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Straight rabbis need to offer LGBTQ Jews more than just wedding ceremonie – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on October 30, 2020

Like many progressives in America, as soon as Amy Coney Barrett was confirmed to the Supreme Court Monday night, my social media feeds erupted with anger over the process and fear that her appointment could presage a rollback of marriage equality.

I am a rabbi, so my feeds were also full of fellow Jewish clergy promising, come what may, to perform queer peoples weddings.

Thats an important impulse. But in this perilous moment, its not enough. Queer folks need and deserve so much more than ceremonies from their straight clergy.

And yet complacency would be a mistake, as much more than marriage equality is up for review by the Supreme Court. As the Jewish LGBTQ organization Keshet noted in a statement, the right of healthcare for transgender people and the ability of LGBTQ people to adopt children will be soon be scrutinized. Next week that is, just days from now the court will hear a case that could allow private agencies that receive taxpayer-funding (e.g., food banks, homeless shelters and foster care providers) to deny services to LGBTQ people. The human dignity of my beloved friends and colleagues is being threatened. The stakes couldnt be higher.

In rabbinical school I interned at a community organization that helped local synagogues address areas of inclusion. One community leader pushed back on a suggestion to include a statement on the synagogues About page that it was a welcoming place for queer people. Were a liberal synagogue, she said. Isnt it obvious that we include LGBTQ families?

No, its not obvious. It is incumbent upon us as rabbis and cantors to keep saying and doing it.

This fall I am thrilled to be able to participate in a weekly online shiur through SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva. SVARAs Talmud instruction recognizes as crucial the insights of transgender, intersex, queer, lesbian, bisexual and gay Jews. In partnership with my chevruta, a gay male rabbi, I have been privileged to learn Gemara in SVARAs signature queer-normative community. In the opening breakout room during the first session last week, one of my fellow participants shared what previous SVARA programs have meant to him. He had long struggled to reconcile his Jewish identity with his queer identity, he said, and SVARA had transformed his ability to do so. It was hard to overstate how important the community was to him, and he was so excited to continue learning Talmud. Witnessing one more queer person be able to believe that he has a part in and a stake in our textual tradition, I was brought to tears.

Here are just some of the promises I want my fellow straight rabbis and cantors to make to the queer folks in our communities: We will never stop fighting for your rights, from healthcare to adoption to legal gender affirmation to partner recognition. We will also promote your leadership in our rabbinical and cantorial schools. We will invest resources in your kids access to Jewish educational experiences. We will step back for you to have ownership over Jewish communal spaces. We will support specifically queer Jewish institutions. We will speak up when you are mispronouned in our synagogues. We will celebrate Coming Out Day as a Jewish holiday. We will condemn from the bimah the fact that trans folks are targets of state violence. We will act on the eternal truth that queer people are created btzelem Elohim, in the image of God.

Jewish marriage ceremonies often end with a smashing of glass, a reminder of the brokenness of the world even amidst joy. When performing the weddings of queer people, I want for my colleagues to understand that moment as a call to further and deeper action, to build a Jewish community in which all queer people are able to thrive in a world that affirms and celebrates their infinite worth as human beings. The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of JTA or its parent company, 70 Faces Media.

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Straight rabbis need to offer LGBTQ Jews more than just wedding ceremonie - The Jerusalem Post

Mikvah off the Coast of Tokyo – First-Person Stories – Chabad.org

Posted By on October 30, 2020

Becomingfriends with a Chabad Rebbetzin was going to be a different sort ofrelationship from any I had had before. The Rebbetzin was wise beyond heryears, yet I was practically old enough to be her mother. She was a woman ofthe house in ways that I had been raised to shun. She reigned in her kitchenwith a sense of purpose and joy that I found astonishing; she could multitasklike nobodys business. I learned from her while peeling potatoes to besingle-handedly focused on the goal at hand. We were preparing for dozens ofgueststhose who made reservations for Shabbat meals and those who just showedup in the way family members do when they feel at home.

Theculmination of the week for me was the clearing of the table after Shabbatlunch. I would open the Chumash, theShe could multitasklike nobodys businessGutnick edition of Torah, with nearly every page offering fascinating insightsfrom the Rebbe, Rashi and other Torah luminaries. The Rebbetzin would sit downand join me, and together we would work on solving one perplexing issue afterthe other. Except she never called it work. The Rebbetzin called it learning,and I found this sweet and inviting. To learn Torah is so different from studying Torah. To learn sounded tome pleasant and from the heart with no pressure attached.

Oneweek we sat down to learn Chayei Sarah,Sarahs Life. This portion (parshah)starts with Sarahs death. Here we learn that the news of her beloved son,Isaac, and his imminent sacrifice caused Sarah to have a heart attack and die.She didnt live to hear the end of the sentence. She never got to hear the partabout the ram, which happened to appear in the bushes, being sacrificed insteadof her son. It was one more lesson in how to choose words carefully, and thetiming of their delivery with utmost care.

Iwas learning week by week at the Chabad House how Torah provides the rawmaterial for rich conversation, and it made our blossoming friendship evencloser. The parshah shaped thedirection of the conversation.

Thereis indescribable intimacy by sharing Torah with a study partner. I could leavebehind my puny troubles, which paled in comparison to Abrahams. As we gotdeeper into the story about the sacrifice of Isaac, the plot thickened at themoment when the ram appeared through Divine intervention. Here was a lesson forthe toolbox of life: to act out of faith and let Gd choose the sacrifice. ThisI could understand just fine. But what bothered me more than Abrahams finelyattuned ear to hear and follow Gds commands, which I could understand, washow Yitzhak, a 37-year-old man, could comply without the least bit ofresistance. He lay down, allowed his father to bind his hands and didnt evenresist the knife to his neck. What sort of a son does that?

TheRebbetzin read each sentence slowly, absorbing Sarahs Life as if for the first time, even though she had beenlearning Torah all her life.

Theresnot a word here to hint of Isaacs reaction, I insisted. The Rebbetzinexplained how Mishnah and Talmud and rabbinical commentary fill in between thelinesnot that she was suggesting I take up reading Mishnah instead of thedaily newspaper. Her words were more nuanced than that. She explained that eachTorah chapters understanding is shaped by the learner. Since each Torahportion shows up once a year, we read the text differently according to ourlife circumstances. This year, I may obsess over Isaacs mysterious surrenderto the knife. Next year, maybe Ill get into a tizzy over the rams suddenappearance in the bushes and why nobody heard that big beast approaching.

Inthe end, I could accept the Rebbetzins view that it wasnt complacency at allthat motivated Isaac. Isaac was so eager to do what Gd had commanded hisfather that he begged his father to tie his wrists to his feet extra tight, inorder to prevent him from jerking suddenly under the knife.

Whew,thats intense.

Lets read on, she said. Along came a ram.It appeared after Abraham heard Gds angel; it was trapped in a nearby thicketso it could be easily slaughtered instead.

WhenAbraham reached the end of the road, so to speak, not even challenging Gd to adebatewhen there was nothing more for Abraham to do except follow Gdsordersthat rams appearance showed Divine intervention. It also required quickthinking on Abrahams part to put aside, at the very last moment, an intentionhe was poised to act upon.

Howdo you know whether your actions are ever correct? I asked. You cant alwaysexpect a ram to be waiting in the bush.

