school distributing books for home-study and lunches, as allowed by the governor's executive order.

"The goal was complete compliance," Lyon said, adding the notice of charges was intended to "issue a wakeupcall."

"In the broader sense, getting compliance increased awareness the rules needed to be followed by everyone," he said.

Steve Lieberman coversgovernment, breaking news, courts, police, and investigations.Reach him at slieberm@lohud.com. Twitter: @lohudlegal.Read more articlesandbio.Our local coverage is only possible with support from our readers.

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Rockland crackdown on coronavirus violations led to one fine that's still unpaid - The Journal News

There is no space for hate Yeshiva University News – Yu News

Posted By on November 13, 2020

Mollie Sharfman

Mollie Sharfman 10S has had an unusual path laid out for her in life. It is not one she would have chosen had she known all the details, but it is one which nevertheless has strengthened and deepened her faith both in herself and in the belief that even in the hard times, G-d is there standing by me, no matter what happens.

Mollie grew up in Baltimore, Maryland, in a family deeply involved in communal life; her parents even helped build the Jewish day school she attended.

For the Sharfman family, YU was always our central station for Modern Orthodox education, and given the YU history in the family, going to Stern College was the natural next step. Mollies father, Dr. William Sharfman, is a 1979 alumnus of Yeshiva College, and her mother, Paula Guttman Sharfman, graduated from Yeshiva University High School for Girls in 1978.

Her grandfather, Chazzan Joseph Guttman zl, believed so deeply in the ideals of Yeshiva University that he sent Mollies mother, Paula, to the high school and her uncle, Rabbi Leonard Guttman 77YUHS, 81YC, 81BR,84R, 92C, to Yeshiva University.

When she arrived in 2007, after spending a year in Israel studying at Midreshet Harova, Mollie immediately found that Stern College was a continuation of the Jewish community work I did in Baltimore, but it gave me more opportunities to do it on a greater scale, interfacing with Jewish communities beyond my own, especially through the Center for the Jewish Future (CJF), where, by her own account, I did almost every initiative they offered.

She traveled across the United States and Canada with the Aaron and Blanche Schreibers Torah Tours, and she also participated in CJFs humanitarian missions, which brought my values alive. The last of these missions, in 2010, took her to Germany in a joint project between CJF and Germany Close Up, an organization that brings American Jews to Germany to discuss the countrys reconciliation process so that American Jews dont think of Germany only through the lens of the Holocaust.

Through that partnership and her work serving as the Director of Programming for New Jersey Junior NCSY while a student at Stern College, she became involved in the work being done in Germany by the Ronald S. Lauder Foundation. I had no idea that this kind of work was being done in the country, she noted, and I decided that I wanted to be a part of it.

In 2011, she worked as an adviser and education coordinator for the JOLT NCSY summer program, traveling to Poland, Israel, and the Austrian Alps. She maintained close contact with everyone she met, and in 2019, she was given the chance to live and work in Berlin, Germany, becoming the deputy program and communications officer for Educating for Impact, whose mission is to promote change in Jewish schools to secure and strengthen Jewish communities in Europe. She also joined the board of Morasha Germany, the address for Jewish university students and young professionals in Germany.

The position gave her work that was fulfilling and consequential, connected to communities and leadershipeverything she could have asked for. So, she began, as she said, living the life of an ex-pat and a Jew abroad, proud of her ability to take the risks and make them work to her advantage.

In October 2019, Mollie accompanied a group of young Jews who had been invited to visit the synagogue in Halle, Germany, for the celebration of Yom Kippur on Oct. 9. The synagogue served an older generation of Jews from the former Soviet Union who, as Mollie pointed out, came to Germany to lead a quiet life away from the difficulties of their former lives. In fact, her group had been invited to give the older congregation a little more energy.

Oct. 9 was also the day when the synagogue in the Paulusviertel neighborhood in the largest city in the German state of Saxony Anhalt underwent an armed attack by Stephan Balliet, a self-proclaimed Holocaust denier who blamed the Jews for promoting feminism, which he believed led to fewer births and increased immigration. For 35 minutes, he livestreamed his attack on the gaming site Twitch. Unable to get into the synagogue itself, he killed two bystandersa woman, Jana Lange and a young man, Kevin S., in a doner kebab shopand later injured two people in the nearby city of Landsberg. (At his trial, he was charged with two counts of murder and 68 counts of attempted murder.)

Minutes before the attack began, Mollie left the synagogue after the morning davening to go for a short walk and spend some meditative moments on a park bench. While the synagogue had a voluntary guard, no police had been assigned to protect the building, but Mollie noted that no one felt in danger, which is why she felt perfectly comfortable taking her break.

By her own account, she heard two very loud sounds a few minutes apart (most likely from a hand grenade thrown by Balliet into the synagogues cemetery) but no screams or any commotion. She continued sitting there for a short while and then decided to go back, only to confront battalions of police around the synagogue while other police pursued Balliet through what had now become an active shooter scene.

With the help of her friend, she managed to convince the police to let her back inside, where everyone continued praying, something they did even as the police escorted them to the hospital, where they did Neilah, the final prayer of Yom Kippur, before they were examined and escorted by the police back home.

Balliet was captured. On Oct. 11, during a court hearing, he confessed to the crime, and on April 11, German prosecutors formally filed charges against him.

