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Ruben Shimonov is working to tell the ‘broader story of Mizrahim’ – JNS.org

Posted By on October 12, 2020

(October 9, 2020 / JNS) Experts in global Jewish history believe that highlighting minority voices within the Jewish community has the power to honor its nuances and interconnectedness. JNSs new series highlighting Jewish ethnic minorities aims to elevate their voices, and in turn, celebrate the beautiful mosaic that is the Jewish people.

Ruben Shimonov was born in the Uzbek capital city of Tashkent and moved to the United States following the collapse of the Soviet Union when he was just 6 years old. His early memories as an asylum seeker, immigrant and Soviet Jew, he says, have largely shaped his life, identity, sensibilities, social justice and his core sense of selfcontinuing to do so, in ways that are both traumatic and inspiring.

Shimonovs identity as an immigrant runs deep, he told JNS, and allows him to connect with other refugees, asylees and immigrants.

The Bukharian family sought refuge in Seattle, escaping the Soviet anti-Semitism that had been institutionalized for decades, while the majority of Bukharian Jews moved to Queens, N.Y., affectionately nicknamed Queensistan.

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Shimonov grew up among a vibrant Sephardi community of Jews originally from Spain, Turkey and Greece. Though many criticize Jewish Americas ashkenormativitya word that describes how the experience of European Jews has become the normative Jewish experience in the United StatesShimonov explained that the Sephardi community also didnt reflect my experience.

We didnt learn about the broader region where Im from in Jewish day school, he explained. I didnt hear about it in the media, nor in my Jewish studies or Near Eastern studies classes at the University of Washington.

Bukharian Hanukkah celebration in Tel Aviv in 1959. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

Shimonovs background and identity, he says, not only wasnt discussed but was seen as not real. And after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, he said, I stopped telling people where Im from and began to internalize this lack of representation and lack of knowledge in both non-Jewish and Jewish circles, wondering if my story even mattersif it was meant to be a footnote, at best, in a book.

Asking the question, Do we fit into the American Jewish narrative? can feel lonely and disempowering, he recalled.

This kind of thinking, Shimonov later determined, results in missed opportunities to build connections with both non-Jews as well as other Jews.

I recently got into a cab with a driver from Afghanistan, who didnt realize there were Jews there, he said. Lifting up Mizrahim allows us to create robust and authentic connections, and bridges with Muslim brothers and sisters.

My Judaism took root and flourished in Islamic lands, he continued. In his role as Hillels director of cross-community engagement and education at Queens College, he said, Pakistani students would come over and say, Oh my God, we have that food, and those sounds [of Mizrahi music] are like what we hear in the mosque.

By connecting, he said, We can spark broader discussions, learn from each other and build a more robust society.

Part of an ancient community

Shimonov began to ask himself where my story fits into the American Jewish story, initiating his own research and academic writing, piecing together disparate and obscure sources into projects and papers, and eventually receiving scholarships and research grants from the University of Washington, which empowered me to understand that this was a story worth being told.

As Uzbekistan is located between the Middle East, South Asia and Russia, Shimonov explained that his culture reflects multiple civilizations surrounding the area, sharing similarities with other Russian and Persian-speaking Jewish communities of central Asia who have also existed in the region since the Babylonian expulsion.

This connects to two stories, he related. We are part of the broader story of Mizrahim who were dispersed in an abrupt and sudden way, and we are also part of Soviet Jewish exodus, including more than 1 million migrants.

We need both the particularities and achdut(unity); its that balance. If I just empowered Bukharians, it would be incomplete.

I can appreciate the threads connecting us to a broader Mizrahi and Sephardi community rooted in the first expulsiontaking pride in being part of an ancient community that has by and large stayed in the same place for millennia, as other religions came and went, he explained. We share a sense of Mizrahi pride with Irani, Iraqi, Syrian and Yemenite Jews who were dispersed east of Israel.

According to Shimonov, around 1,000 Jews remain in Uzbekistan after the mass migration of Central Asian Jews, which began in the late 1800s, though the majority of them moved following the collapse of the Soviet Union.

The Jewish people are a mosaic, described Shimonov, all tiles of different sizes and colors that together create a larger masterpiece. Regarding his work that uplifts a diverse range of minority voices, he said we need both the particularities and achdut(unity); its that balance. If I just empowered Bukharians, it would be incomplete.

Bukharian Jews perform a dance in Jerusalem. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

Celebrate ethnic cultural and racial diversity

To empower a range of Jewish voices, Shimonov has worked in the Jewish nonprofit world as a community organizer, educator and social innovator, aiming to create spaces for Jewish student life on campus to empower and validate, and affirm identities and experiences of a subsection of the Jewish community.

Today, he is the American Sephardi Federations young leadership board vice president of education and community engagement, and organizes Shabbat gatherings that celebrate Jewish cultural diversity, including dinners and retreats for the LGBTQ Sephardic-Mizrahi community.

People are hungry to learnthat enthusiasm is there, he declared.

He said he is happy that the Jewish world is having more conversations about global diversity, inclusivity, pluralism, multiculturalism and the urgency of lifting up voices on the margins, although he believes it is long overdue. Policy-makers and community-builders are finally engaging on issues of what it means to truly understand and celebrate ethnic cultural and racial diversity, rather than just checking off a diversity box, he said.