TheRebbetzin laughed. Why not? Thats what it means to have faith in Gd.

Myown faith, a relationship with the Gd of Abraham, didnt happen overnight. Butone Shabbat at a time, it was gaining traction. Sarah had become a mother at90. Miracles could happen. I could believe them. I was 42 years old.

Iwent home and prayed for another baby.

LearningTorah on Shabbat was one thing. Faith that it actually meant somethingsignificant in my life was another. I had to take Sarah, the matriarchsextraordinary story out for a test drive. In other words, I had to apply it tomy own life.

Ithought to myself what can I do that would be a stretch of faith. I didnt needa miracle, just something a little bit unexpected.

Im over 40, I sighed to the Rebbetzin on another Shabbat.After six years of trying, I feel lucky to have one child. And here Ihesitated to admit the truth. I would love to have a second.

Of course, you can! the Rebbetzin said.

Tell me, what is the secret? Why is it that Orthodox women seemto have an easy time of conceiving one child after the other? I said,returning to conception. At my age, I couldnt afford another long wait.

The mikvah, shesaid.

Now this was going to be a stretch. It just wasnt the thing todo in my family.

But is there even a mikvahTokyo? I asked.

You can do it in the sea. The Rebbetzin made it sound like nobig deal.

Well, there are hordes of people at the beaches.

We know a secluded beach.

And just like that, my faith would be tested. On the appointedevening, the Rebbetzin turned up in front of my house with the rabbi idling thevan in the drivers seat.

Hes coming? I asked in surprise. I understood that going toThis was about to morph into a Chabad House projectmikvah is usually a completely private womens affair, certainly without anyrabbi present. But now, this was about to morph into a Chabad House project.

The Rabbi adjusted his black hat with a taxi drivers smile.Ill be your driver tonight.

I stepped into a van with a giant menorah fixed to the roof. Hemight as well have driven with a banner saying: Off to Purify theMenstruator! We zoomed off for a fast drive to the Miura Peninsula coast. Thebeach was empty when we got there, well past dark. The sea was tranquil and brightstars were our only peeping Toms.

The Rabbi stayed in the car, far from where we were heading. TheRebbetzin swapped her wig for a scarf, then she accompanied me waist-deep intothe sea. She held a prayer book up to the moonlight, and I recited a short prayer.I dunked for an instant, then reached for the towel in the Rebbetzins hands.

Lifewent on. I forgot about the mikvah.But not long after, I felt queasy and repelled by one of my favorite Japanesevegetables, burdock root. I was pregnant again. And more eager than ever tolearn Torah and find out how every decision we make can set off consequences,however insurmountable, that can lead to a miracle, too, when there is faith.

This is an excerpt from myforthcoming memoir The Marriage Out: My Jewish Family Made in Japan.

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Mikvah off the Coast of Tokyo - First-Person Stories - Chabad.org

Finally, a podcast that addresses our crisis of meaning – Big Think

Posted By on October 30, 2020

Language evolves to reflect our understanding of existence. Before Hippocrates, healing was a system of theurgydivine influence on human eventsand religious philosophy. The Greek physician is credited with separating medicine from those previous beliefs. As our understanding of science evolved, new fields emerged: astronomy, biology, physics, sociology, psychology, neuroanthropology.

That last one is still so relatively new that spell checkers don't recognize it. During a 2008 conference, the University of South Florida anthropology professor Daniel Lende revived the notion that anthropologists benefit when studying neuroscience. He argued that knowledge of the evolution of the brain offers insights into intentions, helping anthropologists better understand the motivations of past cultures.

Whereas neuroanthropology looks backward, culture architecture takes that same lens and looks forward, according to bestselling author Jamie Wheal. Wheal co-wrote the Pulitzer Prize-nominated book, Stealing Fire: How Silicon Valley, Navy SEALs and Maverick Scientists Are Revolutionizing the Way We Live and Work. Founder of the Flow Genome Project, he's the new host of the new Collective Insights podcast series Home Grown Humans, which focuses on the intersection of neuroanthropology and culture architecture.

Like Hippocrates building on past knowledge to create new systems, Wheal wants to learn from the lessons of the past and build a better future. Summating the objective of the podcast in a single question, he frames it this way:

"How do we stop seeking and stop searching and stop thrashing around, making a mess behind us, and come to fully embrace the human experience?"

The essence of the human condition, he says, lies in simplicity, reminiscent of the Golden Rule from the Talmud. A gentile asked Rabbi Hillel to explain the entirety of the Torah while standing on one foot, to which Hillel replied, "That which is despicable to you, do not do to your fellow. That is the whole Torah; the rest is commentary."

Wheal recognizes that humans love commentary as well. Storytelling is the foundation of culture. He invokes Dorothy, who went on an epic heroine's journey only to discover that there's no place like home. As with any Campbellian character, she had to leave Kansas in order to love Kansas.

When contemplating Home Grown Humans, Wheal wanted to foster conversations that include critical thought and mystical inclinations. He was inspired by a debate between Sam Harris and Jordan Peterson, in which neither thinker would concede an inch to find common ground. Instead, he wants to find such groundless New Atheist and more New Platonist. As he puts it:

"What is it like to tap people that are well-versed in reason, logic, and evidence, but also have their eye on the mystery? They've had in their own lives, or in their career or readings, some glimpse of more. Hopefully, that's come around to inform their perspective on their field of expertise and what they hold as both the liabilities and possibilities of us going forward."

To better understand the implications of neuroanthropology, Wheal recommends Jared Diamond's Pulitzer-winning Guns, Germs, and Steel and Yuval Noah Harari's Sapiens and Homo Deus, books that reveal how we arrived here. For the culture architecture piece, he cites Daniel Kahnemann's Thinking, Fast and Slow and Richard Thaler's Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness. You have all this knowledge, now what are you going to do with it?

This synthesis of ideologies creates the central thesis of Home Grown Humans.

"It's taking optimal psychology, neuroscience, and historical analysis and really using it to get under the hood of culture and use all of the tools we have from the hard sciences and social sciences to get a better understanding of what makes us tick."

To help him answer such questions, Wheal has invited a range of experts to appear on Home Grown Humans, including Sue Phillips, an instructor at Harvard Divinity School and co-founder of Sacred Design Lab; Erik Davis, author of TechGnosis and High Weirdness; Adam Gazzaley, the founder and executive director of Neuroscape; and Dennis McKenna, an ethnopharmacologist who's been leading the way in the psychedelic renaissance for decades.

The first episode of Home Grown Humans, 'Care for Your Soul: Designing Sacred Practices That Work', with Harvard's Sue Phillips, is out today. Subscribe here.

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Haredim add to COVID-19 complications in Israel – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on October 30, 2020

Israel is gradually emerging from its second COVID-19 lockdown,

imposed after things began spiraling out of control here. The lockdown has brought the rate of infection down substantially and things are now being allowed to open up slowly. Schools remain closed, although preschools have been allowed to open.

Israels public health system has proven its excellence for the most part in dealing with the crisis, but the pandemic has also highlighted longstanding divisions between Israeli society as a whole and the countrys ultra-Orthodox community. The community constitutes 13% of Israels population but accounts for 40% of the countrys coronavirus cases.

