Page 927«..1020..926927928929..940950..»

Judaism can provide the answer to our current crisis of leadership – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on October 28, 2020

Over the recent holiday I was sitting in the sukkah and pondering the meaning of the Ushpizin, the unusual custom in which we invite Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, Aaron, Joseph and David to our sukkah. Aside from the pressure this adds to my need to embellish the meal for such illustrious guests, I was confused as to why we actually do this. Then I had an epiphany.Doesnt the Talmud say that the Temples altar stood on land belonging to the tribe of Benjamin giving it the status of being an ushpizkhan of the Divine presence? (Zevahim 53b) This of course means that Benjamin merited to host the Divine presence in the Temple.Then I took out the Aramaic dictionary and found that Ushpizin means hosts, not guests. So we are actually inviting the hosts of each day to our sukkah. Why are they the hosts? These seven shepherds (roim) are our iconic leaders of old, the founding fathers of our nation. Each one inspired us in his unique way. So as the year begins, we dedicate each day of Sukkot to ponder their instructions and life stories.We are definitely in need of good leadership. I hear this from many people, regardless of their political bent. So what went wrong?In Israel we have been conditioned to believe that leadership true leadership, the one that can influence life and affect change can only come from the political arena. This has been so ingrained in our thinking that every political analyst or interviewer seems to secretly covet some political position. We are probably the only democracy in which this happens. Our generals all want to jump into the political swimming pool, whether they possess talents in this field or not. Growing up in Canada, I never met anyone who actually wanted to be a member of parliament. Personally, I doubt whether the political arena can ever produce true leadership. After all, its not for nothing that a political party in Hebrew is called a miflaga, which means division, since all political parties are divisive. Vote for me for salvation since the opposition will sell you to the wolves, seems to be a familiar message. How can such a leader even if they won an election (as a minority government of course) and coerced some other agenda-seeking parties to join for opportunistic reasons bring unity to a now-divided people? In fact, it is the parties themselves that perpetuate the divisions in order to reap political gain.A nation of tribesThe State of Israel is composed of many tribes. It is the only place in the world where Jews from across the globe have come together. This diversity enriches Israeli life with vigor, but it also presents challenges. Did you notice how many parties ran for Knesset seats (29 last election) and how many actually got in (10)? I think this is unprecedented. You could counter and say we need this. After all, our tribes include, among others, secular socialists, neo-liberals, secular capitalists, anti-nationalists and nationalists, traditional Jews, Modern religious Jews, haredim (hassidim, Mitnagdim and Sefardim), Muslims, Christians, and undefined (this is actually the name of a status assigned by the Interior Ministry). In the early years of the state, the impact of this was minimized by the fact that immigrants predominantly were fleeing the countries they came from. They were de facto refugees. So there was an unspoken trade-off: We give you the status of a free citizen in a country where Jews are not persecuted in exchange for you doing what you are told, whether it be the army, high taxes, or whatever else we throw at you. This worked for about 30 years, especially in light of security issues that just would not go away (and still havent). Thats why, in my opinion, the State of Israel never encouraged immigration from Western countries, because it had no idea what to do with Jews who were not refugees.As the years rolled on, the tribes intermingled, but they still exist and have come of age. However, they really dont want to be told by the government what to do. It is also clear that no politician will succeed in uniting more that his or her own camp. So where does leadership come from?A new way of thinking about leadershipLeadership comes from the non-political camp. The people who really inspire us are educators, entrepreneurs, thinkers, movers, some rabbis, some professors; people with inspiring life stories and accomplishments. These are the people who influence us. Only the very young think that a politician has all the answers. In a normal democracy, a politician is someone we hope is minimally corrupt and maximally out of our lives. With the major issues facing Israel since its inception, this has never been possible, but we crave that other type of leadership: the one with no other agenda except the good of the people.The truth is that the founding fathers of the state thought this way. They created the position of president and first nominated Albert Einstein, a scientist with no political ties. The second nominee was Chaim Weizmann, a scientist with pre-state Zionist affiliations. We had other presidents who were appointed due their stature and contributions to Israeli society, rather than for their political affiliations. Things changed, however, and the presidency became a way of awarding politicians approaching retirement: Ezer Weizman, Moshe Katsav, Shimon Peres, and even our current president, Reuven Rivlin. That does not mean that none of them succeeded, but party affiliation is a real impediment to success in leadership.Once upon a time the president was just a figurehead who talked to foreign leaders so retired politicians were a natural fit. Today, however, we need a president whose character and contribution to society can inspire us; someone who can communicate with the various groups in Israel; someone who can bring out the best from each tribe and create unity in times of strife and struggle. This, by definition, cannot be achieved by a life-long politician who built a career on factionalism.Let the Knesset present names, but let the people vote for a president when they vote for the Knesset. This is our only chance of finding a real mediator who will know the meaning of their job.There is another position that should also be filled by someone whose ethical and spiritual character can inspire and educate us: the position of chief rabbi. The early chief rabbis understood the importance of the office and title: Rabbis Abraham Isaac Kook, Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog and Ben-Zion Meir Hai Uziel saw their role as building bridges between the tribes. Two things happened to change this.First was that the chief rabbi was eventually seen as a leader in Jewish law for the religious communities. Since most people who lead a religious life already have a rabbi to whom they can turn for such insights, that role is generally unneeded.Second, religious politicians turned the selection of chief rabbi into an inter-party power struggle. I am not certain that the chief rabbis must be the head of the rabbinical court, but even if one does, the other does not. The Maharal of Prague comments on the Mishna in Pirkei Avot 1,6, Make for yourself a rabbi, that if you find someone who inspires you to be a better Jew and a better human being, that is what a rabbi is supposed to be. Make him your rabbi, even if he does not have the appropriate degrees or official credentials.The chief rabbi should be someone who can speak to members of all the tribes of Israel, not just the ones who belong to the tribe in which he grew up. He must be someone who understands the other, whether religious or secular, Jewish or not; someone who inspires by their very character; someone who is non-judgmental, and a student of Aaron who loves peace and pursues it.If we could just reclaim these two positions from the claws of the politicians, then even in hard times, with economic uncertainties, health worries and factionalism, their voice, their reason and their empathy would be there to calm us and help us prevail as a nation. The writer, a rabbi, is a lecturer in Jewish studies at Bar-Ilan University and a research fellow at Ariel University.

Continue reading here:

Judaism can provide the answer to our current crisis of leadership - The Jerusalem Post

Lubavitch Announces Emissary to the United Arab Emirates – Chabad.org

Posted By on October 28, 2020

Each new day seems to bring with it historic good news from the Middle East.Augusts surprise announcement of the United States-brokered Abraham AccordsPeace Agreement between the United Arab Emirates and Israel was followed amonth later by a similar agreement between the Kingdom of Bahrain and Israel.The two Arab states and Israel signed their respective agreements on the WhiteHouse lawn on Sept. 15, and it has been a flurry of firsts ever since: directcommercial flights, delegation exchanges, embassy applications.

These rapid developments have been a boon for the growing Jewish community in the entire Gulf region, which over the last few years has been quietly emerging from the shadows. This week marked yet another first when the Chabad-Lubavitch movement announced its appointment of Rabbi Levi Duchman, the rabbi of the United Arab Emirates, as the Chabad emissary to the UAE.