And then the trial began on July 21, 2020. Prosecutors asked Mollie to be the lead witness from the victims.

A few months after the attack, Mollie was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, and I had misgivings about doing what they had asked of me. I had done a lot of work to heal and even experienced post-traumatic growth and made sure the incident would not consume my life.

But describing herself as a person who does what people ask her to if it needs to be done, she agreed to be the lead witnessbut not for herself, or only for herself. My grandfather, Chazzan Joseph Guttman zl, survived the Holocaust, the only one of his family, and none of them had ever had the chance to stand in front of the person who had killed them. How many times in life do you have the chance to stand in front of that person and see them being brought to justice?

German media carried accounts of her testimony, in which she spoke lovingly of her grandfather and everything that he meant to her. Here is how The Berliner Zeitung reported it:

And then Mollie S. talks about her grandfather, with whom she has a close relationship. He was the first to hold her in his arms after she was born. He always wanted to protect me from all evil, she says. The grandfather lost his whole family, more than 100 relatives, in the Holocaust. Because of the events in Halle, she now feels a special connection to her family. I feel like a survivor now, too, she says. And then she takes a piece of paper out of her pocket; on it is a prayer with which her grandfather always blessed her with tears on the eve of Yom Kippur, as she says. She reads it in Hebrew and English: May God bless and protect you / May God show you favor and be gracious to you / May God show you kindness and grant you peace. When Mollie S. says the prayer, it is completely silent in the courtroom. It is as if all of the dead from her family were suddenly sitting in the room.

Here is how one newspaper, Taz DE, reported what happened when Mollie finished her testimony:

Applause in the courtroom is considered inappropriate. But it does happen once, after acquittals, for example. Applause after questioning a witness is unusual. But thats exactly how the eighth day of the trial in the trial of the right-wing extremist attack in Halle begins, when the co-plaintiff Mollie Sharfman freed herself from the assailants power on the witness stand. Mollie Sharfman is the first voice in the trial of the Jews who visited the Halle synagogue while the perpetrator tried to gain access to the building. Sharfman speaks calmly and deliberately past the perpetrator into the room and yet tells the 28-year-old right-wing extremist: You messed with the wrong person, with the wrong family, with the wrong co-plaintiffs. You messed with the wrong people. From that day on, he will no longer cause me personal agony. It ends today.

As she said in an interview with DW, This attackerthis person who is filled with so much hatehe cannot take away what my grandfather taught me, what my grandfather gave me. So, thats what made me feel the strongest was this connection with him. And I felt it was important to share that in the court. That is resilience.

In the months since the trial, many thoughts have crossed her mind, not all of them neatly fitting one into the other. For instance, this still doesnt fit in with my narrative. I dont fully accept that this happened to me. This is not how the story is supposed to go. My grandfather survived the Holocaust, were supposed to be safe, anti-Semitism is not supposed to be a problem that we, as a Jewish people still have (even though it is increasing in Europe and America). I dont know what it means to accept, what it looks like.

Yet, she is acutely aware of the outward ripple effects of an incident like this. The number of people who are affected by something like this is not just the ones affected immediatelythe woman he shot, the nurse walking by the wounded woman who tried to help her, the taxi driver he assaulted, the young man killed in the doner shop and his devastated family. He targeted one group but ended up hitting everything. So many people will forever be affected by this hate crime.

What she hopes to achieve is a state in life where I am able to do the very opposite of what the attacker tried to do: to do work that achieves a positive ripple effect across the Jewish community and the world.

On the one hand, I feel empowered I stood up to someone who is filled with so much hateand on the other, its just one of those things that I bring up or not, depending on the situation. She doesnt want to be defined as Mollie who was in a terrorist attack, but she also knows that it will be something that will always shade her responses and the routine facts of daily living. G-d willing, I will live a very happy and fulfilling life, living in my values, and this will only come up every so often. That is what I hope.

For more of Mollies thoughts, read an account she wrote in The Jewish Week and an article for in the BBC, listen to a speech she gave outside the courtroom after her testimony and listen to excellent interviews with DW and BBC Radio.

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There is no space for hate Yeshiva University News - Yu News

Oppose hatred in all its forms, UN chief urges – UN News

Posted By on November 13, 2020

Secretary-General Antnio Guterres warned that alongside COVID-19, the virus of anti-Semitism and other identity-based forms of hate, has also been spreading.

In recent months, a steady stream of prejudice has continued to blight our world: anti-Semitic assaults, harassment and vandalism; Holocaust denial; a guilty plea in a neo-Nazi plot to blow up a synagogue, he said.

Our world today needs a return to reason and a rejection of the lies and loathing that propelled the Nazis and that fracture societies today, he added.

His latest plea to end hate, came in an acceptance speech after receiving the 2020 Theodor Herzl Award, on Monday. The Award is the highest honour accorded by the World Jewish Congress. This year, due to the coronavirus outbreak, the ceremony was held in a virtual setting.

The event coincided with the anniversary of the Nazi-ordered Kristallnacht or Night of Broken Glass on 9-10 November 1938, during which scores of Jewish homes, businesses and synagogues were destroyed.