When I moved to Israel from Cleveland, I was surprised by the hostility that some Israelis openly expressed towards the haredim, as ultra-Orthodox Jews are known in Hebrew. I heard griping, first and foremost, about the fact that almost all haredi men of draft age are exempt from military service. But there was also grumbling about government funding for ultra-Orthodox educational institutions that fail to teach core subjects like math, science and English which are necessary if the graduates of these schools are to be integrated into the workforce.

But thats not the main goal of most of these schools, which view Torah scholarship as the highest form of learning. In the view of many in the haredi community, integration is not an opportunity but a threat to the communitys identity.

The chasm between mainstream and largely secular Israeli society and the ultra-Orthodox community has reached new depths over the past couple of months amid blatant disregard for COVID-19 restrictions on the part of some haredi Israelis. It has included mass prayer during the High Holy Days and even large weddings, in contravention of the ban on large gatherings.

Some haredim have claimed Israelis are applying a double standard since political protests have been permitted during most of the pandemic without major restrictions. But outdoor protests are not incubators for the virus to the extent that events such as weddings are, where people eat without masks and socialize, particularly if the events are indoors.

This month, one of the countrys most influential ultra-Orthodox rabbis, Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, who as I write this is fighting for his life after being infected with COVID-19, ordered his followers to ignore government restrictions and open ultra-Orthodox Talmud Torah elementary schools for boys. This has the medical community and much of the Israeli public up in arms.

The media coverage of the issue has featured members of the community saying that study and prayer are more important. At a news conference this month, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu criticized the school openings, but said the police didnt have the capacity to fully enforce the law. Health Minister Yuli Edelstein has called for government funding for offending schools to be cut off.

The message conveyed by some haredim that rabbinical authority takes precedence over the rule of law marks an ominous turn in relations between their community and the rest of the Israeli public. Its ironic that, after all of the struggles to create a Jewish state and to secure international recognition for it, many haredi leaders are now undermining the states authority which some of them have never recognized. On the flip side, I was saddened in listening to a haredi caller on a recent radio call-in show who spoke convincingly about the hatred that the community was feeling.

Once the COVID-19 pandemic is over, Israeli society has to address its relationship with the ultra-Orthodox community head-on, through a tough commitment to the rule of law and the message that hostility toward haredim is equally unacceptable.

Cliff Savren is a former Clevelander who covers the Middle East for the Cleveland Jewish News from Raanana, Israel.

Letters, commentaries and opinions appearing in the Cleveland Jewish News do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Cleveland Jewish Publication Company, its board, officers or staff.

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Haredim add to COVID-19 complications in Israel - Cleveland Jewish News

What’s Behind All the Pro-Azerbaijan Articles? – Armenian Weekly

Posted By on October 30, 2020

Azerbaijans President Ilham Aliyev has opened another battlefront thousands of miles away from Baku, in the pages of local and national newspapers and news sites in the US. Much like the Syrian mercenaries Baku recruited and deployed with the help of Turkish defense contractors to target Armenians, Azerbaijans US-based lobbyists are at the forefront of an information warfare that costs millions of dollars annually.

One important aspect of the work of these lobbyists is to place, disseminate and promote anti-Armenian narratives. Their tactics have evolved into a relentless smear campaign through US media outlets, painting Armenia as a close ally of Iran that undermines Western policies and Armenians as intolerant and anti-Semitic. At the same time, Azerbaijan is depicted as a beacon of tolerance, an ally of Israel and a champion of religious rights.

Bakus lobbyists continually push this narrative by placing articles in various media outlets, reaching out to editors with numerous factsheets and disseminating Baku-approved stories to contacts in positions of power. Many such propaganda pieces that are essentially commissioned by the Azerbaijani government appear in US media outlets without proper disclaimers, and therein loom the danger and deception.

Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) filings by Azerbaijans lobbyists show how they approach almost every major outlet from Bloomberg to CNN, the Washington Post, the Jerusalem Post, the New York Times, NBC, Al-Jazeera, San Francisco Chronicle, Sacramento Bee, Haaretz, USA Today, and Wall Street Journal; the list is almost interminably long.

Over the past few weeks, numerous articles have discussed Azerbaijans war on Armenia; many have had a bias, some suspiciously so. It may be impossible to tell which are penned by Aliyevs supporters and which are commissioned or disseminated by Bakus agents here; but a few are (and will be) known because of FARA filings.

From comments left under strikingly pro-Azerbaijani articles, it is clear that many readers have been frustrated and disheartened. Arguably, readers have a right to know whether the content they are consuming is either commissioned or part of a foreign governments information warfare. Without proper disclaimers under articles received from embassies by way of lobbyists, editors risk tarnishing the credibility of the news outlets they represent and deliver a blow to the idea of journalistic integrity. A simple one-liner would suffice, such as, This article was sent to us by [insert name of PR firm] on behalf of the Embassy of the Republic of Azerbaijan to the United States of America. Editors uncomfortable with such disclaimers might reconsider running blatant propaganda pieces that essentially import the state-sponsored narrative of a country with one of the worst media freedom records.

To give readers a clearer idea of how Azerbaijans lobbyists place and disseminate narratives that support Bakus propaganda campaign, I will take a close look at the activities of certain lobbyists employed by Aliyevs government, by examining hundreds of pages of FARA filings available in the US Department of Justice (DOJ) online archives.

An Information Warfare

In an Aug. 25 article titled Russia and Irans Dangerous Energy Gambit in the Caucasus and published by the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies, human rights lawyer and national security analyst Irina Tsukerman embraces all the talking points put out by Baku. She refers to Artsakh as a fake republic and an ersatz entity. After a series of hypotheticals (like Russia and Armenia might join forces to bring Russian biological weapons close to Azerbaijan), she proceeds to advise Baku on how to handle pro-Armenian sentiment in the west.

Azerbaijan should form a closer joint defense relationship with the US, benefiting from joint training and insights from experienced field operatives and officers. Additionally, greater resources need to be marshalled for information warfare and the political aspect of the battle being waged, including supporting professional media to counter disinformation, building personal and long-term relationships with public officials at all levels, and, most importantly, vigorously pursuing legislative and legal relief in US, European, and international bodies. Armenian officials responsible for human rights abuses should be sanctioned, she writes (italics my own).

Since a large chunk of her article deals with the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), which is active in DC, one might understand that Tsukerman is essentially encouraging a foreign government, Azerbaijan, to wage information warfare against a grassroots Armenian-American organization that promotes and advocates for the interests of and issues important to American citizens of Armenian origin. In other words, she is calling on Azerbaijan with its dismal media freedom record to export its relentless propaganda to the US.

In its 2020 report, Freedom House designated Azerbaijan as a consolidated authoritarian regime with a score of 10/100, observing that Constitutional guarantees for press freedom are routinely and systematically violated, as the government works to maintain a tight grip on the information landscape. Defamation remains a criminal offense. Journalists and their relatives face harassment, violence and intimidation by authorities. Many have been detained or imprisoned on fabricated charges, while others face travel bans. Armenia fared as partly free, with a score of 53/100. The report noted Independent and investigative outlets operate relatively freely in Armenia, but their work is generally found online.

We may not know what motivates Tsukermans anti-Armenian rhetoric; she has no known ties to current lobbyists for Baku.