When we lift up these stories that were on the sidelines, the fringes of our Jewish narrative, we are not only empowering these particular communities, but we are also doing an important service to the Jewish people, he maintained. When we celebrate Jewish diversity, and the eclectic and mosaic nature of our people, we all benefit from that. Narrow, myopic views of what Jewish identity is hurts even Ashkenazi Jews, as it strips away the rich tapestry that is our people.

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Ruben Shimonov is working to tell the 'broader story of Mizrahim' - JNS.org

Oct 17 | Online Highlights October 17 to 23 | Great Neck, NY Patch – Patch.com

Posted By on October 12, 2020

Saturday, October 17

7:00 - 8:00 PM

Broadway Trivia

Teens in grades 7+

jrobinson@greatnecklibrary.org

Monday, October 19

6:00 - 7:30 PM

Board of Trustees Regular Meeting online via WebEx

https://gnlskype.my.webex.com/gnlskype.my/j.php?MTID=m91a35ef682b3af0d00acf6a879eaa928

Meeting Number : 163 282 1837 Password: DMksmQMJ265 (36576765 from phones)

Join by phone +1-650-215-5226 United States Toll

8:30 - 9:30 PM

I Love Autumn Drawing Challenge

Teens in grades 7+

lsweeney@greatnecklibrary.org

Tuesday, October 20

9:30 - 10:30 AM

Yoga Flow facilitated by Carolyn

Series Open to All Levels

Learn yoga postures, breathing practices and meditation techniques to bring balance, equilibrium and good health to your body and mind.

Meeting ID: 849 1390 1791 Password: 781668

2:00 - 3:30 PM

Bernard Herrmann and His Music Scores - Presented by Richard Knox

We will have an opportunity during this program to revisit many of the mood-setting scores Herrmann created right through his final work on Martin Scorseses Taxi Driver.

Meeting ID: 861 3551 9909 Password: 181030

Wednesday, October 21

10:00 - 11:00 AM

Virtual Tech Help

Adults (18+)

Every Wednesday from 10:00 to 11:00 a.m. our STEM Lab staff will be standing by to help you virtually.

Meeting ID: 934 0037 5868 Passcode: Help

Dial by your location +1 646 558 8656 US (New York)

stemlab@greatnecklibrary.org (516) 466-8055, ext.230

4:30 - 5:30 PM

Graphic Novel Book Club

Mooncakes by Wendy Xu and Suzanne Walker

Go to hoopla https://www.hoopladigital.com/title/13311596and useyour GN library card to check out your copy.

You also can sign up for adigital library cardfor free.

cgreenblatt@greatnecklibrary.org

6:00 - 7:00 PM

Creative Writing

Teens in grades 7+

Write and share short stories and poems.

jrobinson@greatnecklibrary.org

7:00 - 7:45 PM

Lakeville Literary Club

Good Riddance by Elinor Lipman

Meeting ID: 960 2320 4447 Passcode: books

Checkout the book on Hoopla:

EBook:https://www.hoopladigital.com/title/12307962

EAudiobook:https://www.hoopladigital.com/title/12297629

Thursday, October 22

2:00 - 3:30 PM

Modigliani and Soutine: Expatriate Artists in Bohemian Montparnasse

presented by Vivian Gordon

Meeting ID: 899 2679 4447 Passcode: 049273

Modigliani, an urbane Sephardic Italian family and Soutine from dire poverty in the Lithuanian shtetl, the two struggling artists became close friends until Modiglianis tragic early death.

6:00 - 7:00 PM

Ukulele

Teens in grades 7+

Learn chords, melodies, and songs.

mfisher@greatnecklibrary.org

6:30 - 7:30 PM

Yoga Flow facilitated by Sharon Epstein

Series open to All Levels

Learn yoga postures, breathing practices and meditation techniques to bring balance, equilibrium and good health to your body and mind.

Meeting ID: 848 1488 0463 Password: 462824

Friday, October 23

11:00 AM - 12:00 PM

Internet Propaganda

For Adults

Learn how to recognize it, decipher it, and ultimately learn the truth.

Meeting ID: 950 8868 5919 Passcode: InternetDial by your location

+1 646 558 8656 US (New York)

stemlab@greatnecklibrary.org

12:00 - 1:00 PM

Friday Film Discussion

RBG(2018)PG,1 hr. 38 min.,Documentary,Biography

The exceptional life and career of US Supreme Court JusticeRuth Bader Ginsburg. WatchRBGatyour leisure. Jointhe media staffand fellow patrons in a Zoom discussion of the film.

Streaming free on Hooplawith your Great Necklibrary card, and on Hulu with subscription.

Meeting ID: 623 987 3994 Passcode: films

cdipietro@greatnecklibrary.org

8:00 - 9:00 PM

Scary Stories to Tell Over Zoom

Teens in grades 7+

We'll read a classic tale of terror together, then we'll work on writing our own. This event is as scary as you choose to make it.

jlagasse@greatnecklibrary.org

The rest is here:

Oct 17 | Online Highlights October 17 to 23 | Great Neck, NY Patch - Patch.com

Music of Remembrance To Launch ‘Endurance and Hope’-Inspired Concert Season – OperaWire

Posted By on October 12, 2020

On November 1, 2020, Music of Remembrance will launch its 23rd concert season, which will feature a theme of endurance and hope.