Mr. Guterres said that as the Secretary-General, he is working to mobilize a global coalition against bigotry. He highlighted that even before the coronavirus struck, the UN had been working to counter hate speech, including through a formal Plan of Action, and after rising attacks on synagogues, mosques and churches, the effort to protect places of worship and other religious sites, led by the UN Alliance of Civilizations (UNAOC).

And since the spread of the virus this year, our new Verified initiative has been combating rampant misinformation about COVID-19, he added.

The UN chief also reinforced his call for a global ceasefire, so the world can focus on fighting its shared enemy, the coronavirus.

The Secretary-General also reminded that hatred does not discriminate, and when societies fall into repression and violence, everyone is vulnerable.

Lets remember what history tells us about the descent into repression and violence: one day it is your neighbour under attack, the next it is likely you, he warned.

Mr. Guterres also noted the role that the UN played in the establishment of the State of Israel, and that it remains his fervent hope that next year, a dialogue between Israelis and Palestinians can start again towards the goal of two States, living side-by-side in harmony and peace, in the context of a positive environment of regional cooperation.

I will continue to stand with you in the fight against anti-Semitism and discrimination of every kind, he added, stressing that the UN remains a steadfast ally in the essential struggle to uphold equality and dignity for all.

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Oppose hatred in all its forms, UN chief urges - UN News

ADL webinar addresses election, extremes – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on November 13, 2020

Leading up to the presidential election and afterward, staff at the Anti-Defamation League have tracked hate and worked to prevent the spread of disinformation, misinformation and extremism across the country.

On Nov. 5, the ADL gave a 55-minute webinar, At the Extremes: The Election 2020 and American Extremism, to present information about the presence of hate on the internet and in person.

We remain concerned about the potential for extremists to exploit this moment of discord, to spread disinformation about vote tallies or the validity of the election, or even to inspire their followers to act violently, said Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of the ADL, adding the ADLs role is to act as a watchdog, working with law enforcement.

Leading up to the election, Oren Segal, vice president of the ADLs Center on Extremism, said, the center bolstered its coverage and monitoring capacity.

At the same time, We have been very careful about avoiding amplifying extremist voices and messaging, he said. We know that elevating those messages can exacerbate anxiety and fear.

He said there were scattered reports of poll observers being assaulted in Indiana and Alabama, a few cases of armed men showing up at polling places, and robocalls reaching 10 million people essentially telling them to stay safe and stay at home.

Segal said high voter turnout suggesting that the effect of Election Day of intimidation efforts was limited.

This is not a time to let our guard down, he said. Extremists are amplifying post-election accusations from various circles, including the current president and campaign, that Democrats are trying to steal the election by finding votes. This language is inherently inciting. The power of an idea or conspiracy suggesting that something is being taken away has always had the power to animate extremists from across the ideological spectrum.

Efforts in Michigan and Arizona to control the counting of ballots, he said, were not extremist, he said, but extremists will often show up at rallies because they never miss an opportunity to leverage a crisis.

Segal said in Philadelphia of a Proud Boys sighting on Nov. 5 and conspiracy theorist Alex Jones has urged followers to take out polling places.

On cue, QAnon believers have echoed fears that Democrats are perpetrating a massive voter fraud, he said, referring to the far-right conspiracy theory.

On Nov. 4, three synagogues in Philadelphia received harassing telephone calls, where the caller said, Jews decide the election, Segal said, and a postal worker was doxed with accusations of back-dating ballots.

Dave Siffry, vice president of the ADLs Center for Technology and Society, spoke tracking hate on social media platforms and holding those companies to their own policies in order to protect the election.

Facebook, he said, temporarily shut down its recommendations for social and political groups in advance of the election after the Wall Street Journal identified that 64% of people joined extremist groups on the basis of those recommendations.

Facebook also ran a notification at the top of its news feeds and on individual posts to let people know there was no winner while results were being counted.

Were watching them very carefully and calling them out, Siffry said. In addition, a big concern has been about advertising.

He said Facebook sent a cease and desist letter to researchers at New York University who were investigating ad targeting on Facebook prior to the election.

It has become harder to trust even their own transparency on this issue, so we are tracking them very closely, he said.

YouTube had the least formal policies in place to specifically protect the election compared to Twitter and Facebook, he said, relying on its deceptive practices policy.

In the aftermath of the election, however, numerous journalists have flagged the prevalence of videos with false information, such as fake election results or false claims of victory on the platform from various sources, Siffry said. Some with upwards of 100,000 views.

He said on Election Day, YouTube channels, some with more than a million subscribers, live streamed fake election results to tens of thousands of people.

He said ADL found three broadcasts with fake elections results that had advertisements playing before them. In addition, he said YouTubes labeling said things like Results may not be final, see the latest on Google. rather than Twitter and Facebooks more proactive and definitive linking to election results and statements about inaccurate and misleading information.

He said the ADL has been pushing YouTube to strengthen its labeling and to block videos that contain misinformation or disinformation.

As to Twitter, he said, ADL observed hashtags such as #stopthesteal, #sharpiegate, each having been used more than 20,000 times since polls opened Nov. 3.

While Twitter took appropriate action on prominent accounts, Siffry said the ADL found 152 tweets from which no action had been taken from 84 high visibility accounts with a combined total of 118.8 million followers. Staff counted 1.9 million engagements when it first observed them.