Throngs of children and adults at Duchman's UAE Purim event.

Thank Gd, Jewish life here in the UAE has been able to blossom like a desert rose, says Duchman. The coexistence and true respect people have for one another here is beautiful and unfortunately all too unique. Its also clear that none of this could have happened without the support and vision of the UAEs benevolent leader, his highness Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, and is something the entire world can learn from.

The community of Jewish expats enjoys the UAE's unique spirit of tolerance and coexistence.

The UAE has in recent years become known for its commitment to tolerance andcoexistencemore than 200 nationalities live and work in the Gulf stateandJews have lived in the seven emirates on and off for decades. The Israel-UAEagreement formalizes this understanding, highlighting ... that the Arab and Jewish peoples are descendants of a common ancestor, Abraham, with this spirit inspiring the two countries to foster in the Middle East a reality in which Muslims, Jews, Christians and peoples of all faiths, denominations, beliefs and nationalities live in, and are committed to, a spirit of coexistence, mutual understanding and mutual respect ... .

Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky (third from right), vice chairman of Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, on a visit with the UAE Jewish community. Rabbi Duchman is on the far right and Rabbi Mendy Kotlarsky, director of Chabad's Merkos 302, is on the far left.

Chabads involvement with the UAE stretches back as early as 2008, when New York Jewish businesspeople who had been traveling to the UAE approached Rabbi Yehuda Krinskychairman of Merkos LInyonei Chinuch, Chabads educationalarmrequesting the movement send a rabbi to help develop Jewish life in theUAE. In 2010 Chabad rabbinical students arrived in Dubai to lead the first everYom Kippur service in the Arab state, and rabbinical students have beenvisiting for every Jewish holiday ever since.

Duchman first came to the UAE in the winter of 2015, following up a few months later to lead the communal Passover seder in the capital city of Abu Dhabi. He moved to the country later that year.

At the time, there were a number of Jewish families here already, and nothing by way of Jewish education, explains Duchman. That November Duchman opened a Talmud Torah with four children; today it boasts 40 students.

Rabbi Duchman studies with a member of the UAE Jewish community at his synagogue.

Similar to its work on behalf of isolated Jewish communities around the world, Chabad has long supported the Jews of the UAE in a variety of capacities. Chabad.orgsAsk the Rabbi team, for example, has maintained a close dialogue with the local community for years and helped visitors and new residents connect. UAE children too old for Duchmans Talmud Torah receive a Jewish education in Chabads Nigri International Jewish Online School.

Dubai, a city of 3.3 million people and the UAEs largest, is home to two synagogues. One is led by Ross Kriel and New York-based Rabbi Yehuda Sarna, a chaplain at New York University, the othersome 20 kilometers up the coastis led by Solly Wolf, who has lived in the UAE for the last 20 years, and Rabbi Duchman, who has been the only resident rabbi for six years and has been granted permanent residency. The latter even has a minyan three times daily. Duchman, who speaks five languages including French and multiple dialects of Arabic, also helped found the Jewish community in Abu Dhabi, and recently opened the capitals only synagogue and Jewish community center, which held its inaugural services this past Rosh Hashanah.

Duchman's Talmud Torah provides Jewish learning to some 40 students in the country.

Ivebeen closely following the growth and success of the UAE Jewish community overthe last decade and have been able to see it with my own eyes, says RabbiMoshe Kotlarsky, vice chairman of Merkos LInyonei Chinuch, who over the pastyears has visited the UAE to meet with its Jewish leadership. Kotlarsky, amongwhose responsibilities is overseeing Chabads rabbinical visitation program,has for decades maintained contact with small outlying Jewish communitiesaround the world, the UAE among them. I congratulate the community and itsleaders on their monumental past success and bless them to go from strength tostrength as they celebrate these new milestones.

Chabad of the UAE builds on the 130-year-old relationship between the Russian Chassidic movement and the Jews living in Muslim lands. Already in 1892, Rabbi Shlomo Yehuda Leib Eliezerov, a follower of the Fifth Rebbe, Rabbi Sholom DovBer of Lubavitch, was dispatched to Bukhara, Central Asia, where he worked to strengthen its Jewish infrastructure and ultimately served as rabbi of Samarkand for nearly a decade. The brilliant halachic scholar and Chassid Rabbi Avraham Chaim Naeh arrived in Samarkand in 1911 where, after exchanging his Eastern European clothing for the traditional local garb, he likewise focused on bolstering all aspects of Jewish life.

Duchman visits with Jewish U.S. servicemen in the Gulf region.

Rabbi Sholom DovBers son, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, of righteous memory, expanded this work, both in Central Asia and the Caucuses, and after World War II laid the groundwork for Chabads first outpost in North Africa. Indeed, following the ascension of the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory, as leader of Chabad in 1950, the first place he sent emissaries to was Morocco, building a network of Chabad Jewish schools from Meknes to Casablanca, later also adding centers in Tunisia. Chabad of Morocco remains a vibrant center for Jewishlife and is in fact directed by Duchmans brother-in-law and sister, Rabbi Leviand Chana Banon, and Duchman received his rabbinic apprenticeship in Casablanca.

Theres a unique bond between Rabbi Duchman and the Jews of the UAE, says Kotlarsky. Since his initial visit six years ago, weve been hearing from residents requesting that Rabbi Duchman remain there.

Jewish life in the UAE has bloomed since Duchman first arrived, and just last year the rabbi presided over one of the UAEs first bar mitzvahs. Things have been moving at a breathtaking pace since.

The UAE-based Duchman runs services and provides Torah classes, including bar mitzvah lessons. Last year he presided over one of the country's first bar mitzvahs.

Aside from running Shabbat and holiday services and teaching a host of regular Torah classes, Duchmanwho is vice president of ARIS, or the Alliance of Rabbis in Islamic States, which includes rabbis serving communities in countries such as Turkey, Kyrgyzstan and Uganda, among other stateshas been instrumental in making kosher food available in the emirates. What began with photographing kosher products in supermarkets and tagging them on Instagram for public awareness morphed into the countrys first kosher shechita, which he arranged in 2017.

Earlier this year he opened the Emirates Agency for Kosher Certification (EAKC), which works hand in hand with a number of worldwide kosher supervision organizations and today EAKC supervises one glatt-kosher meat restaurant, Armani/Kaf. (Pictures of the public sukkah erected by Duchman nearby at the base of the iconic Burj Khalifa recently went viral). Another food establishment, Ellis Kosher Kitchen catering service in Dubai, is under the Orthodox Unions (OU) supervision, and the OU is also active in supporting Jewish life in the UAE.

There are three synagogues in the UAE: two in Dubai, and a one in Abu Dhabi. Here Rabbi Duchman assists Ross Kriel with affixing the mezuzah to the Villa Synagogue.

Now, after the Abu Dhabi Department of Culture and Tourism advised hotels in the emirate to provide a kosher-food option, the department has partnered with EAKC to help guide hospitality establishments in the kosher process and provide certification. The five-star Armed Forces Officers Club and Hotel in Abu Dhabi, which regularly provides catered meals to thousands, now maintains an EAKC kosher-certified kitchen, as does the Emirates Palace Hotel.