On Oct. 20, another one of Tsukermans articles, co-authored by Jason Epstein, was published by Newsweek. Tsukerman and Epstein unite in [their] support of Sunni-majority Turkeys Shia ally, Azerbaijan, an unabashedly pro-Western country, as it is unfairly smeared. The article argues that the war is not about religion; it discusses Azerbaijans secularism, the Popes 2016 visit to Baku, religious minorities in Azerbaijan, and Ashkenazi, Georgian and Mountain Jews.

No wonder Iran, the largest Shia country in the world but with ethnic Azeris comprising of up to 30 percent of its population, feels threatened by a tolerant Azerbaijans continued geopolitical success and therefore supports Armenia, write the authors. Tsukermans co-author Epstein is the president of Southfive Strategies, LLC and a former public relations consultant for the Turkish Embassy in Washington (2002 2007); he has long considered [himself] both pro-Israel and pro-Turkey. Among Southfives past clients are the Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy in Baku, the Turkish Embassy in Washington and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus Washington office.

Epsteins work with the Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy, which is funded by the Azerbaijani government, began on Aug. 1, 2008, when Epstein registered as a foreign agent with the DOJs FARA unit for his work with the Academy. In describing his engagement with that entity, Epstein wrote, Assisting the Academy in producing a policy conference in Azerbaijan on US-Azeri relations, as well as meetings with Azeri officials, business leaders, religious leaders, and media personalities.

When asked whether Southfive would engage in political activities and what those activities might entail, Epstein responded, Encouraging journalists to file stories on US-Azeri relations, based on their experiences at the conference and during various meetings.

The disclaimer under the Newsweek article reads: Jason Epstein is president of Southfive Strategies, LLC, an international public affairs consultancy. Irina Tsukerman is a New York-based human rights lawyer and national security/geopolitical analyst, the vice president of Timberwolf Phoenix, a media and security consultancy, and an adviser to the London-based International Justice Organization. The views expressed in this article are the writers own.

There is no mention of Epsteins past lobbying work for the governments of Azerbaijan and Turkey. A reader would have to independently research Southfive Strategies to learn that for years it had engaged in lobbying on behalf of Azerbaijan and Turkey.

Bakus US Agents

A FARA filing by the Podesta Group in 2013 details the extent of its outreach to US politicians, universities, think tanks, but also most major news outlets, including Bloomberg, Foreign Policy, CNN, Washington Post (and Times), EurasiaNet, Associated Press, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, Jerusalem Post, Al-Jazeera, Los Angeles Times, NBC, New York Times and Haaretz.

Just between June and December of 2017, Podesta received $260,735.56 for its work on behalf of the Azerbaijani Embassy in the U.S., according to a Department of Justice (DOJ) report. That year, Podesta was one of four companies registered with the DOJ for work on behalf of Azerbaijan that cost Baku $560,735.56. During a six-month period that same year, 16 companies worked on behalf of Turkey with a total (reported) price tag of $4,284,020.06. Meanwhile, during the six-month period, an Avedis Boyamian offered pro-bono policy consultation to Armenia; price tag: $0. This information is available in the DOJ report titled, Report of the Attorney General to the Congress of the United States on the Administration of the Foreign Agents Registration Act of 1938, as amended, for the six months ending December 31, 2017.

Among the lobby groups that have represented Azerbaijan in the past couple of years are the Livingston Group (contract terminated on Oct. 13), Stellar Jay Communications, BGR Government Affairs, Sanitas International, Rasky Partners (click here for an earlier and more detailed contract, and here and here for samples of their media outreach), and Baker Donelson (contracted by BGR). Meanwhile, another lobbying firm, S-3 Group, which works on behalf of the Baku-based Investment Corporation owned by Seyidov Tural Oglu, has create[d] and place[d] earned and digital media to further diplomacy between America and Azerbaijan, according to a DOJ filing; for instance, S-3 sent out pro-Azerbaijan factsheets on Oct. 15.

To get an idea of the ties, experience and expertise some of these lobby groups retain, a quick glance at the rank and file of BGR Public Affairs will suffice. Among their team members are: former Governor of Mississippi Haley Barbour; former Policy Director at the Senate Finance Committee Matt Hoffmann; Former Representative Sean Duffy (R-WI); former Senior Executive Clandestine Service Officer with the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Daniel Hoffman; former FBI man Tom Locke; former US Ambassador to NATO Kurt Volker; former Director of Legislative Affairs for the National Security Council Mark Tavlarides; former senior USAID official Lester Munson; a Frank Ahrens who can arrange client interviews with Fox News, CNN, The Washington Post and major wire services; and a Jeff Birnbaum who is a former White House, congressional and tax reporter for the Wall Street Journal, a senior political correspondent for Time Magazine, Washington bureau chief for Fortune Magazine and a columnist for the Washington Post.

When Azerbaijan and Turkey pay millions to employ such lobbying firms, they are in effect buying ease of access to major national news services.

A Stellar Case

The case of one public relations firm employed by Baku might offer a glimpse into the Azeri lobbying efforts through pro-Azerbaijan articles in US media. The articles pushed on various editors deal with that general theme of tolerant Azerbaijan and intolerant Armenia. Whatever information warfare Tsukerman might have been alluding to in her article is displayed below.

At the center of the story is Jacob Kamaras, the former editor-in-chief of the Jewish National Syndicate (JNS), where pro-Azerbaijan and anti-Armenian articles have appeared in the past two years (for instance, Irina Tsukermans Oct. 12 article), including pieces that promote denial of the Armenian Genocide. Kamaras is the founder and chief of Stellar Jay Communications, which actively lobbied for the Azerbaijani Embassy in the US in 2020, and about which Julian Pecquet, founder and editor of the Foreign Lobby Report, has written. Note that Kamaras has filed a Fictitious Business Name Statement for his company with the DOJ.

Kamaras registered to lobby for the Azerbaijani Embassy on Jan. 31, 2020. The DOJ form informs that the registrant engages with Azerbaijans Ambassador Elin Suleymanov and receives a $3,300 fee per project. Kamaras principal mode of operation is through outreach to newspapers and editors, as noted in another DOJ file. Still another DOJ filing reveals that Kamaras, whose work for the Embassy entailed media consulting and op-ed placement, was paid $56,100 between Feb. 17 and July 10, 2020, presumably for 17 projects.

Among the papers Kamaras submitted to the DOJ are a number of emails he sent to news outlets, urging them to publish certain pro-Azerbaijan articles and offering certain pro-Azerbaijan talking points. There are 14 files (excluding the companys registration) that span the first eight months of the year; the last disclosure is dated August 7.

Propaganda: Israel Should Ally with Tolerant Azerbaijan

In the first email dated Feb. 12, addressed to the editors at the conservative CNSNews.com, Kamaras asks the news website to consider publishing an article by Maayan Hoffman, the news editor at The Jerusalem Post, titled, A Jewish-Muslim paradigm for peace. Hoffman argues that Azerbaijan has pioneered a paradigm for warm Muslim ties with Israel, the nation Tehran repeatedly vows to wipe off the map Israel only stands to benefit from having an ally like Azerbaijan on the border of arguably the Jewish states fiercest enemy. She stresses that Jews live in Azerbaijan in peace and prosperity and details various developments in the benevolent attitude of Baku towards its Jewish minority population.

Kamaras email (like all his other emails discussed below) ends with a disclaimer noting that the email and its contents are sent by Stellar Jay Communications on behalf of the Azerbaijani Embassy.