We flagged them for Twitter last night, and upon rechecking this morning, 67 of those 152 tweets had been labeled as misinformation or annotated with election security information, he said. But the 85 tweets to which Twitter did not respond received an additional 350,000 engagements since reporting as of midday today.

ADL has also begun monitoring Twitch, the largest streaming platform for video games, which is now being used for political purposes, Siffry said.

Eileen Hershenov, senior vice president of policy, said in the months leading up to the election ADL for the first time collaborated with Moonshot CVE and Bridging Divides Initiative to track and redirect those searching for extremist information to websites that counter those messages.

In the last week, we have reported, Moonshot, our partners reported, over 2,200 searches in 45 states for anti-government, armed group, targeted violence, political violence, and conspiracy theories and information, she said, adding the top search words in the last week for conspiracy theories and violent threats were FEMA coffins, anarchist cookbook, join the 3 percenters.

The top 10 states, she said, are Arizona, Texas, Nevada, Idaho, Washington, Wisconsin, Arkansas, California, Oregon and West Virginia.

She said the ADL briefed law enforcement and elected officials in states where there were indicia of violence and disruption, including governors in seven states and attorneys general in eight, secretaries of state in five, mayors in 10.

Those were very targeted briefings about particular things we were seeing, she said, adding that ADL has held webinars for more than 1,000 law enforcement participants and one with nearly 100 executives in executive agencies in priority states.

ADL also reached out to all 56 FBI field service offices and 78 state and local intelligence fusion centers, which are points of connection for FBI, Department of Homeland Security and local and state law enforcement.

On voting rights, we leaned in working in coalition, she said, adding that ADL worked to register more than 300,000 people in Philadelphia in concert with the Urban League. We were messaging calm.

ADL advocated in Congress for appropriations for safe voting in states and sent a letter to Congress noting the QAnon supporters running for Congress asking they not be given leadership positions.

We intend to take that same message to the states, she said.

Greenblatt spoke of the larger picture,

The reality is most of the work that ADL does is behind the scenes, he said. So we are actively working with law enforcement, with the media and news organizations the social media services to give them actionable intelligence on the threats as we see it, to correct misinformation, particularly when its directed in such a way that it marginalizes Jews or African Americans or other minorities or marginalized communities.

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ADL webinar addresses election, extremes - Cleveland Jewish News

Jewish orgs. react to presumptive win of Dem. nominee Joe Biden – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on November 13, 2020

Major Jewish organizations reacted to the projected win of Democratic nominee Joe Biden on Saturday.The Anti-Defamation League congratulated Biden and presumptiveVice President-elect Kamala Harris, the "first woman and first person of color to hold the office," on their win while calling on both Democrats and Republicans to ensure a peaceful transfer of power once the election results have been validated.Jonathan A. Greenblatt, ADL CEO, noted that this "has been an election year without precedent in American history, not only due to the challenges of the pandemic, but also because it took place in the shadow of record levels of antisemitism and rising hate, the mainstreaming of online conspiracy theories such as QAnon, and attempts by domestic extremists to undermine the voting process.And yet, despite the challenges, Americans turned out in historic numbers. The unprecedented level of civic participation is a powerful testament to the enduring strength of our democracy and the right of every American to have a voice and a vote.Greenblatt recognized that this has been an enormous amount of pain on all sides over these past four years."AIPAC congratulates President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris on their election victory, read a statement Saturday from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the largest pro-Israel lobby. Despite the current profound political polarization, there remains a resolute bipartisan commitment to the U.S.-Israel alliance as both presidential tickets took strong pro-Israel positions.He concluded by calling on "liberals and conservatives, Republicans and Democrats, affiliated and unaffiliated [to] unite after this bitter season and find common ground in working together to solve the myriad challenges that face our nation and the world. America is stronger when we unite and now is the time to find a path forward, together."

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President of the Conference of European Rabbis Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt thanked Trump for his support for Israel and wished Biden well for his coming presidency.

We express our thanks to outgoing US President, Mr Donald Trump, for his unwavering support of Israel, being the first sitting US President to visit the Western Wall the remnant of the Jerusalem Temple in the eternal Jewish capital and for forging ahead with the Abrahamic Accords improving relations between Israel and its Arab neighbors, said Goldschmidt

Bend the Arc CEO Stosh Cotler said that the voters of 2020 will take their "place in history as the people who rose up across religion, race, and all aspects of our identities, to preserve the dream that our country can be a place where freedom, safety, and belonging are for all of us.

Cotler added that for millions of Jewish Americans this election was deeply personal, and our voices rang out clearly."

"Bend the Arc organized across the country for four years, and our volunteers mobilized like never before to flip states and win races up and down the ballot. A historic 77% of Jewish Americans (a seven-point increase from 2016) voted to overcome a politics of fear, division, and lies a politics which endangers Jews, Muslims, people of color, immigrants, and so many other communities," Cotler said.

Ben Sales/JTA contributed to this report.