We want to emphasize that our eagerness to serve kosher cuisine to guests who prefer it springs from our respect for cultural diversity, explained Shaikha Al Kaabi, CEO of the Armed Forces Officers Club and Hotel, after the kosher kitchens ribbon-cutting ceremony. The UAE is a land of tolerance andpluralism and we want our cuisine to reflect the national ethos .

The UAE's Talmud Torah has 40 students studying about their heritage.

Duchman, who was a member of the UAEs delegation to the Peace and Prosperity conference in Bahrain last year, has also spent time assisting Jewish communities throughout the Gulf region. Hes visited the small Jewish community in Kuwait, as well as Jewish members of the U.S. armed forces stationed on two bases there; conducted a funeral in Bahrain; and flown to Oman to help the tiny Jewish presence in Muscat. With his appointment as the Chabad emissary to the UAE, Duchman will be focusing his efforts on the emirates, yet with a continued eye towards helping every Jew in the region.

The rapid growth of authentic Jewish life and learning in the UAE is truly a herald of the prophet Isaiahs words of the era when nation shall not lift the sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore, shares Duchman. Were living in a very special time.

Rabbi Duchman (right) at the ribbon cutting ceremony for the new kosher kitchen at the Armed Forces Officers Club and Hotel in Abu Dhabi. Duchman's kosher supervision service, Emirates Agency for Kosher Certification (EAKC), recently partnered with the Abu Dhabi Department of Culture and Tourism and today certifies a kosher kitchen in both the Armed Forces Officers Club and the Emirates Palace hotel.

See the original post:

Lubavitch Announces Emissary to the United Arab Emirates - Chabad.org

‘Bound in the Bond of Life’ Anthology Published on Two-Year Commemoration of Massacre – Jewish Exponent

Posted By on October 28, 2020

By David Rullo

Two years after the shooting at the Tree of Life building, Bound in the Bond of Life: Pittsburgh Writers Reflect on the Tree of Life Tragedy collects essays from 24 writers as they attempt to make sense of the Oct. 27, 2018, tragedy.

The Pittsburgh journalists, spiritual leaders, historians, writers, poets and academics presented in the collection share their pain, fear, confusion and anger in writings that are scholarly and personal, raw and profound.

Co-editor Beth Kissileff came up with the idea for the book, initially thinking it would be a collaboration with Eric Lidji, director of the Rauh Jewish History Program & Archives at the Senator John Heinz History Center. It was Lidji who initially floated the idea of including other local writers.

Our prime criteria, Kissileff said, was writers, people, that would be able to process the vent through writing. We wanted to be sure that it contained good writing.

Kissileff is married to Jonathan Perlman, rabbi at New Light Congregation, one of three synagogues that shared the Tree of Life building. Three members of that congregation were murdered during the Oct. 27 attack. Kissileff believed it was important that local voices told their story in the collection.

We really wanted to elevate the stories and perspectives of local writers. The national media has a certain angle and story and way of framing things, she said. A lot of people dont even realize there were three synagogues involved. So, we made sure there were two writers from each synagogue who wrote for the book. It was really a chance for different perspectives to be heard.

Lidji explained that the pair originally considered an anthology of previously published pieces but by 2019, the idea evolved to solicit original material from local authors who had unique points of view.

We feel like this is the beginning of a bigger process, Lidji said, allowing people to tell their stories.

Rather than feature stories by those that were a part of the shooting, Bound in the Bond of Life reaches into the broader Jewish and Pittsburgh community. Perlmans essay in the book, Eleh Ezkerah, Nusach Pittsburgh, is the only contribution from someone in the building from the day of the attack. By looking beyond the three synagogues, the geographical limitations of Squirrel Hill and the Jewish faith, Kissileff and Lidji illustrate that, like a pebble dropped into still water, the shooting had effects that rippled throughout Pittsburgh.

In his essay I Read Somewhere That Pittsburgh is Stronger Than Hate, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette columnist Tony Norman ties the shooting to others that have captured national attention, including those in Charleston, South Carolina, and Las Vegas, Nevada, and highlights several others, both in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood and the larger city. He ties anti-Semitism to Americas other long simmering hate, racism, illustrating the point with examples from his own life.

Norman said that when first approached, he wasnt sure what he could add to the anthology. And then it occurred to me: Im a member of this community. I was profoundly affected and shocked. You know, I can do this. It will definitely be from a different perspective.

The columnist said he wrote his essay before George Floyd was murdered while being arrested by Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin, spurring Black Lives Matter protests.

Theres an interesting confluence between these things, Norman said. And I think people have become much more aware of the fact that there are these tribal hatreds out there. Theyre quite primordial and quite deep, and that there needs to be a reckoning. We need to really talk about what this is all about.

Barbara Burstin teaches courses on the Holocaust and American Jewish history at both the University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University. In her essay, Fall Semester 2018, she recalls her experience of teaching her first class Tuesday morning following the shooting the previous Shabbat morning.

Clearly, my experience going into the classroom was pretty dramatic and traumatic, she said.

Burstin viewed her writing as an opportunity for the community to learn about and celebrate Jewish life and the history of Jewish life. I wrote to celebrate life and not just death. I think thats an important message to come out of this, Burstin said.

Conscious that Jews are often presented as victims in Holocaust lessons, she writes that she tries to underscore the lives Jews led before the Holocaust, talking about their hopes and dreams, accomplishments and disappointments. She worries that because of events like the Tree of Life shooting, American Jews are mired in a swamp of anti-Semitism. When the Tree of Life building is reimagined and rebuilt, she said, I would hope that a good chunk of that reestablishment would involve the celebration of the Jewish community.

Historian Laurie Zittrain Eisenbergs essay Sharing Their Stories is unique to the anthology. Instead of addressing her reaction to the shooting, it instead looks at the artifacts left behind by the community to show their grief.

Her writing is accompanied by photos showing both the expected and unusual items people left at the Tree of Life building memorial. In the pictures, there are a pair of tennis shoes next to a menorah surrounded by flowers; a framed leaf from the Raoul Wallenberg Tree on the Righteous Among the Nations Walk in Israel; stones decorated by grieving members of the community; a guitar; and crosses affixed with Jewish stars by a man who has traveled the country leaving white crosses for other shooting victims.

Each of the items shown, and those discussed by Zittrain Eisenberg, are puzzles that the historian and Tree of Life member have attempted to solve by reaching out to the community asking for information about the objects.

I came up with a project to try and identify the back stories of all the things that people left for us, most of which were left anonymously, or with inadvertent clues as to who the benefactor had been, she said. I got over 50 stories that came from people. The essay is kind of my sharing those stories and trying to make sense out of them, trying to find intent and put that in context.

The historian feels a responsibility to document what she calls the positive, loving, supportive response from the community, including those from outside of the Jewish community and Pittsburgh.

In addition to Burstin, Norman and Zittrain Eisenberg, other contributors to the anthology include several current and former writers from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette including David Shribman, former executive editor of Gazette during the Tree of Life massacre, staff writer Andrew Goldstein and religious editor Peter Smith (the paper won a 2019 Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of the shooting); Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle Editor Toby Tabachnick; former Director of the Holocaust Center of Pittsburgh Linda F. Hurwitz, Congregation Poale Zedeck Rabbi Daniel Yolkut and author Jane Bernstein.