Presented over four streamed concerts, the performances will include live conversations, panels, meet-the-artists events, and special guests from around the world.

At a time when the pandemic has sent us on a voyage that none of us could have expected, remarks Artistic Director Miller in a press release, our seasons theme is also one of journeys: journeys in search of safety and freedom, of identity, of hope in the face of daunting odds, and odysseys to new lives in new lands. Remembering these stories strengthens our resolve to prevent human tragedies from happening again.

To Life! will feature the Northwest premiere of Russian composer Polina Nazaykinskayas new work Haim, a musical tribute to David Arben, who survived seven concentration camps during the Holocaust.

Broadcast Dates: November 1 8, 2020

Stormy Seas, a new work by Iranian composer Sahba Aminikia, tells the true stories of people who risked perils at sea in search of safety, such as: from Nazi Germany, from communist Cuba, from war-torn Vietnam, from Taliban-infested Afghanistan, and from an orphanage in Ivory Coast. The concert will also feature Canadian Composer Sid Robinovitchs Rodas Recordada, which explores the Sephardic communities of Greece during the time of the Holocaust.

Broadcast Dates: December 8 13, 2020

Art From Ashes pays tribute specifically to composers across Europe who were murdered during the Nazi occupation, including David Beigelman, Hans Krasa, Dick Kaattenburg, Laszlo Weiner, Erwin Schulhoff, and Paul Hermann.

Broadcast Dates: January 24 31, 2021

Return to Amasia, American composer Eric Hachikians new work, will have its world premiere to conclude the season. The grandson of survivors of the Armenian Genocide this new work is a musical and theatrical account of Hachikians journey to Turkey to connect with his roots.

Broadcast Dates: February 28 March 7, 2021

Currently, MOR hopes to return to live concerts in May of 2021, and plans to present Jake Heggie and Gene Scheers Intonations: Songs from the Violins of Hope, which was originally slated to make its Northwest premiere this year before it was canceled. MORs ensemble will feature violinist Mikhail Shmidt, as well as mezzo-soprano Laura Krumm.

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Music of Remembrance To Launch 'Endurance and Hope'-Inspired Concert Season - OperaWire

Community organizations to hold virtual summit focused on race, hatred and social justice – SILive.com

Posted By on October 12, 2020

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Communities United for Respect and Trust (CURT), a coalition of organizations and community members committed to making Staten Island more inclusive, will host a series of public Zoom meetings as part of its 17th annual summit focused on race, hatred and social justice.

The summit will run from Tuesday, Oct. 13, to Sunday, Oct. 18, with pairs of daily Zoom workshops at 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. The meetings will feature youth town hall meetings and community conversations led by experts and advocates, according to a release from the organization.

The workshops will cover a range of topics, including hate crimes in the time of the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak, racism, anti-semitism, mindfulness, a history of Staten Islands racial past and other subjects.

Co-sponsors of the summit include City Councilwoman Debi Rose, the Anti-Defamation League, the NYPD, District Attorney Michael E. McMahon, the Mayors Office of Human Rights and dozens of others.

This years summit is aimed at providing a forum to discuss relevant topics that will educate all in the uncomfortable truths about the bias that lives in all of us, even like-minded individuals who promote issues of social justice and equality, the release said.

The summits keynote speaker is Jerry Mitchell, executive director of the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting, and the journalist who broke the story of the original criminal case of the 16th Street Baptist Church Bombing and the murder of the Freedom Riders.

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Community organizations to hold virtual summit focused on race, hatred and social justice - SILive.com

Grand jury releases report on hate speech in San Mateo public schools – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on October 12, 2020

In response to several incidents of hate speech and antisemitism at public schools in San Mateo over the last few years, a county grand jury has released its report scrutinizing how administrators are handling the difficult issue. In a survey of 20 principals, the jury found both a lack of uniform, detailed policies and no clarity on whether students understand what constitutes a hate incident.

The report came after several incidents including one that qualified as a hate crime roiled Burlingame High, one of six high schools in the San Mateo Unified High School District, and put a spotlight on the countys public school system.

I think the most important part of the grand jury report for me was that they interviewed students, and students responded by saying, Yes this is happening on campus, said San Mateo County Superintendent of Schools Nancy Magee, whose office oversees the countys 94,000 public-school students.

The report, released Sept. 24, found the rate of such incidents in San Mateo County schools was lower than the national rate. But it also noted that the differences could reflect a lack of reporting within the school community.

In fact, the grand jury noted that district policies on how to track and respond to hate incidents were often unclear or distributed poorly, and that administrators could not confirm whether students understood what constitutes a hate incident or inappropriate behaviors.

Parent Jessica Rosenbaum would agree. Students have no idea that the way they speak is actually hate speech, she said. They dont understand that their way of interacting among each other is actually problematic.

Her son, Ilan Rosenbaum, now a senior, was targeted at Burlingame High School in April 2019 when a swastika and the word fag were drawn on his locker one of the incidents that led the grand jury to investigate. In September 2019, a former student allegedly spray-painted swastikas and other hateful and bigoted graffiti outside the school. There was also an incident at the school in 2018 where students chanted anti-Asian racist words during a basketball game.

After the three incidents at Burlingame High School, school and District administrators stated they did not believe such incidents reflected the dominant school culture, the report found. Yet, some students at the school expressed a belief that there was a lack of tolerance for minorities.