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Jewish orgs. react to presumptive win of Dem. nominee Joe Biden - The Jerusalem Post

Sharon L. Klein Named to Working Mother’s Top Wealth Advisor Moms 2020 – PRNewswire

Posted By on November 13, 2020

The ranking is based on both qualitative and quantitative data from nominations and in-person interviews. This selection of the top 500 advisors from thousands of candidates across the country was based on factors such as revenue trends, assets under management, client experience, and industry experience. Among her other most recent awards, Sharon was recognized by SHOOK for Forbes Best-In-State high-net-worth wealth advisors in New York City, and Forbes Top Women Wealth Advisors in the US.

"Sharon's ranking in the top 60 showcases her unwavering commitment to serving wealthy families through the best and toughest of situations, especially in these ever-evolving times of uncertainty," said Bill LaFond, head of Family Wealth for Wilmington Trust. "With over 25 years of experience and professional impact in the wealth management and matrimonial advice spheres, Sharon's recognition is well-deserved and we're very excited to congratulate her on this accomplishment."

Sharon is responsible for coordinating the delivery of all Wealth Management services, leading teams of professionals across the areas of planning, trust, investment management, family office, and private banking, to high-net-worth clients. As head of Wilmington Trust's National Matrimonial/Divorce Advisory Solutions Practice, the teams Sharon oversees also collaborate with advisors and their clients to offer a comprehensive set of solutions for those impacted by divorce.

Sharon is a Fellow of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel, a highly selective group of peer-elected trust and estate attorneys in the U.S. and abroad, and a member of the New York Bankers Association Trust & Investment Division Executive Committee, The Rockefeller University Committee on Trust and Estate Gift Plans, the Professional Advisory Council of the Anti-Defamation League, the Estates, Gifts and Trusts Advisory Board for The Bureau of National Affairs, and the Thomson Reuters Trusts & Estates Advisory Board. Sharon is chair of the Domestic Relations Committee of Trusts & Estatesmagazine, where she sits on the board and is also on the Advisory Board of Family Lawyer Magazine.She is on the Board of Directors of the American Brain Foundation, and is a member of its Finance Committee. Sharon was also named as an Accredited Estate Planner by the National Association of Estate Planners and Councils.For more information about this designation, please visit https://www.workingmother.com/top-wealth-advisor-moms-2020

MEDIA CONTACT: Maya Dillon, Head of Communications, Wilmington Trust.

Wilmington Trust is a registered service mark used in connection with various fiduciary and non-fiduciary services offered by certain subsidiaries of M&T Bank Corporation including, but not limited to, Manufacturers & Traders Trust Company (M&T Bank), Wilmington Trust Company (WTC) operating in Delaware only, Wilmington Trust, N.A. (WTNA), Wilmington Trust Investment Advisors, Inc. (WTIA), Wilmington Funds Management Corporation (WFMC), and Wilmington Trust Investment Management, LLC (WTIM). Such services include trustee, custodial, agency, investment management, and other services. International corporate and institutional services are offered through M&T Bank Corporation's international subsidiaries. Loans, credit cards, retail and business deposits, and other business and personal banking services and products are offered by M&T Bank, member FDIC.

This is for informational purposes only and is not intended as an offer, recommendation or solicitation for the sale of any financial profit or service or as a determination that any investment strategy is suitable for a specific investor. Investors should seek financial advice regarding the suitability of any investment strategy based on their objectives, financial situations, and particular needs. Investing involves risk and you may incur a profit or a loss. There is no assurance that any investment strategy will be successful.Wilmington Trust is not authorized to and does not provide legal, accounting or tax advice.

SOURCE Wilmington Trust

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Sharon L. Klein Named to Working Mother's Top Wealth Advisor Moms 2020 - PRNewswire

Facebooks redoubled AI efforts wont stop the spread of harmful content – VentureBeat

Posted By on November 13, 2020

Facebook says its using AI to prioritize potentially problematic posts for human moderators to review as it works to more quickly remove content that violates its community guidelines. The social media giant previously leveraged machine learning models to proactively take down low-priority content and left high-priority content reported by users to human reviewers. But Facebook claims it now combines content identified by users and models into a single collection before filtering, ranking, deduplicating, and handing it off to thousands of moderators, many of whom are contract employees.

Facebooks continued investment in moderation comes as reports suggest the company is failing to stem the spread of misinformation, disinformation, and hate speech on its platform. Reuters recently found over three dozen pages and groups that featured discriminatory language about Rohingya refugees and undocumented migrants. In January, Seattle University associate professor Caitlin Carlson published results from an experiment in which she and a colleague collected more than 300 posts that appeared to violate Facebooks hate speech rules and reported them via the services tools. According to the report, only about half of the posts were ultimately removed. More recently, civil rights groups including the Anti-Defamation League, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and Color of Change claimed that Facebook fails to enforce its hate speech policies. The groups organized an advertising boycott in which over 1,000 companies reduced spending on social media advertising for a month.

Facebook says its AI systems now give potentially objectionable content thats being shared quickly on Facebook, Instagram, Facebook Messenger, and other Facebook properties greater weight than content with few shares or views. Messages, photos, and videos relating to real-world harm, like suicide, self-harm, terrorism, and child exploitation, are prioritized over other categories (like spam) as theyre reported or detected. Beyond this, posts containing signals similar to content that previously violated Facebooks policies are more likely to reach the top of the moderation queue.