For Kissileff, serving as a co-editor of a collection of writings trying to comprehend the incomprehensible makes sense.

Theres not one Jewish way to experience things, but the Talmud is a compilation of ideas, she said. Anthology is very much a Jewish genre. We really wanted to put something together that would express and promote a variety of ideas, that theres just not one way to see the world but you know, that a better comprehension can come from looking at an event from a multiplicity of perspectives.

David Rullo is a staff writer at the Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle, an Exponent-affiliated publication where this story first appeared.

Link:

'Bound in the Bond of Life' Anthology Published on Two-Year Commemoration of Massacre - Jewish Exponent

What Rabbi And Rebbetzin Kramer Want You To Know About Their Daughter Gitty – Yeshiva World News

Posted By on October 28, 2020

Gitty Kramer is a Kallah however she is more nervous than excited. She has to deal with questions like: will her father be alive when the wedding date comes around, or will he succumb to his brain tumor? If he is alive, will he be present for the wedding or will he miss it like he missed his 4th childs wedding because of brain surgery? What about her brother who just received a new kidney? The most important question of all is: Will she herself be at her own wedding or will she have to cancel it because her family has become impoverished?

The Kramers currently have no income but they still have a lot of debt from the previous wedding and due to expensive medical bills. Her Father, Rabbi Kramer, used to be a cheder Rebbi. Because he can no longer function, he isnt able to work. Her mother was forced to leave her job to care for her husband and son full time. Because of circumstances beyond her control, Gitty may have to put to rest her childhood dreams of getting married.

Providing for a Kallah is one of the most important Mitzvahs which Hashem guarantees reward for in both this world and the next. According to the Steipler Gaon, a person helping a Kallah protects terminally ill patients from death. For anyone with a relative in shidduchim, helping a Kallah is a proven hishtadlus to them meeting a spouse. The Gemara says a childless couple providing for a kallah is a merit to have children. On the famous Talmud which says one of the questions asked by Hashem after age 120 is Were you involved in Pru urvu?Maharsha says a person who gives to a kallah can answer Yes because giving to a bride is a proper hishtadlus for having kids.

This is not just a case of providing for a poor kallah but also pikuach nefesh. With a weak and vulnerable brain, the stress to Rabbi Kramer caused by failing to marry off his beloved daughter is dangerous. Helping his daughter is literally a matter of life and death. To learn more about the opportunity to perform these two incredible mitzvahs at once, click here.

More here:

What Rabbi And Rebbetzin Kramer Want You To Know About Their Daughter Gitty - Yeshiva World News

ADL says election-related hate on the rise: ‘antisemitism, racism, xenophobia & all forms of bigotry.’ – The Boston Globe

Posted By on October 25, 2020

The Anti-Defamation League has launched a new online reporting tool so members of the public can flag instances of potential hate crimes or disruptions related to voting, the organization said Tuesday.

In a statement, the ADL provided a link to the online reporting portal, which says that we are unfortunately seeing an alarming rise in election-related hate and extremism, both on and offline."

"There is no question that extremists are active in New England and continue exploiting the current political tensions surrounding the election, said Robert Trestan, ADL New England regional director, in the statement. ADL is operating with a heightened vigilance and committing our expertise to ensure everyone has the right to vote without fear or intimidation.

In addition to the online reporting form, the ADL said, members of the public can text hatehelp to 51555 for information on reporting extremist activity such as antisemitic or racist graffiti. The ADL added that its experts will be on standby to assess situations to determine whether reports should be made to law enforcement, polling officials or other government authorities.

The ADL said its directing people to call the non-partisan Election Protection coalition at 1-866-OUR-VOTE for any voting issues that arent extremist related.

In a separate statement, the FBIs Boston office said Tuesday that authorities arent aware of any specific threats targeting the Jewish community, though the bureau vowed continued vigilance.

The FBI has no specific, credible information that would suggest a pending threat to members of the Jewish community in our area, the bureau said. However, the FBI remains vigilant and, as we do every day, will continue to work with our law enforcement and community partners to detect, disrupt, and dismantle any threats that may emerge as everyone exercises their right to vote.

The FBI said it encourages members of the public to remain vigilant and immediately report any suspicious, election-related activity to us.

Tuesdays announcement from the ADL comes after federal and local authorities said Friday in Boston that theyre tracking hate groups on social media and will post federal monitors and police at polls across the state to protect voters from intimidation or threats during the presidential election.

A call by President Trump and the Republican National Committee for thousands of poll watchers to monitor voting locations on Election Day has triggered concerns about voter intimidation and violence by neo-Nazis and right-wing activists.

We will prepare for a worst-case scenario, said US Attorney Andrew Lelling to reporters Friday, detailing coordinated effort by law enforcement to prevent any unrest at the polls and respond quickly if any problems are reported on Election Day.

Massachusetts has seen multiple high-profile incidents of antisemitism over the last year and a half, including the arrest in April of a man for allegedly trying to firebomb a Jewish-sponsored assisted living facility in Longmeadow.

And in May of 2019, a string of arsons reported at Chabad centers in Needham and Arlington shocked both communities.

More recently in September of this year, a church in Great Barrington was a defaced with an antisemitic slur, according to the ADLs online tracker of such incidents, citing reporting from the Berkshire Eagle.

Hate and extremism related to the election are on the rise: antisemitism, racism, xenophobia & all forms of bigotry, the ADL tweeted Monday. If you witness or experience any such incident, text hatehelp to 51555 & we can immediately start investigating.

Shelley Murphy of the Globe staff contributed to this story. Material from prior Globe stories was used in this report.

Travis Andersen can be reached at travis.andersen@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @TAGlobe.

The rest is here:
ADL says election-related hate on the rise: 'antisemitism, racism, xenophobia & all forms of bigotry.' - The Boston Globe

CAPAC: New ADL Report Ties Spike in Anti-Asian Bigotry to Trump – The Rafu Shimpo

Posted By on October 25, 2020

WASHINGTON On Oct. 9, Rep. Judy Chu (D-Pasadena), chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC), and CAPAC First Vice Chair Rep. Grace Meng (D-N.Y.) joined Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), Rep. Brad Schneider (D-Ill.), and John Yang, president and executive director of Asian Americans Advancing Justice (AAJC), for the release of a new ADL report that shows a rise in anti-Asian bigotry on Twitter following the presidents first tweet about his positive coronavirus diagnosis and his remarks at the first presidential debate linking COVID-19 to China.

The new study of Twitter conversations and activity, conducted by ADLs Center for Technology and Society, found that in the 12 hours after the presidents initial tweet about his and the first ladys COVID-19 diagnosis, there was an 85 percent increase in anti-Asian language and conspiracy theories tracked on the platform.

Similarly, the rate of discussions about various conspiracy theories increased 41 percent, with some of those conversations also taking on anti-Semitic overtones. From Oct. 2-5, the percentage of anti-Asian language on Twitter remained higher than usual.

According to the World Health Organization and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, associating a virus with a specific geographic region, country, or people creates stigma and can lead to xenophobia and bigotry. This has been seen in the over 2,600 anti-Asian hate crimes and incidents reported in recent months as the president and members of his administration use slurs like Chinese virus and kung flu.