Magee said that it is important to focus on the student experience and not just the number of incidents.

What the students report is like, yeah, this is happening around us, she said. To me its that student voice that we want to pay attention to.

Ilan Rosenbaum, who was interviewed by the grand jury, said that casual racism and antisemitism were pervasive at his school. He asserted that teachers couldnt avoid hearing it in the classrooms and halls of Burlingame High School but that there were no consequences, probably because the teachers didnt have the training to deal with it.

Nobody cares, he said. Everyone says everything, and theres no accountability.

Since his locker was vandalized, he said, hes been pushing his school to adopt clear guidelines on how to recognize and respond to hate incidents when they arise, so he was pleased to see the same recommendations coming from the grand jury report.

I was really happy with [the report]. I think it was extensive and showed the degree to which hate has infected San Mateo Union High School District schools.

The report recommended meeting with students and asking them about hate speech that might go unnoticed by staff or unreported by kids. The jury also recommended that schools organize presentations to make sure students understand what a hate crime is and what the procedures are if one happens.

Burlingame High School principal Paul Belzer told J. that the school was taking the report seriously, and praised the dedication of his staff and students.

I recognize that we have work to do here at Burlingame High School, he said. It is not new work. It is enduring work.

The report also recommended that schools use existing curricula from the county and the Anti-Defamation League meant to combat intolerance. (ADL has already done work in San Mateo County schools, including at Burlingame High School and Burlingame Intermediate School, where a student reportedly was taunted with antisemitic slurs in early 2019.)

The Grand Jurys report is a pointed reminder of the need for ongoing anti-bias work to achieve and maintain a healthy environment for students, said ADL senior associate regional director Nancy Appel in an email to J. ADL looks forward to engaging with District and school officials to implement our No Place for Hate and other anti-bias programs, as the Grand Jury recommends.

The report also recommended a program recently launched by Magees office thats in use in other counties called Camp LEAD. Magee said San Mateo County was in the process of rolling out the team-building and leadership program, but that it hadnt reached most schools yet.

Its hard to launch such a big, logistically intensive program, and had Covid not hit wed be in a completely different scenario right now, Magee said.

Even though Covid has thrown a wrench into plans for the school year, the grand jurys conclusions require public schools to take action. The school districts have 90 days to respond with information on steps theyll implement.

Educators and administrators must respond swiftly, intentionally and unequivocally to every reported act of bias, Appel said. And it is important for them to recognize that an individual bias incident is often an indicator of larger challenges affecting a schools climate.

According to information collected by ADL, in 2019 there were 411 antisemitic incidents at K-12 schools nationwide (up 19 percent in 2018), and 186 incidents at colleges and universities (down 10 percent from 2018).

Schools are nothing but microcosms and mirrors of the society in which we live, so all you have to do is look at America and figure out whats going on, Magee said. Were in a divided nation.

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Grand jury releases report on hate speech in San Mateo public schools - The Jewish News of Northern California

Anti-government groups shift focus from Washington to states – Idaho Business Review

Posted By on October 12, 2020

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. (AP) The alleged foiled plot to kidnap Michigans governor is a jarring example of how the anti-government movement in the U.S. has become an internet-driven hodgepodge of conspiracy theorists who have redirected their rage from Washington toward state capitols.

Thats in contrast to the self-styled militia movement that took shape in the 1990s loosely connected groups whose primary target was the federal government, which they considered a tyrannical force bent on seizing guns and imposing a socialist new world order.

Deadly standoffs between FBI agents and extremists at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and Waco, Texas, stoked those groups anger. Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols, convicted in the 1995 bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building that killed 168 people, were reported to have met with Michigan paramilitary activists.

Public revulsion over that massacre damaged the movement, which largely faded from public view. But recent protests over racial injustice, the coronavirus and other turmoil during the Trump administration have fueled a resurgence, with paramilitary groups blending into a mishmash of far-right factions that spread their messages on websites and social media.

In many ways, their focus is unchanged, including contempt for authority, reverence for the Second Amendment and backwoods military-style training exercises.

But the plot targeting Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer illustrates one stark difference: Nowadays, much of the anger focuses on state officials whom extremists accuse of denying rights and freedoms.

And this is largely due to the fact that Donald Trump, who the militia movement supports, is at the head of the federal government, said Mark Pitcavage, a senior research fellow at the Anti-Defamation Leagues Center on Extremism.

But they can much more easily be angry at state governors, especially Democratic ones, but sometimes even Republican ones, who are involved with gun-control efforts or lockdown or anti-pandemic measures, he added.

Whitmer told The Associated Press in an interview Friday that extremism targeted at state officials is a very real threat to democracy.

Theres no question that these hate groups are domestic terrorists and I think we need to call them that, Whitmer said while greeting voters in Traverse City. We need leadership who steps up and takes it on. We need it coming out of the White House, we need it coming out of all of our statehouses as well.

Six men were charged in federal court on Oct. 8 with conspiring to kidnap the governor in retaliation for what they viewed as her uncontrolled power, according to a criminal complaint. Seven others, charged in state court for allegedly seeking to storm the Michigan Capitol, are linked to a paramilitary group called the Wolverine Watchmen, a state affidavit said.

The Wolverine Watchmen used Facebook to recruit members and communicated on an encrypted messaging platform, the affidavit said.