Using a technique called whole post integrity embeddings, or WPIE, Facebooks systems ingest deluges of information, including images, videos, text titles and bodies, comments, text in images from optical character recognition, transcribed text from audio recordings, user profiles, interactions between users, external context from the web, and knowledge base information. A representation learning stage enables the systems to automatically discover representations needed to detect commonalities in harmful content from the data. Then fusion models combine the representations to create millions of content representations, or embeddings, which are used to train supervised multitask learning and self-supervised learning models that flag content for each category of violations.

One of these models is XLM-R, a natural language understanding algorithm Facebook is also using to match people in need through its Community Hub. Facebook says that XLM-R, which was trained on 2.5 terabytes of webpages and can perform translations between roughly 100 different human languages, allows its content moderation systems to learn across dialects so that every new human review of a violation makes our system[s] better globally instead of just in the reviewers language. (Facebook currently has about 15,000 content reviewers who speak over 50 languages combined.)

Its important to note that all content violations still receive some substantial human review were using our system[s] to better prioritize content, Facebook product manager Ryan Barnes told members of the press on Thursday. We expect to use more automation when violating content is less severe, especially if the content isnt viral, or being quickly shared by a large number of people [on Facebook platforms].

Across many of its divisions, Facebook has for years been moving broadly toward self-supervised learning, in which unlabeled data is used in conjunction with small amounts of labeled data to produce an improvement in learning accuracy. Facebook claims its deep entity classification (DEC) machine learning framework was responsible for a 20% reduction in abusive accounts on the platform in the two years since it was deployed and that its SybilEdge system can detect fake accounts less than a week old with fewer than 20 friend requests. In a separate experiment, Facebook researchers say they were able to train a language understanding model that made moreprecise predictions with just 80 hours of data compared with 12,000 hours of manually labeled data.

For virility prediction, Facebook relies on a supervised machine learning model that looks at past examples of posts and the number of views they racked up over time. Rather than analyzing the view history in isolation, the model takes into account things like trends and privacy settings on the post (i.e., whether it was only viewable by friends).

Virility prediction aside, Facebook asserts that this embrace of self-supervised techniques along with automatic content prioritization has allowed it to address harmful content faster while letting human review teams spend more time on complex decisions, like those involving bullying and harassment. Among other metrics, the company points to its Community Standards Enforcement Report, which covered April 2020 through June 2020 and showed that the companys AI detected 95% of hate speech taken down in Q2 2020. However, its unclear the extent to which thats true.

Facebook admitted that much of the content flagged in the Wall Street Journal report would have been given low priority for review because it had less potential to go viral. Facebook failed to remove pages and accounts belonging to those who coordinated what resulted in deadly shootings in Kenosha, Wisconsin at the end of August, according to a lawsuit. Nonprofit activism group Avaaz found that misleading content generated an estimated 3.8 billion views on Facebook over the past year, with the spread of medical disinformation (particularly about COVID-19) outstripping that of information from trustworthy sources. And Facebook users in Papua New Guinea say the company has been slow or failed to remove child abuse content, with ABC Science identifying a naked image of a young girl on a page with over 6,000 followers.

Theres a limit to what AI can accomplish, particularly with respect to content like memes and sophisticated deepfakes. The top-performing model of over 35,000 from more than 2,000 participants in Facebooks Deepfake Detection Challenge achieved only 82.56% accuracy against a public dataset of 100,000 videos created for the task. When Facebook launched the Hateful Memes dataset, a benchmark made to assess the performance of models for removing hate speech, the most accurate algorithm Visual BERT COCO achieved 64.7% accuracy, while humans demonstrated 85% accuracy on the dataset. And a New York University study published in July estimated that Facebooks AI systems make about 300,000 content moderation mistakes per day.

Potential bias and other shortcomings in Facebooks AI models and datasets threaten to further complicate matters. A recent NBC investigation revealed that on Instagram in the U.S. last year, Black users were about 50% more likely to have their accounts disabled by automated moderation systems than those whose activity indicated they were white. And when Facebook had to send content moderators home and rely more on AI during quarantine, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said mistakes were inevitable because the system often fails to understand context.

Technological challenges aside, groups have blamed Facebooks inconsistent, unclear, and in some cases controversial content moderation policies for stumbles in taking down abusive posts. According to the Wall Street Journal, Facebook often fails to handle user reports swiftly and enforce its own rules, allowing material including depictions and praise of grisly violence to stand, perhaps because many of its moderators are physically distant and dont recognize the gravity of the content theyre reviewing. In one instance, 100 Facebook groups affiliated with QAnon, a conspiracy labeled by the FBI a domestic terrorist threat, grew at a combined pace of over 13,600 new followers a week this summer, according to a New York Times database.

In response to pressure, Facebook implemented rules this summer and fall aimed at tamping down on viral content that violates standards. Members and administrators belonging to groups removed for running afoul of its policies are temporarily unable to create any new groups. Facebook no longer includes any health-related groups in its recommendations, and QAnon is banned across all of the companys platforms. Facebook is applying labels to but not removing politicians posts that break its rules. And the Facebook Oversight Board, an external group that will make decisions and influence precedents about what kind of content should and shouldnt be allowed on Facebooks platform, began reviewing content moderation cases in October.