On Feb. 13, CNSNews published the story, slightly altering the headline to read, Heres What a Jewish-Muslim Paradigm for Peace Looks Like. A brief bio of the author appeared below the article: Maayan Hoffman is news editor and head of online content and strategy at The Jerusalem Post. She has been an American-Israeli international journalist for more than two decades. There was no mention of Stellar Jay Communications or the Azerbaijani Embassy.

Propaganda: Armenia is Anti-Semitic

Kamaras second email dated March 9 is addressed to Rob Shimshock of CNSNews, containing yet another article, this time by Jesse Bogner and titled The old anti-Semitism is alive and well. This piece alleges that there is medieval-style anti-Semitism coming from Armenian organizations and commentators, and that [T]he ANCAs recent rhetoric on Twitter represents the latest indicator of not only the anti-Semitism emanating from Armenia, one of the worlds oldest Christian nations, but also of the disturbing perpetuation of classical Christian anti-Semitism. Of course, Bogner portrays Azerbaijan as a haven of tolerance. By contrast, Armenias Muslim-majority neighbor has a deep relationship with Israel, no history of anti-Semitism, and a prosperous Jewish community of its own for more than two millennia, he writes.

Apparently CNSNews did not publish Bogners article. On March 15, the piece was published on Bogners blog on The Times of Israel. Again, there was no mention of the Azerbaijani Embassy; just Bogners bio: Jesse Bogner is an author and journalist. His memoir and social critique, The Egotist, has been translated into five languages. His work has been featured in The Daily Caller, MSN, The Daily Wire and The Huffington Post. His book of articles, Tikkunim (Corrections), was released in January 2018.

It is outside the scope of this article to counter such propaganda. However, I will refer you to Yoav Loeffs Jan. 27 article titled, Armenias Antisemitism? The Truth Is Different, in The Jerusalem Post, which he wrote coincidentally in response to a piece by Hoffmanthe same Hoffman whose articles Kamaras disseminated on behalf of Azerbaijans Embassy. Loeff, who teaches Armenian history and culture at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, is Jewish and has traveled to Armenia with other Jews and Israelis on many occasions, and stresses that he has never heard a hint of antisemitic expression.

If there is some criticism, it is usually about Israels hesitation to recognize the Armenian genocide that was perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire he writes.

Armenias small Jewish community never suffered antisemitism in their adopted homeland. Most of them left in the early 1990s, after the severe earthquake in the north of the country in 1988 and the collapse of the Soviet Union, explains Loeff. He notes the dire economic situation following the earthquake and the Artsakh war and adds, They did not leave because they faced any antisemitism; they left because they sought better life.

Loeff also discusses the various ways in which Armenian government representatives had honored Holocaust victims, from Armenian President Armen Sarkissians attendance at the World Holocaust Forum in Jerusalem to the erection of a monument in Yerevan in memory of the victims of the Holocaust and the Armenian Genocide. Unfortunately, there is no parallel such monument in Israel, he adds.

Propaganda: Azerbaijan is a Friend to Israel

On March 13, Kamaras emailed The Jewish Voice editor Fern Sidman, offering him a piece by Hoffman, this time titled, Could fighting coronavirus be the latest frontier in the Israel-Azerbaijan relationship? Hoffman noted the presence of Azerbaijans Finance Minister Samir Shafirov at the AIPAC Policy Conference and quoted him to have said, Cooperation with Israel is not limited to oil supply; we are interested in widening cooperation in defense and the transfer of technology. Apparently Shafirov also read Azerbaijans first-lady-turned-vice-president Mehriban Aliyevas remarks praising Azerbaijani-Jewish ties in the US. The gist of the article was the importance of strengthening Azerbaijani-Israeli ties. The email closed with the usual disclaimer about Kamaras communicating on behalf of the Azerbaijani Embassy.

Hoffmans piece was accepted and published without any mention of Kamaras firm or the Azerbaijani Embassy. However, some days later, NBC news published a piece highlighting Hoffmans article as an example of foreign governments using American lobbyists to promote their efforts to fight the coronavirus outbreak and safeguard their countries reputations in the U.S. capital. NBC goes on to point out that The piece was written by Maayan Hoffman, identified as a Jerusalem Post news editor, but the published version makes no mention that the commentary was placed by Stellar Jay Communications, a lobbying firm representing the government of Azerbaijan, as a FARA filing shows.

NBC was right about foreign governments promoting their countries, safeguarding their reputations and placing op-eds in various papers. What NBC failed to understand is that this was not about the coronavirus, but part of an information war that ultimately feeds and bolsters the myth of the religiously tolerant Azerbaijan and the intolerant Armenia; and that is one of the key objectives of Baku, and by extension their US agents.

Propaganda: Armenia is a Friend to Iran

On April 23, Kamaras sent out another email to CNSNews with an article written by Bogner, whoin Kamaras wordsexamines how the coronavirus is not stopping Iran from fueling conflict and undermining sanctions through its proxies. Specifically, he looks at Armenias role in empowering Iran economically. The article, titled, Coronavirus doesnt stop Iran from fueling the fire of conflict, accuses Iranian trucks of delivering fuel to Nagorno-Karabakh, the Armenian-occupied region which several U.N. resolutions affirm as part of Azerbaijan, charges Armenian banks of enabling Tehran, and faults Democratic US lawmakers for having a pro-Armenian policy agenda.

The article ignores Azerbaijans ties with Iran, the fact that in 2019 Azerbaijans imports from Iran were worth US $452.63 million and exports at US $41.13 million, while Armenias imports from Iran were worth US $324.7 million and exports at US $83.84 million, according to the United Nations COMTRADE database. In other words, both countries maintain an economic relationship with their sanctioned neighbor.

Once again, Bogners piece did not appear in CNSNews and instead was published on his blog on the Times of Israel without any mention of the Azerbaijani Embassy or Jay Stellar Communications.

Propaganda: Azerbaijan Champions Religious Freedom

Kamaras next email (May 6) was also to CNSNews, in which it becomes clear that Rob Shimshock (the recipient) did not respond to the lobbyists previous two emails (which also explains why Bogners pieces ended up on his blog). This time, Kamaras submits his own article titled Azerbaijans postponed Formula 1 race transcends sports about which he tells Shimshock, I write that despite the events postponement this year, the annual Formula 1 auto race hosted by Muslim-majority Azerbaijan particularly during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan is a powerful display of religious freedom, especially in a world plagued by sectarian conflict and now by the invisible enemy of the coronavirus.

What Kamaras fails to mention is that Freedom House gave Azerbaijan a score of 0 out 4 for religious freedom in its 2020 report, which noted, The regime exercises control over religion through state-affiliated entities such as the Caucasus Muslim Board. Religious communities that attempt to operate independently face burdensome registration requirements, interference with the importation and distribution of printed religious materials, and arrest and harassment of religious leaders with international ties or a significant following. In other words, the idea of a religiously tolerant Azerbaijan is a myth nurtured by Bakus agents abroad.

In any case, at the end of the article submission, Kamaras includes his bio: Jacob Kamaras, former editor in chief of the Jewish News Syndicate, is noted for his work on the Middle East and American politics. His writing has appeared in the Washington Times, Independent Journal Review, the American Spectator, and various Jewish and Israeli media. It makes no mention of his role as a lobbyist on behalf of the Embassy of Azerbaijan to the US. However, the email does end with the usual disclaimer.