Joseph Morrison, 42, a founding member, used the screen name Boogaloo Bunyan. Group members gathered for training and drills as they prepared for the boogaloo, an anti-government, pro-gun extremist movement that has been linked to a recent string of domestic terrorism plots, the affidavit said.

Supporters have shown up at protests over COVID-19 lockdown orders and demonstrations over racial injustice, carrying rifles and wearing tactical gear.

The kidnapping plot wasnt the only violence planned by Wolverine Watchmen members, according to investigators. The State Police affidavit says the group was training for an attack on the Michigan state Capitol, targeting police officers and threatening violence to instigate a civil war leading to societal collapse.

The groups other founder, Pete Musico, posted a warning on YouTube that thousands of people were willing to arm themselves and march to Washington, to take our country back and hang every one of you traitors for treason, the ADL said.

Brandon Caserta, one of the suspects arrested on federal charges, posted on Facebook that the COVID-19 pandemic is a lie, the ADL said. It said another suspect, Eric Molitor, posted an image associated with the Three Percenter anti-government movement on his Facebook page and wrote, When tyranny becomes law, resistance becomes duty.

Molitor also reportedly used Facebook to promote the baseless QAnon conspiracy theory that Trump is waging a secret campaign against deep state enemies and a child sex-trafficking ring run by Satan-worshipping Democrats.

We proactively reached out and cooperated with the FBI early in this ongoing investigation, a Facebook spokesperson said Friday.

The ADL said it wasnt immediately clear if the suspects had extensive ties to other self-styled militia groups.This appears to have been a sort of a more informal group or you might call it a militia cell that formed recently and was not outward or public-facing, Pitcavage said.

But its alleged ties to those charged in the kidnapping plot illustrate how modern extremist organizations can make connections online and in person, said J.J. MacNab, a fellow at George Washington Universitys Program on Extremism. Some of those charged with joining the plot met at a Second Amendment rally at the state Capitol in Lansing, a federal affidavit said.

Such gatherings are great recruiting events for paramilitary groups, MacNab said. People get off their computers, go to the Capitol, carry guns, protest and have their voices heard in person.

Greg Stejskal, a retired FBI agent who investigated Michigan militia groups in the 1990s, said their ire was directed largely at the federal government because members considered its authority illegitimate and dictatorial. White nationalism also was a strong influence, he said.

Their more recent focus on state governments makes the job of monitoring them and preventing terrorist activities harder, he said.

Its like being a goalie on the hockey team, Stejskal said. We cant afford to miss any of these and all they have to do is get one through and into the net.

Trump could help by giving stronger support to governors facing threats and protests for trying to control the coronavirus, he said.

He knows the people vote for him, Stejskal said. When he demurs from denouncing them, he encourages them.Whitmer said Trump and other Republicans should do more.

I think that the president has given safe harbor to hate organizations and domestic terror organizations. He has done it in the middle of debates, Whitmer said.

I have asked specifically from this White House to bring the heat down. I have asked the Republican leaders in our state legislature to bring the heat down. I have asked for their help and none of them have done a darn thing.

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Anti-government groups shift focus from Washington to states - Idaho Business Review

Facebook critics webpage removed over false phishing allegations – ComputerWeekly.com

Posted By on October 10, 2020

A coalition of prominent Facebook critics has been forced offline after an internet service provider (ISP) took its webpage down.

The Real Facebook Oversight Board (RFOB) a group made up of two dozen academics, activists, lawyers and journalists who have been vocal critics of the social media company was launched last month with the goal of holding Facebook accountable ahead of the upcoming US presidential electionon 3 November.

Shortly after holding its first press conference on 30 September, in which the group demanded the social media company take action to protect this election and preserve our democracy, Facebook complained to Endurance International-owned ISP SupportNation, which then took the RFOBs webpage down on 7 October.

In a letter to a key RFOB member, journalist Carole Cadwalladr, SupportNation said it had received a complaint that the domain nameis involved in phishing.

While it is unclear what evidence was presented by Facebook to prove the webpages malicious intent, it is highly unusual for an ISP to take such action without first seeking to verify the claims through dispute resolution procedures that allow operators to challenge any allegations.

Endurance International and SupportNation did not respond to Computer Weeklys enquiries about the action by the time of publication.

Its a pretty extraordinary action. Facebook filed a complaint against not one but two of our ISP providers, the second of which removed our website on the basis of a false allegation made by Facebook. This is a company that has spent years defending its failure to take responsibility for hate speech, racism and holocaust denial by making spurious arguments around free speech literally driving its critics off the internet, Cadwalladr told Computer Weekly.

Given its power and reach and the fact that the ISP didnt even think of standing up to Facebook I would hope people understand the gravity and seriousness of what Facebook has done and why this is such a chilling move.

Given its power and reach, I would hope people understand the gravity and seriousness of what Facebook has done and why this is such a chilling move Carole Cadwalladr, Real Facebook Oversight Board

When asked by Computer Weekly why the ordinary dispute resolution procedures were not followed, a Facebook spokesperson said the company was unaware of the action until it had been brought to its attention.

While were still investigating, it appears that this website was automatically flagged by a vendor because it contained the word facebook in the domain and action was taken without consulting with us, they said.