Reps. Chu, Meng, and Schneider issued the following statements:

From the birther scandal to lies about immigrants to his attempt to blame China for his own failure to contain the coronavirus, Donald Trump has built his presidency on perpetuating conspiracy theories and racism. And the dangerous consequences of this can be seen in the actions of his followers, said Chu. As this report shows, when confronted with news that reflects poorly on the president, like his COVID-19 diagnosis, his supporters respond with attacks that Asians or Jews are to blame rhetoric that we know leads to violence.

That is why, since the very beginning of this crisis, we have urged leaders to avoid misinformation and xenophobia. But at every turn, Republicans not only doubled down on the use of slurs like China virus and kung flu, they also denied the impact their own words were having on innocent Asian Americans who have been terrified by the anti-Asian hate we have witnessed throughout this pandemic.

Well now, thanks to the ADLs work, we have the data to prove that their words have an impact and I hope it serves to tamp down the dangerous bigotry that has come to define the Republicans response to the coronavirus.

Since the beginning of the COVID-19 crisis, Asian Americans from all across the country have been the targets of disgusting acts of hate and violence, said Meng. This new ADL report showing a rise in anti-Asian bigotry on Twitter is sad and extremely disturbing.

But unfortunately, it comes as no surprise. It is just a continuation of the ugliness we have seen; ugliness that has been fueled by the discriminatory and disparaging rhetoric that continues to come from President Trump and others.

I thank the ADL and CAPAC for keeping a light shined on this problem, and hope that all who oppose this bigotry and violence will continue call it out whenever and wherever it occurs, and say loud and clear that this hatred is unacceptable and must not be tolerated.

There is a very real danger in what extremists think and do online, said Schneider. This stunning piece of metadata analysis reveals that there is an undeniable connection between the president and how extremists online target others via race and ethnicity. Be it anti-Semitic, anti-Asian, or any other bigoted sentiment, its growth signals potential oncoming violence and compels us to warn the nation: stop scapegoating minorities out of political convenience and instead join together to combat this deadly virus with facts.

Tags

Follow this link:
CAPAC: New ADL Report Ties Spike in Anti-Asian Bigotry to Trump - The Rafu Shimpo

Resisting the Tide of Bigotry – The Cairo Review of Global Affairs

Posted By on October 25, 2020

We are, as a species, a distractible lotespecially at a time of seemingly endless diversions, news events large and small, and discord that stretches across the globe, from Hong Kong to Venezuela to Belarus. Yet, there are trends that deserve our focus, and the deaths of at least eighty-five people over the last two years at the hands of gunmen driven by white supremacist hatred cannot be ignored.

On October 27, 2018, a gunman shouting All Jews must die stormed the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in the United States and slaughtered eleven congregants as they gathered to pray. Not five months later, on March 15, 2019, another gunman posted a white supremacist manifesto online referring to the slaughter in Pittsburgh, then live-streamed a rampage through Christchurch, New Zealand, where he slew fifty-one Muslims at two different mosques. A month later, at a Chabad synagogue in Southern California, a white supremacist killed one worshipper and wounded three others, including the rabbi, after posting another manifesto that praised the killers in Christchurch and Pittsburgh.

On August 3, 2019, a 21-year-old man posted his own white supremacist manifesto, then drove more than one thousand kilometers to El Paso, Texas and opened fire in a Walmart retail store, intending to repel what he saw as a Hispanic invasion. When the rampage ended, twenty-two were dead, victims of an ideology that appears to be spreading wherever white people proclaim that they are being replaced by black and brown-skinned people.

The response to the El Paso slaughter on 8chan, an online free-for-all chat board frequented by white supremacists, was instructive. Contrary to popular belief, we do not hate spics, n**gers, or even arabs (sic), and near enough without exception are happy to have them live IN THEIR OWN LANDS, wrote one poster minutes after the shooting. The only issue is them coming to our lands, but we do not BLAME THEM for that. We BLAME THE JEWS.

Those mass shootingsplus another deadly December shootout at a Kosher grocery store in Jersey City, New Jersey that took three more lives; a Hanukkah stabbing in Monsey, New York, that same month; and the deaths of nine more at the hands of a white supremacist in Hanau, Germany, in Februaryare only the ones we are aware of. Smaller, less-visible episodes have surely taken place without receiving as much attention. Mass shootings at schools in Florida and Texas were less directly connected to white supremacist ideology, but the gunmen involved appear to at least have been exposed to theories variably known as White Genocide or The Great Replacement, the notion that a tide of black and brown people is rising to eradicate the white race at the behest and orchestration of the evil genius Ashkenazi Jew.

These murders are only the ones that came to fruition. The Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish-led American civil rights organization dedicated to combating bigotry, recently wrote that at least twelve white supremacists had been arrested in the United States in the year after the Pittsburgh attack on allegations that they were plotting or threatening anti-Semitic attacks. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) both affirmed this fall that white supremacist extremism is the biggest domestic threat that the worlds remaining superpower faces.

Some of the plots that have been foiled could have been horrific. When Christopher Hasson, a self-proclaimed white supremacist and U.S. Coast Guard officer, was arrested in February 2019, he had amassed an enormous arsenal of shotguns; handguns; semiautomatic, military-style assault rifles; ammunition; and a kill list that included some of the most prominent leaders of the United States Democratic Party. We need a white homeland as Europe seems lost, Hasson wrote in his own manifesto, inspired by other white supremacist killersespecially the deadliest of them all, Anders Breivik, who murdered seventy-seven people in Norway in 2011.

The ideological web that connects Breivik to all the killers who followed him is spreading through dedicated white supremacist websites like The Daily Stormer, unregulated online chat sites like 4chan and 8chan, and allegedly well-regulated social media sites like Twitter and Facebook, where racist and anti-Semitic content is supposed to be banned, but white supremacists gamely evade the content police. On October 8, 2019, YouTube purged a video uploaded to its servers by the violent neo-Nazi Atomwaffen Division. Two days later, the same video was re-uploaded to an account with the same display name and copied dozens of times.

YouTube is either unable or unwilling to employ comprehensive and consistent methods to tackle the problem of white supremacism on their platform, wrote the Counter Extremism Project, a technology group working to counter online extremist messaging, from white supremacy to violent Islamism.

If anything, the coronavirus pandemic and resulting lockdowns and economic recession will foster still more extremism. Anti-Semitic conspiracy theories tracing the creation and spread of the virus to billionaire investor George Soros and a secretive Jewish cabal have ricocheted around the internet. In its annual threat assessment, the DHS highlighted the extremism churning beneath a locked-down societys surface.

American Jewish Response

The reaction of American Jews to the rise of deadly anti-Semitism seems to range from denial to befuddled inaction to rank both as side-ism. When Donald Trump began shifting the blame of unrest to the left and a loose-knit group of radicals known as Antifa, the American Jewish Committee joined in the effort to find an equivalence between leftwing and rightwing violent extremismdespite the conclusion of Trumps own government that rightwing extremism poses a far more pronounced danger. Admittedly, it is all so new. While violent bigotry and white supremacism are sewn into the fabric of American life, anti-Semitic violence is not, at least not on the massive scale shown by the former in the last two years. A nation founded on the creed that all men are created equal could not have cradled race-based slavery for 250 years (from the arrival of the first African slaves to our shores in 1619), hatched the Ku Klux Klan, and embraced the public terror of lynching without white supremacist ideology.