Facebook has also adopted an ad hoc approach to hate speech moderation to meet political realities in certain regions around the world. The companys hate speech rules are stricter in Germany than in the U.S. In Singapore, Facebook agreed to append a correction notice to news stories deemed false by the government. And in Vietnam, Facebook said it would restrict access to dissident content deemed illegal in exchange for the government ending its practice of disrupting the companys local servers.

Meanwhile, problematic posts continue to slip through Facebooks filters. In one Facebook group that was created this past week and rapidly grew to nearly 400,000 people, members calling for a nationwide recount of the 2020 U.S. presidential election swapped unfounded accusations about alleged election fraud and state vote counts every few seconds.

The system is about marrying AI and human reviewers to make less total mistakes, Facebooks Chris Parlow, part of the companys moderator engineering team, said during the briefing. The AI is never going to be perfect.

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Facebooks redoubled AI efforts wont stop the spread of harmful content - VentureBeat

Proceed with eyes open – Isthmus

Posted By on November 13, 2020

Spontaneous celebrations broke out across Madison this weekend as Joe Biden was announced the projected winner in the 2020 presidential race. Not everyone, of course, was excited about those results. Hundreds of Donald Trump supporters turned out for a pair of Stop the Steal rallies at the state Capitol. Included among the attendees were supporters of far-right movements, extremist media, and militia groups.

Were gonna recount, were gonna revote. I think thats what were fighting for here, is a revote, Alex Bruesewitz, a political consultant from Washington, D.C., told several hundred people gathered in front of the Capitol doors on Saturday.

I do organizing work, most recently with For Our Future, a super PAC that focuses on environmental and educational issues and that did electoral work in support of Joe Biden's campaign for president. My specialty is in relational organizing in rural areas, meaning that I spend time training people on how to have conversations with family members who disagree with them politically. It's what drew me to the state Capitol this weekend, where a Biden celebration and Trump rally were happening at the same time on opposite corners of the Square.

Though the pro-Trump rally was somewhat dwarfed by the thousands of Biden's supporters celebrating their victory just down the street, the energy among the Trump crowd remained high. Protesters flew a variety of pro-Trump flags and brought cardboard cutouts of Pelosi and Biden, the latter with the word Pedo written across its forehead a nod to the QAnon conspiracy that high-ranking Democrats are involved in a satanic, secretive pedophile ring that Trump is actively fighting to expose.

On the edges of the Stop the Steal rally where protesters and counter-protesters argued, those signs and flags drew the most attention. Easier to miss were flags that hinted at further extremism. On the western edge of the protest, a woman stood holding a flag with a large Roman numeral three, the year 1776, and the motto When tyranny becomes law, rebellion becomes duty.

This flag represents the Three Percenters, sometimes referred to as 3%ers or Threepers online. The Southern Poverty Law Center lists Three Percenters as an anti-government militia movement. Theyve been connected with several domestic terror plots in recent years, most notably the plot to kidnap and execute Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. The second in command of Wisconsins Three Percenter chapter provided space and training to several of the people who were arrested in October for being involved in the plot, though he claims he had no knowledge of their plans at the time.

Bruesewitz was adamant that there were no militia members present. So the medias gonna twist it... ...theyre gonna see some great guys out here with guns, right? Theyre gonna go Oh my God thats a militia, taking on the [Capitol]. Thats not a militia. Were all peaceful protesters out here fighting for the country we love.

Undercutting this message was the tropical shirt worn by one of the men openly carrying a firearm at the protest; the shirt is a well-known sign in activist spaces for members of the Boogaloo movement.

The Anti-Defamation League calls the boogaloo movement an anti-government extremist movement. Its adherents, referred to as boogaloo boys or boogaloo bois, identify themselves with tropical shirts under military fatigues or by the use of igloo patches (big luau and big igloo sound similar to boogaloo and can help avoid social media keyword-based crackdowns). Boogaloo bois desire a second civil war and seek to apply pressure where they can to help start it. Over 31 members of the movement have been arrested in the past two years for crimes ranging from possession of unregistered firearms to murder. The movement is linked to at least five deaths and was also connected to the failed plot to kidnap and execute Whitmer.

After Bruesewitz finished speaking, he handed the megaphone to Ashley St. Clair, a social media personality based in New York who flew down for the occasion. In the midst of the crowd, a large flag prominently featuring the letters AF was present. Though perhaps unfamiliar to the average Madison resident, it has significant connections to St. Clair.

The AF logo is from the America First podcast, a white nationalist production of Nick Fuentes. Fuentes attended the infamous Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville in 2017 and frames his followers (referred to as the Groyper Army) as Christian conservatives concerned with multiculturalism. The Anti-Defamation League maintains an exhaustive list of racist and anti-Semitic statements by Fuentes, as well as his followers, and their connections to openly white supremacist groups.

St. Clair was fired as a brand ambassador for Turning Point USA in 2019 after photos surfaced of her at a dinner event with Fuentes and other alt-right figureheads. Though she has never voiced support for Fuentes or the America First podcast on the record, she also made no comment about the flag being present at this weeks event.

The Stop the Steal rally featured many familiar alt-right talking points demonization of the media and claims that Democrats hate conservative voters. Republicans were not free from their ire, either.

Paul Ryans basically a Democrat, Bruesewitz lamented about the former U.S. House speaker from Wisconsin. If youre a Paul Ryan Republican and youre watching this? Screw you on behalf of the American people. Politicians were also warned that if they dont demonstrate loyalty and show up to rallies to publicly stand by the president, well vote them out.