We remove trademark violations to prevent bad actors from setting up websites which could cause confusion, or be used for phishing attacks, fraud, or scams. We are working to lift any restrictions that are in place with internet service providers.

Shoshana Zuboff, a member of RFOB and author of The age of surveillance capitalism, added on Twitter that Facebooks role in the domain take-down looks like authoritarian censorship and testimony to Mr. Zuckerbergs tyranny and showcases the problems we joined up to fight: power, economic self-dealing, political corruption.

She added: Even if it were just business triggered by domain name, consider the atrocity: FB allows Trump lies, trolls, calls to violence, fraudulent election claims, misinformation, voter suppression, fake videos, but acts quickly and decisively in favor of its domain protection.

When Facebook first learned of the group, its director of governance and global affairs, Brent Harris,contacted a number of RFOB funders to express his disappointment and tell them they were undermining the companys own oversight board.

There is a real pattern of behaviour at work here, said Cadwalladr. From going after our funders to try and destroy the board before it had even got off the ground, to sending out a spokesman to trash talk us on Twitter, this is a company that as well as being rattled by what the Real Facebook Oversight Board is doing, Id also argue that it has lost any moral compass it may claim to have had.

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Facebook critics webpage removed over false phishing allegations - ComputerWeekly.com

Tik Tok and the spread of antisemitism – San Diego Jewish World

Posted By on October 10, 2020

By Michael Laitman, Ph.D

PETACH TIKVAH, Israel Online antisemitism is nothing new but now it seems to be widely targeting our vulnerable youth more than ever before. Hidden under false identities, haters freely reveal prejudice, bigotry, and antisemitic views across virtually all the unruled space of social media.

Teenagers who identify as Jewish complain of constant hostility on platforms such as Tik Tok, which are increasingly popular among youth. What would be the best way for them to react and deal with this? First of all, understanding what lies behind such hatred will empower them to turn the hostility into acceptance and embrace.

Since the beginning of 2020, more than a staggering 380,000 videos and over 64,000 hateful comments have been removed in the US alone for violating hate speech policies, according to Tik Tok officials. But the reality shows that although some efforts are being aimed at controlling online hostility, this poison rapidly renews itself and spreads worldwide like a virus.

Young American Jews say that in the past when they uploaded content to the platform without disclosing their background they received rave comments, but as soon as they revealed the fact that they are Jewish, the compliments turned into insults and antisemitic outbursts. The comments they continue to receive include praises for Hitler, Nazi salutes, anti-Israel jabs, and Holocaust denial. Tik Tok also recently faced controversy over history trivialization due to a Holocaust challenge that appeared on the app in which users flippantly portrayed themselves as concentration camp victims.

Such controversies and antisemitic manifestations are eye-openers to peoples true nature and sentiments toward Jews. Therefore, it is important they are revealed. It is as futile to bury our heads in the sand about this as it is trying to escape Judaism, leaving our youth rootless and without a sense of belonging anywhere. The disclosure of hatred can be a positive thing if it awakens in young Jews the vital question of why the Jew-hatred exists. Only an understanding of the foundation of this phenomena and an awareness of what the world expects from Jews can provide young Jews with the basis for solving the problem of antisemitism.

Jew-hatred is irrational, so a war of words or altercations are worthless. Antisemitism by character requires no justification, although one will always be found. Many believe the hatred stems from envy: Jews are smart, successful, and innovative; and supposedly we control the media, the entertainment industry, banks, and commerce. But these are no more than superficial rationalizations that both we and our haters use in order to justify the animosity. The root of the animosity is much deeper than that.

Humanity instinctively feels that the Jewish people hold the key to a better world. Why the Jews? And why the increasing pressure now? The Hebrew word for Jew [Yehudi] comes from the word for united [yihud]. Unity is the very essence of our people which was established according to the tenet, love your friend as yourself in order to become a light unto the nations. As the world endures escalating divisions and conflicts, there is a subconscious expectation that Jews should unite and be like a conduit to funnel this positive unifying force from nature to the whole world.

The problem is that we have completely lost awareness of the importance of our Jewish unity, and instead, frictions and separation prevail. And the more that people of the world feel problems and crises stemming from the divisiveness in human society, the more they will subconsciously feel that Jews are to blame.

Antisemitism thus surfaces as a natural phenomenon among the nations of the world in order to pressure Jewish people to unite. In other words, by becoming a good example to the world of positive connection, harmony, and support, the general attitude toward a unified Jewish people will become favorable and encouraging, and confidence within society at large will rise. Now that we realize that we hold the key to a good future for our own youth and the entire world, it is time for us to walk the talk.*

Michael Laitman, Ph.D., studied philosophy and Kabbalah at the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow, and now resides in Petach Tikvah, Israel. He has published more than 40 books on a variety of topics.

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Tik Tok and the spread of antisemitism - San Diego Jewish World

4 Things to Know about Never Again, the Pro-Israel Film that Exposes Anti-Semitism – Crosswalk.com

Posted By on October 10, 2020

Long ago, Kasim Hafeez hated Jews. His family did, too. So did his friends and pretty much everyone in his neighborhood.

As a Muslim, he felt it was his duty: The Jews were the reason for all the evil in the world.

He was on a path to become radicalized and even violent.

But then he went to Israel. Intending to confirm his hatred, he instead met people who were not much different than him. They had families. They had jobs. They didnt hate him, despite his religion.