Anti-Semitismtargeted hatred and discrimination aimed at Jewshas existed in what is now the United States since twenty-three Portuguese Jews from the Netherlands disembarked in what was then New Amsterdam in 1654. Peter Stuyvesant, the Dutch colonial governor and father of New York City, wrote to the directors of the Dutch West Indies Company, We have, for the benefit of this weak and newly developing place and the land in general, deemed it useful to require them [the Portuguese Jews] in a friendly way to depart, praying also most seriously in this connection, for ourselves as also for the general community of your worships, that the deceitful racesuch hateful enemies and blasphemers of the name of Christbe not allowed to further infect and trouble this new colony.

Despite such anti-Semitism, Jews stayed in North America and thrived, and while acts of violence toward Jews, such as the lynching of Leo Frank in 1915 or the bombings of southern synagogues in the 1950s and 1960s, at times shocked the nations conscience, they did not come to be indelibly identified with Jewish life in America. The massacre at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, with eleven killed, was the deadliest act of violence against Jews in the 365 years that Jews have lived in North America. That is remarkable considering the history of racist bloodletting in the United States, from the massacre of about 300 indigenous Lakota people at Wounded Knee, South Dakota in 1890 to Tulsa, Oklahoma, where as many as three hundred African-Americans were killed by a white mob in 1921.

When my book (((Semitism))): Being Jewish in America in the Age of Trump was published in the spring of 2018, it went through the history of the emerging white supremacist alt-right threat, the deadly white nationalist march in Charlottesville, Virginia in 2017 that took the life of an antiracist counter-protester, and the swarming bigots on the internet who were and are willing to destroy the lives of anyone who catches their eyes.

The book was inspired by my own experiences during the 2016 presidential election, when an organized online mob targeted Jewish journalists like myself with an endless barrage of threats, violent images, taunts, and trickery. The online assault forced me to examine this new breed of anti-Semitism and grapple with the forces unleashed by Donald Trumps nationalist movement. I started with a warning: The Jew flourishes when borders come down, when boundaries blur, when walls are destroyed, not erected. Trumps brand of intolerant nationalism was on the rise globally, from Washington to Warsaw, Manila to Milan, Budapest to Brasilia. I wanted American Jewry to take heed that such forces historically have tended to turn against us.

I am convinced that more rightwing anti-Semitic bloodshed is inevitable. But Jews in America have not responded with anything like united resolve; rather, there is fear.

In a poll of American Jewry taken by the American Jewish Committee ahead of the first anniversary of the Pittsburgh massacre, 84 percent of respondents said they think anti-Semitism has increased in the United States in the past five years. About 20 percent said they had been the target of anti-Semitic remarks online, while 23 percent said they had been targeted by anti-Semitic comments in person or through mail or phone. A third of American Jewry said they have avoided outward displays of their faithjewelry with Jewish symbols or wearing a skullcapfor fear of a hostile response.

Yet, an organized, sustained effort to counter rising intolerance is not greatly evidenced. In my book, I wrote of what I called The Israel Deception, the all-consuming debate over Israel that has distracted American Jewry from the trends in our own society that could do real harm. The alt-right, a name that rightwing bigoted nationalists gave themselves, emerged in the later years of George W. Bushs White House in 2007 and 2008, when some fringe conservatives, disenchanted with Bushs foreign policy adventurism and the collapse of the global financial system, turned inward. Yet, Jews did not notice this gathering storm until 2016, with the rise of Trumpism and that movements merger with the existing alt-right. Why? Because in the complacency of the Obama era, American Jews fought with each other or with outside forces almost exclusively over the Jewish state Israel.

Predictably, my calling out The Israel Deception only heightened the preoccupation. As I travel the country discussing my book, I am almost always confronted with Israel. To differing degrees, Jewish audiences have told me that I have it all wrong: that the real threat to Jewry comes not from the violent right but from the intolerant left. And by leftwing anti-Semitism, what they really mean is rising anti-Israel attitudes. In East Hampton, New York, after I was accused of being a self-hating Jew, I was told in the sanctuary of the Jewish Center, the number of rightwing anti-Semites could fit in this room. The number of leftwing anti-Semites would fill this city.

Confused Conflict: Israel, Anti-Zionism, and Anti-Semitism

By the calculus of Trumps Jewish apologists, Trumpist nationalism is not a manifestation of the threat facing Jews, and President Trump is not part of the problem; he is the savior, the greatest American friend that Israel ever had.

After Pittsburgh, I figured that such relativism would fade away. Surely my co-religionists would see that while anti-Israel sentiments can at times spill into anti-Semitism, the young activists leading the anti-Zionist movement do not carry semiautomatic weapons and periodically open fire. I was wrong. The fighting between those warning against the anti-Semitic left and those fearing the anti-Semitic right has gone on unabated.

The inclusion of Israel in that debate has been confusing, in part because of the actions of Israels leadership. Yes, I warned, and still believe, intolerant nationalism is almost always catastrophic for Jews. When politicians begin defining who is and is not truly of a nation, who is and is not a true German, a real comrade of the Soviet Union, or a loyal citizen of Gaul, they usually choose Jews as the essence of the outsider in their midstwith lethal consequences.

However, nobody has been more adept at bigoted nationalism than Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Few have used national identity as deftly or been more willing to openly scapegoat the ethnic outsiderthe Palestinian or the Arab Israelito rally voters to his side. Even Trump has tried (poorly) to keep a few black entertainers or Latino businessmen in his camp as testifiers to his true pluralistic heart. Netanyahu long ago dispensed with such niceties, even making common cause with nationalists like Hungarys former Prime Minister Viktor Orbn, who have dabbled in political anti-Semitism themselves. Confusing, I say, because if anti-Zionism is anti-Semitism, and if Israels longest-serving prime minister is the worlds foremost exemplar of Zionism as well as nationalism, how could nationalism be equated with anti-Semitism?

And how could the movements behind Trump or Orbn or Brazils President Jair Bolsanaro be threats if those men are so aligned with Israels leadership? To many American Jews, especially older Jews, the NetanyahuTrump alliance has been licensed to turn away from the growing pile of corpses left in the wake of the white nationalist movement.

And dont think the white nationalists havent noticed. Their leaders, like Richard Spencer, often say they are pro-Israel, because to them, Israel is the ethno-nationalist state they crave. If the Jews can have their own state, why cant white people? In his rambling manifesto, a bizarre question-and-answer with himself, the New Zealand shooter asked, Are you an anti-Semite? He answered, No, a Jew living in Israel is no enemy of mine, so long as they do not seek to subvert or harm my people.

Demographics are not, however, on the side of those Jews unwilling to confront bigotry in the name of their allegiance to Israel or to its perceived protector, Donald Trump.

Those who claim that leftwing anti-Semitism is the real threat have already lost the generation of American Jews currently at universities or emerging from them. Most of those young American Jews do not share the blind loyalty to Israel that their parents and grandparents had, and have, and have tried to instill in them. If they are not openly hostile to Israel, they are largely indifferent, attracted to Judaisms commitment to social justice but not its sense of nationhood.