CNSNews published the article on May 7, slightly altering the title to read, Azerbaijans Grand Prix Transcends Sports, Speaks to Religious Freedom. However, it added the following to Kamaras bio: Jacob Kamaras is founder of Stellar Jay Communications, a PR firm representing Azerbaijan. The next day, another lobbyist on behalf of Azerbaijan, Mark Tavlarides of the BGR Group, emailed the article out to relevant contacts, urging them to read it.

Propaganda: Israel and Azerbaijan are Partners (and Trailblazers in the Understanding of Aging)

A few days later, Kamaras reached out to the editor of the Salinas Californian, Silas Lyons, with a story written by Diana Cohen Altman, former executive director of the Karabakh Foundation and a contributor to the JNS. Altmans piece was about Azerbaijanis who live up to 120 years old in Lankaran. Altman discusses diet, genetics and clusters of very old people in Azerbaijan, as well as longevity in Ashkenazi Jewish populations. Quoted in the piece is a surgeon who is a member of the Azerbaijan-Israel Inter-Parliamentary Work Group. The piece concludes with yet another nod to Azerbaijani-Israeli friendship with these words: Azerbaijan has fostered significant partnerships in the humanities and other disciplines, and the West is building an understanding of Azerbaijani culture and contributions. Amid the pandemic and in the coming years, the U.S. scientific community may look to Israel and Azerbaijan who are partners in technical and other arenas for breakthroughs in the understanding of aging.

The piece did not appear in The Californian. Instead, it was published by The Jerusalem Post on June 4. The final paragraphs were altered a bit, and there was this addition: The Azerbaijani superaging phenomenon may also be of particular interest to social scientists, given major societal changes during the past century. Consider this: Someone over the age of 100 might have witnessed what is now the Republic of Azerbaijan as a portion of the Russian Empire, a part of the early Azerbaijani Democratic Republic, and as an S.S.R. of the Soviet Union. In effect, this addition attempts to insert a historical footnote in this article that on the surface appears to be about longevity.

Altmans bio appears at the end of the piece: Diana Cohen Altman, principal of Cultural Diplomacy Associates, L.L.C., and former executive director of the US cultural non-profit Karabakh Foundation, writes extensively about Azerbaijani cultural and civil-society topics. It made no mention of the Embassy of Azerbaijan or Jay Stellar Communications. Also to note, Altman is still listed on the Karabakh Foundations website as its Executive Director.

Propaganda: Armenians are Intolerant, Anti-Semitic

On June 11, through Kamaras, Baku resorted again to charges of anti-Semitism as a desperate attempt to vilify Armenian Americans. An email informs that Kamaras own article appeared in BreakingIsraelNews (Israel365News.com), titled Armenias Self-Defeating Campaign Against Christians. The article ran as an op-ed. It decried Armenian-American opposition to evangelical pastor Rev. Johnnie Moores support of Azerbaijan and Trumps Middle East policies, singled out Asbarez news for its coverage and bashed the ANCA, accusing it of anti-Semitic tweets.

Although at the base of his email, Kamaras included his disclaimerThis material is distributed by Stellar Jay Communications on behalf of the Embassy of the Republic of Azerbaijan to the United States of Americathe published article made no mention of the authors bio or of his work on behalf of the Azerbaijani Embassy. Readers were (and continue to be) misled into believing the piece was written by a concerned writer and not a paid agent of Azerbaijans propaganda campaign. The Azerbaijani news.az reprinted the article, also without any mention of Kamaras role as a foreign agent for Baku.

Propaganda: Armenia is an Occupier; Unreliable Partner; Aids Iran

On July 14, Kamaras approached The Washington Free Beacon with a list of Azerbaijani talking points on the escalation of violence between Armenia and Azerbaijan. I wanted to share a few angles below that could help you provide broader context in any story, if you choose to pursue one. Should you want to set up a phone interview with the ambassador, please let me know and Ill be happy to arrange it, wrote Kamaras. The Beacon did not take him up on the offer. In fact their last report that even mentions Azerbaijan ran in January of this year. Nonetheless, its worth reviewing Kamaras talking points.

Aside from highlighting some European support for Azerbaijans territorial integrity, Kamaras shared an article by none other than Bogner in American Thinker titled, Democrats West Bank rhetoric rings hollow, in which the author asks, Where is the condemnation of Armenias occupation of the same percentage of internationally recognized Azerbaijani territory, in the Nagorno-Karabakh region?; another article by Paul Miller in the JNS titled, Beware of the sanctions busters, accuses Armenia of offering the [Iranian] mullahs one of their best escape routes from crippling American sanctions; as well as Hoffmans article in BreakingIsraelNews titled, A Nation that is Faithful to Iran Is no Reliable Partner (one can glean the spirit of the article from the title). He also shared a July 7 article in Arab News by Iranian American journalist Adelle Nazarian, a foreign policy analyst with Breitbart News who was in Azerbaijan in 2019. In it, Nazarian argues that Now is the time for US lawmakers to echo Europes support for territorial integrity. Hypocrisy should no longer be accepted.

Propaganda: Armenians are Plagued by Extremist Ideologies(Like Nazism and Anti-Semitism)

On July 13, Kamaras emailed Fox News correspondent Hollie McKay, offering her the opportunity to interview Azerbaijans Ambassador to the US Elin Suleymanov. McKay had interviewed the Ambassador in March 2019. She did not interview the Ambassador in July, but Fox News did speak with him on Sept. 28, just as Azerbaijan launched its offensive. (On Oct. 4 McKay did report on the recruitment of Syrian fighters by Turkish defense contractors to fight in Azerbaijan).

In early August, Kamaras approached a number of news sites on behalf of Amb. Suleymanov. On Aug. 5, he emailed Mercury News asking them to publish an article penned by the Ambassador, titled Hate crimes have no place under the California sun.

The Ambassadors article centers on a scuffle between Armenian and Azerbaijani protesters in Los Angeles. He proceeds to highlight some statements from Jewish American groups regarding the incident and suddenly hurls allegations of anti-Semitism. Both Armenia and the Armenian communities abroad have long been plagued by extremist ideologies, political violence and a complicated history with anti-Semitism, Nazi collaborators and Middle Eastern radicals, he writes.

Such broad charges are not only insulting to Armenians worldwide and Armenian Americans, many of whom fought the Nazis, but also warps history, erasing the sacrifices of many like the members of the Manouchian Group, one of the most active French resistance groups. Of course, this is coming from the representative of a government that wholeheartedly joins neighbor Turkey in its unashamed and continued denial of the genocide perpetrated by its Ottoman Turkish predecessor.

Essentially, the Ambassador is relying on charges of anti-Semitism against Armenians to draw support for the Azerbaijani policies and claims against Artsakh. By doing so, he is using the very real presence and danger of anti-Semitism in the world as a tool to further Bakus agenda and in the hopes of garnering Jewish American and Israeli sympathies. As Kamaras previous emails show, Bakus tactics have at their core the manipulation of fears towards both Iran and anti-Semitism.

The Ambassadors article was presumably rejected by Mercury News, because on Aug. 6 Kamaras submitted the same piece to the San Francisco Chronicle. Three minutes later, he sent the piece to The Sacramento Bee; and a minute later to The Hill. The article was finally published in The Monterey County Herald on Aug. 12, despite its overt propagandizing and vilification of Armenians worldwide.