Eventually, Hafeez changed his beliefs about Israel and the Jewish people and he pledged to help others like him do the same.

Hafeezs incredible story is included in the new documentary Never Again, a film that confronts anti-Semitism by examining world history and arguing the nation of Israel should be defended. The movie weaves Hafeezs story with that of 91-year-old Holocaust survivor Irving Roth, who tells moviegoers about the rise of Nazi Germany and life in a concentration camp. Other experts on anti-Semitism also are interviewed.

The lies that were perpetrated [in World War II] have been repackaged in the 21st century form, but the end result is the same: The destruction of a people, Roth says.

Christians United for Israel helped make the documentary.

Here are four things you should know about the film:

Photo courtesy: Fathom

From an American perspective, it can be difficult to understand the Middle East divide. Why do people all across the Islamic world hate the Jews? Never Again offers an answer: Many Muslim children are taught by their families and by their schools to hate. Marc Regev, Israels ambassador to the United Kingdom, says children in much of the Islamic world are brainwashed to hate.

We see that in the schools run by Hamas in Gaza, we see that in the schools run by the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank, he says. We see that, unfortunately, in many classrooms across the greater Middle East, where people are taught young people are taught to hate. [Theyre taught] it's good to hate you should hate the Jews: They are evil.

Hafeez told Crosswalk he grew up with a hatred of Jews, even though he was raised in the U.K. (His family is from Pakistan.) He did not know any Jewish families and lived in an insular community. Jews, he believed at the time, were to blame for everything.

All of the things that I heard [about Jews] as ridiculous and absurd as they were became a reality for me, he said. They became truths to me because it was constantly reinforced.

Photo courtesy: Fathom

Roth, who is 91, recounts stories from his time in the Auschwitz concentration camp the time he and his family were rounded up by Nazi solders and placed in train cattle cars, the time he walked on a death march in the snow for days and days, the time he first saw a crematorium that was used to dispose of the bodies from the mass murders.

I jump off a train and I look around in the distance, and I see flames coming out of chimneys, Roth says. He was 14 at the time.

He was rescued in 1945, but only because Allied air raids had prevented the guards from sending him and other Jews on another death march. By then, he weighed 75 pounds and likely would not have survived a lengthy walk.

When the American soldiers walked into his camp to free him, he was surrounded by hundreds of skeletons. The American soldiers, he said, broke down crying.

Photo courtesy: Fathom

Never Again asserts a Jewish state is necessary in a world rampant with hatred. Tragically, Roth wasnt welcomed back into his homeland of Poland after World War II. Citizens, he said, ridiculed the Jews by saying, Hitler didnt do such a great job. Hundreds of Jews in Poland were shot and killed after the war.

You would think that the population would welcome [us], he says. We were not.

The establishment of the nation of Israel, he says, was like a dream come true.

After 2,000 years, the Jewish problem has been solved, he says. The Jews have a country [where they] can go live in peace and harmony.

Never Again addresses the modern Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement and the opposition to Israel as a nation, calling both positions anti-Semitic. The BDS movement promotes a boycott of the Jewish state. (The U.S. House of Representatives condemned the BDS movement in a resolution last year, pushing back on the pro-BDS positions by Reps. Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Rashida Tlaib.)

Michael Oren, the former Israel ambassador to the U.S., calls the BDS movement anti-Semitic.

Its not an organization that aspires to create peace to create a better two-state solution, Oren says. It talks about destroying the world's only sovereign Jewish state and denying the Jewish people's right to self determination in their homeland. That by any definition is anti-Semitic.

About half (49 percent) of young adults in a recent survey said they had seen Holocaust denial or distortion on social media or elsewhere online. Never Again is a necessary film in a society that often questions the truth.

Photo courtesy: Fathom

In Never Again, a former radicalized Muslim tells how he changed his views about Jews, simply by traveling to Israel and meeting Israeli citizens. The film ends with Hafeez sitting down with Roth and discussing how to improve the world.

Never Again shows there is hope for a society filled with hatred and rage. It offers a path forward for the Middle East. People can change.

The biggest cure for anti-Semitism are Jews, and the biggest cure for anti-Islam feeling [is] meeting a range of Muslims, says author and legal scholar Alan Dershowitz.

Hafeez told Crosswalk he hopes the movie will lead moviegoers to take a step back and ask your own questions. He particularly hopes it impacts those who are on the same path he once was.

Go out of your echo chamber, he said. If I can prevent one person from becoming who I was, that's a win for me.

Never Again will be in theaters for two nights: Oct. 13 and 15. VisitNeverAgaintheMovie.com. The film is unrated. It includes images of and discussion of the Holocaust.

Entertainment rating:4 out of 5 stars.

Family-friendly rating:4 out of 5 stars.

Photo courtesy: Fathom

Michael Foust has covered the intersection of faith and news for 20 years. His stories have appeared in Baptist Press,Christianity Today, The Christian Post, theLeaf-Chronicle,the Toronto Star andthe Knoxville News-Sentinel.

Excerpt from:

4 Things to Know about Never Again, the Pro-Israel Film that Exposes Anti-Semitism - Crosswalk.com

Felix Klein one year after the attack in Halle: Fears are back – Pledge Times

Posted By on October 10, 2020

One year after the attack in Halle, the anti-Semitism officer Felix Klein worries about the Jewish community and criticizes Saxony-Anhalts interior minister.