The worlds struggles with the coronavirus pandemic will only hasten this generational shift. American Jews coming of age during the worst public health crisis in a century have seen the dangers of an incompetent government response and are not likely to fall for rhetorical feints like warnings of a rising, dangerous left or an appeal to solidarity with Israel. Ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities in and around New York City have joined Trump and his most ardent followers in railing against the public health strictures of masks and social distancing, even attacking journalists. But they are a tiny minority in a larger American Jewish community that has firmly sided with established science and epidemiology.

All of that is more bad news for old-line Jewish organizations like the American Jewish Committee and the Jewish Federations, which were falling away even before the pandemic. Newer, smaller Jewish organizations like Bend the Arc, focused on social justice in the United States, not support for Israel, are on the rise.

Toward A True Schism or New Coalition?

If young Jews are told that their Jewish identity revolves around their identification with the Jewish state Israel, they will make their choice and walk away. That is what even liberal pro-Israel groups like J Street and the New Israel Fund are finding. The worlds two remaining great Jewish populationsIsraeli and Americanappear to be heading toward a schism, a true break. This break is based on a clear ideological divide between one populationIsraeli, that believes that ethnic identity and national cohesion are fundamental to its survivaland the other, American, that increasingly feels that ethnic identity and nationalism are threats to its survival. The latter believes that only with the reemergence of tolerant pluralism can the American Jewish community regain its sense of security.

I do not posit this schism as a good thing. In a world where Jews are a tiny, always threatened sliver of the population, the cleaving of the last two significant Jewish populations is an existential threat to Judaism itself. Moreover, the adherence of Jewish civil rights groups like the Anti-Defamation League to the fundamental, non-negotiable belief in Israel as an autonomous Jewish homeland is becoming a real impediment to their core civil rights missions in the United States.

At multiple events around my book, I have been paired with a representative of the Anti-Defamation League, who was confronted by black or Muslim activists who see no way to separate the Anti-Defamation Leagues civil rights mission from its Zionism.

When I wrote the chapter The Israel Deception, my counsel was that Jewish, Muslim, immigrant, African-American, and LGBT rights organizations needed to agree to disagree on the IsraelPalestine issue and set it aside to make common cause against intolerance and bigotry. I would never say that Jewish civil rights groups need to renounce Zionism or their support for Israel as a Jewish state to pursue coalition building. That is completely unfair.

But I do now see that simply setting aside the issue may be impossible. Instead, groups like the Anti-Defamation League need to find some common denominator with other civil rights groups on Israel, Gaza, and the occupied West Bank. That common cause could be civil rightsor human rightsfor all people living in Israel and the territories.

While it may be nave to believe that issues of national and political sovereignty can be hived off from human rights, I do believe all actors in an anti-bigotry coalition can at least agree that the human rights and dignity of Palestinians, Israeli Arabs, Druze, and yes, Israeli Jews, need to be safeguarded.

To underscore its commitment to that notion, the Anti-Defamation League should take the significant step of embracing legislation, written by an American member of Congress named Betty McCollum, that for the first time would use American military aid to Israel as leverage to demand more humane treatment of Palestinian children in the West Bank. Saying that U.S. military assistance cannot be used to jail children does not seem too much to ask, and an affirmative gesture like that could at least jumpstart coalition-building between established Jewish groups and the vibrant young activists in Black Lives Matter and other nascent civil rights movements.

These are enormous and intractable issues: the rise of intolerance globally, the conflict between Jews and Palestinians that predates even the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948, and the looming schism between American and Israeli Jews. But they are all intertwined. Sadly, they must be confronted together.

In the early hours of October 12, 1958, in my hometown white supremacists calling themselves the Confederate Underground exploded fifty sticks of dynamite in a recessed doorway at my synagogue in Atlanta, the Temple. At an earlier time, in 1915, a congregant of the same synagogue, Leo Frank, was dragged out of a prison in Milledgeville, Georgia, and lynched by an anti-Semitic mob for a murder he almost certainly did not commit. Franks lynching sent the Jews of my southern city into a defensive crouch. Half of Atlantas Jewish population simply left.

In 1958, the response to the Temple bombing was different. Rabbi Jacob Rothschilds sermon that Friday was entitled And None Shall Make Them Afraid. Ralph McGill, the editor of the Atlanta Constitution, wrote the words of the re-emergent citizen of the world, where identity is both universal and nonexistent. You cannot preach and encourage hate for the Negro and hope to restrict it to that field, he advised. When the wolves of hate are loosed on one people, then no one is safe.

As the United States approaches an election of multigenerational import, an election that could decide its future, those are words to remember. The threat of white supremacist intolerance and hate is not theoretical; it is here. The carnage does not lie.

The response of the Jewish population and the population at large needs to match it. The mobilization during this election season has to be shaped not against a particular candidate, but around the ideals that the United States has long represented, however inconsistently and incompletely: freedom in a multiethnic, multiracial, multireligious democracy, tolerant of dissent but not of bigotry. Hard choices are overdue, as there will be sacrifices needed to defend democratic pluralismand the wolves of hate are already loosed.

Read more from the original source:
Resisting the Tide of Bigotry - The Cairo Review of Global Affairs

Order allowing Texas counties to have multiple mail-in ballot drop off sites is upheld, but appeal halts openings – Katy Times

Posted By on October 25, 2020

By Jolie McCullough | The Texas Tribune

A state appeals court on Friday upheld a Travis County State district court order allowing Texas counties to have multiple drop-off locations for hand delivery of absentee ballots, undercutting Gov. Greg Abbott's recent directive limiting counties to one drop-off site.

But the intermediate court's decision will not yet lead to the reopening of ballot drop-off locations that were shut down in Harris and Travis counties after Abbott's order. Abbott and Texas Secretary of State Ruth Hughs immediately appealed the ruling to the Texas Supreme Court, which at least temporarily blocked the order from taking effect Saturday morning.

The lawsuit, filed in Travis County, is one of several state and federal court challenges to Abbotts Oct. 1 order, which shut down three ballot drop-off locations in Travis County and 11 in Harris County and halted plans for more drop-offs in other counties. Last week, a federal appeals court upheld the Republican governors order under federal law, overturning a lower courts ruling.

The Travis County lawsuit argued that Abbotts order violated state law. Brought by a Texas-based Anti-Defamation League, a voting rights advocacy group and a voter, the suit argued that the governor doesnt have authority under state law to limit absentee ballot hand-delivery locations, and that his order violates voters equal protection rights under the state constitution.

Last week, Travis County State District Judge Tim Sulak agreed, ruling against Abbotts order.

The limitation to a single drop-off location for mail ballots would likely needlessly and unreasonably increase risks of exposure to COVID-19 infections, and needlessly and unreasonably substantially burden potential voters constitutionally protected rights to vote, as a consequence of increased travel and delays, among other things, Sulak wrote.

Abbott and Hughs quickly appealed the ruling, pausing it from going into effect while the appeals court reviewed the case.

As the coronavirus led to concerns for voter safety, Abbott issued an emergency order in July lengthening the early voting period and extending the time voters have to deliver completed absentee ballots in person to county clerk offices. But after large Democratic counties, including Harris and Travis, established several county sites where voters could deliver their ballots, Abbott issued his order limiting such drop-off locations to one per county.