That is the last of Kamaras activities submitted to the DOJ.

A Glance at BGR

Other lobby groups, such as BGR, also heavily publicized pro-Azerbaijan viewpoints and articles, and reached out to various media outlets for interviews, or to offer talking points. For instance, the DOJ FARA registration unit received a copy of an email from Mark Tavlarides of the BGR Group, which shared an article by the same Nazarian, titled, Azerbaijan: A Nation that Bears the Torch, and Burden, of Bringing Religious Freedom to its Less Tolerant Neighbours in the Region.

The author, Adelle Nazarian, visited Azerbaijans 5th World Forum on Intercultural Dialogue in Baku. Nazarian noted the insightful meetings and visits which left her acutely aware of the sensitive nature of Azerbaijans position as a potential kingmaker for the cause of religious freedom and unity between the three Abrahamic faiths in the region. She expressed hope that religious freedom would also flourish in Azerbaijans neighbors in the region, wrote Tavlarides in his email.

Tavlarides has on many occasions disseminated pro-Azerbaijan articles on behalf of the Embassy, such as a piece by Hoffman in the JNS, titled Azerbaijani national hero provides a paradigm for Jewish-Muslim relations. On numerous other instances, Tavlarides sent out the links to articles, official Azerbaijani statements, resources, factsheets (including an Oct. 5 email), press releases, the pro-Azerbaijan statements of various organizations and politicians, and tweets such as one sent out by Israels Ambassador to the US touting Azerbaijan as a beacon of religious tolerance, as well as another one by Luke Coffey, director of Foreign Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation, critical of Armenia and Armenians.

In a turn from the cynical to the absurd, Tavlarides also disseminated a link to an episode of the CBS show Seal Team, which depicts the fictional support of elite US forces to help protect an Azerbaijani power plant from a potential attack by Armenian loyalists, Shiite militia, or foreign powers looking to reduce American influence in the region. Tavlarides went on to stress that The scene emphasizes the strategic role of Azerbaijan as our only ally in the Caspian Sea and a deterrent to unaligned powers in the area.

Azerbaijan paid BGR $510,000 in 2019, $600,000 in 2018, and $490,000 in 2017.

The Case of Brenda Shaffer

In 2015, Till Bruckner of the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) published a piece titled, How to Build Yourself a Stealth Lobbyist, Azerbaijani Style. The focus of the article is Brenda Shaffer, a visiting researcher and adjunct professor at Georgetown University, a Senior Fellow at the Atlantic Councils Global Energy Center, professor at the University of Haifa, and former head of the Caspian Studies Program at Harvard, which was funded by the Azerbaijan Chamber of Commerce. Bruckner discusses Shaffers various activities and lays out her myriad connections with Azerbaijans lobbyists, including her role as adviser to the State Oil Company of the Azerbaijan Republic (SOCAR).

According to Bruckner, Shaffers activities included testifying before the House of Representatives Committee on International Relations, contributing to various DC think tanks (including a panel discussion on Azerbaijan, hosted by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, during which she reportedly praised the countrys vibrant press), and writing numerous op-eds for US and Israeli news outlets. She was often consulted on matters relating to Azerbaijanwhether by the media or US officials.

Supported by an overseas regime and an assorted network of overt and undercover lobbyists, she used oil money to build her academic credentials, then in turn used those credentials to promote Azerbaijans agendas through Congressional testimony, dozens of newspaper op-eds and media appearances, countless think tank events, and even scholarly publications, wrote Bruckner.

In a 2006 Harpers Magazine piece titled Academics for Hire, journalist Ken Silverstein wrote, Caspian watchers beware: the next time you see or hear an independent American expert talking about how the regions rulers are implementing bold reforms, check the experts credentials to see just how independent he or she truly is.

After inquiries by Bruckner, some newspapers like The New York Times and The Washington Post added disclaimers under Shaffers articles, disclosing her roles and ties to SOCAR. Others did not.

Shaffer continues to publish op-eds on the subject. For instance, on Oct. 14, JNS ran a piece by Sean Savage titled, How the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict could impact Israels regional strategic landscape.

Israel and Azerbaijan maintain a strategic alliance. It is not just about arms sales or oil, but a very deep strategic cooperation, she told JNS, adding, Israel has friendly ties with the Armenian people and is home to a vibrant Armenian community. On strategic issues, however, the two states are on different sides. Armenia has close cooperation with Iran, and much of the military supplies to Armenia today transit Iranian territory.

Shaffers credentials were left as a senior fellow at the Atlantic Councils Global Energy Center. The JNS piece was reprinted in multiple outlets.

Armenian Americans Fight Back

The ANCA, the Armenian Assembly and many concerned Armenian Americans have been vocal with their efforts to pressure lobbyists to back down and terminate their contracts, as Foreign Lobbys Pecquet reports. Already over the weekend, the Armenian diaspora bombarded the S-3 Group with more than a thousand emails with an identical message pressuring the Washington public affairs firm to stop representing a new client from Azerbaijan (Foreign Lobby Report was copied on the emails), wrote Pecquet, adding, The firm recently picked up a Baku-based company called Investment Corporation, LLC for $25,000 per month to create and place earned and digital media to further diplomacy. The diaspora letter, which you can read in its entirety here, describes S-3s client as a thinly veiled front for the Government of Azerbaijan through a proxy shell corporation.

Their aim is to vilify Armenians worldwide.

The Livingston Group terminated its contract with the government of Azerbaijan on Oct. 13. Pecquet notes that this came three months after the lobby group informed the DOJ that it was negotiating another contract with Baku. Pecquet also reported that DLA Piper, a lobby group working for the state-owned Azerbaijan Railways CJSC, terminated its contract on Oct. 19. DLA Piper was contracted to provide the foreign principal with legal advice and assistance relating to U.S. sanctions on Iran that affect the transport of oil, gas, and other petrochemical products that originate in third countries and that transit through Iran.

Meanwhile, the lobbying firm Mercury Public Affairs cut its ties with Turkey on Oct. 23, after pressure from the Armenian American community. The decision came following protests led by the ANCA and the Armenian Assembly outside the firms offices, as well as pressure from current clients like Los Angeles County, California State Assembly, and Los Angeles Community College District representatives, reported Politico.

A lot of people have bought a lot of summer homes and fishing boats and put their grandkids through college by lying about Armenia and covering up for Azerbaijan, ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian told Politico.

Hamparian said that BGR was next on the list.

Fact: Baku Aims to Vilify Armenians through US Media

Some of the articles disseminated by these lobby groups employed by Azerbaijan cross-link with others written by authors like Bogner, desperately trying to paint Armenia as a threat like Iran, and Armenians as anti-Semites. Reading these articles, one might not even realize that there is a Jewish community in Armenia as well, and they too have spoken up (See Lara Setrakians article in Haaretz titled, Im Jewish and Armenian. Israeli Weapons Are Killing My People). Their existence is not weaponized in western media by either Armenians or the Armenian government.