This rally was part of a larger organizing effort in several swing states across the country, all of which centered around similar grievances. Black Lives Matter activists in Madison responded to the presence of the pro-Trump rally by creating a car barricade around the Biden celebration which at one point was manned by armed activists openly carrying firearms of their own.

While militias and anti-government extremist groups are not new in America, their rapid expansion and increasing levels of activity in the past few years is cause for concern. We all knew that no matter who won the election, there would be protests. Clashes between protesters seem almost inevitable, although Madison was spared the violence seen in other cities. A fist fight at the Biden celebration and a pro-Trump UW employee driving his motorcycle through protesters were the only widely reported confrontations.

In a year of escalated civil unrest, where cars running through protesters is so frequent it rarely tops national news and people are hospitalized or killed during clashes, its become more important than ever that we recognize the signs of extremism when they come to town. The flags and symbols that were at this Trump rally are easy to miss, especially for your everyday conservative or liberal voter. But like an iceberg, they hint at something much larger and more dangerous below.

No one can predict what comes next. One thing has been stated very clearly: Regardless of the election results, these militias and extremist movements arent going anywhere. The least we can do now is enter the new year with our eyes wide open.

Bryan Boland is a Madison-based organizer and writer. He can be found on Twitter @RedheadBryan.

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Proceed with eyes open - Isthmus

Repressed grief is bad for the soul: Covid victims must be commemorated – Evening Standard

Posted By on November 11, 2020

W

hen I learned on Saturday of the death of Rabbi Lord Sacks, I was deeply saddened by the loss of one of the nations wisest intellectual and moral leaders and of a friend and mentor who had, over the years, shown me great personal kindness. I also recalled a particular conversation we had had many years before about Schindlers List, which, in 1993, was about to be released.

A quarter century since Steven Spielbergs film first appeared, it is easy to forget its sheer cultural impact. There had been many documentaries about the Holocaust, but this was the first major Hollywood dramatisation of its horrors. Was it ethical to turn the greatest crime in history into a blockbuster?

Rabbi Sacks was emphatic that it most certainly was. The eyewitness survivors of the Shoah were dwindling in number, just as some of the physical evidence was decaying. Presciently the web was still in its infancy Sacks foresaw that there would be a resurgence of Holocaust denial. What mattered, above all else, was that the memory of what had happened not fade. Spielbergs fine movie would ensure that, in years to come, hundreds of millions of people billions, probably would see what had taken place and honour the dead.

Today is Remembrance Day, 102 years since hostilities in the First World War were ended formally at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month. This year, the principal ceremonies, held, as ever, on Sunday, were much-reduced in scale by pandemic restrictions which meant that all events had to observe social distancing and that the traditional march past the Cenotaph involved only 30 veterans.

The nature of the virus means that casualties have often died behind closed doors, without loved ones

Yet the spirit of commemoration seemed more vivid than ever. Though Remembrance Day has its roots in the conflict of 1914-18, its significance has deepened and broadened over the years: first, to commemorate the fallen of other wars those who were killed in the fight against Nazism, in Korea, in Afghanistan, in Iraq; and second, to ritualise the importance of remembrance itself, in a world that is captive to the moment, trapped in the digital millisecond and increasingly amnesiac.

We are forgetting how to remember. And we need to reacquire that fundamental human capacity, in an era of competing complex narratives, misinformation and unprecedented volatility.

For the worst possible reasons, this requirement is urgent. As heartening as the possibility of a vaccine becoming available before Christmas undoubtedly is, the cruel fact remains that 50,000 people in the UK have already died of Covid-19 and, tragically, that number will increase.

The nature of the virus means that almost all of this has taken place unseen. Its casualties have died behind closed doors, usually without even the comfort of loved ones at their bedside. As a consequence, the process of collective bereavement has barely begun. Each of those 50,000 was not a data point on graph but a person, with a life, a personality, family members, a circle of friends, colleagues, stories to tell, a world unto themselves. Each of those worlds has been lost.

Credit is due to those, outside government, who have already tried to organise a Covid Memorial Day. But we are lagging badly behind other nations in this respect. As early as March, Italy observed a minute of silence for its coronavirus victims, while Spain held a 10-day commemorative period in May.

Repressed grief is bad for the psyche and, if you believe in its existence, the soul. Buried pain will find a way out, like steam rattling a pressure cooker. Sooner or later, we shall have to come to terms with the losses of 2020, in a manner that involves more than addressing governmental failures (as necessary as that is). We shall have to find a way of acknowledging the scale of what has happened, and of doing so with both emotional candour and dignity.

The AIDS Memorial Quilt conceived in 1985 by the US activist Cleve Jones is a great example of such an undertaking. So too is the 9/11 Memorial and Museum in New York City. We shall need an equivalent initiative before too long when we emerge from lockdown in the broadest sense of the word to address with honesty the collective trauma of what has happened.

To endure, a society must exist in time as well as space. It must honour its dead, not least to give those yet to be born the best chance of a better life. It is upon this, above all, that we should reflect on this Remembrance Day.

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Repressed grief is bad for the soul: Covid victims must be commemorated - Evening Standard


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