Texas does not have drop-off boxes, as have been implemented in other states. Instead, to drop off a mail-in ballot in person at any location, voters must present an approved form of identification to a poll worker, and voters may not turn in any one elses ballot.

In their appeal, Abbott and Hughs said the limiting order was enacted after Hughs learned that at least one county planned to accept hand-delivered absentee ballot applications at invalid county offices. The state also wanted poll watchers to be at each site accepting such ballots.

Multiple voting right groups quickly challenged the governor's limiting order, and three Democratic chairs of high-profile congressional committees called the move an apparent "last-ditch effort to suppress Texans ability to vote."

Disclosure: The Texas secretary of state has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

"Order allowing Texas counties to have multiple mail-in ballot drop off sites is upheld, but appeal halts openings" was first published at https://www.texastribune.org/2020/10/23/texas-mail-in-ballot-drop-off/ by The Texas Tribune. The Texas Tribune is proud to celebrate 10 years of exceptional journalism for an exceptional state.

Original post:
Order allowing Texas counties to have multiple mail-in ballot drop off sites is upheld, but appeal halts openings - Katy Times

Video of Trump rally appears to show attendee making hand gesture commonly used by white supremacists – USA TODAY

Posted By on October 25, 2020

At a Trump rally in Fla., a man appears to display a hand gesture that the Anti-Defamation League calls a hate symbol used by white supremacists. Wochit

Video of President Donald Trump's rally in Florida on Friday appears to show a man standing in the crowd behind the president making a repeated hand gesture commonly used by white supremacists and other far-right extremists.

About six minutes into video of Trump's speech at The Villages, a large retirement community in northern Florida, at a quieter moment when the crowd was not cheering, a man in a checkered shirt, sunglasses and a black baseball cap holds up his left hand in an "OK" symbol and appears to look directly forwardfor 10 seconds.

Less than a minute later, as the president was speaking and the crowd remained quiet, the man makes the gesture again for about 8 seconds, holding his right hand in the air. The man makes the gesture at least one more time.

A feed of the speech by C-SPAN provides a clear view of the incident.Watch a clip of the video below:

The "OK" hand gesture is included in the Anti-Defamation League'sdatabase of hate symbols used by white supremacists and other far-right extremists.

The gesture is an "obvious and ancient gesture that has arisen in many cultures over the years with different meanings," according to theAnti-Defamation League. However, it took on "new and different significance" in 2017. That's when the symbolbegan its circulation as a hoax by members of the website 4chan as a popular trolling tactic, saying the hand gesture formed a "W"and "P"for "white power."

By 2019, the hand gesture started being used "in some circles as a sincere expression of white supremacy," the group says. In September of that year,theAnti-Defamation League added the gesture to its database of hate symbols.

A member of the "Proud Boys" far-right group holds a bible and displays the OK hand gesture believed to have white supremacist connotations during "The End Domestic Terrorism" rally at Tom McCall Waterfront Park on August 17, 2019 in Portland, Oregon.(Photo: JOHN RUDOFF, AFP/Getty Images)

Members of the "Proud Boys" far-right group have been known to flash the symbol. The Southern Poverty Law Center, a liberal advocacy organization, has designated the "Proud Boys" asa hate group.

The man responsible for the New Zealand massacre, where 51 people were killed at two Christchurch mosques in March, reportedly flashed an upside down "OK" symbol when he appeared in court.

In October of last year, Universal Orlando Resort fired an actor whoformed an upside-down "OK" symbol with his fingers on the shoulder of a biracial 6-year-old girl, who posed for a photo with the an actor dressed as the movie character Gru from "Despicable Me." The man seen in the video could not immediately be identified or reached for comment.

The Trump campaign and the Anti-Defamation League did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The man in the video could not immediately be identified or reached for comment.

According to theAnti-Defamation League,many people since 2017 have been falsely accused of being racist or white supremacist for using the "okay"gesture "in its traditional and innocuous sense."

"Someone who uses the symbol cannot be assumed to be using the symbol in either a trolling or, especially, white supremacist context unless other contextual evidence exists to support the contention," the group says.

The gesture is widely known for saying things are "good-to-go." It has now been added to a database by the Anti-Defamation League. The ADL says the sign has been hijacked. Video Elephant

In September, at the first presidential debate, moderator Chris Wallace asked if Trump would condemn white supremacists and militia groups. WhenTrump asked for the name of a specific group, former Vice President Joe Biden said "Proud Boys."

Trump responded,"Proud Boys stand back and stand by. But I'll tell you what, somebody's got to do something about antifa and the left."

Experts in extremism said Trump's response energized the group online.

More than two weeks later, ata60-minute NBC forum in Miami, moderator Savannah Gutherie asked why Trump hadn't affirmatively denounced white supremacy in the first debate.

"I denounce white supremacy," he said. "What's your next question."

Contributing: Adrianna Rodriguez, Courtney Subramanian and Jordan Culver,USA TODAY

President Donald Trump speaks during his campaign event at The Villages Polo Club on October 23, 2020 in The Villages, Florida.(Photo: Joe Raedle, Getty Images)

Read or Share this story: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/10/24/trump-rally-video-shows-man-far-right-ok-hand-gesture/6021823002/

More:
Video of Trump rally appears to show attendee making hand gesture commonly used by white supremacists - USA TODAY

Hate Groups Active In Ohio Long Before Plot To Kidnap Michigan Governor – WOSU

Posted By on October 25, 2020

Federal authorities have charged more than a dozen men with plotting to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and overthrow the government. Authoritiessay that group did some of its planning this summer in Ohio, where extremist groups have been active since at least 1994.

The group was apparently angry about pandemic-related shutdowns and restrictions. There have been demonstrations against restrictions designed to slow COVID-19 in several states, including a few in Ohio. One in July brought a few hundred people to the Statehouse, with "security provided by hundreds of Ohio milita [sic]."

Mark Pitcavage researches extremist groups for the Anti Defamation League. He said though there are such groups in Ohio, he doesnt think Gov. Mike DeWine is in danger for imposing similar restrictions.

If you are targeted for violence by a militia group, you have sort of won the 'bad luck lottery' because obviously that would not happen for most people. So it is theoretically possible. But I would not want to raise any alarm bells for the governor or for any of his supporters," Pitcavage said.

There have been complaints from those who oppose DeWine's pandemic related policies, including state lawmakers such as Rep. Nino Vitale (R-Urbana) calling him a "dictator" and Rep. John Becker (R-Cincinnati) filing paperwork to have him impeached as well as arrested on terrorism charges.

Pitcavage said those postings and actions arent helping when it comes to extremist groups, but the opposition to shutdowns isnt coming just from extremists any more.

"And that's the problem. I mean, it was only coming from extremists that would be worrying, but they would be a relatively small number of people," Pitcavage said. "The fact is, that's also coming from large numbers of people who essentially fall still within the political mainstream.

The Southern Poverty Law Center reports it's tracking 31 hate groups in Ohio, and said last year there are 32 anti-government movements and 13 militias in the state.

Here is the original post:
Hate Groups Active In Ohio Long Before Plot To Kidnap Michigan Governor - WOSU


Page 927«..1020..926927928929..940950..»

matomo tracker