In all this, it is clear that Azerbaijans smear campaign against Armenia relies on those two tales: Armenia is dangerous; and Armenians are intolerant and anti-Semitic. The basic calculations run something like this: Israel is good; Iran is bad; Armenia is to Azerbaijan what Iran is to Israel; therefore, Armenia must be bad, and Azerbaijan must be good; and furthermore, Israel and Azerbaijan must stand united, while Iran and Armenia are the enemy and must be sanctioned. These are the points that are being pushed by Bakus lobbyists to elicit an unfavorable public perception of Armenia and Armenians. Their aim is to vilify Armenians worldwide. The sheer number of articles pushing this narrative is astounding. Some of them are paid for and disseminated by Azerbaijans lobbyists, and published without any disclaimers to highlight that fact. The propaganda is so blatant that one wonders how anyonewhether readers or editorscould take any of these pieces seriously.

However, the responsibility to vet and flag such articles falls squarely at the feet of editors. By publishing articles without the appropriate scrutiny and disclaimers, editors are complicit in the disinformation campaign and agents of Bakus information war. Mercenaries and lobbyists are motivated by Aliyevs petro-dollars. One can only hope that editors are driven by the pursuit of truth; and those who are not should consider sending their resumes to the Azerbaijani Embassy in DC.

Authors note: Id like to thank Khatchig Mouradian for his feedback. This article does not deal with the activities of lobby groups working on behalf of Turkey, or the financial contributions of Azerbaijans lobby groups to US politicians running for office, or other activities and outreach efforts (such as the Oct. 2 Zoom session with Amb. Suleymanov and congressional staff hosted by BGR), as they are outside the scope of this piece. Those interested can read more about Azerbaijans lobbying efforts at Opensecrets.org, a website that tracks developments in the shady lobbying world.

Nanore Barsoumian was the editor of the Armenian Weekly from 2014 to 2016. She served as assistant editor of the Armenian Weekly from 2010 to 2014. Her writings focus on human rights, politics, poverty, and environmental and gender issues. She has reported from Armenia, Nagorno-Karabagh, Javakhk and Turkey. She earned her B.A. degree in Political Science and English and her M.A. in Conflict Resolution from the University of Massachusetts (Boston).

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What's Behind All the Pro-Azerbaijan Articles? - Armenian Weekly

Statement from Governor Cuomo on Two-Year Anniversary of Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting – ny.gov

Posted By on October 28, 2020

Statement from Governor Cuomo on Two-Year Anniversary of Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting | Governor Andrew M. Cuomo Skip to main content October 27, 2020

Albany, NY

"Onthe two-year anniversary of the horrific shooting that killed 11 Jewish worshippers as they prayed inside the Tree of Life synagogue, our hearts remain heavy with sadness as we continue to mourn those who lost their lives that day. Such senseless acts of violence have no place in this country, and thoughts and prayers are never enough. This year, New York launched the 'No Hate in Our State' campaign to combat a rising tide of Anti-Semitic hate-crimes and passed the Josef Neumann Hates Crimes Domestic Terrorism Act, a first-in-the-nation domestic terrorism law. We will never cease taking bold and aggressive actions to protect marginalized communities and to stop the viral spread of hate in this country."

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Statement from Governor Cuomo on Two-Year Anniversary of Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting - ny.gov

A Moment Of Silence For The 11 Lives Lost At The Tree Of Life Synagogue – CBS Pittsburgh

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A Moment Of Silence For The 11 Lives Lost At The Tree Of Life Synagogue - CBS Pittsburgh

‘Love Can Overpower Hatred’: Remembering The Lives Lost 2 Years Ago At Tree Of Life Synagogue – CBS Pittsburgh

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Pennsylvania Mail-In Ballot Application Deadline PassesDozens of voters raced over to their county elections bureaus to get their mail-in ballot applications in on the deadline day; KDKA's Royce Jones reports.

Pittsburgh Community Marks 2 Years Since Tree Of Life TragedyTwo years after the Tree of Life mass shooting, Pittsburgh remembers the 11 lives lost; KDKA's Meghan Schiller reports.

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'Love Can Overpower Hatred': Remembering The Lives Lost 2 Years Ago At Tree Of Life Synagogue - CBS Pittsburgh

On Second Anniversary of Pittsburgh Synagogue Massacre, Top US Jewish Group Urges Unity in Fight Against ‘Pernicious Cancer of Antisemitism’ -…

Posted By on October 28, 2020

A man prays at a makeshift memorial outside the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Oct. 31, 2018. Photo: Reuters / Cathal McNaughton.

Ahead of the second anniversary of the Pittsburgh synagogue massacre on Tuesday, a top US Jewish group issued a statement remembering the victims and urging renewed vigorousness in the fight against antisemitism.

We observe the second anniversary of the deadliest antisemitic attack in American history, in which 11 innocent people were murdered simply because they were Jews, the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations said. We mourn the lives lost and the senseless carnage wrought upon congregations Tree of Life, Dor Hadash, and New Light two years ago at their shared synagogue, and we stand in solidarity with the Pittsburgh Jewish community.

This tragedy ended the age of innocence for American Jewry, it added. It can no longer be said that antisemitism will not manifest itself in this country. As we recall the victims and express sympathy to their families, we must also learn from this tragedy and work to prevent further incidents. When Jew-hatred rears its ugly head, there must be action from all levels of government and all sectors of society to counter it and to hold to account perpetrators, inviters, and enablers. The security of our communities and our institutions must be paramount.

As we mark this solemn occasion, words and condolences are not enough, the Conference of Presidents implored. There must be a meaningful and sustained response from Jews and non-Jews alike. We should not be alone in the fight against the worlds oldest hatred, in America or anywhere else. We must unite to combat the pernicious cancer of antisemitism; together we can neutralize this threat to our community.

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On Second Anniversary of Pittsburgh Synagogue Massacre, Top US Jewish Group Urges Unity in Fight Against 'Pernicious Cancer of Antisemitism' -...

Richmond synagogue inviting people to explore ‘Secrets of the Bible’ – Richmond News

Posted By on October 28, 2020

One of Richmonds Jewish congregations is offering people a chance to find out more about bible, from iconic stories and mystical meanings to lessons for life.

Beginning Wednesday, Nov. 4 at 7:30pm, Chabad Richmond will be offering a new six-session course from the Rohr Jewish Learning Institute (JLI), called Secrets of the Bible.

The course will be offered both in-person, to a limited audience, at 4775 Blundell Rd. (following COVID-19 restrictions), and online via Zoom.

All classes will be recorded on Zoom and accessible online for six days after each class.

People tend to read biblical stories like they do mythology, said Rabbi Baitelman of Chabad Richmond, the local JLI instructor.

Our course invites participants to look deeper and discover the underlying themes and relevant life lessons these stories were designed to convey.

The course presents a unique way of reading the stories of Adam and Eve and the Tree of Knowledge, Noah and the great flood, the lifelong feud between Jacob and Esau, Josephs multicolored coat, the golden calf, and Korahs rebellion.

Each of these stories answers the questions: What is the deeper meaning behind the story? How does it shape the Jewish worldview? What wisdom does it hold for us today?

Throughout the six sessions, Secrets of the Bible explores major life themes, including human subjectivity and bias; the underpinnings of relationships; negotiating spiritual growth with practical impact; why inspiration is fleeting and how to make it last; understanding equality and privilege; and navigating parallel spiritual and material life paths.

To register and for more information call 604-277-6427 or visit http://www.ChabadRichmond.com/JLI. Cost is $95/person or $160/couple and includes a textbook. Classes are 90 minutes long.

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Richmond synagogue inviting people to explore 'Secrets of the Bible' - Richmond News


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