This is where the assassin failed a year ago: the door to the synagogue in Halle Photo: Hendrik Schmidt / dpa

taz: Mr. Klein, A year ago a right-wing extremist attacked the synagogue in Halle and killed two people. Do you remember how you found out about it back then?

Felix Klein: Yes, I was with my wife on the way from the Auschwitz-Birkenau memorial back to Berlin. It was a shock to me as it was to everyone. We had just launched important structures against anti-Semitism, a federal-state commission, the Rias reporting system. And then that. I felt very powerless.

The perpetrator wanted to cause a massacre. Only the synagogue door prevented him from doing so. Would you have thought such an act possible?

I thought that an attack was possible. Especially when you saw how radical the tone was on the Internet. But I did not expect such a hateful, inhuman act in this dimension.

The synagogue was not protected by the police at the time. An unforgivable mistake?

It would have been unforgivable if it had happened willfully. But apparently the police didnt even know that Yom Kippur was being celebrated there and that there was an increased need for security.

But thats also a problem.

the lawyer and diplomat is the Federal Government Commissioner for Jewish life and the fight against anti-Semitism.

Yes of course. That was a negligence that is unacceptable. And this anti-Semitic attack, which ultimately cost the lives of two non-Jews, was also a turning point. He shook up the security authorities. Today the community in Halle is permanently guarded. And the police have evolved, the handling of religious holidays has improved.

A few days ago, however, a man attacked a believer in front of a synagogue in Hamburg, seriously injuring him. How safe do Jews still live in Germany?

Hamburg has shown that this time protective measures took effect. The police had the holiday on their radar there. And the police property guards immediately arrested the attacker and prevented further violence.

But not the attack on the young believer.

There can be no absolute protection. But of course the attack should be an occasion to re-examine the security measures in front of Jewish institutions.

So too little has happened since the attack in Halle?

In my opinion the opposite is the case. The federal government and the states are doing their utmost here. The Federal Ministry of the Interior has just made available 22 million euros for structural protection measures, and the federal states have also taken money into their hands again. In addition, the federal government has launched a comprehensive package of measures, such as the obligation to report online hate postings to the BKA, from which I expect a lot in the fight against anti-Semitism. Because the clientele backs away when they receive counter pressure and the police are at the door. And we saw in Halle that the root of the threat was radicalization on the Internet.

Is that enough? After the Hamburg attack, the Central Council of Jews once again called for more protection for religious institutions and a resolute social commitment against anti-Semitism.

There are certainly further opportunities for improvement. For example, I would like the police nationwide to know the Jewish calendar and on which occasions special protection is necessary. And it is also correct that the state cannot resolve the matter alone. This requires a courageous civil society that counteracts when anti-Semitism is expressed. That is the most important thing. I think the best protection would be if Jewish life were perceived much more as something taken for granted, as part of German diversity. We have to do more for that.

After the attack in Halle and the attack in Hambrug, the situation is different: the Jewish community feels seriously threatened.

Yes, thats how I perceive it, she is very worried. And thats also very understandable. After politics reacted to Halle, my impression was that the community had settled down somewhat. But now the fears are back. We have to take that very seriously.

Isnt that a sign of poverty, especially for Germany with its history?

These concerns must alarm us, absolutely. The very fact that Jewish families are discussing whether they can continue to live in Germany is more than an alarm signal.

As the anti-Semitism commissioner, you report to the federal government. Dont you have to put more pressure on in view of this?

We are making a significant effort. The Chancellor herself is also very committed. Everyone is aware of the seriousness of the situation.

But many of those affected say: we dont want more encouragement, we want to see action.

It has already existed. Many of the measures decided must now be implemented first. Nevertheless, there will be another catalog of measures shortly, from the cabinet committee to combat right-wing extremism.

Last year the number of anti-Semitic crimes rose by 13 percent to a good 2,000 crimes. Whats your explanation for that?

The increase is mainly due to the brutality on the Internet and the local incitement to hatred and Holocaust denial. But there is also a positive explanation: those affected report these incidents more strongly. This is a good development and something I also encourage. Making hatred visible is the first step in combating it.

Why does such hatred always end up in anti-Semitic attacks?

That does not surprise me. Anti-Semitism is so practiced in our culture that it is used again and again, especially in times of uncertainty. Jews were blamed for the plague as far back as the Middle Ages; today this is repeated with the corona virus. This is really fatal.

Even Saxony-Anhalts interior minister, Holger Stahlknecht (CDU), promoted anti-Semitism by referring to the times of police officers in front of Jewish buildings that were missing elsewhere.

To portray Jews as privileged people, for whom action would be taken at the expense of the general public, actually fuels anti-Semitism. It is not possible that groups are played off against each other. Unfortunately, Jewish communities need increased security, but thats not because of the Jews, but because of the threats against them. And the state has a duty to ensure that they can practice their religion without restriction. I think he has to bear 100 percent of the security costs for this. Because this is a fundamental right.

Do you think anti-Semitism can one day be defeated?

It can at least be pushed back so far that the quality of life can be significantly improved. The whole of society benefits from this, not just the Jews. The great majority in Germany is democratic and vigilant. That gives me hope.

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Felix Klein one year after the attack in Halle: Fears are back - Pledge Times


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